Original Broadcast Date: May 8th 2013
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TVTranscript
00:00Would you hand over your house keys to a bunch of strangers to transform your home?
00:15Outlaw Motorcycle Gang Tenancy Takeover, coming soon to ABC3.
00:30Thank you very much.
01:00Well, great news this week.
01:02Hands reached out across the great political divide, and while they didn't exactly grasp
01:06each other firmly in a hearty handshake, they did touch forefingers in the manner of E.T.
01:10and Elliot.
01:11And all for the common good.
01:12The National Disability Insurance Scheme is now well and truly half funded.
01:16Now, the pessimists will say, ah, well, no, no, no, no.
01:21The scheme is not half funded, it's actually half unfunded.
01:25But this, I think, is a philosophical red herring.
01:28How can I explain this?
01:29Oh, yes.
01:30It's a bit like this.
01:31It's a bit like the NDIS is my glass of water.
01:34It doesn't matter if it's half full or half empty because nobody's going to be drinking
01:37it until 2018.
01:39Now, the way they are half funding the NDIS is a bit complicated.
01:43So I'll let a professional explain it to you.
01:46Walkley Award winning Sky News anchor, Helen Daly.
01:48And joining me now from Canberra, I think we've got a story before then, but we're going
01:53to go to Tom Connell.
01:54Is Tom there now?
01:56Tom, it appears the NDIS appears to be a step closer to becoming a reality today.
02:04The PM announced she wants to raise the Medicare levy by half a percent.
02:10Thanks, Helen.
02:11Now, half a percent doesn't sound that much, but if you add that up, that's anybody?
02:16A $3 billion Medicare levy increase.
02:19Okay.
02:20Thanks, Juanita.
02:21Now, the great thing is that $3 billion per year properly invested would, according to
02:25the Treasurer, Wayne Swan, raise $20 billion by the time the scheme becomes operational.
02:30$20 billion.
02:32Now, what's the total cost of the NDIS?
02:34Uh, no, not you, Helen.
02:36Lee Sales.
02:37The total cost of the NDIS will ultimately be $14 billion.
02:41Right.
02:42Thank you very much, Lee.
02:43So they're going to make $20 billion and the scheme only costs $14 billion.
02:47So that's a profit of $6 billion.
02:49So it's no longer a question of the glass being half full or half empty.
02:52We're going to need a bigger glass.
02:54And here's the beauty of it.
02:55Even if the government paid back the $2.3 billion they took from universities to fund
02:59the Gonski reforms, there's still $3.7 billion ahead.
03:02And even if they use some of that to make up for the $2 billion mining tax revenue shortfall
03:07for this year, that's still $1.7 billion.
03:10And even that $1.7 billion, that would make up for overestimating the price of our carbon
03:14for about six months.
03:16And don't worry about that $20 billion being accurate either.
03:20It's from Wayne Swan, so you know the forecast will be spot on.
03:23Still, as I say, the NDIS has got bipartisan state national support, so everybody deserves
03:29the credit needed to pay for it.
03:31Ostrich farmer and freak female National Party official Deborah Crossing, you've criticised
03:36the government for reckless spending.
03:38Why have you greenlit even more of it with the NDIS?
03:41Because some think Sean, like disability care, are above party politics.
03:45Well this levy though raises less than half the money required for the NDIS.
03:48Yeah, it's typical Labor isn't it? They spend it and we have to find it.
03:51Can I just show you this grab of Tony Abbott?
03:54No, not that one, not that one.
03:58No, not that one either.
04:00No, no, no, the other one, you know, the booby trap one, the one.
04:05Booby trapping the future in the hope that an incoming government will be saddled with a
04:13whole lot of commitments.
04:15Alright, so, is the NDIS a Labor government booby trap?
04:20Financially, that's exactly what it is.
04:22And they know that when we win government, we'll walk right into it.
04:24And into yourselves.
04:25Exactly.
04:26It'd be good to have a disability insurance scheme then, wouldn't it?
04:29Don't you worry about us injuring ourselves, Sean.
04:32With Tony Abbott leading the way, there is very little chance of an accident.
04:35Alright, well I think we have footage of Tony leading the way.
04:37Here.
04:38But how do ordinary Australians feel about paying a levy for the NDIS?
04:50Brian, you and your wife are extremely ordinary Australians.
04:53What would you take home on average?
04:56Oh, pens, crockery, fax machine once.
