Race & Identity Ep. 2: Are We Going to Be OK? Seattle scholar considers a return to Singapore to escape Covid-19 Author Ruchika Tulshyan weighs the risks of staying in the US as the pandemic spreads while also navigating lockdown with her three-year-old. Kristin Leong
December 26th | 'Somebody who looked like this was here': five immigrant artists who helped shape 2019 It’s the end of the year, and Record producers have been revisiting some of our favorite conversations. Mine were about: immigrants. Adwoa Gyimah-Brempong Bill Radke
Pike Place Market’s news man is leaving the biz after 40 years You are at the mouth of the Pike Place Market, in downtown Seattle, facing the water. The bronze pig is within a stone’s throw. Joshua McNichols
Politics UW research center to tackle the problem of fake news Ahead of the 2020 election the University of Washington has launched an interdisciplinary center that will study the spread of misinformation and disinformation online. Casey Martin
Arts & Life See you at the library: Free KUOW speaker series connects you to our reporters Get a behind-the-scenes look into our headline stories and share your ideas and questions with KUOW journalists. Kristin Leong
Latin America 12 Journalists Have Been Killed In Mexico This Year, The World's Highest Toll Amid violent crime and impunity, press advocates say the president's harsh approach toward reporters is not helping the situation. Carrie Kahn
Do media images of dead bodies make it harder for you to care? Interrogating our media consumption of images of the dead – whose bodies are shown, whose aren’t, and what (if anything) that will change. Adwoa Gyimah-Brempong
Health Tupperware writes us a surprising email about a needle disposal story Last week, KUOW reporter Anna Boiko-Weyrauch reported on what to do with discarded needles. Isolde Raftery Anna Boiko-Weyrauch
World 'Bearing Witness Is Really All We Have': Memories Of Covering The Tiananmen Aftermath NPR's Deborah Amos arrived in Beijing days after authorities cracked down on Tiananmen protesters. She stayed for six weeks and shares her memories of covering a critical time in China's history. Deborah Amos
Politics The U.S. Now Ranks As A 'Problematic' Place For Journalists "Never before have US journalists been subjected to so many death threats," Reporters Without Borders said in its annual World Press Freedom Index. President Trump "exacerbates" problems, it added. Sasha Ingber