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1 of 6 Contacts: POV Communications: 212-989-7425. Emergency contact: 646-729-4748 Cathy Fisher, [email protected], Jillian Ayala, [email protected] POV online pressroom: www.pbs.org/pov/pressroom New Season of POV Offers Dramatic View of a World in Conflict And Remarkable Stories of Individual Tenacity, Courage and Inventiveness Emmywinning Series Kicks Off 24th Season Tuesday, June 21, 2011 on PBS With “Kings of Pastry,” a Delicious Tour of France’s Top Pastry Competition By Legendary Filmmaking Team of Pennebaker and Hegedus “Better This World” and “If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front” Give Eyeopening, Insider Accounts of IdealistsTurnedLawbreakers and the Agents Who Pursued Them The new season of PBS’ awardwinning documentary series POV (Point of View) kicks off on Tuesday, June 21, 2011 at 10 p.m. (check local listings) with Kings of Pastry, D A Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus’ behindthescenes account of France’s greatest pastry competition, an epic, threeday test of passion, perseverance, artistry and nerves. In advance of the new season, on Tuesday, June 7 at 10 p.m., POV will present a special encore broadcast of the Oscar®nominated film The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers, in honor of the 40th anniversary of the release of the Pentagon Papers, an event that changed the course of the Vietnam War and world history. The 24th season of POV airs on PBS on Tuesdays at 10 p.m. from June 21–Sept. 27, 2011, and will continue with specials in November 2011 and winter/spring 2012. POV is American television’s longest running independent documentary series. It is the winner of a Special Emmy Award for Excellence in Television Documentary Filmmaking, an International Documentary Association Award for Best Continuing Series and NALIP's 2011 Award for Corporate Commitment to Diversity. POV’s new slate of documentaries tells of people as different as cowboys herding sheep into Montana’s rugged mountains for the last time and aspiring teenage NASCAR drivers whirling around tracks at 70 miles per hour before they’re old enough for drivers licenses. In addition, POV and the renowned oral history project StoryCorps will team up for the second year to present everyday people’s intimate conversations in five imaginative and whimsical animated shorts, on television and online. Also included are soldiers at war and at home, in Armadillo and Where Soldiers Come From; political activists who cross the line into lawbreaking and authorities who may be crossing their own lines to catch them, in Better This World and If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front; Chinese workers caught in the largest human migration in history, in Last Train Home; a Colombian teacher whose books travel on hooves through inhospitable jungles, in Biblioburro: The Donkey Library; Finnish men unburdening themselves in a most surprising fashion, in Steam of Life; Russian classmates reflecting on their country’s sweeping transformations on the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Soviet Union, in My Perestroika; and a cunning Cambodian journalist who elicits a startling admission about the 1970s “killing fields” from the highestranking surviving Khmer Rouge leader, in Enemies of the People.

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Page 1: New$Season$of$POVOffers$DramaticViewofaWorldinConflict ... · 1"of"6" Contacts: POV Communications: 212-989-7425. Emergency contact: 646-729-4748 Cathy Fisher, cfisher@pov.org, Jillian

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Contacts: POV Communications: 212-989-7425. Emergency contact: 646-729-4748 Cathy Fisher, [email protected], Jillian Ayala, [email protected] POV online pressroom: www.pbs.org/pov/pressroom

 New  Season  of  POV  Offers  Dramatic  View  of  a  World  in  Conflict    

And  Remarkable  Stories  of  Individual  Tenacity,  Courage  and  Inventiveness      

Emmy-­‐winning  Series  Kicks  Off  24th  Season  Tuesday,  June  21,  2011  on  PBS    With  “Kings  of  Pastry,”  a  Delicious  Tour  of  France’s  Top  Pastry  Competition    

By  Legendary  Filmmaking  Team  of  Pennebaker  and  Hegedus    

“Better  This  World”  and  “If  a  Tree  Falls:  A  Story  of  the  Earth  Liberation  Front”  Give  Eye-­‐opening,  Insider  Accounts  of  Idealists-­‐Turned-­‐Lawbreakers  and  the  Agents  Who  Pursued  Them  

