This week on Consider This,
the bigger story behind President Trump's trip to the world economic forum in Davos,
how he's rewriting the rules of the economy,
and how the rest of the world is coming to terms with the global order not led by the United States.
Listen every afternoon to consider this on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.
Live from NPR News in New York City, I'm Duahli Saikow Tao.
More than 8,000 flights have been cancelled this weekend,
ahead of a major storm that's expected to bring snow,
ice and bitter cold to large parts of the country.
In Kentucky, families are packing stores to grab last-minute supplies,
as Karen Tsar of Member Station W-U-K-Y reports.
This toddler summed up the mood for most shoppers at a Walmart in Lexington, Kentucky.
The state is bracing for ice and heavy snow,
and Governor Andy Beshear has already declared a state of emergency.
Reed Lanter and his partner were part of the crowd stocking up.
We're ready to hunker down.
We got a lot of frozen stuff, so we don't know if that's good or not with the power goes out.
This is kind of our first time adulting, so this store,
like so many others in the path of the storm had rows upon rows of low stock shelves.
As for shovels, management said those were all gone as of Thursday night.