Professional Documents
Culture Documents
krcb.org
Contents
KRCB News …3 - 4
Television Articles …5 - 11
Radio Articles …12 - 15,
18 - 19
Radio Schedule …16 - 17
Membership … 20
TV Daytime Listings …21
Television Listings … 22 - 28
Business Spotlight … 31
Board of Directors
34 bed skilled nursing unit on 8 acre Patrick Campbell
campus with plenty of outdoor access Steve DeLap
Long or short term care
Nancy Dobbs
Post surgery rehabilitation
Physical, occupational, speech and Paul Ginsburg
IV therapies John Kramer
High staff-to-resident ratio Carol Libarle
Josué López
Margaret McCarthy
Eric McHenry
Michael R. Musson
Harry Rubins
Rafael Rivero
David Stare
Dr. Larry Slater
Post
the Gordon Stewart
PetAlUMA
KRCB’s Board and
Community Action
Council meetings are open
A ReAdeR’s Monthly to the public. Call the
station for details on time
and location.
A READER’S
President & CEO
MONTHLY Nancy Dobbs
GUIDE TO Chief Operations Officer
Larry Stratton
NORTH BAY Radio Program Director
ARTS AND Robin Pressman
TV Broadcast Operations
EVENTS Stan Marvin
News Department
Bruce Robinson
on newsstands
and at Cover – Masterpiece
petalumapost. Classic: Downton Abbey
com page 5
2
in the news
The Role of Federal Funding in KRCB’s Budget
There has been much discussion lately about the signifi-
cance of Federal funding in public broadcasting’s ability to
serve our communities with high quality non-commercial
telecommunications services. A quick snapshot of the KRCB
budget will hopefully help you, our faithful member, under-
stand the importance of this funding source.
In the combined budgets of KRCB Television and Radio,
the community provides some 50% of our income through
membership, business sponsorships of programs, and dona-
tions of goods and services to our auctions. We bring in
another 13% through our entrepreneurial activities such as
spectrum lease, tower lease, etc. The annual grant from the Activists protest proposed cuts in
Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the organization funding for Public Broadcasting
through which Federal funding is distributed, comprises fully 25% of our budget. (The
balance comes through foundation grants and in kind contributions.)
In other words, that Federal support is an extremely critical compliment to our community
support. Without that funding, there is absolutely no question that KRCB would be forced
to cut program services and the staff providing those services. It may interest you to know
that the Federal contribution nationally amounts to $1.35 per American per year. Incidental-
ly, this is a fraction of the investment that other industrialized countries make in their public
broadcasting systems. For instance, South Korea invests $8.19 per capita, while Japan invests
$58.86 per person to insure an informed, engaged populace.
Public broadcasting sits at the dawn of a new era of communications. The importance of
maintaining viable non-commercial, educational public media in a democracy, which is of
necessity based on an informed citizenry, is abundantly clear. This importance is highlighted
even further as we consider the retrenchment of other media source such as newspapers.
Now is not the time to be considering downsizing this critical institution in which the
American public has invested so much over the past 50 years and in which the citizens of this
country place the highest trust and confidence.
Radio 91 Television 22
Broadcasting on Comcast Cable and AT&T,
91.1 and 90.9 FM U-Verse-TV,
Comcast Cable 961 DISH and DirecTV Satellite,
Channel 22.
Streaming & podcasting Over the air-digital,
at krcb.org Channel 22.1, 22.2, 22.3.
3
KRCB in the community
Support KRCB and save income taxes to start off 2011
Age 70 ½ IRA Charitable Distributions are back, thanks to the December
17th tax legislation
This means you can support KRCB once again through the reinstatement of IRA
Charitable Distributions.
IRA owners age 70 ½ or older who do not need the taxable income from their Required
Minimum Distributions (RMD) can make a donation directly to KRCB. This will avoid
paying taxes on the RMD that could put you into a higher tax bracket or even the AMT
(Alternative Minimum Tax). The “surprise benefit” in the new tax law allows an extra month
to make 2010 IRA Charitable Distributions. Gifts to KRCB up to $100,000 that are made
before January 31, 2011 can be identified as a 2010 distribution. IRA owners can then make
an additional $100,000 IRA Charitable Distribution in 2011 and avoid paying taxes on their
2011 RMD.
Here are the details:
1. You must be at least age 70 ½ when the IRA distribution is made.
2. Maximum distribution is $100,000 and will satisfy the RMD for the year.
3. Married couples ages 70 ½ or older may each make the maximum
distribution of $100,000 on each of their IRAs.
4. The tax savings is realized by not having the taxable RMD included
in your Adjusted Growth Income. (There is no tax deduction for the
distribution.)
5. You have until the end of January 2011 to make a distribution from your IRA
for the tax year 2010.
6. Only for IRA not 403b or 401k and must be a direct transfer from IRA custodian
As always, check with your professional advisors before taking action. And thank you for
considering a gift to KRCB as part of your financial support.
Dear Member,
Several months ago I told you about a budding partnership between KRCB and local
plein air artist, Annie Murphy Springer. Annie approached us with an offer to produce a
watercolor show for KRCB to air and to send to other PBS stations as well.
Well, I have to tell you that, over the years, many folks have come to us with excellent
ideas. But pulling together the money, the team, and getting the job done is a much
bigger undertaking than most of those folks recognize. Not so Annie.
But then, y’all who know her recognize Annie as a force of nature.
She has pulled off this amazing feat and produced, with her
fantastic producer Seth, a series of seven short form television
programs on the Wonders of Watercolor.
The shows are really wonderful. Thanks to everyone who has
contributed to the effort. Tune in at 1:28 on Saturday after-
noons to catch them. They are airing elsewhere in the schedule as
well, but for sure on Saturday afternoon.
Partnerships with our community. That’s how it
works at KRCB.
4
New Masterpieces on KRCB TV
Masterpiece Contemporary: Framed
A reserved curator (Trevor Eve) from London’s National
Gallery is made responsible for the safe and secret storage of
priceless paintings in rural Wales. Soon he finds it difficult to
keep his low profile, as well as his secret, from the local
villagers. Also starring Eve Myles (Torchwood).
Sunday, February 6 at 9:30 pm
Downton Abbey
Masterpiece, the longest-running, most honored
drama series on primetime television, celebrated its
40th anniversary on PBS. Continuing this illustrious
tradition, the new season premieres with a quintes-
sentially Masterpiece production, Downton Abbey, an
Edwardian spellbinder airing in four episodes starring
Hugh Bonneville, Maggie Smith, Elizabeth McGovern,
and a country-house full of other great actors.
Part One - Sunday, February 20
at 10 pm
When the Titanic goes down, Lord Grantham loses his immediate heirs and his daughter
Mary loses her fiance, throwing Downton Abbey and its servants into turmoil. The new heir
turns out to be Matthew, a lowly lawyer with novel ideas about country life.
Part Two - Sunday, February 27 at 10:30 pm
Mary entertains three suitors, including a Turkish diplomat whose boldness leads to a
surprising event. Downstairs, the shocking former life of Carson, the butler, is unmasked and
Bates risks his health to remain valet.
