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1-44 of 44
- "Mission: The Shoemaker Gang" - a criminal organization in Sweden that engaged in extensive drug smuggling and trafficking in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The leader Kivork Wartanian ran a shoe repair business as cover.
- "Who cares about Somalia"? The emergency aid to starving Somalia both helps and overthrows a country that never seems to recover from its own tragedy. Claes JB Löfgren has traveled in Somalia for six months and mapped how the international emergency aid relieves acute famine, but also fuels corruption, crime and a bloody civil war.
- A TV-series about the human psyche where the Swedish mentalist Henrik Fexeus performed psychological experiments on unsuspecting people, often filmed with hidden camera.
- A compilation of moving images of the Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme's many battles in politics. Where the Vietnam War has a prominent role along with South Africa's apartheid.
- It happened in the heart of Stockholm. Four young men felt offended, rejected. It ended in a violent massacre. The murders at Stureplan was an act of violence that took place on December 4, 1994 in Stockholm. A guard and three guests were killed at the Sturecompagniet nightclub when Tommy Zethraeus, according to the conviction, opened fire straight into the entrance. Guillermo Marquez Jara was also convicted of assisting in gross negligence until another's death. At the shooting, doorman Joakim "Jocke" Jonsson and three pub guests were killed: Kristina Oséen, Katinka Genberg and the deaf author Daniella Josberg. All killed were 21 or 22 years old.
- About women's history, the French Revolution, the suffragettes and Swedish women's suffrage, about Alva Myrdal's collective house and about the Red Socks of the 60's. About women's struggle for justice, equality, for equal pay and more.
- A four-part TV-series about the new political orientation and activism which expressed itself like urban guerrilla warfare including bank robbery, kidnapping and bombs. The series focus mainly on the RAF - Red Army Fraction - a.k.a. the Baader-Meinhof Group - and their actions in West Germany and Sweden.
- Baader-Meinhof was a West German terrorist group, active between 1970 and 1990; also collective name for several parallel groups in West Germany that carried out terrorist activities.
- "You must be crazy if you are not scared" - about children's fear in every day life, in fantasies and for the future.
- A news program with an eye on the world's hot spots and problem areas.
- The Swedish journalist Janne Josefsson returns to some of the more pressing reports he has done in the past.
- A 10-part-series about popular science, where viewers are invited to ask questions to a panel of experts.
- "Revolution in Sweden?" - a discussion about the influence of the left wing parties in Swedish politics and about the conditions for a societal transformation.
- "Channel 3 - no regular magazine program" deals with issues and current events from a slightly different angle.
- "Mission Sweden" - about injustices, invisible problems, social structures and lack of empathy with our fellow human beings.
- A society magazine that provokes and attacks in a mixture of deepest seriousness, irony and humor.
- "Close-up Sweden" - examine reports and debate on current urgent events.
- About the workers who had their lives destroyed while working at Skandinaviska Eternit AB in Lomma. They were daily exposed to work with or around asbestos. The factory closed in 1977 after workers became seriously ill from working with asbestos. A few died working. The company was called Skandinaviska Eternit AB ever since its inception in 1906. The products were stamped "Lomma Eternit". The company was owned by Skånska Cement.
- A TV-series about environmental issues in a rapidly growing world that does not fully agree on how/why we need to save the planet.
- "Absolute Arabic" - examines how the language develop in Europe today and what Arabic influences can be found in European culture.
- Mary Barnes talks about her time at the Kingsley Hall collective, East London, about her self-chosen mental breakdown that became a breakthrough towards a more personal life.
- In 1967 the first group of Swedes traveled to Saint Hill Manor, Sussex, UK, to meet L Ron Hubbard, and learn about Scientology and Dianetics.
- About Peter Tillberg - a Swedish painter, illustrator, set designer and sculptor. He became known in the 1970s for his public debate paintings in photo-realistic style.
- Since its inception, the Narcotics Penal Code has been reformed on several occasions in order to clearly mark that drug use is not acceptable. In 1972, the maximum sentence for serious drug offenses was increased to ten years, which is the strictest time-limited sentence. Now, in 1982, some politicians want to go further with the criminalization of narcotics.
- About the Swedish writer of fiction and screenplays Astrid Lindgren (1907-2002), one of the most popular people of our time. Made for her 80th birthday in 1987, recorded in the home on Dalagatan in Stockholm and at her childhood home outside Vimmerby. Margareta Strömstedt interviews Astrid Lindgren best known for several children's book series, featuring Pippi Longstocking, Emil of Lönneberga, Karlsson-on-the-Roof, and the Six Bullerby Children (Children of Noisy Village in the US), and for the children's fantasy novels Mio, My Son, Ronia the Robber's Daughter, and The Brothers Lionheart.