The Full Story
The Full Story is a lively digital news program that delivers intelligent conversation on what’s happening right now in our community. The host is Tom Kuser, WSHU’s long-time voice of Morning Edition. Tom explores the important issues our listeners care about and speaks to people who have the power to affect our daily lives, including local newsmakers, authors, historians, artists, and activists. Catch these fascinating conversations in our podcast and on the air during Morning Edition.
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Art can be more than an expression of beauty. It can challenge perspectives, change minds or even be a call to action. This week on The Full Story we feature three people who take art to the next level.
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How does a community recover from a tragedy? The residents of Newtown, Connecticut have carried the burden of the Sandy Hook School shooting for 10 years. This week, The Full Story will feature an encore presentation of a conversation with WSHU’s Davis Dunavin about his podcast: Still Newtown.
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Women are getting down to business in Connecticut, and there are funding programs ready to support their ventures.
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Sports are a way of life. But what happens when your ability to compete is different? This week on The Full Story we’re talking with people and athletes in our region who make sports accessible to everyone regardless of ability.
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We’re on a journey of scientific discovery. A discovery that will help deepen our understanding of pre-historic and modern life on earth.
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Connecticut and New York open their 2023 legislative sessions.
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This holiday week, we’re sharing two conversations that take us on a journey filled with ghostly apparitions, time travel, family secrets, and regicide.
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This December marks ten years since the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Newtown, Connecticut. We look at how the residents have strived to recover from the tragedy.
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Voters in Connecticut and New York not only chose candidates for federal and state office, but decided on major referendums as well.
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Candidates are not the only reason to go vote this November. Both Connecticut and New York have statewide referendums voters will consider.