6
Taking Control of Your Health
Taking Control of Diabetes with
Dr. Neal Barnard
Leading clinical researcher, adjunct associ-
ate professor of medicine, author, and health
advocate, Neal Barnard, MD shares his scien-
tifically proven system to taking control of di-
abetes through nutrition, without drugs. The
3-segment program is targeted at diabetics
and those at risk of becoming diabetic based
on genes and current lifestyle habits. Dr. Bar-
nard’s new approach addresses diabetes, but it
also helps with other ailments including high
blood pressure, high cholesterol, heart disease
and weight.
Saturday, February 5 at 11:30 am
Beyond Babyland
Beyond Babyland explores the high rate of infant mortality in the U.S. by focusing on the
young black mothers most at risk and the doctors and organizations striving to help them.
Filmed in Memphis, TN, a city with the country’s worst record of infant deaths, this pro-
gram shows us that saving these babies is not as much a medical issue as it is a challenge to
change the way we view our poorest citizens.
Tuesday, February 15 at 9 pm
PBS Kids program lineup
Weekdays Saturdays
7:00 Sesame Street 7:00 Los Niños en Su Casa-SP
8.00 Sid the Science Kid 7:30 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot About That!-SP
8:30 Curious George 8:00 Clifford-SP
9:00 Cat in the Hat Knows a 8:30 Maya & Miguel-SP
Lot About That! 9:00 Angelina Ballerina
2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 9:30 Thomas & Friends
2:30 Cyberchase 10:00 Bob The Builder
3:00 Arthur 10:30 Mister Rogers’
3:30 WordGirl Neighborhood
4:00 Fetch! - Mon - Th 11:00 A Place of Our Own
Anne of Green Gables - Fri
4:30 The Electric Company Anne of Green Gables
11
Celebrating Love on Harmonia
February 6 – Cançonièr and The Black Dragon
In this program we explore medieval music from the time
of Vlad Dracula with ensemble Cançonièr, Imagem da
Melancolia performs works from the Portuguese Renaissance,
and harpsichordist Robert Hill plays Bach’s viola da gamba
sonatas on the lautenwerk with gambist Ekkehard Weber. Cançonièr
February 13 – You Gotta Have (Renaissance) Love
We ask the age-old question, “What is love?” and find some answers in love songs from
the Renaissance by composers Luzzaschi, Crecquillon, Henry VIII, and Senfl. Performers
include Doulce Memoire, the Egidius Kwartet, Alamire, and Andrew Lawrence King.
12
New Radio Dramas from LA Theater Works
Feb. 5 – The Watts Towers Project / Radio Mambo
The Watts Towers Project is Roger Guenveur Smith’s spellbinding
memory play on the building of the Los Angeles landmark. And in
Radio Mambo, the performance group Culture Clash offers a mix
of vignettes on urban renewal, hurricanes…and drag queens.
Feb. 12 – Odyssey of Love by Lucy Parham, with Martin Jarvis,
Rosalind Ayres, and Lucy Parham (piano)
Mixing the colorful letters of Franz Liszt with some of his most
ecstatic piano music, Odyssey of Love depicts his
tempestuous relations with two fascinating women.
Feb. 19 – Crumbs from the Table of Joy by Lynn Nottage, with
Deidrie Henry, Russell Hornsby, Tinashe Kajese, Kate Steele, and
Charlayne Woodard
Recently widowed Godfrey is under the spell of spiritual leader
Sweet Father Divine, while his teen daughters, Ernestine and Er-
mina, immerse themselves in the illusions of Hollywood to escape
the realities of racial prejudice in 1950s Brooklyn. But things
change quickly when free-spirited Aunt Lily shows up. Suddenly,
Godfrey remarries a white woman, Ermina discovers boys, and
Ernestine is torn between embracing bebop and the Communist
Party.
Feb. 26 – The Unexpected Man / Love and Animals by Yasmina Reza/Phil Davison, with
David Suchet
In The Unexpected Man, a man and a woman sit opposite each other on a train from Paris
to Frankfurt. He’s a world-famous author; she’s got a copy of his latest novel in her handbag.
As we hear their innermost thoughts as the journey passes, we wonder: will they ever speak
to each other? And in Love and Animals, failed entrepreneur Sonny Mullens is chasing the
wife he loved, who’s left him; the man she left him for; and a win on the horses…all of which
brings him to successive interviews with a detective who becomes almost a spiritual guide.
Saturdays at 6 pm, repeating at midnight
The Moth
February 8 – A socialite-turned-social activist inherits her
mother’s hunting trophy collection. Writer Tony Hendra (rt)
remembers the set of the groundbreaking and hilarious 1984
mockumentary classic, This Is Spinal Tap. A hospital orderly with
an attitude problem is put to the test.
February 15 – A college fencer details his most epic match. A
wallflower teaches herself the slide and ends up in the spot-
light. An addict risks a devastating loss while visiting a crack
house. A flight attendant contends with a passenger on his final
flight. A good Samaritan regrets a seemingly good deed.
February 22 – A New York City cop shows his sensitive side. Darryl DMC McDaniels (left)
finds salvation in another artist’s song. A man reveals how it really feels to fall in love with the
wrong woman.
