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1-43 of 43
- Director Rubén Abruña explores the journey of our food after it has been digested and excreted by us. He follows the trail of human feces from the sewers of Paris to one of the largest sewage treatment plants in Chicago.
- How can we best meet every earth citizens need for healthy food facing our limited resources? Regarding the almost 10 billion humans living on earth by 2050, we have to decide now how we want to shape the future of agriculture.
- Follows an abusive man when he speaks out, positioning himself as a critic of violence.
- Why do we throw away so much food? And how can we stop this kind of waste?Amazing but true: On the way from the farm to the dining-room table, more than half the food lands on the dump. Most of it before it ever reaches consumers.
- There is a lack of basic knowledge about the menstrual cycle. However, various fields of research are beginning to take an interest in it and ask questions. Freed from myths and prejudices, the menstrual cycle is being re-evaluated and no longer seen as something weakening, but as something strengthening.
- How can cities be made more livable, how can the air be cleaned, how can solutions be found to cope with rising temperatures due to climate change, and how can space be created for a growing population? These are just some of the challenges faced by cities around the world. A pioneer in this field since the 1960s, Copenhagen continues to think of the city off the beaten track and off the streets saturated by cars, while alternative projects are now also multiplying in other European capitals, notably Barcelona, Berlin and Paris. Further afield, in Singapore, the city continues to grow in density, but in height and without engines.
- The Hambacher Forest in west Germany has been occupied by environmentalists many times, most recently in autumn 2018, when energy giant RWE tried to secure its interests and clear the area in order to expand its neighbouring lignite mine.
- In Europe, one third of working people are in a precarious employment situation. In spite of having a job, and sometimes even several, the end of the month is difficult, and housing, food and heating become delicate issues. These workers form a new social class called "precariat" by economists, a neologism born from the contraction of "precariousness" and "proletariat". The rise in food and energy prices has considerably increased the economic insecurity of large sections of society, which until now belonged to the middle class. While the upper third of society has become richer despite the crisis, the lower third has fallen further behind. Women, who occupy the most precarious jobs, are clearly more affected than men.
- Documentary accompanies five special people in the realization of their very personal and extraordinary life plan. These visions of a different life are intended to create alternatives for themselves and for society.