TV Daily Schedule: KQED World
KQED World: Monday, June 25, 2012
Comcast 190 • Digital 9.3
Schedule is subject to change. Please visit kqed.org/tv/schedules/daily for the most up-to-date info.
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12:00 amGlobe Trekker [#1112] Globe Trekker Food Hour: Scandinavia Merrilees Parker takes a culinary tour around Scandinavia, a region infused with Viking history and heritage. She begins her travels at a Viking festival, learns how to smoke herring in a Swedish village, assists with the smorgasbord at the Midsummer Festival, prepares moose with Lars Backman - the inspiration for the Swedish Chef on "The Muppet Show" - and cooks with the Sami people at the Arctic Circle. duration 57:32 STEREO TVRE (Secondary audio: DVI)
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1:00 amRevolutionaries [#107H] Idea Man Author Paul Allen, co-founder of Microsoft, in conversation with journalist Jose Antonio Vargas. duration 53:11 STEREO TVG
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2:00 amMoyers & Company [#124H] How Big Banks Victimize Our Democracy * JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon's appearances in the last two weeks before Congressional committees - many members of which received campaign contributions from the megabank - beg the question: For how long and in how many ways are average Americans going to pay the price for big bank hubris, with our own government acting as accomplice? This week, Rolling Stone editor Matt Taibbi and Yves Smith, creator of the finance and economics blog Naked Capitalism, discuss the folly and corruption of both banks and government, and how that tag-team leaves deep wounds in our democracy. Taibbi's latest piece is "The Scam Wall Street Learned from the Mafia." Smith is the author of ECONned: How Unenlightened Self Interest Undermined Democracy and Corrupted Capitalism.
* Meanwhile, for anyone who wants to understand why, in one of the richest nations in the world, so many poor people are teetering on the edge, author and advocate Peter Edelman joins Bill to talk about continuing efforts to fight poverty, and what it will take to keep the needs of poor people on the American political agenda. A former aide to Robert Kennedy and faculty director of Georgetown University's Center on Poverty, Inequality, and Public Policy, Edelman's new book is "So Rich, So Poor: Why It's So Hard to End Poverty in America." duration 56:46 STEREO TVG -
3:00 amGrove, The More Americans have been lost to AIDS than in all the US wars since 1900. And the pandemic has killed 22 million people worldwide. But few know about the existence of the National AIDS Memorial, a 7-acre grove hidden in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park. This program chronicles this garden's transformation from a neglected eyesore to landscaped sanctuary to national memorial. The film shows how a community in crisis found healing and remembrance, and how the seeds of a few visionary environmentalists blossomed into something larger than they could have imagined. But as the Grove's stakeholders seek broader public recognition through an international design competition, a battle erupts over what constitutes an appropriate memorial for the AIDS pandemic. What does it mean to be a national memorial? And how do we mark a time of unimaginable loss? duration 56:46 STEREO TVPG (Secondary audio: DVI)
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4:00 amCity of Borders In the heart of Jerusalem, people of all nationalities, religious affiliations, and sexual orientations gather and find peace in an unlikely place: a gay bar. duration 56:40 STEREO TVPG
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5:00 amNot In Our Town, Northern California: When Hate Happens Here "Ordinary" people come together to take action when their neighbors are targets of bigotry. From the state capital to the center of San Francisco, from the shadow of Mt. Shasta to the suburbs of Silicon Valley, community leaders and citizens have found new ways to see through controversy and difference to create a safe place for all residents. This special looks at five California communities over a five-year period as they take action when their neighbors are targets of intolerance based in religion, race and sexual orientation. duration 58:46 STEREO TVPG
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6:00 amReligion & Ethics NewsWeekly [#1543Z] CHURCHES AND THE MENTALLY ILL - Can communities of faith play a role in dealing with mental health issues? At the Episcopal Church of the Holy Comforter in Atlanta, most of the congregation is made of up of people with mental illnesses - bipolar disorder, clinical depression, schizophrenia - who worship and prayer together.
