Season 2

Season 2

2015-09-30
8 Episodes

Overview

In season two, Lisa Ling gains exclusive access to the children of Fundamentalist Latter-Day Saints’ prophet and convicted felon Warren Jeffs, the Mongol Nation outlaw bikers, the LA County Coroner’s office, and The Satanic Temple in Detroit.  She also introduces viewers to Electronic Dance Music fans, young girls vying to be models, Richmond City inmates preparing for a “Date with Dad” dance, and professional pickup artists in Nevada.

Episodes

Children of the Prophet

1. Children of the Prophet

2015-09-30

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Two children of Warren Jeffs make the revelations to Lisa Ling that the imprisoned leader of the polygamous Mormon sect sexually abused them as children.

Inside Mongol Nation

2. Inside Mongol Nation

2015-10-07

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Lisa Ling embeds with the Mongols Motorcycle Club.

Fatherless Towns

3. Fatherless Towns

2015-10-21

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Imprisoned dads learn to become fathers through an innovative program. 13 Inmates prepare for an unprecedented event: The father-daughter dance.

Faces That Sell

4. Faces That Sell

2015-10-28

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Apparently men will pay a lot to be surrounded by beautiful women. Go inside the world of fashion modeling with Lisa Ling.

Electronic Woodstock

5. Electronic Woodstock

2015-11-04

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Lisa relives her life as a 1990s raver, by embedding with a new generation of electronic music fans at a festival called Mysteryland.

America's Busiest Coroners

6. America's Busiest Coroners

2015-11-11

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Go Inside the LA County Coroner's Office where death is business as usual. “There are things that I saw... that will continue to haunt me forever,” said Lisa Ling.

The Seduction Game

7. The Seduction Game

2015-12-09

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Lisa attends a pickup artist bootcamp to explore what draws men to the pickup lifestyle and to discern what pickup masters are really teaching.

The Satanists Next Door

8. The Satanists Next Door

2015-12-13

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Lisa investigates Satanism, focusing on the story of its members including their desire to use their beliefs to promote equality in American society as well as to protest what they describe as oppressive values and rules of the Judeo-Christian religions.