The list below includes award-winning documentaries and critically acclaimed movies that cover topics such as mass incarceration (13th), racism in sport (Breaking the Huddle), and the civil rights movement (Selma).
Documentaries
- 13th | Director: Ava Duvernay
- Becoming | Director: Nadia Hallgren
- Breaking The Huddle: The Integration of College Football | Director: William C. Rhoden
- Freedom Riders Documentary | Director: Stanley Nelson
- I Am Not Your Negro | Director: Raoul Peck
- She Did That | Director: Renae Bluitt
- Soundtrack for a Revolution | Director: Bill Guttentag & Dan Sturman
Movies and TV
- Fruitvale Station | Director: Ryan Coogler
- Just Mercy | Director: Destin Daniel Cretton
- Selma | Director: Ava Duvernay
- When They See Us | Director: Ava Duvernay
Explainers, Interviews, and Speeches
- A Conversation About Growing Up Black
- A Conversation With Black Women About Race
- Activist & Author Kimberly Jones: How We Can Win
- Anti-Racism Activist & Educator Jane Elliot Speaks To White Citizens on Privilege
- Anti-Racism Activist & Educator Jane Elliott: ‘There’s Only One Race; The Human Race’
- Black Parents Explain How to Deal With the Police
- Emmanuel Acho: Uncomfortable Conversations With a Black Man
- Emmanuel Acho: Uncomfortable Conversations With a Black Man: Part 2, With Matthew McConaughey
- Hasan Minhaj on Supporting BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Color) employees as an Asian American
- How to Be an Antiracist (an Interview With Dr. Ibram Kendi)
- Killer Mike’s Emotional Speech at Atlanta Mayor’s Press Conference
- The Daily Show x Spotlight Team: How Racist is Boston?
- Systemic Racism Explained
- Where Do We Go from Here? A Conversation Led by Oprah Winfrey
Ted Talks
- Color Blind or Color Brave, Melody Hobson
- How Studying Privilege Systems Can Strengthen Compassion, Peggy McIntosh
- How to Build an Antiracist World, Dr. Ibram X. Kendi
- How to Overcome Our Biases? Walk Boldly Toward Them, Vernã Myers
- Let’s Get to the Root of Racial Injustice, Megan Ming Francis
- We Need to Talk About Injustice, Bryan Stevenson