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- On the run after murdering a man, accountant William Blake encounters a strange Native American man named Nobody who prepares him for his journey into the spiritual world.
- Aika Sumeragi, a salvager for hire who gets caught up in a plot for world domination. It is well known for its copious amounts of fan service, specifically the camera angles on panties of the many female characters that populate the show.
- In 1999, a battle takes place between two factions of divine warriors for the fate of the world.
- A mother shoots the murderer of her daughter in the courtroom.
- Alexiel was a beautiful angel who defined God and was reincarnated in the body of 16- year old Setsuna Mudo who happens to have incest feeling for his sister Sara. Together, they get caught up in a fight between Heaven and Hell.
- True crime series focusing on the cases of Florida Department of Law Enforcement criminal personality profiler, Dayle L. Hinman.
- Documentary series looking at the influence of art on the current day situation of our society.
- This Swiss TV-series is a vital source of quality on-screen journalism with its collection of reports and documentaries about political sociology, economy and science, as well as the cultural, social, and technical challenges of society.
- In essence, the use of images to tell stories, as in movies, TV or cartoons, relies upon the same powerful techniques since Antiquity. Cuneiform, the world's oldest writing, sets in the world oldest and long greatest city, Uruk in early Mesopotamia (southern Iraq), the oldest recorded story, the still told Gilgamesh epic. As every great story it has a hero, defined by the events and his spiritual and moral ability to respond to them. The Assyrian (northern Iraq) king Assurbanipal had it transposed from -then no longer legible- cuneiform to images, only starring himself in four relief sculptures in his Ninive palace, as a mini-cartoon about the lion hunt, and added far more with thousands of 'extra characters' about his victorious war against the Elamites, an intrigue complete with side-plots. The missing element, emotion, came with the Greek mythological sculptures, notably since Homer's Odysseia.
- In our time, the use of visual advertising in political campaigns is blatantly obvious and professionalized, but in essence the techniques to use the power of images date back to political propaganda since Antiquity. In the prehistory, everybody knew the leader of the small community physically, but soon that changed, creating a political vocation for art. Next to Stonehenge was found a Bronze age grave, 2000 years before the Romans, extremely rich, belonging to a Central European prince, who may well have ordered the monument build, the first known to use gold jewelry as 'regalia', a visual status symbol never went out of use. Darius, Achaemenid (Persian) king of kings of the first true empire, millions of subjects from twenty nations, made his capital a monumental demonstration of his power and of unity trough eclecticism, not just an imposed Persian style, and invented the political logo -representing him as an archer, symbol of the steadfast attitude required for a good ruler- as well as the use of coins to spread it among his people throughout the vast territory; Alexander the Great adopted these principles, with one difference, setting an example for all Hellenistic rulers: the realistic individual political portrait, instead of earlier stereotypes, of the leader. When Octavian needed to reunite Rome, split after Caesar's death between conservatively dressing republicans and 'modern' monarchists, he had hybrid statues made, even a general's image which is simultaneously disarming, even barefoot, just as the principate he established constituted a crowned republic, almost autocratic in all but name. Another technique is stereotypical vilification of enemies in images.
- Like death is a major theme in stories, images of the death are of all time. Even the 9,000 year old site at Jericho contains nine artistically decorated human skulls, like many other cultures still produce, even today in tribal New Guinea. While some are meant to reconcile the audience with mortality by showing the afterlife, in other cultures human sacrifices and cruel warfare give rise to morbid images, specifically designed to frighten. Starting with the Etruscans, a same work of art may refer both to afterlife and death.
- An attacker has a rare genetic condition that leaves the crime scene baffling.
- A playboy's past holds the clue to solving a series of attacks on women in Palm Beach, Fla.
- A college student's death is investigated. It appears to have been an accidental drowning in the bathtub, but the police suspect otherwise.
- A masked man who attacked women in Palm Beach County, Fla., is pursued by law enforcement officers.
- An elderly widow is murdered in her bed in Florida. When DNA retrieved from the scene fails to match any known criminals, police call in Dayle Hinman to profile the killer.
- A sexual predator is on the loose in Tampa and the police are doing everything they can to stop him. Dayle Hinman joins the team knowing that criminals like this don't stop.
- A pizza delivery man is shot dead in West Palm Beach. Police wonder if it's a targeted robbery, but the crime scene clues point Dayle Hinman in a different direction.
- After deaf woman, Darlene VanderGiesen, uncharacteristically misses two days of work, detectives begin investigating. Interviews with friends and family lead them to her boyfriend, Jeff Hakeman. After a thorough inspection, Hakeman is cleared of any wrong-doing. When Special Agent Dayle Hinman reviews the VanderGiesen case file, she confirms detectives' suspicions that the woman has met with foul play. Investigators delve into VanderGiesen's computer, where threatening emails are discovered. They track down the writer, Daphne Wright, a female friend of VanderGiesen's. Earlier interviews reveal that Wright was jealous that VanderGiesen had struck up a friendship with her ex-girlfriend. Can police prove that the author of a vicious letter could also be a killer?
- Police enlist Dayle Hinman's help in an attempt to find links between three attacks on women in West Palm Beach, Fla.
- A waitress is killed in Clovis, New Mexico.
- Agent Hinman discovers a criminal ring when she investigates a murder.
- Michael Graham confessed to shooting and killing Georgia resident David Nemeth in 1999 during an argument over Jayna James McDonald, who was later convicted of concealing the victim's death.
- A look back at a series of murders that occurred at the University of Florida campus in 1990. Although authorities honed in on a suspect, profiler Dayle Hinman was not convinced he was the culprit.
- An investigation of the 1998 murder of Joseph Foley. Foley was found shot to death in his bedroom by his own gun.
- Investigators are baffled how Thelma Reed ended up inside her burning home.
- Two people are murdered in broad daylight in a Billings, Montana's coin shop. The investigators ask for agent Hinman help to catch the killer.