All Things Considered
Weekdays 3:30-6:30 p.m., Weekends at 3:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m.
Whether you're working from home or on your commute, unwind every afternoon with All Things Considered. You'll get updates and deep dives from one of the most trusted news sources in America – right alongside the vibrant stories about your community, music, and art to ease your transition into who you are after work. And, when you listen live, you’ll feel even more connected to the people in your region and around the country who are affected by the stories you’re hearing.
Click here to learn more about this program and access previous shows.
Latest Episodes
-
President Putin starts his first foreign trip of this new term: a two-day visit to China to meet with Chinese leader Xi Jinping. Here's the significance of this trip and what we can expect from it,
-
Novelist Claire Messud comes from a family of writers. Her latest novel is inspired by her grandfather's handwritten book. In it, she excavates generations of family history through fiction.
-
Michael Cohen is back on the stand for a second day of testimony against former President Donald Trump. Cohen testified about receiving payments that prosecutors argue are false business records.
-
Credit card delinquencies rose in the first three months of the year. That's a sign of the growing financial stress that some families are feeling in an era of rising prices and high interest rates.
-
There's a special education staffing crisis in a northern California school district. It means some of the district's most vulnerable students have missed weeks and even months of school.
-
The Biden administration is quadrupling tariffs on China-made EVs. The tariffs are part of a broad swath of protectionist policies first imposed by former President Trump.
-
Big primaries in Maryland and West Virginia could have implications for the Senate in November — and signal fights ahead for Democrats.
-
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Cassandra Nagley, who covers women's basketball for Yahoo Sports, about the WNBA season kickoff.
-
NPR's Juana Summers talks with Leonard Rubenstein of Johns Hopkins University about the unprecedented Israeli attacks on hospitals in Gaza, and what international law could do to protect them.
-
Rick Slayman, who in March became the first living person to receive a kidney from a genetically modified pig, has died. One of his doctors talks about what was learned from the historic transplant.