TELEVISION

Edens Lost & Found - Season 1

Series: Edens Lost & Found
4.2
(6)
Episodes
4
Rating
NR
Year
2020
Language
English

About

The Chicago segment of Edens Lost & Found is hosted by NPR Weekend Today's Scott Simon and features stories about inspirational environmental activists and their plight to preserve the communities around them. This documentary introduces Marian Byrnes, the conscience of the Calamut; Steve Packard and Debra Shore, preservers of a little ecosystem on the prairie; Illinois Teacher of the Year Deb Perryman, who plays real-life sustainability games with her high-school students; Michael and Amelia Howard, who tackle environmental justice issues in their African-American Fuller Park Neighborhood at their Eden Place nature school, and many more influential individuals.

Related Subjects

Episodes

1 to 3 of 4

1. Edens Lost & Found Volume 1: Chicago City of the Big Shoulders

56m

The Chicago segment of Edens Lost & Found is hosted by NPR Weekend Today's Scott Simon and features stories about inspirational environmental activists and their plight to preserve the communities around them. This documentary introduces Marian Byrnes, the conscience of the Calamut; Steve Packard and Debra Shore, preservers of a little ecosystem on the prairie; Illinois Teacher of the Year Deb Perryman, who plays real-life sustainability games with her high-school students; Michael and Amelia Howard, who tackle environmental justice issues in their African-American Fuller Park Neighborhood at their Eden Place nature school, and many more influential individuals.

2. Edens Lost & Found Volume 2: Los Angeles Dream A Different City

56m

Jimmy Smits hosts the Los Angeles segment of Edens Lost & Found: Dream a Different City. Los Angeles made smog and pollution into household words. The effects of humans on natural ecosystems are extensive in this metropolis: native habitat is scarce, wildlife movement is obstructed, surface and groundwater quality are impaired, and ocean water quality is affected. But no longer. To everyone's surprise, Los Angeles has embraced mass transit. The Expo Line represents the first east-west light rail-line in Los Angeles in 50 years. But, more importantly, its citizens have said enough, and are putting not just their words, but their backs into the effort to recover the Edens they have lost. This documentary tells the story of some of these people and grass-roots organizations. TreePeople, founded by Andy Lipkis, is leading the campaign to plant one million trees in the next decade. Girls Today, Women Tomorrow brings together professional women who mentor the girls of Boyle Heights, teaching them about nutrition, exercise, leadership skills, and civic involvement. Find out more about these people and others in this installment of Edens Lost & Found.

3. Edens Lost & Found Volume 3: Philadelphia The Holy Experiment

56m

This documentary focused on Philadelphia is hosted by actor and Philadelphia resident David Morse. It describes how concerned citizens like activists Doris Doris Gualtney and Iris Brown, muralist Jane Golden, sculptor Lily Yeh, musician Kenny Gamble, and gardener Mary Corby have come together to return the city to its Eden-like state through multiple environmental projects.

4. Edens Lost & Found Volume 4: Seattle The Future Is Now

56m

Former Washington Governor Gary Locke hosts the Seattle segment of Edens Lost & Found. From its history as home to the Salmon people who kept their ecosystem in careful balance to protect the future, to its present status as one of the fastest-growing regions in the country, Seattle is walking a fine line. Can a seventh-generation mindset become a value once more in a place that is so popular that people are flocking here and literally loving it to death? This documentary shows how Seattle residents are buying into the modern philosophy and practice of sustainability. Developers are taking care to conserve stormwater on-site for use during the dry season. Seattle is taking alternative fuels seriously: it has the largest population of personal biodiesel users in the nation. Solar power, low-emissive glass, recycled and sustainable materials, green roofs-these are becoming the must-have standards of the construction industry, and a clear statement that corporations value the environment enough to invest in it.

Extended Details

  • Closed CaptionsEnglish

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