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In The Groove: Sending love + music to musicians who lost their homes in LA wildfires

Real wild mix today that starts with FKJ & Bas before heading over to Gil Scott Heron’s forever important “Winter In America” and ending up with a lot of Prince (I’m still collecting myself after hearing his stripped down version of “17 Days” with just him, a mic and a piano).

I wanted to shout out some of the musicians who have lost their homes and their livelihoods in the Los Angeles wildfires, including John Carroll Kirby (with the aptly titled track “Rainmaker”) plus endlessly influential hip-hop producer Madlib and Detroit’s own Bennie Maupin, the multireedist jazz musician who famously appears on Herbie Hancock’s “Headhunters” album. 

Maupin, who has been a resident of Altadena for 30 years, was quoted in the New York Post: “I managed to get out. I lost all my instruments and all my music. All of that’s gone, but I’m still here.”

Madlib has a fundraiser going to help him and his family out via Donorbox.

Maupin has a fundraiser for him and his family via GoFundMe.

If you can support, I hope you do. I know it’s an amazingly small selection of artists who have been affected, but it’s something.

WDET’s Shigeto did a wonderful tribute to Los Angeles and its many musicians on The New Music Show — you can check that out here.

Check the playlist below and listen to the episode for two weeks after it airs using the player above.

In The Groove with Ryan Patrick Hooper playlist for Jan. 14, 2025

  • “Risk” – FKJ & Bas
  • “Winter In America” – Gil Scott Heron
  • “Rainmaker” – John Carroll Kirby
  • “What You Are” – Pete Brandt’s Method
  • “My Last Chance (SalaAM ReMi LP Mix)” – Marvin Gaye
  • “Lazarus” – David Bowie
  • “LUST.” – Kendrick Lamar
  • “Right” – David Bowie
  • “Love Is a Hurtin’ Thing (12″ Version)” – Gloria Ann Taylor
  • “Multi-Love” – Unknown Mortal Orchestra
  • “Too Good (Unknown Mortal Orchestra Remix)” – Arlo Parks
  • “Something, Anything” – STR4TA
  • “Gorgeous (Evm128 Remix)” – Detroit Rising
  • Let Your Hair Down (feat. Hutch the Great)” – Max Sinal
  • “17 Days (Piano & a Microphone 1983 Version)” – Prince
  • “Just Like a Baby” – Sly & the Family Stone
  • “Liquid Love (feat. Sylvia Cox)” – Roy Ayers
  • “We Are The Sun” – Sault
  • “Don’t Wanna Fight” – Alabama Shakes
  • “Wind Parade” – Donald Byrd
  • “Stepping Into Tomorrow” – Madlib
  • “Pop Life (12″ Version)” – Prince & the Revolution
  • “You’re Not In Love” – Carmen Lundy
  • “Nomalizo” – Letta Mbulu
  • “Road of the Lonely Ones” – Madlib
  • “Crime Pays” – Freddie Gibbs & Madlib
  • “Auditorium (feat. Slick Rick)” – Mos Def
  • “Accordion” – Madvillain
  • “Raid (feat. MED)” – Madvillain
  • “Umm Hmm” – Erykah Badu
  • “Anointed Soul” – Jahari Massamba Unit, Karriem Riggins & Madlib
  • “Watermelon Man” – Herbie Hancock & Headhunters

Listen to In the Groove with host Ryan Patrick Hooper weekdays from noon-3 p.m. ET on 101.9 WDET or stream on-demand at wdet.org.

Trusted, accurate, up-to-date.

WDET strives to make our journalism accessible to everyone. As a public media institution, we maintain our journalistic integrity through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today. Donate today »

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Detroit Evening Report: Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson eyes state’s top job

Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson — an early favorite to enter the race to become Michigan’s next governor — says she is considering a run for the state’s top position but right now is spending time talking with voters. 

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Fellow Democrat Gov. Gretchen Whitmer must step down in two years because of term limits. Benson says she’s held more than a dozen community conversations in towns scattered across the state.

“I’m really enjoying these conversations. I’m learning so much about where people are and what they want from their next governor,” she said. “And as those conversations conclude, then I’ll be making an announcement about my next steps.”

Many people in Michigan remain concerned about housing issues and the high price of goods and services, Benson said, adding that she remains a proud Democrat.

A potential rival gubernatorial candidate, Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan, is a long-time Democrat but recently announced he would run for governor as an independent.

-Reporting by Quinn Klinefelter, WDET

Other headlines for Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2024:

Do you have a community story we should tell? Let us know in an email at detroiteveningreport@wdet.org.

Trusted, accurate, up-to-date.

WDET strives to make our journalism accessible to everyone. As a public media institution, we maintain our journalistic integrity through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

Donate today »

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The Metro: How the Detroit Auto Show is shifting gears in an evolving market

The North American International Auto Show — rebranded last summer as the Detroit Auto Show — has long been a harbinger of innovation within the auto industry, drawing as many as 800,000 visitors to the city in the past.

Subscribe to The Metro on Apple PodcastsSpotifyNPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

But attendance at the Detroit show — as well as other large-scale auto shows around the world — have been in decline in recent years, highlighting the changing dynamics automakers are facing in a post-COVID, largely digital-centric world.

WDET reporter Alex McLenon and Automotive News Executive Editor Jamie Butters joined The Metro on Tuesday to discuss some of the reasons behind this decline in attendance and the changes they have seen over the years.

“I think when you think of the auto show, you think of the big different setups, the different flooring, different levels of cars, the turntables, the lights and stuff,” McLenon said. “That is noticeably less than it was like 15 years ago. But that shouldn’t really be news to anybody at this point. It’s kind of been like that for a while.”

Butters said a big part of the auto show has always been selling cars.

Related: Detroit Auto Show taking ‘hands-on’ approach to lure consumers in 2025

“At the auto show, they’re trying to give people experiences, right? If it’s not about the news, it’s about the consumers,” he said.

Use the media player above to hear the full conversation, and other stories from “The Metro.”

