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- In her self-built dream house in Bethel, Tobago, she carves Caribbean dancers from German Oak, and has turned into one of the important representatives of Afro-Caribbean art. She's one of the few people who have turned their dreams into reality and are able to share their experience in an exciting way. This is a timeless and fresh appeal to the courage it takes to live a self-determined life.
- He's the most famous author in the world, but did he really write the works transmitted under his name? Scholars have long tried to explain Shakespeare's surprising success: after all, he had no university degree, no influential contacts and apparently owned not one single book.
- In a far corner of Russia is a place called Mongun Taiga, which means "Silver Mountain". Here, where Siberian forest gives way to Mongolian steppe, one man is realizing a dream: to find ancient treasures of the Scythian Empire buried in the permafrost that has hidden and protected them for two thousand years. He also believes that Genghis Khan is buried there in Mongun Taiga. In the summer of 1994, Jeremy Pine, an American art dealer with an extravagant sense of romance and adventure organizes the 1st joint Russian - American expedition to Tuva in Central Asia. A few years before, the Iron Curtain had fallen. Now everything seems possible. "Ketchup in Tuva" is a Road Movie with astonishing characters and enchanting landscapes. This is the true story of an impossible journey.
- The last witness of Native American civilization was a Prince from Prussia: Prince Maximilian of Wied. His expeditions to Brazil and North America made him one of the most important natural historians of his time.
- Imposters appear as gentlemen amongst criminals. Their scams are always audacious, normally genius and often simply unbelievable. Unbelievable, but true. Why do we always fall for the fraudster's tricks?