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A war and conflict reporter comes home to the U.S. to report on social fragmentation. Luke Mogelson reported in Syria, Iraq, and Afghanistan. Then he opened his reporter's notebook in Michigan, Minneapolis, and Washington D.C. where he shot video from inside the capitol. We'll talk with him about his book The Storm Is Here: An American Crucible.
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Plus, Kevin Woster talks about election integrity and how the catchphrase helped tip the scales for Monae Johnson at the Republican state convention. What's next for current Secretary of State Steve Barnett?
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We speak with the granddaughter of South Dakota Hall of fame Inductee Grace Martin Highly. Highley was the first director of South Dakota Child Welfare and held that position for more than 2 decades.Plus, see artwork from Charles Schulz, the creator of the Peanuts up close in Aberdeen. This weekend is your last chance to see "Snoopy and the Red Baron" at the Dacotah Prairie Museum.
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Mark Shlanta dreamt of connecting every South Dakotan to a digital world at their fingertips. We talk about communication, broadband, and the vision of the late South Dakota Hall of Fame inductee
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NewsThe Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 moves to the U.S. House after passing the Senate, but our resident macro-economist is skeptical of its true impact. We talk with professor of economics at South Dakota State University, Joe Santos.
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NewsWe hear opposing viewpoints on abortion rights, we revisit juvenile justice reform, and Kevin Woster talks politics with his family ... and survives.
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He had me at VA.Well, he also kinda had me at “I’m big. I’m bald. I’m bold. And I’m here to build bridges for South Dakota.”
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An SDPB driveway moment has veteran journalist Kevin Woster pondering the conduct of South Dakota Attorney General Jason Ravnsborg in the days following the fatal crash for which he is currently facing an impeachment inquiry.
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It was to be my first professional massage. At age 70. To be clear, I wasn’t giving it. I was getting it.
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By Twitter. With a tweet. That’s how South Dakota senior U.S. senator, John Thune, announced on Saturday that he would run for a historic fourth term in the Senate.