In 1922, Egypt’s fight for independence and a global mania over Tutankhamun’s tomb provoke an extraordinary struggle for control of the country’s ancient history.
In a time of turmoil, where memories of the past intertwine with the wounds of the present, this work unfolds a human epic set in Iraq, shedding light on a generation born of war and raised amidst profound transformations. Through interwoven stories For characters from diverse backgrounds.
Each episode features five Dutch celebrities who sit down for a special dinner and share their most embarrassing experiences and spicy anecdotes. This is part of the concept for the new reality show "Het Diner" (The Dinner), hosted by Raymond Thiry.
There's a catch, though. Some celebrities at the table have a good reason to hijack someone else's story or lie about their own. This creates a game full of manipulation and tasteful storytelling.
Each dinner starts with a pot of €25,000: the goal is to keep as much of that money as possible at the end of the evening. This only works if they discover who is worth €0 and vote that person out. If they vote the wrong person out, the amount that person was worth disappears from the pot.
A debt-ridden building owner agrees to stage a fake kidnapping to save his family and property, only for the plan to spiral into a real abduction and a dangerously escalating situation.
A determined creditor chasing her dreams crosses paths with an unlucky man stuck paying off his ex-girlfriend’s massive debt—sparking an unexpected romance amid a web of heartfelt love stories.
Ditte Hansen talks with humor and warmth about sex, desire, shame, body and love. Through sketch, expert knowledge and an open-minded panel, she examines what sex really looks like today - when we dare be honest. Without facet lists. Without expectation pressure.
Last autumn, the government presented 100 works that will be included in a cultural canon. Ten of these are music. What kind of work is it? How do they sound? Who are the people behind the works? And do the works have any echo in Sweden today? Messiah Hallberg asks music professor Mattias Lundberg.