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All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 The Silent Majority

    • November 2, 2011

    Consisting of rare footage filmed by President Richard M. Nixon’s aides, this experimental documentary revisits Nixon’s campaign to win an elusive majority.

  • S01E02 Focus

    • December 11, 2012

    The filmmaker Jeff Scher presents an abstract celebration of the New York City Marathon.

  • S01E03 The Umbrella Man

    • November 21, 2011

    On the 48th anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, Errol Morris explores the story behind the one man seen standing under an open black umbrella at the site.

  • S01E04 The Role of Youth

    • December 4, 2011

    The filmmaker Matt Wolf and the writer Jon Savage reflect on the history of youth in times of crisis.

  • S01E05 Texting While Walking

    • January 8, 2012

    The filmmaker Casey Neistat explores the hazards of text messaging while walking in New York City.

  • S01E06 Dismantling Detroit

    • January 18, 2012

    The filmmakers Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady look at young men who salvage scrap metal from Detroit’s derelict buildings, set against the backdrop of globalization.

  • S01E07 Ai Weiwei: Evolution of a Dissident

    • January 22, 2012

    The filmmaker Alison Klayman presents an exclusive look at the Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei and his struggle for the freedom of expression.

  • S01E08 The Justice of the Occupation

    • January 24, 2012

    The filmmaker Ra’anan Alexandrowicz explores the impact of Israel’s High Court of Justice on Palestinian rights.

  • S01E09 They Will Say We Are Not Here

    • January 25, 2012

    The filmmakers Katherine Fairfax Wright and Malika Zouhali-Worrall explore the motivations, sorrows and dreams of the slain Ugandan gay rights activist David Kato.

  • S01E10 El Wingador

    • February 3, 2012

    The filmmaker Errol Morris explores the excessive eating habits of a five-time champion of the Philadelphia Wing Bowl.

  • S01E11 The Island President Deposed

    • February 8, 2011

    The filmmaker Jon Shenk presents a portrait of Mohamed Nasheed, the first democratically elected president of the Maldives and an environmental activist, who was deposed on Feb. 7.

  • S01E12 Bike Thief

    • March 12, 2012

    The filmmaker Casey Neistat conducts an experiment in New York City, locking up his own bike and brazenly trying to steal it, to determine whether onlookers or the police would intervene.

  • S01E13 Hi! I’m a Nutria

    • March 19, 2012

    Hi! I’m a Nutria In this animated short by the filmmaker Drew Christie, a rodent living in Washington State defends criticism that he is an invasive species and asks, “How long does it take to become a native?”

  • S01E14 Call Me Ehsaan

    • March 23, 2012

    A look at the war in Afghanistan through the eyes of Lt. Col. John Darin Loftis, one of the U.S. Air Force’s prized experts in Afghan language and culture, who was killed in Kabul on Feb. 25, 2012.

  • S01E15 Good Night, Ryan

    • April 14, 2012

    A filmmaker explores the fate of Specialist Ryan Yurchison, who returned from Iraq with P.T.S.D. and, after seeking help at the local V.A. hospital, died of a drug overdose in a possible suicide.

  • S01E16 Name Change

    • April 18, 2012

    The filmmaker Sharon Shattuck recalls the apprehension she experienced when her father, a transgender cross-dresser, decided to legally adopt a woman’s name.

  • S01E17 Taking the Waste Out of Wastewater

    • April 21, 2012

    Drinking water reclaimed from sewage might sound disgusting, but it could be a necessary solution to our domestic water woes.

  • S01E18 Mitt Likes Music, Including This

    • May 14, 2012

    The Gregory Brothers present a musical video mash-up about what Mitt Romney likes — from lakes and trees to music and cars to grits and “Twilight.”

  • S01E19 Waiting for Health Care

    • May 20, 2012

    The filmmaker Peter Nicks goes behind the doors of an American public hospital struggling to care for a community of largely uninsured patients.

  • S01E20 Transition

    • May 31, 2012

    The filmmaker Zina Saro-Wiwa presents an Op-Doc on black women’s decision to embrace their naturally kinky hair, rather than use chemical straighteners.

  • S01E21 The Scars of Stop-and-Frisk

    • November 21, 2011

    A short documentary film on New York’s stop-and-frisk policing focuses on Tyquan Brehon, a young man in Brooklyn who says he was stopped more than 60 times before age 18.

  • S01E22 Songs Against Drilling

    • July 5, 2012

    With interviews and concert footage, the filmmaker Alex Gibney covers a rally against hydraulic fracturing and accompanying benefit concert featuring Natalie Merchant and Mark Ruffalo.

  • S01E23 The Light in Her Eyes

    • July 16, 2012

    The filmmakers Julia Meltzer and Laura Nix profile Houda al-Habash and her Koran school for women and girls in Damascus, Syria.

  • S01E24 Taxi Lost and Found

    • July 25, 2012

    A video about the process of trying to recover $13,000 worth of items left in a New York City taxi.

  • S01E25 Allergy to Originality

    • July 31, 2012

    In this animated Op-Doc by Drew Christie, two men discuss whether anything is truly original — especially in movies and books.

  • S01E26 Anosmia

    • August 6, 2012

    Conjuring scents on screen, the filmmaker Jacob LaMendola profiles people with a rare condition that renders them unable to smell.

  • S01E27 The Program

    • August 22, 2012

    The filmmaker Laura Poitras profiles William Binney, a 32-year veteran of the National Security Agency who helped design a top-secret program he says is broadly collecting Americans’ personal data.

  • S01E28 The Right to Vote

    • August 29, 2012

    In the first episode of an Op-Docs series called “Electoral Dysfunction,” the political humorist Mo Rocca explores a curious fact about the U.S. Constitution: why is there no universal right to vote?

  • S01E29 Voter ID Wars

    • September 5, 2012

    In the second episode of an Op-Docs series, “Electoral Dysfunction,” the political humorist Mo Rocca explores controversial voter identification laws, which could benefit Republicans.

  • S01E30 Soda Ban Explained

    • September 9, 2012

    The filmmaker Casey Neistat presents a guide to Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg’s proposal to restrict sales of big sugary drinks in New York.

  • S01E31 Scouted

    • September 11, 2012

    The filmmakers David Redmon and Ashley Sabin examine the lives of teenage girls in Siberia who audition at open casting calls for fashion models.

  • S01E32 Patriot Game

    • September 16, 2012

    The Gregory Brothers present a video-game-inspired musical mash-up of President Obama and Mitt Romney’s speeches from the recent nominating conventions.

  • S01E33 Electoral College 101

    • October 2, 2012

    In the latest episode of the Op-Docs series “Electoral Dysfunction,” the political humorist Mo Rocca consults a third-grade class on the fairness of the Electoral College.

  • S01E34 Three Strikes of Injustice

    • October 8, 2012

    A documentary profiles Shane Taylor, one of more than 4,000 nonviolent offenders serving life in California prisons under a three-strikes law.

  • S01E35 V.P. Debate Highlights, Songified

    • October 12, 2012

    The Gregory Brothers present a musical mash-up of the vice-presidential debate between Representative Paul D. Ryan and Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr.

  • S01E36 Leaf and Death

    • October 12, 2012

    A short animated film by Jeff Scher celebrates the fading (yet somehow glowing) leaves of autumn.

  • S01E37 Bronx Obama

    • October 15, 2012

    In this short documentary we meet Louis Ortiz, an unemployed man from the Bronx whose life is turned upside down when he discovers his uncanny resemblance to President Obama.

  • S01E38 Yes We Chant

    • October 23, 2012

    The Gregory Brothers present a musical mash-up video of the final presidential debate between President Obama and Mitt Romney.

  • S01E39 11 Excellent Reasons Not to Vote?

    • October 30, 2012

    The filmmaker Errol Morris speaks with young Americans about the merits of voting and why some resist, from apathy to awkward family dinners.

  • S01E40 The Black Vote for Gay Marriage

    • November 1, 2012

    Focusing on pastors with opposing views on same-sex marriage, the filmmaker Yoruba Richen explores the influence of African-Americans on a ballot initiative in Maryland.

