News and Public Affairs

Retro Report on PBS

Retro Report makes sense of the present by revealing the past. Join journalists Celeste Headlee and Masud Olufani as they connect the present to the past through four distinct and varied stories, and New Yorker humorist Andy Borowitz adds his signature wit.

The Bullying Industry | Andy Borowitz

4m 37s

Prominent Americans are eager to declare their opposition to bullying. There’s only one problem, New Yorker magazine humorist Andy Borowitz asserts: we live in an enthusiastically pro-bullying culture. He traces the history of bullying on television and beyond.

Episodes

  • How Napster Stirred Up Entertainment: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    How Napster Stirred Up Entertainment

    S1 E8 - 10m 6s

    Napster, created by an 18-year-old developer, exploded across college campuses across the country in 1999. With a mouse click, music lovers gained free access to their favorite tunes. The record industry took to the courts to shut down the upstart company. But a generation of consumers had tasted instant entertainment on demand, and there was no turning back.

  • Correcting the Myth of the Superpredator: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Correcting the Myth of the Superpredator

    S1 E8 - 10m 27s

    States are reconsidering life prison sentences of people who were given mandatory life terms as juveniles – a practice since ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. At the time, in the 1990s, a handful of researchers inspired panic with a dire but flawed prediction: the imminent arrival of  a new breed of remorseless teen killers, so-called superpredators.

  • The Bullying Industry | Andy Borowitz: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    The Bullying Industry | Andy Borowitz

    S1 E8 - 4m 37s

    Prominent Americans are eager to declare their opposition to bullying. There’s only one problem, New Yorker magazine humorist Andy Borowitz asserts: we live in an enthusiastically pro-bullying culture. He traces the history of bullying on television and beyond.

  • Episode 8: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Episode 8

    S1 E8 - 53m 22s

    Sex ed programs in schools are informed by the past; busting a crime myth; AIDS hot spots; the legacy of napster; Andy Borowitz tackles bullying.

  • The Forgotten History of AIDS: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    The Forgotten History of AIDS

    S1 E8 - 11m 55s

    Rates of H.I.V. infection have fallen in many places, but the AIDS crisis persists in some parts of the country. What can be learned from history – and specifically the story of Ryan White?

  • The Controversy Over Teaching Teens About Sex: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    The Controversy Over Teaching Teens About Sex

    S1 E8 - 13m 22s

    A decades-old battle is re-emerging over how sex is presented in the classroom, as the Trump administration gives support to “sexual risk avoidance” programs that promote abstinence.

  • The Truth About the Lawsuit Over Hot McDonald’s Coffee: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    The Truth About the Lawsuit Over Hot McDonald’s Coffee

    S1 E7 - 11m 18s

    The long-running debate over frivolous lawsuits took shape years ago after McDonald’s coffee spilled into a woman’s lap and she was awarded millions in damages. Her complaint sounded frivolous. But the facts told another story.

  • Anita Bryant, Gay Rights Icon | Andy Borowitz: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Anita Bryant, Gay Rights Icon | Andy Borowitz

    S1 E7 - 3m 58s

    New Yorker magazine humorist Andy Borowitz examines how Anita Bryant, ubiquitous in the 1960s and 70s for commercials promoting Florida orange juice, inadvertently energized the gay rights movement.

  • Episode 7: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Episode 7

    S1 E7 - 55m 9s

    Immigration controversies echo past anti-immigration backlash. Why a lawsuit over scalding coffee is misunderstood. The origin of Special Ops forces.  Risks after Challenger. Andy Borowitz examines Anita Bryant’s unintended influence.

  • How the U.S. Came to Rely on Special Ops Forces: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    How the U.S. Came to Rely on Special Ops Forces

    S1 E7 - 7m 46s

    The rise of special operations units today can be traced to a failed attempt to rescue Americans held hostage in Iran in 1980, and the successful Israeli raid at Uganda’s Entebbe Airport.

Extras + Features

  • Air Force Vet Looks for Answers for Military Suicide Crisis: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Air Force Vet Looks for Answers for Military Suicide Crisis

    S1 E5 - 1m 18s

    By the mid 2000s, a suicide crisis was emerging among American servicemembers and veterans. David Luxton, a U.S. Air Force veteran and clinical psychologist, was hired by the department of defense to help find a solution.

  • Working with Lead-Poisoned Children: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Working with Lead-Poisoned Children

    S1 E5 - 1m 13s

    In this scene from Episode 5" June Tourangeau, a licensed practical nurse in Providence, R.I., discusses her work with lead-poisoned children.

  • A Promising Method for Suicide Prevention: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    A Promising Method for Suicide Prevention

    S1 E5 - 37s

    In this clip from Episode 5, the hosts discuss a simple intervention against suicide – messages of compassion and empathy – that showed promise in the 1960s, but has been overlooked.

  • Wild Horses vs Ranchers: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Wild Horses vs Ranchers

    S1 E4 - 2m 1s

    The wild horses running free in the west today -- and the controversy over what to do with them -- are the result of law that was meant to rescue them.

  • Episode 4 Preview: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Episode 4 Preview

    S1 E4 - 30s

    President Trump is taking on the press with a time-tested strategy. Explore the origins of the latest measles outbreak, pro sports free agency, and the consequences of a law meant to save wild horses. Andy Borowitz on the no-apology apology.

  • Episode 3 Preview: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Episode 3 Preview

    S1 E3 - 30s

    Why crime witnesses fail to act. A Naval officer who transformed the U.S. military. Psychedelic drugs like LSD are back in the lab. The meandering voyage of a trash barge that persuaded us to recycle. Andy Borowitz highlights lunar hoax theorists.

  • The Bystander Effect: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    The Bystander Effect

    S1 E3 - 1m 14s

    The death of Kitty Genovese, who was murdered on her way from work in Queens, New York in 1964, while people in nearby apartments were sleeping, became a case study in what became known as the Bystander Effect.

  • A Twist to the Kitty Genovese Case: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    A Twist to the Kitty Genovese Case

    S1 E3 - 1m 2s

    In this scene from "Digital Bystander," how the press reported the Genovese story wrongly created a catalyst for the creation of the 911 system, and new calls for bystander assistance laws in the new era of publicly viewed violent videos.

  • Episode 2 Preview: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Episode 2 Preview

    S1 E2 - 30s

    Uncover crime evidence pulled from DNA websites. See how drug rules stem from a pill’s side effects. Learn how a screen addiction cure is rooted in the past and why Americans are ambivalent about robots. Andy Borowitz objects to “no news.” Tune in or stream Oct. 8 at 9/8c

  • DNA Helping to Close Cold Cases: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    DNA Helping to Close Cold Cases

    S1 E2 - 41s

    DNA data are helping the police to close cold case files. Celeste Headlee and Masud Olufani, co-hosts of Retro Report on PBS, uncover the story.

Schedule

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