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8:00 PMHow The States Got Their Shapes: Hillbilly vs. Redneck
Two underdogs of American culture go head to head to prove how hillbillies and rednecks have shaped … TVPG | CC
Episode Guide | Show SiteHow The States Got Their Shapes: Hillbilly vs. RedneckTwo underdogs of American culture go head to head to prove how hillbillies and rednecks have shaped our states.
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8:30 PMHow The States Got Their Shapes: Mess with Texas
Everything is bigger in Texas. It's the only state that acts like a country, but has it grown too bi… TVPG | CC
Episode Guide | Show SiteHow The States Got Their Shapes: Mess with TexasEverything is bigger in Texas. It's the only state that acts like a country, but has it grown too big for its britches? We'll mess with Texas to settle this ten-gallon rivalry.
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9:00 PMHow The States Got Their Shapes: Rebels & Outlaws
We may be a law-abiding nation but we also admire the outlaw, and the clash between rebels and the r… TVPG | CC
Episode Guide | Show SiteHow The States Got Their Shapes: Rebels & OutlawsWe may be a law-abiding nation but we also admire the outlaw, and the clash between rebels and the rules has shaped our states. Which states like to make their own rules, and which do the heat have on lockdown?
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9:30 PMHow The States Got Their Shapes: The United Shapes of America
After three years on the road, host Brian Unger is taking a different look at just how our states go… TVPG | CC
Episode Guide | Show SiteHow The States Got Their Shapes: The United Shapes of AmericaAfter three years on the road, host Brian Unger is taking a different look at just how our states got their shapes. We'll hear about the unique American values that have made this country what it is today, and travel from coast to coast and everywhere in between. Along the way, Brian reveals that just as we shaped the map, it has shaped us.
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10:30 PMHow The States Got Their Shapes: Red State vs. Blue State
It's a rivalry that tears us apart every four years, but how did our nation divide into red states v… TVPG | CC
Episode Guide | Show SiteHow The States Got Their Shapes: Red State vs. Blue StateIt's a rivalry that tears us apart every four years, but how did our nation divide into red states vs. blue states, and what happens to the states caught in the middle?
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11:00 PMHow The States Got Their Shapes: Force of Nature
How have massive geological events helped create the American map? Long before the Founding Fathers … TVPG | CC
Episode Guide | Show SiteHow The States Got Their Shapes: Force of NatureHow have massive geological events helped create the American map? Long before the Founding Fathers drew the map, mother nature shaped some states. How did an asteroid create the border for three states and change history? How did glaciers plow the great plains and how did natural disasters continue to alter the map?
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12:00 PMHow The States Got Their Shapes: How the States Got Their Shapes
We are so familiar with the map of United States, but do we know why our states look the way they do… TVPG | CC
Episode Guide | Show SiteHow The States Got Their Shapes: How the States Got Their ShapesWe are so familiar with the map of United States, but do we know why our states look the way they do? Every shape on the map tells a great story about our past. Why is California bent? To cling on to gold. Why does Oklahoma have a panhandle? Because of shifting borders for slavery. Why does Missouri have a boot? Because of a massive earthquake. This special examines how every state is a puzzle piece ultimately revealing the unique geography, political and social history of America.
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2:00 PMThe States: 01 - California, North Carolina, Kansas, New Hampshire, West Virginia
Take a history lesson filled with surprising facts, figures and stories from five American states. I… TVPG | CC
The States: 01 - California, North Carolina, Kansas, New Hampshire, West VirginiaTake a history lesson filled with surprising facts, figures and stories from five American states. In California, see how the discovery of gold at Sutter's Mill, in 1848 started the largest migration in US history, and then learn how scientists are currently trying to predict the next big earthquake. Next it's off to North Carolina's tobacco fields and the mystery of Roanoke--the lost colony. Wichita, Kansas is the "Aviation Capital of America" and Wyatt Earp put Dodge City on the map. New Hampshire is the state where the first act of open rebellion in America's Revolutionary War took place and the first presidential primary each election season is held. Finally, learn about The Battle of Blair Mountain, West Virginia, where in 1921, over 10,000 unionizing coal miners faced off with state and federal troops in what was one of the largest armed uprisings in America since the Civil War.
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3:00 PMThe States: 02 - Texas, Massachusetts, Arkansas, Iowa, Delaware
Another history lesson filled with surprising facts, figures and stories from five American states. … TVPG L | CC
The States: 02 - Texas, Massachusetts, Arkansas, Iowa, DelawareAnother history lesson filled with surprising facts, figures and stories from five American states. Texas hit the jackpot in 1901 with the discovery of oil at Spindletop Well in Beaumont. Puritans came to Massachusetts to escape religious persecution, but their own zeal to convert Native Americans led to one of the bloodiest wars in US history. Arkansas, 1957--nine African American high school students attempted to enroll at Little Rock's Central High School and made Civil Rights history. During the Iowa Caucuses farmers rub elbows with would-be presidents. Finally, Delaware patriot Caesar Rodney rode into history in 1776 when he raced 80 miles on horseback to break the deadlocked vote for American independence.