05:00And income?
05:01And income.
05:02Alright.
05:03Let's say you're on 70k.
05:05You alright?
05:06We're doing 90k on the way here, weren't we?
05:08Well, are you happy to pay $364 a year for a national disability insurance scheme?
05:13F*** that.
05:14Well, it's only a dollar a day.
05:16Oh, well, that's alright then.
05:18Does it matter which day?
05:20Well, it would be every day.
05:22Oh, well f*** that.
05:23What's in it for us?
05:25Nothing.
05:26Well, what about if either of you became disabled, say a piano fell on you?
05:29You're not going to get us with your lefty special effects piano, McAuliffe.
05:42But the final word on the NDIS goes to former Treasurer Peter Costello, who this week criticised
05:49the government for not having done as he had when he was in office and...
05:53Delivered 10 surpluses, cleared all debt and put $60 billion in the future fund.
05:57As for introducing an NDIS during a deficit, he said...
06:01I wouldn't be introducing it in this form at this time.
06:05Mind you, what he didn't say was why he hadn't introduced an NDIS when he'd...
06:09Delivered 10 surpluses, cleared all debt and put $60 billion in the future fund.
06:13But not everyone is happy about the increase to the levy.
06:16My CEO Bernie Brooks said that the levy of $350
06:20is something they would have otherwise spent with Meijer.
06:23Part-time Meijer customer relations spokesweaver Lumpy Westphalen has a solution.
06:27That's right, Sean.
06:28We're proposing a further 0.5% increase in the Medicare levy
06:32to incorporate a Meijer levy so as to compensate Meijer for the $350 we miss out on.
06:38Plus, we're proposing an additional 0.5% levy on top of that
06:42to further compensate Meijer for the money that people are not going to spend now
06:46because of Mr Brooks' comments.
06:48All right, well, thanks very much, Lumpy.
06:49Well, how bad is it?
06:50As News Limited Network national political reporter Jessica Mazalak posited in a recent editorial,
06:55a dollar a day, I mean, I've paid more for a cup of coffee.
07:00Well, like, I certainly hope so.
07:02When's the last time you could get a cup of coffee for a dollar?
07:04Mad as hell barista Tuck and throb.
07:071978, I reckon, the office cafe bar dispenser, provided you didn't have any whitener.
07:16That'll be $7, please, signorino.
07:19Thank you very much, Tarko.
07:20Well, he might be right, but then so might you.
07:22Send your entries to the when's the last time you paid $1 for a cup of coffee,
07:25or indeed any hot beverage competition, care of the ABC in your capital city.
07:29Enclose two 50-cent pieces, and you could be in the running for a free bowl of Q&A alphabet soup,
07:34courtesy of the soon-to-be-closed ABC shop.
07:37Mmm.
07:38Q&A alphabet soup.
07:39That's nice.
07:41At the end of the day, though, increased taxes are only part of the baby that Wayne Swan will be delivering in next week's budget.
07:48And it won't be a popular baby. It'll be pretty ugly.
07:51But as a seasoned pro, he knows the old adage,
07:54if you can't stand the heat, then get behind a fire door.
08:03Of course, this sort of thing is just grist to the mill for the Liberal Party's latest attack ad,
08:07or would be had they not made it over a month ago when Kevin Rudd was contesting the leadership.
08:11To talk us through what might be kindly described as the logic of the ad,
08:15Flournoy Quimby from advertising giant Beg, Borrow and Plagiarise.
08:18Logic's very important in an ad, Sean.
08:21For example, when I did the Carlton draft Never Spill a Drop ad, I...
08:24Oh, you did that one?
08:25Yes, I did.
08:30Let's have a look at the Libs ad.
08:34OK, now, just stop. Can we just stop it right there just for a moment?
08:36Now, this is the first point I'd like to make,
08:38is that it's a graphic, it's not a real sign.
08:40So how does a letter come loose on a graphic?
08:43Secondly, it's their own sign, it's not Labor's.
08:46How does the Liberal Party's incompetence at making something,
08:48other than this ad, show Labor in a bad light?
08:51Artistic licence, Sean. It's just a bit of fun.
08:54Check out this next bit and I think you'll see how clever this ad really is.
09:00See, the Labor Party are running around like chooks with no heads.
09:03It's a metaphor.
09:05Yeah, but the headless chooks appear to have heads to me, I mean...
