Crisis at Raleigh Cheesy: When Scary Vulnerability Saves the Day

When the AC died at Courtney Bowman’s Raleigh Cheesy shop during the summer heat, she did something that required real courage – she got vulnerable on Instagram. No script, no polish, just honest desperation. The community’s response was immediate and overwhelming: over $15,000 in orders within days. Meanwhile, Jared Haworth of Lightship Neon is fighting Raleigh’s 1970s signage rules that keep creative neon signs from adding personality to our neighborhoods. His hot-pink neon chicken at Little Rey doesn’t just advertise – it winks at you, saying “something good is happening here.” Both stories ask the same question: What happens when we let people see who we really are? From struggling businesses to city character, these Wake County stories show that authenticity creates stronger community bonds than polished perfection. Sometimes the best moments happen when we stop hiding and let our real selves – and our neighborhoods – glow.

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When Technology Gets Too Smart For Its Own Good

When the same Raleigh rideshare trip costs $14 on one app and $84 on another, you know something’s broken. Steve explores how algorithmic pricing is turning getting home into a high-stakes gamble, then discovers a local Wake County startup using AI to actually make government services work better for residents. From surge pricing mysteries to multilingual government support, these overlooked stories reveal what happens when technology gets too smart—and when it gets smart in the right direction.

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Secret Flow Problems That Are Amazing to Fix in Life

A Florida surgeon performs the first FDA-approved transcontinental robotic surgery on a patient in Angola, Africa, an Indiana good Samaritan stops a drunk driver with a potentially fatal BAC of .40, and UK researchers develop tiny robots that could revolutionize water infrastructure maintenance. Steve explores three stories about intervention, medical, personal, and technological, that show how the most important work often happens where we can’t see it.

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