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Breaking News

The Michigan Supreme Court says former President Trump can remain on the state's
primary ballot. Brandon Bell/Getty Images hide caption

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Brandon Bell/Getty Images


ELECTIONS


MICHIGAN'S SUPREME COURT SAYS TRUMP CAN REMAIN ON THE STATE'S PRIMARY BALLOT

The ruling comes after a historic decision from Colorado's highest court that
ruled that Trump was ineligible to appear on the state's primary ballot because
he engaged in an insurrection.

President Biden is most unpopular among members of Generation X, who lean more
conservative than those in other generations. Mario Tama/Getty Images hide
caption

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POLITICS


GEN X AND PRESIDENT BIDEN: REALITY BITES

Lee Sun-kyun attends the 2023 New York Asian Film Festival Opening Night at
Walter Reade Theater on July 14, 2023, in New York City. John Nacion/Getty
Images hide caption

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WORLD


ACTOR LEE SUN-KYUN OF OSCAR-WINNING FILM 'PARASITE' IS FOUND DEAD IN SEOUL

U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) speaks at a press conference at the U.S.
Capitol Building on May 18, 2023 in Washington, DC. During the news conference
Greene announced that she would be filing articles of impeachment against U.S.
President Joe Biden. Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images hide caption

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POLITICS


REP. MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE TARGET OF SWATTING ATTEMPT

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An Israeli battle tank moves along the border between the Gaza Strip and
southern Israel on Wednesday as battles between Israel and Hamas continue. Jack
Guez/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

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Jack Guez/AFP via Getty Images


MIDDLE EAST CRISIS — EXPLAINED


THE LATEST ISRAEL-HAMAS CEASE-FIRE PROPOSAL DROPS DETAILS OF FUTURE GOVERNANCE
OF GAZA


Photo Illustration by Becky Harlan/NPR


LIFE KIT


A BEHAVIORAL SCIENTIST'S ADVICE FOR CHANGING YOUR LIFE

A gesture of generosity has stuck with Oliver Muensterer. Oliver Muensterer hide
caption

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Oliver Muensterer


MY UNSUNG HERO


HE FORGOT HIS SHIRT FOR A JOB INTERVIEW. A HOTEL EMPLOYEE HAD A NOVEL SOLUTION


LATEST STORIES

 * 58 minutes ago
   
   
   THE LATEST ISRAEL-HAMAS CEASE-FIRE PROPOSAL DROPS DETAILS OF FUTURE
   GOVERNANCE OF GAZA

 * 1 hour ago
   
   
   THESE 5 CHARTS SHOW HOW LIFE GOT PRICIER BUT ALSO CHEAPER IN 2023

 * 2 hours ago Story has audio
   
   
   UP FIRST BRIEFING: TOP U.S. OFFICIALS VISIT MEXICO; 'PARASITE' ACTOR LEE
   SUN-KYUN DIES

 * 5 hours ago
   
   
   GEN X AND PRESIDENT BIDEN: REALITY BITES

 * 5 hours ago Story has audio
   
   
   THIS BIPARTISAN SENATE DUO WANTS TO END LEGACY COLLEGE ADMISSIONS

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NPR


WATCH NPR'S NEWS ROUNDUP: A BORDER SUMMIT IN MEXICO, ISRAEL COMMENTS ON INDIA
EXPLOSION

Top White House officials are headed to Mexico today for meetings on immigration
deterrence. The country now says it believes a blast near its embassy in New
Delhi yesterday may have been an attack.

Supermarket sticker shock eased this year, as egg prices fell back to earth.
Despite gloomy recession forecasts at the beginning of the year, consumers kept
spending and the economy continued to grow. Brandon Bell/Getty Images hide
caption

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Brandon Bell/Getty Images


BUSINESS


THESE 5 CHARTS SHOW HOW LIFE GOT PRICIER BUT ALSO CHEAPER IN 2023

Inflation eased this year and wages are now climbing faster than prices.
Americans are still spending, even if they have to borrow money to do so.

Clockwise from left: Cocaine Bear, Luke Macfarlane in Platonic, Danielle Brooks
and Fantasia Barrino in The Color Purple, Bryce Harper of the Philadelphia
Phillies, the cover of the book Starter Villain, Jessica Williams in Shrinking.
Universal Pictures; Apple TV+; Eli Adé/Warner Bros. Pictures; Tim
Nwachukwu/Getty Images; Tor Books; Apple TV+ hide caption

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Universal Pictures; Apple TV+; Eli Adé/Warner Bros. Pictures; Tim
Nwachukwu/Getty Images; Tor Books; Apple TV+


POP CULTURE HAPPY HOUR


THE YEAR IN REVIEW: 50 WONDERFUL THINGS FROM 2023

Pop culture critic Linda Holmes has been making this annual list since 2010.
Big, small, inspirational, silly — what these items have in common is that they
are all wonderful and brought her joy.

