Beloved TV Reporter Broadcasts From Home to Help Children With Mr. Rogers-Like Lessons on Kindness
Steve Hartman is now taking his On the Road segment into the comfort of his own home so he can teach his fans a few lessons in kindness.
Steve Hartman is now taking his On the Road segment into the comfort of his own home so he can teach his fans a few lessons in kindness.
Spoiler alert: it is possible for spiritually-minded individuals to follow current events without feeling discouraged or depressed.
On June 6, a 60-minute special called, ‘Coming Together: Standing Up to Racism. A CNN/Sesame Street Town Hall for Kids and Families'.
After a Netflix documentary featured a brief interview with this heartbroken restauranteur, thousands of people opened their wallets.
Knowing that empowerment comes with the ability to read, journalist Swagat Thorat launched India's only newspaper for the blind. Now, twice a month, 24,000 blind individuals can read the news.
The Google fact check tool has proven to be extremely useful in helping readers decide what sources are accurate – and it's now available worldwide.
Journalists have to stick together in times of trouble.
This is the first complete study that has researched how the public can learn to fight and recognize fake news and science.
All you have to do to recycle this Japanese newspaper is tear it up, plant it in a pot, and water the remnants until they grow into gorgeous greenery.
Mainstream media can be more harmful to your health than you think, but here's how you can work against the nasty headlines.
The city workers responsible for "Pup View" hope that the fun feature will help bring in more tourism.
This hilarious story of a grandma taking down a bobcat proves that DeDe Phillips is the kind of hero that we need in these dubious times.
A group of refugees have been broadcasting a weekly program that is focused on messages of peace – and it has already made a difference in the camps.
Are you tired of seeing gloom and doom on your news feed? Then here are five stories to restore your faith in humanity.
Captain Herb Emory, the radio personality relied upon for Atlanta traffic updates, is being remembered this week as a caring, cheerful voice. The traffic reporter at WSB-750 AM for 23 years, Captain Herb died doing what he did every day, helping people.
If the old adage "you are what you eat" is true, then it also stands to reason that we are what we see as well.
When a volunteer first saw the flame-scarred nest west of Utah Lake he thought there was no way the eaglet could have survived. Mr. Keller climbed through the scorched landscape on June 28 to document the loss of the nest and unfledged baby. While standing there, taking in the devastation, Keller noticed a set of eagle legs behind a burned tree at the base of the cliff.
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