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- Danguole Rasalaites came from Lithuania to Sweden when she was 16 years old. She was stripped of her passport and held in an apartment in Malmö where she was forced to prostitute herself.
- British rock band Oasis perform a one-off gig at the Cliffs Pavilion in Southend, England in 1995.
- A young panda prince is found unworthy by his mother the Queen, and expelled from the forest. In his journey, he battles dangerous enemies and gets captures and forced to work in a circus.
- The story of German architect Albert Speer, who became one of Hitler's closest allies.
- Behind the scenes of six of the greatest Swedish cultural upsets of our time. When the media storm blows hardest, it can be difficult to see what the core of the discussion really is and why the event has become so infected.
- Scientist Roland Marco believes that sun symbols might change human behavior and he wears an old ring with such a symbol. Is this why terrible things start happening all around him?
- Although Butoh is often viewed as Japan's equivalent of modern dance, in actuality it has little to do with the rational principles of modernism. Butoh is a theater of improvisation which places the personal experiences of the dancer on center-stage. The dancer is used as a medium to his or her inner life, but not for the portrayal of day to day existence. A Dionysian dance of nudity, eroticism, and sexuality, Butoh's scale of expression ranges from meditative tenderness to excessive grotesqueness. By reestablishing the ancient Japanese connection of dance, music, and masks, and by recalling the Buddhist death dances of rural Japan, Butoh incorporates much traditional theater. At the same time, it is a movement of resistance against the abandonment of traditional culture to a highly organized consumer-oriented society. An alliance of tradition and rebellion, Butoh is one of the most fascinating underground dance movements. "Butoh: Body on the Edge of Crisis" is a visually striking film portrait shot on location in Japan with the participation of the major Butoh choreographers and their companies.
- Comedy about a cab driver who is a bigamist.
- Ailing millionaire Jonathan Hardcastle wants to give £10,000 to the only son of his late best friend. Unfortunately it turns out his friend had four identical sons.
- Dr. Lydia Kowalenko loses her job at a pharmaceutical company after she refuses to cover up the shortcomings of certain captive preparations that have already cost lives. Through connections, she soon finds herself a new position. Shortly afterwards, however, her old boss gets her back under his wing again due to a company merger. This time around, she begins to conform. Her daughter Katia, also a doctor, is unscrupulously intent on pursuing her own career from the outset. Driven by her research ambitions, she carries out an unnecessary operative intervention in the clinic on a female patient who then dies from the operation's complications. Katia's son Thomas, who also wants to become a doctor, works as an assistant in the pathology department. He witnesses how the case is covered up and how litigation by the clinic director is quickly forestalled. When Thomas has an accident, he dies in the hospital before the eyes of his relatives, who do not know whether he succumbed to his injuries or if he was a victim of an artificial blood transfusion.
- "Ministry of Fear" - It may seem strange to voluntarily be intimidated, to glance through the door to the uncontrollable, to the phobias, the death anxiety and to the encapsulated, dark secrets.
- Depicts Skinheads in Stockholm, Sweden, their political agenda, way of life and private thoughts and future dreams.
- "The Era - Punk in three parts" - depicts when punk rock spread across Sweden in 1977. Who were the role models and how did it come to be and sound.
- "24 Minutes" was a talk show with various topics and guests, produced by Swedish Television for the new channel SVT24.
- A weekly Swedish popular music program featuring live acts/performers, music videos, charts and new influences like breakdance and electric boogie.
- "My Two Lives" - Bipolar disorder is one of the most common mental illnesses. In this 3-part documentary series Ann Heberlein, who herself has been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, meets others affected.
- A Swedish entertainment, music and comedy show hosted by Janne "Loffe" Carlsson, presenting a wide variety of artists.
- "Furious Friday" - a youth culture show including international and national performers, videos and commentary.
- At a Swedish lodge country and western music is performed by various artist, with Alf Robertson as host.
- About the artist Tamara de Lempicka. At the outbreak of the World War One she fled Poland and settled in Paris. She was quickly drawn into the interaction with Paris's cultural elite.
- An hour of cultural pieces, artists, performers, exhibitions, offbeat and current culture events.
