Sunday, May 29, 2011

Angel on My Shoulder (1946)

The Devil arranges for a deceased gangster to return to Earth as a well-respected judge to make up for his previous life. Starring Paul Muni, Anne Baxter, and Claude Rains.

A New Look at the 'H' Bomb

Full color lecture on the dangers of the new nuclear threat.

Perversion for Profit (1965)

Anti-pornography film produced by financier Charles Keating, linking pornography to the Communist conspiracy and the decline of Western civilization.

Bob Hope Christmas Special (1967)

Presents Bob Hope's annual USO tour of Southeast Asian military bases. Features Raquel Welch, Elaine Dunn, Phil Crosby, Barbara McNair, and Miss World, Madeline Hartog-Bel.

Billy the Kid Returns (1938)

After Pat Garrett kills Billy the Kid, Billy's look-alike Roy Rogers arrives and is mistaken for him.

Big Picture: Operation Readiness

As the Berlin crisis reached a climax during the summer of 1961, President Kennedy, in a televised address to the nation, explained the significance of the situation in that divided city. This week's issue of the THE BIG PICTURE is a graphic portrayal of the steps this nation is taking to bring our armed forces to an advanced stage of readiness.

Big Picture: Assignment Iran

This THE BIG PICTURE film takes the viewer to Fort Bragg, North Carolina, where soldiers were being trained to assist Iranian guerrillas fighting in Iran. These members of the Military Assistance Advisory Group were being sent to act as advisers in the training of the Iranian Imperial Army Special Forces Group.

Atom Bomb (1955)

Early atomic weapons testing.

An American Girl: The Problems of Prejudice (1958)

An adolescent girl in a small town tests her democratic heritage when she pretends to be Jewish and encounters prejudice. She explores the problem of antisemitism by reading her diary at a PTA meeting.

Algiers (1938)

Gaby (Hedy Lamarr) arrives in Algiers engaged to a fat, vulgar borderline-loathsome older man who clearly regards her as a trophy bought and paid for. Why she needed this creep isn't clear. What is clear is her falling in love with the jewel thief Pepe Le Moko (Charles Boyer) who abandons the devoted and clinging Ines (Sigrid Gurie) for this right-off-the-boat hothouse beauty. A Parisian police official (Walter Kingsford) is in Algiers determined to collar Pepe. His forays into the casbah meet with no success and quiet derision from both the locals and some of the French police who understand that the casbah is honeycombed with escape routes and populated with folks eager to thwart the gendarmerie.

Abraham Lincoln (1930)

A biography of the beloved United States president by D. W. Griffith. It stars Walter Huston as Lincoln and Una Merkel, in her first talking role, as Ann Rutledge.

Distant Drummer: Flowers of Darkness (1972)

Traces the history of opium and how it has led to the present day usage of heroin. Examines the methods and procedures of organized crime in transporting the drug to the United States and its toll on the streets of America. Includes methods of combating the problem and interviews with addicts who discuss their compulsion for drugs. Narrator: Paul Newman. Directors: Charles E. Francis, William Templeton. Producer: Frank Kavanaugh.

A Day Called "X"

A nuclear disaster preparation special.

Hercules (1958)

Steve Reeves stars in this spaghetti production of Hercules.

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Hell's House (1932)

Hell's House is a 1932 American drama film directed by Howard Higgin. The screenplay by Paul Gangelin and B. Harrison Orkow, set during the waning days of the Prohibition era, is based on a story by Higgin.

Cast (in credits order):

Bette Davis as Peggy Gardner
Pat O'Brien as Matt Kelly
Junior Durkin as Jimmy Mason
Frank Coghlan Jr. as Shorty
Emma Dunn as Emma Clark
Charley Grapewin as Henry Clark
Morgan Wallace as Frank Gebhardt
Hooper Atchley as Captain Of The Guard
Wallis Clark as Judge Robinson
James A. Marcus as Superintendent Charles Thompson

Groucho Marx: You Bet Your Life Episode - Secret Word "Chair"

Goldilocks and the Three Bears (1958)

The classic fable is told with live trained bears and a cloyingly sweet young girl.

