Sunday, July 22, 2007

Tv9 online









http://videomasti.net/?p=1036

03:00 AM: McLaughlin Group
Go to KQED.org for additional air times and email reminders, or go to this program's official site.
03:30 AM: Foreign Exchange With Fareed Zakaria
* In developing countries, small loans of a few hundred dollars each may have the power to lift communities out of poverty.
* Is micro-lending a sustainable way to change the world?
* And, at the other extreme, a sheik who is building a grandiose royal city in the sand. All this and more on Foreign Exchange, where America meets the world

Go to KQED.org for additional air times and email reminders, or go to this program's official site.
04:00 AM: THIS WEEK in Northern California
* Farm Bill Hearty For California: Claire Cummings, Food and Farming Reporter
California agribusiness may be in for a rich bounty. With the help of Bay Area food and environmental activists, farm programs, which have long been based on Depression-era models, may catch up with the present. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Governor Schwarzenegger were able to persuade lawmakers to apportion over $1.5 billion over 5 years for the state's specialty crops, including research for organic growers, more access to fresh produce in school lunch programs, promotion of farmers' markets and support for farm conservation and environmental improvement. The landmark deal will give California equity in the farm bill for the fist time, and to farmers elsewhere, whose crops are other than corn, wheat, rice, cotton and soybeans, which have been highly subsidized since the 1930's. California is one of the most productive farm states with a $ 17 billion-a-year specialty crop industry, and ranks first in grapes, almonds, raisins and carrots.
* Child Prostitution Sting: Kevin Weston, New America Media
Operation Strikeout resulted in the arrest of over 140 pimps, prostitutes and customers, coinciding with Major League Baseball's All-Star Game in San Francisco. The arrests were made by undercover officers between July 6 and 12 in many Bay Area cities. There were 42 arrests in Oakland, which officials say has become one of the worst cities for prostitution in the western US, with an increasing number of underage prostitutes. The effort, involving multiple agencies and coordinated by the FBI, is part of the 4-year-old Innocence Lost initiative, which seeks to target the increasing trafficking and exploitation of child prostitutes in the Bay Area, where there has been a shift in attitude in law enforcement to treat underage offenders as victims rather than criminals.
* Richmond Refinery Expansion Plans: Amy Standen, KQED-FM
Chevron wants to increase its production of vehicle gasoline by 6% at their refinery in Richmond. Community and environmental activists have carried on a long fight with the giant oil company over toxic emissions that pollute the air in surrounding neighborhoods. But according to the first environmental impact study of Chevron's plans, the upgrades requested by the company would increase emissions of volatile organic compounds. Concerned residents point to Richmond's health problems such as the high rate of asthma in communities near the plant. They have the support of Richmond's new Green Mayor who has promised to establish a new and different relationship between the city and Chevron.
* High Hopes For New School Chief: Jill Tucker, SF Chronicle
Carlos Garcia took over the job of running San Francisco's public schools this week. He previously ran the school system in Las Vegas NV, the 5th largest district in the country, is experienced in dealing with urban schools and is committed to diversity in education. How he faces diversity questions in San Francisco's schools will be affected by the recent US Supreme Court ruling against desegregation programs. Garcia's supporters say he has a strong track record implementing progressive education, both as a superintendent and as a classroom teacher. Also this week, Vallejo regained control of its public school system from the state.

Go to KQED.org for additional air times and email reminders, or go to this program's official site.
04:30 AM: Now
Does abortion cause long-term emotional and psychological problems for women? Now introduces viewers to a new front in the effort to end abortions in the US: claims of extreme negative effects on a woman's mental health. Once focusing primarily on the unborn child, anti-abortion advocates see new hope in an argument that focuses on the women who've made or are about to make a fateful decision. All sides of the debate have been listening and weighing in, including the Supreme Court.

