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Humans are no longer the line judges at the U.S. Open
Electronic line judging has replaced humans at the U.S. Open. But the voices making calls are real people, recorded with varying levels of urgency to sell the call, depending on how close the shot is.
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•
3:58
The House Jan. 6 panel wants to talk to Trump ally Rep. Jim Jordan
Chairman Bennie Thompson's letter to Jordan asks for information and an interview to discuss his conversations with President Donald Trump on Jan. 6.
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•
3:11
South by Southwest: Silver Lining on Music Biz Cloud
Thousands of musicians, music industry insiders and fans descend on Austin, Texas, this week for the 18th annual South by Southwest festival. At a time when employee layoffs and declining sales plague the music industry, the festival continues to grow. NPR's Rick Karr reports.
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0:00
Frontier Airlines drops its customer service line
The budget airline says customers will no longer be able to call a live agent by phone. Frontier is encouraging customers to instead reach out by text, social media and WhatsApp.
'Ethical hackers' are a line of defense against criminal hackers
Some cyber professionals are taking steps to train others to spot system vulnerabilities.
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0:00
Nuon Chea, Top Khmer Rouge Leader, Dies At 93 While Serving Life Sentence
He was seen as a chief architect of the regime's brutal collectivist policies that led to the deaths of some 1.7 million people. He was found guilty of war crimes by a U.N.-backed tribunal last year.
Here's how Zohran Mamdani rose to top of New York City's Democratic mayoral primary
How did a little known assemblyman become the presumptive Democratic nominee for mayor of New York City? NPR's A Martinez talks to Bob Hardt, political director of the NY1 news channel.
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4:36
Here's what we've learned since the 1st Jan. 6 hearing
The Jan. 6 committee is wrapping up its summer series of made-for-TV hearings Thursday night. Here's a look back at all the bombshell details and the major revelations it's shared so far.
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7:53
Antonio Sanchez's 'Lines In The Sand' Is Inspired By Migrants' Stories
Drummer and composer Antonio Sanchez's album, Lines In The Sand, is a cinematic homage to the journeys of migrants heading to the U.S. border. It's a formidable, epic series of compositions.
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4:33
Proposed Power Lines Tangle With Native American History
The Bonneville Power Administration is trying to string a new transmission line project near a cave that contains ancient paintings. The site is considered sacred by Northwest tribes, and one landowner says, "These cultural sites are worth protecting."
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3:50
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