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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A civil rights museum in Atlanta now includes exhibits from the Reconstruction era
A civil rights museum in Atlanta expanded recently and now includes the era of reconstruction that followed the Civil War and ultimately led to segregationist Jim Crow Laws in the South.
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Many homeless encampments have been cleared, but advocates say that's not a solution
Homeless encampment sweeps have been increasing since a pivotal Supreme Court decision in 2024. But medical experts and advocates for unhoused people say those sweeps have hidden health costs.
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The benefits of AI in health care outweigh potential hazards, many experts say
ChatGPT Health is OpenAI's foray into medicine, and so far, it gets high marks from both a cancer patient and a leading doctor. But there are worries it could be misused.
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Employees of Pittsburgh's 'Post Gazette' haven't given up on saving the daily paper
Owners of Pittsburgh's only daily paper plan to shutter the paper in May after a long labor dispute. But employees haven't given up on saving the Post Gazette, even if it has to change to survive.
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Norway says Trump cited Nobel loss when discussing Greenland
The prime minister of Norway says President Trump cited the Nobel Prize as a reason for not pursuing a peaceful resolution on Greenland.
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An Eagle Scout in Missouri has earned every possible merit badge — 140 of them
John Hayes, 18, has earned 140 merit badges, all the badges offered by Scouting America.
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Train crash kills more than three dozen in Spain
More than three dozen people were killed as two high-speed trains collided in southern Spain.
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What was the state of Chavismo under Maduro?
NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks with Javier Corrales, author of a book on Hugo Chavez and a professor at Amherst College, about the legacy of Chavez's rule in Venezuela today.
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Do phone sleep trackers work?
Are sleep trackers on your phone helping you get a full night's rest? NPR's Life Kit investigates.
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Fewer orphans globally, due to HIV medication provided by the U.S.
Until last year, the number of children orphaned because a parent died from AIDS, was plummeting. That's thanks to America's 20 year effort to get lifesaving HIV meds to millions in need. But last years upheaval in foreign aid funding is raising concern that more children will be at risk of losing a parent to the deadly virus.
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College football's underdog this season: Trinidad Chambliss
Between pre-game prayers with his mom and spectacular throwing arm talent, Trinidad Chambliss' underdog college football story this season has excited fans across the country.
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How childbearing choices have changed across three generations in one family
Fewer women are having children than a few generations ago. Sarah McCammon talks with three generations of women in one Atlanta family to understand how opportunities and choices have changed.