|
| News Groups Blog Forum Chat Video Audio Images Documents Wiki Home |
|
|||||||
| Register | Tags | FAQ n Rules | Mark Forums Read |
| Notices |
| Audio & Video discussion Discussion of music and video files in the file archive. |
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
||||
|
||||
|
Upcoming Television Programs about Drugs
Hey guys, I looked and couldnt find a similar thread and i figured I'd put it here. On Jan 20/06, History Television in Canada is airing a program called "The Psychedelic Pioneers" about three scientists reseaching psychoactive drugs, primarily LSD, in of all places Saskatchewan, Canada, from 1950's onward.
I thought other members could post other upcoming programs as well, especially new programs not yet available for upload to the file archive. Edit: The Psychedelic Pioneers (The History Channel) Last edited by ~lostgurl~; 20-08-2007 at 17:35. Reason: adding df link |
|
#2
|
||||
|
||||
|
Moved the topic to the right forum. Please find out if history television has the possiblity to watch the program on their site. If so, please post the link to the movie in the file archive.
|
|
#4
|
||||
|
||||
|
It says the three scientists are Abram Hoffer, Duncan Blewett, and Humphry Osmond. I had never heard of them and i was surprised to hear that there was such studies going on in Canada at the time.
There is nothing on Historytelevision yet, but there is a 10 min clip on cannibis culture. Ill post the link in the movie archive. |
|
#5
|
||||
|
||||
|
SASKATCHEWAN DOCTORS 'PSYCHEDELIC PIONEERS'
The press notes for History Television's documentary The Psychedelic Pioneers, about medically motivated drug experiments in the 1950s, point out that in a remote corner of the Prairies, "three gifted Canadian doctors were attempting to unlock the secrets of the human psyche in an unconventional way -- with the use of the drug LSD." It's debatable whether that would qualify as a legal defence in this day and age, but the documentary profile of how the Saskatchewan doctors first used LSD as a way to understand schizophrenia and later as an aid in psychotherapy and treatment for alcoholism has special significance today, given the renewed debate over legalized drug use. The Psychedelic Pioneers notes how, when news of LSD's seemingly magical effects first became public, artists, writers and intellectuals like Aldous Huxley were quick to experiment. Huxley would later write about his experiences in his 1956 book The Doors of Perception -- written under the influence, as it were. Here's another curious trivia note for you: The Psychedelic Pioneers is narrated by Shirley Douglas, whose father, Tommy Douglas, was Premier of Saskatchewan while the docs were doing their mind control experiments. (Saturday on History Television) |
|
#6
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
More triv for ya - Humphry Osmond is the man responsible for the term 'psychedelic', first used in a letter to Aldous Huxley c1956. So there you are.
|
|
#7
|
||||
|
||||
|
I should have just called this thread "Psychedelic Pioneers". Note that the word psychedelic means "mind-manifesting"
HEAVY HITTERS In honor of LSD inventor Albert Hofmann, who turns 100 on Jan. 11, we’ve assembled this list of the Top 10 all-time psychedelic pioneers. By Peter Gorman 1. ALBERT HOFMANN Born on Jan. 11, 1906, in Baden, Switzerland, Albert Hofmann graduated from the University of Zürich with a degree in chemistry and then went to work for Sandoz Pharmaceutical in 1929. Hoping to develop a stimulant for blood circulation, he synthesized lysergic acid from ergot in 1938, which led him to discover lysergic acid diethylamide. It took five years for Hofmann to revisit his LSD-25. On April 16, 1943, when a minute amount of the chemical entered Hofmann’s bloodstream through his skin, the world’s first acid trip was underway. Suddenly, he went into a “very strange, dreamlike state. Everything changed, everything had another meaning.” Thinking he was ill, he went home to lie down, but the altered state stayed with him. “I would think of something,” he told HIGH TIMES in 1995, “and as soon as I did I could see it. It was wonderful.” Three days later, Hofmann made a solution with water and five milligrams of LSD, then drank a tiny bit of it, enough to dose himself with 250 micrograms of the drug. The experiment was so intense that he asked his lab assistant to take him home. They rode bicycles. “It was about six kilometers from my lab to my little village, and throughout it I had the feeling that time was standing still,” he recalled. “It was a very unusual feeling, one I’d never had before. There was a change in the experience of life, of time. I was already deep in the LSD trance, in LSD inebriation, and one of its characteristics, just on this bicycle trip, was of not coming from anyplace or going anyplace. There was absolutely no feeling of time.” At home he had his assistant call a