ROBOCAR

ROBOCAR
Discovery Studios/Science Channel
July 14, 2008 10pm ET
6×60 non-fiction series
There are lots of bad drivers out there, but could a car drive itself better than a person?
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America’s Lost H-Bomb

AMERICA’S LOST H-BOMB
The Science Channel in CO-PRODUCTION with Marabella Productions
August 19, 2007 10pm ET
1×60 min. documentary
In 1958, a nuclear bomb was jettisoned off the coast of Savannah, Georgia. Containing 400 pounds of conventional explosives and an undisclosed quantity of highly enriched uranium, the bomb’s explosive yield was 100 times that of the Hiroshima bomb. For weeks, the U.S. Navy and Air Force searched for the bomb in the silty waters around Tybee Island. Deemed “irretrievably lost,” the 7,600 pound nuclear Tybee bomb is still out there…
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Base Camp Moon

BASE CAMP MOON
The Science Channel
May 7, 2007 9pm ET
1×60 min. documentary
It has been more than 30 years since NASA put men on the moon and brought them back. Now, plans are underway to return astronauts to the lunar surface. And this time, it doesn’t appear they will be leaving anytime soon.
2007 CINE GOLDEN EAGLE WINNER for OUTSTANDING SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY PROGRAMMING
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Astronaut Diaries

ASTRONAUT DIARIES: REMEMBERING THE COLUMBIA SHUTTLE CREW
The Science Channel
May 14, 2005 9pm ET
1×60 min. documentary
Dave Brown (first from the left) on February 1, 2003 was a first-time astronaut aboard the space shuttle Columbia.. Dave was also an aspiring filmmaker who shot hundreds of hours of the training process leading up to what would become Columbia’s final mission. He captured the weeks and months of training that began well before the Columbia shuttle moved to the launch pad. In scenes usually veiled from the public, ASTRONAUT DIARIES reveals the bonds that form among these seven disparate individuals who very soon would become cohesive members of a team of historic explorers.
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Failure Analysis

FAILURE ANALYSIS
The Science Channel
November 2004
3×60 min. docudrama
Episode #1: Dust Explosion
Episode #2: Pipeline Fire
Episode #3: Hip Failure
When disaster strikes, leaving us feeling helpless and out of control, science is our refuge. Science can explain the unforeseen tragedies that change our lives, determine what variables led to catastrophe, and help prevent them in the future. Every day, across the country, failure analysis experts are using investigative sciences to build a better tomorrow on lessons learned.
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Episode #2: Pipeline Fire

Episode #3: Hip Failure

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