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- After getting dumped by his slutty girlfriend, Caleb falls in love with Gwen. However, thanks to Caleb's roommate, Gwen thinks he's gay and sets him up with her roommate, Marc.
- Expedition Mars brings to life one of the greatest sagas of the Space Age, the epic adventures of Spirit and Opportunity, the rovers that saved NASA's Mars program after a string of failures in the 1990's.
- Take a fresh look at the lands that make up much of the Western Hemisphere. Each country contains landscapes, peoples, and history that have not received the attention they deserve on the world stage. In the Americas with David Yetman undertakes a new approach to travel and adventure. From Japanese immigrants in the Amazon to descendants of poor Italians in Chile, from Mayan temples in Guatemala to ancient fortresses in Mexico, from the glacier-carved frigid barrens of northern Canada to the timeless villages of the Altiplano in Perú. The series takes viewers to parts of Brazil mostly unknown to the outside world, to the wild mountains of western Argentina, to festivals in Colombia and the often ignored Great Lakes of the United States. We approach volcanoes in Hawaii, Chile, and Alaska, ride rafts, boats, ferries, horses, and motorcycles. We visit peoples who can replace conversation with whistling, islanders who have cooked the same meals for ten thousand years, and pastoralists who live at an altitude too high for any activity except herding llamas. We meet people from all walks of life and let them tell their stories, show us their homes, take us about their work, and tell us how they came to be who they are. We show the histories of natives and immigrants, islanders and mainlanders, rural folk and city-dwellers. In the Americas with David Yetman undertakes a new approach to travel and adventure-with a decided bias in favor of our western continents and islands.
- With strange things happening at a remote research station, a university psychologist is sent to investigate.
- Adapted from the novel by Rebecca Chace, Capture the Flag portrays the tenuous relationship between a father and a daughter in the socially turbulent 1970s. Teen-age Annie and her father Luke are about to gather with friends for an annual game of Capture the Flag. This year, a lot more is at stake than the white T-shirt standing in for the flag. Annie's parents are on the verge of divorce, and this is the first time she and her father are participating without Annie's mother. What starts as a joyous reunion soon breaks down as friendships among the adults fracture and new allegiances among the children are formed. Over the course of this weekend, Annie learns that even though some things change, the most important relationships will somehow endure.
- Professor Stephen Hawking enlists engineering expert Prof Danielle George and his own former student, Christophe Galfard, to find out if and how humans can reach for the stars and move to different planets.
- Charles Sadler is experiencing difficulty controlling his physical reactions, stabbing himself in the hand and killing his girlfriend. Dr. John Wilson has made tenure with his exploration of para-psychological cases, much to the chagrin of his younger colleague, Dr. Richard Austin, a confirmed skeptic. At a party, Dr. Wilson introduces Dr. Austin to a visiting paranormal case, Miss Helena Voyich, a one-legged woman who claims to be capable of mesmerism, a form of very powerful hypnosis dismissed by science in the late nineteenth century. She demonstrates on Richard's girlfriend, Audrey, causing her to do things she would never do of her own free will. Still unconvinced, and despite the insistence of Charles Sadler of the danger, Richard agrees to be a test subject so Wilson can submit a prize-worthy article. Helena interferes with his work, ignoring appointments with his student, Steve, and Chancellor Murdoch, and disrupting his relationship with his girlfriend in ways she is largely unaware, and having his maid wake him up at noon only for him to discover copious blood on his clothing...
- College Basketball coverage for all of 12 PAC-12 Men's and Women's Basketball on the PAC-12 Network.
- A young Navajo girl confronts the pressures of modern life conflicting with her traditional identity.
- Relive the top Pac-12 game each week in a viewer friendly, snap-to-snap airing every Sunday evening. Episodes will feature enhanced footage not seen in the live game broadcast, including radio calls, postgame sound, relevant tweets and locker room coverage.
