A reality television program called Married at First Sight (MAFS) marries couples who have never met before at the start of the experiment. The program seeks to investigate whether scientific matchmaking can find true love and compatibility.
After being married, the newlyweds move in together and begin living together. Over the course of MAFS’ fifteen full seasons, 59 couples have been paired.
43 of them (or 73% of them) chose to stay married on Decision Day. Read More...
Digital Town Hall: Asian Americans in the Time of Covid-19 05/01/2020
In connection with the upcoming PBS series, ASIAN AMERICANS, the Center for Asian American Media (CAAM), WETA, and Asian American community leaders will host a digital town hall exploring how lessons from Asian American history can help us understand the experience of Asian Americans in the time of COVID-19.
ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7sa7SZ6arn1%2BssrWtjpqqopmeYq6usdGimpqmo2Q%3D
JOHN YANG:
Early one morning last July, 27-year-old Rich was found fatally shot near his Washington, D.C., home. Politics had drawn the Omaha native to the city, and he was working at the Democratic National Committee when he died.
The case is still unsolved. D.C. police theorize it was a botched robbery, the latest in a string of attacks in the neighborhood. As Rich's family and friends mourned, he became the subject of a baseless conspiracy theory. Read More...