You probably don’t love hummingbirds as much as Terry Masear does, but the exceedingly graceful, beautifully photographed documentary Every Little Thing will help change that.
There is an especially delightful, humble, rejuvenating documentary film that recently premiered at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival that is all about hummingbirds.
A celebration of some of our tiniest and most magical creatures
Serene footage of hummingbirds mid-flight make Every Little Thing worth screening. The story of the woman who cares for these adorable creatures is another good reason to see it.
Award-winning actor, Andy Serkis, narrates this stunning IMAX®/Giant Screen film that brought the world’s largest animal to the world’s largest screen, BLUE WHALES: RETURN OF THE GIANTS. Jared Lipworth is the Head of Studio and Executive Producer at HHMI Tangle Bank Studios and discusses the challenges and triumphs of a film like this.
Premieres Wednesday, Nov. 15, 2023 at 9 p.m. on KPBS TV / PBS App + Encores Sunday, Nov. 19 at 2 p.m. on KPBS TV and 9 p.m. on KPBS 2
NOVA, "The Battle to Beat Malaria" brings viewers an exclusive behind-the-scenes look at the University of Oxford research team that spearheaded the new R21 vaccine — being hailed as a major breakthrough in the fight against malaria — and its long path from development to approval by the World Health Organization (W.H.O.) in October 2023.

HHMI TANGLED BANK STUDIOS WINS 4th KAVLI SCIENCE JOURNALISM AWARD
November 9, 2023 (Chevy Chase, MD) - HHMI Tangled Bank Studios’ Wild Hope series won the 2023 AAAS Kavli Science Journalism Silver Award for In-Depth Reporting, which recognizes distinguished science reporting for a general audience.
Blue Carbon
Told through the eyes of Grammy-nominated DJ and marine biologist, Jayda Guy, accompanied by a score from the Wu-Tang Clan's RZA and featuring Seu Jorge, Blue Carbon is an environmental feature documentary that brings together music and science to uncover what could be our greatest weapon in the fight against climate change.
Flyways
Shorebirds fly thousands of miles each year along ancient and largely unknown migratory routes called Flyways. More than 200 species, such as Far Eastern Curlews, Lesser Yellowlegs, Red Knots and Hudsonian Godwits, travel from feeding grounds in the southern hemisphere to breeding grounds in the Arctic and back again, flying up to nine days non-stop without food or water.