Nationally distributed public television films Produced by Louisiana Public Broadcasting
Alive! In America's Delta: Life on the Edge
Alive! In America’s Delta is an exciting six-part wildlife documentary series produced by Louisiana Public Broadcasting that takes viewers deep into the Mississippi River Delta and the northern Gulf of Mexico to experience one of the few remaining wild frontiers in America.
One of the most ecologically diverse regions on the planet, Louisiana is home to over 600 species of rare plants and animals and about 40% of the nation’s coastal wetlands in the lower 48 states.
With a rich diversity of habitats from upland forests to the open waters of the Gulf of Mexico and everything in-between, this region provides homes for an abundance of migratory and year-round wildlife and reptiles. Nearly 40% of the nation’s shorebirds, raptors and songbirds and 70% of ducks move through this vital coastal delta.
But many species are on the edge of extinction due to loss of habitat and changes brought on by humans.
Meet a few of the many relatively unknown creatures struggling for survival like the Louisiana pine snake and the gopher tortoise, and get to know the people behind the scenes working tirelessly to save them. Discover how two of America’s most iconic species, the American bald eagle and the American alligator were brought back from the edge, and why sustainable management is essential to the future of these and countless other species.
See how new technology and scientific understanding is helping to protect this wildlife and its critical habitat for generations to come, and how their survival is tied to our own.
Producer/Writer/Director: Liz Barnes
Series Producer: Christina Hendrick Melton
Editor: Rex Q. Fortenberry
Photographers: Rex Q. Fortenberry, Gary Allen, Keith Crews
Narrator: John Goodman
Production Company and Copyright Owner: Louisiana Public Broadcasting
Alive! In America's Delta: Black Bear Comeback
By the early 1990s, there were estimated to be fewer than 300 Louisiana black bears left in the world. More than 80% of their bottomland forest habitat had been lost, converted to agriculture and destroyed for development. Habitat fragmentation, human disturbance and over hunting decimated populations once abundant throughout Louisiana, Southern Mississippi and Eastern Texas.
One of sixteen subspecies of American black bear, these shy but curious creatures were immortalized as the inspiration for the “Teddy Bear” during an infamous bear hunt in the early 1900’s.
Today, thanks to an aggressive, broad-based effort to reestablish this endangered animal and restore its habitat through improved land management, high-tech monitoring and public education, the Louisiana black bear is on its way to being removed from protected status. Find out why this bear has captured America’s imagination and adoration for more than a century, and the lengths some will go to save them.
Producer/Writer/Director: Liz Barnes
Series Producer: Christina Hendrick Melton
Editor: Rex Q. Fortenberry
Photographers: Rex Q. Fortenberry, Gary Allen, Keith Crews, Virnado Woods
Narrator: John Goodman
Production Company and Copyright Owner: Louisiana Public Broadcasting
Turning the Tide
It is the largest coastal ecosystem in the Continental U.S. Yet, this fragile delta is experiencing the fastest rate of land loss on earth.
Home to vital habitat for America’s birds, fish and shellfish, critical resources and industries, and millions of people, this endangered region faces challenges that will soon decide its fate. Explore proposed solutions and proven strategies, along with bold engineering from around the world that can “Turn the Tide” on this national crisis unfolding at the mouth of the Mississippi River Delta on Louisiana’s Gulf Coast.
Senior Producer/Director/Writer: Christina Hendrick Melton
Producer: Liz Barnes
Photographer/Editor: Rex Q. Fortenberry
Narrator: Chuck Perkins
Production Company and Copyright Owner: Louisiana Public Broadcasting
Washing Away: After the Storms
Five years after hurricanes Katrina and Rita, Louisiana’s recovery is eclipsed by the largest environmental disaster in American history.
LPB follows six very different survivors as they fight to keep their land, livelihoods and way of life from Washing Away. Their journey through setbacks, subsequent storms and new threats reveal a common thread shared by many of their two million coastal neighbors - determination, perseverance and resilience in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds.