Girls Beware (1961)

Like its precursor Name Unknown (1951), Girls Beware is a trilogy of tragedies brought about by teenage girls' attempts at independent behavior. Covers do's and don'ts in the babysitting situation. Develops the problem of the 'PICK UP' and the girls who go with boys that are too old.

Columbia Revolt (1969)

Documentary on the Columbia University student strike and takeover in 1969.

Helping Johnny Remember (1956)

Surreal social guidance film showing the problems of a boy rejected by other children because he is selfish, uncooperative and domineering.

China Leaps Forward (1958)

This film explores the industry and culture of the cities of Tianjin and Beijing.

Big Request of the Commander (1953)

This U.S. Army film contains information on a counter intelligence survey, security clearances, and a file on a civilian employee, Margaret Gilmore.

Apartheid in South Africa (1957)

This film explores South Africa's apartheid policy, focusing on issues such as race relations, political practices, and segregated dwellings. The footage includes several interviews with black leaders.

Big Picture: To Keep and Bear Arms

Since the discovery of America by Columbus, the rifle has played a significant role in helping our great country fight for and maintain its freedom. This week's issue of THE BIG PICTURE, narrated by Craig Stevens of "Peter Gunn" fame, offers a moving insight into the history of the rifle and the part it has played in our nation's development.

Big Picture: The Third Challenge - Unconventional Warfare

The world has long been familiar with two military challenges posed by the forces of world communism - the challenge of nuclear war and the challenge of large-scale conventional war. The United States and the free world meet these challenges by maintaining the ability to fight both kinds of war-an ability so powerful it has deterred Communists from starting either kind. Today, we are seeing with increasing frequency evidence of another technique the Communists use whenever they consider the occasion appropriate...the technique of unconventional warfare -"The Third Challenge." This challenge involves conspiracy, underground organization and terror. It encourages guerrilla warfare and avoids open conflict and risks by the oblique method of conquering other countries from within. This week's THE BIG PICTURE, narrated by Alexander Scourby, deals with that third challenge and depicts the United States capability to fight this type of war in the far flung reaches of the globe.

Big Picture: The Fight for Vietnam

This issue of THE BIG PICTURE presents a documentary report on the activities of the U.S. Army, Air Force and Navy and their combined effort to help stamp out the threat of communism in South Vietnam. Filmed on location, camera crews widened their coverage to include the composite story of the U.S. Military Assistance Program in this troubled nation. In order to preserve the rights and freedoms of a free people, the United States Armed Forces are training the Vietnamese in order that they will be able to continue to fight the threat of communism.

Big Picture: The Dwight D. Eisenhower Story

"The Dwight D. Eisenhower Story" deals exclusively with the general's life before becoming president, with emphasis on his military career.In as much as his life itself is straightforward, with a drama uniquely its own, the narration by Raymond Massey which accompanies this pictorial record is also straightforward and simple, setting forth the facts, and letting the facts and the picture tell the story. In telling this story of a great American military leader, THE BIG PICTURE camera visits Abilene, Kansas, and the Eisenhower Museum. By using the murals within the museum, the film dissolves into flashbacks in the life of a man who is at once a symbol and a leader of one of the greatest military victories ever won by the United States of America. The dramatic high point comes with the victorious adventure D-Day, and reflects on the incalculable importance of its outcome on the entire world, and on the responsibility it imposed on one man -- Dwight D. Eisenhower.

Big Picture: Pentagon Report

"Pentagon Report" gives the ABCs of a year of crisis in Asia, Berlin, and Cuba. It tells how our Armed Forces meet every challenge and how Communism's guerrilla wars are being combated by counterinsurgency - a major development of the year. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara personally reports on progress in carrying out the President's program for defense of the free world and the President himself pays tribute to all who serve in the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps in his 1963 Message to Congress. Pentagon reporter Peter Hackes narrates this stirring 30-minute color motion picture documentary.

