For a Modern Portrait: 'Miss Juneteenth' (2020)
This Sundance darling from director Channing Godfrey Peoples is the perfect place to start. It’s not a historical epic but a deeply personal, contemporary story set in a Fort Worth, Texas, suburb preparing for its annual “Miss Juneteenth” pageant. The
film follows Turquoise Jones, a former winner, as she pushes her reluctant teenage daughter to follow in her footsteps. It’s a quiet but powerful meditation on Black motherhood, dashed dreams, and the complex ways communities carry the weight and joy of their history. The film beautifully illustrates that Juneteenth isn't just about the past; it’s about the ongoing fight for freedom and opportunity in the present. *Available to stream on Peacock and the Roku Channel.*
For Essential Context: '13th' (2016)
Ava DuVernay’s Oscar-nominated documentary is required viewing for understanding the throughline from enslavement to the modern-day prison-industrial complex. The film takes its title from the 13th Amendment, which abolished slavery “except as a punishment for crime.” Through archival footage and interviews with leading scholars and activists, DuVernay meticulously builds the case that this exception created a loophole that has been exploited to criminalize and disenfranchise Black Americans for generations. It’s a dense, infuriating, and absolutely essential piece of filmmaking that provides the critical context for why the promise of Juneteenth’s freedom has remained, for so many, incomplete. *Available to stream on Netflix.*
For a Story of Joy and Resilience: 'High on the Hog' (2021)
History is not just struggle; it’s also joy, innovation, and culture. This revelatory docuseries, hosted by the charismatic food writer Stephen Satterfield, traces the origins of African American cuisine from Benin, West Africa, to the heart of Texas. The series masterfully connects the dots between the ingredients enslaved people cultivated, the cooking techniques they perfected, and the foundational dishes of American food. The Juneteenth episode, in particular, is a moving celebration of how food has always been a site of community, resistance, and liberation. It’s a beautiful reminder that history is something you can taste. *Available to stream on Netflix.*
For a Genre-Bending Masterpiece: 'Watchmen' (2019)
While it’s based on a graphic novel about superheroes, this HBO limited series is one of the most audacious and brilliant explorations of American racial trauma ever put on television. The show opens not with capes and cowls, but with a horrifyingly vivid depiction of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, an event largely erased from mainstream American history for decades. The entire series is a complex allegory about inherited trauma, systemic racism, and the masks people wear to survive. It uses the sci-fi genre to ask profound questions about justice and legacy, making it a challenging but deeply rewarding watch that re-centers a hidden part of our history. *Available to stream on Max.*
For Sharp Social Satire: 'Atlanta' Season 1, Episode 9
Leave it to Donald Glover’s groundbreaking series to deliver one of the sharpest, funniest, and most uncomfortable takes on Juneteenth. In the episode, aptly titled “Juneteenth,” Earn and Van attend an upscale Juneteenth party hosted by a wealthy white man and his Black wife. The result is a masterclass in social satire, skewering the awkward commercialization of Black culture and the performative allyship that often surrounds it. It’s a brilliantly cringey half-hour of television that asks what it means to celebrate emancipation in a world still grappling with what freedom really looks like, especially when it becomes a branded event. *Available to stream on Hulu.*













