PBS News Hour - Full Show - July 26, 2025 – PBS News Weekend full episode
Episode Date: July 26, 2025Saturday on PBS News Weekend, as deaths from hunger rise in Gaza and global pressure builds, Israel says it will begin airdrops of humanitarian aid. A big birthday for the U.S. Postal Service as it tu...rns 250. We look at a pervasive but little-discussed health condition for women. Plus, the global debut of a unique K-pop boy band featuring two North Korean defectors. PBS News is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
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Tonight on PBS News Weekend, in Gaza, a tipping point.
As deaths from hunger rise and global pressure builds, Israel announces it will begin air
drops of humanitarian aid tonight.
Then, a big birthday and a big moment for the Postal Service, 250 years old, and now
navigating far more than snow, rain,
heat and gloom of night. And the global debut of a unique boy band featuring two North Korean defectors.
I did think that it would be fascinating to have North Korean defectors trying out something in K-pop, because, you know, who doesn't love the story of someone from a humble background chasing their dreams?
-♪
Good evening. I'm Lisa Desjardins.
John Yang is away.
A pivotal moment for lives and the conflict in the Middle East
as deaths from hunger rise in Gaza.
Today, the Israeli military announced it will begin air drops of aid
and will open more humanitarian corridors to bring in food.
But the UN and aid groups have criticized air drops as inadequate and dangerous.
The Gaza Health Ministry reported that in the last day, five people died of malnutrition
and starvation, including a baby girl.
She's one of 85 children to die of malnutrition over the last three weeks, the ministry said.
Death also came from above.
At least 42 people in Gaza were killed by gunfire and airstrikes, according to Gaza
health officials.
Half were shot while waiting for aid.
Earlier today, I spoke with a leading aid worker who is in Gaza.
Rachel Cummings is with Save the Children.
I began by asking what she sees.
The situation in Gaza is catastrophic for children and for their families. We're seeing now a sharp rise
in the number of children coming to our clinics who are malnourished, very deeply
concerned about pregnant women and lactating breastfeeding women coming to
our clinic who are malnourished and now we're hearing of people dying from
starvation and this is deeply deeply concerning. We expect now an exponential rise
in the number of people who are malnourished
and at risk of starvation.
You know, just in our clinics in the last two weeks,
the first two weeks of July,
we've seen the same number as the whole of June.
So this is a rise that we've been fearing for so long.
How about the supplies of food? I know you've recently been to a market and
where are you seeing among your own staff in terms of how they're handling
this with their families? Yeah, all of my staff, I have a return to
staff working, Palestinians working in Gaza and of
course they're all directly impacted by the war. There is
very little, if anything now, left in the market. Three of my staff
last week painted in the office and shared with me that they hadn't eaten that whole
day and most of the staff have shared with me that they worry about going home because
they don't have any food to take for their children and they're worried, desperately
worried about where their next meal will come from.
One of my staff said to me last week,
we are all walking towards death and nobody is helping us.
Now, that's a desperate situation,
and that could be multiplied by pretty much everyone in Gaza.
They know what is happening.
They see themselves wasting away.
I see them wasting away on a daily basis now.
You have said just in the last day or so
that you think this is a tipping point.
What do you mean by that?
It is a tipping point.
So for many months, we've been talking about
the risk of this situation playing out
because we know that not enough food
has been entering Gaza since March when the blockade was put in place in Gaza. Not enough food, consistent food,
faith and dignified distributions haven't been taking place in Gaza and
there is only so long the body can sustain. And what we're seeing now of
course is the weakest dying of starvation. But what we could see is mass starvation for people
across Gaza. Between January and March we had between 400 and 600 trucks a day of humanitarian
supplies and commercial supplies entering Gaza. At the moment it's less than 100 and for many
months it was nothing. So this is the result of the blockade,
humanitarian supplies and food, essential food items not entering Gaza and as you
said people have been since the end of May forced into impossible choices of
whether to stay hungry and risk their children starving or risk their lives to
go and get a bag of flour or a bag of
pasta. This is the situation that we're now facing is absolutely catastrophic.
Do you sense there's a disconnect by those in power? This is atrocious
conditions and yet we continue to get deeper into these conditions. I've said
it many times it can't get worse for children but actually it does and it
gets worse every single day for children so but actually it does, and it gets worse
every single day for children.
So there has to be a disconnect.
We need to stop bombing children.
We need to allow children to eat food, to sustain life.
So there has to be, there is a disconnect
between people making decisions, people in power,
and what is happening for children in Gaza.
What do you think needs to happen now?