Big Picture: Missile Man

"THE BIG PICTURE" covers training of the Army's missile man -- In this era of both missiles and missile men, THE BIG PICTURE covers training activities at three of the major centers in which the Army's missile men receive their highly specialized training. The United States Army, as almost everyone knows, is placing an ever-increasing emphasis on guided missiles, projectiles which can deliver deadly conventional or atomic warheads to enemy targets hundreds or even thousands of miles away. Perhaps the most remarkable fact about these amazing weapons is that they have all been developed in little more than a decade. The combination of nuclear weapons and guided missiles have, in a very real sense, revolutionized our concepts of warfare. Although the nation has entered a new era, it is not an era of "push button" warfare. For to function, one of these new weapons requires more soldiers, better-trained and more highly-skilled, than any other weapon in the history of war. "Missile Man" dramatically tells the story behind the training of these young men who are taking their places in tomorrow's Army. It is a picture dedicated to this new kind of soldier -- the Army Missile Man.

Chicago Police Department Diversity Series: Cultures













Teenage Devil Dolls (1955)

Pert and pretty high school teen Cassandra Leigh (Barbara Marks) opts for the easy life of a pot-smoking biker in order to avoid the demands of her neurotic career mom (Lucille Price). When Cassandra's grades slip and her college plans fall by the wayside, she marries a love-smitten high school swain (Robert Norman). The devotion of her husband bores the young bride: she looks up her old thrill-seeking buddies and splits from home. This movie is also known as One Way Ticket to Hell.

Teen Workers : Real Jobs, Real Risks (2005)

Gives teens essential information about their rights and responsibilities on the job. One teen tells of her life changing serious injury form her first job. A must see for all working teens.

James Dean in Tales of Tomorrow: The Evil Within - Season 2, Episode 35 (1953)

First aired: May 1, 1953

Strictly Personal (1963)

Indoctrination film for new Women's Army Corps (WAC) trainees. High standards of personal hygiene, good grooming, good health and proper conduct are emphasized.

What Makes Us Tick (1952)

Cartoon promoting the stock market as the engine of America's prosperity.

The Fun of Being Thoughtful (1950)

Social guidance film for teenagers encouraging insight into the motives, tastes and desires of others.

Soapy The Germ Fighter (1951)

Young Billy Martin has to learn that being clean isn't the same as being a sissy. One night, a giant, talking cake of soap wearing tights and a puffy-sleeved shirt assures him of this fact. This film, like many personal hygiene films, taught kids about germs and what to do to avoid them in case their parents neglected to do so.

Snap Out of It! (Emotional Balance) (1951)

Discusses why an achievement-conscious boy becomes emotionally upset when he fails to get an expected 'A' in a history course.

Shy Guy (1947)

Phil (Dick York), new in his high school, follows his father's suggestion and observes the most popular students to determine what makes them popular. By offering to help others he becomes popular himself and sheds his shyness.

Sharing Work At Home (1949)

A family cooperates to an unbelievable degree.

Sex Madness (1938)

This is a typical sex exploitation film from the early 1930s - complete with wild parties, sex out of wedlock, lesbianism, etc. A chorus girl's exposure to the "casting couch" also exposes her to syphilis.

Exploitation filmmakers hoped to capitalize on the taboo subjects of venereal disease, sex before marriage, lesbianism, etc. while skirting the Motion Picture Production Code of 1930 which forbade a film from containing such content. Films like this would tour the United States for years - mostly being shown in rundown, skid row theaters. This film has been re-edited and re-titled ("Human Wreckage", "They Must Be Told", "Trial Marriage", "About Trial Marriage") many times to attract the same audience to film, to take advantage of a taboo subject which may have gotten press recently or to appease local censors who disapproved of the film's content.

Service and Citizenship (1951)

Korean War-era film points out that military service should be understood as part of citizenship and that training in the everyday duties of citizenship is a part of the preparation for military service.

