Frontline
The Soldier's Heart
Tuesday, May 22, at 10 pm on VPT
Wednesday, May 23, at 1 am on VPT
Wednesday, May 23, at 10 am on World
Episodes & Air Times
Wednesday, May 23, at 1 am on VPT
Wednesday, May 23, at 10 am on World
The demand for better and faster cell phone service comes with a hidden cost. This joint investigation by FRONTLINE and ProPublica has found that the independent contractors who are building and servicing America's cellular infrastructure are 10 times more likely than an average construction worker to die on the job. Complex layers of subcontracting insulate the carriers against liability, despite the fact that they set the aggressive schedule that can force subcontractors to cut corners in order to meet deadlines. Also this hour: FRONTLINE profiles the case of six-month-old Isis Vas, whose death was deemed "a clear-cut and classic" case of child abuse, sending a man named Ernie Lopez to prison for 60 years. But a Texas judge has moved to overturn Lopez's conviction and new questions are being asked about the quality of expert testimony in this and many other similar cases. In this joint report with ProPublica and NPR, FRONTLINE correspondent A.C. Thompson unearths more than 20 child death cases in which people were jailed on medical evidence -- involving abuse, assault and "shaken baby syndrome" -- that was later found unreliable or flat-out wrong.
Watch Now
The Real CSI
The Interrupters (Graphic Language)
The Interrupters
Opium Brides
A Perfect Terrorist
Syria Undercover
Lost in Detention
The Anthrax Files
Nuclear Aftershocks
The Interrogator
The Man Behind the Mosque
Top Secret America
The Pot Republic
The Child Cases
WikiSecrets
Kill/Capture
Fighting for Bin Laden
The Silence
Football High
Money and March Madness
Revolution in Cairo
Post Mortem
Are We Safer?
Battle for Haiti
Series Website
Watch Now
Cell Tower Deaths
Wednesday, May 23, 2012 at 10:00am on World
Tuesday, May 22, 2012 at 10:00pm on VPT
Wednesday, May 23, 2012 at 1:00am on VPT
Wednesday, May 23, 2012 at 10:00am on World
Wednesday, May 23, 2012 at 4:00pm on World
Wednesday, May 23, 2012 at 6:00pm on World
Wednesday, May 23, 2012 at 9:00pm on World
Thursday, May 24, 2012 at 2:00am on World
Sunday, May 27, 2012 at 3:00am on VPT
Tuesday, May 29, 2012 at 10:00pm on VPT
Wednesday, May 30, 2012 at 1:00am on VPT
Wednesday, May 30, 2012 at 10:00am on World
Wednesday, May 30, 2012 at 4:00pm on World
Wednesday, May 30, 2012 at 6:00pm on World
Wednesday, May 30, 2012 at 9:00pm on World
Thursday, May 31, 2012 at 2:00am on World
Sunday, June 3, 2012 at 7:00am on World
Sunday, June 3, 2012 at 8:00am on World
Sunday, June 3, 2012 at 1:00pm on World
Sunday, June 3, 2012 at 2:00pm on World
Sunday, June 3, 2012 at 8:00pm on World
Sunday, June 3, 2012 at 9:00pm on World
Monday, June 4, 2012 at 12:00am on World
Monday, June 4, 2012 at 1:00am on World
Monday, June 4, 2012 at 6:00am on World
Tuesday, June 12, 2012 at 10:00pm on VPT
Wednesday, June 13, 2012 at 10:00am on World
Wednesday, June 13, 2012 at 4:00pm on World
Wednesday, June 13, 2012 at 6:00pm on World
Wednesday, June 13, 2012 at 9:00pm on World
Thursday, June 14, 2012 at 2:00am on World
Tuesday, June 19, 2012 at 10:00pm on VPT
Wednesday, June 20, 2012 at 10:00am on World
Wednesday, June 20, 2012 at 4:00pm on World
Wednesday, June 20, 2012 at 6:00pm on World
Wednesday, June 20, 2012 at 9:00pm on World
Thursday, June 21, 2012 at 2:00am on World
Tuesday, June 26, 2012 at 10:00pm on VPT
Wednesday, June 27, 2012 at 10:00am on World
Wednesday, June 27, 2012 at 4:00pm on World
Wednesday, June 27, 2012 at 6:00pm on World
Wednesday, June 27, 2012 at 9:00pm on World
Thursday, June 28, 2012 at 2:00am on World
Fast Times At West Philly High
(#3015)
Students and teachers from West Philadelphia High School, a public high school serving one of the most disadvantaged neighborhoods in Philadelphia, defy expectations as they design and build two super-hybrid cars for international competition and compete for the chance to be part of a technological revolution. In summer 2010, the high school's EVX Team raced against mega-sized auto manufacturers, multimillion-dollar start-ups and university teams from around the world in the Progressive Insurance Automotive X PRIZE competition. The challenge: build an affordable, 100 miles-per-gallon car. The prize: $10 million dollars. FRONTLINE explores the viability of these cars, the potential that exists within our young people and the prospects of effective innovation in public education. Also in this hour, a growing body of evidence suggests that the make-or-break moment for high school dropouts may actually be in middle school. And yet middle schools, with their vulnerable population, have long been overlooked. Now a group of dedicated educators are thrusting middle schools onto center stage. They want to use data to find the answer to the middle school malaise. What's more, they insist this data already exists, has enormous power to help repair a broken school system and to predict and prevent dropouts before they happen.
Students and teachers from West Philadelphia High School, a public high school serving one of the most disadvantaged neighborhoods in Philadelphia, defy expectations as they design and build two super-hybrid cars for international competition and compete for the chance to be part of a technological revolution. In summer 2010, the high school's EVX Team raced against mega-sized auto manufacturers, multimillion-dollar start-ups and university teams from around the world in the Progressive Insurance Automotive X PRIZE competition. The challenge: build an affordable, 100 miles-per-gallon car. The prize: $10 million dollars. FRONTLINE explores the viability of these cars, the potential that exists within our young people and the prospects of effective innovation in public education. Also in this hour, a growing body of evidence suggests that the make-or-break moment for high school dropouts may actually be in middle school. And yet middle schools, with their vulnerable population, have long been overlooked. Now a group of dedicated educators are thrusting middle schools onto center stage. They want to use data to find the answer to the middle school malaise. What's more, they insist this data already exists, has enormous power to help repair a broken school system and to predict and prevent dropouts before they happen.
Money, Power And Wall Street, Hour 3 & 4
(#3013)
In a special four-hour investigation, FRONTLINE tells the inside story of the origins of the financial meltdown and the battle to save the global economy. Over two consecutive weeks, the films explore key decisions, missed opportunities and the unprecedented moves by the government and banking leaders that have affected the fortunes of millions of people. The second night of FRONTLINE's special four-hour series on the global economic crisis opens with Barack Obama taking office in the midst of the worst economic crisis in 80 years. To the surprise of many, he adopts a strategy to help the very Wall Street firms that plunged the American economy into chaos. FRONTLINE goes inside the White House to meet the key figures locked in a fierce debate over the administration's game plan and follows those who said they had no choice but to rescue Wall Street. Did they choose the right course? In Hour 4, FRONTLINE probes into a Wall Street culture that remains focused on making risky trades. Bankers left an ugly trail of deals extending from small American cities to European capitals. For more than three years, regulators have tried to fix an industry steeped in conflicts of interest, excessive risk taking and incentives to cheat. New rules and regulations are being written, but can they fend off the next crisis?
