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On this episode of Intersection: examining the plan to restore the Everglades; talking business survival during the pandemic; and a band navigates the new, socially distanced era of live performance
On this episode of Intersection, we’re talking about President Barack Obama’s signature health care law- the future of which is in the hands of the Supreme Court, even as coronavirus cases surge and millions of Americans face unemployment and the loss of health insurance.
Law professor Ciara Torres Spelliscy talks about how the election could end up in the court; we revisit a conversation about the Ocoee Massacre, and Joyce Cummings-Cusack talks about her involvement in the civil rights movement and activism today.
On this episode of Intersection a conversation with a first time voter, and analysis of the Senate Judiciary’s debate and vote on the president’s nomination of Amy Coney Barret to the US Supreme Court.
Former White House chiefs of staff Andrew Card and Peter Rouse discuss politics, governance and the presidential race. And Orlando Film Commissioner talks about 'The Right Stuff' and the future of the film and television industry.
Governor Ron DeSantis’s moratorium on evictions and foreclosures expired this week. The governor’s office said it was to avoid confusion over whether the state order- or the CDC’s nationwide eviction moratorium should apply. So where does that leave renters?
On this episode of Intersection we talk through the politics of the Supreme Court pick with political analysts Dick Batchelor and Chris Carmody. Stetson University College of Law Professor Louis Virelli talks about about the process of picking a new justice. And Miami Herald reporters Sarah Blaskey and Nicholas Nehamas take us behind the gates of President Trump’s ‘Winter White House’, Mar A Lago in their book The Grifter’s Club.
On this episode of Intersection, we talk about how the pandemic and the recession is amplifying the housing crisis in Osceola County, and we discuss the census and the push to get more people to complete it.
Primary analysis with political reporter Scott Powers; how the the recession has impacted working women; the emerging field of pandemic law.
Over the last decade, there’s been a change in how things get to space. Since the end of the Space Shuttle program in 2011, NASA has been looking to commercial companies to fill the void.
Over the last decade, there’s been a change in how things get to space. Since the end of the Space Shuttle program in 2011, NASA has been looking to commercial companies to fill the void.
Over the last decade, there’s been a change in how things get to space. Since the end of the Space Shuttle program in 2011, NASA has been looking to commercial companies to fill the void.
The red planet just go another robot inhabitant. NASA’s Mars InSight lander touched down on November 26 after a six month trip through our solar system. So what do scientists hope to learn from InSight?
The red planet just go another robot inhabitant. NASA’s Mars InSight lander touched down on November 26 after a six month trip through our solar system. So what do scientists hope to learn from InSight?
The red planet just go another robot inhabitant. NASA’s Mars InSight lander touched down on November 26 after a six month trip through our solar system. So what do scientists hope to learn from InSight?
In the 1960s, it was up to programmers like Alice Schmidt to help bring Gemini capsules safely home.
In the 1960s, it was up to programmers like Alice Schmidt to help bring Gemini capsules safely home.
In the 1960s, it was up to programmers like Alice Schmidt to help bring Gemini capsules safely home.
You’ve probably heard about exoplanets, right? They're planets that live outside of our solar system. Scientists say they're about to discover tens of thousands of new exoplanets.
The Apollo 11 astronaut and second person to walk on the moon is now developing a plan to send humans to live permanently on the red planet.