
All Things Considered
Weekdays 3 PM-6:30 PM
NPR's evening news magazine. All Things Considered is serious news, frivolous fun and everything in between.
-
We examine Trump's actions and missteps in first 100 days on the economy, immigration and foreign policy.
-
President Trump is easing some of his tariffs on the U.S. auto industry. But what will the overall impact of these economic policies mean for the nation's biggest carmakers? Ford Motor CEO weighs in.
-
Sundar Pichai testified in the remedies trial that will determine the penalties Google will face for monopolizing the search engine market.
-
For days, police say, Samuel Patrick Groft cruised through the streets of Los Angeles on his bicycle, single-handedly chopping down about a dozen city trees with an electric chainsaw in three different neighborhoods.
-
Researchers at the Department of Veterans Affairs warn that crucial medical research is in jeopardy unless the Trump administration reverses course on cuts.
-
Kids – even some young kids – are being exposed to an unprecedented amount of pornography online and a lot of it is violent and misogynistic. There are tools parents can use to block this content.
-
At the northern end of the Black Sea, Crimea sits at the crossroads of Europe and Asia, having been at various times in its long history either coveted, conquered or controlled by various powers.
-
The food we grow up with says a lot about our heritage and community. Researchers are on a mission to connect people to local fishers — and introduce more Americans to a more diverse array of seafood.
-
Fifty years after the end of the war, Hanoi says nearly 200,000 Vietnamese soldiers are still missing. Some of their families are now calling on the U.S. to help find them.
-
For decades in the U.S., chicken breasts were pricier and more popular than chicken thighs. But that seems to be changing.