In a special four-hour investigation, FRONTLINE tells the inside story of the origins of the financial meltdown and the battle to save the global economy. Over two consecutive weeks, the films explore key decisions, missed opportunities and the unprecedented moves by the government and banking leaders that have affected the fortunes of millions of people. The second night of FRONTLINE's special four-hour series on the global economic crisis opens with Barack Obama taking office in the midst of the worst economic crisis in 80 years. To the surprise of many, he adopts a strategy to help the very Wall Street firms that plunged the American economy into chaos. FRONTLINE goes inside the White House to meet the key figures locked in a fierce debate over the administration's game plan and follows those who said they had no choice but to rescue Wall Street. Did they choose the right course? In Hour 4, FRONTLINE probes into a Wall Street culture that remains focused on making risky trades. Bankers left an ugly trail of deals extending from small American cities to European capitals. For more than three years, regulators have tried to fix an industry steeped in conflicts of interest, excessive risk taking and incentives to cheat. New rules and regulations are being written, but can they fend off the next crisis?
Money, Power And Wall Street
(#3011)
FRONTLINE investigates how two U.S. administrations have confronted the crisis - while dealing with sharp internal divisions and a relationship with Wall Street marked by mistrust and dependence, mutual interests and competing goals. The investigation charts the largest government bailout in U.S. history, a series of decisions that rewrote the rules of government and fueled a debate that would alter the country's political landscape. Focusing on the Obama administration, FRONTLINE tells the story of a newly elected president with a mandate for change grappling with the multi-headed menace of economic instability, and with fundamental choices about winners and losers and the direction of his presidency.
FRONTLINE investigates how two U.S. administrations have confronted the crisis - while dealing with sharp internal divisions and a relationship with Wall Street marked by mistrust and dependence, mutual interests and competing goals. The investigation charts the largest government bailout in U.S. history, a series of decisions that rewrote the rules of government and fueled a debate that would alter the country's political landscape. Focusing on the Obama administration, FRONTLINE tells the story of a newly elected president with a mandate for change grappling with the multi-headed menace of economic instability, and with fundamental choices about winners and losers and the direction of his presidency.
The Real CSI
(#3010)
From the courtroom to the living room (thanks to the hit television series CSI), forensic science is king. Expertise on fingerprints, ballistics and bite mark analysis is routinely called on to solve the most difficult criminal cases - and to put the guilty behind bars. But how reliable is the science behind forensics? A FRONTLINE investigation finds serious flaws in some of the best-known tools of forensic science and wide inconsistencies in how forensic evidence is presented in the courtroom. From the sensational murder trial of Casey Anthony and the FBI's botched investigation of the Madrid terrorist bombing to capital cases in rural Mississippi, FRONTLINE documents how a field with few uniform standards and unproven science can undermine the search for justice. As part of the investigative series Post Mortem, Correspondent Lowell Bergman reports in a joint investigation with ProPublica and the Investigative Reporting Program at UCBerkeley.
From the courtroom to the living room (thanks to the hit television series CSI), forensic science is king. Expertise on fingerprints, ballistics and bite mark analysis is routinely called on to solve the most difficult criminal cases - and to put the guilty behind bars. But how reliable is the science behind forensics? A FRONTLINE investigation finds serious flaws in some of the best-known tools of forensic science and wide inconsistencies in how forensic evidence is presented in the courtroom. From the sensational murder trial of Casey Anthony and the FBI's botched investigation of the Madrid terrorist bombing to capital cases in rural Mississippi, FRONTLINE documents how a field with few uniform standards and unproven science can undermine the search for justice. As part of the investigative series Post Mortem, Correspondent Lowell Bergman reports in a joint investigation with ProPublica and the Investigative Reporting Program at UCBerkeley.
Murdoch's Scandal
(#3009)
Over half a century Rupert Murdoch's business audacity and political shrewdness built one of the world's most powerful media empires. Now his dynasty is under threat -- not from outside competition but from shocking accounts of bribery, blackmail and invasion of privacy. The scandal has prompted criminal investigations on both sides of the Atlantic. It has also cracked open the insular world of the Murdoch family, its news executives, and the political elite who court their favor. Today, the 80-year-old owner of the Wall Street Journal and FOX News Channel is in the fight of his life. In a joint production with the CBC, FRONTLINE correspondent Lowell Bergman tells the story of the battle over the future of News Corporation, Rupert Murdoch's reputation and his family's fortunes.
Over half a century Rupert Murdoch's business audacity and political shrewdness built one of the world's most powerful media empires. Now his dynasty is under threat -- not from outside competition but from shocking accounts of bribery, blackmail and invasion of privacy. The scandal has prompted criminal investigations on both sides of the Atlantic. It has also cracked open the insular world of the Murdoch family, its news executives, and the political elite who court their favor. Today, the 80-year-old owner of the Wall Street Journal and FOX News Channel is in the fight of his life. In a joint production with the CBC, FRONTLINE correspondent Lowell Bergman tells the story of the battle over the future of News Corporation, Rupert Murdoch's reputation and his family's fortunes.
Inside Japan's Nuclear Meltdown
(#3008)
FRONTLINE continues its investigation of nuclear safety with an unprecedented account of the crisis inside the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex after a devastating earthquake and tsunami struck Japan on March 11, 2011. With exclusive eyewitness testimony from key figures in the drama -- including the Japanese Prime Minister and senior executives at the power company Tepco -- FRONTLINE tells the story of the workers struggling frantically to reconnect power inside the plant's pitch-dark and highly radioactive reactor buildings; the nuclear experts and officials in the Prime Minister's office fighting to get information as the crisis spiraled out of control; and the plant manager who disobeyed his executives' orders when he thought it would save the lives of his workers. The story profiles the Japanese soldiers and firefighters drafted to cool the reactors, who were wounded when the reactor housings exploded; and the families living near the nuclear plant, who unknowingly fled in the same direction as the radioactive plume, exposing themselves to dangerously high radiation levels.
FRONTLINE continues its investigation of nuclear safety with an unprecedented account of the crisis inside the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex after a devastating earthquake and tsunami struck Japan on March 11, 2011. With exclusive eyewitness testimony from key figures in the drama -- including the Japanese Prime Minister and senior executives at the power company Tepco -- FRONTLINE tells the story of the workers struggling frantically to reconnect power inside the plant's pitch-dark and highly radioactive reactor buildings; the nuclear experts and officials in the Prime Minister's office fighting to get information as the crisis spiraled out of control; and the plant manager who disobeyed his executives' orders when he thought it would save the lives of his workers. The story profiles the Japanese soldiers and firefighters drafted to cool the reactors, who were wounded when the reactor housings exploded; and the families living near the nuclear plant, who unknowingly fled in the same direction as the radioactive plume, exposing themselves to dangerously high radiation levels.
Cell Tower Deaths
(#3007)
The demand for better and faster cell phone service comes with a hidden cost. This joint investigation by FRONTLINE and ProPublica has found that the independent contractors who are building and servicing America's cellular infrastructure are 10 times more likely than an average construction worker to die on the job. Complex layers of subcontracting insulate the carriers against liability, despite the fact that they set the aggressive schedule that can force subcontractors to cut corners in order to meet deadlines. Also this hour: FRONTLINE profiles the case of six-month-old Isis Vas, whose death was deemed "a clear-cut and classic" case of child abuse, sending a man named Ernie Lopez to prison for 60 years. But a Texas judge has moved to overturn Lopez's conviction and new questions are being asked about the quality of expert testimony in this and many other similar cases. In this joint report with ProPublica and NPR, FRONTLINE correspondent A.C. Thompson unearths more than 20 child death cases in which people were jailed on medical evidence -- involving abuse, assault and "shaken baby syndrome" -- that was later found unreliable or flat-out wrong.