The  new  season  of  PBS’  award-­‐winning  documentary  series  POV  (Point  of  View)  kicks  off  on  Tuesday,  June  21,  2011  at  10  p.m.  (check  local  listings)  with  Kings  of  Pastry,  D  A  Pennebaker  and  Chris  Hegedus’  behind-­‐the-­‐scenes  account  of  France’s  greatest  pastry  competition,  an  epic,  three-­‐day  test  of  passion,  perseverance,  artistry  and  nerves.  In  advance  of  the  new  season,  on  Tuesday,  June  7  at  10  p.m.,  POV  will  present  a  special  encore  broadcast  of  the  Oscar®-­‐nominated  film  The  Most  Dangerous  Man  in  America:  Daniel  Ellsberg  and  the  Pentagon  Papers,  in  honor  of  the  40th  anniversary  of  the  release  of  the  Pentagon  Papers,  an  event  that  changed  the  course  of  the  Vietnam  War  and  world  history.    The  24th  season  of  POV  airs  on  PBS  on  Tuesdays  at  10  p.m.  from  June  21–Sept.  27,  2011,  and  will  continue  with  specials  in  November  2011  and  winter/spring  2012.  POV  is  American  television’s  longest-­‐running  independent  documentary  series.  It  is  the  winner  of  a  Special  Emmy  Award  for  Excellence  in  Television  Documentary  Filmmaking,  an  International  Documentary  Association  Award  for  Best  Continuing  Series  and  NALIP's  2011  Award  for  Corporate  Commitment  to  Diversity.    POV’s  new  slate  of  documentaries  tells  of  people  as  different  as  cowboys  herding  sheep  into  Montana’s  rugged  mountains  for  the  last  time  and  aspiring  teenage  NASCAR  drivers  whirling  around  tracks  at  70  miles  per  hour  before  they’re  old  enough  for  driver’s  licenses.  In  addition,  POV  and  the  renowned  oral-­‐history  project  StoryCorps  will  team  up  for  the  second  year  to  present  everyday  people’s  intimate  conversations  in  five  imaginative  and  whimsical  animated  shorts,  on  television  and  online.    Also  included  are  soldiers  at  war  and  at  home,  in  Armadillo  and  Where  Soldiers  Come  From;  political  activists  who  cross  the  line  into  law-­‐breaking  and  authorities  who  may  be  crossing  their  own  lines  to  catch  them,  in  Better  This  World  and  If  a  Tree  Falls:  A  Story  of  the  Earth  Liberation  Front;  Chinese  workers  caught  in  the  largest  human  migration  in  history,  in  Last  Train  Home;  a  Colombian  teacher  whose  books  travel  on  hooves  through  inhospitable  jungles,  in  Biblioburro:  The  Donkey  Library;  Finnish  men  unburdening  themselves  in  a  most  surprising  fashion,  in  Steam  of  Life;  Russian  classmates  reflecting  on  their  country’s  sweeping  transformations  on  the  20th  anniversary  of  the  fall  of  the  Soviet  Union,  in  My  Perestroika;  and  a  cunning  Cambodian  journalist  who  elicits  a  startling  admission  about  the  1970s  “killing  fields”  from  the  highest-­‐ranking  surviving  Khmer  Rouge  leader,  in  Enemies  of  the  People.  

