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A reader’s companion to KRCB Television 22 & Radio 91 www.krcb.org Volume 10 - No. 7 July 2011

Friday, July 15 thru Sunday, July 17 & Friday, July 22 thru Sunday, July 24, 6:30 pm – 11 pm Nightly

Preview select items and bid online at www.krcb.org beginning July 1

krcb.org

DOWNSIZE THE "SM" WHEN THE USING LOGO ON OVERSIZED APPLICATIONS SUCH OUTDOOR ADVERTISING AND LARGE EXHIBIT DISPLAYS Contents KRCB News …3 - 4 Television Articles …5 - 11 Auction …6 - 7 Radio Articles …12 - 15, 18 - 19 Radio Schedule …16 - 17 Membership … 20 TV Daytime Listings …21 Television Listings …22 - 28 Business Spotlight …31

 34 bed skilled nursing unit on 8 acre Board of Directors campus with plenty of outdoor access Patrick Campbell  Long or short term care Steve DeLap  Post surgery rehabilitation  Physical, occupational, speech and Nancy Dobbs IV therapies Paul Ginsburg  High staff-to-resident ratio John Kramer Josué López Margaret McCarthy Eric McHenry Robert Quail Rafael Rivero Harry Rubins David Stare Dr. Larry Slater the PetAlUMA Gordon Stewart KRCB’s Board and Community Action Council meetings are open AP ReAdeostR’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 Cover – KRCB’s Annual petalumapost. Televised Summer Spree com Auction - page 6

2 in the news KRCB is coming to the rest of the Bay Area Tell your friends and family and anyone else who lives in the South Bay and the East Bay - KRCB is coming! As of August 1, KRCB will be available on Comcast Cable’s digital service throughout the entire Bay Area! That means that cities throughout San Mateo, Santa Clara, Alameda, and Contra Costa Counties will at last be able to receive the great KRCB lineup. Thanks to our friends at KCSM and the support of Comcast staff, this significant expansion will double the KRCB audience. Think Mountain View, San Jose, Hayward and Pleasanton, and all points in between. Spread the word!

Jazz lovers, bid on this! As a special treat for a jazz-loving bidder in KRCB’s Summer Spree Auction, we are pleased to offer a five-day music fan’s visit to New Orleans next fall. This extraordi- nary travel experience for two, taking place Oct. 5-9, 2011, includes events with notable jazz performers, including Ellis Marsalis, the premier modern jazz pianist of our time and the father of Branford and Wynton Marsalis, plus exclusive events at Preservation Hall, tours of Basin Street, and much more. A special highlight will be the keynote address by Ken Burns and chance to meet the celebrated documentary producer in-person. This rare auction item package also features premier hotel accommodations, meals, gratuities, service charges, local guides, admission fees, taxes and porterage. The KRCB Summer Spree Auction is live on the air, July 15- 17 and 22-24 Advance bidding opens July 4 at krcb.org/auction.

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 RepoGraphics 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 Berens, Designer 3 KRCB in the community Meet Calvin Johnson Few behind-the-scenes jobs are more critical to a smooth-running organization these days than keeping our computers happy. That’s the job of Calvin Johnson, KRCB’s new IT (information technology) manager. This is a field in which he has been happily immersed since the early 1980s, when desktop computing began to make its way into small businesses. He plunged into list and records management, eagerly teaching co-workers along the way. For a time, Calvin was a network administrator for the Ukiah School District, where he was able to also teach some computing classes to elementary school students. Calvin came to KRCB following a six-year position with the Dry Creek Gaming Commission, the internal body charged with administering and operating the River Rock Casino near Geyserville. “It was a very fun job, but a high pressure job,” Johnson says, looking back. That’s a clear contrast with his key role here at Northern California Public Media, “a very worthy organization,” Calvin says, with “aspirations that are very closely aligned with mine.” In just a few months—filled with the trouble-shooting and problem solving that come with the job—Calvin has become an important, if little seen, member of the KRCB team. Which is just the way he likes it. “It is my great joy to help these people do what they need to do,” he smiles. “That’s very important to me.”

Dear Member, You have read many times in these pages about KRCB’s own Natural Heroes, about which we are very proud. We are about to launch the fifth season with high hopes of continuing to build a significant national audience. Because KRCB is so much of the North Bay and Bay Area, folks sometimes forget that Natural Heroes is, in fact, a national series with over 50% of the American households now able to tune in thorough their local public station. In addition to Natural Heroes, KRCB provides a wide variety of other environmental programs, some of which have also been distributed nationally, and others available to the Bay Area. You can findClimate One on both KRCB Television and Radio. This excellent speakers series from the Commonwealth Club of California brings together top thinkers and doers from business, government, academia and advocacy groups to advance the discussion about a clean energy future. Bay Nature on the Air and Around the Bay with Will Travis feature our beautiful natural landscape and the challenges of rising sea levels. Lisa Friedenthal-Lee’s Don’t Throw That Away turns young people’s attention to trash, while KRCB and InCA Productions teamed up to produce Powering Up to feature simple changes we can make to significantly reduce our energy consumption. All reflecting KRCB’s commitment to our community and our world. Sincerely,

Nancy Dobbs President and CEO 4 Celebrate July 4th with KRCB TV 22 A Capitol Fourth A Capitol Fourth, featuring musical performances by some of the country’s best known and award-winning musicians with the National Symphony Orchestra, is broad- cast live from the West Lawn of the United States Capitol before a concert audience of hundreds of thousands, millions more at home, on National Public Radio and around the world to our troops on the American Forces Network. Bringing viewers the most spectacular fireworks display anywhere in the nation, the annual broadcast of A Capitol Fourth captures the pyrotechnics from every vantage point with 20 television cameras stationed around the city—includ- ing the U.S. Capitol, the White House, the Washington Monument and across the Potomac River. In tribute to America’s birthday, the show is capped off with Tchaikovsky’s “1812 Overture,” complete with live cannon fire provided by the United States Army Presidential Salute Battery. Monday, July 4 at 8 pm and repeats at 9:30 pm

Our Daytime Audience is Growing!

Every week, KRCB Television 22 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!

5 Annual KRCB Televised Summer Auction

A Fundraising Benefit for KRCB - PBS/NPR in the North Bay

KRCB-TV, Channel 22 presents its annual, televised Summer Spree Auction for two full weekends: Friday, July 15 thru Sunday, July 17 & Friday, July 22 thru Sunday, July 24, 6:30 pm Nightly Preview and Bid Online at KRCB.org beginning July 1, 2011

Participants include:

• Ken Burns American Journeys – The Jazz Event. A one of a kind special event crafted by Tauck® in col- laboration with Ken Burns and his co-producer Dayton Duncan and inspired by Jazz: A Film by Ken Burns. The Jazz Event is a 5 day, 4 night travel experience for two people taking place in New Orleans from October 5 - 9, 2011. The tour includes premier hotel accommodations, meals, and gratuities along with a Keynote address by Ken Burns and a chance to meet the award winning documentary producer in person.

• Boundless Journeys presents a Nine Day private tour of Bhutan for one. Business Week magazine rated Bhutan the happiest country in Asia. The truly peaceful Kingdom of Bhutan is a hidden Himalayan gem, a remarkable land whose well-preserved countryside, architecture, and culture make it seem lost in time.

• Inkaterra, presents an Eight Night package for two. This package will take you to Cusco, the Amazon, and to Machu Picchu and is a very special package created especially for KRCB. For over 30 years, Inkaterra has pioneered and promoted sustainable tourism in Peru.

• Viking River Cruises presents a Romantic Danube Holiday Cruise for two. During this Eight Day journey, encounter the grand cities and quaint villages along the celebrated Danube River.

• The Blakely New York offers Two Nights for two in a Deluxe Suite. The Blakely offers a preferred mid-Manhattan address and is within walking distance of the high-end fashion of Fifth Avenue, Central Park, Broadway, and more. Your stay will be in a deluxe suite, with continental breakfast and Wi-Fi included.

6 • Mandarin Oriental, Las Vegas presents a Two Night stay for two. The Mandarin Oriental, Las Vegas, is part of CityCenter, located at the heart of the Las Vegas Strip and the first centrally located, non- gaming, luxury hotel. Your stay will be in a Cityscape Room, an oasis of oriental charm, overlooking the modern architecture of City Center and Las Vegas.

• Radisson Hotel Fisherman’s Wharf, presents Three Nights for two with parking. You’ll be centrally located in the heart of Fisherman’s Wharf with great dining, shopping and activities.

• Jamul Haven presents Six Nights for two. Jamul Haven is a luxury Victorian Bed & Breakfast in the foothills outside of San Diego. This exclusive B & B Resort offers five-star hotel amenities and service without the crowds, all within 20 minutes of downtown San Diego.

• Hotel Pacific, Monterey presents Three Nights, Mid-Week for two. This boutique hotel is located in downtown Monterey, just a few minutes from Cannery Row. Hotel Pacific is an authentic, Spanish-style adobe and offers luxury all-suite accommodations.

• Marquis Los Cabos offers Three Nights Ocean View Junior Suite for two. Marquis Los Cabos is a spectacular luxury resort overlooking the crystal blue waters of the Sea of Cortez.