Tuesdays at 7 pm
13
Saint Paul Sunday for February
February 6 – Jorja Fleezanis (rt), violin; Karl Paulnack, piano
Peter Mennin: Sonata Concertante (1959)
Alban Berg: Sieben frühe Lieder (Seven Early Songs)
George Perle: Triptych (2003)
Ernest Bloch: Sonata (1920)
February 13 – OPUS ONE
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Piano Quartet in G Minor, K. 478
Antonin Dvořák: Piano Quartet in E-flat Major, Op. 87
February 20 – Zuill Bailey, cello; Awadagin Pratt, piano
Claude-Achille Debussy: Sonata
Ludwig van Beethoven: Sonata No. 3 in A Major
Johannes Brahms: Sonata No. 1 for Cello and Piano in E Minor,
Op. 38
February 27 – Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson Trio
Johannes Brahms: Piano Trio in C Major, Opus 87
Ludwig van Beethoven: Piano Trio in G Major, Opus 1, No. 2
Johannes Brahms: Piano Trio in C Minor, Opus 101
George Gershwin (transc. Andy Stein): Summertime
Sundays at 11 am
Be our Valentine—
Support your
Northern California Public Media
15
Public Radio for Sonoma County & HEAR
the North Bay at 91.1 & 90.9 FM IT
Shaded programs are created and produced at KRCB
ON
Office: 707-584-2000 Studio: 707-584-2020
KRCB
MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
5:00 DOWNSIZE THE "SM" WHEN THE USING LOGO ON
OVERSIZED APPLICATIONS SUCH OUTDOOR ADVERTISING
KRCB OVERNIGHT
AND LARGE EXHIBIT DISPLAYS
5:30
6:00
6:30 MORNING EDITION - NPR NEWS (KRCB host Mark Prell)
7:00 KRCB features: North Bay Report at 6:06 & 8:06 am
Second Row Center with David Templeton, Wednesday, 6:35 and 8:35 am & 6:45 pm
7:30 Reel Time Film Review with Diane McCurdy -Thursday at 8:35 am
8:00 Another Voice with Susan Swartz - Friday at 6:35, 8:35 am & at 6:45 pm
8:30
9:00
SONOMA SPOTLIGHT: Five minutes on local events and issues with Roland Jacopetti
9:30
10:00 PERFORMANCE TODAY with Fred Child
Classical music magazine offering live concert performances
10:30
and interviews with distinguished artists and composers
11:00
11:04 Earth & Sky
11:30
12:00
12:30
MIDDAY CLASSICS
1:00 with Julie Amacher, Lynn Warfel and Mindy Ratner
1:30
2:00
2:30
3:00
3:30 Democracy Now! with Amy Goodman
4:00
4:30 FRESH AIR with Terry Gross
5:00
5:30 ALL THINGS CONSIDERED - NPR News (KRCB host Mark Prell)
6:00 North Bay Report with Bruce Robinson - daily at 5:30 pm
Jim Hightower Report - daily at 6:30 pm
6:30
7:00
Flashback Word by Word Climate One
E-Town
7:30 Live folk/rock
A Novel Idea
the moth WordTemple Poetry Forums
8:00
your Average something freight train
8:30 Abalone connections boogie
completely
9:00 Johnny different Doug Jayne & Bill Frater On the
9:30 Bazzano fiddlin’ zone Roland Jacopetti Allegra Broughton Road Again
Gus Garelick Linda Seabright
10:00
Crossing Kaleidoscope
10:30 Borders Pillow Storm Jan Stephens
Mindy’s Mix
11:00 Mindy Berrett Doug Gosling, Josh Drake & Percussion
11:30 Amy Contardi & Josh Staples Discussion
David Sharp Jim Laveroni
12:00
Democracy Now! with Amy Goodman
1:00
Fresh Air with Terry Gross
2:00 radio free sonoma
KRCB OVERNIGHT
16
Santa Rosa Symphony honors Mozart and Mahler
In recognition of the the 100th anniversary of Mahler’s death, the orchestra performs the Adagio from
his tenth (and unfinished) symphony, plus three pieces from Mozart and Alban Berg. Christine Brandes is
the soprano soloist.
Mozart: Overture and “Porgi Amor” from The Marriage of Figaro; Mozart: Symphony No. 41, “Jupiter”;
Berg: Seven Early Songs; and Mahler: Adagio from Symphony No. 10.
Thursday, February 27 at noon
Friday saturday sunday
5:00
KRCB OVERNIGHT radio Free Sonoma Blues Before sunrise 5:30
6:00
WEEKEND WEEKEND 6:30
EDITION EDITION 7:00
NPR news NPR news 7:30
with with 8:00
Scott Simon Liane Hansen
8:30
9:00
This American Life HARMONIA 9:30
with Ira Glass Early Music
10:00
The Choir Loft
West Coast Live Bob Worth, Dan Solter, Steve Osborn 10:30
Sedge Thomson Anthony Martin & Jenny Bent
hosts music & guests live 11:00
from San Francisco St. Paul Sunday 11:30
12:00
CURTAIN CALL Thistle & Shamrock
Celtic Music sunday classics 12:30
Charles Sepos
1:00
Out of the Box Classical 1:30
OUR ROOTS music from
Shafiq Spanos ARE SHOWING 2:00
(New classical releases) KRCB-FM
John Katchmer, 2:30
Folk & acoustic Shafiq Spanos &
music with 3:00
John Lounsbery
Robin Pressman & 3:30
Steve DeLap 4:00
From the top 4:30
5:00
ALL THINGS CONSIDERED - NPR NEWS 5:30
6:00
LE SHOW
The Play’s the Thing Music & satire from Harry Shearer 6:30
Radio theater from Mouthful 7:00
This American Life LA Theatre Works Food & wine with 7:30
with Ira Glass Michele Anna Jordan 8:00
Rhythm & Roots Outbeat Salon 8:30
Mark Nicholas Beyond GLBT Radio
JAZZ 9:00
& Back NEW DIMENSIONS
Hillary Culhane CONNECTIONS 9:30
RADIO
Chuck Sher, 10:00
red shoes Rodeo OPEN SPACE DISTRICT
Ric Mancuso, John Katchmer 10:30
Michele Anna Jordan & Toby Gleason 11:00
Eclectica
Littlest bird Radio Paul Timberman & 11:30
Preston Reyes Mr. Bad Rules 12:00
Holy Cow! space/time The Play’s the Thing
Richard Wisinski Paul E (Repeat) Night Traveler 1:00
Blues Before sunrise Linda Coffin 2:00
radio Free Sonoma
17
Musical Celebrations in February
Gregg Allman – Low Country Blues
Gregg Allman’s new CD was produced by T Bone Burnett with Dr.
John on piano, guitarist Doyle Bramhall II, bassist Dennis Crouch
and drummer Jay Bellerose. Rounder Records’ Brad Paul talks with
Gregg about the new album and how the blues shaped his career.
Allegra Broughton and Doug Jayne feature more country blues.
Wednesday, February 16 at 8 pm
Rosanne Cash – The List Just in time for Johnny Cash’s birthday
For her latest album, The List, Rosanne Cash brought her
contemporary sound to the list of classic country songs her father
made for her in her teens. This project pays tribute in equal parts
to Johnny Cash’s legacy as a father and mentor, the timeless songs
that influenced his own career, the legendary songwriters who
originally brought them to life, and the many artists who have
recorded them over the years. Rosanne Cash tells us how each
of those factors inspired her own recordings. The List won the
Americana Music Association Album of the Year last year and a
2011 Grammy Nomination for Best Americana Album.
Tuesday, February 22 at 8 pm
18
KRCB Radio FM 91 honors Black History Month
Ruby Elzy: Black Diva of the Thirties
In the year 2000, soprano Ruby Elzy was one of the first inductees
into the Mississippi Musicians Hall of Fame. Sixty-five years earlier, she
was chosen by George Gershwin to create the role of Serena in Porgy
and Bess. Ruby appeared in feature films with Paul Robeson and Bing
Crosby. She performed on Broadway, in Hollywood, and on national
radio. Saturday, February 12 8 pm
The Children of Children Keep Coming
Through story and song, author Russell Goings has adapted his epic poem The Children
of Children Keep Coming into a spoken word performance that celebrates African American
cultural history.
Narratives of historical figures Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King Jr., Frederick Douglass and
Phillis Wheatley intertwine with mythic characters Evalina, Banjo Pete, and Black Tiny Shiny
to tell the important story of the African American heroic journey.
