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- 20141h 40mPG43Metascore6.5 (6.7K)
- Director (as Brian Falk)
- Writer (as Brian Falk)
- Producer (as Brian Falk)
A WWII pilot, bombardier, and radioman find themselves adrift on a lifeboat without food or water after being forced to ditch their plane during a scouting mission. - A recounting of the chaotic events that occurred at Dallas' Parkland Memorial Hospital on the day President John F. Kennedy was assassinated.
- Mary Surratt is the lone female charged as a co-conspirator in the assassination trial of Abraham Lincoln. As the whole nation turns against her, she is forced to rely on her reluctant lawyer to uncover the truth and save her life.
- Lurid television 'info-tainment' reporting on sensationalistic topics.
- Andrew Zimmern travels the US revealing his favorite foods and experiences.
- Stories of aquafarmers and fishers striving for a sustainable future for the globe. Innovative solutions and ground-breaking blue food technology to save fresh waterways in addition to providing food for human consumption.
- Andrew Zimmern visits families across America to explore how the cultural, regional, and historical facets of who we are inform what and how we eat, and all the ways food brings people together.
- Top U.S. chefs compete in their area of expertise.
- A documentary destined to calmly explain and analyze the facts, myths and rumours about John Kennedy's assassination and the overwhelming use of information in Oliver Stone's epic "JFK" (1991), at the same time it presents a behind the scenes documentary on the controversial film. Features interviews with the cast and director, and the personalities who lived and remember the facts concerning the November 22, 1963, like reporters, eyewitnesses and others, and some of the real characters from the movie, like Jim Garrison, Numa Bertel, Lou Ivon and Perry Russo.
- In depth analysis of some of the most notorious criminals.
- Strange Universe was a United States syndicated daily half-hour program about paranormal phenomena that aired from 1996 to 1998.
- From wild hog hunting to silver carp fishing, adventure-loving culinary explorer Yia Vang is ready to chase, kill, cook, and eat all the crazy creatures that have overstayed their welcome.
- The nefarious attempts to cover up a murder and protect an influential family.
- In the MSNBC limited series What's Eating America, award-winning chef and TV personality Andrew Zimmern explores the most provocative social and political issues impacting voters through the lens of food. In each episode, Zimmern travels the country to see first-hand the impact these critical issues - immigration, climate change, addiction, voting rights and healthcare - have on food and the everyday lives of Americans.
- Andrew Zimmern travels across the US to find food truck entrepreneurs who love sharing their culinary creations with the public. In the end, he helps a deserving truck owner take their business to the next level with a cash award.
- A documentary film that was shot in Nepal and chronicles the efforts of a committed scientist to bring life-saving Vitamin A capsules to children. The film features the captivating journey of Dr. Alfred Sommer, who was the celebrated Dean of the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. Sommer made a groundbreaking discovery that Vitamin A capsules can save the lives of millions of children. This finding has led to the largest worldwide medical mobilization since the polio vaccine. In this film, Sommer travels from Katmandu to the Terai region of Nepal. Along the way, he meets locals and Vitamin A volunteers and listens to their stories. Sommer shares tea with a local Lama, delivers Vitamin A to a night-blind pregnant woman, and attends the medical examination of a newborn.
- In the years surrounding The Civil War, The Loomis Gang was arguably the largest family crime syndicate in America. Today, however, few outside of central New York State have ever heard of these horse-thieving rogues from the small village of Waterville. No "professional" historians have laid claim to the Loomis legend. No action figures. No comic books. In fact, the only thing standing between the Loomis family and utter obscurity is a collection of local folks who are fighting to keep the legend alive in a village that largely ignores it. This struggle typifies a battle being waged in towns across the country, and history may be losing. In The Loomis Gang, filmmaker Brian Peter Falk returns to Waterville, his hometown, to learn the details of the Loomis Gang legend and seek out the amateur historians who are its unofficial caretakers. This committed group includes a former school bus driver, a campground owner who dresses the part of a gunslinging sheriff, a brain researcher, a school teacher, and a real life Loomis. The film also features the filmmaker's mother - the matriarch of a family deeply committed to its own history and holiday traditions. As the film chronicles the Loomis saga, complete with Waterville's climactic vigilante uprising, this rag tag group of locals conducts bus tours, writes books, creates displays and prepares stage presentations - all in an attempt to actively witness history. While historic buildings become parking lots in Waterville and many other towns, The Loomis Gang is a comment on the power, and limitations, of such witnessing in the changing landscape of small town America.
- "Front Page" was a news magazine that ran in 1993 on the Fox television network in the United States. It featured five main hosts and reporters.
- Award-winning PBS news-magazine series focusing on human rights from around the world, hosted by civil rights pioneer and international journalist Charlayne Hunter Gault
- TV Series
- Follows a delegation from the Women's Commission for Refugee Women and Children as they travel to Eastern Chad. This short chronicles their work including interviews with Sudanese refugees in 12 camps inside Chad.