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- Benjamin Zand investigates the bizarre and disturbing allegations surrounding the sex life of the U.S. R&B star, including accusations of holding women against their will at his home in Atlanta and running a degrading 'sex cult'.
- Ellie Flynn investigates people making money from selling nude photos and videos of themselves to internet sites, asking if more needs to be done to protect underage and vulnerable contributors.
- The travel writer and broadcaster journeys around the Mediterranean discovering the extremes that lie beneath the picture postcard tourist veneer.
- Simon Reeves makes another "round the world" trip following the tropic of Capricorn which is parallel (but shorter) to the equator in the Southern hemisphere. Again each episode is a rapid visit to one or more countries, in (Austral)Asia, Latin America or Africa, exploring strategic issues as well as daily life for locals, tourists and planners.
- The story of American teenager Nathon Brooks who at the age of 14 shot his mother and father while they slept. Incredibly they both survived and are trying to come to terms with what their son did.
- Documentary telling the jaw-dropping story of Carl Beech, a former nurse from Gloucester who claimed he had been sexually abused by a group of prominent men in the 1970s and 80s leading to a £2 million police investigation.
- Benjamin Zand hosts a social experiment in which a group of people watch a drama in 3 parts, debate what constitutes sexual harassment, hear from people whose life has been affected and from a barrister who explains the law.
- For most people the equator is just an imaginary line running 25,000-miles around the globe. But the countries along the equator are among the most troubled on the planet. In this new series Simon takes a journey around the region with the greatest natural biodiversity and perhaps the greatest concentration of human suffering: the equator. In Equator Simon meets illegal loggers, father and son circumcisers, drunk villagers, and a young woman stuck in the baking desert. Simon and the Equator film-crew are protected by soldiers in a coca field, and UN 'peace-enforcers' in a gold mine. They are blackmailed and abandoned by drivers in one country, and travel through another that has just 300 miles of paved roads - despite being the size of Western Europe. Simon is drenched while white-water rafting, surrounded by a million flamingos and swallowed by a tidal wave. After being warned about the deadly virus Ebola, Simon vomits blood and develops a temperature of nearly 40C. Diagnosed with malaria, he's saved by medicine derived from the Vietnamese sweet wormwood. One remote tribe takes Simon to their sacred monument, while a father from another tribe of former head-hunters decides to make Simon part of the family. After presenting his 'father' with a fine pair of trousers, Simon is blessed with blood, presented with a short sword, and adopted. Simon discovers a matrilineal society where daughters are called 'iron butterflies', mass graves in the jungle, and islands where protesting fisherman have killed giant tortoises. He helps an orphaned orangutan into a tree, swims with sea-lions, fishes for piranha, climbs the equivalent of half-way up Everest, and discovers the city thought to be most at risk from volcanic eruptions. Simon's trip takes him through the nation suffering the worst humanitarian crisis in the Western hemisphere, and the African country that's endured the most violent conflict on the planet since the Second World War
- A look at the role of Saudi Arabia in recent years in politics and international conflicts, in particular at the changes in politics in recent years, as the kingdom is changing under the rule of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
- Revealing who and what made immigration unignorable for New Labour and Cameron's Tories. Blair, Cameron, Farage, migrant activists and government and media insiders go on record.
- What connects amateur sleuths turning up at crime scenes, anti-social behavior in UK schools and riots in France? The answer, according to a BBC investigation, is that they are all examples of a TikTok 'frenzy'.
- Are masked men responsible for people dying as they try to cross the Mediterranean? This film reveals the dark secret hidden behind the beauty of Greece's holiday islands.
- The story of the triumphs and controversies of Britain's cycling medal factory. The architects of Britain's rise to cycling dominance at the Olympics and the Tour De France reveal how they did it and answer their critics.
- As the E.U. Referendum nears, Laura Kuenssberg examines some of the big questions at the heart of the debate. Would the UK be richer or poorer if it left and what are the benefits of remaining.
- A three-part documentary series following the people designing the new benefit system, the staff in Jobcentres implementing it and the claimants living on Universal Credit.
- Pickets and people power. Unprecedented access to the people at the heart of the biggest wave of strikes in a generation - from the union leaders to the workers on the frontline.
- Emily Maitlis presents this examination of Dominic Cummings's place in British politics over the last two decades, from Blair to Brexit and beyond.
- Reporter Livvy Haydock meets some of the new breed of criminals who commit their crimes from the back of motorcycles and mopeds in the congested streets of Britain's cities.
- What is going on beneath the surface? Paul Whitehouse travels around England and Wales to explore why rivers and waterways are in decline and what needs to be done to protect them. In this series Paul looks at the impact water companies have on its rivers and waterways. Later on Paul sees how explosions of algae, caused by fertiliser runoff from farming, are part of a cocktail overwhelming the habitat.
- Ade Adepitan travels to the frontline of climate change. He discovers how life is being affected even now and scours the globe for some potential solutions.
- Presidents Donald Trump, Viktor Orbán and Recep Tayyip Erdogan agree: US multi-billionaire George Soros is the number one public enemy because he is allegedly planning a new world order. All media of the extreme right are in the same vein: Allegedly, Soros is in the process of destabilizing the USA, Hungary or the whole world, flooding them with migrants and eliminating Trump. The right-wing populist criticism of Soros' philanthropic and political engagement, especially in Eastern Europe, has clear anti-Semitic features and is characterized by hatred of Jews that should give food for thought. Activists and ordinary US citizens are associated with Soros and covered with smear campaigns. The crudest and most daring conspiracy theories are in circulation. Some people who are brainwashed as a result take action with serious consequences. But these dangerous conspiracy theories stand up to a fact check. This factual current affairs documentary investigates the question and finds answers.
- Ahead of the U.S. Presidential Elections, Angela Scanlon travels across America to meet some of Donald Trump's most unlikely supporters - including a second-generation Mexican American who wants Trump to build that wall.
- Sugar Babies and Sugar Daddies, paired up on a website with the promise of money, gifts and a luxury lifestyle. It sounds unsavory, but is it a legitimate business?