Their stories illustrate a microcosm of the larger challenges that Louisiana and the nation face as natural and man-made disasters continue to assault America’s Gulf Coast.
Two time Emmy-Award winner, Academy-Award nominee and New Orleans native Patricia Clarkson narrates the program, which also features the music of Emmy-Award winning composer Mike Esneault.
Producer/Writer/Director: Liz Barnes
Photographer/Editor: Rex Q. Fortenberry
Senior Producer/Writer: Christina Hendrick Melton
Editor: Todd Justice
Narrator: Patricia Clarkson
Production Company and Copyright Owner: Louisiana Public Broadcasting
A Summer of Birds
A Summer of Birds details a relatively unknown chapter in the life of renowned naturalist painter, ornithologist and literary figure John James Audubon. Based on the acclaimed book, the documentary chronicles the formative summer Audubon spent in Louisiana in 1821, in the lush surroundings of Oakley Plantation in West Feliciana Parish. There, Audubon began or completed nearly half of the 435 pictures in his famous “Birds of America” collection.
Narrated by Emmy-winning actress Sela Ward (House; Once and Again; Sisters), the film explores the profound influence of Louisiana's natural environment and birdlife on Audubon’s development as an artist and writer, and conversely, Audubon's undeniable impact on the region and its cultural identity. Cameras accompany modern-day birding enthusiasts and naturalists through Louisiana's bayous and woodsy pathways to experience their "paradise of birds" the same way Audubon did nearly 200 years ago.
Based on “A Summer of Birds: John James Audubon at Oakley House” by Danny Heitman
Senior Producer, Writer & Director: Christina Hendrick Melton
Director of Photography & Editor: Rex Q. Fortenberry
Original Musical Score: Mike Esneault
Producer: Liz Barnes
Additional Photography: Keith Crews, Sophie Constantinou, Donna LaFleur
Associate Producer: Danny Heitman
French Voice Over: Jean-Xavier Brager
Graphic Artists: Mark Carroll, Ashley Landry, Todd Justice
Production Company and Copyright Owner: Louisiana Public Broadcasting
Return to the Forest Where We Live
Return to the Forest Where We Live includes a look at the devastation of the urban forests in New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast caused by Hurricane Katrina. Prior to the storm, New Orleans was one of the most forested cities in the country. More than 70% of the trees in the Crescent City were damaged by the storm and the flooding that followed and one-fifth of the half million trees planted in the city’s public parks and other public spaces were destroyed.
“Just imagine what it would be like to live in a city without trees. If you lived in a forested city and all of a sudden all of the trees were gone, what a difference in that, just a sense of place,” David Nowak, a project leader with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forestry Service said.
Other featured cities include Los Angeles, Baltimore, Washington, D.C. and Charlotte, North Carolina.
“What’s happened in Charlotte is like the Joni Mitchell song, you killed paradise and put up a parking lot,” said Attorney Rick Roti, the Chair of the Charlotte Public Tree Fund. “That may sound humorous, that’s in actuality what has happened. It’s not only unique to Charlotte; it is happening all over our region, it is happening all over the country.”
Academy Award and Golden Globe Nominee Nia Vardalos of "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" is the narrator for the documentary.
Producer/Director: Liz Barnes
Writer: Charles E. Richard
Editor: Rex Q. Fortenberry
Photographers: Rex Q. Fortenberry, Keith Crews
Senior Producer/Project Director: Tika Laudun
Narrator: Nia Vardalos
Production Company and Copyright Owner: Louisiana Public Broadcasting
Copy Of -Alive! In America's Delta: Life on the Edge
Alive! In America’s Delta is an exciting six-part wildlife documentary series produced by Louisiana Public Broadcasting that takes viewers deep into the Mississippi River Delta and the northern Gulf of Mexico to experience one of the few remaining wild frontiers in America.
One of the most ecologically diverse regions on the planet, Louisiana is home to over 600 species of rare plants and animals and about 40% of the nation’s coastal wetlands in the lower 48 states.
