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LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
I sopravvissuti condividono le loro storie ed esperienze di sopravvivenza all'estero.I sopravvissuti condividono le loro storie ed esperienze di sopravvivenza all'estero.I sopravvissuti condividono le loro storie ed esperienze di sopravvivenza all'estero.
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Five may not be the UK's most-watched terrestrial TV channel, but personally I think their programming is often far superior to either BBC1 or any of the ITV channels. They're particularly good at commissioning documentaries (which are a lot cheaper than drama, I guess), and have screened lively and informative docs covering everything from art, military history, engineering, medical issues to...well, you name it.
"Banged Up Abroad", produced by Raw TV, is a case in point. The reconstructions using actors are not cheesy (BBC, take note), the camera-work is not intrusive with faux-verite shakiness (everyone else, take note), it's well directed with the minimum of voice-over, and manages to extract heartfelt, and often very moving, narratives from the actual protagonists.
It also skillfully avoids falling into a trap of implicit racism concerning the foreign countries where people find themselves imprisoned. Very often conditions are shocking, and the prison system in question is failing miserably on inmates' rights, but the programme never lazily and simplistically portrays foreign nations as inherently corrupt and beyond-the-pale.
I've found every episode both gripping and illuminating from beginning to end. One can only imagine how hammy BBC1 would make it, with someone like Michael Burke doing the voice-over.
It's a shame that this series, currently airing, consists of only four episodes. This week they told the story of two American girls imprisoned in Peru, so perhaps they will continue to spread their net to relate the stories of other non-Brits. It would also be interesting to hear the stories of those not imprisoned for drug offences - how about the testimony of someone held at Guantanamo Bay?
Let's hope that this excellent programme has a third series.
"Banged Up Abroad", produced by Raw TV, is a case in point. The reconstructions using actors are not cheesy (BBC, take note), the camera-work is not intrusive with faux-verite shakiness (everyone else, take note), it's well directed with the minimum of voice-over, and manages to extract heartfelt, and often very moving, narratives from the actual protagonists.
It also skillfully avoids falling into a trap of implicit racism concerning the foreign countries where people find themselves imprisoned. Very often conditions are shocking, and the prison system in question is failing miserably on inmates' rights, but the programme never lazily and simplistically portrays foreign nations as inherently corrupt and beyond-the-pale.
I've found every episode both gripping and illuminating from beginning to end. One can only imagine how hammy BBC1 would make it, with someone like Michael Burke doing the voice-over.
It's a shame that this series, currently airing, consists of only four episodes. This week they told the story of two American girls imprisoned in Peru, so perhaps they will continue to spread their net to relate the stories of other non-Brits. It would also be interesting to hear the stories of those not imprisoned for drug offences - how about the testimony of someone held at Guantanamo Bay?
Let's hope that this excellent programme has a third series.
This is a very good program where people seem to actually learn from their mistakes and in a very extreme way. I like seeing how other prison systems work compaired to ours and this show does a good job portraying that. I also like to see how much time each person gets for what the smuggle, and in the end, they all seem to learn and grow from their experiences. Interestingly enough, if you smuggle from Mexico to America, you get ZERO time, no matter what you smuggle or how much. You are just sent back to repeat. Watch BorderForce USA: the wall, to see that in action. So to see how much time all these people get compaired to all those people getting no time for millions of dollars worth of Meth, Cocaine, and Fentanyl being smuggled over. It is kinda sad. At least these people learn a lesson after.
This is a very interesting series. I first saw some episodes five years ago, but recently after joining Netflix, I've watched a slew of newer episodes. The episodes have a lot of things in common with each other; nevertheless, each one has unique and interesting things as well. Each individual character is interesting in their own way. Furthermore, each story has its own interesting twists and turns. In a few episodes, I was skeptical of some story lines and details, but overall it's a great series. The production is very good, too.
This series should discourage people from trying to smuggle drugs overseas. Most of the individuals got caught up in the trade because they were young, naive, and just careless -- and, of course, the lure of lots of easy money. So, in addition to being entertaining, the series provides a public service to those who are considering thinking about drug smuggling. The series made me despise the higher level drug dealers who unashamedly and callously use amateurs to make them money. In many cases, these higher level scumbags purposely set up the amateurs to get caught.
