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Detroit News To Be Bought By Freep Owner; and Let's Talk About Minneapolis

Daily Detroit

Release Date: 01/26/2026

Why Ferndale is Growing While Other Suburbs Are Shrinking show art Why Ferndale is Growing While Other Suburbs Are Shrinking

Daily Detroit

Ferndale is bucking the trend. While most of Detroit’s inner-ring suburbs are losing people, Ferndale has grown 1.3% since 2020 — outpacing every municipality that touches Detroit's city limits.  We dig into new population data highlighted by the Detroit Free Press and ask what makes Ferndale different: walkable neighborhoods, a real downtown at Woodward and Nine Mile, a strong LGBTQ community, and a place where people say they feel safe because neighbors have their back.  Here's a link to the piece we discussed: We contrast Ferndale’s urbanist-friendly density and sense of...

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Ice Cream Taste Test + How Noise Pollution Hurts City Birds show art Ice Cream Taste Test + How Noise Pollution Hurts City Birds

Daily Detroit

In this two-parter, we start with Detroit’s birds and end with Detroiters eating dessert. Science and snacks, basically. First up, we talk with University of Michigan alum and Defenders of Wildlife science and policy analyst Natalie Madden about a new meta-analysis on how urban noise affects birds. They get into what a “study of studies” actually is, why everyday city sounds can mess with bird communication, nesting, growth and reproduction, and what planners and policymakers can do to turn down the volume so common species like robins and sparrows can actually thrive in...

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Daly’s Restaurant Memories, Coffee Speakeasy, Boat Club & New Arts Center show art Daly’s Restaurant Memories, Coffee Speakeasy, Boat Club & New Arts Center

Daily Detroit

Detroit’s Friday crew is back! We kick things off a hidden “speakeasy of coffee” called Sml Wrld Cafe on Gratiot in Detroit, and why now is the time to get your yard and urban garden in order. Plus, the historic Detroit Boat Club is on getting on track for a major revival into a public-facing hub with restaurants, events, and rowing education. Jer also checked out the new Cadillac Arts Center near Waterworks Park, with In Thicket Books, Take Me Home, and Bowerbird Home anchoring a growing Little Village arts district on the east side. On the west side, the guys mourn the end of...

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Detroit & Ann Arbor Development, Plus Science Center After Dark show art Detroit & Ann Arbor Development, Plus Science Center After Dark

Daily Detroit

Detroit’s downtown housing study is back, and the headline is clear: there’s still a lot of runway to grow. Norris and I dig into what so many potential new units really means and how incentives, red tape, and construction costs shape what actually gets built. Then we get into lessons from Ann Arbor’s plan to turn a parking lot into a library-and-housing hub, and what real urban density could look like in Michigan and Metro Detroit. After all, Norris hates surface parking lots in cities. Plus, we end on some joy with the Michigan Science Center’s adults-only Aurora Space Party this...

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Eastern Market: Feeding Detroit’s Bodies and Hearts show art Eastern Market: Feeding Detroit’s Bodies and Hearts

Daily Detroit

Eastern Market is best known as a Saturday tradition and Flower Day selfie spot. But it’s also one of the beating hearts of Michigan’s food system. In this episode, I sit down with Eastern Market Partnership president and CEO Katy Trudeau at TechTown to unpack how this 120-year-old market is adapting for 2026 and beyond. Katy explains how the historic sheds anchor a 24/7 neighborhood where live animal processing, wholesale distribution, breweries, restaurants, and nightlife all coexist — and why keeping the core of the district focused on food is key to its future. You’ll hear about...

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Detroit: Arsenal of Democracy Again? + New Poll Shakes Up Michigan’s Senate Race show art Detroit: Arsenal of Democracy Again? + New Poll Shakes Up Michigan’s Senate Race

Daily Detroit

On today’s Daily Detroit, we dig into a fresh Emerson College poll that shakes up the Michigan U.S. Senate race. If their numbers are right, the Democratic primary is suddenly a two-person contest, with Abdul El‑Sayed and Mallory McMorrow tied at the top and Haley Stevens slipping into third, even as more than a third of voters are still undecided. We talk through the big generational split driving those numbers, and reshaping the Democratic coalition, and why jobs and the economy are still the real deciders for that huge undecided block. We also touch on a few other topics in the...

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Detroit's City Budget, Explained show art Detroit's City Budget, Explained

Daily Detroit

On today’s Daily Detroit, we unpack Detroit’s new $3 billion city budget that was just approved and what it actually means for people who live, work, and play in the city. I’m joined by and to walk through where the money’s going, what got reshuffled, and what that means on your block. We get into why the overall budget, approved in April of 2026, actually shrank by about $30 million this year, even as Detroit’s population ticks up. Mayor Mary Sheffield and council still managed to pass a balanced plan. It includes $30 million more for DDOT to boost bus driver pay and...

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Dearborn on the Rise: Hilton at Fairlane, West Warren, Greenways & New Housing show art Dearborn on the Rise: Hilton at Fairlane, West Warren, Greenways & New Housing

Daily Detroit

Today’s show comes to you from the Ford Experience Center in Dearborn, as Jer catches up with Devon O’Reilly at the city’s first‑ever Dearborn Development Day. They dig into the future of the former Hyatt hotel at Fairlane — now moving forward as a Hilton‑flagged property — with plans for 168 residential units, a mix of restaurants and entertainment, and a revived rotating bar at the top. From there, the conversation zooms out to Dearborn’s wider development push: the emerging ‘Midtown’ Fairlane area, West Warren streetscape changes, and new housing concepts around Lundy,...

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Why Are New Single-Family Homes So Rare in Detroit? (And How One Company Is Changing It) show art Why Are New Single-Family Homes So Rare in Detroit? (And How One Company Is Changing It)

Daily Detroit

On today’s Daily Detroit, Jer sits down with developer and to unpack what it really takes to build brand-new single-family houses inside the city limits. After all, there were only 19 permits pulled in 2024 in Detroit. We dig into the brutal math behind new construction: why a typical unit can cost $250,000–$400,000 to build, how the “1% rent rule” prices many Detroiters out of new apartments, and why at $2,500 a month most people start asking whether they should just buy instead. Temkin says Detroit has always been a city of houses, and that new construction needs to respect...

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Detroit’s First Michelin Stars? Our Picks and Predictions (and more!) show art Detroit’s First Michelin Stars? Our Picks and Predictions (and more!)

Daily Detroit

On today’s Daily Detroit, a fast-moving, food-and-development-heavy episode rooted in what’s changing on the ground in metro Detroit.  Jer is joined by Devon O’Reilly and Norris Howard for a full-table conversation that spans ballparks, the best places to eat, and big bets on Dearborn’s future. The crew starts with Opening Day, as Norris recounts one of the most beautiful Tigers home openers he’s ever seen — complete with a cautionary tale about trying to outdo his dad.  Devon then takes us to Midtown for a deep dive on Mad Nice as a rare, reliable “power lunch”...

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More Episodes

Today's conversation is in two parts.

First, we dig into USA Today (formerly Gannett) buying the Detroit News - just a month after a joint operating agreement ended between the two papers and bringing the Detroit Free Press and news under the same ownership umbrella. They say they'll continue as separate publications, but based on the track record of those involved, we have our personal skepticism.

We also get into the precarious state of local news in America.

Then, a personal conversation on the events over the weekend in Minneapolis, Minnesota. We get into the aftermath, the Orwellian nature of it all, how Norris isn't surprised it happened, and the near death of actual conservatism as a political force in America.

Feedback as always, dailydetroit - at - gmail - dot - com or leave a voicemail, 313-789-3211. 

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