Frontline - PBS

Eddie Haskell

Matt 02-12-11
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I was wondering what the right wing members of this forum think of this program. I believe its been on the air for about 20 years and personally think it is the best show on television and one of the very few worth watching.

Would you put it in the catagory of biased journalism? Good and valid information? How do you rate it as a source of information or propoganda?

Ed
 

gardenweasel

el guapo
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Jan 10, 2002
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is this a mental health holiday?...cause, if i get involved in this thread i have a feeling my mental health will take a holiday, rather than me taking a holiday for my mental health......

:00x12
 

Spytheweb

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Frontline is a nice program. It gives you facts, and if you disagree with them, you can do your own fact checking.
 

gardenweasel

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Frontline is a nice program. It gives you facts, and if you disagree with them, you can do your own fact checking.

so does bock obama...i wasn`t even aware that there were 57 states.......

/sorry,i forgot you don`t tug on messiah-superman`s cape....:grins:
 

JCDunkDogs

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Such a good show. So many good stories. Here are a few of my faves as described at the PBS Frontline webpage...

Growing Up On Line
MySpace. YouTube. Facebook. Friendster. Nearly every teen in America is on the Internet every day, socializing with friends and strangers alike, "trying on" identities, and building a virtual profile of themselves -- one that many kids insist is a more honest depiction of who they really are than the person they portray at home or in school. In "Growing Up Online," FRONTLINE peers inside the world of this cyber-savvy generation through the eyes of teens and their parents, who often find themselves on opposite sides of a new digital divide. A generation with a radically different notion of privacy and personal space, today's adolescents are grappling with issues their parents never had to deal with: from cyber bullying to instant "Internet fame," to the specter of online sexual predators. FRONTLINE producer Rachel Dretzin investigates the risks, realities, and misconceptions of teenage self-expression on the World Wide Web.

Spying On the Home Front
FRONTLINE addresses an issue of major consequence for all Americans: Is the Bush administration's domestic war on terrorism jeopardizing our civil liberties? Reporter Hedrick Smith presents new material on how the National Security Agency's domestic surveillance program works and examines clashing viewpoints on whether the president has violated the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) and infringed on constitutional protections. In another dramatic story, the program shows how the FBI vacuumed up records on 250,000 ordinary Americans who chose Las Vegas as the destination for their Christmas-New Year's holiday, and the subsequent revelation that the FBI has misused National Security Letters to gather information. Probing such projects as Total Information Awareness, and its little known successors, Smith discloses that even former government intelligence officials now worry that the combination of new security threats, advances in communications technologies, and radical interpretations of presidential authority may be threatening the privacy of Americans.

News War
In a four-hour special, News War, FRONTLINE examines the political, cultural, legal, and economic forces challenging the news media today and how the press has reacted in turn. Through interviews with key figures in print, broadcast and electronic media over the past four decades -- and with unequaled, behind-the-scenes access to some of today's most important news organizations, FRONTLINE traces the recent history of American journalism, from the Nixon administration's attacks on the media to the post-Watergate popularity of the press, to the new challenges presented by the war on terror and other global forces now changing -- and challenging -- the role of the press in our society.
 
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