An award-winning chef offers a taste of Greenland's history and culture through food Chef Inunnguaq Hegelund has been working to preserve Greenland's indigenous food traditions and utilizing traditional ingredients, working to tell stories of the island's history through food. Juana Summers
'Last Seen': After slavery, family members placed ads looking for loved ones Formerly enslaved people would placed ads in newspapers hoping to find lost children, parents, spouses and siblings. Historian Judith Giesberg tells the stories of some of those families in a new book. Maureen Corrigan
Duolingo's owl mascot is alive after all. What did it gain from faking his death? Duolingo's mascot faked his death to get users to do their daily lessons, and attention from pop star Dua Lipa. Here's how he masterminded it — and why one expert sees the campaign as a success. Rachel Treisman
How 'Anora' breakout star Yura Borisov crafted a sensitive 'brute' Borisov, who plays the hired henchman Igor in Anora, is the first Russian actor to be nominated for an Oscar in decades. The film has a total of six nominations, including for best picture. Mandalit del Barco
Inside the Murdoch family's real-life 'Succession' drama Rupert Murdoch and his oldest kids are battling over who controls his media empire when the 93-year-old dies. The Atlantic writer McKay Coppins explains the stakes and how it could change Fox News. Dave Davies
Joy Reid fired from MSNBC amid network shakeup Reid is a longtime political commentator who has been vocal on progressive issues and sharply critical of President Trump. Alana Wise
'Most people are good': How a stranger's words became a family mantra On a flight home, Caitlin Shetterly told the man next to her that after 9/11, flying made her nervous. Then the man told her something she'll never forget: "Most people are good." Laura Kwerel
'Jesus Wept' author chronicles the debates roiling the Catholic church Philip Shenon talks about the past seven popes, and how efforts to reform the Church with the Second Vatican Council led to power struggles and doctrinal debates that lasted for decades. Dave Davies
After a tragic accident, a widow faces a lifetime of what-ifs Live Fast won France's top literary prize in 2022. Brigitte Giraud's haunting book revisits the death of her husband in a motorcycle crash 20-odd years earlier. John Powers