Tuesday, February 15 at 7 pm
Can Do: Stories of Black Visionaries, Seekers, and Entrepreneurs
Actress Alfre Woodard hosts new stories from The Kitchen Sisters
collection—A man tapes the history of his town with a scavenged
cassette recorder, a woman fights for social justice with a pie, a DJ
ignites his community with a sound. These are stories of black
pioneers, self-made men and self-taught women, neighborhood heros and
visionaries. Wednesday, February 23 at 7 pm
Truckin’ My Blues Away
Boo Hanks from Virgilina, VA; Captain Luke from Winston-Salem, NC; Eddie Tigner
from Atlanta; and Little Freddie King from New Orleans. In their own words and perfor-
mances, these men bring us the story of a music, an era and a culture that are uniquely
American. Thursday, February 24 at 8 pm
20
Daytime Television Listings
MONDAY 11:30 Cook’s Country From America’s 3:30 WordGirl
6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches Test Kitchen 4:00 Anne of Green Gables
6:30 Classical Stretch 12:00 This Old House 4:30 The Electric Company
7:00 Sesame Street 12:30 Avec Eric 5:00 Newsline
8:00 Sid the Science Kid 1:00 Donna Dewberry Show 5:30 PBS NewsHour
8:30 Curious George [repeats Sat. at 2:30 pm] 6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal
9:00 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot 1:30 Signing Time! SATURDAY
About That! 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 7:00 Los Niños en Su Casa (Sp)
9:30 Fons & Porter Love of Quilting 2:30 Cyberchase 7:30 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot
10:00 Quilting Arts 3:00 Arthur About That! (SP)
10:30 Learn to Read 3:30 WordGirl 8:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog (Sp)
11:00 Body Electric 4:00 Fetch! 8:30 Maya & Miguel (Sp)
11:30 Second Opinion 4:30 The Electric Company 9:00 Angelina Ballerina
12:00 Hometime 5:00 Newsline 9:30 Thomas and Friends
12:30 Tommy Tang’s Easy Thai 5:30 PBS NewsHour 10:00 Bob the Builder
Cooking 6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal 10:30 Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood
1:00 Nature THURSDAY 11:00 A Place of Our Own
2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches 11:30 Healing Quest
2:30 Cyberchase 6:30 Wai Lana Yoga 12:00 To the Contrary
3:00 Arthur 7:00 Sesame Street 12:30 Crafting at the Spotted Canary
3:30 WordGirl 8:00 Sid the Science Kid 1:00 Paint This w/Jerry Yarnell
4:00 Fetch! 8:30 Curious George 1:30 Scrapbook Memories
4:30 The Electric Company 9:00 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot 2:00 Best of the Joy of Painting
5:00 Newsline About That! 2:30 Donna Dewberry Show
5:30 PBS NewsHour 9:30 Scrapbook Memories 3:00 Woodwright’s Shop
6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal [repeats Sat. at 1:30 pm] 3:30 Ask This Old House
TUESDAY 10:00 Sewing with Nancy [repeats Tues. at noon]
6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches 10:30 GED on TV (Spanish) 4:00 Cook’s Country From America’s
6:30 Power Yoga 11:00 Muscle Car Workout (Feb 17- Test Kitchen
7:00 Sesame Street Burt Wolf Travel & Traditions) 4:30 Hey Kids, Let’s Cook!
8:00 Sid the Science Kid 11:30 Travelscope 5:00 Food Kids
8:30 Curious George 12:00 Woodsmith Shop 5:30 Delicious TVs Totally Vegetarian
9:00 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot 12:30 Delicious TVs Totally Vegetarian 6:00 Simply Ming
About That! [repeats Sat. at 5:30 pm] 6:30 Martin Yan’s Hidden China
9:30 Knitting Daily 1:00 Crafting at the Spotted Canary SUNDAY
10:00 Hands on Crafts for Kids [repeats Sat. at 12:30 pm] 8:00 Ideas in Action with Jim
10:30 GED Connection (English) 1:30 Piano Guy Glassman
11:00 Wider World 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 8:30 Maria Hinojosa One-On-One
11:30 Healthy Body, Healthy Mind 2:30 Cyberchase 9:00 McLaughlin’s One on One
12:00 Ask This Old House 3:00 Arthur 9:30 Consuelo Mack: Wealth Track
12:30 Simply Ming 3:30 WordGirl 10:00 Religion & Ethics Newsweekly
[repeats Sat. at 6 pm] 4:00 Fetch! 10:30 Between the Lines
1:00 NOVA 4:30 The Electric Company 11:00 (Feb 6 - Great Libraries of the
2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 5:00 Newsline World)(Feb 13 Hispanic
2:30 Cyberchase 5:30 PBS NewsHour Lifestyles) (Feb 20 Snapshots)
3:00 Arthur 6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal (Feb 27 Climate One)
3:30 WordGirl FRIDAY 11:30 World Business
4:00 Fetch! 6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches 12:00 Motorweek
4:30 The Electric Company 6:30 Wai Lana Yoga 12:30 Inside Washington
5:00 Newsline 7:00 Sesame Street 1:00 European Journal
5:30 PBS NewsHour 8:00 Sid the Science Kid 1:30 Scully the World Show
6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal 8:30 Curious George 2:00 America’s Heartland
WEDNESDAY 9:00 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot 2:30 California’s Gold, Green, Water,
6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches About That! Golden Parks, Communities, &
6:30 Wai Lana Yoga 9:30 Creative Living Golden Fairs
7:00 Sesame Street [repeats Sun. at 4 pm] 3:00 Woodsmith Shop
8:00 Sid the Science Kid 10:00 Martha’s Sewing Room [repeats Thurs. at noon]
8:30 Curious George 10:30 Living Smart 3:30 This Old House
9:00 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot 11:00 Roadtrip Nation [repeats Wed. at noon]
About That! 11:30 Ciao Italia 4:00 Creative Living
9:30 Beads, Baubles and Jewels 12:00 Victory Garden 4:30 Garden Smart
10:00 Paint, Paper and Crafts (Feb 9 - 12:30 Cooking Odyssey 5:00 Growing a Greener World
Art Through Time: A Global View) 1:00 Healthful Indian Flavors 5:30 Victory Garden
10:30 Piano Guy 1:30 Sit and Be Fit [repeats Fri. at noon]
[repeats Thurs. at 1:30 pm] 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 6:00 P. Allen Smith’s Garden Home
11:00 America’s Heartland 2:30 Cyberchase 6:30 Red Green
3:00 Arthur [repeats Sat. at 7:30 pm]
21
Primetime Listings for February
1 Tuesday 7:30 Between the Lines with 12:00 Democracy Now! *
7:00 After You’ve Gone Barry Kibrick 1:00 Best of Link TV *
7:30 Burt Wolf 2011 European [repeats Sunday at 10:30 am]
8:00 Good Evening Ev’rybody: 4 FRIDAY
Cruises Marathon Noted
In Celebration of Louis 7:00 To the Manor Born
Public Television travel host
Burt Wolf hosts this special Armstrong (see page 8) 7:30 Consuelo Mack: Wealthtrack
program designed to entice 9:00 Michael Feinstein’s 8:00 Inside E Street: Extraordi-
viewers to travel with him American Songbook: A nary Measures
on a series of cruises along New Step Every Day 8:30 McLaughlin Group
the great rivers of Europe Episode Three, A New Step 9:00 Great Decisions In Foreign
during the summer of 2010 Every Day, explores the fast Policy: Should The U.S.