More stories from The Metro on Jan. 14, 2024: 

  • At one point, there were outdoor hockey rinks all over Detroit. But eventually, budgetary constraints came knocking and the city’s outdoor rinks were closed down. By 1992, there was only one outdoor rink left in the city  — at Clark Park in Southwest Detroit. Director of Clark Park Coalition Anthony Benavides was integral to saving the rink. He joined the show to talk about how they’re supporting young hockey players in the city. 
  • Michigan students with the greatest needs are more likely to be taught by inexperienced teachers or educators who aren’t certified to teach particular subjects, according to a new report from The Education Trust-Midwest. To discuss the organization’s findings and Michigan’s teacher shortage, Director of Policy and Research Jen DeNeal joined the show.
  • Every two seconds, someone in the U.S. needs blood or platelets. And one blood donation can help save more than one life. But medical experts say the blood supply is not diverse enough, lacking donations from underrepresented groups. Dr. Arun Shet, acting branch chief of blood epidemiology and clinical therapeutics at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, joined The Metro to explain the barriers that exist for people of different racial and ethnic backgrounds to donate blood.

Listen to The Metro weekdays from 10 a.m. to noon ET on 101.9 FM and streaming on-demand.

Trusted, accurate, up-to-date.

WDET strives to make our journalism accessible to everyone. As a public media institution, we maintain our journalistic integrity through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today. Donate today »

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Democratic US Sen. Gary Peters says he’s already working with former campaign foes

Many members of Congress are now working with colleagues they tried to help defeat in the recent election.

That includes Michigan’s senior U.S. Sen. Gary Peters, who led the effort to defend Democratic candidates in the Senate.

Peters recently supported GOP-sponsored legislation to expand detaining undocumented immigrants to those convicted of theft, what’s known as the Laken Riley Act. He also met with President-elect Trump’s nominee for U.S. Commerce Secretary.

In an interview with WDET, Peters discussed his efforts to reach across the aisle, as well as his legislative priorities around building a more resilient and self-sufficient U.S. supply chain.

Listen: Gary Peters discusses supply chain goals, finding common ground

The following interview has been edited for clarity and length.

Quinn Klinefelter, WDET: Do you get a sense that the incoming Trump administration will veer far away from the CHIPS Act and some of the other things the Biden administration was doing as it relates to manufacturing?

U.S. Sen. Gary Peters: I talked a fair amount about the CHIPS Act and understanding that you have to have secure supply chains. That it’s not just about final production in the United States, it’s the entire supply chain. We saw what happens when we are overly dependent on foreign chips. Every automobile is basically a computer on four wheels with a massive number of chips. When we had the shortage and disruptions in the supply chain during the pandemic, we saw parking lots filled with automobiles and pickup trucks and other vehicles that couldn’t be delivered because they were missing a few chips. We cannot be dependent on foreign manufacturers for vital components. That’s important. I stressed how the investments that are being made in the CHIPS Act is leading to greater self-sufficiency and resilience in the supply chain. He seemed to be open to that, but I think we have to continue to pressure the Trump administration to understand how important the entire supply chain is.

QK: As you know as well as anybody, one of the issues President-elect Trump was pushing on the campaign trail was trying to deport undocumented workers. They had the recent bill come up about the Laken Riley Act and you indicated you support that legislation. Why is that?

GP: We need to make sure our borders are secure and we have to protect Americans. Bottom line. And I think that’s a bill that we can find some common agreement on, that if people are committing crimes, they certainly should face consequences.

QK: Do you have any concerns that there should be a line drawn somewhere in terms of what they’ve talked about as a massive deportation effort?

GP: Certainly there are lines, there’s no question, but I think there are areas where we can find common ground. And undocumented people who are criminals certainly should not have any protections, they’ve committed a crime. But it is obviously different if we start looking at mass deportations. I’ll have to wait to see what that proposal is. But I think it’s important for us to find common agreement when we can. And when we can’t, certainly draw a very bright line.

QK: You talk about common ground. That’s not seemed to be easy to find politically for a while now. It seems to be so divided. From your interactions at the moment, how well do you think you can work with either the incoming congressional leadership from the GOP or with the people from the Trump administration?

GP: I’m always hopeful I can do that. Certainly in my past history, I’ve always been ranked as one of the most bipartisan senators. In fact, Georgetown University ranks bipartisanship and in the last Congress, I was the most bipartisan Democrat. The new majority leader, Sen. John Thune, is actually someone who I’ve worked with for many years on auto issues, particularly self-driving automobiles. Both Sen. Thune and I have been partners working to promote that technology and working closely with the auto industry. And I would expect that to continue.

QK: The Postmaster General had mentioned again the possibility of privatizing the U.S. Postal Service. Do you have any views about that, since you’ve been one of those that have been overseeing the agency for a while?

GP: Absolutely not. We’re not going to privatize the U.S. Postal Service. The USPS is actually written into the U.S. Constitution, that’s how important the Postal Service is. It’s the only place that delivers to every single address in the country. It’s absolutely vital to bind our country together and it needs to continue to exist as it is.

Read more:

Trusted, accurate, up-to-date.

WDET strives to make our journalism accessible to everyone. As a public media institution, we maintain our journalistic integrity through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

Donate today »

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Pete Hegseth vows to bring ‘warrior culture’ if confirmed as Trump’s defense secretary pick

WASHINGTON (AP) — President-elect Donald Trump’s choice for defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, vowed Tuesday to foster a “warrior culture” at the Pentagon, portraying himself as a “change agent” during a testy Senate confirmation hearing that drew an outburst of protest but also veterans supporting the pick.

Hegesth drew on his combat experience in the Army National Guard and did not initially address the allegations of sexual assault and excessive drinking against him as senators determine whether the veteran and TV news show host is fit to lead the U.S. military.

“It’s time to give someone with dust on his boots the helm. A change agent,” Hegseth said in opening remarks.

Asked directly about the sexual assault allegation, Hegseth dismissed it as a “smear campaign” as he portrayed himself as unfairly attacked. But he did not specifically address any of the accusations, or tell the senators that he did not drink or womanize.

