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- Political strategist Dominic Cummings leads a popular but controversial campaign to convince British voters to leave the European Union from 2015 up until the present day.
- Markets. Finance. Scandal. Keiser Report is a no holds barred look at the shocking scandals behind the global financial headlines. The series has been running for over 1500 episodes, for over 10 years, and broadcast all over the globe.
- Breaking the Set describes itself as "a show that cuts through the pre-written narrative that tries to tell you what to think, and what to care about", and as a show that "cuts through the false Left/Right paradigm set by the establishment and reports the hard facts".
- The team that brought you Four Horsemen now bring together thinkers, writers, leaders and creators who question and re-think the conventional wisdom of modern life.
- This six part documentary series, America's Surveillance State, dissects the United States' present surveillance condition. The thesis statement of the series is that privacy as we understand it is an antiquated fantasy - that we need to adjust our way of living to factor in that someone, somewhere is very likely watching our every move for one reason or another.
- They are FEMEN and their decision to fight for feminism topless has made them famous far beyond their native Ukraine. After being forced to move their HQ in Kiev, FEMEN take their struggle to Paris, France where they continue to challenge gender inequality, patriarchal institutions, religion and the sex industry. This report is produced by RT - former Russia Today - send a clear message how Kremlin view this type of activity.
- Kenneth young just keep praying and everything will be alright
- Sam Delaney takes an irreverent look at the week in news, joined by a panel of comedians and a top political guest.
- Billy, Rene, and Walt were born and raised as men, but they felt uncomfortable with their birth sex. After years of confusion, they each underwent surgery to change into what they thought were their true selves. However, sex change brought no relief to what they had believed was gender dysphoria. While Billy and Walt decided to go back to being men, Rene remained a transsexual woman. I Want My Sex Back. tells their stories of change and disappointment.
- Feature documentary following new recruits in the Kurdish Women's Protection Units (YPJ) who are fighting ISIS in Syria.
- RT covers major issues of our time for viewers wanting to Question More and delivers stories overlooked by the mainstream media to create news with an edge.
- Co-hosts Tabetha Wallace & Tyrell Ventura offer their unique & anti-establishment commentary on the day's news & politics in the US & around the world, diving into the stories & perspectives often ignored or overlooked by the mainstream media
- People living in the tundra are accustomed to a nomadic life. Their homes are ascetic, food is basic, and deers are their everything. They don't watch TV or use the Internet. However, their children do go to boarding schools, but not all parents are in favor of them. Find out more about life and education out on the tundra on RTDoc.
- In China, there are rehab boot-camps for Internet addiction. They treat it just like alcohol or drug dependency, it's considered a clinical disorder that can, and should, be cured, even against the patient's' will. Teens are the most common sufferers of the affliction. When their enthusiasm for virtual reality starts to have a negative effect on their lives, the parents conduct an intervention.
- Former First Minister of Scotland Alex Salmond hosts a new political chat program, 'The Alex Salmond Show', on RT, where he vows to battle the mainstream media narrative and take the news "out of the Westminster nexus." 'The Alex Salmond Show' will take viewers inside the Welsh, Irish and Scottish parliaments, also looking at the government of Northern Ireland, not forgetting Westminster.
- Dive into the heart of the 2011 London uprisings with our compelling documentary, a profound exploration of a pivotal moment in British history. Sparked by the controversial and unproven claims surrounding the police killing of Mike Duggan, this film delves deep into the ensuing chaos that engulfed London and other cities, revealing a society on the brink. Witness the widespread unrest and the harsh reality of thousands of young individuals hastily judged and incarcerated, highlighting a systemic failure to address the core issues of policing and government accountability. Set against the backdrop of a nation grappling with deep-seated inequalities, this documentary serves as a poignant precursor to the global Black Lives Matter movement, shedding light on the persistent challenges faced by BAME communities in Britain. "An early warning signal, totally ignored" - this film not only captures the events of 2011 but also serves as a critical reflection on the missed opportunities for meaningful reform and the ongoing struggle for justice and equality. Join us on this eye-opening journey into the past, to better understand the present and inspire change for the future.
- Wadi Al-Salam in Najaf, Iraq, is the world's largest cemetery, with over 5 million graves. Its hereditary undertakers share their stories.
- Father-to-be, Miguel Francis-Santiago conducts a two-week experiment, he plans to walk in his wife Kristina's shoes, in a bid to understand how pregnancy really feels. To do that, he dons a heavy tummy-suit in which he'll work, drive, do household chores and even sleep. Miguel is determined to strive to replicate what women have to go through before childbirth.
- In the Caucasian mountains people like tradition, no matter how violent it may be. In the 1990s public executions were common in Chechnya and Ingushetiya. They have their own justice and their own methods. The times are changing, as people seek forgiveness rather than revenge.
- Coming into this world from behind a barbed wire: are they atoning for someone else's sins or making first steps toward their own? A look at the prison world through the eyes of its smallest inhabitants.
- 201625m7.5 (20)TV Special
- Documentary featuring stories from the three last stops on the road to the besieged ISIS capital of Raqqa: the Women's Protection Units (YPJ) compound, the medical point and the foreign volunteers base.
