The Guardian
Happy birthday
For years, global music publisher Warner/Chappell claimed copyright of the Happy Birthday song, demanding payment for any public performance of it. Jenn Nelson tells the story of her four-year campaign to prove that the company did not...
Curated Video
Teaching Ruby Bridges
In the 1960s, Black schoolgirl Ruby Bridges and White teacher Barbara Henry showed America the true power of racial integration in the classroom.
The Guardian
Anonymous Comes to Town
The sleepy rustbelt town of Steubenville, Ohio, was once best known for high school sports and as the birthplace of Dean Martin. But when a teen sexual assault committed by two members of the football team surfaced, the shadowy hacker...
Healthcare Triage
The Cost of Funding CHIP Just Went from $8 billion to $800 million. But It's Still Not Funded.
Thanks to a ridiculous accounting trick enabled by the new tax law, the cost of funding the Children's Health Insurance Program went from $8 Billion to $800 million. How is this possible? And how is it still not funded? Dr. Aaron Carroll...
msvgo
Ohm's Law
It explains Ohm's law and its experimental verification as well as resistance and its SI unit.
Brian McLogan
How to use law of cosines for SSS
Learn how to solve for the lengths of the sides and the measures of the angles of a triangle using the law of cosines. The law of cosines is used in determining the lengths of the sides or the measures of the angles of a triangle when no...
Curated Video
Madam Queenie: New York's Notorious Crime Boss
America has always been captivated by crime and the sharp-dressed, trigger happy men who dominate the underworld. But one story remains criminally neglected, that of gambling kingpin Stephanie St. Clair, aka Madame Queenie - the Robin...
Curated Video
Wanted: The Infamous Reno Gang
Over a two-year period in the 1860s, infamous train robbers the Reno Gang stole the equivalent of $9 million dollars, until an act of vigilantism stopped them in their tracks.
ACDC Leadership
Economics Videos- Production Possibilities Curve: Econ Concepts in 60 Seconds
Mr. Clifford's 60 second explanation of Constant and Increasing Opportunity Cost.
Flipping Physics
A Three Force Example of Newton's 2nd Law with Components
Finding the net force caused by three brothers fighting over a stuffed turtle. We break one vector in to components and find the components of the net force in order to solve for the net force.
ShortCutsTv
Using Non-Human Animals in Research
This film begins by looking at how animals were used in psychological research, looking particularly at Harlow's experiments isolating rhesus monkeys in what he himself described as 'the pit of despair'. It then looks at the regulation...
Encyclopaedia Britannica
EB Insights: Supreme Court
Learn more about the U.S. Supreme Court, including how a new justice is seated.
Curated Video
Newton's Third Law: Forces in Equal and Opposite Pairs
This is a lecture video on Newton's third law that discusses the forces that act between two interacting objects. The speaker provides several examples, including a man sitting on a chair, a cannon firing a cannonball, a fish swimming...
Curated Video
Marie van Brittan Brown: Creating CCTV in Queens
How did a hardworking nurse from New York City invent the world's first home security system? When a burglar tried to break into her apartment in the 1960s, this kickass crimefighter went where no-one had gone before.
Brian McLogan
Master Solving word problems using the law of sines
Master Solving word problems using the law of sines
Flipping Physics
An Introductory Tension Force Problem
Learn how to solve a basic tension force problem with demonstration!
Healthcare Triage
What Is the Low Income Housing Tax Credit?
We’re talking about housing for four weeks, thanks to the support of the RWJF! In the last episode, we introduced you to the pathways by which we might think about improving housing for low-income individuals. Today we’re going to get...
Curated Video
Voting in Ancient Athens
The United States is a representative democracy where people vote for politicians to govern on their behalf – but voting in the direct democracy of ancient Athens was a very different process.
Practical Ninjas
Laws of Boolean Algebra | DeMorgan's theorem (Part II) | DE.13
In this video, various laws of boolean algebra are explained such as commutative law, associative law, consensus theorem, Distributive law, Idempotent law, Complementary law, the law of union and law of intersection. You don't have to...
Mediacorp
Online Vigilantes: Seeking Justice Beyond the Authorities
This video explores the stories of two individuals who turned to online vigilantes to help solve their personal crises. It highlights the challenges they faced and the mixed results they obtained, ultimately raising questions about the...
Curated Video
Fighting for LGBTQ Rights: Is the United States Really United?
The 10th Amendment to the Constitution allows each state to set its own laws. That's meant that in Colorado, LGBTQIA+ rights have often been repressed. Meet the students at William J. Palmer High School who took their school district to...
NPR
Debate: Should Panhandling Be Illegal?
A new Sacramento law makes what the city calls “aggressive panhandling” illegal. It forbids people from begging for food or money within 30 feet of a bank or ATM or outside of restaurants. Those caught breaking this law more than three...
Curated Video
Blazing a Trail for Women's Votes
We often think of the American West as a lawless, uncivilized place. But in the 19th century, it was ahead of its time – as the only part of America where women could vote.
Curated Video
Patsy Mink: Changing the Rules
The first Asian American woman ever to be elected to Congress, Patsy Mink dedicated her life to participating in the democratic process and improving the lives of others.