The Week in Philly from KYW Newsradio

Host Matt Leon and KYW Newsradio reporters recap the biggest news in Philadelphia each week. Catch up on what you missed and dig deeper into the top stories.

News
401
COVID-19 vaccines: Are they truly less effectiv...
COVID-19 vaccines from Pfizer have been available for kids 5-11 for a few months now, but a couple of recent studies about the vaccines' effectiveness has sounded some alarms. Are the vaccines really less effective for kids?
14 min
402
'Livestreamed war crimes.' The power of social ...
How do war zones change when anyone with a phone can become a war correspondent? How can regular people tell the difference between propaganda and truth? And how would other conflicts in history, like the Vietnam War for example, have played out differently if social media was as widespread as it is today?
25 min
403
Mental health repercussions from COVID-19 hit B...
The COVID-19 pandemic has been hard on everyone’s mental health, but it has hit communities of color and the Black community disproportionately hard. So why are some communities in America impacted differently than others?
20 min
404
First time job seekers, what you need to know a...
For people entering the job market for the first time, what does the landscape look like after two years of the COVID-19 pandemic? What's expected of workers right now? What are employers looking for? We asked these questions to Jennifer Rossi Long, Senior Director of West Chester University’s Twardowski Career Development Center.
17 min
405
The Dollar General makeover of America was succ...
Two years into the pandemic and shopping has changed dramatically. Morning Consult's Claire Tassin talks about what's changed since early on in the pandemic, why the incredible e-commerce boom is slowing, and what the data says about the future of brick and mortar stores.
19 min
406
The jobs numbers are outstanding. What happened?
Unemployment fell to 3.8% in February and we got an outstanding jobs report -- 678,000 new jobs. What happened, and what does the report mean for the economy moving forward? Economist David Fiorenza is on the podcast to talk about the economic news of the week and why it matters.
9 min
407
Listen up, employers: your workers have the upp...
In the aftermath of the pandemic, employers are facing "a watershed moment." SAP Global Vice President of Field Transformation and Readiness Rae Kyriazis explains why.
19 min
408
'Brilliant lawyering': how Sandy Hook families ...
A record $73 million settlement for the families of victims in the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting was years in the making. But as Saint Joseph's University's Dr. Susan Liebell explains, it might not set new legal precedent for gun control.
14 min
409
Gas prices, palladium, delivery costs, and more...
Russia's invasion of Ukraine has already taken a massive toll on human lives and families, it's affected how society functions in eastern Europe, it's captured the attention of governments and private industry -- and the economic effects have only started to ripple out.
17 min
410
Russia Ukraine war, Supreme Court history: big ...
President Joe Biden will deliver his State of the Union address on Tuesday night. What should we expect to hear? How much has the message changed given the Russian invasion of Ukraine?
23 min
411
CDC mask guideline changes explained: 'This was...
The CDC is changing masking recommendations, and it’s part of a sweeping change in how the center measures COVID-19 in communities.
11 min
412
"That's not going to cut it:" why America needs...
While the United States' vaccination rate is middle-of-the-pack, there are plenty of countries that could use extra help. Drexel University's Dr. Joe Amon tells us what America could be doing better.
16 min
413
Russia invades Ukraine: 'the worst military act...
What everyone feared has happened, Russia has commenced a full-blown invasion of Ukraine. We had a lot of questions -- what are Putin's goals? Was war with Ukraine always going to happen or was there something the US could have done to stop it? How do the people of Russia feel? And what's going to happen next.
34 min
414
Catastrophic earthquakes: How big does a quake ...
For someone who studies earthquakes, what are the scariest places in the world? And how bad could the damage get if 'the big one' struck? This episode of KYW Newsradio In Depth is part four of a mini series called Doomsday Scenarios, where we ask very smart people if this, that, or the other thing could destroy life as we know it.
24 min
415
Should we bring back cash payments to families ...