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 POV  2011  Schedule  (All  programs  air  Tuesdays  at  10  p.m.  Eastern  unless  otherwise  indicated;    check  local  listings):    June  7  –  Encore  Presentation:  The  Most  Dangerous  Man  in  America:  Daniel  Ellsberg  and  the  Pentagon  Papers  by  Judith  Ehrlich  and  Rick  Goldsmith    This  Peabody  Award-­‐winning  film  re-­‐airs  at  a  time  when  people  are  again  debating  issues  of  individual  conscience  and  government  power.  In  1971,  Daniel  Ellsberg,  a  leading  Vietnam  War  strategist,  concluded  that  America’s  role  in  the  war  was  based  on  decades  of  lies.  He  leaked  7,000  pages  of  top-­‐secret  documents  to  The  New  York  Times,  a  daring  act  of  conscience  that  led  to  Watergate,  President  Nixon’s  resignation  and  the  end  of  the  Vietnam  War.  Ellsberg  and  a  who’s  who  of  Vietnam-­‐era  movers  and  shakers  give  a  riveting  account  of  those  events  in  The  Most  Dangerous  Man  in  America.  A  co-­‐production  of  ITVS  in  association  with  American  Documentary  /  POV.  Winner  of  Special  Jury  Award,  2009  International  Documentary  Film  Festival  Amsterdam.  June  21  –  Kings  of  Pastry  by  Chris  Hegedus  and  D  A  Pennebaker  When  Chris  Hegedus  and  D  A  Pennebaker,  award-­‐winning  filmmakers  of  The  War  Room,  Startup.com  and  Don’t  Look  Back,  turn  their  sights  on  the  competition  for  the  Meilleurs  Ouvriers  de  France  awards,  the  country’s  Nobel  Prize  for  pastry,  you’re  in  for  a  treat.  In  Kings  of  Pastry,  16  chefs,  including  Jacquy  Pfeiffer,  co-­‐founder  of  Chicago’s  French  Pastry  School,  whip  up  the  most  gorgeous,  delectable,  gravity-­‐defying  concoctions  and  edge-­‐of-­‐your-­‐seat  drama  as  they  deliver  their  spun-­‐sugar  desserts  to  the  display  table.  The  inevitable  disasters  and  successes  prove  both  poignant  and  hilarious.    June  28  –  My  Perestroika  by  Robin  Hessman    My  Perestroika  is  an  intimate  look  at  the  last  generation  of  Soviet  children.  Five  classmates  go  from  living  sheltered  childhoods  to  experiencing  the  hopes  of  Gorbachev’s  reforms  and  the  confusion  of  the  USSR’s  dissolution  to  searching  for  their  places  in  today’s  Moscow.  With  candor  and  humor,  the  punk  rocker,  single  mother,  entrepreneur  and  married  teachers  paint  a  picture  of  the  challenges,  dreams  and  disappointments  of  those  raised  behind  the  Iron  Curtain.  Through  first-­‐person  testimony,  vérité  footage  and  vintage  home  movies,  this  beautifully  crafted  documentary  reveals  a  Russia  rarely  seen  on  film.    A  co-­‐production  of  Red  Square  Productions/Bungalow  Town  Productions  and  ITVS  International  in  association  with  American  Documentary  /  POV.  An  Official  Selection  of  the  2010  Sundance  Film  Festival.    July  5  –  Sweetgrass  by  Ilisa  Barbash  and  Lucien  Castaing-­‐Taylor  Sweetgrass  presents  a  riveting  and  poetic  portrait  of  the  American  West  just  as  one  of  its  traditional  ways  of  life  dies  out.  Shot  amidst  the  grandeur  of  Montana’s  Absaroka-­‐Beartooth  Wilderness,  the  film  follows  the  last  modern-­‐day  cowboys  to  lead  their  flocks  of  sheep  up  into  the  breathtaking  and  often  dangerous  mountains  for  summer  pasture.  Magnificently  photographed  and  unsparingly  candid,  Sweetgrass  discovers  a  world  of  harsh  beauty  and  arduous  labor,  where  humans  still  work  in  rugged  intimacy  with  nature.  An  Official  Selection  of  the  2010  New  York  Film  Festival.    July  12  –  Enemies  of  the  People  by  Rob  Lemkin  and  Thet  Sambath  The  Khmer  Rouge  slaughtered  nearly  two  million  people  in  the  late  1970s.  Yet  the  “killing  fields”  of  Cambodia  have  remained  largely  unexplained.  Until  now,  in  Enemies  of  the  People.  Enter  Thet  Sambath,  an  unassuming,  yet  cunning,  investigative  journalist  who  lost  his  family  in  the  conflict  and  spends  a  decade  gaining  the  trust  of  the  men  and  women  who  perpetrated  the  massacres.  Sambath  and  co-­‐director  Rob  Lemkin  record  shocking  testimony,  never  before  seen  or  heard,  from  the  foot  soldiers  who  slit  throats  and  from  Pol  Pot’s  right-­‐hand  man,  the  notorious  Brother  Number  Two.  Produced  in  association  with  American  Documentary  /  POV.  A  co-­‐presentation  with  the  Center  for  Asian  American  Media.  Winner  of  World  Cinema  Documentary  Special  Jury  Prize,  2010  Sundance  Film  Festival.    

