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Yn Fyw Yn Y Dŵr
(Alive in Water)
Journalist and former elite swimmer, Seren Jones, asks why so few Black and Asian people swim, and why they are losing their lives in the water. During the programme, Seren takes part in international research that aims to prove once and for all that Black people do not have denser bones than white people and that everyone can swim and float.
Mae'r newyddiadurwr a'r cyn nofiwr elite Seren Jones yn gofyn pam bod cyn lleied o bobl Ddu ac Asiaidd yn nofio, ac yn colli eu bywydau yn y dwr. Yn ystod y rhaglen mae Seren yn cymryd rhan mewn gwaith ymchwil rhyngwladol sy'n ceisio profi unwaith ac am byth nad yw dwysedd esgyrn pobl Ddu yn drymach na phobl gwyn a bod pawb yn gallu nofio ac arnofio.
Zimbabwe, Taid a fi.
(Zimbabwe,
Grandfather and me)

100 days after the ousting of the late former president, Robert Mugabe, Seren Jones returns home to Zimbabwe to experience the shift into what many Zimbabweans were calling the 'Second Independence'.
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Travelling across the country; from Ruwa to Harare to Bulawayo, Seren discovers what this change in politics really means for the people of Zimbabwe. As she learns more about her late grandfather, who was involved in the fight for Zimbabwean liberation, she's left wondering if this is really the country her Sekuru not only loved so dearly, but made so many sacrifices for.
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Seren was nominated for a BAFTA in the break through category for her role as a presenter in this documentary.
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