Religion reporter for The Washington Post
Michelle Boorstein on KCRW
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Buying on Amazon? Your money isn’t all going to the sellers
Business & EconomyAmazon has taken bigger cuts of each transaction over the past seven years, and its artificially low prices contribute to inflation, says a Columbia law professor.
To save more water and create more renewable energy, turn to solar canals
EnvironmentAbout 10% of the water shuttled through the LA Aqueduct gets lost to evaporation. To stop it, LA DWP wants to cover some of those miles of water with solar panels.
There’s 99% chance of COVID being aboard a plane, says doctor
TravelLA is experiencing another COVID surge. On an airplane of 50 passengers or in a restaurant of 20-30 diners, there’s a 90-99% chance that someone there has COVID, says Dr. Bob Wachter.
Broken EV charging station? These black women entrepreneurs can help
TechnologyThe founders of ChargerHelp! want to repair the nation’s electric vehicle charging stations while bringing equity to the workplace.
Replay: Get Sirius about space with JPL director, rent Mt. Wilson’s telescopes
ScienceGreater LA reairs its interview with Laurie Leshin, who formally started her job as JPL’s director in May.
Use TikTok and YouTube to make school more enjoyable, says professor
TechnologyMath scores for fourth and eighth graders have faced their steepest decline ever recorded, according to the National Center for Education Statistics.
The search for our psyches: A new path forward in treating mental disorders
Mental HealthWriter Daniel Bergner goes on a journey to better understand modern psychiatry, and discovers little has changed over the last 40 years when it comes to treatment.
Born & Razed: What’s the future of business, immigration, culture for Olvera Street?
HistoryOlvera Street is an LA tourist attraction that’s been around for 92 years. When it turns 100, will any of its legacy businesses still be here?
Meet LA’s Atheist Street Pirates who take down religious signs
ReligionLocal atheist volunteers started taking down illegally posted religious signs in public places less than a year ago. Now their plunders and crowdsourced maps are gaining traction.