www.whyville.net May 15, 2005 Weekly Issue



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Greetings, TV viewers!

Some broadcast and cable programs contain material included in the public school curriculum and on standardized exams. Here are home-viewing suggestions for May 16-May 22, 2005.

The topic for this week's Media Hour is video games. E3, a major video game and interactive technologies conference, will happen this week... check out the news coverage and let's talk about your favorite games and consoles!

There's always more to discuss where that came from, so crack open your questions and do some investigating. Science teachers, schoolbooks, libraries and your local university scientists are all great places to find answers, and more questions.

We had a great time discussing nuclear power the other week. Several people dug up some great facts about the topic, and I want to thank you all! Maybe this week I'll know how to give you clams for all your great work. :-)

If you've got the smarts to answer a few trivia-type questions, make sure you watch the shows and read the websites! I really want to give out clams to folks who saw the show and who help others in the room learn!!!

Remember to come to Saturday's Media Hour prepared. It's all about an open discussion, with everybody pitching in on a good topic -- remember to talk amongst yourselves while I'm down there! Explore what everyone thinks and remind us to think about what was in the shows and on the websites. The more you help others discuss things (and the more you know about the shows), the better your chances of getting on stage, or even earning clams.

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, May 16
8-9 p.m. E/P

Discovery Channel

Science and Technology

Middle and High School

"Science Of Star Wars: Droids, Bots and Artificial Intelligence"

The "hosts" of this documentary about robots are two of the most famous robots ever, C3-PO and R2-D2. Right now, robots can clean the house, walk the dog and identify life in the rubble of an earthquake. Soon, droids will replace astronauts on dangerous spacewalks and may even act as flying R2-D2s to people living in space. How soon will it be before your mother has an unmanned drone to figure out what you're doing all day? Forget about Big Brother -- can the school principal use these things to patrol the hallways?


Tuesday, May 17
8-9 p.m. E/P

PBS

Ancient History and Archaeology

Middle and High School

"America's Stone Age Explorers"

Who were the first Americans and where did they come from? The conventional view is that ancient big-game hunters entered the Americas across the Bering land bridge -- a strip of dry land that spanned the Bering Strait between Asia and Alaska during the last Ice Age some 12,000 years ago. But in recent years, a wave of startling discoveries has overturned that idea. The first Americans almost certainly came thousands of years earlier, traveling in skin boats and living off sea mammals along the edge of the ice. Now a truly provocative theory has stirred a storm of disbelief and argument among archaeologists. A leading prehistorian at the Smithsonian Institution claims that some of these first canoe-borne migrants came not from Asia but Europe, and that they crossed the Atlantic in skin boats by following the fringes of the ice sheets. This Stone Age detective story reveals that the peopling of the Americas is a far more tantalizing riddle than anyone had ever suspected. Rated TV-PG.

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


Wednesday, May 18
8-9 p.m. E/P

CBS

Economics

High School

"CBS 60 Minutes Wednesday"

The lead story in this newsmagazine is a warning about how to manage your money. Millions of Americans may have to pay off loans with up to 400 percent interest, thanks to "payday lending." Correspondent Scott Pelley shows how this works.


Wednesday, May 18
9-10 p.m. E/P

PBS

American History and Arts

Middle and High School

"Ray Charles: The Genius of Soul"

Eighteen years after his Grammy Award for lifetime achievement and eight months after his death at age 73, Ray Charles again proved his lasting power by posthumously winning another eight Grammys, including Best Album and Best Record of 2004; and the biographical movie. "Ray" was one of the most popular feature films of the year. Charles' revolutionary blend of gospel, soul, rock, jazz and country has earned him status as a genuine national treasure. This documentary follows the blind singer from his impoverished childhood through his rise to stardom and personal recognition by two American presidents. Along the way, "The Genius of Soul" looks at Charles' musical influences and the creation of his distinctive style, but does not ignore his dark side, including a 15-year heroin addiction and his infamous pursuit of women. The film also shows his delightful side -- playing chess with Willie Nelson, joking onstage with Johnny Carson and cutting up backstage with his lifelong friend, Quincy Jones. Rated TV-PG.

Log on #offsite_article( 'http://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters' '' )http://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters


Thursday, May 19
8-9:30 p.m. ET, 5-6:30 p.m. PT

TCM Channel

World History - The Americas

Middle and High School

"El Compadre Mendoza"

This drama about Mexican history is being broadcast as part of a TCM series of classics of Mexican cinema. It's in Spanish with English subtitles. It focuses on a landowner and his family torn between the government and the revolutionaries there in the early 1900s. Zapatistas with rifles arrive at the hacienda of Rosalio Mendoza. The servants replace the picture of Huerta, the government President with one of Zapata, the rebel leader. Mendoza provides a feast and sells the rebels guns. Later he welcomes a federal government colonel, and says he gave the Zapatistas worthless guns. In the rest of the story, Mendoza continues playing both sides of the war to protect his land and family, in a series of developments as rich as those in "Gone With the Wind". The events portrayed are based on what actually happened in Mexico -- where neither side was angelic.


Friday, May 20
8-9 p.m. E/P

Discovery Channel

Science and Technology

Middle and High School

"Spies Above"

This documentary goes behind-the-scenes for an inside view of the secret world of surveillance from space. The CIA's National Reconnaissance Office has collected satellite photos that have changed the course of history.


Saturday, May 21
8-10 p.m. E/P

Discovery Channel

Science and Technology

Middle and High School

"Voyage To The Planets And Beyond"

Could mankind survive a trip through our solar system? While the science now exists to get us there, the voyage has not yet been taken. In this docudrama about the exploration of space, a crew of five astronauts takes off on this six-year journey to Pluto, Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, Venus, Mercury -- and to the largest, most deadly place in the solar system: the Sun. The program shows in detail the dangers of such a trip.


Sunday, May 22
8-11 p.m. E/P

NBC

Ancient Mythology

High School

"Hercules"

This is a new Hallmark movie based on the classic myth. It stars Sean Astin ("Lord of the Rings" trilogy), Leelee Sobieski ("Uprising," "Joan of Arc"), Elizabeth Perkins ("Big") and Timothy Dalton ("Licence to Kill") with Paul Telfer (USA's "Spartacus") in the title role as the super-strong legendary Greek hero. Filmed in New Zealand, the epic follows the exploits of Hercules who, after killing his three sons, is compelled to redeem himself by performing 12 heroic labors. Using special effects, it tells the story of a half-god/half-man who, through extraordinary feats of strength, becomes a legend on Earth and gains immortality among the Greek gods.

Log on http://www.nbc.com/nbc/Hercules.

The majority of the text in these descriptions come from the television stations and production groups that produced the shows; the MediaWiz and Numedeon, Inc. claim no copyright over the text itself.

 

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