UNITED FARM WORKERS 50TH ANNIVERSARY - In its early years, the UFW worked closely with religious groups and relied heavily on religious rites and images. It was also "the first successful labor union for farmworkers, " says author Miriam Pawel. "It was very much the civil rights movement of the West." But fifty years after its founding by the late Cesar Chavez, the UFW is struggling to retain membership and influence. duration 26:46 STEREO TVRE -
6:30 amCloser to Truth [#1012] Big Questions In Free Will duration 26:46 STEREO TVG (Secondary audio: none)
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7:00 amMoyers & Company [#124H] How Big Banks Victimize Our Democracy * JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon's appearances in the last two weeks before Congressional committees - many members of which received campaign contributions from the megabank - beg the question: For how long and in how many ways are average Americans going to pay the price for big bank hubris, with our own government acting as accomplice? This week, Rolling Stone editor Matt Taibbi and Yves Smith, creator of the finance and economics blog Naked Capitalism, discuss the folly and corruption of both banks and government, and how that tag-team leaves deep wounds in our democracy. Taibbi's latest piece is "The Scam Wall Street Learned from the Mafia." Smith is the author of ECONned: How Unenlightened Self Interest Undermined Democracy and Corrupted Capitalism.
* Meanwhile, for anyone who wants to understand why, in one of the richest nations in the world, so many poor people are teetering on the edge, author and advocate Peter Edelman joins Bill to talk about continuing efforts to fight poverty, and what it will take to keep the needs of poor people on the American political agenda. A former aide to Robert Kennedy and faculty director of Georgetown University's Center on Poverty, Inequality, and Public Policy, Edelman's new book is "So Rich, So Poor: Why It's So Hard to End Poverty in America." duration 56:46 STEREO TVG -
8:00 amRevolutionaries [#107H] Idea Man Author Paul Allen, co-founder of Microsoft, in conversation with journalist Jose Antonio Vargas. duration 53:11 STEREO TVG
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9:00 amReligion & Ethics NewsWeekly [#1543Z] CHURCHES AND THE MENTALLY ILL - Can communities of faith play a role in dealing with mental health issues? At the Episcopal Church of the Holy Comforter in Atlanta, most of the congregation is made of up of people with mental illnesses - bipolar disorder, clinical depression, schizophrenia - who worship and prayer together.
UNITED FARM WORKERS 50TH ANNIVERSARY - In its early years, the UFW worked closely with religious groups and relied heavily on religious rites and images. It was also "the first successful labor union for farmworkers, " says author Miriam Pawel. "It was very much the civil rights movement of the West." But fifty years after its founding by the late Cesar Chavez, the UFW is struggling to retain membership and influence. duration 26:46 STEREO TVRE -
9:30 amCloser to Truth [#1012] Big Questions In Free Will duration 26:46 STEREO TVG (Secondary audio: none)
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10:00 amMoyers & Company [#124H] How Big Banks Victimize Our Democracy * JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon's appearances in the last two weeks before Congressional committees - many members of which received campaign contributions from the megabank - beg the question: For how long and in how many ways are average Americans going to pay the price for big bank hubris, with our own government acting as accomplice? This week, Rolling Stone editor Matt Taibbi and Yves Smith, creator of the finance and economics blog Naked Capitalism, discuss the folly and corruption of both banks and government, and how that tag-team leaves deep wounds in our democracy. Taibbi's latest piece is "The Scam Wall Street Learned from the Mafia." Smith is the author of ECONned: How Unenlightened Self Interest Undermined Democracy and Corrupted Capitalism.
