- 6 months ago
First broadcast 30th January 1973.
Bob takes Terry on a tour of their old haunts, by which Terry finds out that most of them have been demolished, and becomes despondent because of this.
Rodney Bewes - Bob Ferris
James Bolam - Terry Collier
Sheila Fearn - Audrey Collier
Ronald Lacey - Ernie
Effie Morrison - Landlady
Elizabeth Lax - Wendy, Bob's Secretary
Iain Blair - Hughie
Bob takes Terry on a tour of their old haunts, by which Terry finds out that most of them have been demolished, and becomes despondent because of this.
Rodney Bewes - Bob Ferris
James Bolam - Terry Collier
Sheila Fearn - Audrey Collier
Ronald Lacey - Ernie
Effie Morrison - Landlady
Elizabeth Lax - Wendy, Bob's Secretary
Iain Blair - Hughie
Category
📺
TVTranscript
00:00Oh, what happened to you, whatever happened to me, and what became of the people we used to be?
00:16Tomorrow's almost over, the day went by so fast, it's the only thing to look forward to, the past.
00:30What are you laughing at? Well, you just look, you look out of place with children.
00:49I'm earning me keep. Our Audrey's put us up for a few days, so it's a week of babysitting and lawn mowing.
00:54What's up, witty? Hello. Hello, Bob. Hello, all right?
00:59Yes, well enough, thanks. How's your mum and Selma? Fine, thanks.
01:02Hey, listen, do you think it'd be all right if I took your au pair out for a Sunday morning drink?
01:07Well, can I trust you, though, because they're very hard to get.
01:10Yeah, she'll be back in time for a dinner.
01:12Hey, do you want to stay for Sunday lunch? You can if you like, because the kids are going to the grandma's.
01:15Are you sure? Sure you've got enough?
01:17Roast lamb and mint sauce, back at 1.30.
01:19Champion.
01:20Pubs won't be open yet. Sunday.
01:22Go for a drive.
01:23That's an idea. See how the old place looks these days.
01:26Now, tell you where we go. What's the name of that coffee bar we used to hang around?
01:30The Marimba, wasn't it? Where they're that sexy waitress with the green fingernails.
01:33Yeah, well, things have changed.
01:35Oh, aye. Pink now, are they?
01:36Changed more than that.
01:38Well, show us anyway.
01:40Uh, what time did Audrey say dinner was?
01:42Half past one.
01:45We don't want to be rushed, do we?
01:46That was your Marimba coffee bar.
02:05Eee, used to get them great raspberry cones with green specks on top.
02:09Green specks? You mean pistachio?
02:11No, nail varnish.
02:13See that lot? That's all coming down in a couple of years.
02:26You know where we are now?
02:28Well, vaguely. I just can't place...
02:31Underneath this great pile of concrete is what used to be the Go-Go Rock Club.
02:36Members only, licensed till three, closed on Sundays.
02:40The North's premier music mecca.
02:42The Go-Go? Gone?
02:47Gone.
02:48But not forgotten.
02:49You come here at three o'clock in the morning of a full moon,
02:52you might just catch a glimpse of a headless guitarist
02:54drifting through the empty parking lots
02:56to the strains of rollover Beethoven.
02:58No wonder they're pulling it down.
03:11Do you remember where you used to come fishing here Sunday afternoons if we didn't have a fixture?
03:18Let's come after dinner. Get some rods and come back this afternoon.
03:21No fish.
03:23No fish?
03:24Pollution.
03:25We've always had pollution. We invented pollution long before it was fashionable.
03:28Yeah, but they pulled down the flour mill and built a chemical factory.
03:31There isn't a fish between here and the North Sea.
03:34What a disgrace.
03:36People have no regard for their environment.
03:39They pollute the rivers and blacken the air and build chemical factories and dump their refuge.
03:45They said there's grace.
03:54That was the market.
04:00That was Saturday morning pictures.
04:05Well, at least Eric still survived.
04:07Just.
04:08I wonder this Pope's still here.
04:13I'm surprised I haven't put a demolition order on this.
04:16Pulled it down and built a new civic centre.
04:18No, the new civic centre on the site of the old Roxy.
04:22Not the Roxy Ballroom.
04:24Afraid so.
04:26Hell's teeth is nothing sacred.
04:28Two pints of special, please, George.
04:30I'm sorry you had to find out like this, but I had to tell you sometime.
04:33A National Trust should have put a preservation order on that.
04:36It's terrible.
04:37All my memories are there.