• The Ridge Tahoe provides Three Nights in a Two Bedroom Suite for up to six guests. The Ridge Tahoe is a unique alpine resort with amazing views of Lake Tahoe and the Carson Valley.

• Four Seasons Resort Maui at Wailea presents Four Nights for two with Ocean View Room.

• The Kahala Hotel and Resort presents Four Nights for two in a one bedroom Ko’olau partial ocean view lanai suite.

• Wharf Master’s Inn in Point Arena presents Seven Nights for up to six at the Wharf Master’s House including the East Lake Suite.

• The Whale Watch Inn, Gualala, presents a One Night stay for two; six of this item will be available.

All these items and much more, venues for every occasion and budget, await viewers and online bidders during the annual televised KRCB Summer Spree Auction presented for two full weekends: July 15 - 17 and July 22 - 24 from 6:30 pm – 11 pm. Bid and preview online at KRCB.org beginning July 1, 2011. 7 Great Performances at the Met presents new operas The only continuing primetime performance showcase on American television, Great Performances presents a diverse programming portfolio of classical music, opera, popular song, musical theater, dance, drama, and performance documentaries. With its programs garnering 64 Emmy Awards and four George Foster Peabody Awards, the series has received every major television honor. Armida This mythical story of a sorceress who enthralls men in her island prison has inspired operatic settings by a multitude of composers, including Gluck, Haydn, and Dvořák. Renee Fleming stars in the title role of Rossini’s version, opposite no fewer than six tenors. Wednesday, July 6 at 8 pm Don Pasquale Anna Netrebko stars as Norina, the irresistible and clever romantic heroine of Donizetti’s comic opera Don Pasquale. James Levine, in his first-ever performance of this opera, conducts a cast that also features Matthew Polenzani as the lovelorn Ernesto, Mariusz Kwiecien as the duplicitous Dr. Malat- esta, and John Del Carlo as the title character. Renowned Austrian director Otto Schenk returns to the Met to direct the first revival of his production. Wednesday, July 13 at 8 pm Boris Godunov Rene Pape takes on one of the greatest bass roles in a new produc- tion by Stephen Wadsworth. Valery Gergiev conducts Mussorgsky’s epic spectacle that captures the suffering and ambition of a nation, with Aleksandrs Antonenko, Vladimir Ognovenko, and Ekaterina Semenchuk leading the huge cast. Wednesday, July 20 at 8 pm Don Carlo Director Nicholas Hytner makes his Metropolitan Opera debut with this production of Verdi’s profound, beautiful and most ambi- tious opera. Roberto Alagna leads the cast. Ferruccio Furlanetto, Marina Poplavskaya, Anna Smirnova, and Simon Keenlyside also star. Yannick Nezet-Seguin conducts. Wednesday, July 27 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 is available online!

8 Climate One forum from Commonwealth Club Charge It? What is the business model for supplying electrons to elec- tric vehicles? Where should chargers be placed? Who should decide: policymakers or companies? Are charging companies dependent on subsidies? What do automakers think should happen? Are utilities ready for the load? A conversation with entrepreneurs in the juice business. Rob Bearman, Director, Global Alliances, Utilities and Energy, Better Place; Mike DiNucci, VP of Strategic Accounts, Coulomb Technologies; Jay Friedland, Legislative Director, Plug In America; & Jonathan Read, CEO, ECOtality.

Sustainable Urbanism with Peter Calthorpe How should the climate imperative change community design? What is sustainable urban- ism? Will the federal and state governments make long-term investments in public mobility when they are in such dire fiscal straits? What are China and other countries doing to build smarter cities from the beginning? Join us for a conversation with one of the fathers of new urbanism. Peter Calthorpe, Founder, Calthorpe Associates; Author, Urbanism in the Age of Climate Change. Sunday, July 24 at 11 am

PBS Helps Kids Realize Their Potential According to the latest Roper Public Affairs and Media survey, the American public has rated PBS the most educational media brand and the undisputed leader in children’s programming. Here are some other interesting statistics: • More than 21 million children watch PBS Kids on TV, and more than 20 million engage with PBS Kids online each quarter. (Nielsen NTI and Google Analytics) • PBS is the #1 source of TV and online content used by pre-K teachers in the classroom. (Frunwald Study) • For the 12th year in a row PBS Kids won more Emmy awards for children’s programs than any other media company. • Children from low-income families who watched as few as two episodes of Super Why! scored 46% higher on standardized tests than those who did not watch the program. (University of Pennsyvania Annenberg School for Communiction) • PBS KIDS offers nine literacy series and 15 series on science, technology, engineer- ing, and math. • PBSKIDSPlay.org was named the winner of the 2009 Teachers Choice Awards for the family. • Preschoolers from low-income communities who participated in PBS KIDS’ media- rich curriculum outscored their peers who did not participate in the curriculum on all tested measures of early literacy. (Education Development Center and SRI International).

9 What’s new on Television 22 Afropop: The Ultimate Cultural Exchange Tony-winning actress Anika Noni Rose hosts the new season of Afropop: The Ultimate Cultural Exchange, the innovative documentary series on contemporary life, art and pop culture in the African Diaspora. Four films introduce powerful stories: African boxers journey across the Atlantic to match their skills against the best in the world; a teenage girl travels to Ghana and an expatriate from Sierra Leone returns to his homeland, each hoping to dispel prevailing myths about the two countries; and, Hurricane Katrina victims find themselves refugees in their own country. Thursdays at 8 pm

POV returns for the summer Celebrating its 24th season on PBS, POV features the work of the best independent docu- mentary filmmakers from America and around the world. Airing Thursdays at 9 pm during the summer, with primetime specials during the year, POV has brought more than 300 award-winning documentaries to millions nationwide. July 7 – The Most Dangerous Man In America: Daniel Ellsberg The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers is a tale told by Ellsberg with a who’s who of Vietnam and Watergate-era figures. July 14 – Kings of Pastry Sixteen chefs, including Jacquy Pfeiffer, co-founder of Chicago’s French Pastry School, whip up the most gorgeous, delectable, gravity-defying concoctions and edge-of-your-seat drama as they deliver their spun-sugar desserts to the display table. July 21 – My Perestroika My Perestroika is an intimate look at the last generation of Soviet children. Five classmates go from living sheltered childhoods to experiencing the hopes of Gorbachev’s reforms and the confusion of the USSR’s dissolution to searching for their places in today’s Moscow. July 28 – Sweetgrass This film presents a poetic portrait of the American West just as one of its traditional ways of life dies out. Shot amidst the grandeur of Montana’s Absaroka-Beartooth Wilderness, Sweetgrass follows the last modern-day cowboys to lead their flocks of sheep up into the breathtaking and often dangerous mountains for summer pasture.

10 What’s new on daytime TV The American Woodshop Brings new woodworking innovations into home shops everywhere as heirloom projects are recreated. Shaker furni- ture, turned stools, hope chests and display cabinets are just the beginning of this season’s tour of woodworking treasures. Scott and Suzy Phillips team up to create fine family heir- looms for everyone. All made with beautiful American woods. Sundays at 3 pm and repeats Thursdays at Noon Pati’s Mexican Table Pati’s Mexican Table brings authentic Mexican flavors, colors, textures and warmth into American kitchens. In each episode, chef, cooking teacher and food writer Pati Jinich embarks upon an exciting and entertaining culinary adventure, where each dish serves as a point of departure into Mexico’s rich history and culture. Fridays at 12:30 pm beginning July 15

Ucook! with Chef Bob Chef Bob Waggoner is one of the leading culinary masters in the southeast and is one of many Charleston chefs who have been finalists for multiple James Beard Awards in recent years. Ucook! features Chef Bob’s award-winning cuisine and offers classic dishes along with contemporary cooking techniques with simple instruction so that the viewer truly can pre- pare delicious entrees quite simply. In each show, Chef Bob will teach the “Average Joe” food guest the techniques and art of gourmet cooking, paired with wines. This appeal to “the every person” is a unique approach. Wednesdays at 12:30 pm beginning July 27 PBS Kids program lineup Weekdays Saturdays 7:00 Sesame Street 7:00 Los Niños en Su Casa-SP 8.00 Sid the Science Kid 7:30 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot About That!-SP 8:30 Curious George 8:00 Clifford-SP 9:00 Cat in the Hat Knows a 8:30 Cyberchase-SP Lot About That! 9:00 Angelina Ballerina 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 9:30 Thomas & Friends 2:30 Cyberchase 10:00 Bob The Builder 3:00 Arthur 10:30 Mister Rogers’ 3:30 WordGirl Neighborhood 4:00 Fetch! - Mon - Th 11:00 A Place of Our Own Anne of Green Gables - Fri Cyberchase (Spanish) 4:30 The Electric Company 11 Harmonia pleases every Early Music fan July 3 – Retrospective: Early Music America Competition Winners, pt. 1 This week we mark the 25th anniversary of Early Music America with a look at its past competition winners. Part one of two looks at the accomplishments of Ensemble La Rota (rt), Asteria, and the Catacoustic Consort. Plus, Jordi Savall and Le Concert des Nations perform in a featured release of music from the time of Louis XV.