This is a dire moment.
The world needs to wake up.
It feels like we've been sleeping
or just watching this unfold,
and yet it's been predicted for months
over the course of the whole war.
What could happen?
And we're now reaching as I
said this tipping point so we need the definitive ceasefire we need to stop
bombing children we need to allow the humanitarian supplies into Gaza the
commercial supplies into Gaza and we need to be allowed to do our jobs as
humanitarian community to reach children who are definitely in need. You know, Save the Children, other humanitarian organizations,
we know how to prevent malnutrition.
We know how to treat malnutrition.
We need to be allowed to do our jobs now.
Rachel Cummings from Save the Children,
thank you for taking this time to talk to us.
Thank you so much.
In tonight's other news, President Trump says
chances of a trade deal with the European Union are improving.
This, as the president is in Scotland, seemed golfing at his resort in Turnberry.
The White House calls it a working visit, with Trump set to talk with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer
and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen about trade and U.S. tariffs.
The president sounded cautiously optimistic yesterday.
With the European Union, I think we have a good 50-50 chance.
That's a lot.
What are the sticking points that you're talking about?
Well, I don't want to tell you what the sticking points are, but the sticking points are having
to do with maybe 20 different things.
You don't want to listen to all of them. Protests and anger have surrounded Mr.
Trump's trip to Scotland,
including this scene in Aberdeen.
An anti-Trump group hosted a kind of protest festival there.
While in the country, the president will also attend
a ribbon-cutting ceremony for a new golf course
bearing his name.
A White House spokesman did not address possible conflicts
of interest, instead praising the course.
House Democrats want more details
on President Trump's potential connections
with Jeffrey Epstein, asking for a copy
of the disgraced financier's birthday book.
Representatives Ro Khanna and Robert Garcia
have asked the attorneys for Epstein's estate
for the book, which the Wall Street Journal reported
was signed by President Trump, though the White House has denied that.
The Full House Committee has subpoenaed testimony from Ghislaine Maxwell, who allegedly put
the book together and is now serving time for crimes related to her time with Epstein.
The governor of Florida confirms that detainees at a remote facility there are being flown out for deportation, even as attorneys for some being held there say they've had no access.
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said in the last day that several flights have taken off,
transferring 100 detainees from the detention center known as Alligator Alcatraz to other
countries.
This, despite outcry and a lawsuit filed by immigration
attorneys who say they have not been able to check on or provide legal counsel to their
clients. The state of Florida runs the facility. An official there said attorney visits did
not begin because of, quote, technology problems.
And the acting prime minister of Thailand said he agrees in principle to a ceasefire with Cambodia.
The comments came as a deadly dispute between the two countries entered its third day.
At least 33 people have been killed since the start of clashes, and more than 168,000
are displaced.
The two countries have long fought over a disputed 500-mile frontier, and past clashes
were often brief.
Today, President Trump warned both countries on social media
that if there is no ceasefire, the U.S. will not make trade deals with them.
Still to come on PBS News Weekend,
a pervasive but little-discussed health condition for women.
And the newest faces in K-pop.
That includes two defectors from North Korea. In our relatively young country, it's one of the oldest institutions we have. CBS.
In our relatively young country, it's one of the oldest institutions we have.
The U.S. Postal Service turns 250 today.
The agency is deeply intertwined with this nation's history
and has been critical to its growth.
But with annual net losses nearing $10 billion,
this time of celebration is also one of concern. I went
to the National Postal Museum in Washington, D.C. to ask how regular Americans see what
many call the post office.
Everything's now on the phone and you're sending texts and messages, but like being able to
get a letter in the mail and be like, yay, I got a letter. It's the best, so I hope that
the post office stays.
I think it's critical because there
are so many places in America that
they're more remote and your your
commercial carriers can't really
reach those places. I don't want
everything to be coming to me electronically.
Sometimes you want paper,
you want something tangible.
I guess it's losing money,
but I would say it's still worth it
because it's it's losing money,
but I would say it's still worth it because it's always there for you.
Hansi Lo Wang is a correspondent for NPR and covers the U.S. Postal Service.
Hansi, let me start with the big birthday question here.
How does the Postal Service fit in the way this country sees itself?
Well, the U.S. Postal Service plays a role in the daily lives of so many people,
and it has been the case going back to 250 years ago,
before the founding of this country,
when the Second Continental Congress set up Benjamin Franklin as a first postmaster general,
and you had horseback riders delivering mail through the 13 colonies,
and now
all the way to today the U.S. Postal Service on foot, by truck, plane, boat, sometimes by mule,
all the way to the bottom of the Grand Canyon and it's six days a week of service of letters,
mails, bills, medication, packages that so many folks rely on through deliveries from a letter
carrier or their
mail carrier.