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July  19  –  Biblioburro:  The  Donkey  Library  by  Carlos  Rendón  Zipagauta  Biblioburro:  The  Donkey  Library  is  the  story  of  a  librarian  —  and  a  library  —  like  no  other.  A  decade  ago,  Colombian  teacher  Luis  Soriano  was  inspired  to  spend  his  weekends  bringing  a  modest  collection  of  precious  books,  via  two  hard-­‐working  donkeys,  to  the  children  of  a  poor  and  violence-­‐ridden  province.  As  Soriano  braves  armed  bands,  drug  traffickers,  snakes  and  heat,  his  library  on  hooves  carries  an  inspirational  message  about  education  and  a  better  future  for  Colombia.  His  efforts  have  attracted  worldwide  attention  —  and  imitators  —  but  his  story  has  never  been  better  told  than  in  this  heartwarming  yet  unsentimental  film.    A  co-­‐presentation  with  Latino  Public  Broadcasting.    July  26  –  Mugabe  and  the  White  African  by  Lucy  Bailey  and  Andrew  Thompson  Mugabe  and  the  White  African,  much  of  which  was  filmed  clandestinely,  tells  an  alarming  story  from  one  of  the  world’s  most  troubled  nations.  In  Zimbabwe,  de  facto  dictator  Robert  Mugabe  has  unleashed  a  “land  reform”  program  aimed  at  driving  whites  from  the  country  through  violence  and  intimidation.  One  proud  “white  African,”  however,  has  challenged  Mugabe  with  human  rights  abuses  under  international  law.  The  courage  Michael  Campbell  and  his  family  display  as  they  defend  their  farm  —  in  court  and  on  the  ground  —  makes  for  a  film  as  inspiring  as  it  is  harrowing.    Aug.  2  –  Steam  of  Life  by  Joonas  Berghäll  and  Mika  Hotakainen  From  a  land  of  long,  dark  winters  comes  Steam  of  Life,  a  moody,  comic  and  moving  study  of  Finnish  men  as  framed  by  the  national  obsession  with  the  sauna.  There,  they  come  together  to  sweat  out  not  only  the  grime  of  contemporary  life,  but  also  their  grief,  hopes,  joys  and  memories.  Beautifully  and  hauntingly  shot,  the  acclaimed  film  provides  a  surprising  glimpse  into  the  lives  of  Finnish  men  and  a  remarkable  depiction  of  the  troubled  and  often  reticent  hearts  of  contemporary  Western  men.  Aug.  9  –  Encore  Presentation:  Food,  Inc.  by  Robert  Kenner How  much  do  we  know  about  the  food  we  buy  at  our  local  supermarkets  and  serve  to  our  families?  Though  our  food  appears  the  same  as  ever  —  a  tomato  still  looks  like  a  tomato  —  it  has  been  radically  transformed.  In  the  Oscar®-­‐nominated  blockbuster  Food,  Inc.,  producer-­‐director  Robert  Kenner  and  investigative  authors  Eric  Schlosser  (Fast  Food  Nation)  and  Michael  Pollan  (The  Omnivore’s  Dilemma)  lift  the  veil  on  the  U.S.  food  industry,  revealing  eye-­‐opening  facts  about  what  we  eat,  how  it’s  produced,  who  we  have  become  as  a  nation  and  where  we  may  go  from  here.    Aug.  16  –  Encore  Presentation:  The  Oath  by  Laura  Poitras  Filmed  in  Yemen  and  Guantanamo  Bay,  Cuba,  The  Oath  interweaves  the  stories  of  Abu  Jandal,  Osama  bin  Laden’s  former  bodyguard,  and  Salim  Hamdan,  a  prisoner  at  Guantanamo  facing  war  crimes  charges.  Directed  by  Laura  Poitras  (Flag  Wars,  POV  2003;  the  Oscar-­‐nominated  My  Country,  My  Country,  POV  2006),  The  Oath  unfolds  in  a  narrative  structure  filled  with  plot  reversals  and  betrayals,  leading  ultimately  to  Osama  bin  Laden,  9/11,  Guantanamo  and  the  U.S.  Supreme  Court.  A  co-­‐production  of  ITVS  in  association  with  American  Documentary  /  POV.  Winner  of  Excellence  in  Cinematography  Award:  Documentary,  2010  Sundance  Film  Festival.      Aug.  23  –  POV  Short  Cuts  A  one-­‐hour  collection  of  documentary  shorts  by  established  and  emerging  filmmakers,  including:    

• Big  Birding  Day  by  David  Wilson    This  short  offers  a  glimpse  into  the  world  of  competitive  birdwatching,  as  three  friends  attempt  to  see  as  many  species  as  possible  in  24  hours.  