THE YEAR IN REVIEW: 50 WONDERFUL THINGS FROM 2023

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Leif Parsons for NPR


GOATS AND SODA


DON'T MOPE, HAVE HOPE: GLOBAL STORIES FROM 2023 THAT INSPIRE OPTIMISM AND
DELIGHT

We found joy in mail-order chicks, soothing lullabies, a celebration of
long-lasting love, the magic touch that can calm a grumpy child (and even a
stressed out adult) and beach day in Mogadishu.

Kelsey, Kristen and Kaylen Kassab of The K3 Sisters Band in front of the Barbie
Theater at World of Barbie at Stonebriar Centre Mall on in Frisco, Texas.
Richard Rodriguez/Getty Images for World of Barbie hide caption

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Richard Rodriguez/Getty Images for World of Barbie


ECONOMY


FROM SWIFTIE BEADS AND BARBIE TO BEYONCE, GIRLS RAN THE WORLD ECONOMY IN 2023

Girl spending was one of the most powerful economic forces in 2023. Taylor Swift
and Beyoncé concerts boosted local and national economies. World leaders begged
Taylor Swift to come and perform.

A tractor trailer veers into ditch on Christmas Day on Interstate 80 in Nebraska
as a winter storm pummels part of the Midwest. Forecasters are predicting that
heavy snow and blizzard conditions will continue through early Wednesday across
part of the north-central U.S. Nebraska State Patrol/AP hide caption

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Nebraska State Patrol/AP


WEATHER


BLIZZARD CONDITIONS, FREEZING RAIN AND STRONG WINDS SLOW HOLIDAY TRAVEL

The "significant" winter storm dropping heavy snow, freezing rains and
potentially damaging ice is expected to last through early Wednesday, the
National Weather Service warns.



Ice skaters in front of Ottawa City Hall in Ontario on Dec. 12, 2023. Jackie
Northam/NPR hide caption

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Jackie Northam/NPR


WORLD


CANADA GRAPPLES WITH THE EFFECTS OF DETERIORATING RELATIONS WITH INDIA AND CHINA

As relations sour with India and China, Canada is grappling with how to stand up
to powerful or authoritarian nations without sacrificing its longstanding
values, such as protecting human rights.

The Wahweap Marina, squeezed by the dropping and encroaching shoreline of Lake
Powell on the Colorado River behind the Glen Canyon Dam outside Page, Ariz., on
Feb. 20, 2023. The bathtub ring marking the once-high level of the lake is
visible on the red rock formations in the distance. Full story here. Hart Van
Denburg/CPR News hide caption

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Hart Van Denburg/CPR News


THE PICTURE SHOW


2023 IN PHOTOS: NPR STATION PHOTOGRAPHERS SHARE MEMORABLE MOMENTS

From across the country, NPR member station visual journalists have documented
events in their states and cities. These images represent some of the year's
most remarkable stories.

A customer shops for holiday gifts in a Target store on Dec. 21 in Austin,
Texas. Holiday shopping was up 3.1% over 2022, a lower figure than the pandemic
years but still a healthy one, economists say. Brandon Bell/Getty Images hide
caption

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Brandon Bell/Getty Images


BUSINESS


HOLIDAY SPENDING IS UP. SHOPPERS ARE CONFIDENT, BUT NOT GIDDY

Consumer spending from Nov. 1 through Christmas Eve rose 3.1% year over year,
new data show, a figure in line with the decade leading up to the pandemic and
another positive sign for the economy.

HOLIDAY SPENDING IS UP. SHOPPERS ARE CONFIDENT, BUT NOT GIDDY

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Elizabeth Weller speaks at a press conference in Austin, Texas on July 19. She's
one of 20 women suing the state after being denied abortions despite serious
pregnancy complications. Suzanne Cordeiro/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

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Suzanne Cordeiro/AFP via Getty Images


SHOTS - HEALTH NEWS


'JANE ROE' IS ANONYMOUS NO MORE. THE VERY PUBLIC FIGHT AGAINST ABORTION BANS IN
2023

As the first full year since Roe v. Wade was overturned closes, the abortion
landscape in the U.S. has changed legally, politically and medically.

A person holds a sign at a rally to raise the federal minimum wage, on Capitol
Hill in Washington, D.C., on May 4. Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

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Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images


ECONOMY


MINIMUM-WAGE WORKERS IN 22 STATES WILL BE GETTING RAISES ON JAN. 1

While that's great news for the almost 10 million workers affected, 20 other
states still pay minimum-wage workers the federal rate of $7.25 an hour.