With a rich diversity of habitats from upland forests to the open waters of the Gulf of Mexico and everything in-between, this region provides homes for an abundance of migratory and year-round wildlife and reptiles. Nearly 40% of the nation’s shorebirds, raptors and songbirds and 70% of ducks move through this vital coastal delta.
But many species are on the edge of extinction due to loss of habitat and changes brought on by humans.
Meet a few of the many relatively unknown creatures struggling for survival like the Louisiana pine snake and the gopher tortoise, and get to know the people behind the scenes working tirelessly to save them. Discover how two of America’s most iconic species, the American bald eagle and the American alligator were brought back from the edge, and why sustainable management is essential to the future of these and countless other species.
See how new technology and scientific understanding is helping to protect this wildlife and its critical habitat for generations to come, and how their survival is tied to our own.
Producer/Writer/Director: Liz Barnes
Series Producer: Christina Hendrick Melton
Editor: Rex Q. Fortenberry
Photographers: Rex Q. Fortenberry, Gary Allen, Keith Crews
Narrator: John Goodman
Production Company and Copyright Owner: Louisiana Public Broadcasting
Copy Of -Alive! In America's Delta: Black Bear Comeback
By the early 1990s, there were estimated to be fewer than 300 Louisiana black bears left in the world. More than 80% of their bottomland forest habitat had been lost, converted to agriculture and destroyed for development. Habitat fragmentation, human disturbance and over hunting decimated populations once abundant throughout Louisiana, Southern Mississippi and Eastern Texas.
One of sixteen subspecies of American black bear, these shy but curious creatures were immortalized as the inspiration for the “Teddy Bear” during an infamous bear hunt in the early 1900’s.
Today, thanks to an aggressive, broad-based effort to reestablish this endangered animal and restore its habitat through improved land management, high-tech monitoring and public education, the Louisiana black bear is on its way to being removed from protected status. Find out why this bear has captured America’s imagination and adoration for more than a century, and the lengths some will go to save them.
Producer/Writer/Director: Liz Barnes
Series Producer: Christina Hendrick Melton
Editor: Rex Q. Fortenberry
Photographers: Rex Q. Fortenberry, Gary Allen, Keith Crews, Virnado Woods
Narrator: John Goodman
Production Company and Copyright Owner: Louisiana Public Broadcasting
Copy Of -Turning the Tide
It is the largest coastal ecosystem in the Continental U.S. Yet, this fragile delta is experiencing the fastest rate of land loss on earth.
Home to vital habitat for America’s birds, fish and shellfish, critical resources and industries, and millions of people, this endangered region faces challenges that will soon decide its fate. Explore proposed solutions and proven strategies, along with bold engineering from around the world that can “Turn the Tide” on this national crisis unfolding at the mouth of the Mississippi River Delta on Louisiana’s Gulf Coast.
Senior Producer/Director/Writer: Christina Hendrick Melton
Producer: Liz Barnes
Photographer/Editor: Rex Q. Fortenberry
Narrator: Chuck Perkins
Production Company and Copyright Owner: Louisiana Public Broadcasting
Copy Of -Washing Away: After the Storms
Five years after hurricanes Katrina and Rita, Louisiana’s recovery is eclipsed by the largest environmental disaster in American history.
LPB follows six very different survivors as they fight to keep their land, livelihoods and way of life from Washing Away. Their journey through setbacks, subsequent storms and new threats reveal a common thread shared by many of their two million coastal neighbors - determination, perseverance and resilience in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds.
Their stories illustrate a microcosm of the larger challenges that Louisiana and the nation face as natural and man-made disasters continue to assault America’s Gulf Coast.
Two time Emmy-Award winner, Academy-Award nominee and New Orleans native Patricia Clarkson narrates the program, which also features the music of Emmy-Award winning composer Mike Esneault.