04:39Part of my life, part of your life, belonged to the Roxy Ballroom.
04:43Oh, well, I expect the National Trust needs better reasons than that.
04:46No Roxy.
04:48I should think on full moons you and I will haunt the new civic centre,
04:51twisting through the corridors.
04:53To the strains of Art Sibley and his singing sax.
04:56He died, you know, at Art Sibley.
04:58Did he?
05:00Poor Art.
05:01Heart and lungs.
05:02Still, I suppose you can't blow a baritone sax six nights a week for 20 years and not do some damage.
05:09You'll be up there now in that great palais in the sky.
05:12Welcoming old friends with a smile and a toot.
05:14And a chorus of Mr. Sandman.
05:16Half a tone flat.
05:17Mind you, the old Roxy wouldn't have been the same without Art Sibley.
05:21Still a tragic loss, though.
05:23Eh.
05:24It was the first dance hall I ever got into.
05:26Such memories, man.
05:28First place I ever learned to dance.
05:31First place I ever learned a bit of social poison.
05:33Rep R.T.
05:34Yeah, I can remember your dance hall, Rep R.T.
05:37Can I drive you home, Pets?
05:38Oh, have you got a car?
05:40No, but I've got a bloody great whip.
05:43I borrowed that from a film.
05:44I think Cary Grant said it to Audrey Hepburn.
05:46I'm sure he did.
05:47Well, it used to break the ice anyway.
05:49Now wait.
05:49Hey, you know I once won the Roxy's winner holiday for two boss and over contests.
05:53Why?
05:54Where was the holiday?
05:55Well, technically, I suppose it should have been Brazil, home of the boss and over.
05:59But that budget couldn't stretch to that, so it was a week in red car.
06:02Red car's still there, is it?
06:05I think so.
06:06Nowhere else has you've shown me this morning.
06:09None of our memories are intact.
06:11Except the juvenile court.
06:13Yeah, today's made me realise just how many changes the house.
06:16But if you live here all the time, you don't notice it so much.
06:19Still, I suppose it's a good thing.
06:20Progress, expansion.
06:22Plenty of opportunities round here now, you know?
06:24You wouldn't think that if you went down the labour exchange.
06:27There's precious few opportunities on display down there.
06:30Unless you want to work for British Rail Parcels or hose down a brewery.
06:34You've been to the labour exchange, have you?
06:36What?
06:37Oh, well, you've got to go, haven't you, for the insurance card.
06:40Oh, I see.
06:41I thought you might have been looking for a job.
06:43No, no, no, no, no, no.
06:44The insurance card.
06:45You've got to, you see.
06:45Fine, yeah, yeah, yeah.
06:47You've got to start thinking about a job sooner or later, you know.
06:50There's no worry.
06:50There's no worry.
06:52I'm not short, you know.
06:53I'm not on the bread line.
06:55I've got me savings and me terminal leave pay.
06:57I'm not rushing into any old job.
07:00You've got to think about it first.
07:01Have a look around.
07:03I'm not sure I want to stay here.
07:06Especially now they've pulled down the Roxy.
07:08No, stay here.
07:08You like it here.
07:10You always said you'd feel funny anywhere else.
07:12You get on the train to King's Cross, you get the jitters at Doncaster.
07:15It was years ago, man, when I was just a...
07:18I didn't know any better.
07:19Thought I'd seen a bit of life.
07:22I don't know.
07:23This town may have a new civic centre, mate,
07:26but it doesn't disguise the fact that it's a dead end.
07:28Well, what could you do?
07:30I don't know.
07:31I just have this feeling.
07:34Look, I was in the army with a bloke called Huey McLaren.
07:37Really good mates we were,
07:39and he'd never had any education or anything like that.
07:41He'd just been a baker in Berwick.
07:42And one day I said to him,
07:44one day I said,
07:46Huey, I said,
07:48what are you going to do when you get out?
07:49And do you know what he said to me?
07:51I'll never forget it.
07:52He said,
07:53anything I like.
07:55Not there's, well, nothing else I can do except bake bread in Berwick.
07:58Oh, no, no, no, no, no.
07:59His attitude was,
08:01anything I like.
08:04Surprise move by Heath,
08:05ex-Berwick Baker to be Postmaster General.
08:08It's typical of your small-town mentality.
08:11If you don't believe you can do something,
08:14you'll never amount to anything.
08:15When Huey got demorbed in Aidan,
08:17he didn't get the plane back.
08:19He hitchhiked back.
08:21Hitchhiked from Aidan.
08:22Now, a bloke like that could do anything.
