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- After a near-fatal car accident, smart, savvy, sharp-suited detective Sam is mysteriously transported back to 1973. Confused by his new surroundings, Sam tries to return to the present, but the police force of long ago needs his help.
- The smartest cultural minds tackle big and small issues from the past week. Enlightening and fun talk, radiant debate, intellectual deep dives and complete nonsense.
- "Olof Palme went to the movies..." An undercover report on Sverigedemokraterna (SD), The Swedish Democrats. What does SD communicate to the public and what is being said and done internally?
- About the Swedish artist Lars Vilks and his monumental driftwood sculptures at Kullaberg, Skåne: Arx and Nimis.
- For the past year, our operative Patrik Hermansson has been living undercover, as Swedish student Erik Hellberg, at the heart of the alt-right. He infiltrated some of the most notorious far-right networks in the US and the UK, culminating in the violent clashes in Charlottesville 2017. He extracted damning information that runs all of the way to the White House. And he caught it all on hidden camera.
- Alice and her sister Moa live in a dysfunctional family. Their father Olle is an alcoholic and their mother Kerstin cannot handle the situation. At Alice's birthday Olle hasn't bought any present to his daughter. Although he is drunk, he takes her on a ride in his car, to buy her a dog. In a turn he crashes into a garden and hurts a man with his car. He and Alice run away from the accident in the car. Alice promises not to tell anybody about what has happened. When things are getting worse in the family, Alice decides to find the man in the garden and tell him that it is her father who hurt him.
- A progressive, innovative program series about today's politics and culture in Sweden and elsewhere.
- A protest against the Eurovision Song Contest, 1975Alternative Festivals were organized all around Sweden. This Alternative Festival was broadcasted from a circus tent in Stockholm.
- "The Hedgehog" - A magic world based on texts by Carlos Castaneda. For me the world is weird because it is stupendous, awesome, mysterious, unfathomable; my interest has been to convince you that you must assume responsibility for being here, in this marvelous world, in this marvelous desert, in this marvelous time.
- "Speak About Sex" - The legendary sexual enlightenment Elise Ottesen-Jensen (1886-1973), nicknamed Ottar, was the first to speak about the unspeakable. She was a traveling lecturer on contraception, childbirth and the woman's right to her own body in the 1920s and 30s. Despite the fact that it was forbidden. Ottar was born in a Norwegian high-church environment where her mother Karen gave birth to 22 children.
- "Voices and the Art of the Voice" - a journey deep down the throat to the origin of the voice. About how people in different professions and privately use their voice. How research in speech, music and hearing is conducted. And about the very first scream.
- In a traveling specially built video booth, ordinary Ukrainians get to tell in their own words how their lives changed when Russia attacked Ukraine. The box travels around during a year of war. Anyone who wants to can go in and speak freely, without questions being asked. The many testimonies collected from mothers, women, children and the elderly provide a unique insight into everyday life with the war.
- "The Undefeated Femininity" - a film about Gun Grut Bergman. In September 1949 Ingmar Bergman left his wife and five children, and escaped to Paris with a new woman, Gun Grut. It was the beginning of a passionate love affair, an enduring jealousy drama and a new theme in Bergman's films. Now their son, Ingmar Bergman Jr, walks in his parents' footsteps, from Paris to the home on Grev Turegatan 69 in Stockholm.
- A satirical indecent humor program at a fast pace and with few restrictions.
- A comedy-talk-show: Mustafa invites guests of all sorts, for talks on current events and entertainment.
- The Swedish baron "Blix" - Bror von Blixen-Finecke (1886-1946) - once married to Karen Blixen, was an adventurer, womanizer, successful safari guide and failed coffee farmer in Kenya. Among his friends he counted Prince Wilhelm, the Prince of Wales and Ernest Hemingway. In the spring of 1940, he ran an American field hospital in Norway, where German troops were advancing.
- A straight story about the Savior's return, about the right and duty to question our living conditions, about the sacrifice that must be made to gain insight and courage to act.
- About the artist Tamara de Lempicka. At the outbreak of the World War One she fled Poland and settled in Paris. She was quickly drawn into the interaction with Paris's cultural elite.
- No one compares to Ulf Lundell when it comes to productivity and versatility. For almost half a century, he has been relevant both as an artist, songwriter and as a writer.
- This is the series about one of Sweden's biggest murder investigations. Two murders that shook the whole of summer Sweden with mindless violence and that terrified an entire community.
- Exciting and trendy guests, known as well as unknown, take part in the program. Fascinating stories are mixed with fun and unexpected encounters.
- Anja Kontor meets people who have gone through difficult events in their lives.
- "God also loves the pre-art. See man." - The poet who writes for pub scenes as well as for Dramaten. About weight and dizziness in an artistry that is related to both Evert Taube and Hjalmar Bergman. ew of theater has aroused criticism.
- On May 1st, 2023, Swedish singer/songwriter Pugh Rogefeldt died, one of the most important and most influential people in Swedish music history. In October of that year, large parts of the Swedish artist elite gathered at Circus in Stockholm to pay tribute to Pugh and his musical heritage.
- About Bo Lycke and his enemy - the Alzheimer's disease. He lives with his wife Eva on Brännö, among friends and musicians - surrounded by the sea. At the age of 59, he received his diagnosis, And when the film ends, more than ten years have passed. "When I got my sentence I promised myself not to get depressed and that I could drink as much as I want. And I have done that. But I watch myself all the time and I see how the abilities disappear, like now this with the underpants and socks... Now I notice that the language is also starting to mess with me!"
- A Swedish pop/rock music live show presenting national and international artists and groups.
