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- An anthology drama series featuring primarily British productions.
- Go beyond the legend and meet the inspiring woman who repeatedly risked her own life and freedom to liberate others from slavery. Born 200 years ago in Maryland, Harriet Tubman was a conductor of the Underground Railroad, a Civil War scout, nurse and spy, and one of the greatest freedom fighters in our nation's history.
- Defying the Nazis: The Sharps' War: Waitstill Sharp, a Unitarian minister, and Martha Sharp, a trained social worker, in February 1939, boldly commit to a life-threatening mission in Europe to assist refugees.
- Chief Curator of Historic Royal Palaces, Lucy Worsley, explores the history of the Tower of London, Hampton Court and Kensington Palace to show how these places symbolize the evolution of British monarchs' place in society.
- The life and career of jazz musician Ron Carter, the most recorded bassist in history, featuring original concert footage and insights from jazz icons.
- The hosts of this show demonstrate gentle exercise moves, most of which are completed in a seated position, ideal for people with limited physical abilities.
- Get inspired. Get wired. Get totally fired up! Get into the PBS Kids reality show Design Squad! This season, two teams of high school kids face off, converting toys into dragsters, inventing fashion for the runway, and creating summer sleds for L.L. Bean. And with only two days to execute these challenges, they need to think smart and design fast. Then the Design Squad-ers put their products to the test, all while keeping their cool when things get hot and their eyes on the grand prize - a $10,000 college scholarship.
- Code Rush follows the people of Netscape Communications during an intense period in 1998, when it was all but certain that Microsoft had already won control of the Internet user's desktop. When all hope seems fading, a group of dedicated developers work their hardest to push out a very special release.
- Follows a handful of people as they journey through the heartwarming and often challenging process of receiving their service dogs from Canine Assistants in Georgia.
- Interviews with former children who survived the Holocaust concentration camps and who were rehabilitated in a disused aircraft factory overlooking Lake Windermere in the UK, and whose experiences in adjusting to freedom in a foreign country were dramatised in The Windermere Children (2020). It also describes their experiences as they were rounded up by the Germans in their home towns and taken by cattle train to concentration camps such as Auschwitz.
- National Geographic investigates the root causes and eventual effects of stress.
- Experience the wildlife of the Okavango Delta, an oasis and lush paradise in Botswana, Southern Africa that connects a wide variety of creatures.
- Historian Henry Louis Gates Jr.'s quest to piece together Lincoln's complex life takes him from Illinois to Gettysburg to Washington, D.C. and face-to-face with people who live with Lincoln every day -- relic hunters, re-enactors and others for whom the study of Lincoln is a passion.
- History Through Deaf Eyes will take a look at Deaf culture from the 19th century to the present. The 120 minute production for PBS will include short films.
- Casts new light on the relationship between Einstein and his first wife, Mileva Maric and their collaboration on the theory of relativity.
- This little-known World War II battle with Japanese forces on the Alaskan island of Attu includes the accounts of two surviving soldiers. The film tells of the tragic operation that saw ill-prepared American troops take on massive casualties.
- The Artist's Way explores real life stories of innovation and creativity. Best selling author Mark Bryan, with special commentary by co-author Julia Cameron, will guide viewers through living examples of creativity, exposing audiences to the facts that everyone is creative, creativity is teachable, and people become more authentic by using their creativity and becoming an innovative person.
- Every show Mike Colameco gives viewers access to some of the best kitchens in the world and talks to real chefs, in real restaurants cooking real recipes. It's an insider's guide and behind the scenes look from a chef's perspective on how these restaurants are putting together their dishes. Along the way we'll meet the owners, chef's and their crews; we will hear their stories and eat some amazing food. Each show has a theme, it might be an ingredient, a neighborhood or a cuisine. And at the end of the show we will go back to Mike's kitchen and he'll teach you how to make a dish inspired by the restaurants we visited.
- Prestigious historians provide a detailed analysis of United States history and document some of the country's most storied historical occurrences.
- In the years leading up to the Civil War, a bloody conflict between slaveholders and abolitionists focused the nation's eyes on the state of Missouri and the territory of Kansas. Told through the actual words of slave owners, free-staters, and border ruffians, "Bad Blood" presents the complex morality, and life-and-death decisions faced by those who lived on the border from 1854 through 1860.
- The Documentary of the life and times of 'Celia Cruz'.
- Texas Parks & Wildlife is a weekly, half-hour program airing on all the PBS stations throughout the Lone Star state, as well as a number of other public television stations around the country. You can also catch the show on about 60 city government and educational access channels across the state. You can even watch the show on your schedule with PBS Online and on our YouTube channel. Originally titled Made in Texas, the program began production in 1985 as a magazine style show, with three or four different segments each week. For a few years the show focused on one topic each week, documentary style. In 1991 the name of the show changed to Texas Parks & Wildlife and reverted to the magazine format that we continue to this day. Each week, our program travels to several different destinations around Texas. The stories cover a wide range of topics, from in-depth issues about conservation and the environment, to fun family activities in the outdoors. This season we'll meet a man who has hiked to just about every state park in Texas. You'll see how easy it is to do some overnight camping and still make it to work in the morning. We'll take you dove hunting, mountain biking, paragliding, and carp fishing in different areas of the state. Our Skill Builder segments offer all kinds of handy tips, from hunting and fishing basics to finding places to paddle a kayak or canoe. This season you'll meet some of the Texas Parks & Wildlife people working behind the scenes to make important contributions to conservation in the state. We'll also introduce you to the 2016 Lone Star Land Steward award winners; private landowners who know the importance of good conservation. We'll showcase our fabulous state parks and historic sites. Each week we'll present our award winning stories about the people and places that make the outdoors of Texas the natural place to be. Our hope is to inspire you to get outdoors and visit the natural places in our state. We want to provide a compelling reason for you to care about the outdoors and the state's cultural heritage. Maybe you'll even get involved and help preserve a piece of that heritage. It's our hope that you'll develop a new appreciation for the natural world, a world that's right here in your backyard. Please join us as we explore the natural State of Texas.