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1-16 of 16
- Loretta McLaughlin was the reporter who first connected the murders and broke the story of the Boston Strangler. She and Jean Cole challenged the sexism of the early 1960s to report on the city's most notorious serial killer.
- The outrageous story of 1970s porn icon Jack Wrangler, and how he rose to the top of the gay, and then straight, adult film industry.
- Documentary about the life and legend of Sarah L. Winchester, heiress to the Winchester Repeating Arms Company who, after the death of her husband and only child moved to San Jose, California and constructed non-stop what came to be known as the Winchester Mystery House during the last 38 years of her life. The film traces Mrs. Winchester's life from her marriage into the wealthy Winchester family, whose family business supplied many of the repeating rifles sold to the United States Army during and after the Civil War and follows her eccentric life in California where, according to legend, she was advised by a mystic to provide shelter for spirits of the victims of her husband's rifles or follow him to an early grave. It provides point-of-view shots of the interior and exterior of the rambling Victorian mansion.
- Singer Tony Bennett stars in a musical showcase of scenic Hawaii, taped on location around Waikiki and at the Monarch Room of the Royal Hawaiian Hotel, with special guests Joey Heatherton and Mike Curb Congregation.
- A 13-part television series that presents the history of the Civil War using authentic Mathew Brady photographs.
- The letters of unnamed German soldiers who fought in the Battle of Stalingrad are dramatized, along with scenes from the home front.
- French composer Michel Legrand is featured in a musical tribute with guest performers Lena Horne, Jack Jones, Mike Curb Congregation, and a group of esteemed jazz musicians.
- Host Bob Emery, with his ukulele, singing his signature tune "Oh the grass is always greener in the other fella's yard"This program taught values like good citizenship (a Toast to the President of the United States; President Eisenhower's photo, Big Brother would hold up a glass of milk, while "Hail to the Chief" played in the background, etc.), while entertaining kids with songs and stories and even a contest or two. He referred to his young audience as "small fry", and his closing song was "So long small fry, it's time to say goodbye..."