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4:29
Meet some kidney patients thinking about pig organ transplants

AP spoke with three people closely watching pig kidney development, including two who’ve asked about volunteering for a trial. Some hope pig kidneys might one day help ease a dire shortage of transplantable organs. (AP video/Shelby Lum)

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5:10
Diving into the world of ‘fine water’

There’s fine wine and now there’s “fine water,” a growing category worldwide — even in water-stressed countries like India. (Nov. 21) (AP Video: Martha Irvine/Dar Yasin,/Srdjan Nedeljkovic/Theodora Tongas)

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7:39
His country trained him to fight, then he turned against it

The U.S. military trained him in explosives and battlefield tactics. But after two tours in Iraq, Chris Arthur was calling for taking up arms against police and government officials in his own country. (AP video: Allen Breed, Serginho Roosblad, Rick Bowmer/ production: Serginho Roosblad, Marshall Ritzel)

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3:58
South Korean adoptee’s search leads to a reunion, for someone else

After a long search for her birth family filled with many twists, Korean adoptee Rebecca Kimmel still doesn’t know who she is. But in the process, she arranged a reunion between a birth father and his twin daughters, who had been separated for decades. (Video: Lora Moftah and David Goldman/ Edited by Serginho Roosblad)

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5:27
Meet the newscaster in drag making LGBTQ+ history in Mexican television

Guillermo Barraza had already faced death threats for his work as a journalist in cartel-plagued Mexico. Now, he is risking even more by hosting a newscast in drag to shine a light on his community and the perils it faces. (Feb. 2)(AP video: Fernanda Pesce)

Oleksii Yukov's team members offload the bodies of Russian soldiers they've collected from the frontline in the Sloviansk region, Ukraine, Tuesday, Oct. 24, 2023. Yukov and his team retrieve bodies from the frontline to barter for Ukrainian bodies in periodic exchanges of war dead. (AP Photo/Bram Janssen)
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6:18
Bringing the dead home from the frontline, one body at a time

Oleksii Yukov says the same thing to all the Ukrainian mothers. He tells them to talk about their dead children, so they will be remembered. It is Yukov’s job to bring the dead home, one body at a time.

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7:01
Prisoners do some of the most dangerous jobs often without the most basic protections

An Associated Press investigation into prison labor in the United States found that prisoners who are hurt or killed on the job are often being denied the rights and protections offered to other American workers. (AP video: Robert Bumsted, Eugene Garcia)

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9:28
How the medical syringe became a tool of control when police restrain people

An investigation led by The Associated Press found at least 94 people died after they were given sedatives and restrained by police from 2012 through 2021. About half of the 94 who died were Black, including Demetrio Jackson. (AP Video: Shelby Lum)

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5:29
Crib videos offer clue to mysterious child deaths, showing seizures sometimes play a role

Crib cameras are offering a clue to a rare but devastating tragedy -- when seemingly healthy young children suddenly die in their sleep and autopsies can’t tell why. (Jan. 4)(AP Video/Shelby Lum)

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7:47
How surging demand for krill is raising concerns over Antarctica’s future

The waters around Antarctica are emerging as a battleground between industry and activists as advances in technology and new demand for krill as a dietary supplement drive more and more fishing of the shrimp-like crustacean. (Oct. 13) (AP video David Keyton/production: Marshall Ritzel)

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6:30
VIDEO: Italy’s migrant jails are squalid and chaotic. A young man from Guinea was desperate to escape

The suicide of a young man from Guinea inside one of Italy’s migrant detention centers has shined a spotlight on the squalid, chaotic conditions. Lawyers and activists have described the centers as “black holes for human rights.” The Italian government says the de-facto jails are essential to deterring migrants from crossing the Mediterranean on smuggler’s boats. But for Ousmane Sylla, who developed mental health issues after leaving Guinea, they were unbearable. He killed himself in February, and his family blames the Italian government. (AP Video/Bram Janssen, Marshall Ritzel, Paolo Santalucia)

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9:44
Afghanistan photographed with a traditional wooden box camera

In the years after the 2001 U.S. invasion and the ouster of the Taliban regime, Associated Press photographer Rodrigo Abd spent months on assignment in Afghanistan and learned how to use a traditional Afghan “box camera,” a handmade camera and darkroom in one. Abd returned this year with an idea: to employ the nearly disappeared Afghan art form to document how life has changed in peacetime, for better and worse, two years after U.S. troops left and the Taliban returned to power. (Sept. 22) (AP video: Bram Janssen)

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9:37
36 days lost at sea: How castaways survived hallucinations, thirst and desperation

On August 14, 2023, fishermen found a Senegalese migrant boat, known as a pirogue, drifting in the Atlantic ocean. They were 290 km (180 miles) northeast of Cape Verde, the last cluster of islands in the eastern central Atlantic Ocean before the vast nothingness that separates West Africa from the Caribbean. For 38 men and boys, it was salvation. For the other 63 who had boarded this boat, it was too late.

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4:58
A growing minority of religious conservatives reshape the US Catholic Church

Generations of U.S. Catholics are giving way to religious conservatives who believe the church has been twisted by change. It has reshaped parishes and universities across the country, leaving them sometimes at odds with much of the Catholic world. (AP Video/ Jessie Wardarski)

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5:07
Maternity homes find new beginning after the end of Roe

There’s been a nationwide expansion of maternity homes since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and Christian anti-abortion advocates want to open more of them to meet a growing need. But maternity homes have had a traumatic history. (AP Video: Jessie Wardarski)

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