Is It A Lizard? From the Showtime docu-series Love Fraud, directors Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady answer the most important question of all: Is it a lizard?
January 21st | The TV getting us through, and reacting to, the COVID-19 pandemic How much we do and don't want to see the pandemic reflected in our favorite TV. Tenants react to the extension of the federal eviction moratorium. And we talk policing and vaccines with Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan. Bill Radke
Is Covid-TV hitting a little too close to home? Okay, fine. Seattle Grace Hospital doctors were bound to face the pandemic. What about the other shows? Brandi Fullwood
With marriage and a gender transition behind them, they dined at Canlis After Maura Hubbell transitioned, her wife Lisa Jaffe couldn't find her "inner lesbian." This is the story of their marriage and the queerness of connecting after getting divorced. Lisa Jaffe
After Inaugural Performance, Poet Amanda Gorman Tops The Amazon Bestseller List Gorman's debut poetry collection and an illustrated kids' book are first and second on the list — on the strength of pre-orders, since both titles won't be out until September. Petra Mayer
A Different Day: A 2021 Poetry Preview, Part 2 Poetry helps us express feelings that don't fit neatly into sentences; confusion and fear but also hope and joy. Here's the second installment of our look ahead at the most exciting poetry of 2021. Craig Morgan Teicher
Farewell To Our Senior Arts Editor Tom Cole Tom Cole, senior editor on NPR's Arts Desk, is retiring after 33 years of shepherding thousands of art pieces to broadcast. NPR bids him farewell. Bob Mondello
Vanessa Kirby and Ellen Burstyn On The Trauma Of Child Loss In 'Pieces Of A Woman' NPR's Lulu Garcia-Navarro speaks with Vanessa Kirby and Ellen Burstyn about their new film, Pieces of a Woman, about a home birth gone terribly wrong and the destruction that follows.
Caro Verbeek: What Can The Scents Of The Past Tell Us About Our History? Each day, we breathe about 22,000 times--and all that time we smell. Scent historian Caro Verbeek recreates scents of the past. She says, just like music and art, smell is a part of our heritage. NPR/TED Staff
'Artists, Weirdos, Hellriders And Homies:' Thrasher Magazine Turns 40 Thrasher magazine was founded 40 years ago in San Francisco to cover skateboarding. Over the next four decades, the black-and-white newsprint magazine grew into a full color cultural arbiter. Milton Guevara