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- Science documentaries about various topics.
- FRONTLINE is investigative journalism that questions, explains and changes our world and American television's top long-form news and current affairs series since 1983
- When his mother dies, a teenager takes a road-trip in a stolen car to find his long-lost brother. Along the way he discovers a profound connection with the car-owner and with himself as well.
- Fed up with her life, Juanita leaves her grown kids behind and hits the road in search of a fresh start.
- A popular self-help expert's ever-growing pride spirals into a terrible downfall. At rock-bottom, he finds himself among the desperate and mistreated at a homeless shelter. Who will he become?
- Winnie the Pooh, Piglet, Tigger, Owl and the rest of the gang discuss all the dangers of strangers and how you should handle yourself should you ever come face to face with a stranger.
- By 1991, health care for AIDS patients in United States could cost an estimated $16 to $22 billion.
- Philly Bongoley Lutaaya was a celebrated singer musician from Uganda who died of AIDS in December 1989.
- In 1945, camera crews went with the American and British armies in the nazis death camps and filmed the horror they found there. A group of directors among whom was Alfred Hichcock developed a script to present these horrors and be sure that people remember. Forty-eight years later it came out from the cave of the Imperial War Museum and was edited as forecast.
- A Frontline documentary about the events that took place in Tianamen square in 1989.
- The Polish people and the Holocaust.
- A documentary by and about a man who carries a film camera around most of the time and films the events of his life, including himself being interviewed by a news crew, and focusing on some of the real people behind the tragedies shown daily on the six o'clock news: a woman living on an island hit by a hurricane; a man whose wife was murdered in her store.
- Journalist and China watcher Orville Schell explores the clash of values between American opinion of China's human rights record and the uncomprehending and intransigent Chinese leadership. Interviewees include actors, directors, musicians, and political figures who discuss the history of Tibet and its yearning for political independence. Richard Gere and Adam Yauch are converts to Buddhism.
- "The Farmer's Wife" takes us deep inside the world of Juanita and Darrel Buschkoetter, a remarkable young Nebraska farm couple, to tell a compelling love story. It follows the Buschkoetters over three years as they face seemingly insurmountable economic hardship, only to confront an even greater challenge: repairing their damaged marriage. What emerges is an epic story of faith, perseverance, and triumph, and an indelible portrait of a real American family's struggle to hold onto their dreams, and to each other.
- In his first film, acclaimed photographer Joel Meyerowitz creates a poignant and indelible portrait of his father.
- 1983– 2hTV-PG8.3 (168)TV EpisodeThe story of the rise of Christianity.
- It may be final tragedy of Holocaust. For years, many survivors and their families have tried in vain to collect assets deposited in Swiss banks.
- An expanded edition of William Peters's classic study of the unique eye-color lesson in prejudice and discrimination taught by Iowa schoolteacher Jane Elliott. This new edition continues the story of Elliott and her sixteen third-graders of 1970, eleven of whom returned to their hometown in 1984 for a reunion with their former teacher. Peters reports on that meeting and its evidence that the long-ago lesson has had a profound and enduring effect on the students' lives and attitudes.
- The marijuana industry in America, and law-enforcement efforts to wipe it out.
- The Whitewater scandals and the Clinton presidency.
- At heart of mystery of who killed John F. Kennedy lies puzzle of Lee Harvey Oswald.
- Each day, thousands of panhandlers work streets and subways of cities all across America.
- FRONTLINE examines new evidence in controversy over danger of manmade chemicals to human health and environment, thirty-five years after Rachel Carson first raised concerns of an impending ecological crisis.
- In 1968, federal drug enforcement budget was $60 million. By end of fiscal year 1999.
- After the collapse of the Soviet Union, how safe is Russia's nuclear arsenal?
- How fair are standardized tests? What do they measure? And what's their impact on racial diversity on America's college campuses? FRONTLINE examines debate over fairness in college admissions.
- An inside look at the Clinton presidency.
- A look into the subculture of computer hackers.
- How businesses market to American teenagers, and the effect they have together on popular culture.
- The story of June Cross, 'secret' daughter of a white woman and a black man, and her efforts to understand her family background.
- The controversy over the growing use of pig fetal cells and pig organs for human transplant.
- The controversy over genetically-modified food crops.
- The troubled life of Kipland 'Kip' Kinkel, a 15-year-old Oregon high school student who killed his parents and two schoolmates.
- FRONTLINE presents a comprehensive biography on world leader who has emerged as a man at war with twentieth century itself.
- FRONTLINE opens its fifteenth season on PBS with a dual biography of 1996 presidential candidates, Bill Clinton and Bob Dole.
- To commemorate National Holocaust Remembrance Week, FRONTLINE travels back in time to a family shtetl.
- Through five decades, Jesse Jackson has been trying to realize promise of his own potential he first embraced as a boy in segregated Greenville, South Carolina.
- Frontline looks at the 1993 siege on the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas. It talks to Branch Davidian survivors and FBI agents from both the negotiation and hostage rescue teams. On April 19, the FBI attempt to tear gas the compound which precipitates a fire which takes the lives of 76 people.
- 1983– 3h 45mTV-MA8.8 (14)TV EpisodeA documentary about the republican movement in the North of Eíre from the late 60s up until present day. Encompassing both the paramilitary wing and the politicial representatives.
- Today, providing health care is a profit-driven enterprise which is subject to forces of marketplace.
- Identified by victim, Ronald Cotton spent eleven years in prison for rape. But in 1995, DNA evidence proved Cotton could not have been attacker.
- 1983– 2hTV-MA7.7 (34)TV EpisodeIn the early 2000's, Israeli and Palestinian negotiators nearly reached a peace agreement. Within weeks, the opportunity vanished. Frontline examines the faltering quest for peace in "Shattered Dreams of Peace: The Road from Oslo" - a film by Charles Enderlin, a Franco-Israeli journalist, specializing in the Middle East and Israel - beginning with the 1995 assassination of Yitzhak Rabin. The two-and-a-half-hour documentary traces the peace process through years of negotiations, with new footage of Israeli-Palestinian negotiations and interviews with key figures on both sides.
- Mairead Farrell was three Irish Republican Army terrorists gunned down by British security forces on Gibraltar in March 1988.
- In this two-hour special, FRONTLINE recounts for first time on television behind-the-scenes story of US and world response to September 11 terrorist attacks on America.
- On December 14, 1999, Ahmed Ressam was detained at US/Canadian border when an alert customs agent became suspicious of Ressam's hesitant answers to her questions.
- Frontline investigates modern meat safety, focusing on the process, politics, and hazards of ground beef manufacturing.
- The United States has determined Osama bin Laden is orchestrator of 1998 bombings of two US embassies in East Africa, October 2000 attack on USS Cole in Yemeni port of Aden, and finally, September 11
- Megacorporations absorb the once fiercely independent movie studios.