Lyndon Johnson becomes president of the United States on a wave of general chaos caused by the sudden assassination of John F. Kennedy. In his first year in office, Lyndon Johnson promotes the passage of the Civil Rights Act, which would end racial segregation in the South - at least on paper.
The year is 2036. A civil war has been raging in Ukraine for several years, and U.S. military forces are acting as peacekeepers. Disobeying a direct order from his captain, drone operator Lieutenant Harp is brought before a commission, but is not court-martialed, but on a special mission. Harp is now under the command of Captain Leo, who is in fact a secret development - a high-tech android, outwardly indistinguishable from an ordinary human. The two of them go to the Russian border zone to find the war criminal Viktor Koval and prevent him from obtaining the nuclear missile launch codes.
Earth has become uninhabitable and all of humanity has moved to Jupiter's satellite, Io. Almost no one is left on the home planet except lonely Sam, who hopes to find a way to save Earth. But the appearance of another survivor forces her to reconsider her plans.
In the 1960s two African-American entrepreneurs hire a working-class white man to pretend to be the head of their business empire while they pose as a janitor and chauffeur.
Members of an elite demining squad are sent to a city in Iraq, where almost every object poses a deadly danger. James is a bomb disposal expert who, despite the danger, treats bomb disposal like a game.
Two New Orleans paramedics' lives are ripped apart after they encounter a series of horrific deaths linked to a designer drug with bizarre, otherworldly effects.
A police raid in Detroit in 1967 results in one of the largest RACE riots in United States history. The story is centred around the Algiers Motel incident, which occurred in Detroit, Michigan on July 25, 1967, during the racially charged 12th Street Riot. It involves the death of three black men and the brutal beatings of nine other people: seven black men and two white women.
In November, 1970, virtually the entire football team and coaches of Marshall University (Huntington, W.V.) die in a plane crash. That spring, led by Nate Ruffin, a player who was ill and missed the fatal flight, students rally to convince the board of governors to play the 1971 season. The college president, Don Dedman, must find a coach, who then must find players. They petition the NCAA to allow freshmen to play, and coach Jack Lengyel motivates and leads young players at the same time that he reexamines the Lombardi creed that winning is the only thing. The father and the fiancée of a player who died find strength to move on. Can Marshall win even one game in 1971?
Following the events of 'Avengers: Endgame,' Sam Wilson/Falcon and Bucky Barnes/Winter Soldier team up in a global adventure that tests their abilities -- and their patience.