Science Bar Hopping is a federal popular science festival, during which more than 40 scientists give free lectures in city bars. In one evening, you can learn how to edit genes, launch spaceships, and study viruses. And at the same time — to meet interesting people and have a good time. The organizers of the festival are the Foundation for Infrastructure and Educational Programs (RUSNANO Group) and the St. Petersburg media company "Paper".
Will Smith whose curiosity and wonder is positively infectious—is guided by National Geographic Explorers traveling to different corners of the world to get up close and personal with the weirdest, most unusual, dangerous and thrilling spectacles of the planet.
Frank Skinner and Denise Mina are hitting the road to explore William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Frank adores the verse of Wordsworth and focuses on what made William tick. Denise, the creator of dark and haunting fiction, concentrates on Coleridge, exploring what draws her to his unique and troubled imagination.
The Costa Concordia's demise remains one of the 21st century's most fascinating disasters. Combining first-person testimony from survivors and rescuers, and previously unseen footage, reconstructions and expert insight, the programme tells the astonishing story in forensic detail of what happened on that fateful night.
In the three-part miniseries, VRT journalist Michaël Van Droogenbroeck examines the social consequences of the coronavirus crisis in our country based on testimonies from entrepreneurs and politicians.
Australia's wilderness is a world unto itself, made possible by the protection provided by The Wallace Line, one of the most important boundaries in nature. Nature's Great Divide is the story of the line that divides wild Australia from the rest of the world.
Two-part series taking the sketched confession John Wayne Glover left before he completed suicide and using it to determine whether he was responsible for the unsolved murders of nine more victims.