March 16, 2025 - PBS News Weekend full episode

24m 9s

March 16, 2025 - PBS News Weekend full episode

Previews + Extras

  • U.S. deports hundreds of Venezuelans under 18th century law: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    U.S. deports hundreds of Venezuelans under 18th century law

    S2025 E75 - 5m 40s

    Nearly 300 Venezuelans are now in El Salvador after being deported from the U.S. without a hearing, despite a federal judge’s order blocking the move. The Trump administration says they are members of a notorious gang called Tren de Aragua and summarily deported them under the Alien Enemies Act of 1798. Katherine Yon Ebright, counsel at the Brennan Center for Justice, joins John Yang to discuss.

  • News Wrap: Deadly U.S. storms leave trail of destruction: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    News Wrap: Deadly U.S. storms leave trail of destruction

    S2025 E75 - 2m 41s

    In our news wrap Sunday, the death toll from extreme weather across the central and southern U.S. rose to 35, a nightclub fire in North Macedonia killed at least 59 people, the U.S. and Houthi rebels in Yemen both vowed to escalate fighting, and two NASA astronauts greeted their replacements aboard the International Space Station.

  • How DOGE’s cutbacks at the FAA could affect aviation safety: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    How DOGE’s cutbacks at the FAA could affect aviation safety

    S2025 E75 - 6m 40s

    President Trump's drive to shrink the federal workforce has touched nearly every agency, including the Federal Aviation Administration. It comes amid rising public concern about air safety after recent incidents, including January's mid-air collision of a passenger jet and an Army helicopter. John Yang speaks with Isaac Stanley-Becker, a staff writer for The Atlantic, about layoffs at the FAA.

  • Why we’re ‘perilously close’ to a global warming threshold: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Why we’re ‘perilously close’ to a global warming threshold

    S2025 E75 - 5m 57s

    This past week, the EPA said it is reconsidering the scientific finding that greenhouse gases are a danger to public health. This comes as research shows average global temperatures in 2024 likely rose above a 1.5 degree Celsius threshold that for years has been a red line for climate change. Ali Rogin speaks with Michael Mann at the University of Pennsylvania to learn more.

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