Economic talk-show / documentary. Each episode focuses on a single entrepreneur and features a reportage explaining their work, as well as studio discussion with the guest.
Salam Zindagi is a unique morning show that is full of life and a variety of colors, providing an energetic, optimistic and festive start to your daily routine.
There's a new Norm in sports. Funnyman Norm Macdonald returns to the desk to give you an update on the week's dropped passes, foul balls and unnecessary roughness--and that's just what happened off the field. Sports, you've finally met your match.
A platform to dissidents and rebels, both within the United States and abroad, who offer critiques of power not heard within mainstream society or permitted by the corporate press. Host Chris Hedges and his guests lay bare the mechanisms that uphold systems of power, including the role of the military and the internal security apparatus, as well as the elaborate forms of propaganda and corporate-controlled media.
Three distinct voices in the Indian pop-culture community—Badal Yadav, Mohit Yadav, and PJ—unite in this candid talk show to dissect the ever-evolving world of entertainment. Blending humor with critical analysis, the trio engages in unfiltered debates on the latest superhero blockbusters, cinematic trends, and obscure fan theories. The series captures the camaraderie of genuine fandom, offering a witty and insightful breakdown of movies, comics, and 'geek' culture for enthusiasts seeking more than just a standard review.
Talking Bad was a weekly half-hour after-show on AMC that served as an accompaniment to the last eight episodes of Breaking Bad. The host, Chris Hardwick, who had already worked on Talking Dead, the live talk show program for AMC's The Walking Dead, analyzes and discuses the latest episodes with special guests.
Yale Courses - This course approaches the New Testament not as scripture, or a piece of authoritative holy writing, but as a collection of historical documents. Therefore, students are urged to leave behind their pre-conceived notions of the New Testament and read it as if they had never heard of it before. This involves understanding the historical context of the New Testament and imagining how it might appear to an ancient person.
At the Movies is a movie review television program produced by Disney-ABC Domestic Television in which two film critics shared their opinions of newly released films. The program aired under various names. Its original hosts were Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times and WLS-TV and Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune and WBBM-TV. Richard Roeper of the Sun-Times became Ebert's regular partner in 2000 after Siskel died in 1999.
Talk show in which different celebrities will open up to share their life stories with humor, emotion, depth, spontaneity and intimacy. Diana will take the guests out of their comfort zones to challenge them and invite them to play and laugh at themselves.