09:09Necks they don't have, I grant you that, but heads they've got.
09:13Human ones.
09:14So, in the run-up to the election, surely this sort of detail you've got to get right.
09:18It's irony, Sean.
09:19The Libs are saying how very like Julia Gillard to promise us headless chooks
09:23and then deliver chooks with heads.
09:24The ad is actually very clever.
09:26Is it?
09:27Alright, what's clever about this bit? Here, this next bit.
09:29Kevin, bring it on.
09:31Everyone should take a very long, cold shower.
09:35Kevin, Minister Crane.
09:37Okay, now, is the dynamite a metaphor?
09:41And what is it a metaphor for?
09:43If it's for the leadership spill, then surely Simon Crane set it off, not Rudd.
09:46And how could it blow up in their faces if they have no heads?
09:49I think you're taking these metaphors a bit too literally, Sean.
09:52You see, advertising is all about a dynamic, creative, high-rotation cut-through.
09:56I'll tell it to Will Anderson.
09:58Finally, for those of you who think this show leans to the left,
10:02and this is actually in the ad.
10:04We haven't doctored this.
10:05You can actually check it out online.
10:06Have a look at this bit of the ad here.
10:08You can see the microphone in the right-hand corner of frame there.
10:13So you know you're fair and balanced when you're featured in a Liberal Party campaign ad.
10:17Still, just in case people are thinking that we're leaning too far to the right now.
10:25Now, normally, I don't like biting the hand that feeds me here at the ABC.
10:28And, of course, I mean that metaphorically.
10:30I'm not referring to Mrs Carol Arthurson who prepares my food
10:33and places it in my mouth pursuant to my contract.
10:36No, I'm talking about a decision this week to appoint Paul Barry
10:39as Jonathan Holmes' replacement on Media Watch.
10:42Now, in doing so, the ABC has really missed out on a great opportunity
10:46to finally have someone in the chair who actually wants the job.
10:50Andrew Bolt blogged an open letter to ABC's Supreme Leader, Mark Scott,
10:54not so long ago, coyly hinting that he wanted the job
10:57and referring to a ripping sound relating to his contract, Channel 10.
11:02Now, Andrew didn't say who was ripping up his Channel 10 contract.
11:05Didn't say it was him.
11:06Could have been anybody over there in authority who'd watched his show.
11:10The point is that he was available for the Media Watch job.
11:13Now, Andrew's a good friend.
11:14You know, we were both educated at Adelaide University.
11:17We both work for Channel 10 and the ABC,
11:20and we both host pretend news and current affairs shows.
11:23But, you know, I think it would have been great.
11:25He's got a wonderful sense of humour.
11:27Have a look at this.
11:28Coming up, academics spend Easter worshipping Karl Marx.
11:37And he'd know all about catching out journalists for being dishonest,
11:40misleading, grossly careless, or picking them up for having factual errors,
11:44or selective misrepresentation, or distorting the truth,
11:47or lacking care and diligence, or being gratuitous, cynical, disrespectful,
11:51intimidatory, inflammatory, derisive, and not acting in objective good faith.
11:56Because Andrew Bolt has been found by the courts
11:58to have done all those things himself in his own journalism.
12:01The only thing I'll say against Andrew concerns his presentation style.
12:05Andrew, if you're watching, you cannot come over to the ABC
12:08and keep that smug, self-satisfied smirk, because that's what I do.
12:12And I think it would be confusing for the audience.
12:15Still, all in all, a lost opportunity, I think.
12:19The ABC.
12:23And coming up later in the show, the 457 Visa Rort forecast
12:27brought to you by a spokesman for Brendan O'Connor.
12:3310,000.
12:3552,000 by 2016.
12:403.
12:42And Greg Combey shows us what it's like to climb out of a training mine shaft.
12:51Well, may we say, God save the Queen.
12:56The dismissal.
12:57Was it constitutional?
12:59Should Whitlam have gone?
13:01What font did Kerr use in his letter?
13:04And what of Fraser?
13:06All these are questions.
13:07And the last one, quite frankly, is a bit vague.
13:10Vague.
13:11Yes, I...
13:13I remember...
13:15Sir John waking up one morning at about...
13:193am.
13:21We'd had a night...
13:22...of torrid love-making.
13:25He was as white as a sheet and clutching his heart.
13:30I said to him, what's wrong?
13:32I said, you look like you've seen a ghost.