- Meet Thor Heyerdahl just before he reached 80 years in 1994. Through expeditions, authorship and scientific work he is changing the theories of our world's cultural history. Peru and Cuba have been at the center of his work in recent years, but privately he is now building his new home in Tenerife, one of his many future projects.
- A Swedish cultural program that deals with current events, trends and content.
- About the Sweden Democrats (SD) preparations before the general election September 19, 2010. They are investing ambitiously to get into the Swedish Parliament, Riksdagen.
- Ferdinand the Bull really existed. And everything was just like in the fairy tale. But the end was something completely different.
- "Sámi Winds" - a TV-series that reflects life and culture in the Sámi communities in the north of Sweden, a part of Sápmi.
- A monthly Sámi TV-series presenting culture and current events in Sápmi and the rest of the world.
- 100 days has passed since the parliamentary election September 19, 2010. What immediate impact has the Sweden Democrats (SD) had so far?
- Maria Schildknecht (1881-1977) was a Swedish actress educated at The Royal Dramatic Theatre's acting school in Stockholm 1898-1901, she made her stage debut in 1905, was a member of the ensemble at August Strindberg's Intima Teatern 1907-1910, followed by decades of stardom at The Royal Dramatic Theatre and Göteborg's City Theatre.
- A portrait of Per Åhlin, who has been called the father of Swedish animation. Meet the man who has created the saga of Karl-Bertil Jonsson's Christmas Eve, Dunderklumpen, the Journey to Melonia and Hundhotellet, and who for decades had a close collaboration with Hasse and Tage.
- About the theater repertoire, news and depths on stage.
- A weekly magazine of cool conversations and wild discussions about art. Images that seduce and provoke.
- "Author Today" - ten completely different female writers are being presented.
- Ernst Wollweber, German communist, active in Sweden during the Second World War, eventually Stasi commander in the GDR, finally purged and forgotten.
- "Judge for yourself." - A program that follows trials and judicial deliberations in various legal cases.
- "The Power and the Truth" - depicts the Geijer-affair in 1977 where journalist Peter Bratt was forced to publish an apology in the Dagens Nyheter even though it turned out that everything he had previously written in the case was true.
- Hans Münch was an infectious disease physician at KZ Auschwitz. His task was to prevent epidemics in the overcrowded camps. When he was forced to actively participate in the mass murder, he began to protest.
- "The Gang of Four" - Four women meet to talk about the big issues of the time, about the wars and politics. A meeting at the highest level, as the women are four of our country's political pioneers.
- "Only in Stockholm" - Local writers invite us on storytelling adventures in varied, colorful, even scary and sometimes very unusual metropolitan environments in the city of Stockholm, Sweden..
- Silence Records is a record label run by the sound engineer Anders Lind together with Eva Wilke and later also Nikolaj Steenstrup. For decades, the company has provided us with innovative, intrinsic and magical music.
- "Texas - for real" - a journey through the wealth and poverty of the Republic of Texas, admitted to the Union in 1845. Among the rich landowners, the cowboy tradition of the ranches, the craftsmen, to the less fortunate minorities and immigrants, those that cross the border illegally, or the many sides of American music developed all over the state -"You don't just move to Texas. It moves into you."
- All kinds of music performed live in studio, combined with relaxed conversations about the meaning of music.
- The West German Embassy siege in Stockholm, Sweden, was a hostage standoff initiated by the Red Army Faction (RAF) on 24 April 1975. Collectively, the attackers referred to themselves as Kommando Holger Meins.
- Stina Lundberg-Dabrowski meet people who have had an impact on the outside world.
- International rock concerts, interviews and reportage.
- "The Film That Didn't Get Made" - What happens to a human being when she retires and no longer has the job to lean on?
- "Top of the Hymns" - What are the most popular spiritual songs in Sweden? The program presents a list where the viewers voted for the most beautiful hymn.
- "Nor should a man put on women's clothing" - about transidentity.
- Miles Davis Quintet: Live in Stockholm - Recorded on October 31, 1967, at Konserthuset, Stockholm, Sweden.
- "Pain in the Soul" - a Swedish 7-part series about psychiatry and psychiatric treatment.