www.whyville.net Apr 24, 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 April 25-May 1, 2005.

The topic for this week's Media Hour is predators. Check out Wednesday's show on PBS to learn more on this topic.

Should wolf populations be encouraged in the American West? What about lions, tigers and bears? They can be dangerous to people and pets, cattle and other critters... but without a balanced ecosystem, most scientists warn of dangerous repercussions.

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.

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!

It's all about an open discussion, with everybody pitching in on a good topic -- remember to talk amongst yourselves! Explore what everyone thinks and remind us all 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, April 25
6-8 p.m. ET, 3-5 p.m. PT

TCM -- Turner Classic Movie Channel

Classic Literature

Elementary, Middle and High School

"The Prince and the Pauper"

This is a black & white adventure movie based on Mark Twain's classic novel. It's about two look-alike boys, one a poor street kid and the other a prince, exchange places to see what the other's life is like.

Log on to http://www.mtwain.com/The_Prince_and_the_Pauper/

Monday, April 25
9-10 p.m. E/P

PBS

Ancient History

Middle and High School

"American Experience: The Fall Of Saigon"

Airing on the 30th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam war, this program begins with U.S. President Nixon's January 1973 announcement of the cease-fire agreement all American POWs and troops would soon be sent home. Nixon made a promise to respond with force if North Vietnam broke the cease-fire, but when Nixon resigned the presidency, his promise went with him. This re-broadcast of the final episode of the classic PBS series "Vietnam: A Television History" recounts the North Vietnamese attack that quickly brought an end to the war and led to victory for them -- 30 years after they launched their struggle. Rated TV-PG, V.

Log on to http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/vietnam/index.html

Tuesday, April 26
8-9 p.m. E/P

PBS

American and World History

Middle and High School

"NOVA: Ancient Refuge in the Holy Land"

This program begins in a cave near the Dead Sea where archaeologists made a startling discovery in 1960: letters on papyrus nearly 2,000 years ago -- written by one of the great figures of Jewish history, the rebel Bar-Kokhba, who led a heroic guerilla uprising against the Romans. Biblical scholar Richard Freund returns to the cave with the latest archaeological techniques, hoping to find more traces of Bar-Kokhba's epic struggle. Instead, Freund comes up with tantalizing new finds that lead him to a radical and controversial theory. Could the treasure concealed in the cave be a long-lost relic of the great temple in Jerusalem destroyed by the Romans?

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

Tuesday, April 26
9-10 p.m. E/P

PBS

Economics and Social Studies

High School

"Frontline: Is Wal-Mart Good for America?"

This newsmagazine shows empty storefronts in Circleville, Ohio, where the local TV manufacturing plant has closed down, and compares it to high rises in the south China factory boomtown of Shenzhen. The connection between American job losses and soaring Chinese exports? Wal-Mart. China has become the source of up to $25 billion in annual imports that help that company deliver low prices to 100 million customers a week. But while some economists credit Wal-Mart's single-minded focus on low costs with helping contain U.S. inflation, others charge that the company is the main force driving the shift to China in the production of American consumer goods, resulting in hundreds of thousands of lost jobs and a lower standard of living here at home.

Log on to http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/

Wednesday, April 27
9-11 p.m. E/P

PBS

Natural Science

Middle and High School

"National Geographic's Strange Days On Planet Earth"

This is the second episode of PBS' Earth Day-themed special. It's entitled "Predators/Troubled Waters" -- In Venezuela, the forest has given way to scrawny, isolated groves, some of them overrun by bands of voracious howler monkeys, a glut of iguanas and hordes of ravenous ants. Scientists believe that life here is running amok because top predators are gone. Yellowstone Park is showing signs of change from the depletion of natural predators. Researchers have recently linked these forest losses to the expulsion of the gray wolf some 70 years ago. Predators play a crucial role in the structure and proper function of entire ecosystems. If they are so vital, should they be brought back? Can they be? In the U.S., there have been strange disappearances. Frogs are vanishing without a trace. Further north, in the green waters of Canada's St. Lawrence River, beluga whales are mysteriously dying -- their white corpses found washed up on the stony shores. On the Pacific Great Barrier Reef, swarms of monstrous sea stars are overrunning this marine paradise. Scientists suspect this may be part of a worldwide transformation brought on by toxins in the water. Have Earth's waterways become massive delivery systems for invisible poisons? Are some of these poisons reaching our faucets? As scientists verify that our problem with toxins is mounting, cutting-edge research with plants and bacteria draws on the building blocks of life itself as a solution to problems vexing the planet.


Thursday, April 28
7-8 p.m. E/P

Animal Planet Channel

Natural Science

Middle and High School

"Most Extreme: Gluttons"

As animal documentaries go, this is a little unflattering. But we need to know both sides of an issue -- and some animals are not nice. Some popular animals are so greedy that they put pigs to shame. Tiger sharks swim around with just about anything in their stomachs and the Tasmanian Devil can swallow 40% of its body weight in a half-hour. That's like eating 216 hamburgers for lunch!


Thursday, April 28
8-9 p.m. ET, 5-6 p.m. PT

Ovation Channel

Art

Middle and High School

"Private Life Of A masterpiece: Sunflowers by Van Gogh"

This program explores how Vincent Van Gogh's famous painting, "The Sunflowers", of which he made 10 versions of the original, only received the acclaim it deserved after his death. Rated TV-PG.


Friday, April 29
8:30-9 p.m. E/P

Travel Channel

American History

Middle and High School

"John Ratzenberger's Made In America"

This episode of a program that shows how business works visits the Crayola Factory in Pennsylvania is where new colors are made. And at Campbell's Soup factory in Ohio, it shows how they get various tastes into a can.


Saturday, April 30
8-10 p.m. E/P

HBO

Social Science and Economics

Middle and High School

"Warm Springs???

This movie biography covers a period in the life of Franklin Roosevelt that many people don't know about. As the only U.S. president re-elected three times, he brilliantly led America through the Great Depression and World War II. But the toughest challenge he ever faced was one the country never saw. Kenneth Branagh stars in this true story of Roosevelt's battle after being left a paraplegic by polio in 1921. Cynthia Nixon plays his wife Eleanor, who took up the task of facing the public on his behalf while he sought out a "miracle" cure in a rural Georgia health spa. Rated TV-PG.


Sunday, May 1
8-9 p.m. E/P

PBS

Natural Science

Middle and High School

"Nature: Deep Jungle -- The Beast Within"

This final episode of the miniseries special about the jungles of the world asks the question, "What role did the jungle play in humanity's distant past and what can it tell us about our future?" It looks for clues among the primates of the rainforests, as well as among the traces of ancient civilizations that once thrived there, only to vanish mysteriously. Included are expeditions to the Central African Republic, Guatemala and Cambodia. Rated TV-PG.

Log on http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/index.html.

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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