which will benefit KRCB. This and furious 1920s and 1930s, Declare A “Special Relation-
program takes us along the when jazz was hot, credit was ship” with Germany?
beautiful Rhine River and loose, and illegal booze flowed Whether assisting U.S. troops
through France as a taste of freely in underground in Afghanistan or flexing its
what the summer cruises will speakeasies. Between perfor- muscles as the largest country
feature. mances, Feinstein illustrates in the European Union, Ger-
8:00 Nature: Elsa’s Legacy: The the impact of talking pictures, many is a key U.S. ally. Is it
Born Free Story 2010 marks the dawn of radio, and the worthy of a “special relation-
the 50th anniversary of the fledgling recording industry. ship” like that with Britain and
publication of Born Free—a Additionally, it introduces Israel?
book and then a film that viewers to other collectors and 9:30 Roger Ebert Presents at the
forever changed the way we musicians who keep the spirit Movies
think about wildlife. What has of the Jazz Age alive today. 10:00 PBS NewsHour
10:00 PBS NewsHour 11:00 Charlie Rose
11:00 Charlie Rose 12:00 Democracy Now! *
12:00 Democracy Now! * 1:00 Best of KRCB *
1:00 Best of Link TV *
5 SATURDAY
3 THURSDAY 11:30am Taking Control of Diabetes
7:00 As Time Goes By with Dr. Neal Barnard Neal
7:30 Aviators Sun ‘n Fun fly-in Barnard, MD shares his
special from Lakeland, FL scientifically proven system to
8:00 History Detectives: Iwo taking control of diabetes.
happened to lions since this Jima Map, Copperhead (see page 7)
story? And what has happened Cane, Theremin 1:00 Chet Atkins: Certified Guitar
to the people featured in the 9:00 Frontline: Flying Cheap Player Celebrate the enor-
film? What has Born Free One year after the deadliest mous influence of guitarist
taught us? domestic airline accident Chet Atkins. (see page 6)
[repeats 2/7 at 1 pm) in seven years, Frontline 2:30 Road to Perfect Health
9:00 Michael Feinstein’s Ameri- investigates the crash of with Brenda Watson Brenda
can Songbook: Best Band in Continental 3407 in Buffalo, shows us how all health
the Land The second episode NY, and discovers a dramati- ailments can be linked to an
examines how popular songs cally changed airline industry, imbalance in the digestive
provided emotional solace where regional carriers now system. (see page 7)
and patriotic inspiration during account for half of the nation’s 4:30 ADD and Loving It?! Actor
World War II. While preparing daily departures. The rise of Patrick McKenna is after the
an original patriotic song, Mi- the regionals and arrival of truth about ADD.
chael weaves in the history of low-cost carriers have been a (see page 7)
1940s big bands, USO shows, huge boon to consumers, and 6:00 John Sebastian Presents:
V-disks, war bond rallies, and the industry insists that the Folk Rewind (My Music) Folk
the powerful role popular mu- skies remain safe. But many legend John Sebastian reflects
sic played in boosting morale. insiders are worried that now, and remembers the very best
10:00 PBS NewsHour 30 years after airline deregu- of The Folk Years.
11:00 Charlie Rose lation, the aviation system is (see page 6)
12:00 Democracy Now! * being stretched beyond its
8:00 Lawrence Welk Show:
1:00 Best of Link TV * capacity to deliver service that
Youman’s Salute
is both cheap and safe.
9:00 Austin City Limits: Dave
2 WEDNESDAy 10:00 PBS NewsHour
Matthews Band
7:00 Last of the Summer Wine 11:00 Charlie Rose
22
Primetime Listings for February
10:00 Live from the Artists Den: brazen overthrow of a sover-
David Gray eign government, a revolution-
11:00 Theater Talk ary public health campaign,
11:30 Red Dwarf: Dimension Jump the backbreaking removal of
12:00 Best of KRCB * hundreds of millions of tons of
earth and construction on an
6 Sunday unprecedented scale.
11:30am Longevity Tai Chi with 9:30 Masterpiece Contemporary:
Arthur Rosenfeld Master Framed (see page 5)
martial artist and philosopher 11:00 Jail, No Bail
Arthur Rosenfeld shares (see page 8)
proven tai chi techniques 11:30 Best of KRCB *
in the new two-part pledge 1:00 Best of LINK TV *
special, Longevity Tai Chi
with Arthur Rosenfeld In 7 Monday
the first act, Rosenfeld and 7:00 Out of Ireland
others discuss the physical 7:30 My Generation: Faces of 50+
and medical benefits of this 8:00 John Sebastian Presents:
ancient practice. In the second 5:30 Victor Borge: 100 Years Folk Rewind (see page 6))
part, he demonstrates the of Music & Laughter! A 10:00 PBS NewsHour
basic tai chi movements and Victor Borge television special 11:00 Charlie Rose
positions, then combines them narrated by Rita Rudner, 12:00 Democracy Now! *
into flowing circular forms. featuring his funniest and 1:00 Best of Link TV *
12:30 Jeff Beck Honors Les Paul most memorable skits—a
Join Jeff Beck and his special truly unparalleled collection 8 Tuesday
guests as they play tribute not to be missed. Hailed as 7:00 After You’ve Gone
to the legendary Les Paul in a child prodigy, Victor Borge 7:30 Leading Gen This is the most
New York City, filmed on what began his performing career serious program of the series
was to be his 95th birthday. with a piano debut in 1926 as severe major problems
Backed by the Imelda May at the age of seventeen. For of the “leading gen” are
band, with special guests eight decades he was never discussed. Nancy Ackerman,
Brian Setzer, Gary U.S. Bonds out of the spotlight. “The Great Psychotherapist, addresses
& Trombone Shorty, this Dane” of comedy, as the the concerns and stressors of
intimate concert proves why beloved international humorist each major age group from
Jeff Beck is considered one of and musician was known, was people ages 20-90.
the greatest guitarists to ever celebrated across the world 8:00 ADD and Loving It?!
