After recent stories of athlete abuse, NPR's All Things Considered wants to have a discussion about the dynamic of trust between families and sports staff.
Weinstein surrendered to police Friday in New York City. Rachel Martin talks to Jodi Kantor of The New York Times, who won a Pulitzer Prize for co-reporting the paper's original story in 2017.
Rachel Martin talks to ex-Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Mike Mullen, who worries a failed North Korea summit could lead President Trump to take military action and that could escalate to nuclear war.
Jim Sellers worked for more than three decades for a phone company but he loved storm chasing. In his obituary, he instructs his friends to launch his ashes into a tornado, adding, "That'll be fun!"
Millions of Americans are hitting the road, rails or jetting off for the weekend. Gas prices are about 60 cents a gallon higher than this time last year. Roads and planes are expected to be packed.
The Hollywood mogul is expected to hand himself over to police at 8 a.m. Friday in Manhattan, a source tells NPR. He's expected pay a million-dollar bail and surrender his passport.
The National Transportation Safety Board's preliminary report said that sensors saw the victim. But Uber says it's the driver, not its system, that was supposed to intervene to avoid the collision.
The cat caught clinging to the roof of a minivan barreling down an Omaha, Neb., highway is aptly named Rebel and sustained no injuries as a result of the harrowing ride.