This Week: "My Father, My Brother, and Me" (60 minutes),
Feb. 3rd at 9pm on PBS (Check local listings)
Live Discussion: Chat with correspondent Dave Iverson, Feb. 4th, 11am ET
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"Parkinson's arrives without fanfare," journalist Dave Iverson says at the start of this week's FRONTLINE broadcast. "You're jogging at the gym one day and you happen to notice that one arm isn't swinging the same as the other. In time, other signs accumulate: a leg starts to tingle, a finger begins to tremble..."
In "My Father, My Brother and Me," airing Tuesday night and available to watch online right now - http://www.pbs.org/frontline/parkinsons/ - Iverson sets off on a personal journey to understand the disease which afflicts him now, and which struck his father and brother years earlier.
As Iverson probes his own story, and tracks decades of efforts to understand and cure Parkinson's, he meets some remarkable people: a leading researcher whose encounter with "frozen" heroin addicts led to a major breakthrough, a Parkinson's sufferer given a new lease on life by an experimental brain surgery, and a geneticist who's identified some of the faulty genes responsible for Parkinson's, and is now working on drugs to fix them.
Iverson also has intimate conversations with fellow Parkinson's sufferers like writer Michael Kinsley and actor Michael J. Fox, whose extended video interview we've posted as well - http://www.pbs.org/frontline/parkinsons/view/fox.html
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