People with umbrellas walk along a cracked, dry riverbed with patches of grass near a large river under a cloudy sky.

Meteorologists predict an El Niño for the history books

Full Episode
49:46

In this file photo, people walk through a part of the Amazon River that shows signs of drought in Santa Sofia, on the outskirts of Leticia, Colombia, Oct. 20, 2024.

Ivan Valencia/AP/File photo

Meteorologists expect not only that an El Niño warming pattern will emerge this year, but also that it will be one of the strongest on record. And, José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, Spain’s prime minister from 2004 to 2011, has been charged with influence peddling in the controversial rescue of an airline partly owned by government officials in Venezuela. Also, during a legislative session in Jamaica last week, a lawmaker used Jamaican Patois — also known as Jamaican — and caused quite a stir. Plus, go into the weekend with the electronic sounds of Cumbia.

In This Episode

Meteorologists predict an El Niño for the history books
8:42
Spanish former prime minister charged with fraud
4:23
Use of Patois in Jamaica’s parliament reignites debate about colonial legacy of English
7:54
Manmade glaciers help secure water supply
6:02
The electronic sounds of Cumbia
10:25
Professional mourners in Kenya honor the living
1:22
Arizona’s section of the famed Route 66 has Middle Eastern roots
5:20
The famed Chelsea Flower Show gets spicy this year
1:26