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- An inner view of the 2002 presidential campaign of Lionel Jospin filmed at "L'Atelier", his campaign headquarters in central Paris, with some excerpts of his electoral meetings. Here, we can see how Lionel Jospin has prepared his electoral campaign with French Socialist Party leaders, and how it has evolved during the 6 weeks of his campaign. No comments from the journalists are done. Although it doesn't explain completely Jospin's result, it shows some indications of the inefficiency of the Socialist organisation, some mistakes made by Jospin, the heaviness of the campaign commitee in which it was difficult to draw a clear direction, and to create a good climate for preparing this election. The film ends with the final unexpected failure of 21st April 2002 where Jospin was eliminated from the second round of the election, arriving only in 3rd position defeated by Jacques Chirac and Jean-Marie Le Pen, and therefore announcing his retirement from politics. Surprise, shock, disbelief and sadness prevailed that evening in the Socialist headquarters.
- 1989– 1h 52mTV Episode
- 1989– 1h 53mTV Episode
- 1989–TV Episode
- Episode: (2020)1989– 1h 45mTV Episode
- 1989– 1h 47mTV Episode
- The special envoy In the aftermath of the results of the American elections, "Special Envoy" will be in the heart of Pennsylvania, one of the famous "Swing States", those States which can change the result. The two candidates have been engaged in one of the fiercest battles for weeks, between Trump, who seduced the white workers four years ago, and Biden, the native of the country who is trying to win them back. We have crisscrossed the state to meet these citizens whose ballot can change everything. Messages of Hope In a country where more than 10% of the population lives below the poverty line and more than 500,000 people are homeless, "Special Envoy" has also been interested in those who are trying to find solutions to heal the wounds of America. This is the case of Kevin Adler in the streets of San Francisco. He and his teams may have found a way to get the homeless off the streets by reuniting with their families. His idea is simple: volunteers, sometimes former homeless people themselves, go into contact with the homeless, ask them to introduce themselves by filming them with a smartphone, disseminate this message on social networks and their dedicated site, in hoping it will be seen by families. This association is called Miracle Messages.
- 1989– 1h 54mTV EpisodeIn summary : Police violence: what justice? More than a year and a half after the start of the yellow vests movement, where are the investigations into police violence? How does justice manage these cases? Are the American police racist? A huge wave of protest against police violence has risen around the world after the death in the United States of George Floyd, a black man suffocated by a white police officer during a check. Are the American police racist? Is she above the law? African Americans are proportionately twice as victims of police blunders as the rest of the population. However, in 90% of cases, the police are not charged. From Los Angeles to Washington via Ferguson, in 2015 "Special Envoy" investigated those who are supposed to "protect and serve" and discovered police stations and courts plagued by racism. Revolution at work. Little by little, they find their way back to the factory, the workshop, the store, with new safety standards, new reflexes, new professions. Everything changed . In this chain of manicure institutes, from the delivery of equipment to welcoming clients, the organization has been rethought. Efficient to revive the activity? In this electronic card factory, quality controllers are now responsible for health safety. A way to push the virus out of the company? The boss of this aeronautical subcontractor hired a coach to help the employees return to work with confidence. Sufficient to reassure? For the founder of this small consulting company, teleworking is a revelation. The opportunity to leave his Parisian offices?
- In summary : My life without a cell phone Rodolphe, 14, a happy teenager and a very good 3rd year student, spends an average of 6.30 hours a day in front of screens. Séverine, 42, switchboard operator and mother of two, is riveted on her smartphone 5:30 a day. Screens take up a lot of space in their lives. However, they agreed to take up an incredible challenge: to do without their smartphone for two weeks. Report: Romain Boutilly, Élodie Delevoye, Adrien Bellay Digital junkies In Austin, Texas, a clinic specializing in addiction has been welcoming "digital addicts" for two years. Like Denton, 23, who spent more than 10 hours a day playing games and watching videos. He has two months to detoxify himself. In Tulsa, Oklahoma, two eminent neurologists are participating in the largest study ever carried out on the effects of screens: 11,000 children will be followed between their 9 and 19 years old to measure the impact on their brain use of smartphones and tablets. Report: Virginie Vilar, Antoine Husser, Marielle Krouk. The app repentants They are talented engineers or gifted programmers. They invented the iPhone which invaded the planet in a few months, developed the algorithms which made the fortune of Youtube, Facebook or Google. And yet today, they regret and even say they have created a "monster". Meet these repentant apps - Report: Yvan Martinet, Yann Moine, Karim Annette.
- My life with or without a car? Xavier, an entrepreneur in Toulouse, only travels by car. For his part, Jean-Marc, a green computer engineer, commutes to work by bicycle and travels between 12 and 15 kilometers per day. They agreed to spend a few days together and to confront their choices . Clandestine euthanasia: the taboo. There are believed to be between 2,000 and 5,000 clandestine euthanasies in France. For the first time, family doctors, hospital practitioners and citizens testify and tell how they take action . Indonesia, the submerged archipelago. Part of this island state in Southeast Asia is sinking.
- In summary : The Jonathann Daval mystery It is an image that upset France before astounding it: this day in November 2017, Jonathann Daval mourns his wife Alexia, found killed in a wood. He is supported by his in-laws and a whole city, upset. A few weeks later, the young man confesses to the murder of Alexia, causing amazement and dread. As his trial opens in Vesoul (Haute-Saône), two positions clash: the defendants' lawyers plead for the access of violence, impulsive and irrational, of a man who felt dominated by his wife. The family of Alexia Fouillot, on the contrary, accuses Jonathann Daval of having premeditated his gesture. Report: Nabyla Zaknoun. My life in the noise With the new confinement, many rediscover the pleasure of silence. Noise is less present, and we realize how much it can weigh on our lives. A few months ago, we shared the existence of those who are constantly exposed to the infernal noise of transport - Report: Lauriane David, Marion Lippmann, Marielle Krouk. Beirut: a bomb in the heart of the city On August 4, an explosion of incredible violence devastated Beirut. More than 200 dead, thousands of homes destroyed. At the origin of this disaster, 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate which were stored in a hangar. How could such a time bomb have formed in the heart of the Lebanese capital despite the numerous alerts? Report: Pierre Monégier, Tristan Waleckx.
- 1989– 1h 43mTV EpisodeFarmers and happy Sébastien Nauleau is a very busy man. He is both a breeder of cows and owner of a food store. He has created his own supermarket near Poitiers and sells his meat there directly to consumers without having to go through mass distribution. The prices are fixed in agreement with the farmers who find a new outlet for their production and avoid the intermediaries. The customers are there. Report: Clémentine Mazoyer. They hunt down pedophiles For several months, in Bordeaux, Reims and Reunion, our teams were able to film, as close as possible to the field, the punching methods of those who track pedophiles. Like Neila, 34, who leads an incredible double life. That of an uneventful Lyon cleaning lady who is raising her three children. But also that of a "pedophile hunter". On Facebook, she poses as Lina, a 12-year-old girl, to attract and trap sexual predators. Report: Romain Boutilly, Swanny Thiébaut, Adrien Bellay. Shadow workers Each year, they harvest a large part of the fruits and vegetables that we find on the shelves of our supermarkets. In the spring, they arrive by bus from Spain and spend several months in agricultural areas, often in makeshift accommodation. We have met these posted workers. Some today denounce difficult working conditions, undeclared hours, "unworthy" housing. Mainly from South America, they are employed by Spanish temporary work companies. Report: Laura Aguirre de Carcer, Thomas Guéry, Marielle Krouk.
- Insulation: risky sites? A year ago, our team tested a tempting offer for you that you had probably received in your mailbox or by telephone canvassing: the insulation of your house for 1 euro. To see what this unbeatable price corresponded to, we had rented a house and seen companies supposedly specialized in methods - not very reassuring. Where are we today? To protect consumers, the law has changed: telephone canvassing to offer insulation solutions is now prohibited. Enough to deter businesses? Not sure - Report: Élvire Beraya-Lazarus. Stella and Alex's new life These are two overwhelming adventures that we followed for several weeks: those of Stella and Alex, two children who want to change their gender. Stella is an 8 year old girl who has always lived in a boy's body. By dint of courage and supported by all her family, she succeeded in making her discomfort understood and convincing that there is only one solution to free herself: change sex. But will she be able, so young, to change her marital status? What are his school friends going to say? Alex was born into the body of a little girl. And as a teenager, he had to resolve to breast surgery. The young man, surrounded by the love of his mother and his grandparents, transforms himself and gradually becomes who he has always been. Report: Naoufel El Khaouafi, Auberie Perreaut, Vincent Gobert. Navalny, the survivor A report by Pierre Monégier, Luc Lacroix and Max Paquereau While the Russian justice has just confirmed on appeal his sentence of two and a half years of imprisonment, a look back at the incredible fate of Alexeï Navalny, the main opponent of Vladimir Putin. Who really is this 44-year-old lawyer who made the fight against corruption his credo? How did he win the support of part of the Russian people? Journey of a man whose imprisonment sparked an unprecedented protest movement in Russia. Report: Pierre Monégier, Luc Lacroix, Max Paquereau.
- 1989– 1h 48mTV EpisodeSquatters: the owner's nightmare For two years, Monique's life has been a nightmare. While putting her family home up for sale in 2018, she discovers that it is illegally inhabited. However, after 48 hours of occupation, the squatters can no longer be dislodged by the police. Monique must then embark on an interminable legal procedure which will last for months. At 75, Martine ended up homeless when she owned a house near Avignon. His tenant who no longer pays his rent refuses to leave the accommodation. Report: Roberto Boy. Did we fail the tests? Testing a million French people per week: that was the objective set by the government to speed up the announced second wave of Covid 19. But very quickly, endless lines formed in front of overwhelmed analysis laboratories - Report: Emmanuelle Mesplelède. The elephant sanctuary She is an extraordinary woman who decided to devote her life to saving the life of the elephants of Thailand. Leek Chailert created twenty years ago a sanctuary in Chiang Mai, in the north of the country, to collect injured or mistreated animals. Report: Mathilde Cusin.
- 1989–TV Episode
- 1989– 1h 51mTV EpisodeIn summary : Passion for various facts: They are more and more numerous on social networks. Citizens who are passionate about various facts and who have taken it upon themselves to investigate major criminal cases. On the Internet, debate groups on famous news items now bring together tens of thousands of people. But sometimes, some amateur investigators go too far and slip up. Report: Nina Montané, Vincent Gobert. Coronavirus: the mystery of its origins: Where does the virus that is shaking the planet come from? Mystery. For a large majority of scientists, it comes from China. For the Chinese authorities, on the contrary, it comes from elsewhere. Who is telling the truth? WHO experts, after months of negotiations, have finally visited China. But their inspection, under close surveillance, and their conclusions did not convince the entire scientific community. Does the virus come from simple animal transmission, as assumed by the WHO? Or of frozen products that China would have imported, according to Beijing? In France, in India, in the United States, researchers, supporting documents, throw the trouble and put forward another hypothesis: and if this virus, taken from bats in 2013 in a Chinese mine, had been manipulated in the Wuhan lab? Could neglect have allowed the virus to escape and spread? Is this scenario credible? Report: Virginie Vilar, Olivier Gardette, Karim Annette, Lisa Beaujour. My life as a small trader: How are our small traders doing? How do they live these long months of health crisis? To understand their daily lives, between worry and hope, we put our cameras in the shops on rue du Commerce, in Blois, in the Loir-et-Cher. Report: Kristian Autain, Yann Moine, Harold Horroks.
- 1989– 1h 41mTV EpisodeMy new life as an artist Are artists, musicians, actors deprived of public and silenced? Never mind . Some intend to make themselves heard and reinvent their profession. Among them, Jean-Louis Aubert. Confined to the countryside, he now sings live on social networks, while waiting to give a big - virtual concert. An artistic adventure and a new relationship with his fans. On the stages of the Olympia and certain Parisian theaters, the shows are broadcast in streaming on the Internet. The artists rely on interactivity through chats and webcams. Ismaël and Didier, young professional pianists, have created their start-up: it sells tickets for their classical concerts, to be watched live from home. But is the remote audience there? Report: Olivier Sibille, Mathieu Dreujou, Julie Martin, Michel Pignard. Guest: Thomas Dutronc, from the Folies Bergères, in Paris. Water war It is a battle that has been tearing the countryside apart and transforming the landscapes for years, that of the water reservoirs. These giant reserves are built by farmers to store water and irrigate fields in summer. But today, they are the subject of a tense face to face. On the one hand, farmers who consider these reserves essential to the survival of their operations. In front of them, the defenders of the environment for whom it is urgent to preserve and share this vital resource. Report: Alice Gauvin, Éric Maizy, Marielle Krouk. Messages of Hope Hundreds of thousands of Americans have lived on the streets for years. The current economic and social crisis continues to amplify this phenomenon. In San Francisco, Kevin Adler and his teams may have found a way to help them get by by reuniting with their family. His idea is simple: volunteers go out to meet the homeless and ask them to introduce themselves by filming them with a smartphone. These videos are then posted on social networks and on a dedicated site, in the hope that they will be seen by their loved ones. Report: Sophie Przychodny, Manon Heurtel, Harold Grenouilleau.
- 1989– 1h 50mTV EpisodeIn summary : Delinquency: farmers at their wit's end Theft of sheep, chickens, fruits and vegetables, but also fuel or ultramodern GPS on tractors: crime in the countryside affects farmers who, until then, did not really take precautions. And according to gendarmerie surveys, these daring thefts are often perpetrated by increasingly organized gangs. Report: Clémentine Mazoyer, Matéo Masnada, Adèle Prugnaud, Colin Guillemant. My sleepless life It is neither a virus nor a disease and yet doctors speak of it as a real health crisis. This epidemic which affects all ages and all social classes is insomnia. An alarming situation because the lack of sleep causes serious diseases: diabetes, obesity, depression, stroke, hypertension - Report: Nathalie Gros. Guadeloupe: water drop by drop Guadeloupe is one of the Antilles islands best endowed with fresh water. However, for years, part of its 390,000 inhabitants have lived at the rate of water cuts. Entire neighborhoods are regularly deprived of running water, residents are forced to stockpile rainwater or shower with bottled water. In question, an underground network in poor condition, with innumerable leaks that take a long time to plug. Report: Laura Aguirre de Carcer, Swanny Thiebaut, Adrien Bellay.