doctor, who sat with him during what he described as a “horribly difficult” experience that lasted several hours. But as it drew to a close, the difficulty turned to happiness. “I saw our world in a new light,” he said. “Our normal world that we don’t normally think of as wonderful, was a wonderful world. It was a rebirth.” Hofmann and several others at Sandoz knew that for so small a dose to have such a profound effect on human consciousness—while having almost no effect on the human body—it must have been working at the very center of the psychic core of the human brain. To see if they were right, shortly thereafter Sandoz began supervised testing on humans in a psychiatric clinic in Zurich. Based on the results from those early tests (which were published in 1947), Sandoz began distributing one gram of crystalline LSD-25 to investigators around the world under the label Delysid. Each gram was capable of producing between 10,000 and 20,000 trips. The psychedelic revolution had begun. For 20 years, until it was outlawed in 1966, LSD was used in psychiatry, psychotherapy, addiction therapy and as a creativity enhancer. Banning LSD, however, did nothing to slow down its influence: LSD’s mind-expanding properties would fuel the hippie revolution, influence rock’n’roll and help spawn home computers, the Internet and DNA research. Hofmann wasn’t finished. When investment banker turned mycologist Gordon Wasson and his wife traveled to Mexico in 1956 and became the first outsiders to take part in a magic-mushroom ceremony, it was Hofmann who was able to isolate the mushroom’s active principles, which he named psilocybin and psilocin, and then to synthesize them. Wasson also introduced Hofmann to another hallucinogenic plant in Mexico, ololuiqui, the seeds of a type of morning-glory flower. (Wasson had acquired the seeds from a Zapotec Indian.) “What we found as the active principle,” Hofmann told HT, “was lysergic acid amide. Very closely related to lysergic acid diethylamide.” It was an extraordinary find, one that Hofmann said “showed that LSD was not just a laboratory product. It’s closely related, chemically, pharmacologically and psychologically, with an old Indian magic drug. Which means that LSD belongs to the sacred magic plants of Mexico.” Hofmann, who also invented medicines that help cerebral function, blood circulation and blood-pressure stablization, remained with Sandoz as head of the company’s Pharmaceutical-Chemical Research Laboratories, Division of Natural Products, until he retired in 1971. And while the DEA and governments worldwide shudder at the very notion of the personal freedom and spiritual insight gained by people who utilize LSD, others have heaped acclaim on its inventor. Hofmann is a member of the Nobel Prize Committee, a fellow of the World Academy of Sciences and a member of the International Society of Plant Research. He’s spent the last 30 years writing books and lecturing. If there are certain occasions in history in which momentous events occur—events that alter the course of life on this planet—certainly the synthesis of LSD is among them. We can all thank Swiss chemist Albert Hofmann, who is about to hit the century mark. He must be doing something right. 2. RICHARD SCHULTES Botanist Richard Schultes’ writings about the use of ayahuasca inspired a generation of seekers, including William Burroughs and Allen Ginsberg, to travel to the Amazon in search of the magical and visionary medicine. Schultes also turned Gordon Wasson on to the whereabouts of magic mushrooms in Mexico. 3. R. GORDON WASSON The third member of the Holy Trinity of Psychedelics—along with Hofmann and Schultes—was investment banker R. Gordon Wasson. Following Schultes’ lead, Wasson did magic mushrooms with the Mexican curandera Maria Sabina in 1955. Life magazine published Wasson’s story in 1957. And the Western world has been looking in cow pies ever since. 4. HUMPHREY OSMOND Psychiatrist Humphrey Osmond turned on author Aldous Huxley and later coined the word “psychedelic.” In 1953, Huxley volunteered for Osmond’s mescaline research, which led to his book The Doors of Perception. In 1956, Osmond wrote to Huxley: “To fathom hell or soar angelic, just take a pinch of psychedelic.” The word, meaning “mind-manifesting,” stuck. 5. ALDOUS HUXLEY Aldous Huxley’s The Doors of Perception, published in 1954, whet the appetite of the Beat Generation, which flocked to the Southwest to eat peyote, the source of mescaline. Huxley and his wife Laura, also an author, later became spiritual figureheads for a generation of hippies, and the little book became a seeker’s bible. 6. TIMOTHY LEARY Whereas Hofmann, Schultes, Wasson and Osmond experimented with psychedelics for medical and spiritual reasons, Leary wanted everyone to “turn on, tune in, drop out.” Booted from Harvard for doling out magic mushrooms and LSD in unsanctioned experiments, Leary preached that proper “set and setting” were vital to having a peak experience. 