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Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Media Menu for March 28, 2012

Here are home viewing suggestions for the week, selected from online advanced TV program listings and aligned with the state and national K-12 academic standards available online. Please consult local listings also, since actual broadcast times may vary.   The Websites cited in the “Log on“  box  below the TV listing provide further details about the show’s  topic and may contain links to video clips from the show or a complete streaming video version of the show.

Wednesday,  March  28, 2012,
9-10 p.m. E/P
PBS
Science
Middle and High School

NOVA: Cracking Your Genetic Code

What will it mean when most of us can afford to have the information in our DNA—all six billion chemical letters of it—read, stored and available for analysis? This documentary   reveals that we stand on the verge of such a revolution. Meet cancer a cancer patient who appears to have cheated death and a cystic fibrosis sufferer breathing easily because scientists have been able to pinpoint and neutralize the genetic abnormalities underlying their conditions. But what are the moral dilemmas raised by this new technology? Will it help or hurt us to know the diseases that may lie in our future? What if such information falls into the hands of insurance companies, employers or prospective mates? One thing is for certain: the new era of personalized, gene-based medicine is relevant to everyone, and soon you will be choosing whether to join the ranks of the DNA generation. TV-PG
Log on http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/body/cracking-your-genetic-code.html

Thursday,  March  29, 2012,
8-10 p.m. ET, 5-7 p.m., PT
TCM – Turner Classic Movie Channel
World History and Geography
Middle and High School

Scott Of The Antarctic

This classic movie tells the true story of the British explorer Robert Falcon Scott and his ill-fated expedition to try to be the first man to discover the South Pole - only to find that the murderously cold weather and a rival team of Norwegian explorers conspire against him. The voice over narration, with actual portions of Scott's journal spoken by John Mills, is what makes this a worthwhile film. You really get drawn into what is happening to these people as they struggle to reach the South Pole first and then get back safely.  Note: The last fifteen minutes of the story, when it is obvious they will not make it, is very harrowing to watch.  TV-G
Log on  http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/21595/Scott-Of-The-Antarctic/articles.html


Friday,  March  30, 2012,
8-9 p.m. E/P
NBC
Geography and U.S. History
Middle and High School

Who Do You Think You Are?

In this genealogy and geography documentary  Rita Wilson travels to Greece and Bulgaria to learn the  history of her late father and uncovers an emotional secret she never expected.  A multi-talented actress/producer/writer and singer,  Wilson first donned a producer's cap for the record-breaking box office hit, "My Big Fat Greek Wedding." She was the driving force behind bringing Nia Vardalos' semi-autobiographical story to the screen with Vardalos as the lead. Rita was honored with the Visionary Award from the Producer's Guild of America, and the film won the People's Choice Award for Favorite Comedy, as well as Golden Globe and Oscar nominations. TV-PG
Log on  http://www.nbc.com/who-do-you-think-you-are/

Friday,  March  30, 2012,
8-9 p.m. E/P
Science Channel
Economics and Geography
Middle and High School

What's America Worth?

Ever thought how much America is worth? Imagine putting a dollar amount on everything in America -all the land, the resources under our feet, our homes, even the water we drink. In this documentary, real estate mogul Donald Trump puts a value on it all. From the loneliest wilderness to the busiest city street,  What if the entire country was put up for sale? All the resources, all the property, all the possessions.  In this age, perhaps more than any other, everything has its price. So how much is the entire USA really worth? TV-PG
Log on http://curiosityintheclassroom.com/media/pdf/WhatsAmericaWorth.pdf

Saturday,  March  31, 2012,
4-5 p.m. E/P
History Channel
Science and Economics
Middle and High School

Modern Marvels: Beans

This documentary follows the soybean from field to refinery  of CHS, Inc. as they convert billions of soybeans into vegetable oils, flour, and soy meal. These products, in turn, end up in salad dressings and margarines, baked goods, animal feed and even bio-fuel and plastics. Pay a visit to the Kelley Bean Company which cleans 80,000 pounds of dry beans per day. B & M Baked Beans stirs up some New England tradition by baking beans in steel kettles and brick ovens. Then, Italian chef and bean lover Cesare Casella whips up a few bean dishes using rare heirloom beans, some of which cost $35 per pound. For dessert, Japanese pastry makers prepare traditional bean-based confections with the azuki bean. Fry up some falafel and puree some beans into a paste called hummus with the most widely consumed legume in the world...the chickpea. Last but not least, the makers of Beano explain how it works to prevent that unfortunate bean byproduct: gas.  TV-PG
Log on http://growingbeans.org/bean-varieties

Sunday,  April 1, 2012,
8-9 p.m. E/P
PBS
U.S. History
Middle and High School

FINDING YOUR ROOTS WITH HENRY LOUIS GATES, JR.

