All three episodes of this remarkable series are presented together in a single video on our website. This powerful documentary gives voice to the people of New Orleans, from the terror and chaos of the storm to the long, painful aftermath. As Hurricane Katrina approaches, the city orders a voluntary evacuation that soon becomes mandatory, but for many it is already too late. Trapped by rising waters, stranded in shelters like the Superdome, powerless without federal help, thousands are forced to endure the unendurable. Yet it is also a story of resilience, of neighbors helping neighbors, of grief and recovery. Two decades later, survivors reflect on what they lost and how their culture and communities have been forever changed. With rare footage and emotional testimonies, this film becomes essential viewing.
On Sunday nights, one television host quietly changed America. At the height of segregation, he broke barriers by giving Black musicians and performers a national stage, challenging prejudice in front of millions. His show became a cultural turning point—introducing groundbreaking acts to households across the country and inspiring generations. Through rare archival footage and candid interviews, this documentary reveals how his bold choices reshaped popular culture, fueled the fight for equality, and cemented a legacy that still echoes today.
This documentary chronicles the unconventional journey of three teenage blues musicians—Billy Gibbons, Dusty Hill, and Frank Beard—from their modest Texan origins to becoming one of the most enduring and beloved rock bands in history. Through candid interviews, rare archival footage, and appearances by celebrity fans like Josh Homme, Steve Miller, and Billy Bob Thornton, the film paints an intimate portrait of the band's evolution, their signature style, and the mystique that’s kept them relevant for over five decades. The narrative highlights key moments such as their early bar gigs, their rise during the MTV era, and the influence of their longtime manager Bill Ham. The storytelling allows viewers to connect directly with the band's legacy and the power of their music’s authenticity.
A searing and courageous feature-length documentary delves into one of the most painful and under examined chapters in collegiate athletics history. Through raw, emotional interviews with former student-athletes—including wrestlers and other victims—it confronts the decades of abuse inflicted by Dr. Richard Strauss at Ohio State University, and the systemic failures that allowed him to prey on vulnerable young men across nearly two decades. The film doesn’t just recount trauma; it exposes the deep institutional complicity and silencing, featuring voices demanding truth, accountability, and justice.
A kaleidoscopic immersion into the underground art and music scene of 1960s New York, this documentary eschews conventional rock biographies in favor of a sensory-rich, cinematic experience. Through a vibrant mosaic of avant-garde films, rare archival footage, and personal testimonies, it paints the Velvet Underground not just as a band—but as the beating heart of a creative explosion. By interweaving interviews with John Cale and Maureen Tucker alongside voices from their cultural milieu, the film evokes the fraught, fragile energy of a time when music intersected with performance, queerness, and counterculture. More than a story about a band, it is a journey into a cultural explosion that still resonates today.
Beneath the glare of the public eye, a bipartisan congressional crusade shines new light on one of America's most enduring enigmas. Step into a world where testimonies under oath by military and intelligence insiders reveal jaw-dropping claims of a clandestine program studying unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP), including recovered materials and non-human biological matter. With candid interviews spanning high-ranking officials, physicists, elected leaders, and military whistleblowers, this documentary peels back the curtain on what the government really knows—and the implications could leave even the staunchest skeptics speechless.
Two decades later, survivors reflect on what they lost and how their culture and communities have been forever changed. With rare footage and emotional testimonies, this film becomes essential viewing.