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- This dynamic, unpredictable tropical environment sets the stage for emergency rescues on high-speed boats, intense drug busts along the Gulf Coast,and breathtaking H60 helicopter missions out on the open sea.
- From Al Roker, this inspiring film follows a self-described "poor, gay, Black man from North Philly" on his historic run for the U.S. Senate. It's about more than taking on the political competition. It's about taking on an entire system.
- The Third season of Coast Guard Alaska takes the viewer back into the world of the United States Coast Guard stationed in rugged Kodiak, Alaska as they train and work in the harsh environment conducting dangerous Search and Rescue missions (SARs).
- Coast Guard Cape Disappointment/Pacific Northwest chronicles dramatic rescue missions conducted by the Coast Guard in and around the Columbia River Bar. Located at the mouth of the Columbia River, at the point where the river converges with the Pacific Ocean, the bar is a notoriously turbulent marine environment responsible for numerous accidents, injuries and fatalities at sea. To take on an array of challenges in this dynamic natural environment, the Coast Guard presence includes both air and surface assets--with helicopter crews from Air Station Astoria, in Oregon, and boat rescue teams out of Station Cape Disappointment, located across the river in Washington. The series focuses on the rescuers' heroic feats in a place that is commonly referred to as "the graveyard of the Pacific."
- TV Series
- "The Graduates NYC" is a web series that turns the cameras on the often dramatic lives of six driven graduates from various HBCUs as they find themselves living in New York City. In this new web series, we will see aspiring artists, moguls, entrepreneurs and executives as they continue to pursue their passion in various competitive industries. Cameras will follow them as they juggle their careers while maintaining their hectic social calendars and budding love lives.
- Scientists show advanced research at top universities, using gene editing, AI consciousness, anti-aging treatments and telepathy.
- Black ownership of farmland has dwindled to alarmingly low numbers due to many factors including usage of an obscure law, Heirs' Property. Gaining Ground: The Fight for Black Land examines the causes, effects, and solutions to this issue.
- The Laredo Police Department's Narcotics Unit targets on a suspected stash house known for selling low levels of heroin and cocaine. In addition, the suspected dealer was recently involved in an officer shooting which puts up their guard more. Roly takes the lead in the case, putting extra pressure on him to find drugs. Despite finding a weapon and a scale, they don't find much more.
- Since most incarcerated people are eventually released back into our communities, doesn't it make sense to examine barriers, in order to prevent a return to crime, both for the safety of society and the moral treatment of other humans?
- The Hunter Family learns something about weather.
- Tat2, a former cop turned bounty hunter with a single-minded obsession: arrest every fugitive in The Big Easy. This season, Tat and his crew take down criminals including a junkie concealed in a hollowed out sofa, Tat's old friend and a fugitive murderer.
- This show provides viewers with the advice, tools, and community to help them pursue their passions. Hosted by entrepreneur and NBC contributor, Mario Armstrong.
- When Mother Nature flashes her fury, do you know how to stay safe? Hosted by Al Roker, "Weather Hacks" gives practical tips, tricks, hacks and plain old advice on what you can do before, during or after a major weather event that could save money, your home or even your life. With climate change, we can expect to see an increase in extreme weather phenomena. In 2016, there were 15 weather and climate disaster events with losses exceeding $1 billion across the country. The weather is always changing. The best you can do is be prepared.
- Two bakeries compete among them for a once in a lifetime opportunity to win a three day mentor-ship with Sylvia Weinstock, considered the Queen of Wedding Cakes.
- Noah's ark and the great flood, Moses and the burning bush, fire and brimstone destroying the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah - all are Bible stories of extreme weather.
- A celebration of the frontier spirit, this special highlights five of the legendary Black cowboys who helped tame the Old West. Today, these heroes inspire a new generation of cowboys and ranchers who keep that spirit alive and well.
- Celebrities Trisha Yearwood, Brooke Burke, David Charvet and Sherri Shepherd get a dose of holiday cheer when HGTV gives them a holiday decorating makeover.
- Fun and funny cooking escapades with Emmy and Peabody award-winning co-creator and original Executive Producer of "The Daily Show," Madeleine Smithberg.
