The BEST episodes of PBS Specials season 2003

Every episode of PBS Specials season 2003, ranked from best to worst by thousands of votes from fans of the show. The best episodes of PBS Specials season 2003!

The Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) is an American non-profit public broadcasting television service with 354 member TV stations in the United States which hold collective ownership. However, its operations are largely funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Its headquarters are in Arlington, Virginia. PBS is the most prominent provider of programming to U.S. public television stations, distributing series such as PBS NewsHour, Masterpiece, and Frontline. Since the mid-2000s, Roper polls commissioned by PBS have consistently placed the service as America's most trusted national institution. However, PBS is not responsible for all programming carried on public TV stations; in fact, stations usually receive a large portion of their content (including most pledge drive specials) from third-party sources, such as American Public Television, NETA, and independent producers.

Last Updated: 10/7/2024Network: PBSStatus: Continuing
Share:
star
0.00
0 votes

#1 - The Spartans - A Nation Of Fighters

Season 2003 - Episode 5 - Aired 8/6/2003

THE SPARTANS opens at Thermopylae and with the epitaph of the Three Hundred — and very stirring it is to hear this spoken in the original Greek — before introducing some of the topics that will be addressed in the program. (Hmm. The claim that “male homosexuality was compulsory” is extremely dubious; the first boldfaced assertion as fact of a subject hotly debated among ancient and modern experts.) After the introduction, we journey to the Dark Ages of Greece, the end of the Achaean Age and the coming of the Dorian Greeks to the Peloponnesus and Laconia. An effective look at the development of hoplite warfare is presented. Next comes the Messenian conquest, then the establishment of the Spartan constitution. The upbringing of Spartan youths, warts and all, is then addressed at length. A good point is made that the sublimation of the individual as practiced by the Spartans can be very liberating – “the possibility of transcending your limitations as an individual and becoming part of something bigger and better.” Spartan institutions are credited for initiating a system of political rights and responsibilities among its citizens centuries before other Greek states conceived of such things.

Watch Now:Amazon
star
0.00
0 votes

#2 - The Spartans - The Battle For Supremacy

Season 2003 - Episode 6 - Aired 8/6/2003

This segment begins by exploring at how Sparta and Athens fell out after the Persian Wars, with a look at Athenian politics and society and how these contrasted to Sparta’s. This is a refreshingly non-partisan treatment, not hesitating to be equally critical of Athens. Women’s life in Sparta is given much attention. Sparta comes off as considerably more enlightened, by modern Western standards, than Athens. (Interesting sidebar – in her remarks during a November 24, 2003, online chat with Channel 4 (UK) viewers, narrator Bettany Hughes, when asked where she’d have rather lived, Sparta or Athens, replied “Sparta. No doubt.”) Hughes wryly notes how Spartan women were “objects of fear and fascination” to non-Spartan men. The legacy of these “radical” Spartan customs on later societies is discussed. Amusingly, whether by design or not, Hughes wears a scarlet dress for much of this sequence – fit garb for a Spartanette – and conducts her narration while striding purposefully about the Laconian countryside or riding on horseback in full exhibition of energetic Spartan vitality.

Watch Now:Amazon
star
0.00
0 votes

#3 - The Spartans - An Enemy Of Change

Season 2003 - Episode 7 - Aired 8/6/2003

The last section of the film opens at Delphi and takes a look at Greek religion and Spartan attitudes toward the gods and oracles before resuming the history of the Peloponnesian War. Alcibiades, the Syracuse expedition, and Lysander are all examined, taking up half of Part 3. Then the period of the Spartan Hegemony is briefly described, shaped by the “crippled kingship” of Agesilaus and marked by power struggles among Sparta’s ruling factions. Hughes notes the critical decline of Spartan citizen manpower and the rise of Thebes as a rival. She takes us to the battlefield of Leuctra, where Spartan military superiority was broken in 371 BC. The remaining sequences very quickly sketch how classical Sparta became a second-class power and finally a tourist attraction for wealthy Romans. The show concludes with a summation of Sparta’s influence on Western philosophy.

