Here and Now
Monday-Thursday, 1-3 p.m.
Stay up-to-date with the news between Morning Edition and All Things Considered. Here & Now combines the best in news journalism with intelligent, broad-ranging conversation to form a fast-paced program that updates the news from the morning and adds important conversations on public policy and foreign affairs, science and technology, and the arts: film, theater, music, food, and more.
-
Over the course of 22 years as a U.N. interpreter, Lynn Visson interpreted for politicians like Russian President Boris Yeltsin and President Jimmy Carter.
-
Most inmates are put on mandatory supervised release, which requires a person to have stable housing before they can leave prison.
-
Here & Now's Jeremy Hobson speaks with The Independent's tennis corespondent about what makes the world's oldest tennis tournament so unique.
-
The Thai cave rescue captivated audiences for weeks. But other concurrent disasters, like flooding in Japan, received less attention.
-
Trap shooting teams gradually fell out of favor in New York's North Country amid the push for stricter gun laws. But now, the sport is coming back.
-
A new study published this week in the field of senolytics might provide a key to anti-aging. Scientists have found that in using compounds to kill off so-called senescent - or aging - cells, the lifespan and agility of mice increased.
-
Whitney Houston's life was "a pure tragedy, in the Greek or the Shakespearean sense," says the director of the documentary "Whitney."
-
NPR's Domenico Montanaro joins Here & Now's Lisa Mullins to discuss reaction to President Trump's choice for the Supreme Court.
-
More than 100 wild horses were recently found dead in northern Arizona, drowned in the thick mud surrounding a dried-up watering hole.
-
Another round of trade tariffs are slated go into effect on around $34 billion worth of Chinese machinery, auto parts and medical devices.