Even though most of the episodes involve drug smuggling, some of them do not. In fact, one of my favorite episodes is about a guy named Glenn Hegstad, who has nothing to do with drugs, but is kidnapped by Colombian guerrillas. Anyway, I hope National Geographic produces more seasons of Locked Up Abroad.
This series should discourage people from trying to smuggle drugs overseas. Most of the individuals got caught up in the trade because they were young, naive, and just careless -- and, of course, the lure of lots of easy money. So, in addition to being entertaining, the series provides a public service to those who are considering thinking about drug smuggling. The series made me despise the higher level drug dealers who unashamedly and callously use amateurs to make them money. In many cases, these higher level scumbags purposely set up the amateurs to get caught.
Even though most of the episodes involve drug smuggling, some of them do not. In fact, one of my favorite episodes is about a guy named Glenn Hegstad, who has nothing to do with drugs, but is kidnapped by Colombian guerrillas. Anyway, I hope National Geographic produces more seasons of Locked Up Abroad.
My favorite show on National Geographic Channel! It's nice to hear the stories about many interesting lives, you can always learn a new life lesson. Altough I like the show very much, I would definitely want to hear the pure truth, not the variation of the story with some changes.
They call it 'schadenfreude' - the dubious thrill of watching other people's misfortunes, sometimes spiced with a feeling that it could so easily have been you.
Banged Up Abroad touches this nerve every time, and brings it all close to home; you are watching people very like your own friends and neighbours, suddenly pitchforked into a shockingly unfamiliar jail environment among people quite unlike them.
The 'us and them' factor (or indeed the very word 'abroad') raises the spectre of racial imagistics, rather in the tradition of Bing and Bob in their Road films, though strictly it's cultural rather than racial. (As for how far culture is impacted by race, that is of course endlessly debatable.) But under the test, there is no doubt that a good-looking young white woman, however guilty, is always made unmistakeably aware of her high rank in this world.
The main theme, though, is the simple contest between goodies and baddies, the baddies being sharply divided between the chuckling drug-barons in their safe havens and the wretched mules, mostly little people who've been tempted by greed into situations they can't handle.
It is that slippery slope that creates the drama, part-tragic, part-comic. The false hopes raised by just one mention of a five-figure reward. The inducement of a tropical holiday break free on the house. The fleeting friendships between gang-members, that turn so easily to loathing and mutual recrimination. The bland assurances that nothing can go wrong...
Welcome to a world tour of luxury yachts, quayside cocktails, false-bottomed suitcases, money-laundering, murderous cartels, corrupt police, sniffer-dogs, dirty needles, lesbian rape, bed-bugs, the lot.
Banged Up Abroad touches this nerve every time, and brings it all close to home; you are watching people very like your own friends and neighbours, suddenly pitchforked into a shockingly unfamiliar jail environment among people quite unlike them.
The 'us and them' factor (or indeed the very word 'abroad') raises the spectre of racial imagistics, rather in the tradition of Bing and Bob in their Road films, though strictly it's cultural rather than racial. (As for how far culture is impacted by race, that is of course endlessly debatable.) But under the test, there is no doubt that a good-looking young white woman, however guilty, is always made unmistakeably aware of her high rank in this world.
The main theme, though, is the simple contest between goodies and baddies, the baddies being sharply divided between the chuckling drug-barons in their safe havens and the wretched mules, mostly little people who've been tempted by greed into situations they can't handle.
It is that slippery slope that creates the drama, part-tragic, part-comic. The false hopes raised by just one mention of a five-figure reward. The inducement of a tropical holiday break free on the house. The fleeting friendships between gang-members, that turn so easily to loathing and mutual recrimination. The bland assurances that nothing can go wrong...
Welcome to a world tour of luxury yachts, quayside cocktails, false-bottomed suitcases, money-laundering, murderous cartels, corrupt police, sniffer-dogs, dirty needles, lesbian rape, bed-bugs, the lot.
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