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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Why Scientists Are Infecting Healthy Volunteers With The Coronavirus
Exposing people to a potentially fatal disease could hasten understanding of COVID-19 and development of new vaccines and treatments. But the risks of such studies raise serious ethical questions.
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Trial Begins For Reporter Who Was Arrested Despite Identifying Herself As Media
The trial started Monday for the Des Moines Register reporter, Andrea Sahouri, who was arrested while covering a protest after George Floyd's death even though she identified herself as media.
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Former Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler Has Created A Conservative Voting Initiative
Former Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler has started a new group in Georgia that aims to be the conservative counter to Stacey Abrams' effective Fair Fight voting organization.
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Congress Approved Rental Aid — But It'll Be Hard To Get It To Many Who Need It Most
Congress approved $25 billion in emergency rental assistance to keep people housed during the pandemic. States are struggling to get the money out to those who need it.
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Venezuelans Granted Protected Status In U.S.
The Biden administration is granting temporary protected status to over 300,000 Venezuelans in the U.S., providing legal status to individuals who have fled the country — a shift in U.S. policy.
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Life Kit: Cleaning Better
NPR's Life Kit has tips and tricks for how to clean better.
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Stories Shed Light On Recent Attacks On Asian Americans
NPR's Michel Martin discusses the spike in anti-Asian American violence with three people who've thought a lot about it: professor Russell Jeung, journalist Eda Yu and restauranteur Jason Wang.
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'To Raise A Boy' Author On Addressing Sexual Violence Against Boys
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Emma Brown, an investigative reporter at The Washington Post, about sexual violence perpetrated against boys.
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Pope Francis Concludes Iraq Trip With More Visits To Christian Towns
Pope Francis continues his trip to Iraq with a mass in a stadium in Erbil, home to many Christians displaced from other areas in the wake of ISIS.
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Minneapolis On Edge As Chauvin Trial Is Set To Open
Minneapolis prepares for jury selection in the trial of former police officer Derek Chauvin, accused in the death of George Floyd last spring.
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Musician Semler Talks New Album 'Preacher's Kid'
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Semler about her new album. On Preacher's Kid, Semler reckons with her faith and queerness.
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Author Explores Preacher Father's Silence On Racial Injustice In 1960s Alabama
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist John Archibald about his book, Shaking the Gates of Hell: A Search for Family and Truth in the Wake of the Civil Rights Revolution.