Senators immediately began sparring, with the Republican chairman of the Armed Services Committee acknowledging the “unconventional” choice and the top Democrat warning of “extremely alarming” allegations against him.

Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., the chairman, compared Hegseth to Trump himself, dismissed the various allegations against him as unfounded and said he will “bring energy and fresh ideas to shake up the bureaucracy.”

But Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I. said flatly: “I do not believe that you are qualified to meet the overwhelming demands of this job.”

Hegseth’s experience in the Army National Guard is widely viewed as an asset for the job, but he also brings a jarring record of past statements and actions, including allegations of sexual assault, excessive drinking and derisive views about women in military combat roles, minorities and “woke” generals. He has vowed not to drink alcohol if he is confirmed to lead the Pentagon.

Trump backed his pick, saying Hegseth has “my Complete and Total support” in a morning post wishing the nominee “good luck.”

The hearing at the Senate Armed Services Committee is the start of a weeklong marathon as senators begin scrutinizing Trump’s choices for more than a dozen top administrative positions.

Hegseth is among the most endangered of Trump’s Cabinet choices, but GOP allies are determined to turn him into a cause célèbre for Trump’s governing approach amid the nation’s culture wars. Outside groups, including those aligned with the Heritage Foundation, are running costly campaigns to prop up Hegseth’s bid.

In the audience were cadres of men wearing clothing expressing support for veterans or service in the military, but also protesters who momentarily disrupted proceedings but were removed from the room.

The Republican-led Senate is rushing to have some of Trump’s picks ready to be confirmed as soon as Inauguration Day, Jan. 20, despite potential opposition to some from both sides of the aisle. With a narrow GOP majority, they need almost all Republicans to support Trump’s pick if Democrats oppose.

Hegseth faces perhaps the most difficult path to confirmation. He will be forced to confront allegations of sexual assault, which he has denied, and his own comments that are far from the military mainstream, though he has the support of some veterans’ groups that say his past indiscretions are not as important as his focus on improving military readiness to fight.

“He will be ripped. He will be demeaned. He will be talked about,” said Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., at an event with former Navy SEALs, Army special forces and Marines supporting the nominee. “But we’re going to get him across the finish line.”

And Hegseth will have to answer for his comments that women should “straight up” not be in combat roles in the military, a view he has softened following recent meetings with senators. Two former female combat veterans, Republican Joni Ernst of Iowa and Democrat Tammy Duckworth of Illinois, are among those grilling him from the dais.

“He can try to walk back his comments on women in combat all he wants, but we know what he thinks, right?” said Duckworth, an Iraq War veteran who lost her legs and partial use of her right arm when the Black Hawk helicopter she was piloting in the Army National Guard was shot down. “He’s the most unqualified person to ever be nominated for secretary of defense.”

Many senators have not yet met with Hegseth and most do not have access to his FBI background check, as only committee leaders were briefed on its findings. The background check on Hegseth appeared lacking, and did not probe or produce new information beyond what’s already in the public realm about him, according to a person familiar with the situation who insisted on anonymity to discuss it.

In many ways, the Hegseth hearing is expected to follow the template set during Trump’s first term, when one of his choices for Supreme Court justice, Brett Kavanaugh, came under intense scrutiny over allegations of sexual assault from his teens but recouped to win confirmation to the high court.

Kavanaugh vigorously fought back during a volcanic 2018 hearing, portraying the sexual assault allegations against him as a smear job by liberal lawmakers and outside groups opposed to his judicial record, turning the tables in a way that many senators credit with setting a new benchmark for partisanship.

Asked about advice for Hegseth, Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, referred to that earlier example.

“Go back and watch videos of the Kavanaugh hearings — give you a flavor,” he said.

Hegseth was largely unknown on Capitol Hill when Trump tapped him for the top Pentagon job.

A co-host of Fox News Channel’s “Fox & Friends Weekend,” he had been a contributor with the network since 2014 and apparently caught the eye of the president-elect, who is an avid consumer of television and the news channel, in particular.

Hegseth, 44, attended Princeton University and served in the Army National Guard from 2002 to 2021, deploying to Iraq in 2005 and Afghanistan in 2011 and earning two Bronze Stars. But he lacks senior military and national security experience.

In 2017, a woman told police that Hegseth sexually assaulted her, according to a detailed investigative report recently made public. Hegseth has denied any wrongdoing and told police at the time that the encounter at a Republican women’s event in California was consensual. He later paid the woman a confidential settlement to head off a potential lawsuit.

If confirmed, Hegseth would take over a military juggling an array of crises on the global stage and domestic challenges in military recruitment, retention and ongoing funding.

Besides being a key national security adviser to the president, the defense secretary oversees a massive organization, with nearly 2.1 million service members, about 780,000 civilians and a budget of roughly $850 billion.

The secretary is responsible for tens of thousands of U.S. troops deployed overseas and at sea, including in combat zones where they face attacks, such as in Syria and Iraq and in the waters around Yemen. The secretary makes all final recommendations to the president on what units are deployed, where they go and how long they stay.

The secretary’s main job is to make sure the U.S. military is ready, trained and equipped to meet any call to duty. But the secretary also must ensure that American troops are safe and secure at home, with proper housing, health care, pay and support for programs dealing with suicide, sexual assault and financial scams.

Pentagon chiefs also routinely travel across the world, meeting with international leaders on a vast range of security issues including U.S. military aid, counterterrorism support, troop presence and global coalition building. And they play a key role at NATO as a critical partner to allies across the region.

Reporting by Lisa Mascaro, Tara Copp and Matt Brown, Associated Press. Associated Press writers Lolita C. Baldor and Mary Clare Jalonick contributed to this report.

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Whitmer signs innovation bills in Detroit

Michigan businesses could get more help from the state with getting off the ground and with research and development under new laws signed Monday by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

One of the new policies allows companies to write off a portion of their R&D expenses on their taxes.

Businesses with at least 250 workers could receive a tax credit of up to $2 million per year. Smaller ones could claim a credit of up to $250,000 annually.

