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00:00I just wanted to say thanks so much for giving me this opportunity.
00:23No problemo. We all got a leg up somewhere along the line.
00:27So, this is TV format development.
00:29You'll be expected to do whatever.
00:31Make tea, go out for coffees, photocopying.
00:34Brilliant. This is brilliant.
00:35And just through here, we've got the mineshaft.
00:40So, you'll basically be dividing your time between helping out the programme development team
00:44and digging for coal in the mine.
00:48Er, wow. I... I didn't know you did coal.
00:52Oh, yeah. Always done coal.
00:54Everyone needs coal. Coal's something you can rely on.
00:56Coal doesn't turn round and suddenly tell you that Dick and Dom aren't very BBC Three.
01:02Right.
01:03Now, you'll need these.
01:06The blackberries, in case anyone needs a latte or something urgently, so you can come straight up.
01:11And the canaries to tell you if the mine's filling up with poisonous gas, because if it is, it'll start to die.
01:19Right. Okay. I mean, I'm not, um... This is... Obviously, I really want this job. It's just...
01:24This is TV, yeah? Maybe one day, in a few years' time, you'll be researching on any dream will do.
01:33But before that, there's a hell of a lot of mining to get through.
01:38Well, he's off his food.
01:43It's the helibets!
01:45Here they come, the helibets!
01:59We're the helibets!
02:01Where's the pet in peril?
02:03And who's the concerned owner?
02:05I am.
02:06Don't worry, little girl. We'll soon have your job all scampering hither and thither about his cage again.
02:11It's dead!
02:12Mooring around in his sand bath.
02:14It's dead!
02:15Chewing off an empty bog roll.
02:17It's stiff and smelly!
02:19We can save him!
02:20We can't!
02:24Come on!
02:26We're the helibets!
02:30The helibets!
02:32Well, the important thing when writing a sports movie is not to get too bogged down in the so-called rules of the sport.
02:42Yeah. I mean, this was our first film writing project, so initially we didn't really know where to start.
02:48I suppose we just started typing.
02:50Yeah, and luckily there's this pop-up in Microsoft Word that says,
02:54It looks like you're trying to write a heartwarming British underdog movie.
02:58Would you like some help?
03:00And then you just have to enter the character names and the context.
03:03So we put Wimbledon, but then it popped up,
03:06There is already a heartwarming British underdog movie called Wimbledon.
03:10Are you sure you want to replace it?
03:12So then we had to think again, and in the end we almost deliberately went for a sport that no-one knows much about.
03:19Well, almost deliberately, because as it turns out, some people know quite a lot about cricket, unlike us.
03:27Yeah.
03:28In a time past hope, in a world gone to crap, one man had an idea.
03:36Here, look, lads! Look what I've found!
03:38Calm down, Arthur. There's no point getting excited about anything.
03:42The steel mine's closed, and we're on the scrappy. It's official.
03:46No, but look. Earned big pounds playing cricket.
03:50Well, it sounds fine, Arthur, but cricket here in Yorkshire don't talk soft.
03:58Did I hear someone say cricket?
04:05That's a word I've not heard in a long time.
04:09What would you know about cricket?
04:12I only used to coach the Manchester United team.
04:16The year they won the European Cricket Cup.
04:20But to us, you seem like some mad old drunk.
04:23That's the other thing about me.
04:25Apart from knowing about cricket.
04:28It was the Ashes.
04:30I could have won them, but I bowled her wide.
04:34You bowled her wide in the Ashes final?
04:37How can you live with your sen?
04:40I know!
04:41Enter the Ashes.
04:45You lot.
04:45You've taken the piss.
04:47Why not?
04:48Arthur's a dab-an with a silly mid-on,
04:50and Pete can do follow-ons like no-one's ever seen.
04:53Come on, let us enter.
04:54We've got stumps in us blood.
04:56Oh, you won't be talking like that
04:58when you have to face the West Indies in the second round.
05:01They've won the Ashes every year
05:03since they beat the Dallas Cowboys in 1978.
05:06Well, we'll just have to practice our catching and throwing
05:09and penalties and that.
05:17Run!
05:18Run!
05:19Ten!
05:20Ten!
05:20Come on, lads!
05:22You've got to bat more!
05:24But the bat is so narrow, it's perverse!
05:27First rule of cricket,
05:36never call the bat narrow.
05:39What the bat is,
05:41is very, very wide
05:43and very, very short.
