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- After their plane crashes in Alaska, six oil workers are led by a skilled huntsman to survival, but a pack of merciless wolves haunts their every step.
- While fleeing from dangerous assailants, an assassin comes out of hiding to protect the daughter she left earlier in life.
- Brutal cold forces two Antarctic explorers to leave their team of sled dogs behind as they fend for their survival.
- "Highway of Tears" is about the missing or murdered women along a 724 kilometer stretch of highway in northern British Columbia. None of the 18 cold-cases had been solved since 1969, until project E-Pana (a special division of the RCMP) managed to link DNA to Portland drifter, Bobby Jack Fowler with the 1974 murder of 16 year-old hitchhiker, Collen MacMillen. Why haven't the killers been found? Is this the work of one or several serial killers? In Canada, more than 500 cases of Aboriginal women have gone missing or been murdered since the 1960s. Half the cases have never been solved. Viewers will discover what the effects of generational poverty, residential schools, systemic violence, and high unemployment rates have done to First Nation reserves and how they tie in with the missing and murdered women in the Highway of Tears cases. Aboriginal women are considered abject victims of violence. Now find out what First Nation leaders are doing to try and swing the pendulum in the other direction.
- A true crime series focusing on the cases of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls in Canada.
- A story about fish and people.
- A musician and his horse.
- On the run with a mysterious suitcase.
- A profile of musician Alexis Puentes, who has taken the stage name Alex Cuba in homage to his homeland, is presented in relation to the outwardly unusual decision in adopting small town Smithers in Northern British Columbia as his new home. He not only discusses what drew him to Smithers, but his connection to Canada before making the decision.
- A number of British Columbia-based creative artists - from visual artists such as painters and carvers, to writers, to musicians, to a landscape architect - speak about what home means to them, both in a general sense stemming from their background and experience, and as it relates to their craft. An ethnobotanist, a developer and a philanthropist also speak about the same from their unique perspectives, with the addition of speaking about that art piece in not being artists themselves per se. In both groups, the place could be a geopolitical entity such as a city, a physical space of some other kind, and/or a state of mind.