Roots
Use attributes for filter ! | |
First episode date | May 30, 2016 |
---|---|
Networks | History |
Narrated by | Ike Amadi |
Main characters | Kunta Kinte |
Dr. William Waller | |
Fiddler | |
Belle | |
Directors | Bruce Beresford |
Thomas Carter | |
Phillip Noyce | |
Mario Van Peebles | |
Jan 29, 1977 | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 649631 |
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Limited Series
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or a Movie
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Music Composition - Series (Original Dramatic Score)
Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directing – Drama Series
TV Land Anniversary Award
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Single Performance by a Supporting Actor in a Comedy or Drama Series
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Film Sound Editing - Series
Primetime Emmy Award For Outstanding Single Performance By A Supporting Actress In A Comedy Or Drama Series
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Film Editing - Drama Series
TV Land "Miniseries You Didn't Miss a Moment Of" Award
Peabody Award
About Roots
The classic story of `Roots' is retold in this miniseries based on Alex Haley's 1976 novel. The show paints a portrait of American slavery through the journey of a family that has a will to survive through many hardships. Malachi Kirby stars as Kunta Kinte, a proud and educated young man who uses those traits to empower himself when he is captured and sold into slavery. While he is enslaved, he challenges his fellow slaves to fight for their freedom as he continues working toward achieving his dream of escaping and returning to his homeland of The Gambia. The miniseries also stars Emmy winner Laurence Fishburne as Haley; Grammy nominee Anika Noni Rose as Kunta's daughter, Kizzy, who is bought by Tom Lea (Jonathan Rhys Meyers), who rapes and impregnates her; and Oscar winner Forest Whitaker as slave musician Fiddler, who mentors Kunta.
First ever images prove 'lost echidna' not extinct
... To reach the highest elevations, where the echidna are found, the scientists had to climb narrow ridges of moss and tree Roots - often under rainy conditions - with sheer cliffs on either side...
Coronation concert: Reggae choir to perform for King Charles
...By Iqra FarooqNewsbeat reporterFrom rehearsal rooms in Leeds to the stage at Windsor Castle - the coronation marks a big moment for the Reggae Roots choir...
Why Ireland is so important to Joe Biden
... And he will make more personal visits to County Louth and County Mayo to revisit his family Roots...
Flying boats and other tech for cleaner shipping
... Then, she went back to her Roots - taking her expertise with her...
Angela Rayner: I'm relaxed about the rich. if they pay tax
... The Labour deputy leader - who has made a political point of her working-class Roots - said her background has also often been brought up in a negative way...
Liz Truss: What sort of prime minister will she be?
... " So although she has this reputation as an ideologue and she has very clear ideological Roots - originally as a Liberal Democrat - she is somehow the darling of Leavers who in the referendum was a Remainer...
Is Trudeau losing his fight against truckers?
... The trucker demonstrations may be a political phenomenon that started in Canada, but it has US Roots - and could become a headache for Joe Biden and US politicians before too long...
The flood that drowned American dreams
... In the month after their deaths, the Chinese-American community pooled the money to cover their funeral costs and to send their ashes back to their homeland - an act, as a Chinese proverb goes, of returning fallen leaves to their Roots...
First ever images prove 'lost echidna' not extinct
By Jonah Fisher and Charlie Northcott Bbc News
Scientists have filmed an ancient egg-laying mammal named after Sir David Attenborough for the First Time , proving it isn't extinct as was feared.
An expedition to Indonesia lead by Oxford University researchers recorded four three-second clips of the Attenborough long-beaked echidna.
Spiky, furry and with a beak, echidnas have been called " living fossils".
They are are thought to have emerged about 200m years ago, when dinosaurs roamed The Earth .
Until Now , the only evidence that this particular species 'zaglossus attenboroughi' existed was a decades-old museum specimen of a dead animal.
" I was euphoric, the whole team was euphoric, " Dr James Kempton told Bbc News of The Moment he spotted the Attenborough echidna In Camera trap footage.
" I'm not joking when I say it came down to the very last Sd Card that we looked at, from the very last camera that we collected, on the very last day of our expedition. "
Dr Kempton headed a multi-national team on the month-long expedition traversing previously unexplored stretches of the Cyclops Mountains , a rugged rainforest habitat More Than 2,000m (6,561ft) above Sea Level .
