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A reader’s companion to

KRCB Television 22 & Radio 91


www.krcb.org
Volume 9 - No. 8 August 2010

Through a
Dog’s Eyes
Destiny and her assistance
dog, Salsa, bond during some
downtime at the Canine
Assistants training camp.

krcb.org
Contents
KRCB News …3 - 4
Television Articles …5 - 11
Radio Articles …12 - 15,
18 - 19
Radio Schedule …16 - 17
Membership … 20
TV Daytime Listings …21
Television Listings … 22 - 28
Business Spotlight … 31

Board of Directors
 34 bed skilled nursing unit on 8 acre Patrick Campbell
campus with plenty of outdoor access Steve DeLap
Long or short term care

Nancy Dobbs
 Post surgery rehabilitation
 Physical, occupational, speech and Paul Ginsburg
IV therapies John Kramer
 High staff-to-resident ratio Carol Libarle
Josué López
Margaret McCarthy
Eric McHenry
Michael R. Musson
Harry Rubins
Rafael Rivero
David Stare
Dr. Larry Slater

Post
the Gordon Stewart
PetAlUMA
KRCB’s Board and
Community Action
Council meetings are open
A ReAdeR’s Monthly to the public. Call the
station for details on time
and location.
A READER’S
President & CEO
MONTHLY Nancy Dobbs
GUIDE TO Chief Operations Officer
Larry Stratton
NORTH BAY Radio Program Director
ARTS AND Robin Pressman
TV Broadcast Operations
EVENTS Stan Marvin
News Department
Bruce Robinson
on newsstands
and at
petalumapost. Cover – Through A
Dog’s Eyes – pg 7
com

2
in the news
A New Vision for Public Media
Planning for the future of any organization in these times
is a particularly daunting task. When that organization hap-
pens to be in the business of public media, the challenge is
magnified by the pace of change in the telecommunications
industry. As KRCB began the process of developing plans for
our future we realized that we could use some outside assis-
tance. We weren’t just looking for information on the rapidly
changing field of media and telecommunications; we also
wanted a process that would involve members of the com-
munity who value our programming. Our planning process
should support the KRCB Mission Statement: “In order to
encourage full participation in society and community KRCB provides educational, informa-
tional, and cultural telecommunications services in partnership with our community.”
The phrase “in partnership with our community” led us to Saul Eisen, Ph.D., a well-
respected member of the professional community of Organization Development practitio-
ners, and founder of the Master’s Program in Organization Development at Sonoma State
University. Partnering with Dr. Eisen gave us confidence that even though we were entering
unknown territory, here was an opportunity for KRCB to re-imagine a vital and relevant
future for our organization.
Over the past two months, KRCB has been
working with Dr. Eisen to plan a Future Search
Conference. These conferences have been held
by large and small organizations, profit and
not-for-profit groups for more than 20 years
worldwide. Simply put, a Future Search
conference is an extremely effective action
planning meeting that brings together a diverse
group of people who have a stake in the success
of their organization or group. Typically it involves approximately 50 people representing a
cross-section of the organization’s identified stakeholders. (continued nest page)

Radio 91 Television 22
Broadcasting on Comcast Cable and AT&T,
91.1 and 90.9 FM U-Verse-TV,
Comcast Cable 961 DISH and DirecTV Satellite,
Channel 22.
Streaming & podcasting Over the air-digital,
at krcb.org Channel 22.1, 22.2, 22.3.
A service of Northern California Public Media
KRCB’s Open Air is printed monthly by GPM and available by request or online at krcb.org.
Published by KRCB Television & Radio, 5850 Labath Avenue, Rohnert Park, CA 94928
707-584-2000 – krcb.org
Bruce Robinson, Editor - Deena “Connie” Berens, Designer
3
KRCB in the community
KRCB’s Future Search Conference will be taking place in the first two weeks of August
over the course of four afternoons; a total of 16 hours. Participants will include board
members, staff members and other individuals with close ties to KRCB, as well as repre-
sentatives from organizations with a stake in public media. But the end of the conference is
just the beginning; KRCB will work with our partners (current and newly-identified) in the
implementation and follow-through of the action plans developed during the KRCB Future
Search Conference. Our goal is nothing less than to create a new vision for public media in
the North Bay; stay tuned!

Dear Member,
This summer saw the beginning of a great new adventure here at KRCB.
Working in association with the City of Rohnert Park, KRCB presented the “Party
on the Plaza” every Friday from July 2 through the final party coming up on August
6. While the Rohnert Park Farmers’ Market is in full swing, KRCB ensures there is
live music for the crowd’s enjoyment.
These fine performers include many of our own staff and radio volunteer hosts and
their bands including Doug Jayne, Jim Laveroni, Cathy Slack, Alegra Broughton, and
Gus Garelick. Thanks, guys.
And many thanks to the series sponsor (that’s how these things
happen), North Bay Corporation. Weekly sponsor support is
provided by Wasson Retirement Services, Summit State Bank,
Raley’s Towne Center, and the Marin/Sonoma Mosquito Control
District. So, thanks to all of them as well.
Music on the air, online, and on the Plaza, super entertainment
in collaboration with our local partners for the enjoyment of the
entire community!
Enjoy,

Nancy Dobbs
President and CEO
4
Great Performances at the Met continues on KRCB
Les Contes D’hoffmann
Offenbach’s fictionalized take on the life and loves of the German
romantic writer E.T.A. Hoffmann is a fascinating psychological journey.
Met Music Director James Levine conducts Joseph Calleja in the tour-
de-force title role. Anna Netrebko is the tragic Antonia and Alan Held
sings the demonic four villains. Tony Award winner Bartlett Sher directs.
Wednesday, August 11 at 8 pm

Carmen
One of the most popular operas of all time, Carmen “is
about sex, violence, and racism—and its corollary: freedom,”
says Olivier Award-winning director Richard Eyre about his
new production of Bizet’s drama. “It is one of the inalien-
ably great works of art. It’s sexy, in every sense. And I think it
should be shocking.” Elina Garanca sings the seductive gypsy
of the title for the first time at the Met, opposite Roberto
Alagna as the obsessed Don Jose. Yannick Nezet-Seguin
conducts.
Wednesday, August 18 at 8 pm

Hamlet
The works of Shakespeare have inspired more
operatic adaptations than any other writer. Simon
Keenlyside and Marlis Petersen bring their extraor-
dinary acting and singing skills to two of the Bard’s
most unforgettable characters in this new produc-
tion of Ambroise Thomas’ Hamlet. For the role of
Ophelia, the French composer created an extended
mad scene that is among the greatest in opera. Louis
Langree conducts the production.
Wednesday, August 25 at 8 pm

KRCB.ORG has changed!


Visit KRCB’s newly redesigned website for local
and national news, community events, television
& radio programming, and everything KRCB.
Now Monthly Open Air now available online!

5
KRCB’s August membership drive presents
Michel Legrand & Friends -
50 Years of Movies & Music
Over the course of his 50-year career,
Michel Legrand composed more than 200
film and television scores as well as several
musicals. In honor of Legrand and his
legendary work, a concert took place at the
MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nevada, hosted
by Jon Voight and Jennifer O’Neil. Dur-
ing the show, Michel Legrand performed
with many of his superstar friends such as
George Benson, Melissa Manchester,
Dionne Warwick, and more!
Sunday, August 1 at 6:30 pm

Hallelujah Broadway
Hallelujah Broadway is based on the simple
premise that powerful songs can bring an
audience to their feet, gladden their hearts
and give them something to really feel good
about. Their program gathers together
some of the most uplifting songs from the
world of musical theatre and harnesses their
emotional power in one delightful feast of
entertainment.
Sunday, August 1 at 8 pm

Clay Aiken-Tried and True: Live!


A special featuring Clay Aiken and guest
stars Ruben Studdard and Linda Edder
performing great romantic hits of the ’50s,
’60s and ’70s. Clay and his guests are
accompanied by a full orchestra in the
Big Band tradition.
Monday, August 2 at 9:30 pm &
Wednesday, August 4 at 7 pm

6
KRCB presents programs that inspire & inform
Through A Dog’s Eyes
Millions of Americans with disabilities
rely on hope to get them through each day;
hope for a breakthrough; hope for gaining
or reclaiming independence; and hope for
a friend. Each year, hundreds of them find
hope at a handful of organizations across
the country that train assistance dogs for
people with disabilities. Through a Dog’s
Eyes follows the life-changing journey of
recipients as they go through the heart-
warming and sometimes difficult process of
receiving and being matched with a service
dog.
Monday, August 2 at 8 pm & Saturday,
August 7 at 12:30 pm Anti-Cancer with
Dr. David Servan-Schreiber
At 31 years old, Dr. Servan-Schreiber
discovered that he had a malignant brain
tumor. Feeling his own doctor’s advice was
lacking, he dedicated his time to research-
ing integrative cancer treatments that can
be used in addition to traditional oncology
to prevent and treat cancer. The results of
his research are astonishing. In Anti-Cancer,
Dr. Servan-Schreiber shares these scientific
truths, and educates viewers about the steps
they can take to prevent and fight cancer.
Friday, August 6 at 7 pm & Saturday,
August 7 at 11:00 am

Tackling Diabetes with Dr. Neal


Barnard
Leading clinical researcher, adjunct asso-
ciate professor of medicine, author, and
health advocate, Neal Barnard, MD shares
his scientifically proven system to taking
control of diabetes through nutrition,
without drugs in Tackling Diabetes with
Dr. Neil Barnard. The 3-segment program
is targeted at diabetics and those at risk
of becoming diabetic based on genes and
current lifestyle habits.
Friday, August 6 at 8:30 pm

7
PBS series We Shall Remain returns in August
This groundbreaking mini-series establishes Native history as an essential part of American
history. Five 90-minute documentaries spanning 300 years tell the story of pivotal moments
in U.S. history from the Native-American perspective. Benjamin Bratt narrates.