This  geological documentary  unearths missing links in the family histories of media legend Barbara Walters and educational superstar Geoffrey Canada. What’s in a name? Well, a lot, at least when it comes to piecing together family history. For former slaves, choosing a last name was one of their first acts of freedom. For Jewish immigrants, it was a way to fit in in their new country. Whatever the reason for a name change, it can make the process of learning about one’s ancestors difficult, if not impossible. In this episode, Professor  Gates unearths missing links in the family histories of media legend Barbara Walters and educational superstar Geoffrey Canada. Walters did not know her father’s real last name. Canada did not know the name of his grandfather. Both had been unable to access their history until now. TV-PG
Log on http://www.pbs.org/wnet/finding-your-roots

Monday,  April 2, 2012,
4-5 p.m. E/P
History Channel
Science and Technology
Middle and High School

Modern Marvels: Future Tech

Shown in this documentary are a  paper-thin, wall-sized holographic television...a car that runs on processed seawater...an army of robotic military machines...outer-space luxury resorts and a cleaning droid controlled by your mind? Buckle-up for safety as we race into the near future--where fantasy becomes fact. There have always been visionaries, futurists, and dreamers predicting the world of tomorrow--flying cars, space-station colonies, and android personal assistants. But time has proven the fallacy of many of their predictions. So what future technology can we realistically expect? With the help of 3D animation, we present some  predictions and take you to various research labs to see working prototypes of these technologies in their infancy TV-PG
Log on http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0650179/
Monday,  April 2, 2012,
10-11:30  p.m. E/P
PBS
English
Middle and High School

AMERICAN MASTERS: Harper Lee: Hey, Boo

Explore the phenomenon behind the often-taught classic American novel, “To Kill a Mockingbird”  and the mysterious life of its Pulitzer Prize-winning author, including why she never published again. This documentary reveals the context and history of the novel’s Deep South setting, and the social changes it inspired after publication. One of the biggest bestsellers of all time, “To Kill a Mockingbird”  is the first and only novel by a young woman named Nelle Harper Lee, who once said that she wanted to be South Alabama’s Jane Austen. Lee won the Pulitzer Prize and became a mystery when she stopped speaking to press in 1964. TV-PG
Log on http://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/episodes/harper-lee-hey-boo/about-the-documentary/1972/

Tuesday,  April 3, 2012,
9:30-11 p.m. E/P
PBS
U.S. History and Technology
Middle and High School

PANAMA CANAL: AMERICAN EXPERIENCE

As shown in this documentary, on August 15th, 1914, the Panama Canal opened, connecting the world’s two largest oceans and signaling America’s emergence as a global superpower. American ingenuity and innovation had succeeded where, just a few years earlier, the French had failed disastrously. But the U.S. paid a price for victory. TV-14
Log on http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/timeline/panama/


Wednesday, April 3, 2012,
9-11 p.m. E/P
PBS
Science Technology
Middle and High School

NOVA: Hunting the Elements

Where do nature’s building blocks, called the elements, come from? They’re the hidden ingredients of everything in our world, from the carbon in our bodies to the metals in our smartphones. To unlock their secrets, David Pogue, the lively host of NOVA’s popular "Making Stuff" series and technology correspondent of The New York Times, takes viewers through the world of weird, extreme chemistry: the strongest acids, the deadliest poisons, the universe’s most abundant elements, and the rarest of the rare—substances cooked up in atom smashers that flicker into existence for only fractions of a second.
Why are some elements like platinum or gold inert while others like phosphorus or potassium violently explosive? Why are some vital to every breath we take while others are lethal toxins that killed off their discoverers such as Marie Curie? As he digs for answers, Pogue reveals the story of the elements to be a rich stew simmering with passion, madness, and obsessive scientific rivalry. TV-PG
Log on http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/physics/hunting-elements.html

