Sunday, May 5th TV listings for PBS World (KNMD-TV) Santa Fe, NM
On Story Inside the Making of Lawmen: Bass Reeves
"Lawmen: Bass Reeves" creator Chad Feehan and series directors Christina Alexandra Voros and Damian Marcano discuss their revival of the television Western.
To the Contrary With Bonnie Erbé
The New York Times correspondent Katie Rogers.
Washington Week With The Atlantic
A panel of journalists provides reporting and analysis of the major stories emanating from the United States capital.
The Open Mind The Origin of the FDA Mandate
Novelist Jennifer Vanderbes talks about "Wonder Drug: The Secret History of Thalidomide in America and Its Hidden Victims."
Whether sex buyers should be prosecuted; escaping to Spain from Russia; the Finnish secret to happiness; a museum on wheels in France.
The tough reality of migrant domestic workers in Spain; whether gas could boost the shift to renewables in Senegal; neodymium.
America ReFramed Chinatown Rising
Rare archival footage, photos and interviews with community leaders and activists from the 1960s illustrate the battles for social justice in San Francisco's Chinatown.
Vanishing Chinatown: The World of The May's Photo Studio
Photos from The May's Studio Photography provide an intimate glimpse of everyday life in San Francisco's Chinatown from the early to mid-1900s.
The Chavis Chronicles The Art Born From Covid-19
Berrisford Boothe and Klare Scarborough discuss "Shifting Time: African American Artists 2020-2021," which features more than 70 Black artists during the early years of the pandemic.
Laura Flanders & Friends Crime & Migration: An Abolitionist Plan for Immigration Justice
Journalist Amir Khafagy; Silky Shah, Detention Watch Network; attorney Aron Thorn, Texas Civil Rights Project.
10 Days in Watts Legacy
The beginning of MudTown Farms, an urban garden in the Los Angeles community of Watts.
Touring the largest producer of endive in America; sustainable walnut farm; an appetizer with whipped goat cheese with dates and bacon; a cheese plant in Tennessee provides a home for the milk from a co-op of Minnesota dairy farmers.
This American Land Confronting Sea Level Rise; Protecting Wyoming Public Lands; Revising Forest Plans
Using education and innovation to tackle rising sea levels in Norfolk, Va.; exploring wilderness areas to determine the best uses for public lands in Wyoming; a new plan for a large national forest in North Carolina.
Start Up Surfsup: Portersville, PA
Ian Smith's SurfSup Adventures offers guided standup whitewater paddle boarding tours and instruction.
To the Contrary With Bonnie Erbé
The New York Times correspondent Katie Rogers.
Firing Line With Margaret Hoover
Margaret Hoover leads interviews and debates.
The Open Mind The Origin of the FDA Mandate
Novelist Jennifer Vanderbes talks about "Wonder Drug: The Secret History of Thalidomide in America and Its Hidden Victims."
The tough reality of migrant domestic workers in Spain; whether gas could boost the shift to renewables in Senegal; neodymium.
On Story Inside the Making of Lawmen: Bass Reeves
"Lawmen: Bass Reeves" creator Chad Feehan and series directors Christina Alexandra Voros and Damian Marcano discuss their revival of the television Western.
PBS News Weekend New
Analysis of national and international news, as well as in-depth reporting on topics ranging from education and politics to technology and finance.
Examining state government.
The U.S. and the Holocaust The Golden Door (Beginnings -- 1938)
Congress reverses open borders; Hitler and the Nazis begin their persecution of German Jews, causing many to seek refuge; President Franklin D. Roosevelt is concerned but unable to coordinate a response to the crisis.
The U.S. and the Holocaust Yearning to Breathe Free (1938-1942)
As World War II begins, Americans unite in their disapproval of Nazi brutality and work to help refugees escape; Germany invades the Soviet Union and secretly begins the mass murder of European Jews.
The U.S. and the Holocaust The Homeless, Tempest-Tossed (1942 -- )
A group of government officials supports rescue operations; the public sees for the first time the scale of the Holocaust as Allies liberate German camps.
Reel South The Only Doctor
The only doctor in rural Clay County, Ga., faces the possibility of closing her clinic.
Mysteries of Mental Illness The New Frontiers
Cutting-edge treatments for mental illness; profiles of patients undergoing deep brain stimulation surgery, infusions of ketamine and modern electro-convulsive therapy.
Poetry in America Mushrooms, Weakness and Doubt
Poems by Sylvia Plath and Kay Ryan explore the cultural significance of mushrooms.
Poetry in America July in Washington
Robert Lowell's poem about the contradictions between American idealism and American policy.
H2O: The Molecule That Made Us Crisis
Earth's changing water cycle, and the globalized movement toward water for profit, forces changes across the globe with regard to people's reliance on water.