After the Mayflower


In March of 1621, in what is now south-
eastern Massachusetts, Massasoit, the leading
sachem of the Wampanoag, sat down to
negotiate with a ragged group of English colo-
nists. Hungry, dirty and sick, the pale-skinned
foreigners were struggling to stay alive; they
were in desperate need of Native help.
Massasoit faced problems of his own. His
people had lately been decimated by unex-
plained sickness, leaving them vulnerable
to the rival Narragansett to the west. The
Wampanoag sachem calculated that a tactical
alliance with the foreigners would provide a
way to protect his people and hold his Native
enemies at bay. He agreed to give the English the help they needed.
A half-century later, as a brutal war flared between the English colonists and a confedera-
tion of New England Indians, the wisdom of Massasoit’s diplomatic gamble seemed less
clear. Five decades of English immigration, mistreatment, lethal epidemics, and widespread
environmental degradation had brought the Indians and their way of life to the brink of
disaster. Led by Metacom, Massasoit’s son, the Wampanoag and their Native allies fought
back against the English, nearly pushing them into the sea.
Sunday, August 22 at 8 pm

Tecumseh’s Vision
In the spring of 1805, Tenskwatawa, a Shawnee, fell into a trance so deep that those around
him believed he had died. When he finally stirred, the young prophet claimed to have met
the Master of Life. He told those who crowded around to listen that the Indians were in dire
straits because they had adopted white culture and rejected traditional spiritual ways.
For several years Tenskwatawa’s spiritual revival movement
drew thousands of adherents from tribes across the Midwest.
His elder brother, Tecumseh, would harness the energies of
that renewal to create an unprecedented military and political
confederacy of often antagonistic tribes, all committed to
stopping white westward expansion.
The brothers came closer than anyone since to creating an
Indian nation that would exist alongside and separate from
the United States. The dream of an independent Indian state
may have died at the Battle of the Thames, when Tecumseh
was killed fighting alongside his British allies, but the great
Shawnee warrior would live on as a potent symbol of Native
pride and pan-Indian identity.
Sunday, August 29 at 8 pm
8
Climate One Commonwealth Club Forums
Climate Showdown
Oil spills, arctic ice, climate skeptics, and clogged legislation—it’s a climate showdown.
Experts from science, business, and the military discuss what our energy future will look like.
Segment 1–After BP: Climate Progress? Joe Romm, Senior Fellow, Center for American
Progress
Does the oil sloshing around the Gulf of Mexico improve or
impede the chance of major energy legislation getting through
Congress this year? After decades of debating climate science,
is the United States making any progress toward acting upon
it? A former official at the U.S. Department of Energy and a
vociferous blogger, Romm gives his insight into the urgency of
the climate crisis and the hope for technology to solve it. He
also sounds off on what he says are distortions and inaccuracies
in mainstream news coverage of the climate debate. Join us for
a no-holds-barred conversation with one of the country’s most
passionate clean-energy commentators.
Segment 2–America’s Climate War Eric Pooley, Deputy Editor, Bloomberg BusinessWeek
Why is the national conversation about America’s energy
future so polarized? Who are the true believers, power brokers
and climate-change deniers working the halls of power in
Washington? The political story of global warming includes
colorful characters from activists chaining themselves to bull-
dozers and powerful lobbyists in the West Wing of President
Obama’s administration. Pooley had extensive access to Al
Gore in writing his new book, The Climate War. He offers his
take on the forces battling it out in the big climate change
showdown. Join him for a conversation about villains, heroes
and the fight to save the earth.
Segment 3–Hot, Wet and Uncertain Wieslaw Maslowski, Research Professor, Naval Post
Graduate School; Will Travis, Executive Director, Bay Area Conservation and Development
Commission; Peter Ward, Professor of Biology and Earth and Space Sciences, University of
Washington, Author, The Flooded Earth
What do scientists predict the Earth will be like in a
few decades? While imperfect and complex, computer
models using historic data and forward projections
suggest deterioration of agricultural land, crumbling
bridges and flooded roads, and population shifts away
from low-lying cities such as Miami and Amsterdam.
How fast will Arctic ice melt? What does that mean for
the rest of the world? What are governments and busi-
nesses doing in the Bay Area and elsewhere to prepare for new water patterns that paradoxi-
cally may bring too much water at times in some areas and drought in others? Join experts
for a discussion of what the past and present can tell us about our future.
Sunday, August 29 at 11 am
Listen to Climate One on Radio 91 FM, Thursdays at 7 pm
9
What’s new on KRCB Television 22
The Leading Gen
What will you do with the rest of your life? The Leading
Gen is a new television series targeting 40- to 100-year-olds.
Each episode features real people from different socio-
economic levels and cultures. Multiple interviewees explain
how they met the challenges of maturing, retirement, new
experiences, divorce, economic planning, finding new jobs/
careers, illness, loss, loneliness, and other problems. Programs
are positive, inspiring, and practical. This series is about real The originators, James
people who find and share their solutions to problems and Carolyn Ausman
unique and important to the challenges of living a longer life.
Tuesdays at 7:30 pm beginning August 10
Great Museums
The award-winning Great Museums series returns with two
new specials. The first, An Acquiring Mind, examines the
prolific 31 year tenure of Philippe de Montebello, the Metro-
politan Museum of Art’s longest-serving director who guided
the acquisition of more than 84,000, from Duccio’s Madonna
and Child to Van Gogh’s Wheatfield with Cypresses. Go behind
the scenes with de Montebello and his curatorial team as they
debate the purchase of masterworks for the museum and
mount an exhibit featuring 300 of the Met’s most important
artworks. Susan Stamberg narrates.
Thursday, August 12 & 26 at 8 pm
New Orleans: A Living Museum of Music, features inspiring
personal narratives of those most deeply affected by
Hurricane Katrina. From the Lower Ninth Ward to Congo
Square, the film reveals the enormous recovery effort under-
way to preserve America’s greatest musical art form.
Thursday, August 19 & September 2 at 8 pm

Every week, KRCB Television 22 delivers


32 hours of the best children’s
programming on television.
We don’t want your kids to watch more
television. We want them to watch
better TV!
Support the one TV choice that kids,
families and teachers trust for
innovative, curriculum-based
programs that are
educational—and fun.
Our daytime audience is growing

10
What’s new in daytime television
Paint, Paper and Crafts
A new season of Paint, Paper and Crafts is here with all
the latest trends in crafting, painting, knitting, scrapbook-
ing, entertaining, decorating, accessorizing, organizing
and gift giving. Host Sloan Rutter is joined this season by
her 9- year-old daughter, Logan, who brings fun, doable
crafting ideas for kids and parents. Each show presents
three new and trendy project ideas plus an Arts and Crafts
segment with Logan. Watching Paint, Paper and Crafts is
like spending the afternoon with your favorite girlfriends
doing what you love most, being creative. Wednesdays at 10 am

Music Voyager
These new travel-based music series features host Jacob
Edgar exploring thriving, exotic global music scenes to dis-
cover emerging talent. Edgar—an ethnomusicologist, cultural
musician and music critic—travels all over the world to hear
cutting-edge musicians and immerse himself in their cultures.
Wednesdays at 1:30 pm

Anne of Green Gables


Inspired by Lucy Maud Montgomery’s classic novels, Anne
of Green Gables follows the adventures of 10-year-old Anne
Shirley, whose independent spirit and impetuous nature
make the fictional turn-of-the-century town of Avonlea an
exciting place to live. Whimsical and engaging storylines
revolve around the timeless problems kids face: self-esteem,
gossip, bullying, sibling rivalry, friendship, sharing and more.
Fridays at 4 pm

Muscle Car Workout


Veteran car builder Alan Goldstein rebuilds
the choicest old school cars on Muscle Car
Workout. Keep tabs on Alan and his crew as
they make over a cast of muscle cars and clas-
sic autos in historic New Smyrna Beach, Fla.
Thursdays at 11 am - beginning August 12

11
Not just for classical connoisseurs – Saint Paul Sunday
August 1 – Charles Wadsworth and Friends
Charles Wadsworth, founder of Charleston’s renowned
Spoleto Chamber Music Festival, brings along four of the
younger artists who made the event so special year after year.
Violinist Chee-Yun, clarinetist Todd Palmer, cellist Andrés
Díaz, and pianist Wendy Chen join Charles in various
combinations for music of Mendelssohn, Schumann, and
another Spoleto regular Stephen Prutsman.
Chee-Yun
August 8 – Dawn Upshaw, soprano; Gil Kalish, piano
Dawn Upshaw joins longtime friend and collaborator pianist
Gil Kalish this week for songs that illuminate the expansive range of this cherished American
soprano. The duo brings us music of Schubert, Mahler, Debussy, and Bartok, as well as two
American composers—William Bolcom and John Harbison—whose works Ms. Upshaw has
long championed.

August 15 – Shai Wosner, piano


The acclaimed young pianist Shai Wosner—recent recipi-
ent of the Avery Fisher Award—performs two breakthrough
works this week. Frédéric Chopin’s Opus 49 Fantasy in f minor.
Its dynamic shifts of mood and color resonate well with the
program’s concluding work, Beethoven’s “Tempest” sonata.
Between these two masterworks we’ll hear a brief haunting
“Night Piece” of Robert Schumann.

August 22 – Imani Winds plays Haas, del Aguila Shai Wosner


Imani Winds makes a warmly anticipated return and two of the program’s works—Jeff
Scott’s “Titilayo” and Valerie Coleman’s reimagination of the spiritual “Steal Away”—were
composed from within the ensemble. Pavel Haas’s stylistically prescient 10th wind quin-
tet reveals these performers’ capacity to illuminate the rarer gems of their repertoire. And
Uruguayan composer Miguel del Aguila’s 2nd wind quintet, which closes the hour, seems to
embrace all that comes before.

