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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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Ceasefire at risk as U.S. helps ships run Iran blockade

5/4/2026
The U.S. says it will guide ships through the Strait of Hormuz to break the deadlock.

Duration:00:06:55

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Why U.S. troops are stationed in Germany, and what happens if some leave

5/4/2026
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Jeff Rathke, president of the American-German Institute, about U.S. troops stationed in Germany, and what happens if President Trump moves some of them elsewhere.

Duration:00:05:48

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One man's quest to only forage for food for one year

5/4/2026
A man who says he is only foraging for food for a year recently taught a group of people in Charlotte, N.C., about the plants that you can find and eat on a walk.

Duration:00:03:29

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The State Department has had a surge in new retirements

5/4/2026
Usually, 2/3 of U.S. ambassadors come from the career foreign service. But the Trump administration has named mostly political ambassadors, leaving senior career diplomats with few prospects.

Duration:00:03:54

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Saying goodbye to the Yankee broadcaster with the legendary calls

5/4/2026
New York Yankees broadcaster John Sterling has died at age 87. He started as the team's play-by-play announcer in 1989, and he called every game until he missed his first one in 2019.

Duration:00:02:38

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What actually happens when schools take away students' phones?

5/4/2026
NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks with Stanford education economist Thomas Dee about the latest study on schools banning cellphones.

Duration:00:03:53

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Anti-poverty program is effective even in one of the world's toughest settings

5/4/2026
Researchers looked at whether a tried-and-true poverty alleviation effort that gives cash and coaching to households, and is typically implemented in rural areas, could work in an urban setting.

Duration:00:04:24

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Supreme Court gives abortion pill mifepristone a 1-week reprieve from a major change

5/4/2026
The Supreme Court says rules that allow patients to get the abortion pill mifepristone through the mail can stay the same for at least a week.

Duration:00:04:18

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Entrepreneurs fight pile-up of garbage in the West Bank

5/3/2026
Israeli restrictions on movement in the West Bank are impeding garbage trucks from reaching landfills, leaving Palestinians living amid mounds of trash. Two Palestinian entrepreneurs are trying to change this.

Duration:00:05:14

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Life Kit team shares tax choices that save you money

5/3/2026
Life Kit has tips to help you make better tax choices now that'll save you money in 2026.

Duration:00:03:37

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A journalist revisits a decision to report on a teacher for sexual abuse

5/3/2026
Investigative journalist Isolde Raftery of KUOW explains why, two decades later, she re-investigated her own reporting on a teacher accused of sexual abuse.

Duration:00:06:20

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As the Devil Wears Prada 2 struts into theaters, NPR staffers discuss fashion in film

5/3/2026
NPR's fashionistas talk about how their favorite films have influenced what we wear, and the power of costumes to transform character.

Duration:00:09:23

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Blasting beats and neon lights: inside Nairobi's 'nganya' bus culture

5/3/2026
In Nairobi, the matatu isn't just a ride—it's a rolling nightclub, art gallery, and heartbeat of the city all in one.

Duration:00:04:06

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Composer Adrian Younge opens up about making music with a cinematic feel

5/3/2026
Composer Adrian Younge talks about being inspired by the spy-thriller sound of 60s and 70s jazz, what it's like being sampled and why his music has a cinematic feel.

Duration:00:04:58

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Modern economic chokepoints in war and the impact on geopolitics

5/3/2026
Hoover Institution fellow Eyck Freymann explains what the Iran war and the blockade of the Straight of Hormuz reveals about modern economic chokepoints, geopolitics and war strategies.

Duration:00:05:33

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How does diplomacy work during a military deadlock?

5/3/2026
Suzanne DiMaggio, senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, explains the nuances of diplomatic moves at a time of military stalemate.

Duration:00:05:37

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Comedian Sheng Wang on finding joy in the mundane

5/2/2026
In his new Netflix special, comedian Sheng Wang elevates mundane moments - like picking a toothbrush - into punchlines. NPR's Emily Feng talks to the comedian about where he finds joy.

Duration:00:09:33

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Oil and gas companies making hay by making plastic?

5/2/2026
Author Beth Gardiner talks about her new book, 'Plastic Inc.' and about what she learned about the relationship between oil and gas companies and the plastics industry.

Duration:00:05:50

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An inevitable rise in Chinese-made EVs in America?

5/2/2026
Chinese-made EVs that are not currently legally sold in the U.S. are making their way across the border anyway, says Wall Street Journal reporter Ryan Felton, who recently covered a rise in interest in the vehicles.

Duration:00:03:53

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Is there a 'standard' Indian body?

5/2/2026
India recently published a survey to 'standardize' the Indian body sizes, so its manufacturers don't have to use the U.S. and E.U. sizes for a billion people. But is there a 'standard' Indian body?

Duration:00:04:53