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- In 1831, a woman flees her abusive marriage, moves to Paris under a male pseudonym, and challenges gender norms by wearing men's clothing, pursuing affairs, and advocating for women's rights through writing.
- Writers, singers, painters, iconic characters... "A house, an artist" revisits the life and journey of some big names, from the world of arts and culture, or those who have left a trace in our memory, by revealing the houses that marked their existence and fed their imagination.
- The principle of "Ce Soir (Ou Jamais!)" is to present live and in public "the news seen by culture". The program brought together guests with very varied profiles, around specific topical themes, which the speakers have the leisure to develop at length while the host stands back, only intervening sporadically to frame the debate. "Ce Soir (Ou Jamais!)" is broadcast daily, from 2006 to 2011, from Monday to Thursday (its duration is one hour and twenty minutes, generally including the interruption by Soir 3). In 2011, it became weekly with programming on Tuesday evenings and lengthened to two hours. The last issue on France 3 was broadcast on February 12, 2013. The show was transferred to France 2, every Friday evening, from March 8, 2013. At the end of May 2015, "Ce Soir (Ou Jamais!)" became the longest-lived cultural program on French television, in terms of the number of broadcasts (724 issues), beating the previous record set by Bernard Pivot's" Apostrophes". The last issue of "Ce Soir (Ou Jamais!)" is broadcast on May 20, 2016.
- In March 2015, the reality of terrorism takes on a new face, that of Rayan, a 12-year-old Toulouse child staged in a frightening video of Daech. Two months after the bombing that targeted "Charlie Hebdo", France, still under the shock of terror, discovers that one of his own children was turned into executioner by the organization of the Islamic State. In a second video released in the spring of 2016, two other French children coldly execute a jihadist group prisoner. The use of children in wars is not a new phenomenon, but Daech innovates with the scale of its devastating policies.
- Originally, a small village: Celles in Occitania district in France, 10 kilometers from Lodève, was to be swallowed up by the waters of Lac du Salagou when it was created in 1969. At the time, its inhabitants were expropriated but ultimately surprisingly, the village was never submerged. Inhabited for more than 50 years now, the children of this bruised village are fighting to bring their little town back to life. The Mayor of Celles, Joëlle Goudard, and the municipal councilors mobilized several years ago to revive the village. But what is the project that proposes to welcome new inhabitants? Will this dream come true?
- Thanks to the journey of its characters and by observing their daily lives, "The new key to the fields" answers essential questions: is the rapid disintegration of the countryside real, inexorable? Is this rural world a laboratory for inventing a new alternative way of life to the problems of the city? The new Clé des Champs offers an immersion in Puisaye. A territory that well represents the fabric that makes France. A territory where clichés about rurality are gradually covered by a different reality, often innovative and sometimes disturbing. Because it is undoubtedly in the countryside that things have changed the most in 20 years, in depth, but without a taste for the spectacular. Women, for example, have become major players in local life, often occupying positions of political responsibility. A commitment that is striking and particularly visible in the villages where energies swarm and come together to move the lines. A universe where personal commitment expresses the will to face challenges in order to solve them.
- While Arthur discovers his grandmother's lie that will put his future in question, Yasmine takes reckless risks and puts her life in danger. For his part, Bertier has been under increasing pressure since Elisabeth took over the reins of L. Cosmétiques.
- 2007– 1h 53m6.2 (6)TV EpisodeBorn in 1873 in Alençon, Thérèse Martin had the unusual ambition of becoming a great saint. At fifteen, she entered one of the most austere convents, the Carmel of Lisieux after soliciting the pope in person at the Vatican. Once she became a nun, Sister Thérèse lived within a community of 26 women and traced her little path towards holiness. She will lay down her experience in an autobiographical book, "Story of a Soul", which will be sold 500 million copies worldwide after her death. Died at the age of 24 from tuberculosis, Thérèse of Lisieux was to experience immediate and unexpected glory.
- 2007– 1h 55m6.2 (6)TV EpisodeBorn in 1798 in Caserta from the royal family of Sicily then tossed about by the revolutionary wars, Marie-Caroline grew up in Italy. She goes to France to marry the Duke of Berry, son of King Charles X who is charged by his father to give an heir to the Bourbon crown. The assassination of her husband in 1820 and the Revolution of 1830 pushed her to take an active role in the perpetuation of the monarchy in France. It is this story told by Stéphane Bern, who also lingers to draw the portrait of the Duchess, art lover, great patron and herself a painter on occasion.