strap on the instrument. for his unique blend of comedy (see page 7)
2:00 New Play Piano in a Flash: 3 and music. 9:30 Burt Wolf 2011 European
Steps to Piano Success 7:00 Antiques Roadshow: Cruises Marathon
Scott “The Piano Guy” San Diego, CA - Hour One (see page 10)
Houston, the “Pied Piper” of 8:00 Panama Canal: American 10:00 PBS NewsHour
recreational piano players, is Experience On August 15th,
back! The Piano Guy, Scott has 11:00 Charlie Rose
1914, the Panama Canal
honed and sharpened his 12:00 Democracy Now! *
opened connecting the world’s
message to an even finer edge two largest oceans and signal- 1:00 Best of LINK TV *
to be even more compelling in ing America’s emergence as a 9 WEDNESDAY
this new show. Scott is at his global superpower. American 7:00 Last of the Summer Wine
instructional and entertain- ingenuity and innovation had 7:30 Between the Lines with
ing best as he shares his 3 succeeded where, just a few Barry Kibrick
Steps to Piano Success with years earlier, the French had [repeats Sunday at 10:30 am]
the army of public television failed disastrously. But the U.S. 8:00 DuSable to Obama:
viewers hungry for the ability paid a price for victory: more Chicago’s Black Metropolis
to simply sit down and have than a decade of ceaseless, There is also a less known,
some fun playing piano. grinding toil, an outlay of more but remarkable aspect of
4:00 Albert King with Stevie than 350 million dollars—the Chicago’s history—the es-
Ray Vaughn In Session The largest single federal expen- sential contributions of African
famed live jam session by two diture in history to that time Americans to the city’s vitality.
of the greatest musicians ever —and the loss of more than (see page 8)
to have played the blues on 5,000 lives. Along the way, 10:00 PBS NewsHour
electric guitar. (see page 6) Central America witnessed the 11:00 Charlie Rose
23
Primetime Listings for February
12:00 Democracy Now! * Consuelo Mack: Wealthtrack
7:30 14 Monday
1:00 Best of LINK TV * Inside E Street: Morrie
8:00 7:00 Out of Ireland
McLaughlin Group
8:30 7:30 My Generation: Off The
10 THURSDAY Great Decisions In Foreign
9:00 Beaten Path
7:00 As Time Goes By Policy: Do Sanctions Work? 8:00 NOVA: Arctic Dinosaurs
7:30 The Aviators Can a private As the U.S. seeks to reign in How is it that dinosaurs
pilot land an airliner?, Delfin rogue regimes like Iran, which managed to survive and even
L-29 fighter jet, Aircraft annual wants nuclear weapons, and thrive in the gloom of the dark
inspection, Airbus A380 North Korea, which already and frigid polar regions? This
8:00 History Detectives: Lauste has them, do sanctions actu- is one of today’s most intrigu-
Film Clip/Baker’s Gold/ ally work?
Transatlantic Cable 9:30 Roger Ebert Presents at the
9:00 Frontline: Battle for Haiti Movies
Last year, in the chaos of the 10:00 PBS NewsHour
earthquake that devas- 11:00 Charlie Rose
tated Haiti, thousands of the 12:00 Democracy Now! *
country’s worst criminals
1:00 Best of KRCB *
seized the opportunity to
stage a mass escape from the 12 saturday
National Penitentiary. One year 7:00 America’s Test Kitchen from
later, the gang leaders are re- Cook’s Illustrated: Classic
asserting control in the capital, Beef Braises ing, little-known enigmas in
threatening the country’s 7:30 Red Green Show: False Idol paleontology. Now, a unique
stability. With unique access to 8:00 Lawrence Welk Show: Love field expedition, covered exclu-
the police units trying to hunt Songs sively by NOVA, will set out for
down the gangsters— and 9:00 Austin City Limits: Pearl Alaska’s North Slope to defrost
revealing encounters with the Jam a jackpot of new fossil clues.
gangsters themselves—Front- With the help of stunning
10:00 Live from the Artists Den:
line examines the uphill fight computer-generated imagery
Corinne Bailey Rae
to rebuild Haiti in the face of (CGI), NOVA will breathe life
deep-rooted corruption and 11:00 Theater Talk
11:30 Red Dwarf: Meltdown into the polar dinosaurs’ lives
12:00 Best of KRCB * and environment in vivid detail.
The team of researchers will
13 Sunday combine extreme engineering
7:00 Antiques Roadshow: San and perilous fossil hunting,
Diego, CA - Hour Two including digging a tunnel
8:00 Greely Expedition: American into the permafrost in order
Experience In 1881, 25 men to collect the dinosaur bones.
led by Lieutenant Adolphus With Alaska’s spectacular
Greely sailed from the harbor wilderness as a backdrop,
of St. John’s, Newfoundland. this program will reveal a
Their destination was Lady prehistoric lost world for the
Franklin Bay in the high first time on television.
Arctic, where they planned to [repeats Tuesday at 1 pm]
collect a wealth of scientific 9:00 Conversation with Henry
data from a vast area of the Louis Gates, Jr. The program
world’s surface that had been provides an interesting and
intimidation. The film also described by a British admiral rarely seen inside look into
offers portraits of the fearful as a “sheer blank.” Three the life and career of Harvard
lives many Haitians are living, years later, only six survivors professor Henry Louis Gates,
as the central government and returned, with a daunting Jr. (see page 9)
judicial system routinely fail to story of shipwreck, starvation, 10:00 PBS NewsHour
maintain order. mutiny and cannibalism. 11:00 Charlie Rose
10:00 PBS NewsHour 9:00 Masterpiece Classic: My 12:00 Democracy Now! *
11:00 Charlie Rose Boy Jack (see page 5) 1:00 Best of LINK TV *
12:00 Democracy Now! * 11:00 Ford Hunger March
1:00 Best of LINK TV * (see page 8) 15 Tuesday
11:30 Best of KRCB * 7:00 After You’ve Gone
11 FRIDAY 7:30 Leading Gen What will you do
1:00 Best of LINK TV *
7:00 To the Manor Born with the rest of your life?
24
Primetime Listings for February
8:00 Nature: Birds of the Gods to the Frank Gehry-designed Americans care what happens
Living in the depths of the Walt Disney Concert Hall for here?
New Guinean Rainforest are another concert. Joined by 9:30 Roger Ebert Presents at the
birds of unimaginable color superstar tenor Juan Diego Movies
Florez, the gala concert’s 10:00 PBS NewsHour
repertoire offers a festive 11:00 Charlie Rose
program of bel canto overtures 12:00 Democracy Now! *
and arias, as well as popular 1:00 Best of KRCB *
Latin American songs and 19 saturday
orchestral dances. 7:00 America’s Test Kitchen from
10:00 PBS NewsHour Cook’s Illustrated: Two Ways
11:00 Charlie Rose with Pork
12:00 Democracy Now! * 7:30 Red Green Show: Harold`s
1:00 Best of Link TV * One and Only
17 THURSDAY 8:00 Lawrence Welk Show:
7:00 As Time Goes By Fashions and Hits Through
and beauty. When Europeans 7:30 The Aviators Can a non-pilot the Years
first saw the plumes of these land an airliner?, Zaon col- 9:00 Austin City Limits: Willie
fabulous creatures in the 16th lision avoidance, Women in Nelson & Asleep at the
century, they believed they Aviation, Light sport aviation. Wheel
must be from heaven and 8:00 History Detectives: Andrew 10:00 Live from the Artists Den:
called them Birds of Paradise. Jackson’s Mouth/Barton The Black Crowes
The people of New Guinea Letter/Spybook 11:00 Theater Talk
make even greater claims. 9:00 Frontline: Are We Safer? 11:30 Red Dwarf: Holoship
They say the birds possess In this story, Pulitzer Prize-win- 12:00 Best of KRCB *
supernatural powers and ning Washington Post reporter 20 Sunday
magic. But to find these birds Dana Priest investigates the
in New Guinea is one of the 7:00 Antiques Roadshow:
terrorism-industrial complex San Diego, CA - Hour Three
toughest assignments and to that grew up in the wake of
witness their extraordinary 8:00 Reagan: American
9/11. Against a backdrop Experience: Lifeguard In
mating displays is even of recent mail bomb threats
tougher. David Attenborough 1988, after two terms in
from Al Qaeda in Yemen and office, Ronald Reagan left the
introduces a young team of growing concerns about
New Guinean scientists on a White House one of the most
homegrown terrorists, Priest popular presidents of the
grueling expedition to find and explores the growing reach of
film these Birds of Paradise; homeland security, fusion
the holy grail of wildlife film- centers, battlefield technolo-
makers. gies, and data-collecting into
[repeats 2/21 at 1 pm)
the lives of ordinary Ameri-
9:00 Beyond Babyland
cans.
