All posts by admin

New for Kids – Dinosaur Train

Weekdays at 7:30am and 12:30pm

Dinosaur Train embraces and celebrates the fascination that preschoolers have with both dinosaurs and trains. The series encourages basic scientific thinking and skills as the audience learns about life science, natural history and paleontology. Each of the 40 half-hour episodes features Buddy, an adorable preschool age Tyrannosaurus Rex, and his adoptive Pteranodon family as they board the Dinosaur Train and embark on whimsical voyages through prehistoric jungles, swamps, volcanoes and oceans. The episodes include two 11-minute animated stories, along with brief live action segments hosted by renowned paleontologist Dr. Scott Sampson, that unearth basic concepts in life science, natural history and paleontology.
Find out more »

Schedule for November 12 – 18

Schedule Notes: All schedules contain the air time, program name and episode name when available. A detailed description for selected programs can be found under Program Highlights or may be featured on What’s on Tonight! Comments are closed on “Schedules ” and programs listed may be subject to last minute changes that may or may not be reflected on the web schedule.

THURSDAY


11/12/09

05:00 PM Nightly Business Report
05:30 PM Think Tank with Ben Wattenberg William Safire: a Gem of an American
06:00 PM The This Old House Hour
07:00 PM The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer
08:00 PM The Story of India Beginnings
09:00 PM The This Old House Hour
10:00 PM Antiques Roadshow Louisville, KY
11:00 PM The Story of India Beginnings
12:00 AM Charlie Rose



FRIDAY


11/13/09

05:00 PM Nightly Business Report
05:30 PM The McLaughlin Group
06:00 PM Washington Week
06:30 PM Now on PBS
07:00 PM The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer
08:00 PM Secrets of the Dead Airmen and the Headhunters
09:00 PM Charlie Rose
10:00 PM BIll Moyers Journal
11:00 PM Secrets of the Dead Airmen and the Headhunters
12:00 AM BIll Moyers Journal



SATURDAY

11/14/09

06:00 AM Super Why!
06:30 AM Dinosaur Train
07:00 AM Thomas & Friends
07:30 AM Bob the Builder
08:00 AM A Place of Our Own Week in Review
08:30 AM Sid the Science Kid
09:00 AM Super Why!
09:30 AM New FlyFisher Niagra River
10:00 AM BAKING WITH JULIA
10:30 AM Victory Garden; The EARTH
11:00 AM New Yankee Workshop; The Kitchen Project; The Kitchen Office, Part 7 of 9
11:30 AM This Old House
12:00 PM Garden Smart
12:30 PM Hometime Barrel Vault Basement
01:00 PM The Woodwright’s Shop Harvard Side Table
01:30 PM Fons & Porter’s Love of Quilting In a Clutch
02:00 PM Jerry Yarnell School of Fine Art Sedona Canyon, Part 4
14:30:00 Taste of History Washington’s Crossing Pepperpot Soup
03:00 PM NOVA | Becoming Human Birth of Humanity
04:00 PM How the Beatles Rocked the Kremlin
05:00 PM Antiques Roadshow Louisville, KY
06:00 PM Secrets of the Dead Airmen and the Headhunters
07:00 PM Hoover Dam: American Experience
08:00 PM How the Beatles Rocked the Kremlin
09:00 PM Austin City Limits Willie Nelson & Asleep at the Wheel
10:00 PM Nature Black Mamba
11:00 PM NOVA | Becoming Human Birth of Humanity
12:00 AM Frontline Sick Around the World



SUNDAY

11/15/09

06:00 AM Super Why!
06:30 AM Dinosaur Train
07:00 AM Clifford the Big Red Dog
07:30 AM Martha Speaks
08:00 AM Arthur
08:30 AM WordGirl
09:00 AM The Electric Company
09:30 AM FETCH! with Ruff Ruffman
10:00 AM America Sews with Sue Hausmann Personalize with Monograms
10:30 AM Quilting Arts
11:00 AM Linda MacPhee’s Workshop Next gen designs
11:30 AM WordGirl
12:00 PM The Electric Company
12:30 PM Sewing With Nancy Appliqué Know How, Part 1
01:00 PM To the Contrary with Bonnie Erbe
01:30 PM Knitting Daily Charity Projects
02:00 PM Mark Kistler’s Imagination Station Vulture Scribble-Off
02:30 PM BIll Moyers Journal
03:30 PM Living Smart SURVIVING IN TOUGH ECONOMIC TIMES
04:00 PM Painting with Paulson Apple Blossoms Pt 2
04:30 PM Scrapbook Memories Paints, Dyes, Markers and Inks
05:00 PM NOVA | Becoming Human Birth of Humanity
06:00 PM Nature Fellowship of the Whales
07:00 PM Masterpiece Contemporary Collision
09:00 PM Austin City Limits Willie Nelson & Asleep at the Wheel
10:00 PM Nature Fellowship of the Whales
11:00 PM Masterpiece Contemporary Collision