- Catalonia is far from being limited to Barcelona, its capital. This region of Spain is divided into counties that have regained their autonomy since the country's return to democracy in the 1970s. Catalonia is full of beautiful and very diverse landscapes. If it is strong in very lively gastronomic and cultural traditions, this region is also marked by its modernism in architecture and art. Sophie Jovillard walks the streets of lesser-known cities and towns, such as Reus, the birthplace of Antoni Gaudi, the architect of the famous and still unfinished Sagrada Familia.
- Ludo takes a very dim view of the recent rapprochement between Akim and his former partner Noémie and struggles to position himself in front of them. The memory of their tormented history continues to torment him. The accident suffered by Jacques Mourre, who supplies L Cosmétiques en fleurs for their exclusive formulas, causes serious tensions with Myriam, who assumes the management of the company, both in her personal and professional circles. How will the situation evolve? Finally Rémi, for his part, finds himself immersed in the heart of a complex criminal investigation.
- My life as a Pôle Emploi advisor Pôle emploi is on the front line of the economic and social crisis. While unemployment is likely to increase in the coming months, the public body has announced the arrival of nearly 3,000 additional advisers. But will he be up to the challenge? In some agencies, lack of agent training, failing management, job seekers left to their fate: we investigated behind the scenes of this major recruitment. Some newly hired agents are in contact with job seekers from their first days without having received any instructions: they find themselves unable to answer the slightest question. Others have the responsibility of individually supporting dozens of unemployed people, still without having received the training necessary for their mission. They realize that job seekers have had no contact with their agency for months or even years without anyone worrying about it. An investigation by Charlotte Renot, Clémentine Mazoyer and Colin Guillemant with STP Productions. Hunters all allowed? They grew up in the middle of these rural landscapes but for a few weeks when they walk there, it is the ball in the belly. Peggy, Sarah and Zoé lost their friend, Morgan Keane, 25, killed on December 2 by a hunter while he was chopping wood near his house, in Calvignac in the Lot. Since then, Morgan's friends and other residents have decided to set up a collective to collect dozens of testimonies from hunting victims and denounce what they describe as an omerta in the countryside. The hunters themselves feel wrongly accused and defend a useful practice for the community. Dive into a valley where gunshots no longer resound as before. An investigation by Perrine Bonnet, Loup Krikorian and Benoît Sauvage. my life as an astronaut On April 22, Frenchman Thomas Pesquet will return to space for another 6-month stay on the International Space Station. He has been preparing for this new mission and all the risks it entails for more than a year. The astronaut agreed to tell us about this new adventure and to comment for us on the images of his hundreds of hours of training. How to put out a fire on board the station, how to keep your cool during a spacewalk, what menus to take on board, what scientific experiments to conduct? He will tell us all the details of this incredible mission. A report by Laura Aguirre de Carcer, Elodie Delevoye and Michel Pignard. Poland, the fight of women It is a revolt of women of all generations: in Poland, since last October, huge demonstrations have shaken the country, unheard of since 1989 and the fall of communism. At the heart of this popular movement, the toughening of the law on the right to abortion. From now on, abortion will no longer be possible in the event of a malformed fetus, which represented nearly 90% of abortions in the country, but only in the event of rape, incest or pregnancy dangerous to the health of the woman. A decision that has changed the daily lives of thousands of young women. We will meet Mola, a 19-year-old activist victim of police violence, Natalia who had to have an abortion alone at home and is now helping other women to have access to abortion pills, or even Grandmother Kasia, a famous 65-year-old feminist who today challenges the police. A report by Magdalena Chodownik, Kouba Kaminski and Xavier Puyperoux with FTV studio.
- Episode: (2022)1989– 1h 50mTV EpisodeReindustrialization: the thunderclap: Unemployment, poverty, small businesses in distress... In Tonnerre, in Yonne, the disappearance of the industrial fabric has created a gaping void. Since the closure in 2004 of the Thomson video recorder factory, the economic lung of the town has disappeared. But the city decided to bounce back. It is this story that we have chosen to tell: that of a city that comes to terms with its past of deindustrialization, but which is gradually regaining ambition. A report by STP Prod The digital castaways: Special Envoy embarked with Christophe Ceylan and Sylvère Latscha. Advisers of the Secours Populaire, they crisscross the roads of Meurthe-et-Moselle in Lorraine in a motorhome to support the inhabitants in their online procedures. From village to village, they come to the aid of those forgotten by the all-digital and the dematerialization of public services. A report by Alice Gauvin, Elodie Delevoye and Max Paquereau These Russians fleeing Putin: These Russians packed their bags the day after the invasion of Ukraine. They go alone or with family. They are engineers, artists or human rights activists. We found them in Istanbul in Turkey where their community is organizing to build a new life. A report by Virginie Vilar, Olivier Sibille, Annie Tribouard and Benoît Sauvage.
