PBSOfficial website: to.pbs.org/3ZsIPN5 | #DeadlockPBS It’s Election Day in the fictional state of Middlevania. You’re a poll worker, excited to do your civic duty, when suddenly you’re confronted with a series of challenges that will lead you to wrestle with what is legal… and what is right.
This election dilemma unfolds in DEADLOCK: an election story, where UC Davis School of Law professor Aaron Tang guides a panel of influential figures from legal, political, media and cultural spheres through complex ethical dilemmas based on a real-life scenario. The special encourages civil dialogue and critical thinking in an era dominated by polarizing debates.
The producers would like to thank the Columbia School of Journalism for its creative contributions to the program.
Filmed on location at The New-York Historical Society.
DEADLOCK: An Election Story. For bios of the panelists, please visit to.pbs.org/3ZsIPN5
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more episodes and clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS app: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Panelists: Dr. Rachel Bitecofer, political strategist; Adrian Fontes, Arizona secretary of state; Dr. Eddie S. Glaude, Jr., James S McDonnell professor of African American studies, Princeton University; Katie Harbath, CEO, Anchor Change and former Facebook executive; Astead Herndon, national politics reporter, The New York Times and host, The Run-Up; Jeh C. Johnson, former secretary of Homeland Security and former general counsel, Department of Defense; Elise Jordan, NBC/MSNBC political analyst; Kris Kobach, Kansas attorney general; Mick Mulvaney, former U.S. representative for South Carolina and NewsNation contributor; Russell Moore, editor in chief, Christianity Today and author; Scott Pelley, CBS 60 Minutes correspondent; and Gabriel Sterling, COO, Office of the Georgia Secretary of State.
0:00 Open and Host Intro 4:25 Uncle Bill 9:39 At the Newsroom 12:20 The Viral Video at PS 42 16:35 As the Viral Video Spreads 24:20 Closing Time 30:10 At the State Legislature (Who’s Stealing Now?) 37:31 With the Incumbent (Who’s Stealing Now? Pt. 2) 48:34 Protests – Eddie’s Daughter and Uncle Bill’s Son 51:02 One Last Chapter
How Would You Respond to These Ethical Dilemmas? | DEADLOCK: An Election Story | Full Episode | PBSPBS2024-09-21 | Official website: to.pbs.org/3ZsIPN5 | #DeadlockPBS It’s Election Day in the fictional state of Middlevania. You’re a poll worker, excited to do your civic duty, when suddenly you’re confronted with a series of challenges that will lead you to wrestle with what is legal… and what is right.
This election dilemma unfolds in DEADLOCK: an election story, where UC Davis School of Law professor Aaron Tang guides a panel of influential figures from legal, political, media and cultural spheres through complex ethical dilemmas based on a real-life scenario. The special encourages civil dialogue and critical thinking in an era dominated by polarizing debates.
The producers would like to thank the Columbia School of Journalism for its creative contributions to the program.
Filmed on location at The New-York Historical Society.
DEADLOCK: An Election Story. For bios of the panelists, please visit to.pbs.org/3ZsIPN5
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more episodes and clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS app: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Panelists: Dr. Rachel Bitecofer, political strategist; Adrian Fontes, Arizona secretary of state; Dr. Eddie S. Glaude, Jr., James S McDonnell professor of African American studies, Princeton University; Katie Harbath, CEO, Anchor Change and former Facebook executive; Astead Herndon, national politics reporter, The New York Times and host, The Run-Up; Jeh C. Johnson, former secretary of Homeland Security and former general counsel, Department of Defense; Elise Jordan, NBC/MSNBC political analyst; Kris Kobach, Kansas attorney general; Mick Mulvaney, former U.S. representative for South Carolina and NewsNation contributor; Russell Moore, editor in chief, Christianity Today and author; Scott Pelley, CBS 60 Minutes correspondent; and Gabriel Sterling, COO, Office of the Georgia Secretary of State.
0:00 Open and Host Intro 4:25 Uncle Bill 9:39 At the Newsroom 12:20 The Viral Video at PS 42 16:35 As the Viral Video Spreads 24:20 Closing Time 30:10 At the State Legislature (Who’s Stealing Now?) 37:31 With the Incumbent (Who’s Stealing Now? Pt. 2) 48:34 Protests – Eddie’s Daughter and Uncle Bill’s Son 51:02 One Last ChapterThe Ancient Tribes That Settled the Americas | First Peoples | Full Episode 1 | PBSPBS2024-10-18 | Watch more of this series with PBS Passport: to.pbs.org/3BJNXmd As early humans spread out across the world, their toughest challenge was colonizing the Americas because a huge ice sheet blocked the route. It has long been thought that the first Americans were Clovis people, who arrived 13,000 years ago. But an underwater discovery in Mexico suggests people arrived earlier — coming by boat, not on foot. [Originally aired in 2015]
Americas | First Peoples
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
First Peoples See how the mixing of prehistoric human genes led the way for our species to survive and thrive around the globe. Archaeology, genetics and anthropology cast new light on 200,000 years of history, detailing how early humans became dominant.Is This One of America’s First Mosques? | American Muslims: A History RevealedPBS2024-10-17 | Among the millions of immigrants arriving in the United States at the turn of the 20th century were thousands of Muslims from Lebanon, then part of Greater Syria. In this film, host Aymann Ismail tells the story of two of these people, a woman named Mary Juma and her husband Hassen who homesteaded in North Dakota in the early 1900s. Traveling across the Midwest, Aymann explores how the community that Mary and Hassen founded constructed one of the first purpose-built mosques in the country, keeping their traditions alive while creating a new identity on the American frontier.
