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THE WEEKLY REVEAL

Saturday, June 06, 2026 

We Get It. You Don’t Trust Us.

Out of focus in the foreground, a male reporter in a suit and tie speaks with a microphone in hand. Behind him, a crowd of people, many wearing red MAGA baseball caps, appear to jeer and boo. One person holds up a handwritten sign that reads “CNN sucks.”

Sean Rayford/Getty

Listen to the episode
Every week, a group of men in their late 60s meets at the Corner Cafe in Elizabethtown, North Carolina. One important reason for these meetups is to discuss what’s going on in their community. 

Local news has virtually dried up in their rural county, as well as neighboring counties, and some residents say they’re being left in the dark and don’t feel equipped to make informed decisions.
    
“I’m not gonna vote if I can’t get the information,” says Penny Abernathy.

Like in much of the country, roughly two-thirds of North Carolina’s counties are considered news deserts. And the lack of local journalism isn’t just making it harder for people to stay informed; it’s exacerbating a crisis of trust in the news media. 

This week on Reveal, we partner with the podcast Scene on Radio and its hosts John Biewen and Chenjerai Kumanyika to understand how American journalism got here and what can be done to repair the cracked foundation of the Fourth Estate.
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🎧 Other places to listen: Spotify, Overcast, iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.

The Revolutionary Roots That Inspired Tupac Shakur

A young Black man holds a microphone to his mouth with his right hand as he gestures with his left hand. Shirtless, he wears baggy jeans over blue-and-red boxers that peek out, a blue bandanna tied around his head, and a cross with a gold chain that dangles from his neck. Among the tattoos on his arms and torso, the most prominent one, just above his belly button, reads “THUG LIFE.”

Raymond Boyd/Getty

It’s impossible to overstate rapper Tupac Shakur’s influence on music and culture in the 1990s. One of the era’s bestselling musical artists, Tupac helped define West Coast hip-hop through vulnerable, introspective lyrics and Black power politics. His death in 1996 at just 25 years old sparked conspiracy theories for decades and left his fans wondering what might’ve been.

By his own admission, sports writer Jeff Pearlman is not the rapper’s likeliest biographer. Pearlman typically profiles athletes like Barry Bonds or Brett Favre. But as he waited for what he called “the big, fat biography” of Tupac, his impatience and long-standing fascination with the rapper got the best of him. So he set out to write it himself.

“Tupac Shakur…was profoundly smart and in many ways incredibly enlightened, and there’s no reason he shouldn’t have his 12th Academy Award now,” Pearlman tells More To The Story host Al Letson, adding that both Tupac’s music and movies still resonate because they were a compelling combination of hip-hop and Black Panther.

On this week’s episode, Pearlman talks about his book Only God Can Judge Me: The Many Lives of Tupac Shakur; discusses how Tupac’s Black Panther mother, Afeni Shakur, shaped her son; and examines the nuance and mystery surrounding Tupac’s life and death almost 30 years later.

Find this episode wherever you listen to Reveal, and don’t forget to subscribe:

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In Case You Missed It

A young African American woman wearing a dark blue coat sits in a folding chair as she fills out her ballot on a table. Erected on the table are several white partitions that have a billowing American flag design on them with the word “Vote” underneath.

🎧 Why Conservatives Are Trying to Kill the Voting Rights Act


New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie examines the conservative movement’s yearslong effort to challenge the right to vote across the country.

Photo Credit: Kamil KrzaczynskI/AFP/Getty
A photo of people seated in orange life vests on a boat in the sea. One person at the far end of the boat stands with arms raised to the sky and a life preserver in one hand.

🎧 Fortress Europe: The Fight for Refugees in Greece


Reporters from the Berlin podcast studio Slowly Media take us to Greece, where refugees and human rights defenders face legal and sometimes physical attacks from authorities trying to seal the country’s borders.

Photo Credit: Aris Messinis/AFP via Getty Images
A photo of people seated in orange life vests on a boat in the sea. One person at the far end of the boat stands with arms raised to the sky and a life preserver in one hand.

🎧 911, Please Hold

America’s 911 dispatchers are straining under pressure, leaving thousands of callers waiting during emergencies.

Photo Credit: Marta Lavandier/AP

A young African American woman, with her hair in a dark blue silk bonnet, stands while holding a baby wrapped in a fuzzy, light green blanket.

🎧 Trump Destroyed USAID. Now People Are Dying.

ProPublica’s Brett Murphy and Anna Maria Barry-Jester examine how America’s foreign aid cuts are threatening the survival of the world’s most vulnerable populations.

Photo Credit: Per-Anders Pettersson/Getty

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This issue of The Weekly Reveal was written by Arianna Coghill and edited by Nikki Frick. If you enjoyed this issue, forward it to a friend. Have some thoughts? Drop us a line with feedback or ideas!
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