July 10 – Music from Colonial America Psalm settings. Fiddle tunes. Shape-note hymns. Ballads that tell of everything from murder and mayhem to home and true love. What do these all have in common? You might have heard any or all of them in the homes, churches, taverns, and theaters of the North American colonies around the time of the American Revolution and the period just following.

July 17 – You Gotta Have (Renaissance) Love Harmonia asks the age-old question: “What is love?” and finds some answers in love songs from the Renaissance by composers Luzzaschi, Crecquillon, Henry VIII, and Senfl. Performers include Doulce Memoire, the Egidius Kwartet, Alamire, and Andrew Lawrence King.

July 24 – Peter Phillips and the Tallis Scholars Peter Phillips joins us to talk about the Tallis Scholars’ recording “Lamentations of Jer- emiah,” Gary Cooper leads the New Chamber Opera Ensemble in music from the Gresham Autograph, and L’Arpeggiata is featured in the release “Via Crucis.”

July 31 – Retrospective: Early Music America Competition Winners, pt. 2 In part two of the retrospective, we look at the accomplishments of the Concord Ensem- ble, Masques, and Plaine & Easie. Plus, Jordi Savall continues his exploration of traditional music from Scotland and Ireland in the featured release Celtic Viol II.

Sundays at 9 am

Flashback celebrates a sideman Easily the most accomplished and widely heard pianist of the rock and roll generation, Nicky Hopkins remains a name known mostly to those who read the fine print on album jackets and in CD booklets. Yet his versatile playing is heard on hundreds of icon- ic songs by the Rolling Stones, The Who, Jefferson Airplane, the Kinks, Steve Miller Band and many others. In addition to sampling an array of these, we’ll also feature an interview with the author of the new biography, And On Keyboards…Nicky Hopkins. Tuesday, July 5 at 7 pm

12 Sundry selections on Saint Paul Sunday

July 3 – Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra The first guests whomSaint Paul Sunday (then known as Saint Paul Sunday Morning) welcomed into its studio are the same performers you’ll hear this week: the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra. On that inaugural broadcast, which aired in March of 1981, the SPCO joined forces with the Dale Warland Sing- ers for an all-Bach program. This week, discover again why this 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.

July 10 – eighth blackbird performs Rzewski This week eighth blackbird brings us two works—Frederic Rzewski’s Les Moutons des Pan- urge and Fred Lerdahl’s Fantasy Etudes—showing us how eighth blackbird’s assorted textures can interact in countless different ways. The blackbirds animate both with characteristic bril- liance and verve as they do the two works that complete their program—Derek Bermel’s Tied Shifts and Ashley Fure’s Inescapable.

July 17 – Imogen Cooper Pianist Imogen Cooper returns to Saint Paul Sunday this week for music of Haydn, Schumann, and the final movement of Thomas Ades’s Traced Overhead, a work of otherworldly beauty which she commissioned herself. In quite different ways, each of the works demands awesome technical virtuosity and great emotional agility— powers Ms. Cooper possesses in abundance.

July 24 – REBEL performs Mozart, Telemann This week the masterful performers of REBEL plunge into Baroque repertoire with all the freedom and zest their name implies. They trace its development from early origins in Mozart and Bach through and beyond Georg Philipp Telemann’s thrilling stylistic juxta- positions. We’ll also hear lesser known pearls of Francesco Mancini and Johann Joachim Quantz.

July 31 – Guarneri String Quartet performs Mozart, Ravel, Dvořák The Guarneri String Quartet returns to Saint Paul Sunday with works by Mozart, Dvořák and Ravel that reveal the heart and soul of this revered ensemble. Each composer’s distinct voice shines, but refracted through a sound and mastery wholly the Guarneri’s own.

Sundays at 11 am

13 Hear Lisa See on A Novel Idea Lisa See is an author beloved by many KRCB listeners. Rosemary Manchester, host of A Novel Idea, was able to schedule an interview with Lisa as she begins an extensive national tour for her brand new book, Dreams of Joy. The story takes Joy, whom readers will remember from See’s earlier book, Shanghai Girls, to China in 1957. She becomes a part of Mao’s Great Leap Forward, and readers will be right there with her as she goes off to Green Dragon Village in the interior of China. In related news, Lisa See’s novel Snow Flower and the Secret Fan has been filmed in China, and is scheduled for release in the U.S. later this month. Hear Lisa See on A Novel Idea on Wednesday, July 13, at 7 pm.

The Play’s the Thing on Saturday nights July 2 – The Caine Mutiny Court Martial, by Herman Wouk A Navy lieutenant is on trial for mutiny aboard the USS Caine. But as details of that day come to the surface, a very different picture begins to emerge. Herman Wouk’s classic play offers a captivating account of the slippery nature of truth in times of war—and the ways in which justice itself can be anything but clear-cut. July 9 – Fifth of July, by Lanford Wilson It’s one of the great dysfunctional family vacations as members of the Talley clan gather at their ancestral home in Lebanon, Missouri to celebrate Independence Day, and to spread their Uncle Matt’s ashes. As the visit goes on, they reveal their dreams, disappointments, and hilarious eccentricities. July 16 – Once in a Lifetime, by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart, adapted by Chris Hart In October 1927, Warner Brothers debuted The Jazz Singer. Talking pictures were born, and Hollywood had to adapt in a hurry. Those wild days of the transition to talkies were a gold mine of material for two of the era’s leading wordsmiths, George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart, who scored a big Broadway hit with this screwball comedy. July 23 – Antigone, by Jean Anouilh, translated by Christopher Nixon In 1943, the French playwright Jean Anouilh adapted Antigone, the classic Greek story of familial love, justice, and retribution as a parable for the Second World War. In Anouilh’s play, the tidy ends of Greek tragedy are undermined by the moral ambiguities of war…and the steadfast pursuit of vengeance threatens to consume both the victor and the vanquished. July 30 – God’s Man in Texas, by David Rambo As the aging founder of the giant Rock Baptist Church in Hous- ton comes under pressure to step down, the search for his succes- sor becomes a struggle over faith and fundraising. The broadcast includes a piece about the influence of real-life megachurches in America. Saturday night at 6 pm and midnight 14 Wal-Mart, Cities and Salmon on Climate One this month July 7 – Wal-Mart: Force of Nature or Greenwashing? After teaming up with Blu Skye Sustainability consul- tant and renowned river guide Jib Ellison, former Wal- Mart CEO Lee Scott retooled the world’s largest retailer into the world’s largest proponent of sustainable business practices. For profits? For public relations? For mother Earth? The company is pursuing cleaner trucks, healthier food, slimmer product packaging and a host of other initiatives. It wants to squeeze carbon and costs from every product on its shelves and is encouraging its 2.1 million employees to walk the walk with their own personal sustainability plans. This is having a profound impact on Wal-Mart’s 100,000 suppliers, and has prodded other industries to approach sustainability as a potential boon to their bottom lines instead of a cost. Has the unlikely partnership between a river guide and a CEO sparked a business sustainability revolution? July 14 – Sustainable Urbanism, Part 1 How should the climate imperative change community design? What is sustainable urban- ism? Will the federal and state governments make long-term investments in public mobility when they are in such dire fiscal straits? What are China and other countries doing to build smarter cities from the beginning? Peter Calthorpe, author of Urbanism in the Age of Climate Change, and one of the fathers of new urbanism offers his perspective. July 21 – Sustainable Urbanism, Part 2 What are cities in the Bay Area and beyond doing to focus growth around existing down- towns and transit? How will California’s new land use law (SB 375) change incentives for land development? Will walkable cities really become reality? How does the federal prefer- ence for highway funding impact California’s vision for low-carbon communities? What turf battles prevent greater regional collaboration among various Bay Area agencies? A conversa- tion about land and mobility in a carbon-constrained world. July 28 – Salmon Odyssey The fight to restore salmon runs in the Pacific Northwest involves billions of dollars in public funds and politicking all the way up to the White House. This spring, a federal judge is expected to hand down a decision that will shape federal salmon policy in the Columbia River Basin. What impact will that decision have on the area’s ecosystems and economies? Can any lessons be applied to the fierce confron- tations between fisherman, farmers and environmentalists in California? Thursdays at 7 pm Whale Nation on WordTemple “In the water, whales have become the dominant species/without killing their own kind.” This month’s WordTemple features English poet, playwright and actor Heathcote Williams reading his green classic, Whale Nation, the first of three book-length poems by Williams on environmental themes. Part poetry, part natural history and part ecologic statement with gorgeous musical accompaniment, Whale Nation is a hymn to the beauty, intelligence and majesty of the largest mammal on earth. WordTemple airs Wednesday, July 20 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 5:30 KRCB OVERNIGAND LARGE EXHIBIT DISPLHAYTS 6:00 6:30 MORNING EDITION - NPR NEWS (KRCB host Mark Prell) 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 E-Town Flashback Word by Word Climate One 7:30 A Novel Idea Live folk/rock Moth WordTemple Poetry Forums 8:00 your Average freight train 8:30 something Abalone completely connections boogie 9:00 Johnny different Doug Jayne & Bill Frater On the 9:30 Bazzano fiddlin’ zone Roland Jacopetti Allegra Broughton Road Again Gus Garelick Linda Seabright 10:00 Crossing Kaleidoscope 10:30 Mindy’s Mix Borders Pillow Storm Jan Stephens 11:00 Mindy Berrett Doug Gosling, Josh Drake & Percussion 11:30 Amy Contardi & Josh Staples Discussion David Sharp Jim Laveroni 12:00 Democracy Now! with Amy Goodman 1:00 Fresh Air with Terry Gross 2:00 KRCB OVERNIGHT radio free sonoma 16 Get in Touch with Our Roots Saturday afternoons mean folk and acoustic music on KRCB-FM. Robin Pressman and Steve Delap, co-hosts of Our Roots Are Showing, delight in sharing new, recent and classic songs and performances from a wide range of artists, and often feature in-studio guests for interviews and mini-concerts. Saturdays, 1-5 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 & Jenny Bent hosts music & guests live 11:00 from San Francisco St. Paul Sunday 11:30 12:00 CURTAIN CALL Thistle & Shamrock 12:30 Charles Sepos Celtic Music sunday classics 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 & 3:00 music with 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 GLBT Radio red shoes Rodeo Beyond JAZZ 9:00 NEW DIMENSIONS Michele Anna Jordan & Back CONNECTIONS 9:30 (5th Friday) Hillary Culhane RADIO 10:00 Chuck Sher, OPEN SPACE DISTRICT Ric Mancuso, 10:30 mUSIC sPECIALS John Katchmer Toby Gleason, & 11:00 Larry Slater the Jazz MD Eclectica Paul Timberman & 11:30 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 What’s Playing on KRCB FM Spoken Word Mostly Music ARTS & IDEAS CLASSICAL FREE-FORM FM Another Voice The Choir Loft Beyond & Back A Novel Idea From the Top Connections Curtain Call Harmonia Flashback Fresh Air Midday Classics Holy Cow! Le Show Opera Sunday Kaleidoscope New Dimensions Radio Out of the Box Left of the Dial Reel Time Film Reviews Performance Today Mindy’s Mix The Play’s the Thing Saint Paul Sunday Percussion Discussion This American Life Sunday Classics Pillow Storm West Coast Live FOLK, AMERICANA & Radio Free Sonoma Word By Word MORE Rare & Well Done WordTemple Poetry Your Average Abalone Red Shoes Rodeo COMMUNITY CONCERNS E-town Space/Time Climate One Lectures Fiddlin’ Zone JAZZ, BLUES, R&B Democracy Now! Freight Train Boogie Blues Before Sunrise Jim Hightower On the Road Again Jazz Connections Mouthful Our Roots Are Showing Rhythm & Roots North Bay Report Thistle & Shamrock TECHNO & TRANCE Outbeat Salon Something Completely Eclectica Sonoma Spotlight Different Night Traveler INTERNATIONAL Open Space District Crossing Borders