The demand for better and faster cell phone service comes with a hidden cost. This joint investigation by FRONTLINE and ProPublica has found that the independent contractors who are building and servicing America's cellular infrastructure are 10 times more likely than an average construction worker to die on the job. Complex layers of subcontracting insulate the carriers against liability, despite the fact that they set the aggressive schedule that can force subcontractors to cut corners in order to meet deadlines. Also this hour: FRONTLINE profiles the case of six-month-old Isis Vas, whose death was deemed "a clear-cut and classic" case of child abuse, sending a man named Ernie Lopez to prison for 60 years. But a Texas judge has moved to overturn Lopez's conviction and new questions are being asked about the quality of expert testimony in this and many other similar cases. In this joint report with ProPublica and NPR, FRONTLINE correspondent A.C. Thompson unearths more than 20 child death cases in which people were jailed on medical evidence -- involving abuse, assault and "shaken baby syndrome" -- that was later found unreliable or flat-out wrong.
The Interrupters
(#3006)
The Interrupters presents profiles in courage, as three former street criminals in Chicago place themselves in the line of fire to protect their communities. The film follows the lives of these "Violence Interrupters," who include the charismatic daughter of one of the city's most notorious former gang leaders, the son of a murdered father, and a man haunted by a killing he committed as a teenager. As they intervene in disputes to prevent violence, they reveal their own inspired journeys of struggle and redemption. From director Steve James (Hoop Dreams) and bestselling author Alex Kotlowitz (There Are No Children Here), "The Interrupters" chronicles an intimate, year-long journey across the stubbornly violent landscape of our cities through the eyes of those fighting to sow peace and security.
The Interrupters presents profiles in courage, as three former street criminals in Chicago place themselves in the line of fire to protect their communities. The film follows the lives of these "Violence Interrupters," who include the charismatic daughter of one of the city's most notorious former gang leaders, the son of a murdered father, and a man haunted by a killing he committed as a teenager. As they intervene in disputes to prevent violence, they reveal their own inspired journeys of struggle and redemption. From director Steve James (Hoop Dreams) and bestselling author Alex Kotlowitz (There Are No Children Here), "The Interrupters" chronicles an intimate, year-long journey across the stubbornly violent landscape of our cities through the eyes of those fighting to sow peace and security.
Opium Brides
(#3005)
Unexpected victims have been caught in the crossfire of attempts to eradicate Afghanistan's flourishing drug trade: young farm girls. Afghanistan produces more than 90 percent of the world's illicit opium. Opium farmers have long borrowed money from drug gangs, some with links to the Taliban, to subsidize their crops. Now, as the Afghan government destroys their livelihood in an eradication program, the farmers find themselves in a horrifying situation: repay their debts or give their daughters to drug-traffickers, often to be used for sex. Award-winning Afghan journalist Najibullah Quraishi reports on the harrowing story of families torn apart and the collateral damage of the counter-narcotics effort in Afghanistan. Also this hour, a timely encore broadcast: FRONTLINE crosses the border into Pakistan, where correspondents Stephen Grey and Martin Smith go inside "The Secret War" against the militants. They uncover evidence of covert support for elements of the Taliban by the Pakistani military and its intelligence service, the ISI. At a safe house not far from where Osama bin Laden was killed, they make contact with one mid-level Taliban commander who tells FRONTLINE, "If they really wanted to, [the Pakistanis] could arrest us all in an hour."
Unexpected victims have been caught in the crossfire of attempts to eradicate Afghanistan's flourishing drug trade: young farm girls. Afghanistan produces more than 90 percent of the world's illicit opium. Opium farmers have long borrowed money from drug gangs, some with links to the Taliban, to subsidize their crops. Now, as the Afghan government destroys their livelihood in an eradication program, the farmers find themselves in a horrifying situation: repay their debts or give their daughters to drug-traffickers, often to be used for sex. Award-winning Afghan journalist Najibullah Quraishi reports on the harrowing story of families torn apart and the collateral damage of the counter-narcotics effort in Afghanistan. Also this hour, a timely encore broadcast: FRONTLINE crosses the border into Pakistan, where correspondents Stephen Grey and Martin Smith go inside "The Secret War" against the militants. They uncover evidence of covert support for elements of the Taliban by the Pakistani military and its intelligence service, the ISI. At a safe house not far from where Osama bin Laden was killed, they make contact with one mid-level Taliban commander who tells FRONTLINE, "If they really wanted to, [the Pakistanis] could arrest us all in an hour."
A Perfect Terrorist
(#3004)
It has been called the most spectacular terror attack since 9/11. On the night of November 26, 2008, 10 men armed with guns and grenades launched an assault on Mumbai with a military precision that left 166 dead. India quickly learned the attackers belonged to Lashkar-e-Taiba, a Pakistani militant group associated with Pakistan's secretive intelligence agency, the ISI. But what wasn't known then was that a Lashkar/ISI operative had been casing the city for two years, developing a blueprint for terror. His name was David Coleman Headley, and he'd been chosen for the job because he had the perfect cover: he was an American citizen. FRONTLINE and ProPublica reporter Sebastian Rotella team up to investigate the mysterious circumstances behind Headley's rise from heroin dealer and U.S. government informant to master plotter of the 2008 attack on Mumbai.
It has been called the most spectacular terror attack since 9/11. On the night of November 26, 2008, 10 men armed with guns and grenades launched an assault on Mumbai with a military precision that left 166 dead. India quickly learned the attackers belonged to Lashkar-e-Taiba, a Pakistani militant group associated with Pakistan's secretive intelligence agency, the ISI. But what wasn't known then was that a Lashkar/ISI operative had been casing the city for two years, developing a blueprint for terror. His name was David Coleman Headley, and he'd been chosen for the job because he had the perfect cover: he was an American citizen. FRONTLINE and ProPublica reporter Sebastian Rotella team up to investigate the mysterious circumstances behind Headley's rise from heroin dealer and U.S. government informant to master plotter of the 2008 attack on Mumbai.
Syria Undercover
(#3003)
As the death toll in Syria nears 3,000, the revolution rages on well after the fall of dictators in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya. While grainy cell phone videos of violent attacks on protesters are making it out, foreign journalists are seldom making it in. In this newsmagazine report, FRONTLINE offers a rare look from inside, as we travel with undercover reporter Ramita Navai into some of the most dangerous parts of Syria to meet members of the opposition movement forced into hiding. As the town of Madaya is besieged by the army, the security forces and the militia, Navai experiences first-hand life as a fugitive when she is trapped in a safe house with three opposition coordinators on the government's most wanted list. Also this hour: a look at the dictator who has managed to hold on longer than any amidst the Arab unrest -President Bashar al-Assad.
As the death toll in Syria nears 3,000, the revolution rages on well after the fall of dictators in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya. While grainy cell phone videos of violent attacks on protesters are making it out, foreign journalists are seldom making it in. In this newsmagazine report, FRONTLINE offers a rare look from inside, as we travel with undercover reporter Ramita Navai into some of the most dangerous parts of Syria to meet members of the opposition movement forced into hiding. As the town of Madaya is besieged by the army, the security forces and the militia, Navai experiences first-hand life as a fugitive when she is trapped in a safe house with three opposition coordinators on the government's most wanted list. Also this hour: a look at the dictator who has managed to hold on longer than any amidst the Arab unrest -President Bashar al-Assad.
