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- Academy Award-winning film-maker Oliver Stone interviews Russian president Vladimir Putin about divisive issues related to U.S.-Russia relations.
- Follows the events happening in Ukraine and the truth about Russia's invasion of the country.
- In the personal and inspiring stories of four patients urgently searching for answers to mysterious symptoms, Below the Belt exposes widespread problems in our health care systems.
- As the 2008 financial crisis loomed, frantic efforts to save the US from economic collapse happened in secret. VICE News explores the untold stories of powerful people leading the way.
- On Chicago's West Side, there is a school for the city's most at-risk youth - the Moses Montefiore Academy. Most of the students at Montefiore have been kicked out of other schools for aggressive behavior, and many have been diagnosed with emotional disorders. "Last Chance High" takes viewers inside Montefiore's classrooms and into the homes of students who are one mistake away from being locked up or committed to a mental hospital.
- Ady Barkan's life is upended when he is diagnosed with ALS, but a confrontation with a powerful senator catapults him to national fame and ignites a once-in-a-generation political movement.
- Connersville, Indiana is haunted by the disappearance of Denise Pflum, and the rumors of what really happened to her. Now, an investigator is trying to solve the case Once and for all.
- From Tesla to Twitter, Elon Musk has become the most influential businessman ever, but it required the masses to support his seemingly unreachable visions - the cult behind the man
- Japan has an uneasy relationship with tattoos, which have come to be associated with organized crime. Living among heavy stereotypes, a group of tattooed individuals practice a centuries-old pilgrimage to a mountain shrine, now one of the few places where the traditional full-body tattoo ("horimono") can be shown and celebrated. Following the events of this never-before-filmed pilgrimage, this short documentary provides a fresh view on the cultural history of Japanese tattoos, and those who continue to choose to get them done.
- With exclusive access to Ukrainian officials, soldiers and civilians, explore the human cost and strategic decisions made to save their most key city in an endless war with Russia.
- Japan's obsession with cutesy culture has taken a dark turn, with schoolgirls now offering themselves for "walking dates" with adult men. Last year the US State Department, in its annual report on human trafficking, flagged so-called joshi-kosei osanpo dates (Japanese for "high school walking") as fronts for commercial sex run by sophisticated criminal networks.
- VICE News' groundbreaking Peabody and GLAAD-Award winning series Transnational returns for a second season that explores the complications and dangers of what should be a triumph: Trans people have never, in all of history, been more visible than now. But the backlash has been just as strong. The show asks the central question: How do you stay safe, or true to yourself, when the world is always watching? Each episode takes on a different facet of this essential question.
- Tom Daley visits the most homophobic countries in the Commonwealth to explore how gay athletes are facing extreme persecution. What can the Commonwealth Games do to help?
- Inside the hustle of a group of shadowy ticket brokers to buy up the best seats in the house and sell them at a huge profit--and how a ticketing monopoly enables them
- Vice explores the painful truth of missing and murdered black women whose stories too often go overlooked by mainstream media and law enforcement.
- As a fire engulfs LA, the online world of the Citizen App spills into the real one, and so too do the terrifying consequences of these calls to action - a vigilante man-hunt.
- A look inside Alabama's notorious parole system, which does not allow inmates to speak on their own behalf at their parole hearings, only allows those testifying on an inmate's behalf to speak for two minutes, and which has a record of denying more than 80% of applicants' requests for parole. And there is no appeals process.
- The Covenant House, located on the outskirts of the French Quarter in New Orleans, Louisiana, cares for the most damaged population of youth that exists in society today. In Shelter, Peabody award winning filmmakers Brent and Craig Renaud (Dope Sick Love, Off to War) spent six months, with unprecedented access, filming the raw and emotional stories of the young people who live there. More than 70% percent of the residents have been physically and/or sexually abused, most suffer from severe PTSD. With few public facilities to treat youth mental illness, the courtyard of Covenant House is filled with a constant stream of teenagers carrying everything they own in plastic garbage bags, many pacing back and forth, victims of early onset paranoid schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. From the moment a kid walks thru the front door and pours their heart out to an intake worker, the Renaud's are at their side. A transgender girl named Raven whose "right wing fanatic" parents have kicked her out of the house; a 17 year old heroine addict named Taylor who wants to kill herself; Shonda a teenage mom trying to learn to read so she can earn a GED and get a job to support her daughter; and Elizabeth whose untreated schizophrenia has turned her into a desperately young bag lady roaming the streets of the French Quarter. The Covenant House of New Orleans is Hope. The doors are always open, and there is always room for one more.
- Vice News interviews the clinical psychologist and professor, Jordan B. Peterson.
- A guide to the all the key incidents and people involved with the events surrounding Donald Trump's impeachment proceedings.
- Activists worldwide show solidarity with the George Floyd protests, while also confronting racism in their own countries.
- In-depth reporting and investigations by VICE News.
- A look inside California's maximum-security Salinas Valley State Prison in Soledad to see the effects of the policy of "mass incarceration"l of the last 30+ years. Also shown is how one of the most notoriously violent prisons in the state is coming up with new ways of controlling prison violence while preparing inmates for their future release,
- A documentary that looks at secrets everyone knows, but no one talks about. Each episode visits a different country, looking at a secret and exploring why it remained veiled for years, either by the factor of fear, privilege or authority
- In March 2021, VICE Founder Suroosh Alvi traveled with a crew to Iran to do a story about a rash of assassinations of Iranian nuclear scientists - most recently Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, head of the country's nuclear program. They ended up getting unprecedented access, from Tehran to Baghdad, into the sprawling shadow war between the US and Iran for the heart of the Middle East.
- An examination of "sex worker nurseries" in the notorious Santa Fe area--the Red Light District--of Bogota, Colombia, where sex workers drop off their children to be taken care of before they go to work. Several prostitutes as well as the owner of one of the nurseries are interviewed.
- In 2019 fentanyl killed more people in a single year than any other drug in modern history. How did the situation get there? VICE News reporter Keegan Hamilton (Chapo: Kingpin on Trial) tracks the third wave of the opioid crisis.
- Brazil has a mugshot problem. Innocent people can be charged with crimes when the only evidence is a blurry photo and an unconfident witness.
- South Sudan achieved its independence from Sudan in 2011, ending a decades-long rebellion. However, a small group of rebels--the SPLA-N)--on the Sudan/South Sudan border carried on the fight against the Sudanese government, which they say is trying to turn the entire country into a hardline Islamic state and impose Sharia law--and they want no part of it.
- It is estimated that there are 8,000,000-9,000,000 feral hogs roaming around the US. They destroy crops, property, land, and even other animals. Texas has more of them than any other state, and ranchers and authorities there are attempting different ways--helicopter hunting, trapping, poisoning, etc.--in an effort to eradicate the pests.
- To cover the revolution against Libyan dictator Moammar Gadaffi, reporter Shane Smith travels throughout rebel-controlled territory in Libya, talking to civilians who have joined the rebel forces, , former army soldiers who have defected and joined the revolution and ordinary civilians to see how the uprising has affected their lives.
- Karachi's first responders work for the world's largest voluntary ambulance service. But tiring work on the front line, where death and suffering is a constant, comes at the cost of their own mental health.