In addition to finding Attenborough's " lost echidna" The Expedition discovered new species of insects and frogs, and observed healthy populations of tree kangaroo and birds of paradise.
Aside from the duck-billed platypus, the echidna is the only mammal that lay eggs. Of The Four echidna species three have long beaks, with the Attenborough echidna, and The Western echidna considered critically endangered.
Previous expeditions to the Cyclops Mountains had uncovered signs, such as 'nose pokes' in the ground, that the Attenborough echidna was still living there.
But they were unable to access the highest reaches of The Mountains and provide definitive proof of their existence.
That has meant that for The Last 62 years the only evidence that Attenborough echidna ever existed has been a specimen kept under high security in The Treasure Room of Naturalis, the Natural History museum of the Netherlands.
" It's rather flat, " Pepijn Kamminga The Collection manager at Naturalis says as he holds it for us to see.
To an untrained eye it's not dissimilar to a squashed hedgehog because when it was first gathered by Dutch botanist Pieter van Royen it wasn't stuffed.
The importance of the specimen only became clear in 1998 when x-rays revealed it wasn't a juvenile of another echidna species but in fact fully grown and distinct. It was then that the species was named after Sir David Attenborough .
" When that was discovered, people thought, well, maybe it's extinct already because it's the only one, " Mr Kamminga explains. " So this [the rediscovery] is incredible news. "
The Cyclops Mountains are precipitously steep and dangerous to explore. To reach the highest elevations, where the echidna are found, The Scientists had to climb narrow ridges of moss and tree Roots - often under rainy Conditions - with sheer cliffs on either side. Twice during their ascent The Mountains were hit by earthquakes.
" You're slipping all over The Place . You're being scratched and cut. There are venomous animals around you, deadly snakes like the Death Adder , " Dr Kempton explains.
" There are leeches literally everywhere. The leeches are not only on the floor, but these leeches climb trees, they hang off The Trees And Then drop on you to suck your blood. "
Once The Scientists reached The Higher parts of The Cyclops it became clear The Mountains were full of species that were new to science.
" My colleagues and I were chuckling all The Time , " Dr Leonidas-Romanos Davranoglou a Greek insect specialist said.
" We were so excited because we were always saying, 'this is new, nobody has seen this' or 'Oh My God , I can't believe that I'm seeing this. ' It was a truly monumental expedition. "
Dr Davranoglou broke his arm in The First week of The Expedition but remained in The Mountains collecting samples. He says they have already confirmed " several dozen" new insect species and are expecting there to be many more. They also found an entirely new type of tree-dwelling shrimp and a previously unknown cave system.
Local scientist Gison Morib, a PhD student from Cenderawasih University , who was on The Expedition , said: " The Top of The Cyclops are really unique. I want to see them protected.
" We have to Protect these sacred mountains. There are so many endemic species we don't know. "
Sacred mountainsPrevious expeditions had struggled to reach the parts of the Cyclops Mountains where the echidnas live because of the belief of local Papuans that they are sacred.
" The Mountains are referred to as The Landlady , " Madeleine Foote from Oxford University says. " And you do not want to upset The Landlady by not taking good care of her property. "
This team worked closely with local villages and on a practical level that meant accepting that there were some places they couldn't go to, and others where they passed through silently.
The Attenborough echidna's elusiveness has, according to local tradition, played a part In Conflict resolution.
When disputes between two community members arose one was instructed to find an echidna and The Other a marlin (a fish).
" That can sometimes take decades, " Ms Foote explains. " Meaning it closes The Conflict for the community and symbolizes peace. "
Dr Kempton says he hopes that rediscovery of the echidna and The Other new species will help build the case for conservation in the Cyclops Mountains . Despite being critically endangered, Attenborough's long-beaked echidna is not currently a protected species in Indonesia. The Scientists don't know how big the population is, or if it is sustainable.
" Given so much of that rainforest hasn't been explored, what else is Out There that we haven't yet discovered? The Attenborough long-beaked echidna is a symbol of what we need to Protect - to ensure we can discover it. "
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com