
All Things Considered
Monday-Friday 4 to 6:30pm
All Things Considered is the most listened-to, afternoon drive-time, news radio program in the country. Every weekday the two-hour and 30 minutes show is hosted by Mary Louis Kelly, Ari Shapiro, Audie Cornish and Ailsa Chang.
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This story starts with a bag of potato chips — but there were no chips inside. A city hall reporter was handed an empty bag with a red envelope filled with money from someone working for Mayor Eric Adams' re-election campaign. NPR's Juana Summers speaks to Katie Honan, the reporter at the center of the incident, about what happened.
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Despite dating apps and social media advice, romantic connections can be hard to make. Enter artificial intelligence.
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This week on the pop music charts, a film soundtrack has done something that no other soundtrack had done in nearly 30 years.
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What's behind the trend of so-called "gray divorces," and what is it like for newly single people to seek out new relationships over the age of 50?
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Even years after a person has lost an arm, the brain faithfully maintains the circuits that once controlled the missing limb.
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NPR's Hannah Chinn and Emily Kwong talk about the microbes behind great-tasting chocolate, possible reasons for daytime drowsiness, and a curious observation about the poop of seabirds.
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Climate change increased the severity of Hurricane Katrina 20 years ago. Since the scientific understanding of how climate change influences hurricanes has changed and improved.
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On Wild Card, well-known guests answer the kinds of questions we often think about but don't talk about. Harrison Ford talks about being too belligerent to listen to advice in his youth.
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NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks to singer and songwriter Kathleen Edwards about her new album, Billionaire.
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Mortgage rates are finally dropping a bit lower at the end of a slow summer season. We take a look at what the latest data tells us about what's ahead.