At the end of every show, Malagurski called citizens to contact him and notify his team about the problems they're facing so that they may try to deal with them together.
The author stressed that the goal was not for him to fix other people's problems, but to give them ideas and present ways in which they can solve issues themselves.
[3] In April 2013, The Presumption of Justice, a documentary film directed by Boris Malagurski and Ivana Rajović, dealing with the 2009 death of a French football fan, Brice Taton, and alleged inconsistencies in the subsequent court case in Serbia.
After the premiere, Malagurski discussed the film with guests in the studio, who included co-director Ivana Rajović, lawyers Branislav Tapušković and Zora Dobričanin, and Dragan Crepulja, an alleged witness who had not been called to testify at subsequent court case.
The Director, Radovanka Predragović Stevanić, announced a lawsuit against Happy TV because its TV crew was allegedly "trying to enter forcibly", which Malagurski denied, saying "the footage clearly shows that we were calmly standing and knocking on the door of a public institution as representatives of a media outlet.
After the interview was broadcast, Kostić wrote a letter of complaint to the Association of Journalists of Serbia, alleging that Malagurski had "forged" a conversation.
[8] Malagurski replied on his Facebook page that he "didn't forge anything", but that Kostic either "forgot how she answered the questions" or had "bad intentions".