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12:00 AM
P.O.V.: Love & Stuff
“How do you live without your mother?” Filmmaker Judith Helfand asks this unbearable question twice: as a daughter caring for her terminally ill mother, and as an “old new mom,” single parenting her much-longed-for adopted baby girl. With footage from 25 years of first-person filmmaking, shiva babka and 63 boxes of dead parents’ “stuff,” the film asks: what do we really need to leave our children?
1:30 AM
P.O.V.: Wisdom Gone Wild
A vibrant tender cine-poem, a filmmaker collaborates with her Nisei mother as they confront the painful curious reality of wisdom ‘gone wild’ in the shadows of dementia. Made over 16 years, the film blends humor and sadness in an encounter between mother and daughter that blooms into an affectionate portrait of love, care, and a relationship transformed.
3:00 AM
PBS News Hour
4:00 AM
Amanpour and Company
5:00 AM
Pacific Heartbeat: Daughters of the Waves
Although only 20, Vahine Fierro is undaunted by the Teahupo‘o wave, considered the most dangerous in the world. Vahine surfs as no other Polynesian girl has ever surfed. In Tahitian culture, riding the waves is an ancestral activity from which women had been gradually eliminated, but now surfing is open to women, just in time for the Olympics.
6:00 AM
BBC News
6:30 AM
Story in the Public Square
7:00 AM
Newsroom Tokyo
7:27 AM
Newsline In Depth
7:40 AM
Direct Talk
8:00 AM
P.O.V.: Love & Stuff
“How do you live without your mother?” Filmmaker Judith Helfand asks this unbearable question twice: as a daughter caring for her terminally ill mother, and as an “old new mom,” single parenting her much-longed-for adopted baby girl. With footage from 25 years of first-person filmmaking, shiva babka and 63 boxes of dead parents’ “stuff,” the film asks: what do we really need to leave our children?
9:30 AM
P.O.V.: Wisdom Gone Wild
A vibrant tender cine-poem, a filmmaker collaborates with her Nisei mother as they confront the painful curious reality of wisdom ‘gone wild’ in the shadows of dementia. Made over 16 years, the film blends humor and sadness in an encounter between mother and daughter that blooms into an affectionate portrait of love, care, and a relationship transformed.
11:00 AM
Pacific Heartbeat: Daughters of the Waves
Although only 20, Vahine Fierro is undaunted by the Teahupo‘o wave, considered the most dangerous in the world. Vahine surfs as no other Polynesian girl has ever surfed. In Tahitian culture, riding the waves is an ancestral activity from which women had been gradually eliminated, but now surfing is open to women, just in time for the Olympics.
12:00 PM
Amanpour and Company
1:00 PM
Story in the Public Square
1:30 PM
Second Opinion with Joan Lunden: Vaccine Hesitancy
2:00 PM
Julia Robinson and Hilbert's Tenth Problem
3:00 PM
Secrets of the Surface: The Mathematical Vision Of Maryam Mirzakhani Syam
4:00 PM
Roadtrip Nation: A Single Mom's Story
5:00 PM
DW News
5:30 PM
BBC News America
6:00 PM
France 24
6:30 PM
NHK Newsline
7:00 PM
Reel South: The Only Doctor
There is only one doctor in rural Clay County, Georgia, one of the state’s poorest and unhealthiest counties. After several years of working without pay, she can no longer volunteer full-time and faces the possibility of closing her clinic. Committed to her community, she seeks to continue serving her patients amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, dwindling support, and broken promises.
8:00 PM
Eyes on the Prize: Power! 1966-1968
The call for Black Power takes various forms across communities in Black America. In Cleveland, Carl Stokes wins as the first Black mayor of a major American city. The Black Panther Party, armed with books, programs, and guns, is born in Oakland. Substandard teaching practices prompt parents to gain control of a school district but lead them to a showdown with New York City's teachers' union.
9:00 PM
Eyes on the Prize: The Promised Land 1967-1968
Martin Luther King, Jr. stakes out new ground for himself and the fragmenting Civil Rights Movement. King opposes the war in Vietnam. His SCLC embarks on the Poor People's Campaign. In the midst of organizing, King detours to support striking sanitation workers in Memphis, where he is assassinated. His death and the failure of his final campaign mark the end of a major stream of the movement.