The BEST episodes of American Experience season 14
Every episode of American Experience season 14, ranked from best to worst by thousands of votes from fans of the show. The best episodes of American Experience season 14!
Presents an absorbing look at the personalities, events and resources that have had a profound impact on the shaping of America's past and present.
#1 - Ulysses S. Grant (1): The Warrior
Season 14 - Episode 13 - Aired 5/5/2002
The military career and troubled administration of the 15th President of the United States.
#2 - Public Enemy #1
Season 14 - Episode 10 - Aired 2/24/2002
The career and violent death of bank robber John Dillinger and the role of the FBI in finally stopping him.
#3 - New York (7): The City and the World (1945-2000)
Season 14 - Episode 2 - Aired 9/17/2001
In exploring the social, economic and physical forces that swept through the city in the post-war period, Episode Seven examines the great African-American migration and Puerto Rican immigration of the '40s, '50s, and '60s; the beginnings of white flight and suburbanization; and the massive physical changes wrought by highways and urban renewal -- all of which were directed, to a surprising degree, by one man: Robert Moses. The film comes to a climax with the destruction of Penn Station, the battle over the Lower Manhattan Expressway, the social and fiscal crises of the '60s and '70s, and New York's miraculous revival in the last quarter-century.
#4 - New York (6): The City of Tomorrow (1929-1941)
Season 14 - Episode 1 - Aired 9/10/2001
In little more than ten years, immense new forces were unleashed in New York, from the Depression itself to the New Deal, which permanently altered the city and the country. Along the way, two of the most remarkable New Yorkers of all time came to the fore: Mayor Fiorello La Guardia and master builder Robert Moses, both of whom attempted to create, in the darkest of times, a bold new city of the future. The episode examines their careers in detail, as well as the immense public works that transformed the city in the '30s. Also explored are the demise of Mayor Jimmy Walker, the coming of the New Deal, the fate of Harlem during the Depression, and the increasingly complex impact of the automobile on the city.
#5 - Mount Rushmore
Season 14 - Episode 6 - Aired 1/20/2002
The grand vision of sculptor Gutzon Borgum and the logistics behind the massive monument located in the Black Hills of South Dakota.
#6 - Zoot Suit Riots
Season 14 - Episode 8 - Aired 2/10/2002
Racial tensions in 1942 Los Angeles resulting from conflicts between young Mexican-American men and off-duty sailors.
#7 - Ulysses S. Grant (2): The President
Season 14 - Episode 14 - Aired 5/12/2002
#8 - War Letters
Season 14 - Episode 3 - Aired 11/11/2001
An episode that focuses on the letters that passed between soldiers and those at home during American history.
#9 - Woodrow Wilson (1): A Passionate Man
Season 14 - Episode 4 - Aired 1/6/2002
The contributions of a history professor and college administrator to the American presidency in the first part of the 20th century.
#10 - Woodrow Wilson (2): The Redemption of the World
Season 14 - Episode 5 - Aired 1/13/2002
#11 - Miss America
Season 14 - Episode 7 - Aired 1/27/2002
The growth of the famed beauty contest from a small promotional event for late-season tourism to a national phenomenon.
#12 - Monkey Trial
Season 14 - Episode 9 - Aired 2/17/2002
Clarence Darrow and William Jennings Bryan square-off in a battle of rhetoric and legal manuevers over the teaching of evolution in Tennessee.
#13 - Ansel Adams
Season 14 - Episode 11 - Aired 4/21/2002
From the day that a 14-year-old Ansel Adams first saw the transcendent beauty of the Yosemite Valley, his life was, in his words, "colored and modulated by the great earth-gesture of the Sierra." Few American photographers have reached a wider audience than Adams, and none has had more impact on how Americans grasp the majesty of their continent. In this elegant, moving and lyrical portrait of the most eloquent and quintessentially American of photographers, producer Ric Burns seeks to explore the meaning and legacy of Adams' life and work. At the heart of the film are the great themes that absorbed Adams throughout his career: the beauty and fragility of "the American earth," the inseparable bond of man and nature, and the moral obligation the present owes to the future.
#14 - A Brilliant Madness
Season 14 - Episode 12 - Aired 4/28/2002
Story of the life of MIT mathematician John Nash - from exceptional theory to struggles with mental illness.