Producer/Writer/Director: Liz Barnes
Photographer/Editor: Rex Q. Fortenberry
Senior Producer/Writer: Christina Hendrick Melton
Editor: Todd Justice
Narrator: Patricia Clarkson
Production Company and Copyright Owner: Louisiana Public Broadcasting
Copy Of -A Summer of Birds
A Summer of Birds details a relatively unknown chapter in the life of renowned naturalist painter, ornithologist and literary figure John James Audubon. Based on the acclaimed book, the documentary chronicles the formative summer Audubon spent in Louisiana in 1821, in the lush surroundings of Oakley Plantation in West Feliciana Parish. There, Audubon began or completed nearly half of the 435 pictures in his famous “Birds of America” collection.
Narrated by Emmy-winning actress Sela Ward (House; Once and Again; Sisters), the film explores the profound influence of Louisiana's natural environment and birdlife on Audubon’s development as an artist and writer, and conversely, Audubon's undeniable impact on the region and its cultural identity. Cameras accompany modern-day birding enthusiasts and naturalists through Louisiana's bayous and woodsy pathways to experience their "paradise of birds" the same way Audubon did nearly 200 years ago.
Based on “A Summer of Birds: John James Audubon at Oakley House” by Danny Heitman
Senior Producer, Writer & Director: Christina Hendrick Melton
Director of Photography & Editor: Rex Q. Fortenberry
Original Musical Score: Mike Esneault
Producer: Liz Barnes
Additional Photography: Keith Crews, Sophie Constantinou, Donna LaFleur
Associate Producer: Danny Heitman
French Voice Over: Jean-Xavier Brager
Graphic Artists: Mark Carroll, Ashley Landry, Todd Justice
Production Company and Copyright Owner: Louisiana Public Broadcasting
Copy Of -Return to the Forest Where We Live
Return to the Forest Where We Live includes a look at the devastation of the urban forests in New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast caused by Hurricane Katrina. Prior to the storm, New Orleans was one of the most forested cities in the country. More than 70% of the trees in the Crescent City were damaged by the storm and the flooding that followed and one-fifth of the half million trees planted in the city’s public parks and other public spaces were destroyed.
“Just imagine what it would be like to live in a city without trees. If you lived in a forested city and all of a sudden all of the trees were gone, what a difference in that, just a sense of place,” David Nowak, a project leader with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forestry Service said.
Other featured cities include Los Angeles, Baltimore, Washington, D.C. and Charlotte, North Carolina.
“What’s happened in Charlotte is like the Joni Mitchell song, you killed paradise and put up a parking lot,” said Attorney Rick Roti, the Chair of the Charlotte Public Tree Fund. “That may sound humorous, that’s in actuality what has happened. It’s not only unique to Charlotte; it is happening all over our region, it is happening all over the country.”
Academy Award and Golden Globe Nominee Nia Vardalos of "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" is the narrator for the documentary.
Producer/Director: Liz Barnes
Writer: Charles E. Richard
Editor: Rex Q. Fortenberry
Photographers: Rex Q. Fortenberry, Keith Crews
Senior Producer/Project Director: Tika Laudun
Narrator: Nia Vardalos
Production Company and Copyright Owner: Louisiana Public Broadcasting
The Science Channel's 100 Greatest Discoveries Series Produced by Thinkfilm, Inc.