08:24Fur-trapping encountered her.
08:26Drive to Kathmandu.
08:28Row across the Atlantic.
08:29And I might just go with him.
08:32Your, your, your roots are here.
08:34If you recall,
08:35five years ago,
08:36I was uprooted from here.
08:38Uprooted and dumped in some drafty barracks
08:40thanks to someone not a million miles away.
08:42Without which you wouldn't have seen life.
08:44Without which you wouldn't have had the urge
08:45to row the Atlantic.
08:47Or drive to Kathmandu
08:48in the back of a baker's van.
08:50One day.
08:52That's all I'm saying.
08:53One day.
08:54All right, one day.
08:55But in the meantime,
08:56maybe you should give yourself time to adjust.
08:58Get some behind you.
09:00You want something coming in.
09:01You're not going to earn a fortune
09:02mowing your Audrey's lawn and babysitting.
09:04If I want a job, a stopgap,
09:06there's no problem.
09:07I just go back to Ellison's.
09:09Old Darby always said to me,
09:11when you come out, Terry,
09:13your job ears open.
09:15I just go back to Ellison's.
09:17There is a problem.
09:18What?
09:18They pulled it down two years ago.
09:22Does anyone want any more pudding?
09:25I'm sorry that roast lamb was done so well.
09:27I can't understand it.
09:29It must be that clock.
09:30I put it on at half past 11 to cook slowly.
09:34Maybe it's the oven.
09:35Maybe it's the meat.
09:36I don't know why you wanted to change that butcher.
09:39I changed that butcher
09:40because they closed the old one down.
09:42Is there anything left standing in this town?
09:45One solitary pre-1967 brick
09:48standing on top of another?
09:50They say that by 1988,
09:51this will be one of the most exciting environments
09:53in the United Kingdom.
09:54In the meantime,
09:55where are you supposed to go to have a dance
09:57or catch an unpolluted fish
09:58or buy a decent piece of meat?
10:00It wasn't the meat.
10:01It was that oven.
10:02They've got this plan
10:03to seal off all traffic
10:05between Sutton Street and Mason's Avenue.
10:07They've pulled down Ellison's.
10:08That's what they've done.
10:09To make way for the new underpass.
10:11So the ordinary working man doesn't come into it.
10:14It's all down to town planners
10:15and environments and landscapers
10:17and people like me
10:18are just bulldozed aside
10:20in the name of progress.
10:22Ellison's went bankrupt
10:23long before the bulldozer moved in.
10:25I saw it coming.
10:25I got out before the crunch came.
10:27You were sensible, Bob.
10:28You did the right thing.
10:29You were very shrewd.
10:31And look how well you've been doing since.
10:32Where are you working now?
10:34Oh, another company.
10:36Another line.
10:36What's the name of this company?
10:39Well, Thelma's dad runs it.
10:41Building and civil engineering.
10:43That's what he's doing now.
10:44Oh, I see.
10:47How shrewd of you to get out
10:49before the crunch came.
10:51No wonder your engagement
10:52to Thelma's back on again.
10:54Might lose a job as well as a wife.
10:56Look, Mr. Chambers does me no favours.
10:58I have to pull my weight.
10:59I have to prove myself
11:00as much as the next man.
11:01Aye, only the next man's
11:02not going to marry his daughter, though, is he?
11:04Perhaps Bob could get you something, Terry.
11:07I don't need any strings pulled for me.
11:09I don't need the old pals act.
11:11It's not what you're doing like, Terry.
11:13It's who you know.
11:15I can manage, thank you.
11:17One day.
11:19One day.
11:20One day what?
11:21One day he and Hughie McLaren
11:23will be washed ashore
11:24on Whitley Bay Sands.
11:25The first men to have crossed
11:27the North Sea on a tea tray.
11:29Who on earth's Hughie McLaren?
11:31You haven't heard of Hughie McLaren?
11:33The Hughie McLaren?
11:34A legend in his own lifetime.
11:36He went all the way from Aidan
11:37to Aldershot on a camel.
11:39Hughie taught me a lot.
11:40He taught me there's more to life
11:42than a salary and superannuation.
11:43and an endowment policy
11:45when you're 55.
11:46Well, who on earth
11:47would want to go all the way
11:48from Aidan to Aldershot
11:50on a camel?
11:51You're a qualified electrician, Terry.
11:53You'll have no trouble getting a job.
11:54I can ask around if you want.
11:56I don't want.
11:57I don't want any help from anybody.
