All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 Cokie Roberts

    • July 3, 2020
    • PBS

    Emmy Award-winning political commentator and author.

  • S01E02 Michael Beschloss

    • July 10, 2020
    • PBS

    Presidential historian and New York Times bestselling author; PBS NewsHour contributor.

  • S01E03 Doris Kearns Goodwin

    • July 17, 2020
    • PBS

    Presidential historian and Pulitzer Prize-winning author.

  • S01E04 Ron Chernow

    • July 24, 2020
    • PBS

    Pulitzer Prize-winning author who wrote Alexander Hamilton, inspiration for the Broadway musical.

  • S01E05 Drew Gilpin Faust

    • July 31, 2020
    • PBS

    Former president of Harvard University and author.

  • S01E06 Andrew Roberts

    • August 7, 2020
    • PBS

    Professor and international bestselling author.

  • S01E07 Jill Lepore

    • August 14, 2020
    • PBS

    Professor of American History at Harvard University and staff writer at The New Yorker.

  • S01E08 Robert A. Caro

    • August 21, 2020
    • PBS

    Pulitzer Prize-winning author and National Humanities Medal recipient

  • S01E09 Walter Isaacson

    • August 28, 2020
    • PBS

    Professor, financier and former CEO of The Aspen Institute.

  • S01E10 Marie Arana

    • September 4, 2020
    • PBS

    Author of Silver, Sword and Stone.

Season 2

  • S02E01 Ambassador Susan E. Rice

    • April 21, 2021
    • PBS

    Ambassador Rice discusses her time serving on the frontlines of American diplomacy and national security. She also talks about her surprising family history and other pivotal moments in her career, including her time as National Security Advisor to President Barack Obama and U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations.

  • S02E02 John Dickerson

    • April 28, 2021
    • PBS

    Journalist John Dickerson delves into the history of presidential campaigns in the United States, focusing on some of the best stories of memorable moments from past election runs.

  • S02E03 Jia Lynn Yang

    • May 5, 2021
    • PBS

    Jia Lynn Yang, a deputy national editor at The New York Times, discusses how lawmakers, activists, and presidents worked to undo the damage of the 1920s and establish a new fairer equality in the American immigration system. Framing the narrative with her family’s own immigration story, she uncovers just how much American immigration transformed during the twentieth century.

  • S02E04 Philip J. Deloria

    • May 12, 2021
    • PBS

    A Harvard University professor, Philip Deloria discusses the social, cultural and political histories of the relations among American Indian peoples and the United States, and how these relationships impacted indigenous peoples throughout history.

  • S02E05 Peter Baker & Susan Glasser

    • May 19, 2021
    • PBS

    Peter Baker, chief White House correspondent for the New York Times, and Susan Glasser, a staff writer at the New Yorker, examine the life and lasting legacy of James A. Baker, one of the most influential political power brokers in American history.

  • S02E06 H.W. Brands

    • May 26, 2021
    • PBS

    Two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist H.W. Brands discusses the early days of the American struggle to end slavery using the stories of two men who were at its forefront: Abraham Lincoln and John Brown.

  • S02E07 Joanne Freeman

    • June 2, 2021
    • PBS

    Joanne Freeman is a U.S. historian and Professor of History and American Studies at Yale University. She is also known as an expert on dueling in America, and her latest book is The Field of Blood: Violence in Congress and the Road to Civil War.

  • S02E08 Henry Louis Gates Jr.

    • June 9, 2021
    • PBS

    The storied filmmaker, literary scholar, journalist, cultural critic, and institution builder discusses his incredible career in history and media, and the importance of continuing to develop how we learn and understand American history.

  • S02E09 Bhu Srinivasan

    • June 16, 2021
    • PBS

    Entrepreneur and author Bhu Srinivasan explores the surprising intersections of democracy and capitalism throughout history, from the days of the Mayflower and Virginia Company through Silicon Valley start-ups.

  • S02E10 Lillian Faderman

    • June 23, 2021
    • PBS

    Author and scholar Lillian Faderman talks about the fight for LGBTQ civil rights in the 1950s, through the fight for marriage equality and beyond.