05:47Wow!
05:49Now, carry on bowling
05:51and try and do that thing with your hand and your wrist
05:54where you make it bounce funny.
05:57Welcome to the 200th World Ashes Cricket Cup
06:02between West Germany
06:04and Pisswiddle Steel Banders
06:06from Pisswiddle in Yorkshire.
06:08Well, the Pisswiddle team,
06:09very much the underdogs,
06:11but anyone who saw them beat Yugoslavia
06:13at cricket in the semis
06:14by 400 wickets to seven runs,
06:16all of it for eight,
06:17will know that they're not to be underestimated.
06:20And West Germany,
06:21famously a bunch of cheats.
06:23As ever.
06:27Now that it's half time
06:43and it looks like we're about to lose,
06:45I want to tell you a story.
06:47I knew a young man
06:50who had a dream.
06:53A dream to win the Ashes.
06:55That young man was me.
07:00But he bowled a wide and became a drunk.
07:02That is, I bowled a wide and became a drunk.
07:07So don't do that!
07:10Now it's your turn to be the team
07:12that stands in pairs with the bats
07:14rather than the ones in a sort of spread out crowd
07:16chucking his round.
07:18So make the most of that!
07:21And remember,
07:23there's no such thing
07:25as a draw in cricket!
07:32Yes!
07:34Go on, my son!
07:37These Pisswiddle boys really can cricket.
07:39What a run.
07:40This summer,
07:43from the location manager of Billy Elliot
07:45and the catering staff
07:47who brought you the full Monty.
07:48Yes!
07:49Remember what they taught you!
07:51No!
07:52No, not that!
07:53That was wrong!
07:55Featuring someone
07:55who was very nearly embraced off
07:57comes a film
07:58to touch the child
08:00in all of us.
08:01But not in that way.
08:02Come on!
08:03Come on!
08:05They're bringing urns and sandwiches
08:08onto the pitch!
08:09They think it's tea!
08:11It is now!
08:16And this is for the ashes.
08:24I can't believe they've done it!
08:26They've actually done it!
08:28In cinemas this summer,
08:29the full number of overs
08:31that are scheduled to be bowled that day.
08:34And remember, lads,
08:36this isn't over
08:37until the full number of overs
08:39that are scheduled to be bowled that day
08:42have been bowled!
08:45Open to June 25th.
08:48Which has all been restored
08:50to how we think it would have looked
08:51when the rooms were originally laid out
08:53in the 18th century.
08:54Jesus.
08:55Just a sec.
08:56I found it!
08:58I...
08:59So,
09:02is this really your mother's house, sir?
09:04There, Mama,
09:04I keep telling her to get Sky Plus.
09:11And this room is still known
09:13as the Hanover bedroom,
09:14as it is believed that George II stayed here
09:16not long after his accession,
09:18and I believe still remained
09:20a friend of the family
09:22for some time after...
09:23Excuse me,
09:25what the hell do you think you're doing?
09:26Security!
09:27Tell Mama I won't be dining tonight.
09:30You're two out.
09:31We're not having sex!
09:32We're not having sex!
09:34I shall report you to my mother,
09:36lady house!
09:37Oh!
09:38Ginger!
09:39I think my nemesis
09:41has corrupted even my beloved mother!
09:47In a country lacerated
09:50by the sharp shards
09:51of broken brown-eyed promises,
09:53in a world bent low
09:54by the burden of disease,
09:55war,
09:55and the price of Thunderbird,
09:56who is left to make
09:57full account a god
09:58of Britain's depleted
09:59moral minibar?
10:00Yes,
10:01it's the surprising adventures
10:02of me,
10:03Sir Digby Chicken Caesar.
10:08I am overtaking,
10:09but we're on a hill.
10:10What, sir?
10:11Oh, my God!
10:13The rolls!
10:14Have your nemesis'
10:15establishment
10:16turned it into
10:17an old banger again, sir?
10:18I think not.
10:20This bears all the hallmarks
10:22of...
10:23the Countess!
10:28Countess!
10:28We meet again.
10:29He's got jams!
10:31This is my valet
10:32and handyman Ginger,
10:34a good man in a crisis.
10:35Thank you, sir.
10:36Just to say,
10:37if I get any more sober,
10:39my dead kidney
10:40will start to throb again.
10:41He's got jams!
10:42If I may.
10:43He's got jams!