Made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
American Muslims: A History Revealed A series of six short documentary films that reveal and explore the early history of Muslims in America. The series is hosted by three leading American Muslim journalists: Malika Bilal, Aymann Ismail, and Asma Khalid. Over the course of the series, they travel the country to piece together stories spanning over 200 years. from the first Muslims to arrive as enslaved people from Africa to the establishment of early South Asian, Syrian-Lebanese, and Black American Muslim communities. The series weaves key moments in U.S. history with the unexpected but essential story threads of Muslims whose lived experiences offer us new insight into how race, religion, and nationality are intertwined in the American fabric. Actors reading the part of historical characters include Hiam Abbas, David Rasche, Kamal Khan, and Faarshad Farahat.Night Cameras Offer Rare Glimpse Into Leopard Den | Big Cats 24/7 | PBSPBS2024-10-17 | Official website: to.pbs.org/4fIVkd1 | #BigCatsPBS Xudum has yet to successfully rear cubs, but she’s reaching an age where experience should help her raise at least one to adulthood. Nearly two years after losing her last litter, she gives birth again. Female leopards keep their cubs concealed at this time, but a revolution in low light camera technology offers a glimpse of the den. At around four days old, they’ve rarely been filmed this young.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Big Cats 24/7 Wildlife Cinematographers Gordon Buchanan, Vianet Djenguet and Anna Dimitriadis join forces with the Natural History Film Unit, Botswana led by Brad Bestelink and his local camera team. Following individual lions, cheetahs and leopards for six months, over two extreme seasons, this documentary shows their battle to survive in an increasingly challenging world. From unprecedented wildfire to flood and extreme drought, the cats and camera crew are tested to their limits. A revolution in low light camera technology means the series showcases previously unseen behavior at night; cutting-edge drones keep track of the big cat’s movements like never before, and combining the raw endeavor of an expedition with premium natural history footage gives the show a contemporary new approach.How a Puerto Rican Auto Shop in Philly Views the 2024 Election | VOCES: Latino Vote 2024PBS2024-10-16 | Official website: to.pbs.org/3MVwiKy | #VocesPBS Marz Auto Central is a fixture of the predominantly Puerto Rican community in North Philadelphia. In between oil changes, dent repairs and wheel alignments, mechanics, customers and neighborhood pundits—mostly young, Caribbean Latino men—hang out to discuss the latest news and political gossip. Co-owner Monica Parilla, who came to Philly from Puerto Rico in the early 90s, plays the role of in-person content moderator. Marz is a spot for in-person and unfiltered conversation that is nonetheless respectful and playful. Over the last few years, the shop has become something of a makeshift political forum for topics as wide ranging as the presidential debate, the economy, and conspiracy theories. All the while, everyone is trying to make each other laugh.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
VOCES: Latino Vote 2024 Examine the priorities of a politically diverse Latino electorate for the 2024 election. Produced by @LPBMedia, acclaimed PBS documentary series VOCES features the best of Latino arts, culture and history and shines a light on current issues that impact Latino Americans. Devoted to exploring the rich diversity of the Latino experience, VOCES presents new and established filmmakers and brings their powerful and illuminating stories to a national audience.Competition Begins for Americas Best Civics Students | Citizen Nation | Full Episode 2 of 4 | PBSPBS2024-10-16 | Official website: to.pbs.org/3Y8ciuE | #CitizenNationPBS The pressure builds as students tackle the first round of competition. They must answer judges’ questions in the style of Congressional hearings, showing a thorough understanding of democracy and the ways it connects to their lives today.
In the Fray | Citizen Nation | Episode 2
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Citizen Nation This four-part documentary series is an inspiring coming-of-age story that follows teenagers from across America as they face off in the nation's premier civics competition called "We the People: The Citizen and the Constitution". Culminating in a championship showdown in the nation’s capital, high school students with diverse personal and political backgrounds grapple with critical questions about democracy.Ancient Rome: A City of Immigrants | Life in Ancient Times with @DariusAryaPBS2024-10-15 | Examine the multiculturalism that defined Imperial Rome, a city of nearly a million people drawn from across the Roman Empire. Much like the melting pot of modern New York, ancient Rome was home to a vast array of cultures, with immigrants bringing their own customs, languages, and gods to the capital. Rome's reputation for embracing outsiders can be traced back to its foundation myth, where Romulus created a safe haven for anyone who sought refuge, from shepherds to runaway slaves.
The city’s neighborhoods reflected its diversity, with enclaves like Little Italys and Chinatowns emerging as people from around the empire settled and integrated into Roman society. Many inhabitants of Rome were enslaved, but through the system of manumission, many became liberti (freed people) who could participate in civic life and gain Roman citizenship. Another group, the peregrini, foreign workers who never became citizens, added to the complexity of Roman society.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Life in Ancient Times with Darius Arya Embark on an unforgettable voyage across the ancient world with archaeologist @DariusArya, to unearth the secrets of civilizations past, delving into the daily rituals, extraordinary achievements, and cultural legacies that shaped our world as we know it today.Animated Story of an Enslaved Woman Who Won Her Freedom | History of White People in AmericaPBS2024-10-14 | Official website: to.pbs.org/IL_2024 In this moving, animated short, poet Ashley M. Jones offers a lyrical historical account of Ann Williams, an enslaved Black woman who won her freedom in the 1830s. When faced with the torturous fate of being separated from her family and sold into Southern slavery, Williams took a literal leap of faith to avoid the dreadful mandate.
All God's Children | The History of White People in America, Episode 5
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
The History of White People in America A series of musical animations, chronicling diverse experiences of how race has helped shape American culture. These shorts provide insight into the unique lived experiences of historical figures who played a role in the evolving definitions of identity.
Executive Producers Carrie Lozano Lois Vossen Christopher Hastings Mark Mannucci Jon Halperin
Directors Jon Halperin Ed Bell Drew Takahashi Aaron Keane Pierce Freelon
Co-Director Ashley M. Jones
Producer Clementine Briand
Executive in Charge of Production Royd Chung
Senior Manager, Short-Form Content Pamela Torno
Supervising Producer Pamela Torno
Consulting Producer Clare Chambers
Composer Pierce Freelon
Writer Ashley M. Jones
Art Directors Ed Bell Drew Takahashi
Animation Producer Lewis Foulke
Animators Ed Bell Granger Davis Sean Dicken Tara Krishna Nathan Stephen Christine L Toscanini Louise Kay Uy
Post Media Operations Specialist Raul Mendez
Mix/Sound Design Aaron Keane
Vocalists Pierce Freelon Ashley M. Jones DL Zene Lance Scott
Archival Images Rare Book and Special Collections Division of the Library of Congress, Washington, DC “Dealers inspecting a negro at a slave auction in Virginia” Courtesy of The New York Public Library “Woman and child on auction block” Courtesy of The New York Public Library “Cruelties of slavery” Courtesy of The New York Public Library “Scenes in Cotton Land - The Cotton Gin” Courtesy of The New York Public Library
Independent Lens Short-Form Funding Provided by: Corporation for Public Broadcasting Acton Family Giving John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Ford Foundation Park Foundation Wyncote Foundation National Endowment for the Arts
Big Cats 24/7 Wildlife Cinematographers Gordon Buchanan, Vianet Djenguet and Anna Dimitriadis join forces with the Natural History Film Unit, Botswana led by Brad Bestelink and his local camera team. Following individual lions, cheetahs and leopards for six months, over two extreme seasons, this documentary shows their battle to survive in an increasingly challenging world. From unprecedented wildfire to flood and extreme drought, the cats and camera crew are tested to their limits. A revolution in low light camera technology means the series showcases previously unseen behavior at night; cutting-edge drones keep track of the big cat’s movements like never before, and combining the raw endeavor of an expedition with premium natural history footage gives the show a contemporary new approach.Silvana Estrada sings Susana Baca’s “Negra Presuntuosa” w/ Snarky Puppy | Next at the Kennedy CenterPBS2024-10-13 | Official website: to.pbs.org/3CBecJa | #KenCenNextPBS Silvana Estrada performs Susana Baca’s “Negra Presuntuosa” with Grammy Award-winning band Snarky Puppy. Joined on stage by Gaby Moreno, Silvia Pérez Cruz, and Fuensanta, these dynamic artists bring the audience to their feet during a sold out show at the Kennedy Center’s Concert Hall honoring Afro-Peruvian icon Susana Baca’s music.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Next at the Kennedy Center A dynamic mix of artists across hip hop, jazz, modern dance, and more perform at the Kennedy Center. Each episode weaves together performances filmed live at the Center with intimate off-stage moments contextualizing each artist’s cultural impact.THE RISKIEST Places to Live in the US as Our Climate Changes | Weathered: Earths ExtremesPBS2024-10-12 | In this story from Weathered: Earth’s Extremes, Maiya May pours over giant risk maps with NASA scientist Marshall Shephard to learn the most significant impacts of our changing climate on each region of the US. Using some of the most powerful computers in the world, scientists can project how a warmer world will change our weather. She finds an answer to the question: where is the riskiest place to live as the climate warms, and how can we prepare?