Lost In Detention
(#3002)
More than one million immigrants have been deported since President Obama took office. Under his administration deportations and detentions have reached record levels. The get-tough policy has brought complaints of abuse and harsh treatment, including charges that families have been unfairly separated after being caught in the nationwide dragnet. The administration has promised to make the detention system more humane and more selectively target the most serious criminals. But it faces Republican critics urging stricter measures -- and a growing backlash among Latino voters, a key 2012 electoral force. In a co-production with the Investigative Reporting Workshop, correspondent Maria Hinojosa investigates Obama's enforcement strategies and journeys into the secretive world of immigrant detention, with a look at who is being detained and what is happening to them.
More than one million immigrants have been deported since President Obama took office. Under his administration deportations and detentions have reached record levels. The get-tough policy has brought complaints of abuse and harsh treatment, including charges that families have been unfairly separated after being caught in the nationwide dragnet. The administration has promised to make the detention system more humane and more selectively target the most serious criminals. But it faces Republican critics urging stricter measures -- and a growing backlash among Latino voters, a key 2012 electoral force. In a co-production with the Investigative Reporting Workshop, correspondent Maria Hinojosa investigates Obama's enforcement strategies and journeys into the secretive world of immigrant detention, with a look at who is being detained and what is happening to them.
The Anthrax Files
(#3001)
In the fall of 2001 envelopes carrying deadly Anthrax were delivered to U.S. Senate offices, network news divisions and a tabloid newspaper. Five people were killed, many more infected and the nation was terrorized. Seven years later, after mistakenly pursuing one suspect, the most expensive and complex investigation ever undertaken by the FBI ended when they identified Army scientist Dr. Bruce Ivins as the sole perpetrator of the attacks -- after Ivins had taken his own life. Now, new questions are being raised about the FBI's investigative methods and whether Ivins really did it. FRONTLINE, in a co-production with ProPublica and McClatchy Newspapers, takes a hard look at the FBI's investigation of the country's most notorious act of bioterrorism.
In the fall of 2001 envelopes carrying deadly Anthrax were delivered to U.S. Senate offices, network news divisions and a tabloid newspaper. Five people were killed, many more infected and the nation was terrorized. Seven years later, after mistakenly pursuing one suspect, the most expensive and complex investigation ever undertaken by the FBI ended when they identified Army scientist Dr. Bruce Ivins as the sole perpetrator of the attacks -- after Ivins had taken his own life. Now, new questions are being raised about the FBI's investigative methods and whether Ivins really did it. FRONTLINE, in a co-production with ProPublica and McClatchy Newspapers, takes a hard look at the FBI's investigation of the country's most notorious act of bioterrorism.
Nuclear Aftershocks
(#2921)
In March 2011 a devastating earthquake and tsunami crippled Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear complex, leaving the country's once popular energy program in shambles. In response, Germany decided to abandon nuclear energy entirely. Should the U.S. follow suit? FRONTLINE correspondent Miles O'Brien examines the implications of the Fukushima accident for U.S. nuclear safety, and asks how this disaster will affect the future of nuclear energy around the world. In particular, he visits one emerging battleground: The controversial relicensing of the Indian Point nuclear plant, located only 38 miles from Manhattan. What lessons can be learned from the disaster in Japan?
In March 2011 a devastating earthquake and tsunami crippled Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear complex, leaving the country's once popular energy program in shambles. In response, Germany decided to abandon nuclear energy entirely. Should the U.S. follow suit? FRONTLINE correspondent Miles O'Brien examines the implications of the Fukushima accident for U.S. nuclear safety, and asks how this disaster will affect the future of nuclear energy around the world. In particular, he visits one emerging battleground: The controversial relicensing of the Indian Point nuclear plant, located only 38 miles from Manhattan. What lessons can be learned from the disaster in Japan?
The Interrogator
(#2920)
In a rare interview with Ali Soufan, the FBI agent who was at the center of the 9/11 investigations, FRONTLINE correspondent Martin Smith uncovers an insider's view on the "war on terror." One of only eight Arabic-speaking FBI agents, Soufan explains why he believes the attacks on the World Trade Center could have been prevented and how the use of torture failed to produce actionable intelligence. Also in this hour: Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post reporter Dana Priest investigates the terrorism-industrial complex that grew up in the wake of 9/11. In "Are We Safer?" Priest explores the growing reach of homeland security, fusion centers, battlefield technologies, and data-collecting into the lives of ordinary Americans.
In a rare interview with Ali Soufan, the FBI agent who was at the center of the 9/11 investigations, FRONTLINE correspondent Martin Smith uncovers an insider's view on the "war on terror." One of only eight Arabic-speaking FBI agents, Soufan explains why he believes the attacks on the World Trade Center could have been prevented and how the use of torture failed to produce actionable intelligence. Also in this hour: Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post reporter Dana Priest investigates the terrorism-industrial complex that grew up in the wake of 9/11. In "Are We Safer?" Priest explores the growing reach of homeland security, fusion centers, battlefield technologies, and data-collecting into the lives of ordinary Americans.
The Man Behind The Mosque
(#2919)
It became the most controversial building in America, a mostly derelict property in lower Manhattan made infamous overnight as the Ground Zero Mosque. Going beyond frenzied media portraits at the time, FRONTLINE tells the inside stories of Sharif El-Gamal, a real estate developer, and of the victims' relatives and anti-Islam activists who helped turn his project into a continuing battle over faith, values, and the meaning of being American. Also in this hour: Adam Davidson of NPR's "Planet Money" returns to Haiti to meet a man with an unlikely plan to help turn around his country's economy through tourism.
It became the most controversial building in America, a mostly derelict property in lower Manhattan made infamous overnight as the Ground Zero Mosque. Going beyond frenzied media portraits at the time, FRONTLINE tells the inside stories of Sharif El-Gamal, a real estate developer, and of the victims' relatives and anti-Islam activists who helped turn his project into a continuing battle over faith, values, and the meaning of being American. Also in this hour: Adam Davidson of NPR's "Planet Money" returns to Haiti to meet a man with an unlikely plan to help turn around his country's economy through tourism.
Top Secret America
(#2918)
The dramatic changes that have reshaped America in the decade since the 9/11 attacks are examined.
The dramatic changes that have reshaped America in the decade since the 9/11 attacks are examined.
The Pot Republic
(#2917)
The country's oldest, largest and most wide-open marijuana market is investigated in California.
The country's oldest, largest and most wide-open marijuana market is investigated in California.
The Child Cases
(#2916)
Child death cases involving medical evidence that was later found to be unreliable are investigated.
Child death cases involving medical evidence that was later found to be unreliable are investigated.
Wikisecrets
(#2915)
Julian Assange is interviewed in this look at the 2010 leak of classified documents on Wikileaks.
Julian Assange is interviewed in this look at the 2010 leak of classified documents on Wikileaks.
Kill/Capture
(#2914)
An investigation into the US campaign of targeted killing includes interviews with General Petraeus.
An investigation into the US campaign of targeted killing includes interviews with General Petraeus.
Fighting For Bin Laden
(#2913)
Two inside views of the fight against al Qaeda and the Taliban.
Two inside views of the fight against al Qaeda and the Taliban.
The Silence
(#2912)
Sexual abuse of Native Americans by Catholic priests and church workers in Alaska is investigated.
Sexual abuse of Native Americans by Catholic priests and church workers in Alaska is investigated.
