The Latest Europe How the town of Cortina, Italy, is preparing to co-host the 2026 Winter Olympics Residents of Cortina, Italy, worry about the effects of the 2026 Winter Olympics on their town. Kyle McKinnon National Sen. Peter Welch on efforts in Congress to fund SNAP amid the shutdown NPR's Juana Summers talks with Sen. Peter Welch of Vermont about his support for a bill to provide SNAP benefits to recipients in spite of the shutdown. Sarah Handel Technology The 'clippers' who make internet stars viral NPR's Scott Detrow speaks with Bloomberg digital culture reporter Cecilia D'Anastasio about an emerging industry of video editing -- designed to help content creators go viral online. Scott Detrow Time for an interstellar flyby! Meet 3i/ATLAS, a very old comet Scientists are observing the skies as the comet 3i/ATLAS makes a close flyby of Earth. Gabriel J. Sánchez Economy Federal Reserve cuts interest rates again as concerns grow about U.S. job market The Federal Reserve lowered its benchmark interest rate today for the second time in six weeks. The central bank is trying to shore up the sagging job market. Scott Horsley Latin America A day after a deadly police raid in Rio de Janeiro, 2 very different stories emerge More than 130 people were killed in Rio de Janeiro's deadliest-ever police raid targeting a major drug cartel. Carrie Kahn Phyllis Trible, a groundbreaking feminist Bible scholar, dies at 92 Noted feminist Bible scholar Phyllis Trible influenced generations of Christians. She died this month at the age of 92. Monique Parsons International Committee of the Red Cross president on transporting remains and delivering aid in Gaza Mirjana Spoljaric, president of the International Committee of the Red Cross, discusses how the ICRC operates amid renewed violence in Gaza and works to uphold humanitarian principles during the fragile ceasefire. Daniel Ofman National Food banks and state governments work to bridge aid gaps as SNAP cutoff looms Tens of millions of people are at risk of losing federal food and nutrition benefits due to the government shutdown. Food bank administrators say they are working overtime to meet demand. Barbara Sprunt As Jamaica assesses the damage from Hurricane Melissa, the storm barrels on Hurricane Melissa has put Jamaica gone through "one of its worst periods." Now the recovery begins. Eyder Peralta Prev 232 of 1647 Next Sponsored
Europe How the town of Cortina, Italy, is preparing to co-host the 2026 Winter Olympics Residents of Cortina, Italy, worry about the effects of the 2026 Winter Olympics on their town. Kyle McKinnon
National Sen. Peter Welch on efforts in Congress to fund SNAP amid the shutdown NPR's Juana Summers talks with Sen. Peter Welch of Vermont about his support for a bill to provide SNAP benefits to recipients in spite of the shutdown. Sarah Handel
Technology The 'clippers' who make internet stars viral NPR's Scott Detrow speaks with Bloomberg digital culture reporter Cecilia D'Anastasio about an emerging industry of video editing -- designed to help content creators go viral online. Scott Detrow
Time for an interstellar flyby! Meet 3i/ATLAS, a very old comet Scientists are observing the skies as the comet 3i/ATLAS makes a close flyby of Earth. Gabriel J. Sánchez
Economy Federal Reserve cuts interest rates again as concerns grow about U.S. job market The Federal Reserve lowered its benchmark interest rate today for the second time in six weeks. The central bank is trying to shore up the sagging job market. Scott Horsley
Latin America A day after a deadly police raid in Rio de Janeiro, 2 very different stories emerge More than 130 people were killed in Rio de Janeiro's deadliest-ever police raid targeting a major drug cartel. Carrie Kahn
Phyllis Trible, a groundbreaking feminist Bible scholar, dies at 92 Noted feminist Bible scholar Phyllis Trible influenced generations of Christians. She died this month at the age of 92. Monique Parsons
International Committee of the Red Cross president on transporting remains and delivering aid in Gaza Mirjana Spoljaric, president of the International Committee of the Red Cross, discusses how the ICRC operates amid renewed violence in Gaza and works to uphold humanitarian principles during the fragile ceasefire. Daniel Ofman
National Food banks and state governments work to bridge aid gaps as SNAP cutoff looms Tens of millions of people are at risk of losing federal food and nutrition benefits due to the government shutdown. Food bank administrators say they are working overtime to meet demand. Barbara Sprunt
As Jamaica assesses the damage from Hurricane Melissa, the storm barrels on Hurricane Melissa has put Jamaica gone through "one of its worst periods." Now the recovery begins. Eyder Peralta