A daily podcast that focuses on stories all across Missouri. Show Me Today offers unique perspectives on our state while being fun and entertaining.
Missouri trout parks open for the catch-and-keep season tomorrow, a new book highlights the history of St. Louis, a Kansas City area state representative is trying to put a cap on insulin and EpiPen expenses, and the Missouri Secretary of State hops on to discuss absentee voting for local elections in April.
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WalletHub recently ranked Missouri as the sixth worst state to drive in, a woman who contracted Alpha-gal from a tick bite has created a cookbook for people who also have the condition, the state is offering new grant funding for the shortage of childcare workers, and a new University of Missouri study explains why it is a good idea to give company employees equal leadership opportunities.
A new study from the University of Missouri highlights that many workplaces have not reached their full potential. It all goes back to the opportunities that certain employees are granted over others. Many workplaces have something called an “informal leader,” which is an employee whose peers around them tend to abide by their structure naturally.
Associate professor for management, Dr. Ann Peng, is here with our producer Cameron Conner to share.
If you have the bad luck to be bitten by a specific tick…it could change your whole diet …. and your life dramatically.
That happened to Kathie Cahoj, and she was not about to settle for having the ALPHA-GAL Allergy take away her love of food. Here she is with Ashley Byrd.
We talk to the Organizing Lady for advice on Spring cleaning, MoDot is starting its annual pothole clean-up initiative, a spokesperson from the IRS gives us tips for the tax season, and a proposed Missouri bill would enable patients to use psilocybin mushrooms.
A Missouri bill would let patients legally use a psychedelic called psilocybin, often called shrooms, to treat certain health conditions. Alisa Nelson talks to the bill sponsor, State Representative Tony Lovasco, of St. Charles County.