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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ACLU lawyer on the fight against Kentucky's new anti-abortion law
NPR's Sarah McCammon speaks with Heather Gatnarek, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union in Kentucky, about a new law that effectively blocks access to abortions in that state.
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A chess grandmaster takes on 30 opponents in a simultaneous exhibition
Chess grandmaster Dorsa Derakhshani led her team at Saint Louis University to the collegiate national championship after taking on the Iranian government. Today, she took on another new challenge.
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Women face disproportionate attacks online. One expert shares some of the details
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with disinformation researcher Nina Jankowicz about her new book, How to Be a Woman Online: Surviving Abuse and Harassment, and How to Fight Back.
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How Black American Jews incorporate their food traditions into their Passover Seders
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with chef and author Michael Twitty and Rabbi Sandra Lawson about Black American cuisine and the Seder plate.
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#NPRPoetry: A former Poet Laureate of Philadelphia shares his latest collection
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with poet Raquel Salas Rivera for National Poetry Month.
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Hundreds of Ukrainian refugees are at the U.S.-Mexico border hoping for asylum
Hundreds of refugees from Ukraine have arrived in the U.S. via Mexico. Many have stayed at a shelter in Tijuana, waiting for permission to cross the border.
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Part of the reason people love video game Elden Ring is because it's so hard to play
Elden Ring is the most talked-about video game of 2022, despite — or perhaps because of — its immense difficulty and complexity.
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The impact of the war in Ukraine on the global food supply
From the start of the war in Ukraine, food policy experts have worried that a hunger crisis could be in the making, given how important Ukraine and Russia are to global food supply.
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Beneath Kharkiv in Ukraine, survival has created a sense of community
For more than 50 days, Ukraine's second largest city has been relentlessly shelled. Above ground, parts of the city are unlivable. But below ground, life is trying to find a way.
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Faith leaders reflect on their messages during the weekend's religious ceremonies
NPR's Ari Shapiro speaks with Imam Mohamed Herbert, Rabbi Ruth Zlotnick and Reverend Marshall Hatch about how their respective faith communities are observing this holy weekend.
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In its 3rd week in lockdown, Shanghai reported 23,000 new COVID cases today
Shanghai, China, is approaching the end of its third week of a near-total lockdown to fight COVID. As case numbers rise, so does the frustration of many in the city of more than 25 million people.
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Texas welfare workers are resigning over orders to investigate trans kids' families
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Eleanor Klibanoff of The Texas Tribune about the child welfare workers who are leaving their jobs over state orders to investigate the families of trans kids.