- NBC has filmed a 30-minute behind-the-scenes TV special about the nationwide search for Broadway's new Sandy. With the help of Pedigree, animal trainer Bill Berloni search shelters across America for find Annie's new best friend.
- Life Aid: A Story of Hope is a documentary featuring first-hand accounts from 9/11 first-responders, state troopers, and military veterans as they work to overcome brain injuries sustained in the line of duty.
- To create a disease-free world, scientists are pushing the envelope in every conceivable corner. This episode features the most cutting-edge scientists out there-including Nobel-prize winners-who are harnessing the power of what's called "The Microbiome." The Microbiome is the full array of the trillions of microorganisms that live in or on the human body, which help it function. By understanding the Microbiome as a kind of ecosystem, scientists are using innovative techniques to discern the microbes' various functions in the body as a whole. Incredibly, through revealing the function of one particular micro-organism, one scientist has been able to cure Stomach Cancer. But other scientists armed with this knowledge are attempting the unthinkable: namely, to increase the presence of microbes across the body by intentionally infecting people with more infectious agents. The reason? Increasing microbial diversity in the body boosts its immunity, and helps people fight disease from the inside out. Radical methods like these are leading to breakthrough remedies, from the erasure of life-threatening infections like C. Difficile, to ending Asthma and Obesity. Innovative research like this will inform the biotechnologies of the future, and in turn create a disease-free world.
- Genetic Engineering extends far beyond the controversial news headlines that obsess over "designer babies." In the science community, gene-editing tools like CRISPR and PRIME editing will do nothing less than save the planet. Methods like this allow scientists to alter and "re-program" the genetics of living organisms. This episode shows scientists at large using gene-editing technologies to revolutionize the food supply chain, bolstering food crops to prevent famines, and even speed up reforestation efforts that will reverse global warming. Genetic Engineering in farm animals is helping scientists to "select" desirable traits, like physical features and gender. Incredibly, one scientist is using gene-editing technologies to resurrect the DNA of extinct species, like the Wooly Mammoth. Despite some public concern, gene-editing is definitely a cause for hope in the fight against genetic disorders in humans. It's already reversing a type of congenital blindness in children. And with the hyper-precision afforded by PRIME editing being prepared for clinical trials, a much more hopeful world will be revealed for families in the future.
- If you thought Human Immortality was just a concept in science fiction, this episode reveals how it will become science fact. For some scientists featured in this program, achieving Immortality is not a question of "If." The real question is "When?" One scientist shows how she is making lab-grown organs called "ghost hearts" that not only grow quickly, but that can be accepted in any host's body without rejection-ending the agony for those waiting for organ transplants. Another biologist is looking at Immortality at the microbiological level. In his lab, he's identified the "longevity gene" (called SIR2) that can slow the aging process, and which holds the key that will unlock our ability to better control the rate at which we age. One gerontologist is unearthing the immortal secrets of lobsters, who never stop growing and naturally live up to the astonishing age of 122 years. Inspired by how their bodies regulate cellular division, he's developing cutting-edge medications that will boost human longevity. Incredibly, one pioneer is creating a unique medical cocktail that can even reverse aging. Medical techniques like these could pave the way to Human Immortality.
- We've all seen Cyborgs in Hollywood blockbusters. But it turns out these fictional beings aren't so far-fetched. In fact, this program features a true-to-life cyborg, who at four months of age, was the youngest American to be outfitted with a myoelectric hand. And at one ground-breaking engineering facility, engineers are developing biotechnologies that can even further enhance high-tech like this by giving mechanical prosthetics something incredible: the physical sensation of touch. Other engineering firms are gearing up powerful exoskeletons that both rehabilitate and enhance the power of the human body - improving the lives of those with paralysis and transforming the work force. But the real pivot is getting machines inside the body. An out-of-the-box "transhumanist" featured in the show installs a chip inside a person's hand. It works as a key that unlocks doors, literally and figuratively. However, brain-machine integration poses the biggest challenges, and the biggest rewards. Cutting-edge neuroscientists and technologists reveal how computer chips can directly interface with the human brain in ways that not only rehabilitate, but which can also "read thoughts" in real-time. Remarkably, a breakthrough technology called "Computer Assisted Telepathy" is achieving the impossible. Through a test subject's mind only, she's able to control another person's body. Technologies like these will pave the way toward the Cyborg Revolution.
