Off the Air - Season 1

Season 1

Episodes

Animals
Surreal footage of animals.
Featured videos
The Big Bounce from the Prelinger Archives
Excerpt from El hombre y la Tierra
Zodiac Animals by Adam Fuchs (credited as Lilfuchs)
Japanese macaque stock footage from Getty Images
Cows and Zebras by Taras Hrabowsky
Meow Mix by Cyriak Harris
Triple Jump advertisement for Japan Airlines
Lizard stock footage from Corbis Motion
Music video for "The Music Scene" by Anthony F. Shepperd
3D end credit animation by Adam Bruneau
Cheese rolling footage from SoGlos
Featured music
"Baltihorse" by Dan Deacon
"Zodiac Shit" by Flying Lotus
"Let the Blind Lead Those Who Can See but Cannot Feel" by Atlas Sound
"The Music Scene" by Blockhead
"Star Spangled Banner" by Black Lips

Food
Surreal footage of foods and drinks.
Featured videos
The Big Bounce from the Prelinger Archives
Think Globally, Act Locally by William Lamson
Food by Dax Norman
Digestive System by Flix Productions Medical Animation
The Huber Experiments – Vol. 1 by Erik Huber and Matthew Huber
Stock footage supplied by iStock
Unabomber Speckles drawing by R. Land
Western Spaghetti by PES
Music video for "We Want Your Soul" by Happy
Something by Cyriak Harris
Ecological Apple by Andreas Soderberg
Oyster Vision by Coral Morphologic
Automato by Bill Feinup and Barry Kudrowitz
Featured music
"Quick Canal" by Atlas Sound (featuring Lætitia Sadier)
"Bruschotti" by Longmont Potion Castle
"The Flying Nun" by 9 Lazy 9
"We Want Your Soul" by Freeland
"Let's All Go to the Lobby" by Filmack Studios

Dance
Surreal footage of dancing.
Featured videos
The Big Bounce from Prelinger Archives
Involuntaries 4 by Foofwa d'Imobilité, Vea Lucca and Alan Sondheim
Opening credit animation by Mark Phillips
Music video for "Buchstabe" by Knorkator
Modern Daydreams 1: Deere John by Mitchell Rose and BodyVox
Stock footage supplied by iStock
Protective Cover (The Condom Song) by Nrityanjali Academy (from the India HIV/AIDS Alliance)
Indian Dancing Prank by Christian von Nathusius
Angry Industrial Dancer in Little Saigon by Duy Huu Luu (also known as Tank Nine)
Music video for "Tush It" by Liam Lynch
Music video for "Vessel (Four Tet Remix)" by Bison
Peacock Spider by Jurgen Otto
Robots Dancing by Jean-Charles Bazin and Young Cheol Lee
Featured music
"Buchstabe" by Knorkator
"5 AM (I Love My Haters)" by Clams Casino
"Electrohead" by Combichrist
"Tush It" by Liam Lynch
"Vessel (Four Tet Remix)" by Jon Hopkins
"Woof Woof" by Dan Deacon
"She's Hot" by Clams Casino

Space
Surreal footage of outer space.
Featured videos
Freedom 7 footage supplied by NASA and the Internet Archive
Porculpa by Lyn Hagan
Opening credit animation by Adam Fuchs; stock footage provided by Getty Images
Toy Robot in Space! by James Trosh
Giant Leap by Kyle Botha
Zeroing by Andrey Nepomnyaschev
Space Ghost character design by Alex Toth, featuring the voice of George Lowe (archived recording from the Space Ghost Coast to Coast episode "In Memory of Elizabeth Reed")
Hell / ????? by David OReilly
Excerpt from In Saturn's Rings by Stephen Van Vuuren
Noisebox in Space by 12foot6
Music video for "A Glorious Dawn" by John Boswell of the Symphony of Science (featuring Carl Sagan and Stephen Hawking)
Music video for "Quantum Leap" by Thomas De Rijk
Apollo 11 launch footage by NASA; telecine by Spacecraft Films
Featured music
"The Grey Ship" by EMA
"Terra Incognita" by Atlas Sound
"A Glorious Dawn" by John Boswell
"Quantum Leap" by Slugabed and Planet Mu
"Decollage" by Les Balayeurs du déser

Body
Surreal footage of bodies.
Featured videos
CORDS (hear us and have mercy) by Sara Lundberg; a cappella performance by Linda Ohlin, Carina Aronsson, Gustav Nordlander, and Carl Slettengren
Stock footage supplied by iStock and the Internet Archive
Photos of the Visible Human Project supplied by the United States National Library of Medicine
All Ways by Color Chart
Take This Pill by David Firth
going to the store by David Lewandowski
Hot Dog Hustle by Thomas Hunter
SyncBody by Daihei Shibata; artwork by Hiroshi Sato
Sossidge Arms animated shorts by Chriddof
Go Pro On a Hula Hoop by Nick Saik
Amalgamide Tide by Taras Hrabowsky
Stinks by Glogman Johns
15 Denier by Harry Handyside
Featured music
"Quitters Raga" by Gold Panda
"All Ways" by Corduroi
"Little Ships" by Jean-Jacques Perrey
"PLMS_IV_D" by Yaporigami and +MUS
"Baby's Arms" by Kurt Vile
"Pigsy in Space" from Journey to the Wes
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Bookish
London, 1946 is the dynamic, dangerous and chaotic setting for this stylish new detective drama, with the eccentric Gabriel Book at the very heart of the story: a self-appointed consultant detective to the local police. The thousands of books that line the shelves of his shop provide him with all the knowledge he needs.
Book has gathered around him a host of lovable, damaged misfits whom he informally protects, cajoles, and mentors. His wife Trottie runs the wallpaper shop next door. She's a charismatic adventuress whom Book loves deeply but not physically, for they are in a 'lavender' marriage to help conceal Book's sexual orientation in a time when it was illegal to be gay.
Bookish marries post-war nostalgia with the reckless and life-affirming atmosphere of the times, creating a fast-paced and stylish detective drama.

Bergerac
Bergerac is based on the original series created by Robert Banks Stewart, which starred John Nettles and ran for nine series on the BBC between 1981 and 1991. The modern re-imagining will honour the iconic detective drama, but with a contemporary twist. Unlike the original hit from the 80s, the new series will see one character-led murder mystery run across all six episodes, in place of a new storyline each episode.
Viewers will meet Jim Bergerac as a broken man, grappling with grief and alcoholism following his wife's recent death. His mother-in-law, Charlie, is concerned Jim isn't putting his daughter Kim first and, when a woman from a wealthy Jersey family is murdered, Jim must fight through his personal struggles to become the formidable investigator he once was.
With a troublesome convict resurfacing from his past, Bergerac is required to call on his sharp investigative instincts and past successes to navigate the intricate family dynamics, and watchful eyes of the police force, in order to solve the case.

History's Greatest Mysteries
History's Greatest Mysteries will investigate a wide range of historically compelling topics and the mysteries surrounding each including the Titanic, D.B. Cooper, Roswell, John Wilkes Booth, and more. Each program within the franchise will showcase fresh, new evidence and perspectives including never-before-released documents to the general public, personal diaries and DNA evidence to unearth brand-new information about these infamous and enigmatic chapters in history.