The data, which was delayed from October by the government shutdown, comes as the economy takes center stage for voters and the Trump administration.
Josh Safdie discusses his upcoming film 'Marty Supreme', set for release on December 25. Ahmad Damen is an editor for All Things Considered based in Washington, D.C. He first joined NPR's and WBUR's ...
The Aspen Jewish Congregation has seen a big turnout at its Hanukkah events this week, despite news of an antisemitic attack in Australia that killed 15 people on Sunday.
Jeffrey Epstein accuser Annie Farmer tells NPR's Leila Fadel how survivors of his abuse are reacting to the Justice Department's file dump, which included her sister's 1996 FBI complaint.
In the second installment of a series about falling birth rates, Amelia Dotzenrod talks about why she waited until her ...
The U.S. poured billions of dollars into rebuilding Afghanistan for two decades. NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with John Sopko, the former Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction.
When a child receives a diagnosis of cancer, parents can feel overwhelmed. A new program helps connect them with volunteers who have cared for children who survived cancer.
A pair of bills from Colorado Democrats would make it easier for homeowners to subdivide and sell their land and let certain ...
Few restaurants, particularly chains, have ridden the viral cheese pull wave as well as Tex-Mex national chain, Chili's. Its ...
This year's Arctic Report Card from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration finds that the northernmost part of ...
For 100 years, Hollywood has relied on Central Casting. It's the real company behind movie extras — and where stars like Gary Cooper, Hattie McDaniel, and Brad Pitt got their start.
Kendal Wright, editor in chief of the University of Alabama's Nineteen Fifty-Six magazine, reacts to the suspension of two student publications amid a federal crackdown on campus DEI policies.