Bounce TV Sets Black History Month Specials

Documentaries will premiere Every Wednesday night in February. Also featured are reflections from Kevin Hart, Gabrielle Union, Regina Hall and other African American celebrities that will air throughout the month.

Bounce TV, the new broadcast TV network for African Americans, is launching its first Black History Month tribute — “Our History” — on Feb. 1. It includes documentaries spanning topics such as slavery, the Civil Rights movement and the explosion of Hip Hop every Wednesday night in February. Additionally, leading African American movie stars and directors including Kevin Hart, Gabrielle Union, Regina King, Tim Story and Will Packer will be featured throughout “Our History” in new vignettes reflecting on their heritage and culture.

Bounce TV’s “Our History” Schedule (All nights start at 8 p.m. ET)

Feb. 1:  February One: The Story of the Greensboro Four documents one volatile winter in Greensboro that not only challenged public accommodation customs and laws in North Carolina, but served as a blueprint for the wave of non-violent civil rights protests that swept across the South and the nation throughout the 1960s.
Freedom on My Mind is next and is an acclaimed documentary film about the efforts to register African-American voters in 1960s Mississippi and the formation of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.

Feb. 8:  Crossing in St. Augustine focuses on the impact of the civil rights movement in St. Augustine, Fla., that culminated in a visit by Andrew Young at the request of Martin Luther King Jr. in 1964.

Next, the multiple award-winning documentary 500 Years Later, which was filmed on five continents and over 20 countries, tells the compelling story of the struggle of a people who have fought and continue to fight for the most essential human right — freedom.

Feb. 15: How We Got Over uses unique archival footage — mostly unseen since the time of its original broadcast in the 1950s and ’60s — to re-frame the story of the civil rights struggle and bring our nation’s struggle for racial equality to life. 

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Wild Women Don’t Have The Blues then details how the blues were born out of the economic and social transformation of African American life.  The lives of Ma Rainey, Bessie Smith, Ida Cox, Alberta Hunter and other music legends are showcased. A special encore of Freedom on My Mind follows.

Feb. 22: The Hip Hop Project is the story of a group of New York City teenagers who transform their life stories into powerful works of art, using hip hop as a vehicle for self-development and personal discovery.

The Real: Rucker Park Legends is next and has been called “The best work ever done on inner city basketball.” It offers historical insight into the importance of Harlem’s legendary Rucker Park and its Stay in School basketball tournament and league as well as its’ famous “Each One Teach One” program, pairing up basketball’s greats with disadvantaged youth.

Feb. 29: The History Makers: Faith leads off the night as the first of two documentaries from the Russell Simmons High Self Series that features African Americans who changed the world. Faith centers on the importance of faith in both oneself and a higher being to achieve the impossible. Jesse L. Jackson, Jr., B.B. King, Susan L. Taylor, Rev. Al Sharpton, Kim Fields, Marva Collins among others are featured.

The History Makers: Courage follows immediately and features Harry Belafonte, Vernon Jordan, Nikki Giovanni, B.B. King, and Angela Davis who tell, or are featured in, Courage’s triumphant stories of overcoming struggles and repression. An encore of Crossing in St. Augustine caps the evening.


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