As the search for the polar bear intensifies, our heroes accept a new foster endling into their family. Meanwhile, Tabby reconnects with her old life in a way Finn wishes he could.
While Johnny, Tabby and Finn wrestle with their potential futures, Julia can’t leave her past behind. But when an old threat becomes new again, the group realizes that the actions they take today will determine their tomorrows.
When Julia is forced to face a familiar enemy alone, all of the endlings are caught in the balance. To save their mission and her new family, Julia must finally face her greatest hurt.
When Hewes’ plan succeeds, Julia, Johnny, Tabby, and Finn must let their hopes, not their hurts, shape their future in order to save Ling and their mission.
Finn accidentally releases an electrifying new endling as Tabby struggles with an impending reunion. Meanwhile a sighting of a recently extinct animal leads Mitra and Lopez back to Hewes.
Hewes uses Johnny and Julia’s pasts against them as Ling unwittingly gives Tabby a startling vision of what’s to come, forcing the family to decide whether to fight the future or accept it as fate.
The fight to save endlings continues as Julia, Johnny, Tabby and Finn track Hewes to her Infinitum facility. When Hewes cracks open an orb releasing a dangerous creature, our heroes have no choice but to bring the fight to her.
A successful entrepreneur is found dead on the side of the road. Surprise clues are found during the autopsy, and investigators soon uncover a devious sex cult and a masterminded revenge plan that leads them to the one killer no one ever suspected.
A dating show with a hyperactive kid, a Scottish dog, and an inept astronaut. A real cheesy doo-wop song. A compilation album about lifeguards. Gary Anthony Williams is the guest contestant.
Amber names a "Hero of the Week"; Tarik grows a soul patch and sings about uniting the country.
A journey through Sicily that takes in seven Unesco World Heritage sites, with the first stop being a visit to a castle whose baron was inspired by Hampton Court. There's a meeting in Modica with Sicily's most famous chocolatier, a trip on the unique railway that travels around Etna, and a visit to Ragusa, a baroque-inspired city famous for its beauty and for its spiral railway that travels within a mountain.
John Wayne Gacy and Dean Corll targeted boys as part of a paedophile ring.
Police link John Wayne Gacy and Dean Corll to an elaborate paedophile ring.
In 373 BCE the classical Greek city of Helike disappeared beneath the waves. Its destruction was so catastrophic that the only way the Greek authors could make sense of it was to blame it on the supernatural - Poseidon destroyed the city. It’s hauntingly similar to the myth of another Ancient civilization lost beneath the waves - Atlantis. Helike’s location is one of the greatest mysteries in archaeology, but could it be possible to rediscover the lost city and could Helike actually be Atlantis?
Go inside "Earth to Ned", "Star Wars: The High Republic" and "Magic of Disney's Animal Kingdom"
Rick heads into the bowels of Cornwall with author Philip Marsden, deep into the China Clay pits, to discover what is known locally as White Gold, one of this county’s most important industries. He then climbs the Cornish Alps, huge slag heaps created by the clay mining and some of Cornwall’s highest land. After a wild swim with Shonna Hands at one of Cornwall’s picturesque hidden coves, Polridmouth, Rick cooks a simple recipe for BBQ sea bass with a fennel mayonnaise – telling you how to make the perfect homemade mayonnaise in the process. In the far west of the county, on the Land’s End peninsula, Rick introduces us to his niece, Lucy Stein, a modern artist who explains her deep spiritual connection to Cornwall – including a wander at Boscawen-un stone circle close to St Buryan.
Griffin Campbell and his family move to a new town and take ownership of an abandoned hotel in hopes of restoring it back to the lively vacation destination it once was.
Many see them as massive testaments to America's progress. Some view them as immutable symbols of the human spirit. Others perceive them as sacred shrines dedicated to the ideals of liberty and freedom. But no matter what they represent--America's monuments are inarguably impressive due to their colossal size and scope, their groundbreaking feats of engineering, and their storied histories. Why is it that America's greatest monuments continue to enthrall us decades--and sometimes centuries--after their creation? And perhaps more importantly, what closely guarded secrets may their implacable facades be hiding?