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The Takeaway remembers the life and legacy of author Harper Lee, we hear from an actor who portrayed Justice Scalia, and look at the fight between Apple and the FBI. (episode)
In 1961, Lee won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction for her famed American novel "To Kill A Mockingbird."
More than 30 people have been killed in a U.S. airstrike carried out against the self-proclaimed Islamic State. Is President Obama opening a new front in the war against ISIS?
Apple's decision to stand up against the FBI is raising bigger questions about the tenuous relationship between tech companies and the federal government.
Antonin Scalia loved to be heard. In oral arguments and written opinions, he joked, he criticized, and he judged.
Rafer Guzman, film critic for Newsday, drops by to review this new horror film.
Anthony Hemingway, co-executive producer of the "The People Vs. O.J. Simpson," directed a number of episodes of the new series. Here, he reflects on the real case and the new hit show.
Last spring, actor Edward Gero had to capture Scalia's multifaceted personality in "The Originalist," a stage play by John Strand performed at the Arena Stage in Washington D.C.