Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-37 of 37
- The true story of Danny Greene, a tough Irish thug working for mobsters in Cleveland during the 1970's.
- A gambling addict and ticket scalper living an aimless life reluctantly agrees to coach a Little League team from the Chicago projects as part of a loan agreement.
- Roger Maris and Mickey Mantle race to break Babe Ruth's single-season home run record.
- Alex and his father are Detroit Tigers Fans. The team is not doing well and Alex's favorite player "Billy Young" isn't either. The team's and Billy's luck turn around after Alex experiences a tragedy that hits close to home.
- The story of the life and career of football star Elroy "Crazylegs" Hirsch (who plays himself).
- Kiss performs in the music video "Shout It Out Loud" from the album "Greatest Kiss" recorded for Mercury Records. The music video features a 1996 performance by the band from Tiger Stadium in Detroit, Michigan. Kiss performs the song on stage while in makeup for the cheering crowd.
- Documentary traces the history of four classic American baseball ballparks using archive footage and modern film.
- Phil Foster takes his 'Brooklyn' character and tours Detroit, Michigan, chattering constantly all the way and finding that Detroit, like all the cities he visits, falls somewhat short of his home town. He visits Wayne University, Cadillac Square, and Greenfield Village,and, then, hops the border to take a quick glance at Windsor, Ontario.
- The 1971 major league baseball All-Star game was played at Detroit Tiger Stadium. The game featured an especially mammoth home run into the light towers above the double-decked outfield seats in the old stadium. Vida Blue (Oakland) and Dock Ellis (Pittsburgh) were the starting pitchers for the American and National Leagues.
- When NFL Films director Phil Tuckett found unprocessed film from the 1964 season, he was convinced he had struck gold. He and several other employees scoured the film faults and found many other cans that hadn't been used for other productions and suggested to Steve Sabol, the company president that they use the footage to show what professional football looked like in the early 1960s, warts and all, including shots of fans, shots of pageantry, bloopers, warm-up activities and on-field heroics. What was initially intended as a single half-hour program eventually grew to 22 episodes airing over four years on the ESPN Classics network.