  • S01E41 Ballot Design With Todd Oldham

    • November 4, 2012

    In Part 4 of the Op-Doc series “Electoral Dysfunction,” Mo Rocca invites the designer Todd Oldham to assess election ballots from across the United States.

  • S01E42 The Fight Over Medical Marijuana

    • November 7, 2012

    An Op-Doc profiles Chris Williams, a medical marijuana grower in Montana who now faces life in prison.

  • S01E43 Lullaby

    • November 14, 2012
  • S01E44 A Thanksgiving Eel

    • November 18, 2012
  • S01E45 Miseducation

    • November 20, 2012

    The filmmaker Nadine Cloete explores childhood in a part of South Africa plagued by gang culture and violence.

  • S01E46 Forgotten In Iraq

    • December 5, 2012
  • S01E47 Solo, Piano - N.Y.C.

    • December 11, 2012
  • S01E48 The Public Square

    • December 15, 2012

    In Times Square, protesters counter an anti-Islamic speech by pastor Terry Jones ... by singing the Beatles.

Season 2

  • S02E01 Death of a Prisoner

    • January 10, 2013

    The filmmaker Laura Poitras follows the tragic return home to Yemen of a Guantánamo Bay prison detainee, Adnan Latif.

  • S02E02 The Long Wait

    • January 17, 2013

    The filmmaker Jason DaSilva reveals the challenges for the disabled in navigating New York City’s public transportation system.

  • S02E03 Gospel of Intolerance

    • January 22, 2013

    The filmmaker Roger Ross Williams reveals how money donated by American evangelicals helps to finance a violent antigay movement in Uganda.

  • S02E04 True Believers in Justice

    • January 23, 2013

    The filmmaker Dawn Porter follows Travis Williams, a young public defender in the Deep South, who struggles against long hours, low pay and staggering caseloads to bring justice to all.

  • S02E05 How to Build a Country From Scratch

    • February 4, 2013

    The filmmakers Florence Martin-Kessler and Anne Poiret present a 12-step program to establish the world’s newest country: South Sudan.

  • S02E06 Calorie Detective

    • February 12, 2013

    With the help of a science lab, the filmmaker Casey Neistat finds that calorie listings on food labels can be highly inaccurate.

  • S02E07 Drones for America!

    • February 18, 2013

    In this animated satire, a former K.G.B. agent welcomes a future in which Americans live under the watchful eyes of drones.

  • S02E08 Shoot One, Please

    • March 5, 2013

    This short documentary follows a 15-year-old from Stamford, N.Y., in the Catskills, as he hunts his first deer with his father.

  • S02E09 The Man Who Sells the Moon

    • March 10, 2013

    This short documentary looks at Dennis Hope, a Nevada man who has made a living “selling” plots of land on the moon.

  • S02E10 In Japan, a Portrait of Mistrust

    • March 26, 2013

    Two years after a tsunami and nuclear meltdown in Fukushima, Japan, the filmmaker Itai Keshet presents a documentary portrait of public fear, mistrust and suspicion about the safety of food.

  • S02E11 Hail, Hail, Freedom in Cyprus

    • April 8, 2013

    On the island of Cyprus, the filmmaker Iva Radivojevic explores how the economic crisis has contributed to a rise in hostility toward immigrants.

  • S02E12 Branko: Return to Auschwitz

    • April 14, 2013

    Branko Lustig, a Holocaust survivor and Oscar-winning producer of “Schindler’s List,” returns to Auschwitz for the bar mitzvah he couldn’t have in his youth.

  • S02E13 The War on Drugs Is a Failure

    • April 19, 2013

    The Gregory Brothers’ latest musical mash-up features Gov. Chris Christie, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, former Congressman Ron Paul and special guests who argue for the reform of U.S. drug laws.

  • S02E14 The Ghost of Gun Control

    • April 22, 2013

    In this animated Op-Doc by Drew Christie, a ghost mourns the failed history of gun control in the United States.

  • S02E15 A Chinese Threat to Afghan Buddhas

    • April 23, 2013

    In Afghanistan, a Chinese mining company threatens to destroy the remains of an ancient Buddhist city, which archaeologists are now racing to excavate.

  • S02E16 Lost Every Day

    • April 29, 2013

    Meet a Colorado woman with a rare neurological disorder who has no sense of direction, even in her own home.

  • S02E17 Vigilante Copy Editor

    • May 6, 2013

    A filmmaker searches for a mysterious vandal who has been correcting grammar on placards in the sculpture garden of the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn.

  • S02E18 A Long Ride Toward a New China

    • May 14, 2013

    Every summer, the blogger “Tiger Temple” bikes around China to report on rural news stories censored by state-run media.

  • S02E19 Sex Offender Village

    • May 21, 2013

    A small community known as Miracle Village, surrounded by sugar cane fields in South Florida, has become a refuge for more than 100 registered sex offenders who seek to rebuild their lives.

  • S02E20 Ode to Bike Sharing

    • May 22, 2013

    In this animation, a New Yorker looks forward to the city’s bike-share program and reminisces about riding his bike when the city was very different.

  • S02E21 Subway Ballet

    • May 28, 2013

    Young men perform daring aerial dances in a crowded New York City subway car.

  • S02E22 Escape From North Korea

    • June 5, 2013

    A smuggler named Dragon attempts to guide North Korean defectors across China into safe asylum.

  • S02E23 West Virginia, Still Home

    • June 19, 2013

    Residents of McDowell County, W.Va., share memories and hopes for their rural community — in jeopardy because of high unemployment and an exodus of young people.

  • S02E24 The Caretaker

    • June 24, 2013

    A short documentary explores the tender relationship between a caretaker who is an undocumented immigrant and an elderly woman in the last months of her life.

  • S02E25 Border Patrol Body Slam

    • July 1, 2013

    In a California lucha libre-style wrestling match, Blue Demon Jr., a self-proclaimed defender of Mexican immigrants, does battle against wrestlers who portray United States border patrol agents.

  • S02E26 Occupy Bakery

    • July 15, 2013

    An immigrant fights to change working conditions at a Manhattan bakery cafe.

  • S02E27 Congo: The Road to Ruin

    • July 22, 2013

    On a dangerous journey from war-torn villages to a refugee camp, Congolese families are caught in the cross-fire.

  • S02E28 An Attack on Equality

    • August 6, 2013

    In New York, widely regarded as a gay-friendly city, reports of attacks on same-sex couples are on the rise. Here, one young couple tells their story.

  • S02E29 Bodies on the Border

    • August 17, 2013

    Forensics experts in Arizona struggle to identify the bodies of migrants who perished while attempting to cross illicitly from Mexico into the United States.

  • S02E30 A Short History of the Highrise Trailer

    • August 28, 2013

    Premiering October 2013, “A Short History of the Highrise” is an interactive documentary that explores the 2,500-year global history of vertical living and issues of social equality.

  • S02E31 No Ordinary Passenger

    • July 15, 2013

    In this short film, Stan Dibben, a winner of the World Sidecar Championship in 1953, recounts the thrills and perils of his profession.

  • S02E32 Paraíso

    • September 8, 2013

    The Op-Doc “Paraíso” (Paradise) reveals the beauty and danger of three immigrant window cleaners’ work on Chicago’s skyscrapers.

  • S02E33 56 Ways of Saying I Don’t Remember

    • September 16, 2013

    Alan Berliner explores memory and forgetting in this short experimental documentary about his cousin Edwin Honig — a poet, translator and professor — and his journey through Alzheimer’s disease.

  • S02E34 An Education in Equality

    • September 23, 2013

    Filmed over 13 years, this short film presents a coming-of-age story of an African-American boy who attends an elite Manhattan prep school.

  • S02E35 A Short History of the Highrise: Part 1

    • October 2, 2013

    In the first episode of a four-part series, "Mud" traces the roots of the residential highrise, from the biblical Tower of Babel to New York's tenement buildings.

  • S02E36 A Short History of the Highrise: Part 2

    • October 7, 2013

    In the second episode of a four-part series, "Concrete" explores how, in New York City and globally, residential high-rises and public housing attempted to foster social equality in the 20th century.

  • S02E37 A Short History of the Highrise: Part 3

    • October 7, 2013

    In the third episode of a four-part series, "Glass" examines the recent proliferation of luxury condos and the growing segregation between the rich and poor.

