Cole del Charco
Producer, "Due South"Cole del Charco is an audio producer and writer based in Durham. He's made stories for public radio's All Things Considered, Morning Edition and Marketplace. Before joining Due South, he spent time as a freelance journalist, an education and daily news reporter for WUNC, and a podcast producer for WFAE in Charlotte.
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A new Governor. Voter ID. Abortion access. A preview of the coming elections, and what they’ll mean for policy that affects nearly 11 million North Carolinians, and the most populous region in the nation.
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Christmas trees aren’t just pretty to look at, they’re the product of an industry that’s an economic engine for many North Carolina communities.
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Co-host Leoneda Inge chats with Duke professor Mark Anthony Neal and NPR TV critic Eric Deggans.
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Jeff Tiberii talks with a reporter about a grant to help fund high-speed rail between Raleigh and Richmond, and why taxpayers are helping a private jet company grow in Kinston.
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In 1898, the Wilmington Massacre was only part of a white supremacist campaign to overthrow elected local governments.
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Arthur Lee Cofield Jr. went to prison at 16 years old.
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The Serial podcast joins Nashville Public Radio and ProPublica for its newest season on a county that illegally jailed thousands of children.
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Before there was “Book-Tok,” there was Troy Johnson, curating a website called the African American Literature Book Club. And, in case you don’t know what “Book Tok” is, creators on the social media app Tik Tok share book recommendations to hundreds of thousands of influenceable readers. A conversation with Johnson, and the founders of North Carolina's first Black-owned children's book store.
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Rod Brind’Amour is the Carolina Hurricanes’ head coach. A long-time NHL hockey player, he led the Canes to their first Stanley Cup in 2005-06, and has seen hockey culture growing in North Carolina and the South.
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Before AR-15s, and gun control laws, there was Samuel Cummings. "Arms Dealer Sam" sold hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of surplus military guns to American buyers after WWII.