April 23, 2025

Overcoming Gambling Addiction: Beating the Odds

Beating the Odds: Overcoming Gambling Addiction tells the powerful story of Michael Mooney, whose first memory of gambling came at just 10 years old — tossing coins against a wall with classmates to win lunch money. What began as harmless fun soon grew into something much more destructive: a gambling addiction that would shadow him for years. By 17, Michael was behind bars for heroin possession. While he served his sentence, his family moved to Las Vegas — a city of bright lights, second chances, and for many, heartbreak. Given a choice between prison time and recovery, Michael chose sobriety. He quit drugs through a 12-step program in 1991 and began to rebuild. But he hadn’t yet confronted his gambling addiction — the hidden struggle still waiting to surface. On his honeymoon, a quick visit to the hotel casino turned into a devastating seven-hour spiral. Michael lost more than $10,000 — every dollar they’d received as wedding gifts — to his gambling addiction. Overcome with shame, he made a life-changing decision the next morning: on May 1, 1995, he quit gambling for good. He hasn’t made a single bet since. Fueled by the pain of his experience and a desire to help others, Michael earned a master’s in psychology and became certified in both substance use and gambling addiction counseling. Today, he leads Choices Counseling Center in Roseville, guiding others through recovery from gambling addiction. Beating the Odds: Overcoming Gambling Addiction is more than a story of addiction — it’s a story of redemption. Michael’s journey shows that even after deep loss, healing is possible, and purpose can grow from the darkest places.
April 23, 2025

The Dangerous Allure of Slot Machines: Addiction by Design

Anthropologist Natasha Dow Schüll, the author of Addiction by Design: Machine Gambling in Las Vegas, spent 15 years studying how casinos and slot machines are designed to pull users into a trancelike state called the “machine zone” where social demands, worries, and bodily awareness fades away. While in this zone, gamblers are not just playing to win, but rather, to play for as long as possible, regardless of the physical, mental and financial costs. While the gambler loses themselves, the gambling industry profits. She extends this research into digital / smartphone gambling as well.
April 23, 2025

Afghanistan: The Billion Dollar Drug War

Drug use in Afghanistan is at an all-time high. With NATO forces withdrawing and local law enforcement authorities having little to no funding, the poppy fields are thriving. In this documentary, 101 East investigates how Afghan authorities are fighting to regulate the return of poppy farming, the ramifications of the global war on drugs, and what the future holds for this vulnerable nation. Fortunately, there is one woman in Kabul who works endlessly to help addicts. Laila Haidari founded “Mother Camp”, a rehabilitation centre devoted to helping hundreds of people recover from addiction and connecting them with support groups. She devotes her life to this underserved group, trying to convince them to stop using drugs, spending hours a day counselling, consoling, and keeping the peace.
April 23, 2025

Ketamine Realms and Realities: Illegal Drug or Therapeutic Treatment?

In this fascinating journey, Hamilton Morris sits down with Timothy Wyllie, an artist, writer, and architect known for his role in creating the controversial Process Church, a religion that challenged traditional beliefs. Wyllie’s lifelong quest to understand his own mind provides unique insights into the complexities of human consciousness. Morris then travels to India, where he explores the production of ketamine, a powerful drug used in both medicine and recreation. He speaks with doctors, therapists, and experts to learn more about the role of ketamine in our society, its medical uses, and how it’s changing the way we think about the mind. Through this exploration, Morris sheds light on ketamine’s impact and its potential to shape our understanding of consciousness, offering a fresh perspective on this powerful substance.
April 23, 2025

The Ketamine Time Bomb (VICE: High Society)

