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- In Jumanji: The Next Level, the gang is back but the game has changed. As they return to rescue one of their own, the players will have to brave parts unknown from arid deserts to snowy mountains, to escape the world's most dangerous game.
- A chronicle of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s campaign to secure equal voting rights via an epic march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama, in 1965.
- Journalist Gary Webb, California 1996, started investigating CIA's role in the 1980s in getting crack cocaine to the black part of LA to get money and weapons to the Contra insurgents in Nicaragua.
- Michael Moore's view on what happened to the United States after 9/11 and how the Bush Administration allegedly used the tragic event to push forward its agenda for unjust wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
- The classic prime time variety show most famous for its vaudeville acts and rock music performances.
- The officers of a small town bank discover a huge shortfall just before the bank examiners are due to visit. Not knowing who the crook is, they decide to fix the books and then rob the bank themselves to cover up everything.
- The true life story of Wendell Scott, the first black stock car racing driver to win an upper tier NASCAR race.
- When a WW2 veteran comes back home, he realizes how the war affected Americans by seeing the changes in his wife, family, and best friend.
- Follow Alex Rodriguez across America as he discovers and curates records for Coachella Music Festival's on-site record store while in the process meeting and swapping stories with fellow collectors and musicians.
- An account of the birth and development of the United States.
- Harold Russell, an American soldier who lost his hands in a training accident, tells the story of his medical rehabilitation at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington DC.
- The eyewitness story of the illegal U.S. and U.K. military anthrax vaccination programs, which is recommended by Montel Williams as the Must-See Documentary of the Year. Because of the vaccine's crippling and deadly consequences when incurable auto-immune disease and birth defects spread like wildfire through Gulf War veterans, your nation was compromised by a for-profit no-liability procurement system ruled by political fears & corrupt scientists. Watch this documentary to learn why you must stop illegal human experiments in the name of Homeland Security. By saving a veteran, you can save your own life.
- Two people from vastly different lives sharing a moment that could change each other's futures forever. One offers the other a choice which leads them to discover intimate details about themselves and each other.
- The Middleton's family, in 1850, is the richest in the Northern region of Georgia with a prestigious plantation. Nathaniel Middleton, a noble and honorable man, marries Sara Hopton and therefore becomes one of the co-owners of her plantation. His identical twin brother and polar opposite, James Middleton, finds himself in gambling debts with the wrong sort of people. These people attempt to kill James for nonpayment, but kill Nathaniel unknowingly. Recognizing that he is fatally wounded and fearing for his brother's safety, Nathaniel forces James to take his place before he dies. James struggles with Nathaniel's life and soon finds himself falling in love with Nathaniel's wife, Sara. As the deception continues, Sara discovers that there are far more deadly secrets on the Hopton plantation than the identity switch.
- Washington Post - Walter Reed Concert Article/Review At Walter Reed, Mellencamp Shuts His Mouth and Sings By J. Freedom du Lac Washington Post Staff Writer Saturday, April 28, 2007 A funny thing happened on John Mellencamp's way to Walter Reed Army Medical Center: He stuck a muzzle on himself. John Mellencamp is going to perform an historic concert inside the Walter Reed Army Medical Center for the wounded men and women of America's Armed Forces. The concert will be on Friday, April 27th at 8 PM ET. This full-band concert will repeat on July 4th Weekend as well. Washington Post - Walter Reed Concert Article/Review At Walter Reed, Mellencamp Shuts His Mouth and Sings By J. Freedom du Lac Washington Post Staff Writer Saturday, April 28, 2007 Article includes photo - Click HERE to read the article online. A funny thing happened on John Mellencamp's way to Walter Reed Army Medical Center: He stuck a muzzle on himself. Mellencamp has been a vocal critic of the war in Iraq and the Bush administration. But last night, the outspoken singer checked his politics -- or at least his polemic -- at Walter Reed's guarded front gate. During a superlative hour-long concert on the beleaguered military hospital campus, Mellencamp avoided turning the stage into a soapbox, opting instead to simply entertain a group of soldiers wounded fighting a war that the rock star doesn't support.
- Red steals his girlfriend's car then picks up his friend, Black, to go to a weed festival. While en route to the festival they are pursued by a bounty hunter, a weed dealer, and their angry girlfriends.
- Shows how everyday Americans are making a difference in the lives of America's healing warriors--by throwing them a wedding to remember.
- Remembering Momma is about Brenda "Ladybug" Brooks, a middle aged African American woman whose vivacious and expressive life as a wife, mother, visual artist and art teacher slowly fades away, due to early on-set Alzheimer's Disease. Azalea "Zay" Brooks (daughter), Jesse "Beau" Brooks (Husband) and Cameron "Cam" Brooks (Son) recant seminal moments of Ladybug's mental decline to Torina Toussaint, a nurse who has been called in to care for her. A pivotal moment occurs on a late summer afternoon when Beau returns home from work. Busy painting in her at-home art studio, Ladybug doesn't recognize him and thinks he's an intruder. Panicked, she runs out into the streets. Gwen and Sadira - two women from the neighborhood on their afternoon walk, come to her aid. Uncertain of the full context of the moment, they call the police. When officers arrive, it briefly becomes an incident of police brutality as Beau works to settle the situation. Two of the family's close neighbors (NeNe and Bunny) aggressively intervene and protest the officers' treatment of Beau. After a brief period of escalating tension, things work out but when the dust settles, her family realizes this is the beginning of the end and that the woman they all know and love is becoming something else. Director's Statement: "for so long others have controlled our narrative, which has led to global perceptions in many ways that have been inaccurate, inauthentic and incomplete. Now that the barriers to telling stories via film & television have become much easier to surmount, we are seeing a rich renaissance of stories being told, representing more of the full scope and scale of who we really are. Even though we are making great strides, we still have many generations of stories that we know can inspire, encourage and shift perceptions and perspectives about Black people. So the work continues."
- A socially conscious monster movie in which zombies symbolize society's disadvantaged and oppressed.
- Famous American golf professionals are seen from "The Masters" in Augusta, Georgia to Pebble Beach in California fighting their constant battle against par. Seven of them also take time to demonstrate their skills with a gold club; Byron Nelson, Ben Hogan, Gary Middlecoff, Ed Dudley, Dick Metz, Horton Smith, and Joe Kirkwood.
- This short, filled with stock-footage from a previous RKO short featuring golfer Ben Hogan, zeroes in on his golfing techniques, while, in April, practicing on the course of The National Golf Club, in Augusta, Georgia, in preparation for the 1953 Masters tournament.
- In 1945 golfer Byron Nelson set the PGA record for most consecutive golf tournaments won, with eleven in a row, and seventeen overall in a single year. The records still stand. Shortly thereafter he retired from the PGA tour, while still in his 30s. Bill Stern watches Nelson giving lessons on how to play various iron-shots.