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1-29 de 29
- Versiones filmadas y televisadas de producciones teatrales, como obras de teatro, musicales, óperas, ballets y conciertos de todo el mundo.
- KQED's award-winning restaurant review series Check, Please. Bay Area launched in 2005 with a simple premise: to welcome local diners - not professional restaurant critics - to share their favorite Bay Area restaurants.Each week, host Leslie Sbrocco joins three local diners who recommend their can't-miss dining destinations. After anonymously trying each other's restaurant picks, the guests come on the show to champion, celebrate and even critique their experiences with humor, enthusiasm, and authentic conversation.
- In 1972, Henry Jacobs collaborated with Bob McClay and Chris Koch on a series of half-hour television programs for San Francisco public television station KQED. "The Fine Art of Goofing Off" was a sort of philosophical Sesame Street; each program would develop an open-ended theme, like "time" or "work" in an unpredictable collage of brief episodes in a variety of different styles of animation. Alan Watts, improv troop The Committee, artist Victor Moscoso, musicians Mark Unobsky and Pete Sears, Woody Leafer, and Jordan Belson all contributed to the series. The CD/DVD set by this name has been described as " a kaleidoscopic array of sound bites that are alternately funny, charmingly nostalgic, bizarre, psychedelic or inexplicable."
- "The Gospel and Guatemala" investigates an evangelical church in Northern California, Gospel Outreach, that sent missionaries to Guatemala and converted a general, Efrain Rios Montt, who then took power in a military coup and led a brutal counter-insurgency war against a popular uprising.
- "Song for Cesar, the Movement and the Music" is a documentary built around the music, musicians, artists, and other important supporters who were instrumental in assisting Cesar Chavez and the UFW grow this movement.
- A look at the use of legal and illegal drugs in American culture and the reasons why such use has exploded in recent years. Drug experts, professors, law-enforcement personnel and young people are interviewed.
- History and tour of the famed prison from it's days as a military fort to its use by Native American protesters in the 1970's. Includes interviews with former inmates and families of prison officials who lived on the island.
- The city of Berkeley was wracked by tension resulting from the "People's Park War." This documentary traces reports on what happened in the streets, especially through the words of key participants.
- Go Ride the Music was filmed in 1969 for KQED-TV by Ralph J. Gleason. It focuses on two of the Bay Area's biggest bands at the time, Jefferson Airplane and Quicksilver Messenger Service. The seven Airplane clips were shot at Pacific High Recording in San Franciso and feature their new drummer, Joey Covington.
- "The Celebrity and the City" examines the role of Jerry Brown in reviving his political career and re-building the city of Oakland during his first term as mayor.
- On November 18th, 1978, college students David Dower and his future wife Denice Stephenson were shocked by breaking news reports that several hundred Americans had been found dead in the jungles of Guyana, apparent victims of a mass suicide. The dead were identified as 913 residents of the agricultural project called Jonestown, led by the Reverend Jim Jones. In January of 2001, Dower commissioned Leigh Fondakowski to create and direct a new play about Jonestown. Fondakowski, along with a team of three writers and an archivist, began by combing through the collection of People's Temple materials at the California Historical Society, where they unearthed oral histories taken in Jonestown.