The Latest Lebanese journalist Kim Ghattas shares likely outcome of U.S.-Iran talks in Pakistan NPR's Scott Simon speaks to Lebanese journalist Kim Ghattas about how U.S.-Iran negotiations being held in Pakistan Scott Simon Sports Saturday Sports: The Masters; NCAA men's hockey tournament; NBA playoffs NPR's Scott Simon and reporter Michele Steele discuss the Masters and the NCAA men's hockey tournament, and preview the NBA playoffs. Scott Simon Celine Dion tribute artist Elisa Furr discusses the iconic singer's return to the stage Celine Dion is returning to the stage after years battling an illness. NPR's Scott Simon talks about it with Elisa Furr, a Celine Dion tribute singer based in Las Vegas. Scott Simon Health The Great Green Wall's one of the world's most ambitious eco-projects. Is it working? It's a global effort with a multibillion dollar price tag. Among its aims: re-greening nearly 250 million acres, planting 4,000 miles of trees, helping farmers, creating jobs, sequestering carbon. Julie Bourdin Arts & Life Gut troubles? This gastroenterologist has tips to help you achieve 'poophoria' In her new book You've Been Pooping All Wrong, Dr. Trisha Pasricha shares habits and practices to make your relationship with your solid waste as smooth as possible Andrea Muraskin World India cracks down on satirists for turning its prime minister into a punch line India's satirists are turning Prime Minister Narendra Modi into a punch line — and the government is hitting back. Omkar Khandekar World Wives and children of foreign ISIS fighters stranded in Syria with no way home NPR visits the last detention camp for ISIS wives and children in an increasingly precarious northeastern Syria. Jane Arraf Science After a whirlwind mission to the moon, astronauts are back home. Here's what's next The Orion crew module containing the four Artemis II astronauts splashed down in the Pacific Ocean Friday evening. Brendan Byrne Latin America Peru's election: A battle for the Presidency amid political chaos and crime With 35 candidates in the race, Peru is set to elect its 9th president in less than a decade. Amid rising corruption and crime, voters are left asking: Can this election finally break the cycle? Simeon Tegel Business How AI is getting better at finding security holes Anthropic announced this week that its new model found security flaws in "every major operating system and web browser." Even before the news, AI models had gotten dramatically better at finding bugs. Huo Jingnan Prev 60 of 1651 Next Sponsored
Lebanese journalist Kim Ghattas shares likely outcome of U.S.-Iran talks in Pakistan NPR's Scott Simon speaks to Lebanese journalist Kim Ghattas about how U.S.-Iran negotiations being held in Pakistan Scott Simon
Sports Saturday Sports: The Masters; NCAA men's hockey tournament; NBA playoffs NPR's Scott Simon and reporter Michele Steele discuss the Masters and the NCAA men's hockey tournament, and preview the NBA playoffs. Scott Simon
Celine Dion tribute artist Elisa Furr discusses the iconic singer's return to the stage Celine Dion is returning to the stage after years battling an illness. NPR's Scott Simon talks about it with Elisa Furr, a Celine Dion tribute singer based in Las Vegas. Scott Simon
Health The Great Green Wall's one of the world's most ambitious eco-projects. Is it working? It's a global effort with a multibillion dollar price tag. Among its aims: re-greening nearly 250 million acres, planting 4,000 miles of trees, helping farmers, creating jobs, sequestering carbon. Julie Bourdin
Arts & Life Gut troubles? This gastroenterologist has tips to help you achieve 'poophoria' In her new book You've Been Pooping All Wrong, Dr. Trisha Pasricha shares habits and practices to make your relationship with your solid waste as smooth as possible Andrea Muraskin
World India cracks down on satirists for turning its prime minister into a punch line India's satirists are turning Prime Minister Narendra Modi into a punch line — and the government is hitting back. Omkar Khandekar
World Wives and children of foreign ISIS fighters stranded in Syria with no way home NPR visits the last detention camp for ISIS wives and children in an increasingly precarious northeastern Syria. Jane Arraf
Science After a whirlwind mission to the moon, astronauts are back home. Here's what's next The Orion crew module containing the four Artemis II astronauts splashed down in the Pacific Ocean Friday evening. Brendan Byrne
Latin America Peru's election: A battle for the Presidency amid political chaos and crime With 35 candidates in the race, Peru is set to elect its 9th president in less than a decade. Amid rising corruption and crime, voters are left asking: Can this election finally break the cycle? Simeon Tegel
Business How AI is getting better at finding security holes Anthropic announced this week that its new model found security flaws in "every major operating system and web browser." Even before the news, AI models had gotten dramatically better at finding bugs. Huo Jingnan