August 29 – Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra


Discover why the Saint Paul
Chamber Orchestra of soloists
is an American musical treasure.
They’ll bring us music from a
vibrant trio of composers—a
Haydn symphony, a Schubert
rondo, and two of Astor
Piazzolla’s vivid Porteno.
Sundays at 11 am

12
More of The Moth
The Moth Radio Hour features true stories
told live on stage, humorous, heartbreaking,
and poignant tales that captivate, surprise, and
delight audiences with their honesty, bravery,
and humor. The storytellers stand alone, under
a spotlight, with only a microphone and a
roomful of strangers, and embark on a high-
wire act of shared experience, which is both
terrifying and exhilarating.
This month we revisit some of the most compelling stories from the first Moth broadcasts.
August 10
Writer Adam Gopnik (Paris to the Moon, The New Yorker) embarrasses his son and offends
other loved ones by getting lost in the new world of Instant Message abbreviations. Also,
stories of first love and unlikely pen pals, and the sad tale of a gay man who comes out to his
parents with dramatic consequences.
August 17
From author Malcolm Gladwell (Outliers, Blink, The Tipping Point) about a wedding prank
gone horribly wrong; an African-American home care attendant caring for a dying Klans-
man; and a miracle survivor of a gang initiation.
August 24
A man is instructed not to fall in love with his monkey, but fails; renowned performer
Sarah Jones (Bridge and Tunnel) finds herself the subject of racial profiling; and the inventor
of the Baby Calzone runs into trouble with the Mob.
Tuesdays at 7 pm

Harmonia: Early music, early Sunday morning


August 1 – More Medieval Instruments
Harmonia continues its look at musical instruments from the Middle Ages, Baroque oboist
John Abberger talks abut his chosen instrument.
August 8 – Lucidarium: La Istoria de Purim
Music of the Jews in Renaissance Italy with Lucidarium and Telemann’s gypsy music with
Ensemble Caprice.
August 15 – Anna Bon with La Donna Musicale
Harmonia looks at the music of 18th-century Italian composer Anna Bon with La Donna
Musicale.
August 22 – Peter Phillips and the Tallis Scholars
Peter Phillips joins Harmonia to talk about the Tallis
Scholars’ recording “Lamentations of Jeremiah.”
August 29 – Great Musicians: Paul O’Dette, lutenist
American lutenist Paul O’Dette talks about his record-
ing of pieces by Marco dall’Aquila, and Los Musicos de Su
Alteza performs in a world-premiere recording of villancicos
by Joseph Ruiz Samaniego.
Sundays at 9 am
13
Diane Di Prima and Carl Sandburg on WordTemple
WordTemple host Katherine Hastings presents current San
Francisco Poet Laureate Diane di Prima who reads from her book
Revolutionary Letters. She also plays recordings of poet, hobo,
organizer for the Social Democratic party, and Pulitzer Prize winner
Carl Sandburg reading his work. Born in 1878, Sandburg was virtu-
ally unknown to the literary world until 1914 when a group of his
poems appeared in Poetry magazine. Poetry collections followed, as
well as a searching analysis of the 1919 Chicago race riots, a novel,
folk songs, a biography of Abraham Lincoln, and an autobiography,
Always the Young Strangers.
WordTemple, Wednesday July 21 at 7 pm

Climate One conversations continue


August 5 – Shag Agassi: A Better Model?
Influential investors seem to be betting on the electrification of vehicles. What infrastruc-
ture will be necessary to make this viable on a national scale? Are electric companies prepared
to support the electric car market? And where does the U.S. stand in a global competitive
context? Find out what Better Place CEO Agassi, once called the “Steve Jobs of clean en-
ergy,” has to say about it.
August 12 – Sun Up: Scaling Solar Power in California
Solar power is surging and yet it is still a small part of California’s overall energy supply.
How will the state’s plan calling for a third of all electricity to be from renewable sources by
2030 impact the growth of commercial and industrial solar? What are the key obstacles and
drivers to meeting the ambitious solar power? Will novel financing schemes and buyer’s clubs
drive demand and make residential solar more accessible? A panel of experts discusses how
bright the future is for sun energy in the Golden State in this repeat broadcast.
August 19 – Women and Climate Activism from the Courtroom to the Arctic Tundra
Kassie Siegel is head of the Climate Law Institute at the Center for Biological Diversity.
In 10-plus years at the Center, she has helped it evolve from a tiny nonprofit founded by a
quartet of men to a national organization with a staff of 60-plus, more than half of whom
are women. Siegel shares her journey, discusses the Institute’s current work battling climate
change, ocean acidification and other threats, and offers perspectives for other female activ-
ists.
August 26 – Spin It Green: The Story of Marissa Muller, Solar-Powered Bicycle Pioneer
After graduating from business school in Spain, Muller returned home to California and
worked with her family in building her vision: a solar powered electric bike. During her
1,000-mile solo adventure on the roads of California,
she visited 14 high schools, offering seminars on solar
and electric vehicles, and sparking a dialogue with the
students to start brainstorming ways to combat our
energy and environmental challenges. Though the ride is
over, her goal of reaching 1,000 clean ideas is ongoing.
Thursdays at 7 pm

14
LA Theater Works for August
August 7 – A Fair Country by Jon Robin Baitz with David
Dukes, Chuma Hunter-Gault, Judith Ivey, Matt McGrath,
Kurtwood Smith
A well-meaning American diplomat in South Africa tries to
pacify his ferociously combative wife and anti-apartheid activist
son by being reassigned to The Hague. But peace is hard to come
by and, at an elegant New Year’s Eve party, a harrowing betrayal
is revealed.
August 14 – Chavez Ravine by Culture Clash with Richard
Montoya, Ric Salinas, Herbert Siguenza and Zilah Mendoza
The controversial history of Chavez Ravine, the immigrant
community that once existed on the site that is now Dodger
Stadium in Los Angeles, is explored with humor, brutal honesty,
and pulse-racing music by the nation’s premier Chicano/Latino
theatre troupe.
August 21 – Atomic Bombers by Russell Vandenbroucke with
Larry Cox, Robin Gammell, Jon Matthews, Phillip Mershon,
Danny Mora, John Vickery, Tom Virtue, Ron West
In 1943, something strange is going on in the New Mexican
desert. Fifty years after Hiroshima, Atomic Bombers takes us into
those secretive canyons to meet the cadre of brilliant scientists
who worked there.
August 28 – The Doctor’s Dilemma by George Bernard Shaw
with Jane Carr, Gregory Cooke, Kenneth Danziger, Roy Dotrice,
Simon Templeman, Douglas Weston
The blowhards, the know-it-alls, the scrupulous and the impe-
cunious are all targets for Shaw’s incisive wit in his classic satire of
the medical profession.
Saturdays at 6 pm & midnight

You can count on Flashback


The Top 10—or 20 or even Top 40—count-
down has been a staple of popular radio for
almost as long as the medium has been playing
the hits. But this month on Flashback, we’ll turn
that trope upside down, and count upwards
through an hour of fine psychedelic-era tunes. Be
prepared to hear from the Doors, John Lennon,
the Byrds, the Charlatans, the Yardbirds and the
Beau Brummels, among others, on this August
edition of Flashback.
Tuesday, August 3 at 7 pm

15
Public Radio for Sonoma County & HEAR
the North Bay at 91.1 & 90.9 FM IT
Shaded programs are created and produced at KRCB
ON
Office: 707-584-2000 Studio: 707-584-2020
KRCB
MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
5:00 DOWNSIZE THE "SM" WHEN THE USING LOGO ON
OVERSIZED APPLICATIONS SUCH OUTDOOR ADVERTISING

KRCB OVERNIGHT
AND LARGE EXHIBIT DISPLAYS
5:30
6:00
6:30 MORNING EDITION - NPR NEWS (KRCB host Lizzie Hannon)
7:00 KRCB features: North Bay Report at 6:06 & 8:06 am
Second Row Center with David Templeton, Wednesday, 6:35 and 8:35 am & 6:45 pm
7:30 Reel Time Film Review with Diane McCurdy -Thursday at 8:35 am
8:00 Another Voice with Susan Swartz - Friday at 6:35, 8:35 am & at 6:45 pm
8:30
9:00
SONOMA SPOTLIGHT: Five minutes on local events and issues with Roland Jacopetti
9:30
10:00 PERFORMANCE TODAY with Fred Child
Classical music magazine offering live concert performances
10:30
and interviews with distinguished artists and composers
11:00
11:04 Earth & Sky
11:30
12:00
12:30
MIDDAY CLASSICS
1:00 with Julie Amacher, Lynn Warfel and Mindy Ratner
1:30
2:00
2:30
3:00
3:30 Democracy Now! with Amy Goodman
4:00
4:30 FRESH AIR with Terry Gross
5:00
5:30 ALL THINGS CONSIDERED - NPR News (KRCB host Mark Prell)
6:00 North Bay Report with Bruce Robinson - daily at 5:30 pm
Jim Hightower Report - daily at 6:30 pm
6:30
7:00 Word by Word
E-Town Flashback A Novel Idea Climate One
7:30 Live folk/rock WordTemple Poetry
the Moth ArtsID
Forums
8:00
your Average something freight train
8:30 Abalone connections boogie
completely
9:00 Johnny different Doug Jayne & Bill Frater On the
9:30 Bazzano fiddlin’ zone Roland Jacopetti Alegra Broughton Road Again
Gus Garelick Linda Seabright
10:00
Rare & well done Crossing Kaleidoscope
10:30 Jeffrey Weissman Borders Pillow Storm Jan Stephens
11:00 Doug Gosling, Josh Drake & Percussion
11:30 Mindy’s Mix Lawrence Alberti, & Josh Staples Discussion
Mindy Berrett Amy Contardi Jim Laveroni
12:00
Democracy Now! with Amy Goodman
1:00
Fresh Air with Terry Gross
2:00 radio free sonoma
KRCB OVERNIGHT
16
The Great Textbook War
In the 1970s, the battle for the hearts and minds of America’s schoolchildren erupted in violence. The
flashpoint for the conflict was a new set of textbooks, which some parents said undermined their values.
This 2010 Peabody Award-winning documentary tells the story of an early skirmish in America’s culture
wars, and examines the divide that is still firmly in place today.
Tues August 31, 7 pm

