From a pitch gone not-so-wrong to how she found community through film, the director of "The Supremes at Earl's All-You-Can-Eat" opened up in this Storytellers Spotlight.
Flanked by county officials and community leaders, David Baldwin turned over a pile of dirt with his shovel, a symbolic ...
Former staff at the Southern Poverty Law Center revealed the mismanagement and political turmoil at the SPLC ahead of mass ...
The economic depression of the 1920s and ‘30s forced the state to open its doors to more and more people, including the ...
L ast month, news outlets reported that Visit Florida, an agency funded by state taxpayers and members of the tourism ...
Black women are bedrock of the Democratic Party. What would it look like if their needs and lives were made central too?
In “America’s Deadliest Election,” Dana Bash and David Fisher detail an especially dangerous episode of political unrest.
Typical racial covenants were put into property deeds to prevent people “not of the Caucasian Race” from buying or occupying ...
From hurricanes to wildfires to droughts, every region of Texas is threatened by man-made climate change, vulnerability index ...
New Jersey’s congressional delegation was the domain of white men.  Of the 15 people representing the state in Congress, ...
USA TODAY recently visited six small towns, all named Hope. For this episode, Dana Taylor traveled to the most diverse in the group: Hope, Arkansas.