Emmanuelle 2024 - Movies (Feb 12th)
The Simpsons The Past and the Furious 2025 - Movies (Feb 12th)
Goodbye Hello 2024 - Movies (Feb 12th)
Unnatural 2024 - Movies (Feb 12th)
Hounds of War 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Nosferatu 2024 - Movies (Feb 11th)
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The Witcher Sirens of the Deep 2025 - Movies (Feb 11th)
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Becoming Led Zeppelin 2025 - Movies (Feb 10th)
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Fox and Hare Save the Forest 2024 - Movies (Feb 10th)
The Wish Swap 2025 - Movies (Feb 9th)
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Turn Me On 2024 - Movies (Feb 9th)
The ReidOut with Joy Reid - (Feb 13th)
Jen and Chris - (Feb 13th)
Murder by the Sea - (Feb 13th)
Lets Make a Deal - (Feb 13th)
The Price Is Right - (Feb 13th)
My 600-lb Life - (Feb 13th)
Abbott Elementary - (Feb 13th)
Shifting Gears - (Feb 13th)
Jesse Watters Primetime - (Feb 12th)
Hannity - (Feb 12th)
Deadline- White House - (Feb 12th)
Love Island- All Stars - (Feb 12th)
Match of the Day - (Feb 12th)
The Kelly Clarkson Show - (Feb 12th)
The Young and the Restless - (Feb 12th)
The Ingraham Angle - (Feb 12th)
Special Report with Bret Baier - (Feb 12th)
The Five - (Feb 12th)
Outnumbered - (Feb 12th)
Salvage Hunters - (Feb 12th)
Every weekend for six years, Jessica takes a bus from NYC, where she lives and works as a set decorator, to Boston, her hometown, where she cares for her dad, Aloysius, who is 87 and has advanced Alzheimer's disease.
When Harvard PhD student Jennifer Brea is struck down at 28 by a fever that leaves her bedridden, doctors tell her it’s "all in her head." Determined to live, she sets out on a virtual journey to document her story—and four other families' stories—fighting a disease medicine forgot.
Through revealing interviews with experts and victims' families, this gripping documentary examines the problem of deadly foodborne illness in the US.
A poetic and metaphysical view on a daily life routine in a distant nursing home, on a top of the mountain in Uzice, Serbia – the closest place to heaven. This is the last station on earth for old people that called “clients”. While they’re waiting for the end of their lives, prisoned in a desolate nursing home and their old-dying body, they are fighting for the freedom of their soul, the only place they can feel young and alive. A fight between light and darkness, suffering and acceptance, life and death.
The chronic shortage of housing in Central Havana has pushed the city upwards, where life spills out onto the rooftops. Resilient and remarkable, these rooftop dwellers have a privileged point of view on a society in the process of major transformation.
Lou Colpé has been filming her grandparents since she was 15. In the process of this intense relationship, she notices some disconcerting signs in her grandmother: Alzheimer’s is slowing her down. A new film begins, a tougher one: the story of a couple that must face a tremendous challenge. Struggling against the tide of oblivion, the task of filmmaking becomes the ultimate act of resistance. Trying to retain the last images of her grandparents, an intimate conversation begins and echoes through the songs that play on the radio, conjuring lost stories and memories.
Thomas Haemmerli is about to celebrate his fortieth birthday when he learns of his mother's death. A further shock follows when he and his brother Erik discover her apartment, which is filthy and full to bursting with junk. It takes the brothers an entire month to clean out the place. Among the chaos, they find films going back to the 1930s, photos and other memorabilia.
Bill Moyers and filmmaker David Grubin give viewers a rare glimpse into dancer/choreographer Bill T. Jones’s highly acclaimed dance Still/Here. At workshops around the country, people facing life-threatening illnesses are asked to remember the highs and lows of their lives, and even imagine their own deaths. They then transform their feelings into expressive movement, which Jones incorporates into the dance performed later in the program. For this documentary, Jones demonstrates the movements of his own life story: his first encounter with white people, confusion over his sexuality, his partner Arnie Zane’s untimely death from AIDS, and Jones’s own HIV-positive status.
Five million Americans suffer from Alzheimer's disease and dementia—many of them alone in nursing homes. A man with a simple idea discovers that songs embedded deep in memory can ease pain and awaken these fading minds. Joy and life are resuscitated, and our cultural fears over aging are confronted.
In Uganda, AIDS-infected mothers have begun writing what they call Memory Books for their children. Aware of the illness, it is a way for the family to come to terms with the inevitable death that it faces. Hopelessness and desperation are confronted through the collaborative effort of remembering and recording, a process that inspires unexpected strength and even solace in the face of death.