Weathered: Earth's Extremes Host, Maiya May travels around the world to highlight real stories from people affected by natural disasters and climate change. Stream our series to learn how building a better future is possible. Check out more from Weathered on @pbsterra!Snarky Puppy Performs El Mayoral with Gaby Moreno | Next at the Kennedy Center | PBSPBS2024-10-11 | Official website: to.pbs.org/3CBecJa | #KenCenNextPBS Gaby Moreno performs the hit song “El Mayoral” with Grammy Award-winning band @snarkypuppy. Backed by Silvana Estrada, Silvia Pérez Cruz, and Fuensanta, these dynamic artists bring the audience to their feet during a sold out show at the Kennedy Center’s Concert Hall honoring Afro-Peruvian icon Susana Baca’s music.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Next at the Kennedy Center A dynamic mix of artists across hip hop, jazz, modern dance, and more perform at the Kennedy Center. Each episode weaves together performances filmed live at the Center with intimate off-stage moments contextualizing each artist’s cultural impact.Who Will Win? Lions Battle a Crocodile for a Meal | Big Cats 24/7 | PBSPBS2024-10-10 | Official website: to.pbs.org/4fIVkd1 | #BigCatsPBS Food is running low for Tsebe, and she’s always on the lookout for a meal. As a nursing mother, producing enough milk for her large litter of five cubs leaves her constantly hungry. When the female lion hears a lechwe struggling in the water nearby, her hunger leads to a desperate and dangerous battle against a crocodile to steal its prey.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Big Cats 24/7 Wildlife Cinematographers Gordon Buchanan, Vianet Djenguet and Anna Dimitriadis join forces with the Natural History Film Unit, Botswana led by Brad Bestelink and his local camera team. Following individual lions, cheetahs and leopards for six months, over two extreme seasons, this documentary shows their battle to survive in an increasingly challenging world. From unprecedented wildfire to flood and extreme drought, the cats and camera crew are tested to their limits. A revolution in low light camera technology means the series showcases previously unseen behavior at night; cutting-edge drones keep track of the big cat’s movements like never before, and combining the raw endeavor of an expedition with premium natural history footage gives the show a contemporary new approach.How Latinos Will Impact the Election | Full Documentary | VOCES: Latino Vote 2024 | PBSPBS2024-10-09 | Official website: to.pbs.org/3MVwiKy | #VocesPBS Examine the priorities of a politically diverse Latino electorate in the run-up to the 2024 presidential election in some of the most hotly contested battleground states, including Arizona, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania as well as California and Florida.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
VOCES: Latino Vote 2024 Examine the priorities of a politically diverse Latino electorate for the 2024 election. Produced by @LPBMedia, acclaimed PBS documentary series VOCES features the best of Latino arts, culture and history and shines a light on current issues that impact Latino Americans. Devoted to exploring the rich diversity of the Latino experience, VOCES presents new and established filmmakers and brings their powerful and illuminating stories to a national audience.Meet the Students in Americas Top Civics Competition | Citizen Nation | Full Episode 1 of 4 | PBSPBS2024-10-09 | Official website: to.pbs.org/3Y8ciuE | #CitizenNationPBS Teenage contestants from across the United States embark on a year-long civics competition. Wyoming’s teams embody the state’s spirit. Immigrant students in Las Vegas rally for competition. Richmond, Va., has the team to beat.
Chasing Victory | Citizen Nation | Episode 1
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Citizen Nation This four-part documentary series is an inspiring coming-of-age story that follows teenagers from across America as they face off in the nation's premier civics competition called "We the People: The Citizen and the Constitution". Culminating in a championship showdown in the nation’s capital, high school students with diverse personal and political backgrounds grapple with critical questions about democracy.Americas First Chinese Woman Was Treated as a Circus Oddity | History of White People in AmericaPBS2024-10-07 | Official website: to.pbs.org/IL_2024 In this animated musical short, acclaimed poet Sally Wen Mao gives voice to the little-known history of Afong Moy, America's first recorded Chinese woman, brought to New York City by merchants and exhibited as a circus oddity in the 1830s. Moy was eventually managed and exploited by circus showman P.T. Barnum.
“The Diary of Afong Moy” | The History of White People in America, Episode 4
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
The History of White People in America A series of musical animations, chronicling diverse experiences of how race has helped shape American culture. These shorts provide insight into the unique lived experiences of historical figures who played a role in the evolving definitions of identity.
Based on the poem ‘The Diary of Afong Moy’ by Sally Wen Mao
Executive Producers Carrie Lozano Lois Vossen Christopher Hastings Mark Mannucci Jon Halperin
Directors Jon Halperin Ed Bell Drew Takahashi Aaron Keane Pierce Freelon
Co-Director Sally Wen Mao
Producer Clementine Briand
Executive in Charge of Production Royd Chung
Senior Manager, Short-Form Content Pamela Torno
Supervising Producer Pamela Torno
Consulting Producer Clare Chambers
Composers Pierce Freelon Aaron Keane Wu Fei
Writer Sally Wen Mao
Art Directors Ed Bell Drew Takahashi
Animation Producer Lewis Foulke
Post Media Operations Specialist Raul Mendez
Animators Ed Bell Granger Davis Drew Takahashi Louise Kay Uy
Vocalists Sally Wen Mao Pierce Freelon Wu Fei
Musicians Pierce Freelon Aaron Keane Tyler Lee Lance Scott
Guzheng Player Wu Fei
Independent Lens Short-Form Funding Provided by: Corporation for Public Broadcasting Acton Family Giving John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Ford Foundation Park Foundation Wyncote Foundation National Endowment for the Arts
Big Cats 24/7 Wildlife Cinematographers Gordon Buchanan, Vianet Djenguet and Anna Dimitriadis join forces with the Natural History Film Unit, Botswana led by Brad Bestelink and his local camera team. Following individual lions, cheetahs and leopards for six months, over two extreme seasons, this documentary shows their battle to survive in an increasingly challenging world. From unprecedented wildfire to flood and extreme drought, the cats and camera crew are tested to their limits. A revolution in low light camera technology means the series showcases previously unseen behavior at night; cutting-edge drones keep track of the big cat’s movements like never before, and combining the raw endeavor of an expedition with premium natural history footage gives the show a contemporary new approach.What is Coral Bleaching? The Fight to Save Coral Reefs | Weathered: Earths ExtremesPBS2024-10-05 | Maiya May heads to Florida to explore climate tipping points – thresholds that lead to rapid and irreversible change. Discover how critical our climate systems like coral reefs are for our planet’s stability. Are these vital ecosystems already past their tipping point, or is there still hope to reverse the damage? Learn about the science behind these changes and what can be done to protect our planet's future.
