MPR News Update
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Need something to do today that isn’t shopping or sleeping? State parks and recreation areas will be free all day, so go outside . And check out our Outside in Minnesota app for outdoor events and ideas. 

Weather news is on Updraft and your forecast is here.

Or, if you feel like being inside, check out these stories. I’m not working today, so here’s a two-day-old list of some of our best features I think you should read: 


  • Moving to Mexico for love sounded awesome. Then my African uncle called — Jeffrey Bissoy, my friend and recently departed newsroom colleague, just moved to Mexico City to live with his longtime girlfriend. As he eloquently writes on the Sahan Journal, that didn’t seem like an outlandish idea. His Uncle Claude felt differently, asking: “In what world do you think this is OK?”


  • The decline and resurgence of Minnesota’s freshwater mussels — Kirsti Marohn and Daniel Ackerman produced a three-part written and radio series on a crucial, but endangered, Minnesota species: freshwater mussels. Part one gives an overview of the state of mussels, part two dives into the history; and three explores restoration efforts. 



  • Uprooted: The 1950s plan to erase Indian Country — Deep reporting from Max Nesterak via APM Reports. Here’s how he describes the documentary and story: “In the 1950s, the United States government came up with a plan to solve what it called the ‘Indian problem.’ It would assimilate Native Americans by moving them to cities and eliminating reservations. The 20-year campaign failed to destroy Native cultures and tribal sovereignty, but its impact is still felt today.” 






Cody Nelson, MPR News
Doorbusters Busted: Shoppers Rethink Black Friday
Alina Selyukh | NPR
The day after Thanksgiving is still the busiest shopping day of the year. But, for many reasons, it is losing its status as the focal point of the holiday shopping season.
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Here's to grown-up siblings and the ties that bind
Robin Marantz Henig
Though she and her younger brother are very different, he's the one, in a way, she knows best. Sibling relationships, in fact, are the longest-lasting family ties we have, transcending time and loss.
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