Category Archives: Program Highlights

ROOSEVELTS

THE RISING ROAD

THURSDAY, APRIL 23 @ 10:00PM

Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s 1933 presidential inauguration comes during the nation’s worst economic crisis – the Great Depression. Banks have failed and savings accounts have been wiped out, so to explain the banking system and how it works, Franklin Roosevelt gives his first “fireside chat” to the American people. In fourteen and a half minutes he calms the public, and by the next Monday people begin to redeposit their money, thereby averting a crisis. This begins his first one hundred days in office, the most productive in presidential history. Fifteen major bills are passed, social programs are instituted, and the federal government – which up to this point has been a mostly passive observer of the people’s problems – becomes an active force in trying to solve them. Eleanor Roosevelt takes to her new role as First Lady with energy and purpose.


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H2O

THE MOLECULE THAT MADE US

PULSE

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22 @ 7:00PM & 11:00PM

H20: The Molecule that Made Us is a landmark, three-part series that tells the human story through our relationship to water. We find out how our success is intimately connected to our control of the molecule, but that the growth of our civilizations has also created a dangerous dependence on a precious resource. One that may be about to run out.


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INDEPENDENT LENS

THE HOTTEST AUGUST

MONDAY, APRIL 20 @ 11:00PM

Brett Story’s critically acclaimed documentary The Hottest August raises the specter of climate change without ever mentioning it, spotlighting ordinary New Yorkers as they share their anxieties about what the future holds while bracing for what could be one of the hottest months on record.


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DISHING WITH JULIA CHILD

THE POTATO SHOW

TO ROAST A CHICKEN

FRIDAY, APRIL 17 @ 11:00PM

“The Potato Show” – Rick Bayless comments on Julia Child’s performance preparing potatoes. Collaborator and dear friend Jacques Pepin discusses her love of butter and her gracious approach to meet all of the staff at restaurants where they dined.


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SOMEWHERE SOUTH

WHAT A PICKLE

FRIDAY, APRIL 17 @ 7:00PM & 11:00PM

Vivian is asked to lecture on chow chow, a quintessentially Southern relish, at Asheville’s first ever Chow Chow Festival. From there, her preservation education dives into Indian and Sri Lankan pickles, Puerto Rican escabeche and Korean kimchi.


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THE ROOSEVELTS

AN INTIMATE HISTORY

THE STORM

THURSDAY, APRIL 16 @ 7:00PM & 11:00PM

In the 1920s, memories of Theodore Roosevelt begin to fade. The Great War is over, Woodrow Wilson is ill, and the American public is weary of domestic reform and events overseas. The Republican Party nominates Warren G. Harding for president, while Democratic nominee James M. Cox chooses thirty-eight-year-old Franklin D. Roosevelt to be his running mate. FDR campaigns with relish, and eventually persuades Eleanor to join him as he crisscrosses the country. She grows to enjoy meeting new people and dealing with the press, and also gains a new-found respect for Franklin’s most trusted advisor, Louis Howe. Although Cox and FDR lose the 1920 election to Harding, Franklin’s tireless campaigning gains him national recognition and the attention of prominent Democrats. For Eleanor, the 1920 campaign gives her a taste of what is possible outside the confines of home, and she is determined to find “real work” and to redefine her role with her husband and family.


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