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Last night the 2013 Grammy nominations came rolling in and most of our faves made the list. #TeamBeautiful is delighted for artists like Trey Songz,…

If we told you there was a free informational event aimed at getting people to manage or avoid diabetes, would you go? News 92 FM’s…

Gossip

Via TheUrbanDaily.com –  Chad “Ochocinco” Johnson‘s life has been turned upside down since he spent the night in jail for head butting his now estranged wife Evelyn Lozada. In an appearance on ESPN’s “First Take,” Chad opened up about the domestic situation and claimed he is taking responsibility for his actions. When Ochocinco joined the […]

Kathy Griffin, of Confido Searches, joined NEWS 92 FM’s Dennis Spellman about a local private investigations firm which offers confidential drug sweeps with a drug-sniffing…

In 2012, there were a number of crimes that took place, which were heartbreaking, flat-out ridiculous, and outrageously shocking. Here, NewsOne looks back at some…

Tamar Braxton can sang. Point. Blank. Period. Dot coms, dot orgs and giving out seats aside, the youngest Braxton sister’s vociferous vocals play to her…

As the city of Jacksonville, Fla., continues to deal with the shocking murder of 17-year-old Jordan Davis (pictured above) at the hands of overzealous gun…

NASA(HOUSTON) -- Earth-watching scientists over at NASA on Wednesday rolled out what they call the “Black Marble,” a series of new images and video featuring Earth as seen from space at night.The images come from a new sensor on board the Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership satellite (NPP) launched last year by NASA and NOAA.NASA’s composite animation was stitched together with images gathered over 312 satellite orbits.  It took that many passes to get cloud-free images of every continent and island on the planet. NASA claims the new sensor — called VIIRS, or the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite — is so sensitive it can pick up the light of a single ship in the middle of the ocean.Scientists say the capability to observe Earth at night will help them get a more complete view of storms and other weather conditions that can’t be seen as well with other sensors used in daylight. Images from VIIRS are being used to forecast low clouds and fog at coastal airports like San Francisco, NASA said.The satellite also captured Hurricane Sandy as it bore down on the east coast in October.NASA has, over the years, released daytime versions of the entire Earth from space, dubbed the “Blue Marble.”The new images were released in San Francisco on Wednesday at an annual meeting of earth scientists held by the American Geophysical Union.Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio