All Things Considered
Hear KUOW and NPR award-winning hosts and reporters from around the globe present some of the nation's best reporting of the day's events, interviews, analysis and reviews.
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Episodes
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American Jews are reclaiming German citizenship amid political concerns
A growing number of American Jews whose parents and grandparents fled Germany during World War II are now getting German citizenship, in part because of political concerns in the United States.
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A railroad mega-merger could create the country's first coast-to-coast freight railroad
Two of the U.S.'s largest railroad companies, Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern, say they plan to merge, which would create the country's first coast-to-coast freight railroad.
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Chicago Cubs legend Ryne Sandberg has died at age 65
Chicago Cubs legend and Hall of Famer Ryne Sandberg has died after battling cancer. The second baseman was a Cub's fan favorite who earned a reputation as one of the best all-around players in the game.
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What we know about NYC shooting suspect
New York City authorities are trying to learn additional information about 27-year-old Shane Tamura, the gunman who burst into a Manhattan skyscraper and killed four people, including an NYPD officer.
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Remembering poet Thomas Sayers Ellis, dead at 61
An influential poet has died at the age of 61. Thomas Sayers Ellis was the founder of a community of Black poets, as well as a musician, photographer and bandleader.
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These underwater sculptures help save the Italian sea from trawlers
Sculptures are sunk to the bottom of the Mediterranean sea with concrete blocks to break the nets of the trawlers that devastate marine life. They now protect miles of Tuscan coastline.
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Locals around President Trump's new Scottish golf course aren't all happy
Before departing Scotland, President Trump inaugurated a new golf course he owns, named after his Scottish-born mother. NPR spoke to some of Trump's new neighbors.
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Two data breaches in one week on social media site Tea
A dating app, Tea, that was created to privately share information has been breached -- twice. We learn more about the user information that was hacked.
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In a Missouri Town, a group called Abide in Love works to help immigrants jailed by ICE
A Missouri group called "Abide in Love" provides care packages and more to ICE detainees who often arrive in jail with no possessions and no ability to contact their loved ones.
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President Trump is breaking or ignoring all sorts of presidential norms
President Trump's critics accuse him of breaking or ignoring norms. But, others say he may just be treating them differently than past presidents.
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IRC head talks about his call to allow more aid as Gaza verges on famine
NPR's Juana Summers speaks with David Milliband, head of the International Rescue Committee, about his call to allow more aid to enter Gaza amid a food crisis on the verge of famine.
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In 'Sloppy,' Rax King details her journey from addiction to sobriety
NPR's Juana Summers talks with Rax King about her new collection of essays, Sloppy. King is now three years sober from alcohol and cocaine, and the book documents her journey getting clean.