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- Many different cartoon stars like Bugs Bunny, the Muppet Babies and Garfield join forces to convince a teenager that drugs aren't cool.
- A high school kid (Sumpter) develops an addiction to Internet porn so intense that it begins to destroy his life and tear his family apart.
- When Coleman F. Sweeney, a self-centered, uncaring, aggravating, nihilistic and slightly sadistic man, suddenly dies, his good side finally shows to everyone's surprise.
- A cautionary training film for those who operate and repair heavy equipment. Vignettes show men taking short cuts in their work, doing things they aren't trained for, neglecting to warn a less-experienced worker, using the wrong tool or a tool that's in disrepair, ignoring proper safety practices, trying to appear macho in front of fellow workers, thinking their reflexes are quicker than they are, working while distracted, and generally putting themselves and others at risk. The film is punctuated by the song, "Shake Hands with Danger," the story of Three-Finger Joe. Filmed using Caterpillar equipment.
- You are on a boat with your friend Charles, everything is normal until a piece of the boat falls on you and drop into the ocean. Helpless, you try to survive.
- This anti-homosexual social "scare" short film focuses on the dangers of young boys talking to strangers.
- Launched in 1989, NBC's "The More You Know" series of brief public service announcements has utilized the talents of some of Hollywood's brightest stars (almost only actors appearing on NBC-TV programs at the time), writers, and directors to deliver messages about such topics as tolerance, mentoring, parental involvement, and the prevention of violence. The winner of numerous Emmy and Peabody Awards, "The More You Know" has been praised for its effectiveness in harnessing the power of television for a greater good.
- Non-traditional PSA web-series in the form of six short raunchy comedic vignettes made to raise awareness of the water shortage in California. In each episode, the narrator (Bruce Campbell) encourages the viewers to stop wasting water.
- Follows Peter Griffin at the doctor's office where he debates about getting the COVID-19 vaccine, but Stewie and Brian teleport inside his body and explain how vaccines work.
- An educational film about AIDS contracted by the Swedish National Board of Health and Welfare, later to be withdrawn due to its controversial content.
- A bunch of white celebrities take 'responsibility' for being white.
- Different stars from NBC's various prime-time series teach viewers in public service announcement form how to solve different ethical problems.
- Portrays the hazard of playing on a construction site and dramatizes peer pressure and its consequences.
- A variety of men, women, and children in everyday situations are graphically blown to pieces for failing to be sufficiently enthusiastic about the 10:10 campaign to reduce carbon dioxide emissions.
- Star-studded propaganda short aimed at persuading Canadians to buy Victory Bonds. A 1960 family looks back at 1944.
- A public service announcement by the National Health Service - NHS - to raise awareness about Covid-19 during the early days of the pandemic. Chief Medical Officer Chris Witty presents the common symptoms of the disease and the ways to prevent it. Narrated by actor Mark Strong.
- A former drug addict tells her story to some high school kids.
- Rachel Leigh Cook talks to the viewer about the consequences of heroin.
- This anti-drug film uses common childhood habits and activities, such as building a machine out of Lego blocks, to metaphorically illustrate the effects and dangers of drug abuse.
- A new drug is taking over the streets, coating them in blood, vomit, and other less savory fluids. The six eye-opening stories in this anthology reveal the truth about this new white menace.
- Sonny Bono appears onscreen to tell kids that marijuana is a "bummer" that turns you into a "weedhead" and will make you "trip out" (the fact that, based upon his performance, Sonny appears to have ingested unknown substances before the cameras started rolling tends to limit the film's crediblity somewhat).
- A father confronts his son after finding a box containing drugs. After his father angrily asks him how he learned to use drugs, the son shouts that he learned it from watching him.