Josh Edge, Alaska Public Media
Alaska News Nightly: July 6, 2012
State Gets First Federal Waiver For ‘No Child Left Behind’; Researchers Find Surprising Plastic Pollution Levels In Pacific Northwest; Dive Team Recovers Body From Matanuska Lake Canoe Accident, Searching For Second; Search Efforts Intensify For Missing Mt. Marathon Runner; Shell’s Oil Response Barge Awaiting USCG Approval Before Heading North; Greenpeace Campaign Against Arctic Drilling Facing Less Resistance In Unalaska; AK: A Tribute; 300 Villages: Nikolaevsk
Alaska News Nightly: July 5, 2012
Runner Missing After Mt. Marathon Race; Troopers Shoot Man Brandishing Gun In Wasilla; APD Shootings Spark Rally, Community Concern; Alaska Teachers Attend National Education Association Conference; More Fire Crews To Assist With Lower 48 Blazes; Scientists Search For Answers To Low Chinook Runs; Assessment Aims To Document Arctic Biodiversity; Earliest Matanuska Valley Residents Shrouded in Mystery; Alaska Territorial Guard Gains Recognition With Bethel Memorial
Unalaska Kids Reinvent The Lemonade Stand
With many kids spending as much of their summer days online as outside, there’s something a little quaint about the lemonade stand that just popped up in Unalaska. But, the operation can’t be described as old fashioned.
Alaska News Nightly: July 4, 2012
Western Arctic Caribou Herd Continues Declining; Soldotna Hold First Public Hearing On Coastal Zone Management Initiative; Joint Venture Aims To Create Jobs in Kake; Mask Carver Puts an Urban Twist on Alaska Native Tradition; Group Learning Nearly-Traditional Kayak Making Techniques; Woman Using Changing Time To Reinvigorate Seward Journal; Unalaska Kids Reinvent The Lemonade Stand
Alaska News Nightly: July 3, 2012
Whaling Commission Upholds Subsistence Catch Limits; Sen. Begich, Fishermen Discusses Low King Runs; Financial Pressure Mounts For Military Downsizing; Baby Found In Sitka Sink Returns As Adult; Slavic Population Influx Slowing In Delta; Park Service Releases New Denali Road Management Plan; Oyster Farms Flourishing in Southeast; Dismal Runs Close Ship Creek Fishery
Alaska News Nightly: July 2, 2012
Report on Muni Election Debacle Blames Complacency, Inexperience; Alaska Sending Fire Crews To Help Fight Lower 48 Blazes; Japanese Skiff Lost In Tsunami Washes Up Near Metlakatla; IRS Threatens Alaska’s Air Taxi Operators; Yukon River Communities Cope With Low King Runs; Searches Called Off For Hyder, Wrangell Residents; State Revamping Animal Health Care Regulations; 54 Mushers Sign Up On First Day Of Iditarod Registration; Taco Bell Delivers 10,000 Tacos To Bethel
Great Performances at the Met: Faust
Watch GP at the Met: Faust on PBS. See more from Great Performances.
With Jonas Kaufmann in the title role, René Pape as the devil and Marina Poplavskaya as Marguerite, Gounod’s classic retelling of the Faust legend is directed by Tony Award-winner Des McAnuff, who updates the story to the first half of the 20th century in a production that won praise in London. Yannick Nézet-Séguin, on the heels of his Don Carlo success, conducts. TV: Satuday, 6/30 at 7:00pmMariachi High – PBS Arts
In a part of America that rarely makes headlines, there is a small town with a group of teenagers who will inspire, surprise and bring you to your feet with their astonishing musical virtuosity and the music they make. MARIACHI HIGH spends a year in the life of the champion mariachi ensemble of Zapata High School on the Rio Grande in south Texas.
TV: Friday, 6/29 at 9:30pm
Alaska News Nightly: June 28, 2012
Murkowski, Begich Split On Health Care Decision; Gov. Parnell Reacts To Health Care Ruling; Some Alaskans Relieved By Health Care Ruling; Transportation Bill Would Give Alaska Railroad $31 Million; Salazar Signs Off On 5-Year Offshore Oil, Gas Leasing Plan; NOAA Crew Surveys Beaches For Tsunami Debris; Ship Creek Closed To King Fishing; Forest Service, Conservation Groups Bet On River Restoration
POV: Granito: How to Nail a Dictator
In a stunning milestone for justice in Central America, a Guatemalan court recently charged former dictator Efraín Rios Montt with genocide for his brutal war against the country’s Mayan people in the 1980s. Pamela Yates’ 1983 documentary, When the Mountains Tremble, provided key evidence for bringing the indictment. Hear the extraordinary story of how a film, aiding a new generation of human rights activists, became a granito — a tiny grain of sand — that helped tip the scales of justice. By Peter Kinoy, Pamela Yates and Paco de Onís.
