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Programs
Fifty one years ago, the nation watched in horror as bloody images of police attacks on civil rights protestors in Selma, Alabama aired on television.
Answering the Call
From the Oscar-winning producers of 12 Years a Slave comes a powerful true story starring David Oyelewo and Oprah Winfrey. Facing violent opposition, Martin Luther King, Jr., led a historic march from Selma to Montgomery, changing the world forever.
Selma
In a-three part series sponsored by W.K. Kellogg Foundation, two NBC News journalists travel to East Buffalo, New Orleans and Selma, to explore what it truly takes for a community dealing with a history of racial trauma to heal.
Changing the Narrative
Jason Lee interpreta a un ejecutivo en la ciudad de Seattle que se va a casar con la hija de su jefe (Selma Blair). Su vida se convierte en una pesadilla cuando no se acuerda si la engañó durante su despedida de soltero.
Un novio en apuros
In his mid-30s, Abe (Jordan Gelber) clings to the trappings of his adolescence, including the extensive collection of toys and action figures adorning his boyhood bedroom. Still living with his parents Jackie (Christopher Walken) and Phyllis (Mia Farrow), Abe works for his increasingly disappointed Dad and spends evenings ruthlessly trouncing his Mom at backgammon. His older brother Richards (Justin Bartha) success as a California doctor only feeds Abes resentment and rage at his family over his failures.When Abe meets Miranda (Selma Blair), whose personal and professional disasters have sent her scrambling back to the safety of her parents suburban home, he sees what he thinks is a chance at true love. Abe throws himself into pursuing the overmedicated Miranda, convincing her to marry him after a whirlwind courtship. But, as the couple haltingly prepares to start a new life together, the film swerves into Abes subconscious, where his crippling self-doubt and dark fears begin to undermine his nearly realized dream of a fuller life.
Dark Horse
An audio tour accompanying National Archives' major traveling exhibition: "Eyewitness - American Originals from the National Archives," 2006-2008, produced in collaboration with Acoustiguide, Inc. Out of the stacks and vaults of the National Archives and its Presidential Libraries, comes this selection of original, first hand, eyewitness accounts. Vivid and intensely personal, they chronicle some of the most dramatic moments in history. The exhibition presents the original documents; the audio tour brings these compelling documents to life: you will hear Thomas Jefferson's account of the French Revolution, reported from Paris in July 1789; the poignant account of Abraham Lincoln's doctor describing the President's condition after he was shot on April 14, 1865, in Ford's Theater; and Laura Ingalls Wilder's description of the journey she made with her family by wagon from South Dakota to Missouri in 1894. You will also hear Congressman John Lewis himself weaving his own spellbinding account of what happened on March 7, 1965 - the day that has gone down in history as "Bloody Sunday-when he led a demonstration for Voting Rights in Selma, Alabama; and President Jimmy Carter reading from his personal diary about his private meeting with Pope John Paul II on October 6, 1979. The instinct to tell what we have seen is as old as humanity. Americans from every generation have handed down their stories in untold numbers. Millions of them are preserved in the stacks of the National Archives waiting to be shared. Within them lie embedded messages that enlighten us on what has gone before, and strengthen us for what may lie ahead.
National Archives Eyewitness
An audio tour accompanying National Archives' major traveling exhibition: "Eyewitness - American Originals from the National Archives," 2006-2008, produced in collaboration with Acoustiguide, Inc. Out of the stacks and vaults of the National Archives and its Presidential Libraries, comes this selection of original, first hand, eyewitness accounts. Vivid and intensely personal, they chronicle some of the most dramatic moments in history. The exhibition presents the original documents; the audio tour brings these compelling documents to life: you will hear Thomas Jefferson's account of the French Revolution, reported from Paris in July 1789; the poignant account of Abraham Lincoln's doctor describing the President's condition after he was shot on April 14, 1865, in Ford's Theater; and Laura Ingalls Wilder's description of the journey she made with her family by wagon from South Dakota to Missouri in 1894. You will also hear Congressman John Lewis himself weaving his own spellbinding account of what happened on March 7, 1965 - the day that has gone down in history as "Bloody Sunday-when he led a demonstration for Voting Rights in Selma, Alabama; and President Jimmy Carter reading from his personal diary about his private meeting with Pope John Paul II on October 6, 1979. The instinct to tell what we have seen is as old as humanity. Americans from every generation have handed down their stories in untold numbers. Millions of them are preserved in the stacks of the National Archives waiting to be shared. Within them lie embedded messages that enlighten us on what has gone before, and strengthen us for what may lie ahead.
National Archives Eyewitness v2
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