Lofty Music on Sunday Mornings Every Sunday morning at 10, Sonoma County’s very own choir lofters bring you the best in choral music. July 3 – Americana Celebrate the Fourth with some American thirds, fifths and other intervals. Hosted by Bob Worth. July 10 – Mahler songs More from Gustav’s (rt) inexhaustible pen. Hosted by Dan Solter. July 17 – Top Secret Slip on your decoder ring and tune in for a program so unique, so compelling, so rich with gravitas, we can barely fathom it ourselves, much less try to convey it to you. Hosted by Anthony Martin. July 24 – Missa Sanctissimae Trinitatis A wondrous late mass by Jan Dismas Zelenka, the Bohemian Bach. Hosted by Steve Osborn. July 31 – Music of Austri Choral works by several generations of Austrian composers including Haydn, Schubert and Wolf. Hosted by Jenny Bent. Sundays at 10 am

18 Enlightened entertainment on E-town July 4 – Ralph Stanley & His Clinch Mountain Boys / Ramblin’ Jack Elliott The legendary Ralph Stanley & His Clinch Mountain Boys take the stage, sharing songs from Ralph’s 60+ years as a performer of bluegrass, old-time, and roots music. And long-time, “hard travelin’” Ramblin’ Jack Elliott (rt) joins us as well. July 11 – BeauSoleil avec Michael Doucet / Ben Kweller Cajun masters BeauSoleil are back. Bob Dylan said about their sound, “That’s my kind of music!” Acclaimed indie-pop singer/song- writer Ben Kweller also joins us. July 18 – Indigo Girls / Nathaniel Rateliff We welcome back Indigo Girls Emily Saliers and Amy Ray to Lincoln Center in Fort Collins, CO. Also on the program, up-and- coming singer/songwriter Nathaniel Rateliff and his band. July 25 – DeVotchKa / Joe Purdy Eclectic rocker group DeVotchKa honed their skills on stages around Colorado before achieving international success with the movie soundtrack for the indie movie Little Miss Sunshine. Up-and-coming singer/songwriter Joe Purdy stops by as well for his first appearance on the show. Mondays at 7pm

Outbeat lives on Sunday evenings July 3 – Living Proof co-hosts and wives, Dr. Dianna Grayer and Sheridan Gold, celebrate Independence Day talking to guests about freedom. Their guests share their personal stories involving being a straight couple, having kids, going through transition, becoming lesbians, and staying together! July 10 – Greg Miraglia hosts a summer gay dance party with three decades of dance club music. Hang up your disco ball! July 17 – Outbeat Collage - Out in the Arts. Hosts Mikala Kennan and Gary Carnivele will chat with Theater Director Buzz Bense about Pegasus Theater’s current production Avow. Jason Perdue from the Sebastopol Documentary Film Festival will be here to talk about the organization’s “Best in the Fest” program’s July 22 screening of Out in Silence. Also the Arts & Entertainment Calendar. July 24 – Outbeat Now! Jeff Basham and Greg Miraglia with the latest news and information about the LGBT commu- nity in the North Bay. On Outbeat Youth, Miraglia talks with Jason Galisatus about his role in coordinating the LGBT Youth Summit at Aragon High School. Greg will also be joined by Nathan Manske, the creator of “imfromdriftwood. com,” an innovative website now capturing stories from LGBT communities around the world. July 31 – Outbeat Forum - How to get involved and make a difference. Sunday nights at 8 pm 19 A message from Membership

Did you know that you don’t have to wait for a mem- bership drive to continue or enhance your relationship with KRCB? You are always welcome to contact us at 707-584-2018 or join us at our website at www.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 funding you provide makes possible all the wonderful programming you’ve come to appreciate on KRCB.

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

KRCB Volunteer of the Month – Mary Moore-Campagna This past year we’ve featured volunteers who have been with KRCB for five years or more. This month we take time out to make an excep- tion for an exceptional volunteer who, in the relatively short time she has been with us, has spent many hours volunteering her time in both radio and television. Mary Moore-Campagna has done everything from staying late to help clean up after our live auctions to operating the radio board very early on Sunday mornings (and sometimes late into the evening). She’s created technical manuals, PowerPoint presentations, and was an active participant in the KRCB Future Search Conference last summer. It all started over a year ago when Mary thought she would like to help organize the CD library. As it happened, she arrived during a membership drive and we needed help answering the phones. Mary jumped right in and started registering new and returning members of KRCB, welcoming them as if she’d been working for the station for years. When Radio Program Director Robin Pressman asked Mary if she was willing to come in to the studio and invite listeners to call in their pledge live on the air, she readily agreed (later she confessed that she “never met a microphone she didn’t like”). In addition to volunteering at KRCB, Mary and her husband Gus are also very active in the Northwestern Pacific Railroad Historical Society and the Northwest Folklife Society. We can’t thank Mary enough for all that she’s done for KRCB. She can always be counted on to be here when she’s made a commitment and last but not least, every- one appreciates her positive outlook on life and upbeat spirit. If you would like to learn more about volunteering at KRCB, contact Cheryl Scholar at 707-584-2005.

