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1-43 of 43
- While examining the influence of the fast food industry, Morgan Spurlock personally explores the consequences on his health of a diet of solely McDonald's food for one month.
- A naive youth leader is appointed to fill a vacancy in the U.S. Senate. His idealistic plans promptly collide with corruption at home and subterfuge from his hero in Washington, but he tries to forge ahead despite attacks on his character.
- Injuries sustained by two Army rangers behind enemy lines in Afghanistan set off a sequence of events involving a congressman, a journalist and a professor.
- A tycoon hires a tutor to teach his lover proper etiquette, with unexpected results.
- The polarizing search for a new Secretary of State has far-reaching consequences.
- A young man gains significant political influence as the leader of a counterculture rock band with his rallying cry of voting rights for teenagers.
- The story of Washington D.C. radio personality Ralph "Petey" Greene, an ex-con who became a popular talk show host and community activist in the 1960s.
- During the 1950s, a military panel grills Junior Officer John Paul Steckler to find the whereabouts of a Navy destroyer that he temporarily commanded during WWII and is missing.
- In a U.S. army base, a senior army officer leads a group of young men into drug trafficking.
- After Barry Corvall discovers that his new bride is a possible enemy agent, he resigns from the diplomatic service to go undercover to root out an espionage ring planning to destroy American industrial capability.
- Interviews and documentary footage combine with the story of an air-force pilot who encounters aliens.
- An account of the birth and development of the United States.
- Tribulations of a newly elected President.
- Various configurations of the United States Marine Band, including marching band, choir, and symphony orchestra, perform patriotic songs on the National Mall. The performances are intercut with footage of the Marine Corps in training.
- The signs indicate current bounty prices: $50 for a fox, $75 for a bear, only 2 cents for a rabbit. Bugs is insulted.
- Documentary/Historical retrospective of the Gay Rights movement from the 1969 Stonewall riots to the present.
- Examines the new media monopoly by corporations in America versus the public battle for truth and democracy.
- "The Agency" has put Lian and Gabe on trial for crimes they did not commit while they secretly plot to distribute Syphon Filter, a deadly virus, throughout the population. And with Gabe and Lian on trial there would be no one to stop them.
- Droopy the Boy Scout attempts to do good deeds, but has various Spike-related hurdles to overcome first...
- The President wants a military/scientist named Micheal W. Logan dead, after he discovers the Gateway Arch in St. Louis is actually a portal to the Planet X.
- The annual July 4th concert to celebrate America's birthday, which is held on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.
- The annual July 4th concert to celebrate America's birthday, which is held on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.
- John Burkett Ryder is a master of finance with a boundless desire for wealth. No mean avarice, but a love of the power to be gained through riches, a domineering will and an unscrupulous soul. Previous to the opening of the story Ryder has compassed the financial ruin and professional disgrace of Judge Rossmore, of the Supreme Court, to avenge himself for certain adverse decisions which the judge has rendered against the corporation. Shirley Rossmore, the judge's daughter, and young Jefferson Ryder returning from Europe on the same boat, have met and register a pretty story interest in each other, being at the time entirely ignorant of the friction now existing between their respected fathers. Shirley has written a novel, and from Jefferson's description of his father has made the star character of the story a fair prototype of the master of finance. Ryder, without consulting his son's wishes, has already announced an engagement between Jefferson and the daughter of Senator Roberts. Shirley Rossmore's book which is written under the pseudonym of Sarah Green gets into Ryder's house and makes such an impression that the great financier employs a detective to find the author. Sarah Green is found and Ryder employs her to compile his biography, not dreaming that she is the daughter of the judge he has ruined. Now comes the battle between the Lion and the Mouse. The Mouse wins the Lion's admiration by the outspoken audacity of her opinion of his life and moral code. Kate Roberts, whom Ryder had selected to be his son's fiancée, elopes with his aristocratic private secretary, "Fourth groom of the bed chamber to the second Prince of England." Ryder, to pacify his son and to offset his attachment for Shirley Rossmore, suggests that he marry Sarah Green, "who has proved herself far more brilliant than the judge's girl." It is then Shirley's turn; she declares her identity and admits that she has secured certain letters from Ryder's desk that will prove her father's innocence. Ryder orders her from the house, then he sits up all night, consumes innumerable black cigars and finally conquers his own vanity. Next day Jefferson Ryder proposes, but Shirley declares that she will never marry a man that has such a father. With bitter words, Jefferson denounces his father; he tells him that the girl he loves objects to the family. But John Burkett Ryder eats a big slice of humble pie; he announces that he will prevent the impeachment of Judge Rossmore and implores Shirley to accept his son. The Mouse has conquered the Lion.
- The annual July 4th concert to celebrate America's birthday, which is held on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.
- The annual July 4th concert to celebrate America's birthday, which is held on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.
- A new psychological terrorist inspired by Hitler, takes matters into his own hands in Washington D.C., giving a NYPD cop another ultimatum.
- The annual July 4th concert to celebrate America's birthday, which is held on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.
- The annual July 4th concert to celebrate America's birthday, which is held on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.
- Colonel Armistead, accompanied by his faithful servant Amber, travels to Washington, where the colonel has made application for an appointment in the State Department. Arriving in Washington, the colonel sets out for the State Department office. He finds little encouragement there. Time goes on until, with no money to pay rent or for food, the old man is threatened with starvation. His faithful old servant Amber, takes his fiddle to a street corner and plays, thereby collecting enough to pay the landlady. In the meantime, the clerks fake up an official appointment, and send it to the colonel. The colonel is overjoyed and on the way to the office he stops a runaway horse, ignorant of the fact that the frightened young lady in the vehicle is the daughter of the Secretary of State. She thanks him kindly and drives off. He goes on to the office and there learns of the joke played upon him. Soon after, the secretary's daughter calls at her father's office to tell him of her deliverance from certain death. There she discovers the bunch of violets which her father had that morning purchased for her, and which she had in turn, given the old gentleman who had stopped her horse. He had dropped them in the office on learning of the hoax. She coaxes her father to write her deliverer another and legitimate appointment, which the latter does. She arrives with the genuine paper, just too late. The colonel has gone to fill an appointment in the service of his Creator.
- The annual July 4th concert to celebrate America's birthday, which is held on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.
- The annual July 4th concert to celebrate America's birthday, which is held on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.
- Newsreel in five segments features rescue of POWs in Manila in the course of its liberation by American forces; activities at the Red Cross offices in Geneva; major ice jams on two U.S. rivers; current activities of the U.S. Coast Guard; and FDR's report to Congress on the Yalta conference.
- The annual July 4th concert to celebrate America's birthday, which is held on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.
- The annual July 4th concert to celebrate America's birthday, which is held on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.
- Contains segments "A Cheaper Way to Conduct a Witch Hunt" and "Funeral at an HMO".
- Simon explores how faith has shaped American political life.
- A report on the state of the Navy from aboard the USS Nimitz, a United States Navy aircraft carrier operating southeast of Taiwan and China in the western Pacific; profile of billionaire businessman Rocco Commisso.
- 1968–3.1 (44)TV EpisodeRep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.); Alejandro Mayorkas, homeland security secretary; Icelandic scientists make discoveries about forecasting volcanic eruptions.
- Silent films about crowds celebrating the end of World War I in November 1918.