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- On 26 November 1942, 529 Jewish people were sent by ship from Oslo. Now, 80 years later, some of the people who grew up during the war tells us about what really happened to the Jews in the streets.
- Three Norwegian fashion bloggers travel to Cambodia. There they get to experience the everyday life of the workers in the textile industry. After meeting and talking to real people these privileged youths come to the conclusion that the world is extremly unfair and the only reason why they are rich is because people like the textile workers are poor.
- As 15-year-old shy boy, Lillebjørn Nilsen was brought into the limelight due to his talent. Now, he tells us his life story about music, fame, and his eternal longing for peace.
- Artificial general intelligence can be humanity's salvation, or its downfall. What did Ilya Sutskever think about the relationship between man and machine when he developed what is today the most powerful artificial intelligence - ChatGPT?
- A burning insider account of the hopes and dreams of Iraqi youth, led by a 19-year-old woman who faces the enormous consequences of fighting for democracy, freedom and a future.
- We executed 25 of our own after World War II. A dark chapter in Norway's history. Who were they really, and did they deserve to die?
- Hans Thomas Waaler has lost his big love: Liv Aud Waaler. He tells us about his life with Liv, from the time of youth when there was love at first sight, and over to the time when Liv suffered from Alzheimer. According to him, love has always a great price: Sorrow. This is his story.
- The film chronicles the life of author Thorvald Steen, who suffers from facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy; a rare waste disorder that gradually and irreversibly paralyzes his body. The disease, however, has never stopped Thorvald. He is still an active public debater, freedom of speech advocate, author and cultural communicator, although his ski jumping days are over. Through Thorvald's own wonderful sense of humor and storytelling abilities, the film paints an intimate and poetic picture of an unusual life and the man who's still very much enjoying it. The well-known Norwegian photographer Per Maning has followed Thorvald with his camera for 25 years and documented Thorvald's development. The result is a unique and rare portrait of the meaning of life.
- David Lynch's visit to Norway.
- Christian Strand was adopted when he was a baby in Indonesia. Since then, he has never searched for the truth due to fear about his background, until now.
- The film follows Artemis, a Norwegian trans woman who wants to complete her transformation, with the challenges this brings in an early phase of the gender correction process.
- On July 22nd 2011, Norway experienced incomprehensible terror. However, it was not the first time one in our midst used extreme measures to create fear and panic.
- Ragnar Ulstein was the freedom fighter who did flee to England to join the resistance in 1941. After the war was over, he exchanged weapons with a pen and became journalist, writer and historian. Ragnar is telling his entire story.
- Former Barista World Champion, Tim Wendelboe shows you how to make outstanding home brew in your own kitchen.
- Utøya is a Norwegian island with a story that stops at 14 PM on July 22, 2011. In 1933 LO bought it from Jens Bratlie, a conservative man. Throughout the years, there have been happiness, dissension, friendship and love. The island was a mixture of emotions and politics which was very special, according to Hanne Grotjord who met her husband Thorbjørn Jagland there. There are examples of lasting ties being linked to the island, and the director of this documentary program Edvard Hambro says: 'Political ideas have been born here - ideas that we may be taking for granted today. The goal has been to provide an experience and understanding of what the island has been and meant for so many'.
- "Gjennom Nåløyet" follows three aspiring students through a semester of the one-year program in psychology at the University of Bergen, who all dream of becoming a psychologist. Their stories offer an unique insight that shows what it implies to fight for something - to sacrifice everything for a period of your life knowing that your endless efforts might all be in vain.
- Before the WWII, the Nazis had taken power in Germany, and Jews started being harassed. Liv, Gerd and Siegmund are just some of the people who lived their safe life in peaceful Norway, until the war came there too.
- During the spring and autumn of 1942, all Jews got a J stamped in their passports. It had become dangerous to be Jewish in Norway, and rumors were spread around. Who and what could people trust? Now, 70 years later, some of the people who lived through the war will tell you about that.
- On 25 November 1942, an order came to all police offices in Norway: Women and children were to be arrested, and the country had to be emptied of Jews within a day.
- The cargo ship Donau had left Oslo with 529 Norwegian Jews on board. The few who were left had the urge to flee, but the problem was how.
- At Bredtvet prison, Jewish people of all ages were still imprisoned, without any hope to be saved until Sweden began offering help.
- In 1945, the war ended, and Norway was in euphoria of victory. Jewish refugees could finally return home, unaware of what they really came home to.