Michigan has been the only state in the Midwest that didn’t offer some sort of R&D tax credit.

State Rep. Alabas Farhat (D-Dearborn) said the new laws will help keep entrepreneurs from leaving the state.

“It’s causing a brain drain. It’s causing our best and brightest to start somewhere else. And what we’re doing is we’re creating an opportunity for our homegrown talent here in Michigan to stay in Michigan, to employ in Michigan, to invest in Michigan,” Farhat said during a bill signing in Detroit Monday.

Another new policy would form a new state fund to invest in other funds that, in turn, invest in start-up businesses.

$60 million in returns from those investments would then get funneled back toward the Michigan Innovation Fund Program each year to restart the cycle.

Whitmer called the Michigan Innovation Fund Program “fiscally responsible” and “great for taxpayers.”

“When we invest in an entrepreneur and their business makes money and creates jobs, it’s the people of Michigan who benefit. We’ll also put the money we invested right back into the innovation fund so we can help even more startups in a sustainable way,” Whitmer said.

Both policies received bipartisan support on their journey through the state Legislature. But they also received criticism from both sides of the aisle.

Critics argued the state shouldn’t be giving profitable companies money.

Monday also marked Whitmer’s first time taking questions from media at an event since the last legislative session sputtered out.

The messy end in the Michigan House left a handful of bills still waiting to be sent to her desk by the time Republicans took control of the chamber last week.

They deal with topics like retirement plan options for corrections officers, insurance premiums for state employee health plans, and tax millages for history museums.

Republican House Speaker Matt Hall (R-Richland Twp) told reporters last week that he instructed the House clerk to hold off on forwarding the bills to Whitmer once he took charge, saying he wanted to make sure there weren’t “technical problems” with them.

Whitmer, a Democrat, said she’ll wait to see what Hall decides what to do.

“I’m not going to prejudge what is happening with the bills. I know that Speaker Hall has said they’re doing a legal review that’s in his purview. He’s now the speaker of the House. But we’ll continue to wait and expect those bills shortly I would imagine,” Whitmer said.

The state constitution requires bills passed by the legislature go to the governor. But it doesn’t say anything about a timeline.

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Donate today »

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Detroit Evening Report: State program aims to improve mental health services for Medicaid, Medicare patients

Michigan is working to streamline behavioral health care for Medicaid and Medicare patients with mental health or substance use disorders. 

Subscribe to the Detroit Evening Report on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, NPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

Megan Groen, Michigan’s Medicaid director, says the state received a $7.5 million grant to implement the changes over the next eight years. 

“You know, Medicaid and Medicare populations experience a disproportionately high rate of mental health conditions, substance use disorder or both, and as a result, they’re more likely to experience more health outcomes, such as frequent visits to the emergency department, hospitalization,” she said.

Groen says the CMS model hopes to provide a more personalized integrated care to reduce emergency room visits and improve behavioral and physical health outcomes. 

The department also hopes to address health-related social needs such as housing, food and transportation. 

Other headlines for Monday, Jan. 13, 2024:

  • The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) is looking for people to join its Social Determinants of Health Hubs Advisory Council. The council is a part of Michigan’s Roadmap to Healthy Communities, which provides recommendations to improve health and well-being. Applications are due by Friday, Jan. 17. Meetings will be held virtually, starting in February 2025 through December.
  • Dearborn Heights homes and businesses will be getting new high-tech water meters to replace ones that are over 60 years old, thanks to state and federal grant funding. The replacements will begin this month and take about 24 months to complete.
  • Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel is warning residents about possible parking scams around the Detroit Auto Show, taking place now through Jan. 20 at Huntington Place in Detroit.
  • The Association of Chinese Americans is hosting a Lunar New Year Community Fair in Detroit from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Feb. 2, in Shed 4 of Eastern Market.
  • Several Asian American organizations are coming together to host a virtual presentation to prepare immigrants for policy changes proposed by the incoming Trump administration. The Asian Americans Advancing Justice Affiliation will go over potential immigrant policy changes and share key information impacting AAPI communities during a webinar set for 6:30 p.m. Jan. 21.

Do you have a community story we should tell? Let us know in an email at detroiteveningreport@wdet.org.

Trusted, accurate, up-to-date.

WDET strives to make our journalism accessible to everyone. As a public media institution, we maintain our journalistic integrity through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

Donate today »

The post Detroit Evening Report: State program aims to improve mental health services for Medicaid, Medicare patients appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Acoustic Café: In-studio guest John Moreland discusses a year unplugged

On this week’s episode of Acoustic Café, Oklahoma songwriter John Moreland returned after throwing away the smartphone for a year and reconnecting with “real life” on a new album called “Visitor.”

Also, in-studio performances from Sara Watkins, Jack Johnson, a Dylan classic about to turn 50 and more — plus milestone birthdays on the way in 2025!

See the playlist below and listen to the episodes on-demand for two weeks after it airs using the media player above.

Acoustic Café Playlist for Jan. 4, 2025

  • “Million Dollar Intro” – Ani DiFranco
  • “Take Me In Your Arms (Rock Me)” – Lamont Dozier ft. Marc Cohn
  • “Run” – TopHouse
  • “Punisher” – Phoebe Bridgers
  • “The Baton” – Katie Gavin
  • “Any Old Time” – Sara Watkins
  • “Crawling Back To You” – Kathleen Edwards
  • “The More You Say, The Less It Means” – John Moreland (in-studio performance)
  • “One Man Holds The World Hostage” – John Moreland (in-studio performance)
  • “C’est La Vie” – Jade Bird (in-studio performance, 2024)
  • “Me In 20 Years” – Moses Sumney
  • “Big Sur” – Jack Johnson
  • “Mudfootball” – Jack Johnson (in-studio performance, 2004)
  • “Happy New Year” – Arny Margret
  • “Lover Take It Easy” – Bonny Light Horseman
  • “I’ll Go Anywhere” – Mustafa
  • “Atom Bomb” – Bully
  • “Working For The Enemy” – Peter Case (in-studio performance, 1995)
  • “Tangled Up In Blue (Take 3)” – Bob Dylan (Blood On The Tracks turns 50!)
  • “You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome…” – Shawn Colvin
  • “My Name” – Kara Jackson, Ahya Simone, Dirty Projectors
  • “Overlord” – Dirty Projectors (in-studio performance, 2020)
  • “Gentle Violence” – John Moreland (in-studio performance)
  • “Visitor” – John Moreland (in-studio performance)

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In The Groove: Japanese Breakfast previews new album; music from Mogwai, Rich Ruth + more

We’re back In The Groove with new music from Japanese Breakfast, Mogwai, Goat Girl, Rich Ruth, Lightning Bug and more.