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4:00 PMThe States: 03 - New York, Louisiana, Oregon, New Mexico, Vermont
Travel back to the origins of New York City at New Amsterdam, the 16th century Dutch merchant colony… TVPG | CC
The States: 03 - New York, Louisiana, Oregon, New Mexico, VermontTravel back to the origins of New York City at New Amsterdam, the 16th century Dutch merchant colony. Discover how French Acadians fled Canada in 1873 to settle in Louisiana, developing the "Cajun" subculture. The Oregon Trail opened in 1843, bringing half a million settlers to the west. Visit Los Alamos Laboratories in New Mexico's remote high desert, the birthplace of the atomic bomb, and where today research continues to advance science. Finally, learn how two friends from Vermont opened an ice cream shop in 1977 and would go on to become America's most famous entrepreneurs.
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5:00 PMThe States: 04 - New Jersey, Arizona, Kentucky, Oklahoma, Alaska
Crossing the icy Delaware River on Christmas night, 1776, allowed George Washington to surprise the … TVPG L | CC
The States: 04 - New Jersey, Arizona, Kentucky, Oklahoma, AlaskaCrossing the icy Delaware River on Christmas night, 1776, allowed George Washington to surprise the British at Trenton, a critical American victory in the Revolutionary War. One of the world's most recognizable natural landmarks, the Grand Canyon, defies the imaginations of the five million people who visit there annually. Pioneer Daniel Boone blazed the Wilderness Trail through Kentucky in 1775 and tamed the wild frontier. The opening of "The Unassigned Lands" in Oklahoma resulted in 50,000 settlers racing across the prairie to grab a stake and claim ownership of a homestead. The discovery of oil in Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, in 1975 called for an ingenious feat of engineering to transport fuel across 800 miles of icy wilderness.
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6:00 PMHow The States Got Their Shapes: How the States Got Their Shapes
We are so familiar with the map of United States, but do we know why our states look the way they do… TVPG | CC
Episode Guide | Show SiteHow The States Got Their Shapes: How the States Got Their ShapesWe are so familiar with the map of United States, but do we know why our states look the way they do? Every shape on the map tells a great story about our past. Why is California bent? To cling on to gold. Why does Oklahoma have a panhandle? Because of shifting borders for slavery. Why does Missouri have a boot? Because of a massive earthquake. This special examines how every state is a puzzle piece ultimately revealing the unique geography, political and social history of America.
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12:00 AMAncient Discoveries: Mega-Structures of the Deep
Our modern day landscapes are littered with the remains of ancient superstructures. Now, cutting edg… TVPG | CC
Episode Guide | Show SiteAncient Discoveries: Mega-Structures of the DeepOur modern day landscapes are littered with the remains of ancient superstructures. Now, cutting edge archaeology is beginning to reveal that this century's most exciting discoveries actually lie at the bottom of the ocean.
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1:00 AMAncient Discoveries: Mega Ocean Conquest
From conquering the depths of the oceans to defending the freedoms of the seas--ancient man pushed t… TVPG | CC
Episode Guide | Show SiteAncient Discoveries: Mega Ocean ConquestFrom conquering the depths of the oceans to defending the freedoms of the seas--ancient man pushed the technological boundaries to the limits in the mega battle for the oceans. New discoveries will reveal how an ancient destroyer rammed its way to victory in one of the most significant battles in human history. In Denmark, a team of divers build and test the world's first ever deep sea diving suit that was designed 350 years before the history books tell us it was possible to walk along the seabed. Can CSI science unravel the mystery of a time traveling ghost ship? And in a groundbreaking sea cannon experiment, naval experts will discover how a 16th century war fleet blasted their way to victory against an enemy armada seven miles wide, without the loss of a single ship.
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2:00 AMAncient Discoveries: Ancient Mining Machines
The Romans created a hydraulic mining system that literally blew millions of tons of material away a… TVPG | CC
Show SiteAncient Discoveries: Ancient Mining MachinesThe Romans created a hydraulic mining system that literally blew millions of tons of material away and ancient sappers dug under mega walls and brought a whole castle down. But how was this possible? And, the invention of gunpowder forever changed the way we mine--but who brought explosives into mines? In 1689 in Cornwall England, miner Thomas Eplsey invented gunpowder mining. The technique would eventually kill him--but it revolutionized how we mine today.
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3:00 AMAmerica Unearthed: Giants in Minnesota
Geologist Scott Wolter visits a Minnesota farmer who wants to investigate the possible existence of … TVPG | CC
Episode Guide | Show SiteAmerica Unearthed: Giants in MinnesotaGeologist Scott Wolter visits a Minnesota farmer who wants to investigate the possible existence of bones from a giant he unearthed in his yard. The bones raise the question of whether Vikings could have traveled all the way to America.
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4:00 AMLost Worlds: Al Capone's Secret City
Al Capone's, rise to power coincided with the notorious "Roaring Twenties" period in Chicago. Capone… TVPG | CC
Lost Worlds: Al Capone's Secret CityAl Capone's, rise to power coincided with the notorious "Roaring Twenties" period in Chicago. Capone and his fellow mobsters flooded the city with bootleg liquor, while buying off government officials. Follow a team of historical detectives as they travel back to a time of unimaginable wealth, speakeasies, and ruthless mobsters. Using evidence from excavations, scientific studies and historical documents watch as the team piece together clues as to what 1920's Chicago looked like. Computer graphics allow viewers to fly over, enter the streets, and walk through the halls of this era.
