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- The classic long-running prime time TV investigative news magazine.
- One of television's most popular true-crime series, investigating shocking cases and compelling real-life dramas with journalistic integrity and cutting-edge style.
- The news show that does personal interest pieces. Anything from interviews with actors, political figures, athletes, musicians, costume designers, fashion designers, restaurant owners, charity heads, kids with special talents
- Investigative news episodic show. Based on 48 hours This is the ID (Investigation Discovery) version of it.
- A Cincinnati museum director goes on trial in 1990 for exhibiting sadomasochistic photographs taken by Robert Mapplethorpe.
- A program featuring one or more question-and-answer sessions with prominent figures currently in the news. One of the longest-running programs on television.
- Dark Fellowships attempts to uncover the truth about some of the most renowned and feared secret organizations throughout history. In the first episode, Dark Fellowships: the Vril, meet a bizarre occult group, whose members allegedly included many leaders of the Nazi Party, even Hitler himself.
- In 1962, the veteran news anchor Douglas Edwards was replaced with Walter Cronkite. The news show initially used the title "Walter Cronkite with the News", but was soon re-titled to "CBS Evening News". It was the first half-hour weeknight news broadcast on network television. The show dominated the ratings among the network evening news programs for nearly two decades, and Cronkite became known as "the most trusted man in America" (after being given this title in a poll). Cronkite faced mandatory retirement in March 1981, at the age of 65. He was soon replaced by a younger news anchor, Dan Rather.
- "RAZZMATAZZ" was a News and Entertainment program aimed primarily for teen and young adult audiences. Airing in the United States on the CBS Television Network, it starred entertainment personality Brian Tochi, who replaced the show's original host, Barry Bostwick, after the first season. The show ran from 1977 to 1982. This Emmy-winning news magazine series was produced by the veteran news producer, Don Hewitt, and had the same production team as CBS's prime news show, "60 MINUTES".
- Boiling Point investigates instances of police brutality, voter suppression, school segregation, environmental racism and mass incarceration throughout American history, and the impact those injustices have had on equality.
- Explores the way-out world of the Hippies and the Haight-Ashbury psychedelic 1960s LSD scene. Footage of LSDs users experiencing bummer trips. The Diggers, the Oracle and cool street and Golden Gate Park scenes with hippies tripping out. The Grateful Dead are interviewed and are shown performing "Dancin' in the Streets" on a flatbed truck in Golden Gate Park.
- CBS's morning news and talk show.
- Mark Hacking has the looks and charisma, and he puts on quite a facade of who he really is. Lori Kay Soares thinks she has met and married the perfect man until she finds out the truth, which has dire consequences for her.
- CBS News looks at Malcolm X, focusing on his public life from 1959 to his assassination in 1965, suggesting that his death was a great loss to the nation. The film intercuts archival footage of Malcolm and interviews with family, friends, colleagues, scholars, and writers. CBS documents Malcolm's move from being Elijah Muhammad's deputy in the Nation of Islam to his embrace of Islam: his new links with the civil rights movement posed a real threat to the powers that be. CBS details his death after secret FBI acts to increase the rift between Muhammad and Malcolm. Maya Angelou, Dick Gregory, and Andrew Young offer trenchant comments. "He was our manhood," eulogized Ossie Davis.
- Not truly belonging in the series of CBS morning shows, this was a 6 a.m. early-morning news broadcast that coincided with the brief 1987 run of "The Morning Show," one of CBS' attempts at success in the morning time period.
- The leading source of LGBT news with daily short-form online pieces and a weekly show hosted by news anchor, Ross Palombo.
- Designed as the next-generation source of interactive science information on television and on the web, Brink is the premier series for immersing viewers on the front lines of cutting-edge breakthroughs in technology, research, inventions, discoveries and the mysteries of the scientific world. The series explores people who are on the brink of changing our lives, and will also include content generated from scientists, organizations, universities and viewers from around the world. The series provides viewers with a clear understanding of the impact and relevance science has in our lives today, and offers significant insights into how science may profoundly change our lives tomorrow. Each half-hour episode combines short-form reports on the latest global science news with vital interviews with prominent scientists. Brink's innovative format will also include unusual segments covering a range of subjects from peculiar, avant-garde research to "backyard inventors" who are pushing the limits of science in their own way - such as building their own space craft.
- A seven-part series about Black America.