
All Things Considered
Monday- Friday 4PM- 6PM, Saturday- Sunday 5PM- 6PM
Every weekday, All Things Considered delivers in-depth reporting and transforms the way listeners understand current events and view the world. The program presents two hours of late-day breaking news mixed with compelling analysis, insightful commentaries, interviews and special feature stories.
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In Zuckerberg's second day of testifying in the federal antitrust trial, he defended Meta's acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp. The U.S. government wants Meta to bust up the two companies.
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Ashley Blas visited her mother's grave for the first time since the funeral. The driver who took her noticed grass covering part of the stone. In a full suit, he knelt down and cleaned the gravestone.
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A whistleblower tells Congress and NPR that DOGE may have taken sensitive labor data and hid its tracks. "None of that ... information should ever leave the agency," said a former NLRB official.
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Mario Vargas Llosa, one of the most celebrated writers in Latin America and the first Peruvian to win the Nobel Prize in Literature, has died at 89. The author died on Sunday surrounded by his family.
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Trump administration reforms at the State Department are shrinking the United States' diplomatic footprint globally.
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Damian Kulash of OK Go reflects on the band's decades of creating elaborate one-take viral music videos.
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China's leader, Xi Jinping, embarks on a five-day, three-nation Southeast Asia tour, amid the trade war with the U.S.
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Ousted FDA vaccine chief Dr. Peter Marks talks about the current administration's policy on vaccines and how that is impacting its response to the ongoing measles outbreak in the southwestern U.S.
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A viral "true crime" story was actually made up, generated by A.I. Reporter Henry Larson explores the ethical questions raised by this new frontier of content.
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The new album from OK Go, called And The Adjacent Possible, is the band's first in more than a decade.