In a world where automation, globalization, and pandemics rewrite the rules of work, this documentary follows the workers left fighting for survival. From gig workers delivering food to wind turbine technicians scaling new industries, individuals navigate an economy built to favor machines and corporate profits over people. Education no longer guarantees security, and stable careers are vanishing fast. As millions scramble to stay relevant, some find resilience in unexpected places — others are crushed by the relentless pace of change. This is not a prediction — it’s reality. The future of work has already arrived, and it’s brutal.
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Stealing Africa | The Aid Scam | The Dirty Math of ‘Helping’ Africa
Africa is rich—rich in copper, oil, gold, diamonds, and people. But its wealth flows out while its people remain in poverty.
This is Gaza: witnessing the Israel Hamas war |
‘This is Gaza’ follows the emotional journey of Palestinian filmmaker Yousef Hammash. As Israel carried out an unprecedented assault on the territory, following the fatal Hamas attacks on October 7, Yousef reported from the warzone amidst the military and humanitarian crisis.
The American Oligarchy: How corrupt is US politics?
Dark Sides of Artificial Intelligence
Lesley Stahl’s report on AI, chatbots and a world of unknowns. From 2024, Stahl’s story on Kenyan workers training AI who say they’re overworked, underpaid and exploited by big American tech companies. Also from 2024, Anderson Cooper’s report on “nudify” sites that use AI to create realistic, revealing images of actual people. And from 2021, Bill Whitaker’s look at the use of artificial intelligence to create deepfakes.
Salt in their Veins
The Bajo people of Southeast Asia have a deep connection with the marine environment. As descendants of sea nomads, they traditionally roamed the ocean to fish and trade, but today, most live in coastal villages or on stilts over the water. This short film focuses on the Bajo of Southeast Sulawesi, Indonesia, highlighting their strong bond with the sea and the challenges small-scale fishing communities face. Impacted by overfishing, pollution, and biodiversity loss, they are struggling to survive. In response, some have resorted to harmful fishing methods, putting the health of the reefs at risk and leaving their future in jeopardy
The Dirty Mobile Phone Industry
A mobile phone is sold every 57 seconds meaning that there are now more mobile phones on the planet than toothbrushes. We investigated the shameful secrets of the multinationals who produce our mobile phones. They are the big winners of the mobile revolution as their profits explode but what is the human and environmental cost in the production countries of China and the Congo?