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Horrors of real life on PBS show

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Times Staff Writer

It’s Halloween, and Dracula is scaring up tourist dollars in Romania. But the truly haunting segment in tonight’s edition of the PBS magazine show “Frontline/World” (9 p.m., KCET) takes place on the other side of the globe, deep in the Cambodian jungle, where the Khmer Rouge still strikes fear.

This “Frontline” spinoff departs from the original’s single-topic format -- a welcome departure from the “news” magazines obsessed with the adulterous murder plot of the week.

Hosting a bittersweet travelogue, expatriate Romanian poet Andrei Codrescu returns to his homeland. He finds vibrancy in hip-hop artists and defiant Gypsy musicians, yet something eerie in the new breed of entrepreneur running Dracula-themed restaurants and training women to be exotic dancers.

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In another segment, Amanda Pike finds unrepentant former leaders of the Khmer Rouge, whose reign of terror in the ‘70s left 2 million Cambodians dead. Pol Pot’s deputy, Nuon Chea, says, “Just because you did something wrong doesn’t mean you’re a bad person.”

The scary thing about the face of evil is its ordinariness.

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