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- A woman in her sixties, after losing everything in the Great Recession, embarks on a journey through the American West, living as a van-dwelling modern-day nomad.
- A family saga covering several decades of Westward expansion in the 19th century, including the Gold Rush, the Civil War, and the building of the railroads.
- In 1825, an English aristocrat is captured by Native Americans. He lives with them and begins to understand their way of life. Eventually, he is accepted as part of the tribe and aspires to become their leader.
- A violent man is ejected from his tribe after killing two of its elders, but he discovers a way to make weapons out of iron, and begins waging war against all the tribes in the region. His arch rival manages to escape and vows to stop him.
- David Attenborough's groundbreaking study of the evolution of life on our planet.
- The English gentleman known as Horse, returns to the American west to save his adopted Indian tribe from extinction.
- In 1883 South Dakota, two buffalo hunters start a personal feud over a captured squaw and a stand-off with a Dakota raiding party over some stolen horses.
- This is a historical drama about Mato Win, an eight-year-old Native American girl who lives at Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. After her parents are critically injured in an accident, she is sent to live with a white family at a horse ranch in the Black Hills. She stays with Clara, an eight-year-old white girl and her family, but Mato Win is determined to get back to the reservation. She runs away to the mountainous forest but is found. Mato Win calls her brother, Tate, who is a rodeo rider to come get her. She is afraid she will be kept from her parents and does not trust Clara's older brother Cavan. Mato Win questions Clara about an old photo of two Indian men in her home. Clara tells the story of her great-great grandma, Emylon, who rode the train from Indiana to teach there, a hundred years ago. She fell in love with Frank, one of the Native American men in the photo and married him. Mato Win starts to understand why Clara says she feels the spirits too. Mato Win is confronted by a white boy at the playground. Cavan and Clara stand with her against this bully. Mato Win sees there is a difference among the white people. Tate finally arrives on his horse, and they escape into the mountains. When caught by the sheriff, Mato Win is given a choice, to go back to the reservation or to Clara's ranch. She will go back, if her brother can go too. Clara's grandma, Ilona, welcomes Tate and his horse. In the midst of racism, these children found lasting friendship.
- For thousands of years, the Great Plains were home to countless numbers of American bison, but in the late 1800s, the number of bison dropped from nearly 30 million to just a few hundred in less than 100 years. What happened to place this national icon on the brink of extinction? Join us as we detail the events that led to this mass extermination. Then follow the story of William Temple Hornaday, a chief taxidermist at the Smithsonian Institution who headed west to hunt bison for the museum, but ended up saving the species instead.
- Although an icon of the American West, the buffalo was hunted to near extinction until a handful of determined people stepped in to save it.
- A feature documentary film project following North America's most iconic mammal, the American Bison (aka Buffalo). Featuring ranchers across the United States and Native American Territories, the documentary aims to highlight the history of Bison, the regenerative significance Bison has on our ecology, and the industry that has made it's comeback both possible and sustainable.
- 2014–2020TV-GTV EpisodeColton and Jack diving into South Dakota's unexpected adventure with stops at Minuteman Missile National Historical Site and Custer State Park.
- Meet penguins raising a family on the driest Desert on the planet.
- Welcome to the Custer State Park. One of the largest national parks in the United States of America. And home to thousands of Bison, the largest animals in North America. Custer National park was named after George Armstrong Custer, who led an expedition that discovered gold there in 1874. It became a protected area in 1913 and a state park in 1919. Custer State park is home to one of the largest herds of Bison in the world. With over 1500 individuals roaming here alone.
- Richard joins the cowboys and cowgirls of South Dakota in the 50th annual Buffalo Round Up at Custer State Park. Join in the festivities of a county fair and explore the underground caves of South Dakota as Richard goes spelunking.
- Colton and Jack are road trippin' through South Dakota. After a stop in Custer State Park, they'll do their best not to get stuck in Jewel Cave or lost in Badlands National Park.
- Bison thunder across South Dakota's plains during the world's largest bison round-up, while bald eagles fly high at a Maryland dam during a feeding frenzy.
- The trend of businesses giving workers "summer Fridays" off; a podcast, "Ear Hustle", tells of life inside prison; actor/author Todd Fisher (book, "My Girls: A Lifetime with Carrie and Debbie") talks about his mother, Debbie Reynolds, and his sister, Carrie Fisher; a David Bowie exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum; a tour of the Tenement Museum;
- Colton and Jack explore American parks through various transportable vehicles as their count down about the Top Ten marvelous rides.