www.whyville.net Jan 23, 2005 Weekly Issue



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Media Specialist

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Greetings, TV viewers!

Some broadcast and cable programs contain material included in the public school curriculum and on standardized examinations. Here are home viewing suggestions for January 24 - January 30, 2004.

Media Hour is cancelled for this week, though a City Worker may come by and host something.

What do you think of the new format for the Media Menu? We're continuing to make improvments, so if you have ideas about what would make it easier to use, read, etc, let us know in the BBS below.

Remember to come to Saturday's Media Hour prepared! Watch the shows and really read the related websites, so you can help us focus our discussion. Explor what everyone thinks and remind us to think about what was in the shows and on the websites. Come to the Media Hour prepared and you will be invited down on stage, and you may earn clams, too!

What's the Media Hour? Watch the show(s)-of-the-week, jot down some ideas, then come and talk about them with me and other citizens (including other City Workers, if they're available). We get together at the Greek Theater (next to City Hall), every Saturday morning at 9 a.m., Whyville Time. You'll find that discussions are easier in the Theater, since everyone's chat bubbles overlap a little less than in other rooms, and City Workers are able to direct people's movement and behavior, when we need to.

Monday, January 24
9-10:30 p.m. E/P
HBO Social Studies High School
"Dirty War"

In a post-9/11 world, how do you prepare for the unthinkable? Is it possible to stop a coordinated radioactive-weapons attack by determined terrorists in an international city? And what, if anything, should the public be told about such a threat? This HBO-produced movie shows how a "dirty bomb" attack might be planned and executed in London, despite the best efforts of police and intelligence forces -- as well as how devastating the consequences of such an attack could be. A fictional thriller, it features intrigue, espionage and action and is based on extensive factual research about the planning and execution of a "dirty bomb" terrorist attack.. Warned by a number of sources that both terrorists and materials used for radioactive weapons have entered Great Britain, members of Scotland Yard -- including an Islamic undercover detective and several high-ranking terrorism experts -- do their best to identify and apprehend the perpetrators before their dirty bomb is constructed and detonated, but their efforts fall short. When the bomb goes off in the heart of London's financial center, the city's inadequate emergency-services plans are put to an immediate test -- with disturbing results for a population ill-prepared to understand or obey anti-contamination and quarantine orders.

Log on to http://www.hbo.com/films/dirtywar.

Tuesday, January 25
9-10 p.m. E/P
Travel Channel Economics & Technology Middle & High School

"World's Best: Fun Food Factories"

Here's a behind-the scenes look at where the most popular food snacks come from -- the assembly line. From Wonder Bread and Skippy Peanut Butter to marshmallow peeps and interactive Pez, find out how these confections get from the factory floor into the lunchbox.

Tuesday, January 25
8-9 p.m. E/P
PBS Science Middle & High School
"NOVA Science NOW"

This new science program has teamed the award-winning producers of NOVA with veteran reporter Robert Krulwich to cover the timeliest developments in science and technology today. Among the topics in this initial broadcast are Mirror Neurons. According to provocative recent discoveries in brain imaging, inside our heads we constantly "act out" and imitate whatever activity we're looking at. If we're watching a basketball player shoot hoops, our brains will register a pattern of brain activity similar to the athlete's, as if we were jumping with the ball ourselves. Another report, Life on the Edge, is a video profile of MIT scientist James McLurkin. When he builds robots, he finds inspiration in his ant farm. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency asked McLurkin to make a swarm of small, disposable robots which can spread throughout the interior of a building, mapping the unfamiliar space and searching for intruders. Also, McLurkin teaches underprivileged kids science in a program called SEED and discusses with other black MIT engineers the challenges of being a minority in science. Another report is: New Orleans: The Wrath of a Killer Storm, with correspondent Peter Standring is about how direct hit from a hurricane could inflict one of the biggest natural and economic disasters in United States history, submerging the French Quarter up to the rooftops and brewing a toxic soup of sewage, petrochemicals, alligators and dead bodies, causing 100,000 casualties. Could meteorologists one day pull off the ultimate trick of stopping a killer storm in its tracks, or diverting it to a less lethal path?

Log on to http://www.pbs.org/nova/sciencenow.

