vice_videos:premiere

Shows

Videos

  • Alaska Natives

    The Eskimos and Innuit (there’s a difference) of Northern Alaska live off some of the least live-off-able land on Earth. How do they do it? And even more pressingly, why?

  • Trans At Karachi Fashion Week

    Hailey talks to her hairdresser at Karachi Fashion Week, and learns about one woman’s journey as a trans person in Pakistan.ย 

    STATES OF UNDRESS begins 3/30 on VICELAND.

  • The Future of Weed Snacks

    Krishna takes a tour of the home of pot soda, Dixie Elixirs, and sees how they make thousands of edible marijuana products every day.

  • Bears

    Itโ€™s Bear Week in Provincetown, when the burliest members of the gay community descend on Cape Cod to revel in their heft, hair, and heartiest homosexual hankerings. Will Thomas find love with one of the many types of Bear? He otter! (Get it? Otter.)

  • Ramadan

    To celebrate the holy month of Ramadan, a good Muslim canโ€™t eat or drink all day. Not even water. After sunset though, itโ€™s a snackerโ€™s mecca. Thomas joins a Lebanese family in Dearborn, Michigan to give Islam a try during Mohammedโ€™s favorite month.

  • Ramadan in Dearborn, Michigan

    To celebrate the holy month of Ramadan, a good Muslim canโ€™t eat or drink all day. Not even water. After sunset though, itโ€™s a snackerโ€™s mecca. Thomas joins a Lebanese family in Dearborn, Michigan to give Islam a try during Mohammedโ€™s favorite month.

  • Stoned Vets

    Daily life can be a minefield of triggers for those struggling with PTSD. While many states have legalized medical marijuana, the federal government has not, so agencies like the V.A. can’t recommend it, even though many Vets feel that they need it.

  • Tugs

    The Catherine Miller is a tugboat in New York Harbor, home to some of the busiest ports in America. So youโ€™d think sheโ€™d need more than a two-man crew to keep things running. But oh how youโ€™d be wrong. Thomas makes three as the boatโ€™s new deckhand.

  • Speaking In Tongues

    In this preview of BALLS DEEP, we follow Thomas Morton into a Pentecostal tent revival, where the congregation prays in tongues, in the name of Jesus. The Pentecostal tent revival is as exciting as Christian church gets. It is still church, however. Thomas goes to a revival in Arkansas to see how the holy spirit stacks up against secular temptations like drugs, movies, and sleeping in on Sunday.

  • Stoned Baby: Checking On T-Cells

    WEEDIQUETTE host Krishna Andavolu travels to Los Angeles to the home of Tracy and Josh Ryan, who started treating their baby with cannabis before she could even talk. The next big thing in medical marijuana might be cancer therapy. But with little hard evidence, families whose children have life-threatening cancer are taking matters into their own hands, and getting their kids super stonedโ€”to save their lives.ย 

    WEEDIQUETTE airs Tuesdays at 11pm on VICELAND.

  • The War on Kids

    VICE travels to Temeculaย California to investigate an undercover drug sting in a local high school where an autistic boy was arrested.

  • Leathermen

    The Eagle NYC is the last great outpost of New York’s gay leather scene. Once the hardest, burliest, most cruisinest members of the gay community here and everywhere, Leathermen’s ranks were hit especially hard by AIDS in the 80s and 90s. Where the side streets of the West Village and Chelsea once swarmed with glistening, hairy chests and bulging jeans, like some never-ending Tom of Finland mural, these days the scene is but a faded denim shadow of its former self.

    Since finding a solid clutch of Leathermen in New York nowadays is harder than getting a leprechaun to make eye contact with you at the Central Park Ramble, we went into the Eagle, basically the Leatherman’s Alamo, to meet the surviving members of this once-mighty subculture and learn the tricks of their rough trade. Please be mindful of the hanky code while watching this video, and, of course, no khakis, sneakers, or fragrances.

  • The Sakawa Boys

    While Nigeria’s 401 scammers may have written the book on West African internet fraud, their shtick looks like Compuserve compared to what’s going on in Ghana. Unsatisfied with the meager winnings from emailing thousands of random Westerners in hopes of convincing one poor sap they’re the treasurer of the Ivory Coast, Ghana’s scammers decided to stack the odds in their favor the old-fashioned wayโ€”witchcraft. Taking a page from cyberpunk, traditional West African Juju priests adapted their services to the needs of the information age and started leading down-on-their-luck internet scammers through strange and costly rituals designed to increase their powers of persuasion and make their emails irresistible to greedy Americans. And so “Sakawa” was born.ย 

    Now not only is Sakawa Ghana’s most popular youth activity and one of its biggest underground economies, it’s a full-blown national phenomenon. Sakawa has its own tunes, clothing brands, Sakawasploitation flicks, and even a metastatic backlash from Christian preachers and the press. When we were in Accra over the summer it was impossible to walk more than 10 feet without seeing the word Sakawa in blood-red Misfits letters on a poster or tabloid, often accompanied by bone-chilling horrors of the photoshopped variety.ย 

    The government is freaked out because Sakawa is threatening Ghana’s business reputation, the Christians are freaked out because they’re losing money to the Juju priests, the press is freaked out because being freaked out is what sells papers, and the public is freaked out because their government, preacher, and media are all telling them they should be. All the while the Sakawa boys are living the high life and racking up debts to the spirit world, just waiting for the axe to fall.

  • Sewers of Bogota

    Itโ€™s all fun and games until the death squad shows up.ย VICEย takes a trip to Bogota, Colombiaโ€™s most inhabited sewers.