Episodes
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How Napster Stirred Up Entertainment
S1 E8 - 10m 6s
Napster, created by an 18-year-old developer, exploded across college campuses across the country in 1999. With a mouse click, music lovers gained free access to their favorite tunes. The record industry took to the courts to shut down the upstart company. But a generation of consumers had tasted instant entertainment on demand, and there was no turning back.
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Correcting the Myth of the Superpredator
S1 E8 - 10m 27s
States are reconsidering life prison sentences of people who were given mandatory life terms as juveniles – a practice since ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. At the time, in the 1990s, a handful of researchers inspired panic with a dire but flawed prediction: the imminent arrival of a new breed of remorseless teen killers, so-called superpredators.
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The Bullying Industry | Andy Borowitz
S1 E8 - 4m 37s
Prominent Americans are eager to declare their opposition to bullying. There’s only one problem, New Yorker magazine humorist Andy Borowitz asserts: we live in an enthusiastically pro-bullying culture. He traces the history of bullying on television and beyond.
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Episode 8
S1 E8 - 53m 22s
Sex ed programs in schools are informed by the past; busting a crime myth; AIDS hot spots; the legacy of napster; Andy Borowitz tackles bullying.
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The Forgotten History of AIDS
S1 E8 - 11m 55s
Rates of H.I.V. infection have fallen in many places, but the AIDS crisis persists in some parts of the country. What can be learned from history – and specifically the story of Ryan White?
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The Controversy Over Teaching Teens About Sex
S1 E8 - 13m 22s
A decades-old battle is re-emerging over how sex is presented in the classroom, as the Trump administration gives support to “sexual risk avoidance” programs that promote abstinence.
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Exploring the Recent History of U.S. Immigration Backlashes
S1 E7 - 9m 54s
Immigration policy has exposed the sharp divisions of the Trump era more clearly than any other issue. The controversies echo an anti-immigration movement 25 years ago in California.
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Lessons From the Space Shuttle Challenger Tragedy
S1 E7 - 18m 31s
Normalization of deviance, the process of becoming inured to risky actions, is a useful concept for today that was developed to explain how the Challenger disaster happened.
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The Truth About the Lawsuit Over Hot McDonald’s Coffee
S1 E7 - 11m 18s
The long-running debate over frivolous lawsuits took shape years ago after McDonald’s coffee spilled into a woman’s lap and she was awarded millions in damages. Her complaint sounded frivolous. But the facts told another story.
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Anita Bryant, Gay Rights Icon | Andy Borowitz
S1 E7 - 3m 58s
New Yorker magazine humorist Andy Borowitz examines how Anita Bryant, ubiquitous in the 1960s and 70s for commercials promoting Florida orange juice, inadvertently energized the gay rights movement.
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Episode 7
S1 E7 - 55m 9s
Immigration controversies echo past anti-immigration backlash. Why a lawsuit over scalding coffee is misunderstood. The origin of Special Ops forces. Risks after Challenger. Andy Borowitz examines Anita Bryant’s unintended influence.
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How the U.S. Came to Rely on Special Ops Forces
S1 E7 - 7m 46s
The rise of special operations units today can be traced to a failed attempt to rescue Americans held hostage in Iran in 1980, and the successful Israeli raid at Uganda’s Entebbe Airport.
Extras + Features
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Working with Lead-Poisoned Children
S1 E5 - 1m 13s
In this scene from Episode 5" June Tourangeau, a licensed practical nurse in Providence, R.I., discusses her work with lead-poisoned children.
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A Promising Method for Suicide Prevention
S1 E5 - 37s
In this clip from Episode 5, the hosts discuss a simple intervention against suicide – messages of compassion and empathy – that showed promise in the 1960s, but has been overlooked.
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Episode 5 Preview
S1 E5 - 30s
Texting could reduce suicides. Surrogate parenthood. Lead is banned but a toxic mess remains. Climate help may come from the Cold War. Long prison sentences based on old fears are being shortened. Andy Borowitz on a river that burst into flames.
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Wild Horses vs Ranchers
S1 E4 - 2m 1s
The wild horses running free in the west today -- and the controversy over what to do with them -- are the result of law that was meant to rescue them.
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Episode 4 Preview
S1 E4 - 30s
President Trump is taking on the press with a time-tested strategy. Explore the origins of the latest measles outbreak, pro sports free agency, and the consequences of a law meant to save wild horses. Andy Borowitz on the no-apology apology.
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The Bystander Effect
S1 E3 - 1m 14s
The death of Kitty Genovese, who was murdered on her way from work in Queens, New York in 1964, while people in nearby apartments were sleeping, became a case study in what became known as the Bystander Effect.
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A Twist to the Kitty Genovese Case
S1 E3 - 1m 2s
In this scene from "Digital Bystander," how the press reported the Genovese story wrongly created a catalyst for the creation of the 911 system, and new calls for bystander assistance laws in the new era of publicly viewed violent videos.
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Episode 3 Preview
S1 E3 - 30s
Why crime witnesses fail to act. A Naval officer who transformed the U.S. military. Psychedelic drugs like LSD are back in the lab. The meandering voyage of a trash barge that persuaded us to recycle. Andy Borowitz highlights lunar hoax theorists.
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Episode 2 Preview
S1 E2 - 30s
Uncover crime evidence pulled from DNA websites. See how drug rules stem from a pill’s side effects. Learn how a screen addiction cure is rooted in the past and why Americans are ambivalent about robots. Andy Borowitz objects to “no news.” Tune in or stream Oct. 8 at 9/8c
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Dungeons and Dragons' Perception Turnaround
S1 E2 - 37s
In a twist, Dungeons and Dragons is now seen as a solution to screen time. Masud Olufani, co-host of Retro Report on PBS, explain why.
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DNA Helping to Close Cold Cases
S1 E2 - 41s
DNA data are helping the police to close cold case files. Celeste Headlee and Masud Olufani, co-hosts of Retro Report on PBS, uncover the story.
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A Decades-Old Case was Recently Solved
S1 E2 - 50s
A decades-old cold case in Allenstown, New Hampshire, was recently solved using DNA data.
Schedule
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