MONDAY


11/16/09

05:00 PM Nightly Business Report
05:30 PM COMMUNITY MESSAGES
06:00 PM Antiques Roadshow Louisville, KY
07:00 PM The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer
08:00 PM Documenting the Face of America
09:00 PM Antiques Roadshow Louisville, KY
10:00 PM Surviving the Dust Bowl: American Experience
11:00 PM Documenting the Face of America
12:00 AM Charlie Rose



TUESDAY


11/17/09

05:00 PM Nightly Business Report
05:30 PM COMMUNITY MESSAGES
06:00 PM NOVA | Becoming Human Last Human Standing
07:00 PM The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer
08:00 PM Independent Lens No Subtitles Necessary: Laszlo & Vilmos
09:30 PM PBS Previews: The National Parks: America’s Best Idea
10:00 PM Frontline A Death in Tehran
11:00 PM Independent Lens No Subtitles Necessary: Laszlo & Vilmos
12:30 AM PBS Previews: The National Parks: America’s Best Idea



WEDNESDAY


11/18/09

05:00 PM Song of the Mountains Bill and Maggie Anderson A. J. Roach James Leva & Purgatory Mountain
06:00 PM Secrets of Shangri-La
07:00 PM The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer
08:00 PM Mustang – Journey of Transformation
08:30 PM In Search of Myths and Heroes Shangri-La
09:30 PM Crown of the Continent – Alaska’s Wrangell – St. Elias
10:00 PM Charlie Rose
11:00 PM Lost Cave Temples
12:00 AM Mustang – Journey of Transformation
12:30 AM In Search of Myths and Heroes Shangri-La

Hoover Dam: American Experience

Saturday, November 14 @ 7:00pm

It has been compared to the Acropolis of Ancient Greece and the Coliseum of Imperial Rome. Rising 726 feet above the raging waters of the Colorado River, it was called by the man whose name it bears “the greatest engineering work of its character ever attempted by the hand of man.” In fact, Hoover Dam reflected the engineering genius and design philosophy of the time. And, in the midst of the Great Depression, it was a symbol of hope for the dispossessed.

Winding through California’s richly fertile Imperial Valley, the Colorado River was wildly unpredictable—flooding in the spring, drying up in the summer. The only way to harness this indispensable resource was to build a dam, which in turn would provide badly needed electricity to the western states. It was a brilliantly conceived scheme, uniting public works and private enterprise. A giant construction company was formed by six previously smalltime contractors.

The engineering problems were stupendous, the solutions ingenious. Before work could start, the river had to be diverted. Four tunnels, each 50 feet in diameter (which today could accommodate a 747 without the wings), were drilled through the solid rock walls of the Black Canyon. Men called “high-scalers,” lowered in bosun’s chairs, stripped the canyon walls of loose rock.

For two years, workers poured concrete 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Working conditions were dangerous, pay was low, housing inadequate. But it was the Depression, and many were grateful to have work. Five thousand men and their families settled in the Nevada desert. There were two mess halls, each seating 600; the dishwasher was sixteen feet long.

The federal government built Boulder City, an efficiently run, well-ordered company town, but dozens of tent cities sprang up—honky-tonk towns dotted the road from the dam to the small town of Las Vegas.

In 1935 the job was finished under budget and ahead of schedule. But Hoover Dam also raised policy questions about the economic and environmental impact of large scale irrigation throughout the West.

Temporarily renamed Boulder Dam by the Roosevelt Administration, the project’s electrical output helped build the ships and planes used in World War II; its water grew fruits and vegetables in California. It tamed a wild river and, for a time, renewed faith in American ingenuity and technology.

Secrets of the Dead

T he A ir men and the Headhunters

Friday, November 13 @ 8:00pm & 11:00pm and Saturday November 14 @ 6:00pm

In 1944, as war raged across the globe, an incredible drama unfolded in the remote jungles of Borneo. A U.S. bomber was hit by Japanese anti-aircraft fire, and as the plane went down, the surviving crew ejected and parachuted into the wilderness. Pursued by Japanese soldiers, they were taken in and protected by members of the Dayak tribe—the so-called “wild men of Borneo,” who were infamous for their grisly custom of hunting and smoking enemy heads. Months later, the airmen were found by an eccentric British Major, who arrived in the jungle to set up a guerilla army, and built a runway out of bamboo so rescue planes could pick up the stranded airmen. Harder to believe than a fictional Hollywood thriller, their true tale is one of courage, survival, and compassion from the most unlikely sources. Based on the book of the same title by Judith Heimann and featuring exclusive testimonies from the last surviving airman, veterans and Dayak heroes, dramatic on-location recreations, archival film footage, and never-before-seen photographs,

The Story of India

Holi Festival
Holi Festival

Thursday, November 12 @ 8:00pm & 11:00pm

Episode 1: Beginnings

The first episode looks at identity and the roots of India’s famous “unity in diversity”. Using all the tools available to the historical detective—from DNA to climate science, oral survivals, ancient manuscripts, archaeology, and exploration of the living cultures of the subcontinent—Michael Wood takes us from the tropical heat of South India to the Ganges plain and from Pakistan and the Khyber Pass out to Turkmenistan where dramatic new archaeological discoveries are changing our view of the migrations that have helped make up Indian identity.