Football High
(#2911)
High school football has never had a higher profile, with nationally televised games, corporate sponsorships and minute-by-minute coverage on sports websites. In northwest Arkansas, FRONTLINE examines one ambitious high school team working its way towards national renown. With a superstar quarterback at the helm, tiny Shiloh Christian is striving to join the ranks of the country's best high school teams -- teams whose workout schedules, practices and styles of play increasingly imitate the pros. But as high school players grow bigger, faster and stronger, there are growing concerns about the health and safety of these young players -- with rising rates of concussions, career-ending injuries, even death. In Arkansas, FRONTLINE documents a tragic story of heatstroke injuries that reveal how weak regulation has created a crucial lack of athletic trainers at most high schools. It all raises a critical question: has the amped-up culture of high school football outrun necessary protections for the boys who play the game?
High school football has never had a higher profile, with nationally televised games, corporate sponsorships and minute-by-minute coverage on sports websites. In northwest Arkansas, FRONTLINE examines one ambitious high school team working its way towards national renown. With a superstar quarterback at the helm, tiny Shiloh Christian is striving to join the ranks of the country's best high school teams -- teams whose workout schedules, practices and styles of play increasingly imitate the pros. But as high school players grow bigger, faster and stronger, there are growing concerns about the health and safety of these young players -- with rising rates of concussions, career-ending injuries, even death. In Arkansas, FRONTLINE documents a tragic story of heatstroke injuries that reveal how weak regulation has created a crucial lack of athletic trainers at most high schools. It all raises a critical question: has the amped-up culture of high school football outrun necessary protections for the boys who play the game?
Money And March Madness
(#2910)
A look at the multi-billion dollar business of the NCAA and its brand of amateur college sports.
A look at the multi-billion dollar business of the NCAA and its brand of amateur college sports.
Revolution In Cairo
(#2909)
The youth movement taking to the streets in Cairo and Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood are explored.
The youth movement taking to the streets in Cairo and Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood are explored.
A Daughter's Death
(#2908)
When the Army declares a soldier's death in Iraq a suicide, her father searches for the hard truth.
When the Army declares a soldier's death in Iraq a suicide, her father searches for the hard truth.
Post Mortem
(#2907)
Every day nearly 7,000 people die in America. And when these deaths happen suddenly, or under suspicious circumstances, we assume there will be a thorough investigation, just like we see on CSI. But the reality is very different. In over 2,000 counties across America, elected coroners, many with no medical or scientific background, are in charge of death investigations. Nationwide there is a severe shortage of competent forensic pathologists to do autopsies. The rate of autopsies -- the gold standard of death investigation -- has plummeted over the decades from 50 percent of those who die to less than six percent. As a result, not only do murderers go free and innocent people go to jail, but the crisis in death investigation in America is also a threat to public health. FRONTLINE correspondent Lowell Bergman reports the results of a joint investigation with ProPublica, NPR, and the Investigative Reporting Program at UC Berkeley.
Every day nearly 7,000 people die in America. And when these deaths happen suddenly, or under suspicious circumstances, we assume there will be a thorough investigation, just like we see on CSI. But the reality is very different. In over 2,000 counties across America, elected coroners, many with no medical or scientific background, are in charge of death investigations. Nationwide there is a severe shortage of competent forensic pathologists to do autopsies. The rate of autopsies -- the gold standard of death investigation -- has plummeted over the decades from 50 percent of those who die to less than six percent. As a result, not only do murderers go free and innocent people go to jail, but the crisis in death investigation in America is also a threat to public health. FRONTLINE correspondent Lowell Bergman reports the results of a joint investigation with ProPublica, NPR, and the Investigative Reporting Program at UC Berkeley.
Are We Safer?
(#2906)
The terrorism-industrial complex that grew up in the wake of 9/11 is investigated by Dana Priest.
The terrorism-industrial complex that grew up in the wake of 9/11 is investigated by Dana Priest.
Battle For Haiti
(#2905)
The fight to rebuild Haiti in the face of deep-rooted corruption and gang intimidation is examined.
The fight to rebuild Haiti in the face of deep-rooted corruption and gang intimidation is examined.
Facing Death
(#2904)
How far would you go to sustain the life of someone you love, or your own? When the moment comes, and you're confronted with the prospect of "pulling the plug," do you know how you'll respond? Unfounded rumors of federal "death panels" grabbed headlines last summer, but the real decisions of how we die -- the questions that most of us prefer to put off -- are being made quietly behind closed doors, increasingly on the floors of America's intensive care units. In this film, FRONTLINE gains access to the ICU of one of New York's biggest hospitals to examine the complicated reality of today's modern, medicalized death. Here, we find doctors and nurses struggling to guide families through the maze of end-of-life choices they now confront: whether to pull feeding and breathing tubes, when to perform expensive surgeries and therapies or to call for hospice. The film also offers an unusually intimate portrait of patients facing the prospect of dying in ways that they might never have wanted or imagined.
How far would you go to sustain the life of someone you love, or your own? When the moment comes, and you're confronted with the prospect of "pulling the plug," do you know how you'll respond? Unfounded rumors of federal "death panels" grabbed headlines last summer, but the real decisions of how we die -- the questions that most of us prefer to put off -- are being made quietly behind closed doors, increasingly on the floors of America's intensive care units. In this film, FRONTLINE gains access to the ICU of one of New York's biggest hospitals to examine the complicated reality of today's modern, medicalized death. Here, we find doctors and nurses struggling to guide families through the maze of end-of-life choices they now confront: whether to pull feeding and breathing tubes, when to perform expensive surgeries and therapies or to call for hospice. The film also offers an unusually intimate portrait of patients facing the prospect of dying in ways that they might never have wanted or imagined.
The Confessions
(#2903)
Police interrogation techniques that led four innocent men to confess to murder are investigated.
Police interrogation techniques that led four innocent men to confess to murder are investigated.
The Spill
(#2902)
BP's corporate culture, safety violations and the trail that led to the Gulf disaster are examined.
BP's corporate culture, safety violations and the trail that led to the Gulf disaster are examined.
Death By Fire
(#2901)
Did Texas execute an innocent man? Several controversial death penalty cases are currently under examination in Texas and in other states, but it's the 2004 execution of Cameron Todd Willingham -- convicted for the arson deaths of his three young children -- that's now at the center of the national debate. With unique access to those closest to the case, FRONTLINE examines the Willingham conviction in light of new science that raises doubts about whether the fire at the center of the case was really arson at all. The film meticulously examines the evidence used to convict Willingham, provides an in-depth portrait of those most impacted by the case and explores the explosive implications of a possibly innocent man.
Did Texas execute an innocent man? Several controversial death penalty cases are currently under examination in Texas and in other states, but it's the 2004 execution of Cameron Todd Willingham -- convicted for the arson deaths of his three young children -- that's now at the center of the national debate. With unique access to those closest to the case, FRONTLINE examines the Willingham conviction in light of new science that raises doubts about whether the fire at the center of the case was really arson at all. The film meticulously examines the evidence used to convict Willingham, provides an in-depth portrait of those most impacted by the case and explores the explosive implications of a possibly innocent man.
Law & Disorder
(#2818)
Behind the enduring images of heroic rescues undertaken by the New Orleans Police Department in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, there is another story of law enforcement in crisis, even out of control. "Law & Disorder," a year-long, ongoing collaboration among FRONTLINE, ProPublica and the New Orleans Times-Picayune, investigates charges that NOPD officers inappropriately used lethal force against New Orleans citizens and then tried to cover up their actions. Airing days before the fifth anniversary of one of the deadliest hurricanes in U.S. history and drawing from reports published in a real-time online investigation, FRONTLINE takes a fresh look at how the NOPD performed when the rules of civilized society collapsed.
