In a series of five  																						articles, Francetv Info presents the lives of immigrant Rroma in France.  																						Unfortunately, the only Rroma getting a voice already stood in the focus of  																						media attention through the focus on differences to the general population. Baïetto’s  																						(2014) text focuses on the fate of a Rroma family in Champs-sur-Marne. The  																						article accuses the eviction-policy of the French authorities, but at same time  																						confirms stereotypical notions of neglected Rroma that beg and sell scrap  																						metal. In addition, once again only visible Rroma get a chance to speak: “For many families in their situation, scrap  																						iron and begging are the two basic sources of income. The men get up very early  																						in the morning, looking for pieces of metal they can sell. The women beg in the  																						streets of the city and make five or six Euros a day.” The Rroma  																						interviewed emphasize that life in France, in spite of their apparently  																						miserable conditions, is still much better than in Romania. Here they don’t go  																						hungry and the children can attend the school. Since she is living in France, says  																						one Rromni, she had to change her accommodation a dozen times due to forced  																						evictions. This happened in a time period of four years.
Legrand (2014) portrays  																						a young Rrom who left Romania at the age of thirteen. Elvetian works as a  																						middleman. He provides his acquaintances with outlets for objects such as  																						mobile phones or jewellery whose origin are doubtful. In the following section Elvetian  																						tells about his childhood, in which he committed shoplifting and illegal copper  																						collection. He was deported several times, but always travelled back to France,  																						because his entire family lives here. Legrand’s article gives an overview of  																						the difficulties immigrant Rroma face in their attempt to integrate into the labour  																						market and French society. However, her article confirms stereotypes about  																						stealing Rroma, as the have been widely disseminated by the media. Therefore,  																						one cannot describe the selection of the portrayed Rroma as fortunate nor as  																						representative.  
The third article deals  																						with a fifteen-year old Rrom who prostitutes himself in front of the Gare du  																						Nord in Paris. He earns twenty to thirty Euros per client, who he usually serves  																						on the toilets of the train station and the surrounding fast food restaurants.  																						He has no pimp, but regular customers. Between thirty and fifty young Rrom  																						prostitute themselves in front of the Gare du Nord, according to the  																						sociologists Olivier Peyroux. One of the reasons for this are the difficulties  																						minors face in finding a regular job. The article paints a picture of  																						prostitution that is practiced out of poverty and lack of alternatives and not  																						equated with human trafficking. Nevertheless, also this article has to be  																						described as one-sided, as it confirms stereotypes of prostituting Rroma  																						(Legrand 2014/II).
The fourth article  																						focuses on the fate of a Rroma family from Timisoara, in north-western Romania.  																						The family of 32-year-old Viktor benefited from an active integration policy,  																						which was conducted between 2000 and 2007 by the agglomeration syndicate Sénart.  																						As a result of the active integration policy, the portrayed family received a  																						council house on the condition that the children regularly attend school, that  																						the parents actively seek work and they would not beg: “At the end of the 1990s, Rroma families settled down in the heart of  																						the new town. Some voters complained and the prefecture decided to try  																						something out.  […] Based on  																						their behaviour and their history, the prefecture chose 23 Rroma families and  																						settled them on a site with sanitary facilities.” In return for their  																						active integration efforts, the families received first job offers and  																						residence permits, so that they would be able to raise the necessary funds to  																						purchase regular social housing. In 2007, Sénart stopped its support payments  																						to the families due to lacking funds. Viktor and his family could remain in the  																						social housing thanks to his job in a supermarket. They do not approve the  																						one-sided portrayal of the Rroma in the French media: “I hear pranksters about Romanians in television, rants Viktor. […]  																						If a Romanian causes problems, they equate all Romanians, he complaints. Look  																						at me, I’m working, I have a house and my children go to school, he tells.”  																						The fourth article, concerning the stereotypical representations of Rroma, clearly  																						can be better rated than the other ones. It shows the positive example of a successful  																						integration. However, that there are other integrated Rroma in France, who are living  																						the country since generations or decades, a fact that is not mentioned here either  																						(Baïetto 2014/II).
The fifth article in the  																						series also tries to create a counter-image against stereotypical notions of  																						Rroma. Florin, a Rrom of 25 years, works as a storeman and speaks perfect  																						French. Only as a teenager, when he newly arrived from Romania in France, he was  																						begging. Then he made the acquaintance of a mart trader, for whom he worked illegally  																						for seven years. His girlfriend helped him to learn French. After problems with  																						the residence permit, Florin’s family was one of the few beneficiaries of the  																						infamous, inter-ministerial circular of the 26th August 2012. His parents got a  																						council house and he and his wife a room in a hotel. In September 2013, he  																						finally finds a legal job as a storeman in Rungis. However, he still has no  																						definite residence permit, even though he would like to integrate and live his life  																						in France (Baïetto 2014/III).