 

• Flawed  by  Andrea  Dorfman    Artist/filmmaker  Andrea  Dorfman's  drawings  burst  colorfully  into  life  as  she  animates  the  story  of  her  long-­‐distance  relationship  with  a  man  whose  profession  —  plastic  surgery  —  gives  her  plenty  of  fodder.    

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• Six  Weeks  by  Marcin  Janos  Krawczyk  In  Poland,  a  mother  has  the  right  to  give  her  child  away  —  and  lose  all  parental  rights  —  during  the  first  six  weeks  of  the  newborn’s  life.  This  poignant,  award-­‐winning  film  follows  a  single  mother  who  must  decide  what  is  best  for  her  baby.  

 

• Tiffany  by  Alix  Lambert  In  this  animated  short,  a  woman  tells  of  her  ongoing  struggle  to  hold  on  to  the  most  contested  object  in  her  divorce  —  the  Tiffany  lamp.    

 

• StoryCorps    Following  the  success  of  its  first  season  on  POV  in  2010,  StoryCorps  will  bring  its  Peabody  Award-­‐winning  storytelling  back  for  a  second  season.  Since  2003,  the  acclaimed  nonprofit  organization  StoryCorps,  founded  by  MacArthur  Fellow  Dave  Isay,  has  been  recording  and  preserving  the  voices  of  everyday  people,  one  conversation  at  a  time,  for  public  radio.  POV’s  short  films,  animated  and  directed  by  The  Rauch  Brothers,  use  some  of  StoryCorps  most  popular  recordings.  Funded  by  the  Corporation  for  Public  Broadcasting.  Two  StoryCorps  shorts  will  be  featured  on  Aug.  23;  additional  shorts  airing  during  the  season  will  be  announced:    

• Miss  Devine  –  Cousins  James  Ransom  and  Cherie  Johnson  recall  their  inimitable  Sunday  school  teacher,  Miss  Lizzie  Devine.  This  animated  short,  set  in  the  small  Bradenton,  Fla.  town  of  the  cousins’  memories,  will  have  you  laughing  along  with  James,  Cherie  and  the  fearsome  Miss  Devine.  

 

• No  More  Questions!  –  Strong-­‐willed  grandmother  Kay  Wang  allowed  her  son  and  granddaughter  to  drag  her  into  a  StoryCorps  booth.  Though  Kay  was  reluctant,  she  still  had  stories  to  tell,  from  disobeying  her  mother  and  rebuffing  suitors  while  growing  up  in  China  to  late-­‐life  adventures  as  a  store  detective  for  Bloomingdale’s.  Kay  passed  away  just  weeks  after  that  interview,  and  her  son  and  granddaughter  returned  to  remember  her  gentler  side,  which  she  kept  to  herself.  

 Aug.  30  –  Armadillo  by  Janus  Metz  In  2009,  Janus  Metz  and  cameraman  Lars  Skree  accompanied  a  platoon  of  Danish  soldiers  to  Armadillo,  a  combat  operations  base  in  southern  Afghanistan.  For  six  months,  often  while  under  fire,  they  captured  the  lives  of  the  young  soldiers  fighting  the  Taliban  in  a  hostile  and  confusing  environment,  where  official  rhetoric  about  helping  civilians  too  often  met  the  unforgiving  reality  of  being  a  foreign  occupier.  Winner  of  the  Critics’  Week  Grand  Prix  at  Cannes,  Armadillo  is  one  of  the  most  dramatic  and  candid  accounts  of  combat  to  come  out  of  Afghanistan.    Sept.  6  –  Better  This  World  by  Kelly  Duane  de  la  Vega  and  Katie  Galloway  The  story  of  Bradley  Crowder  and  David  McKay,  who  were  accused  of  intending  to  firebomb  the  2008  Republican  National  Convention,  is  a  dramatic  tale  of  idealism,  loyalty,  crime  and  betrayal.  Better  This  World  follows  the  radicalization  of  these  boyhood  friends  from  Midland,  Texas,  under  the  tutelage  of  revolutionary  activist  Brandon  Darby.  The  results:  eight  homemade  bombs,  multiple  domestic  terrorism  charges  and  a  high-­‐stakes  entrapment  defense  hinging  on  the  actions  of  a  controversial  FBI  informant.  Better  This  World  goes  to  the  heart  of  the  war  on  terror  and  its  impact  on  civil  liberties  and  political  dissent  in  post-­‐9/11  America.  A  co-­‐production  of  ITVS.    Sept.  13  –  If  a  Tree  Falls:  A  Story  of  the  Earth  Liberation  Front  by  Marshall  Curry  If  a  Tree  Falls:  A  Story  of  the  Earth  Liberation  Front  explores  two  of  America’s  most  pressing  issues  —  environmentalism  and  terrorism  —  by  lifting  the  veil  on  a  radical  environmental  group  the  FBI  calls  the  country’s  “number  one  domestic  terrorism  threat.”  Daniel  McGowan,  a  former  member  of  the  Earth  Liberation  Front,  faces  life  in  prison  for  two  multimillion-­‐dollar  arsons  against  Oregon  timber  companies.  

