www.whyville.net Feb 6, 2003 Weekly Issue



MediaWiz
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These listings cover television programs up to Thursday, February 14th.

Greetings, TV viewers!

This coming week's Show-of-the-Week is Unchained Memories: Readings from the Slave Narratives, on Monday, February 10th. It documents the experiences of real slaves in America, presented by major African-American actors like Angela Basset, Robert Guillaume, and Oprah Winfrey. I estimated that this would be an excellent opportunity for the MediaHour to discuss Black History Month (in the U.S.) and race in general in Whyville.

Those of you who joined us for the MediaHour discussing PETA may want to check out Friday's 20/20, which lambasts PETA for its debatable ethics in the battle against animal cruelty.

Want some clams? Watch the shows-of-the-week, then talk about them with me and other citizens (including other city workers, if they're available) in the House of Illusions Geek Speak. We usually meet on Wednesdays at 6:30pm Whyville Time.

If you come and really take part in the meeting, you'll get up to 50 clams from City Hall... you like that?

To sum up: tune to the show, show up to the chat, chat up your thoughts, and know you get clams!

Watch the shows and tell me what you and your parents think. Email me, the MediaWiz of Whyville!

And now... the Media Menu!

Thursday, February 6

"ABC Thursday Night At The Movies: NTSB" (ABC Network 8-10pm E/P) This is a movie about the technicians of the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board. In the movie the airplane crash being investigated is fictional ("Flight 323"), but you'll learn a lot about how this scientific fact-gathering is done. The cast is led by Emmy winner Mandy Patinkin. Compare the movie with what's on the official NTSB website at http://www.ntsb.gov.

Friday, February 7

"Expedition Egypt Life beyond the Pyramids" A&E Network, (7-8pm E/P) This documentary uses modern technology and computer imagery to venture down the Nile to a time 5,000 years ago when the Pharaohs reigned. At the ancient port city Mendes, archaeologist Donald Redford has been uncovering the lives of farmers, priests, and merchants. You will also visit the ancient craftsman's village Deir el Medina to learn more about the lives of workers who toiled in the Valley of the Kings. And finally, wander through modern Cairo to discover similarities between ancient Egypt and the Egypt of today.

"ABC 20/20" (ABC, 10-11pm E/P) A main feature in this newsmagazine is a report by correspondent John Stossel about animal rights activists. Here's his viewpoint in his own words: "...animal rights nuts??? I mean, 'activists' -- they want to tell us what to wear, what to eat, and ban research that might save human lives. PETA President Ingrid Newkirk wants us to stop eating turkey, because turkey farms are 'concentration camps for animals'.... Famous people like Alec Baldwin and Alicia Silverstone appear in their ads. Silverstone licks a frog, and says they should not be dissected. Even though animal testing has led to penicillin, organ transplants, the cure for polio, PETA says medical research must not involve animal testing. Other animal rights activists advocate not just civil disobedience, but force. PETA says it does not fund terrorists, but when arsonists blew up a research lab in Michigan, PETA paid $45,000 for the legal defense of the arsonist. Now out of jail, he has been taped recorded urging others to burn buildings down."

Saturday, February 8

???Inside the Actors Studio: Ben Affleck??? (Bravo Channel, 7-8pm E/P) This is an interview program with a really smart person who happens to be an actor. It's Ben Affleck, who writes screenplays, including "Goodwill Hunting" which won him an Oscar. You may have seen him in "Shakespeare In Love" (and learned a lot about English history) if your parents took you with them -- it was R rated. I like him because he in heavily involved in doing a documentary series based on "A People's History Of the United States" by Howard Zinn. (That book deserves an R rating, but for "radical" -- if you ever read even a page of it, your eyes will go wide with surprise.)

Sunday, February 9

"Before We Ruled the Earth: Hunt or Be Hunted" (Discovery Channel 8-9pm E/P) This documentrary explains the situation 1,700,000 million years ago in Africa when Homo ergaster, an ancient predecessor of modern humans had to scavenge to survive. They lived in the elements, dodging the monsters of the day, like the sabretooth cat. The program is followed by another documentary at 9-10pm E/P entitled " Before We Ruled the Earth: Mastering the Beasts" which takes place15,000 years ago when the Cro-Magnons had evolved in Europe and other early humans crossed the land bridge connecting Asian and the Americas -- evolving into the so-called Paleo-Indians. They had all the abilities of modern humans: the power of speech, reasoning skills, and a belief in the afterlife -- and abilities to defend themselves against giant carnivores.

