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1-21 of 21
- Justin throws himself and everyone around him into chaos when he attempts to break free from his addiction to his thumb.
- This feature documentary is a lyrical exploration of family, the craft of photography and the power of visual storytelling to create change. Following the careers of former National Geographic Magazine Editor in Chief, Chris Johns, and his daughter Louise, a young freelance photographer, it's an examination of the soul of journalism and its role in preserving a planet balanced on the edge of devastation.
- Over its more than 4-billion-year history, Earth has been home to repeated violent climactic changes, which have caused mass extinctions. And yet, life has survived.
- The Scientist's Warning is a documentary film about a researcher who started a movement to encourage scientists to help turn scientific knowledge into action. It's the story of scientists all over the world awakening to the need to become advocates for the fate of the planet and the humans who depend on it.
- Relive the top Pac-12 game each week in a viewer friendly, snap-to-snap airing every Sunday evening. Episodes will feature enhanced footage not seen in the live game broadcast, including radio calls, postgame sound, relevant tweets and locker room coverage.
- A look at animated shorts produced during World War II with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Superman, Porky Pig, Popeye and more.
- Researchers in Antarctica observe Adelie penguins during the polar summer as they nest and raise chicks.
- Clues from a 13,000-year-old skeleton and a submerged coastline reveal surprising insights about the first humans to arrive in the Americas.
- Which places on earth are poised to generate the next mega-tsunamis and the science of what happens as the wave emerges from open ocean and bears down on land.
- Out of the vast expanse of the Pacific Ocean rises the Olympic peninsula. Its rugged coastline, rain-drenched forests, and high summits are teaming with wildlife. The Olympic peninsula one of most diverse National Parks in North America.
- Under the Pacific Ocean lies a vast area known as the Ring of Fire where 75% of the world's volcanoes lie and 90% of earthquakes occur. Evidence show that its seismic activity could destroy Japan, North America and New Zealand one day.