Close-up shot of girl's eyes with camera zooming into her irises slowly.
Voiceover: "I had a dream."
Scene: 1
Characters: Girl
Location: -
Props: -
Over-shoulder shot of girl sitting in front of computer scrolling through the details of a job advertisement online.
Voiceover: "They promised me pay, so I could support my family."
Scene: 2 (Flashback)
Characters: Girl
Location: Home
Props: Computer, mouse
Low-angle shot of girl (from behind) walking into a large space of the airport and pausing in the middle of the crowd to smile with hope on her face (camera pans around to front of girl).
Voiceover: "I left with hopes for a better future."
Scene: 3 (Flashback)
Characters: Girl
Location: Airport
Props: Luggage, sweater, scarf, beanie
Close-up shot of girl's hands tied in rope on top of her head.
Voiceover: "There was no turning back."
Scene: 4
Characters: Girl
Location: -
Props: Rope
Over-shoulder-shot of girl as she walks into the room to shake hands with a lady in corporate attire.
Voiceover: "It was a job interview, and there was a lady."
Shot from low-angle side perspective, before girl can shake hands with the lady, two supposedly bodyguards grab her by the arms from behind and drag her away.
Voiceover: “They said I owed the company debt!”
Scene: 5 (Flashback)
Characters: Girl, Lady, Men
Location: Office
Props: Table, chairs
Close-up shot of girl's feet as blood trickles down her calf.
Voiceover: “And I had to pay. With sex.”

Scene: 6
Characters: Girl
Location: -
Props: -
Shot from girl’s perspective (camera backs away from subject) as guy in suit takes off coat, removes tie, unbuttons shirt and leans down.
Voiceover: “My virginity was worth a high price.”
Medium-close-up shot from side perspective as guy kisses girl's neck, with her expression of pain, agony and suffering.
Voiceover: “So was my dignity.”
Scene: 7 (Flashback)
Characters: Girl, Guy
Location: Bedroom
Props: -
Close-up shot of girl’s abdomen, filled with bruises and scars.
Voiceover: “Nobody escapes.”
Scene: 8
Characters: Girl
Location: -
Props: -
Shot of shadows on the wall/door, showing the brutal treatment of pimp hitting girl with belt and roughly throwing her to floor.
Voiceover: “They hit you, threaten you. They can even kill you.”
Scene: 9 (Flashback)
Characters: Girl, Pimp
Location: Room
Props: Belt
First shot of girl in a corner, knees up to chest, head in arms, crying.
Second shot of girl using stone to carve numbers on cement ground.
Voiceover: “There’s fear, and survival. To continue living, even when our souls are dead.”
Scene: 10 (Flashback)
Characters: Girl
Location: Cell
Props: Stone
Close-up shot on girl’s mouth, shut with black tape.
Voiceover: “The thing is, people don’t know.”

Scene: 11
Characters: Girl
Location: -
Props: -
Timelapse of busy street, that slowly fades to black.
Text (white): 27 million people worldwide are slaves of human trafficking.
Scene: 12
Characters: Crowd
Location: Street
Props: -
Shot of red light district with people walking to and fro, that slowly fades to black.
Text (white): 80% of human trafficking victims are women.
Scene: 13
Characters: Crowd
Location: Red Light District
Props: -
Random shots of different women (and men) faces, that slowly fade to black.
Text (white): Anyone can be a victim. Anyone can help.
Scene: 14
Characters: Women
Location: -
Props: -
Text (on black screen): STOP (red) human trafficking (white).
Logos shown on screen.

