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- Long-running factual programme reporting on all aspects of life in Britain.
- Civilian recruits compete to win a gruelling selection process designed by veterans from six international special forces units.
- Humanity's relationship with nature and wildlife and how scientists and conservationists study ways to restore the planet.
- Louis Theroux travels to San Francisco where a group of doctors help kids who claim to be born in the wrong body.
- Louis Theroux traces the fortunes of different people living in South London suffering from alcoholism.
- Louis Theroux meets people living with the long-term effects of a brain injury.
- Dzershinsk, nearly 400 km east of Moscow, was a secret facility producing chemical weapons during the time of the Soviet Union. Today it is officially the most polluted spot on earth.
- A recovered Samsung tablet belonging to Russian mercenaries in Libya offers an unprecedented look at how Vladimir Putin's Foreign Legion operates. From September 2019, photographs and reports had begun to emerge of Russian mercenaries in Tripoli. They were identified as units from the so-called Wagner Group, a secretive and highly controversial organization of mercenaries that fought first in Ukraine, then in Syria, and later in Sudan, Mozambique, the Central African Republic and Libya. Wagner forces appear to be divided into seven so-called Storm Units, within which personnel and commanders are subject to change. All soldiers act under their code names and choose one when they join, though these can change.
- Tom Mangold investigates the internet phenomenon that is becoming Britain's millennium gold rush as investors, hoping to become millionaires, scramble to put money into tiny internet companies.
- In the wake of the London bombings the Government is proposing new anti-terrorist laws. Will they really make us safer? If so, at what cost to our civil liberties? Vivian White reports on the plans - and differences of opinion.
- This edition features an interview with the Egyptian President, Colonel Nasser. It also features filmed reports on the teaching of Latin in British schools and an investigation of high pressure sales tactics employed by some companies.
- Diana, Princess of Wales, speaks openly for first time about her separation from Prince of Wales in a frank interview for BBC's Panorama program.
- Mariella Frostrup reports from inside the reality television revolution. It's sometimes cruel, it's voyeuristic and often it's humiliating, and it seems we can't get enough of it.
- With a nod to the famous quiz show from a campus location, in the presence of Education Secretary Charles Clarke , Gavin Esler hosts a debate on the Government's top-up fees policy.
- Tony Benn and Roy Jenkins debate on EEC Common Market in studio.
- This film is a mock exercise of what might happen in London if there was a terror attack now. In a unique fusion of drama, detailed research and expert discussion Panorama puts Britain's emergency plans to the test.
- Michael Crick reports on the controversial life and career of politician and novelist Jeffrey Archer, leading up to his perjury trial in 2001.
- Three years ago the United Nations Special Commission on Iraq, UNSCOM, charged with ridding Saddam Hussein of his lethal arsenal. became fatally compromised.
- Panorama investigates the growing concern about the health implications of mobile phones, and examines accusations that the industry has covered up possible risks, delayed research and cancelled scientific funding.
- On 20 January, Bill Clinton will become the first Democratic president of the United States for 12 years. Peter Jay, who was Britain's ambassador to the USA during the Carter administration, examines the mood of the country.
- In an exclusive and wide ranging interview for Panorama, David Dimbleby quizzes the former President on his record, his political passions and how his public and private lives clashed.
- A US government whistleblower tells Panorama how scientific reports about global warming have been systematically changed and suppressed. Some of America's leading climate scientists claim that they have been censored by the administration