10:45Now, Countess,
10:46tell me,
10:47are you what...
10:48give that to me!
10:49He's got jams!
10:50Are you in league
10:53with my nemesis?
10:54There's a soggy
10:55pack of Rothmans
10:56in that bag.
10:57You are!
10:58He's got jams!
11:00Ginger,
11:00beat the crap out of her!
11:02I'm...
11:03I'm sorry, Countess,
11:05I'm going to have
11:05to confiscate your jewels.
11:07He's got jams!
11:07You're bullshit about yourself!
11:08He's got jams!
11:09Go, go!
11:10How will I break
11:11the unholy alliance
11:12between the Countess
11:12and my nemesis?
11:13How will I tell
11:14friend from foe
11:15if not by asking them
11:16for a quid
11:16and then pushing them over?
11:17Is it true
11:18that if you sneak
11:19into the London Eye
11:19they'll let you sleep there?
11:21Find out next week
11:22in The Surprising Adventures
11:23of St. Egovicic and Caesar.
11:25This one's just
11:26full of dog shit, sir!
11:28This is just
11:29the birth certificate
11:30of her estranged daughter!
11:32What a Christian day!
11:36I think it makes
11:37you 19 times more
11:38the man,
11:39but it doesn't.
11:41Alan has 19 penises,
11:43which, after the watershed,
11:45we can show you.
11:47Come on,
11:48that's got to be worth a look.
11:50I mean, to start with,
11:51you just think it's normal.
11:52You think everyone's
11:53got 19 penises.
11:55Continuing our
11:56people-who-ve-grown-into-spectacularly-the-wrong-shape
11:59season,
12:00you get the chance
12:01to have a good old stare
12:02without feeling guilty.
12:04That's
12:05the man who had
12:06so many penises
12:07he was worth making
12:08a television programme about
12:10later tonight.
12:11roll up, roll up.
12:23OK, so the RSPCA
12:24are looking for a song
12:25to go on their new advert.
12:27They're trying to catch
12:28some criminals
12:28who've been letting dogs
12:29out of their kennels.
12:31So basically,
12:32someone's let the dogs out,
12:33but they don't know
12:33who's let them out.
12:34Can we think of
12:35an appropriate song?
12:42How about
12:43Freedom by George Michael?
12:46By the rivers of Babylon?
12:49What we need
12:50is something to really
12:50punch home the idea
12:52that these dogs
12:52are being let out
12:53onto the streets
12:54with nowhere to go
12:55and nothing to eat.
12:56Who let the dogs out?
12:57They don't know.
12:58That's why they're
12:59putting out the anthem.
13:00Look at it this way.
13:02What would I choose
13:03if you'd let the dogs out?
13:04If who'd let the dogs out?
13:05You, if you'd let the dogs out.
13:08Please release me.
13:10Let's leave that one
13:11and come back to it.
13:12Maybe this one
13:13will be easier.
13:14It's for a TV station.
13:15They're looking for a song
13:16to advertise the film
13:17Roxanne.
13:18You know the
13:19Steve Martin film
13:20Roxanne?
13:21No, I'm struggling.
13:22Can you give us
13:23something more to go on?
13:24It's on a Monday night.
13:26Blue Monday?
13:27I like the Monday bit.
13:28Roxanne?
13:29Yes, the film
13:30Roxanne with Daryl.
13:32By the rivers of Babylon?
13:33Let's revisit that one
13:36after lunch.
13:38OK, this last one
13:39is for a documentary.
13:40Michael Palin
13:41is going to be
13:41trekking along the rivers
13:42near where the Babylonians
13:44once lived.
13:45Anyone?
13:47By the rivers of Babylon?
13:49That's right.
13:50He's going to be looking
13:50at civilisations
13:51from that era.
13:53Nothing immediately
13:54jumps to mind.
13:54Maybe just a little bit
14:06more parsley.
14:09Perfect.
14:10That smells amazing.
14:13You've really turned this
14:14place around over the last
14:15few months, Chris.
14:16You've certainly got the
14:16magic touch when it comes
14:17to soup.
14:18Well, Alan, what can I say?
14:20It just makes a lovely
14:20change from working in
14:21robotics.
14:22Yeah, I bet.
14:24Oh, here.
14:24I want you to try
14:25something.
14:29Taste one.
14:33Oh, my God.
14:35It's soup.
14:36That's right.
14:37Solid soup.