7. RAM DASS A psychologist who worked with Leary at Harvard, Ram Dass’ experience with psychedelics—first magic mushrooms and then LSD—began in 1961, when he was still known as Richard Alpert. While in India, Alpert rechristened himself Ram Dass. His book Be Here Now remains the perfect companion for tripping. 8. AUGUSTUS OWSLEY STANLEY III After the Feds outlawed LSD in 1966, Augustus Owsley Stanley III became the first chemist to mass-produce high-quality acid. His Purple Haze, White Lightning and Orange Sunshine are legendary for being the closest in purity to Sandoz’s original LSD-25. Owsley supplied Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters’ Acid Tests, as well as the Grateful Dead. 9. KEN KESEY Ken Kesey first took psilocybin, mescaline and LSD at a government research program in Menlo Park, CA, in the late ’50s. Following the success of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Kesey and the Merry Pranksters began throwing outlandish parties fueled by Owsley acid, dubbed the Acid Tests and featuring music by the Grateful Dead. 10. TERENCE MCKENNA While the ’60s had Leary, Kesey, Ram Dass and Allen Ginsberg as their psychedelic spokesmen, the ’80s and ’90s had Terence McKenna. Author, thinker and psychonaut, McKenna proselytized about mushrooms and ayahuasca, the visionary vine of South America—sparking interest in shamanism and psychedelic substances for a new generation. |
|
#9
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
Channel 4 in Briton are currently doing a show called 'Going Cold Turkey', which basically does what it says on the tin. Basically Big Brother does detox, it follows a group of people in detox as they kick h, airing at 9.30 am and 11 pm if I remember rightly. Haven't seen it yet (no telly!) but downloadable using bittorrent from UKNova - you need to register to use the site, and ratios are important, but it's well worth it; if you do register run a search for 'Sacred Weeds'. Also just noticed this on there -" 'Giving Up The Weed' : Actor and rapper J Rock of Big Brovas fame has been smoking marijuana for 14 years and is desperate to give up. This one-hour observational documentary called Giving Up The Weed charts J Rock's struggle to give up one of the constants in his life and witnesses how he copes. Can he shape up and rid his life of the drug in just one month? Will he be able to remain creative and focused and can he change the elements of his life that keep him in contact with weed?
Director: Paul Blake." Shown last night(20/02/06). |
|
#10
|
||||
|
||||
|
Micklemouse, please post the bittorrent in the file archive: Movies about drugs
If the psychedelic pioneers is available online please post that to. url? |
|
#11
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
Quote:
|
|
#13
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
Quote:
I'm a silly sausage - I'll pm ya!
|
|
#14
|
||||
|
||||
|
CBS News' 60 Minutes to air Prince of Pot Story This Sunday, March 5
by Marc Emery (29 Feb, 2006) CBS's most awarded journalist Bob Simon investigates the story of Marc Emery, The Prince of Pot. &Number Tick, tick, tick, tick...On Sunday, March 5th at 7.00 p.m. in all time zones across North America, CBS News flagship program 60 Minutes will air the story of Marc Emery, Canada's Prince of Pot. The segment will examine Emery's lifelong battle against prohibition and his unique strategy to accomplish that aim – by selling marijuana seeds around the world. The episode will be seen by approximately twelve to fourteen million viewers across Canada and the United States. Prestigious CBS journalist Bob Simon interviewed Marc Emery and others, including the Drug Enforcement Administration and Canadian police, to delve into Emery's current predicament of facing extradition to the USA for a prison term of possibly 30 years or more. Edit for video link: 60 Minutes, Prince of Pot Last edited by ~lostgurl~; 20-08-2007 at 17:54. Reason: adding df video link |
|
#15
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
I watched the whole first season of Weeds. It was pretty fucking lame IMO even though Kevin Nealon is fucking halarious
|
|
#16
|
||||
|
||||
|
CN BC: Extradition Woes Of 'Prince Of Pot' Become Story For 60