Book TV Schedule

Saturday, March 31st

8am (ET)
Approx. 1 hr. 8 min.
2012 National Book Critics Circle Awards
Multiple Authors
9:15am (ET)
Approx. 1 hr. 21 min.
"American Grace: How Religion Divides and Unites Us"
David Campbell
12pm (ET)
Approx. 1 hr.
BOOKTV in Little Rock, Arkansas
BookTV Visits Little Rock, Arkansas
1pm (ET)
Approx. 1 hr. 15 min.
"Debacle: Obama's War on Jobs and Growth and What We Can Do Now to Regain Our Future"
John Lott, Jr.; Grover Norquist
7pm (ET)
Approx. 2 hr. 15 min.
"Space Chronicles: Facing the Ultimate Frontier"
Neil deGrasse Tyson
9:15pm (ET)
Approx. 45 min.
"The Many Faces of George Washington: Remaking a Presidential Icon"
Carla Killough McClafferty
11pm (ET)
Approx. 1 hr. 32 min.
"The Devil We Don't Know: The Dark Side of Revolutions in the Middle East"
Nonie Darwish

Sunday, April 1st

12:45am (ET)
Approx. 1 hr.
"Consent of the Networked: The Worldwide Struggle For Internet Freedom"
Rebecca MacKinnon
2am (ET)
Approx. 54 min.
"The Founding Fathers Guide to the Constitution"
Brion McClanahan
3am (ET)
Approx. 1 hr. 27 min.
A Discussion on War Crimes Tribunals with William Shawcross, David Scheffer, and Harold Koh
Harold Koh; David Scheffer; William Shawcross
4:30am (ET)
Approx. 1 hr. 8 min.
2012 National Book Critics Circle Awards
Multiple Authors
6am (ET)
Approx. 1 hr. 10 min.
"The Crusader: The Life and Tumultuous Times of Pat Buchanan"
Timothy Stanley
8:30am (ET)
Approx. 2 hr. 15 min.
"Space Chronicles: Facing the Ultimate Frontier"
Neil deGrasse Tyson
3pm (ET)
Approx. 1 hr. 8 min.
2012 National Book Critics Circle Awards
Multiple Authors
4:30pm (ET)
Approx. 1 hr. 21 min.
"American Grace: How Religion Divides and Unites Us"
David Campbell
11:15pm (ET)
Approx. 45 min.
"The Many Faces of George Washington: Remaking a Presidential Icon"
Carla Killough McClafferty

Monday, April 2nd

12am (ET)
Approx. 3 hr.
In Depth: Richard Brookhiser
5:45am (ET)
Approx. 1 hr. 32 min.
"The Devil We Don't Know: The Dark Side of Revolutions in the Middle East"
Nonie Darwish
7:30am (ET)
Approx. 29 min.
"King Larry: The Life and Ruins of a Billionaire Genius"
James Scurlock

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Media Menu for March 21, 2012


Here are home viewing suggestions for the week, selected from online advanced TV program listings and aligned with the state and national K-12 academic standards available online. Please consult local listings also, since actual broadcast times may vary.   The Websites cited in the “Log on“  box  below the TV listing provide further details about the show’s  topic and may contain links to video clips from the show or a complete streaming video version of the show.

Wednesday,  March  21, 2012,
10-11 p.m. E/P
PBS
U.S. History and Technology
Middle and High School

Steve Jobs - One Last Thing

There has been near-universal agreement that the late Apple founder was a great innovator in business and technology, but why was he great? What were the influences that shaped his character and drove him to such success from humble beginnings? With colleagues who worked closely with him and those who have chronicled his life,  this documentary takes an unflinching look at the mercurial, brilliant man and review his many talents and achievements. And , in a never-before-broadcast interview from 1994, Jobs expounds on his philosophy of life: “You tend to get told that the world is the way it is, but life can be much broader once you discover one simple fact; and that is that everything around you that you call life was made up by people no smarter than you … Once you learn that, you’ll never be the same again.”
Log on http://www.biography.com/people/steve-jobs-9354805