  • S02E38 A Short History of the Highrise: Part 4

    • October 7, 2013

    In the final episode of a four-part series, "Home" comprises images submitted by New York Times readers, who show their lives in high-rises around the world.

  • S02E39 A Short History of the Morgue

    • October 3, 2013
    • The New York Times
  • S02E40 An Unfair Game

    • October 15, 2013

    This short film explains a troubling situation in English football, where ticket prices have risen to levels so high that many of the fans can no longer afford them.

  • S02E41 Flo: Portrait of a Street Photographer

    • July 15, 2013

    This short documentary profiles the photographer Flo Fox who, in spite of near-blindness and multiple sclerosis, continues her work in the streets of New York.

  • S02E42 The Animated Life of A. R. Wallace

    • November 4, 2013

    This paper-puppet animation celebrates the life of Alfred Russel Wallace, who is co-credited with Charles Darwin for the theory of natural selection.

  • S02E43 Great Expectations for Female Lawyers

    • November 11, 2013

    Twelve years after being interviewed by The New York Times Magazine, five women, who all started their law careers at Debevoise & Plimpton, reflect on ambition, leadership and success.

  • S02E44 November 22, 1963

    • November 20, 2013
    • The New York Times

    Will we ever know the truth about the Kennedy assassination? In a film by Errol Morris, Josiah “Tink” Thompson returns to what has haunted him for 50 years: Frame #313 of the Zapruder film.

  • S02E45 Why Care About the N.S.A.?

    • November 25, 2013

    A short film explores whether ordinary Americans should be concerned about online surveillance.

  • S02E46 Riding With the 12 O’Clock Boys

    • December 2, 2013

    A group of dirt bike riders in Baltimore have been called reckless. But to them, riding their bikes provides a sense of escape.

  • S02E47 35 and Single

    • December 9, 2013

    An Argentine shares her intimate search for love and the answer to this question: To be happy, should she settle down or remain a free spirit?

  • S02E48 Naturally, J.J. Cale

    • December 15, 2013

    This animated Op-Doc explores why J.J. Cale, who wrote such classic songs as “After Midnight,” “Cocaine” and “Call Me the Breeze,” never achieved stardom.

  • S02E49 Spider Drove a Taxi

    • December 17, 2013

    This Op-Doc video celebrates New York City’s taxi drivers through the life of Johnnie Footman, known as Spider, who was the city’s oldest cabby.

  • S02E50 The Night Witch

    • December 19, 2013

    This animated Op-Doc explores the life of Nadezhda Popova, known as Nadia, who became a World War II hero as part of a Soviet all-female bombing regiment.

  • S02E51 Christmas Icon Reform

    • December 23, 2013

    Santa has gone too soft on kids, argues this animated Op-Doc, prompting the need for more frightening Christmas-season icons - like the German Krampus or Japanese Namahage.

  • S02E52 Daredevil on a Snowmobile

    • December 24, 2013

    This Op-Doc celebrates the achievements of Caleb Moore, a competitive snowmobiler who was the first to fatally crash at the X Games.

Season 3

  • S03E01 Running on Fumes in North Dakota

    • January 13, 2014

    A young woman, lured to North Dakota for a truck-driving job in the oil industry, shares her agonizing existence in an isolated boomtown.

  • S03E02 Notes on Blindness

    • January 15, 2014

    After the writer John Hull became completely blind, he kept an audio diary of his experience. A short film by Peter Middleton and James Spinney is a dramatization using those recordings.

  • S03E03 China’s Web Junkies

    • January 19, 2014

    A short documentary about a Chinese boot-camp-style treatment center for young men “addicted” to the Internet.

  • S03E04 Sarah's Uncertain Path

    • January 21, 2014

    Profiling a pregnant teenager in Missouri, this short documentary provides a window into rural poverty in America's heartland.

  • S03E05 When Loud Music Turned Deadly

    • February 3, 2014

    This video tells the story of a black teenager in Florida who was killed by a white man after an argument over loud music. The slain youth’s father shares his loss.

  • S03E06 VHS vs. Communism

    • February 17, 2014

    In Communist Romania in the 1980s, a young translator became an unlikely voice of freedom. She illicitly dubbed thousands of foreign films, distributed on VHS tapes, turning B-movie stars into heroes.

  • S03E07 Chinese, on the Inside

    • March 3, 2014

    Catie and Kimberly were adopted from China by a couple from Maine, who attempt to pass on a culture they've never known firsthand.

  • S03E08 My Brother, Teddy

    • March 10, 2014

    This short film captures a young girl’s love for her brother, who has cerebral palsy.

  • S03E09 Subway Alarm

    • March 18, 2014

    A New Yorker questions whether the alarms on emergency exit doors in the New York subway system are necessary safety measures — or harmful annoyances.

  • S03E10 Slomo

    • March 31, 2014

    Dr. John Kitchin quit a medical career to pursue his passion: skating along the boardwalk of San Diego’s Pacific Beach. He calls himself “Slomo.”

  • S03E11 The Deadly Cost of Fashion

    • April 14, 2014

    A photojournalist who covered last year’s deadly collapse of the Rana Plaza building in Bangladesh draws connections to New York from clothing labels he found in the rubble.

  • S03E12 Animals Are Persons Too

    • April 23, 2014

    This short documentary follows the lawyer Steven Wise’s effort to break down the legal wall that separates animals from humans.

  • S03E13 Verbatim: What Is a Photocopier?

    • April 27, 2014
  • S03E14 Love and Stuff

    • May 7, 2014

    After her mother passes away, the filmmaker Judith Helfand struggles to pack up her things — figuring out what to keep and how to let go.

  • S03E15 Courtroom Sketch Artist

    • May 12, 2014

    This short documentary captures the rise and fall of a courtroom sketch artist in Texas.

  • S03E16 Wiring The Amazon

    • May 19, 2014

    This short documentary chronicles a remote Peruvian village’s four-year struggle to get Internet access.

  • S03E17 Vanishing Island

    • June 2, 2014

    This short documentary profiles residents of the Isle de Jean Charles in Louisiana, as they confront a future threatened by sinking shorelines and rising seas.

  • S03E18 Pass it On

    • June 8, 2014

    This short video shows how a Congolese man turns scraps into a soccer ball for village children, so they can play the sport they love.

  • S03E19 Gnarly in Pink

    • June 23, 2014

    This short film celebrates the “Pink Helmet Posse,” three 6-year-old girls who share an unusual passion: skateboarding.

  • S03E20 A Threat to Internet Freedom

    • July 9, 2014

    New rules proposed by the F.C.C. could divide the Internet into fast lanes and slow lanes, violating the central concept of “net neutrality.”

  • S03E21 Kite Fight

    • July 15, 2014

    In the crowded favelas of Rio de Janeiro, flying kites is more than a leisurely escape: It’s also a playful form of battle.

  • S03E22 Two Countries, No Home

    • July 22, 2014

    After having grown up in the United States as an undocumented immigrant, Rufino Santiz Díaz decided to go back to Mexico — and now finds himself caught between two worlds.

  • S03E23 A Threat to Cambodia's Sacred Forests

    • July 28, 2014

    In a remote valley in southwest Cambodia, an indigenous group fights to protect its homes from the looming construction of a hydroelectric dam.

  • S03E24 The Marijuana Divide

    • August 2, 2014

    In Colorado, two towns near each other have divergent reactions to their state’s legalization of marijuana.

  • S03E25 My Life After Manson

    • August 4, 2014

    Forty-five years ago, Patricia Krenwinkel killed for Charles Manson. Now she provides an emotional account of her life from prison.

  • S03E26 Who Speaks Wukchumni?

    • August 18, 2014

    This short documentary profiles the last fluent speaker of Wukchumni, a Native American language, and her creation of a comprehensive dictionary.

  • S03E27 A Marriage to Remember

    • July 28, 2014

    In this short documentary, the filmmaker Banker White explores how Alzheimer’s disease has revealed the strength of his parents’ marriage.

  • S03E28 Pastor With a Punch

    • September 8, 2014

    In this short documentary, a pastor runs a “fight ministry” out of his church in Rochester, N.Y.

