Due South

“Due South” is WUNC News’ weekday current affairs radio program and podcast. Broadcast from the American Tobacco Historic District in downtown Durham, co-hosts Leoneda Inge and Jeff Tiberii put life in the Triangle region into perspective and present a unique sense of place.   From interviews with state lawmakers and local luminaries to Friday news roundups with statewide journalists, “Due South” puts current events into context and offers audiences a greater sense of connection. Each hour-long show sparks deeper conversation and understanding of life in and beyond the Triangle.

  1. 1 DAY AGO

    Durham’s Oscar Diaz sizzles on ‘Top Chef.’ Plus, the secret college basketball game that challenged Jim Crow.

    0:01:00 A look at the inner lives of North Carolina’s political wivesThe Assembly’s Billy Warden discusses his discoveries about the lives of North Carolina’s political spouses in a candid profile that includes interviews with First Lady Anna Stein and Susan Tillis, wife of Sen. Thom Tillis. (This Due South encore conversation originally aired March 24, 2026.) Billy Warden, marketing specialist, writer, contributor to The Assembly 0:13:00 The Broadside: ‘The Secret Game’In March of 1944, two basketball teams in North Carolina played perhaps the most important game that nobody has ever heard of. It was the first unofficial interracial college basketball game in the Jim Crow South. And it remained a secret for half a century. Scott Ellsworth, author of “The Secret Game: A Wartime Story of Courage, Change, and Basketball’s Lost Triumph” This episode of The Broadside was produced by Charlie Shelton-Ormond and edited by Jerad Walker. 0:33:00 Durham’s Oscar Diaz sizzles on ‘Top Chef’ Chef Oscar Diaz is known around town for Little Bull, a Michelin-recommended restaurant in Durham. But around the country, he’s known as a “cheftestant” on the current season of ‘Top Chef’ – filmed in Charlotte, NC and Greenville, SC. Co-host Leoneda Inge talks to Diaz about how he spins the food of his childhood, his travels, and the Triangle into flavors that are both new and familiar. Oscar Diaz, chef and owner, Little Bull and several other North Carolina restaurants

    50 min
  2. 7 APR

    Uncovering the impacts of abortion bans - including the preventable death of a NC woman who died waiting for an abortion

    0:01:00 Duke Gardens is about to open. Here’s what visitors should know.A new entrance to the Sarah P. Duke Gardens is finished. The day before reopening, Due South’s Leoneda Inge speaks with the head of the Gardens to talk about how to visit, and what you can expect now that the project is complete. Bill LeFevre, Executive Director of Sarah P. Duke Gardens 0:13:00 North Carolina woman Ciji Graham died while waiting for an abortionGraham, a Greensboro police officer, had heart problems, and in the past her chronic condition had been treated by cardioversion. But a doctor didn’t offer the treatment because of a positive pregnancy test.  ProPublica is investigating Graham’s, and other women’s, deaths related to tightening abortion laws following the overturning of Roe v. Wade.  Lizzie Presser, covers health and social policy at ProPublica where she won the 2025 Pulitzer for public service along with several reporters who covered deaths related to abortion laws. The article discussed in this segment is titled, "A Pregnant Woman at Risk of Heart Failure Couldn’t Get Urgent Treatment. She Died Waiting for an Abortion." 0:33:00 Checking in on Duke’s oral history project from health care workers in a post-Roe AmericaHow the health care landscape has changed in the two years since Leoneda Inge first spoke with Dr. Beverly Gray about the end of the legal right to abortion after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. Dr. Beverly Gray, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Duke University Medical Center, one of the leaders of the Abortion Care Today oral history project, and the co-host of a podcast about abortion access called Outlawed.

    50 min
  3. 6 APR

    Research Triangle Park's past, present and future

    0:01:00 The future of Research Triangle ParkThe growing popularity of remote work is one challenge. Cuts to federal research funding is another.  But those are only two threats to the future of Research Triangle Park, the flagship business park that helped inspire the region’s “Research Triangle” name over the last half century.  Leoneda Inge speaks with a reporter who’s keeping track of RTP’s planned changes, and whether they will come to pass. Kayli Thompson, Senior Reporter at the Triangle Business Journal and author of the recent article, “RTP at a Crossroads.” 0:13:00 Two men who designed RTP on how it all came togetherA new exhibit at the Museum of Durham History tells the story of Research Triangle Park, in some ways the heart of the Research Triangle. Leoneda Inge speaks with two men who helped plan the project. John Atkins III, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of O’Brien/Atkins Associates, a multidisciplinary design services firm he co-founded in 1975 Robert Teer Jr., real estate planner and developer, and a lifelong resident of Durham. He’s served on the NC Turnpike Authority Board since 2003. 0:33:00 Research Triangle Park today How leaders at RTP are trying to be more than just a business park. Leoneda Inge speaks with two leaders involved in planning, and programming to make that happen. Including Boxyard RTP, a plaza with restaurants and small businesses on the campus. Travis Crayton, Vice President of Planning and Public Policy Research Triangle Park Kelly Propst, Vice President of Marketing and Communications Research Triangle Park This episode of Due South first aired in February.

    50 min

About

“Due South” is WUNC News’ weekday current affairs radio program and podcast. Broadcast from the American Tobacco Historic District in downtown Durham, co-hosts Leoneda Inge and Jeff Tiberii put life in the Triangle region into perspective and present a unique sense of place.   From interviews with state lawmakers and local luminaries to Friday news roundups with statewide journalists, “Due South” puts current events into context and offers audiences a greater sense of connection. Each hour-long show sparks deeper conversation and understanding of life in and beyond the Triangle.

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