All Things Considered
Weekdays from 4-6:00pm
In-depth reporting and transformed the way listeners understand current events and view the world. Every weekday, hear two hours of breaking news mixed with compelling analysis, insightful commentaries, interviews, and special - sometimes quirky - features.
Pete Rose, all-time hits leader who was then banned from baseball, has died at 83
by Ailsa Chang
Baseball great Pete Rose has died. He's known as MLB's all-time hits leader, but was banned from the sport in 1989 for gambling. NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with author Keith O'Brien about Rose’s legacy.
Brazil has another month of campaigning after presidential election goes to runoff
by Carrie Kahn
Brazil faces a tense month ahead as the two divisive presidential candidates face each other in a runoff election.
Britain's finance minister reverses new policy just a week after initial annoucement
by Willem Marx
Britain announced a series of tax proposals that led to a major sell-off of the country's currency and the government's debt. Just over a week later, the government has been forced to change tack.
Russia is losing the edge in Ukraine, but Putin still seems ready to double down
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with Michael McFaul, a former U.S. Ambassador to Russia, about Putin's mindset as the war in Ukraine shifts out of Russia's favor.
In 'Thistlefoot,' GennaRose Nethercott explores painful history through folklore
by Mallory Yu
In her debut book Thistlefoot, author GennaRose Nethercott reimagines the centuries-old character Baba Yaga as a Jewish woman living in a shtetl in 1919 Russia, in a time of civil war and pogroms.
EPA creates new office to advance environmental justice initiatives
by Leoneda Inge
Forty years after Warren County, N.C., residents marched to a landfill to try to stop dump trucks, the EPA is creating a new office charged with advancing environmental justice.
Lawsuits involving Florida Gov. DeSantis' migrant relocation flights move forward
by Joel Rose
More details about Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis's migrant relocation flights are coming to light. Meanwhile, lawsuits are moving forward alleging people on those flights were misled.
Residents in Fort Myers, Fla., are preparing for a hard recovery after Hurricane Ian
by Martin Kaste
Hurricane Ian destroyed Fort Myers Beach in Florida, but the city of Fort Myers was damaged, too. In the historically Black neighborhood of Dunbar, people are living without drinkable water and power.
Biden visits Puerto Rico to assess damage from Hurricane Fiona
by Adrian Florido
President Biden was in Puerto Rico on Monday to assess damage from Hurricane Fiona. Biden landed in the southern city of Ponce, one of the hardest-hit communities.
A 23-year megadrought is endangering the agricultural economy in the Southwest
by Kirk Siegler
Drought is pushing Arizona farmers to the brink as they've been cut off from the shrinking Colorado River. The crisis is also renewing questions about the viability of growing crops in a desert.
A group of angry library patrons in Texas has gone to court over book removals
by John Burnett
A group of library patrons in Llano, Texas, has filed a First Amendment lawsuit against county officials for removing or restricting a range of books. It's a rare example of readers pushing back.