Friday saturday sunday


5:00
KRCB OVERNIGHT radio Free Sonoma Blues Before sunrise 5:30
6:00
WEEKEND WEEKEND 6:30
EDITION EDITION 7:00
NPR news NPR news 7:30
with with 8:00
Scott Simon Liane Hansen
8:30
9:00
This American Life HARMONIA 9:30
with Ira Glass Early Music
10:00
The Choir Loft
West Coast Live Bob Worth, Dan Solter, Steve Osborn 10:30
Sedge Thomson & Anthony Martin
hosts music & guests live 11:00
from San Francisco St. Paul Sunday 11:30
12:00
CURTAIN CALL Thistle & Shamrock
Celtic Music sunday classics 12:30
Charles Sepos
1:00
Out of the Box Classical 1:30
OUR ROOTS music from
Shafiq Spanos ARE SHOWING 2:00
(New classical releases) KRCB-FM
John Katchmer, 2:30
Folk & acoustic Shafiq Spanos &
music with 3:00
John Lounsbery
Robin Pressman & 3:30
Steve DeLap 4:00
From the top 4:30
5:00
ALL THINGS CONSIDERED - NPR NEWS 5:30
6:00
LE SHOW
The Play’s the Thing Music & satire from Harry Shearer 6:30
Radio theater from Mouthful 7:00
This American Life LA Theatre Works Food & wine with 7:30
with Ira Glass Michele Anna Jordan 8:00
Rhythm & Roots Outbeat Salon 8:30
Mark Nicholas Beyond JAZZ GLBT Radio
CONNECTIONS 9:00
& Back NEW DIMENSIONS
Hillary Culhane 9:30
Chuck Sher, RADIO
Larry Slater 10:00
red shoes Rodeo OPEN SPACE DISTRICT
(The Jazz MD), John Katchmer 10:30
Michele Anna Jordan Maria Marquez, 11:00
& Toby Gleason Eclectica
Littlest bird Radio Paul Timberman & 11:30
Preston Reyes Mr. Bad Rules 12:00
Holy Cow! space/time The Play’s the Thing
Richard Wisinski Paul E (Repeat) Night Traveler 1:00
Blues Before sunrise Linda Coffin 2:00
radio Free Sonoma
17
Summertime, and the Livin’ is Outbeat
August 1 – Living Proof. Find out more about the We Mean it
Productions team as Sher and Di discuss life with Ellen Maremont
Silver and Robyn Bramhall.
Augsut 8 – Keep on the Sunny Side. Sun Bell talks with Melissa
Etheridge on Outbeat Music and has interviews from July’s Fab
Fest at Petaluma’s Walker Creek Ranch.
August 15 – Outbeat Collage Out in the Arts. Hosts Mark Prell
and Gary Carnivele welcome Face to Face Executive Director Rick
Dean who will talk about his organization’s 23rd Annual Art for Life. The
September event features art by hundreds of local artists that is offered for
auction to benefit Face to Fac—Sonoma County AIDS Network. Also, the Arts and
Entertainment Calendar.
August 22 – Outbeat Now! profiles two new programs serving the LGBT community in
Sonoma County. Jeff Basham and Joel Bellagio talk with Jesse Funes about a new support
group for parents, grandparents, and guardians of LGBT youth. On the Outbeat Youth
segment, Greg Miraglia interviews Shana Friedman about the new Sonoma County Peer
Outreach Coalition and the mental health services they provide for youth.
August 29 – Jeff Basham presents a documentary about two transgender women, Jacqui
Nugent and Vanessa Agrabright—who have recently fully transitioned from male to female.
They, along with their partners and family members, will share their journeys.
Sundays at 8 pm

Lofty Music on Sunday Mornings


Every Sunday morning at 10, Sonoma County’s very own choir lofters bring you the
best in choral music.
August 1. Bach and the Fugue
An exploration of Bach’s masterful use of the fugue, including both vocal and instru-
mental works. Hosted by Bob Worth.
August 8. The English Renaissance
So what if the Italians got there first? In English music, the Renaissance was well worth
the wait. Hosted by Dan Solter.
August 15. Sacred Music of Michael Haydn
At the tag end of the Enlightenment, Franz Joseph Haydn’s little brother emerged as a
brilliant composer in his own right.
August 22. Missa Votiva
A stupendous mass by the 18th century Czech composer Jan Dismas Zelenka. Hosted
by Steve Osborn.
August 29. I believe!
Tune in this hour to explore several settings of the Credo text from the Mass Ordinary,
including interpretations from Bach, Haydn, Martin, Palestrina, Josquin, Machaut, and
the great Monteverdi. Hosted by Anthony Martin.

18
Hot summer licks on E-town
August 2 – E-town’s Green Rocks at Red Rocks – Part Two
Originally taped in 2007, you’ll hear exciting live perfor-
mances and intimate, behind-the-scenes artist interviews
from Michael Franti & Spearhead plus a great live perfor-
mance from and conversation with the John Butler Trio.
August 9 – Del McCoury Band / Eddie Kowalczyk
Del McCoury and his amazing band deliver their signa-
ture stellar musicianship and harmony vocals. Also powerful
singer and superb songwriter Eddie Kowalczyk, stepping out
from his multi-platinum, alt-rock band to perform some rare Michael Franti & Spearhead
solo acoustic songs.
August 16 – Grace Potter & The Nocturnals / Ben Sollee & Daniel Martin Moore
Grace Potter & the Nocturnals are emerging as one of
the nation’s foremost rock bands with a rabid fan following.
There’s also the acoustic driven duo of Ben Sollee & Daniel
Martin Moore, featuring Ben on cello and vocals and Daniel
on guitar and vocals.
August 23 – Lila Downs / Gregory Alan Isakov
Multi-cultural singer-songwriter Lila Downs was raised in
the Mixtec region of Oaxaca, Mexico and in Minnesota, and
her music reflects her diverse roots. Also emerging artist
Gregory Alan Isakov, a fantastic singer and songwriter who
shares some of his original tunes. Grace Potter & The Nocturnals

August 30 – Loudon Wainwright III / Bettye LaVette


Ultimate singer-songwriter Loudon Wainwright III shares
a set of both hilarious and touching songs, as only he can do.
Then, it’s legendary soul singer Bettye LaVette, force to be
reckoned with, who sings, teases and taunts the audience into
tapping their feet to her dynamic set.

Mondays at 7 pm
Bettye LaVette

Oh, the Places You’ll Hear


ArtsID looks at Venues this month—all
the places people find to make art or put on
a show, from singing in the shower to Steve
Oliver’s sculpture ranch in Geyserville. We’ll
also look at some of the old halls in the north
bay—the Mystic, the Phoenix, the newly
refurbished Uptown theater in Napa, and visit
the newly built Castello di Amorosa in Napa,
and listen to the still in-progress Green Music
Center.
Wednesday, August 25 at 7 pm
19
A message from Membership
Did you know that you don’t have to wait for a member-
ship drive to continue or enhance your relationship with
KRCB? You can do it anytime.

We are always happy to hear from our members and you


are always welcome to contact us at 707-584-2018 or
visit our website, krcb.org.

Membership is by far our largest and most reliable


source of revenue and your continued association
with KRCB truly does make a difference. The fund-
ing you provide makes possible all the wonderful
programming you’ve come to expect and appreciate
on KRCB.

Thank you so much for being a part of our KRCB family.

Volunteer of the Month


Diane McCurdy
This month our featured volunteer is someone who
knows a lot about special features; she’s been review-
ing movies on Radio 91 for the past ten years. But the
story of how Diane McCurdy became KRCB’s film
critic goes back much further. Her grandfather owned
The Strand, the first theater in Sonoma County.
Diane’s mother worked in the ticket booth and one
day, she took note of a particular patron. The feeling
was mutual, and in due course they were married.
When Diane came along, she was named after a
character in the movie, Seventh Heaven.
Today, Diane is a member of a movie review group
that meets regularly at Borders, and enjoys review-
ing unusual movies; ones that are easy to miss unless
you hear about them from a special source. She also
occasionally reviews commercial films, commenting
on the good, the bad and the ugly (NOT a big fan of car chases!) Listeners appreciate
her reviews and sometimes call the station to get her most recent list of favorites from a
particular time period or genre. KRCB has been fortunate to have Diane as our movie
reviewer for these past ten years; it’s nice to know that she has such a rich family history
in local theater.
You can hear Diane’s Reel Time Film Reviews at 8:35 am on Thursday mornings. If
you miss one, get the podcast at www.krcb.org