Check the playlist below and listen to the episode for two weeks after it airs using the player above.

In The Groove with Ryan Patrick Hooper playlist for Jan. 13, 2025

  • “Searching” – Black Vandross
  • “Better” – Joy Orbison & Léa Sen
  • “AA   BOUQUET   FOR   YOUR   180   FACE” – Saya Gray
  • “She’s Coming” – The Gaslamp Killer & The Heliocentrics
  • “Satin Curtains” – Molly Lewis
  • “God Gets Your Back” – Mogwai
  • “A.M. 180” – Grandaddy
  • “One” – Ahmad Jamal & Gary Burton
  • “Road Head” – Japanese Breakfast
  • “Orlando In Love” – Japanese Breakfast
  • “Boyish” – Japanese Breakfast
  • “Ride Around” – Goat Girl
  • “Like I Say (I runaway)” – Nilufer Yanya
  • “No Muscle, No Memory” – Rich Ruth
  • “Automoton” – Ash Walker
  • “Give It To Me Baby” – Jarina De Marco
  • “Huarache Lights” – Hot Chip
  • “I Will Run” – Ibibio Sound Machine
  • “A Figure In The Surf” – Mount Kimbie
  • “I Feel…” – Lightning Bug
  • “Thank You Deeply” – Mystery Tiime & The Maghreban
  • “Before You Gotta Go” – Courtney Barnett
  • “Take Me” – Scout laRue Willis
  • “Carry Me Higher (7 Inch Version)” – The Blessed Madonna, Joy Anonymous & Danielle Ponder
  • “7 AM” – Jacqueline Taïeb
  • “The Call Up” – The Clash
  • “Rain Can’t Reach Us (feat. Tony Allen)” – Yannis and the Yaw
  • “Enjoy The Silence” – Depeche Mode
  • “Song of hope” – Nicolas Jaar
  • “The Bug” – Crumb
  • “Cécile” – Edouard Ferlet
  • “Over When It’s Over” – Lucy Rose
  • “Inside And Out” – Feist
  • “Mad (Young Franco Remix)” – Hope Tala
  • “I’m Gonna Dance (Jitwam Remix)” – Asha Puthli
  • “Movementt” – Emma-Jean Thackray

Listen to In the Groove with host Ryan Patrick Hooper weekdays from noon-3 p.m. ET on 101.9 WDET or stream on-demand at wdet.org.

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

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The Metro: Is owning a home still part of the American dream?

Owning a home has been a symbol of achievement in this country for generations. It’s the most common way to accumulate wealth, but home prices surged during the pandemic and haven’t come down.

The cost of buying a home has made younger generations look at homeownership differently. Sixty percent of Americans don’t believe homeownership is worth the return on investment it once was, according to a Harris Poll

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Today on The Metro, Thomas Sugrue, professor of social and cultural analysis and history at New York University, joined the show to discuss this trend and why the demand for homes is outpacing the supply.

“A lot of folks who have the good fortune of buying houses and getting mortgages on them when interest rates were low are hanging on,” Sugrue said. “They’re not letting go of their houses, because ultimately it would cost them to get new higher interest rates and move elsewhere.”

With all the additional costs that come with homeownership, there are a lot of homeowners in the city that may be better off renting, says Anika Goss, CEO of Detroit Future City — an organization working to create more opportunities for residents to become homeowners.

“There are a lot more costs than just the cost of the home itself that goes into ownership — the maintenance costs, taxes, all of that,” Goss said. “But at the same time trying to find and trying to create pathways for long-term renters — so that people who are renting, you know, for five years, 10 years, or a lot of people who rent like that, they should probably be owners at this point.”

Use the media player above to hear to hear the full conversation, and other stories from “The Metro.’

More stories from The Metro on Jan. 13, 2024: 

    • The Detroit to Traverse City passenger rail study has entered its second phase. Transportation Specialist with Groundwork Center Michael Goldman Brown joined the show to discuss the project and what’s been done so far.
    • This March marks five years since the COVID-19 pandemic caused officials to shut the country down. While COVID-19 is still here, there are other viruses getting the attention of physicians this season as well, including Norovirus and the H5N1 Bird Flu. To discuss this, Wayne State University infectious diseases professor Dr. Teena Chopra joined the show.
    • The Department of Housing and Urban Development has awarded the city of Detroit $346 million to prevent basement flooding. Mayor Mike Duggan says some of the grant money will be used to repair outdated sewer infrastructure that led to severe flooding for many residents. Professor of Environmental Law and Interim Dean of the University of Detroit Mercy School of Law Nick Schroeck joined the show to discuss.

    Listen to The Metro weekdays from 10 a.m. to noon ET on 101.9 FM and streaming on-demand.

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    L.I.V.E. Outreach wants to hit the road and help young Detroiters

    There are challenges young people and their families are facing daily — often invisible ones. And no matter how you look at it, the same conditions don’t apply across the board. 

    L.I.V.E. Outreach is a community organization working to empower Detroit youth to be the best versions of themselves. Right now, the group is on the hunt for funding to support its efforts to launch a mobile unit that will bring much needed support to young people and their families in the city. 

    The organization’s founder, Malika Williams, joined The Metro last week to discuss the project.