(02 Mar 2006) Province British Columbia B.C.'s "Prince of Pot," Marc Emery, may soon be a household name in the U.S. On Sunday, the CBS News investigative show 60 Minutes will air a segment on Emery, who is facing possible extradition to the U.S. over sales of marijuana seeds through the mail to the U.S. "Here's a guy who operates openly in Canada," said 60 Minutes reporter Bob Simon. "He's been running his business, running his program to get marijuana legalized and has been completely left alone, which I take it is a reflection of the culture in Vancouver. He's being extradited to face 10 years to life in prison. The situation is so outlandish that it's a story." Emery is hoping the segment, expected to reach more than 12 million people, will affect viewers, and voters, on both sides of the border. "If I end up in an American prison, both the citizens of America and Canada are responsible for shipping a good person off to jail for life," he said "7:00 pm sunday night. Approx 17 minute segment. 60 Minutes is available on most satalites. Dont be to concerned about schedualing sunday or if you dont have a dish and not in north america. The Emerey camp has confirmed this will be available for link and torrent afterwards. Some grumblings about going up against the oscars, lack of build up to the show, and some concerns about what CBS will edit. But everyone is super excited here in Canada regardless! moto" |
|
#17
|
||||
|
||||
|
Lead up story at CBS here:http://www.drugs-forum.com/forum/loc...tid=-1&lpage=1
Last edited by ~lostgurl~; 09-07-2007 at 12:11. Reason: correcting link |
|
#18
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
Ideal - BBC Three
ideal.jpg
Ideal The down and dirty flipside of Weeds is this unconventional, new BBC3 comedy set in a Manchester drug-dealer's flat. It promises to be addictive viewing for those who hook into its humour. Airing in NZ on Prime at 11.15pm, Sunday 23rd September 2007 - Has anyone seen this show? Is it any good? Here's an article about it, it was first screened in the UK in 2005 Quote:
|
|
#19
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
Re: Upcoming Television Programs about Drugs
I have seen a couple episodes of this. I'm not a big fan of gross humor, and there's a fair amount of that, but the people lookin' to score are always pretty funny, and i'm continuing to watch it. One can find it online from a couple sources. Seems like a fairly accurate picture of the business, too, which is cool.
My favorite part is that one of the main character's suppliers is a cop who gets his stock from drug busts. |
|
#20
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
Retirement Living TV Presents Sex, Drugs and Rock 'N Roll
Retirement Living TV Presents Sex, Drugs and Rock 'N Roll
5 October 2007 Author : Retirement Living TV News Category : PressRelease earthtimes.org COLUMBIA, Md. - Retirement Living TV (RLTV), the first network dedicated to people 55+ presents Sex, Drugs and Rock 'n Roll, October 8-12, a week of exciting programming that includes sneak peeks of some of the newest shows airing on the network. Sex: 73% of older adults are sexually active. What's On: Dr. Ruth Westheimer on Daily Cafe, hosted by former CNN anchors Felicia Taylor and Mary Alice Williams. "America's favorite sex therapist" will conduct her weekly call-in segment to answer the intimate questions of our viewers. Later in the week, a "best of" Dr. Ruth reel will debut chock full of her steamiest advice to date. Also, senior sex and AIDS, two separate episodes with a strong connection on Healthline hosted by Kevin Soden, M.D. Drugs: 72% of senior Americans thought marijuana should be legal for medicinal purposes. What's On: Medical marijuana, a Viewpoint special hosted by RLTV's Lea Thompson with field reporter "Lifestyle Gerontologist" Alexis Abramson, Ph.D., will give an investigative report of the world of medicinal narcotics. Rock 'n Roll: Senior adults are responsible for twice the music sales of any other age group. What's On: A Tony Bennett interview on Daily Cafe, and a "Punk Rock Granny" JoDina and her band One Foot in the Grave rock the house on The Art of Living. Sneak Peaks: Healthline presents: Whole Body Health, a companion series to the award- winning Healthline that explores complimentary and alternative medicine (CAM). This sneak peek episode will focus on Native American healing and a center in Arizona run by certified physicians and healers that use (CAM) to help patients find the path to wellness. For more information and programming schedules of the mentioned shows and specials, log onto WWW.RL.TV/sneakpeekweek/. About Retirement Living TV Retirement Living TV (RLTV) is the only network dedicated to informing, involving and inspiring people aged 55+. Launched in September 2006, the network has all original programming with established celebrities and journalists on topics including health, lifestyle, finance and politics. RLTV is the expert in the field of aging, guided by an internationally recognized team of gerontologists and researchers in addition to world class partners. The award-winning network is seen in 29 million homes across North America on DirecTV, Comcast and other video providers or by logging on to http://www.rl.tv/ http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/s...,192868.shtml# |
|
#21
|
|||||||||||
|
|||||||||||
|
Re: Upcoming Television Programs about Drugs
For any of you who are in the UK......watch the repeat episodes of "Skins". Honestly that programme was great, deal's with a lot of problems in youth culture today.
