Steve Kornacki breaks down what to look for as polls close in Tennessee special election
02:28
Texas House passes new congressional maps
04:03
Finding Their Path: How One School Helps Students Thrive by Doing
05:22
Healing Hearts, Raising Scores: How One School Centers Emotional Wellness
05:25
AI + Human Tutors = A New Equation for Math Success
05:24
'These are tears of joy': Menendez family reacts to Erik and Lyle's resentencing
03:46
KOSA is designed to protect kids online. Here’s why these kids are banding together against the bill
05:25
What’s at stake if TikTok gets banned
07:00
There are only 200 analog photobooths left in the world. Will they go extinct?
07:04
‘I’m choosing peace’: Leaving America after the election
07:25
Bankruptcy and biscuits: Red Lobster’s CEO says they’re swimming forward
05:40
I froze my eggs and it wasn’t what I expected
08:42
House Divided: My parents and I are split between Trump and Harris
04:28
Affected by gun violence, these Philly teens are learning how to shoot
07:58
What young voters really think of Trump and Harris
04:00
Trump or Harris? How hip-hop could decide
03:32
How mariachi united this Iowa high school
05:50
Meet the evangelical Christians pushing to address climate change
06:32
Is this Amber alert alternative to find missing Black youth working?
06:28
Is ‘botanical sexism’ the reason why your allergies are worse this year?
04:08
Stay Tuned
Can the military survive on rural recruits alone?
NBC News Clone summarizes the latest on: Can The Military Survive On Rural Recruits Alone 207521861843 - Breaking News | NBC News Clone. This article is rewritten and presented in a simplified tone for a better reader experience.
09:54
Copied
The U.S. military is facing a recruiting crisis: 2022 and 2023 were the worst years for military recruitment since it became an all-volunteer force 50 years ago. Part of the problem? Recruits are coming from a smaller and smaller pool of applicants, namely: folks with family who served, rural communities (disproportionately in the South), or areas that have a military base (also disproportionately in the South). And the future doesn’t look much brighter — only 9% of 16 to 21-year-olds are open to the possibility of serving. In this week’s Stay Tuned, we dive deeper into the military’s relationship with one rural community in Louisiana, how it impacts the mindset of two young people who live there, and what it could spell for the future of the U.S. military.March 22, 2024