20 Daytime Television Listings MONDAY 12:30 Avec Eric (7/27 - Ucook! with 4:30 The Electric Company 6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches Chef Bob) 5:00 Asia Biz Forecast 6:30 Classical Stretch 1:00 Invitation to World Literature 5:30 PBS NewsHour 7:00 Sesame Street 1:30 Signing Time! 6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal 8:00 Sid the Science Kid 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog SATURDAY 8:30 Curious George 2:30 Cyberchase 7:00 Los Niños en Su Casa (Sp) 9:00 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot 3:00 Arthur 7:30 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot About That! 3:30 WordGirl About That! (SP) 9:30 Fons & Porter Love of Quilting 4:00 Fetch! 8:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog (Sp) 10:00 Quilting Arts 4:30 The Electric Company 8:30 Cyberchase (Sp) 10:30 Learn to Read 5:00 Newsline 9:00 Angelina Ballerina 11:00 Functional Fitness with Suzanne 5:30 PBS NewsHour 9:30 Thomas and Friends Andrews 6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal 10:00 Bob the Builder 11:30 Second Opinion THURSDAY 10:30 Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood 12:00 Hometime 6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches 11:00 A Place of Our Own 12:30 Taste This! 6:30 Wai Lana Yoga 11:30 To The Contrary with Bonnie 1:00 Nature 7:00 Sesame Street Erbe 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 8:00 Sid the Science Kid 12:00 Design Squad 2:30 Cyberchase 8:30 Curious George 12:30 Biz KID$ 3:00 Arthur 9:00 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot 1:00 Paint This w/Jerry Yarnell 3:30 WordGirl About That! 1:30 Around the House with Matt and 4:00 Fetch! 9:30 Around the House with Matt and Shari 4:30 The Electric Company Shari 2:00 Best of the Joy of Painting 5:00 Newsline [repeats Sat. at 1:30 pm] 2:30 Rough Cut - Woodworking with 5:30 PBS NewsHour 10:00 Sewing with Nancy Tommy Mac 6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal 10:30 GED on TV (Spanish) 3:00 Woodwright’s Shop TUESDAY 11:00 13 Wonders of Spain 3:30 Ask This Old House 6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches 11:30 Travelscope [repeats Tues. at noon] 6:30 Power Yoga 12:00 American Woodshop 4:00 Bake, Decorate, Celebrate 7:00 Sesame Street 12:30 Nick Stellino Cooking with 4:30 Hey Kids, Let’s Cook! 8:00 Sid the Science Kid Friends 5:00 Food Kids 8:30 Curious George [repeats Sat. at 5:30 pm] 5:30 Nick Stellino Cooking with 9:00 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot 1:00 Biz KID$ Friends About That! [repeats Sat. at 12:30 pm] 6:00 Simply Ming 9:30 Knitting Daily 1:30 Piano Guy 6:30 Vine Talk 10:00 Sew It All 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog SUNDAY 10:30 GED Connection (English) 2:30 Cyberchase 8:00 Ideas in Action with Jim 11:00 Wider World 3:00 Arthur Glassman 11:30 Healthy Body, Healthy Mind 3:30 WordGirl 8:30 Maria Hinojosa One-On-One 12:00 Ask This Old House 4:00 Fetch! 9:00 McLaughlin’s One on One 12:30 Simply Ming 4:30 The Electric Company 9:30 Consuelo Mack: Wealth Track [repeats Sat. at 6 pm] 5:00 Newsline 10:00 Religion & Ethics Newsweekly 1:00 NOVA 5:30 PBS NewsHour 10:30 Between the Lines 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal 11:00 (7/3 -Cotsen Children’s Library) 2:30 Cyberchase FRIDAY (7/10- Hispanic Lifestyles) (7/17 3:00 Arthur 6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches - Snapshots) (7/24 - Climate 3:30 WordGirl 6:30 Wai Lana Yoga One) (7/31- Hispanic Lifestyles) 4:00 Fetch! 7:00 Sesame Street 11:30 World Business 4:30 The Electric Company 8:00 Sid the Science Kid 12:00 Motorweek 5:00 Newsline 8:30 Curious George 12:30 Inside Washington 5:30 PBS NewsHour 9:00 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot 1:00 European Journal 6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal About That! 1:30 Scully the World Show WEDNESDAY 9:30 Creative Living 2:00 America’s Heartland 6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches [repeats Sun. at 4 pm] 2:30 California’s Gold, Green, Water, 6:30 Wai Lana Yoga 10:00 Martha’s Sewing Room Golden Parks, Communities, & 7:00 Sesame Street 10:30 Living Smart Golden Fairs 8:00 Sid the Science Kid 11:00 Rudy Maxa’s World 3:00 American Woodshop 8:30 Curious George 11:30 Ciao Italia [repeats Thurs. at noon] 9:00 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot 12:00 Victory Garden 3:30 This Old House About That! 12:30 Cooking Odyssey (7/15 - Pati’s [repeats Wed. at noon] 9:30 Beads, Baubles and Jewels Mexican Table) 4:00 Creative Living 10:00 Art Through Time: A Global View 1:00 B Organic with Michelle Beschen 4:30 Garden Smart 10:30 Piano Guy 1:30 Sit and Be Fit 5:00 Growing a Greener World [repeats Thurs. at 1:30 pm] 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 5:30 Victory Garden 11:00 America’s Heartland 2:30 Cyberchase [repeats Fri. at noon] 11:30 Bake, Decorate, Celebrate 3:00 Arthur 6:00 P. Allen Smith’s Garden Home [repeats Sat. at 4 pm] 3:30 WordGirl 6:30 Red Green 12:00 This Old House 4:00 Anne of Green Gables [repeats Sat. at 7:30 pm] 21 Primetime Listings for July 1 FRIDAY overplowed southern plains, 7:30 Growing Bolder: Dreams 7:00 To the Manor Born turning bountiful wheat fields Come True 7:30 Consuelo Mack: Wealthtrack into desert. Disease, hardship 8:00 Nature: Victoria Falls 8:00 Inside E Street: When I’m 65 and death followed, yet the Cutting across the Zambezi 8:30 McLaughlin Group majority of people stayed on, River, bridging the countries of 9:00 Natural Heroes: Cascade steadfastly refusing to give up Zambia and Zimbabwe, Victo- if Light In the arctic, some on the land and a way of life. ria Falls is the largest waterfall adventures make the spirit 9:00 David Suchet on the Orient in the world. In the dry dance. Discover perpetual light Express: A Masterpiece season, this awesome and the spectacle of arctic life Special Takes us across the force of nature divides two with a group of friends from Europe of today and reaches an urban culture who follow into bygone eras. With glam- a river to the Arctic Ocean. our, insight, charm, beautiful They learn that awareness, photography and fascinating not crisis, must define our characters, Suchet leads us relationship with the rest of on an epic journey on an the natural world. And how the iconic train through a series of greatest journey is where the romantic cities and stunning scenery. land takes us within ourselves. 10:00 Masterpiece Mystery! Poirot 9:30 Ebert Presents at the X: Murder on the Orient Movies Express David Suchet stars 10:00 PBS NewsHour natural worlds—the tranquil as suave Belgian super sleuth meandering river above the 11:00 Charlie Rose Hercule Poirot in this mystery cascade, and the raging abyss 12:00 Democracy Now! * based on the novels by Agatha of the gorge below. 1:00 Best of KRCB * Christie. When the train [repeats 7/11 at 1 pm) 2 saturday becomes caught in a snow- 9:00 Jimmy Tingle’s American 7:00 America’s Test Kitchen from drift and a passenger is found Dream Jimmy Tingle’s Cook’s Illustrated: Great American Dream is a tour de Glazed Chicken force of comedy, commentary and conversation with some of 7:30 Red Green Show: Foster America’s most iconic Child personalities and social critics, 8:00 Lawrence Welk Show: as well as family, friends and Hawaii total strangers as they speak 9:00 Austin City Limits: Robert up and speak out on the Earl Keen/Hayes Carll American Dream. Presents Texas singer/song- 10:00 PBS NewsHour writers with Robert Earl Keen 11:00 Charlie Rose and Hayes Carll. Veteran Keen 12:00 Democracy Now! * precedes up-and-comer Carll. brutally murdered mid-voyage, 1:00 Best of LINK TV * 10:00 Live from the Artists Den: the famous Belgian detective Grace Potter and the is called upon to investgate 6 WEDNESDAY Nocturnals the crime and find the cuprit. 7:00 Last of the Summer Wine 11:00 Theater Talk 11:30 Best of KRCB * 7:30 Between the Lines with 11:30 Red Dwarf: Ouroboros 1:00 Best of LINK TV * Barry Kibrick: Esmeraldo 12:00 Best of KRCB * Santiago (Author) 4 Monday Conquistadora 3 Sunday 7:00 Out of Ireland [repeats Sunday at 10:30 am] 7:00 Antiques Roadshow: 8:00 Great Performances at the Washington, DC - Hour 7:30 My Generaton: Never Out of Three Style Met: Armida (see page 8) 8:00 Surviving The Dust Bowl: 8:00 A Capitol Fourth 11:00 Charlie Rose American Experience They (see page 5) 12:00 Democracy Now! * were called “Black Blizzards,” 9:30 A Capitol Fourth 1:00 Best of LINK TV * 11:00 Charlie Rose dark clouds reaching miles 7 THURSDAY into the sky, churning millions 12:00 Democracy Now! * 1:00 Best of LINK TV * 7:00 As Time Goes By of tons of dirt into torrents of 7:30 The Artist Toolbox: Jason destruction. For ten years be- 5 Tuesday Alexander Join host John ginning in 1930, dust storms 7:00 After You’ve Gone Jacobsen in the beautifully- ravaged the parched and 22 Primetime Listings for July remodeled Saban Theatre in 8:00 Inside E Street: Diagnosis: as a “sheer blank.” Three Los Angeles as he attempts to Scam years later, only six survivors crack up classic funny-man 8:30 McLaughlin Group returned, with a daunting Jason Alexander, perhaps best 9:00 Natural Heroes: The Story of story of shipwreck, starvation, known as George Costanza Stuff A fast-paced, fact-filled mutiny and cannibalism. from the ground- breaking look at the underside of our 9:00 Masterpiece Mystery! sitcom, Seinfeld. While having production and consumption Poirot X: Appointment with such a successful show often patterns. The Story of Stuff Death While on holiday in typecasts actors for the rest exposes the connections Syria, Poirot finds himself of their careers, Alexander between a huge number of drawn into a murder investiga- talks about breaking the mold environmental and social tion located at an archaeologi- and forging a career based on issues, and calls us together cal site on the brink of making craft, training and ambition. to create a more sustainable a major discovery. With no 8:00 Afropop: The Ultimate and just world. shortage of suspects, from Cultural Exchange: The 9:30 Ebert Presents at the family members to fellow tour- Fighting Spirit Boxing is show Movies ists, only Poirot can unearth business with blood—a tough 10:00 PBS NewsHour the truth. sport known for finding its top 11:00 Charlie Rose 10:30 Buddha of the Piano: competitors in the poorest 12:00 Democracy Now! * Leopold Godowsky Antonio 1:00 Best of KRCB * Iturrioz’s film gives us the highlights of Godowsky’s busy, 9 saturday peripatetic career, shares 7:00 America’s Test Kitchen from his thoughts about music Cook’s Illustrated: Chicken and life, and summarizes his and Rice–Indian–Style achievements as pianist, ar- 7:30 Red Green Show: What A ranger, composer and teacher. Dump The film unfolds against a 8:00 Lawrence Welk Show: From backdrop of Godowsky’s own Polkas to Classics luxuriant, highly original and 9:00 Austin City Limits: Rosanne legendarily difficult music. neighborhoods. Bukom, a tiny Cash/Brandi Carlile Great 11:30 Best of KRCB * district in Ghana’s capital city voices and songs combine 1:00 Best of LINK TV * of Accra, is one such locale. with Rosanne Cash and Brandi 11 Monday Grounded in a long cultural Carlile. Cash presents tunes 7:00 Out of Ireland tradition of wrestling that, from her C&W tribute album over the years, developed The List. Brandi Carlile follows 7:30 My Generation: Resolve to into boxing, the tiny fishing with genre-spanning tunes Solve village trains young people to from Give Up the Ghost. 8:00 NOVA: Parallel Worlds, Mark Oliver fight—and win. Bukom has 10:00 Live from the Artists Den: Parallel Lives Everett, better known as E, is produced up to five percent Robert Plant and the Band the lead singer of U.S. cult of the world’s champion and of Joy band the EELS. What most Olympic medal boxers. The 11:00 Theater Talk of his fans don’t know is that Fighting Spirit tells the story of 11:30 Red Dwarf: Duct Soup three fighters from Bukom— Mark’s father, Hugh Everett 12:00 Best of KRCB * two men and a woman—as III, was one of America’s top they battle their way to the 10 Sunday quantum physicists. In 1957, glittering rings of Europe and 7:00 Antiques Roadshow: Hugh Everett came up with the United States to compete Wichita, KS - Hour Two a revolutionary theory that for the biggest prizes in the 8:00 Greely Expedition: American predicted the existence of business. Experience In 1881, 25 men 9:00 POV: The Most Dangerous led by Lieutenant Adolphus Man In America: Daniel Greely sailed from the harbor Ellsberg (see page 10) of St. John’s, Newfoundland. 11:00 Charlie Rose Their destination was Lady 12:00 Democracy Now! * Franklin Bay in the high Arctic, 1:00 Best of LINK TV * where they planned to collect a wealth of scientific data from 8 FRIDAY a vast area of the world’s 7:00 To the Manor Born surface that had been 7:30 Consuelo Mack: Wealthtrack described by a British admiral 23 Primetime Listings for July parallel universes. The idea 12:00 Democracy Now! * 13 WEDNESDAY quickly seeped into popular 1:00 Best of Link TV * 7:00 Last of the Summer Wine culture, but only recently has it 7:30 Between the Lines with been accepted by mainstream 12 Tuesday Barry Kibrick: Dr. Judith 7:00 physicists. The film follows After You’ve Gone Prager (Psychologist) Verbal the wry and charismatic Mark, 7:30 Growing Bolder: Passion for First Aid who had been estranged from Living [repeats Sunday at 10:30am] his father, as he travels across 8:00 Nature: The Beauty of Ugly 8:00 Great Performances at the America to learn about the We may think we know what Met: Don Pasquale father he never knew. It is only is beautiful and what isn’t, but (see page 8) by entering the paradoxical in the natural world, beauty 10:30 Journey for Good: Tanzania world of quantum mechan- can be many things—in- Six women leave their friends ics that Mark can hope to cluding what we might find and family behind to travel understand why he was such completely repulsive. Not only across the world to Tanzania. a stranger to his own father. can the bizarre be attractive, it There, they embark on a life- [repeats Tuesday at 1 pm] can also provide just the edge changing journey, one which 9:00 Under Our Skin: A Health a creature needs to succeed in combines adventure travel and Care Nightmare In the a difficult environment. From hands-on volunteer work. 1970s, a mysterious and frogfish and hagfish to naked 11:00 Charlie Rose mole rats and elephant seals, deadly illness began infecting 12:00 Democracy Now! * from vultures and warthogs to 1:00 Best of LINK TV proboscis monkeys and the * ugliest bug in Oklahoma, the 14 THURSDAY program shows how and why 7:00 As Time Goes By ugly can be beautiful, even 7:30 The Artist Toolbox: David when it isn’t pretty. Garrett Come and listen to the [repeats 7/18 at 1 pm) gypsy strings of the dazzling 9:00 Over 90 and Loving It Pro- David Garrett, whose violin can files an inspirational group of conquer the classical work people in their 90s and 100s of composers such as Bach children in a small town in who continue to lead full and and Chopin as effortlessly, as Connecticut. Today it’s a global passionate lives. The docu- gracefully, as old-world Rus- epidemic. A gripping tale of mentary introduces a wide sian folk music, as well as microbes, medicine & money, range of engaging characters the more contemporary Under Our Skin: A Health Care —from a legendary folk singer sounds of Metallica and Led Nightmare exposes the hidden to a senior Olympian to a New Zeppelin. story of Lyme disease. Follow- 8:00 Afropop: The Ultimate ing the stories of patients Cultural Exchange: Desert fighting for their lives, the film Bayou In the wake of one reveals with beauty and terror of the worst natural and a natural world out of balance humanitarian disasters ever to and a human nature all too hit American shores, the U.S. willing to put profits before government airlifted nearly patients. 600 African Americans to the 10:30 Fit Kids, Healthy Families almost entirely white state of A half-hour program that Utah…without their knowl- focuses on the critical threat edge. Desert Bayou examines to children’s health posed by whether two cultures—one childhood obesity. The fast- black, one white—can come paced program provides together in a time of utter information on how and why York City taxi-cab driver. Each chaos or whether their childhood obesity has risen interviewee offers pearls differences prove too great a of wisdom about achieving to become a major issue. The challenge to overcome. and sustaining a happy life, program also provides valu- 9:00 POV: Kings of Pastry regardless of age. able information to children (see page 10) 10:00 PBS NewsHour and parents on making wise 10:30 Great American Seafood nutritional and exercise 11:00 Charlie Rose Cook-Off III America’s finest choices to help insure a 12:00 Democracy Now! * chefs showcase their seafood- lifetime of healthy habits. 1:00 Best of LINK TV * preparation skills in The 11:00 Charlie Rose Great American Seafood 24 Primetime Listings for July Cook-Off III. In 2010, 14 book Musicophilia. We travel accomplished and up-and- around the globe to meet peo- coming chefs from throughout ple like Tony Cicoria, who was the United States gathered in struck by lightning and was New Orleans to compete in the suddenly inspired to become Great American Seafood Cook- a pianist; and Matt Giordano, Off. The event emphasizes the who uses drumming to allevi- importance of cooking with ate his severe Tourettes. NOVA local, domestic seafood even peers deep into the brain and encourages the use of of Dr. Sacks himself, in a rare summer camp. Southern Belle products from sustainable glimpse of what makes minds takes an insider’s look at the fisheries. musical. 1861 Athenaeum Girls’ School 11:00 Charlie Rose [repeats Tuesday at 1 pm] in Columbia, TN, where the 12:00 Democracy Now! * 9:00 Lord Is Not On Trial Here antebellum South attempts 1:00 Best of LINK TV * Today This program tells the to rise again. Every summer, personal story behind one young women ages 14 to 18 15 FRIDAY of the most important and eagerly sign up to transform 6:30 KRCB Summerspree Auction land-mark First Amendment themselves into the iconic and You can be the high bidder cases in U.S. history, the case romantic image of Southern on unique Summer Spree that established the separation identity, the Southern belle, experiences! This year, KRCB of church and state in public receiving instruction in literally takes you around the schools. The film recounts etiquette, penmanship, art, world with amazing vacation what plaintiff Vashti McCollum music, dance and social packages and fun activities for later described as “three years graces. the whole family. of headlines, headaches and 10:00 PBS NewsHour 11:00 Charlie Rose hatred,” but which eventually 11:00 In the Life: Art, culture, is- 12:00 Democracy Now! * led to a decision that still sues, and news of the gay and 1:00 Best of KRCB * resonates in the church-state lesbian community. battles of today—more than 11:30 Hawaii: Roots of Fire Hawaii: 16 saturday 60 years after the original Roots of Fire goes down below 6:30 KRCB Summerspree Auction decision in McCollum v. Board the Hawaiian Islands in a Bid to win on travel packages of Education. search for the hidden forces from Hawaii, Continental 10:00 PBS NewsHour that drive the planet’s largest Europe, Mexico, the Carib- 11:00 Charlie Rose and most active volcanic bean, and much more! 12:00 Democracy Now! * system. The film follows earth 11:00 Theater Talk 1:00 Best of LINK TV * scientists as they work among 11:30 Red Dwarf: the volcanoes of the Big Island 12:00 Best of KRCB * 19 Tuesday of Hawaii, pursuing clues 7:00 After You’ve Gone and compiling evidence in a 17 Sunday 7:30 Growing Bolder: American 6:30 KRCB Summerspree Auction Spirit The Silver and Gold Boards 8:00 Nature: The Gorilla King close tonight! Tune in for the In 1974, famed primatolo- opportunity to bid on amaz gist Dian Fossey introduced ing Summer Spree packages, a young researcher named fun activities for the family! Kelly Stewart to a gorilla 11:00 Ebert Presents at the family. Stewart, daughter of Movies actor James Stewart, was the 11:30 Best of KRCB * first to see a tiny new baby 1:00 Best of LINK TV * gorilla. She named him Titus, 18 Monday and her journal entry began quest to shed new light on the 7:00 Out of Ireland the up-close observation of mysterious inner Earth process 7:30 My Generaton: Healthy his life that researchers have that has been producing giant Connections continued to this day. volcanoes in the middle of the 8:00 NOVA: Musical Minds [repeats 7/25 at 1 pm) Pacific Ocean for more than 9:00 Southern Belle Although the NOVA investigates the extraor- 75 million years. Civil War ended 145 years dinary impact music can have 12:00 Democracy Now! * ago, the spirit of rebellion lives on the human brain, through 1:00 Best of LINK TV * on in the South, even in the case studies from neurolo- something as innocent as a 20 WEDNESDAY gist Dr. Oliver Sacks’ latest 25 Primetime Listings for July 7:00 Last of the Summer Wine project in Atlanta, Georgia, 12:00 Best of KRCB * 7:30 Between the Lines with 17-year-old Sylvia Dorsey 1:00 Best of LINK TV * Barry Kibrick: Andy Williams feels frustrated by the drug (Singer) Moon River and Me abuse and violence surround- 25 Monday [repeats Sunday at 10:30 am] ing her. Black to Our Roots 7:00 Out of Ireland 8:00 Great Performances at the shares the inspirational story 7:30 My Generaton: Secrets of Met: Boris Godunov (see of the journey Sylvia takes to Money page 8) explore her ancestral home 8:00 NOVA: Space Shuttle 11:30 New Madrid Seismic Zone: in Ghana in an attempt to Disaster On February 1, Rumblings of Imminence escape the cycle of violence 2003, the space shuttle Nearly 200 years ago a series and poverty of her Atlanta Columbia disintegrated over of earthquakes emanating neighborhood. Texas just 16 minutes before it 9:00 POV: My Perestroika was due to land. All seven as- (see page 10) tronauts aboard perished and 10:30 Doumar’s: A Recipe for the implications for the future Success A profile of the start of the space shuttle program of an American icon - the ice were enormous. What caused cream cone and its legacy. the Columbia tragedy? An Host Cathy Lewis talks with engineering flaw? A failure the nephew of the man within NASA? A lack of financ- credited by the Smithsonian ing? Could this catastrophe from the midwest rocked the Institution with the creation of have been avoided? Through entire eastern half of the North this beloved treat. Its legacy, interviews with astronauts and American continent. This event Doumar’s Restaurant, has their families, as well as with represents one of the largest been a staple in the Hampton members of the Columbia releases of seismic energy Roads community for more Accident Investigation Board, anywhere in the world during than 70 years. Space Shuttle Disaster gives the last 25,000 years. Starting 11:00 Charlie Rose viewers a new look at the on December 16, 1811 the 12:00 Democracy Now! * Columbia tragedy—and at region around what is now 1:00 Best of LINK TV * NASA itself. New Madrid, Missouri [repeats Tuesday at 1 pm] experienced 3 - 5 earthquakes 22 FRIDAY 9:00 Atlantic Crossing: A Robot’s estimated to be around 8.0 6:30 KRCB Summerspree Auction Daring Mission Visionary in magnitude. Throughout the New Silver and Gold boards oceanographer Scott Glenn next year over 2000 shocks open tonight! Be the high leads a team of passionate were recorded before the fault bidder on highly sought-after and daring scientists as they finally settled. Many of these Summer Spree vacation pack- ‘aftershocks’ measured be- ages from across the globe. tween 5 and 6 on the richter 11:00 Charlie Rose scale. 12:00 Democracy Now! * 12:00 Democracy Now! * 1:00 Best of KRCB * 1:00 Best of Link TV * 23 saturday 21 THURSDAY 6:30 KRCB Summerspree Auction 7:00 As Time Goes By Bid to win on travel pack- race against time to launch 7:30 The Artist Toolbox: Isabel ages from Hawaii, Continental the first autonomous underwa- Allende Join host John Europe, Mexico, the ter robot across the vast and Jacobsen in the lush Marin Caribbean, and much more! dangerous Atlantic Ocean. County home of Isabel Allende, 11:00 Theater Talk Destined for Spain, the 8-foort the most widely-read writer in 11:30 Red Dwarf: bright yellow robot named the Spanish language, whose 12:00 Best of KRCB * RU27, or “Scarlet,” is launched eighteen books have been off the coast of New Jersey.