  • S03E29 Seeing the Invisible

    • September 15, 2014

    This animated documentary celebrates the 17th-century citizen scientist Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, whose discovery of microbes would change our view of the biological world.

  • S03E30 Brown's "Rape List," Revisited

    • September 24, 2014

    Brown University faces questions about how it responds to a student’s charge of sexual assault, two decades after similar accusations sparked a national reform movement.

  • S03E31 Leymah Gbowee: The Dream

    • October 9, 2014

    Through her activism to topple Liberia’s dictator, Leymah Gbowee was able to restore her own faith in humanity. Part 1 of “Three Short Films About Peace.”

  • S03E32 Lech Walesa: The Shipyard

    • October 9, 2014

    The former Polish president Lech Walesa explains how he defied Communist rule to help bring down the Iron Curtain. Part 2 of “Three Short Films About Peace.”

  • S03E33 Bob Geldof: The Moment

    • October 9, 2014

    The Irish rocker Bob Geldof used the power of music to combat famine in Africa. Now he recalls the best day of his life. Part 3 of “Three Short Films About Peace.”

  • S03E34 Another Tea?

    • October 20, 2014

    During their monthly gatherings for tea, a group of Chilean women reflect on the past in a ritual that has held their friendships together for 60 years.

  • S03E35 San Quentin's Giants

    • October 24, 2014

    At one of California’s most notorious prisons, baseball teams take the field.

  • S03E36 First Bite

    • October 30, 2014

    This animated vampire tale is based on an original 18th Century written account from the Balkans.

  • S03E37 Lone Star Candidate

    • November 2, 2014

    This short documentary profiles Mike Minter, an underfunded Democrat who seeks election against a Republican incumbent in one of the most conservative districts of Texas.

  • S03E38 Gorillas in the Crossfire

    • November 7, 2014

    A national park ranger in the Democratic Republic of Congo struggles to protect gorillas from a brutal civil war.

  • S03E39 Re-enacting the Vietnam War

    • November 10, 2014

    Each year in Oregon, a group of men gather to re-create a war that so many Americans have tried to forget.

  • S03E40 We Are Penn State

    • November 18, 2014

    At a bronze statue of Joe Paterno, the former Penn State football coach, a critic and fans spar over his legacy.

  • S03E41 Toys of War

    • December 10, 2014

    Molding clay into scenes of war, displaced children tell their story in South Sudan in this short documentary.

  • S03E42 An Army for Afghanistan

    • December 15, 2014

    In this short documentary, a front-line company of Afghan soldiers in Helmand, the country’s most dangerous province, faces new difficulties as their foreign allies prepare to withdraw.

  • S03E43 The Case Against Torture

    • December 21, 2014

    In this short documentary, a former defense lawyer for prisoners at Guantánamo Bay argues against the C.I.A.’s use of torture.

  • S03E44 No Guns for Christmas

    • December 22, 2014

    Based on two police shootings in Ohio, this short documentary questions whether toy guns can really be innocent gifts.

Season 4

  • S04E01 An African's Message for America

    • January 5, 2015

    This short documentary profiles a Kenyan activist who asks American student volunteers: “Why do you want to help us? Help your own country.”

  • S04E02 Charlie Hebdo, Before the Massacre

    • January 9, 2015

    In this short documentary filmed at Charlie Hebdo in 2006, cartoonists and editors design a satirical front page image of Muhammad.

  • S04E03 The Black Panthers Revisted

    • January 22, 2015

    This short documentary explores what we can learn from the Black Panther party in confronting police violence 50 years later.

  • S04E04 Midnight Three and Six

    • January 26, 2015

    This short documentary shows a mother’s efforts to manage her daughter’s daily struggle with a life-threatening condition: Type I diabetes.

  • S04E05 Hotel 22

    • January 28, 2015

    In Silicon Valley, the region’s homeless use a 24-hour bus line as a shelter at night.

  • S04E06 Melody

    • February 3, 2015

    In this short documentary, students in a youth orchestra program in Chile pursue their love of music to escape poverty.

  • S04E07 Our Curse

    • February 3, 2015

  • S04E08 Animated Life: Pangea

    • February 17, 2015

    This animated documentary tells the story of polar explorer Alfred Wegener, the unlikely scientist behind continental drift theory.

  • S04E09 Kaboom!

    • February 24, 2015

    This short documentary profiles a couple who spend their lives pursuing their passion for blowing things up.

  • S04E10 Holocaust Survivor Band

    • March 3, 2015

    This short documentary profiles two elderly Holocaust survivors in Florida who recently formed their own klezmer band.

  • S04E11 Umbrella Cam's View of Wintry New York

    • March 3, 2015

    A camera mounted on an umbrella captures scenes of New Yorkers struggling through a late winter snow across the Brooklyn Bridge into Manhattan.

  • S04E12 A Call From Selma

    • March 6, 2015

    This short documentary explores how the murder of a white minister in Selma, Ala., helped catalyze the civil rights movement.

  • S04E13 A Conversation With My Black Son

    • March 17, 2015

    In this short documentary, parents reveal their struggles with telling their black sons that they may be targets of racial profiling by the police.

  • S04E14 The Bull Rider

    • April 8, 2015

    This short documentary profiles the champion bull rider Gary Leffew, whose insights on rodeos apply far beyond the sport.

  • S04E15 The Last Reel

    • April 14, 2015

    As cinemas across the United States transition to digital projectors, this short documentary celebrates the beauty of traditional 35-millimeter film.

  • S04E16 A Danger on the Rails

    • April 21, 2015

    This short documentary warns about the dangers posed by trains that transport explosive oil across North America.

  • S04E17 A Sustainable Chef

    • April 22, 2015

    This short documentary explains why one world-class chef overhauled his menu to emphasize sustainable ingredients.

  • S04E18 Rent-a-Foreigner in China

    • April 28, 2015

    In this short documentary, housing developers in China hire ordinary foreigners to pose as celebrities, boosting flagging property sales.

  • S04E19 A Conversation About Growing Up Black

    • May 7, 2015

    In this short documentary, young black men explain the particular challenges they face growing up in America.

  • S04E20 My Enemy, My Brother

    • May 13, 2015

    In this short documentary, two survivors of a brutal war in the Middle East meet again years later under astonishing circumstances.

  • S04E21 Shot in the Name of Art

    • May 20, 2015

    This short documentary celebrates the late conceptual artist Chris Burden’s landmark work “Shoot,” in which a friend shot him in the arm.

  • S04E22 Transgender, at War and in Love

    • June 4, 2015

    This short documentary shares the challenges of a transgender military couple, who are banned from serving openly.

  • S04E23 The Art of Dissent

    • June 9, 2015

    Laura Poitras documents the dissidents Ai Weiwei and Jacob Appelbaum as they collaborate on an art project.

  • S04E24 Who Sounds Gay?

    • June 23, 2015

    This short documentary explores the reasons that some men sound stereotypically gay, whether they are or not.

  • S04E25 Elder: A Mormon Love Story

    • June 25, 2015

    This short documentary tells the story of a gay Mormon’s love affair while he served on a mission in Italy.

  • S04E26 A Conversation With White People on Race

    • July 1, 2015

    This short documentary features interviews with white people on the challenges of talking about race.

  • S04E27 A Ride Home From Prison

    • July 16, 2015

    This short Op-Doc documentary profiles a former prisoner who guides men released from life sentences in California through their first hours of freedom.

  • S04E28 Sandorkraut: A Pickle Maker

    • July 29, 2015

    This short documentary profiles the queer farmer and food writer Sandor Katz, whose work in culinary fermentation transformed his relationship with life and death.

  • S04E29 Verbatim: The Ferguson Case

    • August 5, 2015

    This short video juxtaposes the reenacted testimony of two key witnesses in the shooting of the unarmed black teenager Michael Brown by a police officer in Ferguson, MO.

  • S04E30 We Need Brain: Songify the G.O.P.Debate

    • August 7, 2015

    The Gregory Brothers present a musical mash-up video of the first Republican presidential debate of 2016.

