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Who Killed the Red Car?

Who Killed the Red Car?

Season 5 Episode 1
26:46
Winemaking

Winemaking

Season 5 Episode 2
26:41
Prehistoric Landscapes

Prehistoric Landscapes

Season 5 Episode 3
26:46
German Exiles

German Exiles

Season 5 Episode 4
26:04
From Little Tokyo to Crenshaw

From Little Tokyo to Crenshaw

Season 5 Episode 5
26:37
Fast Food and Car Culture

Fast Food and Car Culture

Season 6 Episode 1
26:47
Historic Filipinotown

Historic Filipinotown

Season 6 Episode 2
26:39
Hiking Trailblazers

Hiking Trailblazers

Season 6 Episode 3
26:40
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Lost LA

Three Views of Manzanar: Ansel Adams, Dorothea Lange and Toyo Miyatake

Season 4 Episode 2

Despite the trauma of their incarceration during World War II, Japanese Americans built new lives while detained at concentration camps like Manzanar. They played baseball, planted gardens and made the honor roll. Three renowned photographers captured these scenes: outsiders Dorothea Lange and Ansel Adams and incarceree Tōyō Miyatake who boldly smuggled in a camera lens to document life from within the camp. All three trained their lenses on small yet profound moments of dignity and domesticity, documenting resilience in the face of civil injustice. This episode compares and contrasts their approaches and the politics encoded in their work. It also follows the work of Paul Kitagaki, Jr., an award-winning photographer, who is trying to capture the images and voices of those incarcerees decades after that fateful moment in time. 

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25:06
See how the many restrictions many Angelenos had to navigate, exposing Los Angeles as a place of coded segregation and resistance.
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Los Angeles is often identified with Hollywood, but there's more to the entertainment industry than its facade of movie stars and blockbuster films.
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Wood, iron, steel, concrete -- these are the materials that gave form to Los Angeles and shaped its identity in the national imagination. This episode also questions the cultural legacy and environmental costs of the city's relentless growth.
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26:12
Long before Hollywood imagined the Wild West, Los Angeles was a real frontier town of gunslingers, lynch mobs, and smoke-belching locomotives.
Pio Pico
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American history has long been told as a triumphant march westward from the Atlantic coast, but in southern California, our history stretches back further in time.
Reshaping L.A.
28:32
In this episode, "Lost LA" examines how the modern metropolis has reshaped its own topography. The program explores downtown L.A.'s lost hills and tunnels, as well as the vanished canals of Venice Beach.
Before the Dodgers
20:57
In this episode, "Lost LA" explores the various ways Southern California's inhabitants have used the hills around Dodger Stadium.
Wild L.A.
23:28
In this episode, Lost L.A. explores the complicated relationship between the city and its natural environment.
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