Bill Nye "The Science Guy" hosts a series that highlights the greatest scientific discoveries of all time, from the earliest time to the present day. The series features nine episodes: Evolution, Earth Sciences, Medicine, Physics, Astronomy, Chemistry, Genetics and Biology, plus a wrap up episode featuring the top 10 discoveries of all time. This is a fun and instructive series, with a lot of historical re-creations, archival footage, visits to interesting scientific research facilities and interviews with present-day scientists including several Nobel laureates - all presented with the flair and humor associated with television's "Science Guy" Bill Nye. - Kathryn Coombs
Host and Writer: Bill Nye
Series Producer and Director: Michael F. Fountain
Producer: Robyn Bennett
Series Writer: Michael Angelella
Writers: Ivan Abel Amato, Tony Black, Christina Reed, Charles Seife,
Marica L. Triunfol, Ginger Weingarten, Bob Zimmerman
Directors of Photography: Tom Inskeep, Jeffrey Saunders
Editors: Donna Andrade, Laurel Cobble, Ralph Fasano, Don Fish, Bill Davis
Production Manager: Greta Pittard
Associate Producer: Jonathan Reich
Production Coordinator: Christopher Geair
Gaffers: Josh Spring, Tomo Sasaki, Dave Jackson
Grips: Cyrus Amini, Tim Gordon
Sound Recordists: Dennis Towns, Brian Buckley, Ed Fritz
Assistant Camera Operator: Sarah Brandes
Temporary Operator: Melony Barton
Art Department: April Freeman
Production Assistants: Scott Foster, Justin Dickson
Recreation Coordination: Historical Entertainment LLC, Kathryn Coombs
Original Music and Sound Effects: Blue Dot
Archival Supervisor: Joy Ardizzone
Post Production Supervisor: Liz Magno Barnes
Stock Footage Researchers: Steve Droter, Rudy Estrada, Karma Foley, Erin Gray
Post Production Facilities: Interface Media Group
Graphic Design & Animation: Jeff Weingarten, Dave Flood, Frank Rogers, Alex Scott
Online Editor: Brent Hufnagel
Assistant Editor: Richard Akerson
Audio Mixer: Dennis Jacobsen
Colorist: Richard Pagliaroli
2nd Unit
Director: Drew Vandervelde
Production Coordinator: Erin Charles
Make-up and Hair: Jim Choate, Erika Onsager
Produced by thinkfilm, inc. for The Science Channel
Executive Producer: Joseph Aloysius Becker
For The Science Channel
Executive in Charge of Production: Steve Burns
Coordinating Producer: Wyatt Channel
Production Manager: Lori Beane
© Discovery Communications, Inc.
National Geographic International Channel Films Produced By Hoggard Films

Riddles of the Dead: Hitler's Skull
In Hitler’s Skull, forensic scientist Mark Benecke investigates the death of Adolf Hitler and takes viewers from the Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC, to Lausanne Switzerland and into a Russian archive where fascinating evidence has been kept secret for almost half a century.
Deep in a cavernous research facility in Moscow, Benecke analyzes Hitler’s alleged skull, his teeth and even the remains of his beautiful mistress, Eva Braun.
These strange artifacts will reveal many things for the first time – including how Hitler killed himself.
Was it poison? A bullet to the head? Or both?
In Hitler’s Skull, viewers learn why these shards of bones and teeth may belong to Hitler and – most intriguingly – why they were hidden away by Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin in the first place…
Produced, Written & Directed By: Jeanine Isabel Butler
Co-Director: Steven Hoggard
Editor: David Dill
Cinematographers: David J. Goulding. Brett F. Wiley
Associate Producer: Liz Magno
Sound Recordists: F. Patrick French, R. Patterson
Location Coordinator - Moscow: Andrey Stankevich
Narrator: Dr. Mark Benecke
Production Assistants: Hannah Chismar, Jake Laufer
Production Company: Hoggard Films

Riddles of the Dead: Immortal Comrade
In truth, Lenin himself was adamant that he didn’t want to be embalmed. Had he known his body would be preserved as a pseudo-religious artifact – it would’ve left him turning in his grave.
If he had one…
Learn of the odd and ongoing fate of the founder of a superpower: a man whose bodily remains have outlasted the empire he created.
Today, Lenin’s embalmers still tend to his corpse as they’ve done for nearly a century now.
But with times a-changing and those with living memories of the Soviet Union slowly disappearing from the scene, the scientists of Lenin’s tomb – once a lauded and pampered bunch – are scrambling to reinvent themselves and their lab as a ‘mummy renovation’ facility to stay in business.
Today, just across Red Square from Lenin’s Mausoleum, sits one of Russia’s shiniest and most extravagant malls. Forces here are building to remove the venerable leader from Red Square altogether.
