I’m pregnant... I’m confused. I’m scared. I’m 14. I don’t know what I’m doing at all.
Heather, a teenager in Idaho who found out she was pregnant. There was the possibility her boyfriend, who was 24, would go to prison.
READ Heather’s story

oozey mess

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Jules of Nature
occasionally subtle
wallacepolsom
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Cosmic Funnies
hello vonnie

pixel skylines
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Kaledo Art
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$LAYYYTER
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祝日 / Permanent Vacation
Today's Document
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Not today Justin
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@frontlinepbs
I’m pregnant... I’m confused. I’m scared. I’m 14. I don’t know what I’m doing at all.
Heather, a teenager in Idaho who found out she was pregnant. There was the possibility her boyfriend, who was 24, would go to prison.
READ Heather’s story
In the summer after 9th grade, 14-year-old Heather discovered she was pregnant. Her boyfriend Aaron was 24. At the time, marriage seemed like it could be a solution to their problems — and maybe a way to keep Aaron out of jail.
In the first ever episode of The FRONTLINE Dispatch, reporter Anjali Tsui and producer Sophie McKibben go inside a battle playing out over child marriage in America.
LISTEN: Child marriage in America
The little-known story of the only U.S. bank prosecuted in relation to the 2008 financial crisis. “Abacus: Small Enough to Jail” chronicles the Sung family’s fight to clear their names.
In late 2009, the Sungs discover fraud at Abacus Federal Savings Bank — which serves the Chinese immigrant community — and fire the loan officer responsible. With the financial crisis underway, they soon find themselves and their small family-owned bank under scrutiny. While the big banks avoid prosecution and pay fines, Abacus faces charges.
WATCH the full film “Abacus: Small Enough to Jail” now.
Some stories are meant to be heard. At FRONTLINE, we have been talking about bringing our journalism to audio for years. For storytellers and audiences alike, audio offers a special intimacy and transparency.
I am pleased to introduce The FRONTLINE Dispatch — a new narrative podcast from FRONTLINE that expands our tradition of tough, fair reporting.
SUBSCRIBE
LISTEN TO OUR TRAILER
Three years ago this week, ISIS killed or enslaved thousands of Yazidis.
Aeida was abducted along with her two children near Sinjar Mountain in the summer of 2014. She was among the earliest Yazidi women to escape the terrorist group’s brutal reign.
“I dream of ISIS attacking us and I run away,” she said. “Sometimes I see them arresting me. Some nights, I can’t sleep until the early morning hours because of the nightmares.”
Aeida and other women and children who managed to flee shared their experiences in our 2015 documentary.
Watch "Escaping ISIS"
Children describing the sounds bombs make as they fall. Streets covered with rotting garbage. Doctors and nurses who have gone months without pay, at hospitals struggling to care for an influx of cholera patients and malnourished infants.
That’s what FRONTLINE filmmaker Martin Smith and his team witnessed in May when they became the only foreign journalists given permission to enter Yemen, the country that’s home to what the United Nations recently called the “largest humanitarian crisis” in the world.
“People are not seeing what’s going on. We’re talking thousands of civilian dead,” Smith says in Inside Yemen, a 10-minute documentary short released by FRONTLINE.
WATCH “Inside Yemen” NOW
What did health care in America look like before the Affordable Care Act?
In 2009, FRONTLINE investigated the country’s health care system in “Sick Around America.”
WATCH the full film.
What did health care in America look like before the Affordable Care Act?
In 2009, FRONTLINE investigated the country’s health care system in “Sick Around America.”
WATCH the full film.
Greenland's glaciers are melting faster and faster. And it's not just warm air melting the ice — @nasa scientists suspect something is happening beneath the water’s surface. Their findings mean current predictions about global sea level rise could actually be conservative.
This 360° video from FRONTLINE, @novapbs, and Emblematic Group takes you to a remote Arctic land most people never get near, to explore what Greenland’s disappearing ice means for the climate and the world.
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Greenland’s glaciers are hiding a secret: They’re melting faster than expected. Why? NASA is trying to find out why and what it could mean for the whole world.
Step onto this disappearing icy landscape in the 360° video from FRONTLINE, @novapbs, and Emblematic Group:
