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  • Politics is a spectator sport in Louisiana, so it only makes sense that we talk about actual sports. Specifically, we'll examine how proposals dealing with taxes on sports betting and tax breaks for name, image and likeness (NIL) deals fared in this year's legislative session. We'll also hear from LSU's new interim LSU president, and we take a wide-angle view at the changes being forced on Planned Parenthood.
  • A Russian couple is seeking asylum in America over fears they could face punishment in their home country for their anti-Putin views. They took all the proper steps to enter the U.S., yet they were separated and placed in ICE detention when they appeared for their immigration appointment. More than a year later, they remain apart – with one of them held in Louisiana facing probable deportation.
  • On this week's episode, we venture onto the Pearl River, which flows through Jackson, Mississippi, down into southeastern Louisiana.
  • We'll share how Gov. Landry is giving the old college try to end what he considers “woke” college curricula. There could also be changes coming on campus for those lucrative name, image and likeness deals for student athletes. Plus, we're moving into peak hurricane season with a big question about what federal disaster response might look like under the Trump administration. One state isn’t happy about the answer they received.
  • New Orleans food writer Ian McNulty on a different way to appreciate how relationships run through local restaurants.
  • The Lemon Tree Mound is a sacred place for the Atakapa/Ishak-Chawasha tribe. And it's disappearing under the rising waters of the Gulf of Mexico. In this episode, we travel out into the bayous of South Louisiana to understand what this one small sacred place means for the Land Back Movement and climate justice, and why efforts to save our coast matter, even if they really mean only buying time.
  • Traditionally, union strikes have lasted until their demands were met. But in the last decade, unions have taken a new approach to strikes — making them shorter.
  • Reporter Drew Hawkins takes over this week’s episode to share an excerpt from his new podcast — Bitter Jaguar: The Shooting of Denver Smith and Leonard Brown.
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