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- 'Quilted Stories with Ms. Karen' is an 8 episode miniseries that combines live-action and animation to deliver bite-sized Black history, present and past, hosted by quilter and historian Karen Robinson (Quilted Education).
- A series of short music videos, each focusing on community.
- Teeny Little Super Guy lives in a cup and sometimes helps his friend R.W. Shipshape, a boy in a salt shaker.
- This is a song from the PBS TV concert special, "Diahann Carroll: The Lady, The Music, The Legend," a live concert special taped in Palm Springs. Carroll is backed by a 42-piece Orchestra.
- BrainCraft is a series that examines human behaviour through psychology and neuroscience, telling stories about science in a creative way.
- This magical performance by these great folk legends is the song that was their second number one hit after Tom Dooley introduced them a year earlier.
- "A Letter Home" is a narrative 360° video that takes place in the Mansion House Hospital, the main location for Mercy Street. The short video captures a few moments on a Civil War hospital ward when things are quiet, the doctors are gone and a nurse makes her rounds. The narration is provided by a fictional character inspired by actual letters home from soldiers.
- WIN is the story of a struggling singer/songwriter who turns her journey across DC into a song while fighting to overcome hurdles standing between her and her dream.
- Suffering of a young man while he had nightmare about spiders and demons.
- The Oscar winner and star of "Hostiles" with Christian Bale, shares his views on contemporary Native American music, as well as praises the concert he just experienced, "Songcatchers: The Gathering."
- In June 1964, at the beginning of Freedom Summer, roughly 100 doctors, nurses and social workers traveled to Mississippi to provide medical care to civil rights workers and local community people who couldn't receive appropriate or adequate medical care in the segregated South. These caregivers were known as the Medical Committee for Human Rights (MCHR), and they became the medical arm of the civil rights movement.
- The word "inventor" conjures images of a far-off past. Today, inventor Steve Hollinger keeps the spirit of innovation alive in his tinkering workshop, just as more than 100 years ago, Nikola Tesla worked in his to revolutionize the electrical age.
- Cult classic children's animated series about a group of human and animal characters that gather at the roundabout / carousel in the park. Although the original series is French there are multiple dubbed versions from other countries.
- The adventures of Spot, a little yellow puppy and his family and friends.
- This is a weekly television program about naked-eye astronomy. Information about celestial objects and events in the night sky is presented. The program teaches viewers where to look for these objects and events.
- This all-star live performance of a Trio #1 hit song features banjoist Grove, a member of the Trio for 43 years, who delivers an inspirational rendition of the John Stewart classic.
- A TV series of acoustic live shows featuring well-known and upcoming artists together.
- A mouse claiming to be centuries old helps tell tales of great historical figures and events.
- The secret plan by the American Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and British Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) to overthrow the then-democratically-elected Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh in 1953.
- A powerful performance by the international superstar and Latin sex symbol, shot on the never-before filmed, historic lands of the San Cristobal Castle.
- On May 28, 1900, San Francisco policemen formed a perimeter around Chinatown, and set about building an eight-foot high wall around the district using cement blocks and barbed wire. Officials diagnosed bubonic plague in the neighborhood and wanted to quarantine the nearly 20,000 residents. As tensions flared, an influential group of merchants known as the Chinese Six Companies sprang into action.
- The San Diego Museum of Art is the largest visual arts organization in San Diego County. They offer a wide variety of programs and services, and interpretive materials. One being the 'Monarch Program' in which this documentary focuses on; an education department with an outreach program reaching the community's children; that don't have the means to explore Museums activities, in order to enhance their education and visual abilities.
- A touching portrayal of the essence of home is conveyed through this bitter-sweet, evocative archive of a house in Chalmette, Louisiana that was flooded by Katrina.
- About 90 miles northeast of Paris, the Chemin des Dames is a ridge in a region of Picardy, with centuries old chalk mines underneath. During World War I, the Germans, the French, and the Americans all occupied these mines at one time or another. Writer Richard Rubin set off in search of the mines, and found a time capsule, covered in graffiti.
- THE RUFF RUFFMAN SHOW features YouTube inspired videos about canine Ruff Ruffman.
- Over the fourth of July weekend in 1947, 4,000 motorcycle riders roared into Hollister, California for a three-day rally. The small town woke to motorcyclists in an unusual uniform: leather jackets and blue jeans. But riot and pandemonium are what has been remembered and denim has remained 'outlaw' fashion.
- A girl struggles to understand the balance between faith and science.
- Best friends Kim and Dara endure the humiliations of 7th grade with a little help from a 6-year-old DJ, a 20-year-old stereo, some fierce moves and a great beat.
- President Obama and Mitt Romney 2012 Presidential Debate Spoof face-off who will win?
- Ben chooses Virtual Killer II over a romantic weekend with Rosa. But is that a good idea? Video games can be pretty dangerous.
- The story of Tony Sarg, the father of American puppetry. An artist and visionary (with a playful spirit), Sarg delighted children and adults alike: whether they spied the mysterious Nantucket sea serpent of his creation in 1937 or have ever felt awed by a giant balloon bounding through New York's streets in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade.
- According to The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, over 3 million LBGT people are over age 65. While seniors are protected against age-based discrimination by "The Older Americans' Act," the lack of LGBT specific protections can drive our pioneers back into the closet when entering long-term care facilities. Disturbed by this trend, some activists and visionaries have taken matters into their own hands by creating safe spaces for our elders.
- On a Saturday evening in July 1944, Private Booker T. Spicely boarded a segregated bus from Durham, North Carolina back to his military base, Camp Butner. When some white soldiers got on, the bus driver shouted at Spicely to move to the last row. "I thought I was fighting this war for democracy," Spicely protested. "We're both wearing the same uniform." Private Spicely never made it back to base that night.
- Lillian Kinkela Keil was one of the most decorated women in WWII and the Korean War, with 11 battle stars, four air medals and more than 450 air evacuations in Europe and in Korea. Starting as an air stewardess, where one had to be a registered nurse at the time, Kinkela then joined the air force and started evacuating soldiers off the battle field. During the Korean War, she participated in 175 air evacuations missions and accumulated 1400 hours in the air during the 16 months. She took care of the marines and the soldiers at the Battle of Chosin.