Selling as a Career (1953)

Typical day of work of Art Williams, salesman of sporting goods. Preparations at home for next day's work, fills out reports, estimates sales prospects, schedules calls. Focuses on procedures and personal characteristics.

Self-Conscious Guy (1951)

Shows how feelings of self-consciousness keep a high school boy from doing his classwork well or making friends easily.

Starting Now (Are You Ready for Service? No. 4) (1951)

High school students anticipate and prepare for the military draft.

Going Steady? (1951)

Attempts to provoke teens into discussion on the complex issue of going steady. Provides little support for the practice.

Friday, May 27, 2011

Gangs, Inc. (1941)

When she was a little girl, she saw her father gunned down right in front of her. When she got older, she was tricked into taking the rap for a hit-and-run committed by her boyfriend. The experience left her bitter and so she puts her efforts into becoming a crime-boss. Also known as Paper Bullets.

Cast:

Joan Woodbury as Rita Adams
Jack La Rue as Mickey Roman
Linda Ware as Donna Andrews
John Archer as Bob Elliott
Vince Barnett as Scribbler, a petty forger
Alan Ladd as Jimmy Kelly aka Bill Dugan
Gavin Gordon as Kurt Parrish
Phillip Trent as Harold DeWitt
William Halligan as Police Chief Flynn
George Pembroke as Clarence DeWitt
Selmer Jackson as District Attorney
Kenneth Harlan as Jim Adams
Bryant Washburn as Attorney Bruce King
Alden "Stephen" Chase as Detective Joe Kent
Robert Strange as Lou Wood
Alex Callam as Joe Fagan
Harry Depp as Johnny Mason

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Port of New York (1949)

Port of New York is a 1949 film shot in semi-documentary style. The film is notable for being Yul Brynner's first movie. The film tells the story of a customs and treasury agent out to stop the distribution of opium, that came in on a ship in the Port of New York but was smuggled off by drug dealers. The leader of the drug dealers is the suave Vicola (Brynner).

Planet Outlaws (1953)

Buck Rogers (1939) re-edited from serial to feature format and re-released for theatrical distribution in 1953; an American soldier suspended in time wakes up to find himself in the futuristic world of the year 2500.

Is It Worth Your Life? (1992)

Provides information from the Late Night Worker's Crime Protection Code: WAC 296-832-200 to prevent or defuse a violent situation in retail. Topics addressed include: store appearance; adequate lighting; and lock box use. Suggested behavior in the event of a robbery.

How Quiet Helps at School (1953)

Social guidance film for young children suggesting that they take their noise out to the playground.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

James Dean: TV Movie Debut - Family Theatre - Hill Number One (1951)

This is one of four relatively short films (Family Theatre) made by powerful American religious groups, it tells the story of the Resurrection and Christ's victory on Golgotha. However, most interestingly, this marks the debut of none other than James Dean.

Jayne Mansfield on the Jack Benny Program: Talent Show - Season 7, Episode 8 (1956)

Broadcast December 30, 1956 featuring Jayne Mansfield and Mel Blanc.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Father's Little Dividend (1951)

Newly married Kay Dunstan (Elizabeth Taylor) announces that she and her husband are going to have a baby, leaving her father (Spencer Tracy) having to come to grips with the fact that he will soon be a granddad.

The Self Image Film (If Mirrors Could Speak) (1976)

In hopes of keeping kids' attention, social engineering films would often use supernatural elements to make their points. In this film, we see a magic talking mirror that reflects bratty kids as clowns. Most of the misbehaving kids understand how their behavior is disruptive and make amends. Surprisingly, one kid doesn't care if he is a "clown" and continues being a jerk probably for the rest of his life.

Kid Dynamite (1943)

Kid Dynamite is a 1943 American film directed by Wallace Fox and starring the East Side Kids.

Let's Face It: Nuclear War

A cold war gem from the U.S. Civil Defense Department.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Invisible Ghost (1941)

A horror film starring Béla Lugosi, shot in black and white, and directed by Joseph H. Lewis.

