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- Documentary series featuring startling, groundbreaking stories from around the world.
- Emmy®-winning documentary series VICE is known for delivering longform, on-the-ground journalism and newsworthy explorations of our world today.
- A documentary news series airing on VICE TV Wednesday and Thursday nights at 11p ET. Featuring deep investigations, and immersive pieces from all over the globe.
- In 2005 the town of Ponchatoula, Louisiana, was traumatized when a local church's secret Satan worship, ritualized child molestation, and animal sacrifices came to light.
- Connersville, Indiana is haunted by the disappearance of Denise Pflum, and the rumors of what really happened to her. Now, an investigator is trying to solve the case Once and for all.
- Current affairs channel, producing daily documentary essays and video through its website and YouTube channel.
- It features stories told through a distinct reporting lens, immersive narratives and fresh perspectives on the important - and sometimes controversial - issues defining today's culture.
- A long-form improv' show that ran at the U.C.B. Theatre in N.Y.C. and L.A. It has run on Sunday nights since 1996. It remained the premier show at their theatre and the one featuring the top (and most famous) talent.
- On March 5, 2010, while filming a snowmobiling segment in the Sierra Nevada back-country, Grant Korgan burst-fractured his L1 vertebrae and was told he would never walk again. Despite his prognosis, Grant Korgan and his wife Shawna, focused on the goal of 120% recovery. On January 17, 2012, along with two seasoned explorers, Grant accomplished the impossible and became the first spinal cord injured athlete to literally PUSH himself--nearly 100 miles (the final degree of latitude) to the most inhospitable place on the planet: the bottom of the globe, the geographic South Pole.
- Authoritarianism on the rise and rapidly escalating tensions between Iran and Saudi Arabia.
- Following front line healthcare workers as they take on the unprecedented COVID-19 crisis; The nuclear legacy of the United States' atomic weapons testing in the Marshall Islands and the negative impacts on its people.
- Mississippi's Department of Corrections neglected Parchman Prison for years until recent riots. Smuggled out images exposed its deadly conditions; What it's like surviving as an undocumented immigrant in the midst of the COVID-19 outbreak.
- Sports have historically been organized into two strict categories: male and female. But what about those who challenge the binary?
- Enlisted personnel are falling victim to violence in an unexpected place - on stateside military bases. Gianna Toboni explores violence and impunity across the US military; Hind Hassan travels to Egypt to investigate human rights abuses.
- Gianna Toboni examines how drastically the country could change in a post-Roe world; Krishna Andavolu travels to the Philippines to learn more about the play-to-earn gaming phenomenon that has taken the country by storm.
- Denise Pflum left her home in rural Indiana to look for her purse in 1986. She hasn't been seen since. The Sheriff's department is taking a fresh look at the case - and her ex.
- Two cousins have allegedly confessed to killing Denise multiple times. They've never been arrested, and police say one of them hasn't even been questioned - until now.
- While in custody, Denise's ex-boyfriend confesses to killing her. But he dies before the case can go to trial, leaving Connersville with more questions than answers.
- How a resurgent Islamic State nearly managed to free thousands of imprisoned militants from under the nose of one of America's closest allies in the fight against ISIS; What it takes to become a right wing star in the U.S. today.
- An estimated 120,000 landmines still litter the Bosnian countryside since the end of the war there in 1995, making daily life a challenge for hundreds of thousands of people. In May, the worst floods in over a century dislodged countless mines and deposited them in new locations, from farm fields to the back yards of local residents. The flooding also unearthed previously undiscovered mass graves, making some citizens hopeful that they may finally be reunited with the remains of their lost loved ones. VICE News traveled to northern Bosnia to tag along with the team in charge of de-mining the countryside, and met residents still reeling from the horrors of war.
- 'We the People' - A recent study funded by the Department of Homeland Security listed domestic right-wing groups as two of the top three greatest terrorist threats in America. In an effort to understand this phenomenon better, VICE sent host Gianna Toboni to investigate these so-called patriots, training and taking up arms along the border. 'Countdown to Extinction' - During the last six decades, the boom of industrial fishing has nearly wiped out the top level of the marine food chain, depleting about 90 percent of the world's large predatory fish. VICE correspondent Isobel Yeung heads to the Mozambique Channel and the Gulf of Mexico to get an idea of how much we've overfished our oceans, and what we can now do to reverse that trend.
- 'Lines in the Sand' - Cocaine use in Europe has increased dramatically over the past decade, and new routes have evolved to supply the demand. Ben Anderson follows the cocaine highway from the streets of Venezuela, to drug smuggling boats in the Caribbean, to the ports of West Africa, and finally to desert territories controlled by Islamic extremists. 'Outsourcing Embryos' - VICE looks at the boom in one of the world's newest billion-dollar industries: gestational surrogacy. The cost of surrogacy in the U.S. can be over $100,000, leading many prospective parents to look for affordable options in other countries. Gianna Toboni heads to India, where commercial surrogacy is legal, to investigate this growing industry. By exploring some of the country's 3,000 surrogacy clinics, watching doctors deliver surrogate babies, and following recruiters who find prospective surrogates in the slums, we see the true cost of outsourcing reproduction.