Avery Keatley
Stories
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Spooky but not scary: movies to watch when you want chills, not nightmares
All Things Considered producers Avery Keatley and Marc Rivers talk about movies that capture the eerie spirit of Halloween without the blood, gore, or jump scares.
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We met Lyra in 'The Golden Compass.' Philip Pullman's new book finishes her story
More than 25 years ago, Philip Pullman's first novel, The Golden Compass, introduced readers to heroine Lyra Belacqua. Now, more than 25 years later, her story comes to a close in The Rose Field.
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For four years she hid her Parkinson's diagnosis. Then she let a reporter follow her journey.
Dr. Sue Goldie and New York Times reporter John Branch recount how a private, years-long conversation about her Parkinson's became a public story.
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Ukrainians react to President Trump's new stance on the war with Russia
Olga Rudenko, chief editor of the Kyiv Independent, talks about how Ukrainians view President Trump's shift from praising Vladimir Putin to backing Ukraine's full territorial recovery, and what it could mean for the war.
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Gov. Cox of Utah looked to his Mormon faith in hopes of keeping the state free of political violence. Is that possible now?
Writer Mckay Coppins talks about his article on Utah's Governor Spencer Cox and the shooting of Charlie Kirk that took place in the state.
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Tramell Tillman and Britt Lower discuss their characters' evolutions in 'Severance'
NPR's Scott Detrow speaks to Tramell Tillman and Britt Lower, stars of the Apple TV+ series Severance, about their complex character arcs and show's highly-anticipated second season.
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Adapting to coastal erosion in Louisiana and Alaska
NPR's Scott Detrow speaks with the team from the WWNO/WRKF podcast Sea Change about their reporting on community responses to climate-driven coastal erosion in Alaska and Louisiana.
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President Trump's responses on political violence over time
NPR's Tamara Keith examines President Trump's response to the Charlie Kirk assassination along with his reaction to a 2017 political shooting and other moments of political violence.
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The Supreme Court clears the way for ICE agents to treat race as grounds for immigration stops
As ICE immigration enforcement intensifies across the country, a Supreme Court ruling permits racial profiling as grounds for immigration stops.
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They called him 'God's influencer,' the Catholic Church canonizes the first millenial saint
The Catholic Church is about to canonize its first saint of the millennial generation.