Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Beginning with Season 8, Frontline would eschew from using a regular on-air host, using an off-screen narrator to introduce each episode. As part of its 8th season, Frontline aired the 4-part documentary Decade of Destruction.
Frontline/World is a spin-off program from Frontline, first transmitted on May 23, 2002, which was transmitted four to eight times a year on Frontline until it was canceled in 2010. It focused on issues from around the globe, and used a "magazine" format, where each hour-long episode typically had three stories that ran about 15 to 20 minutes ...
List of Frontline episodes may refer to: List of Frontline (Australian TV series) episodes, an episode list for the 1994–1997 Australian television series which aired on ABC; List of Frontline (U.S. TV program) episodes, an episode list for the U.S. television program which has aired on PBS since 1983
On December 20, 2019, Frontline announced that it will release the two-part television documentary titled America's Great Divide: From Obama to Trump on January 13 and 14, 2020, which will comprehensively examine "the growth of a toxic political environment that has paralyzed Washington and dramatically deepened the gulf between Americans", and provide context for the election year of 2020. [3]
At the age of 77, Pat Sajak, the record holder for longest game show host of the same show, has decided to retire. He first made the announcement in June of last year, but his final episode will ...
Part 1: Denial, an 85-minute episode was aired April 19, 2022. Part 2: Doubt, and Part 3: Delay are each 54-minute episodes. [1] On July 21, 2022, PBS Distribution released the series on DVD, and the Mongoose Pictures and Frontline production was broadcast on the BBC Two television channel and added to the BBC iPlayer streaming service in the ...
Ryan Seacrest's first episode as host of "Wheel of Fortune" airs Sept. 9, as he takes over for Pat Sajak for the show's 42nd season with Vanna White.
The footage was then transferred onto film and finally transferred back to videotape [4] (see: Kinescope). Footage that was portrayed as being part of the Frontline broadcast (i.e., studio or field reports) was shot at broadcast quality, to increase the "realism" of the satire and complement the behind-the-scenes footage.