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1-102 of 102
- Each year in Oregon, a group of men gather to re-create a war that so many Americans have tried to forget.
- This New York Times Op-Doc celebrates the achievements of Caleb Moore, a competitive snowmobiler who was the first to fatally crash at the X Games.
- Dalya Zeno and her mother left their home in Syria in 2012, making a new life for themselves in Glendale. "Dalya's Other Country" is a documentary that follows Zeno through her high school years, as the Syrian war continues, and as President Trump comes to power.
- 2011– 17m8.4 (14)TV EpisodeIn a galaxy far, far away, he was almost Anakin Skywalker. Devon Michael was a rising child actor in the 1990s. Until he auditioned for Star Wars.
- In 2017, when Alex Honnold made his stunning free-solo ascent of Yosemite's El Capitan, he was taking an unimaginable risk: nearly three thousand feet of climbing without any ropes or safety equipment. But was the climb made even riskier by the filmmakers who accompanied him?
- If losing a child to an illness is one of the worst things that can happen to a family, Dr. Nadia Tremonti has made it her mission to make it better. It's not easy. But as a pediatric palliative care physician, she works to ensure that terminally ill children receive quality end-of-life care. Palliative care is sometimes misunderstood to shorten life expectancy, but it's a method that increases quality of life, improves symptom burden and decreases medical costs. We follow Dr. Tremonti in the short documentary above as she works to make death less medical and more human. In the process she asks a critical question: When a child is terminally ill, how can we make the end of life a better one?
- Short film documentary about the mysterious umbrella man that appears in the Zapruder film during the assassination of president John F Kennedy in Dallas, Texas in 1963, November 22.
- 50 years has passed since JFK's assassination and nothing so conclusive about it was discovered. Reporter Josiah Thompson - who covered the case - shares his views on the subject.
- Watching football - supposedly the ultimate working man's game - has become a luxury for many fans in England. 'A Game of Numbers' tells the story of the growing financial imbalance between the incredibly wealthy stars of the English Premier League and their supporters, with a custom set of football playing cards. The illustrations on the cards feature the men and women who 'make' the game: players of past and present, fans and agents . The film was initially created for the New York Times Opinion Strand.
- Through her activism to topple Liberia's dictator, Leymah Gbowee was able to restore her own faith in humanity. Part 1 of "Three Short Films About Peace."
- Errol Morris' "Demon in the Freezer" is a short 17-minute documentary about the stockpiles of the smallpox virus that remain stored for research purposes.
- A white separatist explains why he wanted to help transform a small North Dakota town into an all-white enclave.
- A transgender airman is deployed to Afghanistan as the gender he knows himself to be. But everyday he risks being discharged because outdated U.S. policy bans open trans service.
- What would it mean to marry someone behind bars?
- An incident at a prominent Ivy League school sheds light on a long history of institutional bias and mishandling of sexual harassment and assault cases.
- Sing Fields Of Gold in the Style of Eva Cassidy. Stingray Karaoke Pop, 1998, English, Key A.
- The filmmaker Alison Klayman presents an exclusive look at the Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei and his struggle for the freedom of expression.
- In the first episode of an Op-Docs series called "Electoral Dysfunction," the political humorist Mo Rocca explores a curious fact about the U.S. Constitution: why is there no universal right to vote?
- In the second episode of an Op-Docs series, "Electoral Dysfunction," the political humorist Mo Rocca explores controversial voter identification laws, which could benefit Republicans.
- In the latest episode of the Op-Docs series "Electoral Dysfunction," the political humorist Mo Rocca consults a third-grade class on the fairness of the Electoral College.
- In Part 4 of the Op-Doc series "Electoral Dysfunction," Mo Rocca invites the designer Todd Oldham to assess election ballots from across the United States.
- Mapping The Disability Trap is a New York Times Op-Doc produced and directed by Emmy Award-winning documentary director, Jason Dasilva about an ongoing investigation of the maddening of Catch-22 that prevented him from moving to State of Texas with his son due to his disability caused by 4th stage progressive multiple sclerosis. The Op-Doc also mentioned about challenges faced by New Yorkers with disability in getting around the Big Apple in a wheelchair.