Now, the Postal Service is not going away, as you're saying, by law.
It must deliver mail six days a week under current law, but the future is not clear.
They operate almost entirely off of their own revenue, not taxpayer dollars.
But can you help us understand the fiscal challenge here? Two main things to keep in mind is that first, the mail value, the amount of mail in the
system has been on the decline for about two decades since 2006.
And that's a really, really disruptive trend to a postal service that, like you said, generally
receives no tax dollars to keep it running and relies on stamp sales and service fees.
The other main thing to really keep in mind kind of little really in the weeds, but a
really key part of why if you were to look at the financial books of the postal service,
why it's you see these losses is that Congress passed really unique legal requirements for
the postal service to pre-fund retirement benefits, health benefits for retired postal
workers.
So that has been really saddling the finances of a postal service that has also been seeing
a changing United States with different ways of communicating.
Now, the current postmaster general has said he just in the last week, he does not want
to privatize.
He wants to keep this as an independent agency.
But President Trump, we know in the past and in his current presidency, has indicated he
may be interested in privatization or somehow taking over the Postal Service into another
agency.
Does he have the power to do that potentially?
By law, the president does not have the power to privatize, to take over what Congress set
up to be an independent federal agency.
It is part of the executive branch, but it is run by a board of governors. Those boards,
those governors are appointed, nominated by the president, but they have to be confirmed
by the Senate. But ultimately, those governors are the ones who pick the postmaster general,
who really help guide the direction of the Postal Service,
according to federal law and a lot of other requirements.
And so all the talk coming from the Trump administration
about potentially looking into privatizing
or folding it into the Commerce Department,
that's been another idea that's been floated.
Those would run into legal challenges.
Can you help us understand the stakes then
for this debate over the future of the postal
service, if it's able to stay as it is, or if it does need significant change?
In the age of the internet, it can be really easy to take the postal service for granted,
not even think about it.
But there are so many people in the country, across the country, especially in rural communities that depend on the postal service for their
medication to mail, to receive voting ballots, to receive payments.
This is an infrastructure that the country still relies on, that the economy still relies
on to send packages as well.
It reaches every address in the country.
And so the stakes are very high when you're talking about potentially
dismantling it or changing it in dramatic ways. So many people, so many parts of the
country rely on it. But again, it is running into these challenges at a time when the country,
how it communicates is so different from when the postal service got started.
Hansi Lo Wang, always illuminating talking with you. Thank you.
You're welcome.
From unbearable pain to feeling no symptoms at all, women with uterine fibroids can have vastly different experiences.
And while these growths impact a large percentage of women,
health advocates say they too often go undiscussed.
That has now started to change as women share their stories,
including Academy Award-winning actress Lupita Nyong'o
and tennis superstar Venus Williams.
Ali Rogan spoke with Satiria Venable, a patient advocate and CEO of the Fibroid Foundation.
Satiria Venable, thank you so much for being here.
Thank you for inviting me.
I really appreciate it.
You yourself have experienced uterine fibroids.
Tell us more about what they are and what your own journey with them has been like.
Uterine fibroids are non-cancerous growths in and around the uterus, and the word non-cancerous
is really important because a lot of people who are diagnosed don't know whether they're
cancerous or not. And what led me to this journey is I had had my third fibroid surgery, I've had
four total, and I couldn't find a provider to care for me
who wouldn't offer a hysterectomy.
And I lived in Chicago at the time,
and I thought if I'm living in a major metropolitan city
and I can't find a provider,
what are other women experiencing?
And I just wondered why people weren't screaming
from the rooftops, because until that time,
I thought that I was alone in my journey,
which is another
recurring theme that we hear from our community.
It's truly extraordinary how many women this affects. What do we know about any groups
of women among whom the risk is greater or the symptoms are more prominent?
We know that 70 to 80% of all women will be diagnosed with uterine fibroids by the age that they're 50.
And there's a misnomer that it's primarily
women of African descent,
because we do know that women of all walks of life,
all ethnicities have fibroids.
What does the range of symptoms look like?
It can be really exhaustive.
Women have pain, they're gasping for air,
and don't really realize that
their lung capacity has been reduced by the anemia. There can be complications. A lot
of our community members find out that they have fibroids when they're either pregnant
or trying to conceive. And then it becomes a real issue because sometimes because of
the surge in estrogen during pregnancy, the fibroids can grow
as quickly as the fetus and sometimes crowd out the fetus
and cause issues.