Weathered: Earth's Extremes Host, Maiya May travels around the world to highlight real stories from people affected by natural disasters and climate change. Stream our series to learn how building a better future is possible. Check out more from Weathered on @pbsterra!Constructing The Scorpion Tower | Impossible Builds | Full Episode | PBSPBS2024-10-04 | Watch more of this series with PBS Passport: to.pbs.org/4dD05Tj | #ImpossibleBuildsPBS Follow the construction of one of the most complex skyscrapers ever to make it off the drawing board. Its design is so radical that construction experts have turned to a building material never before used in skyscrapers. Known as One Thousand Museum, the Miami skyscraper was originally designed by Iraqi-British architect Zaha Hadid. [Originally aired in 2018]
The Scorpion Tower | Impossible Builds
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Impossible Builds Learn about the creation of some of the world’s most ambitious and technologically advanced buildings. From subaquatic homes to futuristic towers and pencil thin skyscrapers, see how these previously impossible structures are taking shape.Lions Steal a Starving Leopards Meal | Big Cats 24/7 | PBSPBS2024-10-03 | Official website: to.pbs.org/4fIVkd1 | #BigCatsPBS Xudum the leopard is hunting again. Now pregnant, she desperately needs a successful kill and makes a risky decision to strike from the treetops. The gamble pays off, and Xudum takes down an impala. But her victory is short-lived when she attracts the attention of the lioness mothers, and they move in and steal her meal.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Big Cats 24/7 Wildlife Cinematographers Gordon Buchanan, Vianet Djenguet and Anna Dimitriadis join forces with the Natural History Film Unit, Botswana led by Brad Bestelink and his local camera team. Following individual lions, cheetahs and leopards for six months, over two extreme seasons, this documentary shows their battle to survive in an increasingly challenging world. From unprecedented wildfire to flood and extreme drought, the cats and camera crew are tested to their limits. A revolution in low light camera technology means the series showcases previously unseen behavior at night; cutting-edge drones keep track of the big cat’s movements like never before, and combining the raw endeavor of an expedition with premium natural history footage gives the show a contemporary new approach.A First-Time Voter’s Complicated Path Navigating Family and Politics | VOCES: Latino Vote 2024PBS2024-10-02 | Official website: to.pbs.org/3MVwiKy | #VocesPBS Jerry Reyes was born and raised in the heart of California’s Central Valley, surrounded by a sweltering expanse of industrial agriculture. He never worked in the fields, but his parents and grandparents did – picking the very grapes that Cesar Chavez once boycotted. And while Jerry is a citizen, his family members were all undocumented and at risk of deportation over the years and administrations.
Sitting at a crowded taquería, Jerry talks about the upcoming election, and describes what matters to him as a 24-year old, first-time voter: he wants to “make money.” And while he concedes he himself is a product of immigrants, he thinks it’s time to close the border. Jerry sells insurance, is a registered Republican, and is voting for Trump. This decision has meant multiple family members will no longer speak to him, a consequence Jerry believes is an unfortunate necessity of being a “free thinker.”
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
VOCES: Latino Vote 2024 Examine the priorities of a politically diverse Latino electorate for the 2024 election. Produced by @LPBMedia, acclaimed PBS documentary series VOCES features the best of Latino arts, culture and history and shines a light on current issues that impact Latino Americans. Devoted to exploring the rich diversity of the Latino experience, VOCES presents new and established filmmakers and brings their powerful and illuminating stories to a national audience.Would You Help a Poll Watcher Even if You Dont Share Their Views? | DEADLOCK: An Election StoryPBS2024-10-01 | Official website: to.pbs.org/3ZsIPN5 | #DeadlockPBS
Imagine you’re a poll worker in the fictional state of Middlevania. Your uncle, who you feel has become radicalized over time, has doubts about the integrity of the election and will be a poll watcher.
It’s Election Day and every poll shows a virtual tie between the incumbent president of the United Sates and the challenger. Your uncle wants a ride to the polls.
What would you do?
This is the first of several dilemmas unfolding in DEADLOCK: an election story. UC Davis School of Law professor Aaron Tang guides a conversation between influential figures from legal, political, media and cultural spheres through complex ethical challenges based on a real-life scenario. In an era dominated by polarization, this special encourages respectful dialogue and critical thinking.
Panelists: Dr. Rachel Bitecofer, political strategist; Adrian Fontes, Arizona secretary of state; Dr. Eddie S. Glaude, Jr., James S McDonnell professor of African American studies, Princeton University; Katie Harbath, CEO, Anchor Change and former Facebook executive; Astead Herndon, national politics reporter, The New York Times and host, The Run-Up; Jeh C. Johnson, former secretary of Homeland Security and former general counsel, Department of Defense; Elise Jordan, NBC/MSNBC political analyst; Kris Kobach, Kansas attorney general; Mick Mulvaney, former U.S. representative for South Carolina and NewsNation contributor; Russell Moore, editor in chief, Christianity Today and author; Scott Pelley, CBS 60 Minutes correspondent; and Gabriel Sterling, COO, Office of the Georgia Secretary of State.
The producers would like to thank the Columbia School of Journalism for its creative contributions to the program.
Filmed on location at The New-York Historical Society.Troublemaker lion cub pesters his siblings 😹 #shortsPBS2024-10-01 | A little lion cub has developed a reputation for being mischievous. Sounds like most kittens we've met -- except this is no kitten!
Watch "Big Cats 24/7" full episodes and more of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App! Check out "Big Cats Unleashed" over on @pbsterra!
Made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Big Cats 24/7 Following individual lions, cheetahs and leopards for six months, over two extreme seasons, this documentary shows their battle to survive in an increasingly challenging world. From unprecedented wildfire to flood and extreme drought, the cats and camera crew are tested to their limits. A revolution in low light camera technology means the series showcases previously unseen behavior at night; cutting-edge drones keep track of the big cat’s movements like never before, and combining the raw endeavor of an expedition with premium natural history footage gives the show a contemporary new approach.