Scene: 15
Characters: -
Location: -
Props: -
 
Picture
Mood Board
 
On researching the public's perception of the human trafficking issue, our group created an online survey with 85 random respondents from Facebook, with the questionnaire and results as below:
 
 
"To be deprived of freedom in a land where the Statue of Liberty stands tall under the sun."
"I was involved in trafficking for more than six months. I compare that time to being held hostage in a timeless existence where my mind engaged itself in disassociation with my soul. This mental state was the only way in which I could keep any sanity. Repeatedly, I witnessed the beatings, rapes and murders of innocent women. At times, my tears of hopelessness would drown me into a pathos of my own execution. How could my own country not be aware of these cruelties? How could this kind of discrimination and slavery be given the power to blind immigrant and American women of their rights? The frustration of these and other questions echoed within my catatonic mind."
-- A Survivor's Story


Human trafficking is the fastest increasing criminal industry in todays world, coming in second after illegal drug-trade. This type of slaver has been traced back to the ancient Mesopotamian and Mediterranean civilization and has continued to grow. What is human trafficking? Commonly referred to as "modern-day slavery" is the illegal trade of human beings for forced labor or for exploitation. Exploitation referring to the using others for prostitution or other forms of sexual exploitation, forced labour or services, slavery, or the removal of organs. Woman and young children living in poverty are the ones who usually fall in the trap of the traffickers. Due to poverty many woman are not educated and are no employed leaving them with no choice but to sell their bodies to provide for their families. An approximate of 17,500 foreigners are trafficked each year in the United States alone, the number of United States citizens trafficked within the United States are even higher. Human trafficking is a near-guaranteed death due HIV and AIDS woman are infected with. Government around the world are just beginning to address this problem and have realized just how strong this type of slavery has become.

The United States government is committed to fight against human trafficking at home and abroad. The Trafficking victims Protection Act was signed in the year 2000. Stated on humantrafficking.org this Act: "enhances pre-existing criminal penalties, affords new protections to trafficking victims and makes available certain benefits and serves to victims of severe forms of trafficking.It also establishes a Cabinet-level federal interagency task force and establishes a federal program to provide services to trafficking victims." The U.S is also helping countries abroad by providing many anti-trafficking and development programs. Millions of dollars were provided to organizations all over the world to provide programs so human trafficking can be fought. The programs contribute on informing people the dangers of trafficking and strengthening the numbers of non-government organizations. Also stated on www.humantrafficking.org that: "The U.S. has assisted countries to enact anti-trafficking legislation, trained law enforcement officials, prosecutors, border guards and judicial officers on detecting, investigating, and prosecuting traffickers, and protecting victims and provided start-up equipment for new anti-trafficking police units." The Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act came out in 2003, dedicated to provide aid to approximately 20,000 victims that are trafficked into the U.S each year. President Bush had signed into law in early January the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2005. The United Stated had started monitoring people who were being trafficked in 1994, and is continuing to do so until human trafficking is prosecuted.

All in all, human trafficking is a serious crime that not many people are informed about. Young woman and children are forced into this sickening business everyday. Woman and children living in poverty do not know the meaning of human trafficking due to the lack of education. The highest percentage with people carrying the HIV/AIDS virus is for woman on this planet, many believing part of the percentage is because of human trafficking. Not many woman and children know the risks they are taking when they have no choice but to sell their bodies. Government all over the world should be providing information on human trafficking because no nation is immune from this crime.
 
"Everyday, everywhere, something's happening somewhere."
Tangled In Social Wires
With more than 550 million people on Facebook, 65 million tweets sent through Twitter each day, and 2 billion video views every day on YouTube (Curtis, 2013), it is self-evident that social media is now integrated as an essential component of our everyday lives. People are getting increasingly accustomed to networking through this highly interactive communication platform, so much to the extent that a concern on the negative impacts of social media has risen among scholars and researchers. Studies suggest that social media may be addictive, especially to users who constantly engage in these sites out of habit, for "fear of missing out" (FOMO) on the latest information and updates. The accessibility of social media on mobile phones serves as a form of convenience, but at the same time worsens society's over-reliance on social media. People tend to cling to their gadgets and devices for communication purposes, even on occasions when face-to-face communication is supposedly used to create social bonds. The irony is that social media may bring us closer to faraway people, yet further apart to closer people. It is high time people stepped out of the virtual reality of social media and started socializing, really.

