A cat detective, a song called Chop My Money, and an interview about the meaning of forgiveness — journalists from The World's newsroom in Boston pick their favorite stories of 2014.
Belgium's favorite comic book son, Tintin, gets to speak Scots in a new translation by Susan Rennie. Listen as she speaks some of the dialogue, and explains why this particular Tintin adventure got the Scots treatment.
The career of Jimi Hendrix was like a firecracker, bright, but short-lived. Some of his music hasn't been heard since he played it, particularly from some of his live performances. But a new recording is bringing new life to a February 1969 performance of his in the U.K.
The World's Clark Boyd profiles a group of Serbians who want to give The Onion a run for its money. Meet the people behind The Global Edition.
There's a long list of foreign policy issues that got little or no mention during the Obama-Romney foreign policy debate. Anchor Marco Werman asks our editors Peter Thomson, William Troop and Clark Boyd talk about three.
In Tuesday night's debate, Governor Mitt Romney cautioned that four more years of President Obama's economic policies would put the US on "the road to Greece," a nod to the Mediterranean country's ongoing financial woes.
We have an update on a crowd-sourcing project in Britain that has yielded some amazing data, and some amazing visualizations.
Germany's Constitutional Court handed down a decision Wednesday which may help save Europe's embattled single currency, the euro. But is it too little, too late?
Greece remains at the center of Europe's ongoing battle to salvage its single currency, the Euro. Now, a leaked memo indicates that European leaders want Greece to expand the work week, and loosen up its labor laws.