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This Short Documentary explores the harsh reality of The Famine In Gaza, shedding light on the daily struggles faced by families in Palestine 🇵🇸. It’s a story of survival, resilience, and the urgent need for global awareness. Through this Short Documentary, we show the devastating effects of The Famine In Gaza, where countless children and communities in Palestine 🇵🇸 are left without basic needs. The voices you’ll hear are not just statistics—they are real people enduring unimaginable hardship. By watching this Short Documentary, you’ll understand why The Famine In Gaza is more than a regional crisis—it’s a humanitarian disaster that the world cannot ignore.

What a wonderful world we’ve built—until you stop and wonder just how much lower humanity can still sink!

The Dancing Boys of Afghanistan is a 2010 documentary film produced by Clover Films and directed by Afghan journalist Najibullah Quraishi about the practice of bacha bazi in Afghanistan. The 52-minute documentary premiered in the UK at the Royal Society of Arts on March 29, 2010,[1] and aired on PBS Frontline in the United States on April 20. Bacha bazi, also known as bacchá (from the Persian bacheh بچه‌, literally “playing with boys” in Persian, Pashto and Hindustani), is a form of sexual slavery and child prostitution in which prepubescent and adolescent boys are sold to wealthy or powerful men for entertainment and sexual activities. This business thrives in Afghanistan, where many men keep dancing boys as status symbols. The practice is illegal under Afghan law.

Human-AI relationships are no longer just science fiction. OpenAI’s launch of ChatGPT in 2022 ushered in a new era of artificial intelligence chatbots from companies like Nomi, Character AI and Replika, and tech titans like Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk are touting chatbots on their platforms. The AI companions have proven to be smart, quick-witted, argumentative, helpful and sometimes aggressively romantic. While some people are falling in love with the AI companions, others are building deep friendships. The speedy development of AI chatbots presents a mountain of ethical and safety concerns that experts say will only intensify once AI begins to train itself. The societal debate surrounding AI companions isn’t just about their effects on humans. Increasingly it’s about whether the companions can have human-like experiences. In this documentary, CNBC’s Salvador Rodriguez traveled across the U.S. to interview people who’ve formed emotional relationships with AI and met the founders of chatbot companies to explore the good, the bad and the unknown, and to find out how AI is changing relationships as we know them.

There’s one thing milk stands for — health. It’s seen as natural and nutrient-rich. Which is exactly what makes it so attractive for the market. But is it really that healthy?

Why do some women decide not to become mothers? What role do factors such as wars, environmental destruction, population growth, career or childcare play? What hurdles do these women face in society? “You have a uterus, use it!” It’s an outrageous statement. Or is it outrageous NOT to have children? The film follows young women who’ve made a conscious decision not to have children. Where does the image of women as mothers originate and how has it changed over the centuries?

Elvis’ closest friends and confidants share their memories and experiences with the King and what really happened during his final hours, including interviews with Sonny West, Billy Smith, Larry Geller, Joe Esposito, Jerry Schilling, Marty Lacker and Lamar Fike.

A film about corruption in high places and those who enable it. Politically Exposed Persons (PEPs) are people who hold a public function and as a result present higher risks of being involved in bribery or corruption. Offshore leaks have revealed repeatedly that PEPs use British finance and British offshore jurisdictions to launder their wealth, hide their wealth and re-invest that wealth back into the global financial system. London is the place where they buy property, where they take legal action against their critics and where they live when they fall from grace. But what happens when a developing country fights back and attempts to get Britain to return the money that it claims has been stolen?

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