- 1989– 1h 52mTV EpisodeThe Cobalt Damned A report by Julien Fouchet and Marielle Krouk The scene is chilling: Hervé, a young Congolese, goes down every day into a narrow well, which he dug himself, in search of cobalt. This mineral is essential to our energy transition. It is used, among other things, in the manufacture of electric batteries. Special Envoy accompanied one of these "damned cobalt" working 20 meters underground in these artisanal mines, which fail to collapse at any time, and where oxygen is scarce. With the strength of the arms, each month, Hervé brings up a ton of cobalt. Sale price: 1100 euros. What slightly improve his daily life and that of his family, but not enough to get out of poverty. A paradox, when you think that the Democratic Republic of Congo is the largest cobalt reserve in the world. The country could have used this providential windfall to finally bring its population out of underdevelopment. Yet the vast majority of Congolese barely benefit from this resource. The authorities have sold the main mines to foreign companies, mostly Chinese. Only crumbs of cobalt remain for the Congolese, who see, before their eyes, the natural wealth of their country confiscated by other nations. Cocaine while driving: the new scourge A report by Anaïs Bard, Olivier Sibille, Juliette Jonas, Julien Fouchet, Lila Bellili and Marielle Krouk After the accident caused by Pierre Palmade, investigate these more and more drug addicts on our roads. These users of cocaine or other narcotics take the wheel without realizing the risks they run and the danger they represent for other motorists. Results, sometimes shattered lives and opposite, for these speeders, sentences often considered far too light by the victims. In 2022, more than 700 people are believed to have lost their lives as a result of accidents involving the use of cocaine or cannabis. The broken choirs A report by Brice Lambert, Grégory Roudier and Vincent Fajeau, for StudioFact It is a muffled world, often bourgeois, where speech is finally free: that of children's choirs. The teams of Special Envoy, in partnership with the newspaper Le Parisien, reveal several sexual abuses which would have been committed on young singers by choir directors, in particular within the choir school of Moineaux du Val-de-Marne, in the suburbs Parisian. An unprecedented investigation, with rare testimonies and archives that show that one of these choir leaders could have gone from choir to choir thanks to the complicit silence of several employers. Who goes piano goes lontano A report by Violaine Vermot-Gaud, Claire-Marie Denis, Luis Marques, Benoît Sauvage, Mathilde Rougeron and Marie Bouchet. Her life, she "has always lived it in music". Colette Maze, born June 16, 1914, is a pianist. For her, "everything is rhythm", music "is a world of images, beauty, colors" and "a hand is like a brush, each finger must have its own poetry". She discovered the piano very young, preferred it to her dolls and never stopped playing. Her instrument "gave her tenderness", perhaps the one that was missing from this child whose mother "was tough and only knew how to slap". A graduate of the Normal School of Music in Paris, Colette Maze took lessons from Pascal Rogé, then became a piano teacher and practiced all her life. At 108, she still practices every day for four to five hours on her Steinway, chosen for its "good sound".
- The journey begins in Tamanrasset where we welcome Khadjia. At the market, she meets an artisan who shows her around his Tuareg house. The evening ends in music with a local band. The next day, Sophie Jovillard discovers, in the company of Sister Marie-Jo, the Catholic religious community of the city. Then, with her guide, she takes the road aboard a 4x4, towards the Sahara and its capital Tamanrasset, the red city of the blue men. There she discovers the spiritual attraction of the Assekrem plateau, the majestic Ahaggar National Park and meets the Tuareg of today: between modernity and tradition.
- Algeria is waking up, offering a new face. This week at the controls of the show, Raphaël de Casabianca discovers the country, from Algiers to Oran, along a magnificent coast. He meets Algerians who explore, seek each other, innovate or bring old traditions up to date, collecting their testimonies. A sunny and surprising trip, in the particular atmosphere of the beautiful summer months.