- 1989– 1h 47mTV EpisodeExpropriation: the infernal gear Each year thousands of French people undergo an expropriation procedure. What the law says ? What are the indemnities? We have followed the long and painful journey of these inhabitants driven from their own homes. Report: Élise Menand, Benjamin Poulain, Elouën Martin, Soline Braun. Clandestine euthanasia: the taboo There would be between 2,000 and 5,000 clandestine euthanasies in France, people with incurable diseases who wish to end their lives with the help of a third party. The practice is strictly prohibited, but it is currently the subject of debate. Our journalist, Julie Pichot, went to explore this reality which is less and less hidden. Report: Julie Pichot. Thailand, paradise rediscovered The coronavirus epidemic has deprived Thailand of visitors, like the island of Phuket, which has lost 90% of its 14 million annual tourists. While the economy is hit hard, leaving hundreds of thousands of Thai workers unemployed, the flora and fauna come back to life. Freed from pollution and nuisances linked to tourism, the landscapes have regained their splendor: sea turtles return to lay their eggs on the beaches, the water has become crystalline and clean again, underwater life has regained its serenity. Faced with this observation, the authorities would like to put an end to mass tourism in order to turn to more reasoned development, in accordance with the protection of the environment and ecosystems. Report: Hakim Abdelkhalek, Vincent Reynaud, Chakkrit Jumsai na Ayudhya. Presentation: Élise Lucet.
- 1989– 1h 50mTV EpisodeIn summary : Soldiers of the heart They operate urgently on patients on - the sidewalks of Paris. A special unit of doctors performs cardiac operations as close as possible to patients because "every second counts". "War" medicine in peacetime in the heart of Paris. Report: Manuel Laigre, Guillaume Maurice. Vacation: from heaven to hell From the dream villa which, in fact, makes you live a nightmare, to the rentals already occupied by way of the classifieds trapped by the crooks of the web, we will give you the keys to thwart the many traps which plague the company today. tourism industry. Report: Nathalie Gros, Guillaume Viart. Afghanistan: the shattered dreams of Kabul women A few days before the fall of Kabul, we met in the Afghan capital women whose fate changed with the arrival of the Taliban. Atifa is 14 years old. At the end of July, she was going back to school and dreamed of becoming a tourist guide. Today she is in hiding. Faousia is a midwife in a maternity hospital in Kabul regularly hit by terrorists. At the end of July, we followed her in her work with women. Today, she fears that she will no longer be able to exercise. The last hours of freedom of two women with broken destinies. Report: Pierre Monegier, Sandra Calligaro, Mikael Bozo. Signage: not recommended for under 10s (-10) Helping the forgotten people of Kabul They are Afghans, military or civilian, and worked for France. We had met them two years ago. Now that Kabul is in the hands of the Taliban, what has become of them? Welcomed in France or hidden for fear of reprisals, we wanted to know how France keeps its promise not to abandon them. Report: Laura Aguirre de Carcer.
- 1989– 1h 54mTV EpisodeOn my poisoned beach Clément Le Goff investigated the lands of his childhood, in Hillion, in the Côtes-d'Armor, where a phenomenon has been repeated every summer, for half a century: at each tide, green algae wash up in the hundreds. tons. These algae cover the sand of the beaches, poison the life of the inhabitants and, beyond bad smells, release a toxic gas, fatal in high doses. Report: Clément Le Goff, Mathieu Birden, Jean-Luc Cesco. I had Abaaoud It is the story of an ordinary citizen embarked on a story that goes beyond her. "Sonia" (it is a pseudonym to preserve her security) is the one who denounced Abdelhamid Abaaoud, one of the coordinators of the attacks of November 13, 2015, to the police. This courageous act made it possible to locate and neutralize terrorist, and arguably saved lives. The investigation has indeed shown that a new attack was scheduled at La Défense. Faced with the cameras of "Special Envoy", a year after the attacks, she had agreed to testify. Report: Yvan Martinet, Romain Boutilly. Lebanon, the collapse Lebanon experienced one of the worst disasters in its history in 2020. But isn't the worst yet to come? More electricity, more money in the banks, unpaid wages. In hospitals, respirators are turned off. Patients on dialysis or suffering from cancer are no longer properly cared for. The country is collapsing and lives are in danger. Report: Raphaële Schapira, Guillaume Beaufils. Anti-pass: the virus of division For or against the health pass? This is the question that has torn families apart all summer. As thousands of opponents take to the streets every Saturday, we wanted to understand who the anti-passers are. What drives them to put themselves on the margins of society? One of our teams immersed itself in this France that the vaccine passport divides. Report: Yannick Sanchez, Eloüen Martin, Gianni Collot.
- In summary : Medical deserts: the new pioneers After ten years spent in the emergency room in Beauvais, Doctor Binet decided to place his plate in Lozère. With wife and children, he begins his new life in a territory abandoned by his colleagues. Doctor Jardel, a freshly graduated, chose to travel the French countryside in a motorhome. In the medical deserts of eleven departments, he comes to replace the practitioners who have gone on leave. We follow the daily life of these new pioneers for whom medical deserts in France should not be inevitable. Report: Marion Cieuta. Marseille: young people are still dreaming Child dealers who are victims of drug trafficking. One of our teams sought to understand why in Marseille traffickers increasingly kill young people, sometimes minors. Investigation in these neighborhoods where the "kids" are often targets but sometimes also killers. Report: Romain Boutilly, Elouën Martin, Karim Anette. DRC: the refuge of the lost apes In the Democratic Republic of Congo, Lipipi, a small orphaned chimpanzee, victim of poachers, has regained form and even a family in the heart of a sanctuary created by a young Frenchwoman who has left everything to devote herself to primates. His farm is helping to re-establish and preserve the species in the country. Report: Raphaëlle Shapira, Swanny Thiébaud. The secrets of the Benalla affair What role did the former official in charge of Emmanuel Macron play in the signing of the famous "Russian contract"? Who moved his personal safe before his home was searched? Had he retained support at the Élysée?
- 1989– 1h 52mTV EpisodeIn summary : My life without water 4,000 liters: this is the amount of water that each French person consumes per month. But is it tenable? Pollution, climate change, how to live while spending less? Hygiene, food, clothing, a team took up the challenge of life without or almost no water. We went to meet these French people who realized that water is already a rare and precious commodity. Report: Nathalie Gros. Family: these grandparents deprived of their grandchildren When grandpa and grandma are not welcome. Investigation into a taboo: these families who tear themselves apart to obtain visitation rights for the grandchildren. One of our teams met a grandmother who sued her daughter for the right to see her grandson, and parents who outlaw themselves to prevent grandparents from spending time with their children. . What are the rights of grandparents? Can children ban them from their families? Report: Elena Le Runigo. The voice of Uyghur women Kidnappings, torture, mass internments, forced labor, sterilizations - Is there a genocide of the Uyghur population underway in China? Seven countries have already answered yes. In France, around forty deputies have tabled a resolution to this effect. In England, a People's Court is studying the matter. Gulbahar, Tursunay and Sayragul testified there. They tell of the violence that drove them to flee the country where they were locked up in a camp or a prison. Report: Élise Menand, Antoine Husser.
- 1989– 1h 42mTV EpisodeIn summary : Pensions: the account is not there. Are retirees getting what they are owed? Is their pension well calculated? According to the Court of Auditors, one in seven pensions would include calculation errors, most often to the detriment of pensioners, ranging up to several hundred euros per month. Report: Alexandre Paré, Alice Gauvin, Nicolas Bellemon, Élodie Delevoye, Benoît Viudès. Martine finally at home: Finally at her place. For Martine Garofalo, 75, the year begins with the long-awaited return to her house, near Avignon. Last November and December, we told you how Martine was forced by the courts to live with her squatter, who could not be evicted during the winter break. During the holidays, a solution was found with his tenant, who is speaking for the first time. Report: Roberto Boy, Antoine Boddaert. The train of their dream: Craftsman, former train driver, civil servant or sound engineer: they all live in the countryside, in the Lot. And they share the same observation: far from big cities, complicated to travel by train, yet practical and more ecological. So, as the train market was completely opened up to competition, they created their own company, Railcoop. Report: Perrine Bonnet, Vincent Piffeteau, Benoît Sauvage. Texas, justice in black and white: While Donald Trump, in the last days of his mandate, accelerates the executions of death row inmates, a family and stars, like Beyoncé and Rihanna, are trying to save the life of Rodney Reed. Since 1998, Rodney Reed has been sentenced to death in Texas for the murder of Stacey Stiles. Rodney is black, Stacey was white. For the jurors, there was no doubt of the guilt. However, a twist has revived the whole affair. Stacey's former companion, now in prison (for rape), allegedly confessed to being the real perpetrator of the murder. Report: Vanina Kanban, Cyril Thomas, Marc Boulay, Emmanuel Lejeune.
- 1989– 1h 44mTV EpisodeIn summary : Marriage agencies: the flashback We thought they were outdated, dethroned by the Internet, but marriage agencies are making a comeback after the loneliness of the various confinements. Céline, nurse, understood that she needed help to finally make a serious meeting. After several failures, Serge, a former tiler, disappointed by dating sites, sees it as the ultimate hope of finding love. One of our reporters tested the methods of these fashionable matchmakers. Report: Adrian Jaouen, Aurélien Fougère. Small bosses with a big heart Baker in Besançon, restaurateur in Normandy, artisans everywhere in France are mobilizing to prevent the expulsion of their apprentices of foreign nationality. Thanks to them, Laye Fodé Traoré was able to complete her baker's CAP. But will Yaya Bahqui get his papers? Will Dembo Monekhata be sent back to Africa at the end of his training? We have followed these big-hearted bosses who, to defend their business, are trying to bend the French administration. Report: Alice Gauvin, Élodie Delevoye. Shortages in the United Kingdom: the reverse of Brexit? Gas stations running dry, supply problems, shelves soon to be empty: the United Kingdom is suffering the full brunt of shortages linked to the lack of truck drivers. With Covid-19, foreign workers have been sent home and with Brexit and border closures they have not returned. Report: Pierre Monégier, Christophe Kenck.
- 1989– 1h 46mTV EpisodeIn summary : When living in the country becomes too expensive In medium-sized cities, real estate prices have skyrocketed since the pandemic. This is particularly the case in the Basque Country. Some accuse city dwellers who have come to settle down to telecommute in the green of pushing up prices. Real estate agencies tagged, apartments occupied to denounce seasonal rentals, families who take refuge in the motorhome there is nothing left to rent - One of our journalists returned to his native Basque Country to understand this anger that rises when we no longer have the means to live at home. Report: Yannick Sanchez, Élodie Delevoye, Matthieu Le Rue. I don't want a child While the birth rate has been falling in France for five years, report on young people who go so far as to be sterilized because they do not want children. In France, a clinic specializes in these surgical procedures. Individualism? Economic calculation? Or environmental motivations? What drives these young people to make such a radical choice? Report: Perrine Bonnet, Guillaume Beaufils, Roméo Cristien.
- Prescription Sexual Assault: Women, often very young, raped or sexually assaulted in their doctor's office. Colleagues who sometimes close their eyes. Doctors sued who continue to practice. Sanctioned whistleblowers and the Order of Physicians which does not always intervene despite the reports - Investigation into the leaden cover that has long covered the abuses that could have taken place in some medical offices, on these patients who speak and the doctors who dare to break the law of silence. Report: Julie Pichot. It's decided, I stop working. For many, letting go of your job is a fantasy that will never be fulfilled. Some, however, take the plunge and stop working for good, well before the legal retirement age. But the daily life of a life without work is sometimes difficult to live - Report: Marine Haag. Riad Sattouf: immersed in the secret life of young people: His comics are a worldwide success. Over four million copies sold in twenty countries. Because Riad Sattouf succeeds there the feat of making us penetrate, without filter but with humor, in a universe usually very secret: that of the young people. Their daily life, their language, their love - Whether he chronicles the life of a Parisian teenager or his own much more tormented youth, his line, sometimes squeaky, rings true astonishment and also knows how to move. Report: Olivier Sibille, Mathieu Dreujou, Emmanuel Rassat, Germain Vaudry.
- 1989– 1h 20mTV EpisodeIn summary : Dry california Forced to shower in gas stations, deprived of drinking water, thousands of California residents must learn to live without water. Victim of repeated drought, California is already facing the consequences of climate change. We have met Americans who are forced to relocate because of the climate and those who somehow organize a life in a new desert. Report: Élise Ménand, Guillaume Marque, Raynald Lellouche. Wind turbines: the wind of revolt Everywhere in France, a wind of revolt is rising against wind turbines: considered noisy, too expensive, unnecessary, they are also suspected of favoring the corruption of elected officials. In Flers, in the Hauts-de-France, Erik can no longer stand them: five wind turbines 110 meters high spoil his view when he opens the windows of his listed castle. For years, he has tried everything in court to get rid of what he considers to be "a wart" in his landscape. In the bay of Saint-Brieuc, Julien, a lobster and scallop fisherman, is afraid of losing his livelihood: he is fighting against the establishment of a park of sixty-two giant wind turbines in the middle of sea, in the middle of its fishing area. At a time when the energy transition law plans to double the number of wind turbines by 2023, report in this France that does not want it. Report: Raphaële Schapira, Émilie Gouveia Vermelho, Frédérique Prigent. Detectorists: the new treasure hunters They roam the fields and the beaches with their amazing frying pans and headphones on. Detectorists hunt for treasures buried in the ground. Nice collectors or looters of antiques? Who are they really? Report: Kristian Autain, Guillaume Marque, Benjamin Poulain, Bruno Maruani.
- In summary : - Nicolas Hulot: women accuse As part of the day of violence against women, Special Envoy collected the testimony of several of them who accuse Nicolas Hulot of having sexually assaulted them. Women hurt by facts they denounce and which are now prescribed. Elise Lucet will receive, live, on the set, Laurence Rossignol, PS senator of Oise, former minister of families, children and women's rights. - Madagascar: climatic famine These are the first images of a forgotten famine in southern Madagascar. To eat, children only have beef skin or boiled cactus leaves. Residents flee the drought-ravaged countryside and crowd into towns where 80% of children suffer from undernutrition. Hospitals are overwhelmed. One of our teams succeeded in reaching this remote region of the "Big Island" where global warming is starving the population.
