IMDb RATING
8.6/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Before the popularity of AncestryDNA, journalist and cultural critic Henry Louis Gates, Jr. divulges the family trees of various celebrities, many times with stunning revelations.Before the popularity of AncestryDNA, journalist and cultural critic Henry Louis Gates, Jr. divulges the family trees of various celebrities, many times with stunning revelations.Before the popularity of AncestryDNA, journalist and cultural critic Henry Louis Gates, Jr. divulges the family trees of various celebrities, many times with stunning revelations.
- Nominated for 2 Primetime Emmys
- 6 nominations total
Browse episodes
Featured reviews
10tdhward
Finding Your Roots with Henry Louis Gates is soaring high this season. The celebrity guests are awesome. The American history, the story telling, and the surprise endings are so moving. Every episode is a must watch. Science Pioneers, The Slave Trade, Beyond the Pale, Secrets & Lies, Off the Farm, Italian Roots. I can't pick a favorite because they are all so good. Keep the stories coming! I love this show.
I am not that into genealogy that much. But, for me learning about the genealogy of famous people is fascinating.
On finding your roots there are usually 3 guests on each episode. Luis gates sits at a table with each guest and takes them through their genealogy. The show switches back and forth between guests.
And sometimes Luis gates jr even finds that two of the guests on the show are related or that a guest on the show is related some someone else famous.
It always interesting.
On finding your roots there are usually 3 guests on each episode. Luis gates sits at a table with each guest and takes them through their genealogy. The show switches back and forth between guests.
And sometimes Luis gates jr even finds that two of the guests on the show are related or that a guest on the show is related some someone else famous.
It always interesting.
I started to watch this a few days ago and couldn't stop watching. I laughed and I cried while learning about people I never knew existed and had no relationship to me.
Another reviewer complained that the program is not telling the whole story about slavery and our founding fathers. No historical record can tell the whole story. We get bits and pieces from various sources.
When I studied U.S. history in school ---I'm 73, as I write this ---no one mentioned that many of our founding fathers had slaves. I learned that information during the intervening years because I've read a lot of history and watched many documentaries. But for many, who don't read history, this may be new information.
I learned much myself from the episodes I watched. For example, I didn't know that freed slaves were often captured and placed back into slavery. I didn't know that some free slaves bought their relatives and had to keep them as legal slaves so they could not be put back into slavery by someone else. I also learned heartwarming stories of slave owners who freed their slaves and gave them property before the Civil War, which I assumed was extremely rare.
I was impressed at how many people were willing to give DNA samples that could possibly prove that their slave-owning ancestors fathered the children of slaves, thus completing some stories about certain branches of a family.
The one thing that everyone can take away from these episodes is that our genetic makeup is rarely pure. We are mostly a combination of ethnicities and races, and therefore racism is not only harmful but stupid. Most of us don't know where all of our ancestors began their lives and under what hardships they lived in order to make life better for their heirs. No matter where they cam from, they contributed to who we are now.
Another reviewer complained that the program is not telling the whole story about slavery and our founding fathers. No historical record can tell the whole story. We get bits and pieces from various sources.
When I studied U.S. history in school ---I'm 73, as I write this ---no one mentioned that many of our founding fathers had slaves. I learned that information during the intervening years because I've read a lot of history and watched many documentaries. But for many, who don't read history, this may be new information.
I learned much myself from the episodes I watched. For example, I didn't know that freed slaves were often captured and placed back into slavery. I didn't know that some free slaves bought their relatives and had to keep them as legal slaves so they could not be put back into slavery by someone else. I also learned heartwarming stories of slave owners who freed their slaves and gave them property before the Civil War, which I assumed was extremely rare.
I was impressed at how many people were willing to give DNA samples that could possibly prove that their slave-owning ancestors fathered the children of slaves, thus completing some stories about certain branches of a family.
The one thing that everyone can take away from these episodes is that our genetic makeup is rarely pure. We are mostly a combination of ethnicities and races, and therefore racism is not only harmful but stupid. Most of us don't know where all of our ancestors began their lives and under what hardships they lived in order to make life better for their heirs. No matter where they cam from, they contributed to who we are now.
Finding your roots pulls at our heartstrings and speaks to our senseability with their strong research. The Production Manager in this show really shines!
What's it like to see that
How's that make you feel
You are looking at the moment
Did you know that story
Did you sense that
Please turn the page
Please read the transcribed/hilited area
Have you ever heard that
You just met your xxxxxgrand parents
You just learned
I enjoy the show, I have learned a lot of information regarding my Irish roots, as well as places to make contacts. Many of the guest are forever entertaining.
I remember one story when the mother escaped by carrying her child on her back only to drown it when she crossed a body of water.
Tony Shaloub was one of my favorites.
Valarie
Valarie.
I enjoy the show, I have learned a lot of information regarding my Irish roots, as well as places to make contacts. Many of the guest are forever entertaining.
I remember one story when the mother escaped by carrying her child on her back only to drown it when she crossed a body of water.
Tony Shaloub was one of my favorites.
Valarie
Valarie.
Did you know
- TriviaWhen Stephen King appeared on the show, he looked through a scrapbook very much like the one from Ça (1990), based upon his novel.
- Quotes
Stephen King: [when discovering his roots] Thankyou.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Henry Louis Gates Jr.: Uncovering America (2019)
- How many seasons does Finding Your Roots have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Finding Your Roots
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content