NEW & EXCLUSIVE
Should Britain Accept More Refugees?
Monday9pm,channel 4
This channel4 documentary willbe broadcast on Monday night next
week. (say the date) The documentary willbe exploringhow you, the
British public feel on this topic. The filmmakersSam, Elaniaand
Myleswill be visiting the streets of Solihull and the local sixth form to
get a moredetailed view on the general publicsstance on this crisis.
The documentary showsheavy amountsof footage featuring
(including interviews with) the primeminister, political experts and the
refugees.
The refugeecrisis is just that. (the refugee crisis is just that, a crisis) “With
morethan 13million homelessrefugeesin the world and an
estimated 126,000already livingin the UK”. After watching this
yourseyeswill truly be opened. You willlearn, hear and see things
you didn’tknow before. This is the aim of the documentary, to
educate.
There are over 4 million Syrian refugeeswho fled (fleeing) to fivehost
countries. These countries include, Turkey, Iraq, Lebanon, Egyptand
Jordan. In Lebanon, 1 in 5 peopleis a Syrian refugee and in Jordan 1
in 13 is a Syrian refugee. (sourceMercycorps)
Thousands of Syrians (refugees) flee their country every day. They often
decide to finally escape (they are often forced to leave when) after seeing
their neighborhoods bombed or family members killed.
The risks on the journey to the border (the risk the journey has can be as) can
be as high as staying: Families walk for miles through the night to avoid
being shot at by snipers (not needed)or being caught by soldiers who will
(not need) kidnap young men to fight for the regime.
Peoplefrom all sorts of backgrounds (all backgrounds) have an opinion
on this topic. From White to Black, Muslim to Christian, Old to Young,
European to rest of the world, weall have differentviewsthat need
to be heard. This documentary navigatesthrough (Make people aware
of the what these people are facing everyday)all of these backgroundsand
collects viewsand compiles them into clear statistics.
Q&A
What sort of difficulties did you face during filming?
“The hardest partwas the filming, because it’s a delicate subject
certain members of the public werereluctant to give their views.”-
Myles
What do you want to come out of this documentary?
“I just hope the issuesraised can be solved and that wecan re-home
as many peopleas we can.”- Sam (Make people aware of the what these
people are facing everyday)
Was it worth is?
“Well, it was a struggle but I do believe it wasworth it, I mean come
on we have a documentary on channel4! Lets justhope you like it” –
Elania
The crew say they are expected to travel to the MiddleEast to
conductyet another documentary on ISIS the terror group. This will
be challenging, as they have never doneanything of this caliber
before.

Editing dps

  • 1.
    NEW & EXCLUSIVE ShouldBritain Accept More Refugees? Monday9pm,channel 4 This channel4 documentary willbe broadcast on Monday night next week. (say the date) The documentary willbe exploringhow you, the British public feel on this topic. The filmmakersSam, Elaniaand Myleswill be visiting the streets of Solihull and the local sixth form to get a moredetailed view on the general publicsstance on this crisis. The documentary showsheavy amountsof footage featuring (including interviews with) the primeminister, political experts and the refugees. The refugeecrisis is just that. (the refugee crisis is just that, a crisis) “With morethan 13million homelessrefugeesin the world and an estimated 126,000already livingin the UK”. After watching this yourseyeswill truly be opened. You willlearn, hear and see things you didn’tknow before. This is the aim of the documentary, to educate. There are over 4 million Syrian refugeeswho fled (fleeing) to fivehost countries. These countries include, Turkey, Iraq, Lebanon, Egyptand Jordan. In Lebanon, 1 in 5 peopleis a Syrian refugee and in Jordan 1 in 13 is a Syrian refugee. (sourceMercycorps) Thousands of Syrians (refugees) flee their country every day. They often decide to finally escape (they are often forced to leave when) after seeing their neighborhoods bombed or family members killed. The risks on the journey to the border (the risk the journey has can be as) can be as high as staying: Families walk for miles through the night to avoid being shot at by snipers (not needed)or being caught by soldiers who will (not need) kidnap young men to fight for the regime. Peoplefrom all sorts of backgrounds (all backgrounds) have an opinion on this topic. From White to Black, Muslim to Christian, Old to Young, European to rest of the world, weall have differentviewsthat need to be heard. This documentary navigatesthrough (Make people aware of the what these people are facing everyday)all of these backgroundsand collects viewsand compiles them into clear statistics.
  • 2.
    Q&A What sort ofdifficulties did you face during filming? “The hardest partwas the filming, because it’s a delicate subject certain members of the public werereluctant to give their views.”- Myles What do you want to come out of this documentary? “I just hope the issuesraised can be solved and that wecan re-home as many peopleas we can.”- Sam (Make people aware of the what these people are facing everyday) Was it worth is? “Well, it was a struggle but I do believe it wasworth it, I mean come on we have a documentary on channel4! Lets justhope you like it” – Elania The crew say they are expected to travel to the MiddleEast to conductyet another documentary on ISIS the terror group. This will be challenging, as they have never doneanything of this caliber before.