Cultures On A Scale
Globalization is an inevitable phenomenon in today's interconnected world, where information and ideas can reach out to great numbers of people through mass migration, travel and online communication. From a cultural perspective, globalization in its outlook is the worldwide movement of ideas, attitudes and values across national borders towards integration (wiseGEEK, 2013). Cultural globalization is an issue that triggers both positive and negative responses from communities across the globe. Some contend that globalization eliminates cultural diversity as people succumb to homogenization and adopt a generic, uniform culture. Based on a more optimistic point of view, globalization helps level out cultural differences and increase mutual understanding to avoid cultural conflicts internationally (Vysotka, 1995). Cultural communities today face the challenge of keeping a healthy balance between benefiting from cultural integration and protecting the uniqueness of individual culture. As a vital component that contributes to the cultivation of culture, education should be designed to preserve original cultures while preparing learners to live in a globalized world.

Should Gender Matter In "Love"
Over the recent years, the previously shamed and suppressed social issue of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender (LGBT) rights has surfaced into the light as a worldwide movement with an increasing circle of support from people around the world. From pride parades to peaceful demonstrations, much effort has been made to raise awareness on equal rights and civility to the LGBT community.  As a controversial social issue in various local contexts, legal recognition for same-sex marriages remains an unresolved matter in most countries. Traditional notions have often scoffed the idea of legalizing same-sex marriages, insisting that "marriage is an institution between one man and one woman" and that "gay sex is unnatural" (Bidstrup, 2000). LGBT supporters however, argue that the law should uphold constitutional rights of consenting adults regardless of their gender or sexual orientation, and allow them to love and marry whomever they wish. This social issue prompts us into thinking critically: should society give the green light to many individual liberties or should we stay with traditions that might foster social cohesion and social solidarity? (Sapp, n.d.)

Moving In A Green Way
Apart from mere development in technology and infrastructure, modern urbanization poses the challenge of creating environmentally sustainable "green" cities that last us to the distant future. Most people in cities spend a large amount of time travelling from place to place, hence a good transport system will  not only increase efficiency, but greatly impact our environment as well. According to research, most air pollution and approximately 16.5% of greenhouse gas emissions are a result of the way we travel and use transport (Department of Transport, 2013). Sustainable transport should aim to increase fuel efficiency and reduce carbon emissions, while have long-term goals of utilizing renewable energy sources for future use.  A wide range of transport measures should be implemented in cities for people to have a better choice in how they move from place to place. Roads should have routes favorable for pedestrians and cyclists, who contribute best in maintaining a sustainable form of transport within short distances. By enhancing its attraction and services, public transport systems which cut congestion should also be a common choice of transport in everyday life. When all transport systems in the country are made sustainable, a "green" reputation would most definitely be easier to achieve.

To Be Legally Drugged?
Marijuana as a legal drug is one of the highly debated issues today, especially in the United States where marijuana faces crossed destinies of legalization at the current moment. The reasons why this drug is still currently illegal is fairly understandable; marijuana contains known toxins and cancer-inducing chemicals, which can be stored in the human body for long periods of time, leading to health problems such as damaged brain cells, respiratory problems, acute memory loss and a lowered immune system (Public Sea Lion, 2012). It is feared that if marijuana were to be legal, problems on the overuse of such drugs would become uncontrollable with an increased number of marijuana smokers. On the other hand, support for legalized marijuana has increased 22% since the late 1990s (The New York Times, 2013) as people begin to make comparisons between legalization of the drug and other legalized substances such as tobacco and alcohol. Pro-marijuana parties claim that legalization of the drug would actually decrease crime and allow police officers to deal with other severe problems affecting the country instead of arresting non-harmful marijuana smokers. The government would be able to track the use of marijuana across the country, and impose tax on the distribution and sale of marijuana as a means of regulation. The controversy goes on and on. Should marijuana be legalized?