Thursday,  March  22 , 2012,
10-11  p.m. E/P
PBS
Science
Middle and High School

FRONTLINE: The Vaccine War

Public health scientists and clinicians tout vaccines as one of the greatest achievements of modern medicine. But for many ordinary Americans vaccines have become controversial. Young parents are concerned at the sheer number of shots — some 26 inoculations for 14 different diseases by age six — and follow alternative vaccination schedules advocated by gurus like Dr. Robert Sears. Other parents go further. In communities like Ashland, Oregon, up to one-third of parents are choosing not to vaccinate their kids at all. And some advocacy groups, like Generation Rescue, argue that vaccines are no longer a public health miracle but a scourge; they view vaccines as responsible for alarming rises in certain disorders, including ADHD and autism. This documentary explains the vaccine war: On one side sits scientific medicine and the public health establishment; on the other a populist coalition of parents, celebrities, politicians and activists. It's a war that increasingly takes place on the Internet with both sides using the latest social media tools, including Facebook and Twitter, to win the hearts and minds of the public.
Log on http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/vaccines

Friday,  March  23 , 2012,
10-11  p.m. E/P
National Geographic Channel
U.S. History
High School

Only For God: Inside Hasidism

With unprecedented access,  this National Geographic  documentary introduces you to the passionately orthodox community of Hasidic Judaism. Some of the people who share their stories include a revered Hasidic rabbi challenging what it means to be spiritual in the modern world, a young man raised Catholic now attending a Hasidic yeshiva in Brooklyn, and a young Hasidic woman taking her first steps to leave this tightly knit community and live a secular life in Manhattan.
Log on  http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/national-geographic-channel/all-videos/ngc-the-newly-hasidic-life/?source=email_channel

Saturday,  March  24 , 2012,
8-10  p.m. E/P
CNN
Science and Economics
Middle and High School

Global Lessons: A GPS Roadmap to Saving Health Care

This documentary is an examination of rising costs in health care draws attention to efforts to address the challenges around the globe.  What can Britain, Taiwan and Switzerland teach America about health care?
Log on  http://globalpublicsquare.blogs.cnn.com/category/health/

Sunday,  March  25, 2012,
8-10  p.m. E/P
PBS
U.S. History
Middle and High School

FINDING YOUR ROOTS WITH HENRY LOUIS GATES, JR

This is a broadcast of the initial two episodes of a10-part series, with renowned cultural critic and Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates, Jr., who journeys deep into the ancestry of a group of remarkable individuals and provides new understanding of personal identity and American history.  Episode One: Harry Connick Jr. and Branford Marsalis. Trace the turbulent and contradictory history of New Orleans through the family stories of two men. Their European immigrant ancestors blazed unconventional trails in America, from capturing British ships for the American Revolution to crossing racial barriers in slave-era Louisiana. Generations later, as children growing up in New Orleans, Harry Connick Jr. and Branford Marsalis found a deep and abiding friendship through their common love of jazz and of the city itself.  Episode Two: Cory Booker and John Lewis. Discover the family histories of two African-American politicians from different generations and opposite backgrounds. This program features two African-American politicians from different generations and opposite backgrounds. John Lewis grew up in a sharecropping family in rural Georgia, while Cory Booker was raised in an affluent, all-white New Jersey suburb. Although both men have devoted their lives to the betterment of African-American people, neither knows much about his own ancestors. In this episode, Booker is introduced to his white great-grandfather, a man he never knew, and Lewis is moved to tears over the extraordinary ambitions and accomplishments of his slave ancestors. TV-PG
Log on  http://pressroom.pbs.org/Programs/f/Finding-Your-Roots.aspx

Monday,  March  26, 2012,
4-5 p.m. E/P
History Channel
Science and Technology
Middle and High School

Modern Marvels: Corrosion & Decomposition

According to the American Society of Civil Engineers, the aging U.S. infrastructure is in danger of collapse. Learn about a company in Missouri that uses a trench-less technology to rebuild corroded sewer pipes from the inside out while engineers at General Motors Proving Grounds lead the battle against corrosive road de-icing salts. See how a bioreactor in Florida turns mountains of garbage methane gas. Finally, this documentary shows  how the tiny termite is teaching us how to turn agricultural waste into ethanol at a fraction of the current cost. TV-PG
Log on  http://www.infrastructurereportcard.org/

