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- Two journalists analyze the control of French private media by billionaires Bernard Arnault and Vincent Bolloré.
- They're bankers, traders, investment funds executives. They forgot all about morality to make money. The entire world had to suffer the consequences of their actions. They impoverished countries, drove millions of workers into unemployment, and contributed to the rise in extremism. So who are they? And, after the 2008 crisis, were the real culprits condemned? Could there be another?
- It chronicles the rise of Carlos Ghosn as well as the internal rivalries and tensions he sparked within Nissan-Renault and his dramatic arrest.
- In the last 10 years, the landscape of the pharmaceutical industry has changed. A handful of multinationals control the manufacture of most of the drugs.
- Secret internal documents reveal how Catholic Church officials protect priests accused of pedophilia and sexual abuse by moving them from country to country, sometimes as far away as Africa. Even Pope Francis is implicated. When he was bishop of Buenos Aires, he tried to influence the Argentinean justice system in order to protect a convicted priest.
- Starbucks' business empire is among the most recognizable multinational food companies on Earth. This investigative report explores the brand's appeal and the secrets of its success, while revealing the coffee giant's dark underside.
- Children as young as three are becoming addicted to mobile phones, harming their development and causing possible long-term damage. We follow some of the youngest cases and hear how our brains are affected by exposure to screens.
- Academics, public relations experts, and satirists of various kinds describe the history and nature of propaganda.
- Artificial intelligence is developing and the digital economy is expanding. To enable this millions of people are doing underpaid work that insults human intelligence.
- Le Monde en face is a French television program presenting a documentary followed by a debate.
- Special Investigation is a reporting and investigation program broadcast on Canal+ from September 2002 to June 2016, which took over from Lundi Investigation and 90 Minutes, previous investigation programs broadcast on Canal+. The investigative journalist Paul Moreira, who founded these two programs in 1999 and 2003, left Canal+ 2006 to create the Premières Lignes television press agency, which from the outset has been an important supplier of investigations for Special Investigation but also for Cash Investigation, founded in 2012 by Elise Lucet. From the mid-2010s, the show came under pressure over its revelations, denounced by the editorial team. In 2016, Geoffrey Livolsi, Nicolas Vescovacci, the two authors of an investigation which was to be broadcast on May 18, 2015 in Special Investigation, and Jean-Pierre Canet, editor-in-chief of the documentary, filed a complaint for "obstruction of freedom of expression", "abuse of corporate assets" and "abuse of power", to protest against these pressures. According to their complaint, Vincent Bolloré, president since 2014 of the supervisory board of Vivendi, parent company of Canal+, called the former general director of the encrypted channel, Rodolphe Belmer, since dismissed, to "demand the deprogramming of the documentary" , highlighting his friendship and business ties with the boss of the bank that the documentary was about.
- The decision not to extradite Julian Assange to the United States is unlikely to be the end of his long struggle. For the past 10 years, Premiere Lignes has investigated Assange and the WikiLeaks network. In their first film in 2011, they interviewed Julian Assange and his team and profiled these new transparency activists who aim to disrupt citizens' relationship with information. In 2013, they met Julian Assange again, interviewing him in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, where he described a society petrified by authoritarian excesses that he felt obliged to confront. At the time, Assange had no idea that he was going to spend seven years between four walls, watched by surveillance cameras. During the past decade, Wikileaks has come under constant pressure from the U.S. government. But the site continued to publish compromising documents that illuminate and shape our world. In 2016, its interventions in the US elections played a crucial role in the election of Donald Trump. In 2017, it tried to similarly influence the French election. Throughout all these years, the Première Lignes team continued to investigate, regularly filming new interviews. They met with Julian Assange's father, who regularly goes to Belmarsh prison near London, where his son is imprisoned. They also spoke to his lawyers who denounce Assange's arbitrary detention. Today, Julian Assange and WikiLeaks are at a turning point in their history. For his detractors, Assange is a spy and traitor who deserves his fate. For his supporters, the extradition request is a serious and unprecedented attack on the freedom of information, protected by the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Who's to say The Guardian, Der Spiegel or Le Monde could not also be prosecuted for collaborating with WikiLeaks?
