
Aftermath with William Shatner takes viewers back to dramatic events that shocked the world.William Shatner re-examines some of the biggest national news stories of the past two decades to find out how the lives of the people directly affected by these events have changed forever. Shatner gains exclusive access to the newsmakers -- heroes, villains, victims, family members and law enforcement -- at the heart of the stories, including those of Jessica Lynch, Bernard Goetz, Mary Kay Letourneau and the DC snipers, to separate the fact from the fiction, with archival footage and re-enactments helping to round out the storytelling.

In this episode of Aftermath, William Shatner sits down with Bernard Goetz, known to many as the Subway Vigilante. After years of silence on the subject, Goetz now talks openly of the day in 1984 when he shot four African American teenagers on the New York City subway.

In this episode of Aftermath, William Shatner sits down with Paul LaRuffa, Kellie Adams, and Caroline Seawell, all survivors of the DC sniper shootings that terrorized the Capital Beltway area in 2002. Each shares an intimate and compelling personal story of endurance, triumph, and for one, misery and sadness.

In this episode of Aftermath, William Shatner sits down with Mary Kay Letourneau and Vili Fualaau as they share intimate details of their infamous case of teacher/student romance... when 6th grade instructor Mary and 13 year old Vili fell in love.

In this episode of Aftermath, William Shatner sits down with Jessica Lynch, ambushed in Iraq before becoming the first US POW to be successfully rescued since World War II. While recovering from her injuries, Jessica learns that the military PR machine has spun her into a Rambo-like character, glorified her as a hero and embellished her actions.

In this episode of Aftermath, William Shatner sits down with Sara Weaver, daughter of Randy and Vicki Weaver, survivalists with extreme political and religious views. Sara shares the tragic story of the 10-day siege in 1992 when her family's rural Idaho compound was surrounded by hundreds of Federal agents. When it was all over three would lose their lives

In this episode of Aftermath, William Shatner sits down with David Kaczynski, brother of Unabomber Ted Kaczynski who engaged in a bombing spree that lasted nearly two decades, taking three lives and injuring dozens more.

Ed Smart lived every parent's worst nightmare--the abduction of a child. But when Smart's 14-year-old daughter Elizabeth was kidnapped at knifepoint in 2002, the nightmare turned even more horrible when suspicion fell on Smart and his family themselves.

When 18-month-old "Baby Jessica" fell down an abandoned well in 1987, the world was riveted by the efforts of the rescue team that included fireman Robert O'Donnell. But the overwhelming media attention left O'Donnell feeling hollowed-out and betrayed, and his life spiraled downward.

Complete episode guide for Aftermath with William Shatner with detailed information about every season and episode including air dates, summaries, ratings, and streaming availability in United States.
This episode guide is organized by seasons, making it easy to track your viewing progress or find specific episodes. Use the episode information to plan your binge-watching sessions or catch up on missed episodes.
When defense expert Daniel Ellsberg worked on a secret government study in 1969 about the Vietnam War, he realized that American leaders were lying to the public, they knew it was not a winnable war. Ellsberg decided to secretly copy the study and give it the nation's top newspapers. The "Pentagon Papers" became a national scandal.

When 33 miners were trapped in a Chilean mine, a desperate call went out to Jeff Hart, asking him to assemble a team and fly 10,000 miles to Chile to save the men. Hart and his crew had spent their entire working lives drilling for oil and water, but now they were drilling to save lives.

It was the most notorious sex scandal of the 1980s: the arrest of Sydney Biddle Barrows--a blue-blood debutante, a descendant of the Mayflower, a name in the Social Register... and a Madam of a high-priced call girl service. William Shatner talks with Ms. Barrows to find out how a high-society dame found herself working the underground sex scene.

He's been called "The Man Who Knew Too Much" -- Dr. Jeffrey Wigand, a top scientist for a top tobacco company, who became the first insider who blew the whistle on Big Tobacco: what they knew about the deadly addictiveness of nicotine, and how many millions of dollars they spent covering that information up.