TV: Thursday, 6/28 at 9:00pm
Nature: Cloud – Challenge of the Stallions
The continuing saga of Cloud, the wild, white stallion, returns viewers to the Arrowhead Mountains of Montana. Cloud is now a confident band stallion in his prime. As he rules the mountains, gathering mares and expanding his reign, the story turns to his two sons. Bolder is his by birth - beautiful and golden, the success of his father and grandfather flowing in his veins. Flint, sired by another stallion, is the colt Cloud raised. Now, Bolder has gathered some mares of his own, while Flint has joined a group of bachelor stallions, young guns roaming the mountains. Who will rise to challenge the mighty Cloud? Will nature or nurture produce the next great stallion of the Arrowheads?
TV: Wednesday, 6/27 at 7:00pm
Frontline: Dollars and Dentists
Dental care can be a matter of life and death. Yet millions of Americans can’t afford a visit to the dentist. An investigation by FRONTLINE and the Center for Public Integrity reveals the shocking consequences of a broken safety net. Poor children, entitled by law to dental care, often cannot find a dentist willing to see them. Others kids receive excessive care billed to Medicaid or major surgery for preventable tooth infections. For adults with dental disease, the situation can be as dire — and bankrupting. While millions of Americans use emergency rooms for dental care, at a cost of more than half a billion dollars, corporate dental chains are filling the gaps in care, in some cases allegedly overcharging patients or loading them with high credit card debt. Correspondent Miles O’Brien investigates the flaws in our dental system and nascent proposals to fix them.
TV: Tuesday, 6/26 at 9:00pm
Alaska News Nightly: June 25, 2012
Adak To Support Offshore Oil And Gas Development; 17 New Forest Fires Reported Sunday; Crews Work To Quell Allakaket Blaze; USAV Monterrey Towed To Seward; Public Safety No Longer Controls Alcohol; Project Healing Waters, BBNC Sponsor Injured Veteran, Soldier Fishing Excursion; Dunbar Going For Gold In Eugene; Conference Attendees Defend Small Business Administration Program; Communities Celebrate Final Whaling Festivals
Monarchy: The Royal Family At Work – Head of State
For the dramatic ritual that opens Parliament, the queen’s coachmen don full livery, and two of her horse-drawn carriages parade through the streets. One holds the queen — the other carries the crown jewels. “Head of State” leads viewers through the elaborate state opening of Parliament, from the secret removal of the crown jewels from their Tower of London vault to the moment when the House of Commons slams the door in the face of the queen’s representative to the eventual conclusion when the rowdy Commons stand before their queen.
KAKM: Monday, 6/25 at 9:00pm
300 Villages: Venetie
This week, we’re going to Venetie, an Interior community above the Arctic Circle. Eddie Frank is the tribal administrator for Venetie.
Alaska News Nightly: June 22, 2012
State Challenges Federal Voting Rights Requirements; Matanuska River Threatening Waterfront Properties; Susitna Drainage King Fishing Closing Next Week; Officials Monitoring Subsistence Closures; Army Relocating Units To Fort Wainwright; Mayor’s Marathon Taking Place This Weekend; Human Waste Adds Up To Stinky Problem on Denali; AK: A Cold Case; 300 Villages: Venetie
Wages of Spin: Dick Clark
The Wages of Spin chronicles The Philadelphia Music Scene from 1952 thru 1963. The film focuses primarily on Dick Clark, The Genesis of Bandstand, The Congressional Payola Hearings in 1960 and Payola. This is the first honest, comprehensive look at the inner workings of The Music Industry during this time frame.
KAKM: Friday, 6/22 at 9:30pm
Alaska News Nightly: June 21, 2012
Firefighters Respond To Interior Wildfire; Senate Passes Farm Bill With Minor Cuts To Food Stamps; Plankton Bloom Discovery Prompts Scientists To Rethink Arctic Food Web; Officials Issue 33 Citations For Illegal Fishing On Kuskokwim; Yukon To Close To Subsistence King Salmon Fishing; Wrangell Medical Center Board Of Directors Fire Hospital CEO; State Senators Hose Alaska Rocket and Space Summit; Law Will Require Insurers Cover Autism
Alaska News Nightly: June 20, 2012
Subsistence Users Protesting Kuskokwim Closures; Sealife Center Caring For Rescued Beluga Calf; New Cook Inlet Player To Spend $200 Million In AK; Joe Miller Wins Case Against Fairbanks North Star Borough; Former Fairbanks Militiaman Speaks Out Against Verdict; Wrangell Voters Recall Eight From Hospital Board; Anchorage Renovated MLK Memorial; Invasive Species Causing Major Problems; Contractor Demolishes Historic Cabin Near Dalton Highway
Nature: Superfish
They slice through the water’s surface with explosive power — sail, spear and half a ton of muscle flashing in the sun. Their journeys through the open ocean are epic, their life cycle, bizarre. They are the billfish — marlin, sailfish, spearfish and swordfish — largest and most highly prized of all gamefish. Their astonishing story has never been fully told. Emmy Award-winning filmmaker and biologist Rick Rosenthal brings a lifetime of experience with these astonishing sea creatures to the screen as he observes tiny billfish nurseries in the wild, dives deep into secret undersea canyons, films incredible color-changing behavior and embarks on a quest for an elusive thousand-pound “grander.”
KAKM: Wednesday, 6/20 at 7:00pm