Watch Now:Amazon
star
0.00
0 votes

#4 - Einstein's Wife

Season 2003 - Episode 9 - Aired 10/21/2003

Casts new light on the relationship between Einstein and his first wife, Mileva Maric and their collaboration on the theory of relativity.

Watch Now:Amazon
Avoiding Armageddon, Part 1, Silent Killers: Poisons and Plagues
star
0.00
0 votes

#5 - Avoiding Armageddon, Part 1, Silent Killers: Poisons and Plagues

Season 2003 - Episode 1 - Aired 2/6/2003

Biological and chemical weapons such as sarin, anthrax, plague, smallpox, and VX gas can claim more lives over greater distances than a nuclear bomb—and are easier to make and use. This look at historical uses of these types of weapons by both governments and terrorists also examines who might have them and be willing to use them now.

Watch Now:Amazon
Avoiding Armageddon, Part 2, Nuclear Nightmares: Losing Control
star
0.00
0 votes

#6 - Avoiding Armageddon, Part 2, Nuclear Nightmares: Losing Control

Season 2003 - Episode 2 - Aired 2/13/2003

The demise of the Soviet Union put an end to fears of a global nuclear war between the superpowers, but it also means that control of the Soviet stockpile of nuclear weapons and component parts is now scattered among many different governments, creating a security nightmare. With nations such as North Korea pursuing their own nuclear programs, the conflict between nuclear neighbors India and Pakistan heating up, and the possibility of terrorists gaining control of bomb-making materials, the potential for a nuclear conflict on some scale may actually be increasing.

Watch Now:Amazon
Avoiding Armageddon, Part 3, The New Face of Terror: Upping the Ante
star
0.00
0 votes

#7 - Avoiding Armageddon, Part 3, The New Face of Terror: Upping the Ante

Season 2003 - Episode 3 - Aired 2/20/2003

Nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons have added a horrific new dimension to terrorism, enabling a small group of people to inflict enormous damage—especially if they're willing to die in the process. This look at the motivations and conditions behind terrorism includes interviews with a former comrade of Osama bin Laden, a British Islamic couple who condemn the September 11 attacks but still teach the concept of holy war, and a 17-year-old Arab boy hoping for a productive future but also attracted to the idea of a "martyr's" death.

Avoiding Armageddon, Part 4, Confronting Terrorism: Turning the Tide
star
0.00
0 votes

#8 - Avoiding Armageddon, Part 4, Confronting Terrorism: Turning the Tide

Season 2003 - Episode 4 - Aired 2/27/2003

Explores measures that can be taken to reduce the threat of terrorism, from San Francisco's round-the-clock efforts to protect the Golden Gate Bridge to measures that can be taken globally to rescue nations in the midst of crisis. Topics include efforts to rebuild Afghanistan and to combat the ravages of AIDS in Africa.

Watch Now:Amazon
star
0.00
0 votes

#9 - Lawrence of Arabia: The Battle for the Arab World

Season 2003 - Episode 10 - Aired 10/22/2003

Courage, guilt, betrayal and triumph; the story of T.E. Lawrence has it all. How one man inspired an Arab army but could not prevent their betrayal. Filmed in England and the Middle East, this two-hour epic charts the real-life story of a twentieth century hero.

Directors: James Hawes
star
0.00
0 votes

#10 - Horatio's Drive: America's First Road Trip

Season 2003 - Episode 8 - Aired 8/20/2003

In 1903, Americans considered automobiles practical for short trips only. Horatio Nelson Jackson believed differently. He bet a man fifty dollars that he could drive an automobile across the country. Nelson paid a man to accompany him on a trip that attempted to go from California into Oregon and the Rocky Mountain states, then across the Midwestern U.S.A. and finally to New York City. Jackson's trip made him a media sensation. While Jackson, the other man, and a dog travelled by car, they encountered numerous setbacks involving mechanical difficulties. After the Jackson car started, two other teams of drivers set out from San Francisco, each trying to be the first team to reach New York.