Saturday, May 14, 2011

The Mind-Benders: LSD and the Hallucinogens (1970)

This film explores the history of hallucinogenic drugs, and specifically the effects and therapeutic uses of lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD). Combining graphics that suggest a hallucinogenic experience, snippets of interviews with users (who explain their reasons for taking the drug) and doctors, and taped sessions of research with volunteers, the film delves into the destructive as well as possible positive uses of the drug.

The Cocaine Fiends (1935)

A drug dealer on the run from the law meets an innocent young girl and her brother, and turns them into "cocaine fiends."

The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920)

Often believed to be the first horror film created, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari) is a silent film and was made in Germany in 1920. The story is told in flashback by a young man named Francis who is explaining the events that happened when a carnival came to the mountain village of Holstenwall and about the strange and sinister Dr. Caligari who came with them.

The Boss of Big Town (1942)

The Boss of Big Town is a 1942 American film directed by Arthur Dreifuss.

Cast

* John Litel as Michael Lynn
* Florence Rice as Linda Gregory
* H.B. Warner as Jeffrey Moore
* John Miljan as Craige
* Jean Brooks as Iris Moore
* David Bacon as Dr. Gil Page
* Mary Gordon as Mrs. Lane
* Frank Ferguson as Bram Hart
* Lloyd Ingraham as Insp. Torrence
* John Maxwell as Foster
* Paul Dubov as Graham
* Patricia Prest as Frances Hart

The Adventures of Tartu (1943)

The versatile Robert Donat is Captain Terrence Stevenson a.k.a. Jan Tartu, a British spy well versed in Russian and Romanian that is assigned to aid Czech partisans in destroying a poison gas factory operated by Nazis.

Friday, May 13, 2011

Intolerance (1916)

Director D.W. Griffith's expensive, most ambitious silent film masterpiece Intolerance (1916) is one of the milestones and landmarks in cinematic history. Many reviewers and film historians consider it the greatest film of the silent era. The mammoth film was also subtitled: "A Sun-Play of the Ages" and "Love's Struggle Throughout the Ages." Griffith was inspired to make this film after watching the revolutionary Italian silent film epic Cabiria (1914) by director Giovanni Pastrone. Intolerance was a colossal undertaking filled with monumental sets, lavish period costumes, and more than 3,000 extras. The film consisted of four distinct but parallel stories that demonstrated mankind's intolerance during four different ages in world history.

Dangerous Assignment: The Assassin Ring Story - Season 1, Episode 31 (1952)

Steve Mitchell needs to find out who killed an Arabian king and framed the US for being behind the assassination.

Ingenuity in Action (1959)

Made for hot rod fans; explains how to prepare and enter a car show; also serves as an ethnographic account of the "nomadic tribe of hotrodders."

Monday, May 9, 2011

Great Expectations (1946)

Great Expectations is a 1946 British film which won two Academy Awards and was nominated for three others (best picture, best director and best screenplay). It was directed by David Lean, based on the novel by Charles Dickens and stars John Mills, Valerie Hobson, Finlay Currie, Martita Hunt and Alec Guinness. Jean Simmons, who played the role of the young Estella in the film, later played Miss Havisham in a 1989 version directed by Kevin Connor.

That Junior Miss Spirit (1970)

Age 13 (1955)

The inner life of an "at-risk" teenager, told in an idiosyncratic and often surreal manner. A key film by Sid Davis, who is beginning to emerge as one of the great unsung talents of educational filmmaking. Shot in working-class Inglewood, Hollywood and other parts of the Los Angeles basin.

International Moves the Browns to Sterling Street (1941)

Motivational film for International Silver salespeople describing how installment buying has made silver tableware available to a broad range of consumers.

I Eat Your Skin (1964)

This story of mad scientists, voodoo, and zombies was made in 1964 but wasn't released until 1970 when it was put on a double bill with I Drink Your Blood.

House of Secrets (1936)

House of Secrets is a 1936 American film directed by Roland D. Reed starring Leslie Fenton and Muriel Evans.

