News Clip2:35
PBS

Author And Journalist Sarah Smarsh On Resisting 'Bogus' Labels That Divide Us

12th - Higher Ed
Sarah Smarsh is an author and a journalist whose environment as an adult diverges greatly from her childhood on a Kansas wheat farm. With exposure to extremely different regions and cultures within the U.S., Smarsh shares her humble...
News Clip6:25
PBS

Erasing the pain and taboo of fistulas

12th - Higher Ed
Roughly one million women in the developing world suffer from obstetric fistula, an injury that results from inadequate medical care and causes incontinence. But beyond the physical effects, the condition can subject them to shame and...
News Clip5:55
PBS

Rohingya Mother Remembers Her Rapists Every Time She Holds Her Baby

12th - Higher Ed
It's a horrific byproduct of the Rohingya flight to Bangladesh: babies who are the product of rape, born to refugees who were assaulted by the Myanmar military. Compounding the trauma, their community views the women as dishonored....
News Clip9:33
PBS

#MeToo: Gretchen Carlson

12th - Higher Ed
Former FOX News host Gretchen Carlson, who filed a sexual harassment lawsuit against her then-boss Roger Ailes, was recently appointed chair of the Miss America Organization’s board of directors. She describes her efforts to change...
News Clip10:05
PBS

The Reporters Behind Harvey Weinstein Story On How It Was ‘Just The Beginning’ For Metoo

12th - Higher Ed
Harvey Weinstein was a film industry titan, but behind the scenes, he amassed a long list of alleged abuses toward employees and others -- as well as an intimidation campaign to keep them quiet. New York Times reporters Jodi Kantor and...
News Clip6:54
PBS

How This Community College Is Preparing Students For Careers In Aviation

12th - Higher Ed
According to Boeing, 800,000 new pilots will be needed worldwide over the next 20 years. In Bend, Oregon, a community college is preparing students to resolve this critical need -- and cultivate their own career success. Special...
News Clip7:00
PBS

Modern Inspiration in Shakespeare

12th - Higher Ed
Jeffrey Brown talks to Kuwaiti writer and theater director Sulayman al-Bassam, whose company is presenting a Shakespeare play with a twist, "Richard III: An Arab Tragedy."
News Clip4:53
PBS

How A Centuries-Old Water Mill Is Providing This British County Its Daily Bread

12th - Higher Ed
We close the week with an uplifting tale from the United Kingdom. Amid shortages of essential supplies during the coronavirus era, a picturesque water mill of the medieval period has been pressed back into service -- to provide bakers...
News Clip3:35
PBS

Tom Hanks on HollywoodÕs tipping point over sexual misconduct

12th - Higher Ed
What do the Harvey Weinstein allegations reveal about power and gender in Hollywood? When Tom Hanks recently sat down with Jeffrey Brown for a conversation about his first collection of short stories, the legendary actor also...
News Clip8:01
PBS

Is God beyond gender? Swedish church challenges traditional perception

12th - Higher Ed
According to the Church of Sweden, it's preferable not to refer to God as a "he." The official decision to use gender-neutral language will be a change in the way that many Swedish churchgoers worship -- and one that has divided the...
News Clip10:44
PBS

Interview with Gerald and Betty Ford

12th - Higher Ed
In an interview at the 1984 Republican Convention, former President Gerald Ford and Betty Ford talk about the re-nomination of President Reagan and Vice President Bush, the conservative movement in the Republican Party, the rising...
News Clip6:26
PBS

Soccer Star Megan Rapinoe On Living In A World Created By Men

12th - Higher Ed
Megan Rapinoe is best known for her successful soccer career, leading the U.S. women's national team to two World Cup championships and an Olympic gold medal. She's also known for her fierce advocacy for social justice. Judy Woodruff...
News Clip7:20
PBS

Why Black Women Face A Triple Threat From Breast Cancer

12th - Higher Ed
For Black women in America, a breast cancer diagnosis brings with it a disturbing statistic. Black women are less likely to develop breast cancer but 40 percent more likely to die from it than white women, according to the Centers for...
News Clip8:43
PBS

Even with Roe v. Wade intact, many states have aggressively restricted abortion access

12th - Higher Ed
Judge Brett Kavanaugh's nomination to the Supreme Court has many abortion rights advocates worried that the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision is in imminent peril. In many places the rollback of access is already steadily progressing....
News Clip8:44
PBS

Conversation with Toni Morrison (Mar. 9, 1998) (8:44)

12th - Higher Ed
A conversation with the Nobel and Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist about her book, "Paradise."
News Clip8:00
PBS

Rohingya refugees flee harrowing violence

12th - Higher Ed
Hundreds of thousands of Muslim Rohingyas have fled to Bangladesh in the past three weeks after suffering violent attacks by Myanmar troops and Buddhist vigilantes. The sudden influx of Rohingyas is causing tensions with local...
News Clip6:51
PBS

How one woman brought life-saving maternity care to Somaliland

12th - Higher Ed
Somaliland, a region of Somalia that lay in ruin from years of war, suffers some of the world's highest rates of infant and maternal mortality. But 15 years ago, Edna Adan fulfilled a lifelong dream by building a nonprofit hospital...
News Clip8:34
PBS

Douglas Wilson: Honor's Voice

12th - Higher Ed
Book: Honor’s Voice: The Transformation of Abraham Lincoln
News Clip10:07
PBS

These women aspire for combat role-and now they are training for it(Pt.1)

12th - Higher Ed
Until recently, women were barred from U.S. military combat jobs. Today females are volunteering for the most physically and mentally grueling Marine roles. But is the Corps helping or hurting women recruits' readiness by separating...
News Clip7:26
PBS

At U.S./Mexico Border, Migrants Seeking Legal Entry Are Stranded In Hazardous ‘Limbo’

12th - Higher Ed
Much of President Trump’s rhetoric over immigration focuses on the people crossing the U.S./Mexico border illegally. But what is the situation for the thousands who wait on a daily basis to enter through legal means? In the second...
News Clip8:37
PBS

This HBO exec endured harassment as a woman in the film industry. But now, Ôwomen are not alone anymoreÕ

12th - Higher Ed
Sheila Nevins, the president of HBO Documentary Films, has been the target of sexual harassment like innumerable professional women across all industries. But with a groundswell of voices declaring #MeToo, Nevins sees hope for young...
News Clip9:39
PBS

When migrants' desparate journey becomes a deadly journey

12th - Higher Ed
The NewsHour's Malcolm Brabant was there, and the cameras were rolling, as the Doctors Without Borders rescue ship he was on came across a horrific scene: More than 20 migrants dead on an unseaworthy ship that was taking them from...
News Clip6:14
PBS

Britain Cautiously Plans To Ease Rigid Lockdown Restrictions

12th - Higher Ed
Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson has announced a cautious timetable ending the country's COVID lockdown, one of the strictest in the world with almost all foreign travel outlawed under the guidelines. But the full lockdown isn’t...
News Clip6:35
PBS

Afghanistan

12th - Higher Ed
Nearly nine months since the Taliban took over Afghanistan, the economy is in freefall and about half the country is nearing acute food insecurity. But even with this widespread suffering, the Taliban on Sunday ordered all women be...