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1-11 of 11
- This documentary looks at one of the deadliest anti-Semitic attacks in American history at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh, PA.
- Retired ATF agent Jay Dobyns discusses the years he worked as an undercover investigator who infiltrated the Hells Angels, an outlaw motorcycle gang, from 2001 to 2003 as part of Operation Black Biscuit. He speaks with Insider about his experience with gang and its inner workings.
- The Ukrainian comedian Vasyl Baidak sparks an unlikely and enduring friendship with retiree Iryna Terekhova when he works with a group of young people from Kyiv to rebuild her home.
- Hollywood has always been keen on disaster flicks. The genre is unique in the sheer size of the spectacles that must be created, with special effects teams building entire cities or worlds only to level them. Movies Insider breaks down the diverse techniques used to create extreme weather phenomena on the big screen, from miniature effects to shaky deck sets to a massive light and rain rig, and show you exactly what these effects looked like behind the scenes.
- Many movies, TV shows, and music videos have called for surreal sequences where the characters are thrown into zero gravity as the room they're in starts to move around them, thus finding themselves walking on the walls and ceilings. It started when Fred Astaire danced on all corners of a room in 1951's "Royal Wedding." A rotating set with a fixed camera attached allowed the actor to dance with no gravity while still keeping his feet to the ground. This technique was applied in similar ways in movies like "Poltergeist" and "High School Musical 3," as well as music videos like Lionel Richie's "Dancing on the Ceiling" and Ariana Grande's "No Tears Left to Cry." Movies like "Inception" innovated by allowing its actors to fight in a rotating hallway with multiple cameras capturing the action. In 2019, the pilot episode of HBO's "Euphoria" used a revolving set to allow its main character, played by Zendaya, to walk on walls. VFX supervisors David Van Dyke and Nhat Phong Tran of Pixomondo told us how the show used everything from motion-control cameras to visual effects to create a scene with not one, but two centers of gravity.
- Fight For Football is a documentary film looking back at the decision to cancel the 2020 Big Ten football season, and the fight by players, coaches, parents, and fans around the league to save it. The film includes interviews with players and their families, as well as journalists from around the Big Ten and the rest of the nation who covered every minute of the most historic year in the sport's history. When everyone had access to the same medical information, why did some conferences decide to play with only minor tweaks to their schedules, while others felt it was simply impossible to do so safely?
- Sayce Holmes-Lewis was assaulted by the Metropolitan Police at age 14, and since then he has been stop-and-searched over 30 times. Holmes-Lewis spoke to Insider about his experiences and the racism within UK policing. He now runs training sessions for police officers to change the way they interact with the public, and he is the founder and CEO of Mentivity, a mentoring organization for young people.
- Join hosts as they invite guests from across the world of women's football to guide you through the 2022/23 Women's Super League season.
- Jonathan Freedland invites experts to help analyse the latest in American politics. From politicians to journalists covering the White House and beyond.
- Beyond the Blade, it is time to investigate the impact of knife crime on Britain's young people, and exposing the myths that surround it.