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00:24:12

Beauty and Beast Combined Is Sha’Carri Richardson

Sha’Carri Richardson electrifies every race with power, presence, and an unmistakable voltage. She’s the rare athlete whose elegance and ferocity merge into something the sport can’t look away from.
00:20:19

Shohei Ohtani: The Night He Became a Legend — and Bridge Between Two Baseball Worlds

Shohei Ohtani’s 10 strikeouts and 3 home runs in Game 4 sealed the Dodgers’ pennant, bridging Japan and America through one transcendent night of baseball.
01:28:50

Primatologist Jane Goodall’s Life, Science, and Impact on Conservation and Humanity

Jane Goodall, pioneering primatologist and global conservationist, has died at 91. Her groundbreaking chimp research and relentless activism reshaped science and inspired generations worldwide.
00:13:01

The Revolt That Wouldn’t Die: Kenya’s Gen Z vs. Debt, Corruption, and State Violence

Kenya’s youth ignited a finance bill revolt, braved bullets, and won. A year later, they march on—demanding justice for the dead and a democracy free from creditors and corruption.
00:20:02

Why Believing in Meritocracy Makes Inequality Worse

Meritocracy claims to reward effort, but often reinforces privilege. True opportunity demands equal starts. As inequality grows, the myth endures, masking the need for systems rooted in equity and access.
00:08:44

Chinatown USA: History, Adaptation, Gentrification, and the Road Ahead

San Francisco’s Chinatown embodies immigrant resilience—its preservation is a stand for justice, memory, and belonging as Chinatowns nationwide face renewal or erasure.
00:10:53

The Global Rise of Sponge Cities: A Natural Solution to Urban Flooding & Drought

Copenhagen’s sponge city approach shows what’s possible when cities stop fighting water and start designing for it, absorbing the impact of storms and floods instead of being overwhelmed by them.
00:57:10

La Raza Magazine: Covering the Chicano Movement from the Inside Out

Launched in 1967, La Raza used writing and photography, poetry and art to document struggle, amplify Chicano voices, and ignite grassroots change.
00:15:00

The Dark History of “Gasoline Baths” at the US-Mexico Border

In 1917, U.S. officials began delousing Mexican immigrants with toxic chemicals, a practice that sparked a mass protest led by 17-year-old Carmelita Torres, but continued for 54 years and later influenced Nazi methods.