From Military.com:
“Apollo 11: Moon Landing Milestone Gets Epic TV Treatment”
The U.S. space program has inspired memorable dramatic movies
from "The Right Stuff" and "Apollo 13" to last year's
"First Man," which re-created the Apollo 11 moon landing. For the
50th anniversary of Apollo 11, television will go the documentary route in a
mammoth way. The programs start airing weeks before July 20, the day in 1969
that Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the first humans on the lunar
surface. PBS is gathering its NASA programs under the banner "Summer of
Space." The animated "Ready Jet Go!" on PBS Kids will offer
"One Small Step" to help parents and children prepare for the
milestone.
Here's a look at the prime-time programs:
-- "Apollo's Moon Shot," 8 p.m. Sunday, Smithsonian
Channel: A six-part series that mixes newly restored archival footage with the
astronauts' debriefings after they returned to Earth. The program also looks at
astronaut artifacts from the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum. Those
items range from John Glenn's camera to the last space boots on the moon, which
remain covered with lunar dust.
-- "Apollo 11," 9 and 11 p.m. June 23 on CNN: The
stunning documentary that played in movie theaters comes to television. The
film draws on newly discovered 70 mm footage to provide an immersive look at
the mission. Director-producer Todd Douglas Miller's film will be repeated,
including on July 20.
-- "The Day We Walked on the Moon," 9 p.m. July 7,
Smithsonian Channel: An exploration of the first 24 hours of the moon landing.
The speakers include Michael Collins, the third member of the Apollo 11
mission, and the children of Armstrong and Aldrin. Other witnesses include
Flight Director Gene Kranz, Queen guitarist (and astrophysicist) Brian May and
TV host (and physics professor) Brian Cox.
-- "Antiques Roadshow," 8 p.m. July 8, PBS: NASA
memorabilia fills the episode called "Out of This World."
-- "Chasing the Moon," 9 p.m. July 8-10, PBS: A
six-hour, three-part look at the challenges in putting a man on the moon. The
"American Experience" production recounts the space race with the
Soviet Union, earlier Apollo missions and the magnitude of Apollo 11's
achievement.
-- "Nova: Back to the Moon," 8 p.m. July 10, PBS:
Will the moon be the steppingstone to other missions? Engineers and
entrepreneurs say so in this program, although President Donald Trump has
suggested otherwise.
-- "8 Days: To the Moon and Back," 9 p.m. July 17,
PBS: Audio of candid conversations with Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins is
combined with news footage, NASA archival material and a CGI re-creation of the
journey. Re-enactments, which are used when moments weren't filmed, feature
Rufus Wright as Armstrong, Jack Tarlton as Aldrin and Patrick Kennedy as
Collins.
-- "Wonders of the Moon," 10 p.m. July 19, BBC
America: Blood moons, super moons and total eclipses are topics in the
documentary about how our natural satellite affects life on Earth. The program
examines a total eclipse across the United States, explores coral reefs in the
South Pacific and visits an autumn festival in Hong Kong. Low light cameras
will show the moon in its natural light, BBC America says.
-- "Apollo 11: The Forgotten Films," 8 p.m. July
20, Discovery Channel: The two-hour program draws on footage from NASA Research
Centers, the National Archives and news reports of the time. Also airs at 8
p.m. July 21 on Science Channel.
-- "Confessions From Space: Apollo," 10 p.m. July
20, Discovery Channel: Apollo astronauts provide "an intimate conversation
about life in space, and after," according to a blurb for the show. They
include Aldrin and Collins (Apollo 11), Al Worden (Apollo 15) and Charlie Duke
(Apollo 16).
-- "Moon Landing Live," 9 p.m. July 20, BBC
America: The historic event is re-told through NASA footage and live news
broadcasts from around the world. The audience is put at 600 million for
Armstrong's first steps on the moon.
-- "Ancient Skies," 8 p.m. July 24, PBS: A
three-part series about how our ancestors studied outer space for centuries.
-- "Nova: The Planets," 9 p.m. July 24, PBS: A
five-part look at our neighbors, with special attention to Saturn's rings and
Neptune's winds.
If you prefer the dramatic approach, National Geographic has
announced a scripted series of "The Right Stuff" with Patrick J.
Adams as John Glenn. Production starts in Cocoa Beach this fall, and the series
will debut next year.
^ This seems a fitting and informative way to make the 50th
Anniversary of the 1969 Moon Landing. ^
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