  • S04E31 Climbing the Shark's Fin

    • August 11, 2015

    This short documentary chronicles the ordeal of three mountain climbers attempting one of the most elusive first ascents in the Himalayas.

  • S04E32 Diving for Scallops

    • August 18, 2015

    This short documentary profiles a fisherman in Maine who practices a fading craft: diving for sea scallops on the ocean floor.

  • S04E33 Separatist

    • September 9, 2015

    In this short documentary, a white separatist explains why he wanted to help transform a small North Dakota town into an all-white enclave.

  • S04E34 My Silver Hair

    • September 16, 2015

    In this short animation, a New Yorker explains why she wears her hair in its natural color.

  • S04E35 Bible Belt Atheist

    • September 22, 2015

    In this short documentary, a former Pentecostal preacher starts a secular congregation in the heart of the Bible Belt.

  • S04E36 Stray Bullet

    • October 7, 2015

    This short documentary follows a mother’s devotion after her 11-year-old daughter is struck by a stray bullet in New York City.

  • S04E37 Lullaby

    • October 14, 2015

    In this short documentary, young mothers in a homeless shelter write lullabies to bond with their babies.

  • S04E38 Marathon

    • October 27, 2015

    An Ecuadorian prep-chef explains how he’s become one of the fastest marathon runners in New York City.

  • S04E39 Would Jesus Wear a Sidearm?

    • October 30, 2015

    In this short documentary, a prominent leader of the Christian right explains why he left the Republican Party over guns.

  • S04E40 Vic Invades

    • November 3, 2015

    “UrbExers” are extreme explorers who infiltrate subways and skyscrapers for adventure—and the perfect photograph.

  • S04E41 A Conversation with Police on Race

    • November 11, 2015

    In this short documentary, former officers share their thoughts on policing and race in America.

  • S04E42 A Conversation With Black Women on Race

    • December 1, 2015

    In this short documentary, black women talk about the challenges they face in society.

  • S04E43 Animated Life: Mary Leakey

    • December 8, 2015

    This short documentary remembers the paleoanthropologist Mary Leakey, who discovered footprints of human ancestors on the African savanna.

  • S04E44 Verbatim: Follow the Chicken

    • December 15, 2015

    In this dramatization of transcripts from a legal deposition, lawyers grapple with a plaintiff’s bizarre testimony about the destruction of his chicken’s pasture.

  • S04E45 Animated Life: Coelacanth

    • December 22, 2015

    This short video celebrates the discovery of the coelacanth, the fossil-like fish time left behind.

  • S04E46 Verbatim: Expert Witness

    • December 29, 2015

    In this dramatization of transcripts from a legal deposition, a so-called “expert witness” fails to perform middle school math.

Season 5

  • S05E01 Summer's Choice

    • January 25, 2016

    In this short documentary, a talented teenager in the Mojave Desert is torn between ​​​her goal of attending art school and wanting to help support her family.

  • S05E02 Another Kind of Girl

    • January 27, 2016

    In this short documentary, a 17-year-old Syrian films an intimate portrait of life in her refugee camp.

  • S05E03 Object: Diving Below the Ice

    • February 11, 2016

    This short film follows a diver on a search below the ice.

  • S05E04 How to Win an Election

    • February 18, 2016

    A leading political strategist explains how candidates use the art of storytelling to help swing elections.

  • S05E05 A Conversation With Latinos on Race

    • February 29, 2016

    In this short documentary, Latinos grapple with defining their ethnic and racial identities.

  • S05E06 Games You Can't Win

    • March 17, 2016

    A​ transgender woman, a sufferer of severe mental illness​, and the parents of a child with cancer transform their experiences into intensely personal video games.

  • S05E07 Unsilenced

    • March 22, 2016

    An activist is murdered on-air while hosting a radio show for fellow displaced residents of a rural town in Mexico.

  • S05E08 Late December

    • March 30, 2016

    After 63 years of marriage, a man’s devotion to his wife is unbroken by Alzheimer’s.

  • S05E09 A Conversation With Asian-Americans on Race

    • April 5, 2016

    Asian-Americans confront stereotypes about their community.

  • S05E10 Fashion vs. Art

    • April 15, 2016

    Fashion occupies a prime position in our culture and economy. But is it art?

  • S05E11 Manufacturing China's Future

    • April 26, 2016

    A mayor tries to secure his city’s future… by tearing it down.

  • S05E12 I Think This Is the Closest to How the Footage Looked

    • May 6, 2016

    A man brings objects to life in a struggle to recreate the lost memory of his mother’s last day.

  • S05E13 Demon in the Freezer

    • May 17, 2016
    • The New York Times

  • S05E14 The Shampoo Summit

    • May 24, 2016

    In a hair salon in Israel, Arab and Jewish women find common ground… in a sink.

  • S05E15 Afghanistan by Choice

    • June 9, 2016

    How do you make the wrenching decision of whether to leave your homeland?

  • S05E16 The Chosen Life

    • June 16, 2016

    There are only a few doctors left in Alabama who provide abortions. Yashica Robinson is one of them.

  • S05E17 Who Makes the Bronx

    • June 22, 2016

    Antonio Guzmán makes a living by knowing how to peel the perfect orange. Part of a series about the workers of Jerome Avenue, in the Bronx.

  • S05E18 Not Dead Yet

    • July 5, 2016

    At the age of 93, Norman Lear is still entertaining America. What’s his secret?

  • S05E19 Slow to Show

    • July 13, 2016

    Every year, the city of Odessa, Tex., is witness to a strange phenomenon: cars that fly.

  • S05E20 I, Destini

    • August 2, 2016

    A racist system. A brother in jail. One teenage girl turned to animation to make sense of it all.

  • S05E21 My Deadly, Beautiful City

    • August 9, 2016

    The arctic mining city of Norilsk is one of the most polluted in the world — but many residents are still proud to call it home.

  • S05E22 Long-Term Parking

    • September 6, 2016

    An airport parking lot in Los Angeles has become an improvised village of airline workers.

  • S05E23 I'm Not From Here

    • September 13, 2016

    Day after day, an elderly woman recalls the Spanish Basque country of her youth — while forgetting she is consigned to a retirement home in Chile.

  • S05E24 The Many Sad Fates of Mr. Toledano

    • September 20, 2016

    Phillip Toledano was terrified of growing old. So he decided to do it as many times as possible.

  • S05E25 4.1 Miles

    • September 28, 2016

    A coast guard captain on a small Greek island is suddenly charged with saving thousands of refugees from drowning at sea.

  • S05E26 Supreme Court v. the American Voter

    • September 30, 2016

    This year’s election will be the first in over 50 years without the full protection of the Voting Rights Act.

  • S05E27 Taller Than the Trees

    • October 6, 2016

    Japanese men haven’t traditionally been caregivers. But for Masami Hayata, it’s a crucial part of raising his family.

  • S05E28 The Presidential Debate in Song: Who's Gonna Work It Out?

    • October 10, 2016

    Joseph Gordon-Levitt and the Gregory Brothers team up to present a musical mashup of highlights from the second 2016 presidential debate.

  • S05E29 "Never Trump." But Then What?

    • October 14, 2016

    At the annual RedState gathering, prominent conservatives reflect on how Donald Trump has divided their party.

  • S05E30 Bad Hombres, Nasty Women: The Presidential Debate in Song

    • October 20, 2016

    Weird Al Yankovic and the Gregory Brothers stage an apocalyptic musical at the final debate of the 2016 presidential campaign.

  • S05E31 Pashtana's Lesson

    • October 29, 2016

    A teenage girl resists her arranged marriage so she can stay in school.

  • S05E32 The Price of Certainty

    • November 1, 2016

    There's more to what you believe than you think.

  • S05E33 Pickle

    • October 20, 2016

    A couple builds an unlikely menagerie of obese chickens, paraplegic possums, and bodyless fish.

  • S05E34 Dangerous Curves

    • December 6, 2016

    The plus-size women who pole dance.

  • S05E35 Indefinite

    • December 19, 2016

    In Britain, some immigrants face a future of indefinite detention.

  • S05E36 Policing Flint

    • November 21, 2016

    Step inside a police department struggling with budget cuts and public distrust.