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What  turned  this  working-­‐class  kid  from  Queens  into  an  eco-­‐warrior?  Marshall  Curry  (Oscar®-­‐nominated  Street  Fight,  POV  2005)  provides  a  nuanced  and  provocative  account  that  is  part  coming-­‐of-­‐age  story,  part  cautionary  tale  and  part  cops-­‐and-­‐robbers  thriller.  A  co-­‐production  of  ITVS.  Winner  of  Best  Documentary  Editing  Award,  2011  Sundance  Film  Festival.    Sept.  20  –  The  Learning  by  Ramona  Diaz  One  hundred  years  ago,  American  teachers  established  the  English-­‐speaking  public  school  system  of  the  Philippines.  Now,  in  a  striking  turnabout,  American  schools  are  recruiting  Filipino  teachers.  The  Learning  is  the  story  of  four  Filipino  women  who  reluctantly  leave  their  families  and  schools  to  teach  in  Baltimore.  They  hope  to  use  their  higher  salaries  to  transform  their  families’  impoverished  lives  back  home.  But  the  women  bring  idealistic  visions  of  the  teacher’s  craft  and  of  life  in  America,  which  soon  collide  with  Baltimore’s  tough  realities.  A  co-­‐production  of  CineDiaz  and  ITVS  in  association  with  The  Center  for  Asian  American  Media,  with  funding  provided  by  the  Corporation  for  Public  Broadcasting  and  American  Documentary  /  POV.    Sept.  27  –  Last  Train  Home  by  Lixin  Fan  Every  spring,  China’s  cities  are  plunged  into  chaos  as  130  million  migrant  workers  journey  to  their  home  villages  for  the  New  Year  in  the  world’s  largest  human  migration.  Last  Train  Home  takes  viewers  on  a  heart-­‐stopping  journey  with  the  Zhangs,  a  couple  who  left  infant  children  behind  for  factory  jobs  16  years  ago,  hoping  their  wages  would  lift  their  children  to  a  better  life.  They  return  to  a  family  growing  distant  and  a  daughter  longing  to  leave  school  for  unskilled  work.  As  the  Zhangs  navigate  their  new  world,  this  award-­‐winning  film  paints  a  rich,  human  portrait  of  China’s  rush  to  economic  development.  An  EyeSteelFilm  production  in  association  with  ITVS  International.  A  co-­‐presentation  with  the  Center  for  Asian  American  Media.  An  Official  Selection  of  the  2010  Sundance  Film  Festival.  Winner  of  Best  Feature-­‐Length  Documentary  Award,  2009  International  Documentary  Film  Festival  Amsterdam.  Thursday,  Nov.  10  at  9  p.m.  –  Special  Presentation:    Where  Soldiers  Come  From  by  Heather  Courtney  From  a  snowy,  small  town  in  northern  Michigan  to  the  mountains  of  Afghanistan,  Where  Soldiers  Come  From,  premiering  the  day  before  Veterans  Day,  follows  the  four-­‐year  journey  of  childhood  friends  who  join  the  National  Guard  after  graduating  from  high  school.  As  it  chronicles  the  young  men’s  transformation  from  restless  teenagers  to  soldiers  looking  for  roadside  bombs  to  23-­‐year-­‐old  combat  veterans  trying  to  start  their  lives  again,  the  film  offers  an  intimate  look  at  the  young  people  who  fight  our  wars,  the  families  and  towns  they  come  from  —  and  the  way  one  faraway  conflict  changes  everything.  A  co-­‐production  of  Quincy  Hill  Films  and  ITVS  in  association  with  American  Documentary  /  POV,  with  funds  provided  by  the  Corporation  for  Public  Broadcasting.    Winter/Spring  2012  Special  –  Racing  Dreams  by  Marshall  Curry  Fondly  described  as  “Talladega  Nights  meets  Catcher  in  the  Rye,”  Marshall  Curry’s  Racing  Dreams  chronicles  a  year  in  the  life  of  three  tweens  who  dream  of  becoming  NASCAR  drivers.  Though  they  aren’t  old  enough  for  driver’s  licenses,  Brandon,  Josh  and  Annabeth  race  extreme  go-­‐karts  at  speeds  of  up  to  70  miles  per  hour  in  the  World  Karting  Association’s  national  series,  the  “Little  League”  of  professional  racing.  The  film  is  a  humorous  and  heartbreaking  portrait  of  racing,  young  love  and  family  struggle.  Winner  of  Best  Documentary  Feature  Award,  2009  Tribeca  Film  Festival.    POV  Series  Credits:  Executive  Producer:           Simon  Kilmurry  Co-­‐Executive  Producer:         Cynthia  López  Director  of  Production  and  Programming:     Chris  White  Series  Producer:         Yance  Ford    