20
Daytime Television Listings
MONDAY 11:30 Healthy Flavors 5:00 Newsline
6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches 12:00 This Old House 5:30 PBS NewsHour
6:30 Classical Stretch 12:30 Taste This! 6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal
7:00 Sesame Street 1:00 Donna Dewberry Show SATURDAY
8:00 Dragon Tales 1:30 Music Voyager 7:00 Los Niños en Su Casa (Sp)
8:30 Curious George 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 7:30 Dragon Tales (Sp)
9:00 Sid the Science Kid 2:30 Cyberchase 8:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog (Sp)
9:30 Fons & Porter Love of Quilting 3:00 Arthur 8:30 Maya & Miguel (Sp)
10:00 Quilting Arts 3:30 WordGirl 9:00 Angelina Ballerina
10:30 Learn to Read 4:00 Fetch! 9:30 Thomas and Friends
11:00 Body Electric 4:30 The Electric Company 10:00 Bob the Builder
11:30 Allaire Back Fitness 5:00 Newsline 10:30 Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood
12:00 Hometime 5:30 PBS NewsHour 11:00 A Place of Our Own
12:30 Tommy Tang’s Easy Thai 6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal 11:30 Healing Quest
Cooking THURSDAY 12:00 To the Contrary
1:00 Nature 6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches 12:30 Scheewe Art Workshop
2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 6:30 Power Yoga 1:00 Jerry Yarnell’s School of
2:30 Cyberchase 7:00 Sesame Street Fine Art
3:00 Arthur 8:00 Dragon Tales 1:30 Scrapbook Memories
3:30 WordGirl 8:30 Curious George 2:00 Best of the Joy of Painting
4:00 Fetch! 9:00 Sid the Science Kid 2:30 Gary Spetz’s Watercolor Quest
4:30 The Electric Company 9:30 Scrapbook Memories 3:00 Woodwright’s Shop
5:00 Newsline [repeats Sat. at 1:30 pm] 3:30 Ask This Old House
5:30 PBS NewsHour 10:00 Sewing with Nancy [repeats Tues. at noon]
6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal 10:30 GED on TV (Spanish) 4:00 Julie and Jacques Cooking
TUESDAY 11:00 Burt Wolf: Travels & Traditions 4:30 Hey Kids, Let’s Cook!
6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches (8/12 - Muscle Car Workout) 5:00 Food Kids
6:30 Power Yoga 11:30 Travelscope 5:30 Everyday Food
7:00 Sesame Street 12:00 Woodsmith Shop 6:00 Simply Ming
8:00 Dragon Tales 12:30 B Organic with Michele Beschen 6:30 Mexico One Plate at a Time
8:30 Curious George 1:00 For Your Home with Rick Bayless
9:00 Sid the Science Kid 1:30 Piano Guy SUNDAY
9:30 Knitting Daily 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 8:00 Ideas in Action with Jim
10:00 Hands on Crafts for Kids 2:30 Cyberchase Glassman
10:30 GED Connection (English) 3:00 Arthur 8:30 Latin View
11:00 Wider World 3:30 WordGirl 9:00 McLaughlin’s One on One
11:30 Healthy Minds (8/17 - Healthy 4:00 Fetch! 9:30 Consuelo Mack: Wealth Track
Body, Healthy Mind) 4:30 The Electric Company 10:00 Religion & Ethics Newsweekly
12:00 Ask This Old House 5:00 Newsline 10:30 Between the Lines
12:30 Simply Ming 5:30 PBS NewsHour 11:00 European Journal (Last Sunday
[repeats Sat. at 6 pm] 6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal of the month - Climate One)
1:00 NOVA FRIDAY 11:30 World Business
2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches 12:00 Motorweek
2:30 Cyberchase 6:30 Wai Lana Yoga 12:30 Inside Washington
3:00 Arthur 7:00 Sesame Street 1:00 The Leading Gen
3:30 WordGirl 8:00 Dragon Tales 1:30 Scully the World Show
4:00 Fetch! 8:30 Curious George 2:00 America’s Heartland
4:30 The Electric Company 9:00 Sid the Science Kid 2:30 California’s Gold, Green, Water,
5:00 Newsline 9:30 Creative Living or Golden Parks
5:30 PBS NewsHour [repeats Sun. at 4 pm] 3:00 Woodsmith Shop
6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal 10:00 Martha’s Sewing Room [repeats Thurs. at noon]
WEDNESDAY 10:30 Katie Brown Workshop 3:30 This Old House
6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches 11:00 Road Trip Nation [repeats Wed. at noon]
6:30 Power Yoga 11:30 Ciao Italia 4:00 Creative Living
7:00 Sesame Street 12:00 Victory Garden 4:30 Garden Smart
8:00 Dragon Tales 12:30 Barbecue America 5:00 Wild Gardens
8:30 Curious George 1:00 Endless Feast 5:30 Victory Garden
9:00 Sid the Science Kid 1:30 Sit and Be Fit [repeats Fri. at noon]
9:30 Beads, Baubles and Jewels 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 6:00 P. Allen Smith’s Garden Home
10:00 Paint, Paper and Crafts 2:30 Cyberchase 6:30 Red Green
10:30 Piano Guy 3:00 Arthur [repeats Sat. at 7:30 pm]
[repeats Thurs. at 1:30 pm] 3:30 WordGirl
11:00 America’s Heartland 4:00 Anne of Green Gables
4:30 The Electric Company
21
Primetime Listings for August
1 Sunday generations’ memories. 11:00 Seeing, Searching, Being
11:00am Lower Your Taxes! Now 6:30 Michel Legrand & Friends - Seeing, Searching and Being
& Forever with Ed Slott This 50 Years of Movies & Music is a documentary trilogy
program will cover all new (see page 6) centered on the quest for
material including pressing 8:00 Hallelujah Broadway meaning, spirituality and truth
viewer retirement questions: (see page 6) by existentialist William Segal,
how not to run out of money 10:00 Wolfgang’s Vault Presents done in collaboration with
in retirement, ROTH IRA Day on the Green 1977 This Ken Burns. Part I–William
conversion traps, 10 steps to never before seen concert Segal focuses on Segal the
pay less taxes, a rundown of from Wolfgang’s Vault’s painter and explores the link
key retirement terms, how to archives has Peter Frampton between the intimate self and
pick retirement professionals the creative process of art
and much more. It was shot and the artist; Part II–Vezelay
before a live audience in his is an exploration in search of
humorous yet informative style individual identity and springs
filled with poignant anecdotes. from the inspiration of the ba-
Ed manages to make the dif- silica at Vezelay, France; Part
ficult subjects such as estate III–In the Marketplace com-
planning, family conversations bines the themes of Vezelay
about money, and retirement and William Segal providing
planning understandable and context and breathing life into
fun. the abstract.
1:00 Play Piano in a Flash Ever 12:00 Democracy Now! *
wish you could sit down at a 1:00 Best of KRCB *
piano and just play a tune?
Have you taken lessons at at his prime singing his hits 3 Tuesday
some point in your life, but Baby I Love Your Way, Show 7:00 Big Band Years
can’t play a thing? If you an- Me The Way, Lynyrd Skynyrd (see 8/01 at 4:30 pm)
swered “yes” to either of these performing Free Bird, and 9:00 Music and Dance of Poland:
questions, Scott “The Piano Sweet Home Alabama. Locked Mazowsze Recorded live
Guy” Houston wants to change away for all these years, the in the Polish National Opera
all that. His Play Piano in a concert will strike a chord with House in Warsaw and narrated
Flash program teaches you to baby boomers. by Bobby Vinton. Mazowsze is
play the way the pros play—in 11:30 Miles Davis: The Sound of internationally recognized as
a style enormously simpler Miles Davis In a rare national Poland’s cultural ambassadors
than traditional classical piano television appearance filmed having performed over 6000
lessons. April 2, 1959, the legendary shows in cities around the
3:00 Video Games Live The power trumpet player performs with world, including tours to the
and emotion of a symphony the Gil Evans Orchestra and US. Their symphonic arrange-
orchestra mixed with the ex- one of his “great quintets,”
ments and dances have all
citement and energy of a rock featuring tenor saxophonist
John Coltrane, pianist Wynton been created from traditional
concert and the technology,
Kelly, bassist Paul Chambers, performance styles that repre-
fun and interactivity of a video
game all completely syncron- and drummer Jimmy Cobb. sent more than 30 regions in
ized to amazing cutting edge Poland.
1:00 Best of KRCB *
video screen visuals, state of 10:30 Wolfgang’s Vault Presents
the art lighting, and special FX. 2 Monday Day on the Green 1977
4:30 Big Band Years My Music 7:00 Easy Yoga for Arthritis with (see 8/1 at 10 pm)
presents its first “Big Band” Peggy Cappy Peggy Cappy is 12:00 Democracy Now! *
music retrospective featuring ready to add a fifth title to her 1:00 Best of KRCB *
the biggest songs that got Yoga for the Rest of Us series
us through World War II and with Easy Yoga for Arthritis, a 4 WEDNESDAY
program that effectively ad- 7:00 Clay Aiken - Tried and True:
kick-started the baby boom
dresses arthritis relief through Live! (see 8/ 2 at 9:30 pm)
with brassy legends that will
take your members on a the practice of yoga. 8:30 Aretha Franklin Presents:
“Sentimental Journey.” This 8:00 Through A Dog’s Eyes Soul Rewind (My Music)
is a very warm and nostalgic (see page 7) Aretha Franklin, the Queen
program that compiles the 9:30 Clay Aiken - Tried and True: of Soul herself, returns to
original hit makers and Live! (see page 6) public television in an all new
legends that define the GI and My Music festival of original