Monday, February 10

"Unchained Memories: Readings From the Slave Narratives" (HBO, 8-9:30pm E/P) Watching this documentary may change forever your ideas and feelings about U.S. history. When the Civil War ended in 1865, more than four million slaves were set free. Over 70 years later, when 100,000 were still alive, their memories of life in bondage, ranging from the brutal to the bittersweet, were preserved. This documentary brings to life their stories -- gathered by writers for the U.S. government's Work Projects Administration in the 1930s -- through readings by leading African-American actors, including Angela Bassett, Michael Boatman, Roscoe Lee Browne, Don Cheadle, Sandra Daley, Ossie Davis, Ruby Dee, Robert Guillaume, Jasmine Guy, Samuel L. Jackson, CCH Pounder, LaTanya Richardson, Ruben Santiago-Hudson, Roger Guenveur Smith, Courtney B. Vance, Vanessa L. Williams, Oprah Winfrey and Alfre Woodard. In addition to their in-character readings, the actors sometimes add their own anecdotes and editorial comments, giving a contemporary and emotional perspective to the documentary's serious subject matter as well as archival photographs, authentic slave-era music performed by the McIntosh County Shouters, and creative footage evoking the brutal legacy of slavery in America. The film was produced in association with the Library of Congress. Rated TV-PG for Adult Content. Log on to http://www.hbo.com/docs/programs/unchained_memories for further information.

"Partners of the Heart (PBS, 9-10pm E/P) Here's another strong story from Black history -- it's a science documentary about 2 men at Johns Hopkins University Hospital who pioneered a groundbreaking procedure in 1944 that would save thousands of babies' lives. One of them, Alfred Blalock, was a prominent white surgeon. The other, Vivien Thomas, was an African-American with a high school education. Blalock recognized Thomas' talents when the younger man inquired about a hospital janitor's job. But though Blalock came to treat Thomas with tremendous respect in the lab, the two men were rarely treated as equals in the outside world. Over time, Thomas would go on to train two generations of the country's premier cardiac surgeons. In 1976, more than three decades after the first baby's life was saved, Johns Hopkins finally formally recognized Thomas' extraordinary achievements, awarding him an honorary doctorate. Visit the website at http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/partners/.

Tuesday, February 11

"Alcan Highway" (History Channel, 10-11pm E/P) This documentary, airing as part of the observance of Black History Month, is about the construction of the 1,500-mile long Alaska Highway is an unrivaled engineering feat. It took nearly 4,000 Black U.S. soldiers and another 6,000 other construction workers only eight months to build this highway in 1942. Crossing the Canadian Rockies, plowing through thick virgin forests and skirting raging rivers and lakes, the soldiers dealt with long hours, horrible weather, isolation, and wild animals to build a highway the equivalent in length to the distance from Washington D.C. to Denver, Colorado.

Wednesday, February 12

"The Perilous Fight: America's World War II In Color" (PBS, 9-11pm E/P) If you've stayed away from history documentaries because they were in black and white and you thought B&W was boring, here's a cure for your erroneous opinion. This four-hour series, narrated by Martin Sheen ("West Wing"), captures America's wartime experience through original color film footage and passages from diaries and letters. These sometimes startling scenes -- never before publicly screened -- presents an unusually up-close view of life on the battlefield and on the U.S. home front. Episode I, "Infamy; Battlefronts" cover the years prior to the outbreak of World War II through the Nazi invasion of Poland and the buildup of the country's military and preparations for D-Day. Episode II, "Wrath; Triumph" covers events between D-Day and V-E Day, including the capture of a German U-boat carrying Enigma code machines and America's efforts to win the war in the Pacific. The second episode airs February 19, from 9-11pm E/P.

Thursday, February 13

"Frontline: China In The Red" (PBS, 9-11pm E/P) This documentary follows ten Chinese individuals -- from factory workers to rural farmers and millionaire entrepreneurs -- over three pivotal years in China's evolution from a rigid Communist society to an exploding market economy. For more than half a century, millions of Chinese workers labored in state-run factories that provided cradle-to-grave job security. But the economic reforms that have brought the world's most populous nation economic prosperity now threaten the livelihood of many Chinese workers. The Chinese Communist Party can no longer afford to subsidize the factories, and millions are being laid off, with no social safety net to catch them. These people now struggle to survive in a world they never dreamed would exist. Log on to www.pbs.org/frontline for extended coverage of the story, streaming video, and a discussion with experts about China???s future. Also check out this related LA Times article.

 

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