-
Tom talks with Debbie Hines, the author of Get Off My Neck: Black Lives, White Justice, and a Former Prosecutor's Quest for Reform.
-
Midday theater critic J. Wynn Rousuck reviews Pride & Prejudice which runs at Baltimore Center Stage through November 10.
-
Here’s a stoop story from Sean MacDonald about that feeling you get from being watched, when no one is there ...
-
Secret knowledge and magic potions.
-
The Chesapeake Bay Foundation made Hilary Harp Falk president in 2022, only the third leader of the organization since its creation in the mid-1960s. She is looking for state and federal leaders to recommit to the bay's restoration.
-
The percentage of senior citizens in the United States continues to grow. There are more people over the age of 60 today that ever before. According to American Association of Retired People, senior citizens are remaining active in voting, participating in the national discourse, and contributing to decisions on public policy at the federal, state and local level.
-
All states should consider improving gun safety laws. Each year in America over 500 people die from accidental gun shot wounds. The GOOD News is that states like Minnesota, Illinois, Maryland, and Colorado have enacted new gun safety laws. These new laws will expand background checks before a gun purchase is permitted, bans on high-powered firearms, and restrictions on unregistered “ghost guns.”
-
Elizabeth Strout's latest book brings both familiar characters and news ones into focus as the author explores how we relate to each other, and the meaning of the unobserved life.
-
WYPR health reporter Scott Maucione shares an update on recent health news.
-
Recent reporting by The Washington Post found dangerous levels of understaffing and staff turnover at Clifton T. Perkins Hospital Center.
-
With early voting starting this week, Midday takes a look at Question 1 on Maryland's statewide ballot and the bond and charter amendments on the Baltimore City ballot.
-
Baltimore's mayor joins Tom Hall for another monthly conversation about key issues facing the city including trouble at the Baltimore Office of Promotion & The Arts, juvenile justice reform and the future of Harborplace.