translated into almost as many 24 Sunday Throughout her journey, data languages as exist on the 6:30 KRCB Summerspree Auction collected by Scarlet is fed into planet. The “do not miss” last night! oceanographic navigation and Viewers can expect excep- 8:00 Afropop: The Ultimate forecasting models. Engulfed tional Summer Spree vacation by the powerful ocean, our Cultural Exchange: Black to packages with something for Our Roots Black to Our Roots robot hero faces extreme every one. is a testament to the power weather conditions, ship traffic 11:00 Ebert Presents at the of change. Living in a housing and aggressive sea life that Movies 26 Primetime Listings for July can terminate her mission. 1:00 Best of LINK TV * ists, the visitors confront their With limited power and never own stereotypes and fantasies before tested hardware, Scar- 27 WEDNESDAY of Africa while shattering the let faces daunting challenges. 7:00 Last of the Summer Wine Sierra Leoneans’ percep- Fighting currents and storms, 7:30 Between the Lines with tion of America as a “second she breaks world records. Barry Kibrick: Elaine Hall heaven.” 10:00 PBS NewsHour (Autism Coach) Now I See The 9:00 POV: Sweetgrass 11:00 Charlie Rose Moon (see page 10) 12:00 Democracy Now! * [repeats Sunday at 10:30 am] 10:30 Teen Romance: What’s 1:00 Best of LINK TV * 8:00 Great Performances at the Risky, What’s Not? Teens Met: Don Carlo (see page 8) 26 Tuesday have the dominant voice in 12:00 Democracy Now! * Teen Romance: What’s Risky, 7:00 After You’ve Gone 1:00 Best of LINK TV * What’s Not? They define ro- 7:30 Growing Bolder: Never Give mance and friendship in what Up 28 THURSDAY 8:00 Nature: In The Valley of the 7:00 As Time Goes By Wolves As the first wolves 7:30 The Artist Toolbox: John reintroduced into Yellowstone, Legend Get a taste of the the Druids are the most performance chops of six-time celebrated wolf pack in North Grammy Award-winning America. New pioneers in the recording artist John Legend wilderness, they were at the with host John Jacobsen. heart of a massive scientific experiment to restore an entire ecosystem that began to break down without its wolves. they regard as healthy and Emmy Award-winning unhealthy relationships. The filmmaker Bob Landis spent film is specifically oriented over three years with these toward the mental health side remarkable wolves, creating of relationships, not the physi- a spectacularly dramatic and cal risks. Students advise their intimate record of their lives, peers on sex, “friends with their great battles with rival benefits,” jealousy, and love on wolf packs, and the changing the Internet. They talk can- fortunes of the coyotes and More than just good looks didly about setting boundaries, foxes who share their home and what Legend has called proper ways to communicate, range in Yellowstone’s beauti- a ‘presumptuous’ name, how to break up, and most ful Lamar Valley. Legend’s innate musical ear importantly, how to recognize [repeats 8/1 at 1 pm) and talent for fusing his early and deal with difficult situa- 9:00 CSI On Trial When does solv- gospel influences with hip- tions. ing a crime become a crime? hop, jazz and even classical 11:00 An innocent man confessed to Charlie Rose music, has found him working 12:00 Democracy Now! * murder and forensic evidence with top names. 1:00 Best of LINK TV * supported his confession. The 8:00 Afropop: The Ultimate Cul- real killers confessed, but they tural Exchange: Moving to 29 FRIDAY were ignored by the police. the Beat Moving to the Beat 7:00 To the Manor Born Across the nation, criminal explores how youth in Africa 7:30 Consuelo Mack: Wealthtrack convictions are being and the United States use hip 8:00 Inside E Street: When I’m 65 overturned due to either hop music to communicate - Change Agents incompetence or deliberate— with one another and as a lan- 8:30 misconduct in crime labs. How McLaughlin Group guage for social change. The 9:00 did Nebraska’s foremost CSI Natural Heroes: Brower documentary follows Rebel Meet six fall under suspicion of faking Youth Awards Soulz, a hip hop group from extraordinary young people evidence? CSI on Trial follows Portland, Oregon, as they who are recognized for their what went wrong in Nebraska journey to Freetown, Sierra outstanding activism and and what we can learn from Leone to bring the radical achievements in the fields this tragedy. roots of American hip hop to of environmental and social 10:00 PBS NewsHour the motherland of Africa. In the justice advocacy. 11:00 Charlie Rose process of collaborating and 9:30 Ebert Presents at the 12:00 Democracy Now! * interacting with the local art- Movies 27 Primetime Listings for July 10:00 PBS NewsHour dead, leading Poirot to team affected by fragile X 11:00 Charlie Rose up with crime novelist Ariadne syndrome. Fragile X is the 12:00 Democracy Now! * Oliver in order to solve one of leading cause of inher- 1:00 Best of KRCB * the most baffling cases of his ited mental disability and the career. leading known cause of 30 saturday 10:30 Living with Fragile X The autism. 7:00 America’s Test Kitchen from documentary is meant to 11:30 Best of KRCB Cook’s Illustrated : All-Time reveal a new view of those in 1:00 Best of LINK TV * Cookie Favorites our society who are tradition- 7:30 Red Green Show: Winston’s ally considered “flawed” or Wedding “abnormal”. Who decides * Available on Cable