What are the treatment options for this?
So we have a few treatment options
and some medical therapies that were approved
during the pandemic that aren't widely known.
If you're looking to conceive the most frequently utilized
therapy is a myomectomy, which can
be either open incision in the abdomen, which is just really tough to recover from.
And then the medical therapies, I really think about them as tools because they can help
you to stabilize your body to combat anemia and to have your body recover to some degree
while you're trying to understand
what fibroids are and what treatment option I should pursue.
But we really don't have enough treatment options for this and hysterectomy sadly accounts
for half of the 600,000 hysterectomies that occur annually in the United States.
And as is so often the case, women's health research into it has been
systematically under invested in.
What would the addition of investment attention
do to this ailment that affects so many women around the world?
So investment in this would be huge. We're trying to get
more research dollars on two fronts. In general legislation
through NIH research and also under the military umbrella for military readiness because our
service members are suffering with fibroids and endometriosis and other women's health
concerns. So the research would look at finding new treatment options, really understanding.
We don't understand how fibroids behave in
the body really because there hasn't been enough research. And so a package of bills
was introduced last week by several members of Congress that will look at various aspects
of research and understanding fibroids, screening for fibroids, understanding endometrial cancer,
and also recognizing July as Fibroid Awareness Month.
The Trump administration so far has cut a number of research projects devoted to various ethnic
minorities, to women. And so I wonder how are you feeling about the future for investment in
uterine fibroids specifically as we're in this particular moment politically?
I am not deterred.
My whole life, I've kind of bucked the system
and tried to find solutions.
And so that's what I'm doing in this moment.
We are moving full steam ahead.
We're finding partners who understand and agree
and empathize.
And I encourage anyone who doesn't really see this
as a priority to go home and talk with the women and menstruators
in your family.
And whenever I invite anyone to do that,
they come back and say,
Oh my God, I didn't know my mother had had a hysterectomy
due to fibroids.
I didn't know that my sister is suffering right now
or that she had birth complications.
And it really opens their eyes to this issue.
Satiria Bennaball, founder and CEO
of the Five Boyd Foundation, thank you so much.
Thank you for having me.
["The Five Boys"]
Finally tonight, the debut of a new K-pop boy band
with an improbable origin story that
includes two North Korean defectors.
And a note for viewers, there is some flash photography in this piece.
The world of K-pop has fresh new faces. The band, Universe, with a debut album and lead single, Shattered.
That's more than a pop hook. It's an anthem, especially to band member Yoo Hyuk. He escaped
North Korea as a child, joining his mom in South Korea. She arranged to get him across
the border. His father chose to stay and died a few years later.
JUNG-JUNG KIM, Father of JUNG-JUNG KIM, Korean Father
My song, Shattered, captures the feeling of my life breaking apart.
I'm sharing the story for the first time.
I wrote it drawing on the emotions when I heard my father in North Korea passed away.
JUNG-JUNG KIM He remembers starting work at 9 years old and having to resort to desperate measures for food. father in North Korea passed away. LISA DESJ the making, worried no longer about basic survival, and,
instead, pushing back with music that is pointedly illegal in the North and risky.
Reports indicate the North Korean government is cracking down on consumption of South Korean
culture. A group working with defectors released this video. They say it shows two high schoolers being publicly
sentenced to 12 years of hard labor for watching K-pop.
But they couldn't stop the music from reaching Kim Sook, UNIVERSE's other North Korean defector.
He was inspired when he was secretly shown a 2012 global hit by the K-pop artist Psy.
I'd never seen a video like Gangnam Style before. I didn't have it myself. A friend
showed it to me in North Korea, and both the music video and the song really blew me away.
Kim, now 25 years old, escaped the regime in 2019 with his father and grandmother.
Universe was carefully formed, label CEO and producer Michelle Cho.
I did think that it was fascinating after casting the two, that it would be fascinating
to have North Korean defectors trying out something in K-pop, because who doesn't love
the story of someone from a humble background chasing their dreams?
The rest come from across the globe. Ito from Japan, Kenny a Chinese American
from Los Angeles and Nathan from Arkansas. We learn from each other's
backgrounds I think that only benefits us more just because we learn from each other things that we couldn't
have learned if we didn't meet, if we've never met.
The very existence of universe demonstrating the power of music to transcend even the most closed borders.
And that's our program for tonight.
I'm Lisa Desjardins.
For all of my colleagues here, thank you for joining us.
See you tomorrow.