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Sea Change

How the world looks through American eyes, and the myriad and unexpected ways that the world influences the United States.

For the first time in decades, Washington has approved ferry service between the US and Cuba. We hear from one Cuban exile who’s now expecting nautical traffic jams in the Florida Straits. Also: Does an octopus have a soul? We explore that and other octopus-related questions. And the New York restaurateur Ratha Chaupoly tells us how he learned his culinary craft by buying and selling sea urchin.

Plus, the Irish writer Ethel Rohan describes her first days in America. How a New York school is using football to help integrate immigrant kids into student life. And the White House plan to give pollinators their own protected corridor, stretching from Canada to Mexico.
Image: A ferry leaves the Florida city of Key West on a trip to Cuba in October 1954. (Courtesy of the Monroe County Library Collection)

Available now

27 minutes

Last on

Sat 6 Jun 2015 19:32GMT

Chapters

  • Ferry to Cuba

    Passenger ferries may soon run between Florida and Cuba for the first time in decades

    Duration: 03:24

  • Octopus Tale

    The author Sy Montgomery discusses her new book, ‘The Soul of an Octopus’

    Duration: 04:48

  • Ratha Chaupoly

    How a New York restaurateur learned his trade by buying and selling sea urchin

    Duration: 03:15

  • First Days

    She 'escaped' to America, but the pace of life, and even the words, made her miss home

    Duration: 02:43

  • NYC Football

    How the beautiful game helps young immigrants in New York integrate into new schools

    Duration: 05:22

  • Save the Bees

    From the White House to Minnesota gardens, an effort to make more room for pollinators

    Duration: 05:45

Broadcasts

  • Sat 6 Jun 2015 04:32GMT
  • Sat 6 Jun 2015 13:32GMT
  • Sat 6 Jun 2015 19:32GMT

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