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The Salt
10:12 am
Fri August 10, 2012

Smoked Chocolate, For National S'More Day And More

Credit Florangela Davila / NPR
Chocolate chips, fresh out of the smoker at Hot Cakes Molten Chocolate Cakery in Seattle.

Originally published on Mon October 15, 2012 10:57 am

It's National S'more Day, so you've got a good reason to indulge in the gooey goodness.

But what if you're nowhere near a campfire? How can you replicate the taste of a chocolate-marshmallow-graham cracker s'more fired up and fashioned en plein air?

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Author Interviews
4:45 am
Fri August 10, 2012

Dr. Siri Books Began With A Surprise Hospital Stay

Originally published on Fri August 10, 2012 6:28 am

Author Colin Cotterill believes in fate. Though he didn't know it at the time, fate seemed to determine early on that he would write the Dr. Siri books, a series of mysteries that follows a 70-something Laotian country coroner. (This piece initially aired August 15, 2008 on Morning Edition).

Poetry Games
3:22 am
Fri August 10, 2012

'Swim Your Own Race' Wins NPR's Poetry Games

Originally published on Fri August 10, 2012 1:24 pm

As athletes have sprinted and soared their way to bronze, silver and gold in London, Morning Edition has celebrated the Olympics with the Poetry Games: We invited poets from around the globe to compose original works about athletes and athletics and asked you to be the judges.

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Movies
5:17 pm
Thu August 9, 2012

In Times Of Drought, Movies Show Tenacity Of Life

Originally published on Fri August 10, 2012 11:02 am

The nationwide drought that has withered crops in more than 30 states shows no sign of letting up. But as Katharine Hepburn established in her film, The Rainmaker, that doesn't mean hope has to dry up.

"I dreamed we had a rain, a great big rain," she tells her brothers, only to be told that "a drought's a drought, and a dream's a dream."

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Media
5:17 pm
Thu August 9, 2012

Fox Pioneers Formula For Latino News

Originally published on Wed August 15, 2012 9:48 am

This is the first in a three-part series about major American networks trying to appeal to a broader Latino audience.

In a glass-walled conference room at Fox News in New York, reporter Bryan Llenas and two of his colleagues discuss the nature and success of their news site, Fox News Latino, largely aimed at English-speaking Hispanics.

Maybe a dozen feet away, two pundits can be seen heatedly arguing in a Fox News TV studio.

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