Behind the enduring images of heroic rescues undertaken by the New Orleans Police Department in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, there is another story of law enforcement in crisis, even out of control. "Law & Disorder," a year-long, ongoing collaboration among FRONTLINE, ProPublica and the New Orleans Times-Picayune, investigates charges that NOPD officers inappropriately used lethal force against New Orleans citizens and then tried to cover up their actions. Airing days before the fifth anniversary of one of the deadliest hurricanes in U.S. history and drawing from reports published in a real-time online investigation, FRONTLINE takes a fresh look at how the NOPD performed when the rules of civilized society collapsed.
College, Inc.
(#2817)
Uncover how Wall Street and for-profit universities are transforming the idea of college in America.
Uncover how Wall Street and for-profit universities are transforming the idea of college in America.
The Vaccine War
(#2816)
Public health scientists and clinicians tout vaccines as one of the greatest achievements of modern medicine. But for many ordinary Americans vaccines have become controversial. Young parents are concerned at the sheer number of shots -- some 26 inoculations for 14 different diseases by age six -- and follow alternative vaccination schedules advocated by gurus like Dr. Robert Sears. Other parents go further. In communities like Ashland, Oregon, up to one-third of parents are choosing not to vaccinate their kids at all. And some advocacy groups, like Generation Rescue, argue that vaccines are no longer a public health miracle but a scourge; they view vaccines as responsible for alarming rises in certain disorders, including ADHD and autism. This is the vaccine war: On one side sits scientific medicine and the public health establishment; on the other a populist coalition of parents, celebrities (like Jenny McCarthy), politicians and activists. It's a war that increasingly takes place on the Internet with both sides using the latest social media tools, including Facebook and Twitter, to win the hearts and minds of the public.
Public health scientists and clinicians tout vaccines as one of the greatest achievements of modern medicine. But for many ordinary Americans vaccines have become controversial. Young parents are concerned at the sheer number of shots -- some 26 inoculations for 14 different diseases by age six -- and follow alternative vaccination schedules advocated by gurus like Dr. Robert Sears. Other parents go further. In communities like Ashland, Oregon, up to one-third of parents are choosing not to vaccinate their kids at all. And some advocacy groups, like Generation Rescue, argue that vaccines are no longer a public health miracle but a scourge; they view vaccines as responsible for alarming rises in certain disorders, including ADHD and autism. This is the vaccine war: On one side sits scientific medicine and the public health establishment; on the other a populist coalition of parents, celebrities (like Jenny McCarthy), politicians and activists. It's a war that increasingly takes place on the Internet with both sides using the latest social media tools, including Facebook and Twitter, to win the hearts and minds of the public.
Obama's Deal
(#2815)
Examines the political battles and costly compromises behind Obama's Health care reform policy.
Examines the political battles and costly compromises behind Obama's Health care reform policy.
The Quake
(#2814)
A firsthand look at the ill-coordinated relief efforts after the devastating earthquake in Haiti.
A firsthand look at the ill-coordinated relief efforts after the devastating earthquake in Haiti.
Behind Taliban Lines
(#2813)
An Afghan video journalist ventures into areas that have quietly reverted back to Taliban control.
An Afghan video journalist ventures into areas that have quietly reverted back to Taliban control.
The Wounded Platoon
(#2812)
In the first five years since the Iraq War began, soldier arrests in the city of Colorado Springs tripled. At least 36 servicemen based at the nearby Army post of Fort Carson committed suicide. And 15 Fort Carson soldiers were charged or convicted in at least 11 killings. Many of the most violent crimes involved men who had served in the same battalion in Iraq. Three of them came from a single platoon of infantrymen. FRONTLINE tells the dark tale of the men of Third Platoon, Charlie Company, 1st battalion of the 506th infantry and how the war followed them home. It is a story of heroism, grief, vicious combat, depression, drugs, alcohol and brutal murder; an investigation into the Army's mental health services; and a powerful portrait of what multiple tours and post-traumatic stress are doing to a generation of young American soldiers.
In the first five years since the Iraq War began, soldier arrests in the city of Colorado Springs tripled. At least 36 servicemen based at the nearby Army post of Fort Carson committed suicide. And 15 Fort Carson soldiers were charged or convicted in at least 11 killings. Many of the most violent crimes involved men who had served in the same battalion in Iraq. Three of them came from a single platoon of infantrymen. FRONTLINE tells the dark tale of the men of Third Platoon, Charlie Company, 1st battalion of the 506th infantry and how the war followed them home. It is a story of heroism, grief, vicious combat, depression, drugs, alcohol and brutal murder; an investigation into the Army's mental health services; and a powerful portrait of what multiple tours and post-traumatic stress are doing to a generation of young American soldiers.
The Suicide Tourist
(#2811)
A revealing look inside Dignitas, a non-profit in Switzerland that helps people end their own lives.
A revealing look inside Dignitas, a non-profit in Switzerland that helps people end their own lives.
Flying Cheap
(#2810)
In this re-broadcast, FRONTLINE investigates the deadly crash of Continental 3407 outside Buffalo, NY, and discovers a dramatically changed airline industry, where regional carriers now account for half of the nation's daily departures. The rise of the regionals and arrival of low-cost carriers have kept prices low for consumers, and the industry insists the skies remain safe. But the Buffalo crash, and ensuing investigations like FRONTLINE's, reveal a host of serious safety concerns with today's aviation system - concerns that prompted the most sweeping airline safety law in more than a decade.
In this re-broadcast, FRONTLINE investigates the deadly crash of Continental 3407 outside Buffalo, NY, and discovers a dramatically changed airline industry, where regional carriers now account for half of the nation's daily departures. The rise of the regionals and arrival of low-cost carriers have kept prices low for consumers, and the industry insists the skies remain safe. But the Buffalo crash, and ensuing investigations like FRONTLINE's, reveal a host of serious safety concerns with today's aviation system - concerns that prompted the most sweeping airline safety law in more than a decade.
Digital Nation
(#2809)
Experts explore life on the virtual frontier and critical ways that technology is transforming us.
Experts explore life on the virtual frontier and critical ways that technology is transforming us.
The Fall Of Lehman
(#2808)
Traces how Lehman Brothers ignored warnings and became the largest bankruptcy in history in 2008.
Traces how Lehman Brothers ignored warnings and became the largest bankruptcy in history in 2008.
The Dancing Boys Of Afghanistan
(#2807)
An Afghan journalist investigates a sexual exploitation ring that trades young boys for sex.
An Afghan journalist investigates a sexual exploitation ring that trades young boys for sex.
The Card Game
(#2806)
The future of the consumer loan industry and its impact on America's fragile economy are examined.
The future of the consumer loan industry and its impact on America's fragile economy are examined.
A Death In Tehran
(#2805)
Neda Soltani became a symbol when her death was filmed on a cameraphone during the Iran protests.
Neda Soltani became a symbol when her death was filmed on a cameraphone during the Iran protests.
Alaska Gold
(#2804)
Local Fishermen battle mining companies seeking to extract minerals from Bristol Bay's Pebble Mine.
Local Fishermen battle mining companies seeking to extract minerals from Bristol Bay's Pebble Mine.
Close To Home
(#2803)
Clients in a New York salon, from well-to-do bankers to struggling actors, discuss the recession.