11:59I've got a few ambitions
12:00and a few ideas
12:01and a few plans of me own.
12:02And getting a job round here
12:04doesn't fit into any of them.
12:05Come in.
12:08Oh, uh, excuse me.
12:13Is, uh, is Mr. Busby around?
12:16Who wants him?
12:17Uh, well, the Labour Exchange sent me.
12:19You're, uh, looking for electricians,
12:21they said.
12:22I am.
12:23Mr. Busby.
12:25Mr. Busby's not here at the moment.
12:27Oh, I see.
12:29Well, they said to come down this morning.
12:32They said definitely this morning.
12:35Electricians, is it?
12:36Aye.
12:37Mr. Busby, they said, this morning.
12:40He didn't say anything.
12:42Mr. Busby, J.C. Harvey,
12:44electrical contractors.
12:46Oh, you've got the right place.
12:48It's just that he didn't say anything.
12:54Well, should I come back?
12:55Um, just a minute.
13:12His assistant will see you.
13:14Oh, right.
13:15In a moment.
13:25Oh, by the damson that I've been playing this up this morning.
13:30What's wrong with your leg, then?
13:32I'll never talk about it.
13:35I've been overseas, you see.
13:37Oh?
13:38In a few years.
13:40By, there's been some changes round here, though, but...
13:43I see they pull the Roxy down.
13:45The where?
13:47The Roxy.
13:49Roxy?
13:49The Roxy dance hall.
13:53Don't know it.
13:55You must have been away a long time.
13:58Yes, well, I have.
14:00Been all round the world.
14:02Seen lots of places, lots of people.
14:05Nothing like travel, you know, for broadening the mind,
14:08for making you realise what life has got to offer.
14:13What are you doing here, then?
14:17He'll see you now.
14:27Sit down.
14:27I'll be with you in a minute.
14:30It's Henry.
14:31What on earth?
14:33Well, I was...
14:34I was just passing by.
14:36I was just passing, so I thought I'd drop in and say hello.
14:39Hello.
14:41Hello.
14:43Hello.
14:43Great.
14:44Do you want a cup of tea?
14:45Yes.
14:46Great.
14:46That's what I thought.
14:47I thought I'd pop in and see Bob and have a cup of tea.
14:50Hang on.
14:51Wendy.
14:52Oh, Wendy.
14:53Could you rustle up a couple of teas and a biscuit for Mr Collier?
14:56Yes, Bob.
14:57Mr Ferris.
15:00I can't...
15:01I can't take too long.
15:03I've got some applicant out there for a job.
15:05Oh, really?
15:06A job?
15:07Yeah, Spark.
15:08Look, still let him wait.
15:11People like us can't be rushed, can we?
15:13I suppose not.
15:14Sparks are to a penny.
15:18I don't know.
15:20J.C. Harvey belonged to your future darling, no?
15:23Yeah, subsidiary.
15:24There's four firms in the group.
15:26Do you normally interview people, then?
15:29No, not normally, no.
15:30That's Frank's job.
15:31Frank Busby.
15:32Still he's out on the site somewhere.
15:34Makes a change.
15:35Drunk with power, eh?
15:37Sit down, sit down.
15:38Terry, you know what I was talking about the other day?
15:45I mean, I know you fancied a change, but, um...
15:48Well, if you do feel that you need something, I could always...
15:51I mean, Frank Busby could always...
15:52No, thank you, Bob.
15:53No, thank you very, very much.
15:54But, uh, there's nothing further from my mind.
15:58Well, as a matter of fact, I've reached a decision.
16:01I'm not staying.
16:02I thought you should be the first to know.
16:04I'm moving on.
16:06Moving on?
16:06Where?
16:07What?
16:07Where?
16:08Where?
16:09Ah.
16:10Well, uh, that's not quite been finalised yet.
16:14I suppose the first thing to do will be, uh, contact you and McLaren and then, uh, play
16:18it by ear.
16:19Are you sure you're doing the right thing?
16:21I've never been so sure.
16:22This is not just a snap decision, you know.
16:24When are you leaving?
16:24What?
16:25When?
16:26When?
16:27Oh, uh, well, this week, I should think.
16:30I mean, definitely, there's no point in hanging about, is there?
16:33No, I suppose not.
16:36You'll miss my wedding.
16:38Yeah, I know, mate.
16:39Still, your in-laws won't be sorry about that.
16:42Well, I will.
16:43Well, I'll send you a telegram wherever I am.
16:47Be a bit pricey from Kathmandu.
16:51Shouldn't think we'll have got that far by then.