Georgetown University in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, D.C., on
Dec. 3, 2021. Daniel Slim/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

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Daniel Slim/AFP via Getty Images


POLITICS


THIS BIPARTISAN SENATE DUO WANTS TO END LEGACY COLLEGE ADMISSIONS

After the Supreme Court barred race-conscious college admissions, there's a
growing push in Congress to end preference for applicants tied to alumni and
donors.

THIS BIPARTISAN SENATE DUO WANTS TO END LEGACY COLLEGE ADMISSIONS

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Connie Hanzhang Jin/NPR


LIFE KIT


NEED A NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTION? HERE ARE 50 WAYS TO IMPROVE YOUR LIFE IN 2024

Scroll through Life Kit's New Year's Resolution Planner to find the perfect goal
this year, whether it's exercising more, paying off your credit card debt or
having more fun.

A new report focuses on Wagner's operations in Sudan, Mali and the Central
African Republic. Vladimir Nikolayev/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

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Vladimir Nikolayev/AFP via Getty Images


INTERVIEW HIGHLIGHTS


HOW 'BLOOD GOLD' FROM AFRICA IS FUNDING RUSSIA'S WAR ON UKRAINE

According to a new report, the Wagner Group has laundered some $2.5 billion to
Russia since its full scale invasion of Ukraine last year, in an effort to
support the war effort.

President Biden is seen in the White House Oval Office in January 2021 in
Washington, D.C., as Vice President Kamala Harris looks on. Doug Mills/Getty
Images hide caption

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Doug Mills/Getty Images


POLITICS


BIDEN'S WEST WING HAS A MOON ROCK, A RUGBY BALL AND HOMEMADE COOKIES

The White House's latest tenant invited over Architectural Digest magazine for a
rare and personal look at his version of the Oval Office.

Sofia (Danielle Brooks) and Celie (Fantasia Barrino) in the 2023 film
reincarnation of The Color Purple. Eli Adé/Warner Bros. Pictures hide caption

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Eli Adé/Warner Bros. Pictures


MOVIES


'THE COLOR PURPLE' IS THE BIGGEST CHRISTMAS DAY OPENING SINCE 2009

The Color Purple is now the second-biggest Christmas Day opening in history —
$18 million on day one of its release.

South Fork Wind — a 12-turbine wind farm near Long Island —began generating
electricity in December. South Fork Wind hide caption

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South Fork Wind


CLIMATE


OFFSHORE WIND IN THE U.S. HIT HEADWINDS IN 2023. HERE'S WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW

WBUR

Rising interest rates, inflation, and global supply chain issues brought delays
in 2023 for the offshore wind industry, but also some projects began generating
energy.

Shovels and an excavator are visible at the groundbreaking celebration for the
Stratos direct air capture plant in West Texas on April 28. Construction began
on the site in late 2022, and it's slated to begin operations in 2025. Camila
Domonoske/NPR hide caption

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Camila Domonoske/NPR


BUSINESS


THIS OIL COMPANY INVESTS IN PULLING CO2 OUT OF THE SKY — SO IT CAN KEEP SELLING
CRUDE

A technology that could help combat climate change is being championed by an
unlikely proponent: Occidental Petroleum, a big oil company. And that's raising
all kinds of knotty issues.

THIS OIL COMPANY INVESTS IN PULLING CO2 OUT OF THE SKY — SO IT CAN KEEP SELLING
CRUDE

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The humanitarian crisis in Gaza as air strikes continue is prompting grief,
survivors' guilt, and "bringing back a lot of baggage." Seeing a need for
support, a mosque and school in Garden Grove have incorporated mental health
into their programming. Samanta Helou Hernandez/LAist hide caption

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Samanta Helou Hernandez/LAist


NATIONAL


NEWS FROM GAZA IS REKINDLING TRAUMA FOR MUSLIM COMMUNITIES IN SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA

The humanitarian crisis in Gaza as airstrikes continue is prompting grief,
survivors' guilt, and "bringing back a lot of baggage."

Palestinian children, having fled the Israeli bombing of the northern Gaza Strip
in response to the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas, are living in temporary shelters at
Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital. Global health groups say they are doing what they can
to keep a lid on infectious diseases amid crowded, unsanitary conditions and a
devastated health-care system. Majdi Fathi/NurPhoto via Reuters Connect hide
caption

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Majdi Fathi/NurPhoto via Reuters Connect


GOATS AND SODA


HEALTH WORKERS STRUGGLE TO PREVENT AN INFECTIOUS DISEASE 'DISASTER IN WAITING'
IN GAZA

Public health experts say conditions in war-torn Gaza are ripe for the spread of
infectious disease. Health workers are struggling to spot and contain outbreaks,
even as the health system teeters.