    She says they have already begun the process of retrofitting a 14-person bus into a mobile unit with the help of University of Detroit Mercy, which will provide everything from fresh fruit and toiletries to books, clothing and other household items residents may need.

    A rendering of L.I.V.E. Outreach's mobile unit.
    A rendering of L.I.V.E. Outreach’s mobile unit.

    “The transportation barrier has been another [problem] for our kids and our families,” she said. “So we want to kind of be able to pull up, you know, even if it’s at the park or, you know, at a school, at a library, where we know the families are. That way it wouldn’t limit us and also that will put us where our overhead is low.”

    For more information about L.I.V.E Outreach, visit theliveoutreach.org.

    Click here to listen to the full conversation from “The Metro” on Jan. 6, 2024, beginning at the 39:10 mark.

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    Former Wayne State governor Paul Massaron dies at 80, university reports

    Paul Massaron, a former member of the Wayne State University Board of Governors twice elected by Michigan voters, has died at 80 years old, the university reported Monday.

    Massaron served on the board from 2001 to 2016, and was known by his colleagues as a “tireless advocate” for the university with “exceptional negotiation skills and the ability to bring people together.”

    Paul Massaron
    Paul Massaron

    Prior to serving on the board, he worked in labor relations, contract negotiations, arbitration and political action at the United Auto Workers Local 400 for more than 30 years.

    During his time on the university board, Massaron served as chair of the budget and finance and health affairs committees, where his “contributions were instrumental in shaping the university’s success and growth during his tenure,” said WSU President Kimberly Andrews Espy in an emailed statement.

    The board established the Paul E. Massaron Endowed Scholarship upon his departure in 2016 to support students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences’ Labor Studies program.

    “On behalf of the entire leadership team, I share our profound gratitude for Paul’s many years of service,” Espy said. “We extend our deepest condolences to the Massaron family, including his son, David, who served as Wayne State’s chief business officer, CFO/senior vice president for finance and business operations, and treasurer until December 2023.”

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    ‘Made in Bangladesh’ cookbook highlights stories from Bangladesh, home kitchens 

    Metro Detroit has a growing Bangladeshi population. That’s why there’s more interest in the region’s culture and food. 

    Dina Begum is a U.K.-based food writer and the author of the Bangladeshi cookbook, “Made in Bangladesh: Recipes and Stories From a Home Kitchen,” which features 76 recipes from the country’s eight divisions.

    “It was so important to preserve these recipes that have been passed down through generations, from my grandmothers, from my mum, my aunties,” she said. “Similarly, with a lot of the Bangladeshi diaspora — who have kind of grown up abroad — it’s important to preserve those recipes and share them with people who don’t know much about Bangladeshi cuisine.

    Begum says she’s been compiling these recipes in her head since she was a child. Begum moved from Sylhet, Bangladesh to the U.K. when she was four years old with her family.

    "Made in Bangladesh: Recipes and stories from a home kitchen."
    “Made in Bangladesh: Recipes and stories from a home kitchen.”

    She says the book shares memories of her childhood watching her family members whip up Bangladeshi foods in U.K. kitchens, and a summer in Bangladesh watching how people make meals from farm to table.

    “Everything that we had was fresh, kind of just harvested and cooked, the style of cooking was different. So even though we had traditional food in the U.K., the flavors and the way it was cooked and just the stories around them, families gathering, I just love the whole culture of it,” she said.

    The book features the six original seasons of Bangladesh, the festivals, culture, and how intrinsic food is to those activities.

    She also features dishes from the eight divisions of Bangladesh: Barishal, Chittagong, Dhaka, Khulna, Rajshahi, Rangpur, Mymensingh and Sylhet.

    “It was important to showcase special specialties from different regions to people who are new to Bangladeshi cuisine,” she said. “We’ve got a range of dishes from the north, south, east, west.” 

    Begum recently traveled to Bangladesh to do research for her new book, to test her recipes and learn more about the various regional dishes.

    She says this book is for people who are familiar with Bangladeshi food, but also for those who are curious about the cuisine. 

    “I didn’t grow up seeing a lot of Bangladeshi culture represented, and then I thought this would be an opportunity to present that to people that, not only people that I know, but people internationally, people who are not Bangladeshi, who want to find out more about Bangladeshi cuisine,” she says.

    Begum says there’s an expanding interest in Bangladeshi cuisine, with an increase of Bangladeshis migrating to the U.K. who are in search of homemade foods, along with the rise of social media bloggers in the U.K.

    She says many Bangladeshis owned Indian restaurants in the U.K. in the 1960s and 1970s, when the country was still a part of India, contributing dishes like the U.K.’s national dish, chicken tikka masala.

    “At one point, we had over 50 restaurants along Brick Lane Bangladeshi owned restaurants and run by Bangladeshis. But sadly, they didn’t often sell Bangladeshi food, which was partly due to the fact that when they started opening, it wasn’t Bangladesh,” she said. 

    Bangladesh gained independence from India in 1971.

    “Often it’s Bangladeshis that started these businesses, but the cuisine or heritage is nowhere to be seen. So it was important to me to highlight that,” she said.

    A picture of bhortas featured in the book.

    Begum says that cuisine is what Bangladeshis eat at home, and is oftentimes not found in restaurants.

    But she says that’s slowly changing, adding that as a food writer, she’s noticed a shift in the past 15 years or so.

    “Now I can see more kind of Bangladeshi restaurants popping up. There’s a smaller kind of eateries owned and run by Bangladeshi that sell kind of home-cooked style foods,” she said.

    She says people are also hosting super clubs, and pop-ups, and writing about the food, and posting it online.

    “Mothers at home, sometimes they don’t speak English, but it’s an amazing way for them to kind of share the food that they, you know, create every day. And through that, people kind of engage with the content,” Begum said.

    She says tourism to Bangladesh has also spiked a curiosity in people. 

    “Vloggers going to Bangladesh as a tourism has also kind of influenced that as well as people’s interest in Bangladesh cuisine,” she said.

    Begum says the book was a labor of love, from figuring out measurements for ingredients to researching stories behind the recipes.