16:54But, uh, Kathmandu's on your itinerary?
16:57Possibly, possibly.
16:58It depends which route we take.
17:00Route to where?
17:02Well, that's not been finalised yet.
17:06I don't know, Terry.
17:06You've just got back and now you're off again.
17:09I never knew there was so much gypsy in your soul.
17:11Well, it's just something in the blood, I suppose.
17:14I mean, the last five years have given me a taste for excitement, adventure, a taste for
17:19the unknown, a hint of mystery and danger.
17:22Yeah, that's why I've got to go and join Huey.
17:25Well, where is he?
17:25Berrick-on-Tweed.
17:28Hear me, I thought at least he was a mercenary up the Congo.
17:32There's not much danger and mystery about Berrick-on-Tweed, is there?
17:34You can go there on a day trip.
17:36That's just his home, you fool.
17:37That's where we'll meet and plan things and buy maps and stores and such like.
17:42And then you'll set off, up through uncharted waters, in search of the source of the Tweed.
17:47It's that sort of attitude that is driving me away.
17:51I'm sorry, kid.
17:52I don't want you to go away.
17:53I don't want you to go away at all.
17:55My mind's made up.
17:56Well, if it is, fine.
17:59Fine.
18:00All I can say is good luck.
18:01And God bless.
18:05Oh, cheers, mate.
18:06Cheers.
18:08Congratulations.
18:09Number four.
18:10If you're having a cup of tea and shaking hands, you must have got the job.
18:19Sheer loss of face.
18:21It's his pride that's been hurt.
18:23Ah, well, I don't think he really wanted to go in the first place.
18:26Of course he didn't.
18:27Loss of face.
18:28Look, he was just getting used to being back and he's seen how things have changed.
18:32I mean, he's seen how well you're doing, Bob, and all his other friends.
18:35He feels left behind.
18:37I mean, all he's got to show for his years in the army is a broken marriage and a few post office savings.
18:43And a tattoo on his left buttock.
18:46Has he?
18:47Why?
18:48So that's why he always locks the bathroom door.
18:51A tattoo of what?
18:52Oh, it'll be something crude like a snake wrapped round a topless woman.
18:56No, I caught a glimpse of it once down the public basset.
18:58It was more dignified than that.
18:59It was more like a royal coat of arms or a crest, you know, with something underneath.
19:04Oh, maybe it's his regimental badge.
19:07Stupid thing to do anyway.
19:08Still, if he has disappeared, at least we've got a distinguishing mark to give to Stuart Henry.
19:15Come home, Terry Collier.
19:18Nancy Ridley forgives you.
19:20He hasn't disappeared anyway.
19:22I've had a letter from him.
19:24A letter?
19:24It's only to remind us we owe him four pounds lawn mowing charges.
19:30Where's it from, Berwick?
19:32There's an address there.
19:34You know, all the time he was in the army, he never wrote to us.
19:37He sent us that postcard from Cyprus.
19:39Yes, but that was only to remind us he had a birthday coming.
19:42He doesn't say much, does he?
19:43I mean, there's no hint of meeting Nat Huey or any mention of any plans or anything.
19:48Well, if you asked me, he only wrote to let us know where he was, so we'd write back and beg him to come home.
19:53Perhaps I should drive up there and talk to him.
19:55It's up to me, isn't it?
19:56I could drive up there and talk to him and maybe fetch him back.
19:59The sooner the better.
20:01You think so?
20:02Ah, well, we haven't got a babysitter for Friday night.
20:06We haven't got a babysitter.