We begin long before recorded history with the first human journey out of Africa. In extraordinary scenes in the tropical backwaters of Kerala, Wood finds survivals of human sounds and rituals from before language.

In Tamil Nadu the latest DNA research takes him to a village where everyone still bears the genetic imprint of those first “beachcombing incomers”—the “first Indians” who went on to populate the rest of the world excluding Africa.
Find out more »

P.O.V.

Wednesday, November 11 @ 10:00pm

The Way We Get By

The Way We Get By takes a look behind the hearty smiles, handshakes, heartfelt thanks and free cookies and cell phones the greeters bring to the airport, and discovers a world in which the seniors are engaged in their own struggles with aging, disease, loneliness, memories of war and personal loss. The film discovers a remarkable symbiosis between the soldiers’ fighting mission and the greeters’ fight to overcome pain, fatigue and depression in making sure no soldier departs or returns without thanks.

On call 24 hours a day for the past five years, a group of senior citizens has made history by greeting over 900,000 American troops at a tiny airport in Bangor, Maine. The Way We Get By is an intimate look at three of these greeters as they confront the universal losses that come with aging and rediscover their reason for living. Bill Knight, Jerry Mundy and Joan Gaudet find the strength to overcome their personal battles and transform their lives through service. This inspirational and surprising story shatters the stereotypes of today’s senior citizens as the greeters redefine the meaning of community. A co-production of Dungby Productions and ITVS in association with WGBH and Maine Public Broadcasting Network (MPBN) with funding provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB).

NOVA | Becoming Human

SUNDAY, November 22 @ 5:00pm

Birth of Humanity

NOVA presents a comprehensive three-part, three-hour special-investigating explosive new discoveries that are transforming the picture of how we became human. The first program explores fresh clues about our earliest ancestors in Africa, including the stunningly complete fossil nicknamed “Lucy’s Child.” These three-million-year-old bones from Ethiopia reveal humanity’s oldest and most telltale trait-upright walking rather than a big brain. The second program tackles the mysteries of how our ancestors managed to survive in a savannah teeming with vicious predators, and when and why we first left our African cradle to colonize every corner of the Earth. In the final program, NOVA probes a wave of dramatic new evidence, based partly on cutting-edge DNA analysis, that reveals new insights into how we became the creative and “behaviorally modern” humans of today, and what really happened to the enigmatic Neanderthals who faded into extinction. Shot “in the trenches” as discoveries were unearthed throughout Africa and Europe, each hour of Becoming Human unfolds with a forensic investigation into the life and death of a specific hominid ancestor, such as Lucy’s Child. Dry bones spring back to vivid life with stunning animation, the product of a unique NOVA collaboration between top anthropologists and a talented team of movie animators.

The Berlin Airlift: American Experience

Sunday, 11/08/09 at 8:00pm and 12:00am

Commemorating the 50th anniversary of the end of the Berlin blockade, this program captures the suspense, drama and historical significance of this phenomenal story through newsreels, eyewitness accounts and interviews. The Berlin Airlift of 1948-49 was the most dramatic rescue operation of the 20th century. It not only saved one of Europe’s most important capitals from Communist takeover, but is viewed by historians as the single most significant event in stopping the Soviet advance across Europe.

Frontline Tonight at Midnight

Saturday, 11/07/09 at 12:00 AM

Ten years ago, stimulants like Ritalin and Adderall were the drugs of choice to treat behavioral issues in children. Today children as young as four years old are being prescribed more powerful anti-psychotic medications that are much less understood. The drugs can cause serious side effects, and virtually nothing is known about their long-term impact. The increase in the use of anti-psychotics is directly tied to the rising incidence of one particular diagnosis – bipolar disorder. Experts estimate that the number of kids with the diagnosis is now more than a million and rising. As the debate over medicating children continues to grow, FRONTLINE producer Marcela Gaviria confronts psychiatrists, researchers and big pharmaceuticals about the risks and benefits of prescription drugs for troubled children.

Masterpiece Classic

CRANFORD

SUNDAY, JANUARY 3 @ 7:00PM & 11:00PM

Welcome to Cranford, circa 1840…a rural English town where etiquette rules, undergirded by a healthy amount of gossip. Modernity is making a move in town as construction of a railway comes harrowingly close. Cranford’s eclectic residents, among them Matty Jenkyns (Dame Judi Dench) her sister Deborah (Dame Eileen Atkins), and Miss Pole (Imelda Staunton), stay immersed in the sweet pleasures and sometimes heartbreaking realities of simple village life. But when a handsome, young doctor arrives with cutting-edge new techniques, it rapidly becomes clear that as the world changes, so Cranford will change with it. Based on three Elizabeth Gaskell novels (Cranford, My Lady Ludlow and Mr. Harrison’s Confessions), and boasting an all-star cast, Cranford breathes life into one town during one extraordinary year.


Find out more »