    “I’ve tried to keep them as traditional as possible how my mother or grandmother used to cook. So obviously, it’s easier for the home cook to cook. And also, I guess the challenge was to try and write everything down, measure them, time them, which is not the way I grew up cooking,” she says. “Everything was kind of through andaaz or estimation, And it’s a way you feel your way around the kitchen. You kind of know when something’s cooked, when it’s how something smells or something looks, there’s no timers, there’s no, you know, weights, measurements, nothing in the Bangladeshi kitchen,” she said.

    Begum says the book is a love letter to herself and others.

    “I wanted [people] to open the book and just feel happy looking at it, you know, wherever they came from,” she said. “And also trying to include some Bangla in there as well, in terms of the season’s name and the map. So just to put that in there so people can see, you know, how beautiful Bangla looks.”

    Begum is also the author of, “The Brick Lane Cookbook.” The book can be purchased here

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    Hearing scheduled for proposed gift disclosure rules

    A date has now been set for a hearing on proposed rules to close a potential loophole around lobbyist gift laws in Michigan.

    Michigan law bans lawmakers and other public officials from accepting gifts, like concert and sports tickets, from lobbyists if the value is above a certain amount determined each year.

    For 2025, that amount is $79 per month.

    The concern, however, is that officials have been accepting those gifts anyway with the promise of reimbursement for the difference between the actual gift value and the legal limit.

    “If a public official wants to pay the Detroit Lions, Tigers, Pistons, Red Wings, or Fisher Theatre, etc., directly for a ticket out of the public official’s candidate committee by finding a way to categorize that payment as an incidental expense, maybe legal, however, the lobbyist or lobbyist agent shouldn’t be allowed to play Ticketmaster, by delivering the ticket to the public official and be the one reimbursed,” mid-Michigan attorney Bob LaBrant wrote in a request for the state to step in.

    In August, state elections officials answered requests from LaBrant and the Michigan Association of Health Plans.

    The interpretive statements moved to end the reimbursement practice and add more guidance to lobbying groups that seek to pay for officials to travel and attend conferences.

    Christina Hildreth Anderson is chief of staff for Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson.

    “Allowing the cost of a gift to be allocated across multiple parties, be they lobbyists or public officials, cannot circumvent the gift ban and in doing so would frustrate the purposes of the Lobby Act,” Hildreth Anderson wrote in a response to LaBrant.

    Now, the state is trying to codify that stance into an official administrative ruleset, to further cement it.

    The next step in that process is a public hearing set for Tuesday, March 18.

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    Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music: Some Hendrix tracks and covers, car songs + more

    On this episode of Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music, new Father John Misty, Waxahatchee, and lots of Hendrix and Hendrix covers. Plus, Detroit’s Mayer Hawthorne, Speed Circuit and loads more! See the playlist below and listen to the episode for two weeks after it airs using the media player above.

    Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music Playlist for Jan. 11, 2025

    • “The Wind Cries Mary” – Seal
    • “Same Old Song” – The Lumineers
    • “Chaise Longue” – Wet Leg
    • “Are You Experienced?” – Jimi Henrix
    • “Angels Falling From Heaven” – Laura Rain & The Caesars
    • “Partner In Crime” – Lucy Dacus
    • “Orlando In Love” – The Japanese Breakfast
    • “All Along The Watchtower” – Michael Hedges
    • “I Guess Time Makes Fools Of Us All” – Father John Misty
    • “Lucky” – Erika De Casier
    • “Evil Spawn” – Waxahatchee
    • “Getting Older” – Gary Louris
    • “Waiting For The Sun” – The Jayhawks
    HOUR TWO:
    • “Ezy Ryder” – Jimi Hendrix
    • “Hey Joe” – Steve Earle (Acoustic Cafe in-studio performance @ Electric Lady)
    • “Golden” – Elmeine
    • “Swamp Dream #3” – Everything Is Recorded
    • “The Pool” – Mayer Hawthorne
    • “Jimmy Carter” – Blue Mountain
    • “Die Slowly Without Complaint” – Amythyst Kiah
    • “Roots” – Cautious Clay
    • “Lucky Breaks” – Speed Circuit
    • “Angel” – Jimi Hendrix
    • “Motor City Steel” – The Dandy Warhols
    • “Make Out In My Car” – Moses Sumney
    • “Wrap It Up” – Sam & Dave (RIP Sam Moore)

    Listen to Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music every Saturday from 2-4 p.m. ET on Detroit Public Radio 101.9 WDET and streaming on-demand at wdet.org.

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    State faces rosier revenue, budget picture with new projections

    Michigan’s employment and earnings numbers are coming in better than expected, which also means a likely windfall to help pay for K-12 schools, public universities, community colleges and state government. That determination was made Friday by a panel of state budget officials.

    Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and the Legislature are required to use the numbers adopted by the Consensus Revenue Estimating Conference. It looks like they’ll have a little short of $33.2 billion to work with in the coming fiscal year. That is $770.4 million more than was anticipated.

    Jen Flood, the Democratic governor’s budget director, said a lot of economic indicators are pointed in the right direction.

    “Inflation is down, more people are working, and incomes are up,” she said. “Our strong economic growth means that we’re well positioned heading into 2025.”

    State Treasurer Rachel Eubanks, who also works for Whitmer, said whether that surplus holds will depend a lot on actions by the incoming administration of President-elect Donald Trump.

    “We will continue to watch very closely what happens at the federal level, especially as it relates to tax and trade policy and how that can potentially uniquely impact Michigan,” she said. “But we don’t have a crystal ball, so we do our very best to forecast revenues based on what we do know.”   

    Many Republicans say they would like to see that surplus directed toward fixing roads and a tax cut.

    “If we’ve got another billion in projected revenue that’s great, but it’s not a license to spend frivolously,” said Rep. Joe Aragona (R-Clinton Township). “There is still a lot of waste in the budget that we need to cut, and we should be looking for a way to return some of the surplus to the people of Michigan.”

