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.
Sponsored
Episodes
-
LA Times columnist Jean Guerrero takes back her name
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Guerrero about her recent piece titled "For years, I Anglicized my Mexican last name. MAGA trolls inspired me to reclaim it."
-
Photos: Russian forces were driven out of this village outside Kharkiv, Ukraine
Last month, Ukrainian forces pushed the Russians out of the village of Mala Rohan. NPR goes inside the warehouse Russia had used as temporary barracks.
-
Displaced Ukrainians in Bulgaria are finding ways to mark Orthodox Easter
This weekend is Orthodox Easter, a holiday celebrated in Ukraine. Millions are fleeing the Russian invasion right now, but those seeking refuge in Bulgaria are marking the holiday.
-
Macron is beating Le Pen in France's polls — but not by as much as 5 years ago
French voters cast their ballots Sunday. Polls show incumbent president Emmanuel Macron ahead of his rival, populist candidate Marine Le Pen.
-
Black Californians discuss the possibility of reparations in their state
California's Reparations Task Force voted to exclude some Black residents from eligibility. NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks to some Black Californians on how they view the possibility of reparations.
-
China's tech crackdown has disrupted its financial markets
China has enforced strict regulations on its tech platforms over the past year. But this crackdown has sparked such instability in financial markets that the government may be having second thoughts.
-
The unhoused population in Tennessee is facing new restrictions around sleeping
Tennessee lawmakers have passed a bill that could mean prison time for sleeping in public spaces. It's the latest effort to regulate homelessness in a state. The bill now goes to the governor.
-
1 of the multiple blasts in Afghanistan hit worshippers in a mosque
Bomb attacks in Afghanistan have shattered a relative lull in violence that had held since the Taliban seized power eight months ago.
-
A Palestinian man's request to leave Gaza for surgery was a matter of life and death
A Palestinian man in Gaza gets a glimmer of hope for treatment for his heart condition when Israel grants him a permit to travel to seek care in the West Bank.
-
Judge temporarily blocks Kentucky's new abortion ban
Abortion has been unavailable in Kentucky for more than a week, after a new state law took effect that puts layers of new requirements on providers.
-
Meet the the lottery winner who has less than a year to prove his identity
Winning over a quarter of a million dollars was easy for an undocumented 28 year-old Algerian man in Belgium. Actually getting his winnings has proven to be a challenge.
-
Review: Robert Eggers' 'The Northman' is 2+ hours of art-house savagery
The legend that Shakespeare based Hamlet on has inspired another work: Robert Eggers' violent new film, The Northman.