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He’s been called a strategist, a revolutionary and a provocateur.
Steve Bannon helped create a movement intent on transforming America. Who is he, and what’s shaped the worldview at the heart of his politics? Get the inside story on Bannon’s mission to disrupt the establishment.
WATCH the full film “Bannon’s War” now.
It was just before noon on a Saturday in April when the armed men started taking up positions in the high desert sun.
Kitted out in camouflage and tactical gear, they had driven hundreds of miles across the country to make a stand in a dry stretch of scrubland in southeastern Nevada.
Men calling themselves Oath Keepers had come from Arizona and New Hampshire, joining a militia group from Montana, Operation Mutual Aid; and members of the Three Percenters from Idaho and Oregon. This was the first time these self-styled “patriots” had come together in one place, to confront what they all believed was the growing tyranny of the federal government.
Brandon Rapolla, a Marine veteran from Oregon, was one of them. “I’m a devout Christian,” he said. “I prayed upon it very heavily. And within less than a 24-hour period, I got my gear ready and headed down there.”
They had come to defend Cliven Bundy, a longtime Nevada rancher who had declared a “range war” against the federal government. Bundy’s cattle had grazed freely across public lands near the town of Bunkerville for more than 20 years, in defiance of orders from the federal Bureau of Land Management. Bundy had ignored penalty fees and three court orders requiring him to remove the animals. Now, the bureau had begun impounding the cattle to auction them off.
The bureau had expected resistance from Cliven and his sons, who had vowed to defend a livelihood their family had maintained for generations. They even thought there might be protests from local friends and family.
“What we really did not anticipate is hundreds of militia members, many of them armed, coming from around the country,” said Steve Ellis, then the BLM’s deputy director of operations, who was watching the situation unfold from his office in Washington, D.C.
The standoff had been coming to a head for several days, and by that Saturday morning, the BLM estimated, hundreds of militia and other supporters had gathered — some on horseback, many of them armed. They vastly outnumbered the federal agents on the scene.
It was the largest gathering of militia anyone had seen in decades, and it sent shockwaves through the land management agency. Like most of his colleagues at the BLM, Ellis, a soft-spoken forester from the midwest, spent his time thinking about how best to manage public lands, not armed standoffs. Now, some of his officers in Nevada were worried they might never see their families again.
To the FBI, who had sent two agents to the scene, the gathering was more familiar, but no less concerning. They knew what had happened in the past when armed extremists confronted federal agents, and they were sobered by what they saw unfolding in Bunkerville. The message that got back to the BLM was chilling: We hunker down, people die. We go back to gathering [cattle], people die. We extricate ourselves immediately, people die.
READ MORE
FRONTLINE investigates how the Bundy family’s fight against the federal government invigorated armed militias and “patriot” groups — helping them grow to levels not seen in decades.
WATCH the full film “American Patriot: Inside the Armed Uprising Against the Federal Government” now.
In Dallas and other tight rental markets, Section 8 voucher holders can't find the homes they need, while developers face resistance from wealthier neighborhoods when trying to build new housing.
Laura Sullivan’s reporting for FRONTLINE & @npr’s “Poverty, Politics and Profit.”
FRONTLINE and @npr investigate the billions spent on affordable housing, and why so few get the help they need.
WATCH the full film “Poverty, Politics and Profit” now.
READ/LISTEN to Laura Sullivan’s investigation.
On average, 685 juvenile offenders are tried as adults in the U.S. each day.
For more, watch “Second Chance Kids” & explore our extensive reporting on the criminal justice system & mass incarceration.
Convicted of crimes as teenagers, they were locked up for life. Anthony Rolon and Joe Donovan were given life without parole sentences during the country’s crackdown on juvenile offenders during the “superpredator” era.
“Second Chance Kids” follows Rolon and Donovan’s cases as they become the first men in America to be released after the Supreme Court ruled sentences of mandatory life without parole for juveniles unconstitutional.
"Second Chance Kids” asks tough questions about crime and punishment in America, and what happens when some offenders are given a second chance.
WATCH the full film “Second Chance Kids” now.