- Acclaimed journalist Paul Moreira investigates how Russia manipulates public opinion, undermines democratic governments and attempts to alter world events. The public face of foreign policy: the state news channels, Sputnik and Russia Today. But working in the shadows is the hidden part: the hackers and trolls pushing the Russian agenda - The Russians know that public perception of their country has reached a new low. Russophobia is massive. Their message is tainted with illegitimacy. But how does the Russian information war machine work?
- A new global phenomenon: over-equipped police facing furious, defenseless crowds brandishing their cell phones to record everything. The war of images on social media further polarizes police and demonstrators.
- The documentary explores the dark secrets behind the origin and development of the fast fashion and its disastrous consequences on people's health and our planet.
- Cash Investigation is an investigative journalism TV show broadcasted in France. The show focuses on major topics and industries of our society (food, drugs, transportation, work, telecommunications, health, etc.) and often involves deep cover infiltrations worldwide. Cash Investigation is considered among the French as a major, if not the major, source of vulgarized investigative journalism.
- For the past 12 years, journalist Paul Moreira has travelled extensively in Iraq. In this film, he goes in search of the men he filmed back in 2003 at the very beginning of the American occupation. Through their stories, and by tracing the roots of ISIS to the arrival of Abu Mousab Al-Zarqawi and America's handling of the resistance, he tells the story of how Iraq became such a fractured nation.
- How come ham is pink? Why do we believe that it is good for our children? Why are product labels beyond understanding? Industrial giants are able to stall and orientate policy decisions that directly affect public health. No tactics seem too extreme. The industry targets politicians and researchers alike, not hesitating to even bribe scientists in an effort to protect their interests. When money is not good enough an incentive, they adopt a more brutal approach. Scientists are manipulated and discredited. Their crime: monitoring studies that underline the health risks of a particular product for the consumer.
- Six months ago, Maltese journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia was brutally killed by a car bomb just meters from her home. The investigation into her killing is ongoing, but there is little doubt that she was murdered because of her work. With a brazen, unapologetic and uncompromising style, she denounced corruption, nepotism, and all kinds of criminal behaviors in her tiny EU member state. A group of 45 journalists representing 18 news organizations from 15 countries picked up Daphne's work after it was abruptly halted by her gruesome death on the doorstep of Europe. For five months they kept digging - poring over her findings, gathering documents, talking to sources - to try to get to the bottom of the many leads the formidable woman left behind. The Daphne Project was coordinated and led by Forbidden Stories, a Paris-based organization established specifically to continue the work of killed, imprisoned, or otherwise incapacitated journalists. The Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) facilitated the sharing of documents and information across the participating organizations and assigned researchers and reporters to investigate the many allegations about wrongdoing among Malta's elite. The sun was shining on the day assassins took Daphne's life. Now her colleagues will shine many lights onto the stories that killed her. On April 17, we will start revealing what Daphne left behind. Watch this space.
- Over 300 foreign volunteers chose to give up their comfortable lives and go fight ISIS in Raqqa. We filmed them there, all the way up to when Raqqa was freed. Then we followed them back home - changed forever.
- For the past 12 years, journalist Paul Moreira has travelled extensively in Iraq. In this film, he goes in search of the men he filmed back in 2003, at the very beginning of the American occupation. Through their stories, and by tracing the roots of ISIS to the arrival of Abu Mousab Al-Zarqawi and America's handling of the resistance, he tells the story of how Iraq became such a fractured nation.
- Tony is ready to audition for drama drama. Steven, who is to help him with the counter-remarks, does not show up. Tony decides to never talk to Steven, the traitor, again.