George Mason University professor Colin Dueck talked about the strengths and weaknesses of President Trump's foreign policy and the role of conservative nationalism in U.S. foreign policy.
Cassie Chambers looked back at her grandmother, aunt, and mother, who grew up in poverty in Kentucky's Appalachian Mountains region and their decisions to remain or leave.
University of Texas journalism professor Kate Winkler Dawson looked at the life of Edward Oscar Heinrich, America's first forensic scientist, who was integral in introducing the use of ballistics, blood spatter analysis, and fingerprints as evidence in legal cases.
Republican National Committee spokesperson Kayleigh McEnany reported on the grassroots populist movement in the U.S. She is interviewed by Daily Beast senior columnist Matt Lewis.
NPR's Steve Inskeep recounted the lives of Jessie and John Fremont, a 19th century political power couple, who promoted western settlement, women's rights, and abolition. John Fremont was one of California's first U.S. Senators and was the first nominee of the Republican Party in 1856.
Netflix director of inclusion and former UN official Michelle King examined what she calls the invisible barriers to women succeeding in the workplace. She was interviewed by author and former USA Today Editor-in-Chief Joanne Lipman.
Brown University's Peter Andreas talked about the relationship between six drugs - alcohol, tobacco, caffeine, opium, amphetamines, and cocaine - and war.
Legal historian Melvin Urofsky provided a history of affirmative action; from how the Supreme Court has ruled on cases to how it's affected society and those it's meant to benefit.
Book TV talked to Bradley Graham, co-owner of Politics & Prose Bookstore in Washington, DC, about how the coronavirus has impacted his bookstore's operations.