The Latest Houthi rebels resume attacks on shipping vessels The Houthi rebel group in Yemen have resumed attacking shipping vessels in the Red Sea. Ruth Sherlock Arts & Life Why writer Jenny Han understands embarrassment so well On Wild Card, well-known guests answer the kinds of questions we often think about but don't talk about. Writer Jenny Han talks about why she understands embarrassment so well. National DOJ memo says no evidence of Jeffrey Epstein 'client list' or blackmail Conspiracy theories have swirled around disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein since his death in a federal lockup in 2019. On Monday, a department released a memo that reaffirmed previous conclusions. Ryan Lucas National Security An AI imposter is pretending to be Marco Rubio An AI imposter is making calls to officials. Who is the AI imposter impersonating? United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio. Jordan-Marie Smith The new Trump Accounts give kids $1,000. What should parents do? Parents can contribute a total of up to $5,000 to a Trump Account annually, until the year their child turns 18. But should they do that? And where does it stand compared to other savings options? Bill Chappell L.A. Taco: Documenting raids, arrests and resistance in Southern California As immigration agents sweep through Southern California, L.A. Taco journalists document raids, arrests, and resistance. Mandalit del Barco How one couple survived a shipwreck and kept their marriage afloat NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Sophie Elmhirst, author of A Marriage at Sea, which chronicles the voyage of Maurice and Maralyn Bailey, a British couple who was lost at sea for 118 days in 1972. Kathryn Fink Politics Supreme Court allows Trump to resume mass federal layoffs for now Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, who was appointed to the court by President Biden, dissented. Andrea Hsu Business Prime Day — er, Days — tests deal hunters' will to spend amid tariffs Electronics and back-to-school supplies are expected to top many shoppers' lists. Alina Selyukh National Shoes off at the airport? TSA gives the pesky rule the boot The Transportation Security Administration has booted one of the most despised rules at U.S. airport security checkpoints: removing your shoes. Joe Hernandez Prev 776 of 1648 Next Sponsored
Houthi rebels resume attacks on shipping vessels The Houthi rebel group in Yemen have resumed attacking shipping vessels in the Red Sea. Ruth Sherlock
Arts & Life Why writer Jenny Han understands embarrassment so well On Wild Card, well-known guests answer the kinds of questions we often think about but don't talk about. Writer Jenny Han talks about why she understands embarrassment so well.
National DOJ memo says no evidence of Jeffrey Epstein 'client list' or blackmail Conspiracy theories have swirled around disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein since his death in a federal lockup in 2019. On Monday, a department released a memo that reaffirmed previous conclusions. Ryan Lucas
National Security An AI imposter is pretending to be Marco Rubio An AI imposter is making calls to officials. Who is the AI imposter impersonating? United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio. Jordan-Marie Smith
The new Trump Accounts give kids $1,000. What should parents do? Parents can contribute a total of up to $5,000 to a Trump Account annually, until the year their child turns 18. But should they do that? And where does it stand compared to other savings options? Bill Chappell
L.A. Taco: Documenting raids, arrests and resistance in Southern California As immigration agents sweep through Southern California, L.A. Taco journalists document raids, arrests, and resistance. Mandalit del Barco
How one couple survived a shipwreck and kept their marriage afloat NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Sophie Elmhirst, author of A Marriage at Sea, which chronicles the voyage of Maurice and Maralyn Bailey, a British couple who was lost at sea for 118 days in 1972. Kathryn Fink
Politics Supreme Court allows Trump to resume mass federal layoffs for now Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, who was appointed to the court by President Biden, dissented. Andrea Hsu
Business Prime Day — er, Days — tests deal hunters' will to spend amid tariffs Electronics and back-to-school supplies are expected to top many shoppers' lists. Alina Selyukh
National Shoes off at the airport? TSA gives the pesky rule the boot The Transportation Security Administration has booted one of the most despised rules at U.S. airport security checkpoints: removing your shoes. Joe Hernandez