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- A bullied adolescent experiences a turning point summer in which he learns to stand up for himself.
- At the age of 51 and after 20 months on unemployment, Thierry starts a new job that soon brings him face to face with a moral dilemma. How much is he willing to accept to keep his job?
- After being raised in an Oklahoma orphanage, 15-year-old Donald makes his way to California during the depression. He meets Emogene, the daughter of poor migrant farm laborers, and together they set out to break the cycle of poverty and ignorance. This is the inspiring true story of Donald P. Bailey, a charming, and eccentric father of nine, whose charisma and optimism set him apart from the average dad. But his golden voice made him a legend to his posterity for generations. His unique life is remembered through the eyes of his daughter, Elizabeth.
- As a young man gets fitted for his first suit, he comes to terms with the loss of his father.
- After being raped and sexually assaulted, 18-year-old Kadeem Simmons drops out of college and returns home. Kadeem won't open up about why he left college, his mother, Jada, becomes concerned. With her back against the wall, she decides to contact his estranged father, Malik.
- John Fairmeadow has been expelled from a theological seminary because of his evident unfitness for the ministry. He goes West and finally winds up in a lumber camp. Pattie, the pet of the woodsmen, is praying for a parson to come perform her father's burial service--he was killed by a falling tree. Fairmeadow's clerical appearance makes his arrival seemingly providential, for Pattie declares when she beholds him that her prayers have been answered, so Fairmeadow is compelled to conduct the burial service and thereafter pose as a parson. Having gone to the woods to fight out his own battles, Fairmeadow gains help for himself in helping others. The "parson's" reputation as an exhorter has traveled to a nearby camp and he is urged to go there and conduct revival services. Jack Flack, the "boss" of the neighboring camp, objects to Fairmeadow's activities and undertakes to physically expel him from the community. In this encounter Flack comes off second best, and Fairmeadow's record is enhanced. Flack is living with a girl he has enticed from the camp where Fairmeadow makes his headquarters. This girl is moved by Fairmeadow's sermons to leave her environments and return home. She leaves her baby where Fairmeadow will come upon it in the woods, and when the "parson" takes it in his arms and carries it to his home camp, she follows. Going directly to Pattie's home, Fairmeadow is arranging for the care of the child when its mother is discovered by Pattie looking in at the window. Thus mother and child are reunited and Fairmeadow and Pattie go with her to her father's home, where a reconciliation is effected. Flack comes to the camp to find the girl and have vengeance upon the "parson." One of the converts Fairmeadow has made kills Flack in a fight, and the "parson'" witnesses that the deed was committed in self-defense. While Fairmeadow has been at the neighboring camp, his congregation has built him a church and cabin to live in, and soon after his return the "parson" is called upon to perform a marriage. Then it is that he makes clear his standing; that he has studied for the ministry but has never been ordained. When one of the lumbermen leaves the woods to visit his mother, he goes to Fairmeadow's father, who is a Bishop, and explains how matters stand with his son. The Bishop hastens to the lumber camp, ordains his son and performs two marriages, one of which unites Fairmeadow and Pattie.
- Mike, a decent young chap, gets involved with his two disreputable friends who decide to drive to a nearby city, buy beer and pick up some "wild girls." Mike really doesn't want to engage in this kind of unsavory behavior, but he doesn't want to seem "chicken."
- Overcoming his addiction to drink, John Fairmeadow leaves the Bowery for a western logging camp posing as a minister. His fistic ability and his gentle manner reform the town drinkers and put the saloon out of business. Meanwhile, John also protects pretty orphan Pattie Batch from the attentions of Jack Flack; Flack is killed by saloon keeper Pale Peter after the body of his wife, Clare, who was betrayed by Flack, is discovered in the river; and John is united to Pattie.
