
All Sides with Amy Juravich
Weekdays 10 a.m. to noon and 8 to 10 p.m. on 89.7 NPR News, also available as a podcast.
All Sides with Amy Juravich is WOSU Public Media’s daily news program that dives deep into issues important to Central Ohio. Hosted by Amy Juravich, All Sides explains how the most complicated issues affect our lives.
All Sides connects with listeners on air, on-line or on-demand via the All Sides podcast.
Join the conversation! Follow All Sides and Amy Juravich on Facebook, X, and Instagram.
Watch the video stream of All Sides, weekdays from 10 a.m. to noon.
Call in with a question or comment to All Sides at 614-292-8513. Questions or comments can also be shared through an email to allsides@wosu.org.
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Have you ever enjoyed a restaurant meal and thought, “I’d sure like to try this at home?”
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Columbus-based forensic psychologist Jeffrey Smalldon’s fascination with serial killers started early when as a college student he began writing to Charles Manson, and Manson wrote back to him.
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We’ll talk about what’s driving this trend, the careers Gen Zers are drawn to and what this means for the world of work.
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Author Erik Larson, one of the most popular authors of non-fiction history, joins us to discuss his new book The Demon of Unrest: A Saga of Hubris, Heartbreak, and Heroism at the Dawn of the Civil War.
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We’re talking about Ohio’s three C’s: Columbus, Cleveland and Cincinnati.
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The centers are supposed to create spaces for debate and civil discussion, as well as prepare students to become citizens.
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On Nov. 2, the Beers and Board Games Club of Columbus will host its 10th annual 24-hour game marathon, with all the proceeds going to Nationwide Childrens Hospital. The event demonstrates the ongoing popularity of board games.
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New investments in housing and development have taken place on Columbus’ South Side in recent years.
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As Brea Baker writes in her recent book, Rooted: The American Legacy of Land Theft and the Modern Movement for Black Land Ownership, she is "reconstructing a world where Black people thrive and relish in the fruit of our labor.”
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Seventy percent of teenage girls feel shame about their bodies. Three out of four executive women struggle with imposter syndrome, and many working mothers are embarrassed by their work-life balance.