Clients in a New York salon, from well-to-do bankers to struggling actors, discuss the recession.
The Warning
(#2802)
Examines causes of the economic crisis and critical moments when it might have gone differently.
Examines causes of the economic crisis and critical moments when it might have gone differently.
Obama's War
(#2801)
Examines the U.S. counter-insurgency strategy, as thousands of fresh troops move into Afghanistan.
Examines the U.S. counter-insurgency strategy, as thousands of fresh troops move into Afghanistan.
Breaking The Bank
(#2715)
America's current financial crisis is examined through the story of a superbank's disintegration.
America's current financial crisis is examined through the story of a superbank's disintegration.
The Madoff Affair
(#2714)
The story behind the global Ponzi scheme that has become the biggest business scandal in history.
The story behind the global Ponzi scheme that has become the biggest business scandal in history.
The Released
(#2713)
Focuses on the struggles of the mentally ill after prison and why they return at alarming rates.
Focuses on the struggles of the mentally ill after prison and why they return at alarming rates.
Poisoned Waters
(#2712)
Focuses on the conditions of our waterways and the rising hazards to human health and eco-systems.
Focuses on the conditions of our waterways and the rising hazards to human health and eco-systems.
Black Money
(#2711)
A new crackdown against multi-national companies involved in international bribery is investigated.
A new crackdown against multi-national companies involved in international bribery is investigated.
Sick Around America
(#2710)
The flaws in U.S. healthcare and the future of the private insurance industry are investigated.
The flaws in U.S. healthcare and the future of the private insurance industry are investigated.
Ten Trillion And Counting
(#2709)
Focuses on how America's national debt will constrain and challenge the new Obama administration.
Focuses on how America's national debt will constrain and challenge the new Obama administration.
Inside The Meltdown
(#2708)
Chronicles the Bear Stearns deal, the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the $700 billion bailout.
Chronicles the Bear Stearns deal, the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the $700 billion bailout.
Rules Of Engagement
(#2607)
FRONTLINE cuts through the fog of war to reveal the untold story of what happened in Haditha, Iraq, where 24 of the town's residents were killed by U.S. forces in what many in the media branded "Iraq's My Lai." With accusations swirling that the Marines massacred Iraqi civilians "in cold blood," the Haditha incident has led to one of the largest criminal cases against U.S. troops in the Iraq war. But real questions have emerged about what really happened that day, and who is responsible. Through interviews with Iraqi survivors and Marines accused of war crimes, FRONTLINE investigates this incident and what it can tell us about the harrowing moral and legal landscape the U.S. military faces in Iraq. After years of delays, U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Frank Wuterich went on trial in January 2012 in connection with the killings of 24 Iraqi civilians more than six years ago, one of the worst incidents of its kind of the war. What really happened on November 19, 2005, in the village of Haditha? FRONTLINE cuts through the fog of war to reveal the untold story of what some have branded "Iraq's My Lai." With accusations swirling that a squad of Marines massacred Iraqi civilians "in cold blood," the Haditha killings led to one of the largest criminal cases against U.S. troops in the Iraq war. Yet major questions remain unanswered. Through interviews with Iraqi survivors and Marines accused of war crimes, FRONTLINE investigates the incident and what it can tell us about the moral and legal maze of U.S. troops' involvement in Iraq.
FRONTLINE cuts through the fog of war to reveal the untold story of what happened in Haditha, Iraq, where 24 of the town's residents were killed by U.S. forces in what many in the media branded "Iraq's My Lai." With accusations swirling that the Marines massacred Iraqi civilians "in cold blood," the Haditha incident has led to one of the largest criminal cases against U.S. troops in the Iraq war. But real questions have emerged about what really happened that day, and who is responsible. Through interviews with Iraqi survivors and Marines accused of war crimes, FRONTLINE investigates this incident and what it can tell us about the harrowing moral and legal landscape the U.S. military faces in Iraq. After years of delays, U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Frank Wuterich went on trial in January 2012 in connection with the killings of 24 Iraqi civilians more than six years ago, one of the worst incidents of its kind of the war. What really happened on November 19, 2005, in the village of Haditha? FRONTLINE cuts through the fog of war to reveal the untold story of what some have branded "Iraq's My Lai." With accusations swirling that a squad of Marines massacred Iraqi civilians "in cold blood," the Haditha killings led to one of the largest criminal cases against U.S. troops in the Iraq war. Yet major questions remain unanswered. Through interviews with Iraqi survivors and Marines accused of war crimes, FRONTLINE investigates the incident and what it can tell us about the moral and legal maze of U.S. troops' involvement in Iraq.
The Undertaking
(#2603)
FRONTLINE profiles Thomas Lynch, a poet and undertaker whose family has cared for the dead in a small town in central Michigan for three generations. In "The Undertaking," a critically acclaimed book, Lynch offered unique and profound insight into what he called the "dismal trade." In an intimate and revealing film, Lynch helps makes sense of the ways Americans cope with death, grief and life.
FRONTLINE profiles Thomas Lynch, a poet and undertaker whose family has cared for the dead in a small town in central Michigan for three generations. In "The Undertaking," a critically acclaimed book, Lynch offered unique and profound insight into what he called the "dismal trade." In an intimate and revealing film, Lynch helps makes sense of the ways Americans cope with death, grief and life.
The Meth Epidemic
(#2407)
What started as a fad among West Coast motorcycle gangs in the 1970s - methamphetamine - quickly spread across the United States over the last decade. These days, meth remains as potent and widespread as ever. Despite calls to regulate its key ingredient, pseudoephedrine, which is found in over-the-counter cold remedies, "super smurfs" still manage to stockpile enough of the drug to fuel thousands of small meth labs nationwide. FRONTLINE, in association with The Oregonian, investigates the ongoing meth problem in America: the devastating impact on individuals, families and communities and the state-by-state battles to make pseudoephedrine a prescription drug, a strategy that's led to significant improvement in Oregon.
What started as a fad among West Coast motorcycle gangs in the 1970s - methamphetamine - quickly spread across the United States over the last decade. These days, meth remains as potent and widespread as ever. Despite calls to regulate its key ingredient, pseudoephedrine, which is found in over-the-counter cold remedies, "super smurfs" still manage to stockpile enough of the drug to fuel thousands of small meth labs nationwide. FRONTLINE, in association with The Oregonian, investigates the ongoing meth problem in America: the devastating impact on individuals, families and communities and the state-by-state battles to make pseudoephedrine a prescription drug, a strategy that's led to significant improvement in Oregon.
Death Of A Princess
(#2312)
The Jesus Factor
(#2212)
Diet Wars
(#2211)
Examine the array of weight loss programs and their often contradictory underlying principles.
Examine the array of weight loss programs and their often contradictory underlying principles.
Ghosts Of Rwanda
(#2210)
The Invasion Of Iraq
(#2209)
Tax Me If You Can
(#2208)
How U.S. corporations and wealthy individuals avoid paying billions of dollars in federal taxes.
How U.S. corporations and wealthy individuals avoid paying billions of dollars in federal taxes.
Beyond Baghdad
(#2207)
Chasing Saddam's Weapons
(#2206)
Dangerous Prescription
(#2204)
The Alternative Fix
(#2203)
Chasing The Sleeper Cell
(#2202)
Truth, War, And Consequences
(#2201)
The Other Drug War
(#2120)
Public Schools, Inc.
(#2119)
The Wall Street Fix
(#2118)
Burden Of Innocence
(#2117)
Cyber War!