- Jack Fuller and his sweetheart, Bird, go off for a jaunt through the woods. They sit down on a rock to, well, there's no use telling on them, but, say, you're not old enough to have forgotten. They are so absorbed in their, now, never mind, that it is some time after the actual deed that Bird discovers the theft of her purse. In the distance the thief's figure looms up, and Jack goes off in pursuit. For a long time Bird waits for the return of her lover. At last she determines to go home, thinking he has lost his way and would return home alone. She finds her way out to the clearing, and suddenly remembers that she has no car-fare. She is in despair over her dilemma. Fred Barton, a fashionable clubman, passing by, notes her worried look, and volunteers his assistance. His charm, and polish, his suave manner, conquer her shyness. She tells him of her predicament. He invites her to his home, nearby, for rest and refreshment, and Bird, at first reluctant, is again overpowered by his personality. She accepts. She comes to a mansion, and Bird, humble shopgirl, is awed at the evidences of wealth and refinement. She contrasts the elegance, the gilt and velvet, to the poverty of her own squalid home. She compares the handsome, cultured scion of wealth to Jack, rough, poor, and unlearned, and the seed of discontent is sown, to reap the wild harvest of regret. He takes her home in his automobile, and makes another appointment with her. Jack, who had returned with the purse, to find her not yet home, is waiting, anxious for her welfare. Her attitude toward him is strange, strained; he feels an unknown doubt, a deep pang, and wonders. In the days that follow Jack notices and divines. Broken-hearted, his dream of a summer day shattered, he enters the army. And the woman, she continues to meet her Prince Charming until, he begins to neglect her. Puzzled, pained, she goes to his grounds, and lurking in the shadows, sees him leave the house with another woman, his wife. Disillusioned, she goes her own lone way in sorrow and remorse. How does it end? Just as we'd all like it to. Five years later she again meets Jack, and the love of the summer day years before is reborn, to live and last through the springs and summers and autumns of many, many years, to the gray of life and the snows of December.
- Helen MacDermott, daughter of the Factor at Bear Lake, has been carefully and religiously brought up by her widowed father. Bob Brandt, a dashing young gambler and adventurer, stops at Bear Lake in his wanderings, and having occasion to visit the post to buy supplies, he becomes acquainted with Helen. She quickly surrenders to his charms and he, taking advantage of her innocence, persuades her to elope with him in the face of her father's opposition. Six months later, happily married to her, (as she thinks) good and honest young husband, Helen is rudely awakened by a delegation of the Vigilant Committee, who roughly give her husband orders to move his operations to some other locality. Helen then learns that her hero is nothing more nor less than a gambler and swindler. Having a deep loathing for divorce, and too proud to return to her father, Helen continues as Bob's wife. A month later after the Vigilante episode, while wandering about the country, Bob accidentally shoots himself in the shoulder. Jim Stuart, a lieutenant in the Northwest Mounted Police, finds Bob and Helen and takes them to his quarters, where he cares for the injured man until he is well again. A warm friendship develops among the three and Jim secures a place on the force for Bob. Soon Jim discovers he is slowly falling in love with his friend's wife, and, try as he will, he cannot still the cravings of his heart. Seeing the disgrace he is sure to bring upon himself by some day losing his self-control and declaring his love, he resigns from the service and goes away without saying good-bye to Helen. A few days later, Helen, who has been keeping a diary which Bob has never seen, is suddenly called from the house, and leaves the diary lying open on the table. Entering a few minutes later, Bob sees the diary and reads in it a confession of Helen's love for Jim. Bob realizes that his wife's love is lost to him, and he determines to bring Jim hack so that she may gather a few scattered fragments of happiness. Acting upon his resolution, Bob tracks Jim down and forces him to return to the post with him. There he explains the situation and wishing them all happiness, rushes down to the river. Brought face to face with the cold proposition and realizing the great sacrifice Bob has made for her, Helen is swept from her feet by the return of her old love, and the decision that he is after all, the better man. She rushes from the house, just in time to save Bob's life from a would-be Indian murderer and throwing herself into his arms, asks and receives forgiveness.
- A professionally commissioned documentary about the training of Rhodesian Regular Army Officer Cadets. It follows the fortunes of Inf 25/19 - a group of young men commissioned into the Rhodeisan Army in 1977.
