This production of 'Twelve Angry Men', written especially for Studio One, is shorter than the film version and leaves a few twists and turns of plot undeveloped, but it is fifty minutes of class nevertheless. For many years this episode was thought to have been lost. The Museum of Television and Radio (now the Paley Center) had only the first 30 minutes of the hour-long program on a kinescope provided by CBS - the only version CBS had. After nearly 30 years of searching, a copy of the complete program was found in 2003 by filmmaker Joseph Consentino, who was working on a documentary about noted defense attorney Robert Leibowitz (Leibowitz reported on the Charles A. Lindbergh baby kidnapping for the NY radio station WHN) and found a copy of the show in the archives maintained by the children of Leibowitz, Robert Leibowitz and Marjorie Leibowitz Finch. Samuel Leibowitz requested and received a commercial-free kinescope copy of "Twelve Angry Men" from CBS shortly after it aired because of his interest in legal issues. The Leibowitz children donated the kinescope to the museum and it had a re-premiere in May 2003.
本节目由五洲传播中心联合美国国家地理频道、英国Wild Blue Media共同制作,旨在展示中国悠久的历史和璀璨的文明。节目共3集,每集45分钟,由美国考古学家艾伦·马卡担任主持人。节目中,他带领其技术团队,探访中国各地历史遗迹,并与当地专家密切合作,借助卫星遥感成像、数字摄影测量、三维动画等当代先进技术,讲述了长城的起源发展,回顾了元上都的往日繁荣,探寻了石峁、喇家、金沙、三星堆和良渚等失落的古城。节目以解密方式层层推进,对外展示了中国最新的考古发现,深入解读了中国悠久绵延的历史和博大精深的文化。