Camera Operator
Más de veinte años después de que Vladimir Putin llegara al poder supremo en Rusia, el 7 de mayo de 2000, la sociedad rusa está profundamente dividida. Una generación joven y moderna se opone a la creciente represión ejercida por el régimen, que aún conserva el apoyo de gran parte de los miembros de generaciones anteriores. ¿Quiénes son estos ciudadanos ordinarios que sueñan con vivir en una Rusia diferente? ¿Qué precio deberán pagar para lograr la libertad y la justicia que tanto desean?
Writer
Más de veinte años después de que Vladimir Putin llegara al poder supremo en Rusia, el 7 de mayo de 2000, la sociedad rusa está profundamente dividida. Una generación joven y moderna se opone a la creciente represión ejercida por el régimen, que aún conserva el apoyo de gran parte de los miembros de generaciones anteriores. ¿Quiénes son estos ciudadanos ordinarios que sueñan con vivir en una Rusia diferente? ¿Qué precio deberán pagar para lograr la libertad y la justicia que tanto desean?
Director
Más de veinte años después de que Vladimir Putin llegara al poder supremo en Rusia, el 7 de mayo de 2000, la sociedad rusa está profundamente dividida. Una generación joven y moderna se opone a la creciente represión ejercida por el régimen, que aún conserva el apoyo de gran parte de los miembros de generaciones anteriores. ¿Quiénes son estos ciudadanos ordinarios que sueñan con vivir en una Rusia diferente? ¿Qué precio deberán pagar para lograr la libertad y la justicia que tanto desean?
Director
Cinematography
What we now call an IQ test was originally developed by Alfred Binet at the start of the 20th century as a way to measure developmental delays in schoolchildren. But with the eugenics craze at its peak, Binet's concept was soon appropriated and exploited by those who wished to guarantee the ethnic purity of their society. This program looks at the history of IQ assessment, from Ellis Island evaluations to William Shockley's racist declarations in the 1970s, and reveals how social policies were influenced by the idea that intelligence is set at birth. In addition, Charles Murray, co-author of The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life, defends his views.
Writer
What we now call an IQ test was originally developed by Alfred Binet at the start of the 20th century as a way to measure developmental delays in schoolchildren. But with the eugenics craze at its peak, Binet's concept was soon appropriated and exploited by those who wished to guarantee the ethnic purity of their society. This program looks at the history of IQ assessment, from Ellis Island evaluations to William Shockley's racist declarations in the 1970s, and reveals how social policies were influenced by the idea that intelligence is set at birth. In addition, Charles Murray, co-author of The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life, defends his views.
Director
What we now call an IQ test was originally developed by Alfred Binet at the start of the 20th century as a way to measure developmental delays in schoolchildren. But with the eugenics craze at its peak, Binet's concept was soon appropriated and exploited by those who wished to guarantee the ethnic purity of their society. This program looks at the history of IQ assessment, from Ellis Island evaluations to William Shockley's racist declarations in the 1970s, and reveals how social policies were influenced by the idea that intelligence is set at birth. In addition, Charles Murray, co-author of The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life, defends his views.