- Everyone has heard about Artificial Intelligence (or "AI"), but very few people know what it is or how it actually works. This episode brings this otherwise abstract topic to life by visiting the most cutting-edge engineering firms where innovative technologists are using Artificial Intelligence to transform machines into thinking robots. Leading institutions are preparing robot rovers and flying drones to navigate through unmapped territories, in order to save lives in bold Search and Rescue missions. By "mapping as they go," these thinking machines generate their own intelligence-allowing them to self-navigate without human input. Additionally, some technologists are coordinating swarms of drones to operate and collaborate together-all with the explicit ambition of improving the efficiency of farming and increasing food production. Though the news media often reports on how machines could cause unemployment, that's not what AI inventors in this program are saying. In fact, their AI-driven robots are using machine-learning to work better with humans. Through observation, AI robots are learning to anticipate the actions of human co-workers, keeping people safer in the workplace-and making it more productive. Some scientists in this show are even developing AI robots that are achieving the beginnings of robotic consciousness. By comprehending their own self-image, they are able to learn about their environment, make decisions, and navigate the space around them-just as human babies do. Some engineers are taking this technology even further to develop real-world Androids-that is, robots that look, feel, and act like people. Becoming consultants, advisors, and even friends, these Androids will ultimately help individuals adjust to realities of "the human condition."
- If you thought The Space Race peaked with the Apollo missions, wait 'til permanent research bases on the Moon and Mars start cropping up. The New Space Race in getting humans to Mars is heating up, and this episode presents the visionaries who are making this future possible. Once exclusively financed by governments, private companies are now developing the means of living in outer space. On the cutting edge of this Copernican Revolution is the Dream Chaser-a new, high-flying space shuttle that will ferry researchers to inflatable research habitats in outer space. But creating permanent habitats in the toxic environments on the Moon and Mars is a serious undertaking. Scientists and engineers take these threats to human life very seriously. One engineer is creating advanced, reusable spacesuits that makes mobility and dexterity less "bulky," and more feasible in gravity-free environments. Some engineers featured in the show are helping in these efforts by developing high-tech drills and pressurization chambers that allow for the excavation of the most crucial resource for the survival of humanity: Liquid Water. These are just parts of the complex efforts needed to establish habitats on alien planets. One firm is developing habitats that are 3D printed with Martian soil, and will be pre-built before astronauts arrive. But one of the boldest endeavors lies in creating a living, breathing ecosystem that, through plant growth, generates oxygen and food for the first permanent settlers on the Moon and Mars. One ambitious research project-30 years in the making-is providing the "ground-truth" of how to create an Earth-like Biosphere in outer space - providing a road map for how humanity will survive and even thrive in the life-threatening conditions of other planets.
- Included - a helicopter rescue onboard a tanker in rough Alaskan seas; a race to reach a victim who fell off a 200-foot cliff; a rescue endeavor after a bush-plane crash a few miles from base.
- At Station Ketchikan, a local man requires help from the boat crew; at Sitka, a helicopter-rescue team battles powerful winds to get to a vessel in trouble; back in Kodiak, there's an unknown distress call in the middle of the night. Meanwhile, a young AST struggles to make the grade.
- The team races to Sitka, where a hunter's been shot in the back; two men in Kodiak abandon a sinking boat; guardsmen load a sleigh with holiday cheer and visit remote Alaskan villages.
- The captain races to the North Pole; two helicopter rescue crews go on a mission to save injured fishermen; an aerial search is launched for a missing person in the North Pacific.
- Rough seas are battled to reach a small boat; a surfer who sought shelter from the waves must be hoisted off a 200-foot cliff.
- Helicopter rescue crews encounter rough weather that threatens operations.
- The series opener examines life for Coast Guard men and women at Air Station Kodiak, where they police the area, perform rescues, protect the environment and oversee safety of marine transportation.