It looks like you haven't set a station - localize now.
Don't have WORLD Channel in your area? Take a look at everything we have to offer below and WATCH online now!
12:00 AM
Nature: Tusker: Brotherhood of Elephants
1:00 AM
Finding Your Roots: Great Migrations
2:00 AM
Independent Lens: Razing Liberty Square
Liberty City, Miami, is home to one of the oldest segregated public housing projects in the U.S. Now with rising sea levels, the neighborhood’s higher ground has become something else: real estate gold. Wealthy property owners push inland to higher ground, creating a speculators’ market in the historically Black neighborhood previously ignored by developers and policy-makers alike.
3:30 AM
Better Next Big Thing
4:00 AM
Cruise Boom: A Community on the Cusp of Change
5:00 AM
Voces: American Sons
6:00 AM
BBC News
6:30 AM
Whitney Reynolds Show: The Real Reality
7:00 AM
Newsroom Tokyo
7:28 AM
Direct Talk
7:43 AM
Short Program
8:00 AM
Nature: Tusker: Brotherhood of Elephants
9:00 AM
Finding Your Roots: Great Migrations
10:00 AM
Independent Lens: Razing Liberty Square
Liberty City, Miami, is home to one of the oldest segregated public housing projects in the U.S. Now with rising sea levels, the neighborhood’s higher ground has become something else: real estate gold. Wealthy property owners push inland to higher ground, creating a speculators’ market in the historically Black neighborhood previously ignored by developers and policy-makers alike.
11:30 AM
Better Next Big Thing
12:00 PM
Amanpour and Company
1:00 PM
Whitney Reynolds Show: The Real Reality
1:30 PM
The Open Mind: Life Beyond Us
2:00 PM
100 Years from Mississippi
3:00 PM
Crossing Overtown
4:00 PM
Dream Land: Little Rock's West 9th Street
5:00 PM
DW News
5:30 PM
BBC News America
6:00 PM
DW The Day
6:30 PM
NHK Newsline
7:00 PM
Niagara Movement: The Early Battle for Civil Rights
8:00 PM
Ida B. Wells: American Stories
9:00 PM
Local, USA: Segregation Scholarships
The untold story of Black Americans in pursuit of higher education in the North when Southern graduate schools were white-only. The academics, who left during the Great Migration, returned to the Jim Crow South to strengthen their communities and to help end segregation. SEGREGATION SCHOLARSHIPS highlights the trailblazers while illustrating the role of education in transforming social conditions.
