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American Writers: A Journey Through History is a series produced and broadcast by C-SPAN in 2001 and 2002 that profiled selected American writers and their times. Each program was a two- to three-hour look at the life and times of one or more significant American writer. Episodes were broadcast from locations of importance to the profiled writer and featured interviews with historians and other experts. The series had an overall budget of $4,500,000. The first program aired on May 19, 2001, and focused on William Bradford and the Mayflower Compact.
From glorious canyon country to rugged mountain wilderness, get ready to journey into two of America's most incredible places: Grand Canyon and Grand Teton National Parks. The essential qualities and characteristics of each park are revealed through stunning cinematography and the expertise of those with intimate knowledge of each park.
America Calling, sponsored by the Greek War Relief, was broadcast February 8, 1941 on CBS, NBC, independent stations and all of Europe.
Jack Benny and Bob Hope were the "co-masters of ceremonies" for a show that featured The Merry Macs; Shirley Temple, Charles Laughton, Groucho Marx and Madeleine Carroll in a comedy skit written by Dick Mack; Clark Gable and Merle Oberon in a "modern romance" by Robert Riley Crutcher; Frank Morgan singing an "updated" Mikado, introduced by Reginald Owen; a visit to the home of the Hardy Family; Benny, Hope and Groucho Marx singing a trio; Ronald Colman reading "The Jervis Bay Goes Down," a poem by Gene Fowler; and Hope and Benny in a sketch with Mary Martin and Myrna Loy.
Also on the program were Ann Rutherford, Barbara Stanwyck, Carey Wilson, Connee Boswell, Dick Powell, Don Wilson, Fay Holden, Knox Manning, Lewis Stone, Max Terr's Choral Group, Melvyn Douglas, Mickey Rooney, Robert Taylor, announcer Ted Bond and Meredith Willson and His Orchestra.
Dore Schary supervised the show and scripted with Ed Beloin. Bill Morrow was the producer.
Ethics in America was a ten-part television series, originally aired from 1988 to 1989, in which panels of leading intellectuals from various professions discussed the ethical implications of hypothetical scenarios, which often touched on politics, the media, medicine, and law. The panels were moderated by law professors from leading law schools.
The series was developed and hosted by former CBS News president Fred Friendly and produced by Columbia University Seminars on Media and Society. It was funded in part by the Annenberg/CPB Project. The executive producer was Cynthia McFadden. The series was originally broadcast on PBS. In 2006, Fred Friendly Seminars produced a new series, Ethics in America II, which also aired on PBS.
If you’re like Flavorwire, your memories of Election Day 2016 probably involve unopened bottles of champagne, very much open bottles of cheap booze, and a creeping feeling of existential dread that has never really gone away since. If you want to see how the rest of America reacted to Donald Trump’s, um, unexpected electoral college victory, then you can tune into Epix next Tuesday at 8pm for the new documentary Election Day: Lens Across America.
This part mockumentary, part sketch show follows the irrepressible Keith Lemon as he and some of his best loved sketch show characters, head to LA to try to break the United States of America.
Documentary series filmed inside America's biggest art museum as it prepares for its 150th anniversary, only to endure closure due to Covid, demands for greater diversity and financial disaster.
The American Forum of the Air, hosted by Theodore Granik, was a public affairs panel discussion program, the first series of its kind on radio. It aired on the Mutual Broadcasting System and NBC from 1934 to 1956. Notable guests, such as Franklin D. Roosevelt
In June 1942, eight German saboteurs were delivered to the east coast of the United States on U-boats. The spies were apprehended almost immediately, and six of the eight were swiftly executed. Drawing on research from leading scholars and reams of recently declassified FBI documents, THE HISTORY CHANNEL® exposes the shocking truth behind this ill-fated incursion, and uncovers the reasons why the Germans' mission is said to have been doomed from the very begining.
News and features about woodworking tools, techniques and projects.
This five-hour exposé tells the story of America's heartland, where wildlife roam across wild swaths of frontier land. It's the woods that Davy Crockett once called home in The Great Valley of Appalachia, and where Wild Bill Hickok saw his last sunset in the Badlands of South Dakota. From bears, bison and burrowing owls, to weasels, wood ducks and wild horses, episodes reveal a cast of critters making themselves at home, whether it's beneath ice sheets in the Land of Lakes, or sharing the abundant ecosystem among farmers and their tools.
From talking kitties and slumbering cats to dancing dogs and dogs that doze, we count down the cutest clips in the web-o-sphere to crown America's Cutest Cat and America's Cutest Dog.
Haylie Duff embarks on a food-filled adventure, traveling across the country and reconnecting with friends and family while checking out new tasty hot spots and yummy old-school mainstays.
America from the Ground Up was filmed on location at archaeological and historical sites throughout the U.S. and Canada. Join us in the search for clues to America's hidden history: from exploring the ruins of America's lost civilizations, to the settlement of the North American continent in the 19th Century.