American Experience

8.6
/10
  • real genres
  • documentary
  • watched
A series showcasing documentaries on American history.
  • 1hs
  • Seasons: 36
  • Episodes: 387
T4
Continuing

American Experience

season 4

serie United States 1988

Episode rating

8.1
E1
8.0
E2
7.0
E3
5.0
E4
6.9
E5
6.8
E6
6.5
E7
8.0
E8
7.1
E9
6.4
E10
6.8
E11
5.8
E12
7.2
E13

Cast of season 4

In order of relevance in the season

Episodes of season 413

  • 8.1
    /10

    LBJ: Part 1 - Beautiful Texas

    episode S4.E1 september 1991
    Award winning filmmaker David Grubin profiles one of the most controversial U.S. presidents, Lyndon Baines Johnson, who rose from obscurity to the pinnacle of power, only to suffer disillusionment and defeat. Witness the events that brought LBJ from Texas to Washington, the White House, and a landslide election in 1964. Follow his triumphs in passing a wave of social legislation then his downward spiral which ends in withdrawal from politics. This is the first of two parts.
  • 8
    /10

    LBJ: Part 2 - My Fellow Americans

    episode S4.E2 october 1991
    Award winning filmmaker David Grubin profiles one of the most controversial U.S. presidents, Lyndon Baines Johnson, who rose from obscurity to the pinnacle of power, only to suffer disillusionment and defeat. Witness the events that brought LBJ from Texas to Washington, the White House, and a landslide election in 1964. Follow his triumphs in passing a wave of social legislation then his downward spiral which ends in withdrawal from politics. This is the second of two parts.
  • 7
    /10

    The Massachusetts 54th Colored Infantry

    episode S4.E3 october 1991
    A story of the formation and service of the first all-Black military unit in the United States during the Civil War.
  • 5
    /10

    Scandalous Mayor

    episode S4.E4 october 1991
    The story of the corrupt political dominance of Mayor James Curley and its effect on the city of Boston in the early 20th century.
  • 6.9
    /10

    The Johnstown Flood

    episode S4.E5 november 1991
    Exploding dam kills thousands in massive flood catastrophe in Pennsylvania in 1889.
  • 6.8
    /10

    Pearl Harbor: Surprise and Remembrance

    episode S4.E6 november 1991
    Recounting the historic attack of 1941, including the planning and military outlook of both the United States and Japan at the time.
  • 6.5
    /10

    G-Men: The Rise of J. Edgar Hoover

    episode S4.E7 november 1991
    To understand J. Edgar Hoover's rise to power is to understand the America of the 1920s and 1930s and the building of both the power and the mythology of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
  • 8
    /10

    Duke Ellington: Reminiscing in Tempo

    episode S4.E8 december 1991
  • 7.1
    /10

    The Quiz Show Scandal

    episode S4.E9 january 1992
    America's love affair with the quiz show is dealt a blow when it's revealed that the games are fixed.
  • 6.4
    /10

    Love in the Cold War

    episode S4.E10 january 1992
    The story of Eugene Dennis and his wife Peggy, communist activists in the post-World War II era.
  • 6.8
    /10

    Wild by Law

    episode S4.E11 january 1992
  • 5.8
    /10

    Barnum's Big Top

    episode S4.E12 february 1992
    Story of P.T. Barnum and his role in developing the American Circus into a large business and a cultural force.
  • 7.2
    /10

    In the White Man's Image

    episode S4.E13 february 1992
    In 1875, Captain Richard Pratt ordered 72 Indian warriors suspected who had fought white colonists to Fort Marion in St. Augustine, Florida. Once there, Pratt began an experiment which involved teaching Indians to read and write, making them learn English and forcing them to be Christians, barring Native languages and religions, and putting even children as young as five in uniforms and drilling them like soldiers. "Kill the Indian and the save the man," was Pratt's brutal motto. A film about cultural genocide that Richard Pratt began to forcibly assimilate Native Americans into white culture with the creation of the Carlilse School for Indians in 1879. Pratt's school, and others like it, claimed noble intentions. The death toll was high from physical abuse and disease. Similar efforts in Australis and Canada are considered genocide, leading to investigations and official government apologies. These forced assimilation efforts lasted well into the 1930s, when they were abandoned as destructive and worsening poverty, unemployment, and suicide rates.