- Honest, dark, and disturbing, 'Summertime Killers' is a low-budget independent film about teenagers growing up in the drug culture in white, middle-class suburbia. The story focuses on Ben (Tad Sallee), a teen who has started dealing weed in his neighborhood with his friend Walter (Mack Celentano). But when the ramifications of their decisions and the consequences of the lifestyle begin to disrupt their perfect little lives, Ben begins to see the hard truth behind real life and tries to change his path. But is it too late?
- A Band to Honor is the story Navy Band Unit 22 - The ships band for the USS Arizona - The band trained together, practiced together, performed together, lived together and on December 7, 1941, died together!
- Rainer Ptacek and Das Combo live at Studio A, University of Arizona.
- In the Wild West of the late 1800s, a trusting man gets a taste of the lawless life when he follows the path of the wicked.
- The Universe examines the stormy gas giant Jupiter and its mini-solar system of over 60 moons.
- The unique features of Earth's moon and the processes that shaped it are described. Past theories of the Moon's formation are also presented.
- Program takes a brief look at the dynamics of Saturn's rings before exploring the unique and amazing features of the planet itself, including the curious behavior at the poles, and recent discoveries about Saturn's exotic moons.
- How the various structural types of galaxies form by merging with smaller galaxies is explained and simulated. The preliminary hints at the importance of dark matter in the process are mentioned.
- More extreme aircraft are profiled. Among them the F-35 Lightning II stealth fighter, the B-1B Lancer (a supersonic bomber), the DC-10 Super Tanker, drones, and personal aircraft vehicles.
- 2012–TV Episode
- If a planet has an atmosphere it has weather. And where there is weather there are storms. Our solar system is chock full of them. And the bigger the temperature extreme the bigger the storm. Which makes Earth hurricanes and thunderstorms seem rather uninteresting.
- The Arizona State Sun Devil Football team play in the annual Territorial Cup game after claiming the Pac-12 South champs title after beating UCLA the week before.
- It sounds like a Hollywood blockbuster: a deadly asteroid is on a collision course with Earth. But in reality, it's only a matter of time before a giant space rock threatens to wipe out civilization. An asteroid took out the dinosaurs sixty-five million years ago. Are we next? This episode analyzes the threat and explores the many ways--from a nuclear bomb to ingenious new technology
- Every year, thousands of objects both natural and manmade plummet through our atmosphere and crash into the Earth. These menacing messengers from the sky provide scientists with amazing insights into the natural, and not so natural, phenomena.
- Scientists discuss 10 different ways of destroying the Earth; including Venus to Earth impact, the Big Burn, Stop the Spin, Black Holes, Turn off the Gravity, Anti-Matter Annihilation, Parallel Worlds Collide.
- Professor Brian Cox explores the powerhouse of them all, the sun. In India he witnesses a total solar eclipse and in Norway, he watches the battle between the sun's wind and Earth, as the night sky glows with the northern lights. Beyond earth, the solar wind continues, creating dazzling aurora on other planets.
- Professor Brian Cox takes a flight to the top of earth's atmosphere, where he sees the darkness of space above and the thin blue line of our atmosphere below. Against the stunning backdrop of the glaciers of Alaska, Brian reveals his fourth wonder: Saturn's moon Titan, shrouded by a murky, thick atmosphere.
- Scientists reveal evidence of the existence of alien life. Detailed imaging of an underground ocean on a planetary moon and newly discovered extrasolar planets reveal what contacting alien life will be like. This is a serious scientific look at how will we meet ET.
- All life on Earth needs water so the search for aliens in the solar system has followed the search for water. We examine the patterns in the ice on Jupiter's moon Europa, which reveal an ocean far below with more potentially life-giving water than all the oceans on Earth. But of all the wonders of the solar system forged by the laws of nature, Brian reveals the greatest wonder of them all.
- NASA satellite data and footage give new insight into the ecosystem of the Amazon rainforest, the plant life of the oceans as a barometer of the health of the seas, and the nature of violent storms.
- From 2006 to 2010 Mars was invaded by by several new spacecraft from its nearest neighbor, Earth. These probes have revealed numerous unexpected features of the martian surface. Several have implications for life, past and present.
