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  • The new BBC America show, written by author Tom Rob Smith, opens with a gay couple falling in love. Then one of them mysteriously disappears.
  • This year KUNC connected in meaningful and impactful ways with our Northern Colorado audience. In 2024, we shared another season of The Colorado Dream and saw it become a top podcast with national notice. We launched our Reflecting Colorado Photo Desk and embarked on one of our most comprehensive efforts to listen to voters and talk about the big issues and concerns they had this election year. We collaborated with students at CU Boulder and Front Range Community College. We also celebrated what will be the Colorado Capitol News Alliance as the Corporation for Public Broadcasting awarded a large grant to KUNC to collaborate with Colorado Public Radio, Rocky Mountain PBS, and The Colorado Sun on that project in 2025. It was a momentous year with lots to celebrate.
  • Writer Dorothy Parker gave her estate -- including proceeds from her papers -- to the NAACP. But literary executor Lillian Hellman made access to Parker's work difficult. Marion Meade tells the story in Bookforum Magazine, and discusses it with Scott Simon.
  • NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with co-directors Tony Gerber and Jesse Moss about their new documentary War Game, which considers dangerous possibilities after the 2024 presidential election.
  • The House Select Committee on the Jan. 6 attacks just ended its first season and concluded that President Donald Trump willfully refused to stop rioters from attacking the Capitol.
  • The House select committee investigating the January 6th insurrection has not yet announced witnesses for either Thursday's or next week's hearings.
  • On Thursday, Ryan Kelley was charged with four misdemeanors related to the attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. He's one of five candidates on the Republican primary ballot for governor.
  • The International Court of Justice ordered Israel to ensure its military does not take actions that violate the Genocide Convention, but the court did not call for a cease-fire.
  • Kassie Yeung traveled from Los Angeles to Seoul to remove a lock from a popular tourist attraction, where lovers leave padlocks. She went with a pair of wire cutters to remove the lock.
  • The same general area of Japan that was devastated by an earthquake and tsunami almost exactly one year ago was rattled again today. But authorities have canceled an earlier warning about a possible tsunamki.
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