Eyes On The Prize III to debut on Hbo Max

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Watch Trailer For ‘Eyes On The Prize III,’ New Installment Of Award-Winning Series On America’s Struggle For Equity, Racial Justice​


Eyes_on_the_Prize_III_KA.jpg


Dawn Porter serves as executive producer of the series. Individual episodes are directed by Geeta Gandbhir, Samantha Knowles, Muta’Ali, Rudy Valdez, Smriti Mundhra, and Asako Gladsjo.
HBO Documentary Films presents Eyes on the Prize III: We Who Believe in Freedom Cannot Rest 1977-2015,

Watch the trailer above.
This is a breakdown of the series:
  • Episodes:
Episode 1: “America, Don’t Look Away 1977-1988”
Debut date: TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25 (9:00 p.m-10:00 p.m. ET/PT)
Directed by Geeta Gandbhir, episode one chronicles community activists in New York’s South Bronx and Philadelphia fighting for fair housing and healthcare at the tail end of the Carter administration and through the rise of Reaganomics and the AIDS crisis.
Featured Participants: Community activists Robert Foster, Carol Waring, Leon Potts, Allen Pierce, and Harry DeRienzo; former Bronx borough president Fernando Ferrer; former commissioner of public health Estelle Richman; AIDS activist and Bebashi founder Rashidah Abdul-Khabeer; AIDS activists Tyrone Smith, David Fair, and Michael Hinson; former mayor of Philadelphia W. Wilson Goode.
Episode 2: “Trapped: 1989-1995”
Debut date: TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25 (10:00 p.m-11:00 p.m. ET/PT)
Directed by Samantha Knowles, episode two documents the criminal justice system profiling public defenders in Washington D.C. and local organizers in South Central Los Angeles who sound the alarm about institutional structures and policies that disproportionately affect the Black community.
Featured Participants: Activists Aqeela Sherrills and Skipp Townsend; congresswoman Maxine Waters; public defenders Kim Taylor-Thompson, James Forman, Jr. and Robert Wilkins; Coalition Against Police Abuse (CAPA) member Mabie Settlage; deputy drug czar Reggie Walton; and assistant U.S. attorney D.C. L. Jackson Thomas.
Episode 3: “Million Man March 1995”
Debut date: WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26 (9:00 p.m-10:00 p.m. ET/PT)
Directed by Muta’Ali, episode three chronicles the controversy and community inspired by the 1995 Million Man March in Washington, D.C. that came to be a transformative experience for many of the men who traveled in from around the nation to participate.
Feature participants: Former executive director NAACP Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr.; activist Reverend Al Sharpton; journalist Michael Cottman; U.C. Santa Cruz professor emerita Angela Davis; youth mentor Jimmy Cunningham; attorney Roderick Terry; march organizer E. Faye Williams; march attendees Bobby Sykes, Ron Thompson, John Davi Ervin, Jr., and Katina Parker; White House speechwriter J. Terry Edwards; congressman Kweisi Mfume; photographer Jason Miccolo Johnson; and public speaker Ayinde Jean-Baptiste.
Episode 4: “Spoil The Vine 1982-2011”
Debut date: WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26 (10:00 p.m-11:00 p.m. ET/PT)
Directed by Rudy Valdez, episode four explores the growing environmental justice movement as local activists in West Virginia and Florida fight threats to their communities’ health and survival.
Featured participants: United Church of Christ commissioner for racial justice Dr. Benjamin Chavis, Jr.; activists Sue Ferguson Davis, Kathy Ferguson, and Pam Nixon; environmental justice activist Dr. Robert Bullard; director of environmental justice at United Church of Christ Charles Lee; Citzens Against Toxic Exposure (CATE) activists Francine Ishmael, Frances Dunham, and Eddie Ishmael; former vice president and environmental activist Al Gore.
Episode 5: “We Don’t See Color 1996-2013”
Debut date: THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27 (9:00 p.m-10:00 p.m. ET/PT)
Directed by Smriti Mundhra, episode five explores the complexities of affirmative action policies and how a changing demographic landscape affected school desegregation in new ways.
Featured participants: UCLA School of Law professor Kimberlé Crenshaw; By Any Means Necessary (BAMN) chairperson Shanta Driver; University of Michigan Law School professor Ted Shaw; Advancement Project executive director Judith Browne Dianis; organizers Yevonne Brannon, Erika Wilson, Rasheda Kilpatrick, Amelia Lumpkin, Adrienne Lumpkin, Samantha Lumpkin, Rev. Nancy Petty, and Mary D. Williams; University of Michigan former president Lee Bollinger; senior research scholar Timothy Tyson; former Wake County superintendent Bill McNeal; former school board members Keith Sutton and John Tedesco; former president of North Carolina NAACP Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II.

Episode Six: What Comes After Hope? 2008-2015
Debut date: THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27 (10:00 p.m-11:00 p.m. ET/PT)
Directed by Asako Gladsjo, episode six chronicles the years of America’s first Black president, when, despite hope for significant societal change, police brutality soared and a new movement under the banner #BlackLivesMatter emerged.
Featured participants: Organizers Jonathan Lykes, Nelini Stamp, Charlene A. Carruthers, Asha Ransby-Sporn, and Ahmad Abuznaid; Dream Defenders co-founders Phillip Agnew, Ciara Taylor, and Jonel Edwards; Black Youth Project 100 (BYP100) co-founders Damon Williams, Breanna Champion, and Johnaé Strong; Black Lives Matter (BLM) co-founders Alicia Garza and Patrisse Cullors; former Florida state senator Dwight Bullard; U.C. Santa Cruz professor emerita Angela Davis; BlackOUT Collective co-director Chinyere Tutashinda; Advancement Project executive director Judith Browne Dianis; activist Rev. Al Sharpton; University of Chicago professor Cathy Cohen, PHD.; and Advancement Project lawyer Alana Greer.



 
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1st episode of the original series



Eyes on the Prize
S1.E1

Awakenings: 1954-1956​

  • Episode aired Jan 21, 1987
  • TV-PG
  • 57m



The beginnings of the U.S. Civil rights struggle is profiled, including the Emmett Till murder trial and the Rosa Parks arrest/Montgomery bus boycott
 

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Interview with the producer

2/25/25
"In the 1960s we had a very easily identifiable enemy. There were laws saying, “You cannot sit here, you cannot eat here, you cannot go to school.” In the 1970s and '80s, '90s and early 2000s, and even today — well, I'll get to today – but in the period that we cover, racism and exclusion were not quite so obvious, and it was important to us to point out that while laws had been eradicated or changed, behaviors had not always been eradicated or changed. And so our job was a little harder. We had to point to things that were more subtle forms of discrimination and exclusion. Those were the stories that we were looking for.

I would say that 2025 is now becoming more like 1968, where there are specific and not subtle attacks on full equality for all people, regardless of background. When Trump has weaponized the term diversity as something that corporations, educational institutions and even PBS are stepping back from, that is outrageous"
 

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On episode one right now and you quickly piece together the era/climate Trump earned his bones in. The Bronx, Gaza, federal workers, all of us honestly.
 
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