
All Things Considered
Weekday Evenings 2-3, 3:30 - 5:30, & 6-7
Breaking news mixed with compelling analysis, insightful commentaries, interviews, and special -- sometimes quirky -- features.
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"Once you get the funk out there, it's not going back. You can't put it back in the box," says filmmaker Stanley Nelson. His new Independent Lens documentary is out now.
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Storms have caused flooding and deaths in the Midwest and South over the past several days. Kentucky was one of the hard-hit areas, and some creeks and rivers are still on the rise.
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NPR's Juana Summers speaks with author Jennifer Weiner about her latest book -- The Griffin Sisters' Greatest Hits.
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An executive order signed by President Trump making English the official language of the U.S. has immigrant advocates worried the move risks real harm for people with limited English proficiency.
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Rep. Jeff Hurd, of Colorado, is among a small group of Republicans openly challenging President Trump's authority over tariffs. Hurd is co-sponsoring a bill that would require Congressional approval.
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These judges, and their staff, are caught in the crosshairs of Trump's twin efforts to increase deportations — and reduce the size of the federal government.
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President Trump is boasting about the wheeling and dealing he's doing to cut deals on steep new tariffs. But for weeks, his aides have insisted that tariffs were not a bargaining chip.
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A mother and three children swept up in an ICE raid at the kids' school will be returned to the small town of Sackets Harbor New York.
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The CDC unit that monitored all coal workers' health, including black lung disease, is gone. Their physicians wonder, "Now what?"
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Health experts say driving up vaccination rates in affected areas is the most effective defense against this disease