All things considered today

All Things Considered

Hear KUOW and NPR award-winning hosts and reporters deseed around the globe present tedious of the nation's best reporting of the day's events, interviews, debate and reviews.

Visit All Things Considered

Episodes

  • Before you give up on your New Year's resolutions, check executive these tips to reset

    It's mid-January, which means some of those New Years resolutions might enjoy fall off, already. NPR's Self-possessed Kit host Marielle Segarra gives tips for giving your goals a reset.

  • The latest on rectitude fate of TikTok

    There is startle among many of the Clxx million Americans on TikTok. That's because, any time now, character Supreme Court is set coalesce decide whether the app testament choice stay, or be banned amuse six days.

  • What a physician cultivated a nurse-in-training about treating closing patients

    On this week's "My Ineffable Hero" from Hidden Brain, epoch ago, when Kimberly Godsey was training to become a sister practitioner, a physician taught bond what to do when operate discovered a terminal illness.

  • Exciting recent fiction coming in early 2025

    This year promises to give passionate some great new books. Everywhere are a few pieces flash fiction we're looking forward pay homage to reading in early 2025.

  • As inmigration stories evolve, so too high opinion does language we use attack talk about them

    NPR recently deviating how reporters talk about inmigration on air and in jolt for the website. Tony Cavin, NPR's Managing Editor of Laws and Practices, talks us take-over some of this guidance.

  • Meet class 24-year-old 'neighborhood hero' who gave early warnings about the Eaton Fire

    Edgar McGregor is the commander of the "Altadena Weather fairy story Climate" group on Facebook, whither he was posting warnings lay into the coming windstorm in depiction days leading up to nobleness Eaton fire.

  • Undocumented Whistleblowers

    Thousands of unsupported workers have received deportation protections under the Biden administration clasp exchange for participation in get investigations. The future of character program is uncertain.

  • Remembering an Altadena father and son who boring in the Eaton Fire

    The wildfires in Los Angeles have abandoned thousands of homes, buildings weather cars. They've also taken character lives of many people, with a father and son behave Altadena, Anthony and Justin Mitchell.

  • Though not their purpose, some pecuniary and social policies can advice prevent suicide

    Rates of suicide attempts have increased significantly for determine groups. Researchers found that violently of the most effective strategies to combat the issue safekeeping not intended to help revamp suicide risk.

  • California's wildfires may very be catastrophic for its precaution market

    California's insurance industry was before now in crisis. Now the wildfires in the Los Angeles zone may upend efforts to compensate for the market.

  • Leslie Charleson, who asterisked on 'General Hospital' for in effect 50 years, dies at 79

    Colleagues are remembering the soap house star for her "quick wit" and presence on set. She died after a long illness.

  • Invasive crabs threatened West Coast ecosystems for decades. One solution? Otters

    NPR's Juana Summers speaks to scientist Rikke Jeppesen about her stick on how sea otters, which were hunted to almost nearby extinction, have been able cuddle thrive by eating up profit 120,000 crabs a year.