documentaries-related stories
Posted Aug 11th 2007 10:02AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Pickups and Renewals, Documentary
I told you not long ago that Wordplay, the documentary about New York Times Crossword editor Will Shortz and his annual crossword competition would air as part of the PBS series Independent Lens on October 16. It turns out it's also the very first documentary of the series' sixth season.
Other documentaries will include An Unreasonable Man, the popular 2006 documentary about presidential candidate and consumer advocate Ralph Nader; Banished, which tells the story of how some small towns expelled their black communities; King Corn, about two college students who grow their own food to challenge big agri-business; Miss Navajo, which centers on a unique Native American beauty pageant; Iron Ladies of Liberia focuses on the first head of state in Africa; Mapping Stem Cell Research: Terra Incognita, about a neurologist trying to find a cure for his paralyzed daughter; and Please Vote for Me, a documentary from China about three eight year old students running for "class monitor."
Continue reading Independent Lens returns in October
Posted Nov 30th 2006 7:04PM by Julia Ward
Filed under: VH1, Pickups and Renewals, Documentary

VH1 has
picked up five documentaries for its
Rock Doc series, and they're pretty darn interesting. Alright, four of the five of them sound interesting. The fifth is a Courtney Love documentary, which maybe only qualifies as interesting in that "can't tear my eyes from the car wreck" kinda way.
The series aims to bring "untold stories" with an "unconventional narrative approach" to the screen. Three of the five films are acquisitions, which means that documentary filmmakers may have a new avenue for hawking their wares. The series starts up December 16th and continues into 2007.
The five documentaries include:
Continue reading VH1 announces Rock Doc line-up
Posted Oct 19th 2006 4:33PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Cable, News, Industry, Programming, Celebrities, Ratings
As an addendum to what Rich reported earlier today, Broadcasting & Cable says something at the end of this piece that I thought was rather odd: NBC Universal might make MSNBC an all taped show/magazine format, and move Keith Olbermann and Chris Matthews - the only two people who really have any buzz on the network - over to CNBC.
Hmmm...
Actually, at first I thought this was silly, but if you think about it, it makes sense. MSNBC is going more and more towards the documentaries and taped shows, so moving a lot of the news programs over to CNBC would be a good move. It could build up CNBC to what it once was, make their schedule stronger, and fit in better.
[via Romenesko]