#lion #cats #cute #cuteanimals #cutecat #BigCatsPBSHow the Electoral College Works and Why It Exists | One Person, One Vote? | Independent Lens | PBSPBS2024-10-01 | Official website: to.pbs.org/3zn4v2k | #IndieLensPBS At a time when many Americans question democratic institutions, "One Person, One Vote?" unveils the complexities of the Electoral College, the uniquely American and often misunderstood mechanism for electing a president. The documentary follows four presidential electors representing different parties in Colorado during the intense 2020 election.
One Person, One Vote? | Independent Lens
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
More About Independent Lens @independentlens is an Emmy® Award-winning PBS documentary series. With founding executive producer Lois Vossen, the series has been honored with 10 Academy Award nominations and features documentaries united by the creative freedom, artistic achievement, and unflinching visions of independent filmmakers. Presented by ITVS, INDEPENDENT LENS is funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Acton Family Giving, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Ford Foundation, Wyncote Foundation, and National Endowment for the Arts.Lion Mamas Defend Their Cubs from Threatening Male Lions | Big Cats 24/7 | PBSPBS2024-09-29 | Official website: to.pbs.org/4fIVkd1 | #BigCatsPBS With Big Toe and Madumo missing, all the Xudum Pride cubs are in danger when two intruding males appear. Taking over a pride is a simple but brutal process: kill the cubs to eliminate all traces of the previous dominant males. But these four experienced and powerful mothers won’t back down when the intruders enter the heart of their territory.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Big Cats 24/7 Wildlife Cinematographers Gordon Buchanan, Vianet Djenguet and Anna Dimitriadis join forces with the Natural History Film Unit, Botswana led by Brad Bestelink and his local camera team. Following individual lions, cheetahs and leopards for six months, over two extreme seasons, this documentary shows their battle to survive in an increasingly challenging world. From unprecedented wildfire to flood and extreme drought, the cats and camera crew are tested to their limits. A revolution in low light camera technology means the series showcases previously unseen behavior at night; cutting-edge drones keep track of the big cat’s movements like never before, and combining the raw endeavor of an expedition with premium natural history footage gives the show a contemporary new approach.10 Buildings That Shaped American Architecture | 10 That Changed America | Full Episode | PBSPBS2024-09-27 | Watch more of this series with PBS Passport: to.pbs.org/3zHVst5 | #10ChangedAmericaPBS A state capitol that Thomas Jefferson designed to resemble a Roman temple, the home of Henry Ford’s first assembly line, an airport with a swooping concrete roof that seems to float on air — these are among the buildings surveyed in this cross-country journey to 10 influential works of American architecture. [Originally aired in 2013]
10 Buildings that Changed America | 10 That Changed America
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
10 That Changed America Host Geoffrey Baer takes viewers across the country to the legendary streets, monuments and man-made marvels that changed America. Explore the streets that change the way we get around, visit the Statue of Liberty and Mount Rushmore, and learn more about the engineering feats that made our civilization possible.
Chapters 00:00 Intro 01:32 Virginia State Capitol - Richmond, VA 07:13 Trinity Church - Boston, MA 11:45 The Wainwright Building - St. Louis, MO 17:04 The Robie House - Chicago, IL 22:19 Highland Park Ford Plant - Highland Park, MI 26:54 Southdale Center - Edina, MN 32:04 Seagram Building - New York, NY 38:06 Dulles Airport - Chantilly, VA 42:39 Vanna Venturi House - Philadelphia, PA 48:30 Walt Disney Concert Hall - Los Angeles, CA 53:19 OutroA Herd of Buffalo Force the Pride Into Deep Water | Big Cats 24/7 | PBSPBS2024-09-26 | Official website: to.pbs.org/4fIVkd1 | #BigCatsPBS The Xudum Pride finds itself in a tough spot when it gets stuck between a large herd of buffalo and a river channel. Lions may eat buffalo, but a herd of this size has the upper hand. When a bull charges, the lions flee into the water. Panic drives the cubs into deeper water, and the risk of attracting crocodiles increases. Even dominant male, Big Toe, is in jeopardy.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Big Cats 24/7 Wildlife Cinematographers Gordon Buchanan, Vianet Djenguet and Anna Dimitriadis join forces with the Natural History Film Unit, Botswana led by Brad Bestelink and his local camera team. Following individual lions, cheetahs and leopards for six months, over two extreme seasons, this documentary shows their battle to survive in an increasingly challenging world. From unprecedented wildfire to flood and extreme drought, the cats and camera crew are tested to their limits. A revolution in low light camera technology means the series showcases previously unseen behavior at night; cutting-edge drones keep track of the big cat’s movements like never before, and combining the raw endeavor of an expedition with premium natural history footage gives the show a contemporary new approach.The Issues that Matter to a Future Voter | VOCES: Latino Vote 2024PBS2024-09-25 | Official website: to.pbs.org/3MVwiKy | #VocesPBS Back in 2020, when Francisco Chavero was 12 years old, he canvassed with his mother for then presidential candidate Bernie Sanders in Nevada. Now at age 17, Francisco is looking ahead to the day he can vote, in two years time. Right now he says he supports some Democratic policies such as immigration reform, but also agrees with Republicans when it comes to issues related to the economy. What does Francisco’s story reveal about the evolving dynamics of the youth vote? Are younger voters more likely to identify as independents when compared to older voters? We will also highlight Francisco’s political evolution - how does he feel about candidate Kamala Harris after expressing criticisms about the age of the candidates before Harris entered the race?
Made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
VOCES: Latino Vote 2024 Examine the priorities of a politically diverse Latino electorate for the 2024 election. Produced by @LPBMedia, acclaimed PBS documentary series VOCES features the best of Latino arts, culture and history and shines a light on current issues that impact Latino Americans. Devoted to exploring the rich diversity of the Latino experience, VOCES presents new and established filmmakers and brings their powerful and illuminating stories to a national audience.Teenage Siblings Act Like Cubs Instead of Adult Male Lions | Big Cats 24/7 | PBSPBS2024-09-19 | Official website: to.pbs.org/4fIVkd1 | #BigCatsPBS The threat from intruder lions is particularly high for the sub-adult males in the Xudum Pride. Nkgonne and Colin may be physically larger than cubs, but these inexperienced two-year-olds hardly act like nearly independent male lions. Instead, the siblings clown around together, even taking their outlandish behavior into the trees.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Big Cats 24/7 Wildlife Cinematographers Gordon Buchanan, Vianet Djenguet and Anna Dimitriadis join forces with the Natural History Film Unit, Botswana led by Brad Bestelink and his local camera team. Following individual lions, cheetahs and leopards for six months, over two extreme seasons, this documentary shows their battle to survive in an increasingly challenging world. From unprecedented wildfire to flood and extreme drought, the cats and camera crew are tested to their limits. A revolution in low light camera technology means the series showcases previously unseen behavior at night; cutting-edge drones keep track of the big cat’s movements like never before, and combining the raw endeavor of an expedition with premium natural history footage gives the show a contemporary new approach.Finding Your Roots | Season 11 Trailer | PBSPBS2024-09-19 | Official website: to.pbs.org/3TA8505 | #FindingYourRoots Finding Your Roots with Henry Louis Gates, Jr. returns for its eleventh season on PBS. Over the course of ten new episodes, Gates and his team use genealogical detective work and cutting-edge DNA analysis to trace the family trees of twenty compelling guests, telling stories that illuminate America’s fundamental diversity. Along with an array of celebrity guests, the season features a special twist as host Henry Louis Gates, Jr. becomes a guest himself, uncovering a personal family mystery.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Explore our shared histories with Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr. through iconic series like Making Black America, Finding Your Roots, and The Black Church: pbs.org/professorgates
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Finding Your Roots For more than a decade, renowned Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates, Jr. has helped to expand America’s sense of itself, stimulating a national conversation about identity with humor, wisdom, and compassion. Professor Gates has explored the ancestry of dozens of influential people from diverse backgrounds, taking millions of viewers deep into the past to reveal the connections that bind us all.A Wild Hog Hunt in Arkansas Builds Cross-Cultural Solidarity | PBS Short DocsPBS2024-09-16 | Official website: to.pbs.org/IL_2024 | #IndieLensPBS A wild hog hunt in the Ozarks leads to an unexpectedly vulnerable dialogue between Iranian American filmmaker Andy Sarjahani and his childhood friend Bubba as they navigate a polarized world. As their paths diverged in the increasingly anti-Middle Eastern years after 9/11, Andy's journey of self-examination tries to reconcile his two cultural identities.
