Milton Guevara
[Copyright 2024 NPR]
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Chef Nite Yun, who was born in a refugee camp and went on to become an acclaimed chef, discusses her debut cookbook, 'My Cambodia' — and shares a recipe essential for Khmer cooking.
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Pop star Sabrina Carpenter tells NPR's Leila Fadel why she describes her new album as a "party for heartbreak," and "a celebration of disappointment."
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President Trump says restaurants in Washington, D.C. are "busier than ever" now that the National Guard is patrolling the streets. Locals share how they feel about going out on the town.
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Sweden's 113-year-old Kiruna Church is being transported away from a location that is sinking due to underground mining.
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The U.S. dollar had its worst start this year in more than half a century. Harvard University economics professor Kenneth Rogoff says President Trump is accelerating the decline.
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How did a streetwear-loving kid from Chicago become Louis Vuitton's artistic director in Paris? Critic Robin Givhan explores the rise of Virgil Abloh in her new book, Make It Ours.
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Past Spelling Bee champions reflect on the words that shaped their lives.
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The latest issue of "The Strand Magazine" contains rare stories by the iconic midcentury writers Ian Fleming and Graham Greene.
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Journalist and author Ted Genoways follows the violent, unpredictable and hugely profitable world of tequila through the story of its most successful maker, Jose Cuervo, in his book "Tequila Wars."
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The president of the American Bar Association says that the Trump administration is targeting judges and lawyers who make decisions it disagrees with.