By The Beachwood Bea Arthur Affairs Desk
One last tribute – in five video parts – to Bea Arthur. Plus, the complete listing of our very own Kathryn Ware’s brilliant episode-by episode recap of the debut season of Maude.
– 1. Sniff Swig Puff with Rock Hudson*
From The Beachwood Firebird Files
The passing of the Pontiac brand brought a lot of Firebird fans out of the woodwork to once again commemmorate the tan and gold Espirit model that private investigator James Rockford drove.
We join in the celebration/mourning with these videos that memorialize Rockford and his car. 1. The Rockford Spin
What Really Happens To Mentally Ill Offenders When They Leave Prison By Frontline
Five years ago, Frontline’s groundbreaking film, The New Asylums, went deep inside the Ohio prison system as it struggled to provide care to thousands of mentally ill inmates. This year, Frontline filmmakers Karen O’Connor and Miri Navasky return to Ohio to tell the next chapter in this disturbing story: what happens to mentally ill offenders when they leave prison. The Released airing on Tuesday, April 28, at 9 P.M. on PBS, is an intimate look at the lives of the seriously mentally ill as they struggle to remain free.
As communities across the country face the largest exodus of prisoners in history, the issue has never been more pressing. This year alone, over 700,000 people will leave prison, more than half of them mentally ill. Typically, these offenders leave prison with a bus ticket, $75 in cash, and two weeks’ worth of medication. Studies show that within 18 months, nearly two-thirds of mentally ill offenders – often poor and cut off from friends and family – are re-arrested.
By Steve Rhodes
Bill Moyers recently interviewed The Wire creator and former newspaper reporter David Simon. Every journalist in the land ought to be paying attention. Here are a few excerpts with some commentary thrown in. But you should also go read the whole transcript. SIMON: To find out what’s going on in my own city I often find myself at a bar somewhere taking, writing stuff down on a cocktail napkin that a police lieutenant or some school teacher tells me. Because these institutions are no longer being covered by beat reporters who are looking for the systemic. It doesn’t exist anymore.
And this is not all the Internet. This was a – you know, there’s a lot of the general tone in journalism right now is that of martyrology. MOYERS: Being martyrs, right. SIMON: Yes, we were doing our job. Making the world safe for democracy. And all of a sudden, terra firma shifted, new technology. Who knew that the Internet was going to overwhelm us? I would buy that if I wasn’t in journalism for the years that immediately preceded the Internet because I took the third buyout from the Baltimore Sun. I was about reporter number 80 or 90 who left, in 1995. Long before the Internet had had its impact. I left at a time – those buyouts happened when the Baltimore Sun was earning 37 percent profits.You know, we now know this because it’s in bankruptcy and the books are open. Thirty-percent profits.
By The Beachwood Greeting Card TV Affairs Desk
Not recommended for, um, mature viewers.
* 6:30 a.m.: Paid Programming 7 a.m.: Golden Girls 7:30 a.m.: Golden Girls 8 a.m.: Golden Girls 8:30 a.m.: Golden Girls