- In summary : women under threat How to free oneself from a violent husband despite complaints to justice? How do you live under the threat of blows from your ex-companion? Alison has seen the shutters closed since her ex-husband was released from pre-trial detention; Géraldine fled from her former companion and trembles at the idea that he knows her new address. "Special Envoy" followed the daily life of these two women who are trying to lead a "normal" life after leaving a violent spouse. Report: Alice Gauvin, Violaine Vermot-Gaud, Julie Martin, Max Paquereau. forest man In India, he is now known by his nickname: Forest Man, the man of the forest. Thirty years ago, Jadav Payeng decided to plant his own forest. Today it is larger than Central Park and home to elephants, rhinos and tigers as well as hundreds of thousands of snakes. He is recognized as a national hero, a protector of nature and ecology. Report: Anouk Burel. Tok Tok in Amazon land While many small businesses are disappearing, Amazon is continuing to establish itself in France. In Briec, Finistère, the construction of a new warehouse sparked unrest: the launch of a Stop Amazon collective, demonstrations, and even, in November 2021, an occupation during which opponents chained themselves to site grids. In vain. We went to meet the inhabitants, to ask them what they think of this new logistics platform, and of online commerce in general - Report: Arnaud Muller, Élie Dupont, Christophe Cesar.
- 1989– 1h 45mTV EpisodeIn summary : Heritage, the party in the village. It happens that very small towns receive one fine day a gift almost fallen from the sky: a deceased resident has bequeathed his fortune to them. The donation often reaches several million euros, much more than the annual budget. A posthumous letter sometimes explains this gesture of recognition. But how do these villages manage this unexpected windfall? Did they turn it into a boon or a poisoned gift? Did they respect their donor's wishes? Report: Roberto Garçon, Antoine Boddaert, Matthias Somm, Marie Drouet. A spy in my pocket? We know that our precious cell phones record almost everything we give them: dating, travel, purchases, passwords, likes, etc. But how far does their knowledge of our intimacy go? And to whom do they transmit this private information? What is the level of our monitoring? To find out, we conducted several experiments. Report: Raphaële Schapira, Guillaume Beaufils, Adrien Bellay. my life as a nurse It's their vocation, the job they love, the choice of a life, but today, they can't take it anymore. Tiffany, 30, and Anne-Sophie, 49, are both nurses in the intensive care unit of the University Hospital of Amiens, in the Somme. And the third wave of the Covid that they face brings them to the brink of rupture. Despite the courage, solidarity and resourcefulness in the department, they see some of their colleagues cracking up from exhaustion, younger and younger patients who cannot resist the disease, distraught families. Report: Laura Aguirre de Carcer, Claire-Marie Denis, Marielle Krouk.
- 1989– 1h 6mTV EpisodeIn summary : Companies: the revenge of the employees Faced with the labor shortage, more and more companies are forced to give in to the demands of their employees in order not to lose them. "Special Envoy" takes you to these companies where employees take their revenge. Report: Stéphanie Rathscheck, Charles Maumy, Guillaume Birot, Jacques-Olivier Benesse, Frédéric Nony, Marielle Krouk, Olivier Broutin. USA: the workers' revolt With the Covid-19 pandemic, American workers can't take it anymore. Between strike and mass resignations, they demand wage increases and better working conditions. Thousands of employees are leading an unprecedented fight in America. From Starbucks, where they obtained the creation of a union, to Kellogg's, where two and a half months of strikes made the bosses bend, back to the revolt of American workers. Reporting: Laura Aguirre de Carcer, Gionna Messina, Benoit Sauvage. Presented by: Élise Lucet.
- 1989– 59mTV EpisodeIn summary : Pitfalls on the Internet We traced the trail of bogus investment scams that caused pensioners to lose tens of thousands of euros. The investigation takes us from Alsace to Cyprus, from Bulgaria to Israel. Report: Julie Benzoni, Édouard Mounier, Maxime Souville, Franck Vignon, Vicky Logan. The knights of "made in France" Companies on a human scale, bosses in love with know-how and a region, employees motivated by their work and their quality of life. What drives these business leaders who opted for "made in France" when it was no longer fashionable? Why have they succeeded in maintaining employment and know-how in their regions? Report: Kristian Autain, Benjamin Poulain, Xavier Gaillard.
- In summary : Working after 62: at what cost? At what age can we retire? We went to meet seniors: happy at work, looking for a job or worn out even before retirement. Some companies are now adapting to allow older employees to work in better conditions. Reporting: Alice Gauvin. The guardian angel of giraffes This is the story of an image that has gone around the world. That of the lifeless bodies of six giraffes, lying on the sand in the Kenyan desert. But today, a man is battling drought and poaching threatening giraffes with extinction. They have been placed on the red list of endangered species. Reporting: David Muntaner.
- 1989– 1h 18mTV EpisodeIn summary : Lyon: alert to eternal pollutants. Is the milk of pregnant women in the Lyon suburbs contaminated by perfluorides? Is the drinking water network also? Investigation of a ubiquitous chemical component that worries European health authorities. After the Teflon scandal in the United States, it is the turn of the French and Italians to warn of the dangers of these industrial discharges with an unlimited lifespan and their effects on the health of local residents. Report: Martin Boudot, Laure Aguirre. The French prefer to laugh about it They decided to live by making people laugh. Marie, 40, quit her job in fashion to go on stage. Arnaud Ducret has filled theaters all over France for years. Fanny Ruwet, 27, broke through thanks to a video posted on the Internet. Meeting with these humorists who are a hit in France. Report: Amaury Velter, Bassel Al Hamwi, Julien Mercier, Mateo Masnada. Presented by: Élise Lucet.
- In summary : Never without my weapon. Are the French more armed than it seems? Between hunters and licensees in shooting clubs, which have been increasing steadily for ten years, weapons circulate in France in a completely legal manner. But is it safe? What controls? Report: Clément le Goff, Giona Messina, Gaëlle Pidoux. Teachers: at the school of arms Faced with the resurgence of mass shootings in schools, Texas in 2007 authorized teachers to carry weapons inside classrooms. Since then, across the United States, other states have legislated in this direction. In August 2017, Texas took a new step by allowing students to carry a weapon in universities. A highly contested decision on the Austin campus, where we followed a student who attends his classes with his weapon. Report: Kristian Autain, Loup Krikorian, Nils Montel. Does the car drive us crazy? A young woman who has her jaw broken because of a honk, a cyclist beaten up because of a wave of the hand, after two years of life in slow motion, violence at the wheel is on the increase. But beyond these extreme acts, we feel like a tension on the roads between motorists, cyclists and pedestrians. Why do even the calmest people lose their bearings in the car? What makes us go off the rails while driving? Does the car drive us all crazy? Report: Olivier Sibille. Tok-Tok: the third round? During the first round of the presidential election, we were in Beuvry in Pas-de-Calais, land of the left now conquered by the RN. Our reporter Arnaud Muller, a native of the city, returned to meet voters and candidates in this constituency where the far right is now torn apart. Report: Arnaud Muller.
- 1989–TV Episode
- In summary : A dry summer In many departments it has not rained since the spring. How did the French experience this summer of drought? What are the consequences for humans, fauna and flora? Report: Emilie Lambin. Mustard: investigation into a disappearance Why is there no more mustard on supermarket shelves when it is a French flagship? How did this specialty become a rare commodity? Because the drought has struck again. But in Canada this time, which has become the world's leading producer of mustard seeds. Report: Julien Cholin, Mathieu Rénier, Emma Noël. Die for Taiwan In recent weeks, China has been increasing demonstrations of force off Taiwan. Faced with this, the secessionist island organizes its defense to maintain its independence. If war breaks out in this region of the world, will there be a risk of a global shortage of microprocessors? Report: Olivier Sibille, Guillaume Marque, Roméo Cristien. This is my story They lost everything in the fire that ravaged the Landes forest this summer. They tell their story. Reporting: Laura Aguirre de Carcer.
- In summary : Incest: no longer be silent One in ten French people would have been the victim of incest, these sexual assaults committed within families. Over the past year, thousands of people, all over France, have come to testify before representatives of the Independent Commission on Incest and Sexual Violence Against Children (Ciivise). We were exceptionally authorized to film one of these meetings, where victims of all generations testify. Report: Alice Gauvin, Violaine Vermot-Gaud, Claire-Marie Denis, Marielle Krouk. Signage: not recommended for children under 10 (-10) Optical fiber: frying on the line While the government promises fiber for everyone in 2030, this historic site entrusted to operators is getting bogged down: self-employed technicians trained anyhow because of excessive subcontracting, after-sales service overwhelmed, 15 to 20% of subscribers would be affected by a malfunction of the service. Report: Julien Duponchel, Sarah Lerch, Vincent Buchy. This is my story: my life away from the Taliban That of Atifa, whom we had met in Kabul last summer before the capture of the city by the Taliban. We find her in Romorantin, where she has taken refuge with her family. She tells us about her new life. Report: Olivier Sibille. These dead that Russia does not want to see On the borders of Siberia, a region provides many soldiers sent to fight in Ukraine. They enlist to escape poverty and often return in coffins. Report in Buryatia, where the families' anger is rising against this war which they did not see coming. Report: Virginie Vilar, Adrien Bellay.
- In summary : Organ donation: saving those we love Maé, 18 months, is a little boy of just over a year. Suffering from a very rare metabolic disease, the only way to save him is a liver transplant. And it was Joey, her 26-year-old dad, who gave her a piece of his. The operation took place in Marseilles. In the Loir-et-Cher, it is between two sisters that the transplant will take place. Martine, 62, will give her sister Muriel, 63, one of her kidneys to cure her. We tell you about the struggle of these families to save one of their own, before, during and after the operation. Report: Floriane Chaume, Benjamin Chabeau, Nicolas Bellemon, Cédric Fourre, Alexandre Amaral. There is no small credit 1080 euros. This is the annual sum that the French will have to pay to absorb the general rise in prices. In this context of declining purchasing power, we are seeing the appearance of new financing offers for people who need money right away and who have to spend the money they will have today (perhaps ) tomorrow. We have tested mini credit, split payment, long-term rental, all these solutions offered today to pay immediately what cannot wait when it is difficult to make ends meet. As you will see, they often present pitfalls for the most precarious customers. Report: Nathalie Gros, Victoire Radenne, Guillaume Viart, Romain Vitellio and Olivier Broutin Ghana, the textile dustbin of the world In the Ghanaian capital, Accra, an artificial dune has been added to the landscape and has been growing steadily for fifteen years. About twenty meters high, it is not made of earth or stone, but 60% of clothes from all over the world. Most of these clothes come from the recycling industry in rich countries. Report: Élise Menand, Guillaume Marque, Léo Lochmann. Presented by: Élise Lucet.
- 1989– 1h 54mTV EpisodeIn summary : Obesity: learning to love yourself For a year, we followed the fight to lose weight led by four teenagers, Adil, Kylian, Philippine and Wenceslas, in a private clinic in Blois. When they were not in college, their daily life was punctuated by physical activities, nutrition workshops and community life. They all made the choice to follow this cure, except Kylian. He is here because justice has decided on a treatment order concerning him. A pediatrician reported to social services that his parents were unable to properly feed their children, an abuse in the eyes of the law. Their testimony is rare, courageous and poignant. Report: Perrine Bonnet, Claire-Marie Denis, Mikael Bozo. Male contraception: men too Will the future of contraception be masculine? While many women turn away from the pill every year, more and more men want to take control of fertility management in their relationship. Report: Yannick Sanchez, Matthieu Renier, Matthieu Le Rue. My life away from the Taliban This is the story of Atifa, 16, whom we met in Kabul in the summer of 2021, before the city was taken over by the Taliban. We find her in Romorantin, where the young Afghan has taken refuge with her family. She talks about her new life. Report: Clément Le Goff, Pierre Monégier, Martin Lavielle, Francis Simoes, Siv-An Ho, Marielle Krouk. Textile: the hill of shame In the Ghanaian capital Accra, an artificial dune has been added to the landscape and has been growing steadily for fifteen years. About twenty meters high, it is not made of earth or stone, but of 60% of clothes from all over the world, mostly from the recycling industry of rich countries. Report: Élise Menand, Guillaume Marque, Léo Lochmann. Presented by: Élise Lucet.
- My life as a Pôle Emploi advisor Pôle emploi is on the front line of the economic and social crisis. While unemployment is likely to increase in the coming months, the public body has announced the arrival of nearly 3,000 additional advisers. But will he be up to the challenge? In some agencies, lack of agent training, failing management, job seekers left to their fate: we investigated behind the scenes of this major recruitment. Some newly hired agents are in contact with job seekers from their first days without having received any instructions: they find themselves unable to answer the slightest question. Others have the responsibility of individually supporting dozens of unemployed people, still without having received the training necessary for their mission. They realize that job seekers have had no contact with their agency for months or even years without anyone worrying about it. An investigation by Charlotte Renot, Clémentine Mazoyer and Colin Guillemant with STP Productions. Hunters all allowed? They grew up in the middle of these rural landscapes but for a few weeks when they walk there, it is the ball in the belly. Peggy, Sarah and Zoé lost their friend, Morgan Keane, 25, killed on December 2 by a hunter while he was chopping wood near his house, in Calvignac in the Lot. Since then, Morgan's friends and other residents have decided to set up a collective to collect dozens of testimonies from hunting victims and denounce what they describe as an omerta in the countryside. The hunters themselves feel wrongly accused and defend a useful practice for the community. Dive into a valley where gunshots no longer resound as before. An investigation by Perrine Bonnet, Loup Krikorian and Benoît Sauvage. my life as an astronaut On April 22, Frenchman Thomas Pesquet will return to space for another 6-month stay on the International Space Station. He has been preparing for this new mission and all the risks it entails for more than a year. The astronaut agreed to tell us about this new adventure and to comment for us on the images of his hundreds of hours of training. How to put out a fire on board the station, how to keep your cool during a spacewalk, what menus to take on board, what scientific experiments to conduct? He will tell us all the details of this incredible mission. A report by Laura Aguirre de Carcer, Elodie Delevoye and Michel Pignard. Poland, the fight of women It is a revolt of women of all generations: in Poland, since last October, huge demonstrations have shaken the country, unheard of since 1989 and the fall of communism. At the heart of this popular movement, the toughening of the law on the right to abortion. From now on, abortion will no longer be possible in the event of a malformed fetus, which represented nearly 90% of abortions in the country, but only in the event of rape, incest or pregnancy dangerous to the health of the woman. A decision that has changed the daily lives of thousands of young women. We will meet Mola, a 19-year-old activist victim of police violence, Natalia who had to have an abortion alone at home and is now helping other women to have access to abortion pills, or even Grandmother Kasia, a famous 65-year-old feminist who today challenges the police. A report by Magdalena Chodownik, Kouba Kaminski and Xavier Puyperoux with FTV studio.