Beyond Babyland ex-
plores the high rate of 10:00 PBS NewsHour
infant mortality in the U.S. 11:00 Charlie Rose
(see page 9) 12:00 Democracy Now! *
10:00 PBS NewsHour 1:00 Best of LINK TV *
11:00 Charlie Rose 18 FRIDAY
12:00 Democracy Now! * 7:00 To the Manor Born
1:00 Best of LINK TV * 7:30 Consuelo Mack: Wealthtrack
twentieth century—and one
16 WEDNESDAY 8:00 Inside E Street: Sandwich of the most controversial. A
7:00 Last of the Summer Wine Generation failed actor, Reagan became
7:30 Between the Lines with 8:30 McLaughlin Group a passionate ideologue who
Barry Kibrick 9:00 Great Decisions In Foreign preached a simple gospel of
[repeats Sunday at 10:30 am] Policy: Should Americans lower taxes, less govern-
8:00 Great Performances: Care About The Caucuses? ment, and anti-communism.
Celebracion! Music director- The Caucuses have long One by one, his opponents
Gustavo Dudamel and the Los represented a critical region underestimated him; one by
Angeles Philharmonic with for U.S. interests due to its oil one, Reagan surprised them,
and natural gas resources and rising to become a president
Great Performances returns
proximity to Russia. But should
25
Primetime Listings for February
who always preferred to see 9:00 Lincoln: Prelude to the of the so-called Athenaeum
America as a “shining city on Presidency To commemorate portrait. On several occasions
a hill.” Produced by Austin Abraham Lincoln’s 200th in 1796 George Washington
Hoyt and Adriana Bosch. David birthday in 2009, a new docu- came to the Philadelphia
Ogden Stiers narrates mentary immerses viewers in home of the artist Gilbert
10:00 Masterpiece Classic: a critical, but often overlooked, Stuart to sit for a life portrait.
Downton Abbey - Part 1 An time in the stateman’s life. Those sittings produced what
Edwardian spellbinder airing Lincoln: Prelude to the is, arguably, the most famous
in four episodes starring Hugh Presidency pieces together a portrait ever created: the
Bonneville, Maggie Smith, & critical 23-year period (1837- unfinished Athenaeum image
Elizabeth McGovern. 1860) through interviews with of Washington that peers out
(see page 5) noted historians, researchers from the dollar bill. First Face:
11:30 Best of KRCB * and experts, and re-enact- The Buck Starts Here consid-
1:00 Best of LINK TV * ments filmed at historic ers the circumstances leading
sites in central Illinois. to the creation of Stuart’s
21 Monday 10:00 PBS NewsHour portrait, and its subsequent
7:00 Out of Ireland 11:00 Charlie Rose life as the defining image of
7:30 My Generation: Ground 12:00 Democracy Now! * Washington and, ultimately,
Breakers 1:00 Best of Link TV * as an enduring symbol of
8:00 NOVA: Deadliest Earth- America.
quakes In 2010, epic 22 Tuesday 9:30 Frederick Douglass:
earthquakes all over the planet 7:00 After You’ve Gone Pathway from Slavery to
delivered one of the worst 7:30 Burt Wolf 2011 European Freedom (see page 9)
annual death tolls ever Cruises Marathon 10:00 PBS NewsHour
recorded. The deadliest strike (see page 10) 11:00 Charlie Rose
8:00 Nature: Born Wild: The 12:00 Democracy Now! *
First Days of Life From the 1:00 Best of LINK TV *
moment of their birth, baby
animals in the wild can face 23 WEDNESDAY
almost anything—from a large 7:00 Last of the Summer Wine
social group of interested 7:30 Between the Lines with
caregivers, to a potentially Barry Kibrick
deadly group of relatives, to [repeats Sunday at 10:30 am]
one or two devoted parents, 8:00 American Masters: Jeff
to complete abandonment Bridges: The Dude Abides
was in Haiti, where a quake and no available help at all. Called “the most natural and
just southwest of the capital, Yet they all have something least self-conscious screen
Port-au-Prince, killed more in common. They must learn actor that has ever lived”
than 200,000, reducing whom to trust, what to fear by critic Pauline Kael, Jeff
homes, hospitals, schools, and and when to act—all in the Bridges has been plying his
the presidential palace to first days of life. Child care craft most of his life. With a
rubble. In exclusive coverage, involves instinct, but also first role as an infant in his
a NOVA camera crew follows a experience and choices, some mother Dorothy’s arms and
team of US geologists as they of which can be devastat- a childhood television debut
first enter Haiti in the immedi- ingly hard. Find out how being in his father Lloyd’s television
ate aftermath of the tragedy, born in the wild has evolved
and to Chile which was struck over time, and how animals
by a quake 100 times more interacting with their young,
powerful, unleashing a tsu- wrestling with the feelings
nami that put the entire Pacific and dilemmas that come with
coast on high alert. Could their raising a baby, can mirror our
work, and the work of geolo- own experiences.
