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The Program

   2024    Culture
Prepare to question everything you thought you knew. For the first time in over half a century, the United States Congress is peeling back the curtain on one of the most guarded secrets of our time: the truth about UFOs, now officially termed UAP. In a historic bipartisan effort, public hearings have revealed jaw-dropping testimony under oath from military and intelligence officers about a shadowy program allegedly analyzing materials and biologics of non-human origin.
“The Program” takes you deep into this unfolding drama through exclusive interviews with high-ranking insiders, elected officials, scientists, intelligence officers, and military whistleblowers. What emerges is a compelling narrative that challenges even the staunchest skeptics and raises profound questions about humanity’s place in the universe. Get ready to go beyond the headlines and uncover the extraordinary.

The Whistleblower

   2022    Technology
In the third episode, during cleanup at the plant, insiders claim that cost-cutting measures and intimidation tactics create a danger war force than the accident itself.
Several state and federal government agencies mounted investigations into the crisis, the most prominent of which was the President's Commission on the Accident at Three Mile Island, headed by chairman John G. Kemeny. The investigation strongly criticized Babcock & Wilcox, Met Ed, Graphics processing unit, and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission for lapses in quality assurance and maintenance, inadequate operator training, lack of communication of important safety information, poor management, and complacency.
Kemeny said that the procedures and that the control room were greatly inadequate for managing an accident.
Series: Meltdown: Three Mile Island

What is One Degree

   2011    Science
Comedian Ben Miller returns to his roots as a physicist to try to answer a deceptively simple question: what is one degree of temperature? His quest takes him to the frontiers of current science as he meets researchers working on the hottest and coldest temperatures in the universe, and to a lab where he experiences some of the strangest effects of quantum physics - a place where super-cooled liquids simply pass through solid glass. Plus, Ben installs his very own Met office weather station at home. Ben's investigations in this personal and passionate film highlight the importance of measurement and accuracy in the 21st century.