Thursday, May 22, 2025

CBC’S CURRENT AFFAIRS AND DOCUMENTARY PROGRAMMING: JAN 22-28, 2018

Crying Out For Care
Friday, January 26, 2018 at 8 p.m. /8:30 p.m. NT on CBC

In a special year-long investigation, Marketplace uncovers a shocking rise in the number of abuse incidents inside Ontario nursing homes. Rates of resident on resident abuse have doubled in just six years, and the increase is even bigger for staff on resident incidents. We crunch the numbers and head undercover inside homes with some of the highest rates of abuse to see for ourselves.

Driving Stoned
Friday, January 26, 2018 at 9 p.m. /9:30 p.m. NT on CBC

Walk on a straight line. Touch your fingertips to your nose. Hold one foot off the ground and keep your balance for 30 seconds. Did you know this is currently the best tool police have in Canada and the U.S. to detect whether drivers are driving high? It’s a decades-old system developed in the U.S. that relies on what on a police officer observes. And with legal weed soon coming to Canada, the federal government is investing tens of millions of dollars to train Canadian police to administer this test. Is it solid science or police guesswork?
 
How to Stay Young
Saturday, January 27, 2018 at 10 p.m. ET/PT on CBC News Network (repeats Sunday, January 28 at 10 p.m. ET/PT on CBC News Network)

Scientific breakthroughs are redefining how we think about aging and more than ever, there is hope that we can overcome our greatest enemy – the process of biological decline. How to Stay Young investigates the latest research around the world that could put the brakes on the aging process. In Germany we learn which exercise holds off aging the best; in the U.S. we find out about the unexpected diet that can add years to our lives. And in Ecuador we meet a 17-year-old with a rare syndrome who could hold the key to curing aging – incredibly, he will never grow old like the rest of us.

For more information or to watch the trailer click here

The Nature of Things

Champions Vs Legends

Sunday, January 28, 2018 at 8 p.m. /8:30 p.m. NT on CBC

What if the greatest elite athletes – present and past – could compete against each other on a level playing field? If competitive conditions were made equal, would today’s stars come out on top? Or would they be beaten by the heroes of the past? Renowned sports scientist Steve Haake investigates whether today’s winter sports champions are really better than those of the past or whether they get their edge from modern sports technology.
For more information, click here
 

Searching for Winnetou

Sunday, January 28, 2018 at 9 p.m. /9:30 p.m. NT on CBC
Searching for Winnetou explores the controversy surrounding cultural appropriation of Indigenous culture in an innovative, hilarious, unnerving, yet inspiring way.
For years Drew Hayden Taylor, prolific playwright and author of 30 Canadian-Indigenous novels, has noticed a high proportion of German tourists visiting Canada, many who have come looking for a real “Indianer” experience (what Germans call the North American Native lifestyle).  Inevitably, almost every one of these Germans will relate stories of Winnetou: Germany’s most famous, but mythical, Apache warrior. Winnetou was their childhood hero. As one museum curator explained: “Winnetou is like Superman for the German people”.
Fascinated with this phenomenon Taylor spent last summer in Germany trying to uncover the over 100-year roots of its Winnetou obsession.
For more information click here

32 Pills: My Sister’s Suicide
Sunday, January 28, 2018 at 9 p.m. ET

A few days before December 12, 2008, my sister Ruth Litoff decorated her Manhattan loft like a beautiful stage set with fifteen suicide notes surrounding her and specially selected gifts for her closest friends. Multiple bowls of cat food were left in case it took us awhile to find her and every one of her hundreds of markers was in rainbow order. The police officer whispered, “I’ve never seen anything like this.”
The film begins on that day I found Ruth dead and traces over her fascinating life and work, punctuated by incredible highs and lows and secrets and lies. It follows my journey as I examine her rich body of artwork, interview friends and family, and read her journals for the first time. She excelled at everything she did.  She was my hero. Why would she want to die?
Like a detective, I’m trying to piece it all together. The film raises so many questions. Must I admit that my sister and I are not so different?  Will the process set me free or destroy me?
For more information or to watch the trailer click here

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