"True Talk" puts people in front of the camera who are fighting prejudice or discrimination. They answer questions that nobody would normally dare to ask directly.
This week, Rosanna, who used to be anorexic, talks about why the disease can last for many years. She says that many people don’t take anorexia seriously and think it can be cured by simply eating “normally”. But this, she says, shows how little people understand about a disorder that kills ten percent of its victims.
(SRF/swissinfo.ch)
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Documentary portrays Swiss teenagers forced to return to parents’ homeland
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Drug addiction: ‘I pretended I had it under control’
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Reda explains what it was like being a junkie, about the culture of lying, and how the highs are not as great as people might think.
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"True Talk" puts people in front of the camera who are fighting prejudice. We speak to Hitzi, who says Switzerland is not at all wheelchair friendly.
Fynn: ‘I don’t have to choose between being a man or a woman’
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“True Talk” puts people in front of the camera who are fighting prejudice. They answer questions that nobody would normally dare to ask directly. This week, we speak to Fynn who defines himself as non-binary. He says the climate is much safer now for people to declare themselves as trans. (SRF/swissinfo.ch)
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If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.