22
Primetime Listings for August
artist Soul Hits of the 1960s the Rolling Stones, Sly and the 7 SATURDAY
plus some special ’70s love Family Stone, the Mamas and 11:00am Anti-Cancer with Dr.
ballads. An abundance of long the Papas and more David Servan-Schreiber
lost archival material has been 11:00 Soupy Sales: The Whole (see 8/6 at 7 pm)
recovered from England, Ger- Gang Is Here SPLAT! That’s 12:30 Through A Dog’s Eyes
many and France, along with the sound of one of the more (see 8/2 at 8 pm)
a treasure trove of long buried than 20,000 pies legendary 2:00 Julia Child Memories: Bon
live performance footage comedian Soupy Sales (born Appetit! Julia Child Memories:
from local television stations Milton Supman, 1926-2009) Bon Appetit! presents a retro-
throughout the U.S. got hit in the face with over spective that includes some of
10:30 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame the most memorable episodes
Live Rock ’n’ Roll Hall of Fame from Child’s classic cooking
Live is a special featuring rare, series, The French Chef: Bouil-
one-of-a-kind performances labaisse à la Marseillaise,
from the induction ceremonies To Roast A Chicken and The
of the Rock Hall of Fame, shot Omelette Show.
during the last 24 years. The 4:00 Soupy Sales: The Whole
biggest names of rock ’n’ roll
Gang Is Here
perform in intimate settings,
and jam in combinations not (see 8/05 at 11:00 pm)
seen anywhere else, with 5:00 Ethan Bortnick and His
exclusive, anything-goes Musical Time Machine At
induction speeches by rock age 9 Ethan Bortnick’s musi-
royalty, along with behind-the- cal resume reads like a who’s
who of the music world. A
scenes footage. 
his half-century-long career. prodigious piano musician and
12:00 Democracy Now! *
Most famous for his 1960s composer Ethan Bortnick has
1:00 Best of LINK TV * performed with the likes of
children’s TV series The Soupy
5 THURSDAY Sales Show, Sales became a Alicia Keys, David Foster, Josh
7:00 Marvin Hamlisch Presents: beloved icon of Baby Boomer Groban, Celine Dion, Elton
The ’70s, The Way We Were generation kids and their John, Arturo Sandoval, Gloria
Marvin Hamlisch is host of parents with his unpredictable Gaynor, the Canadian Tenors
Marvin Hamlisch Presents: sketches, slapstick humor, and many others. He has ap-
The ‘70s, The Way We Were, a witty puns, and puppet gags. peared on Oprah, Dr. Phil and
PBS national television special A loving tribute to the late The Jay Leno Show among
entertainer, Soupy Sales: The many other media outlets.
featuring live acts performing
Whole Gang is Here features 6:00 Viewer’s choice
their big hits from the 1970s.
the funniest moments from the 10:30 Leonard Cohen Live In Lon-
The TV special stars Marvin don For over four decades,
Hamlisch, BJ Thomas, Three 1964-1966 run of The Soupy
Sales Show, filmed in black Leonard Cohen has been one
Dog Night, Debby Boone, of the most important and
Marilyn McCoo & Billy Davis, and white from New York City,
and 1978’s The New Soupy influential songwriters of our
Jr., Ray Stevens, Freda Payne, time, a figure whose body of
Sales Show, filmed in color
Guy & Ralna, Bobby Golds- from Los Angeles—many of work achieves greater depths
boro, Billy Joe Royal, Peaches which haven’t been seen in of mystery and meaning as
and Herb, Jonathan Edwards over 30 years. time goes on. His songs have
and Gloria Gaynor. 12:00 Democracy Now! * set a virtually unmatched stan-
9:00 Ed Sullivan’s ’60s Rock & 1:00 Best of KRCB* dard in their seriousness and
Roll From the late 1940s ‘til range. Sex, spirituality, religion,
the early 1970s, millions of 6 FRIDAY power—he has relentlessly
viewers of all ages saw great 7:00 Anti-Cancer with Dr. David examined the largest issues in
musical acts each Sunday Servan-Schreiber human lives, always with a full
night on The Ed Sullivan (see page 7) appreciation of how elusive
Show. This installment in the 8:30 Taking Control of Diabetes answers can be to the vexing
My Music series presents with Dr. Neal Barnard questions he raises.
classic song performances (see page 7) 12:00 Best of KRCB *
from 1963-1968. From the 10:00 Hallelujah Broadway
Beatles’ American television (see 8/1 at 8 pm)
8 Sunday
debut to the Doors’ infamous 12:00 Democracy Now! * 11:00am Viewer’s Choice
one-time-only appearance to 7:00pm Viewer’s Choice
1:00 Best of KRCB * 12:00 Best of KRCB *
23
Primetime Listings for August
1:00 Best of LINK TV * outside the poles, a desert 8:00 Great Performances at the
where penguins nest and ver- Met: Les Contes D’hoffmann
9 Monday tical mile-high geysers where (see page 5)
7:00 Out of Ireland flamingos huddle for warmth. 11:00 Charlie Rose
7:30 My Generation: Connections [repeats 8/16 at 1 pm) 12:00 Democracy Now! *
8:00 NOVA: Walk to Beautiful 9:00 In The Footsteps of Marco 1:00 Best of LINK TV *
This program, a story of hope Polo In The Footsteps of
and survival in contemporary Marco Polo captures the 12 THURSDAY
Ethiopia, presents the stories remarkable, two-year, 7:00 As Time Goes By
of five Ethiopian women who 25, 000 mile attempt to 7:30 Innerviews with Ernie
have been devastated by Manouse: Karen Armstrong
obstetric fistula, a common 8:00 Great Museums:An Acquir-
aftermath of neglected child- ing Mind: Philippe De
birth. An obstetric fistula is a Montebello (see page 10)
hole that forms between the 9:00 P.O.V. William Kunstler:
vagina and the bladder (and in Disturbing The Universe
some cases the rectum) William Kunstler’s two daugh-
during prolonged, obstructed ters from his second marriage
labor. Affecting over two grew up lionizing a man
million women worldwide, this already famous for his historic
horrific injury leaves victims civil rights and anti-war cases.
incontinent, often suffering Then, in their teens, they
nerve damage and in some began to be disillusioned by a
cases unable to bear children retrace Marco Polo’s legend- stubborn man who continued
again. Rejected by their hus- ary trek from Venice, Italy representing some of the most
bands and ostracized by their to China. This illuminating reviled defendants in America
communities, these women epic follows two friends from —this time accused rapists
are often left to spend the rest Queens, New York—one and terrorists. In this intimate
of their lives alone, isolated photographer and one visual biography, Emily and Sarah
and ashamed—unless they artist and ex-Marine—as they Kunstler seek to recover the
can get help. NOVA follows complete the journey by land real story of what made their
these women on their journey and by sea, a feat in which all late father one of the most
to the Addis Ababa Fistula others have fallen short. beloved, and hated, lawyers in
Hospital, where they find 10:30 Legacy of Prop 13: Examine America.
health and solace for the first The Legacy of Proposition 10:30 Life In Prison: The Cost
time in years. 13 The Legacy of Prop 13: of Punishment Explore the
[repeats Tuesday at 1 pm] Examine the legacy of Propo- cost of California’s “tough on
9:00 Woodsongs: Over The Rhine sition 13 - the 1978 ballot crime” legislation. Hosted by
10:00 PBS NewsHour initiative that limited property KPBS reporter Joanne Faryon,
11:00 Charlie Rose tax increases. It’s been 32 the 30-minute video gives
12:00 Democracy Now! * years since it passed, but you an inside look into three
1:00 Best of LINK TV * Prop. 13 continues to affect state prisons, including the
our state economy. It changed California Medical Facility.
10 Tuesday how we pay for our schools, CMF houses the oldest and
7:00 After You’ve Gone fire departments, police sickest inmates in the state.
7:30 The Leading Gen see page 10) forces and libraries. Explore 11:00 Charlie Rose
[repeats Sunday at 1 pm] whether Prop. 13 was the best 12:00 Democracy Now! *
8:00 Nature: Andes: The thing that ever happened to 1:00 Best of LINK TV *
Dragon’s Back When this home-owners, or whether it’s
great spine-like mountain to blame for California’s fiscal 13 FRIDAY
range rose from the sea, it crisis. 7:00 To the Manor Born
created a new continent and 11:00 Charlie Rose 7:30 Consuelo Mack: Wealthtrack
a bridge that joined North 12:00 Democracy Now! * 8:00 Inside E Street: Within Our
and South America, allowing 1:00 Best of LINK TV *   Reach
flora and fauna from each to 8:30 McLaughlin Group
mix and diversify. Today, the 11 WEDNESDAY 9:00 Great Decisions In Foreign
Andes continue to grow and 7:00 Last of the Summer Wine Policy: The New Energy
evolve and are home to a rich 7:30 Between the Lines with Economy Call it the “green-
tapestry of environments, Barry Kibrick ing” of America. As Americans
including the largest ice field [repeats Sunday at 10:30 am] increasingly turn to renewable
24
Primetime Listings for August
energies, what opportunities film tells the story of one of that were undertaken in the
exist for industry and innova- the boldest and most popular summer of 2007 at the site
tion? New Deal experiments, posi- of Ling Bua on the island of
9:30 Future of News: What’s The tioning it as a pivotal moment Flores, Indonesia. These are
Future of TV News? Frank in the emergence of modern the first investigations of the
Sesno and guests John King environmentalism and federal cave site since the sensational
of CNN and Steve Grove of unemployment relief. discovery of tiny and bizarre
YouTube discuss the impact 9:00 Masterpiece Mystery! human fossil bones at the site
of the internet on television Miss Marple, Series V: The in 2004. NOVA investigates
news. Mirror Crack’d from Side to the furious scientific debate
10:00 PBS NewsHour Side Acclaimed British actress currently raging on what the
11:00 Charlie Rose Julia McKenzie (Cranford) “Hobbit” bones represent. Are
12:00 Democracy Now! * stars as the beloved spinster they fossils of a previously
1:00 Best of KRCB * sleuth Miss Marple in three unknown primitive branch
new episodes of the popular of the human family? Or are
14 SATURDAY Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple they remains of a dwarf race
7:00 America’s Test Kitchen from series.When people are found of modern humans suffering
Cook’s Illustrated: Sensa- poisoned soon after a glamor- from a strange pathological
tional Skillet Recipes ous Hollywood couple settles condition?
7:30 Red Green Show: The Statue in St. Mary Mead, Miss Marple [repeats Tuesday at 1 pm]
8:00 Lawrence Welk Show: Can’t must track down the killer 9:00 Woodsongs: Rhonda Vincent
Help Singing and discover the cause of the & The Rage
9:00 Jubilee: Rhonda Vincent & murders. 10:00 PBS NewsHour
The Rage 10:30 Long Days Working Hard 11:00 Charlie Rose
10:00 Song of the Mountains: Long Days Working Hard 12:00 Democracy Now! *
Jeanette Williams Band is a documentary about the 1:00 Best of LINK TV *
Midnight Ramblers West Coast World War II
11:00 Theater Talk experience. Long Beach, 17 Tuesday
11:30 Red Dwarf: The End California, is highlighted as a 7:00 After You’ve Gone
12:00 Best of KRCB * 7:30 The Leading Gen
(see page 10)
15 Sunday [repeats Sunday at 1 pm]
7:00 Antiques Roadshow: Salt 8:00 Nature: Oceans In Glass:
Lake City, UT - Part 1 Behind The Scenes of the
8:00 Civilian Conservation Corps: Monterey Bay Aquarium
American Experience In Because of its realistic
March 1933, within weeks presentations, the Monterey
of his inauguration, President Bay Aquarium is recognized
Franklin Roosevelt sent as one of the most significant
legislation to Congress aimed community uniquely positioned and spectacular aquariums in
at providing relief for the to fully participate in the war the world. Instead of exhibiting
one out of every four American effort, including shipbuilding, collections of animals, the
workers who were unem- aircraft manufacturing, aquarium presents entire
ployed. He proposed the petroleum production, Navy habitats, virtual slices of ocean
Civilian Conservation Corps activity and more. From Pearl that include 30,000 animals
(CCC) to provide jobs in Harbor’s precursor to Howard and plants. But how does an
natural resource conservation. Hughes’ Spruce Goose... from aquarium work? What’s the
Over the next decade, the CCC B-17s and Rosie the Riveter science behind the magic?
put more than three million to enemy submarines and [repeats 8/23 at 1 pm)
young men to work in the Japanese internment, it all 9:00 Shanghai World Expo
nation’s forests and parks, happened in Long Beach. The Shanghai World Expo is
planting trees, building flood 11:30 Best of KRCB * the largest World Expo in the
barriers, fighting fires and 1:00 Best of LINK TV * history of International Exposi-
maintaining roads and trails. tions. Host Vicki Liviakis takes
Corps workers lived in camps 16 Monday you on a tour of the Expo as
under quasi-military discipline, 7:00 Out of Ireland it opens. From a quick stop in
and received a wage of 30 7:30 My Generation: True Value Denmark to see the national
dollars per month, 25 of which 8:00 NOVA: Alien from Earth treasure The Little Mermaid
they were required to send NOVA presents exclusive statue (the real thing!) to
home to their families. This coverage of new excavations extended trips through

