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1-32 of 32
- This 90 minute feature documentary chronicles what many consider the world's greatest radio station. For nearly 20 years, Chicago's WLUP (The Loop) was known as "high school with money" as it grew from one FM station powered by classic rock 'n roll to the AM birthplace featuring rock, talk, shock, and legendary marketing events driven by music and fun. The film features interviews with Jimmy Kimmel and Bob Odenkirk as well as LOOP luminaries Jonathan Brandmeier, Steve Dahl, Garry Meier, Kevin Matthews, and Danny Bonaduce (among others).
- A dramatic expedition into an unknown world, THE FIRST PATIENT challenges audiences to embrace their curiosity and courage as they follow first year medical students through gross anatomy - the dissection of the human body. The Mayo Clinic School of Medicine granted unprecedented access to veteran filmmaker Chip Duncan and The Duncan Entertainment Group team to explore a world long considered taboo. The documentary proves both entertaining and emotional as the camera follows a diverse group of students, faculty and body donors on this life-affirming journey inside the human body. THE FIRST PATIENT provides dynamic insights into medical science, teamwork, death, and spirituality as students discover what it means to be a doctor...and what it means to be a human being.
- Narrated by Academy Award-winner Ben Kingsley, this multi-award-winning program is the most complete portrait of C.S. Lewis (1898-1963), widely known for his children's book series, The Chronicles of Narnia, was also one of the supreme Christian apologists and adult novelists of the 20th century.
- The three part series explores the presidency, policies and long term impact of Ronald Reagan's two terms in office. The series includes notable members of Reagan's team as well as many who opposed his policies. Interview subjects include Walter Mondale, Condoleezza Rice, Sandra Day O'Connor, Andrew Young, Robert Reich, Bud McFarlane, George Shultz, Reza Aslan, Trita Parsi, Douglas Brinkley, Svetlana Savranskaya, Oscar Arias and others.
- This one-hour documentary explores the facts and fictions behind the presidency of Herbert Hoover including The Great Depression and its lasting impact on government.
- What makes a place special? That's the theme behind this one hour public television special on the state of Michigan. The film airs nationwide through American Public Television (APT) during April, 2023.
- American Gothic is among the most imitated paintings on Earth. It's the second most recognizable painting after the Mona Lisa. But few people can name the great Midwestern painter who brought American Gothic to life. His name is Grant Wood - and his life and work will be featured in 5 Turner Alley coming soon to PBS affiliates nationwide.
- Mystic Lands takes viewers on a journey of spiritual exploration and discovery. From the ritual practices of Vodou on the island of Haiti to the ruins of the fabled temple of Machu Picchu in Peru, Mystic Lands is an adventure of the soul.
- Tells the story of Wisconsin and its people, a story rooted in a deep love of the land and an unsurpassed work ethic that goes back generations. It is a story filled with respect for our native roots and its traditions.
- 'The Sound Man,' is a documentary short featuring 62-year-old location sound engineer Abdul Ramadhan. After graduating from a local madras in central Nairobi, Abdul learned his craft on the job at Nairobi's Camerapix production company where he's been employed for more than thirty-five years. While working with acclaimed photojournalist Mohamed Amin and others, Abdul recorded the sounds of revolution, civil war, genocide and famine throughout East Africa. Abdul speaks candidly about the tragedies he's witnessed and provides gripping detail about the civil war in Sudan, the genocide in Rwanda revolution in Somalia and Ethiopia and the current tribal conflicts in Kenya. Abdul has traveled the continent for his work, yet he continues to reside in his boyhood home in Africa's largest slum...Kibera.
- Funded by the Packard Foundation, this one hour documentary aired nationwide on public television. The film features three countries in the ongoing debate about a woman's right to choose (Ethiopia, Peru and the United States) and explores the way various world religions view women's reproduction rights. Though PBS aired the show nationally in the US, more than half of the nation's affiliates refused to broadcast the show.
- A two-part movie examining how prayer and religion have shaped America from its earliest days through today.
- This half hour documentary aired on Discovery Channel. It investigates the efforts of an international mining company to mine copper on the Windy Craggy ridge along the Tatshenshini River that borders Canada and southeast Alaska near the city of Haines. The film won the Jackson Hole Wildlife Festival and it played a key role in conservationist efforts to protect the Tatshinshini-Alsek River corridors from development.
- TV Mini Series
- Stand Together As One chronicles the historic events surrounding the 1983-85 famine in northern Ethiopia. The film tells the story behind Kenyan photojournalist Mohamed Amin and BBC correspondents Michael Buerk and Mike Wooldridge as they overcame government restrictions and civil war to document the crisis. Their work inspired musician-activists Harry Belafonte and Bob Geldof as they engineered humanitarian relief through groundbreaking recordings including WE ARE THE WORLD and DO THEY KNOW IT'S CHRISTMAS. Interviews include humanitarian nurse Dame Claire Bertschinger, Harry Belafonte, Ken Kragen, Dionne Warwick, and Michael Buerk, among others. The film includes never-before-seen footage from the Mohamed Amin archive in Nairobi.
- This short film features yoga therapist Tina Langdok and her groundbreaking work using the ancient healing techniques of Prana (life force) to treat ALS. Also featured are Scott Stieber MD and Dr. Ron Reimer MD from Mayo Clinic Jacksonville.
- This 2-part series was produced for release through Discovery Education and played successfully for more than a decade in North American schools. The series looks at climate change with a lens directed specifically at glaciers and global warming including numerous interviews with prominent glaciologists and climatologists.
- For many in America, the racial divide remains a considerable obstacle to progress in housing, education, health care, policing, and many other facets of American life. This one hour public television documentary explores many of those issues in Milwaukee, Wisconsin when the city was just a generation removed from the one of the most significant years in the Civil Rights Movement. In 1998, Milwaukee ranked as the 7th most segregated large urban area in America. It also ranked among the most impoverished cities in the country. THOUGH ONE CITY'S EYES looks at the challenges and proposed solutions during that window of time.
- The life and career of legendary Ohio State University football coach Wayne Woodrow "Woody" Hayes.
- This one hour film aired nationwide on public television. It features an expedition down the remote Tatshenshini River that crosses from western Canada into southeast Alaska. The film emphasizes the importance of nature and conservation through the exploration of glaciers and their impact on the natural world.