- On the ground in Israel and Lebanon:The "Special Envoy" teams went to Israel, with reports from Clément Le Goff and Julien Fouchet and, from Lebanon, Loïc de La Mornais on set in the Palestinian refugee camps, Potato gleaners A report by Arnaud Muller, Loïc Célarié and Christophe Wideman. Heroin, the poison of the countryside: A report by Florian Le Moal, Mathieu Dreujou and Nicolas Berthelot. In the east of France, the Meuse department has barely 185,000 inhabitants. In its rural landscape, the "Special Envoy" team discovered villages plagued by drugs. Dominique Guirlet, a former Samu doctor who became an addictologist, sees the ravages of heroin every day, in which she sees the equivalent of "a third war"... With the Csapa Centr'aid team, she travels all over the Department. Here, drug addicts are sometimes well integrated into society, because hard drugs circulate easily, making their use commonplace. They also occupy a significant place in judicial activity. The prosecutor of Bar-le-Duc, Sofian Saboulard, discovered campaigns poisoned by drugs, in particular cheap heroin, and organized crime coming from Metz and Nancy. According to him, it is an "abandoned territory", with "difficulties of access to transport and employment", and heroin, financially accessible, seems present in all the communes. Marine wind power: the rush for wind: A report by Eléna Le Runigo, François Cauwel, Marc Sainsauve and Jeanne Bureau for Hikari. The French coastline will radically change in the coming years. By 2030, France should operate 17 offshore wind farms. The next one, in Brittany, off the coast of Saint-Brieuc, began producing electricity during the summer of 2023. The Spanish energy company Iberdrola is installing 62 masts 207 meters high which will power 835,000 homes. A gigantic project that the "Special Envoy" teams were able to follow exclusively. Fishermen fear seeing their scallop resources disappear. Are they right to be worried? Near Batz-sur-Mer, the very first offshore wind farm has been visible since the summer of 2022. The skyline is definitely no longer the same... What do locals and tourists think? In Scotland, we no longer really ask the question because the offshore wind turbines are part of the decor. Manufacturers have taken a head start and are already preparing the new technology: floating wind turbines.
- Michelin, in the secrets of the stars: A report by Olivier Sibille, Matthieu Renier, Guillaume Marque, Thierry Mongellaz. While the 2024 stars have just been awarded by the Michelin Guide, the magazine goes behind the scenes of the famous red guide. Exceptionally, "Special Envoy" was able to accompany one of his inspectors in the field, to understand how those who crown and bring down the kings of gastronomy work. We discover the ultra-confidential meetings in which stars are granted or withdrawn from restaurants. For the first time, we see a "star maker" at work, one of those consultants that more and more chefs call on to try to win a new star, but whose employment remains taboo behind the stove . In a rapidly changing world of gastronomy, what does the big red book still embody? A century-old institution that inspires respect but whose methods are sometimes criticized... Why do some chefs turn away from it, when so many others still dream of it? What do the famous stars change for them? Have they become too economically dependent on it? How has the recipe for winning them changed? But chefs are no longer the only ones competing. The Michelin Guide itself faces new challenges. Supplanted by internet applications, the paper guide no longer sells much and it faces increasing competition. To find new sources of income, it embarked on international development, sending its inspectors all over the world. "Special Envoy" accompanied them in search of these new stars... Manon Fleury, a chef who hits the mark: A report by Violaine Vermot-Gaud, Matthieu Renier, Mathieu Dreujou, Amandine Stelletta, Luis Marques and Julie Martin. Manon Fleury is a young chef who, after being a high-level athlete, launched into haute cuisine. Drawing on her experience working with star chefs, she is now opening her own address. This thirty-year-old intends to defend another vision of the restaurant: she chooses to surround herself with female chefs and campaigns for benevolent management in kitchens where violence has long been kept silent. The Valley of Happiness: A report by Christophe Duchiron and Frédéric Capron with Bonne Compagnie. It is the story of a rebirth, that of the Aldudes valley, a small landlocked territory at the bottom of a Pyrenean valley, which has managed to resist desertification and unemployment. It all started with an idea: that of a butcher and charcutier who took over a family farm with a handful of breeders to revive an ancient breed of Basque pigs. Artisanal breeding, with the desire to produce only quality in mind. Today, local hams and cured products are exported to Hong Kong, Singapore and Canada. Carried away by this momentum, the other inhabitants of the valley are getting involved in their turn: mountain trout, sheep's milk cheeses, the valley specializes in high-end local products. And it works . At a time when many villages are dying for lack of work and inhabitants, the valley is coming back to life. Presented by: Elise Lucet.
- Tom is invited by Noura on a date who does not say his name. Will he manage to find the money in time to honor the appointment? Alex saves Johanna and will do everything possible to find her attacker. And, for that, he knows that the devil is in the details.
- Algeria is waking up, offering a new face. This week at the controls of the show, Raphaël de Casabianca discovers the country, from Algiers to Oran, along a magnificent coast. He meets Algerians who explore, seek each other, innovate or bring old traditions up to date, collecting their testimonies. A sunny and surprising trip, in the particular atmosphere of the beautiful summer months.