25
Primetime Listings for August
pavilions like the high tech 21 SATURDAY
Japan Pavilion, you will see 7:00 America’s Test Kitchen
each country’s interpretation from Cook’s Illustrated: An
of the Expo theme “Better City, Austrian Supper
Better Life.” 7:30 Red Green Show: False Idol
10:00 PBS NewsHour 8:00 Lawrence Welk Show:
11:00 In The Life Art, culture, Tour of Southern California
issues, and news of the gay (Otwells Interview)
and lesbian community. 9:00 Jubilee: Grasstowne
11:30 Green Jobs: EcoSense for
10:00 Song of the Mountains:
Living In post-Katrina New
Marty Raybon
Orleans, there’s a shining
example of real-life results 11:00 Theater Talk
of green job training. At-risk 11:30 Red Dwarf: Future Echoes
and joy. For this 81-year-old 12:00 Best of KRCB *
young people get hands-on artist, memories live through
training on how to fortify and her films. In The Beaches of 22 Sunday
weatherize homes in The Big Agnes, she uses film clips, old
7:00 Antiques Roadshow: Salt
Easy. Then EcoSense takes photos and reenactments to Lake City, UT - Part 2
you to Spartanburg, S.C., to revisit her Belgian youth, as-8:00 We Shall Remain: American
witness a unique recycling sociation with the French New Experience: After The May-
process - The Coca-Cola Wave, marriage to director flower (see page 8)
Company has partnered to Jacques Demy (The Umbrellas 9:30 Masterpiece Mystery! Miss
create new bottles directly of Cherbourg) and the making Marple, Series V: The Secret
from old bottles without using of her movies. of Chimneys Miss Marple
raw materials. Hungry to go 11:00 Charlie Rose accompanies Lady Virginia
green? See how traditional 12:00 Democracy Now! * Revel to a weekend party at
food industry jobs are being 1:00 Best of LINK TV * her family home of Chimneys.
transformed, from the farmer When an important dignitary
all the way to pizza delivery. 20 FRIDAY goes missing, the search
Hosted by Jennie Garlington. 7:00 To the Manor Born reveals a decades-old murder
12:00 Democracy Now! * 7:30 Consuelo Mack: Wealthtrack that might be connected to
1:00 Best of LINK TV *   8:00 Inside E Street: Take Me a mysterious diamond theft.
18 WEDNESDAY Out.... Stephen Dillane (God on Trial)
7:00 Last of the Summer Wine 8:30 McLaughlin Group and Edward Fox guest star.
9:00 Great Decisions In Foreign 11:00 First Year Teachers This
7:30 Between the Lines with documentary explores why
Policy: The World’s Bottom
Barry Kibrick 25% of all new teachers quit
[repeats Sunday at 10:30 am]
Billion Nearly 10 years ago,
leaders from around the globe within their first four years. As
8:00 Great Performances at the public education faces ever-
made a bold declaration—
Met: Carmen a promise to end extreme tightening budgets and stricter
(see page 5) poverty by 2015 through the test standards, many teachers
11:00 Charlie Rose achievement of the Millennium experience mounting pres-
12:00 Democracy Now! * Development Goals. Consider sures that eventually crush
1:00 Best of LINK TV * this episode a report card. their enthusiasm and lead
19 THURSDAY 9:30 Future of News: Global to burnout. This compelling
7:00 As Time Goes By News Guests Ann Curry of program follows two first-year
7:30 Innerviews with Ernie NBC News (Today, Dateline teachers for an entire school
Manouse: Bruce Beresford NBC), and Charles Sennott of year, and chronicles their
8:00 Great Museums: New Global Post, both of whom successes, failures, and chal-
Orleans: A Living Museum of enjoy distinguished careers lenges.
Music (see page 10) in international reporting, join 11:30 Best of KRCB *
9:00 POV The Beaches of Agnes host Frank Sesno to discuss 1:00 Best of LINK TV *
In this memoir, award-winning the changing media landscape
French filmmaker Agnes in the United States and what 23 Monday
it means for news. 7:00 Out of Ireland
Varda (Vagabond, Cleo From
10:00 PBS NewsHour 7:30 My Generation: Human
5 to 7) employs all the magic
11:00 Charlie Rose Spark
of cinema to juxtapose the
real and the imagined, the 12:00 Democracy Now! * 8:00 NOVA: Kings of Camouflage
past and the present, pain 1:00 Best of KRCB * Cuttlefish are one of the

26
Primetime Listings for August
strangest animals on our give up, despite the odds. Can The film captures multiple per-
planet. These shape-shifting life as they knew it survive spectives of citizens struggling
creatures can hypnotize one the worst disasters in US to create just solutions.
their prey, impersonate the history? The unusual size and 10:00 PBS NewsHour
opposite sex and even kill with interconnectedness of this 11:00 Charlie Rose
lightening fast speed. More 155-member family seem 12:00 Democracy Now! *
accomplished masters of to promise hope. Surviv- 1:00 Best of LINK TV *
disguise than any chameleon, ing through large, deeply
they have an incredible ability rooted families has always 27 FRIDAY
to morph their skin color— been a cultural truth in the 7:00 To the Manor Born
even their shape—to blend New Orleans area. As the 7:30 Consuelo Mack: Wealthtrack
into most any background. story of their evacuation to 8:00 Inside E Street: Aging
[repeats Tuesday at 1 pm] Dallas gives way to the story Inmate$
9:00 Woodsongs: Dar Williams of their return to their small 8:30 McLaughlin Group
10:00 PBS NewsHour bayou community, unexpected 9:00 Great Decisions In Foreign
11:00 Charlie Rose difficulties compromise the Policy: Wall Street and the
12:00 Democracy Now! * experience of home as they World: The Global Financial
1:00 Best of Link TV * knew it. Crisis Expert guests explain
10:00 PBS NewsHour how the financial crisis came
24 Tuesday 11:00 Charlie Rose about, its impact on regional
7:00 After You’ve Gone 12:00 Democracy Now! * economies and the interna-
7:30 The Leading Gen 1:00 Best of LINK TV *   tional response.
(see page 10) 9:30 Future of News: Political
[repeats Sunday at 1 pm] 25 WEDNESDAY Reporting Two of
8:00 Nature: Penguins of the 7:00 Last of the Summer Wine Washington’s most accom-
Antarctic Emperors and kings, 7:30 Between the Lines with plished political reporters,
chinstraps and adelies—the Barry Kibrick ABC News contributor Sam
penguins of Antarctica all [repeats Sunday at 10:30 am] Donaldson and Politico execu-
make their home in one of the 8:00 Great Performances at the tive editor Jim VandeHei join
most unforgiving environ- Met: Hamlet (see page 5) host Frank Sesno for a discus-
ments on Earth. Their life 11:00 Charlie Rose sion of the Internet’s impact
has always been a constant 12:00 Democracy Now! * on political reporting, and the
struggle to survive. But their 1:00 Best of LINK TV * ways talk radio, partisan Web
sites, and cable television
26 THURSDAY programs can drive the news
7:00 As Time Goes By agenda and exaggerate the
7:30 Innerviews with Ernie importance of particular news
Manouse: Tommy Chong stories.
8:00 Great Museums: Acquiring 10:00 PBS NewsHour
Mind: Philippe de Monte- 11:00 Charlie Rose
bello (see page 10) 12:00 Democracy Now! *
9:00 P.O.V. Promised Land Though 1:00 Best of KRCB *
apartheid ended in South
Africa in 1994, economic 28 saturday
biggest challenge is yet to injustices between blacks and 7:00 America’s Test Kitchen from
come. As the climate changes, whites remain unresolved. As
long-established territories are Cook’s Illustrated: Who
revealed in Yoruba Richen’s
being invaded, and traditional Wants Pasta?
Promised Land, the most
nesting colonies are being potentially explosive issue 7:30 Red Green Show: Harold`S
disrupted. How will these ex- is land. The film follows two One and Only
traordinary birds deal with the black communities as they 8:00 Lawrence Welk Show:
full effects of global warming? struggle to reclaim land Country & Western
[repeats 8/30 at 1 pm) from white owners, some of 9:00 Jubilee: Dale Ann Bradley
9:00 Still Waiting: Life After whom who have lived there 10:00 Song of the Mountains:
Katrina Still Waiting: Life After for generations. Amid rising Seldom Scene
Katrina draws viewers into tensions and wavering govern- 11:00 Theater Talk
the painful and uplifting story ment policies, the land issue 11:30 Red Dwarf: Balance of
of one post-Katrina African remains South Africa’s “ticking Power
American/Creole family and time bomb,” with far-reaching 12:00 Best of KRCB *
the bayou culture they cannot consequences for all sides.
27
Primetime Listings for August
29 Sunday whom are on the govern- and down the West Coast
7:00 Antiques Roadshow: Salt ment’s secret watch list, fought for their rights against
Lake City, UT - Part 3 now more than half-a-million the forces of shipping com-
8:00 We Shall Remain: American names long. Based on the panies, politicians and police
Experience: Tecumseh’s latest best-seller by journalist arrayed against them.
Vision (see page 8) James Bamford, Inside the 10:00 PBS NewsHour
9:30 Masterpiece Mystery! Miss Spy Factory is a gripping 11:00 Charlie Rose
Marple, Series V: The Blue investigation of the NSA, from 12:00 Democracy Now! *
Geranium While visiting an its tragic failures leading up to 1:00 Best of LINK TV *  
old friend, Miss Marple (Julia the 9/11 attacks to its secret
McKenzie) discovers that listening rooms currently in-
there may be new evidence stalled in the nation’s telecom * Available on Cable
concerning the notorious Blue networks. and Satellite only
Geranium murder case. Can [repeats Tuesday at 1 pm] * Link TV is an independent
Marple unlock the clues before 9:00 Woodsongs: John television network that broad-
the wrong person is found McCutcheon casts unseen documentaries
guilty of murder? Sharon Small 10:00 PBS NewsHour from around the world, the
and Toby Stephens guest star. 11:00 Charlie Rose best of World Music videos, and
11:00 High School Dropouts 12:00 Democracy Now! * current affairs programming.
The high school dropout rate 1:00 Best of LINK TV *
is rapidly increasing in many
cities throughout the U.S. 31 Tuesday Program listings are accurate
Teachers, counselors, lawmak- 7:00 After You’ve Gone
at the time of printing. For late
ers and parents are teaming 7:30 The Leading Gen
programming changes, phone
up to reverse this disturbing (see page 10)
[repeats Sunday at 1 pm]
(800) 287-2722
trend. This program examines
how adults in the Sacramento/ 8:00 Nature: Silent Roar: Search-
Stockton area are literally ing for the Snow Leopard
Only a privileged few have
going door-to-door to catch
truants, threatening legal ac- ever seen a snow leopard— cc
tion against their parents, and the powerful and mysterious
providing second chances to predator of the Himalayas. The majority of our prime time
kids who’ve already dropped Telling the story of this most programs are closed captioned.
out but want to return. elusive creature is one of the
11:30 Best of KRCB * last great challenges in wildlife
1:00 Best of LINK TV * filmmaking. This remarkable
program, representing three
Point,
30 Monday
7:00 Out of Ireland
years of hard work, high
altitudes, long waits, great risk
Click,
7:30 My Generation: Heart
8:00 NOVA: The Spy Factory
and dogged determination,
accomplishes the impossible
Enjoy!
For the first time on television, when a legendary filmmaker
NOVA exposes the hidden sets out to film a legendary
world of high-tech, 21st- cat.
century eavesdropping carried [repeats 9/6 at 1 pm)
out by the National Security 9:00 Bloody Thursday Bloody
Agency (NSA). Today, the NSA Thursday tells the story of a
is the world’s largest intel- pivotal moment in American
ligence agency, three times labor history—the Pacific If you haven’t explored
the size of the CIA and far Waterfront Strike of 1934, in KRCB’s new user-
more secret. Its mission is to which longshoremen up
eavesdrop on the world—from friendly website lately,
cell phones in Europe to pay you’ll discover it’s a
phones in Afghanistan to email great resource for
messages from Pakistan to
Baghdad. But since 9/11, it information,
has also turned its giant ear entertainment, and
inward, listening in without
warrant on thousands of
news.
American citizens, many of
28
Business Support Opportunities
Kids’ Programming
Each week KRCB offers 32 hours of programs designed for preschoolers
and elementary school children, including old favorites such as Sesame Street
and Mister Rogers and new programs such as WordGirl, Anne of Green
Gables, and Angelina Ballerina. The Electric Company airing Mondays
through Fridays at 4:30 pm is designed to advance the idea that
reading it cool.
Saturday mornings feature programming for Spanish speaking children.
Sponsorship of these programs is available on a per spot basis
throughout the day. These programs can be underwritten
individually or as a group.
For more information on supporting these and other programs,
please call Stan Marvin at 707-584-2010.

