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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Investigative journalists track suspected cartel boss using his google reviews
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with open source researcher Connor Plunkett, about his report with Bellingcat titled "Kinahan Cartel: Wanted Narco Boss Exposes Whereabouts by Posting Google Reviews."
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Maine AG wants shield law for health workers who perform care banned in other states
How much can states reach into each other's territory to enforce laws on abortion and transgender treatments? Maine's attorney general is attempting a "shield" law to protect health workers.
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A huge crane with a CIA history helps with the Baltimore bridge cleanup
Cleanup efforts continue after last week's fatal collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore. A key part of the wreckage removal is a decades-old, massive crane.
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Rudy Mancuso's 'Musica' brings viewers inside the sensation of rhythmic synesthesia
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Rudy Mancuso about his new movie, Musica. It's his semi-autobiographical film about living with synesthesia and falling in love.
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A closer look at U.S. military support for Israel
President Biden says Israel is inflicting too many civilian casualties in Gaza. Yet he's also proposing $14 billion in fresh military assistance to help Israel wage the war.
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D.C. restaurants are changing how they handle wages for workers who get tips
Restaurants in Washington, D.C., are phasing out the lower minimum wage often given to workers who earn tips. Restaurant owners say it's forced them to add fees, and diners are reportedly confused.
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Once in a lifetime? A 104-year-old recalls Vermont's solar eclipse of 1932
Floyd Van Alstyne was 12 years old in 1932, when Vermont saw its last total eclipse. He says people didn't make much of a fuss about it then. He's not planning a fuss this time, but he'll be watching.
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An Arizona energy company wants to build a new lake in the desert for hydropower
An Arizona utility wants to build a new reservoir in the desert it says will lower its carbon footprint. There are skeptics.
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A sports betting bill has yet again run into stiff opposition, this time in Alabama
Sports betting is still illegal in 12 states. In Alabama, an effort to legalize sports betting has stumbled amid opposition from religious conservatives and those concerned about problem gambling.
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Tony Award-winning playwright Christopher Durang has died
American playwright Christopher Durang has died at 75. He won a Tony Award for "Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike" and was a Pulitzer Prize finalist with "Miss Witherspoon."
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Texas' immigration law is being challenged in court amid racial profiling concerns
Texas' immigration law has raised fear that it'll promote racial profiling by police. The concerns evoke memories of what happened after Arizona passed its so-called "show me your papers" law in 2010.
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Why Tuesday's earthquake in Taiwan was so much less destructive than the one in 1999
Taiwan was rocked Tuesday by a 7.4 magnitude earthquake that hit off the coast. But the causalities and destruction are minimal compared to a devastating earthquake that the island nation in 1999.