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NPR All Things Considered

NPR

All Things Considered hosts Ailsa Chang, Mary Louise Kelly, Juana Summers and Scott Detrow present the program's trademark mix of news, interviews, commentaries, reviews, and offbeat features 7 days a week.

Location:

United States

Networks:

NPR

Description:

All Things Considered hosts Ailsa Chang, Mary Louise Kelly, Juana Summers and Scott Detrow present the program's trademark mix of news, interviews, commentaries, reviews, and offbeat features 7 days a week.

Language:

English


Episodes
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Major League Soccer has a new schedule to align with international leagues

11/14/2025
MLS is switching from a spring-to-fall calendar to a summer-to-spring calendar. The move aligns with the rest of international soccer but could pose a challenge for teams in wintry locations.

Duration:00:03:00

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The U.S. didn't send delegates to COP30, but California is filling the void

11/14/2025
The U.S. didn't send high-level delegates to COP30, but states like California are sending representatives and having an impact on the world climate stage.

Duration:00:02:56

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How NPR edits remarks by the president

11/14/2025
The BBC recently apologized for a documentary it aired in 2024 featuring remarks by President Trump. In light of this news, we wanted to share how NPR handles editing remarks by the president.

Duration:00:03:27

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Questions remain as Australia moves to ban social media for kids under 16

11/14/2025
In a few weeks, Australia will become the first country to ban children below the age of 16 from having social media accounts.

Duration:00:03:39

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How to scare off hungry gulls

11/14/2025
Neeltje Boogert, an associate professor at the University of Exeter in the U.K., is the senior author of a new scientific study about how to best scare away gulls, out now from the Royal Society.

Duration:00:04:19

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Relatives of late artist Norman Rockwell push back on DHS use of paintings

11/14/2025
Norman Rockwell's granddaughter Daisy has condemned the Department of Homeland Security's use of his paintings, saying DHS is misappropriating his art to support policies he would not have endorsed.

Duration:00:05:07

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This week in Washington: End of shutdown, Epstein emails and affordability crisis

11/14/2025
The government reopened, more files related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein were released, and the White House is shifting some attention to affordability.

Duration:00:05:54

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Chile's election sets up a stark left–right showdown

11/14/2025
Chile heads to the polls on Sunday, in a fiercely polarized election that mirrors the region's struggles with crime, inflation, and economic stagnation.

Duration:00:04:01

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Amid ICE crackdowns, migrants are sending more money to some Central American countries

11/14/2025
Planet Money talks to immigrants in the U.S. and people in Honduras to try to figure out why remittances are surging to some countries right as it is harder for immigrants here to find work.

Duration:00:04:47

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Sean Ono Lennon shares 'John & Yoko' documentary, and family memories

11/14/2025
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Sean Ono Lennon about what his mom taught him, and the new documentary about his famous parents, One to One: John and Yoko.

Duration:00:08:16

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Young brain researchers ponder other careers amid federal funding cuts

11/14/2025
Cuts and disruptions to federal research funding are causing many young brain scientists to reconsider their career choice.

Duration:00:03:53

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Jordan prays for rain as drought hits olive harvest

11/14/2025
As world leaders meet in Brazil to discuss climate change, Jordanians pray for rain.

Duration:00:03:03

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A storm devastated Alaska Native villages. Now their public media lost funding

11/14/2025
A public TV and radio station in Western Alaska serves dozens of villages damaged by Typhoon Halong. But with federal funding eliminated, KYUK faces severe cuts to its staff and news department.

Duration:00:04:33

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In Kansas and elsewhere, some state lawmakers are skeptical of the redistricting rush

11/14/2025
Kansas Republican leaders couldn't rally enough support this fall for a special session on redistricting. It's just one example of lawmakers pushing back on a new round of partisan gerrymandering.

Duration:00:03:40

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Scientists pull ancient RNA from a woolly mammoth's body

11/14/2025
Scientists have extracted the oldest RNA molecules out of a woolly mammoth, gaining a snapshot into the processes at work in the extinct mammal's body just before it died.

Duration:00:03:59

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The Trump administration plans major shift away from long-term housing for homelessness

11/14/2025
The overhaul shifts funds to transitional housing requiring work and addiction treatment. The administration says it promotes "self-sufficiency," but critics warn many will risk losing housing again.

Duration:00:03:47

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Catholic bishops talked about immigration and transgender care at U.S. gathering

11/13/2025
U.S. Catholic bishops gathered in Baltimore, where they elected new leaders, responded to Pope Leo's call to speak on immigration and issued new directives on transgender care for Catholic hospitals.

Duration:00:04:03

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Tragedy looms 40 years after a volcano wiped out a Colombian village

11/13/2025
Forty years after the Nevado del Ruiz volcano wiped out the town of Armero, the ghosts of Colombia's deadliest tragedy still haunt its slopes, and families are still searching for lost children.

Duration:00:04:34

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The government can now get back to measuring the economy with shutdown over

11/13/2025
Now that the government shutdown is over, federal number crunchers are back at work. It could take time, though, to make up for the jobs reports and inflation scorecards we missed in the last 6 weeks.

Duration:00:03:43

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This week in science: A Saturn moon's ocean, chameleon eyes and energy used for AI

11/13/2025
Emily Kwong and Regina Barber of NPR's Short Wave discuss new findings about the ocean of Saturn's moon Enceladus, the secrets behind chameleons' eye movements and the energy use behind AI computing.

Duration:00:07:59