14:39Soup you can hold
14:40in your hand.
14:42Chris, you're a genius.
14:44Thanks.
14:45Go on.
14:45Take an hour off.
14:46Get back from the
14:46lunchtime rush.
14:47Thanks, boss.
14:48Hey, that's my iPod
15:08and copy of
15:08Perfume by Patrick
15:09Susskind.
15:12Oh.
15:13Be sure you're
15:19okay to work, Chris.
15:20Yeah, I'm fine.
15:25Needs a bit more
15:25zinc.
15:30Be sure you're okay
15:31to work, Chris.
15:32Yeah, yeah, fine.
15:33Fine, fine, fine, fine.
15:43What the hell
15:57happened, Chris?
15:58If I'd, I don't know,
15:59bad day, I'll be fine
16:00tomorrow.
16:01You can't smell anymore,
16:02can you?
16:03What?
16:04Ever since that guy
16:04hit you, you can't
16:05smell your hand in front
16:06of your face.
16:07Don't be ridiculous.
16:08I can smell
16:09perfectly.
16:10I can smell that
16:11clove of garlic
16:12down there.
16:14Where?
16:15Just, just down
16:16here.
16:17Yes.
16:18I knew I could
16:18smell garlic.
16:20I see.
16:22Oh, blimey, Pete.
16:23That's a bit of a
16:23fruity guff you just
16:24did.
16:25Oh, yeah.
16:25Sorry, boss.
16:26Oh, yeah.
16:28Bloody hell, Pete.
16:29Smells like something's
16:30crawled up your arse
16:30and died.
16:35I'm sorry, Chris.
16:38Nobody farted.
16:42Look down, look down
16:45That lonesome road
16:49Before you travel on
16:54Well, if I can't smell,
16:57you'll just have to smell
16:58for me.
17:01I smell.
17:03Yes, Al.
17:04OK, robot.
17:08Smell and identify
17:09the objects.
17:11I obey.
17:13Lost, lost, cannot see.
17:15Can only smell.
17:17Help, help, help.
17:20Cannot reach.
17:24Cheese.
17:26Brilliant.
17:27It works.
17:30Cheese.
17:31No, flowers.
17:34Never mind, let's keep
17:35trying.
17:37Cheese.
17:38OK.
17:42Cheese.
17:46Petrel.
17:47It's actually petrol,
17:48but good.
17:50Petrel.
17:52Oh, bollocks.
17:56Cheese.
17:57Good.
17:57Patrails.
18:01Good.
18:05Patrails.
18:06Oh.
18:07OK, well, let's try this.
18:12Cheese.
18:14Well, I suppose that'll have to do.
18:17Welcome to Back to Life.
18:25Back to Reality.
18:26The show that adds an un to the phrase
18:28safe revival of cryogenically frozen billionaires.
18:31And an ear to the phrase
18:33responsible treatment of reanimated cadavers.
18:36When cryogenics company Frozen Stiff
18:38underwent liquidation earlier this year,
18:40we became the first TV show ever
18:43to own some frozen people
18:45to make telly fun for you.
18:47That's right,
18:48we literally own their asses.
18:50When these boys were frozen
18:51back in the 40s...
18:52That's pre-Hollyoaks, history fans.
18:54They expected to be defrosted carefully
18:57and when it was appropriate to do so.
18:58We haven't got time for that.
19:00We've got a TV show to make.
19:02Let's have a look at what these boys
19:03have been up to
19:04after being warmed up a bit
19:05and fiddled about with
19:07by the production team
19:08to make them work.
19:09In...
19:10Back to Life.
19:11Back to Reality.
19:12It's the third day in the house
19:26and there's big trouble
19:27for Howard P. Getty.
19:29He's sprung a leak.
19:30Yes, they're not filled with blood and guts
19:32like you and me.
19:33They're filled up with some chemicals
19:35put in by expert chemists, specialists.
19:37Without those chemicals,
19:39they will die.
19:41You know, properly.
19:42So we've given the other housemates
19:44the task of fixing Howard.
19:46Cliff Richards, per relation,
19:47has got the box of repairing stuff.
19:50Our medical team reckon Howard's
19:51got about three minutes left,
19:53give or take.
19:54Let's see how they get on.
19:58Oh, that's really not going to help.
20:00Professor von Strausenberg there
20:09has been distracted by a CD.
20:11He's just got no idea what it is.
20:14And look at that.
