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- Two sisters must figure out how to live life on their own after the sudden passing of their parents.
- Against his better judgment, Scott lets his vegan girlfriend-from-hell move into his house. Within hours, his quiet life turns into hell. Now he has to find a way to maintain his sanity and restrain himself from the hourly urges to kill (the vegan out of) his girlfriend.
- Get to know the already world-famous Nick 'Seffy D' Sefiddashti a little better through this up-close and personal documentary.
- Marvels of technology: a mobile police command post; gymnasium with retractable floor; U.S. military landing barges and PT boats.
- Three friends on spring break in a foreign country charter a boat to a remote island where it's rumored that you can freely hunt zombies. However, what starts out as a fun real-life video game, turns a little too real. The question then becomes "who's hunting who?"
- A miserable henpecked sci-fi film fan wishes that his shrewish and nagging wife was dead. The wife gets killed in an automobile accident, but comes back as a pesky rot-faced zombie.
- A local legend turns into a horrifying reality for a group of young grad students seeking to debunk a Wisconsin haunted house.
- The difference between rats and squirrels is the difference of a bushy tail. Is a 'bushy tail' all that separates the homeless from those who aren't?
- Narrator Ellise Trewyn ties together art and real-life accounts of middle school students with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) in this autism awareness and peer acceptance film intended for audiences of 12- to 15-year-olds.
- Neurodivergent students, with their friends and siblings, share their lived experience in this revelatory autism acceptance short film created with middle school audiences in mind.
- This episode includes a look at new uses for cotton, the modern kitchen, an all female medical college, frozen food, UCLA's mechanical brain (the differential analyzer mechanical computer), and the Northrup flying wing.
- The first feature in this series entry shows how topographical maps of remote areas of the United States are produced. Initially, hundreds of photographs of the area are taken with four special cameras using large-format film. The photographs are then painstakingly assembled so that a large, single photo can be produced. The next story shows a few modern bathroom. conveniences. Next, oddball inventor Russell E. Oakes demonstrates a set of "double decker" false teeth and a nose filter that renders onion fumes harmless. In the final story, Dr. Joseph M. Hill, of Baylor University Hospital, demonstrates the process he invented for dehydrating blood serum. The crystalized serum can be stored almost indefinitely without being refrigerated.
- A PSA campaign: The cast and production team of The Laramie Project worked together to build a message of action to stop discrimination and to ask people to think about how they treat others.
- A news program, comprised of five different segments that are researched, written, produced, and performed by 7th and 8th grade students and aired on cable during prime time. Time Warner continues to take the program to new heights by collaborating with CNN and the Student News Bureau.
- The issue if the series includes views of the 'skidoodler,', a ski-tow that climbs mountain slopes without effort; a frosted=food farm covering 25,000 acres in Brigeton, New Jersey; and a visit to San Antonio's Randolph Field to follow the cadets through their U. S. Army Air Corps training. And a series continuing characters, the Wily Wizard of Waukesha, displays his newest invention, designed to cure women of forgetting their purses and handbags.
- In this episode: diamond cutting technology; a collapsible 2-story trailer; how glass marbles are made; the Vultee Vengeance dive bomber.
- Are our body, mind, and soul interconnected? How might our soul help or hinder our hands? As a potter, Ryan Pederson had been perfecting his work for decades, beginning with an initial curiosity in high school and then as a professional artisan. Never satisfied with simply repeating his prior success or making the next marketable piece, he voraciously learned and honed his craft. But then he met a challenge he couldn't overcome. Even though he sensed there was still untapped potential in both his talent and technique, his work was falling apart. His failures led him on a much deeper journey, one that led him back to painful memories that lay dormant. Along the way he discovered a newfound alignment between the work of his hands and that of his heart.