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  • Speech therapist Wendy Chase helps transgender people make their voices sound like their gender identity. She says how people communicate affects how they are perceived.
  • In a 1999 interview, Kongar-Ol Ondar demonstrates his ancient style of singing for Terry Gross.
  • British singer-songwriter James Hunter discovered his earliest musical influences in a stack of his grandmother's 78s, a collection of Jackie Wilson and other pre-Beatles R&B. His new CD sounds as if it could have been recorded in the 1950s but has a timeless feel.
  • Coca-Cola has reported disappointing second-quarter results, citing bad weather and weak global growth. But the company has been steadily losing consumers in the United States.
  • Films that focus on disability are frequently overlooked by festivals and audiences. Reelabilities, a 15-city festival, is bucking the trend, showcasing films by and about people with disabilities.
  • Missed social cues are awkward. But what happens when poor communication is a matter of life and death?
  • After a man took a gun to a pizzeria to investigate a fake conspiracy theory, psychology professor Viren Swami of Anglia Ruskin University in Cambridge, U.K. discusses why people are susceptible.
  • The main character in Halldor Laxness' novel Independent People is querulous, contrary, hard-hearted and stubborn — but author Christina Sunley can't get enough of him.
  • Twitter, Instagram and Facebook have changed the way we interact with advertising. What risks are involved, and how has social media become social marketing?
  • When coping with cancer, sometimes laughter is the best medicine. Kairol Rosenthal and Iva Skoch explain the phenomenon of "cancertainment."
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