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NFL Films also produces the Greatest Moments series, which details classic games from the 1960's, 1970's, 1980's, 1990's, and 2000's (decade); the Lost Treasures series, which uses old NFL Films footage, which had previously never been shown on television, to look at football players, coaches, and referees; and NFL Films Presents, an umbrella ...
NFL Monday Night Magazine: 1987-1992 Sports Almanac: 1992, 1995 Distant Replay: 1993-2006 NFL's Greatest Games: 1997-2017 Lost Treasures of NFL Films: 1999-2000 America's Game: 2005-2008 Full Color Football: The History of the American Football League: 2009 The Top 100: NFL's Greatest Players: 2010 A Football Life: 2011, 2014-2015 Star Spangled ...
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A co-production of ESPN and NFL Films, included in ESPN's 30 for 30 series. Examines how a dominant defense and larger-than-life personalities propelled the 2000 Baltimore Ravens to a Super Bowl win. The film uses a May 2022 reunion of the team's key figures as a framing device. 80 for Brady: 2023 Comedy
NFL Films compiled as much footage as it could find from the league for a 2000 episode of its series Lost Treasures, which included segments from most of the broadcast-quality footage and home-recorded kinescopes of very poor quality (mainly used as game film to assess performance) that serve as some of the only footage of the Charlotte Stars ...
The story of one fan's obsessive quest to purchase, at a 2010 auction, James Naismith's original rules of basketball, perhaps the most important historical document in American sports history, and to bring it "home" to Lawrence, Kansas, where Naismith taught and coached at the University of Kansas for 39 years.
Media Home Entertainment Inc. was a home video company headquartered in Culver City, California, originally established in 1978 by filmmaker Charles Band. Media Home Entertainment also distributed video product under additional labels — The Nostalgia Merchant (very old or classic films; Media bought this company in 1984), [1] Hi-Tops Video (children's videos), Condor Video (Spanish-language ...
While on display at the Judy Garland Museum, it was stolen in 2005 and recovered in September 2018. On December 7, 2024, this pair was sold at auction for $28 million by Heritage Auctions ($32.5 million after auction fees are included), [20] making it the most "valuable movie memorabilia ever sold at auction," according to Heritage Auctions. [21]