This is The Guardian.
Today five Guardian reporters on the moments this year that will stay with them forever.
You listen to a daily news podcast, so we don't need to tell you just how quickly the news can move.
Charlie Kirk has been shot and agreed ceasefire in Gaza has come into effect.
And our reporters are often very, very busy.
Pictures not seen before that were taken on Jeffrey Epstein's private island in the Caribbean.
Speaking to sources, recording interviews,
getting reports of a plane crash in India, witnessing history unfold in real time.
Just weeks after President Trump signed a...
But there are always moments that stick with you.
Things that you can't forget, weeks, months, sometimes even years later.
Stuff that maybe doesn't even make your article.
It's not a headline, it's a little moment.
A sound may be the sort of thing you lie awake at night thinking about.
So as the year draws to a close, we've got a different kind of episode for you today.
We thought we'd go to Guardian reporters around the world to ask them about the one moment this year that they just couldn't shake.
Earlier this year,
I traveled to Syria to get a sense of what freedom looked like in a country that had been living under one of the most oppressive regimes in the world for decades.
And I wanted to capture what that freedom sounded like.
You all know that voice.