WATCH: Hulu names release date for controversial The 1619 Project docuseries

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Nikole Hannah-Jones
FILE – In this Saturday, May 21, 2016, file photo, Nikole Hannah-Jones attends the 75th Annual Peabody Awards Ceremony at Cipriani Wall Street in New York. Proposals in Arkansas, Iowa and Mississippi would prohibit schools from using the New York Times’ “1619 Project,” that focused on slavery’s legacy. Hannah-Jones, who won a Pulitzer Prize for the lead essay in the project, called it a work of journalism that wasn’t intended to replace what’s being taught in schools. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File) Evan Agostini/Evan Agostini/Invision/AP

WATCH: Hulu names release date for controversial The 1619 Project docuseries

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Video streaming service Hulu announced Jan 26 as the release date for its docuseries on The 1619 Project, which is a controversial body of research, heavily criticized for promoting Critical Race Theory.

Two episodes, “Democracy” and “Race,” will debut the for series at once. They will be followed by “Music,” “Capitalism,” “Fear,” and “Justice” titled after the essays found in the book by the same name authored by Pulitzer-prize winning journalist and professor Nikole Hannah-Jones. Each week will bring two episodes at a time.

THE OTHER SLAVERY EXPOSES THE 1619 PROJECT’S FRAUD

“You cannot tell the story of America without telling the story of black America,” the trailer’s voiceover states. “We are the story of America.”

The 1619 Project trailer

Its title comes from Hannah-Jones’s alternative theory that America was founded in August 1619, when about 20 slaves were sold to the governor of the Virginia colony by a British privateer. Her essays go on to claim that slavery became central to the nation’s history.

“It’s not a documentary about Black people, it’s a documentary series about America,” Hannah-Jones explained to the Television Critics Tour on Saturday. “It offers a better understanding of the country we live in.”

Hannah-Jones claimed several production companies approached her about creating a documentary based off of her work. Ultimately Lionsgate won the draw in association with One Story Up Productions, Harpo Films, and the New York Times.

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Executive producers include Roger Ross Williams, Oprah Winfrey, editor of The 1619 Project Caitlin Roper, and the New York Times’s editorial director for film and television Kathleen Lingo.

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