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Judy Woodruff: With more than 1,000 deaths reported yesterday, many states are struggling to contain COVID outbreaks. As we just heard in Stephanie's report, former CDC head Dr. Tom Frieden says, to do that, the country urgently needs much better collection of data. Dr. Frieden joins me now. He ran the CDC from 2009 to 2017. He's now president of Resolve to Save Lives. It's a global health initiat
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FRONTLINE follows renowned New Yorker writer and Boston surgeon Atul Gawande as he explores the relationships doctors have with patients who are nearing the end of life. In conjunction with Gawande’s new book, Being Mortal, the film investigates the practice of caring for the dying, and shows how doctors — himself included — are often remarkably untrained, ill-suited and uncomfortable talking abou
>> NARRATOR: Tonight on Frontline, inside the worst nuclear disaster of the century. (explosion) One year later, men who risked their lives to save the Fukushima nuclear plant reveal what really happened... >> (translated): We never imagined we'd be sent there. I was praying. >> NARRATOR: ...the life and death decisions... >> (translated): This would affect not just Japan, but the world. >> NARRAT
FRONTLINE continues its investigation of nuclear safety with an unprecedented account of the crisis inside the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear complex after a devastating earthquake and tsunami struck Japan on March 11, 2011. With exclusive eyewitness testimony from key figures in the drama — including the Japanese prime minister and senior executives at the power company TEPCO — FRONTLINE tells the sto
It’s been almost a year since a devastating earthquake and tsunami crippled Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear complex, leaving the country’s once popular energy program in shambles. In response, Germany decided to abandon nuclear energy entirely. Should the U.S. follow suit? FRONTLINE correspondent Miles O’Brien examines the implications of the Fukushima accident for U.S. nuclear safety, and asks
FRONTLINE examines how Israel ended up fighting wars in Gaza and Iran — and the U.S. role.
How to Watch Need To KnowNeed To Know is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio. Stream Here on PBS.orgDownload the PBS App Check Your Local Listings for Broadcast Schedules
The difficulty is that too may start-ups crash and burn, and you've got to convince yourself and your patrons that your project has legs. Be prepared for rejection, but don't let it stop you. — Steve Benedict How to Break Through the Difficult 'Phase 2' of Any Project
What made America? What makes us? These two questions are at the heart of the new PBS series Faces of America with Henry Louis Gates, Jr. The Harvard scholar turns to the latest tools of genealogy and genetics to explore the family histories of 12 renowned Americans — professor and poet Elizabeth Alexander, chef Mario Batali, comedian Stephen Colbert, novelist Louise Erdrich, journalist Malcolm Gl
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Check out NewsHour Classroom's Invention Collection! Lessons are available for STEM and non-STEM subjects to help students become civic-minded problem solvers. Click here to find resources that fit your learning goals. Classroom features daily news lessons based on PBS NewsHour, full-length video-based lesson plans and opportunities for teachers and students to be published on Classroom Voices
I sometimes wonder whether we are held captive by old school thinking. At our newspapers at Mediafin, we are in the process of integrating web operations with the print publication, a move which I fully endorse. There's one major risk to this: that we might end up seeing the web as just another way to distribute newspaper articles rather than a radically new opportunity. People who have spent yea
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The day after Martin Luther King, Jr. was killed, Jane Elliott, a teacher in a small, all-white Iowa town, divided her third-grade class into blue-eyed and brown-eyed groups and gave them a daring lesson in discrimination. This is the story of that lesson, its lasting impact on the children, and its enduring power 30 years later.
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Friday on the News Hour, the president signs an executive order to combat homelessness by making it easier to forcibly place people in mental health facilities. The politics behind the $8 billion Paramount-Skydance merger approved by the FCC. Plus, private companies that run immigration detention centers could soon cash in from the GOP's budget bill and the Trump administration's deportations.
One year after the Down Jones industrial average peaked above 14,000 points, it closed Friday below 8,500 amid a global financial slump. Economic analysts and reporters give insight on the latest Wall Street woes.
Video Game Revolution is the companion site to the PBS program.
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The full-screen version plays the programs at double the regular playback size. Because this requires additional processing power, some older computers may not play the full-screen option smoothly. For technical reasons, full-screen is only available in QuickTime. If you experience difficulty viewing, it may be due to high demand. We regret this, and suggest you try back at another time. Note that
Proud parents of twins sometimes recall a baffling, unique language their youngsters seem to create in the crib, understood by no one but the children. The twins' special communication tends to fade quickly, diluted and then replaced by the language the world around them speaks. Those parents' stories resonate with scientists who are trying to figure out one of the most baffling questions about la
When I was writing a blog post about Mark Cuban and his ShareSleuth site, I wanted to illustrate it with a good photo of Cuban but didn't like the photo he sent me. So I turned to an invaluable source of photography for a non-commercial blog like MediaShift -- the Flickr Creative Commons pool. On that site, you can search through 22 million photos for shots that are being legally shared by photogr
In 1775, a ragtag army of farmers and tradesmen went to war against the most powerful army in the world, ultimately winning American independence. What military technologies did the American colonies use in their fight for freedom, and how did they help propel them to one of history’s most unlikely victories? Archaeologists and historians uncover the real stories of innovation, skill, and strategy
Film Mr. Polaroid Before the iPhone, the Polaroid camera let people instantly chronicle their lives. Along with instant photo mania, its company culture became the model for Silicon Valley. Mr. Polaroid is the story of Edwin Land, the man behind the camera. Collection Documentaries to Watch Now Stream these American Experience documentaries anywhere, anytime. We will update this page as new films
Mark Glaser: Journalist, Critic, Facilitator, New Media Expert Continued... MediaShift is a weblog that will track how new media—from weblogs to podcasts to citizen journalism—are changing society and culture. Continued... Glossary | Feedback Digging Deeper Should Community-Edited News Sites Pay Top Editors? by Mark Glaser, 12:10PM If there is one push-and-pull balancing act that defines news in t
Synopsis In Japan, baseball is not a pastime — it's a national obsession. And for many of the country's youth, the sport has become a rite of passage, epitomized by the national high school baseball tournament known simply as "Koshien." Four thousand teams enter, but only 49 are chosen to compete in the championship that grips the nation for two weeks every August. Read the full film description »
Khufu's Pyramid (click and drag in image, left or right, up or down) Start in the Descending Passage and venture down to the Unfinished Chamber or up to the Ascending Passage, the Grand Gallery, and the Queen's and King's Chambers. Think you see daylight at the top of a passage? That's the exit, and this movie stays inside the pyramid.
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