NEWS

PBS Primetime Programming for The Week of March 16

Written by Josh Lasser
Published March 14, 2008
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8:30 - 9:00PM

NOW on PBS #412. It’s the Emmy award-winning weekly newsmagazine. It looks at issues facing our democracy. The show is hosted by David Brancaccio. And, even better, they still send me e-mails (I think that makes me cool and them nice). Thanks, Now, you guys are awesome!

9:00 - 10:00PM

Bill Moyers Journal #1150. It’s Bill Moyers. It’s his 1,150th journal (not really, but I’m not going to explain to you the way in which TV shows are numbered at this point in time, maybe later if you’re nice). He’s a good journalist so I assume this will be good journalism (at least the odds are it will).

10:00PM - 11:00PM

Journey to Planet Earth - “The State of the Ocean’s Animals”. Jason Bourne is back! This is Matt Damon’s fourth season hosting the show. Can you believe it? Jason Bourne caring about the environment. Humph, this is man who doesn’t care at all for human life, heck, he can’t even remember his own.

 

Saturday, March 22:

9:00 – 10:00PM

Austin City Limits – “Allison Krauss + Union Station/Kathleen Edwards”. Really? They're adding Allison Krauss and Union Station/Kathleen Edwards. I wonder what happens when you try to do that math. Let's see, Krauss, Station, and Edwards… nope, I have no idea what that would make.

 

Okay, quite honestly, I can take more than a Quantum of Solace from the fact that it's been a good year so far. Far more than a Quantum of Solace from it. Plus, let's not forget the most important thing we can possibly talk about – the new James Bond movie is due out in just a few short months. Who can wait? I can't wait. I can't, I can't, I can't.

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Josh Lasser, formerly known as "TV and Film Guy," and complete with a Masters Degree in Critical Studies in said areas, gives his opinions on TV, Film, and Entertainment in general. All of which he does in a shameless attempt to try to get paid to do the exact same thing. Josh is also the editor of the Blogcritics Magazine Television Section.
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PBS Primetime Programming for The Week of March 16
Published: March 14, 2008
Type: News
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: News, Video: Television
Part of a feature: PBS in Primetime
Writer: Josh Lasser
Josh Lasser's BC Writer page
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Comments

#1 — March 16, 2008 @ 22:21PM — Alice Jester

Thanks! I actually have been turning to the PBS over the last month since network TV has been so droll, so I love this summary. I keep forgetting what night Antiques Roadshow is on. I'm thrilled to see someone acknowledging PBS programming.

Austin City Limits has been on my TIVO for two years now and that Allison Krause and Union Station one is a repeat. It's pretty good, but you're right, Kathleen Edwards seemed out of place. They should have given Union Station the whole hour. I've been dying for some new shows. They haven't aired a new one since that fantastic Crowded House hour in January. It's still by far the best music show on TV.

#2 — March 17, 2008 @ 15:36PM — bliffle

Commercial TV has been unwatcheable for several years, and PBS has become the only source of decent, adult TV. Commercial TV now inserts as much as 25 minutes of ads into every hour of elapsed time. That's why some of your familiar favorites have become even more thin and uninteresting: 5 minutes more of plot had to be excised to allow for the ads.

But alas! Now PBS management is determined to make PBS compete with the commercial networks. This is a very stupid move. What's the point? To trick people into watching watered down program content augmented with sugar and made simple-minded? To increase PBS budgets so that the execs get bigger pay?

Now PBS is getting worse with it's ads and programming pabulum. The commercial pitches are as annoying as on the commercial nets. The "Pledge Drives" are much more frequent and are parodies of the annual auctions and pledge drives that used to drive the budget of the stations.

One of the few refuges is PBS KIDS which consistently turns out programs that adults should watch in hopes of becoming as smart as a 5th grader.

Soon, the discriminating viewer will be forced to either abandon TV altogether and/or convert to Pure Pirate Programming by harvesting their own materials from the wealth of good stuff that's available somewhere, if you know how and where to look.

Of course, one of the consequences of the iron grip of the network corporate monopolies on broadcasting is that it's impossible for a small individual or group to broadcast their own community TV. In spite of the fact that the cost of TV broadcasting has dropped to very little, and the conversion of huge amounts of analog TV to digital has freed up enough spectrum to accomodate almost everyone who would want to broadcast a non-commercial signal.

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