    The GOP negotiating position is significantly improved in this session with the Republican takeover of the Michigan House Representatives. The Senate remains in Democratic control.

    Read more:

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    MichMash: State lawmakers return to Michigan Capitol for first day of new session

    The state’s 103rd Legislative session began on Wednesday, with Republicans taking the majority in the House of Representatives. But Democrats still hold a majority in the state Senate, requiring bipartisan efforts in the Legislature to get bills passed into law.

    This week, MichMash host Cheyna Roth and Gongwer News Service’s Zach Gorchow discuss the first day back in session and some of the new legislative developments being drafted. Then, Gorchow sits down with Republican state Rep. Joseph Aragona to discuss his goals for this new Legislature and the likelihood for bipartisanship.

    Subscribe to MichMash on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, NPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

    In this episode:

    • House Republicans’ legislative priorities this session
    • Likelihood of movement on FOIA expansion bills
    • Republicans’ focus on government oversight

    Roth noted that a coveted spot for a bill is to be House or Senate Bill No. 1, and this year’s Senate Bill 1 is Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) expansion — something we’ve talked about a lot on this show

    It’s an issue that was killed during lame duck last year, and one that Gorchow said is hard to be optimistic about this session after multiple terms of inaction and with Republicans in control of the House.

    “When a minority party becomes the majority party, they often get cold feet about this idea. See the House Democrats last term,” Gorchow said, adding that there are no firm commitments from House Republicans yet on this issue.

    Still, Gorchow said, it’s “a clear message from the Senate that they want this done quickly.”

    Aragona, a second term House Republican serving Clinton Township in Macomb County, says while he’d be supportive of FOIA expansion, his priorities this year will revolve around updating Michigan’s tipped wage and sick leave policies, as well as on expanding government oversight via the House Oversight Committee.

    “We’re trying to bring a higher value for the tax dollars that people give state government throughout Michigan,” Aragona said, referring to House Republicans’ oversight priorities. “These subcommittees are meant to try and encompass the breadth of state government, and [to address] issues we’ve seen in the past where we haven’t gotten answers.”

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    Detroit Evening Report: City announces road closures, free transportation during Detroit Auto Show

    The city of Detroit is providing convenient parking, free transportation and more for the 2025 Detroit Auto Show, taking place now through Jan. 20.

    Subscribe to the Detroit Evening Report on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, NPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

    Those attending the show can park at a city parking facility, private garage/lot or street parking meter close to a People Mover station and ride for free to the Huntington Place station.

    The People Mover will also be operating earlier on the weekends during the Detroit Auto Show, from 6:30 a.m. to midnight Monday through Friday and 8 a.m. to midnight Saturday and Sunday.

    Individuals can also park anywhere along the Woodward Corridor between New Center and downtown and ride the QLine for free and get dropped off two blocks from Huntington Place.

    The city is also restricting traffic in certain areas around the auto show,  including on Washington Boulevard, Atwater, Shelby, Bates, Congress, Fort, Griswold, Cass and westbound Jefferson.

    For more information about traffic and transportation during the Detroit Auto Show, visit the city of Detroit’s website.

    Other headlines for Friday, Jan. 10, 2024:

    Do you have a community story we should tell? Let us know in an email at detroiteveningreport@wdet.org.

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    The Metro: Tips for thriving and surviving in the winter

    We’re a little over a week into the new year and there’s at least one thing that’s notable about it so far: It is COLD. 

    The freezing weather we’re experiencing now is part of a broader cold front hitting the midwest and east coast. Winters have been getting warmer on average, due to climate change, but the nature of our changing climate means the weather shifts to the extremes. 

    Today on The Metro, we heard from experts and listeners on how to best navigate the coldest months. 

    Holli-Anne Passmore, an associate professor and department chair of psychology at Concordia University of Edmonton, joined the show to talk about the psychological benefits of connecting with the natural world, even in the winter.

    “There’s also something called nature connectedness, and that’s about the quality of your relationship with the natural world,” Passmore said. 

    Ian Solomon, founder of Amplify Outside and communications and engagement manager for the Detroit Parks Coalition, also joined the discussion. Amplify Outside works to remove barriers that prevent people from enjoying the outdoors. 

    “The land moves with the seasons, the city does not. So you really have to give first, give yourself grace that you are expected to move at a pace that is unnatural,” Solomon said. “All of us are moving in an unnatural way right now, and we do it every year for four months straight. And so we have to first accept and say, I’m not the problem.”

    We also asked our listeners:

    “What do you enjoy doing in the winter months?”

    George from Southgate said: “I am a winter person to begin with, I love the winter time. But I’m a retired soldier, and when I was in the army our uniforms improved tremendously because of the new technology out there that keeps you warm. Gore-Tex shoes for example, they’re waterproof, but they’re breathable so your feet don’t sweat.”

    Use the media player above to hear the full conversation and other stories from “The Metro.”

    More stories from The Metro on Jan. 10, 2024: 

    • Beginning this week, Detroit high school students can earn $200 gift cards every time they have perfect attendance for 10 consecutive school days. The program runs through March and students can earn up to $1,000. Jeremy Singer, a professor of teaching at Wayne State University and associate director of the Detroit Partnership for Education Equity and Research, joins the show to talk about DPSCD’s new approach to combat chronic absenteeism.
    • The Detroit Film Theatre is launching its winter season this week. Elliot Wilhelm has been the director of the DFT since 1974. He spoke with WDET’s Ryan Patrick Hooper about films to see at the theater this month.
    • Last summer, the Michigan State Supreme Court ruled that former property owners are retroactively entitled to profits from tax foreclosure sales. This means if your home was foreclosed on from 2015 to 2020, you could be owed some cash. Detroit Documenters, Outlier Media and five community organizations are working to get this money back in Detroiters hands. Senior reporter Koby Levin and Detroit Documenters Coordinator Noah Kincade joined The Metro to talk about the new project.

    Listen to The Metro weekdays from 10 a.m. to noon ET on 101.9 FM and streaming on-demand.

    Trusted, accurate, up-to-date.

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