For nearly 50 years, FBI director J. Edgar Hoover amassed secret files on America's most prominent figures, files he used to smear and control presidents and politicians.
Three years after Nelson Mandela's release from prison, talks between Mandela's African National Congress and government of President FW DE Klerk show signs of reaching an agreement will end apartheid.
As 1993 baseball season begins, Frontline looks at power struggle between owners and players for economic control of Major League baseball and how that battle has led national pastime to brink of disaster.
With headlines focused on United Nation's search and destroy missions inside Iraq, Frontline investigates how Iran is quietly rebuilding its national arsenal of weapons.
A 90-minute, prime-time special featuring analysis of the Los Angeles riots by prominent observers from the African-American, Caucasian, Asian-American and Latino communities.
Frontline, in association with The Health Quarterly, presents a behind-the-scenes report on Bill Clinton's savvy campaigning and hard bargaining for health care reform.
Bizarre accusations of abuse surround a prominent daycare in Edenton, North Carolina. Frontline's 3-part investigation "Innocence Lost" chronicles how a disagreement between two friends snowballed into a sexual abuse hysteria.
The Innocent Lost series continues, focusing on testimony of twelve children who took stand, questioning by prosecutors and defense attorneys, and jurors' decisions on what they heard.
FRONTLINE opens its twelfth season with story of General Motors--world's largest industrial company and symbol of corporate America's once golden age of optimism.
Wes McKinley didn't know what he was getting into when, in 1990, he was chosen as foreman of a special grand jury investigating potential crimes at Rocky Flats nuclear weapons plant in Colorado.
Since outbreak of AIDS more than a decade ago, an estimated 30,000 Americans have become infected after receiving HIV-contaminated blood or blood products.
In a year in which national attention has focused on police brutality trials in cities like Los Angeles, Detroit, and Miami, FRONTLINE crosses 'blue line' to examine police culture and to ask what do cops think of us?