The story of a Mississippi town’s effort to integrate its public schools in 1970.
Kalāheo High School junior Cadence
Wisniewski, seen here in her HIKI NŌ
Student Reflection, hosts the January
17th and 24th episodes from the PBS
Hawai‘i studio. Cadence’s in-studio
hosting launches a new aspect of
HIKI NŌ student learning: media
professionals mentoring students
who have a career interest in
on-camera hosting.
The Busing Battleground viscerally captures the class tensions and racial violence that ensued when Black and white students in Boston were bused for the first time between neighborhoods to comply with a federal desegregation order.
As Van der Valk and the team continue to investigate, they are drawn into the murky world of drug smuggling before revealing a deeper, darker personal tale of envy.
The team works to identify the body found in the chimney flue as forensics reveal the cause of death.
When a prominent barrister and his second wife are found shot dead in their home, the crime scene has uncanny parallels to another double murder 15 years ago – is it a copycat killing or was the wrong man prosecuted? Meanwhile Professor T wants to help but he’s in hospital with appendicitis.
The documentary film and educational initiative Objects and Memory is about how we respond to history while it is happening and how we tell our stories through the otherwise ordinary things in our homes and museums that are associated with people, places, and events.
Making the most of ingredients, limiting waste, and cooking from scratch help to keep a kitchen frugal, as Mary proves that watching pennies does not have to mean sacrificing flavor. School Chef of the Year Holly Charnock shows how she recreates her award-winning recipes for schoolchildren on a budget. Mary then visits Cackleberry Farm to learn about the useful and economical egg.
Vietnamese American Chef Andrew Le is friendly, carefree, fun and funny. He is also passionate about his work, family and mother who is keeper of all the secret broths! In this episode we learn about how the Le family immigrated to Hawaiʻi after the Fall of Saigon in 1975 and became an American success story. Today they own one of the most popular restaurants in Hawaiʻi.
IN OUR SON'S NAME is an intimate portrait of Phyllis and Orlando Rodríguez, whose son, Greg, dies with thousands of others in the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001. The bereaved parents choose reconciliation and nonviolence over vengeance and begin a transformative journey that both confirms and challenges their convictions.