Tara and Zoe discover the body of a young girl in an area of the forest that Tara later discovers is a sacred site with dangerous supernatural powers. When Tara learns Simon Blackhorse sent the girl there for a traditional berry fast, she is determined to prove he is responsible for her death. Bob sets his sights on a more convenient suspect, a sex offender who just happens to be visiting Rabbit Fall.
In the season premiere, Farida treats a child with a superficial injury and gets a front row seat to a custody battle. Charlie comes clean to Dallaire about the encounter between Gary and a dirty cop. Following a bone marrow donation Eva's asks for a transfer out of the Rez. Dawn arrests on Cameron's watch, Gina is wheeled into the ER after her assault and Nancy deals with the aftermath of a patient's suicide.
Aboriginal gangs provide a pseudo-family dynamic for those who otherwise fall through the cracks. But female members and associates are often used as prostitutes and drug mules by gang leaders. Meet three courageous women who walked away, and now struggle with recovery from addiction, and the violent crimes of their past.
If you want to shoot legal base jumping, then you have to travel to West Virginia and the annual base jump event called Bridge Day. Gracey faces one of her toughest challenges ever by attempting to capture a shot of Bryan Campau launching himself by catapult off the New River Gorge Bridge and free falling 800 ft to the landing zone below.
Three Indigenous entrepreneurs with businesses that blend contemporary and traditional elements of culture pitch their ideas to the Bears! Each aspiring business owner is in the running for an episode prize and a $100,000 grand prize.
The Bible and the Distant Time gives a rare glimpse of some of the ways that traditional Athabascan beliefs and Christian beliefs coexist in villages on the Koyukuk River.
Art introduces Dan to Yellowknife's funky urban beat. After hooking a monster Pike on the recently thawed Great Slave Lake, Art makes a pit spot at a funky spice shop. Dismissed by local Dene as an overly bony fish, Art is determined to create a mouthwatering meal from his catch. Micisok!
COLUMBUS DAY LEGACY explores tensions and contradictions between Native and Italian-American participants in the ongoing Columbus Day parade controversy in Denver, CO. This very personal yet public conflict is visualized through hard questions about the freedom of speech, the interpretation of history, and what it means to be an "American."
Narrated by Peter Coyote, FOR THE RIGHTS OF ALL: ENDING JIM CROW IN ALASKA traces the Native Alaskan civil rights movement. The film profiles the remarkable people behind the victories for citizenship, voting rights, and school desegregation, including Alberta Schenck Adams ("Alaska's Rosa Parks") and Elizabeth Peratrovich, an unassuming young woman whose compelling testimony helped sway the Alaska State Senate to pass the first civil-rights bill since the Civil War. Blending re-enactments, rare and newly discovered historic footage and photographs, and interviews with tribal elders, FOR THE RIGHTS OF ALL chronicles Alaska Natives' efforts to honor their heritage and leverage their future.
Yellow Fever follows young Navajo veteran, Tina Garnanez on her journey to investigate the history of the Navajo Uranium Boom, its lasting impacts in her area and the potential new mining in her region.
It's a destination tourism spot on an island. The Alutiiq Museum and Archaeological Repository in Kodiak, Alaska, wants you to stop by. It recently received a grant from the American Indian-Alaska Native Tourism Association, in partnership with the U.S. Forest Service. April Counceller told ICT producer Shirley Sneve about the project. In New Mexico, one of the 19 pueblos has created a space to foster and grow community through various events and classes. The Poeh Cultural Center is building back traditions and creating new ones through education, preservation and repatriation. ICT's Paris Wise has the story.
The youth meet each other for their initial weigh-ins and fitness tests.
Teepee visits his grandmother; Teepee rakes leaves.
My Moort, my family make me djoorabiny, they make me happy.
Tiga is not very good at listening - he continually gets distracted while Kimmie tries to read him a story. She gets fed up and decides not to bother. Tiga and Kokum take the bus to visit Jason's pre- school at Lauwel- new, the Tsartlip Band School where they learn about listening and LLL words. After school, Tiga goes to Auntie May's house to see about spinning with sheep's wool and makes pompoms for touques. Back at home Jason drums and sings the butterfly song in Sencoten, and later we see firsthand that Gavin is not good at landing. Tiga is now a much better listener and begs Kimmie to finish the butterfly story, which she does, proving that Tiga has indeed LLL Learned.
The friends are sure the creature following their boat is a lake monster but after their motor fails and they use their skills to capture it they discover it's the solution to getting them home. Important packages must be delivered by the friends but Joe is not able to run and jump through the forest as well as Nina and Buddy and feels he is not useful until Kookum helps him realize that his super seeing skill will save the day.
Randy and Katie search for the ingredients to make ice pops. / Randy finds out his dog Osky hid one of his slippers.
Forced to go to summer camp by their parents, T-Bear, Talon and Devon are subjected to the pranks of boys from the rival Brown Toe reserve. After thwarting the boys' attempts at retaliation, the elders call in their parents, but the bored adults are ultimately taught a valuable lesson by their children.
Amy introduces all the songs heard from each episode of season 1
Isa asks why Animal habitats are important and what we can learn from animals, and how to be grateful for the food, shelter, knowledge, and medicines our animal relatives provide.
