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  • Furloughed Centers for Disease Control and Prevention worker Peter Farruggia talks about how he will pay his bills if the government shutdown continues much longer. His last paycheck was last Friday.
  • The Orpheum Theatre Group’s biggest party—and biggest fundraiser— Orpheum Soiree, returns to Orpheum Theatre on Friday, November 14, at 7:00 p.m.
  • Author, poet, and essayist Hadley Hury joined Kacky Walton to discuss his new book, "At the Villa Borago"—a love story set in Italy and Memphis, Tennessee, during the 1960s.
  • Kacky Walton spoke with Juanita Tolliver, a Memphis native and MSNBC political analyst, about her new book, "A More Perfect Party."
  • Kacky Walton spoke with author Preston Lauterbach about his new book, "Before Elvis: The African American Musicians Who Made the King."
  • Premiums for people who get their health insurance through the Affordable Care Act marketplace are set to jump by thousands of dollars when open enrollment begins in a couple of weeks. Cynthia Cox, vice president at independent health policy organization KFF, joins us.
  • This week on "Protecting Your Money," Randy Hutchinson, President and CEO of the Better Business Bureau of the Mid-South, explains how to research a company before you buy and the steps you can take to make sure the business you’re dealing with is reputable.
  • Parents in DeSoto County are calling for a school walkout to protest both the light sentencing given to a convicted sex offender and the controversy caused by character letters written on the offender’s behalf by nine teachers, a vice principal and a school board member.
  • Gov. Bill Lee’s administration has responded to a lawsuit filed by local officials that questions the legality of National Guard deployment here.
  • The Senate just passed a government funding deal, and House members will vote soon. Many Democrats wanted the party to hold out for Affordable Care Act subsidies, and some of them have turned against Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, even though he opposed the deal. Schumer's former legislative director, Jim Kessler, explains more.
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