A research participant in the Levi Lab at University California, Berkeley
undergoes treatment for amblyopia using virtual reality. Elena Zhukova/UC
Regents hide caption

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Elena Zhukova/UC Regents


SHOTS - HEALTH NEWS


VIRTUAL REALITY GIVES A BOOST TO THE 'LAZY EYE'

To treat amblyopia, or lazy eye, doctors typically prescribe a patch to cover
the stronger eye and make the brain learn to work with the weaker one. Virtual
reality offers a new approach.

Early morning motorists travel west in December 2012 along I-70 and into a
winter storm near Lawrence, Kan. Orlin Wagner/AP hide caption

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Orlin Wagner/AP


WONDER WHY HEADLIGHTS SEEM BRIGHTER? PLACEMENT IS PART OF THE PROBLEM

While federal regulations have largely stayed the same, new technology has
changed the headlight game, and the way they're being tested doesn't reflect how
they look on the road.

Chimpanzees and bonobos recognize photos of groupmates they haven't seen for
more than 25 years, and respond even more enthusiastically to pictures of their
friends, a new study finds. Kate Grounds/Edinburgh Zoo hide caption

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Kate Grounds/Edinburgh Zoo


ANIMALS


APES REMEMBER LONG-LOST FRIENDS AND FAMILY THEY HAVEN'T SEEN IN DECADES

Researchers found that chimpanzees and bonobos were able to recognize photos of
former groupmates after more than 25 years apart, according to a new study from
Johns Hopkins University.

Canadian astronaut David Saint-Jacques has his blood sampled on board the
International Space Station for an experiment that examines the space-related
changes that occur in blood and bone marrow. NASA hide caption

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NASA


MEDIA


EDITOR'S PICKS: STORIES WE LOVED THAT YOU MIGHT HAVE MISSED

We can tell from website analytics that a number of readers loved these stories
as much as we did. So we're taking the opportunity to share them again before
the year is out.

LISTEN: MUNDI HAS ALREADY MADE ELEPHANT FRIENDS IN HER NEW HOME

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Clockwise from top left: Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One,
Passages, Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse, Four Daughters, Only Murders in
the Building, Hijack Paramount Pictures; MUBI; Sony Pictures; Jour2Fête; Hulu;
Apple TV+ hide caption

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Paramount Pictures; MUBI; Sony Pictures; Jour2Fête; Hulu; Apple TV+


REVIEW


CULTURE


THE BEST MOVIES AND TV OF 2023, PICKED FOR YOU BY NPR CRITICS

Whether you plan to head out to the theater or binge from the couch, our critics
have gathered together their favorite films and TV shows of the year. Happy
watching!

Durand Jones' "Wait Til I Get Over" is one of the songs that hit us hard in
2023. Rahim Fortune hide caption

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Rahim Fortune


ALL SONGS CONSIDERED


LISTENERS SHARE THE SONGS THAT MOVED THEM THE MOST IN 2023

We asked listeners to tell us about a song they ugly cried to, or just couldn't
stop playing in 2023. On this episode we share some of their picks and the
stories behind them.

LISTENERS SHARE THE SONGS THAT MOVED THEM THE MOST IN 2023

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Illustration by Jed Chisholm for NPR


BEST MUSIC OF 2023


THE 123 BEST SONGS OF 2023

A best-of list should be an opportunity for discovery, so NPR Music has handmade
a series of mixtapes full of great songs from 2023 to help you find music you'll
love well beyond the end of the year.


Jerome Tisne/Getty Images


LIFE KIT


WHY IT'S OK TO JUDGE A BOOK BY ITS COVER (AND MORE TIPS ON HOW TO FIND A GREAT
READ)

Traci Thomas, host of the hit reading podcast The Stacks, explains how she finds
books she can read from start to finish. Some of her ideas may surprise you!

WHY IT'S OK TO JUDGE A BOOK BY ITS COVER (AND MORE TIPS ON HOW TO FIND A GREAT
READ)

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NPR


REVIEW


BOOKS


HERE ARE THE BOOKS WE LOVE: 380+ GREAT 2023 READS RECOMMENDED BY NPR

Books We Love returns with 380+ new titles handpicked by NPR staff and trusted
critics. Find 11 years of recommendations all in one place – that's more than
3,600 great reads.


IN A YEAR OF BOOK BANS, MAUREEN CORRIGAN'S TOP 10 AFFIRM THE JOY OF READING
WIDELY


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