Season 3

  • S03E01 Brenda Child

    • January 5, 2022
    • PBS

    Scholar Brenda Child talks about how American Indians were impacted by the arrival of Colonial settlers, President Andrew Jackson's Indian Removal Act and aggressive assimilation efforts in boarding schools and beyond.

  • S03E02 Walter Issacson

    • January 12, 2022
    • PBS

    Author Walter Isaacson discusses the life and work of Nobel Prize-winning biochemist Jennifer Doudna.

  • S03E03 Jeffrey Rosen

    • January 19, 2022
    • PBS

    Jeffrey Rosen, president and CEO of the National Constitution Center, recalls observations he gleaned from Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg about her judicial and personal life.

  • S03E04 Bret Baier

    • January 26, 2022
    • PBS

    News anchor Bret Baier discusses the three essential days in Iran in 1943 when President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin met to discuss strategy for defeating Hitler.

  • S03E05 Susan Eisenhower

    • February 2, 2022
    • PBS

    Author Susan Eisenhower talks about the life and legacy of her grandfather, World War II Supreme Allied Commander and President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

  • S03E06 David Reynolds

    • February 9, 2022
    • PBS

    Historian and biographer David Reynolds talks about the life and political career of Abraham Lincoln.

  • S03E07 Joseph Ellis

    • February 16, 2022
    • PBS

    Historian Joseph Ellis explores how the nation's founders, including George Washington and John Adams, established a new republic.

  • S03E08 Erica Armstrong Dunbar

    • February 23, 2022
    • PBS

    Author and historian Erica Armstrong Dunbar relays the story of a 22-year-old who escaped enslavement from the household of George Washington in 1796.

  • S03E09 Fredrik Logevall

    • March 2, 2022
    • PBS

    Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Fredrik Logevall explores the life of President John F. Kennedy, from his birth to his rise to power during a time of national turmoil and transformation.

  • S03E10 Jonathan Alter

    • March 9, 2022
    • PBS

    Journalist, author and filmmaker Jonathan Alter traces President Jimmy Carter's life from his childhood during the Depression to the White House to his Nobel Peace Prize-winning humanitarian work.

Season 4

  • S04E01 Ada Ferrer

    • January 4, 2023
    • PBS

    Pulitzer Prize-winning author and historian Ada Ferrer unravels the complex intertwining of the U.S. and Cuba’s foreign policy and domestic affairs, from proxy conflicts during the Cold War, to how Cuban-American relations are used as a cipher for a president’s foreign policy.

  • S04E02 Ian W. Toll

    • January 11, 2023
    • PBS

    Historian Ian W. Toll discusses the grand strategic decisions and naval operations behind the crushing assault the U.S. waged on the Japanese navy in the Battle of the Philippine Sea, as World War II in the Pacific entered its endgame in June 1944.

  • S04E03 Simon Winchester

    • January 18, 2023
    • PBS

    In a wide-ranging conversation, bestselling author Simon Winchester examines how humanity’s conquest to acquire territory and wield its power—including European imperialism and the dispossession of Native American populations—has so definitively shaped history.

  • S04E04 Lien-Hang T. Nguyen

    • January 25, 2023
    • PBS

    Award-winning historian and former war refugee Lien-Hang T. Nguyen draws on her personal and professional journey in a discussion on the contested history of the war in Vietnam, visiting new historical terrain that continues to elicit national debate, deep soul-searching, and purported lessons for America's role overseas.

  • S04E05 H.W. Brands

    • February 1, 2023
    • PBS

    Pulitzer Prize finalist H.W. Brands examines the deep-seated divisions that made up the American Revolution before the war—between Loyalists and Patriots, families, friends, and neighbors.

  • S04E06 Manisha Sinha

    • February 8, 2023
    • PBS

    Historian Manisha Sinha discusses the historical significance of America’s evolution during the period of Reconstruction following the Civil War, which saw a transformation of the American nation from a slaveholding republic into an interracial democracy, all alongside the rise of industrial capitalism and the violent and ambitious conquest of the West.