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Produced  by  American  Documentary,  Inc.  and  beginning  in  its  24th  season  on  PBS  in  2011,  the  award-­‐winning  POV  series  is  the  longest-­‐running  showcase  on  American  television  to  feature  the  

work  of  today’s  best  independent  documentary  filmmakers.  Airing  June  through  September  with  primetime  specials  during  the  year,  POV  has  brought  more  than  300  acclaimed  documentaries  to  millions  nationwide  and  has  a  Webby  Award-­‐winning  online  series,  POV’s  Borders.  Since  1988,  POV  has  pioneered  the  art  of  presentation  and  outreach  using  independent  nonfiction  media  to  build  new  communities  in  conversation  about  today’s  most  pressing  social  issues.  Visit  www.pbs.org/pov.          POV  Digital  (www.pbs.org/pov)  POV’s  award-­‐winning  website  extends  the  life  of  our  films  online  with  interactive  features,  interviews,  updates,  video  and  educational  content,  as  well  as  listings  for  television  broadcasts,  community  screenings  and  films  available  online.  The  POV  Blog  is  a  gathering  place  for  documentary  fans  and  filmmakers  to  discuss  their  favorite  films  and  get  the  latest  news.      POV  Community  Engagement  and  Education    POV  films  can  be  seen  at  more  than  450  events  across  the  country  every  year.  Together  with  schools,  organizations  and  local  PBS  stations,  POV  facilitates  free  community  screenings  and  produces  free  resources  to  accompany  our  films,  including  discussion  guides  and  curriculum-­‐based  lesson  plans.  With  our  community  partners,  we  inspire  dialogue  around  the  most  important  social  issues  of  our  time.    Major  funding  for  POV  is  provided  by  PBS,  The  John  D.  and  Catherine  T.  MacArthur  Foundation,  National  Endowment  for  the  Arts,  The  Educational  Foundation  of  America,  New  York  State  Council  on  the  Arts,  New  York  City  Department  of  Cultural  Affairs,  FACT  and  public  television  viewers.  Special  support  provided  by  the  Academy  of  Motion  Picture  Arts  and  Sciences.  Funding  for  POV's  Diverse  Voices  Project  is  provided  by  the  Corporation  for  Public  Broadcasting.  Project  VoiceScape  is  a  partnership  of  Adobe  Youth  Voices,  PBS  and  POV.  POV  is  presented  by  a  consortium  of  public  television  stations,  including  WGBH  Boston  and  THIRTEEN  in  association  with  WNET.ORG.      American  Documentary,  Inc.  (www.amdoc.org)  American  Documentary,  Inc.  (AmDoc)  is  a  multimedia  company  dedicated  to  creating,  identifying  and  presenting  contemporary  stories  that  express  opinions  and  perspectives  rarely  featured  in  mainstream  media  outlets.  AmDoc  develops  collaborative  strategic-­‐engagement  activities  around  socially  relevant  content  on  television,  online  and  in  community  settings.  These  activities  are  designed  to  trigger  action,  from  dialogue  and  feedback  to  educational  opportunities  and  community  participation.      

       

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