Wild Hogs and Saffron | Short Documentary | Independent Lens
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
More About Independent Lens @independentlens is America’s home for independent documentary film. Each week the award-winning series delivers engaging documentaries crafted by the industry’s boldest filmmakers. Independent Lens films have won 19 Emmy Awards, 16 Peabody Awards, five duPont-Columbia University Awards, and have received 10 Academy Award nominations. Independent Lens won the 2013, 2014, 2015, 2017, and 2022 International Documentary Association (IDA) Award for Best Continuing Series.
Featuring Bubba Samuels Andy Sarjahani
Directed and Produced by Andy Sarjahani
Edited by Ivete Lucas
Director of Photography Blaine Dunkley
Executive Producers Carrie Lozano Lois Vossen Courtney Pledger Keith Maitland
Producer Jennifer Samani
Supervising Producer Pamela Torno
Executive In Charge of Production Royd Chung
Senior Manager, Short-Form Content Pamela Torno
Post Media Operations Specialist Raul Mendez
Sound Design by Adam Sekuler
Re-recording Engineer Brian Goodheart
Associate Producer Vanessa Uhlig
Assistant Editor Cole Lansden Trevor Garza
Addtional Assistan Editing Trevor Garza
Additional Cinematography Andy Sarjahani
Production Assistant Sarah Nichols
Titles Design Jane Geisler
Archival Footage Provided by Ali and Tammie Sarjahani
Special Thanks Leo Chiang Sarah Killins-Samuels Kiyoko McCrae Tony Nichols PJ Raval
Artist Support Provided By New Orleans Film Society – Emerging Voices
Original Production Funding Provided by Arkansas Humanities Council The Micheaux Award and Film Labs
Fiscal Sponsorship Arkansas PBS Foundation
Independent Lens Short-Form Funding Provided By: Corporation for Public Broadcasting Acton Family Giving John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Ford Foundation Park Foundation Wyncote Foundation National Endowment for the Arts
Wild Hogs and Saffron is a co-production of Big Sun Films LLC, Independent Television Service (ITVS), with funding provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), and Arkansas PBS, in association with Go-Valley. This program was produced by Big Sun Films LLC, which is solely responsible for its content.
Big Cats 24/7 Wildlife Cinematographers Gordon Buchanan, Vianet Djenguet and Anna Dimitriadis join forces with the Natural History Film Unit, Botswana led by Brad Bestelink and his local camera team. Following individual lions, cheetahs and leopards for six months, over two extreme seasons, this documentary shows their battle to survive in an increasingly challenging world. From unprecedented wildfire to flood and extreme drought, the cats and camera crew are tested to their limits. A revolution in low light camera technology means the series showcases previously unseen behavior at night; cutting-edge drones keep track of the big cat’s movements like never before, and combining the raw endeavor of an expedition with premium natural history footage gives the show a contemporary new approach.Can We Time Travel? | Genius by Stephen Hawking | Full Episode 1 | PBSPBS2024-09-13 | Watch more of this series with PBS Passport: to.pbs.org/2gqCoEK | #HawkingGeniusPBS In 2016, world-famous scientist Stephen Hawking set three ordinary people a series of mind-blowing challenges. Can they think like a genius? Can they work out if time travel is possible? [Originally aired in 2016]
Can We Time Travel? | Genius by Stephen Hawking
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Genius by Stephen Hawking Professor Stephen Hawking was a theoretical physicist, cosmologist, and author with a prolific career spanning decades. Hawking passed away in 2018 at the age of 76. In this series, Hawking challenged a selection of volunteers to think like the greatest geniuses in history and solve some of humanity's most enduring questions.Cheetah Takes Down an Impala After a Dramatic Chase | Big Cats 24/7 | PBSPBS2024-09-12 | Official website: to.pbs.org/4fIVkd1 | #BigCatsPBS The pressure is on for Pobe to make a kill. She’s the only resident female cheetah in the Xudum area, but survival is still hard, even for a smart and experienced hunter like her. Cheetahs may be fast, but it takes energy, and they need time to recover after a chase. Fortunately, lying low is also the perfect hunting strategy when pursuing impalas.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Big Cats 24/7 Wildlife Cinematographers Gordon Buchanan, Vianet Djenguet and Anna Dimitriadis join forces with the Natural History Film Unit, Botswana led by Brad Bestelink and his local camera team. Following individual lions, cheetahs and leopards for six months, over two extreme seasons, this documentary shows their battle to survive in an increasingly challenging world. From unprecedented wildfire to flood and extreme drought, the cats and camera crew are tested to their limits. A revolution in low light camera technology means the series showcases previously unseen behavior at night; cutting-edge drones keep track of the big cat’s movements like never before, and combining the raw endeavor of an expedition with premium natural history footage gives the show a contemporary new approach.How Rome Fed A Million People (Before Modern Farming) | Life in Ancient Times with @DariusAryaPBS2024-09-10 | Ancient Rome was a city of 1 million inhabitants. How were they fed? With bread! We’ll explore feeding Rome by baking bread just as they did in Rome and Pompeii. We’ll also explore ancient bakeries in Ostia Antica and the tomb of a baker!
Bread, olive oil and wine were the most famous commodities imported to Rome- the Mediterranean diet- but the most important commodity for the masses (for the sheer caloric value) was bread. In this episode we’ll look at the complex infrastructure that made it all possible, as grain was mostly imported from North Africa, Sicily, and Spain.
