This documentary delivers a penetrating examination of Sean Combs, charting his rise from visionary hitmaker to one of the most powerful figures in hip-hop, and the growing controversies that now surround his legacy. Through archival footage, insider testimony, and investigative reporting, it exposes both the revolutionary impact of Bad Boy Entertainment and the darker allegations that have cast a long shadow over his empire, raising urgent questions about power, accountability, and image in the music industry. In the first two episodes, viewers see how a driven kid from New York reinvented himself as Puff Daddy, building Bad Boy Records into a cultural force. As fame and wealth accelerate, the series explores how the embrace of celebrity ignites a dangerous rivalry with Death Row Records, setting the stage for an era defined by excess, conflict, and unresolved questions. The lingering mystery surrounding the shooting of Tupac Shakur looms large, framing a story where ambition, rivalry, and consequence collide.
Guided by Stanley Tucci, this documentary journeys into the heart of Italy to reveal the country as it truly is, complex, contradictory, and deeply rooted in its culinary traditions. Through food, Tucci uncovers stories of history, identity, and innovation, showing how every dish reflects centuries of culture, migration, and local pride. What emerges is not a postcard Italy, but a living, evolving nation where cuisine is a language spoken by everyone. In the first three episodes, Tucci immerses himself in Tuscany, savoring the artistry of its cuisine while exploring Florence and Siena, where Renaissance creativity still shapes the table. He then heads north to Italy’s industrial regions, discovering cutting-edge gastronomy and futuristic farming, from high-tech agricultural labs to unexpected gourmet food found at service stations. Finally, in the German-speaking Alpine north, he explores a dual cultural identity through mountain dishes, skiing traditions, and glacial river fishing, revealing how history, borders, and landscape have forged a cuisine unlike any other in Italy.
In episodes 3 and 4, a seemingly simple ingredient becomes the invisible force that has shaped civilizations, fueled exploration, and quietly dictated the fate of empires. From ancient trade routes to modern industry, salt emerges not just as a seasoning, but as a powerful driver of human history and survival. At the same time, the story shifts to something far more familiar yet equally unsettling: the global dominance of a single type of banana. What appears to be abundance hides a fragile system built on uniformity, where one disease could wipe out a staple food relied upon by millions. As the journey unfolds, the narrative exposes the hidden cost of convenience and monoculture, revealing how the loss of biodiversity is not a distant ecological concern but an immediate threat to our food security and future. With striking connections between past and present, these episodes invite you to rethink what you eat, where it comes from, and how something as ordinary as salt or a banana could hold the key to understanding the balance—and imbalance—of our world.
In the first two episodes, viewers see how a driven kid from New York reinvented himself as Puff Daddy, building Bad Boy Records into a cultural force. As fame and wealth accelerate, the series explores how the embrace of celebrity ignites a dangerous rivalry with Death Row Records, setting the stage for an era defined by excess, conflict, and unresolved questions. The lingering mystery surrounding the shooting of Tupac Shakur looms large, framing a story where ambition, rivalry, and consequence collide.