  • S05E37 Errol Moris: "Demon in the Freezer"

    • May 17, 2016

Season 6

Season 7

  • S07E01 Birth Control Your Own Adventure

    • January 9, 2018
    • The New York Times

    How my side effects made me four different people

  • S07E02 Black Colleges in the Age of Trump

    • January 16, 2018
    • The New York Times

    The President’s dealings with these important institutions has ranged from out-of-touch to outright bizarre.

  • S07E03 My Dead Dad's Porno Tapes

    • January 19, 2018
    • The New York Times

    Was my father’s leftover stuff the key to who he really was?

  • S07E04 Baby Brother

    • January 22, 2018
    • The New York Times

    Sometimes coming home is the hardest move of all.

  • S07E05 Sinking Islands, Floating Nation

    • January 24, 2018
    • The New York Times

    Rising sea levels are forcing the nation of Kiribati to make difficult choices.

  • S07E06 Rebel Monk

    • February 6, 2018
    • The New York Times

    Five hundred years ago, Martin Luther shook the church — and the world.

  • S07E07 Arctic Boyhood

    • February 20, 2018
    • The New York Times

    Coming of age on the Greenland tundra.

  • S07E08 2,300 Miles to Work

    • February 27, 2018
    • The New York Times

    An illustrator captures one of the world's largest migrations.

  • S07E09 My Grandfather's Memory Book

    • March 6, 2018
    • The New York Times

    When he died, Byron Levy left behind a vast inheritance — of drawings.

  • S07E10 Sanctuaries of Silence

    • March 27, 2018
    • The New York Times

    Discovering quiet in an ever-noisier world

  • S07E11 Diamenteurs

    • April 17, 2018
    • The New York Times

    Diamonds and humans have more in common than you might think.

  • S07E12 Polar Bears of Hudson Bay

    • April 24, 2018
    • The New York Times

    Polar bears haunt the landscape around the remote town of Churchill in northern Manitoba.

  • S07E13 The Happiest Guy in the World

    • May 1, 2018
    • The New York Times

    Two decades ago, Mario Salcedo went on a cruise — and never came back.

  • S07E14 We Became Fragments

    • May 15, 2018
    • The New York Times

    Ibraheem was just a regular kid — until he lost everything.

  • S07E15 The Pull

    • May 22, 2018
    • The New York Times

    John Bixby was first prescribed opioids when he was 16. Thirteen years later, he’s still struggling to quit.

  • S07E16 The Last Storm

    • June 5, 2018
    • The New York Times

    Mark Zabawa is on a mission: to fight cancer and chase tornadoes.

  • S07E17 A Town Divided Over Blue Lives Matter

    • June 19, 2018
    • The New York Times

    A blue line intended to show support for police instead turned neighbors against each other.

  • S07E18 Searching for Saraswati

    • July 10, 2018
    • The New York Times

    Hindu nationalism reaches new heights in a quest to find a sacred river.

  • S07E19 Death Metal Grandma

    • July 17, 2018
    • The New York Times

    A 96-year-old who fled the Holocaust finds a new way to be heard.

  • S07E20 How Healthcare Makes Disability a Trap

    • July 24, 2018
    • The New York Times

    I have multiple sclerosis. Why can’t I move to be closer to my son?

  • S07E21 Between Sound and Silence

    • August 7, 2018
    • The New York Times

    For a generation of people with cochlear implants, technology is transforming the experience of deafness.

  • S07E22 Calving Season

    • August 14, 2018
    • The New York Times

    A teenager helps her ranching family save calves during a snowy spring.

  • S07E23 Sanctuary City Hotline

    • August 21, 2018
    • The New York Times

    ICE has triggered a perpetual state of fear among undocumented immigrants in the U.S. — even among those living in so-called sanctuary cities.

  • S07E24 Where the Towers Stood

    • September 4, 2018
    • The New York Times

    The World Trade Center wreckage once smoldered here. Now visitors come from around the world to learn, remember and grieve the loss of 9/11.

  • S07E25 Dulce

    • September 18, 2018
    • The New York Times

    In a small Colombian village, a mother guides her daughter through a rite of passage.

  • S07E26 Earthrise

    • October 2, 2018
    • The New York Times

    The first people to see the Earth from the moon were transformed by the experience. In this film, they tell their story.

  • S07E27 Holding On to the Farm

    • October 9, 2018
    • The New York Times

    No one lives there anymore. So what should we do with my family’s land?

  • S07E28 Volte

    • October 2, 2018
    • The New York Times

    In the sport of equestrian vaulting, even a 12-year-old girl can be “too big.”

  • S07E29 What if He Falls?

    • October 31, 2018
    • The New York Times

    Alex Honnold took a huge risk when he made his free solo climb of El Capitan. Did making a film about it make it even riskier?

  • S07E30 While I Yet Live

    • November 13, 2018
    • The New York Times

    A close-knit group of rural African-American women have perfected the distinctive art of quilting.

  • S07E31 Tungs and the Chicken From Hell

    • November 19, 2018
    • The New York Times

    A cautionary tale about the epic power struggle between humans and poultry.

  • S07E32 A Moment in Mexico: A Prisoner in the Family

    • October 2, 2018
    • The New York Times

    Out of desperation, a woman has kept her mentally ill son under lock and key for over twenty years.

  • S07E33 A Moment in Mexico: Justice in Translation

    • December 10, 2018
    • The New York Times

    Many indigenous people who enter the Mexican justice system must navigate it without a translator — even if they don’t speak Spanish.

  • S07E34 A Moment in Mexico: Ruptured City

    • December 10, 2018
    • The New York Times

    In the aftermath of a major earthquake in Mexico City last year, aerial footage captures the resilience of the city’s response.

  • S07E35 A Moment in Mexico: The Diver

    • December 10, 2018
    • The New York Times

    Mexico City employs a diver to clear out clogs and snags from its gigantic sewer system. And he loves it.

  • S07E36 A Moment in Mexico: Children of the Narco Zone

    • December 10, 2018
    • The New York Times

    What it’s like to grow up as the child of an avowed gangster.

Season 8

  • S08E01 After Birth

    • January 8, 2019
    • The New York Times

    I love my baby. But I was unprepared for how childbirth would change my body.

  • S08E02 Traveling While Black

    • January 15, 2019
    • The New York Times

    The Green Book was a critical guide for African-Americans struggling to travel safely in the Jim Crow era. This 360 degree video explores its complicated legacy.

  • S08E03 The Dispossessed

    • January 25, 2019
    • The New York Times

    Hazari is a traditional faith healer, exorcising patients who’ve been possessed. But against the backdrop of the long-running conflict in Kashmir, nothing is as it seems.

  • S08E04 The Atomic Soldiers

    • February 12, 2019
    • The New York Times

    They served near dangerous nuclear tests — and it has haunted them ever since.

  • S08E05 Natural Born Settlers

    • March 19, 2019
    • The New York Times

    I’d never understood the Israeli settlers. So I moved in with them.

  • S08E06 Boca del Lobo

    • May 7, 2019
    • The New York Times

    Mario Guevara, a reporter for Mundo Hispánico, investigates the impact of ICE arrests on his Atlanta community.

  • S08E07 El Vacío

    • May 14, 2019
    • The New York Times

    Years living as an undocumented immigrant taught me not to believe in the American Dream.

  • S08E08 To Be Queen

    • May 28, 2019
    • The New York Times

    In Luling, the “toughest town in Texas”, two Latina high school girls compete to be the next Watermelon Thump Queen.

  • S08E09 Stonewall: The Making of a Monument

    • June 4, 2019
    • The New York Times

    Ever since the 1969 riots on the streets outside New York City’s Stonewall Inn, L.G.B.T.Q. communities have gathered there to express their joy, their anger, their pain and their power.

  • S08E10 Contaminated Memories

    • June 25, 2019
    • The New York Times

    I was certain of my assailant’s identity. Why didn’t an alarm bell go off?

  • S08E11 Growing Up Ethan

    • July 2, 2019
    • The New York Times

    How do you find independence when you’re coming of age with autism?

  • S08E12 Given Away: Korean Adoptees Share Their Stories

    • July 23, 2019
    • The New York Times

    “One of the last things that my grandmother said was, ‘When you grow up, come visit me.’”

