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PBS Hawaiʻi Live TV
Powerful documentary about ordinary people caught up in the Northern Ireland conflict. The devastating impact of the hunger strikes as seen through the eyes of three women. Tit for tat killings, car bombs and assassinations are now part of everyday life.
In 1968 tensions between Catholic and Protestant communities explode after decades of relative peace. Hopes of equality are lost as a civil rights movement is suppressed. The British Army is deployed and Northern Ireland descends into conflict.
A look back at Washington Place, home of Hawaiʻi's last reigning Queen, Liliʻuokalani
Musician David “Saba” Wisnia believed that he survived the horrors of Auschwitz by entertaining the Nazi guards with his beautiful singing voice. Join David and his grandson Avi as the pair embark on a journey exploring the mystery of Saba’s past.
Joseph “Papa” Kanae talks about his
postal service career and sings and
dances “Hawaiian Cowboy.”
Learn the history of plantation life and more in this episode from 1987.
With a trove of gripping footage filmed by protestors, this documentary goes inside the uprising that rocked Iran after the death of a young woman in police custody — and sheds new light on a regime under unprecedented pressure.
Al Capone — the quintessential self-made American man, ruthless killer or both? Just his name sparks images of pin-stripe suits and bloody violence. To this day, Americans are fascinated by this celebrity gangster. The question is why?
The story of Shinji Mikamo, who was a teen in the center of Hiroshima City when the atomic bomb exploded. This film features never-before-seen audio and video recordings, evocative reenactments and archival images that bring the past into the present.
Kumu hula share their early learning experiences from cultural icons in the Native Hawaiian community.