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- A reporter finds what appears to be a cover-up of safety hazards at a nuclear power plant.
- The life and work of photographer Sebastião Salgado, who has spent forty years documenting societies in hidden corners of the world.
- Three actors learn that their respective performances in the film "Home for Purim," a drama set in the mid-1940s American South, are generating award-season buzz.
- PBS NewsHour is an news show which shows news updates.
- Thought-provoking documentary on war propaganda: how governments manipulate the facts and how most media let them get away with it.
- Bellingcat: Truth in a Post-Truth World explores the promise of open source investigation, taking viewers inside the exclusive world of the "citizen investigative journalist" collective known as Bellingcat.
- From more than eight million feet of newsreels, amateur footage, tape-recordings and more, David L. Wolper presents a priceless detailed account of the time and events surrounding the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
- Pirated satellite feeds revealing U. S. media personalities' contempt for their viewers.
- A film account about the military 1990 siege of a Native American reserve near Oka, Quebec, Canada and its causes.
- 20161h 31mNot Rated7.3 (567)63MetascoreA look at the life and work of American journalist, I.F. Stone, who leads a one-man crusade against government deception.
- There were two wars in Iraq--a military assault and a media war. The former was well-covered; the latter was not. Until now... Independent filmmaker, Emmy-award winningTV journalist, author and media critic, Danny Schechter turns the cameras on the role of the media. His new film, WMD, is an outspoken assessment of how Pentagon propaganda and media complicity misled the American people, while selling the war to influence international public opinion. Schechter compares and contrasts coverage on a global basis, including exclusive material and insider interviews. WMD is a serious film that exposes the media role--the biggest scandal of our time.
- A rookie NPR reporter on his first assignment, covering the armed occupation of Wounded Knee in South Dakota in 1973, is treated as the enemy and ultimately arrested by the FBI for defying a government news blackout to embed with militant Indians. Forty years later, he meets a Yurok Indian fisherman in California, a man he unwittingly had photographed during the 10-week occupation. The two become friends, traveling back to the Dakotas and later to the pipeline protests at Standing Rock, to investigate the legacy of 1970's activism in Indian Country. Meanwhile, the reporter launches a new investigation into the murder of his former room mate, a Canadian Native who played a part at Wounded Knee. He butts heads with the FBI again, this time over the Bureau's alleged practice of 'snitch-jacketing' the dead women as an informer. The story takes another unsettling turn when the reporter confronts the co-founders of the Indian movement with their alleged ties to her killing, a decision that threatens to undermine his status as a trusted outsider.
- The profile of controversial journalist George Seldes and a piercing examination of America's news media. Narrated by Susan Sarandon, with readings of writings by Ed Asner, this Academy Award-nominated film includes stunning archival materials.
- A political biography of I.F. Stone that details his approach to the news, his working habits and some of his exposés of government treachery that made his one-man newspaper, I.F. Stone's Weekly, important.
- In 2022, a young journalist is invited to interview the UK's enigmatic new Prime Minister.
- Full Disclosure Network® is the news behind the news produced by Emmy Award Winning Host/Producer Leslie Dutton and Producer T.J. Johnston. The twice nominated Full Disclosure public affairs program is the only Public Cable, non-commercial, network television stations in Southern California. More than mere investigative journalists, they have exposed political corruption, voter fraud, our malfunctioning state courts, and errant police policy where it compromised the Rule of Law. From the judicial system to the Presidency, Full Disclosure has interviewed prosecutors, police chiefs, and U.S. attorneys general, pursuing government accountability in issues including Iran Contra, Watergate, Whitewater, our border security and immigration policy, and its effect on the War on Terrorism.
- A short look at Cenk Uygur, the host of The Young Turks, the largest online news show in the world.
- In spring 2011, poets and writers Joshua Ferris, Eliza Griswold, Bob Holman, Nathalie Handal and Christopher Merrill traveled to Afghanistan, Pakistan, Nepal and UAE as part of a literary tour sponsored by the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa and the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs at the U.S. Department of State. POSTCARDS is a series of short pieces about their trip including their experiences in Pakistan when Osama bin Laden was killed by U.S. Special Forces.
- A short look at The Young Turks, a show that started in a living room, and now is the largest online news show in the world.
- Arguing for the need of an independent media, Tonje Hessen Schei examines the US media's covering of the war in Iraqi.