Made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Life in Ancient Times with Darius Arya Embark on an unforgettable voyage across the ancient world with archaeologist @DariusArya, to unearth the secrets of civilizations past, delving into the daily rituals, extraordinary achievements, and cultural legacies that shaped our world as we know it today.The Shifting Demographics in Mainstream, USA | America By The Numbers | Full Episode 1 | PBSPBS2024-09-06 | Watch more of this series: to.pbs.org/3z0R4oJ In the last few decades, the town of Clarkston has undergone a significant demographic shift. Whites made up almost 90% of the residents of this small town in Georgia in 1980, but by 2012 over 80% of Clarkston residents were non-white. How are these rapid changes affecting this small town? Watch the full episode to find out. [Originally aired in 2014]
Mainstream, USA | Season 1 | Episode 1 | America By The Numbers with Maria Hinojosa
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
America By The Numbers with Maria Hinojosa Explore America's changing demographics and the stories behind them.Thermal Cameras Capture Lions On a Midnight Hunt | Big Cats 24/7 | PBSPBS2024-09-05 | Official website: to.pbs.org/4fIVkd1 | #BigCatsPBS Thermal cameras capture seven female lions moving in on a herd of tsessebes. With night vision six times greater than humans, the lions quickly spread out under the cover of darkness undetected. This time, the females enlist more help from the pride – three sub-adult males. But that also means less food to go around, and the lionesses and cubs go hungry again despite their successful kill.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Big Cats 24/7 Wildlife Cinematographers Gordon Buchanan, Vianet Djenguet and Anna Dimitriadis join forces with the Natural History Film Unit, Botswana led by Brad Bestelink and his local camera team. Following individual lions, cheetahs and leopards for six months, over two extreme seasons, this documentary shows their battle to survive in an increasingly challenging world. From unprecedented wildfire to flood and extreme drought, the cats and camera crew are tested to their limits. A revolution in low light camera technology means the series showcases previously unseen behavior at night; cutting-edge drones keep track of the big cat’s movements like never before, and combining the raw endeavor of an expedition with premium natural history footage gives the show a contemporary new approach.Soul Food has surprising origins 🌽🍗 @independentlensPBS2024-09-04 | Soul food has roots in the cuisine of enslaved Africans in North America. Learn more in the documentary "Soul Food Junkies", from @independentlens.
Made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App.
#soulfood #blackculture #cooking #pbs #shorts #IndieLensPBSMarketing Less-Known Fish for a more Sustainable Food Source | Hope in the WaterPBS2024-09-03 | Watch more: to.pbs.org/44p817E | #HopeInTheWaterPBS
Discover how students in Philadelphia are promoting a diverse and sustainable fish market by introducing lesser-known fish varieties to the community through a subscription model This community-supported initiative bridges the gap between ocean conservation and everyday consumer choices and expands culinary horizons while supporting local fisheries.
Made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Hope in the Water From Emmy Award producer Andrew Zimmern, in collaboration with multi-award-winner and storytelling visionary David E. Kelley, Hope in the Water explores the groundbreaking work of dedicated fishers, aqua farmers, and scientists who are attempting what was once thought impossible: harvesting aquatic species to feed our growing planet while saving our oceans. Now streaming on YouTube, pbs.org and the PBS app: to.pbs.org/44p817EFemale Lions Hunt Zebra to Feed Their Cubs | Big Cats 24/7 | PBSPBS2024-09-01 | Official website: to.pbs.org/4fIVkd1 | #BigCatsPBS The Xudum Pride mothers must make a kill to feed their young lion cubs. Slowly, they spread out in the tall grass to stalk a large herd of zebras. Hunting as a group helps lions take down much larger prey. When a fourth female joins the lioness mothers in the hunt, their success becomes even more likely.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Big Cats 24/7 Wildlife Cinematographers Gordon Buchanan, Vianet Djenguet and Anna Dimitriadis join forces with the Natural History Film Unit, Botswana led by Brad Bestelink and his local camera team. Following individual lions, cheetahs and leopards for six months, over two extreme seasons, this documentary shows their battle to survive in an increasingly challenging world. From unprecedented wildfire to flood and extreme drought, the cats and camera crew are tested to their limits. A revolution in low light camera technology means the series showcases previously unseen behavior at night; cutting-edge drones keep track of the big cat’s movements like never before, and combining the raw endeavor of an expedition with premium natural history footage gives the show a contemporary new approach.The Quest for Clean Shaped the World | How We Got to Now with Steven Johnson | Full Episode 1 | PBSPBS2024-08-30 | Watch more: to.pbs.org/3YZc5L2 | #HowWeGotToNowPBS Dirty water has killed more humans than all the wars of history combined, but in the last 150 years, a series of radical ideas, extraordinary innovations and unsung heroes have changed our world. The iPhone, the subway, flat screen TVs and even the bikini are the result of the valiant efforts of the unsung heroes of clean. [Originally aired in 2014]
Clean | How We Got to Now with Steven Johnson
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
How We Got To Now with Steven Johnson A six part documentary series that reveals the story behind the remarkable ideas that made modern life possible; the unsung heroes that brought them into the world, and the unexpected and bizarre consequences each of these innovations has triggered. Steven is both a successful web entrepreneur and bestselling author. His books include “Where Good Ideas Come From,” “Everything Bad is Good for You,” “The Ghost Map,” “The Invention of Air” and most recently “Future Perfect.”Aerial Ambush! Leopard Attacks an Impala From a Tree | Big Cats 24/7 | PBSPBS2024-08-29 | Official website: to.pbs.org/4fIVkd1 | #BigCatsPBS Hunting from trees takes time and considerable skill, especially since it can result in serious injury instead of a meal. But Xudum’s patience pays off. After days without eating, the female leopard ends up in the right tree, in the right position, and with the right prey beneath her.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Big Cats 24/7 Wildlife Cinematographers Gordon Buchanan, Vianet Djenguet and Anna Dimitriadis join forces with the Natural History Film Unit, Botswana led by Brad Bestelink and his local camera team. Following individual lions, cheetahs and leopards for six months, over two extreme seasons, this documentary shows their battle to survive in an increasingly challenging world. From unprecedented wildfire to flood and extreme drought, the cats and camera crew are tested to their limits. A revolution in low light camera technology means the series showcases previously unseen behavior at night; cutting-edge drones keep track of the big cat’s movements like never before, and combining the raw endeavor of an expedition with premium natural history footage gives the show a contemporary new approach.The role that changed Bo Dereks life ⭐ #hollywood @americanmastersPBS2024-08-28 | Director Blake Edwards offered Bo Derek a role in his 1979 American romantic comedy film "10".
Discover the man behind the camera and explore his iconic career and his professional and personal relationships in American Masters – Blake Edwards: A Love Story in 24 Frames.
Watch the film on Edwards and find analysis of his work at the American Masters website: pbs.org/americanmasters
Made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App.
