
FRONTLINE
"It Only Takes One Rotten Apple"
Show title: FRONTLINE
Video title: "It Only Takes One Rotten Apple"
Video duration: 1m 12sVideo description: Former warden Gary Henman on his strategy at Marion to keep the worst inmates in isolation. "We would take these so called rotten apples, put them together. If they spoiled each other, at least to allowed the other facilities to be safe, secure," he said.
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"There Is No Justice"
2m 15s
Police brutality, a main cause of the revolution, remains unaddressed, says Gigi Ibrahim.
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We Need National Consensus on Basic Issues
1m 18s
Heba Morayef of Human Rights Watch explains difficulties in the aftermath of Tahrir.
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Muslim Brotherhood Leader: We Need Some Time
45s
Essam El-Erian says his party is looking for the "long-term cure" to Egypt's problems.
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"The Army and the People, Hand in Hand!"
1m 11s
How one Egyptian revolutionary saw the Army as an ally
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What's Coming on FRONTLINE Fall 2011/Winter 2012
4m
Preview some of the stories and investigations already underway...
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The Pot Republic
24m 28s
The bulk of the marijuana consumed in the U.S. used to come across the border. Now, more than half is believed to be home grown in California, where an enormous black market has emerged under the cover of the state's medical marijuana law.
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100 Cheers
10m 30s
A few weeks after the tsunami, the ChimPom art collective traveled to a fishing village in Fukushima. Hand in hand with some young locals from the community, they created a video piece that became an expression of solidarity.
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Doctor Hotspot
13m 1s
Using medical billing data in Camden, N.J., Dr. Jeffrey Brenner mapped out "hot spots" of the impoverished city's most costly patients. By targeting unique care -- including home visits and social workers -- at high-cost patients, he developed a program that he argues has both lowered health care costs and provided better care in Camden. But can his model work for the rest of the nation?
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Level7
4m 32s
ChimPom rogue-installed "Level7," an addition to the mural "Myth of Tomorrow," a famous '60's-era painting by artist Taro Okamoto that's located in Tokyo's Shibuya subway station.
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The Atomic Artists
12m 3s
How Chim Pom, a provocative group of young artists, is challenging the status quo in Japan after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. Its work, ranging from video pieces to rogue installations in public places, comes at a generation-defining moment as many question Japan's dependence on nuclear power.
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Real Times
10m 26s
On April 11, 2011, the one-month anniversary of the earthquake, ChimPom artists traveled to the Fukushima Daiichi plant wearing Hazmat suits to create a new version of the Japanese flag.
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Preview: The Pot Republic
30s
More than half of the marijuana consumed in the United States is believed to be home grown in California, where an enormous black market has emerged under the cover of the state's medical marijuana law. FRONTLINE and The Center for Investigative Reporting team up to investigate the country's oldest, largest, and most wide-open marijuana market.
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Inside California's Green Rush
2m 38s
Sgt. Randy Johnson used to bust pot growers. Now he works with them. With more than a third of all states now trying some form of legalization and decriminalization, and several California counties attempting to openly regulate pot production, FRONTLINE and the Center for Investigative Reporting investigate the country's oldest, largest and most wide-open marijuana market in "The Pot Republic."
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One Sheriff's Radical Experiment
4m 2s
An inside look at a California sheriff's innovative -- and controversial -- program to license medical marijuana growers. From "The Pot Republic," airing July 26, 2011.
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New Protests Erupt in Tahrir Sq
2m
Correspondent Charles Sennott once again witnesses protests and tear gas in Tahrir Square.
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The Child Cases
32m
What happens when a child dies under suspicious circumstances? Abuse is often suspected, but are forensic pathologists being properly trained to find out the cause of death?
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Educating Sergeant Pantzke
17m 57s
In a follow-up to FRONTLINE's "College, Inc.," correspondent Martin Smith investigates how for-profit schools are aggressively recruiting huge numbers of new veterans with educational promises that many now question whether they can keep.
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