Wyatt investigates space and alternative fuel sources, and travels to Minnesota to determine the cause of the police force's problems.
Wyatt tries to figure out the relation between National Rifle Association and the movies, muses on why dogs eat chicken bones, and heads to Birmingham, Alabama, to know more about police apologies.
Wyatt attempts to persuade coal miners to adopt renewable energy technologies. He travels to Elgin, Illinois, to learn about the community's resident officer program and to talk about a police shooting that happened shortly after he departed.
As Wyatt investigates several sorts of sanctuary for illegal workers, he proposes a better strategy for communities to deal with rain. Moreover, he discusses community initiatives in Los Angeles' Skid Row neighborhood to reduce police presence.
Wyatt discusses a bill that would enable post offices to offer some banking services, mosquito control, and the interaction between mentally ill patients and the police.
Wyatt talks about how robots are taking over human jobs, UBI, nonlethal weapons for police officers, and producing cosmetics in a way that'd conserve the environment.
Wyatt looks at the student loan situation in America, efforts to alleviate sidewalk traffic in congested non-rural areas, and the topic of police sexual misconduct.
Wyatt Cenac investigates the most common problems of mobile phones, the earliest known use of adhesives, and how the police deal with drug prohibition.
Wyatt discusses the history of gender bias in medicine and medical research, the environmental concerns of artificial reefs, and restorative justice.
Wyatt investigates the lack of funding for America's teachers, gains a new perspective on the circle of life, and finds a creative solution for his long policing investigation.