- Fuels/Covid long In summary : Fuels: the bad pump The Gonfreville-l'Orcher refinery, in Seine-Maritime, the largest in France, has been blocked for several days by employees who are asking for salary increases. We follow their movement from the inside, as well as local motorists who are victims of the shortage caused by their action. We are also following the negotiations started in Paris under the leadership of the government. Are the interests of each other compatible? What will be the consequences of this shortage which is added to those of other sources of energy? Report: Clément Le Goff, Yannick Sanchez. Investigation on my Covid long In France, two million people are said to suffer from persistent symptoms of Covid. Our journalist Anaïs Bard is one of them. On May 20, 2021, she tested positive for coronavirus and since then it's a bit like the disease has never gone away. Intense fatigue, palpitations, tinnitus, brain fog. Why doesn't she heal? How is this virus messing up his body? Report: Anaïs Bard, Swanny Thiébaut, Julien Ababsa, Harold Horroks. Presented by: Élise Lucet.
- Episode:(2021)
Cuisines fantômes, vrais restaurants?/Police les mesages de la haine/Indonésie, l'archipel englouti.
1989– 1h 52mTV Episode"Ghost kitchens, real restaurants?". Burger, Greek pita, Thai menus or fried chicken... in the same kitchen, dishes are prepared that have little to do with each other. These are restaurants that will never welcome customers, kitchens entirely dedicated to the delivery of meals, which are called "dark kitchens" or "ghost kitchens". These 4,500 "virtual restaurants" are virtually indistinguishable from traditional restaurants, which display a real specialty. To the despair of restaurateurs - In Indonesia, on the north coast of the island of Java, the rising waters devour the land of many towns and villages a little more each day. Trapped, the inhabitants struggle to survive. - 1989– 1h 53mTV EpisodeBuitoni pizzas: chain negligence? Two dead children, dozens of others poisoned by pizzas made in a factory belonging to Nestlé, this is the Buitoni scandal. For the first time, the parents of little Kelig recount the ordeal of their two-and-a-half-year-old son. Employees of the Caudry factory testify to the poor hygienic conditions on the site which manufactured the pizzas in question. Report: Eugénie Yvrande, Pauline Kerempichon. Hunters all allowed? Peggy, Sarah and Zoe lost their friend, Morgan Keane, 25, killed on December 2, 2020 by a hunter while chopping wood near his house. Since then, Morgan's friends and other residents have decided to set up a collective to collect testimonies from victims of hunting and denounce what they describe as an omerta in the countryside. The hunters, on the other hand, feel wrongly accused and defend a useful practice for the community. Report: Perrine Bonnet, Loup Krikorian, Benoît Sauvage. From undocumented to engineer Jonathan, a brilliant science terminal student, joined an engineering school at the start of the school year: INSA in Lyon. But his story is not as linear as his school career might lead one to believe. Three years ago, he landed in Brest without papers, on the street. He lived all these years with the fear of being expelled and sent back to his country of origin, the Democratic Republic of Congo. Report: Olivier Sibille, Mathieu Rénier. I give birth at home Isabelle is a midwife who practices her profession in an unusual way: in Touraine, she helps future mothers give birth at home. A practice that is not widespread in France, where less than one birth in four hundred takes place at home, compared to one in eight in the Netherlands. Reporter: Marine Haag.
- Episode: (2021)1989– 1h 37mTV EpisodeCBD madness A report by Julie Benzoni, Jerôme Mars, Paul Cabanis and Antoine Imbert for Kraken Films France has authorized the sale of CBD, traders who have embarked on this promising, but not really legal business, are rubbing their hands. This is the end of a legal vagueness. Yet for French farmers who have embarked on the adventure, it's a cold shower. Hemp flower remains prohibited for sale because it would be the voice for the legalization of cannabis. The shops must therefore source their supplies abroad. Special Envoy tells you about this new French paradox. Generation Nude: when the body is worth gold A report by Romain Boutilly, Swanny Thiebaut, Antoine Husser and Baptiste Rimbert It is a phenomenon that has exploded since the 1st confinement in March 2020. In just 2 years, selling photos of your naked body would have become a considerable source of income. On twitter, just type a few explicit keywords like "Nudes" or "Sellnudes" to find thousands of accounts of young people, mainly girls, exposing their bodies for a few euros. A practice that is not without risk. Because these images can one day resurface, years later, by being disseminated in revenge on the internet, without consent. A practice often called "revenge porn" against which activists like those of the "Stop Fisha" collective are fighting. Special Envoy followed these vigilantes of the net who flush out accounts that display the bodies of girls in order to harm them. Jean-Martin Fortier: an extraordinary gardener A report by Anouk Burel for Babel Press He is the official sponsor of the vegetable garden at the Château de Chambord, and in Quebec, he is a star on TV shows and even the hero of a series: Jean-Martin Fortier is not a gardener like the others. On his organic farm in Canada, he practices permaculture and revolutionizes market gardening to make it a very lucrative economic activity. Mini-farms for maxi-profits. His book "the peasant gardener" has sold 200,000 copies. Envoyé Spécial takes you into the world of the man who perhaps foreshadows the agriculture of tomorrow.
- 1989– 1h 53mTV EpisodeIn summary : The slag heaps go green Solar panels on the church, reduction of public lighting, social housing with the best insulation standards, there are places in France where this has long been a daily reality. In Loos-en-Gohelle, in Pas-de-Calais, the mayor did not wait for rising energy prices to become a concern. How can the municipalities protect their inhabitants from this crisis which they are taking for the most part with full force? What are their solutions today when faced with the issue of sobriety? Report: Lila Bellili, Alexandre Rémond, Alex Gouty, Louise Laggabe. The Loiseau family: a heritage of gastronomy Nineteen years after the death of chef Bernard Loiseau, we tell you how the family recovered. One girl in the kitchen, the other at the head of the company. The star race continues. Report: Eugénie Ygrandegrande, Stéphanie Ponsart, Matéo Édouard, Benoit Loisel. Lithium, the new white gold France is embarking on the lithium race. By 2027, a deposit of this ore, essential for the manufacture of batteries, will be mined in the Allier. This new "white gold" is becoming a crucial issue for energy independence. Report: Kristian Autain, Francis Simoes, Léo Lochmann. Delinquency: farmers at the end of their tether William is a worried breeder. For several weeks, he has been going to his meadows every night to watch over his sheep and ewes. And every morning, he recounts them to check that no animal has been stolen. Sheep, chickens, fruit and vegetables, but also fuel or ultramodern GPS on tractors: crime in the countryside affects farmers who, until then, did not really take precautions. And these thefts are often perpetrated by increasingly organized gangs. Report: Clémentine Mazoyer, Matéo Masnada, Adèle Prugnaud, Colin Guillemant.
- Episode: (2022)1989– 1h 50mTV EpisodeReindustrialization: the thunderclap: Unemployment, poverty, small businesses in distress... In Tonnerre, in Yonne, the disappearance of the industrial fabric has created a gaping void. Since the closure in 2004 of the Thomson video recorder factory, the economic lung of the town has disappeared. But the city decided to bounce back. It is this story that we have chosen to tell: that of a city that comes to terms with its past of deindustrialization, but which is gradually regaining ambition. A report by STP Prod The digital castaways: Special Envoy embarked with Christophe Ceylan and Sylvère Latscha. Advisers of the Secours Populaire, they crisscross the roads of Meurthe-et-Moselle in Lorraine in a motorhome to support the inhabitants in their online procedures. From village to village, they come to the aid of those forgotten by the all-digital and the dematerialization of public services. A report by Alice Gauvin, Elodie Delevoye and Max Paquereau These Russians fleeing Putin: These Russians packed their bags the day after the invasion of Ukraine. They go alone or with family. They are engineers, artists or human rights activists. We found them in Istanbul in Turkey where their community is organizing to build a new life. A report by Virginie Vilar, Olivier Sibille, Annie Tribouard and Benoît Sauvage.
- 1989– 1h 48mTV EpisodeIn summary : Truck hell From national 10 in Charente, to national 83, in Doubs, local residents can't take it anymore. The number of HGVs has steadily increased since they were widened and they can drive there as fast as on toll motorways. Risk of accident, deafening noise, wild car parks, rubbish of all kinds, condemned houses and gardens... The living environment of the inhabitants along these roads has become hellish. Report: Amaury Velter, Christophe Blais, Pierre Collet, Jeanne Bureau, Bruno Bequet. Bread lovers Good bread is their whole life. And for them, the industrialization of chopsticks would have made this traditional food lose some of its virtues. Would today's bread be less easy to digest, less tasty, less rich? Is it for this reason, among others, that its consumption has been in constant decline in France for years? Report: Raphaële Schapira, Swanny Thiébaut, Mathieu Dreujou. Killer Drug Alert. In the markets of Abidjan, a young blond man from Béarn helps the police track down the fake drugs that are wreaking havoc in Africa. Two years ago, Arnaud Pourredon was a fourth-year medical student in Bordeaux. He dropped everything to fight against the trafficking of fake drugs in Africa. He even created a start-up to help local pharmacists. Report: Romain Boutilly, Matthieu Rénier, Marielle Krouk.
- 1989– 1h 22mTV EpisodeIn summary : TER, what a mess. What is happening at the SNCF? The regional express trains, the famous TER borrowed every day by millions of French people, are increasingly decried. Delays, outright canceled departures, users can't take it anymore... Report: Julien Fouchet. CAF does not respond Extended processing times, impossibility of obtaining an appointment, suspension of rights without notice... For several months, CAF recipients have been complaining of difficulties in receiving their social benefits: family allowances, housing aid, RSA ... Through a cartoonist who has made a comic strip of her bad experience and a mother who is fighting to recover her rights, immersion in the functioning of this public service which comes to the aid of nearly half of the French. Reporting: Alice Gauvin, Sarah Lerch, Marielle Krouk. Japan: disturbing idols In Japan, almost every man has his "idol", that is to say a young starlet, sort of Lolita, with whom he can play lovers on social networks. To meet them, some do not hesitate to spend a good part of their salary. Nodji, 63, is crazy about Mizuki, 22, but their relationship is totally platonic. The obsession with the woman-child is widespread in the archipelago. In recent years, idols are everywhere: in the street, in concert, in manga, they have become a real industry. A ruthless world in which these young girls are pure consumer products, even with an expiry date. Report: Constantin Simon.
- 1989– 1h 26mTV EpisodeIn summary : Household waste: a public service in the trash? In several French departments, garbage collection at home is over. It is replaced by "voluntary contribution points". Many villages but also neighborhoods in large cities are adopting this new collection method. Which is almost unanimous against him. And for good reason: undersized bins that overflow, helpless elderly people now living in the middle of their garbage, multiplication of wild dumps... There is a wind of revolt in the countryside against this system. And yet, originally, it started with a good intention: to encourage people to reduce their waste. But behind the ecological speeches, it is a public service that disappears. Report: Delphine Welter, François Gagnant. Pensions: the account is not there. Are all retirees getting what is due to them? Is their pension calculated correctly? According to a report by the Court of Auditors relating to the year 2019, one retirement in seven would include calculation errors, most often to the disadvantage of pensioners. Basic scheme, supplementary schemes, employees, civil servants, self-employed, auto-entrepreneurs... for thousands of retirees, collecting their pension has become a headache. Report: Alexandre Paré, Alice Gauvin, Nicolas Bellemon, Élodie Delevoye, Benoît Viudès. The secrets of France's youngest billionaire He is an autodidact and the youngest billionaire in France. And yet, no one knows him. Sadri Fegaier, 43, is a powerful and discreet man, an entrepreneur who has built an insurance empire from a simple phone shop in a shopping mall. But today he is the target of thousands of angry consumers who accuse him of fraud. Report: Olivier Sibille, Alex Gouty, Benoît Sauvage.
- 1989– 1h 54mTV EpisodeIn summary : Single parents, the harder the recovery will be They are eight million to bring up their children alone. And for these mothers and fathers, inflation and the energy crisis are tougher than for others. In this new year, we are with those who face the crisis alone, alongside these single parents who are so many courageous parents. Report: Yannick Sanchez, Juliette Jonas, Stéphane Bidart. Lubrizol, a disaster without pollution? On the night of September 26, 2019, two Rouen companies, Normandie Logistique and Lubrizol, caught fire. The fire lasted more than twelve hours, burning 9,500 tonnes of chemicals. That day, the family of our journalist Julien Duponchel was next to the factory, under the cloud of smoke. Officially, the authorities have not observed any consequences for the environment and the health of the inhabitants. Three years later, "Special Envoy" reopens the files and certain analyzes raise questions. Guests: Julien Duponchel, journalist; Paul Poulain, consulting engineer in industrial risks. Report: Julien Duponchel, Élodie Delevoye, Matthieu Hauville, Bruno Maruani. Tanzania, the Maasai chased from their land In Tanzania, the photo safaris all stop in a Maasai village. What tourists don't know is that these nomadic people are gradually being expelled from their ancestral lands. In the World Heritage-listed Ngorongoro Protected Area, the Maasai and their herds of cattle are seen as a threat to wildlife and tourism revenue. To push the inhabitants to leave, the government does not hesitate to reduce their access to social services, health and education. Forest: the hangover You may have noticed it if you have a parquet floor or a frame installed: prices are soaring and deadlines are getting longer. Because for the past few months, the raw material, oak, has been running out. "Special Envoy" investigated the reasons for this shortage. Reporter: Marine Haag.