13:35He said, I thought something terrible had happened to my wife.
13:39I said, there, there.
13:41You're with me now.
13:43He said, I know that now, but for a moment I thought she was you and something terrible had happened to her.
13:49I said, what do you mean?
13:51He said, well, you're no oil painting, are you?
13:54I said, what about one by Bruegel?
13:56And he had to concede.
13:59I had a point.
14:03We had such a row.
14:05He told me to get out of the hotel room and then leave immediately.
14:09I said, can you at least give me some money for a taxi?
14:13He gave me $12.50.
14:16I said, $12.50?
14:18The plates alone are about a hundred grand.
14:21He said, oh, I thought you were talking about a taxi fare.
14:26Well, he got dressed and went off to work and sacked the Whitlam government that very afternoon.
14:35The women behind the men behind the dismissal.
14:39Soon to ABC1.
14:41This Friday on an all-new Miss Fisher Murder Mysteries.
14:45What is it, Constable?
14:47What was so important that I had to cease drunkenly dancing the Charleston till dawn with my Chinese lover?
14:53I'm afraid there's no body this week.
14:55What? No murder?
14:57How curious.
14:59Melbourne in 1928 is usually a hotbed of homicide if you check behind the piano.
15:03Yes, ma'am.
15:05Any theories?
15:06We think Dr. Blake might have stolen it, perhaps to solve the crime himself.
15:10Well, I can't see how.
15:12His series is set in the 1950s.
15:14It'll be 20 years before the murder even takes place.
15:17Maybe to get a head start on us.
15:19I told management it was a mistake doing two Australian period murder mysteries on the ABC.
15:23I've seen the ads, Miss Fisher.
15:25That Craig McLaughlin looks pretty good in them.
15:27Oh, pssh!
15:28Can Craig McLaughlin do this?
15:29I believe he can, Miss.
15:30Assemble ABC management in the drawing room immediately.
15:31I shall get us a body.
15:32Even if I have to commit the murder myself.
15:36Miss Fisher murder mysteries, Friday night, 8.30.
15:37How was that, Dave?
15:38Yeah, I'm good.
15:39I'm good.
15:40I'm good.
15:41Yeah, I heard better.
15:42Okay then.
15:43Bye.
15:44Bye.
15:45Bye.
15:46Bye.
15:47Bye.
15:48Bye.
15:49Bye.
15:50Bye.
15:52Have a good weekend.
15:58Miss Fisher Murder Mysteries, Friday night, 8.30.
16:04How was that, Dave?
16:06Yeah, I heard better.
16:07OK, then. Bye.
16:19Have a good weekend.
16:21Hey!
16:28Tony, Tony, let's all go for Tony.
16:37Let's all go for Tony.
16:54Hi.
16:56Are you Elsa?
16:56Um, Elsie, actually.
16:59Rob?
17:00Yeah.
17:02You're a lot more attractive than your photo.
17:17That's great, that's great.
17:19We're so close now.
17:20We're so close.
17:21Oh, come here.
17:23I'm glad you're in, sweetheart.
17:25Good luck, son.
17:26Bye, Dad.
17:26Don't cry, Mum.
17:31You can Skype me.
17:38It's coming.
17:39Come on.
17:39Hi, welcome back.
17:57Well, briefly, in local news.
17:58300 Melbourne taxi drivers staged a surprise protest at the Tullamarine Airport this week
18:03over changes to short fare practices.
18:05The surprise was that 300 taxi drivers knew where the airport was.
18:09Of course, many people go to the airport, and it's outside the country, and it's outside the country that we find news from countries other than Australia.
18:17Well, first to Holland, and this week, Prince William Alexander was sworn in as Europe's youngest monarch.
18:27Royal watcher Gay March has been observing the goings-on game.
18:30Yeah, well, that's right, Sean.
18:31Well, that's right, Sean.
18:32Not much happening in old blighty Queen-wise lately.
18:37No?
18:38Unless you count her punching Prince Philip in the eye.
18:41So I thought I'd pop over to Amsterdam and top up on me tulips and me licorice, and while I was there, catch up on the crowning of the new King of the Netherlands.
18:54Very nice.
18:55Bit of a pants man in his younger day.
18:58Used to call him King of the Nether regions!
19:01LAUGHTER
19:03Oh, but me and my late husband had our honeymoon there back in the day, so it brought back a lot of lovely memories.