  • S08E13 Six Degrees of Immigration

    • July 30, 2019
    • The New York Times

    Can a marriage made of video chats and airplane tickets survive?

  • S08E14 Darlin

    • August 13, 2019
    • The New York Times

    A family divided by immigration authorities struggles to reunite.

  • S08E15 Almost Famous: The King of Fish and Chips

    • August 20, 2019
    • The New York Times

    In the late 1960s, Haddon Salt built a fast food empire. Then Kentucky Fried Chicken came knocking.

  • S08E16 Losing My Son to Syria

    • September 3, 2019
    • The New York Times

    He was 21 years old. And then he left to join the insurgency.

  • S08E17 My American Surrogate

    • September 24, 2019
    • The New York Times

    A Chinese businesswoman in California has become a matchmaker between Chinese parents and American wombs.

  • S08E18 Walk, Run, Cha-Cha

    • January 8, 2019
    • The New York Times

    Paul and Millie Cao lost their youth to the aftermath of the Vietnam War. Forty years later, they are rediscovering themselves on the dance floor.

  • S08E19 Stay Close

    • October 14, 2019
    • The New York Times

    One man’s unlikely path to fencing glory.

  • S08E20 Mumbai's Midnight Gardeners

    • October 29, 2019
    • The New York Times

    Meet the people who keep their city running while the rest of the world sleeps.

  • S08E21 The Church Forests of Ethiopia

    • December 3, 2019
    • The New York Times

    On the Ethiopian highlands, church grounds have become accidental time capsules of biodiversity.

  • S08E22 Almost Famous: Kim I Am

    • December 16, 2019
    • The New York Times

    Kim Hill was a rising singer. She met a young rapper named will.i.am. The rest is history — or is it?

  • S08E23 Almost Famous: The Other Fab Four

    • December 17, 2019
    • The New York Times

    In the mid-1960s, four teenagers from Liverpool were changing the face of pop music. Their names were Mary, Sylvia, Pam and Val.

  • S08E24 Almost Famous: The Lost Astronaut

    • January 8, 2019
    • The New York Times

    In 1963, Ed Dwight Jr. was poised to be NASA’s first African-American astronaut. Until suddenly he wasn’t.

Season 9

  • S09E01 Music and Clowns

    • January 14, 2020
    • The New York Times

    What I wish people understood about having a family member with Down syndrome.

  • S09E02 Betye Saar: Taking Care of Business

    • January 28, 2020
    • The New York Times

    In the first film from our Sundance 2020 series, meet Betye Saar, who says her weapon is art.

  • S09E03 Now Is the Time

    • February 5, 2020
    • The New York Times

    In the next film from our Sundance 2020 series, two brothers carve their community’s first totem pole in nearly a century.

  • S09E04 Single in China

    • February 11, 2020
    • The New York Times

    Dating is hard. A government campaign to get you married is worse.

  • S09E05 Self-Quarantined for the Holidays

    • March 7, 2020
    • The New York Times

    I was stuck inside with my parents during Chinese New Year. Here’s what we did.

  • S09E06 Hysterical Girl

    • March 20, 2020
    • The New York Times

    Op-Docs is premiering one of SXSW’s picks, which re-examines Freud through the lens of his female subject.

  • S09E07 Messages From Quarantine

    • April 2, 2020
    • The New York Times

    In the age of coronavirus, the only way you can see Milan is to fly through it.

  • S09E08 The Sound of Gravity

    • April 28, 2020
    • The New York Times

    Albert Einstein had a theory. These scientists proved it a century later.

  • S09E09 Container

    • May 15, 2020
    • The New York Times

    The agony and anxiety of living in a migrant camp.

  • S09E10 How to Be Alone

    • May 21, 2020
    • The New York Times

    I was struggling with quarantine — until I found the polar explorers.

  • S09E11 All I Have to Offer You Is Me

    • June 16, 2020
    • The New York Times

    Larry Callies comes from a long line of black cowboys living and working on the frontier.

  • S09E12 Forgiveness Day

    • June 23, 2020
    • The New York Times

    “I was young and in denial of my own sexuality.”

  • S09E13 The Torture Letters

    • June 30, 2020
    • The New York Times

    From unjustified stops of Black teenagers to a device to torment people in custody, racist police brutality runs deep.

  • S09E14 Huntsville Station

    • July 7, 2020
    • The New York Times

    For these former inmates in Texas, the rush of emotions that accompany freedom play out at a Greyhound bus station.

  • S09E15 The Lonely Goalkeeper

    • July 21, 2020
    • The New York Times

    Arsenal legend Bob Wilson on the loneliest role in soccer.

  • S09E16 Tears Teacher

    • July 28, 2020
    • The New York Times

    A teacher travels across Japan to encourage adults to cry more.

  • S09E17 Dying in Your Mother's Arms

    • August 11, 2020
    • The New York Times

    A palliative care doctor on finding a “good death” for children in the worst situations.

  • S09E18 Gods From Space

    • August 18, 2020
    • The New York Times

    The Aetherius Society believes in selflessness and extraterrestrial life.

  • S09E19 All Cats Are Gray in the Dark

    • September 8, 2020
    • The New York Times

    The star of this short documentary calls himself "Catman."

  • S09E20 Club Quarantine

    • September 22, 2020
    • The New York Times

    When the coronavirus shut down clubs around the world, I found community in a queer dance party on Zoom.

  • S09E21 All Her Dying Lovers

    • October 6, 2020
    • The New York Times

    One woman’s revenge against the Nazis has become legend in a small Czech town.

  • S09E22 The Spiritual Exercises

    • October 20, 2020
    • The New York Times

    The story of a priest who left the Catholic Church for love.

  • S09E23 Attención! Murderer Next Door

    • November 10, 2020
    • The New York Times

    What to do when your neighbors have carried out crimes against humanity.

  • S09E24 A Concerto Is A Conversation

    • November 24, 2020
    • The New York Times

    A virtuoso jazz pianist and film composer tracks his family’s lineage through his 91-year-old grandfather from Jim Crow Florida to the Walt Disney Concert Hall.

  • S09E25 Menopause Stories

    • December 5, 2020
    • The New York Times

    "There are still many women who think that menopause is the end of your life."

Season 10

  • S10E01 Ark of the Apocalypse

    • January 5, 2021
    • The New York Times

    In a small town in Kentucky, an immense replica of Noah’s ark looms over the countryside.

  • S10E02 Carne

    • January 12, 2021
    • The New York Times

    Five women share the experience of being treated less like a person than like a body — like flesh.

  • S10E03 Another Hayride

    • January 16, 2021
    • The New York Times

    Self-help guru Louise Hay’s “Hayrides” drew in thousands during the hopelessness and government neglect of the AIDS crisis.

  • S10E04 The Field Trip

    • January 28, 2021
    • The New York Times

    Through a day of role-playing, a group of students get an eye-opening introduction to the careers that may await them.

  • S10E05 Tiger and Ox

    • February 9, 2021
    • The New York Times

    A mother told her daughter to keep her father’s absence a secret. Years later, they look back on the stigma they faced as a single-parent family in South Korea.

  • S10E06 The Paradise Next Door

    • February 23, 2021
    • The New York Times

    “Why would I want to hear about death and destruction? I’d rather hear somebody made a hole in one yesterday.”

  • S10E07 Love Factory

    • March 2, 2021
    • The New York Times

    Livestreaming your life to a devoted audience is big business. What happens when the cameras are off?

  • S10E08 Hallelujah Anyway, Anyway.

    • March 16, 2021
    • The New York Times

    A daily routine becomes a symbol of resilience for a New York artist.

  • S10E09 The Death Cleaner

    • March 30, 2021
    • The New York Times

    For a forensic cleaner in Mexico City, healing is at the core of his service.

  • S10E10 H.A.G.S. (Have A Good Summer)

    • April 20, 2021
    • The New York Times

    I don’t know how I feel about adulthood, so I called my middle school friends.

  • S10E11 My Father Was in a Coma for 57 Days. He Awoke to a Pandemic.

    • May 18, 2021
    • The New York Times

    After 57 days in a coma, Julio Lumbreras awoke to learn he had been one of Spain’s earliest Covid-19 patients.

