An animated feature about a mythical child on a quest has taken China by storm and shattered records. The film is now in U.S. cinemas.
Months after a public vote to end one of the strictest bans in the U.S., abortion access starts opening up in Missouri clinics. It's part of the ongoing changes in abortion rights as the issue varies ...
Billionaire Elon Musk is helping the Trump administration orchestrate mass firings of federal workers, a tactic he's used in his business career. He's up against different realities in the government.
Why are so many love interests in romantic comedy or romance movies architects? NPR finds out from an Architectural Digest writer.
Firings at the U.S. Forest Service will interrupt land management work that will leave the U.S. more exposed to damaging wildfires, among other impacts, according to employees at the agency.
NPR's Scott Detrow speaks with personal finance columnist Susan Tompor about the real-world implications of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau being dismantled.
Robberies at a string of NFL and NBA athletes homes have generated headlines lately. Now, The FBI says these are connected to an international crime ring.
A judge last week ruled that the freeze on foreign aid must be reversed. But Trump's USAID team responded that many contracts ...
The U.S. Agency for International Development was the biggest funder of projects for Palestinians to encourage stability and peace. Now these projects are under a stop-work order.
Since he took office four weeks ago, President Trump has taken a series of actions that have upended the traditional role of government. Are they pushing the United States closer to an autocracy?
A bill to expand federal compensation for victims of U.S. nuclear testing failed in the last Congress despite bipartisan support. A new bill has created strange political bedfellows.
What role are migrants' tattoos playing in the Trump administration's efforts to identify, arrest and put on display criminal immigrants?