19:13Yes.
19:14Oh, staying in a luxury windmill, clog dancing till dawn, window shopping in the red light district,
19:22and, of course, watching the van der Volt on the telly.
19:27Yes, all right, the report.
19:29Oh, yeah!
19:31It was a gala day as the Dutch monarch was sworn in before a joint session at the Houses of Parliament.
19:38A joint session so apt in a city like Amsterdam.
19:42The inauguration was attended by Prince Charles and his wife Camilla,
19:46who, as they approached the new king, observed centuries of tradition by passing the duchy on the left-hand side.
19:54Outside, a huge crowd came dressed in orange, the traditional colour of the Netherlands,
20:01as well as the traditional colour of one-third of their traffic lights.
20:05Finally came time for the Queen Beatrix to formally sign the Act of Abdication,
20:11a process that can take upwards of 13 hours to complete.
20:16Then, as quickly as it had begun, it was all over,
20:20bar the king's daughters donning their Hessian sacks.
20:24And all that remained was for the entire royal family to be entertained.
20:29Which explains why Andre Rieu was not invited.
20:35Well, thank you very much indeed, Gaye.
20:37Well, from Holland to Hollywood now,
20:39an IBM scientist in California have produced a film
20:42made entirely by animating the individual atoms of a carbon molecule.
20:46Let's have a look.
20:47What did you think, Margaret?
21:02A great start, but it really dragged in the middle.
21:05And the ending was so predictable.
21:07Two stars for an eight, don't it?
21:09Well, I loved it.
21:10It makes Singing in the Rain look like the artist.
21:12I'm giving it two.
21:14Still to come in overseas news and...
21:16The Federal Government orders 12 new subs in white paper, as seen here.
21:23But first, sports.
21:25Well, who knew who injected whom with what, when,
21:28and who knew what was banned, and when and by whom.
21:31But specifics to one side,
21:32I can't work out what the freak's going on in the Essendon sports doping saga,
21:35but then I'm not a football journalist.
21:37So I'll leave it to the experts on Fox's AFL 360 to explain it.
21:41I'm just saying it's Essendon, I'm not saying it's dank.
21:44And the ACC are private, and ASADA says this, and AWADA says that.
21:49It's just a very complex issue.
21:53Hmm.
21:54Well, if systematic doping, organised crime, and match-fixing have infiltrated Australian sport,
22:00what about other pastimes that we enjoy sitting down and looking at?
22:04Jackson Oxygen Delves.
22:06Each team will be short snippets of songs.
22:11You have to listen carefully and identify as many of those songs as you can.
22:15For what seemed like 20 years, Spics and Specs was the ABC's flagship light entertainment program.
22:21A Wednesday night dose of feel-good fun and pop music trivia.
22:25But does such longevity come at a price?
22:30Former half of popular music funny men, the scared weird little guys, Rusty Bertha appeared on Spics and Specs episode 753,
22:39along with Hamish Blake, Andy Lee, Dave O'Neill, and the chimpanzee from Peter Gabriel's Shock the Monkey video.
22:46I'd never heard of the show before, but my agent forced me to do it.
22:51So I get down to the ABC, and about an hour before the taping, Adam calls everyone out into his trailer,
22:59and lined up on the bed in the trailer, syringes.
23:05And there's this guy there. Adam just says it's the ABC doctor.
23:10And then, one by one, Adam injected us all into our stomachs.
23:17And were you told what you were being injected with?
23:19No. He just said it was performance enhancing, and left it at that.
23:25Did you have to sign anything?
23:26I did. The doctor had a scary little guy's DVD, and he got me to inscribe it to his boyfriend.
23:35And when you did Spics and Specs, would you say your performance was, uh, enhanced?
23:41I didn't feel that different, but, uh, Hamish, he was on fire, and he was really good.
23:48And he? Not so much.
23:51They asked Rusty to accompany me to Luna Park, explaining that it's visually boring just watching someone being interviewed in a room,
23:58and it's good to break it up every now and then.
24:01After the show, Adam comes over, and he smiles and shakes my hand,
24:05and, uh, then he threatened to beat me to death if I breathed the word of the injections to anyone.
24:12That's when Rusty was approached by a member of an Asian betting syndicate.
24:16So this guy says that just prior to me going on the show the next time I'll get this call,
24:20asking me to get more questions right or more questions wrong than usual.
24:24And thus influence which teams won or lost?