Tuesday, January 25
10-11 p.m. E/P
PBS Social Studies & World History High School
"Frontline: Al Qaeda's New Front"
Mosques burn and a filmmaker is murdered in a culture clash between Muslims and Christians in the Netherlands. A series of bombs tear apart commuter trains in Madrid. Al Qaeda terrorist cells are uncovered in the UK, Germany, Italy and Spain. This news program investigates the new front in the war on terror: Europe and is accompanied by a website which compares European and American approaches to fighting terrorism.
Log on to http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/front/.

Wednesday, January 26
5-6 p.m. E/P
History Channel World History & Technology Middle & High School
"Modern Marvels: The St Lawrence Seaway"
The St. Lawrence Seaway is a monumental stairway in water, lifting massive ships hundreds of feet over thousands of miles. It's the world's longest inland waterway, a system of rivers, lakes, canals, dams, and locks that stretches 2,400 miles. And it's one of the greatest engineering triumphs of the 20th century, pulled off against the violence of raging water and extreme winter. An essential part of the commercial infrastructure of the U.S. and Canada, it provides direct access from the Atlantic to North America's heartland, enabling ships packed with trade to stop at any one its 65 ports -- from Montreal to Duluth. From the 16th century, when French explorer Jacques Cartier searched for the legendary Northwest Passage, to the modern Seaway, built in the 1950s, the program traces the creation of this waterway.

Wednesday, January 26
6-7 p.m. E
/P
Discovery Channel Science & Technology Middle & High School
"Monster Garage: Hot Air Balloon"
At the annual balloon festival in Albuquerque, over 1,000 balloonists launch their airships. In a five day flurry of fabricating, the hosts of this program will turn a Chevy GEO Tracker into the quickest launching hot-air balloon and chase vehicle packaged into one.

Wednesday, January 26
10-11 p.m. E/P
NBC Social Studies & Health High School (This program is unrated, but parental discretion is advised)
"Katie Couric -- The 411:Teens and Sex"
In this NBC News Special, reporter Katie Couric talks to teens about their sexual attitudes. Because programs produced by the news divisions of U.S. networks are not TV-rated as to content according to FCC rules, this broadcast has no Parental Guidance designation attached to it. But, considering the subject matter and the hour of the program parents may decide not to have anyone in the family watch it -- or parents may decide to watch it without children present. On the mater of teens and sex, Couric says, "There's a dramatically different paradigm -- it's more matter-of-fact and we wanted to make sense of it." So she spent a November weekend in Key Biscayne, Fla., with 20 youngsters (ages 13-17) from around the country. In her opinion, this broadcast is a primer for parents. "It was designed to help parents understand what kids are thinking and doing," she says, "and how best to deal with it." The starting point of the program will be the findings from a groundbreaking national survey of young teens commissioned by NBC News and People Magazine, Couric's special explores how teens are coming to terms with their sexuality and how they deal with cultural influences, peer pressure and the abstinence. Parents of the teens also will talk about their concerns with two adolescent specialists and explored ways to better communicate with their teens.
Log on to http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6839080/.

Thursday, January 27
8:30 p.m. E/P
History Channel Science High School
"Modern Marvels Nature Tech: Tsunami"
The devastation wrought by the recent tsunami prompted many to explore what natural forces created these gigantic waves. Tsunamis are generated by offshore earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and landslides. This seismic activity creates a large-scale underwater displacement of sediment on the seabed and produces a massive underwater wave -- or series of waves known as a "wave train." Technology has enabled scientists to predict more with more accuracy when a tsunami might strike. But computerized buoys, wave simulation machines, satellites, shake tables and 3-D models do not allow for definite forewarning. Traveling to locations in Hawaii, Japan, Oregon, Seattle and California, this program highlights the latest state-of-the-art technology used.

Thursday, January 27
6-7 p.m. E/P
History Channel Science Middle & High School
"Nature Tech: Lightning"
Since time immemorial, flashes of light have startled our senses and piqued our imagination. But it's only in recent years that we've begun to unlock the secrets behind this terrifying phenomenon, as we learn in this high-tech look at how man has tried to control nature throughout history. Lightning kills nearly 100 people yearly in the United States and injures hundreds of others. Meet men and women who look for new ways of detection, prevention, and how to save lives when Mother Nature strikes.

