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Here & Now

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Hosted by Robin Young and Jeremy Hobson, Here & Now is a live production of NPR and WBUR Boston, in collaboration with public radio stations across the country.
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In the days, weeks and months after the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, a 27-year-old man who lost his legs in the attack became the public face of the city's resilience — the face of "Boston Strong."

Jeff Bauman wrote about his experiences in the 2014 book "Stronger," and this week a film based on the book, starring Jake Gyllenhaal as Bauman, is opening. Here & Now's Robin Young speaks with Gyllenhaal and Bauman (@Jeffmbauman) about the film.

You can listen to the full interview here. Photo: Robin Lubbock/WBUR

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I have very distinct memories of just floating on my back looking up at the amazing walls, just thinking, 'This is like the perfect place, perfect time.' One of those moments.

Travel writer and photographer Joe Yogerst, on his visits to Lake Mead and the Grand Canyon -- and which lakes top the list of the nation’s best to visit over the summer

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What we’re trying to do is show people that history is not a settled thing. It’s open for question. It’s up to the visitor to find their answers to those questions along our path.

Philip Mead, historian at the new Museum of the American Revolution  

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Medicaid directors on a bipartisan basis have been calling for years for reforms, for changes to help us better manage the program — but that's not what this is.

Matt Salo, executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors, on the proposed health care bill and potential Medicaid rollback

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Kevin Rutley on a boat on the Barataria Waterway. (Virginia Hanusik for Here & Now)

The state of Louisiana predicts that up to 2,800 square miles of coast will wash away in the next four decades. Rising sea levels, sinking land and encroaching salt water are causing massive erosion.

Officials say the flooding could be so common and such a nuisance that everyday life will become next to impossible within 25 years.

Here & Now’s Peter O’Dowd visits Louisiana’s bayous to speak with people who’ve spent their entire lives witnessing the changes.

"It breaks my heart. There is so much that has disappeared in my lifetime." - Kevin Rutley, 65, whose family has lived by the Barataria Waterway since the Civil War

The entrance to The Pen, a lake off the Barataria Waterway that used to be a farm.(Virginia Hanusik for Here & Now)

Read the full story and listen along here.

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