For 16 years, Amr Nassef hosted the What After program on the Al-Manar channel. The political work on television has achieved impressive results after it deeply immersed itself in the events taking place in Lebanon and the Arab world. But about four years ago, the Egyptian journalist stopped running his program. It is noteworthy that Nassef has not completely disappeared from the screen, but his presence in special television interviews in Al-Manar has remained constant. And so it went on until Nassef finally decided to go back to conducting the talk show by work, features of which will soon become clear.

In this context, Nassef announced in a quick contact with Al-Akhbar that he would present a new program called “Witness Evidence” that would begin broadcasting in the next few days. The journalist explained that at each stage he does not host witnessing political events, but interviews someone who contributed to its creation or the historical event, provided the guest lives at the event itself and how it did.
Among his reasons for returning to programming, Nassef indicated that during “what after”, he stopped putting up ideas for the return of certain programs, and eventually reached an agreement with the “witness witness”: “The viewer is no longer receiving a regular talk show, but the columnist is looking for a TV job that attracts people and doesn’t make them feel bored. So the agreement came to the “testimony of witnesses” to get rid of the limits of repetition and stagnation in regular meetings.