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All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 The Death of Fear

    • April 1, 2011
    • Al Jazeera

    In this first episode, Journalist Rageh Omaar examines how the death of a street fruit vendor led to a wave of uprisings across the Arab world.

  • S01E02 The end of a dictator

    • April 1, 2011
    • Al Jazeera

    Driven by its youth, Egypt’s revolution embraced all sectors of society. As the fear barrier was broken, destinies were transformed by the tumultuous events. An examination of the demise of the Mubarak regime through the eyes of people whose lives were, until now, defined by it.

  • S01E03 The fall of Mubarak

    • April 1, 2011
    • Al Jazeera

    A day-by-day account of how a protest became a people’s revolution and brought down one of the most durable leaders in the Arab world.

  • S01E04 The Evolution of Revolutions

    • April 1, 2011
    • Al Jazeera

    Marwan Bishara, Al Jazeera’s senior analyst, hosts a debate on the triggers and traumas of revolution in the Middle East after decades of repression.

  • S01E05 Seeds of Revolution

    • April 1, 2011
    • Al Jazeera

    A film following the activists who led Egypt’s revolution, as they attempt to capitalise on their unexpected success.

  • S01E06 Libya: Through the Fire

    • April 1, 2011
    • Al Jazeera

    Through the eyes of a Libyan-born filmmaker, we investigate the dark stories emerging from a country fast unraveling into civil war.

  • S01E07 Absolute Power

    • April 1, 2011
    • Al Jazeera

    Those in a position to know reveal the ‘tricks of the trade’ of Arab dictatorship.

  • S01E08 The People Want…

    • April 1, 2011
    • Al Jazeera

    “The people want the fall of the regime” is the shared slogan of the Arab uprisings. In this episode an array of characters from across the region explain what they want and what they expect for the future.

  • S01E09 Tweets from Tahrir

    • April 1, 2011
    • Al Jazeera

    Cairo's 'Twitterati' tweeted their revolution for 18 days from in and around Tahrir Square. Young, urbane and highly-motivated, their tweets revealed the truth of the scale of the uprising which Egypt's state media sought to hide, and gave a street-level, minute-by-minute account of how the persistence and bravery of the Egyptian people brought down a dictator.