We kid you not. Jack Paar's trademark phrase isn't heard once in this clips compendium, which focuses mostly on his 1962-65 prime-time talk show. Guests range from Fidel Castro to the Muppets, as well as Judy Garland, Woody Allen, Jonathan Winters, Shirley MacLaine, and the Smothers Brothers. John and Robert Kennedy also appear as does a piano-playing Richard Nixon. And there's this unlikely duet: Liberace accompanying a promising young heavyweight as he recites "The Legend of Cassius Clay."
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Six-part documentary on the city of Muncie, Indiana - nicknamed "Middletown" after a study in the 1920s deemed it representative of middle America. The series finds that amid the great ...
In 1959, nine Russian students die mysteriously while hiking. Explorer Mike Libecki reinvestigates the mystery and finds clues suggesting the cause of the horrific deaths could be the work of a creature thought only to exist in folklore, the Yeti.
Highlights from past Democratic National Conventions, including acceptance speeches from Harry Truman (1948), John F. Kennedy (1960), Lyndon B. Johnson (1964) and Hubert Humphrey (1968); Robert F. Kennedy's 1964 tribute to President John F. Kennedy; keynote speeches from Barbara Jordan (1976) and Barack Obama (2004); and Edward M. Kennedy's 1980 address.
Experience television history from an African American perspective as revealing interviews and entertaining clips combine to paint an unflinching portrait of life on the small screen from Amos and Andy to Bernie Mac. These are the programs that forever changed the way race was perceived in America, as told through the words of the stars and creators behind the most popular African-American sitcoms, dramas, and mini-series' ever to grace the small screen.