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The Walt Disney documentary was banned in New York on August 10, 1954 due to a clip where it demonstrated a buffalo giving birth. The ban was lifted after a complaint by the American Civil Liberties Union. [53] [54] The Bamboo Prison: 1954 1955 The Korean War film was banned in Memphis due to its "inimical" content. [55]
FX is one of the few commercial–dependent cable channels that features nudity in its programming (notably the controversial Nip/Tuck and American Horror Story ). SundanceTV will allow nudity. Discovery and other documentary -related channels may show nudity in a journalistic context, such as that of indigenous peoples .
Release. April 28, 1991. ( 1991-04-28) Switched at Birth is a 1991 American miniseries directed by Waris Hussein. It is based on the true story of Kimberly Mays and Arlena Twigg, babies switched soon after birth in a Florida hospital in 1978. [1] NBC aired the production as a two-part miniseries over two consecutive nights on April 28, 1991.
Without question, part of my fear about being pregnant stemmed from statistics that I was all too familiar with as a journalist: Black women are 2 to 3 times more likely to die in childbirth than ...
December 8, 2019. ( 2019-12-08) The Lost Women of NXIVM is a two-hour documentary premiered on Investigation Discovery on December 8, 2019. Former NXIVM publicist Frank Parlato, who first revealed that NXIVM was branding women, [1] [2] takes a deep dive to answer the questions surrounding the tragic deaths and mysterious disappearances of five ...
Lisette Lopez-Rose lives in Richmond. If you need assistance with postpartum depression or other perinatal mental health disorders, call 1-800-944-4PPD (4773) or Text “Help” to 1-800-944-4773 ...
July 29, 2024 at 11:59 PM. Jul. 29—Filmmaker and TV producer Amanda Erickson wanted to tell the shocking story of murdered and missing Indigenous women in a way that made an impact, that might ...
The Business of Being Born. The Business of Being Born is a 2008 documentary film that explores the contemporary experience of childbirth in the United States. Directed by Abby Epstein and produced by Ricki Lake, it compares various childbirth methods, including midwives, natural births, epidurals, and Cesarean sections. [1]