TV Schedule for PBS World (K35MU-D3) Cottonwood, Etc., AZ
Saturday, May 16th TV listings for PBS World (K35MU-D3) Cottonwood, Etc., AZ
The Whitney Reynolds Show Home Grown
Soccer player Justin Reynolds of Chicago Fire FC reflects on roots and representation; Dr. Patrick Kalenzi shares his journey from immigrant to impact-maker; educator Martha Osornio Ruiz of Marwen shows how nurturing creativity uplifts generations.
Consuelo Mack WealthTrack Great Investor Opportunities
Investor David Giroux.
To the Contrary With Bonnie Erbé New
All-female news analysis of issues and policy affecting the U.S.
Washington Week With The Atlantic New
Journalists Peter Baker, Susan Glasser, Mark Mazzetti and Nancy Youssef.
POV Against the Tide
The friendship between two Koli fishermen in Bombay is fractured by the weight of a changing world and a sea threatened by climate change.
POV Who's Afraid of Nathan Law?
Nathan Law's fight for freedom in Hong Kong.
Consuelo Mack WealthTrack Great Investor Opportunities
Investor David Giroux.
The Whitney Reynolds Show Digging Up Dreams
Bold dreamers like entrepreneur Betsy Fore, Trent Davis, Victoria Thomas and Nigel Barker prove that purpose grows when we dig deep and believe big.
Independent Lens Natchez
The town of Natchez, Miss., confronts the tension between preservation and truth as it wrestles with race, memory and identity.
The Montiers: An American Story
The histories of the Montier and Morrey families in Philadelphia.
POV Against the Tide
The friendship between two Koli fishermen in Bombay is fractured by the weight of a changing world and a sea threatened by climate change.
POV Who's Afraid of Nathan Law?
Nathan Law's fight for freedom in Hong Kong.
To the Contrary With Bonnie Erbé
All-female news analysis of issues and policy affecting the U.S.
Washington Week With The Atlantic
Journalists Peter Baker, Susan Glasser, Mark Mazzetti and Nancy Youssef.
Zocalo Public Square Presents How Do We See Ourselves In Each Other?
American Muslims: A History Revealed A New Hope for Freedom
Malika Bilal, Senior Presenter, Al Jazeera English, tells the story of early Black American Muslim communities through a woman named Florence Watts, who moved to the bustling South Side of Chicago around 1910.
American Muslims: A History Revealed A South Asian in the Southwest
Asma Khalid travels to the American Southwest to tell the story of Mir Dad, a Muslim man from South Asia who comes to the U.S. in 1917 and marries a Mexican-American woman on the California-Arizona border in the early years of the 20th century.
American Masters Nam June Paik: Moon Is the Oldest TV
The evolution of Korean artist Nam June Paik, the father of video art and coiner of the phrase "electronic superhighway."
A French Village The Man Without a Name
Retreating German soldiers temporarily take shelter in the school; Hortense and Heinrich are interrogated by American soldiers.
Shinmachi: Stronger Than a Tsunami
The resilience of the Japanese business district in Hilo, Hawaii, that was destroyed by a tsunami in 1946.
American Masters Nam June Paik: Moon Is the Oldest TV
The evolution of Korean artist Nam June Paik, the father of video art and coiner of the phrase "electronic superhighway."
Betrayed: Surviving An American Concentration Camp
Exploring the long-term effects of the World War II incarceration of Japanese Americans by the U.S. government; intergenerational trauma.
We Said No! No! A Story of Civil Disobedience (2022)
During World War II, thousands of "disloyal" Japanese Americans are sent to the Tule Lake Segregation Center. Those who refuse to say yes to the Loyalty Questionnaire fight for their freedom, dignity and families in a country that has forsaken them.
America ReFramed Geographies of Kinship
Four adult adoptees return to Korea and recover personal histories that were lost when they were adopted.
Ghost Mountain: The Second Killing Fields of Cambodia
A Cambodian refugee makes his way to Connecticut after escaping the killing fields in 1980.
