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.
Sponsored
Episodes
-
A lesson in Mardi Gras King Cake making
King Cake, the New Orleans Mardi Gras staple, is not easy to make. A cooking class can help.
-
Bad Bunny's joyful defiance captivates Super Bowl halftime
Bad Bunny delivered a joyful 13-minute Super Bowl halftime performance with a message of unity as well as pride in Latin American culture at a time when many Latinos in the U.S. feel under attack.
-
Sidewalk delivery robots are colonizing city sidewalks and raising concerns
NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks with Ainsley Harris, senior writer at Fast Company, about the accelerated rollout of delivery robots and how they're being received in communities across the country.
-
Do you have some bad habits? Good news - you can make new ones. Here's how
Research shows it helps to start small if you want new habits to stick. NPR's Life Kit has more.
-
The physics of the spiral pass have long been a mystery. Not anymore
The physics of the spiral pass have baffled physicists and football fans for decades.
-
We're talking to you - Taxi Driver is 50
-
How one New Hampshire town made sure its water was 'Safe to Drink'
NPR's Emily Kwong talks with Mara Hoplamazian about the new podcast, "Safe to Drink," about Merrimack, New Hampshire's fight for clean drinking water.
-
Breezy Johnson wins gold, while Lindsey Vonn crash ends comeback quest
On the first Sunday of the Olympic Winter Games, downhill skier Breezy Johnson captured the first gold for Team USA. And alpine racer Lindsay Vonn crashed and was transported to the hospital with a broken leg.
-
U.S.-India trade deal improves relations, but strain still shows
After months of wrangling and much tension, India and the US have finally released a framework for an interim trade agreement
-
The seismometers at the end of the earth have names
Scientists have placed two seismometers 8000 feet below the ice cap at the South Pole to measure earthquakes and support tsunami alerts.
-
Investigating one of the worst train accidents in Spain's history
More than a week after one of the worst train accidents in Spain's history, many questions remain unanswered, and survivors struggle to move on.
-
What does it mean when the president calls to "nationalize the voting"?
Wendy Weiser, the vice president for democracy at the Brennan Center for Justice, discusses the impact of President Trump's recent urging of Republicans to "nationalize" voting.