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 COVID-19 Vaccine Trials In Children Are Going To Work
NPR's Audie Cornish talks with Dr. Yvonne Maldonado, chair of the Committee on Infectious Disease for the American Academy of Pediatrics, about the COVID-19 vaccine trials in children.
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Officials From The U.S. And China Have Met For The First Time Since Biden Took Office
Cabinet-level officials from the U.S. and China met for the first time since Biden took office, amid increasingly acrimonious and fraught relations between the world's two largest economies.
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Signs Of Ye Olde Times: Worn Out Highway Signs Are An Issue For Drivers And Officials
Those green highway signs on interstates increasingly have problems. Older signs are almost invisible at night and it's creating issues for drivers and headaches for state transportation managers.
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Bird Feeders May Be Spreading The Salmonellosis That's Killing Thousands Of Finches
A Salmonellosis outbreak is killing thousands of finches across the country, and experts say bird feeders might be spreading the disease.
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As The NCAA Tournament Starts, The Men's And Women's Bubbles Look A Bit... Different
Since the NCAA D1 basketball tournaments started this week, players, coaches and fans have pointed out the differences between the men's bubble in Indiana and the women's bubble in Texas.
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'We're Going To Keep Digging,' FBI Director Wray Says Of Capitol Siege
In a rare interview, FBI Director Christopher Wray told NPR that the bureau will keep working on the sprawling investigation "no matter how long it takes."
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Where The Krill Go, Whales Follow — And They Took This Humpback To The SF Bay Early
A humpback whale has been spotted in the San Francisco Bay. It's young, it is healthy, but it is the first time a humpback has been seen this early in the year at that location.
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A Vaccination Announcement On Social Media May Bring On Negative Responses
People getting vaccinated for COVID-19 are deciding whether to share the good news, as posting a vaccine selfie can lead to unwelcome questions, assumptions and backlash.
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New Netflix Documentary Shows How Money Can Buy Admission To A Top U.S. University
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Chris Smith, director of the Netflix documentary Operation Varsity Blues: The College Admissions Scandal.
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As Out-Of-State Buyers Drive Up Prices, A Montanan Utilized Local Cred To Buy A House
Bozeman, Mont., resident Sean Hawksford tried nearly 20 times to buy a house. But a flood of new home buyers from the coasts — who can work remotely — has driven home prices way up and supply down.
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What Authorities Know About The Spa Shootings In Atlanta
In Cherokee County, Ga., authorities are still trying to understand why a 21-year-old man shot and killed four people at Young's Asian Massage Parlor and then killed four others at spas in Atlanta.
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Biden Announced A $12 Billion Plan For COVID-19 Testing In Schools, A Pricey Endeavor
The Biden administration announced a $12 billion plan to expand the ability of schools to test students, teachers and staff for COVID-19. Some Massachusetts schools are doing this, but it's expensive.