- 1989– 1h 42mTV EpisodeIn summary : When the French steal to eat They are students or employees, unemployed or retired and for a few months, they have started stealing food. A phenomenon that is gaining more and more momentum in small shops and supermarkets. "Special Envoy" went to meet them. Report: Jérôme Levy, Marjorie Lafon, Mikael Bozo, Vincent Kelner. Turkey, tears and anger On the night of Monday, February 6, 2023, a magnitude 7.8 earthquake struck Turkey. A few hours later, another tremor was felt and several aftershocks took place. These earthquakes took place in densely populated areas and affected an area including southern Turkey and northern Syria. As the toll of the disaster continues to rise, survivors face freezing temperatures and desperately try to find their loved ones in the rubble, in indescribable pain and destitution. Report: Marianne Getti, Yaël Goujon. Survey of radical ecologists Blocking motorists, spraying the canvases of great masters with soup, sabotaging factories considered polluting... For months, not a week has passed without Last Renovation, Just stop oil or Extinction Rebellion organizing a punch operation. In the ranks of these organizations, many young people between 20 and 30 years old, mostly graduates and city dwellers. For them, traditional activism is over, with petitions or climate marches. This new generation, anxious about global warming, chooses to strike hard to warn of climate inaction. Leave to face justice. Report: Romain Boutilly, Élodie Delevoye, Perrine Aubert, Adrien Bellay. For my brother On October 30, 2012, Jallal Hami, a graduate of Science-Po Paris and a brilliant student officer of the prestigious Saint-Cyr school, died drowned at the age of 24 in an exercise in "transmission of traditions", in other words a "cramming", in the within the military academy. It took eight years before the seven defendants, five former students and two former members of the hierarchy, appeared before the Rennes criminal court in 2020. Only three of them were sentenced, and only to prison with suspended sentence for manslaughter. Rachid Hami, his older brother, made it the fight of his life, to honor the memory of his younger brother. Today a filmmaker, his feature film, "Pour la France", looks back on Jallal's life, his death and his funeral. Reporting: Julie Martin, Benjamin Chabeau, Emmanuel Charieras. Presented by: Élise Lucet.
- In summary : Live Rescue In July 2021, panicked, the mother of two-month-old Ryan contacted the Beauvais emergency call center: her baby was no longer breathing, he was "all blue". It was a cardiac arrest. Immediately, the firefighter she had on the phone dispatched an emergency team to the scene. At the same time, he remotely guided the actions of this mother in distress and helped her to save the infant by indicating how to give him cardiac massage. Report: Clément Le Goff. Retirement: big anger in small towns While the bill is being debated in the Senate, the social movement opposing the pension reform began a new stage on Tuesday, March 7, with demonstrations in more than two hundred cities, but also a call to "put France off ". A team followed the mobilization in Brittany. Report: Arnaud Muller. Abortion: the Italian way of the cross In Italy, voluntary termination of pregnancy has been legal for forty-five years. However, the "anti-abortion" sow many obstacles in the way of those who want to terminate a pregnancy. Pro-life movements are organizing in the hope of one day seeing this right challenged, as in the United States. And these movements have the ear of Giorgia Meloni, the new Prime Minister. Report: Anaïs Bard, Giona Messina, Gaëlle Pidoux.
- 1989– 1h 52mTV EpisodeThe Cobalt Damned A report by Julien Fouchet and Marielle Krouk The scene is chilling: Hervé, a young Congolese, goes down every day into a narrow well, which he dug himself, in search of cobalt. This mineral is essential to our energy transition. It is used, among other things, in the manufacture of electric batteries. Special Envoy accompanied one of these "damned cobalt" working 20 meters underground in these artisanal mines, which fail to collapse at any time, and where oxygen is scarce. With the strength of the arms, each month, Hervé brings up a ton of cobalt. Sale price: 1100 euros. What slightly improve his daily life and that of his family, but not enough to get out of poverty. A paradox, when you think that the Democratic Republic of Congo is the largest cobalt reserve in the world. The country could have used this providential windfall to finally bring its population out of underdevelopment. Yet the vast majority of Congolese barely benefit from this resource. The authorities have sold the main mines to foreign companies, mostly Chinese. Only crumbs of cobalt remain for the Congolese, who see, before their eyes, the natural wealth of their country confiscated by other nations. Cocaine while driving: the new scourge A report by Anaïs Bard, Olivier Sibille, Juliette Jonas, Julien Fouchet, Lila Bellili and Marielle Krouk After the accident caused by Pierre Palmade, investigate these more and more drug addicts on our roads. These users of cocaine or other narcotics take the wheel without realizing the risks they run and the danger they represent for other motorists. Results, sometimes shattered lives and opposite, for these speeders, sentences often considered far too light by the victims. In 2022, more than 700 people are believed to have lost their lives as a result of accidents involving the use of cocaine or cannabis. The broken choirs A report by Brice Lambert, Grégory Roudier and Vincent Fajeau, for StudioFact It is a muffled world, often bourgeois, where speech is finally free: that of children's choirs. The teams of Special Envoy, in partnership with the newspaper Le Parisien, reveal several sexual abuses which would have been committed on young singers by choir directors, in particular within the choir school of Moineaux du Val-de-Marne, in the suburbs Parisian. An unprecedented investigation, with rare testimonies and archives that show that one of these choir leaders could have gone from choir to choir thanks to the complicit silence of several employers. Who goes piano goes lontano A report by Violaine Vermot-Gaud, Claire-Marie Denis, Luis Marques, Benoît Sauvage, Mathilde Rougeron and Marie Bouchet. Her life, she "has always lived it in music". Colette Maze, born June 16, 1914, is a pianist. For her, "everything is rhythm", music "is a world of images, beauty, colors" and "a hand is like a brush, each finger must have its own poetry". She discovered the piano very young, preferred it to her dolls and never stopped playing. Her instrument "gave her tenderness", perhaps the one that was missing from this child whose mother "was tough and only knew how to slap". A graduate of the Normal School of Music in Paris, Colette Maze took lessons from Pascal Rogé, then became a piano teacher and practiced all her life. At 108, she still practices every day for four to five hours on her Steinway, chosen for its "good sound".
- Callac/Panama/Host families In summary : The Battle of Callac Public death threats against elected officials, violent demonstrations in the streets... who would have thought that Callac, 2,200 inhabitants, would one day occupy the front of the news for months? The small Breton town has become the symbol of the tense debate on immigration. It all started in the spring of 2022, when the city council announced that the town should welcome families from Syria, benefiting from a long residence permit. The local, and even national, extreme right then made the failure of this new project its battle horse. Report: Julie Benzoni, Jean-Charles Guichard, Pablo Rey, Julien Dufau. Guest: Yannick Morez, mayor of Saint-Brévin-les-Pins (Loire-Atlantique). Panama: we went through green hell In the mountainous jungles between Colombia and Panama, we followed migrants trying to reach the United States from South America. For days, these people, from Venezuela, Haiti or Africa, face the dangers on foot to cross the "Darién Gap", or "Darién plug", 100 kilometers of extremely dangerous jungle where many lose their lives. To make this grueling journey, they paid 350 dollars per person to a cartel of Colombian drug traffickers. Once this dense jungle has passed, they will still have several countries to cross, over 3,000 kilometers, before crossing the border into the United States. Report: Loïc de La Mornais, Thomas Donzel, Keely Sullivan Den Bergh, Carlos Villalon. Guest: Loïc de La Mornais, journalist. Host families, happy families On her Norman farm, Stéphanie is a family assistant, a job better known as "foster family". Alongside her two children, she is raising a 12-year-old boy and a 2-year-old girl who were entrusted to her by the Childhood Social Aid. And if she does everything to ensure that these children are happy in her family, it is because she herself is a former foster child. Reporting: Alice Gauvin, Sarah Lerch, Jérôme Sarfati, Soline Braun. Presented by: Élise Lucet.
- In summary : Help, my insurer no longer insures. Broken glass on your vehicle? An accident for which you are not responsible? Have you been a victim of flooding? Beware. Because in the event of bad luck and a new disaster, you risk termination. Nearly a million French people saw their insurance terminated last year. In 2022, insurers paid more than 50 billion euros in compensation, including 10 billion just for natural disasters... Three times more than last year. So they hunt down the "poor" and the bad customers. Woe to him who is not profitable. Report: Wendy Zbinden, Julien Merci, Justine Rousseaux. Harry and Meghan, royal business The life of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex is scrutinized by the whole planet, from the "fairy tale" of their union until their break with the British monarchy. The couple, who lead a sumptuous lifestyle, never stop talking and making people talk: a six-hour series on Netflix, the release of the prince's biography... The couple sells their image dearly and masters their communication perfectly. All his contracts together would bring in at least $135 million. And not to lose a crumb, the Sussexes would have put in place a clever financial arrangement, legal of course, but not necessarily ethical. What is behind the image of philanthropists given by Harry and Meghan? Report: Julien Duponchel, Guillaume Beaufils, Swanny Thiébaut, Julie Martin, Benoît Sauvage. Desperately looking for caregivers He's missing half of his staff and can't make it anymore. This director of a specialized home for people with autism or Down's syndrome is sounding the alarm: some days, for lack of time, caregivers become almost abusive towards residents. They no longer have a minute for "awakening" activities, little time for hygiene gestures and a general lack of attention which considerably disrupts the routine of the handicapped, who are already very fragile. The staff who remained exhausted themselves, eventually falling ill and resigning in turn. Plunged into a medico-social sector out of breath, which now has 50,000 vacancies. Report: Marianne Getti, Florent Hayet, Jérôme Prouvost. Presented by: Élise Lucet.
- In summary : All HPI? Series on television, specialized schools, best-selling books: the gifted have never been so fashionable. But who really are the high intellectual potentials? Young students or adults working in companies, why do many of them feel the need to find themselves between HPI? They would be 134,000 in France. How are they detected? Why does an American company have a global monopoly on IQ tests? Are these tests really reliable? Report: Valérie Astruc. Charles III, my king and me As the whole kingdom prepares for the coronation of King Charles III, British journalist Louise Eckland has investigated the Prince's Trust, the solidarity fund created by Prince Charles in 1976 and which is still in operation. Reporting: Louise Eckland. The life ahead They are 100 years old and in great shape. These dashing centenarians still ride bicycles or horseback, and there are many more of them than you might imagine. There are four areas on the planet that have an unusual proportion of centenarians and what scientists call ultra-nonagenarians. Called "blue zones", these regions intrigue demographers around the world: have their inhabitants unlocked the secret of longevity? Report: Kristian Autain, Vincent Piffeteau, Cédric Beaume, Ghislain Delaval. Presented by: Élise Lucet.
- 1989– 1h 45mTV EpisodeIn summary : Workforce: the revenge of the employees? In Brest and throughout Finistère, the unemployment rate has melted to 6.3% and employers are in despair. They are not short of work but of workers. Where to find candidates in a region with almost full employment? How do you convince employees to stay when another employer offers them better conditions? In the jobs with the most pressure, salaries go up and working conditions must improve, otherwise employees will leave. Report: Valérie Astruc, Guillaume Marque, Sylvain Testor, Baptiste Blanc, Mikaël Bozo. Guest: Sophie Binet, General Secretary of CGT. Artificial intelligence: friend or foe? A computer capable of brilliantly passing the competition to become a lawyer without the help of any human being. A machine accessible free of charge, which reasons as well as a professor, diagnoses your illnesses better than a doctor, can write letters, reports, homework or commercial advertisements for you... It's no longer science fiction, ever since ChatGPT went live a few months ago. The development of artificial intelligence, which also makes it possible to fabricate false information, is causing growing concern. Why isn't this latest innovation from Silicon Valley just another gimmick? Reporting: Yannick Sanchez, Élodie Delevoye, Juliette Jonas, Sarah Lerch, Harold Horoks. Guest: Alexeï Grinbaum, physicist, director of research at the Atomic Energy Commission (CEA). Urban rodeos: beware of speeders. This is a phenomenon that affects all cities, large or medium-sized, as long as there is an industrial or commercial area with a large car park nearby: on Friday and Saturday evenings, cars rush at full speed on straight lines and skid in the bends, in the middle of the night, in the middle of spectators without any protection. In one year, the number of "rassos" has tripled throughout France. On April 14, 2023, one of these urban rodeos left thirteen injured in the suburbs of Bordeaux. Report: Julien Duponchel, Julien Fouchet, Léa Prunier, Tom Cluzeau, Gabriel Viallet, Bruno Maruani.
- In summary : Fed up with burglaries. In Tournefeuille, near Toulouse, there were 302 burglaries last year, almost one a day. With a 40.5% increase compared to 2021, this suburban town, popular with families of aeronautical executives, is the town in France which has experienced the largest increase in the number of burglaries. How do burglars operate? What can law enforcement do? Which homes are most affected? Why is a home robbery so traumatic for its victims? Report: Florian Le Moal, Alex Gouty. What if rejuvenation became possible? American billionaire Bryan Johnson, 45, wants to reverse the course of time. He claims to have looked five years younger thanks, in particular, to his very particular diet. The biologist Greg Fahy, meanwhile, does not appear his 73 years: by injecting a growth hormone and two other hormones, would he have found an antidote to aging? Some scientists want to go further and reprogram the very heart of our cells, which would make it possible to rejuvenate some of our organs. A mad race in which dozens of start-ups and billionaires have embarked. Report: Olivier Sibille, Julien Duponchel, Guillaume Marque, Guillaume Beaufils, Emmanuel Rassat, Benoît Sauvage. Presented by: Élise Lucet.
