I enjoyed the topics that are covered related to trafficking. However, the host's actions and expression have been constantly annoying me. She has good summary skills based on the narration in the show. But she constantly show her obliviousness and hidden superiority through the questions she asked to the interviewees or her "shallow" sympathy towards the victims.
She would ask a culturally- deep-rooted superstitious person that "do you really believe that?", and would ask a person who has failed to finish his work task that "how do you feel?", like they would respond with anything beyond our expectations.
Shallow emotional expressions doesn't only reveal her naivety but also her hidden superiority. Expressed sorrow or concern justifies her identity as an outsider and who only has superficial sympathy but lack of deep compassion or empathy. As living in those horrible situations, people have no choice but live the best of their lives just like everyone else in the other part of world, they are used to it, it is reality. But her lamenting makes those people and their situations seems like so tragical, miserable. As an outsider, she perfectly expressed those sympathetic emotions to the lives that she's seen in which she was lucky enough to not live, which squarely unveiled her uncovered superiority that she might not even noticed herself.
She would ask politicians, governors some challenging or rhetorical questions like she had the solutions or answer in mind, or she could do a better job than them. She seemed like a perfect judge in some interview scenes, which really annoys me and seemed amusing.
The "documentary" is more like her personal vlog that she would constantly log her prejudiced thoughts, opinions, and she would bite her lips, make those mouth movements so often that always distracted me and I had to take a deep breath to relax myself.