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5:00 AMInfo-Documentaries.
Informational programming. TVG | CC
Info-Documentaries.Informational programming.
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5:30 AMInfo-Documentaries.
Informational programming. TVG | CC
Info-Documentaries.Informational programming.
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6:00 AMInfo-Documentaries.
Informational programming. TVG | CC
Info-Documentaries.Informational programming.
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6:30 AMInfo-Documentaries.
Informational programming. TVG | CC
Info-Documentaries.Informational programming.
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7:00 AMLost Worlds: Henry VIII's Mega Structures
Considered one of England's greatest Kings and builders, Henry VIII remains famous for his six wives… TVPG | CC
Lost Worlds: Henry VIII's Mega StructuresConsidered one of England's greatest Kings and builders, Henry VIII remains famous for his six wives. Henry ruled by fear, executing his opponents and several of his wives. He ordered the destruction of beautiful buildings, libraries and works of art. However, Henry also built many magnificent palaces like Hampton Court and transformed Westminster Abbey from a modest church into the epicenter of the Protestant religion. Henry VIII remains one of the most important monarchs to have ruled England.
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8:00 AMThe States: 01 - California, North Carolina, Kansas, New Hampshire, West Virginia
Take a history lesson filled with surprising facts, figures and stories from five American states. I… TVPG | CC
The States: 01 - California, North Carolina, Kansas, New Hampshire, West VirginiaTake a history lesson filled with surprising facts, figures and stories from five American states. In California, see how the discovery of gold at Sutter's Mill, in 1848 started the largest migration in US history, and then learn how scientists are currently trying to predict the next big earthquake. Next it's off to North Carolina's tobacco fields and the mystery of Roanoke--the lost colony. Wichita, Kansas is the "Aviation Capital of America" and Wyatt Earp put Dodge City on the map. New Hampshire is the state where the first act of open rebellion in America's Revolutionary War took place and the first presidential primary each election season is held. Finally, learn about The Battle of Blair Mountain, West Virginia, where in 1921, over 10,000 unionizing coal miners faced off with state and federal troops in what was one of the largest armed uprisings in America since the Civil War.
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9:00 AMThe States: 02 - Texas, Massachusetts, Arkansas, Iowa, Delaware
Another history lesson filled with surprising facts, figures and stories from five American states. … TVPG L | CC
The States: 02 - Texas, Massachusetts, Arkansas, Iowa, DelawareAnother history lesson filled with surprising facts, figures and stories from five American states. Texas hit the jackpot in 1901 with the discovery of oil at Spindletop Well in Beaumont. Puritans came to Massachusetts to escape religious persecution, but their own zeal to convert Native Americans led to one of the bloodiest wars in US history. Arkansas, 1957--nine African American high school students attempted to enroll at Little Rock's Central High School and made Civil Rights history. During the Iowa Caucuses farmers rub elbows with would-be presidents. Finally, Delaware patriot Caesar Rodney rode into history in 1776 when he raced 80 miles on horseback to break the deadlocked vote for American independence.
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10:00 AMThe States: 03 - New York, Louisiana, Oregon, New Mexico, Vermont
Travel back to the origins of New York City at New Amsterdam, the 16th century Dutch merchant colony… TVPG | CC
The States: 03 - New York, Louisiana, Oregon, New Mexico, VermontTravel back to the origins of New York City at New Amsterdam, the 16th century Dutch merchant colony. Discover how French Acadians fled Canada in 1873 to settle in Louisiana, developing the "Cajun" subculture. The Oregon Trail opened in 1843, bringing half a million settlers to the west. Visit Los Alamos Laboratories in New Mexico's remote high desert, the birthplace of the atomic bomb, and where today research continues to advance science. Finally, learn how two friends from Vermont opened an ice cream shop in 1977 and would go on to become America's most famous entrepreneurs.
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11:00 AMThe States: 04 - New Jersey, Arizona, Kentucky, Oklahoma, Alaska
Crossing the icy Delaware River on Christmas night, 1776, allowed George Washington to surprise the … TVPG L | CC
The States: 04 - New Jersey, Arizona, Kentucky, Oklahoma, AlaskaCrossing the icy Delaware River on Christmas night, 1776, allowed George Washington to surprise the British at Trenton, a critical American victory in the Revolutionary War. One of the world's most recognizable natural landmarks, the Grand Canyon, defies the imaginations of the five million people who visit there annually. Pioneer Daniel Boone blazed the Wilderness Trail through Kentucky in 1775 and tamed the wild frontier. The opening of "The Unassigned Lands" in Oklahoma resulted in 50,000 settlers racing across the prairie to grab a stake and claim ownership of a homestead. The discovery of oil in Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, in 1975 called for an ingenious feat of engineering to transport fuel across 800 miles of icy wilderness.







