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1-32 of 32
- The visitors to an Open House are disappearing. This was one deal that was too good to be true.
- Katelyn and Kelsey Winters, two sisters distracted by an argument, unknowingly travel through a stretch of isolated wilderness plagued by mysterious disappearances.
- A secret military experiment goes awry, leaking a devastating contaminant in to the air and water. 72 years later: "The Sickness" has forced the unaffected to take shelter in secure compounds. One community holds the secret to a drinkable water supply, but it requires renewal and sacrifice. The Gambit is a quest after this source. Produced on a limited budget as a baseline test of consumer gear.
- Chandler Spoon a lousy whiskey breath sports columnist of the Shalimar Sun is held captive in the backseat of a cab by a Serial Killer risen from the past.How this story plays out is up to Chandler.
- Like many small towns, this sleepy Georgia town has fallen on hard times. To make matters worse 15 of the town's children were killed when a drunk driver ran a bus off the road. Struggling to cope, the town�۪s newly elected mayor proposes a novel idea to bring the community together and begin healing once and for all.
- When their father was killed in action during the Vietnam War, Anthony Elders made a vow to always take care of his baby brother Michael. A promise that was not always easy to keep, given Michael's affinity for mischief. Growing up, they spend many a day fishing the waters in their small town near Savannah, Ga. Fishing became the opportunity for Anthony to impart wisdom and in general, correct his brother's impish behavior. Anthony was the old soul having grown up overnight to become the man of the house. Michael, though as intelligent as Anthony, remained wide-eyed; seeing only the possible and refusing to entertain the improbable. Despite this, the boys were more alike than different. No two brothers were closer and they often talked about fixing up their father's old decrepit boat and sailing the world together. Fast forward to the mid 90's. Michael, graduates from Annapolis and is serving overseas as a Navy Seal. Anthony, a helicopter pilot serves stateside. On a beautify southern, spring afternoon, The Elders a family (minus Michael) along with friends and neighbors take a canoe trip on the river. Among them are a young school friend Amir and his sister Nadia, a medical student. When their perfect day becomes a perfect nightmare, Nadia comes to the rescue...but not without personal tragedy. From that day on, Nadia and the Elders share a family-like bond. In 1999, a catastrophic earthquake hits Turkey. Nadia and Michael, each in Turkey on their own relief missions, cross paths and meet for the first time. Their connection is powerful and nearly instant. Though Nadia is Muslim, (and promised to another man) they pursue an ill-advised "friendship" that will likely bring them both pain. Like the bird who loved the fish, it seemed as though they were two creatures, unable to exist in the other's world. A fact that Michael, ever the optimist, refused to accept. On September 11, 2001, the face of America changed forever. In the midst of tragedy, Nadia and Michael find their way just before both men head to war. Their plans to sail around the world would have to wait until after their return.
- When their sister is killed in a car accident, the Garison twins are left to cope on their own. Lured into the woods by an ancient creature, they must face their fears to save themselves and others from it's wrath.
- Music video for "Violin Tsunami" by Kishi Bashi.
- Explore Walt Whitman's "The Wound-Dresser," set in the battlefield infirmaries and operating theaters of 1860s Washington, D.C. Actor David Strathairn, playwright Tony Kushner, composer Matthew Aucoin, opera star Davóne Tines, physician-writers Rafael Campo and Abraham Verghese, and historian Drew Faust join Elisa New to discuss how the trauma of the Civil War shaped American history.
- Richard Blanco's poem "Looking for The Gulf Motel" transports readers to 1970s Florida, recalling a Cuban-American family's vacations on the sparkling sands of Marco Island. Blanco and international superstar Gloria Estefan join Elisa New and a chorus of Cuban American adults in Miami and middle school students in New York City to reflect on family and what it means to call a place home.
- Picking up a hand-sized stone near a rushing waterfall, the speaker of A.R. Ammons's poem "Cascadilla Falls" is catapulted into the cosmos. Planetary scientist Lindy Elkins-Tanton, composer DJ Spooky, geologist Daniel Schrag, poet Joshua Bennett, CEO Larry Berger, and philosopher Rebecca Goldstein join host Elisa New to consider Ammons's window onto the vast motions of the universe.
- Billie Holiday's haunting song "Strange Fruit" winds beneath the unsettling, satiric humor of Evie Shockley's poem "you can say that again, billie." Shockley, jazz singer Cassandra Wilson, historian Robin D.G. Kelley, actor LisaGay Hamilton, novelist Beverly Lowry, and radio host Nick Spitzer join Elisa New to discuss the history of racism, violence, and artistic tradition in the American south.
- Do good fences really make good neighbors? Robert Frost's "Mending Wall" asks about the role walls play in society. Caroline Kennedy, Tracy K. Smith, Julia Alvarez, and more join Elisa New to read Frost's classic poem.
- 2018–TV EpisodeSharon Olds's "The Language of the Brag" and Bernadette Mayer's "The Desires of Mothers to Please Others in Letters" are boisterous tributes to motherhood. Donna Lynne Champlin, Emily Oster, and both poets join host Elisa New.
- Two poems, by Linda Hogan and Alberto Ríos, follow animals across the Great Plains and Sonoran Desert. Both poets join host Elisa New, Jeff Corwin, and more to discuss survival in the harsh climates of the American West.
- 2018–TV EpisodeIn 1920s Greenwich Village, Edna St. Vincent Millay wrote sonnets that challenged clichés of love and romance. To probe her unsentimental break-up poetry, host Elisa New speaks with Olivia Gatwood, Leslie Jamison, Philip Galanes and more.
- In 1770s Boston, Phillis Wheatley was at the same time enslaved and an international celebrity: a writer who mastered the most persuasive rhetoric of the day to publish enduring arguments about freedom. Inaugural poets Amanda Gorman and Richard Blanco, writer Clint Smith, and scholars Glenda Carpio and Henry Louis Gates, Jr. join host Elisa New to read two of Wheatley's poems for public occasions.
- 2018–TV EpisodeRussian-born poet Joseph Brodsky wrote about the centaur as a Cold War self-portrait: a divided global refugee, created by a geopolitics of shifting borders and cultures. Theater of War artistic director Bryan Doerries, writer Yelena Akhtiorskaya, and scholars Sven Birkerts, Zakhar Ishtov, Jonathan Brent, and Joseph Ellis read two poems by Brodsky: one about love; the other, exile.