- Ancient Mysteries examines the history of human sacrifice. It looks at sacrifices performed in the Middle East, Northern Europe, India, Carthage, and the Aztec Empire.
- 2019–TV EpisodeAn astrophysics professor shows how to build telescopes and shows how they work. A designer shows how design and engineering work together to make cutting-edge technology in cars. An engineer shows how she made a fingertip sensing robot. Miranda Cosgrove calls Esther Povitsky with science facts about wisdom teeth.
- Scientists are on the verge of answering one of the greatest questions in history: Are we alone? Finding Life Beyond Earth immerses audiences in the sights and sounds of alien worlds, while top astrobiologists explain how these places are changing how we think about the potential for life in our solar system.
- Nicole introduces us to the fans of soap operas and their world of fandom. Tension builds when Amber and Suzanne fight over Axel Bellino, a character in their favorite soap opera, Moments Of Our Time. Will the girls agree to disagree? Also! Nicole meets a new friend that wants to know more about soap operas, will Nicole be able to teach her? Tune in!
- 201444mTV-PG9.1 (3.6K)TV EpisodeA thrilling, new adventure across space and time begins.
- 1982– 43mTV EpisodePyramids are among the oldest structures known to mankind. The geometric shape can be found in many cultures around the world. Harald Lesch explores the secrets behind the monumental buildings. Neither most nor the largest pyramids are in Egypt. In the Peruvian region of Lambayeque alone, 260 of these unusual buildings are rising. Unlike in Egypt, they did not serve exclusively as tombs of the rulers, but as palace temples. To the west of Cairo rises the only surviving wonder of the ancient world, the Pyramid of Cheops. It and its slightly smaller neighbors are among the most famous buildings in the world. For thousands of years, the monumental tombs of the pharaohs have captivated people. But the intriguing geometric shape is not an Egyptian monopoly. The emperor in faraway China also chose it for his tomb - and rebuilt entire landscapes for it. Pyramids can be found all over the world. From the Maya in Central America to present-day Iran. Allegedly, there are even 30,000-year-old pyramids in Bosnia. Why is this form found almost everywhere - among cultures that were far away in time and space, and who could not have known anything about each other? Researchers around the world have found that each culture had its own purpose for the pyramid - ranging from a tomb to a temple, from a multi-functional building to an observatory to a bloody sacrificial site. In northern Peru rise the gigantic "Gold Pyramids of Sican". Built from millions of mud bricks, their construction was an enormous collective effort, comparable to the work on the pyramids on the Nile. Archaeologists assume that the mud-brick mega-structures were not only used for religious ceremonies and as the burial place of the rulers. In the heyday of the culture, the ruling elites used the pyramids as representative residential buildings. And in times of crisis, they were probably also the scene of human sacrifices. The first emperor of China, Qin, had a huge landscape transformed into his funerary pyramid. So far, Chinese archaeologists have only partially excavated it, because it is said that there is a mortal danger inside. Rivers of mercury are said to protect the interior of the pyramid, according to old reports. And indeed, researchers have measured an increased mercury concentration in the vicinity of the funerary pyramid. The tomb became famous decades ago with the discovery of the Terracotta Army. It is one of the few excavated grave goods in the vast area of 56 square kilometers around the pyramid. What immeasurable treasures may have been given to Emperor Qin in his tomb and still slumber there untouched? In Mexico and Guatemala, new technologies are making sensational discoveries for Mayan researchers. With the LiDAR scanning process, the jungle can be digitally defoliated and shows what the ground hides under the canopy. Tens of thousands of previously unknown structures, including several pyramids, were thus revealed, providing clues as to why the great Mayan empire collapsed. Bosnia is home to the most controversial "pyramids" at the moment. Geologists see a pyramid-shaped mountain as just a whim of nature, others as a 30,000-year-old structure. For many esotericists, the Bosnian Pyramid of the Sun has become a place of pilgrimage. They are convinced that cosmic energies are at work on the mountain. Harald Lesch sorts out the arguments for or against an ancient building. Harald Lesch presents these and other enigmatic buildings in the new episode "Terra X - Unsolved Cases of Archaeology: Pyramids".