Chef Kimo Kauhane is the chef at the beautiful Kualoa ranch on O'ahu. The majestic Ka'a'awa Valley serves as the backdrop and kitchen for season 10 of Cooking Hawaiian Style and we couldn't be happier to be back at the ranch. Chef Kimo Kauhane shares his Roasted Beef Bone Marrow Gremolata Breadcrumb recipe.
In this episode, Chef Kelly is in Macouba and Le Carbet, Martinique, to revisit the "assiette creole." For her revisit, she goes to the fishermen market with Marcel, a fisherman and restaurateur, and she meets Nazaire, cellar master at Macouba rum distillery.
It's a destination tourism spot on an island. The Alutiiq Museum and Archaeological Repository in Kodiak, Alaska, wants you to stop by. It recently received a grant from the American Indian-Alaska Native Tourism Association, in partnership with the U.S. Forest Service. April Counceller told ICT producer Shirley Sneve about the project. In New Mexico, one of the 19 pueblos has created a space to foster and grow community through various events and classes. The Poeh Cultural Center is building back traditions and creating new ones through education, preservation and repatriation. ICT's Paris Wise has the story.
Actor Loren Anthony of the Navajo Nation shares experience walking off "Ridiculous Six" movie set due to script concerns; Southwest Navajo Nation rapper Def-i speaks to Indigenous life while smashing stereotypes in songs.
The players have arrived in Gatineau and now try to settle in to their new environment. John and the rest of the staff meet the players and establish what is expected of everyone. Stakes are set pretty high from the get-go as players are quickly informed that not everyone invited will be taking part in the main camp.
For the past two years Gracey has worked on numerous mountain bike shoots, and now she is on a mission to try and nail the Photo Of The Day on Pinbike, and capture the vibe from the Jumpship Festival at Bear Mountain in Victoria, BC. Grace showcases Peter Savage, a local young up and coming freeride mountain biker.
Four unhealthy and overweight individuals set out on a journey towards a healthy living.
In this episode, Juaquin completes the assembly of the Boy's Fancy Apron. Making Regalia can now be seen on the FNX Native American television network. Check your local PBS listings to see if FNX is available in your area.
The Native Drum, hosted by master drum maker, Shawn Littlebear is a how-to television series. Littlebear is a traditional drum maker who shares with us his techniques for making drums.
A production of NPR radio affiliate and FNX sister station KVCR, host David Flemming and/or Sahar Khadjenoury (Navajo Nation) visit with Native American artists about their work and endeavors.
Art introduces Dan to Yellowknife's funky urban beat. After hooking a monster Pike on the recently thawed Great Slave Lake, Art makes a pit spot at a funky spice shop. Dismissed by local Dene as an overly bony fish, Art is determined to create a mouthwatering meal from his catch. Micisok!
Dave explores haunted cabins in Northern Alberta and then travels south to Pyramid Lake Nevada to search for more ghosts.
A Lakota mother studying geology seeks the source of the water contamination that caused her daughter's critical health problems. Meanwhile, a Lakota grandmother fights the regional expansion of uranium mining. Crying Earth Rise Up exposes the human cost of uranium mining and its impact on Great Plains drinking water.
Democracy Now! is an award-winning, independent, noncommercial, nationally-distributed public television news hour. Produced each weekday, Democracy Now! is available for public television stations free of charge.
A new report in Colorado examines the rich history of tribes in the state and the horrors visited on them by territorial, state and federal governments. ICT?s Stewart Huntington has an interview with one of the report's lead authors.
Tom sends Shayla to find out about the giant squid that have been found in the cold, Atlantic waters.
Justin faces federal criminal charges and Matthew finds himself failing, leading to desperate measures.
Native Hip-Hop performer Iam Artson! A descendent of the Tarahumara people, Artson (Tarahumara) recognized the connection between hip-hop and indigenous culture. His unique style takes hip-hop to a new level with the indigenous flute to beatbox and fuse the two worlds together.
Art sets out to learn the traditional means of baking Whitefish in clay - sourced from the Yellowknife River. But first he and Dan must survive a rocky boat ride across the Great Slave Lake to drop the nets. Once their seasickness subsides, Art and Dan celebrate a clay - baked dinner with local dene drummers - a truly authentic experience in the Northwest Territories! Micisok!
A production of NPR radio affiliate and FNX sister station KVCR, host David Flemming and/or Sahar Khadjenoury (Navajo Nation) visit with Native American artists about their work and endeavors.
At the heart of "Something Inside is Broken" is the story of two young lovers from the Nisenan Tribe. The heartbreak and bloodshed in the tale are interspersed with satirical comic relief by short segments of a reality show, Frontier Idol-hosted by the first "Governator" of California, Peter Burnett-pitting 1846 slave hunters against the Native enslaved girls. The story follows actual and created figures who were affected by Johann Sutter's exploitation methods to build his fortune-making empire at Sutter's Fort. The world-altering clash is brought to life through story, song, and dance.
What does a family have to endure to create a future for itself? In April 2000, Alex White Plume and his Lakota family planted industrial hemp on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota after other crops had failed. They put their hopes for a sustainable economy in hemp's hardiness and a booming worldwide demand for its many products, from clothing to food. Although growing hemp, a relative of marijuana, was banned in the U.S., Alex believed that tribal sovereignty, along with hemp's non-psychoactive properties, would protect him. But when federal agents raided the White Plumes' fields, the Lakota Nation was swept into a Byzantine struggle over tribal sovereignty, economic rights and common sense.