24:27Yep.
24:28Despite no actual score being kept throughout the show?
24:31Yeah, I think that's what made this show so attractive to them, you know?
24:34So, Rusty, can you tell me if other ABC shows have been compromised?
24:38Yeah. Insiders, 7.30, Q&A, even Lateline.
24:45Did anybody fix randling? Not before I went to air, no.
24:51And, unfortunately, Adam Hills was not available for comment.
24:55That's right, isn't it, Adam?
24:57Yeah, sorry, I'm just so busy working on my new series, I don't even have time for a cameo.
25:01Yeah, yeah, yeah. But another time, perhaps?
25:04No, I don't think so.
25:06No, no, I mean, after your show's finished, have you got some time?
25:08I said no, Sean.
25:09Alright.
25:14The drugs in sports scandal has sadly spilled over into a sport normally unsullied by controversy.
25:22Horses pumped full of peptides and anabolic steroids is not something we need in the racing industry, is it, Maggie?
25:27No way, Sean. Detracts from the purity of the sport and reduces it to a farce. A bloody farce.
25:33Alright. Big fan of horse racing, aren't you, Mags?
25:35Oh, I love it, Sean. From the smell of the mounting yard in the morning to the sight of the young fillies in designer dresses lying in the mud on ladies' day, it's truly the sport of kings.
25:44Alright, so what can be done to recapture the integrity of the sport?
25:47Well, Tony Abbott's got the right idea, Sean. He wants to take the gambling out of football, why not take it out of horse racing as well?
25:53Okay, otherwise it'd be just like cock fighting or bear baiting, wouldn't it?
25:56Yeah, exactly. Strip it back to what horse racing was always meant to be, watching animals run in a circle just for the sheer fun of it.
26:03Wouldn't there be sufficient satisfaction after the running of a gambling free Melbourne cup in turning to your mates and saying,
26:09yeah, I thought that horse would win.
26:12How would people make money out of it though, Mags?
26:14Oh, same as car racing, Sean. Cover them in advertising.
26:17So, Maggie, the interview with Bernard Tomek's father has been cancelled, I take it?
26:22Not good.
26:23Fair enough. Thanks, Mags.
26:25Well, not coming up because I've got to pop over to Channel 10 and put on a onesie.
26:30Egyptian cruelty to cattle surprises no one. After all, they can't even look after their mythical creatures properly.
26:37And the NRA celebrates win for unfettered Second Amendment rights.
26:41Keep the faith, stand up and fight for our freedoms.
26:45All right, I'll do that, says this man.
26:48Well, this is our last show before the federal election, so I really want to leave you with something to sustain you over the remaining five months of the campaign.
26:59I know we're all looking forward to it. Alan Jones, I think, speaks for all of us when he says,
27:04Men, women, boys, girls, horses, cats and dogs have had enough of all of this.
27:09They can't wait for September 14.
27:12Alan speaks to a very wide audience. My audience is smaller and mostly humans.
27:17But I can say it's been great talking to you every week.
27:20I don't get a chance to do that on the Channel 10 show because, you know, I'm busy solving a murder.
27:24And you can't turn to the camera midway through a scene and start talking about Christopher Pyne or Wayne Swan,
27:30unless one of them is a murder victim.
27:35Anyway, as always, I hope we've been equally unfair to both sides of politics
27:39and that on September 14th, you put aside self-interest, remember that it's not all about you
27:44and vote for a government that will increase funding to the ABC, particularly its comedy programme.
27:49Until then, how can I say this so it doesn't sound trite?
27:53Um...
27:58Forget your troubles and just get happy
28:00You better chase all your cares away
28:02Shout hallelujah, come on, get happy
28:04Get ready for the judgement day
28:06The sun is shining, come on, get happy
28:09The Lord is waiting to take your hand
28:11Shout hallelujah, come on, get happy
28:13We're going to the promised land
28:16We're heading across the river
28:18Wash your sins away in the tide
28:20It's all so peaceful
28:23On that other side
28:25Forget your troubles, come on, get happy
28:27You better chase all your cares away
28:29Hallelujah, come on, get happy
28:31Be ready for the judgement day
28:33Ho!
28:34Ho!
28:35For the judgement day
28:36Ho!
28:37Ho!
28:38Ho!
28:39Ho!
28:40Ho!
28:41Ho!
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29:00Ho!
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29:20Ho!