Amelia's "Good Stuff That Comes On PBS" Thread

I forgot to add: The BJU students are shipped to Ghana via a small boat meant for only half their number. Only 1 in 4 make it to shore alive.
 
Queersetti said:
I found it particularly heartening when they did the post-project interviews with the Wyers, who clearly came away form the project with a greater respect for religious diversity and a greater sense of tolerance.

That was one of the best parts, for me.
 
Queersetti said:
I don't know why one would participate if they were not willing to try to fit into the role they had volunteered for.

I agree. I daresay that I personally have more disdain for religion than does Ms. Voorhees, but I would have (even though I suck at it) tried to roleplay my part. The rest of the project shares the blame, however; they should have burned her at the stake (actually - hanged her or pressed her to death considering that was how it was done in colonial America). Of course she could have falsely accused half of the rest of the colony and taken them with her.

Our Puritan forebears are mighty interesting to study, but they are not people whom we want to emulate, are they?

And I must say that some of the members, speaking as their 21-century personas, were infuriatingly patronizing in that way that only evangelicals can be.
 
i'm giddy! i'm not sure if this is going to be on everywhere...but i can't wait to see it.

Nova: Death Star

i think i'm an astrophysicist trapped in a not very bright person's body.
 
One of my most favorite shows ever was on PBS . Connections with James Burke. He showed how things were intertwined historically and how civilization progresses in the strangest of ways .One of the most interesting shows i saw was based on a theory of how the the black plague advanced the development of the written word and led to the invention of the printing press .
His theory was that prior to the plague there were lots of scribes to write down whatever needed to be written and that when the population was decimated by X % ( i dont know a real number here) a new system was needed ( step in Gutenberg) to preserve the oral history .
 
Origins was on tonight. I love this show. It breaks down even the tough concepts into simple ones.

You can catch it again (a 4 hour miniseries) on Sunday, I believe.

Hyper-novas, baby universes, primordial soup, and heavy elements. What's not to love?
 
amelia said:

Sir Francis Chichester and Blondie Hasler made a $.50 bet on who could sail alone across the Atlantic the fastest. No motors allowed. Falmouth, England to Newport, R.I.
 
Cleopatra said:

Hyper-novas, baby universes, primordial soup, and heavy elements. What's not to love?


You too? I loved the part where they explained how all the suns early on created all of the elements in the universe, and how the atoms in us were created in the heavens.

Poetry in motion.
 
islandman said:
You too? I loved the part where they explained how all the suns early on created all of the elements in the universe, and how the atoms in us were created in the heavens.

Poetry in motion.

The only part I didn't get was how the iron explodes.

But I'm not the best physicist. ;)
 
Cleopatra said:
The only part I didn't get was how the iron explodes.

But I'm not the best physicist. ;)

The iron doesn't explode, per se. It accumulates in the core, until the rest of the nuclear fuel runs out, then starts collapsing on itself. At some point, the pressure inside exceeds the pressure crushing the core, and boom.
 
Cleopatra said:
Origins was on tonight. I love this show. It breaks down even the tough concepts into simple ones.

You can catch it again (a 4 hour miniseries) on Sunday, I believe.

Hyper-novas, baby universes, primordial soup, and heavy elements. What's not to love?

I was on the lookout for this one and really liked it. I've been privileged to hear a backyard presentation/star party from the host - Neil Tyson. Something about his delivery makes it seem that he's used to presenting to kids, but he's one sharp cookie.

I dug the octopi section tonight - controlling 20 million chromatophores requires a complex brain, indeed. I appreciate when they take a shot at our intellectual superiority complex like that.
 
Cleopatra said:
Hyper-novas, baby universes, primordial soup, and heavy elements. What's not to love?

i think i just came. w00t! i'll definitely look for the show this weekend.
 
amelia said:
i think i just came. w00t! i'll definitely look for the show this weekend.

Now's the time I wish I had TiVo.

I'll just have to make due with my VCR.
 
This Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday they're doing "Broadway; The American Musical" each night.

Also, this Tuesday ~ NOVA Neanderthals on Trial and

Wednesday ~ Quest for the Phoenicians.
 
Cleopatra said:
This Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday they're doing "Broadway; The American Musical" each night.

thanks for reminding me!
 
I haven't been watching that much PBS lately. Are they still doing those Colonial House/Frontier House shows? I love those!
 
PBS has absolutely the best children's programming. Good shows (if you ignore the Boobahs) and no commercials for sugary cereals and breakable multi-pieced toys.

They still be up in tha hood wit Mr Rogers too. Can't beat that.
 
Cleopatra said:
This Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday they're doing "Broadway; The American Musical" each night.

this has been really excellent so far. I have not watched tonight's episode yet. Is anyone else watching this documentary?
 
Cleopatra [/i][B]This Tuesday said:
this has been really excellent so far. I have not watched tonight's episode yet. Is anyone else watching this documentary?
Damn it woman, there's baseball to be had! :devil:

Sorry. I read above about the 'Neanderthals on Trial' program and became interested. But the Red Sox wouldn't quit, and then the Cardinals came alive...

Anyways, it's all settled. Did I miss anything good? :)
 
flawed_ethics said:
Did I miss anything good? :)

oh yes! it was excellent. I would definitely recommend keeping an eye out for the next time it comes on.
 
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