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NPR News Now

NPR News: 11-19-2025 8AM EST

19 Nov 2025

Transcription

Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?

0.031 - 3.295 Corva Coleman

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Corva Coleman.

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Chapter 2: What recent legislation has Congress approved regarding Jeffrey Epstein?

3.315 - 14.45 Corva Coleman

Congress has approved a bill to compel the Justice Department to release all its files on the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. As NPS Claudia Grisales reports, the measure cleared the Senate on a voice vote.

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14.79 - 25.684 Chuck Schumer

In an extremely rare scene in Republican-controlled Washington, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer moved to approve the bipartisan bill under a voice vote with no objections.

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25.833 - 32.333 Unknown

The Senate has now passed the Epstein bill as soon as it comes over from the House.

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32.515 - 49.009 Chuck Schumer

House Republican leaders said they voted to approve the plan with the expectation the Senate would amend it to address their concerns. However, Senate Majority Leader John Thune said after the overwhelming House vote of 427 to 1, that was no longer necessary.

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Chapter 3: What significant deals did Trump announce with Saudi Arabia?

49.429 - 62.32 Chuck Schumer

And this way, the senators did not have to have their votes recorded. In a major reversal, Trump in recent days said he'd sign the bill when it reaches his desk. Claudia Rosales, NPR News, the Capitol.

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62.3 - 66.667 Corva Coleman

President Trump will attend the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum in Washington today.

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Chapter 4: How is Purdue Pharma restructuring under its bankruptcy plan?

67.007 - 79.086 Corva Coleman

He'll be joined by Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. Trump and the Saudi Crown Prince say they've reached several deals. Trump says that the U.S. is now giving Saudi Arabia a special new status.

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79.406 - 90.37 Donald Trump

I'm pleased to announce that we're taking our military cooperation to even greater heights by formally designating Saudi Arabia as a major non-NATO ally.

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90.59 - 95.975 Corva Coleman

During his White House visit yesterday, the Saudi crown prince faced questions from journalists. U.S.

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Chapter 5: What does the new study reveal about ultra-processed foods?

96.035 - 115.071 Corva Coleman

intelligence have found he approved the operation that led to the killing and dismemberment of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi in 2018. Trump dismissed the reporter's question as embarrassing to the crown prince, who has denied involvement. Khashoggi's widow has criticized Trump's comment yesterday.

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115.051 - 125.415 Corva Coleman

Drugmaker Purdue Pharma will cease to exist under a Chapter 11 bankruptcy plan that has been approved by a federal bankruptcy court judge. NPR's Sydney Lepkin reports.

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Chapter 6: What urgent government actions are suggested to combat ultra-processed food consumption?

125.648 - 132.74 Corva Coleman

The OxyContin maker and the company owners, the Sackler family, have been at the center of the nation's opioid crisis.

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133.261 - 151.11 Sydney Lepkin

The new restructuring plan replaces one the Supreme Court rejected in 2024, finding that it would have shielded the Sackler family from future lawsuits. This time around, members of the family can still be sued in civil court. The Sackler family will pay up to $7 billion to Purdue's creditors as part of the plan.

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151.57 - 163.647 Sydney Lepkin

The arrangement will also provide a pool of up to $865 million to compensate individual victims. The plan was approved by Judge Sean Lane of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York.

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Chapter 7: What unusual wildlife news is coming from Venice, Italy?

164.108 - 174.644 Sydney Lepkin

Purdue will dissolve and emerge as a new company, Noah Pharma. Its focus will include overdose reversal medicines, and it will not involve the Sacklers. Sydney Lepkin, NPR News.

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174.945 - 196.513 Corva Coleman

On Wall Street and pre-market trading, Dow futures are higher. This is NPR. A California judge has ordered the man accused in one of the deadly Los Angeles wildfires to stay jailed while he waits for trial. Prosecutors say Jonathan Rindernacht is considered a flight risk. He's accused of starting the Palisades fire last New Year's Day. He pleaded not guilty.

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196.933 - 220.86 Corva Coleman

The fire killed 12 people and destroyed nearly 7,000 structures. A new study finds ultra-processed foods are a key driver of chronic disease around the world, and governments need to act now to reduce their consumption. That's the conclusion of an expansive new series of papers published by an international team of health researchers. NPR's Maria Godoy has more.

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220.84 - 241.15 Maria Godoy

The papers reviewed years' worth of evidence linking ultra-processed foods to poor health outcomes, including an increased risk of obesity, type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, chronic kidney disease, Crohn's disease, and dying prematurely. The researchers say ultra-processed foods have been shown to harm nearly all the organ systems in the human body.

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241.611 - 262.098 Maria Godoy

These foods have rapidly displaced fresh foods and traditional diets around the world, even as diet-related diseases have been rising. The authors say government policies like soda taxes, warning labels, and limiting these foods in school meals are urgently needed. The papers appear in the medical journal The Lancet. Maria Godoy, NPR News.

262.338 - 280.109 Corva Coleman

Officials in Venice, Italy, say a bottlenose dolphin is swimming in city canals. He's been there for months. But Venice authorities want him to swim away because he may have been injured by a boat propeller. They'll try to move the dolphin to open water. This is NPR.

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