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05:00 AM: Los Ninos En Su Casa
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05:30 AM: Place of Our Own
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06:00 AM: Big Comfy Couch
When Loonette and Molly play "can you do what I do?" Loonette discovers that sometimes even practice won't make perfect - but it sure does help.

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06:30 AM: Bob the Builder
Bob and the team are building a new home inside an old tower for Mr. Sabatini and his family. While collecting bricks for the job, Muck and Spud discover some old wooden pole and canvas and pretend to be knights in a jousting competition. In their game, they wind up making a mess of the job, knocking over all the bricks that Muck collected for the tower - only to discover that their knight costumes are actually parts for the new windmill! Bob has bought a new drilling attachment for Benny. Benny is desperate to try it out so Bob promises he can as long as he's with him to help. But before they get to use Benny's new drill, Bob gets called away. Looking for something to bash, crash or smash, Benny causes rocks to fall and winds up trapping himself. But will Benny discover something that makes all his trouble worth while?

Go to KQED.org for additional air times and email reminders, or go to this program's official site.
07:00 AM: Thomas & Friends
Sir Topham Hatt has lost his voice so Lady Hatt gives Percy the job of handing out his instructions for the day. Percy has lots of things to remember. Thomas offers to help, but Percy is determined to do it on his own. Percy goes to see James, Gordon and Toby but gets things muddled up, giving his friends some very silly jobs! Disaster strikes when James, Gordon and Toby crash into each other - all thanks to Percy. Percy is very sorry and asks Thomas if he'll help after all. Thomas is only too pleased to help his friend and together they retrace Percy's tracks. Percy finally remembers the jobs that Lady Hatt has told him and Percy puts everything right. Sir Topham Hatt is very please with Percy. He has been really useful! It's the country fair in the hills and Duncan is to take the bell from the clock tower to be specially polished. Duncan enjoys the sound the bell makes going over the bumpy tracks. He enjoys it so much that he doesn't listen to the foreman's instructions to go slowly. He doesn't listen to anyone telling him to slow down, until disaster strikes and Duncan hits a dip in the track - the bell bounces off his flat-bed and down the hill. Duncan is horrified. In the quiet, he hears the bell chiming - it's stuck in a tree. Duncan races to it, just in time for it to fall back on his flatbed. Slowly and carefully Duncan takes the bell to the polishers. At the fair, the shiny bell rings and Duncan thinks it's the best sound in the whole world!

Go to KQED.org for additional air times and email reminders, or go to this program's official site.
07:30 AM: Clifford's Puppy Days
"Sock It To Me" - Daffodil feels left out when Clifford and Emily Elizabeth have a great time playing with the "sock spider." Can Clifford think up a new fun way to include Daffodil in the game too?

"My Toy" - Will Clifford and the gang understand why Jorge doesn't want to share his toy?

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08:00 AM: Arthur
* Phony Fern - When Fern's parents give her a cell phone for "emergencies only," Fern is uninterested - until Muffy introduces her to the joys of personalized ring tones, texting, and incessant chatting! Fern becomes hooked, and starts to believe that nail polish consultations are "emergencies." But she realizes that although evolving technology is great, sometimes it's better to communicate the old-fashioned way, in person.
* Brain's Shocking Secret -Brain is the smartest kid in his class. Everyone knows that! What they don't know is that he was kept back in Kindergarten - and that's a fact Brain would like to keep secret. Will Binky spill the beans?

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08:30 AM: Raggs
It's too hot outside for the Egg and Spoon Race Championships, so the dogs find different ways to cool down. Also, Pido makes hot soup on a cold day but now it's too hot to eat.

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09:00 AM: Dragon Tales
Moving On - Cassie's favorite big sister, Sophie, is going away to cooking school and Cassie is devastated to see her go. Enrique sings a Spanish farewell song as the sisters embrace. The gang tries to cheer her up about missing Sophie. They take her to their favorite spots in Dragon Land to have fun, but everywhere they go, Cassie is reminded of Sophie and is sad all over again. Enrique suggests that instead of trying to forget Sophie, Cassie do something that reminds her of Sophie. Cassie decides to make Goo-Berry Pudding, one of their favorite recipes, but finds she is sad making it without Sophie. When Cassie's little sister comes wanting to help, Cassie decides to teach her little sister to cook, just like Sophie taught her - and feels much better!