- "It Happened in Ingermanland" - about a forgotten people's displacement that took place during the Stalin's reign of terror in the Soviet Union. During the WW2, when the Nazi army arrived in the area of St. Peterburg/Leningrad about 63 000 Ingermanlanders was deported to Finland. In 1946 Stalin wanted them back for his work camps. About 5 000 fled to Sweden and settled there.
- One hundred years ago in 1923, Stockholm's city hall was inaugurated. A documentary about how the controversial architect Ragnar Östberg (1866-1945), through strikes, war and years of crisis, fights together with craftsmen and artists to create Sweden's last monumental building built entirely by hand - a house for the newly won democracy. With unique archive material, we go behind the scenes in Stockholm's city hall both a hundred years ago - but also today. In the film, we meet royalty, glitter of gold but also cleaners and construction workers and get to see something other than the glamour of the Nobel Prize Celebration.
- "Cheeky Friday" was a late-night show presented by sexologist Malena Ivarsson, introducing an extensive variation of guest. The topic was mostly related to sex and eroticism and every show included an episode of "Série rose".
- "The Center" - A hub in the noise. The latest on current events in entertainment.
- Baader-Meinhof was a West German terrorist group, active between 1970 and 1990; also collective name for several parallel groups in West Germany that carried out terrorist activities.
- Portrait of the Swedish artist, sculptor, estradeur, author, designer, and professor, Carl Fredrik Reuterswärd (1934-2016).
- The controversial Swedish author Anderz Harning (1938-1992) share component of his writing, his sources of inspiration and his never ending anger. "Didn't I say so/Vad var det jag sa" are the challenging words on his memorial stone. Anderz Harning was a major critic of the modern bureaucratic society, nepotism and abuse of power. In his autobiographical novels "Stålbadet" and "Asfåglarna", he reflects on his upbringing in a Nazi home in Sweden.
- Stina Lundberg-Dabrowski meet people who have had an impact on the outside world.
- Emilio Kozhikow, Milos Karoli and Franz Josef Czardas have in common that they are Gipsies and that they have survived the extermination camps of the Nazis during World War 2. Quietly and movingly they tell about the incredible sufferings and inhuman conditions. And about bestial executions. But also about will and strength. With many stills from the concentration camps and an example from a short Czech fiction film, the film moves from the personal element into the general one, becomes a requiem on the fate of a whole nation and comments on the conditions of the Gipsies today.
- "The suburb is on fire" - about the alienation of young people. How is it that a destructive lifestyle feels like the only way to face the future?
- Few poets have been as appreciated and loved as Bodil Malmsten. Her pioneering style drew the broad masses to poetry and shaped generations of readers. But she herself had a hard time feeling that she was dying - a feeling that over time became so strong that in her middle age she left everything and emigrated to Finistère, Bretagne. In the film, family and friends tell about how Bodil Malmsten wrote to conjure up her inner darkness.
- Swedish film critic Nils Petter Sundgren meet Jerry Lewis for a talk about the restart of his movie career. Also about Jerry Lewis unfinished project "The Day the Clown Cried" recorded partly in Sweden.
- Doktor Krall fights furiously against diseases and depressions that can affect rats, paddles, rabbits and horses. But also against the enormous ambition and energy of his assistant Rolf.
- A three-part series about the Swedish Nazism during WW2 and up till the middle of the 1990's. How different fractions try to gain political power by local elections and loud manifestations.
- It's like a miracle, writing a book with the knuckles of the left index finger and the right thumb. Mattias Agnesund is the author who, despite a paralyzing muscle disease, wrote a biography of Einar Ekberg.
- "When the past and future collide - Paris 1919" (1973) performed by John Cale, his band and the Malmö Opera Orchestra. "Paris 1919" takes its musical influences from pop and rock artists such as Brian Wilson, the Bee Gees, and Procol Harum. Lyrically, Cale recalls possible childhood memories in "Child's Christmas in Wales", whose title is a reference to a prose poem by Dylan Thomas and a reference to Thomas' poem "The Ballad of the Long-Legged Bait" in its second verse. Cale makes cultural and literary references to writer Graham Greene, William Shakespeare's Macbeth (1623), Enoch Powell, Chipping Sodbury, Andalucia, Dunkirk, and Segovia, while "Antarctica Starts Here" is inspired by the 1950 Billy Wilder film "Sunset Boulevard" starring Gloria Swanson. John Cale has performed "Paris 1919" live in its entirety throughout the world, beginning in Cardiff on 21 November 2009, with his regular band and a 19-piece orchestra, with new orchestral arrangements by Cale and composer Randall Woolf. The show was staged again in 2010 in London, Norwich, Paris, Brescia, Los Angeles, and Melbourne, then in 2011 in Barcelona, Essen, and Malmö, as well as two shows in New York City in January 2013.
- An interview with the three survivors in the most infamous rock band of all time, Led Zeppelin. Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones talks along with some never-before-seen concert photos.
- An entertainment show featuring Swedish and International celebrities in or around the music industry.
- "Beautiful Sunday" - a lifestyle program about fashion, design, beauty, garden, sex, quality of life and many other topics.
- "Without me you are nothing!" - Romanian maestro Sergiu Celibidache (1912-1996) transformed the orchestra at Sweden's Radio from an entertainment ensemble into the world-famous Radio Symphony Orchestra. Celibidache was an elitist and demanding demon conductor who, with his colorful performance in black and white television, became a household name with the Swedish people. And the memories still live, for better or for worse, in Sweden's Radio Symphony Orchestra.
- Trio CMB (Carl Michael Bellman) perform epistles, and songs by the Swedish songwriter, composer, musician, poet and entertainer.