"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.
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1 minute
Nadja became pregnant at the age of 17. It was unplanned, but she decided to keep her child. It was a decision that changed the young woman’s life – for the better, she says.
Nadja was already three months pregnant when she found out. For Nadja and her boyfriend, giving the baby up for adoption wasn’t an option, they wanted to keep the baby. But this wasn’t an easy decision for the young couple, Nadja says, as “in Switzerland there is almost no support for young mothers”, adding “with child benefit of CHF220, I can barely buy enough nappies each month”.
Nevertheless, the 23-year-old doesn’t regret her decision for a second: “My daughter is the best thing that ever happened to me. I wouldn’t give her back for all the money in the world”.
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Through his unique sense of humour and his honest take on life, Noha openly explains the prejudices he faces and how he deals with this.
‘People should be allowed to choose when they want to die’
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In 2017, 734 people ended their lives using the services of assisted suicide organisation, Exit, which operates in German- and Italian-speaking Switzerland. Erica, a 65-year-old assisted suicide counsellor explains what her job entails, what preconceptions she faces and why you have to love people in order to be there for them in the last minutes of…
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Earning a living through death: working as an undertaker certainly wouldn't suit everyone, but Michael is anything but unhappy with his workday.
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This week we meet Tristan aka “Ennia Face”, a 37-year-old drag queen from Zurich. He’s been dressing up as a woman for 20 years, even though some deemed it very uncool to be feminine as a gay man in the 1990s. Why does he prefer to dress as a woman? “Women wear glitter, are more coiffured and generally…
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There are a lot of clichés when it comes to the police: they smoke confiscated marijuana, never get fines, are all right-wing and enjoy violence. Bap, a 27-year-old policeman, fills us in first hand on what’s true and what’s just a myth. (SRF/swissinfo.ch)
The lighter and darker sides of being nearly blind
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Yves is visually impaired, but he doesn't feel that he's at a disadvantage. He avoids other visually impaired people who moan about it.
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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