- The Indian state of Punjab is undergoing a severe water crisis. Once an agricultural leader in India, it's now turning into a desert. Farmers and other rural dwellers are going bankrupt over the need to pay for water delivered from other regions. In this drastic situation, the number of suicides has skyrocketed. The task of obtaining water for the households became a matter of life or death for the people living there.
- Who needs art in wartime? The Syrian conflict made artists redundant. With RTD, meet those who are fighting for humanity with their own weapons: a street dancer who dares people to live out their dreams. A conscript who sculpted a tunnel where rebels made missiles. And a jazz orchestra conductor who came back to his homeland to realise his creative ideas.
- Minister Steve, founder of "Tent City" for the homeless, lost his battle with the authorities and the makeshift settlement was torn down. Now he's built a raft to sail the perilous waters of the Intracoastal Waterway and raise awareness of the problem of homelessness in America. Flying a 13-star Betsy Ross flag, and with conquistador statue for protection,
- The Democratic Republic of Congo is one of the world's most resource-rich countries. A wide range of rare minerals can be found here in abundance, all commanding high prices in world commodity markets, but the DRC still remains one of the poorest countries in the world. For Bernard Kalume Buleri, fixer and musician, his country's history of turmoil is very personal; like most Congolese people, he and his family fell victim to the unending mineral based power struggle. Born in the year of his country's independence, he has lived through war and seen his homeland torn apart by violent looting and greed. His story is a damning testament, illustrating how nature's bounty, instead of being a blessing, becomes a deadly curse.
- The Mars One mission is a one-way ticket to the Red Planet. It's scheduled for 2023, when the first group of 4 men and women will land on Mars to prepare it for human colonization. Anastasia has made it to this daring project's short-list. What draws her towards the fourth planet from the Sun and away from Earth?
- Documentary dealing with Iraq's orphan crisis and the trials of Hicham al-Dhahabi, a Baghdad man who founded the "Iraqi Safe House for Creativity", Iraq's first private orphanage.
- Never has homelessness in America's biggest city been more of a problem, and yet more than ever, the homeless are being treated like criminals. Hear from New Yorkers who have no place to go, many of whom suffer from schizophrenia and other illnesses.
- In early 2015, a small Egyptian village was dealt a cruel blow. Isis killed 20 men from Al-Ur because they were Christian. Now their families take comfort from their faith as they to come to terms with the loss. The whole community honors the dead as martyrs, Christian and Muslim neighbors alike mourn their deaths and condemn the killers.
- "Geological scandal" is a phrase often used to describe The Democratic Republic of Congo. It is one of the world's most resource-rich countries with extensive deposits of gold, diamonds, tungsten and uranium amongst many others. The abundance of internationally valued minerals has however failed to bring any kind of prosperity. It began with colonial exploitation of the land and its people and continued in bloody civil war, the Congolese have harvested nothing from their country's natural riches but misery and poverty.
- Donning swastikas and brown shirts, or long white robes and hoods, the attendees of a white supremacist rally are without a doubt a disquieting and memorable sight. Coated with heavy symbolism that pierces deep into the darkest shadows of America's racial history, Klan members, neo-Nazis, and other right wing extremists are easily passed off by most as simply members of a 'hate group.' But in order to combat the existence of these organizations, we must first understand them. How do members of these groups acquire their beliefs? How does the white supremacist movement exist now, in a country where it is considered by many to be a relic of the past? And what are its goals for the future? On the other side of the coin, what is it like to be a victim of violence perpetrated by this movement? Or what is it like to attempt to infiltrate or monitor right wing extremism, despite the dangers? The film "Revealing Hate" will attempt to answer some of these questions, through telling the stories of those who have prosecuted, photographed, protested, infiltrated, and even participated in these organizations. Each individual's story, told separately in a vignette style, will shed more light on these philosophies that continue to run deep within the fringes of our society.
- When human activity causes bear cubs to be separated from, or abandoned by their mothers, they have no chance of surviving unless people intervene. Russia's Orphan Bear Rescue Center, has been established to save and nurture orphaned bear cubs. The center is a part of a larger organization - the International Fund for Animal Welfare that rescues and protects animals worldwide.
- All across the USA people are rising up against fracking. They don't believe the process is safe and think it causes wide-scale land contamination. Everday more extraction sites are being approved and developed with new plants being built in once idyllic landscapes.
- Alexandr Gurnov interviews Tatiana Sorokko, one of Russia's most famous and beautiful models, as she discusses fashion, style and her exhibition at the Moscow Fashion Museum.
- In Basra, a lack of clean water is making people ill. Locals are desperate and rioting. During the summer of 2018, over 150,000 cases of water poisoning were recorded in Iraq's second city, where the Tigris and Euphrates meet. The canals of Basra, once known as the Venice of the East, are in a shocking state, the salinity of the water is over 10 times of what it should be and Dr. Azzam Alwash and Dr. Jassim al-Asadi of "Nature Iraq" are scrambling for solutions.