- 1989– 1h 56mTV EpisodeIn summary : Inside Elon Musk's head She is a highly controversial figure who has cut off all contact with the media since coming under fire from critics. The loss of half of his fortune in 2022, the difficulties of Tesla, the accusation of manipulation of the stock price on Twitter, of encouraging toxic management within his companies, of the sacrifice of 1,500 guinea pigs in as part of his research in neuroscience or his fight "against political correctness" via the takeover of Twitter... What is the real face of Elon Musk? The multi-billionaire built his legend in San Francisco by creating a dozen companies focused on new technologies. For Elon Musk, obsessed with the end of the world, only unlimited human and technological development will save our civilization. But what is in the head of this tireless entrepreneur who shakes up the established order? Is he a visionary genius, a sorcerer's apprentice or a megalomaniac boss? Report: Pierre Monégier, Edward Bally, Élodie Delevoye, Élouen Martin, Arnaud Pacary, Benoît Sauvage. At the heart of an assize trial We obtained the exceptional authorization to film an appeal trial in an assize court in its entirety. That of a "crime of blood on a woman committed by her spouse". The story of a divorce procedure, between two parents of five children, which turns into a tragedy. Is this a murder or an assassination? At first instance, premeditation was not accepted. What will happen during this appeal trial? This unpublished document is also an opportunity to decipher in detail an assize trial. How do those who run this court actually work? How is it constituted? Who are the judges and what is their role? Report: Floriane Chaume, Chloé Vienne, Sébastien Girodon, Antonin Marcel, Alexandre Amaral. Presented by: Élise Lucet.
- 1989– 1h 49mTV EpisodeIn summary : France is blooming again More and more independent florists stop buying foreign flowers and try to introduce their customers to local varieties. Flower farms and their more varied flower production promote biodiversity. They rely on short circuit sales and are attracting more and more customers. Report: Alice Gauvin, Élodie Delevoye, Claire Combaluzier, Arnaud Pacary, Gabriel Viallet. My life without plastic Journalist Raphaële Schapira tried to take up a challenge: to live without plastic. And it doesn't look so simple. Disposable plastic objects, a priori the easiest to replace, are everywhere in our kitchen, our bathroom, our daily life. The journalist called on a "zero waste" specialist to help her rid her cupboards of all the accumulated plastic. According to her, the solutions exist. Report: Raphaële Schapira, Julien Ababsa, Aloyse Launay, Siv An Ho, Marion Gualandi, Karim Annette. School: a director facing the dealers Christophe Boissier is director of the Georges-Bruguier school, in the heart of the disadvantaged district of Chemin-Bas d'Avignon, in Nîmes. A seemingly classic school, but which is nevertheless surrounded by drug trafficking that the police are struggling to stem. Christophe Boissier will retire after a long career in establishments in priority education zones. He tells his story. Report: Clément Le Goff, Julien Pelletier, Baptiste Blanc, Benoît Sauvage. In the land of abandoned children At the door of the orphanage, Pastor Lee's baby box has already welcomed around thirty newborns since the beginning of the year. All abandoned by their mothers for fear of being ostracized from society. In South Korea, the world's tenth largest economy, child abandonment is one of the best kept secrets. These women are mostly single mothers and, in this country where employers ask for the family record book when recruiting, having a child alone or out of wedlock is a shame. These abandoned children are often sent for international adoption. Since the 1960s, more than 200,000 Korean children have been taken in by parents abroad. They even constitute the largest diaspora of children in modern history, feeding the business of multinational adoption companies. Report: Camille Le Pomellec, Minju Song, Byoungsoo Kim, Colin Guillemant. Presented by: Élise Lucet.
- Dear animals: Thematic program around the French passion for our four-legged friends. In summary : The pet business With 15 million cats and 7.5 million dogs, France is the leading country in Europe in terms of the number of pets. Almost one in two households owns one and, on average, our animal friends cost their owner between 800 and 1,000 euros per year. A market of 3.5 billion euros, constantly increasing (+ 4% per year) because despite the crisis and galloping inflation, 30% of owners say they prefer to deprive themselves rather than cut corners on the well-being of their animal. Two large multinationals dominate the animal feed market and are no longer content to reign supreme in this area, one of the most profitable. They are now attacking the animal care market, by buying up veterinary clinics with all their might. Report: Laurent Boullard, Mario Pécot. guardian angels of animals Animals now have their lawyers, whether they are victims or... accused. The judges have the mission to protect them but can also condemn them to death, by requiring their euthanasia. Since 2015, animals have been recognized by the Civil Code as living beings endowed with sensitivity and are no longer, in the eyes of the law, mere objects. Reporter: Marine Haag. Search: monkey sacrifice Mauritius is known for its heavenly beaches, less for its laboratory monkey farms, of which it is the second largest exporter in the world, mainly to the United States and France. These animals are essential to science, but to feed this business of 15 million euros per year, clandestine farms and illegal captures of wild animals are increasing. Report: Lucie Chaussoy, Nicolas Bertrand, Fabien Fougère, Kilian Le Bouquin, Thomas Pham-Hung. Presented by: Élise Lucet.
- 1989– 1h 49mTV EpisodeIn summary : Seniors: the gold mine of our countryside There are seven million isolated people in France, almost half of whom are over 60 years old. As a result, the personal assistance sector has never been so flourishing. This is particularly true in Creuse, where 40% of the population is over 60 and where only one in ten seniors benefits from home help. Between start-ups, hiring young people, host families or actions to reduce the isolation of seniors, everything is good to make the most rural department in France a model of personal service. Report: Hélène Gautier, Victor Bachtik, Aurélie Sanner. Sex, lies and video Gilles Artigues, deputy mayor of Saint-Étienne (Loire), tells for the first time on television how he found himself the victim of an intimate video trap, after being filmed without his knowledge in a bedroom. hotel with an "escort boy". He confides in his six years of nightmare and accuses the mayor of Saint-Étienne, Gaël Perdriau, who refutes this accusation, of having been aware of the blackmail. Gilles Artigues recalls the years when he lived imprisoned in his silence. His family also testifies: Mireille, his wife, and Claire-Marie, his daughter. Report: Valérie Astruc, Clément Le Goff, Hervé Pozzo. Medical deserts: the new pioneers After ten years in the Beauvais emergency room, Doctor Binet decided to put his plate in Lozère. With wife and children, he begins his new life on a territory abandoned by his colleagues. Doctor Jardel, a recent graduate, chose to travel the French countryside in a motorhome. In the medical deserts of 11 departments, he comes to replace practitioners who have gone on leave. Report: Marion Cieutat. Presentation: Élise Lucet.
- 1989– 1h 37mTV EpisodeIn summary : Tourism, the overflow? Inflation and climate change have not put an end to the desire to travel. But 95% of tourists today visit less than 5% of the world, a problematic concentration, especially due to the impact of smartphones and social networks. Cliffs of Étretat, Verdon gorges, Corsican or Italian villages: in these popular destinations, everyone is looking for authenticity and... the best place to take a photo. How to cope? What cost for the popular localities? Should tourist flows be regulated? How to preserve the economy while thinking about ecology? Report: Romain Boutilly, Baptiste Laigle, Luis Marques, Dorian Liscouët. Campsites, the winners of the crisis Fort-Mahon-Plage, on the Picardy coast, is a popular destination far from the posh standards of neighboring Touquet. One of the popular types of accommodation is camping, adapted to vacationers' tight budgets. There are six in the town, most of them equipped with fully equipped mobile homes for low prices. Now, tents and caravans have given way to open-air accommodation. In France, almost one in ten campsites no longer offer bare pitches. The drop in purchasing power is good for professionals in the sector: the number of overnight stays has exploded in 2022, reaching 136 million. But we must keep prices as low as possible by ensuring the maintenance of the premises, a cheap offer accessible to as many people as possible. Difficult when costs increase... Report: Grégory Cohen, Matéo Masnada, Aurélien Martin, Johan Boulanger. The rush to Zanzibar The Zanzibar archipelago in the Indian Ocean has become a popular destination. The number of vacationers there has more than doubled since the Covid crisis, and Zanzibar is expected to welcome nearly a million visitors per year in 2024. But this explosion in tourism comes with challenges for the archipelago. Everywhere, concrete is replacing coconut trees, a spectacular growth that allows many to make a living from tourism but which has put underwater life in danger. Heaps of garbage from hotel complexes also pile up in illegal dumpsites, affecting groundwater and polluting water supplies. The quality of life of the 800,000 locals ultimately deteriorated. Report: Nicolas Bertrand, Fabien Fougère, Mégane Guillaume, Margot Chevance, Thomas Pham-Hung. Presentation: Élise Lucet.
- In summary : Ear Scams Unpleasant whistles, echoes, repeated breakdowns... and no one to repair your hearing aid. Very often, these little technological gems end up in a drawer simply because they have been incorrectly adjusted. While one in four French adults have hearing problems, the hearing aid market already represents 2.2 billion euros and is booming since these devices are fully reimbursed by Social Security and mutual insurance companies. Report: Julien Duponchel, Marie Petitjean, Adrien Mellot. Not ugly cantoches What if cooking organic and local was cheaper than opening cans? From canteen to canteen, it's the crazy challenge taken up on a daily basis by Jean-Marc Mouillac, chef, who teaches his methods for "not ugly cantoches", where the cuisine is 100% homemade, organic and local. Report: Anaïs Bard, Océane Labalette, Anne Cohen. India: the fury of the Hindus Is India sliding towards a religious war? Churches ransacked, priests threatened and Christians persecuted... Mosques burned, imams stabbed and Muslims lynched... These two minorities have become the target of the Hindu majority. Its extremist fringe, which supports Prime Minister Narendra Modi, dreams of making India a "Hindustan", a 100% Hindu nation. "Special Envoy" traveled the roads of a subcontinent in turmoil, among the ashes of Muslim shops set on fire by excited crowds, among the ruins of ravaged churches, alongside Muslims lynched by their neighbors, Christians who land, and Hindu-Muslim couples fleeing the fury of the fanatics. Report: Pierre Monégier, Ulysse Cailloux, Emmanuel Lejeune. Presentation: Élise Lucet.
- Water help. In France, we thought the water resource was inexhaustible. But as of August 2023, 72% of the country's water tables remained below normal. Exceptional program dedicated to water. In summary : Vittel: drink, eliminate... the tablecloth. Vittel, a small Vosges town of 4,000 inhabitants, is known throughout the world thanks to its mineral waters. One billion five hundred million bottles flow each year from the factories of Vittel and its neighbor Contrexeville and are exported all over the world by the Nestlé group. But over the past four years, the turnover of Vosges mineral waters has fallen by 17% and with global warming, this wealth is threatened. Report: Julien Fauchet, Violaine Vermot-Gaud, Mélanie Dumas, Anne-Marie Toulac. Guest: Julien Fourchet, journalist. Swimming pool, the ideal culprits? They are singled out every drought. The owners of private swimming pools would be the embodiment of a form of environmental selfishness, continuing to fill their pools when the rivers are dry. "Special Envoy" went to meet them in Roquefort-les-Pins, the commune in France which has the most swimming pools per inhabitant: 2,049 pools for 7,277 inhabitants. But are swimming pools really responsible for the lack of water in these thirsty territories? Report: Arnaud Muller, Lena Charlot, Steven Kali. Guest: Jean-Pierre Deprade, Montescot golf director. Andalusia, the fruits of drought In Andalusia, the immense wetland of the Donana National Park is dying, causing this "paradise for naturalists" with its fauna and flora to disappear. The capture of water by irrigation canals 80% used for agriculture, especially red fruits, is particularly singled out. Despite the Andalusian Parliament banning a number of farms, clandestine wells were dug, supplying farms that are now illegal. How to reconcile economic activity and respect for biodiversity? Report: Loïc de La Mornais, Rémy Bonnefoy, Fabrice Fuzillier, Katia Pinzon, Emmanuel Lejeune. Guests: Loïc de La Mornais, journalist; Marc Petit, mayor of Claira (Pyrénées-Orientales). Guadeloupe by the dropper Guadeloupe is one of the Antilles islands best endowed with fresh water. However, for years, some of its 390,000 inhabitants have been living with water cuts. Entire neighborhoods are regularly deprived of running water, local residents are forced to stock up on rainwater or shower with bottled water. The cause is an underground network in poor condition, with countless leaks that take a long time to plug. Report: Laura Aguirre de Carcer, Swanny Thiébaut, Adrien Bellay. Presentation: Élise Lucet.
- 1989– 1h 16mTV EpisodeIn summary : Alone against Goodyear She became a vigilante for love. Sophie Rollet has been investigating alone for eight years, since her husband, a truck driver, died in a road accident caused by a burst tire. This mother is convinced that the cause of the accident which killed the father of her children was the failure of a Goodyear truck tire. On a crusade against the American tire giant, she amassed evidence, compiled an impressive dossier, recorded similar accidents in France and abroad and convinced the courts to reopen the case. Report: Yannick Sanchez, Guillaume Beaufils, Karim Annette. Blind happiness The story of Delphine, 48 years old and blind from birth. She wanted to live her life without her disability preventing her from achieving her dreams. Today, she has two children, has become a court clerk and believes she has a good life. The engineer and the miraculous fountains From French Guiana to Senegal, we follow the members of an association who install miraculous fountains which make the water of all the rivers, wells or springs where they are installed drinkable. Pumps developed by a French engineer, Jean-Paul Augereau. Report: Hakim Abdelkhalek. Presentation: Élise Lucet.
- 1989– 1h 51mTV EpisodeDiesel/Academy of Versailles/School harassment/Pollution in Bali In summary : The damned of diesel A few years ago, they bought a diesel car on the advice of the governments of the time. Today, they are singled out: terrible polluters, enemies of the planet... What are the solutions for changing your car when you cannot afford an electric vehicle? Why has diesel become the beast to be killed? What are its real effects on pollution and health? Report: Olivier Pinte. The school in turmoil The Versailles academy, the largest in France, is in the spotlight: it is particularly accused of its management of the harassment of a 15-year-old high school student who committed suicide in Poissy (Yvelines) on September 5 , and whose parents had complained of insufficient care. The revelation of a letter sent by the rectorate, which accused the teenager's parents of not having a "constructive and respectful" attitude and even threatened them with criminal prosecution, sparked a wave of indignation. Charline Avenel, the former rector of this academy, had to explain this letter, judged by the Minister of National Education Gabriel Attal as "a shame". Report: Julien Duponchel. School bullying: adults' fault? We are used to talking about school bullying by explaining it in terms of the cruelty of children. But do we wonder about the responsibility of adults? In several recent cases, the parents of victims blame the institution, therefore National Education. Are teachers trained enough to detect cases of harassment in a classroom and resolve them? Does the institution respond quickly enough? Report: Raphaëlle Schapira, Mathieu Dreujou, Christine Trescartes. Under the plastic, the beach The island of Bali produces 300,000 tonnes of waste each year which invades mangroves, rivers, beaches, and ultimately the ocean. All come from illegal dumps, but also from residents who throw their trash directly into waterways. Because in Bali, there is no garbage collection or management. Indonesia is the world's second largest contributor to ocean pollution after China. To prevent waste from reaching the ocean, barriers in rivers have been built, like floating dams, by Sungai Watch, an association which collects it and then attempts to recycle it. Report: Angélique Forget, Antoine Védeilhé, Oskars Goetso. Presentation: Élise Lucet.
