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How ‘The Sympathizer’ confronts Hollywood’s version of the Vietnam War
But there was usually one thing missing from these Vietnam War stories: the Vietnamese perspective.
For Vietnamese Americans, like author Viet Thanh Nguyen, that experience left him feeling confused as a child.
In his Pulitzer-winning debut novel The Sympathizer, Nguyen filled that gap by telling the story of a Vietnamese double agent who struggled with his involvement in all parts of the conflict.
And with the release of a new HBO series adapting the story, one question arises: Can The Sympathizer subvert the long-standing narrative on the Vietnam war in Hollywood?
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As antisemitism grows, it is easier to condemn than define
The Anti-Defamation League says since then, antisemitic incidents in the US are up 361% over the same period a year ago. Both Congress and the White House have tried to address antisemitism in recent weeks, yet there’s still a debate about what it is.
Two journalists, who have been thinking and writing about antisemitism in the U.S. weigh in.
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The migrant aid group caught in a right-wing social media thread
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How this Girl Scout troop offers community to migrant children
The shelter has around 3,500 migrants, and all of the Girl Scouts are children of families seeking asylum. For the last few weeks, NPR’s Jasmine Garsd has been spending time with them, and brings us their their story.
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Have the new weight-loss drugs changed what it means to be body positive?
Over the last several years the body positivity movement has pushed back on that notion. But then came a new class of weight-loss drugs.
New York Magazine contributing writer Samhita Mukhopadhyay grapples with the possible future of a movement like this in her recent article, So Was Body Positivity All A Big Lie?
She joins All Things Considered host Juana Summers to discuss the ever-evolving conversation on health, size, and whose business that is in the first place.
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He may be a longshot, but Robert F. Kennedy Jr. could impact the election
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Critics hated ‘The Phantom Menace.’ It might be time to reconsider
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From utility man to one of California’s foremost journalists
But it was the buzzing newsroom that inspired SahagĂșn to soon spend his lifetime writing stories about the undiscovered characters and corners of California.
Now after 43 years, he’s retiring from the paper, and reflecting on what motivated him to cover a side of the Golden state that remained unknown to many.
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Israel seized control of the Rafah border crossing. The impact could be devastating
Rafah is the site of Israel’s latest campaign in its war against Hamas. It’s also home to some 1.3 million Palestinians. More than half of those people have fled fighting in other parts of Gaza.
On Monday night, Israeli tanks rolled into Rafah taking control of the Palestinian side of the border crossing with Egypt.
The seizure of the border crossing cuts a key supply line for humanitarian aid.
Israel says its incursion in Rafah is a “precise counterterrorism operation.” But possible further military action along with the closed border crossing could exacerbate a humanitarian catastrophe.
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