-- 8 p.m. ET, American Movie Classics: "Clear and Present Danger." A former professional football player and commodities trader tries to warn the world about the massive rigging of financial markets but is thought to have played and traded too long without a helmet.
-- 8 p.m. ET, Encore: "Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen." A news service's financial columnist rises to the top of her profession without ever having posed a tough question to anyone in authority.
-- 8 p.m. ET, The Family Channel: "Doctor Dolittle." A flunky for central banks takes over the World Gold Council and persuades it to spend $60 million per year promoting overpriced jewelry.
-- 8 p.m. ET, Cinemax: "Wild Things." Mining prospectors commit all sorts of disgusting atrocities at an industry conference in Vancouver and write off the expenses as part of their private placement.
-- 8 p.m. ET, The Movie Channel: "What's Love Got to Do with It?": A big mining company that has sold more gold than it can dig out of the ground makes generous takeover offers to other mining companies that have done the same thing.
Or you can turn to Canada's Report on Business Television on the Internet ANY TIME tonight or for the next six days and watch and listen to Sprott Asset Management's chief investment strategist, John Embry, as he is interviewed by Jim O'Connell and telephone callers on this afternoon's ROB-TV "Market Call" program.
Among Embry's observations:
-- He agrees with Newmont Mining President Pierre Lassonde that the gold price will reach $525 by the end of this year.
-- The new chairman of the Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke, is a dedicated inflationist and will be very good for gold.
-- Economic problems in the United States are intractable and the truth about them is not being told officially.
-- Massive worldwide monetary debasement is ahead and that will be good for gold.
-- The gold market "doesn't act right because there are intrusions into the market by guys who want the price to remain suppressed."
-- The growing number of market anomalies suggests that markets in general are increasingly being manipulated by the U.S. government as a matter of national security.
You can find today's "Market Call" program at the ROB-TV archive here:
Scroll down to the 12:30 p.m. Tuesday section. It's an hour-long show and you're not likely to find anything better on TV until they bring "Dobie Gillis" back.
CHRIS POWEL, Secretary/Treasurer Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.