Back to Show
FRONTLINE
When Interrupters Return to Criminal Activity
Upset after learning from police that some of the interrupters are still involved in criminal activity, program director Tio Hardiman warns that they could be ruining the program for everyone else. "I'm not saying this job is everything," he cautions, "but this job does mean a lot to some people."
Sign up now for inspiring and thought-provoking media delivered straight to your inbox.
Support Provided By

54:21
Why was the U.S. left scrambling for critical medical equipment in the COVID-19 crisis?

1:54:21
An election-year examination of the moments that shaped Donald Trump and Joe Biden.
54:20
Can police reform work? FRONTLINE returns to a troubled department after four years.

54:22
The experience of childhood poverty against the backdrop of the pandemic.

54:22
Two intimate stories of immigrant families whose lives were upended by the coronavirus.

54:53
How conspiracy theories went from the fringes of U.S. politics into the White House.

54:26
How the COVID crisis has hit vulnerable immigrants and undocumented workers.

1:54:22
The story of the Iraq war & the chaos that followed, told by Iraqis who lived through it.

54:23
The story of a drug company that pushed opioids by bribing doctors.
1:24:22
As COVID-19 spread from Asia to Europe, why was the U.S. caught so unprepared?

54:22
Inside a hospital battling COVID-19 in Italy, doctors face life and death decisions.

54:22
FRONTLINE examines the US response to COVID-19, from Washington State to Washington, D.C.