PBS PROGRAMMING
PBS Announces Unprecedented Multiyear Commitment to Environmental and Climate Programming
Multiplatform Initiative to Explore Climate Change from Diverse Perspectives with New Series and Specials, Including HUMAN FOOTPRINT, a Second Season of AMERICA OUTDOORS, and the New PBS KIDS Series WEATHER HUNTERS from Al Roker Entertainment
PBS is launching an unprecedented environmental and climate programming initiative that explores impacts on the country and planet. The comprehensive effort marks a bold commitment to bring together the very best in science, history, and news programming in 2023 and beyond. Building on more than 200 hours of climate and environmental content currently available across its various platforms, PBS and its member stations will focus on the challenges of a changing climate while highlighting examples of positive impact.
NOVA LAUNCHES “CLIMATE ACROSS AMERICA” CAMPAIGN SPOTLIGHTING THE EFFECTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE IN COMMUNITIES ACROSS THE U.S.
Series Partners with 10 Public Media Stations to Engage Audiences Around the Climate Crisis–and Innovative Solutions–through Localized Content and Two New Films Premiering in April 2023
The award-winning PBS science series NOVA, produced by GBH, is launching a national campaign, CLIMATE ACROSS AMERICA, spotlighting how climate change affects communities across the U.S. and engaging audiences in productive conversations about innovative climate solutions. Leveraging the reach and power of the PBS system to drive a national conversation about local impacts and solutions — with major support from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting — NOVA is working with 10 public media stations and students in classrooms to produce and distribute climate-focused content, rolling out in spring 2023. Nationally, NOVA will present two new, one-hour climate documentaries: “Weathering the Future,” premiering Wednesday, April 12, and “Chasing Carbon Zero,” premiering Wednesday, April 26.
PBS Announces New Phase of Filmmaker Initiative to Bring Opportunities to Dynamic and Diverse Creators at Various Career Stages
Next Phase of Program Includes Details on Eight New Films Set to Debut This Year
PBS revealed the first wave of content creators who will receive funding support to included details on new measures as part of a larger Diverse Voices Initiative to support the careers of early and mid–career filmmakers from underrepresented communities to further diversify public media.
The WNET Group, Latino Public Broadcasting and NGL Collective to Present AMERICAN HISTORIA with John Leguizamo, Premiering Tuesday, August 29 on PBS
New three-part series follows John Leguizamo’s continued quest to uncover the
history and often overlooked contributions of Latino people
In 2018, acclaimed Broadway and film actor John Leguizamo kicked off an exploration of Latino history in his Tony-nominated play Latin History for Morons, cramming 3,000 years of history into a 90-minute one-man show. Now, following his triumphant Broadway run, and prompted by a quest to discover lost Latino heroes throughout history, Leguizamo sets out on his most ambitious journey yet in the new three-part documentary series, AMERICAN HISTORIA. Co-created by Leguizamo and award-winning filmmaker Ben DeJesus, who also serves as director, The WNET Group, Latino Public Broadcasting and Latino digital media and entertainment company NGL Collective are collaborating to produce the series. A co-presentation of The WNET Group and Latino Public Broadcasting’s VOCES, AMERICAN HISTORIA is set to premiere nationwide on Tuesday, August 29.
New Ken Burns Film Explores History of the American Buffalo
Two-Part, Four-Hour Film Traces the Near Demise – and Ultimate Return – of the U.S. National Mammal, While Examining the Species’ Connection to Indigenous Communities and the Land
THE AMERICAN BUFFALO, premiering Oct. 16 and 17, is the biography of an improbable, shaggy beast that has found itself at the center of many of the country’s most mythic and heartbreaking tales. The series, which has been in production for four years, will take viewers on a journey through more than 10,000 years of North American history and across some of the continent’s most iconic landscapes, tracing the mammal’s evolution, its significance to the Great Plains and, most importantly, its relationship to the Indigenous People of North America.
PBS and AMERICAN EXPERIENCE Announce Two Documentaries That Explore the Legacy of Efforts to Integrate Public Schools in 1970s America
“Boston School Battle” and “The Harvest” Premiere Fall 2023 on PBS and Streaming on PBS.org“Boston School Battle (w.t.)” viscerally captures the class tensions and racial violence that met the city’s decision to use busing to end school segregation. The film is directed by Sharon Grimberg and Cyndee Readdean. “The Harvest” is a personal and powerful look at Leland, Mississippi’s attempts to desegregate its schools. The film is directed by Sam Pollard and Douglas A. Blackmon, one of the Leland students and the Pulitzer Prize–winning author of “Slavery by Another Name: The Re–Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II.” Both films are executive produced by Cameo George and will premiere in Fall 2023. |