Tuesday,  March  27, 2012,
9-10 p.m. E/P
PBS
U.S. History
Middle and High School

TRIANGLE FIRE: AMERICAN EXPERIENCE

As shown in this historical documentary, on March 25, 1911, a fire broke out in the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in New York’s Greenwich Village. The blaze ripped through the congested loft; huge piles of trimmings fed the flames. Petrified workers desperately tried to make their way downstairs, but the factory owners kept the doors on the ninth floor locked and the woefully inadequate fire escape soon crumpled. Hundreds of horrified on-lookers arrived just in time to see young men and women jumping from the windows. By the time the fire had burned itself out, 146 people were dead. Less than two years earlier, the workers of the factory had been leaders in an industry-wide strike to protest dismal wages and dangerous working conditions. Despite unlikely support from some of the wealthiest women in the city, including Anne Morgan, most of the workers returned to their shops without having their demands met. It took the tragedy of the fire and the ensuing public outrage to force government action. The landmark legislation that followed gave New Yorkers the most comprehensive workplace safety laws in the country.  TV-14
Log on http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/films/triangle/

Wednesday,  March  28, 2012,
9-10 p.m. E/P
PBS
Science
Middle and High School

NOVA: Cracking Your Genetic Code

What will it mean when most of us can afford to have the information in our DNA—all six billion chemical letters of it—read, stored and available for analysis? This documentary   reveals that we stand on the verge of such a revolution. Meet cancer a cancer patient who appears to have cheated death and a cystic fibrosis sufferer breathing easily because scientists have been able to pinpoint and neutralize the genetic abnormalities underlying their conditions. But what are the moral dilemmas raised by this new technology? Will it help or hurt us to know the diseases that may lie in our future? What if such information falls into the hands of insurance companies, employers or prospective mates? One thing is for certain: the new era of personalized, gene-based medicine is relevant to everyone, and soon you will be choosing whether to join the ranks of the DNA generation. TV-PG
Log on http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/body/cracking-your-genetic-code.html
Book TV Schedule

Saturday, March 24th

8am (ET)
Approx. 1 hr. 20 min.
"A Single Roll of the Dice" 
Trita Parsi
9:30am (ET)
Approx. 1 hr.
"The U.S. Supreme Court: A Very Short Introduction" 
Linda Greenhouse
10:30am (ET)
Approx. 35 min.
Landmark: The Inside Story of America's New Health Care Law 
Alec MacGillis
11am (ET)
Approx. 1 hr. 6 min.
"Health Care Reform: What It Is, Why It's Necessary, How It Works" 
Jonathan Gruber
12pm (ET)
Approx. 1 hr. 15 min.
"The Pipes Plan: The Top Ten Ways To Dismantle And Replace Obamacare" 
Sally Pipes
2:30pm (ET)
Approx. 1 hr. 22 min.
"Bending History: Barack Obama's Foreign Policy" 
Martin Indyk; Kenneth Lieberthal; Michael O'Hanlon
4pm (ET)
Approx. 39 min.
"Ronald Reagan: Our 40th President" 
Winston Groom
7pm (ET)
Approx. 1 hr. 20 min.
"A Single Roll of the Dice" 
Trita Parsi
8:30pm (ET)
Approx. 53 min.
"No Way Out: A Story of Valor in the Mountains of Afghanistan" 
Kevin Maurer; Mitch Weiss
11pm (ET)
Approx. 39 min.
"Ronald Reagan: Our 40th President" 
Winston Groom

Sunday, March 25th

1am (ET)
Approx. 1 hr.
"The U.S. Supreme Court: A Very Short Introduction" 
Linda Greenhouse
2am (ET)
Approx. 35 min.
Landmark: The Inside Story of America's New Health Care Law 
Alec MacGillis
2:30am (ET)
Approx. 1 hr. 6 min.
"Health Care Reform: What It Is, Why It's Necessary, How It Works" 
Jonathan Gruber
3:45am (ET)
Approx. 1 hr. 15 min.
"The Pipes Plan: The Top Ten Ways To Dismantle And Replace Obamacare" 
Sally Pipes
8:30am (ET)
Approx. 1 hr. 22 min.
"Bending History: Barack Obama's Foreign Policy" 
Martin Indyk; Kenneth Lieberthal; Michael O'Hanlon
10am (ET)
Approx. 53 min.
"No Way Out: A Story of Valor in the Mountains of Afghanistan" 
Kevin Maurer; Mitch Weiss
3:30pm (ET)
Approx. 1 hr.
2012 Tucson Festival of Books: "Emerging from the Shadows: Women in the Lives of Wilson, Jefferson, and Twain" 
Kristie Miller; Virginia Scharff; Laura Skandera Trombley
7pm (ET)
Approx. 39 min.
"Ronald Reagan: Our 40th President" 
Winston Groom