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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How The Pandemic Changed The College Admissions Selection Process This Year
Colleges around the country faced an admissions season marked by pandemic-era challenges: dropped testing requirements, remote learning, disrupted extracurriculars and record applicant pools.
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Joy, Relief In Airports As Australia And New Zealand Open 'Travel Bubble'
Families and friends met in airports for the first time in over a year after Australia and New Zealand opened a "bubble" of quarantine-free travel between their countries.
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What Security Looks Like Amid Protests In The Minneapolis Area
We look at the security for Minneapolis and nearby areas, including a quiet protest outside the Brooklyn Center police station.
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COVID-19 Is Now Spreading Fastest In India — Pushing Its Health System Near Collapse
India is now where the coronavirus is spreading fastest. With shortages of hospital beds, oxygen and vaccines, the country's health system is near collapse.
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Philadelphia's Imbalanced Vaccination Rates Fueled By Lack Of Access
Vaccination rates for Black and Latino people in Philadelphia are half those of their white and Asian counterparts. It appears lack of access is more to blame than hesitancy to get vaccinated.
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'Open Water' Explores Blackness and the Vulnerability of Falling In Love
Caleb Azumah Nelson's Open Water is built on a familiar premise: two young people meet and fall in love. Nelson's debut novel is brimming with references to Black art, music, poetry and photography.
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Despite Strained Relations, U.S. And China Agree To Combat Climate Change Together
The U.S. and China say they will work together to tackle climate change. It's a rare display of cooperation amid an overall tense relationship.
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What Would A 'Feminist Internet' Look Like?
Charlotte Jee of the MIT Technology Review speaks with NPR's Michel Martin about some of the ideas to make the internet more welcoming to women.
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#NPRPoetry: Samuel Getachew
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with poet Samuel Getachew, former National Youth Poet Laureate finalist, about his favorite listener-submitted poems.
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Writer Gets LinkedIn To Make Room For Parents Trying To Re-Enter Workforce
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Heather Bolen about an article she wrote that got LinkedIn to add several new title options for stay-at-home parents.
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Researcher Studies How Messaging On COVID-19 Disparities Affects Policy Preferences
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with professor Evan Lieberman about the study he co-authored looking at how sharing information about the pandemic's racial disparities affect peoples' policy opinions.
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Idaho Resistance Groups Work To Combat Extremism Seeping Into Mainstream
There's a fledgling effort to organize against far-right ideology that's moving into Idaho's political mainstream.