On the show this week, we’re talking about the secondary ticket market, where sports fans and concertgoers sometimes feel ripped off— and rightfully so. revealnews.org/episodes/the-t…
2/ @ByardDuncan tells us about his bad experience buying tickets to an NBA game.
The ticket seller took his money, sent a confirmation email but didn’t include what he actually paid for: the tickets🤔
3/ We talk about other people's experience falling into the ticket trap, too. Sharon Valentine found herself tricked by a website she thought was the official box office for a theater where she lives.
Turns out, it was a website where tickets get resold for much higher prices.
4/ If you haven't been caught in the ticket trap, but miss going to concerts and sports events, we've got something for you later in the show.
@RadioIke drops by the Paramount Theatre to see when it might open up to the public again and what it will be like when it does.
5/ It's not just fans in the states eager for sports events and concerts to open up again. It's #Kpop fans all over the world, too.
1/ Despite a peaceful transfer of power during Joe Biden's swearing in as the 46th president of the U.S., there's still a long shadow cast by the White supremacist and anti-immigrant forces that brought President Trump to power. revealnews.org/episodes/a-tra…
2/ In the episode, @Appalachia100 reporter @GWOTTrapLordz describes what it was like on the scene in Washington during the inauguration.
3/ Then, we hear from two D.C. residents who tell us what the attack on the Capitol meant for those who call the surrounding area home.
@anjucomet spoke to one of them: a 24-year-old Army veteran who says that her D.C. is not the D.C. much of the country sees from a distance.
1/ On Jan. 20, 2020, the United States' first known case of the coronavirus was reported in a county north of Seattle.
Since then, the virus has crept into every county in the U.S., killing nearly 400,000 people, and infecting 1 in every 14 Americans. usatoday.com/in-depth/news/…
2/ Our coverage around the COVID-19 pandemic aimed to highlight how the virus affected the most vulnerable people in this country, from immigrants stuck in unsanitary ICE facilities, to healthcare workers and residents in nursing homes with poor infection controls.
3/ One of the first stories we published at the height of the pandemic centered immigrants.
As many corners of American life came to a halt to slow the spread of the coronavirus, the U.S. immigration system in many ways continued with business as usual. revealnews.org/article/how-fe…
1/ @McDonalds USA has claimed it’s an industry leader when it comes to COVID-19 precautions.
In our latest investigation, we reported on complaints filed by workers who portrayed some of the chain's outlets as COVID-19 incubators. revealnews.org/article/mcdona…
2/ In the early weeks of the pandemic, workers at a McDonald's in Oakland claimed social distancing wasn’t enforced.
As they boxed Big Macs, scooped french fries and bagged orders, they often stood shoulder to shoulder.
3/ The Oakland McDonald's was so busy that workers said they had no time to wash their hands, let alone disinfect the countertops.
And when there weren't enough masks, managers offered up a box of dog diapers someone had left at the store.
1/ First, it was problems with government-issued tech.
Then it was complaints about repetitive work, arbitrary terminations and disorganized management.
Now, census workers across the U.S. are raising new concerns about how cases were closed. revealnews.org/article/census…
2/ Nearly 150 people have responded to our survey seeking census workers’ experiences on the ground: screendoor.dobt.co/reveal/work-fo… .
One concern voiced by supervisors: The bureau gave up too early on getting the best data by door-knocking and instead relied on administrative records.
3/ According to the Bureau's own research, quality and completeness of administrative records is not expansive enough to replace a traditional census. [link or screengrab]
1/ In the 3 years since the murders of Syrian-American journalist Halla Barakat and her mother, questions about the case lingered.
Police said they were killed in a domestic dispute & closed the case. Those who knew them wondered if the murders had something to do w/ their work.
2/ In collaboration with @ABC and freelance reporter @faribanawa, we dug into the investigative files related to the killings and learned that the U.S. government chose not to get involved in the investigation. revealnews.org/article/an-ame…
3/ Around the time we published our story last year, @AgnesCallamard from the @UN sent a letter to Turkish authorities seeking clarity on the depth of the investigation into the brutal killings and insisting that a possible “politically-motivated killing be considered.”