Head Over Heels - Quetzal's brother Fernando is sick. When Quetzal asks the gang to bring him a delicious bowl of gazpacho, they are eager to help. To get there, however, they must pass by Trumpy the trollbooth troll. The toll? One cartwheel each. This worries Emmy, who's embarrassed to admit that she doesn't know how to cartwheel. Her friends help: Ord shows her how to balance; Cassie explains the "ready, hand-hand, foot-foot" method; and Zak and Wheezie coach her in keeping her arms straight. Emmy keeps on trying, and even though she's frustrated, she gradually improves. When they reach the bridge, the gang encourages a nervous Emmy to do her best, and everyone cartwheels successfully enough to cross the bridge and deliver the soup to a grateful Fernando. On the way back, everyone is surprised to learn that Trumpy is sad because he can't do a cartwheel himself and hoped to learn by watching everybody else pay the "toll." The gang, including Emmy, is happy to help him learn.

Go to KQED.org for additional air times and email reminders, or go to this program's official site.
09:30 AM: Curious George
* Candy Counter - Eating candy is easy, but counting and sorting it is much more difficult! George quickly learns this when he agrees to watch Cayley's candy counter for an afternoon. While trying to stack the chocolates into different shapes, they all fall over, and George can't remember which candy is what! With help from a few customers, and a little sampling, George discovers how to sort the candies by color and shape.
* Curious George, Rescue Monkey - George is inspired to become a volunteer with the fire department when they help him get his foot unstuck from a chair. He spends the day with Andie, Stig and Stew of Rescue Squad 86 and has fun trying out all the special fire fighting tools. But when Compass gets trapped at the museum, a little monkey ends up being the best tool for the job.

Go to KQED.org for additional air times and email reminders, or go to this program's official site.
10:00 AM: Maya & Miguel
Maya's friend Chrissy discovers that her father has been transferred and is moving the whole family to Hong Kong. Chrissy is so distraught that she doesn't want to go. Eager to help her friend adjust to a very different culture, Maya enlists Miguel and the gang to " introduce" Chrissy to Hong Kong. They stage an imaginative (and homemade) "voyage" to show her a variety of interesting places: a restaurant that serves dim sum, a pink dolphin-watching cruise, and the dragon boat races. By the end, Chrissy is so enchanted that she can't wait to move to Hong Kong. Unfortunately, the transfer falls through...and Chrissy doesn't move. But at least "las tres amigas" get to stay together!

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10:30 AM: Wild Chronicles
Sudan's great antelope migration. Crittercam: emperor penguins on the move. Preserving China's panda population. Solving a Hawaiian bird mystery.

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11:00 AM: Nature
It is a visual wonderland, where imposing mountains rise almost two vertical miles above sprawling salt flats, and canyons are painted in strokes of blue, pink, violet and green from sunrise to sunset. This is Death Valley - one of the most inhospitable places on the planet. Nowhere else is a landscape so exquisite yet brutal, stunning yet harsh. Here, temperatures spike into the 130s, the earth cracks like broken clay and when the hot wind blows, all anyone can taste is dust and salt. Ironically, it is water that has shaped this super-arid home of true survivors.

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12:00 PM: Emperors of the Ice
Standing over 3 feet tall, the emperor penguin is the largest diving bird on the planet. The only species to breed during the Antarctic winter, emperor penguins are sublimely built to conquer the cold. But in a world threatened by global climate change, can they take the heat?