(#2116)
Kim's Nuclear Gamble
(#2115)
Blair's War
(#2114)
The War Behind Closed Doors
(#2113)
China In The Red
(#2112)
A Dangerous Business Revisited
(#2109)
Workplace safety and regulations are investigated in one of America's most dangerous industries.
Workplace safety and regulations are investigated in one of America's most dangerous industries.
Much Ado About Something
(#2108)
In Search Of AL Qaeda
(#2107)
Let's Get Married
(#2106)
A Crime Of Insanity
(#2105)
Missile Wars
(#2104)
The Man Who Knew
(#2103)
The extraordinary tale of the life and death of FBI agent and counterterrorism expert John O'Neill.
The extraordinary tale of the life and death of FBI agent and counterterrorism expert John O'Neill.
Campaign Against Terror
(#2102)
Faith And Doubt At Ground Zero
(#2101)
Explore how the spiritual lives of believers and non-believers have been challenged since 9/11.
Explore how the spiritual lives of believers and non-believers have been challenged since 9/11.
Bigger Than Enron
(#2022)
The Siege Of Bethlehem
(#2021)
Muslims
(#2020)
Terror And Tehran
(#2019)
Did Daddy Do It?
(#2018)
Modern Meat
(#2017)
Requiem For Frank Lee Smith
(#2016)
Battle For The Holy Land
(#2015)
Testing Our Schools
(#2014)
Roll Over: The Hidden History Of The Suv
(#2013)
The impact of SUVs on the American auto industry and their potential safety flaws are investigated.
The impact of SUVs on the American auto industry and their potential safety flaws are investigated.
American Porn
(#2012)
Inside The Teenage Brain
(#2011)
Investigates whether a cause of adolescent angst may all be in teens still-forming brains.
Investigates whether a cause of adolescent angst may all be in teens still-forming brains.
Dot Con
(#2010)
Inside The Terror Network
(#2009)
An Ordinary Crime
(#2008)
The Monster That Ate Hollywood
(#2007)
The Saudi Time Bomb
(#2006)
Gunning For Saddam
(#2005)
Trail Of A Terrorist
(#2004)
Dangerous Straits
(#2003)
Looking For Answers
(#2002)
Target America
(#2001)
Blackout
(#1916)
Lapd Blues
(#1915)
Medicating Kids
(#1914)
Organ Farm (Part 2)
(#1913)
Organ Farm (Part 1)
(#1912)
The Merchants Of Cool
(#1911)
Hackers
(#1910)
Saving Elian
(#1909)
Juvenile Justice
(#1908)
The Clinton Years
(#1907)
Real Justice - Part 2
(#1906)
Real Justice - Part 1
(#1905)
The Future Of War
(#1904)
Drug Wars - Part Two
(#1903)
Drug Wars - Part One
(#1902)
The Choice 2000
(#1901)
Episode #1818
(#1818)
The Battle Over School Choice
(#1817)
Return Of The Czar
(#1816)
Jefferson's Blood
(#1815)
Dr. Solomon's Dilemma
(#1814)
War In Europe
(#1813)
War In Europe
(#1812)
Assault On Gay America
(#1811)
The Survival Of Saddam
(#1810)
The Killer At Thurston High
(#1809)
The Case For Innocence
(#1808)
Justice For Sale
(#1807)
Apocalypse!
(#1806)
Apocalypse!
(#1805)
Mafia Power Play
(#1803)
Secrets Of The Sat
(#1802)
The Crash
(#1719)
Pop
(#1718)
Making Babies
(#1717)
The Long Walk Of Nelson Mandela
(#1716)
Give War A Chance
(#1715)
Spying On Sadaam
(#1714)
Hunting Bin Laden
(#1713)
Russian Roulette
(#1712)
The Execution
(#1711)
The Triumph Of Evil
(#1710)
Snitch
(#1709)
Fat
(#1708)
The Child Terror
(#1707)
Plague War
(#1706)
Washington's Other Scandal
(#1705)
Ambush In Mogadishu
(#1704)
The Farmer's Wife (Pt. 3)
(#1703)
The Farmer's Wife
(#1702)
The Farmer's Wife
(#1701)
Fooling With Nature
(#1619)
The World's Most Wanted Man
(#1618)
Inside The Tobacco Deal
(#1616)
The High Price Of Health
(#1614)
From Jesus To Christ: The First Christians - (Pt.2
(#1612)
In program 2, FRONTLINE examines the period after the first revolt, tracing the development and impact of the Gospels and looking at the increasingly hostile relationship between the Christians and the Jews. The film looks at another bloody Jewish war against Rome, the second revolt, assessing its impact on the Christianity movement. The broadcast documents the extraordinary events of the second and third centuries in which Christianity grew from a small Jewish sect to an official religion of the Roman Empire.
In program 2, FRONTLINE examines the period after the first revolt, tracing the development and impact of the Gospels and looking at the increasingly hostile relationship between the Christians and the Jews. The film looks at another bloody Jewish war against Rome, the second revolt, assessing its impact on the Christianity movement. The broadcast documents the extraordinary events of the second and third centuries in which Christianity grew from a small Jewish sect to an official religion of the Roman Empire.
From Jesus To Christ: The First Christians - Pax R
(#1610)
FRONTLINE presents the epic story of the rise of Christianity. Drawing upon new and sometimes controversial historical evidence, the series transports viewers back two thousand years to the time and place where Jesus of Nazareth once lived and preached and challenges familiar assumptions and conventional notions about the origins of Christianity. Program 1 traces the life of Jesus of Nazareth, exploring the message that helped his ministry grow and the events that led to his crucifixion around 30 C.E. The film then turns to the period that followed Jesus' death, examining the rise of Christianity and concluding with the first revolt-the bloody and violent siege of Jerusalem and the beginning of a rift between Christianity and Judaism. The broadcast explores new evidence suggesting that Jesus' followers, because of their diversity and the differences in their cultures and languages, looked at and interpreted Jesus and his teachings in many different ways.
FRONTLINE presents the epic story of the rise of Christianity. Drawing upon new and sometimes controversial historical evidence, the series transports viewers back two thousand years to the time and place where Jesus of Nazareth once lived and preached and challenges familiar assumptions and conventional notions about the origins of Christianity. Program 1 traces the life of Jesus of Nazareth, exploring the message that helped his ministry grow and the events that led to his crucifixion around 30 C.E. The film then turns to the period that followed Jesus' death, examining the rise of Christianity and concluding with the first revolt-the bloody and violent siege of Jerusalem and the beginning of a rift between Christianity and Judaism. The broadcast explores new evidence suggesting that Jesus' followers, because of their diversity and the differences in their cultures and languages, looked at and interpreted Jesus and his teachings in many different ways.
The Two Nations Of Black America
(#1609)
My Retirement Dreams
(#1608)
Last Battle Of The Gulf War
(#1607)
The Princess And The Press
(#1606)
Tibet
(#1604)
The Secret History Of The Ira
(#1603)
The Lost American
(#1602)
Once Upon A Time In Arkansas
(#1601)
Nazi Gold
(#1518)
Easy Money
(#1517)
Innocence Lost: The Plea
(#1515)
The Opium Kings
(#1514)
Little Criminals
(#1513)
Nuclear Reaction
(#1512)
The Fixers
(#1511)
Murder, Money, And Mexico
(#1510)
Valentina's Nightmare
(#1509)
Six O'clock News
(#1507)
Betting On The Market
(#1506)
Secret Daughter
(#1505)
Loose Nukes
(#1504)





