Aaron Brown hosts second season of PBS series “Wide Angle”
Aaron Brown, the Walter Cronkite Professor of Journalism at Arizona State University and former CNN news anchor, is hosting the PBS international affairs weekly series “Wide Angle” this summer.
The series, which was created in 2001 by WNET/Thirteen in
Brown, the former CNN anchor who teaches full time at ASU’s Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication as the Cronkite Professor of Journalism, travels the globe following the academic year to report. This is his second year as “Wide Angle” anchor.
Cronkite, the former CBS News anchor and the namesake of Brown’s school, has called the series “just good television. The series tells stories, portrays people and reveals places that are too often overlooked or neglected.”
“Wide Angle” can be seen in
The following is this season’s lineup, reproduced from the Eight/KAET Web site:
July 1: Crossing Heaven’s Border
North Korean defectors take a life-threatening journey, traveling thousands of miles through
July 8: Heart of Jenin
When 12-year-old Palestinian Ahmed Khatib was accidentally shot and killed by Israeli soldiers in the West Bank city of
July 15: Birth of a Surgeon
“Wide Angle” travels to
July 22: The Market Maker
“Wide Angle” travels to
July 29: Contestant No .2
Duah Fares is an Arab-Israeli teenager and member of the Druze religion. When she sets her sights on the Miss Israel pageant, her tight-knit religious community balks. The pageant requires contestants to wear a bathing suit, an act that could disgrace her family and even put her in danger.
Aug. 12: Victory is Your Duty
“Wide Angle” gains intimate access to the
Sept. 2 and 9: Time for School Series
The show’s award-winning 12-year documentary project “Time for School” travels to seven classrooms – in Afghanistan, Benin, Brazil, India, Japan, Kenya and Romania – to offer a glimpse into the lives of seven winning children who are struggling to achieve what is not yet a global birthright – a basic education.