- On the ground in Israel and Lebanon:The "Special Envoy" teams went to Israel, with reports from Clément Le Goff and Julien Fouchet and, from Lebanon, Loïc de La Mornais on set in the Palestinian refugee camps, Potato gleaners A report by Arnaud Muller, Loïc Célarié and Christophe Wideman. Heroin, the poison of the countryside: A report by Florian Le Moal, Mathieu Dreujou and Nicolas Berthelot. In the east of France, the Meuse department has barely 185,000 inhabitants. In its rural landscape, the "Special Envoy" team discovered villages plagued by drugs. Dominique Guirlet, a former Samu doctor who became an addictologist, sees the ravages of heroin every day, in which she sees the equivalent of "a third war"... With the Csapa Centr'aid team, she travels all over the Department. Here, drug addicts are sometimes well integrated into society, because hard drugs circulate easily, making their use commonplace. They also occupy a significant place in judicial activity. The prosecutor of Bar-le-Duc, Sofian Saboulard, discovered campaigns poisoned by drugs, in particular cheap heroin, and organized crime coming from Metz and Nancy. According to him, it is an "abandoned territory", with "difficulties of access to transport and employment", and heroin, financially accessible, seems present in all the communes. Marine wind power: the rush for wind: A report by Eléna Le Runigo, François Cauwel, Marc Sainsauve and Jeanne Bureau for Hikari. The French coastline will radically change in the coming years. By 2030, France should operate 17 offshore wind farms. The next one, in Brittany, off the coast of Saint-Brieuc, began producing electricity during the summer of 2023. The Spanish energy company Iberdrola is installing 62 masts 207 meters high which will power 835,000 homes. A gigantic project that the "Special Envoy" teams were able to follow exclusively. Fishermen fear seeing their scallop resources disappear. Are they right to be worried? Near Batz-sur-Mer, the very first offshore wind farm has been visible since the summer of 2022. The skyline is definitely no longer the same... What do locals and tourists think? In Scotland, we no longer really ask the question because the offshore wind turbines are part of the decor. Manufacturers have taken a head start and are already preparing the new technology: floating wind turbines.
- In summary : Home, the end of a dream? A house and a small garden of their own is the dream of eight out of ten French people, a need for space reinforced since the pandemic. Barely two years ago, this ideal was still accessible to many citizens thanks to rock-bottom mortgage rates. But in a few months, the situation has changed a lot with rates which are now close to 4% and real estate prices which are not falling enough. Why are banks no longer lending and who are the French people most affected? What are the conditions for accessing a real estate loan? Can you still become an owner today? Report: Laura Orosemane, Jonas Juliette, Brice Gouronnec, Julien Pelletier, Maxime Cayot, Anne-Laure Marcault. Desperately looking for rental In most major French cities, the rental market has never been so tight. Between Lyon and La Rochelle, we followed these French people who work but for whom finding accommodation has become a desperate quest. Report: Olivier Sibille, Mathieu Dreujou, Antonin Sayada, Luis Marques, Mikaël Bozo. Presentation: Élise Lucet.
- 1989– 1h 21mTV EpisodeGreat wines, great misery/Civilians in the war/Olympics In summary : Great wines, great poverty In Margaux, Saint-Estèphe or Pauillac, in the Médoc, the vines have structured the landscape. Their appellations have made the region a flagship of French luxury. First stage in the making of these exceptional wines, the harvest, which begins in mid-September. A shadow army then hires every day at dawn until the end of the harvest. Many wine growers use service companies who hire seasonal labor often from abroad, paid the minimum wage, sometimes with very difficult working conditions and indecent housing. Backbreaking jobs, and above all precarious, which in no way reflect the luxury of great wines. Report: Julien Fouchet, Victor Di Bartolo, Floriane Chaume, Fabrice Fuzillier, Pascal Drapier. Guest: Guillaume Boudy, mayor of Suresnes. Civilians in war Since October 7, 2023, Omar, a Palestinian architect, has had to flee his house in Gaza, targeted by the Israeli army. While no Western journalist can enter the city, he films his devastated daily life himself. Like so many other Gazans, terrified, he tries to survive under the bombs and fears that he would not be identified if he died. The brother of Israeli Ofri, his wife and their two children were captured by a Hamas commando in the Nir Oz kibbutz, less than two kilometers from the Gaza Strip. A video shot by a member of this commando haunts Ofri, like a horror film: that of the kidnapping of his family from their house, the terror of his sister-in-law hugging her children. She is afraid that these images will lead her to hate all Palestinians, she who has always tried to "get closer" to them. On opposite sides of a border of fire and hatred, these two civilians were thrown into war. They are sure that the days to come will be difficult, because the time for dialogue and compassion still seems impossible. Report: Clément Le Goff, Julien Fouchet, Loïc de La Mornais, Lila Bellili, Élodie Delevoye, Ariel Koseleff, Omar Gharbia, Ludovic Lavieille, Michel Leray. Objective first Olympic medal They have never participated in the Olympics, so Paris 2024 is their goal. Ninon, Khalil, Duncan and Oriane have seven months to secure a place among the athletes who will represent France next summer. These athletes, among the best in their discipline, agreed to be monitored during their preparation. Report: Marianne Getti, Hélène Renaux, Jean Barrere, Hélène Lanfranchi. Guest: Clarisse Agbégnénou, judokate. Presentation: Élise Lucet.
- When women are targeted On the occasion of the International Day to Combat Violence Against Women, special program dedicated to this theme, in an innovative format. Élise Lucet intervenes at the heart of the reports to decipher certain situations or get witnesses to react. What means are being implemented to combat the scourge of violence against women? How to support those close to victims of femicide? Has French society really evolved after the MeToo movement and the numerous prevention campaigns? In summary : Judging violent men How can we better judge domestic violence? At the Clermont-Ferrand court, a specialized center has been set up, made up of specifically trained volunteer magistrates. Several times a month, these magistrates preside over hearings dedicated to domestic violence. The objective: to allow victims to feel more confident, and to make perpetrators understand the seriousness of their actions. Report: Alice Gauvin, Élodie Delevoye, Sarah Lerch, Vincent Zanetto, Maxime Cayot, Marielle Krouk. Dad killed mom In 2022, 129 children in France lost their mothers to femicide. What support for these children, whose mother is dead and their father is in prison for having killed her? Our cameras were able to film at the Hospices Civils de Lyon, where a protocol was put in place to shelter the children and offer them psychological support. Report: Alice Gauvin, Sarah Lerch, Renaud Perret, Marielle Krouk. Surf therapy: a wave of hope There are six of them, they don't know each other but they have one thing in common. All these women have suffered violence or experienced trauma which today prevents them from living peacefully. After several months, even years of therapy within the Unit specializing in psycho-trauma support (USAP) at the Robert-Ballanger hospital in Villepinte, their caregivers considered them ready to experience an adventure together. as surprising as it is unprecedented: taking part in a surf therapy stay. Report: Floriane Chaume, Sarah Lerch, Jérôme Sarfati, Alexandre Amaral. South Africa: women strike back In South Africa, a woman is killed every three hours. Statistics also show that a South African woman has a 40% chance of being raped in her lifetime. Faced with this situation, women now have a radical response: they learn to shoot. Report: Loïc de La Mornais, Baptiste Laigle, Gabriel Porrometo, Roméo Cristien.
- In summary : Police officers, the great depression The National Police is experiencing an unprecedented and large-scale wave of resignations. Faced with increasingly violent missions and the hatred of a part of the population, the peacekeepers are prey to deep unease. Professional burnout, lack of recognition, psychological disorders, alcohol addiction... the pathologies are multiple. The ultimate expression of this unease: the suicide rate in law enforcement is 36% higher than that of the rest of the population. We obtained exceptional authorization to film at the Courbat health center. This castle, lost in the Touraine countryside, treats police officers suffering from addictions, burn-out or other psychological trauma. Report: Yonathan Van der Voort, Ulysse Cailoux, Victor Bachtik, Steve Kali. Riots: small town and big chaos On June 29, 2023, Montargis, in Loiret, caught fire. In the heart of the town of 15,000 inhabitants, the police station, the town hall and the shopping street were ransacked by rioters. More than a hundred stores were affected, some completely burned. Why has this medium-sized city become one of the symbols of this unprecedented urban violence? For the first time on television, police officers but also rioters tell the story of this evening from the inside. Residents and traders confide their trauma. Report: Clément Le Goff, Cyril Theophilos, Stéphane Bidart, Harold Horoks. From Trappes to the USA, the stars of Mawa Mawa McQueen is a chef, black, famous... and a millionaire. A real surprise for this mother of Ivorian origin, daughter of a cleaning lady, who moved from the Parisian suburb of Trappes to Aspen, a very upscale ski resort in Colorado. She launched a luxury creperie there where her homemade pancakes are sold at high prices. She studied at the Yvelines hotel high school where, around twenty years ago, she was one of the rare black people. But it was in the United States that she found models and made her dream come true. Report: Lila Bellili, Baptiste Laigle, Arnaud Pacary. Presentation: Élise Lucet.
- In summary : Floods: my insurance is damaged. Storm ? Fire ? Flood ? Be careful... Because in the event of bad luck and another disaster, you risk termination. In 2022, insurers paid more than 50 billion euros in compensation, including 10 billion for natural disasters alone, three times more than the previous year. So they track down the "scum" and the bad customers. Woe to him who is not profitable. Report: Wendy Zbinden, Clémence Chupin, Julien Mercier, Justine Rousseau, Raphaël Mencuccini. Without papers but not without work In France, there are between 400,000 and 1 million. They work in sectors lacking labor such as catering and hotels, and occupy sometimes thankless jobs that the French refuse to do, such as vegetable picking or personal services. Foreigners who arrive illegally on the territory, who are often declared by their employers, pay their taxes even though they do not have the right to live in France, and live in hiding under the threat of expulsion. What does their daily life look like? Why can some employers no longer do without this workforce? Report: Romain Boutilly, Elouen Martin, Maxime Cayot, Colin Guillemant. The road of hatred In the West Bank, Route 60 is one of the busiest arteries in this territory militarily occupied by Israel since the Six Day War in June 1967, an area where Israelis and Palestinians live in distrust. They never cross paths, except on this road. Everyone lives entrenched: on the one hand, the Israelis in their illegal colonies according to international laws, on the other, the Palestinians in their villages and towns considered as bastions of the "resistance", such as Jenin. Everyone has their own license plate. Regularly, there are deaths on both sides. And each time, both camps pass the blame to each other. We went up this road, from south to north, from Bethlehem to Jenin, passing through the Nablus region. The team met settlers who were sure of their rights, Palestinian children who dream of dying as martyrs, but also a rabbi who comes to the aid of Palestinian shepherds chased from their land. Report: Lila Bellili, Julien Fouchet, Vincent Gobert, Raynald Lellouche, Rama Youssef. Presentation: Élise Lucet.
- 1989– 1h 50mTV EpisodeIn summary : A masterpiece in your living room? Certain masterpieces, sometimes forgotten in a family living room for ages and saved from oblivion at the last minute, make their owners millionaires. "Special Envoy" followed the story of several paintings with exceptional destinies. Report: Laura Aguirre de Carcer, Swanny Thiebaut, Mathieu Renier, Benoît Sauvage. Who benefits from online prize pools? Initially, they were intended for family or friendly occasions, but in recent years, Leetchi, Papayoux, OnParticipe or Cotizup have developed a new activity: "solidarity pots". Rebuilding Notre-Dame, helping orphans in Ukraine, supporting caregivers during COVID, sending donations after an earthquake... The amounts raised often exceed a million euros. But who launches these calls for donations? Who controls what happens to the money? Report: David Corre, Maureen Alibert. Colette's last notes She has always lived her life through music. The pianist Colette Maze, born June 16, 1914, died on November 19, 2023 at the age of 109. For her, everything was rhythm. She discovered the piano when she was very young, she preferred it to her dolls and never stopped playing. Her instrument gave her tenderness, perhaps the one that was lacking in this child whose mother was harsh and only knew how to slap. Report: Violaine Vermot-Gaud, Claire-Marie Denis, Luis Marques, Benoît Sauvage, Mathilde Rougeron, Marie Bouchet. The good looks of RC Lens Football and mining have nothing to do with each other. And yet. During each match in Lens, an entire region celebrates the glorious mining epic of its past. To film this report which tells a love story between a club and its land, the journalists arrived in the former mining basin of Pas-de-Calais on the day of Saint Barbara, the patroness of miners. Here, it is a date celebrated almost as much as Christmas. Every December 4, the Racing Club de Lens releases a new jersey in homage to the "black faces". And even at 90 euros, fans are snapping it up. Report: Arnaud Muller, Edmond Muller, Marguerite Teulet, Steven Kali. Guests: Laura Aguirre de Carcer, journalist; Arnaud Muller, journalist. Presentation: Élise Lucet.