- Sandy, a derelict, drifts into a western camp looking for a job. Bradley, a shift boss, assaults him because his necessity makes him importunate. Mathews, the superintendent, witnesses the assault and discharges Bradley. Sandy is given work. Bradley, in resentment, sets the Mexican laborers against Sandy and they attack him and leave him oh the ground unconscious. Again Mathews rescues him and discharges all the Mexicans concerned. He orders Sandy taken to one of the bunkhouses and cared for. Later, Bradley learns that the money for the payroll will arrive in camp late in the afternoon. Mathews and the engineers have planned to spend the day at the headworks, some miles distant. Bradley collects the discharged Mexicans and unfolds to them a plot to seize the camp and obtain the money . The superintendent leaves Sandy and the boy in the bunkhouse to take care of each other, and departs with his men. Sandy takes a nap, and Tommy goes out to play. He sees the Mexicans enter camp and breaks into the gun room and overhears their plans to raid the powder house next in quest of the ammunition. Hurrying back to the bunkhouse he wakes Sandy and tells him what he has discovered. Sandy, though still weak from his injuries, realizes that if he can keep the Mexicans from obtaining ammunition he can defeat their plans. He sends the boy over the hills to bring back the men and hurries to the powder house. A hydraulic nozzle used for excavating, and capable of discharging a stream of water at terrific force, is located near the powder house. When the Mexicans led by Bradley appear on the scene, he orders them to stand back, but they laugh at him and charge. Quickly whirling the valve open, he discharges into their midst a stream of water which scatters them right and left. Bradley after a while conceives the idea of sending a couple of men far up the canyon to cut off the water supply. This causes a delay, during which Tommy arrives at the headworks and starts back with help. Just as the stream fails the rescuers appear in the distance. The Mexicans in their eagerness to take possession of the powder house do not see Mathews and his men until they are surrounded. Bradley is captured by Sandy, who hurls himself on him and holds him until assistance comes.
- A retiring Arizona ranger chases one last crook.
- A schoolteacher encounters hostility and harassment when he arrives to start a school in a ranching community that has had no teacher before. When the teacher disappears after being taken out of town by night riders, his wife decides to continue in his place, and Johnny assists her despite continued resistance from children's parents.
- 1987–199446mTV-PG9.1 (6.3K)TV EpisodeWhen Data resigns his commission rather than be dismantled for examination by an inadequately skilled scientist, a formal hearing is convened to determine whether Data is considered property without rights or is a sentient being.
- Benny is Kim is resolutely unimpressed by Kim's attempts to write a salacious piece about a womanizing Australian cricketer, pushing her to lengths she never imagined. Prince pulls a fast one on his competitor to gain control over the printing press, and Ivan believes he's being haunted by his old friend Douglas.
- Episode: (2020)2015– 53mTV-14TV Episode
- Can Stephen get past the legal foibles in this? Will Keith hold it up against Universe Journey? What does Jimmy-Jerome think?
- 2012–Podcast Episode
- 2010– 47mPodcast Episode
- Rachel is enraptured and Chris cries watching this classic episode of TNG.
- 2010– 4mPodcast Episode
- While traveling, a judge witnesses a gang robbing a bank and vows to bring the thieves to justice, but the case turns personal when one of the outlaws turns out to be the son of a widow he admires.
- 2017– 35mPodcast Episode
- Roland and Kandice discuss an episode, and its heavy hitting themes, from Star Trek TNG, "The Measure of A Man". The discussing makes philosophical reflections upon themes such as slavery, rights, Personhood, and comparisons to actual historical events. The episodes specifically focuses on the Android character named Data, as well as the concept of sentient beings.
- Episode: (2022)2020– 18mPodcast Episode
- 2020–Podcast EpisodeThe hosts discuss the hit Star Trek TV episode from The Next Generation called "The measure of a Man" and all the topics within the film's story, including time displacement.
- 2021– 28mPodcast Episode
- 2021– 24mPodcast Episode
- Jamie Ortega believes Becca has been lying to them and she has her own theory about the case - that Azimov kidnapped Michael to force Becca and Paul to return the stock certificates they stole from him. Jamie thinks it's all tied to Operation Snowbird where in 1999, Becca and Paul worked together to retrieve a boy by the name of Maxim and reunite him with his mother. The operation ended in disaster but unbeknown to Becca, the boy in question was Azinov's son. Meanwhile, Dax tells Giancarlo that Asimov isn't working on his own and is reporting to someone - most likely Paul. Michael and Oksana are on the train but don't realize their keeper from the house is also board. Oksana is in desperate need of insulin.
- 2021– 45mPodcast Episode
- 2016– 1h 12mPodcast Episode
- 2012– 30mPodcast Episode
- Episode: (2022)2021– 53mPodcast Episode