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
-
Movies to look forward to this fall
We bring you a selective look at all the action, romance, drama, comedy and awards contenders Hollywood has in store for cooler weather.
-
Devastating earthquake in Afghanistan leaves locals displaced, aid workers scrambling
NPR's Juana Summers talks with the International Rescue Committee's country director of Afghanistan, Sherine Ibrahim, about the 6.0 magnitude earthquake that hit the eastern mountainous region.
-
Leniency on lice in schools meets reality
Lice is low down on threats to public health—they don't carry disease, they don't jump or fly. But school systems and parents are still grappling with whether to keep kids with lice in class.
-
Labor Day protesters say 'no' to Fed takeover
Protestors pushing back against President Trump's policies took to the streets across the United States. In Chicago, many came out to oppose the plans to send the National Guard to their city.
-
How one Canadian's misplaced signature caused a diplomatic incident at the end of WWII
-
On 'Miss Black America,' singer-songwriter Kirby pays homage to her Mississippi roots
NPR's Ari Shapiro speaks with soul singer KIRBY about her new album, Miss Black America, and how her Mississippi roots have shaped her music.
-
A remembrance of longtime CBS reporter and White House correspondent Mark Knoller
The White House Press Corps lost an icon this weekend. A remembrance of longtime CBS News reporter Mark Knoller.
-
College Game Day personality Lee Corso is retiring
On Saturday, the college football personality Lee Corso announced he was retiring from the broadcast and the network he joined back in 1987.
-
An emergency room doctor describes what the changes at the CDC could mean for public health
The Trump Administration has made significant changes to the departments in charge of public health. Dr. Craig Spencer, an emergency medicine physician who teaches public health policy at Brown University, discusses the impact he expects on the health of average Americans and for the future of public health research.
-
The best and worst of movies about high school
A look at the movies that authentically reflect the high school experience.
-
Israeli takeover of Gaza City is under way
The Israeli military says an order for nearly a million people to march south is "inevitable" -- and the assault has already begun.
-
Music on the porch brings joy to neighborhoods
The last Saturday in August is Play Music on the Porch Day. People register their porch parties online, and create some free neighborhood music and joy.