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1-19 of 19
- A deconstruction of the known history of the Cuban revolution.
- The Friday Zone is an Emmy award winning weekly children's television show produced by WTIU Public Television at Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana. The Friday Zone features a variety of local guests, exciting projects, and a different spotlight show every week. The program encourages kids to learn about their world in fun and interesting ways.
- Documentary filmmakers ask local residents of Bedford, Indiana, also known as "The Limestone Capital of the World," what makes their town special. What they discovered was that Bedford was far richer in community and history than just the mining industry that defined their town for nearly a century.
- Documentary on Indiana Civil War General Lew Wallace, and author of "Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ". Film documents his life and influences in careers from military general to author.
- This documentary shows beautiful scenery and an emotional and relevant musical score celebrating the four seasons of the Indiana State Parks. Widely recognized as among the best in the country, Indiana State Parks are a great source of state pride. The Indiana State Parks have a striking and diverse topography, attractive to visitors interested in all types of natural wonders.
- Beautiful by Design: The Indiana University Bloomington Campus takes a look at one of the most beautiful college campuses in America.
- Ten Steps to College with the Greenes is designed to help the student in your family find and get into the college that is right for them. Father and son tema Howard and Matthew Greene present a practical plan for finances, high school cirriculum, testing, applications, campus visits, and more. Included are exclusive interviews with admissions officers from America's selective colleges and a bonus Q & A session with a live studio audience. In their private counseling practice, the Greenes have helped thousands of students move from high School to College. Now the Greenes share their 40 years experience with you in Ten Steps to College with the Greenes.
- On any given day there are people in our community who need assistance as the result of personal decisions or outside influences. In many cases family and friends are the answer to their needs. In other cases short-term assistance can serve to address the need for food, shelter and clothing brought on by poor personal decisions, an abusive relationship or a sudden catastrophic event like a flood. For those who have the support of family and friends, or are fortunate to experience a quick recovery, life soon returns to normal. Oftentimes, however, there are those who need intensive and on-going support as they work their way back to a stable, secure and safe life. Hard Life is the story of 3 people who are on a journey of recovery. Kent was living paycheck to paycheck and lost his job which resulted in nearly instant homelessness. He would eat from the leftovers thrown out in the trash dumpster of a local pizza restaurant. He learned from others on the street of a place he could go for daily meals, help in a search for work, personal guidance, and transportation assistance. Still, nothing can replace the loss of priceless family photos destroyed as the rental company cleaned out his apartment to rent it to someone new. Ellen was the manager of an apartment complex on the south side of Martinsville when days of rain finally covered her home in 3 feet of sewer backwash and neighborhood debris. She lost nearly everything she owned and for the first time in her life needed to seek out the help of local agencies as they assured she could meet even the most basic of needs including access to clean water and food. As the waters rose, she watched the life she knew wash away and a new life of waiting, reconstruction and change come to the surface.
- Each holiday season, Tchaikovsky's magical The Nutcracker is brought to life in a colorful production by the Ballet Theater of Indiana University's School of Music. Sugarplum Dreams: Staging The Nutcracker Ballet goes behind the scenes of the 43rd annual presentation of this classic, showing the preparation, talent, and sheer effort exerted to bring this production to the stage.
- The experiences of the Hoosiers who served in WWI. Reenactments, restored archive footage and current-day footage of the French battlefields is combined with family and military historians who give context to what it meant to have served.
- Art Sinsabaugh made his artistic breakthrough in the early 1960s with panoramic landscapes of the Midwest that were unprecedented in both form and subject matter. Trained at Chicago's Institute of Design, Sinsabaugh was a landscape photographer who photographed the spaces that people inhabit. From his early prairies to the majestic work of his last years, his remarkable photographs capture the ever-changing face of the American environment.
- Advice on handling college expenses from educational consultants Matthew and Howard Greene, who interview university financial-aid officers and profile families with varying needs.
- Sports writer Bob Hammel had a knack for being in the right place at the right time, with the skills to take advantage of his good fortune. And he couldn't have picked a better place to be-professionally and personally-than Bloomington, Indiana. Bob Hammel and Bloomington: A 50-Year Love Affair explores how a city, a newspaper, and history intersected to propel Hammel from small-town reporter to a nationally-celebrated figure in the world of sports.
- Thirty-two competitors from around the world compete in the triennial international harp competition in Indiana. This film presents a taste of the grueling challenges of preparing for this prestigious competition that will launch one of the contestants to stardom with a magnificent new harp as one of the prizes. Numerous musical highlights are presented including a work written specifically for the competition.
- "Wilderness Plots: Songs and Stories of the Prairie" is a television music special that provides a glimpse into the creative collaboration of six Midwestern artists - five musicians and one writer. The program features a selection of their songs based on tales about the settling of America, which were written by Scott Russell Sanders. Complementing the performances are intimate interviews with the artists allowing each to offer insight into their work, their perspectives, and their love for music, writing and history. Ultimately, "Wilderness Plots" is a delightful tribute to the craft of storytelling and songwriting.