8:00 Lawrence Welk Show: what’s normal? Because an and Satellite only Link TV is an independent Songs By Johnny Mercer * television network that broad- 9:00 Austin City Limits: Elvis casts unseen documentaries Costello/The Band of from around the world, the Heathens Songwriting genius best of World Music videos, and Elvis Costello returns to ACL current affairs programming. to showcase songs from his latest, Americana-influenced record Secret, Profane and Program listings are accurate Sugarcane. Austin’s rootsy at the time of printing. For late songwriting collective the Band of Heathens follows. 10:00 Live from the Artists Den individual is different from you Squeeze and me, should he or she be cc 11:00 Theater Talk “fixed”? Living with Fragile X takes a rare and intimate look 11:30 Red Dwarf: Epideme The majority of our prime time 12:00 Best of KRCB * at the lives of several families who live with a member programs are closed captioned. 31 Sunday 7:00 Antiques Roadshow Wichita, KS - Hour Three 8:00 Civilian Conservation Corps: It is members Get involved American Experience In March 1933, within weeks like you who of his inauguration, President today! Franklin Roosevelt sent legislation to Congress make it all KRCB offers a aimed at providing relief for variety of ways for the one out of every four possible! American workers who were you to show your unemployed. He proposed support, from basic the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) to provide jobs membership to in natural resource conserva- volunteering, you’ll tion. Over the next decade, We count on the CCC put more than three find details online at million young men to work in you! www.krcb.org/ the nation’s forests and parks, planting trees, building flood membership. barriers, fighting fires and maintaining roads and trails. 9:00 Masterpiece Mystery! Poirot X: Third Girl Poirot finds he cannot ignore the pleas of a young heiress when she approaches him with the bizarre claim that she may be a murderer. Soon the heiress’ childhood nanny is found

