10/14 - 10/20
2012
All times are EST
Previously aired
MASTERPIECE
Watch the continuing drama at 165 Eaton Place, beginning in 1936.
Follow Sir Hallam and Lady Agnes’ move to 165 Eaton Place and Rose’s attempts to assemble a staff.
See the range of reactions in Eaton Place to the arrival of a new maid, a German-Jewish refugee.
Witness the turmoil at 165 Eaton Place as 1936 comes to a close.
ANTIQUES ROADSHOW
A set of clubs once owned by George “Gix” Von Elm; a set of 18th-century Chinese white jade carvings; and a Mormon advertisement on textile and a copy of Brigham Young’s Invasion Proclamation.
HISTORY DETECTIVES
Get the facts about a Vietnamese soldier’s diary, a bootlegger’s notebook and a Hollywood Indian ledger.
NATURE
Watch the cataclysmic meeting of 2,000-degree lava and 75-degree ocean water — creating new land.
PBS NEWSHOUR DEBATES 2012: A SPECIAL REPORT
Watch live coverage and analysis of the presidential candidates’ debates.
Journey with the extreme gardeners whose monster pumpkins compete at the annual Cooperstown weigh-off.
POV
Examine one of the most sensational trials in the history of the Philippines.
JULIA CHILD
Leah Chase cooks up her famous fried chicken, biscuits and sweet-potato pie.
This one-hour special features highlights from the seventh annual Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival - one of the most unusual public music festivals in America. Staged every year in the sprawling meadows of Golden Gate Park with dozens of bands on many different stages, the festival attracts more than 300,000 music fans. This year's line-up includes performances by Emmylou Harris, the legendary Earl Scruggs, Doc Watson, Ricky Skaggs and Bruce Hornsby, to name a few.
A 6.5 carat yellow mine cut diamond ring; a North American Indian club and pipe; and three Charles Darwin first editions.
INDEPENDENT LENS
Meet the indomitable Dolores Huerta, who has tirelessly led the fight for racial and labor justice.