Ketamine has emerged as a defining drug for a generation of young Brits. A report from November 2020 revealed that 1-in-30 young people had used ketamine in the past year — the highest rate ever recorded and significantly higher than in other European countries. Current data ranks ketamine as the fourth most commonly used drug among young people, following cannabis, ecstasy, and cocaine. There’s a striking contradiction at the core of what's been dubbed "Generation K": ketamine is both dismissed as a bizarre, almost comical horse tranquiliser and feared for its very real, dangerous effects—including the risk of severe bladder damage and addiction. As its popularity has surged, so too have cases of ketamine-related health issues, including users developing conditions that cause them to urinate blood. In this report, Matt Shea dives into the world of Generation K to explore how a party drug can spiral into something far more harmful.
April 23, 2025

Benzo Dope & Tranq: The Next Wave of the Overdose Crisis

In 2021, over 100,000 Americans died from drug overdoses, making it the deadliest year on record. The latest phase of the overdose crisis is being fueled by synthetic substances, often combined with fentanyl to create street drugs that are even more potent and addictive. One of the most dangerous of these combinations is "benzo dope" —a mix of fentanyl and benzodiazepines, a class of sedatives that slow brain activity. This blend significantly increases the risk of overdose and seizures. Alarmingly, naloxone, the life-saving drug used to reverse fentanyl overdoses, is ineffective against benzo dope. In fact, using pure fentanyl alone is considered less hazardous. These mixtures are often made illicitly with ingredients that can be found in household kitchens, making them difficult to track or regulate. Another rising threat is "tranq"—a combination of fentanyl and xylazine, a veterinary tranquilizer not approved for human use. Xylazine prolongs fentanyl’s high but severely disrupts the central nervous system, leading to memory loss, dangerously low heart rate and blood pressure, and flesh wounds that don’t heal, often resulting in amputations. What makes this trend even more alarming is the ease with which these synthetic drug components can be purchased online—just a search away. Since the U.S. banned the import of pure fentanyl from China, the production and circulation of these homemade synthetics have surged, and that trend is expected to continue. Meanwhile, the lack of accessible recovery programs makes it even harder for users to escape addiction. These new drug cocktails are so powerful that users often don’t even remember getting high—they either wake up hours later or overdose. With these chemical-laced versions of fentanyl saturating the market, using drugs has become a gamble with life-threatening consequences. Ironically, in this deadly environment, some dealers now consider selling only uncut or pure fentanyl the “ethical” option. Beyond Fentanyl explores this unsettling landscape by examining the spread of benzo dope and tranq, their devastating effects on North American communities, and how U.S. drug policy has contributed to this surge in synthetic street drugs.
April 23, 2025

Alcohol: Adrian Chiles – Drinkers Like Me

In this revealingly intimate documentary for BBC2, Adrian Chiles takes a long, hard look at his own love of boozing. He wants to find out why he and many others don’t think they are addicted to alcohol despite finding it almost impossible to enjoy life without it. Adrian, who drinks almost every day, decides to start a drinking diary and soon finds out his intake is way over the recommended limit. He decides to visit his parents to find out what it was that motivated him to start drinking as a teenager and reveals that sneaking into pubs underage was all about friendship and being part of something, and that the allure of the social side of drinking has never really left him since his teens.
April 23, 2025

Alcohol & The Brits – Drinking for England

This BBC2 documentary depicts the drinking culture in Britain in the 90s and the bond that Brits have with booze. It follows people who drink heavily and use poetry and song to describe their tragic, yet sometimes amusing, relationship with alcohol. They include a man who drinks a minimum of ten pints of beer a night, a fashion model who drinks until she collapses, and a woman receiving detoxification treatment in a private hospital.
April 23, 2025

Alcohol at Home – Britain’s Secret Drinkers

It is commonly believed that binge drinking culture in Britain is their most serious drinking problem. However, experts in this short video, featured on the BBC programme ‘Tonight’, discuss a different concern – at home drinkers. According to a study discussed in the video, more and more people are regularly drinking alcohol at home, sometimes every night of the week. For some, it’s seen as a reward after a long day at work, and for others, it’s a way of relaxing. Unfortunately, many people appear unaware of the consequences of such behaviour.