DOWNSIZE THE "SM" WHEN THE USING LOGO ON 28 OVERSIZED APPLICATIONS SUCH OUTDOOR ADVERTISING AND LARGE EXHIBIT DISPLAYS 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, Angelina Ballerina, and Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot About That! The Electric Company airing Mondays through Fridays at 4:30 pm is designed to advance the idea that reading it cool. And now Biz Kid$, Thursdays and Saturdays, a show where kids teach kids about money and business. Saturday mornings features 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! Supporting Television Worth Watching…Made Easy! KRCB invites you to join a special group of supporters. Those who provide their support to KRCB through automatic deduction, on a monthly basis, from their checking or credit card accounts. It’s Easy... To become a Sustaining Partner simply contact Viewers KRCB, at 800-287-2722 or visit our website at Like You! krcb.org/sustaining-partner program.

“What a great way to support KRCB and it’s so easy!”

29 Thank you to these supporters of KRCB! Art, Museums and Cultural Fresh Choice Restaurants North Bay Bohemian Organizations Hampton Inn & Suites Pacific Sun Arts Council of Sonoma County Healdsburg Farmers’ Market Petaluma Post Audubon Canyon Ranch Holiday Inn Express Point Reyes Light California Indian Museum Pearson & Company Press Democrat Charles M. Schulz Museum Peter Lowell’s Cafe Sonoma Index Tribune Dry Creek Rancheria Band of Sebastopol Farmers’ Market Sonoma West Publishing Pomo Indians Wine Spectrum Shop & Bar The Community Voice GLBT History Museum Education The Sonoma County Gazette Quicksilver Mine Co. Santa Rosa Junior College West Marin Citizen RBP Concerts, Inc University of San Francisco - SR Non-profit & Government Santa Rosa Symphony Entertainment American Ag. Credit SSU Intercultural Center Marin JCC “Center Stage” Becoming Independent Automotive Rialto Cinemas Lakeside Laguna de Santa Rosa Foundation Earth In Upheavel Spreckels Center North Bay Leadership Council Manly Honda Wells Fargo Center for the Arts Rohnert Park Chamber of Books, Music, & Video Financial & Insurance Commerce Copperfield’s Books Exchange Bank Sebastopol Area Chamber of Jackalope Records Redwood Credit Union Commerce Last Record Store Rubins Financial Strategies Sonoma County GoLocal Coop Business & Professional Summit State Bank Sonoma Land Trust Leach Communication Health Care Town of Windsor Mac Networks Medtronic Foundation United Way of the Wine Country North Bay Labor Council St. Joseph’s Healthcare, Wallace Genetic Foundation North Bay Leadership Council Sonoma County Windsor Chamber of Commerce & Primadesk Home & Garden Visitors Center Simple Office Solutions Clark Pest Control Retirement Related Solar Living Institute Culligan Water Company Friends House Sonic.Net Earthtone Construction Springfield Place Trope Group Far West Trading Company Santa Rosa Memorial Hospice Dining, Food/Wine & Lodging General Hydroponics For further information Aqus Cafe Foundry Wharf Harmony Farm Supply & Nursery visit krcb.org/business-sponsors Barndiva Restaurant & Lounge Hawley’s Paint Store Caffe Trieste Rogers Pool & Spa Service Clover Stornetta Sonoma Compost Special Thanks To: Community Market Wyatt Irrigation Supply Advent Office Furniture Don Taylor’s Omelette Express Media, Magazines & Publishing Hawley’s Paint East West Cafe North Bay Biz Stephen Curley Roofing Fresh by Lisa Hemenway North Bay Business Journal 30 Business Sponsor – Primadesk Own Your Personal Cloud Have you heard of the Cloud? Whether you realize it or not, you are probably using a Cloud provider— • web-based email like Google Gmail, AOL, HotMail, or Yahoo; • online document services like Dropbox, Box, SugarSync, or Pogoplug; • online photo services like Picasa, Shutterfly, Snapfish, Kodak Gallery, Flickr, or Photobucket. These and many other services make up the Cloud Computing environment. But it is not just a single cloud…in fact, it is made of individual, discreet clouds. Each requires a sepa- rate URL, username, and password, and when you have multiple devices—desktop, laptop, smartphone, pad—you have just multiplied your complexity. How do you manage all this? That is where Primadesk comes in. Primadesk is a personal cloud content management solution. We give you a unified view. You can search, transfer, manage, backup, and access all your web-based services from a single dashboard. Use drag’n’drop functionality for pictures and documents, and manage all your email accounts from one place. With our Single Sign On technology, you now have one-click access to many of the most popular social websites like Facebook, LinkedIn, and more. Search, manage, and backup all your content from a web-browser, or download and install our mobile application for Android and iOS (iPhone, iPad). Primadesk is partnering with KRCB as a sponsor of educational and entertaining program- ming. We hope that together we can use technology to improve the quality of life for viewers. Primadesk—helping you own your personal cloud. www.primadesk.com Watch for Expressions on KRCB Television Museums of Sonoma County

The Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center The Sonoma Valley Museum of Art The West County Museum The Pacific Coast Air Museum

Supported by the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors

31 707-584-2000 or800-287-2722 To learn more, contactKRCB toll-free at impactful thantraditionaltelevision. which makesyour businessesmessagemore programming inanuncluttered environment simply can’t offer. KRCB provides uninterrupted brand thatthenetworks andcabletelevision co-branding withatrusted sponsor KRCB, you’re or When you underwrite ally known organizations. institution amongnation- the nation’s mosttrusted Americans considerPBS and Media pollshows GfK Roper Public Affiairs brands in America trusted Co-brand withoneofthemost A service ofNorthernA service California Public Media sm

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