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Los Hermanos / The Brothers

Virtuoso Afro-Cuban-born brothers—violinist Ilmar and pianist Aldo—live on opposite sides of a geopolitical chasm a half-century wide.

Tracking their parallel lives in New York and Havana, their poignant reunion, and their momentous first performances together, Los Hermanos/The Brothers offers a nuanced, often startling view of estranged nations through the lens of music and family.

Regret to Inform

At the age of 24, American director Barbara Sonneborn lost her husband in the Vietnam War. Twenty years after his death, Sonneborn sets out to interview other American and Vietnamese women whose spouses died in the conflict.

Along the way, she meets a Vietnamese woman who was forced into prostitution during the war, an American woman whose husband died of chemical poisoning years after the conflict ended, and a woman who worked as a North Vietnamese spy.

Soft Vengeance

A portrait of Albie Sachs, a white man who put his body on the front lines of change in apartheid-era South Africa and nearly paid the ultimate price, losing an arm and an eye to a car bomb. After over 20 years of exile, Albie returns to his home country to help write their first constitution and offer his vision of reconciliation to a damaged and grieving nation.

Have You Heard from Johannesburg

The anti-apartheid movement was like the Civil Rights movement writ large. Editing this series on the global movement to end South African apartheid was one of the richest experiences of my career. I was able to meet and hang out with heroes of the movement, including some who’d served decades in prison with Mandela.

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    Murders that Matter

    African American Muslim mother Movita Johnson-Harrell travels a harrowing journey as she transforms from a co-victim of violent trauma into a fierce advocate against gun violence in Black communities.

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    Soft Vengeance

    A portrait of Albie Sachs, a white man who put his body on the front lines of change in apartheid-era South Africa and nearly paid the ultimate price, losing an arm and an eye to a car bomb. After over 20 years of exile, Albie returns to his home country to help write their first constitution and offer his vision of reconciliation to a damaged and grieving nation.

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    The Judge

    Kholoud Al-Faqih was the first woman judge in history to be appointed to the Middle East’s Shari’a (Islamic law) courts. She brought it all–wisdom, courage, knowledge, faith, and family.

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    Have You Heard From Johannesburg

    The anti-apartheid movement was like the Civil Rights movement writ large. Editing this series on the global movement to end South African apartheid was one of the richest experiences of my career.

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    Los Hermanos/The Brothers

    Two Brothers from “enemy nations” navigate love, politics and music.

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    Cubanacán

    An American tries to help Cuba mount its first original opera in over 40 years.

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    Ralph Ellison: An American Journey

    A portrait of one of the most gifted and intellectually provocative authors of modern American literature—a central figure in contemporary debates over art, politics, race, and nationhood.

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    Regret to Inform

    A look at the toll that war extracts from women, told by American and Vietnamese women who lost their husbands in the Vietnam War.

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    The Good War and Those Who Refused To Fight It

    In the face of criticism and scorn, 40,000 Americans refused to shoulder weapons in WW2 because their conscience would not allow them to kill another human being.

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    Speaking in Tongues

    4 kids. 4 languages. 1 city. 1 world.

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    Into the Current

    The courage of Burmese political prisoners, whose endless struggle for human rights shines a light on the abuses of their country’s military regime.

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    Portrait of Mexican muralist José Clemente Orozco, whose dramatic life, iconoclastic personality and dynamic painting changed the way we see art and politics.