Day: November 10, 2025

Best-bets for Nov. 12: time for a golden finale

1) “The Golden Bachelor” finale, 8-10 p.m., ABC. In pro football, Mel Owens was a 6-foot-2, 220-pound linebacker. He was a starter for six of his nine seasons and an honorable-mention All-Pro. Now he’s a lawyer, 66, choosing between two retirees: Cindy Cullers (shown here, center), 60, was a biomedical engineer; Peg Munson (ri8ght), 62, was a firefighter and a bomb tech. Read more…

It’s a fresh take on history’s giants

Most of us have learned the grand stories of the American revolution — Valley Forge and Bunker Hill and crossing the Delaware and more.
Many of them were epic; most were true. “What I learned in school was not wrong,” David Schmidt said. “It was just incomplete.”
Now the story gets filled out, in depth. PBS’ “The American Revolution” — a sprawling saga, produced by Ken Burns (see previous story),, Sara Botstein and Schmidt — is at 8 p.m. (repeating at 10) for six nights, starting Sunday, Nov. 16. Read more…

After 35-year gap, it’s Ken Burns’ revolution

Back in 1990, Ken Burns showed TV critics an extraordinary film.
He was 37 then, but looked much younger. He was a cherubic-looking guy with the enthusiasm of a kid and the vocabulary of an ancient scholar.
Burns (shown here, nowadays) had already made seven films on subjects — from Huey Long to the Statue of Liberty — that could be grasped in one night. But this was something else — the Civil War, spread over nine nights and 18 hours.
Members of the Television Critics Association praised it; still, he recalls, many wanted to “warn me that no one was gonna watch it, because there are these things called MTV videos that (have) eroded people’s attention span.”
The result? The film, he said, “remains the highest-rated program in the history of public programming.” Read more…