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01:00 PM: From The Top: Live from Carnegie Hall
Host Christopher O'Riley welcomes the Bone Rangers, a teenage trombone quartet from Chicago, and Roderick Demmings, 13, a pianist from Dallas, Texas, who also is director of his church choir. The Bone Rangers perform selections from Hornoff's Suite for Four Trombones, Roderick plays Chopin's "Black Key" Etude and then all join forces for the jazzy "Harlem Express."

Go to KQED.org for additional air times and email reminders, or go to this program's official site.
01:30 PM: From The Top: Live from Carnegie Hall
The Chicago Children's Choir, under their dynamic director Josephine Lee, offers stirring renditions of the spiritual "Elijah Rock" and the South African "Lizela." Drew Peterson, a 12-year-old pianist and aspiring conductor from Oradell, New Jersey, performs Chopin's "Grande Valse" and takes on host Christopher O'Riley in a left-handed "Name That Tune" challenge.

Go to KQED.org for additional air times and email reminders, or go to this program's official site.
02:00 PM: Expose: America's Investigative Reports
Vanity Fair pulls back the curtain on SAIC, the largest government contractor you've never heard of.

Go to KQED.org for additional air times and email reminders, or go to this program's official site.
02:30 PM: To The Contrary
* Should school be year-round, because summer breaks cost families a lot of money?
* Sexism in the Anglican Church, an interview with former Anglican Bishop Jane Holmes Dixon
* Panelists: Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC); Independent Women's Forum President and CEO Michelle Bernard; Conservative Commentator Nancy Pfotenhauer; National Organization for Women President Kim Gandy

Go to KQED.org for additional air times and email reminders, or go to this program's official site.
03:00 PM: Inside Washington
Go to KQED.org for additional air times and email reminders, or go to this program's official site.
03:30 PM: McLaughlin Group
Go to KQED.org for additional air times and email reminders, or go to this program's official site.
04:00 PM: THIS WEEK in Northern California
* Farm Bill Hearty For California: Claire Cummings, Food and Farming Reporter
California agribusiness may be in for a rich bounty. With the help of Bay Area food and environmental activists, farm programs, which have long been based on Depression-era models, may catch up with the present. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Governor Schwarzenegger were able to persuade lawmakers to apportion over $1.5 billion over 5 years for the state's specialty crops, including research for organic growers, more access to fresh produce in school lunch programs, promotion of farmers' markets and support for farm conservation and environmental improvement. The landmark deal will give California equity in the farm bill for the fist time, and to farmers elsewhere, whose crops are other than corn, wheat, rice, cotton and soybeans, which have been highly subsidized since the 1930's. California is one of the most productive farm states with a $ 17 billion-a-year specialty crop industry, and ranks first in grapes, almonds, raisins and carrots.
* Child Prostitution Sting: Kevin Weston, New America Media
Operation Strikeout resulted in the arrest of over 140 pimps, prostitutes and customers, coinciding with Major League Baseball's All-Star Game in San Francisco. The arrests were made by undercover officers between July 6 and 12 in many Bay Area cities. There were 42 arrests in Oakland, which officials say has become one of the worst cities for prostitution in the western US, with an increasing number of underage prostitutes. The effort, involving multiple agencies and coordinated by the FBI, is part of the 4-year-old Innocence Lost initiative, which seeks to target the increasing trafficking and exploitation of child prostitutes in the Bay Area, where there has been a shift in attitude in law enforcement to treat underage offenders as victims rather than criminals.
* Richmond Refinery Expansion Plans: Amy Standen, KQED-FM
Chevron wants to increase its production of vehicle gasoline by 6% at their refinery in Richmond. Community and environmental activists have carried on a long fight with the giant oil company over toxic emissions that pollute the air in surrounding neighborhoods. But according to the first environmental impact study of Chevron's plans, the upgrades requested by the company would increase emissions of volatile organic compounds. Concerned residents point to Richmond's health problems such as the high rate of asthma in communities near the plant. They have the support of Richmond's new Green Mayor who has promised to establish a new and different relationship between the city and Chevron.
* High Hopes For New School Chief: Jill Tucker, SF Chronicle
Carlos Garcia took over the job of running San Francisco's public schools this week. He previously ran the school system in Las Vegas NV, the 5th largest district in the country, is experienced in dealing with urban schools and is committed to diversity in education. How he faces diversity questions in San Francisco's schools will be affected by the recent US Supreme Court ruling against desegregation programs. Garcia's supporters say he has a strong track record implementing progressive education, both as a superintendent and as a classroom teacher. Also this week, Vallejo regained control of its public school system from the state.

