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1-21 of 21
- Returning to her native region 15 years after the end of the Algerian war, Lila is obsessed by memories of the war for independence that defined her childhood. In dialogue with other Algerian women, she reflects on the differences between her life and theirs.
- The principle of "Ce Soir (Ou Jamais!)" is to present live and in public "the news seen by culture". The program brought together guests with very varied profiles, around specific topical themes, which the speakers have the leisure to develop at length while the host stands back, only intervening sporadically to frame the debate. "Ce Soir (Ou Jamais!)" is broadcast daily, from 2006 to 2011, from Monday to Thursday (its duration is one hour and twenty minutes, generally including the interruption by Soir 3). In 2011, it became weekly with programming on Tuesday evenings and lengthened to two hours. The last issue on France 3 was broadcast on February 12, 2013. The show was transferred to France 2, every Friday evening, from March 8, 2013. At the end of May 2015, "Ce Soir (Ou Jamais!)" became the longest-lived cultural program on French television, in terms of the number of broadcasts (724 issues), beating the previous record set by Bernard Pivot's" Apostrophes". The last issue of "Ce Soir (Ou Jamais!)" is broadcast on May 20, 2016.
- his film essay pieces together various photographs and footage of the Zerda ceremony from colonial archives, with anonymous poetic voice-overs recounting the lived experiences of indigenous Algerians.
- A monthly show in which Bernard Pivot interviews artists, actors and musicians who were not born in France, but adopted the French culture and language as their own.
- Dedicated to the problems of immigration and integration, as well as xenophobia and racism, this program explores the life of migrants who have settled for several generations or those who have just recently arrived in regions of France.
- A literary program hosted by Frédéric Ferney, French journalist and drama critic, which features the great writers of the moment in France 5's studio in Paris. After 8 seasons, the show became 'Le Bateau Livre'.
- Broadcast from 1977 to 1987 on FR3, every Sunday morning, for 1h30, Mosaïque is a variety show with a set where music groups from the countries of origin of immigration perform, and which broadcasts reports on these countries and on immigrants who live in France. When it was created, it aimed to promote the cultures of origin of immigrants, but also to make them better known to the rest of the population. However, the program was never financed by public television which considered that it was was aimed at a specific audience and was therefore not part of a public service mission. It received financial support from the Ministry of Labor, through its subsidy to the National Office for the Cultural Promotion of Immigrants, ONPCI (which later became Information Culture and Immigration, ICEI, in 1977, then Agency for the Development of Relations intercultural studies, ADRI, in 1982).