Professional Motion Picture Production and Distribution NEWS
Fourth Season of 'Vanguard' Premieres on Current TV With Special Episode Featuring Freed Journalists Laura Ling and Euna Lee, Imprisoned in North Korea in 2009
By Staff
posted Apr 28, 2010, 12:33
'Captive in North Korea' Includes Never-Before-Seen Field Footage, Interviews and Commentary with Ling and Lee on their Capture and Imprisonment, and What Really Happened Behind the Scenes at Vanguard
'Captive in North Korea' Includes Never-Before-Seen Field Footage, Interviews
and Commentary with Ling and Lee on their Capture and Imprisonment, and What
Really Happened Behind the Scenes at Vanguard
Vanguard, 2010 Peabody Award-Winner, Premieres Wed., May 19th at 10 p.m.
(San Francisco) The fourth season of Vanguard, Current TV's award-winning investigative
documentary series, kicks off Wednesday, May 19th at 10 p.m. EDT / 7 p.m. PDT
with "Captive in North Korea," a special 30-minute episode featuring
Vanguard correspondent team Laura Ling and Euna Lee. While on assignment in
China for Current TV in 2009, the two were captured in China by North Korean
soldiers minutes after crossing into North Korea and making it back on Chinese
soil. They were held against their will in North Korea for more than four months
before being freed and returned to the United States last August.
The special features never-before-seen footage, letters, commentary and personal
interviews with Ling, Lee and producer Mitch Koss, who managed to escape capture.
Vanguard correspondents Adam Yamaguchi and Mariana Van Zeller take viewers behind
the scenes to recount the harrowing story of Ling, Lee and Koss's ordeal and
how they managed to communicate with their interned colleagues. The episode
also features video of the Vanguard team reuniting upon Ling's first visit to
Current following the journalists' return to the U.S.
Current TV was thrown into the international spotlight in March 2009 when Vanguard
journalists Laura Ling, Euna Lee, and Mitch Koss were on assignment to document
human trafficking across the North Korea-China border. Minutes after crossing
into North Korea and back on to the China side, Ling and Lee were arrested.
They were later charged by the North Korean government for "hostile acts"
and sentenced to 12 years of hard labor. After four and a half months in detention,
the two were pardoned and sent home.
Laura Ling also is co-author of SOMEWHERE INSIDE: One Sister's Captivity in
North Korea and the Other's Fight to Bring Her Home, coming from HarperCollins
Publishers on May 18, 2010.
Resources:
http://www.current.com
www.studentfilmmakers.com © 2004-2005. All rights reserved.
A division of Welch Integrated, Inc.