  • S04E07 George F. Will

    • February 15, 2023
    • PBS

    In an expansive conversation, Pulitzer Prize-winning author and journalist George F. Will shares his perspective on the political, social, and cultural trends that have shaped the national experience since 2008.

  • S04E08 Stacy Schiff

    • February 22, 2023
    • PBS

    Pulitzer Prize-winning author Stacy Schiff uncovers the truths behind the mythology of the infamous Salem Witch Trials, connecting the influences this dark chapter in Colonial America had on the future republic.

  • S04E09 Tracy Campbell

    • March 1, 2023
    • PBS

    In the United States, World War II is often regarded as a time of unrivaled national unity and optimism, however in reality this traumatic period tested the American resolve in the most significant way since the Civil War. How did the nation rise to the occasion? Author and historian Tracy Campbell examines the critical year of 1942.

  • S04E10 Lynne Cheney

    • March 8, 2023
    • PBS

    Author Lynne Cheney examines the friendships and rivalries within the “Virginia Dynasty” of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and James Monroe, including the contradiction between the ideals of American liberty and prosperity they espoused and their status as slaveholders.

Season 5

  • S05E01 Beverly Gage

    • January 3, 2024
    • PBS

    Beverly Gage is professor of 20th-century American history at Yale University and the author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning biography, G-Man: J. Edgar Hoover and the Making of the American Century.

  • S05E02 Richard Haass

    • January 10, 2024
    • PBS

    Richard Haass, president emeritus of the Council on Foreign Relations, is the author of The Bill of Obligations: The Ten Habits of Good Citizens.

  • S05E03 Craig L. Symonds

    • January 17, 2024
    • PBS

    Craig L. Symonds is professor of history emeritus at the United States Naval Academy and the author of Nimitz at War: Command Leadership from Pearl Harbor to Tokyo Bay.

  • S05E04 Siddhartha Mukherjee

    • January 24, 2024
    • PBS

    In the late 1600s, separated by the North Sea, English polymath Robert Hooke and Dutch cloth-merchant Antonie van Leeuwenhoek looked through their handmade microscopes. What they saw introduced a radical concept that swept through biology and medicine: complex living organisms are made up of tiny, self-contained, self-regulating units. Hooke christened them “cells.”

  • S05E05 Leslie M. Harris

    • January 31, 2024
    • PBS

    Many Americans’ knowledge of slavery is largely limited to the antebellum South, but prior to 1827, New York City actually had the largest enslaved population of any city outside of the South. In lower Manhattan, the African Burial Ground alone holds the remains of as many as 20,000 enslaved Blacks.

  • S05E06 Jonathan Darman

    • February 7, 2024
    • PBS

    In popular memory, Franklin Delano Roosevelt was the quintessential political “natural.” Yet for all his gifts, as a young man Roosevelt nonetheless lacked depth, empathy, and an ability to think strategically. Those qualities, so essential to his eventual success as president, were skills he acquired during his seven-year journey through illness and recovery.

  • S05E07 Marie Arana

    • February 14, 2024
    • PBS

    In 1960, one out of every 25 people in the United States was of Latino heritage. In 2023, it is one out of five. In 2050, it will be one in three. Latinos are our largest, oldest, most undercounted, fastest growing, and least understood community. Prizewinning author Marie Arana explains who they are and what they have meant to America.

  • S05E08 Candice Millard

    • February 21, 2024
    • PBS

    Candice Millard, in conversation with David M. Rubenstein, offers an extraordinary account of President Garfield’s momentous, if brief, presidential career, and the legacy left not only by his work but by his death.

  • S05E09 Fredrik Logevall

    • February 28, 2024
    • PBS

    John F. Kennedy was one of the most iconic political figures of the 20th century, a man known universally by his initials. From his college days to the end in Dallas, he was fascinated by the nature of political courage and its relationship to democratic governance. How should we understand JFK and his role in US and world politics?

  • S05E10 Jeffrey Frank

    • March 6, 2024
    • PBS

    Journalist Jeffrey Frank.