gists at earthquake hot-spots [repeats 2/28 at 1 pm)
around the U.S., one day lead 9:00 First Face: The Buck Starts
to a breakthrough in predicting Here Mark Twain is thought to
quakes before they happen? have quipped, “If Washington
NOVA investigates new leads should rise from the dead and
in its investigation of a deadly not resemble the Stuart por-
scientific conundrum. trait, he would be judged an
[repeats Tuesday at 1 pm] imposter.” Such is the legacy
26
Primetime Listings for February
series Sea Hunt, he burst onto 9:30 Roger Ebert Presents at the
the silver screen in The Last Movies
Picture Show in 1971 and was 10:00 PBS NewsHour
immediately recognized with a 11:00 Charlie Rose
Best Supporting Actor nomina- 12:00 Democracy Now! *
tion. He has created original 1:00 Best of KRCB *
and memorable characters in
notable films since that time. 26 saturday
To name but a few—Heaven’s 7:00 America’s Test Kitchen
Gate, Starman, Jagged Edge, Platoon, Charlie Company, 1st from Cook’s Illustrated: The
The Fisher King, Fearless, battalion of the 506th infantry Cookie Jar
Wild Bill, The Fabulous Baker and how the war followed 7:30 Red Green Show: The
Boys, The Big Lebowski, and them home. It is a story of Grapes of Wrath
his 2010 Oscar-winning best heroism, grief, vicious combat, 8:00 Lawrence Welk Show:
actor in Crazy Heart. He is depression, drugs, alcohol and Rhythm Is Our Business
an exceptional musician, an brutal murder; an investigation 9:00 Austin City Limits: Allen
artist, a photographer, an into the Army’s mental health Toussaint
occasional vintner and a story services; and a powerful 10:00 Live from the Artists Den:
teller extraordinaire. portrait of what multiple tours Dierks Bentley
9:30 New Glass at Wheaton and post-traumatic stress are 11:00 Theater Talk
Explores the world of New doing to a generation of young 11:30 Red Dwarf: The Inquisitor
Jersey’s Creative Glass Center American soldiers. 12:00 Best of KRCB *
of America, where fellowship 10:30 Crossing The Line: Border
artists pursue their creative Stories As the country 27 Sunday
visions. Cameras follow three debates Arizona’s controversial 7:00 Antiques Roadshow: Des
young residents as they new immigration law, this Moines, IA - Hour One
manipulate glass in new and program takes a closer look 8:00 American Experience: Rea-
unexpected ways. at unauthorized immigration gan: An American Crusade
10:00 PBS NewsHour here in San Diego County. It 10:30 Masterpiece Classic:
11:00 Charlie Rose explores why migrants take Downton Abbey - Part 2
12:00 Democracy Now! * big risks to work in the U.S., (see page 5)
1:00 Best of LINK TV * and what happens to the 12:00 Best of KRCB *
children of deported parents. 1:00 Best of LINK TV *
24 THURSDAY Three million unauthorized
7:00 As Time Goes By immigrants live here in CA. 28 Monday
7:30 The Aviators Air Traffic Con- The statistics raise an impor- 7:00 Out of Ireland
trol Tower, Walkaround checks, tant economic question— 7:30 Burt Wolf 2011 European
Quesnel air show, Pilot profile: just what are the financial Cruises Marathon
John Lovelace implications of such a large (see page 10)
8:00 History Detectives: Crom- undocumented population? 8:00 NOVA: Making Stuff Stron-
well Dixon, Bartlett Sketch- 11:00 Charlie Rose ger From carbon nanotubes
book, & Duke Ellington 12:00 Democracy Now! * to artificial skin, our world
Plates 1:00 Best of LINK TV * is poised at the frontier of a
9:00 Frontline: The Wounded revolution in materials science
Platoon Since the Iraq War 25 FRIDAY as far-reaching as the biotech
began, soldier arrests in the 7:00 To the Manor Born breakthroughs of the last two
city of Colorado Springs have 7:30 Consuelo Mack: Wealthtrack decades. This series explores
tripled. At least 36 servicemen 8:00 Inside E Street: Pension
based at the nearby Army post Deficit Disorder
of Fort Carson have committed 8:30 McLaughlin Group
suicide. And 14 Fort Carson 9:00 Great Decisions In Foreign
soldiers have been charged or Policy: Is U.S. Power In
convicted in at least 11 kill- Decline? America has long
ings. Many of the most violent been the “indispensible”
crimes involved men who had nation in world affairs. But
served in the same battalion in recent events, from the global
Iraq. Three of them came from financial crisis to the wars in
a single platoon of infantry- Iraq and Afghanistan, have led
men. Frontline tells the dark some to question whether U.S.
tale of the men of Third power is on the decline.
27
Primetime Listings for February
how materials changed history
and are shaping the future,
ranging from cost-effective Our Daytime Audience is Growing
fuel cells and solar panels to
quantum computers and ultra-
light automobiles. The New
York Times’ technology cor- Every week,
respondent and best-selling
author David Pogue brings his
KRCB Television 22
trademark goofball humor and delivers 32 hours of the best
techie zeal to this exploration children’s programming on
of the future of “stuff.” television.
[repeats Tuesday at 1 pm]
9:00 Eritrea’s Struggle to Survive We don’t want your kids to
The land Mussolini tried watch more television. We
to turn into the new Rome want them to watch
—complete with art deco
masterpieces—rises to
better TV!
nationhood, rebuilds its scenic Support the one TV choice
that kids, families and
teachers trust for innovative,
curriculum-based programs
that are
educational—and fun.
We count on
you!
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To become a Sustaining Partner simply contact
Viewers KRCB, at 800-287-2722 or visit our website at
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29
Thank you to these supporters of KRCB!
Art, Museums and Cultural Tierra Vegetables, Inc. Wyatt Irrigation Supply
Organizations Traverso’s Gourmet Foods & Wine Media, Magazines & Publishing
Arts Council of Sonoma County Wine Spectrum Shop & Bar Bay Nature Magazine
California Indian Museum Education Marinscope Community Newspapers
Charles M. Schulz Museum Santa Rosa Junior College More Marin!
Dry Creek Rancheria Band of University of San Francisco - SR North Bay Biz
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Mendocino Film Festival 42nd Street Moon North Bay Bohemian
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Automotive Mendocino Film Festival Press Democrat
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30
Business Sponsor – Clars Auction Gallery
KRCB Public Media is pleased to welcome a new corporate
partner this month: Clars Auction Gallery in Oakland.
Clars Auction Gallery got its start in the auction business in
1948 with Harvey Clar, an Oakland native who, at the age of 18,
began conducting industrial auctions—starting with machine,
wood-working, and automobile repair shops. His skill and reputa-
tion grew over the next couple decades, as he conducted a wide
variety of commercial and industrial auctions, as well as the occasional estate filled with
personal property.
Mr. Clar and his wife Donna established their first auction gallery in 1971, and the gallery’s
reputation for knowledge and experience in handling quality estate property has continued
to grow over the last thirty plus years. It is now one of the largest auction houses in the
Western United States and works with buyers and sellers both throughout the United States
and worldwide. The majority of its clients, however, are located in Northern California. In
mid-2004, the gallery began offering simultaneous internet bidding, in conjunction with the
live auction, on many of its lots through eBay.
Clars Auction Gallery conducts monthly two-day estate auctions of 1500-2000 lots at its
North Oakland location. Between three and five thousand people attend the auctions and
previews, with many thousands more viewing the lots online.
In 1996, Harvey Clar sold the estate auction gallery business to Redge A. Martin, who
is now President of the Gallery, as well as being one of the main auctioneers and apprais-
ers. Harvey Clar continues to appraise and conduct auctions of industrial and commercial
property.
Clars Auction Gallery
www.clars.com
5644 Telegraph Avenue
Oakland, CA 94609
Toll Free 888.339.7600
KRCB
PAID
✓ Active in community
KRCB Television & Radio
www.krcb.org
Partner with
Contact program underwriting at
707-584-2000 or 800-287-2722