Which, at least in part, is what Lenin would’ve probably wanted all along…
Produced, Written & Directed By: Steven Hoggard
Co-Director: Steven Hoggard
Editor: David Dill
Cinematographers: David J. Goulding. Brett F. Wiley
Associate Producer: Liz Magno
Production Manager: Michael Amouri
Sound Recordists: F. Patrick French, R. Patterson
Location Coordinator - Moscow: Andrey Stankevich
Original Music: Christopher Moscatiello
Narrator: Dr. Mark Benecke
Production Assistants: Hannah Chismar, Jake Laufer
Production Company: Hoggard Films

Riddles of the Dead: Plague Hunters
See how doctors are using forensic science to track a silent killer.
Called the Spanish Flu, it was the single deadliest viral outbreak of all time.
It began at the end of the First World War, when soldiers from around the world were returning home after five years of bloodshed.
They unknowingly brought with them a virus that would soon kill 40 million people – more than had died in the entire war.
Unlike most flus, ‘the Spanish Lady’ preyed not on the old and infirm but on the young and healthy.
In Plague Hunters, we join two teams of scientists as they race to find, identify, and reconstruct the DNA of history’s most lethal plague. Only by reconstructing the virus can scientists hope to create a vaccine to combat if and when it returns…
Producer/Writer/Director: Jeanine Isabel Butler
Associate Producer: Liz Magno
Photographer: David Goulding
Sound Recordist: Brian Buckley
Executive Producer: Steve Hoggard
Production Company: Hoggard Films

Riddles of the Dead: Savage Evidence
This story follows the work of the United Nations forensics investigation team that, often under armed guard, searches for mass graves hidden in the hills around Srebrenica.
Led by a fiercely determined Australian detective, the team seeks to uncover the dead, identify the bodies for relatives seeking closure, reconstruct the crime and bring those responsible for the largest European massacre since World War Two to justice.
In telling their story and those of the survivors, we revisit the war and tell the tale of when a small, Dutch peacekeeping unit at a crossroads just outside Srebrenica handed over nearly 10,000 Bosnian men, boys, women and children to the Serb paramilitaries who became their executioners.
Written & Directed By: Steven Hoggard
Producer: Daphna Rubin
Editor: Christine Romero
Cinematographer: David J. Goulding
Field Producer: Faruk Serderavic
Associate Producer: Liz Magno
Sound Recordist: Brian Buckley
Production Manager: Michael Amouri
Original Music: Christopher Moscatiello
Narrator: Rino Romano
Production Assistants: Monica Pinto, Pam Preston
Production Company: Hoggard Films

Riddles of the Dead: Clearing the Killing Fields
In Clearing the Killing Fields viewers hold their breath with the professional minesweeping teams who, each day, search Sarajevo’s battle-scarred cityscape for hidden killers and risk all to rid the land of a deadly menace.
Will they succeed-or will more innocent lives be taken? Mines never rest, they’re relentlessly deadly and cannot discriminate between civilian and soldier… And here in Bosnia years after the guns have fallen silent – they still take massive life.
In this story, viewers first meet 13-year-old Damir Vatres who lost part of his arm and one of his eyes to the hidden threat. We then join Bosnian dog handler, Neda Brkovic, and her minesweeping dog, Bonza, at the Canadian Canine Countermine School, as they learn to work together to detect and eliminate the mines that threaten their countrymen.
Throughout the program, we follow a team of demining professionals as they risk life and limb to rid Sarajevo’s neighborhoods and parks of their silent foe. Along the way, we learn about the tools, technology and dog training methods these heroes bring to bear.
And, unfortunately, the job is far from done.
Written & Directed By: Daphna Rubin
Co-Producer: Steven Hoggard
Editor: Christine Romero
Cinematographer: David J. Goulding
Field Producer: Faruk Serderavic
Associate Producer: Liz Magno
Sound Recordist: Brian Buckley
Production Manager: Michael Amouri
Original Music: Chris Moscatiello
Narrator: Rino Romano
Production Assistants: Monica Pinto, Pam Preston
Production Company: Hoggard Films