* Meanwhile, for anyone who wants to understand why, in one of the richest nations in the world, so many poor people are teetering on the edge, author and advocate Peter Edelman joins Bill to talk about continuing efforts to fight poverty, and what it will take to keep the needs of poor people on the American political agenda. A former aide to Robert Kennedy and faculty director of Georgetown University's Center on Poverty, Inequality, and Public Policy, Edelman's new book is "So Rich, So Poor: Why It's So Hard to End Poverty in America." duration 56:46 STEREO TVG -
11:00 amRevolutionaries [#107H] Idea Man Author Paul Allen, co-founder of Microsoft, in conversation with journalist Jose Antonio Vargas. duration 53:11 STEREO TVG
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12:00 pmDemocracy Now! [#1236] duration 59:00 TVRE
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1:00 pmJournal [#8126] duration 28:10 STEREO TVG
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1:30 pmTavis Smiley [#2630Z] Tavis continues his conversation with award-winning songwriting collaborators and lyricists Alan & Marilyn Bergman, who reflect on writing the Good Times theme song and discuss the challenge of finding new ways to talk about love and the hip-hop generation's influence on the next wave of writers. duration 26:46 STEREO TVRE
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2:00 pmNewsline [#3085] duration 28:12 STEREO TVRE
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2:30 pmCharlie Rose [#18130H] (original broadcast date: 06/22/12)
* Amy Gutmann, President of the University of Pennsylvania on her book "The Spirit of Compromise"
* Adam Johnson on his book "The Orphan Master's Son: A Novel" < br />* James Corden, winner of the Tony for Best Actor for his performance in "One Man, Two Guvnors" duration 56:46 STEREO TVRE -
3:30 pmNightly Business Report [#31256Z] Stocks are down for the day, so what's bugging the markets? The answer is Europe. New York Correspondent Suzanne Pratt has details. More signs of a foundation are forming for housing. Economist Bob Brusca talks about the jump in May home sales. The Supreme Court rules on Arizona's controversial immigration law. Washington Bureau Chief Darren Gersh breaks down the details. SCOTUS also ruled on political spending at the state level. Washington Correspondent Sylvia Hall reports. Campaign advertising and stocks. TheStreet.com's Joe Deaux shares his picks for cashing in on campaign spending. It's this week's "Word on the Street." Foodie Craze: we start our series on the food industry with a look at how media is changing the way we eat. New York Correspondent Erika Miller reports. duration 26:46 STEREO TVRE
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4:00 pmPBS NewsHour [#10357H] Supreme Court On Immigration * More From The Courts * New Leadership In Egypt * Mexican Election Preview duration 56:46 STEREO TVRE
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5:00 pmBBC World News America [#17177H] duration 27:18 STEREO TVRE
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5:28 pmNBR NewsBrief [#3106] duration 1:00
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5:30 pmPBS NewsHour [#10357H] Supreme Court On Immigration * More From The Courts * New Leadership In Egypt * Mexican Election Preview duration 56:46 STEREO TVRE
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6:27 pmNBR NewsBrief [#3106] duration 1:00
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6:30 pmNewsline [#3085] duration 28:12 STEREO TVRE
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6:58 pmNBR NewsBrief [#3106] duration 1:00
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7:00 pmPBS NewsHour [#10357H] Supreme Court On Immigration * More From The Courts * New Leadership In Egypt * Mexican Election Preview duration 56:46 STEREO TVRE
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7:57 pmNBR NewsBrief [#3106] duration 1:00
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8:00 pmCharlie Rose [#18131H] (original broadcast date: 06/25/12)
* a discussion on Egypt with Steven Cook, Rula Jebreal & Hafez al-Mirazi
* artist Taryn Simon on her exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art called "A Living Man Declared Dead and Other Chapters I-XVIII "
* Gail Collins of The New York Times on her book "As Texas Goes...: How the Lone Star State Hijacked the American Agenda" duration 56:46 STEREO TVRE -
8:58 pmNBR NewsBrief [#3106] duration 1:00
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9:00 pmTavis Smiley [#2631Z] Tavis talks with the Tony-nominated actor Jeff Daniels, star of the new HBO series, The Newsroom, who discusses the necessity of being informed on current events and leaving the family business to become an actor. duration 26:46 STEREO TVRE
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9:28 pmNBR NewsBrief [#3106] duration 1:00
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9:30 pmNightly Business Report [#31256Z] Stocks are down for the day, so what's bugging the markets? The answer is Europe. New York Correspondent Suzanne Pratt has details. More signs of a foundation are forming for housing. Economist Bob Brusca talks about the jump in May home sales. The Supreme Court rules on Arizona's controversial immigration law. Washington Bureau Chief Darren Gersh breaks down the details. SCOTUS also ruled on political spending at the state level. Washington Correspondent Sylvia Hall reports. Campaign advertising and stocks. TheStreet.com's Joe Deaux shares his picks for cashing in on campaign spending. It's this week's "Word on the Street." Foodie Craze: we start our series on the food industry with a look at how media is changing the way we eat. New York Correspondent Erika Miller reports. duration 26:46 STEREO TVRE
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9:57 pmNBR NewsBrief [#3106] duration 1:00
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10:00 pmPBS NewsHour [#10357H] Supreme Court On Immigration * More From The Courts * New Leadership In Egypt * Mexican Election Preview duration 56:46 STEREO TVRE
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10:57 pmNBR NewsBrief [#3106] duration 1:00
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11:00 pmDemocracy Now! [#1236] duration 59:00 TVRE
MORNING
AFTERNOON
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