We count on
you!

PBS Kids program lineup
Weekdays Saturdays
7:00 Sesame Street 7:00 Los Niños en Su Casa-SP
8.00 Dragon Tales 7:30 Dragon Tales-SP
8:30 Curious George 8:00 Clifford-SP
9:00 Sid the Science Kid 8:30 Maya & Miguel-SP
2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 9:00 Angelina Ballerina
2:30 Cyberchase 9:30 Thomas & Friends
3:00 Arthur 10:00 Bob The Builder
3:30 WordGirl 10:30 Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood
4:00 Fetch! - Mon - Th 11:00 A Place of Our Own
Anne of Green Gables - Fri
4:30 The Electric Company

Clifford the Big Red Dog

29
Thank you to these supporters of KRCB!
Art, Museums and Cultural Wine Spectrum Shop & Bar Voters
Organizations Education Hispanic Chamber of Commerce
Arts Council of Sonoma County Huntington Learning Center Laguna de Santa Rosa Foundation
California Indian Museum Santa Rosa Junior College North Bay Leadership Council
Charles M. Schulz Museum University of San Francisco - SR PFLAG-NB
Cloverdale Friday Night Live Entertainment Santa Rosa Street Smarts
Dry Creek Rancheria Band of Harmony Festival Sebastopol Area Chamber of
Pomo Indians Marin JCC “Center Stage” Commerce
Mendocino Film Festival Mendocino Film Festival Sierra Club
Quicksilver Mine Co. Rialto Cinemas Lakeside Solar Sonoma County
San Francisco Ballet San Francisco Ballet Sonoma County GoLocal Coop
Santa Rosa Symphony Sonoma County Repertory Theater Sonoma Land Trust
SSU Intercultural Center Spreckels Center Stewards of the Coast &
Automotive Wells Fargo Center for the Arts Redwoods
Downtown Autobody Financial & Insurance United Way of the Wine Country
Manly Honda American AgCredit US Peace Corp
Out West Garage Exchange Bank Wallace Genetic Foundation
Books, Music, & Video Redwood Credit Union Windsor Chamber of Commerce &
Copperfield’s Books Rubins Financial Strategies Visitors Center
Jackalope Records Summit State Bank Media, Magazines & Publishing
Last Record Store Wasson Reitrement Services Bay Nature Magazine
Business & Professional Health Care KSRO
Daniel Data Advanced Fertility Associates Marinscope Community Newspapers
Hines Signs Bryce Hetler, DDS More Marin!
Leach Communication Medtronic Foundation North Bay Biz
Mac Networks St. Joseph’s Healthcare, North Bay Business Journal
Red Condor Sonoma County North Bay Bohemian
Simple Office Solutions Home & Garden Pacific Sun
Solar Living Institute Alice’s Garden Petaluma Post
Trope Group Clark Pest Control Point Reyes Light
Dining, Food/Wine & Lodging Culligan Water Company Progressive Music Sources LLC
Aqus Cafe Foundry Wharf Earthtone Construction Press Democrat
Barndiva Restaurant & Lounge Far West Trading Company Scout City Media
Caffe Trieste Gado Gado Sonoma Index Tribune
Clover Stornetta General Hydroponics Sonoma West Publishing
Community Market Harmony Farm Supply & Nursery The Community Voice
Don Taylor’s Omelette Express Hawley’s Paint Store The Sonoma County Gazette
East West Cafe Rogers Pool & Spa Service West Marin Citizen
Fresh Choice Restaurants Sebastopol Hardware Center Retirement Related
Hampton Inn & Suites Solar Works Friends House
Healdsburg Farmers’ Market Sonoma Compost Springfield Place
Holiday Inn Express Vintage Bank Antiques Santa Rosa Memorial Hospice
Paradise Ridge Winery Wild Birds Unlimited Trade Show Events
Pearson & Company Wyatt Irrigation Supply Gem Faire
Peter Lowell’s Cafe Non-profit & Goverment
Richmond Certified Farmers Market American Ag. Credit For further information
Sebastopol Farmers’ Market Becoming Independent visit krcb.org/business-sponsors
Tierra Vegetables, Inc. California Human Development
Traverso’s Gourmet Foods & Wine California League of Conservation
30
Business Sponsor
This month KRCB is thanking our sponsors for supporting our first-ever LIVE music
series in Rohnert Park, “Party on the Plaza” (see page 4). These live concerts for the
community every Friday night from July 2-August 6 could not have happened without the
encouragement and participation of the following sponsors:
Series Sponsor: North Bay Corporation

Weekly Music Sponsors: Wasson Retirement Services, Summit State Bank, Raley’s Towne
Center, and the Marin/Sonoma Mosquito & Vector Control District.

Weekly Party Sponsors: Mojica Insurance, Merrill Gardens & Sahouria Pediatric
Dentistry, Sign-a-Rama & Big 4 Party Rents.

Watch for Expressions on


KRCB Television
Hiking Trails of Sonoma County

Schollenberger Park Wetlands Walk

Jack London Park

Pomo-Shell Beach & Red Hill

Armstrong Woods

Healdsburg Ridge Open Space Preserve

Santa Rosa Creek Trails

Supported by the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors


31
U.S. Postage
Organization
Nonprofit

KRCB
PAID
On KRCB
Digital Channel 22-2
Full schedule at
krcb.org/programming-schedule
Create™ TV’s instructional programs provide
expert advice on cooking, arts & crafts,
gardening, home improvement, and travel.
Tune in and be inspired to taste, grow, imagine,
explore, and live more fully.

Reach the hard


to reach!
The North Bay Public TV
& Radio Audience
✓ Decision makers
✓ Upscale home owners
✓ Post grad or professional
✓ Active in community
(Rural California Broadcast Corporation)
KRCB Television & Radio

Rohnert Park, CA 94928


5850 Labath Avenue

www.krcb.org

Partner with
Contact program underwriting at
707-584-2000 or 800-287-2722

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