Thursday, January 27
8:30 p.m. E/P
Nickelodeon World History & Social Science High School
"Nick News With Linda Ellerbee: Never Again? From the Holocaust to Sudan"
This Nickelodeon special broadcast airs on the 60th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, where the Nazis had operated an execution camp during WWII. Ellerbee comments in the program: "The Holocaust was no more of an accident than what is happening ion the Sudan is an accident. In telling these stories we remind ourselves of these events and promise ???Never Again'. We realize that if we have nothing else, we each have a voice and every voice counts." Included in the special are interviews with kids who are taking matters into their own hands and helping victims of the Sudanese genocide.

Friday, January 28
9-9:30 p.m. E/P
check local listings

PBS Social Studies & Science High School
"NOW"
Anchoring this new version of "NOW" is David Brancaccio, who joined "NOW" after a decade as host of public radio's "Marketplace." NOW pursues aspects of stories overlooked by other news and public affairs broadcasts -- issues that impact working people. Topics announced for coverage in this in edition of the program are the new immigrants to the U.S. and the safety of America's 140 nuclear power plants.
Log on to http://www.pbs.org/now.

Saturday, January 29
5-6 p.m. E/P
TCM -- Turner Classic Movies Art and World History High School
"Agony and the Ecstasy"
In this movie, also available on video, Charlton Heston plays Michelangelo Buonarotti, the Florentine painter, sculptor, architect and poet, one of the greatest and most versatile artists of the Renaissance who exerted an extraordinary influence on Western art. The story, based on the Irving Stone best-seller, covers the period during Michelangelo's life when he painted the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel for Pope Julius II, the greatest art patron of the papal line and one of the most powerful rulers of his age. The movie is preceded by a short documentary about the range of Michelangelo's work includes The Creation (Adam and God); The Pieta of St. Peter's; The Colossal David; and The Moses.
Log on to http://www.michelangelo.com/buon/bio-index2.html.

Sunday, January 30
6-7 p.m. E/P
Travel Channel Geography and World History Middle & High School
"Travel Channel Presents World's Best: Ancient Cultures Countdown"
Are there some ancient cultures still in existence today? Yes, they have had little or no contact with the modern world. This program is about some people who have never seen cars, CDs or fast food restaurants. They still live their ancient ways -- the Dreamtime which aborigines have celebrated for over 60 millennia, the Samurai world of Japan and ancient ethnic practices in India, the Inuit and Navajo peoples. From the Arctic to remote Pacific islands and onto the Amazon jungle, viewers get to know the hidden tribes of Africa and Papua New Guinea and finally come into contact with the extraordinary world of Central Asia, the land of Genghis Khan and the remote kingdoms of the Himalayas.

Sunday, January 30
8-10 p.m. E/P
A&E Channel Social Studies High School
"See Arnold Run"
This movie about the current Governor of California is rated TV-PG. Below is a weblink which parents may wish to consult before having any younger members of the family join them in viewing this program. Jurgen Prochnow plays Arnold Schwarzenegger and Mariel Hemingway plays wife Maria Shriver in this biographical movie about the muscleman who became a Hollywood superstar and then a superstar politician. It follows Schwarzenegger's campaign for governor of California in a recall election of 2003, looks back at his pursuit of an unprecedented 4th "Mr. Olympia" body building championship three decades ago, and shows how his ambition and personal charisma have brought him to the top.
Log on to http://www.aetv.com/seearnoldrun/.

Sunday, January 30
9-11 p.m. E/P
Discovery Channel Ancient History High School
"Pompeii: The Last Day"
Because this program is a good way to find out about Roman history and it's airing at the same time this day as some other programs worth watching, it might be a good idea to tape it or tune in on one of the days when it will be repeated -- February 1 and February 5. It dramatizes historical events when Mount Vesuvius showered the ancient Roman city of Pompeii with ash, smoke and rock. What exactly did happen that summer day in A.D. 79? The program looks at the latest scientific findings from a city lay undisturbed under volcanic debris for more than 1,500 years. It presents a detailed account of the city's final 24 hours, based on this buried evidence.
Log on to http://dsc.discovery.com/convergence/pompeii/pompeii.html.

 

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