- 1989–TV EpisodeIn summary : Does a month without alcohol work? Initially, it was a personal challenge that journalist Adrian Jaouen set for himself: to no longer drink a single glass of alcohol for at least a month. Objective: to evaluate the effects of this abstinence on his health and to test his resistance to temptation. An experience that he filmed day by day. This challenge is the whole concept of Dry January. Imported from the United Kingdom in 2020, the "alcohol-free month" is gaining more and more fans in France. But if this operation is acclaimed by addictologists, it arouses much less enthusiasm among the authorities. In a country where alcohol consumption is part of the tradition, promoting its cessation does not seem to be accepted. Report: Adrian Jaouen, Thomas Lhoste. The smugglers of freedom American women begging Mexican women to help them. This grotesque situation is the direct consequence of the annulment by the Supreme Court of the United States, in June 2022, of the Roe v. Wade, who guaranteed the right to abortion for American women. Since then, fifteen states out of fifty have completely banned access to abortion. In the meantime, Mexico went the opposite way and decriminalized it in September 2023. Mexican feminist activists helped thousands of their compatriots to have clandestine abortions, at home, using pills. An experience and know-how that they decided to pass on to their neighbors, setting up a solidarity network for the smuggling of abortion pills between the two countries. Report: Ingrid Piponiot, Alex Gohari, Sophie Przychodny, Rémi Vorano, Raynald Lellouche. Presentation: Élise Lucet.
- In the heart of the agricultural world Behind the scenes of the farmers' movement. A first report from Brittany and Occitanie, and the different convoys en-route for Paris. A second looks at the difficulties faced by young farmers trying to start their own farm. As protests spread across Europe, a report from the Netherlands and Germany. Guests: Lorine Vandewalle, farmer; Julien Duponchel, journalist; Loïc de La Mornais, journalist; Dominique Schelcher, managing director of Système U. Presented by: Élise Lucet.
- An exceptional interview with the French footballer Kylian Mbappé and a focus on the association IBKM (Inspired By Kylian Mbappé), run by Fayza Lamari, mother of the PSG star player, which accompanies youngsters in their professional projects. Report on the "Patriotic Millionaires" campaigning in favour of a wealth tax.
- 1989– 1h 44mTV EpisodeContents: "False bank advisor scam". Investigation into these SMS messages asking to renew your health card, to pay a fine or to pay postal charges, the starting point of a gigantic scam organized by a network which brings together tens of thousands of young people throughout France. "Gérard Miller: the complaints are piling up." For a month, several women have accused the famous psychoanalyst Gérard Miller of rape or sexual assault. - "Top model: the dream of refugees". For several years, European modeling agencies have been recruiting poor and fragile women in the Kakuma camp, in northern Kenya.
- Anti-colds: the impossible ban Faced with the lack of doctors when winter arrives, more and more French people are turning to pharmacy shelves. Runny nose, fever, fatigue: dozens of remedies are available without a prescription for these daily ailments. In 2023, four million boxes of Actifed Rhume, Dolirhume, Nurofem Rhume, Humex Rhume or other Rhinadvil have been sold, for a total of twenty-five million euros. But this reflex can be dangerous. In October 2023, the National Medicines Safety Agency alerted consumers asking them to no longer use these anti-cold medications based on pseudoephedrine. Report: Laura Orosemane, Justine Weyl, Claire Combaluzier, Renaud Perret, Sandrine Philibert. These campaigns where we are hungry They live in France, far from big cities, and do not have enough to eat. In Allier, in central France, one in five residents lives on less than 800 euros per month, and many do not have enough money in their wallets to fill their plates. In question ? Record inflation on food products and heating, in particular. In this context, solidarity grocery stores and shared gardens allow the most deprived to continue to feed themselves. Report: Marianne Getti, Émilie Iob, Marion Cantor. Guest: JR, artist, co-founder of Refettorio Paris. A revolutionary gardener He is the official godfather of the vegetable garden at the Château de Chambord, and in Quebec, he is a TV star and even the hero of a series: on his organic farm in Canada, Jean-Martin Fortier practices permaculture and revolutionizes market gardening to make it a very lucrative economic activity. Immersion in the world of the man who perhaps prefigures the agriculture of tomorrow. Report: Anouk Burel, Lisa Monin, Christophe Barreyre, Thomas Denis, Damien Pasinetti. Presentation: Élise Lucet.
- Michelin, in the secrets of the stars: A report by Olivier Sibille, Matthieu Renier, Guillaume Marque, Thierry Mongellaz. While the 2024 stars have just been awarded by the Michelin Guide, the magazine goes behind the scenes of the famous red guide. Exceptionally, "Special Envoy" was able to accompany one of his inspectors in the field, to understand how those who crown and bring down the kings of gastronomy work. We discover the ultra-confidential meetings in which stars are granted or withdrawn from restaurants. For the first time, we see a "star maker" at work, one of those consultants that more and more chefs call on to try to win a new star, but whose employment remains taboo behind the stove . In a rapidly changing world of gastronomy, what does the big red book still embody? A century-old institution that inspires respect but whose methods are sometimes criticized... Why do some chefs turn away from it, when so many others still dream of it? What do the famous stars change for them? Have they become too economically dependent on it? How has the recipe for winning them changed? But chefs are no longer the only ones competing. The Michelin Guide itself faces new challenges. Supplanted by internet applications, the paper guide no longer sells much and it faces increasing competition. To find new sources of income, it embarked on international development, sending its inspectors all over the world. "Special Envoy" accompanied them in search of these new stars... Manon Fleury, a chef who hits the mark: A report by Violaine Vermot-Gaud, Matthieu Renier, Mathieu Dreujou, Amandine Stelletta, Luis Marques and Julie Martin. Manon Fleury is a young chef who, after being a high-level athlete, launched into haute cuisine. Drawing on her experience working with star chefs, she is now opening her own address. This thirty-year-old intends to defend another vision of the restaurant: she chooses to surround herself with female chefs and campaigns for benevolent management in kitchens where violence has long been kept silent. The Valley of Happiness: A report by Christophe Duchiron and Frédéric Capron with Bonne Compagnie. It is the story of a rebirth, that of the Aldudes valley, a small landlocked territory at the bottom of a Pyrenean valley, which has managed to resist desertification and unemployment. It all started with an idea: that of a butcher and charcutier who took over a family farm with a handful of breeders to revive an ancient breed of Basque pigs. Artisanal breeding, with the desire to produce only quality in mind. Today, local hams and cured products are exported to Hong Kong, Singapore and Canada. Carried away by this momentum, the other inhabitants of the valley are getting involved in their turn: mountain trout, sheep's milk cheeses, the valley specializes in high-end local products. And it works . At a time when many villages are dying for lack of work and inhabitants, the valley is coming back to life. Presented by: Elise Lucet.
- 1989– 1h 36mTV EpisodeIn summary : Heat pumps: money pumps? More ecological and more economical, heat pumps appeal to the French. Promoted by public authorities and partly financed by state aid, more than 300,000 have been sold in 2023. Unfortunately, not all installers are honest. Scammers hide even among the professionals who hold the label set up by the State, although it is supposed to guarantee the quality of the work and the reliability of the companies. Who are these scammers? What is their modus operandi? How to protect yourself from it? And above all, why are the controls so failing? Report: Mathieu Barrère, Clément Voyer, Frédéric Capron, Vincent Fajeau. Rwanda: the miracle of reconciliation Mbyo is a unique village: only victims of the genocide live here alongside the direct murderers of their own families. A crazy bet launched in Rwanda, the day after the genocide which left a million dead in three months. And it's a success. It illustrates the fierce desire of this country to turn the page. Every day, everyday life and the power of forgiveness erase the hatred of the past and contribute to the reconstruction of the country. Report: Marine Courtade, Paul Cabanis, Mikael Bozo. Guest: Loïc de La Mornais, journalist, observed, thirty years after the genocide, the new face of Rwanda. He went with a group of tourists to Volcanoes National Park, the last sanctuary of mountain gorillas; at Lake Kivu, shared with the Democratic Republic of Congo; and at the National Genocide Memorial in Kigali, the capital. Presentation: Élise Lucet.
- In summary : Floods: go or stay? Stay or flee? In Nord-Pas-de-Calais, after the thousand-year floods this winter, this is the question that the inhabitants of Blendecques, flooded twice, are asking themselves. In two weeks, the equivalent of six months of precipitation fell and more than 800 houses were invaded by water. After the floods, we followed the slow psychological reconstruction of its inhabitants, its traders and its elected officials. Once calm has returned, the hardest part is to come, the time to choose. Rebuild while waiting for the next flood? Or abandon your house which seems condemned by rising waters and climate change? Report: Julien Fouchet, Océane Labalette, Élodie Delevoye, Guillaume Philippon. The success of chess This is one of the unexpected effects of confinements and a successful TV series: in France, the game of chess is on the rise and the country is now third in the international ranking. To understand this unprecedented craze, we followed three junior champion sisters and a grandmaster. Report: Laurent Delhomme, Alice Cazin, Antoine Boddaert, Anthony Casabianca, Pierre-François Lemonnier, Bruno Maruani, Hélène Lanfranchi. Granny marathon At 84, Barbara Humbert is still running. And not just any distance: she's a marathon fan. This spring 2024, she is lining up at the start of her favorite race, the Paris Marathon. Before realizing a dream this summer: running the Marathon for All, the race open to fans of the 2024 Olympic Games. This will be his 60th marathon. Report: Alice Gauvin, François Daireaux, Élodie Delevoye, Siv-An Ho, Marielle Krouk. Presentation: Élise Lucet.
- In summary : Cigarettes: trafficking is a hit Cigarette trafficking is exploding in France. According to a study dating from 2020, more than one in ten cigarettes smoked in France comes from the parallel market. For traffickers, cigarettes have become the miracle product: they bring in big profits and in the event of arrest, the risk is always almost zero. However, the police and customs services make life difficult for these traffickers. This is demonstrated by the 650 tonnes of tobacco and cigarettes seized in 2022, compared to 180 in 2020. But nothing is happening, this trafficking is booming. And it is increasing with increases in the price of a pack of cigarettes. Report: Nicolas de Labareyre, Pablo Rey, Victor Bachtik, Kristel Bernaud, Aliénor Adrey, Julien Dufau. My "homemade" house Building your house with your own hands: the idea is attracting more and more French people. Each year, between 8,000 and 10,000 people embark on the adventure, or 5% to 6% of all houses built. But what an adventure. And not always successful. Report: Marine Haag, Manon Descoubes, Thomas Lhoste. Presentation: Élise Lucet.
- 1989–TV EpisodeCrime messaging investigation It is an extraordinary story that no French camera has been able to film until today, the most spectacular case of the French judicial police, a case so captivating that it could be the poster child for a Hollywood spy film. It all started in 2019, when the French judicial police, with their Belgian counterparts, managed to secretly infiltrate an encrypted telephone network, such as Telegram, called Sky ECC and whose servers were based in France. A messaging system reputed to be inviolable, and used by the most wanted criminals on the planet. For two years, investigators spied on several thousand thugs and worked very closely with the 200 most important members of global organized crime. Thinking of using tamper-proof telephones, they exchange openly, "in the clear", about their crimes: delivery points and photos of cocaine shipments, lists of weapons or targets to be killed, settling of scores and executions filmed live, threats and kidnappings. "It's as if we were at the table with the criminals," summarizes Catherine De Bolle, the executive director of Europol. Over the months, the French judicial police get their hands on more than a billion exchanges. Investigators from around the world are asking him for access to this extraordinary database, including the Serbian police. The Sky ECC seals reveal the existence of a "house of horror" where local godfathers had their enemies tortured and executed. Their high-tension trial opens in Belgrade. In France, the Anti-Cybercrime Office (OFAC), the Anti-Narcotics Office (OFAST) or the Central Office for the Suppression of Serious Financial Crime (OCRGDF) track down criminals who used this encrypted messaging. Exclusively with these shadowy investigators, "Special Envoy" offers a unique and dizzying dive into the secrets of organized crime. A report by Mathilde Gautry, Alexandre Basso and Marie-Noëlle Beck from Saint-Jore / Cover Films. Young carers: courageous children Isaline, 14, lives alone with a 100% disabled mother. At home, she manages almost everything. Margot, 15, says she "has no choice" and takes care of her 10-year-old sister with Down syndrome to make her parents' complicated lives easier. Elwynn spends her week at a boarding school in Amiens. When she returns home on weekends, she helps her bipolar father, her autistic brother, and takes over from her mother, who is in the midst of burnout. At the age of carelessness and lightness, Isaline, Elwynn and Margot therefore face, like adults, a difficult daily life. Is it really the role of these minors to assume all these responsibilities? "Special Envoy" decided to highlight the role of these courageous teenagers. A report by Guillaume Barthélémy, Barthelemy Rigaud, Marc Woudenberg and Nicolas Vescovacci / Tony Comiti Productions. The solar of fear It must be one of the energies of the future: solar. Throughout France, ground-mounted photovoltaic park projects are multiplying, driven by the law to accelerate the production of renewable energies passed in March 2023. Ever larger projects which, despite their ecological vocation and the economic benefits for the municipalities, the anger of certain residents, who see the landscapes of the countryside where they live changing. Because these solar parks, which must be installed as a priority in already artificialized areas, often eat away at natural, agricultural and forest land. In the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, an area very suitable for the production of solar energy, environmental activists denounce the installation of solar panels synonymous with clearing and destruction of protected species on the Lure mountain. In Alsace, it is the project of an innovative cereal producer that is disturbing: he wants to combine agriculture and photovoltaics. Opponents fear a gradual artificialization of agricultural land. For its promoters, what we call "agrivoltaism" could on the contrary save both the planet and agriculture, by offering a virtuous and unexpected additional income to a profession in crisis. A report by Alice Gauvin, Guillaume Marque, Elodie Delevoye, Martin Peignier, Luis Marques and Marielle Krouk. The new treasure hunters They roam the fields and beaches with their amazing frying pans, headphones on. Detectorists hunt for treasures buried in the ground. There are 100,000 of them in France. But in recent years, war has been declared: on the one hand, the defenders of heritage who accuse them of being looters and denounce trafficking in antiquities; on the other hand, the detectorists who claim, on the contrary, to save objects from oblivion. These prospectors are now in the crosshairs of justice and more and more of them are the subject of prosecution judicial. Why are they considered outlaws today? Kind collectors or looters of antiquities, who are they really? "Special Envoy" went to meet these enthusiasts who spark controversy. A report by Kristian Autain, Guillaume Marque, Benjamin Poulain and Bruno Maruani.
- 1989–TV Episode
- 1989– 1h 16mTV Episode
- 1989–TV Episode
- The presence of a pet, supervised by therapists, is increasingly sought after by fragile people: this is called animal mediation.