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JANUARY COLLECTION
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Featured Collection:
Awards All-Stars Collection ([link removed])
Streaming through Jan 30
This month’s Awards All-Stars 2026 Collection ([link removed]) highlights four films from our eighth season of POV Shorts ([link removed]) that have received industry accolades and precipitated the Oscar® season. Among the Awards All-Stars films in the collection are two films both recently selected to the Shortlist ([link removed]) – Classroom 4 ([link removed]) and Chasing Time ([link removed]) (the 40 minute Director’s Cut). We premiered the full slate of our 8th season in November and presented the 24-minute version of Chasing Time.
Now part of the Oscar® legacy, Chasing Time and Classroom 4 take their place within the storied history of the Academy, and we’re crossing our fingers for our film teams that have made this year’s shortlist.
Awards All-Stars Collection is a celebration of Oscar® contenders, along with two other films that have garnered industry recognition whose stories and characters are worthy of special mention in their own right: Songs of Black Folk ([link removed]) and The People Could Fly. ([link removed]) As a new Juneteenth tradition comes to Emerald City of Seattle, the filmmakers behind Songs of Black Folk ([link removed]) take viewers inside the process of commemorating the history of Black enslavement by honoring Black creative spirit. The People Could Fly ([link removed]) is a portrait of Lexington, Kentucky’s rollerskating community woven together from a patchwork of intimate interviews mixed with archival and contemporary footage of rollerskaters, and their go-to places, to tell of its lasting presence and the deeper meaning as it acknowledges the complicated
racial histories within the American South. Classroom 4 ([link removed]) offers an intimate look at a prison where a class of free and incarcerated students come together to study “The History of Crime and Punishment.” As the professor moderates their conversations, the incarcerated individuals are shown as whole people, not defined by their crime, but with a set of experiences not unlike their free classmates. In the 24-minute streaming version of Chasing Time ([link removed]) , renowned photographer James Balog, whose work merges fine art and science to reveal the impact of climate change, is confronted by the fragility of his physical health while documenting the fate of the world’s glaciers.
Together, this quartet of must-see titles reveal the shared humanity experienced during moments of transformation when a barrier becomes an opportunity to engage with communities, to go beyond limitations, explore new traditions and celebrate the old ones.
WATCH NOW ([link removed])
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Featured Collection:
Celebrating the Culture:
Kwanzaa 2025 Collection ([link removed])
Streaming through Jan 1
What defines community? What brings people together? What does community look like? Our latest collection is curated around the nature of community in an era of cultural, social and political division. Springing from a desire to connect with others around shared experience, collective memory and culture, communities provide a pivotal transformative counter to peril, loss and grief. This collection presents POV features and POV Shorts that imagine various ways communities define themselves, their goals, needs and ideals, and how histories, personal experiences and geography influence how communities look and feel.
From undaunted grassroots organizers confronting violence in their communities in Murders That Matter ([link removed]) and The Body Politic ([link removed]) ; to activists united around accessibility and inclusion in All Riders ([link removed]) ; to American Seams ([link removed]) , Águilas ([link removed]) and A Story of Bones ([link removed]) where bonds are forged by traditional craft, loss and memorial; and MnM ([link removed]) and Jardines ([link removed]) , intimate portraits of people whose identity and self expression are deeply entwined with dignity and safety.
These stories demonstrate that community is a shared effort built through dreams, perseverance, resistance, and that Getting Back to Abnormal ([link removed]) is only possible through collective healing and joy. Watch these visionary stories about community spaces and places and the people who create connections, transform themselves and others, and make a difference out of necessity and hope.
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POV Shorts: S8 is Now Streaming
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POV Shorts, the award-winning nonfiction shorts film series curated by POV, returns today for its 8th season with bold new films from visionary independent filmmakers. This year’s lineup explores themes of cultural identity, climate change, resilience, intergenerational storytelling, music, and belonging.
This January season, tune in to:
Chasing Time ([link removed]) , The People Could Fly ([link removed]) , This is America ([link removed]) (MnM ([link removed]) , Your Opinion, Please ([link removed]) ), The Songs of Black Folk ([link removed]) , La Orquesta ([link removed]) , and Classroom 4 ([link removed])
All 6 episodes are now available to stream at pbs.org/povand on the PBS App ([link removed]) .
WATCH NOW ([link removed])
STREAMING ENCORES
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What does it take to rebuild a community after a crisis? POV’s Getting Back to Abnormal ([link removed]) follows the stories of people coming together to reclaim normalcy and resilience in extraordinary times.
Getting Back to Abnormal is be available to stream now until Jan 30 2026 on POV on pbs.org ([link removed]) , and the PBS App ([link removed]) .
WATCH NOW ([link removed])
Discover our free resources, thoughtfully created by educators, community leaders, and librarians to inspire learning and dialogue. From reading materials to discussion guides, these tools help you create meaningful impact in your community.
Browse All Resources:
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* Discussion Guides ([link removed])
* Reading Lists ([link removed])
Ready to start? Access our complete resource library below.
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POV ON YOUTUBE
Select POV titles are now available to stream on PBS's Youtube channel.
Explore the POV collection and watch now on Youtube!
STREAM ON YOUTUBE ([link removed])
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Major funding for POV is provided by PBS, The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Wyncote Foundation, Reva & David Logan Foundation, Open Society Foundations, Perspective Fund and the National Endowment for the Arts. Additional funding comes from Nancy Blachman and David desJardins, Bertha Foundation, The Hollywood Foreign Press Association's Charitable Trust, Park Foundation, Sage Foundation, New York State Council on the Arts, public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, Chris and Nancy Plaut, Abby Pucker, Ann Tenenbaum and Thomas H. Lee and public television viewers. POV is presented by a consortium of public television stations, including KQED San Francisco, WGBH Boston and THIRTEEN in association with WNET.ORG.
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