
All Things Considered
Weekdays 4 - 6:30 p.m., Weekends 5 - 6 p.m. on 88.5 NEPM
Every weekday, join NPR’s Ari Shapiro, Mary Louise Kelly, Alisa Chang, Juana Summers and New England Public Media's Kari Njiiri and Adam Frenier for breaking news mixed with compelling analysis, insightful commentaries, interviews, and special — sometimes quirky — features.
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Acadia National Park and Bar Harbor fared through a peak weekend for tourism with the park open, but many facilities inside it unstaffed.
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Fall means giant pumpkin contests in some places. At the Topsfield Fair in Massachusetts, we meet the next generation of competitors and their mentors.
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The military have taken control of Madagascars government, as the President flees the country.
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Known as a perfectionist, the singer emerged in the 1990s during the neo-soul movement with his classic debut, Brown Sugar. He made just two more albums, Voodoo and Black Messiah. Both were treasured.
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In a Department of Homeland Security video, Kristi Noem blames Democrats for the government shutdown. Law and ethics experts say it violates the Hatch Act, but there are rarely serious consequences.
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Writer John T. Edge has spent much of his career telling stories about a changing American South filtered through the lens of food and culture. Now he's talking about his troubled family's history.
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A group of volunteers in West Virginia makes sure preschoolers in areas with no libraries or bookstores get books to read.
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A group of volunteers in West Virginia makes sure preschoolers in areas with no libraries or bookstores get books to read.
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NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with Dr. Hagai Levine, head of the medical team for the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, about the road to recovery for hostages just released from captivity.
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Applied physicist Iker Zuriguel studies the movement of particles and people to optimize their flow and improve public safety.