NPR News Now - NPR News: 11-15-2025 5PM EST
Episode Date: November 15, 2025NPR News: 11-15-2025 5PM ESTLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Luis Skiyavoni.
The world's largest aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald Ford, will arrive in the Northern Caribbean tomorrow, according to a U.S. military official.
This has tensions with Venezuela grow.
NPR's Laura Sullivan has more.
The USS Gerald Ford will be joining some 15,000 soldiers and sailors already in the region.
A U.S. military official told NPR the U.S. is gearing up for possible military action, saying,
quote, the table is being set.
High-level meetings with members of Congress and foreign leaders are continuing,
along with ongoing military exercises.
It remains unclear, however, if President Trump will use military force against the country.
The U.S. has conducted multiple strikes on boats in the region.
President Trump has also repeatedly called on Venezuelan leader Nicholas Maduro to resign.
Officials told NPR the arrival of the USS Gerald Ford could be just another pressure tactic on Maduro,
who has put his own forces on high alert.
Laura Sullivan, NPR News.
Having been out of town for more than 50 days,
members of the House of Representatives
returned to their desks this week,
voting to reopen the government
with another short-term spending bill,
but no resolution of the standoff
over the Affordable Care Act.
Moving to the top of the agenda
in the coming week is a vote on the release of documents
related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
NPR's Deirdre Walsh has the
the latest. Because of increasing calls from House Republicans to get these files out, the Speaker decided to hold this vote next week. I mean, the politics for the party are really bad. The Republicans are divided. And this bill forcing the release of the Justice Department files is picking up more GOP votes each day, even at a time when the president and top Trump officials were pressuring some Republicans to block a bill from even getting a vote.
NPR's Deirdre Walsh reporting from Washington.
The season's first heavy rainfall has deluge Gaza, flooding tents and hampering recovery after two years of war.
With winter approaching, the United Nations says needs are immense.
NPR's Lauren Freyer reports.
Wind and rain are hampering efforts to stay warm and dry in places like El Mouasi,
where up to half a million displaced Palestinians are staying, mostly in temporary tents.
A spokesperson for Gaza's civil defense agency, Mahmoud Basal, says rain has inundated those makeshift shelters.
In a statement, Hamas decried what it called Israel's continued obstruction of humanitarian aid into the strip.
Israel says it opened a border crossing this week into northern Gaza, where the UN declared a famine last summer.
The UN now says, quote, full and sustained opening of existing and additional crossings is required,
and that the transport of aid within Gaza remains limited and highly congested.
Lauren Friar and PR News Tel Aviv.
This is NPR.
The Pope met with prominent figures from the world of cinema at the Vatican today.
NPR's Chloe Veltman reports,
Pope Leo delivered an address about the power of movies to bring hope and safeguard human dignity.
Kate Blanchett, Vigo Mortensen and Spike Lee were among those present
as Pope Leo delivered a speech in Italian about the transformative power of cinema.
Vatican News shared a video of the event and provided an interpreter.
It is wonderful to see that when the magic light of cinema illuminates the darkness,
it simultaneously ignites the eyes of the soul.
The Pope said that movies aren't just about entertainment.
They also help people pursue meaning, justice and beauty.
He also lamented the widespread closure of cinemas and urged filmmakers and institutions
to work together to promote the social and cultural value of moviegoing.
The speech came just a few days after the Pope talked a variety about his favorite movies.
Top of the Chicago-born Pontiffs list, It's a Wonderful Life.
Chloe Valtman, NPR News.
Millions of YouTube TV subscribers have had their news and sports programming
restored after the settlement of a fee dispute between Disney and YouTube.
The standoff, which went on for roughly two weeks,
had interrupted access on YouTube TV to Disney-owned networks like ABC and ESPN.
The agreement came literally hours before sports event fans were gearing up for a weekend
of watching their favorite college teams meet on the gridiron.
Alphabet, which owns YouTube TV and Google is a financial supporter of NPR.
I'm Louise Skiyvone and PR News, Washington.