Go to KQED.org for additional air times and email reminders, or go to this program's official site.
04:30 PM: QUEST
* Where are the Bees? - California farmers depend on bees to pollinate the state's multi-million dollar fruit and nut crops, but recently, bee colonies have been rapidly disappearing. Quest follows the scientists that are racing to find the cause, plus discovers how you can help.
* Landslide Detectives - With its rolling hills and winter storms, the Bay Area has been a landslide hotspot, putting houses and lives at risk. Meet the geologists working to understand and predict these natural disasters.
* Story Time with Young Science Authors - What do kids age 5-8 think about science? Young authors from the KQED Reading Rainbow Young Writers and Illustrators Contest read their science-themed contest entries.

Go to KQED.org for additional air times and email reminders, or go to this program's official site.
05:00 PM: International Dancesport World Championships 2006
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06:00 PM: Supernatural Science
The truth behind the global belief in re-incarnation?
07:00 PM: As Time Goes By
Jean and Lionel have made the decision to live together. However, wires get crossed and their is confusion about who is to go live with whom. They end up still living apart.

Go to KQED.org for additional air times and email reminders, or go to this program's official site.
07:30 PM: Keeping Up Appearances - The Memoirs of Hyacinth Bucket
Hyacinth volunteers Richard's services to help out with the Church Hall where there is a problem with the lights. However, since his forte is strictly not in the direction of DIY, Richard's contributions only add to the mayhem.

Go to KQED.org for additional air times and email reminders, or go to this program's official site.
08:01 PM: Nature
Although green is its emblematic color, Ireland's verdant fields are not the nation's only extraordinary natural feature. Sculpted millions of years ago by the advance and retreat of vast shields of ice, the Emerald Isle harbors a wealth of wildlife among its craggy mountains, fog-shrouded coastlines, steep gorges and vast networks of inland waterways. This program illustrates the modern-day legacy of Ireland's ice-bound past.

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09:00 PM: Mystery!
Miss Marple is faced with her greatest challenge yet when she receives instructions from an old friend, the recently deceased Mr. Rafiel, to investigate a possible crime. But there's a catch - she has not been told what the crime is.

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10:30 PM: ImageMakers
* Snapshots For Henry - Canada
Pent and Angie are party people. Tim and Joanne are a hard-working (= boring) couple with a baby. The only thing these couples share is a duplex. . . until life throws them all a cruel curve. Sex, drugs and rock n' roll are the backdrop to one woman's recollection of her youth and the fateful decision that unexpectedly touches her life again 25 years later. Engaging performances and a refreshingly unapologetic script populate this story of regret and rebellion. Written and directed by Teresa Hannigan. Principal cast: Zoie Palmer, Allan Hawco, Daniel Petronijevic and Molly Jane Atkinson.
* Ten Feet Tall -Australia
Two men, bound together in trying circumstances, must rely on one another to prepare for an uncertain future. The sparse dialogue captures how men attempt to deal with grief and look for ways to start again. Directed by Aaron Wilson and based on the song of the same name by Australian singer/songwriter Pete Murray. Principal cast: Samuel Johnson, Michael Veitch and Georgia Van Cuylenburg.

Go to KQED.org for additional air times and email reminders, or go to this program's official site.
11:00 PM: Supernatural Science
Those who have narrowly escaped death help shed light on the workings of the human brain.

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