Those direct cash payments to families with children as part of the Expanded Child Tax Credit did an incredible lot of good last year as they lifted millions of kids out of poverty. But those payments ended on December 15th and hopes of continuing them were dashed for the time being when President Biden’s Build Back Better plan was sidelined.
14 min
416
Why nostalgia is a hot marketing commodity
Everywhere you look - TV, movies, stores - we are surrounded by ads, items, shows, and music that take us back to younger days. And that is not an accident, nostalgia is big business.
15 min
417
Why Sigal Atzmon argues the US will emerge from...
Sigal Atzmon is the Founder and CEO of Medix Global, a global medical management company. She recently wrote an op-ed for The Hill about how many other countries will emerge from the pandemic with populations that have suffered less than the population in the US, both in terms of physical and mental health, mainly because of the lack of a vaccine mandate
24 min
418
The hidden face of human trafficking: Philadelp...
Philadelphia police Detective Kate Gordon and Officer Stephanie Rosenbaum from the Special Victim's Unit are tasked with finding children who've gone missing, some lured online by predators. Now, they want parents to know what they can do to protect their children, while allowing them to live lives online.
24 min
419
Sarah Palin vs. The New York Times: A judge's u...
A libel case brought by former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin against The New York Times took a very strange turn of events this week, involving a judge's comment, a jury's decisions, and news push alerts. Craig Green, Professor of Law at Temple University’s Beasley School of Law joins the podcast to explain what's happening and the possible ripple effects this case and others like it could have on free speech in the United States.
23 min
420
Why gas prices are so high: Demand spikes, OPEC...
OPEC vs. America, demand spikes, and weird pandemic stuff: Why gas prices are so high, and what the future of energy looks like Clean title: OPEC vs. America, demand spikes, and weird pandemic stuff: Why gas prices are so high, and what the future of energy looks like Episode subtitle: Gas prices are stubbornly high. So what's causing us to pay so much at the pump? Villanova chemical engineering professor Dr. Scott Jackson explains what's happening behind the scenes that's making gas prices so high, as well as diving into a fascinating breakdown of why natural gas has very quietly made the US essentially energy independent, what presidents can and can't do to affect gas prices, and why companies like Exxon-Mobile can make money whether the price of oil is high or low. Episode Summary: Gas prices are stubbornly high. So what's causing us to pay so much at the pump? Villanova chemical engineering professor Dr. Scott Jackson explains what's happening behind the scenes that's making gas prices so high, as well as diving into a fascinating breakdown of why natural gas has very quietly made the US essentially energy independent, what presidents can and can't do to affect gas prices, and why companies like Exxon-Mobile can make money whether the price of oil is high or low. Episode Pubdate: Now Midroll locations: 13'12"
23 min
421
How we're spending money is good news for the A...
The retail doom and gloom around the holidays looks a lot better right now. Philadelphia area economist David Fiorenza breaks down the economic news of the week and why it should matter to you.
11 min
422
Alzheimer's disease disproportionally affects t...
The Black community is significantly affected by Alzheimer’s, yet they are vastly underrepresented in clinical trials. The AHEAD study is trying to make progress in the fight against Alzheimer’s while also working to level the playing field in those trials.
12 min
423
Creators of "American Reckoning" tackle unsolve...
Wharlest Jackson was a Korean War veteran and a Mississippi NAACP leader who was murdered in 1967 in the Deep South. His murder is still unsolved, and now it's the focus of a PBS Frontline Documentary called American reckoning.
12 min
424
"Locked in:" James Harden's high school coach s...
We know what James Harden is now. His high school head coach, Scott Pera, pulls back the curtain on The Beard's path to superstardom and the Sixers.
24 min
425
'When the facts change, we have to be willing t...
The school mask debate has been raging for more than a year and half. But a lot has changed since this time last year. In the second interview of KYW Newsradio In Depth's two part series on school masks, KYW's Jim Melwert talks to Dr. David Rubin, the director of CHOP Policy Lab which has been key in informing school boards and administrators on how to handle everything from in person learn, hybrid learning, physical distancing, and now, once again, masking.
21 min