The Fast and the Furious (1955)

A man wrongly imprisoned for murder (John Ireland) breaks out of jail. He wants to clear his name, but with the police pursuing him, he's forced to take a beautiful young woman, driving a fast sports car, hostage and slip into a cross-border sports car race to try to make it to Mexico before the police get him.

Cast

* John Ireland as Frank Webster
* Dorothy Malone as Connie Adair
* Bruce Carlisle as Faber
* 'Snub' Pollard as a park caretaker

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Fighting Men: Killed Or Be Killed (1943)

U.S. War Department Training Film: Shows that there are no rules of sportsmanship or fair play on battle field. "Anything goes when the stakes are kill or be killed." Soldiers are encouraged to use any weapon that comes to hand. Weapon can be anything from your close friend to your rifle, bayonet or hand grenade.

Groucho Marx: You Bet Your Life Episode - Secret Word "Water"

The Fat Spy (1966)

Off the coast of Florida, a nearly-deserted island is rumored to have the fountain of youth. A boatload of teenage kids are headed there for a scavenger hunt. Wellington, the island's wealthy owner, is none too happy about that, so he dispatches his daughter, Junior, to get rid of them. She's happy to go because her sweetie, Irving, is the island's only resident. Junior sends Irving to spy on the kids to find out what they know. Irving's twin brother, Herman, and Herman's high-school sweetheart, Camille Salamander, are also headed for the island with their own nefarious plans. Is the fountain of youth real, and if so, who will get to it first?

Starring:
Phyllis Diller
Jack E. Leonard
Brian Donlevy
Jayne Mansfield

Christopher Hitchens' Appearances on CNN: TV Debates and Interviews (2000-2010)

A request was submitted recently for Christopher Hitchens' appearances on CNN's Crossfire. While CNN's archives of footage remain largely unavailable to the general public, their archive of show transcripts is well maintained and continues to be published regularly. As a result, it is possible to read transcripts of all of Hitchens' appearances on CNN from 2000 to present. That list is presented below, accompanied by online video clips where available:

June 21, 2000 - Larry King Live: Can Prince William Save the British Monarchy?

April 2, 2001 - TalkBack Live: Spy Plane Standoff: What Should the Bush Administration Do Next?

June 12, 2001 - CNN Crossfire: Should President Bush Care About Europe's Opinion of Him?

December 1, 2001 - CNN Live Event/Special: Sessions, Murphy Debate Use of Military Tribunals; Willis, Frederick Discuss U.S. Recession; Frank, Hitchens Talk About Military Efforts

March 6, 2003 - CNN Crossfire: Is Bush Getting Read to Attack Iraq?; What Are the British Cooking Up at the U.N.?

March 10, 2003 - CNN Connie Chung Tonight: France Refuses to Support New Resolution Under Any Circumstances; Will U.N. Defeat Stop U.S. From Invasion?

May 8, 2003 - CNN Lou Dobbs Moneyline: SARS Death Toll Reaches 506; FBI Contact Indicted for Spying

June 27, 2003 - International Correspondents

July 11, 2003 - International Correspondents

September 10, 2003 - CNN Newsnight Aaron Brown: New al Qaeda tape released; Rumsfeld Heckled At National Press Club; Problems In Iraq Are Not Insurmountable

May 29, 2004 - International Correspondents: 'NY Times' Issues Mea Culpa Over Iraqi WMD Coverage

June 25, 2004 - CNN Crossfire: Will 'Fahrenheit 9/11' Impact Presidential Election?

July 4, 2004 - CNN Reliable Sources: Are Media Ganging Up on Michael Moore?; Interview With Bob Edwards

November 10, 2004 - Lou Dobbs Tonight: Bush Chooses White House Counsel To Replace Ashcroft; US, Iraqi Forces Regaining Control Of Falluja; Interview with John Thune

January 31, 2005 - Insight: Iraq Elections

June 25, 2005 - International Correspondents: Coverage of Iranian Election

January 17, 2006 - Paula Zahn Now: Hillary Clinton Under Fire; Confessed Killer Walks Free; The Royal Stranger

March 16, 2006 - CNN Larry King Live: U.S. Launches Massive Offensive in Iraq; Interview With Macaulay Culkin

March 17, 2006 - Anderson Cooper 360 Degrees: Operation Swarmer Continues; Taliban Gaining Power in Pakistan?; Spring Break Serial Killer?



