In a word, mini series. I acknowledge that the mini series is the closest combination of television and movies, but the mini series is very boring. The only person who excites John Adams is the only evolved / evolved old man whose taste evolved into historical media, and an 11-year-old student watches when their historical teacher "does not want to do life" today I guess. The network may regard their program as an Emmy award, but no one calls Fargo a mini series, but no one calls a real detective.
The problem is that it is only feedback on TV and movie discussions. It is a famous TV mini series that began in 1990. That scene was in 1960, and the children of those days were plagued by penny wise for 30 years. The same characters we saw were subject to torture like adults, but they finished teasing the last chapter "Chapter 1".
The point of culturally high slavery awareness may be the epic 1977 TV Mini Play "Route". It may not be a visceral way Tarantino or other people may prefer, but the roots are truly a nationwide event (and the first very successful TV mini play). Also, 1977 was a long time ago. For many today's young people, "Roots" is not a revolutionary historical show, but a popular hip-hop band. The title "slavery for 12 years" also caused an early release to the audience, making the feeling of only 12 years that the entire life of the hero would not be destroyed by slavery. Otherwise, McQueen will not make Northup's story a bit softer. Either way, Northrop's often disgraceful experience will be excessively condensed within 134 minutes of the movie. Yes, McQueen does not completely irritate it, but this story is as fierce as people think