6/23 - 6/29
2013
All times are EST
Previously aired
Stop at a Connecticut diner, a Hawaiian donut shop and several places in between to celebrate the morning meal.
MASTERPIECE
Investigate the strangling of a controversial American guest lecturer at Oxford.
Travel back in time with writer Gwen Roland, who built a houseboat and lived in the Atchafalaya Swamp as her forebears had.
ANTIQUES ROADSHOW
One of the most valuable objects ever appraised on the series; California plein air paintings stolen from a private collection
A late 18th-century heirloom Kentucky sugar chest; an 1860 rococo revival table, whose top sports a painting of Mt. Vernon; and a pair of boxing gloves signed by Muhammad Ali — once as Cassius Clay, in 1963 and again as Muhammad Ali 40 years later.
INDEPENDENT LENS
Explore the life and death of a boy who was also a girl, and the essentially spiritual nature of gender.
Travel with Bettany Hughes across the eastern Mediterranean to find out the truth about Helen of Troy.
FRONTLINE
Witness the devastating effect of the religious feud that’s shaping Syria’s future.
NOVA
Find out what separates us from our closest living relatives — the great apes.
Join National Geographic to uncover the criminal network behind ivory’s supply and demand.
AMERICAN MASTERS
Follow raconteur Garrison Keillor — and his crew of actors, musicians and technical staff — as he criss-crosses the country, broadcasting, recording and revealing himself.
THIS OLD HOUSE
Window seat, stairs and knee walls; part eleven of Cambridge project
ASK THIS OLD HOUSE
Using hand planes; repairing a cracked stone walkway
AUSTIN CITY LIMITS
It’s the best in indie rock with Spoon. Austin institution Spoon highlights its album Transference.
NATURE
Learn how a surprising number of creatures live in the hostile environment of Africa’s Drakensberg Mountains.
AMERICAN EXPERIENCE
Trace the brief life of New York’s Penn Station, whose destruction spurred landmarks preservation.
A 6.5 carat yellow mine cut diamond ring; a North American Indian club and pipe; and three Charles Darwin first editions.
Meet the indomitable Dolores Huerta, who has tirelessly led the fight for racial and labor justice.