November 1, 2006 - The Situation Room: President Bush Gives Vote of Confidence to Rumsfeld, Cheney; Florida Republicans Have Another Controversy; Will Kerry's Apology Be Enough?



May 3, 2007 - Lou Dobbs Tonight: Syria's Meddling: Interfering in Iraq War; Battle Over Iraq; Top al Qaeda Operative Killed



May 9, 2007 - Anderson Cooper 360 Degrees: What Is a Mormon?; Interview With Christopher Hitchens

May 9, 2007 - Lou Dobbs Tonight: Lowering the Bar: Redefining Success in Iraq; Cheney in Iraq; New Poll on Voter Concerns; Churches Offering Sanctuary for Illegals; Comprehensive Immigration Bill Reintroduced; Evangelicals Call for Immigration Reform; Controversy Erupts Over Al Sharpton Remarks on Mitt Romney

May 12, 2007 - Lou Dobbs This Week: Sharpton Upsets Mormons; Illegal Immigrants and Amnesty



May 15, 2007 - Anderson Cooper 360 Degrees: Jerry Falwell's Legacy

May 15, 2007 - Anderson Cooper 360 Degrees: Falwell: Faith and Fury; America Votes 2008



May 22, 2007 - Paula Zahn Now: Imus Fallout Creating Climate of Fear on Talk Radio?; Muslims in America; Falwell's Legacy

June 22, 2007 - International Correspondents: BBC Correspondent Still Being Held; Christopher Hitchens Interview; Journalists in Exile



July 31, 2007 - Paula Zahn Now: Koran in the Toilet: Hate Crime?; Political Bedtime Stories

November 20, 2007 - CNN Live Event/Special: Former Bush Insider to Release Bombshell Book?; Polygamist Leader Sentenced; Interview With Christopher Hitchens

December 9, 2007 - CNN Reliable Sources: Imus Back on the Radio; Romney Addresses His Faith in Speech

March 19, 2008 - CNN Live Event/Special: Five Years of Iraq War; Reaction Mixed to Obama Speech on Race



October 24, 2008 - CNN Larry King Live: McCain Worker Lied; Can McCain Win?; Scott McClellan Endorses Obama

November 19, 2008 - CNN Larry King Live: Interview with Michael Moore/Auto Bailout Vote Canceled



February 25, 2009 - Lou Dobbs Tonight: Obama's big Government; Spending Binge; Sharpton v. Murdoch; Payback for Unions?; Free Speech Fight



March 1, 2009 - Fareed Zakaria GPS: Pakistani Government Achieves Truce With Taliban

August 30, 2009 - Fareed Zakaria GPS: Interview with James Baker, Bernard-Henri Levy, Fawaz Gerges, Christopher Hitchens



October 26, 2009 - Joy Behar Show: Jackson Movie Controversy; Is Atheism the New Religion?



April 16, 2010 - Anderson Cooper 360 Degrees: Goldman Sachs Accused of Fraud; National Day of Prayer Unconstitutional?



August 5, 2010 - Anderson Cooper 360 Degrees: Interview With Virginia Attorney General Kenneth Cuccinelli; Interview With Illinois Congressman Luis Gutierrez; Connecticut Gunman's 911 Tape Released; Naomi Campbell Testifies in War Crimes Trial; Christopher Hitchens Faces Off with Cancer; Naomi Campbell Testifies at War Crimes Trial; Facebook Crime: Woman Posts Video of Burglars

August 5, 2010 - Anderson Cooper 360 Degrees: Immigration Uproar in Virginia; Killer's Chilling 911 Call Released; Hitchens, God and Cancer; Naomi Campbell Testifies before The Hague; Fighting for Exceptional Kids