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- Making Space: The Female Frontier spotlights the history of space exploration and the women who made it possible. From the hidden women in the 1960s, to a new generation of NASA leaders taking us back to the moon and on to Mars.
- Winger performs in the music video "Down Incognito" from the album "Pull" recorded for Atlantic Records. The music video opens with a shot of a man playing harmonica on the side of a desert road. A convertible pulls up to a house decorated like a cow skull. Kip Winger sings while the band plays.
- A community of mice and birds are living and playing peacefully until the arrival of the title character: a mechanical cat who wants to eat so he picks a bird to take to his castle. All of the bird's friends follow the victim there but many are given electrical shocks when they confront the cat. A mouse who lives in a supermarket hears a distress signal on his radio and, after eating Limburger cheese, turns himself into the costumed superhero Mighty Mouse (though he was known as Super Mouse at the time). As he flies to the castle, Mighty fights and defeats the mechanical cat as the head falls off and the bird escapes making possible another happy ending.
- Gandy Goose and his bullying, tormentor Cat buddy, are hunting in the jungle. The jungle birds and animals are irritated at being hunted (especially by an American goose and alley-cat), hold a counsel and devise ways and means to harass the unwelcome invaders. Gandy and Cat put up an inept fight and driven away.
- In response to the crisis in Darfur, mtvU sent three college students, one producer and two body guards to refugee camps in Chad to hear the victims' stories. For the students, this experience attached faces to the 180,000 deaths and the 2 million displaces persons. For the refugees, the team offered an outlet through which they could speak to the world. Mothers told of their dying sons and children drew pictures of the Janjaweed militias; both facets of the atrocities that statistics and news clips cannot convey appropriately.
- Heckel and Jeckel start selling tamales at a bull fighting ring, but find themselves inside the ring.
- Documentary analysis of the history of "AIDS Project Los Angeles", and its battle against HIV/AIDS in the United States during the previous 20 years. The program includes celebrity interviews, musical performances and stories of people living with HIV/AIDS.
- At the dawn of the digital download, the MP3 player dominated the landscape. Playlistism interviewed celebrities from film and music to find out what's on their playlist.
- Gandy appears on the "Dunker's Doughnuts" radio show and recalls a disastrous day when he and Sergeant Sourpuss were training for combat.
- Gandy The Goose falls asleep reading Aladdin's Lamp and dreams of living the life of Riley.
- Unaired pilot spin-off of Nickelodeon's 'Double Dare' game show, this time with adult contestants paired with celebrities to answer trivia questions and take physical challenges for a chance to run the obstacle course.
- According to Aesop, Philip, a little fish who lives at the bottom of the sea with his dogfish, catfish, shark and other classmates in the school of fish, desires to become the first flying fish. His horrified friends ostracize him for his strange wish, but he practices until he is able to fly, but the birds escape in terror at the sight of a flying fish. When a pelican invades the ocean-bottom and proceeds to scoop up Philip's ex-playmates in his large bill, Philip takes to the air and drives off the wicked bird. Philip is now a hero, and the fish establish a flying school in his honor...according to Aesop Terrytoon.
- "The Kingdom of Could Be You" was a spin-off series of "The Most Important Person;" it explored the various occupations adults have as well as what school-aged children would like to do when they get older, hence the title. The animated kids from "The Most Important Person" (Mike, Cindy, Nicola, Pablo, etc.) returned, but in place of Fumble, Hairy, and Bird, they were joined by a wizard who acted as their guide through the kingdom and who often cast spells that backfired. There was also an unnamed animated duck-billed platypus wearing a black-and-yellow striped sweater that provided commentary throughout each episode.
- Viacom aired across its television networks Listen: Facing Addiction in America, a 30-minute commercial-free special featuring live discussion with U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, celebrities and advocates.
- Descendant of "The $64,000 Question," contestants who were experts in a particular field answered progressively more-difficult questions in an effort to win $128,000.
- This was a very eclectic, and entertaining, variety show. "Music Hall America" had no regular host, but among those guest hosting included Ray Stevens (on the premiere episode), Dottie West, Ken Berry, Vicki Carr, Jim Stafford, and Burl Ives. There was a resident song-and-dance group, The Even Dozen, whose members also did solo spots; e.g. there were vocalists Sandi Burnett, Dean Rutherford (who was dubbed "The Bionic Songwriter"), and Hollis Peyser, and members Denise DiRenzo performed a song-and-dance number on one episode and Eddie Pruett did a salute to George M. Cohan on another. "Music Hall America," even though it was videotaped at Opryland, U.S.A. in Nashville, wasn't just Country; for example, on the premiere episode rock group Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods ("Billy, Don't Be a Hero")performed a song called "Teenage Rampage," and on another episode JoAnne Worley ("Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In") did a comedy sketch recalling how she began in opera (she even sang!). There were also recurring "quickie" comedy sketches in which The Even Dozen were members of an orchestra and traded jokes among themselves, and with Eddie Pruett as a member of the French Foreign Legion who had some outrageous last requests before being executed by the squad, and managed to escape that fate every time. Perfect family viewing for a Saturday night (or Sunday, depending on when and where it was shown). They certainly don't make them like this anymore!
- Meet The Bears, a typical suburban family that happens to have a magical story book. Every page that they read becomes a reality and a crazy adventure. James the adventurer, Lilly the smart one, Mom the boss of the house. But situations get tough when trying to get back to living an ordinary life.
- Syndicated show where two teams of two players compete against each other to determine the name of a famous person. One member of the team, who knew the answer, would give clues to his or her teammate.
- Heckle and Jeckle, the world's most famous talking Magpies, go on a moose-hunting trip. In order to get close enough to a moose to shoot him, they combine themselves into a female(?) moose costume. But the disguise is too effective, the moose is soon in love, and it appears a union that will produce the worlds first Moosepie animal is in the offing.
- a Paul Terry Terrytoon cartoon (production number 5109) in which Gandy Goose gets spring fever (the only mention of the word "spring" in this seven-minute cartoon) and runs away from home, and promptly runs into a fox, proprietor of a roadside diner, who wishes to offer goose-fricassee on his menu. Gandy's goose is about to be cooked, until he develops a sneezing-fit and sneezes his way back home. This cartoon has nothing do do with some MTK3 short with the same title.
- "VH1 Confidential" probes the mysteries, myths and urban legends of influential artists in Rock 'n' Roll.
- NFL players and gospel recording artists join together on stage for uplifting music and inspirational messages.
- After Gandy Goose being rejected by the US Navy during World War II for being an incompetent, Gandy's Goose-like girlfriend suggests that he create his own navy. Encouraged by her suggestion, Gandy creates his own military with the aid of his barnyard friends and he helps the US military win the war.
- This half-hour original special looks back at the first 15 years of the GLAAD Media Awards to see how it got started and how it got to where it is today. Features Ellen DeGeneres, Tom Hanks, Julianne Moore, Glenn Close and many more.