
Enterprise (1981)
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Eric Sevareid as Self - Host
Episodes 38
Wildcatter
Bill Brodnax (Taurus Petroleum) drills for gas in the Cajun country of southern Louisiana. Witness how drilling is planned, financed, and carried out. In the closing moments, viewers learn alongside the wildcatter and his backers whether the well does in fact strike gas.
Read MoreThe Colonel Comes to Japan
Loy Weston, the American chairman of Kentucky Fried Chicken Japan, presides over 324 stores. Witness the setting up of a new outlet in northeast Tokyo.
Read MoreGulliver's New Travels
Examining the future of AT&T as its telephone monopoly ends and a new era of tooth-and-nail competition begins.
Read MoreFast Horse in a Bull Market
The bizarre preparations for an auction where millionaires bid for race horses. (Tom Gentry Farms)
Read MoreBankrupt
Inforex was a $70 million-a-year computer firm that rode the high-tech wave to prosperity in the early 1970s. Founded in 1968, it had burst on the scene with the IKE, a television-like data entry machine that had rendered the old punchcard systems obsolete. But the company had never been able to come up with a profitable second product.
Read MoreThe Making of a Package Deal
Entertainment industries, searching for safer products with bigger returns on investments, have joined forces to create 'properties'. Witness one such property progress from inception to spinoff.
Read MoreDogfight Over New York
One of the new airlines challenging the giants of the industry in the wake of deregulation, New York Air is followed from start-up to inaugural flight.
Read MoreCatfish Fever
Unhappy with the unpredictability of cotton prices, many Mississippi Delta farmers are converting their hardscrabble land to catfish "farms" of 80-acre ponds.
Read MoreNot by Jeans Alone
Levi-Strauss attempt to market a moderately priced, mass produced men's suit.
Read MoreThe Kyocera Experiment
The San Diego subsidiary of Japan's fastest-growing company -- Kyoto Ceramic -- illustrates Japan's management techniques.
Read MoreOne Man's Multinational
Tom Bata, chairman of Bata Shoe, visits his company's manufacturing plants in Chile, Upper Volta, Mauritius, Sri Lanka, and Kenya.
Read MoreThe Jet Set: Boeing vs. the World
How market leader Boeing stays on top of the world aircraft business.
Read MoreThe Selling of Terri Gibbs
Terri Gibbs, award-winning country-and-western singer, tries for a second hit album and super-stardom.
Read MoreThe Diamond Game
William Goldberg, president of the Diamond Dealers Club, offers a window on the intensely secretive diamond market as we see newly mined diamonds graded, cleaved, sawed, polished, traded, designed, and sold as jewelry in fashionable Fifth Avenue showrooms.
Read MoreThe Buck Stops in Brazil
The high-stakes world of international banking in Sao Paulo, Brasilia, New York, and Zurich.
Read MoreChef's Special
Chef David Garo Sokitch arranges and oversees every complex detail that precedes the opening of his new San Francisco restaurant.
Read MoreHong Kong Dresses Up
Textile magnate S.T. King and his company Wearbest manufacture designer jeans in one of the most regulation-free economies in the world.
Read MoreWest Meets East
Four employees of California-based National Semiconductor Corporation tour Japan to observe how the Japanese are rivaling and surpassing American industry in a variety of fields.
Read MoreAll in the Game
The business of video games, focusing on William Grubb, who left a vice president's position at Atari Inc. to start Imagic.
Read MoreThe New Space Race
Space Services, Space Transportation, and other private companies compete to develop astronautical shipping and traveling services in the business of communications satellites.
Read MoreCalifornia Crude
Sun Oil Company prepares to bid on tracts off the California coast, in the risky and expensive business of oil leases.
Read MoreTed Turner and the News War
Ted Turner and Satellite News Network executive Lloyd Werner vie for advertisers, subscribers, and cable-system carriers as they jockey for position in the cable news business.
Read MoreLife After Death
Telophase Corporation plans to start America's first chain of low-cost crematoria and to market cremation as an alternative to burials.
Read MoreRoom at the Top
Will the new $125-million Westin Hotel in Boston be able to compete in a market already filled to capacity with luxury hotels?
Read MorePerfectly Frank
Frank Perdue, the man who turned chicken into a brand-name item in the Northeast, plans to market a new product: chicken franks. WARNING: May contain scenes of animal trauma.
Read MoreReel Estate
Texas real estate developer Trammel Crow attempts to lure Hollywood filmmakers to Dallas by building a state-of-the-art production complex.
Read MoreCash on the Vine
The prize-winning Matanzas Creek Winery in California attempts to escalate production without disrupting the delicate balance of supply, demand, and high quality.
Read MoreThe Million Dollar Scan
Israeli firm Elscint tries to develop, produce, and deliver a superior medical diagnostic scanner to compete with larger corporations.
Read MoreHot Chocolate
Winners -- and losers -- stake their fortunes on cocoa in the futures market.
Read MoreCrosswind Take-Off
Lear Fan Ltd. and Beech Aircraft vie for a larger share of the market by developing a light, efficient corporate plane while battling technical problems, skeptical investors, and bureaucracy.
Read MoreHard Sell, Soft Sell
Salespeople demonstrate their personal tricks of the ancient trade, to illustrate the psychology of selling.
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