TV Academy Honors to range of provocative programs

For the fourth consecutive year, the organization behind the prime-time Emmys will salute eight programs that exemplify “television with a conscience.” Two-time Emmy champ Dana Delaney (“China Beach”) returns for the third time to host the May 5th event at the Beverly Hills Hotel.

This year’s honorees tackled such serious subjects as sexual abuse and assault, racism, mental health, teen pregnancy, autism, living with a life-threatening disease and childhood obesity. They are episodes of “The Big C,” “Friday Night Lights,” “Parenthood” and “Private Practice,” the reality series “Jamie Oliver’s Food  Revolution,” a two-part “Oprah” show, and the documentaries “The 16th Man” and “Wartorn 1861-2010.”

Full descriptions of each title can be found below.


“The 16th  Man” – The documentary  tells the emotional story of the end of apartheid in South Africa, the start  of Nelson Mandela’s new government with its goal of racial unity, and what the  South African rugby team’s victory in the 1995 Rugby World Cup meant to the  country’s healing process.  With narration by Morgan Freeman, the program  educates viewers on how Mandela used the sport of rugby to make a deeply  divided, distressed nation whole again when traditional politics failed, and  how the 1995 Rugby World Cup win became the turning point in South Africa’s  history. (Produced by ESPN Films in Association with Revelations  Entertainment)
 
“The Big C” (“Taking  The Plunge”) – In the season one  finale of “The Big C,” Cathy Jamison (Laura Linney) finally  informs her family of the life-threatening cancer diagnosis she had kept  secret, and after wavering on treatments, opts for a risky procedure. In this  compelling episode, Cathy examines the taboo nature of her own mortality while  bravely transcends denial to acceptance of living with her disease.   “The Big C” explores the critical need for all, whether facing a medical  diagnosis or merely getting older, to live life every day as though one is  dying the next. (Produced by SHOWTIME Presents, Sony Pictures Television,  Perkins Street Productions, Farm Kid and Original  Film)
 
“Friday Night Lights” (“I Can’t”)– One of America’s  most acclaimed family drama series tackles a difficult situation that  teens and adults face every day: unwanted pregnancy. As Becky (Madison  Burge) faces a heartbreaking decision and seeks support, information  and advice from friends and total strangers, the episode delves into the human  emotion surrounding abortion with honesty and grace, never succumbing to the politically-charged emotion that usually overwhelms the dialogue around this  controversial issue. (Produced by Imagine Television, Film 44 and Universal  Media Studios)
 
“Jamie Oliver’s Food  Revolution”
– Hosted by celebrity  chef, best-selling author and food activist Jamie Oliver, the Emmy-Award  winning docu-reality series proves a television show can create a  movement.  The series is set in Huntington, West Virginia, named by the  Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as one of the most  nutritionally unhealthy areas in America.  Oliver works to help people  switch from fast and processed to fresh foods, both in the schools and at  home.  With the success of Huntington behind him, Oliver’s ready for a  bigger challenge — help the kids and families of the country’s second largest  city – Los Angeles.  (Produced by Fresh One Productions and Ryan Seacrest  Productions)
 
“The Oprah Winfrey Show” (“A Two-Day Oprah Show Event: 200 Adult Men Who Were Molested Come  Forward”) – Shattering the  stigma of male sexual abuse, 200 men speak out – some for the first time –  about the trauma of their own childhood experiences in this special two-part episode of “The Oprah Winfrey Show.”  It is estimated that one in  every six men has been molested as a child, but this special marks the first  time a national television conversation has been held in such depth about male  childhood sexual abuse.  Fathers, husbands, sons and brothers stand  alongside Oprah Winfrey and Tyler Perry, and open up like never before about  how the abuse continues to affect them, in the hope of offsetting the stigma  of male sexual abuse and open a “door to freedom,” help and healing for  themselves and others. (Produced by Harpo Productions,  Inc.)
 
“Parenthood” (“Pilot”)  – In the series  premiere of Parenthood, Kristina and Adam Braverman (Monica Potter  Peter Krause) discover their young son Max (Max Burkholder) has Asperger’s  syndrome, a form of autism. 1.5 million Americans have some form of  Autism Spectrum Disorder, but this statistic ignores the millions of parents,  siblings, friends, teachers and therapists whose lives are affected by autism  every day. In its pilot episode, Parenthood introduces the  colorful, intergenerational Braverman family; with raw emotion it demonstrates  the impact of Asperger’s on all members of Max’s family and the need for them  to find the means to support each other.  (Produced by Imagine Television  and Universal Media Studios)
 
“Private Practice” (“Did You Hear What Happened To Charlotte King?”) – In this powerful episode, “Private Practice” masters the gut-wrenching crime of  sexual assault, as well as a poignant depiction of its aftermath and the longterm mental health effects that follow.  When Pete (Tim Daly) discovers Charlotte (KaDee Strickland) in the halls of the hospital bloodied  and bruised, he and his fellow doctors come to her aid. However, only Addison (Kate Walsh) learns the truth from Charlotte – that she wasn’t just beaten and  robbed, but was raped. This marks the second Television Academy Honor for “Private Practice.” The series was also honored in 2010 for the  episode “Nothing To Fear,” a thought-provoking account of physician-assisted  suicide. (Produced by ABC Studios)
 
“Wartorn 1861-2010” –  With suicide rates  among active military servicemen and veterans currently on the rise,  Wartorn 1861-2010 brings urgent attention to the invisible  wounds of war.  Drawing on personal stories of American soldiers whose  lives and psyches were torn asunder by the horrors of battle and  post-traumatic stress disorder, the documentary, executive produced by James Gandolfini, chronicles the lingering effects of combat and post-traumatic  stress on military personnel and their families throughout American history,  from the Civil War through today’s conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.  (Produced by Attaboy Films and Downtown Community Television in Association  with HBO Documentary Films)
 

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