Bit ironic coming from an 18 year old druggie...............heh. |
|
#22
|
||||
|
||||
|
Re: Upcoming Television Programs about Drugs
Right now on the history channel this:
Hillbilly The Real Story is showing, it is 20 minutes into it and they are talking about how hillbillies distill illegal liquor and grow illegal marijuana. They are actually saying that their marijuana is actually of real high quality. It is showing again at tonight 1:00AM eastern(GMT -3) on the same channel, if you have the history channel you should watch it at least until they stop talking about drugs. |
|
#23
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
Is alcohol worse than ecstasy? Horizon, BBC TV - (UK/Ireland)
Worth a watch, scientists analyse the effects of 20 drugs,
Tomorrow Tuesday 5th February 2008, 9pm, BBC Two, Horizon. "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sn/tvradio/programmes/horizon/broadband/tx/drugs/" |
|
#24
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
Re: Upcoming Television Programs about Drugs
The History Channel will premiere a new documentary called PEYOTE TO LSD: A PSYCHEDELIC ODYSSEY on April 20, 2008.
Here is a link to the trailer on YouTube: http://youtube.com/watch?v=NJ9miB4QY9w See below for more info! ********************************** PR Newswire Comtex VANCOUVER, British Columbia, April 2, 2008 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- From Amazon jungles to the American Plains, British mental wards, Swiss labs, New York mansions and Grateful Dead shows, the history of hallucinogenic drugs is as fantastic as the visions the drugs produce. Wade Davis, is a modern-day anthropologist, author ("The Serpent and the Rainbow") and protege of one of psychedelia's most intrepid forefathers -- Richard Evans Schultes. Davis traces Schultes' life's work as one of the greatest botanist-explorers of the 20th century and reveals an illustrated history of the world's most mind-altering plants and substances in: PEYOTE TO LSD: A PSYCHEDELIC ODYSSEY, premiering Sunday, April 20, 2008 at 8:00 p.m. ET/PT on The History Channel. Winner of the prestigious 2008 CINE Golden Eagle Award, the documentary follows the career of Schultes, who journeyed into far-flung areas in search of ritualistic healing medicines known to produce powerful visions: Peyote, mushrooms, Ayahuasca. Davis, a former student of Schultes at Harvard and author of Schultes' biography ("One River"), travels to the exotic locations Schultes once voyaged to, seeking the same experiences. Along the way, set to the music of the Grateful Dead and featuring input from experts such as Dead co-founder Bob Weir, plus Dr. Andrew Weil, and LSD inventor Dr. Albert Hofmann, the documentary reveals how hallucinogens got from jungle shamans to the hippie generation. Questions arise about the attitude toward psychedelics: their great potential benefits versus perceived harmful side effects. Why is it that so many ancient cultures consider hallucinogenic plants -- a medicine given from God, while in today's culture they are outlawed, and even reviled. PEYOTE TO LSD: A PSYCHEDELIC ODYSSEY is a long, strange trip that began decades ago, but is probably nowhere near its end. Even now, new uses for hallucinogens are being sought and tested by leading universities and medical institutions. PEYOTE TO LSD: A PSYCHEDELIC ODYSSEY is produced and directed by Peter von Puttkamer of Gryphon Productions Inc. along with producer Sheera von Puttkamer and co-producer Wade Davis. Executive Producer for The History Channel is Michael Stiller. An exhibit of Richard Evans Schultes' photographs will run at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC, April 16 - November, 2008. See the trailer at http://www.gryphonproductions.com or on YOU TUBE. SOURCE Gryphon Productions Inc. http://www.gryphonproductions.com/ |
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| USA - home searched due to mail orders | TazBeBad | Law and order | 136 | 15-10-2009 20:25 |
| Opinions - Drugs and Crime Go Hand in Hand | Police Officer | Drug Policy Reform & Narco Politics | 214 | 12-07-2009 18:24 |
| Early-warning system on new synthetic drugs | Alfa | Law and order | 5 | 01-06-2009 19:53 |
| New Zealand - Article: Your Views: Have drugs been wrongly demonised? (NZ) | ~lostgurl~ | Drug Policy Reform & Narco Politics | 9 | 05-05-2009 09:43 |
| Interesting scholarly drug facts | rxbandit | Pharmacology | 17 | 30-10-2008 06:53 |
| Sitelinks: | Site Functions: |