  • S10E12 Bob of the Park

    • May 25, 2021
    • The New York Times

    In this short film, go bird-watching through New York City’s parks with Robert DeCandido, known locally as “Birding Bob.”

  • S10E13 Almost Famous: The Queen of Baseball

    • June 29, 2021
    • The New York Times

    Lusia Harris led her team to three national championships, scored the first basket in women’s Olympic history and was officially drafted by the New Orleans Jazz in 1977.

  • S10E14 A Ship From Guantánamo

    • July 6, 2021
    • The New York Times

    Moath al-Alwi has never been charged with a crime, but has spent over 19 years at the U.S. military detention camp in Cuba. In a new short film, see the art he makes to survive.

  • S10E15 What You'll Remember

    • July 20, 2021
    • The New York Times

    Stable, affordable housing was out of reach for a San Francisco Bay Area family. So they built a home without a house.

  • S10E16 Almost Famous: The Silent Pulse of the Universe

    • July 27, 2021
    • The New York Times

    In 1967, Jocelyn Bell Burnell made a breakthrough in astronomy. But as a woman in science, her role was overlooked.

  • S10E17 Drawings of My BF

    • August 10, 2021
    • The New York Times

    What does love look like? This intimate short film captures the relationship between the artist Wilfrid Wood and his boyfriend-muse, Theo Adamson.

  • S10E18 Almost Famous: The First Report

    • August 24, 2021
    • The New York Times

    As an investigative reporter, Jason Berry exposed the church’s systematic cover-up of sexual abuse. Somehow, it wasn’t enough.

  • S10E19 Don't Go Tellin' Your Mama

    • September 14, 2021
    • The New York Times

    Musician Topaz Jones and directing duo rubberband. reimagine the Black ABCs in this Sundance-winning short film.

  • S10E20 Almost Famous: The Unchosen One

    • September 28, 2021
    • The New York Times

    Devon Michael was a rising child actor in the 1990s. Until he auditioned for “Star Wars.”

  • S10E21 Takeover

    • October 12, 2021
    • The New York Times

    On July 14, 1970, members of the Young Lords took over Lincoln Hospital in the Bronx. Among their demands? Accessible, quality health care for all.

  • S10E22 While Working, ‘You Simply Stop Thinking’

    • November 2, 2021
    • The New York Times

    is work working for us?

  • S10E23 Mission: Hebron

    • November 16, 2021
    • The New York Times

    The director Rona Segal learned filmmaking in the Israel Defense Forces. Now she turns the camera on her fellow soldiers.

  • S10E24 Just Girls

    • December 7, 2021
    • The New York Times

    From period pains and hip dips to bullying and catcalling, five girls talk about the trials of growing up.

Season 11

  • S11E01 Think About the Beautiful Future Ahead

    • January 25, 2022

    When a beloved uncle died, he left behind an inheritance made of love.

  • S11E02 Perfect the Art of Longing

    • February 22, 2022

    A rabbi in a long-term-care facility reflects on what it means to be alive in a state of profound isolation.

  • S11E03 You Can't Stop Spirit

    • March 1, 2022

    For a community of Black women, dressing up as baby dolls is a Mardi Gras tradition and a celebration of freedom.

  • S11E04 Yaren and the Sun

    • March 22, 2022

    Yaren, age 10, lost her mother at 6. She felt alone in her grief — until she attended a camp for kids who have lost someone important.

  • S11E05 Not Even for a Moment Do Things Stand Still

    • April 19, 2022

    Mourners from across the country gathered among hundreds of thousands of white flags to honor those lost to Covid.

  • S11E06 Prosopagnosia

    • May 3, 2022

    Prosopagnosia means “face blindness.” But what does it mean to live with it?

  • S11E07 My Disability Roadmap

    • May 17, 2022

    The path to adulthood is a precarious one for those with disabilities. So Samuel Habib, 21, seeks out guidance from America’s most rebellious disability activists.

  • S11E08 Five Days of Fear

    • June 7, 2022

    Do you worry about the same things as these Warsaw residents?

  • S11E09 Mink!

    • June 23, 2022

    Throughout her life, Representative Patsy Mink challenged the status quo. As a leading advocate of Title IX, she defended the bill against those who sought to weaken it.

  • S11E10 Tuesday Afternoon

    • July 26, 2022

    After nearly 33 years in prison — and over two decades in solitary confinement — Jack Powers embarks on the first day of his new life.

  • S11E11 The Score

    • August 25, 2022

    Fleeing war, a pianist left her dreams behind. Thirty years later, she returns to her piano.

  • S11E12 The Best Chef in the World

    • September 13, 2022

    Sally Schmitt sold her successful Napa Valley establishment, the French Laundry. Then it became “the best restaurant in the world.”

  • S11E13 Pony Boys

    • October 3, 2022

    Two brothers from the Boston suburbs set out on an improbable journey to Montreal’s Expo 67 by hoof.

  • S11E14 Svonni v. the Swedish Tax Agency

    • October 18, 2022

    Indigenous Sami tradition versus Swedish bureaucracy — which one wins this dogfight?

  • S11E15 Long Line of Ladies

    • November 1, 2022

    In Northern California, the Karuk people celebrate a girl’s first period in a coming-of-age ceremony.

  • S11E16 The Benevolents

    • November 14, 2022

    Volunteers at a Montreal call center train to be an ear for a lonely society.

  • S11E17 Party Poster

    • November 21, 2022

    In Mumbai, India, science, religion and politics collide when a group of laundry workers sets out to design a poster in time for a major festival.

  • S11E18 Happiness Is £4 Million

    • November 28, 2022

    An idealistic journalist and a prosperous real estate guru question each other’s worldviews.

  • S11E19 My DuduĊ›

    • December 5, 2022

    A filmmaker documents his mother’s bond with an abandoned baby squirrel.

  • S11E20 Blue Room

    • December 12, 2022

    Incarcerated men and women watch nature videos on a loop in a mental health program.

Season 12

  • S12E01 Victoria

    • January 10, 2023

    In a traditional Catholic town, Alex develops his identity and defends his dreams.

  • S12E02 The Ambassador’s Wife

    • January 24, 2023

    In Burkina Faso, a diplomatic spouse spends her days within the boundaries of the embassy.

  • S12E03 The Missing Parts

    • February 7, 2023

    A filmmaker revisits his time in Cuba to tell a story he left unfinished.

  • S12E04 Stay With Me, the World Is a Devastating Place

    • February 22, 2023

    It was 1970. Over 50 years later, these words serve as a dire warning.

  • S12E05 You Are Always 20

    • March 7, 2023

    When a director gets hold of an action movie he and his best friend made two decades ago, he reconsiders the risks they took as young men

  • S12E06 The Army We Had

    • March 15, 2023

    Nearly 20 years after their deployment to Iraq, veterans grapple with their younger selves and try to make sense of the war.

  • S12E07 Obon

    • April 4, 2023

    Akiko Takakura survived the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. This is her story, in her voice.

  • S12E08 Away

    • April 18, 2023

    Two teenage Ukrainian refugees in Budapest express their pain and grief through art.

  • S12E09 Now I’m in the Kitchen

    • May 9, 2023

    A mother and daughter find a connection in a place they least expected.

  • S12E10 My A.I. Lover

    • May 23, 2023

    Three women reflect on the complexities of their relationships with their A.I. companions.

  • S12E11 Study of a Fight

    • June 6, 2023

    Two actors, partners at the time, discuss relationship conflicts between takes of a scripted scene.

  • S12E12 Hardly Working

    • July 11, 2023

    As background extras, some nonplayer characters are programmed to do one thing forever: drudgery.

  • S12E13 Freshwater

    • July 25, 2023

    Dream Hampton explores water as a force of harmony and devastation as climate change affects her home city of Detroit.

  • S12E14 Control

    • August 8, 2023

    A Northern Irish man’s relationship with a peregrine falcon reveals a personal history of torture during the Troubles.

  • S12E15 Backflip

    • August 22, 2023

    Nikita Diakur tried to do a backflip, and injured himself. With A.I. and a six-core processor, his avatar learns to do one instead.