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The World: Latest Stories

The World: Latest Stories
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Host Marco Werman and his team of producers bring you the world's most interesting stories that remind us just how small our planet really is. The World, the radio program, is heard each weekday on over 300 public stations across North America.
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The International Ski and Snowboard Federation is implementing new safety rules for the upcoming season after a number of rising stars suffered fatal crashes on the slopes. The World's Bianca Hillier reports.
Three Chinese astronauts are stuck on the Tiangong space station after it was damaged from space debris. They were supposed to return to Earth today, but will remain up in space indefinitely. The World's Host Marco Werman learns more about the threat of junk orbiting the planet from Nilton Rennó. He's a professor of Climate and Space Engineering at the University of Michigan.
Superstitions vary from culture to culture and can, at times, be puzzling. Steph Dalwin was fascinated by her mom's Vietnamese superstition of keeping a knife under her pillow at night to keep away ghosts. So, she started doing the same thing. Dalwin is a research analyst and stand-up comedian and shared the superstition with GBH's Stories From The Stage.
Vir Das is incredibly popular in India. Now, he's making a bigger and bigger name for himself outside the country, too. He has a memoir that came out this week, and he'll be doing a residency at the Lincoln Center in New York. Reporter Sushmita Pathak has the story.
Not very long ago, in the galaxy we live in, someone invented a sport that combines fencing with our fantasy pals from "Star Wars." All you need is one of those glow-in-the-dark swords every kid, and adult, secretly wanted as a birthday present from Obi-Wan Kenobi, and you're ready to rock. The World's Gerry Hadden reports from Barcelona on the fun of this rising trend.
Pope Leo XIV fielded questions from reporters outside the papal retreat at Castel Gandolfo last night. Hosts Carolyn Beeler and Marco Werman share a few take-aways.
A glacier in Antarctica has broken a melt record. Last year, the Hektoria glacier lost five miles of ice in two months — more than 10 times the previous record. The World's Host Carolyn Beeler speaks with study author Ted Scambos about the finding.
Every year, thousands risk the perilous journey across the Mediterranean, aiming for Italy and a chance at a new life in Europe. Many land off the island of Lampedusa, abandoning their boats offshore. Now, in a prison workshop in Milan, those boats are being given a second life. Inmates at Opera prison, one of Italy’s largest jails, are turning the abandoned vessels into musical instruments, which have been played at the country's most famous opera house. The government of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni is not on board with the project though. The World's Europe Correspondent Orla Barry reports from Milan.
The surprising rise of Zohran Mamdani to become mayor-elect of New York City has captured global attention. Mamdani, a Muslim, was born in Uganda to parents of South Asian descent, and people from across both continents have been reacting to his win. Hosts Marco Werman and Carolyn Beeler have more.
From the late 1990s through the early 2000s, US oil giant Exxon spent tens of thousands of dollars funding think tanks across Latin America to promote climate skepticism. That’s according to a new investigation by the climate journalism organization DeSmog. Host Carolyn Beeler speaks to the author of the investigation, Geoff Dembicki. He’s the global managing editor of DeSmog, which co-published the findings with The Guardian.
No longer just QR codes on doorways, China’s surveillance of Uyghurs is now hidden in Cloud services and software updates. Dina Temple-Raston of the "Click Here" podcast looks at how digital tools meant to protect identity are being used to erase it. Her story focuses on a cyberattack against members of the World Uyghur Congress.
Hosts Carolyn Beeler and Marco Werman survey global headlines flying just under the radar.
Thirty years ago today, a far-right Israeli extremist shot and killed Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. The World’s Host Marco Werman speaks with author Robert Malley about Rabin’s legacy, and why the former general’s hopes for peace in the region faltered. Malley’s new book with co-author Hussein Agha is called, "Tomorrow Is Yesterday: Life, Death, and the Pursuit of Peace in Israel/Palestine.”
Sir David Beckham was knighted by the UK's King Charles today. The ceremony took place at Windsor Castle and the former soccer pro knelt before the monarch, who touched his shoulders with a sword to make it official. But the honor acknowledges more than just the soccer player's work on the field. Hosts Carolyn Beeler and Marco Werman have the details.
Paris has launched a lottery to restore some of the spectacular funerary monuments within the overcrowded cemeteries of Père-Lachaise, Montparnasse and Montmartre. Gravestones and monuments in Parisian cemeteries are maintained by families, not the city, and some graves can become abandoned and decrepit over time. So, Paris officials would like residents to come in, fix up monuments and be buried alongside the likes of Jim Morrison, Edith Piaf and Oscar Wilde. Hosts Marco Werman and Carolyn Beeler explain.
Richard Bruce "Dick" Cheney, who died on Monday at the age of 84, became an influential figure in Washington on matters of foreign policy starting in the 1970s. Cheney believed in the robust use of America power — including military force — to shape the world to serve US national security interests. He was a strong advocate for the first Gulf War, the US-led invasion of Afghanistan and a central player in the 2003 US invasion of Iraq. Cheney was also one of the architects of the so-called "War on Terror," which has had a profound impact on US influence around the globe. The World's Matthew Bell reports.
Turkey welcomed not one but two major European leaders to its capital last week. First, the UK’s Keir Starmer, then Germany’s Friedrich Merz. For more than a decade, Turkey’s backsliding on democracy has lead to distance from Europe. But the growing threat from Russia, and Turkey’s potential role in Europe’s defense, seem to be ushering in a new era of cooperation, ironically, at the same time that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's crackdown on domestic opposition figures reaches a new peak. Deutsche Welle, DW's Dorian Jones reports from Istanbul.
When the Intercontinental Hotel first opened its doors in Kabul in 1969, Afghanistan was embracing modernity. In the decades that followed, it kept those doors open through a Soviet occupation, civil wars, a US-led invasion and the rise, fall and rise again of the Taliban. Journalist Lyse Doucet follows the lives of the hotel’s staff as they navigate decades of change in her new book "The Finest Hotel in Kabul: A People's History of Afghanistan."
Northern parts of Afghanistan were hit with a strong earthquake overnight Monday. At least 20 people were killed and many injured, according to local officials. This is the second time since August that the country has been hit with a strong earthquake. The World’s Shirin Jaafari speaks with Host Marco Werman.
Today in a ceremony hidden from public view Tanzania swore in Samia Hassan for a second term as president. She won with a landslide 98% of the vote in an election that has sparked nationwide protests, and that many international observers are concerned was rigged. Host Marco Werman learns more from Daniel Paget, a specialist in Tanzania's elections and an assistant professor at the University of Sussex in the UK.





If you are a Christian conservative with a soft spot for other Abrahamic religions , this podcast, disguised as current news snippets is for you. Example: Recent podcast on Vatican corruption covered by a reporter from Ireland ( Catholic majority country), interviewees: 1. Jesuit priest 2. Professor at Villanova ( Catholic University) 3. Catholic News website. Key takeaways: Grey shades where the Vatican is concerned. Francis is good, he is really trying. Innocent till proven guilty. Standards for covering news about Hindus, Budhists, Jains - GUIlTY as charged. In the past few years, have heard multiple stores that portrayed these religions solely negatively. If there is a negative story to be covered you can rest assured that Marko and team are on it. Recent stories about beheading of a Hindu engineer by Islamists in Pakistan, lynchings of.a Hindu by Sikhs were ignored by Marko and team. A Kashmiri Muslim from a region where Hindus have been targeted for their religion since 194
hunters laptop?
sounds like some technical difficulties in today's show.