20:36yes oh is there mr collier here a mr terry collier i there is but he's not in just no
20:47oh could you tell me what tell me he'll be back
20:49hi tease at six o'clock you'll know my spot thanks you're welcome
21:06so
21:18so
21:22so
21:36the right idea i think what you're doing is great what i really envy you don't patronize
21:56me first envy what soaking wet feet and chapped hands we don't wash them cars in fairy liquid
22:02you know i do envy you everything you're doing is so together it's the way to be these days isn't it
22:09you're you're easy riding it's taking off it's getting straight moving on what do you mean all
22:17i'm doing is ringing out elvis presley worked in a car wash well in song anyway it's this whole
22:24idea of freedom like american youth today you don't want possessions a home and a job you want
22:29to be on the road trucking down to new mexico by the time i get to phoenix it's only 24 hours to
22:36tulsa that sort of thing all you need is a sleeping bag and a harmonica i don't play the harmonica
22:42you play a fair tune on your cousin martin's accordion there's hardly room for an accordion
22:47on me and a sleeping bag don't get bogged down by trivia i'm talking about broader things
22:53you can maybe live in a commune oh bob who are you kidding i'm not in new mexico i'm in berwickshire
23:00and it's half day closing and the weather forecast says drizzle it might be all right in america but
23:05it's different here it's different when you say by the time i get to peebles i'm only 24 hours from
23:12falkirk it's a state of mind look bob i don't wish to shatter your romantic illusions but i am not the
23:19sort of bloke to give up my worldly goods and go traipsing around in a sleeping bag not shaving
23:24for a start i haven't got any worldly goods to give up i hate camping i'm not working in a car wash is a
23:31tribute to elvis presley i'm working there to pay the rent from his sweaty boarding house it's worth it
23:36isn't it you've made the gesture you made me think twice about getting suffocated you yes you think
23:43my life is so exciting you think decorating and planting a hedge and saving up every penny and
23:48staying up all out of the dreary correspondence course do you think that's living i've always
23:53yearned to see places i've only read about in the color supplements long to meet girls that i've only
23:58seen in hawaii 50 i thought you were all settled in your mind yes i was and then you come back after
24:05five exciting years in foreign parts well they weren't all that exciting mate some of them were
24:11spending divisors it was different look bob the army's hardly hawaii 50 but you did it you made the
24:20break and perhaps it's time i did what did huey mcclaren say eh what did huey say anything you like
24:25you can do we can do i could cash in me savings sell the car what about thelma i can just see you and
24:32her up the orinoco in a sleeping bag with 2.4 children no one has got to realize a man has to
24:38do what a man has to do yeah well i know what i have to do what get you back where you belong how
24:46much are you huey hang on a minute terry cheers mate huey not not the huey right not the huey mclaren in person
25:03what's he doing here which is where i found him he married his childhood sweetheart and they live
25:07in a caravan he's got a 95 percent mortgage on this place and if you work 16 hours a day for
25:13the next 33 years you might have paid off the tea yarn do you fancy coming around later terry maureen's
25:20making some toad in the hole and uh maybe we could have a wee game of monopoly later
25:24it's very very tempting huey but we're moving on
25:32oh nothing on the box terry oh later on yeah there's plenty of beer in the fridge you haven't
25:37uh you haven't seen a cufflink anywhere have you no mate no she said the supper's in the oven ah fine
25:43are you okay now yes thanks ernie oh it's nice to sit in a comfy chair in a warm house we were so
25:50worried when you went off like that terry were you mate oh well we wouldn't have had a sitter for
25:56tonight would we check the kids are asleep but if wayne does wake up be firm don't bribe him with
26:04half a pound of chocolates like you did the last time i can manage oh that'll be bob let him in
26:11will you love now all you've got to do is when the tinger goes take the tin foil off and brown it for
26:16five minutes all right thank you flower hello watch it hey kid you look smashing oh i wish i felt it
26:22i'm in such a rush hello kidder brought you half a bottle of vodka you're all being very nice to me
26:28tonight hello pleased to see you again back in the bosom of your family oh i've got a couple of
26:32glasses hey terry about that job i've had a work with mr busby and it's still open you know he needs
26:37a good electrician i told him you were the best are you listening it's in a union race you have
26:42these bags of overtime you qualify for holidays pop round and see him tomorrow you never give up do
26:49you pardon worrying about my welfare making assumptions now what have i said all right so i'm
26:57back home but that doesn't alter my thinking on certain fundamental principles you don't think i
27:03spent the last five years of sweating toil in every far flung corner of this globe just to come
27:08back here and work for some tin pot builders of sparks do you with you prancing about the site
27:14flaunting your newfound status in your slide rule you ungrateful pig i i put my reputation on the
27:22line recommending you for that job knowing how you might screw things up for me and embarrass me well
27:26never again mate never again will i raise a finger never again will i rescue you from the obscurity of
27:31a scottish car wash i washed my hands of you spend all your life babysitting if that's what you want
27:36or join the dog queue i don't care he left his vodka
27:50well ever since i've known him i've never seen bob like that i've never seen him so worked up
27:56why was he that angry because he loves me
28:06what became of the people we used to be
28:16oh what happened to you whatever
28:20happened to me
28:21what became of the people we used to be
28:28oh
28:30oh
28:41what happened to you
28:41oh
28:43what happened to you
28:45whatever happened to me
28:47what became of the people
28:49oh
28:51what became of the people
28:53oh
28:55what happened to you
28:57what happened to me
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