#AmericanMastersPBS #hollywood #directors #filmhistory #filmmaking #actingA Pride of Lions Protect Their Cubs | Big Cats 24/7 | PBSPBS2024-08-25 | Official website: to.pbs.org/4fIVkd1 | #BigCatsPBS Survival isn't easy for lion cubs, and 80% won't make it to their second birthday. For the Xudum Pride, the survival of the entire family comes down to its experienced mothers and dominant adult males, Big Toe and Madumo. But wildfires have put the pride in jeopardy, and the pressure is on Big Toe and Madumo to protect their territory and young cubs.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Big Cats 24/7 Wildlife Cinematographers Gordon Buchanan, Vianet Djenguet and Anna Dimitriadis join forces with the Natural History Film Unit, Botswana led by Brad Bestelink and his local camera team. Following individual lions, cheetahs and leopards for six months, over two extreme seasons, this documentary shows their battle to survive in an increasingly challenging world. From unprecedented wildfire to flood and extreme drought, the cats and camera crew are tested to their limits. A revolution in low light camera technology means the series showcases previously unseen behavior at night; cutting-edge drones keep track of the big cat’s movements like never before, and combining the raw endeavor of an expedition with premium natural history footage gives the show a contemporary new approach.The History of the Telescope | Breakthrough: The Ideas That Changed the World | Full Episode 1 | PBSPBS2024-08-23 | Watch more of this series with PBS Passport: to.pbs.org/2V48w28 | #BreakthroughPBS Meet the brilliant minds throughout history, from Galileo to Edwin Hubble, responsible for creating the telescope. Today, their invention allows humanity to reach the furthest limits of seeing – 13 billion light-years out. [Originally aired in 2019]
The Telescope | Breakthrough: The Ideas That Changed the World
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Breakthrough: The Ideas That Changed the World Take a mind-blowing journey through human history, told through six iconic objects that modern people take for granted, and see how science, invention and technology built on one another to change everything. These are the secrets of how we got to our modern world.Wildfire Creeps Toward Camera Crew Following Lions | Big Cats 24/7 | PBSPBS2024-08-22 | Official website: to.pbs.org/4fIVkd1 | #BigCatsPBS The situation becomes critical as wildfires to the north change direction, driving them straight toward the team's camp. It's the biggest fire on the Okavango Delta in five years, and it puts the operation and big cats at risk.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Big Cats 24/7 Wildlife Cinematographers Gordon Buchanan, Vianet Djenguet and Anna Dimitriadis join forces with the Natural History Film Unit, Botswana led by Brad Bestelink and his local camera team. Following individual lions, cheetahs and leopards for six months, over two extreme seasons, this documentary shows their battle to survive in an increasingly challenging world. From unprecedented wildfire to flood and extreme drought, the cats and camera crew are tested to their limits. A revolution in low light camera technology means the series showcases previously unseen behavior at night; cutting-edge drones keep track of the big cat’s movements like never before, and combining the raw endeavor of an expedition with premium natural history footage gives the show a contemporary new approach.Could Ancient Fish Ponds Help Feed Hawaii? | Hope in the WaterPBS2024-08-20 | Watch more: to.pbs.org/44p817E | #HopeInTheWaterPBS
Most of the seafood consumed in Hawai'i is imported. Hi'ilei Kawelo makes it her life’s work to restore an ancient fishpond to feed the community. Growing fish in the pond means eating the main predators. Hiʻilei Kawelo prepares a feast of local caught fish from the pond. She prepares Hawaiian papio sashimi, moi and papio roasted in ti leaves and grilled octopus.
Made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
#seafood #fishing #cooking #hawaii
Hope in the Water From Emmy Award producer Andrew Zimmern, in collaboration with multi-award-winner and storytelling visionary David E. Kelley, Hope in the Water explores the groundbreaking work of dedicated fishers, aqua farmers, and scientists who are attempting what was once thought impossible: harvesting aquatic species to feed our growing planet while saving our oceans. Now streaming on YouTube, pbs.org and the PBS app: to.pbs.org/44p817EHow Images of Musicians Become Legendary | Icon: Music Through The Lens | Full Episode 1 | PBSPBS2024-08-16 | Watch more of this series with PBS Passport: to.pbs.org/3ldLi9L | #IconPBS What defines an iconic image? This question provides the central theme for Episode 1 as we are introduced to some of music photography's greatest names. [Originally aired in 2021]
On Camera | Icon: Music Through The Lens
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Icon: Music Thru The Lens Featuring in-depth and often irreverent interviews with the world’s best-known music photographers, musicians, gallerists, music journalists and social commentators, Icon: Music Through the Lens is an eye-opening, six-part, thrill ride through the amazing world of music photography.Big Cats 24/7 | Official Trailer | PBSPBS2024-08-15 | Official website: to.pbs.org/4fIVkd1 | #BigCatsPBS In this new raw, unfiltered observational wildlife series, an elite camera team capture the dramatic lives of African big cats in the breath-taking Okavango Delta, Botswana. With extraordinary, unparalleled access, in an area unvisited by tourists, and the opportunity to film from the ground, the air and through the night, the Big Cat 24/7 team work together to follow the cats’ lives around the clock.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
Big Cats 24/7 Wildlife Cinematographers Gordon Buchanan, Vianet Djenguet and Anna Dimitriadis join forces with the Natural History Film Unit, Botswana led by Brad Bestelink and his local camera team. Following individual lions, cheetahs and leopards for six months, over two extreme seasons, this documentary shows their battle to survive in an increasingly challenging world. From unprecedented wildfire to flood and extreme drought, the cats and camera crew are tested to their limits. A revolution in low light camera technology means the series showcases previously unseen behaviour at night; cutting-edge drones keep track of the big cat’s movements like never before, and combining the raw endeavour of an expedition with premium natural history footage gives the show a contemporary new approach.Hear the Voices of Mississippis Past | PBS Short DocsPBS2024-08-12 | Official Website: to.pbs.org/3FCanEX | #ReelSouth Clinton Bagley revisits his first interview from Mississippi’s Washington County Oral History Program. Amongst the files, one piece of material sticks out, the catalyst for the whole program. In a conversation he recorded in 1975 with Daisy Greene, a retired school teacher from his hometown, we learn about a devastating flood, cruel systems of oppression, and the voices that define the Delta.
It's in the Voices | Reel South
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: youtube.com/PBS
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
REEL SOUTH reveals the South's proud yet complicated heritage, as told by a diversity of voices and perspectives, through the curation and distribution of feature-length and short documentaries. Reel South is a PBS documentary series co-produced by PBS North Carolina, South Carolina ETV, and Louisiana Public Broadcasting, and produced in association with Alabama Public Television, Arkansas PBS, Tennessee Public Television Council, and VPM. Reel South is a platform for and a service to non-fiction filmmakers in the American South working within the region’s tradition of storytelling.