20:16It seems as if a couple of the prof's fingers
20:18have actually dropped off.
20:21Walt there, doing his best,
20:23but when you're only ahead,
20:25you can't be much more than an ideas man.
20:27So he's just chewing a starburst there.
20:29Being from the 40s,
20:30that's probably his very first starburst.
20:33Do you remember your first starburst?
20:35Why not text in about that?
20:37Might as well.
20:39Looks like time is running out
20:40for poor old Howard.
20:46Look at that!
20:47He's fixed himself!
20:48With the professor's dropped-off fingers,
20:51they've made perfect bungs
20:52for his chemical-leaking holes.
20:54And where's the professor gone?
20:55Surely he'd want to see
20:56that his loss wasn't in vain?
20:58He's trying to re-freeze himself!
21:01Unlucky, professor.
21:02You might have once been
21:03a Nobel Prize-winning physicist,
21:05but now you're ours.
21:11Morning, horse.
21:13Lovely day.
21:15Sorry about yesterday.
21:17I know things got a bit...
21:18Well, I think we were both.
21:20Anyway, onwards and upwards.
21:22Where do we get up to?
21:27Right.
21:31Je m'appelle horse.
21:36Je m'appelle horse.
21:39OK, so, after me.
21:40Je...
21:41Come on, I know it's early.
21:46Je m'appelle...
21:47Hot, you're not even trying, are you?
21:49You're not even trying.
21:51And this is why I get a little bit,
21:52you know, just...
21:53Je.
21:54Je.
21:55Je.
21:56Will you just at least make an effort,
21:57you long-faced sack of shit?
22:00Je.
22:00Je.
22:00God, it's like pulling teeth with you.
22:02You just don't care, do you?
22:04You don't care at all.
22:05All the effort I put in.
22:07Je.
22:08Je.
22:08Je.
22:09Je.
22:09Je.
22:10Right, forget it.
22:11That's fine.
22:12You just carry on feeding your face.
22:15Don't worry about me.
22:18No one else makes me like this.
22:20Pig doesn't give me this, bollocks.
22:26Mmm.
22:28And the great advantage is that
22:29not only does it taste of chocolate,
22:31it also works in exactly the same way as real soil.
22:35LAUGHTER
22:35Now, I have to admit to being
22:40a little bit nervous about this next item
22:42because the guy we're going to be talking to
22:43is, let me tell you, absolutely bonkers.
22:47I thought he was on at the end.
22:49What?
22:49The guy who was section.
22:50Oh, yeah, he is.
22:52I'm talking about the comedian.
22:54Oh, right.
22:56I was getting confused
22:57because later on we have got a real schizo on.
22:59LAUGHTER
23:00But, no, our next guest is crazy in a different
23:04and less harrowing way.
23:06But, um, before we meet him,
23:08let's see a clip of his new show,
23:10Two Sugars, s'il vous plaît.
23:13LAUGHTER
23:13Well, it's been a really tough day
23:16and I'm beginning to wonder
23:17if that whole drunken bet was a good idea, after all.
23:21I mean, making a cup of tea for everyone in Belgium.
23:25What was I thinking?
23:26LAUGHTER
23:27I haven't even looked up the French word for tea.
23:37I'm so crazy.
23:38I won't bring myself into these heart-warming scrapes.
23:41Making a cup of tea for everyone in Belgium.
23:44Crazy idea.
23:45I know.
23:47What?
23:47Where did that all spring from?
23:49Well, this is all actually Ricky Gervais' fault.
23:52Damn you, Gervais!
23:54Er, I call him Ricky.
23:56I know him.
23:57No, er, what it was, was I was at a party with Ricky Gervais,
24:01er, who did, er, The Office and Extras,
24:04and he was talking to me, er, which I'm quite used to.
24:07And, er, a certain amount of drink had been taken.
24:10I expect you mean a lot.
24:12LAUGHTER
24:12Yeah, that's what I...
24:14I...
24:14I kind of did that joke.
24:17And I said, and, you know, God knows where I get these things from,
24:20I bet I could make a cup of tea for everyone in Belgium.
24:24And Ricky said, why?
24:26So, obviously, that was a challenge I couldn't ignore.
24:29Priceless.
24:30Because, of course, this isn't the first drunken bet
24:32from a famous person you've got yourself mixed up in, is it?
24:34No!
24:35Just looking at all your books and DVDs,
24:38there's crossing Africa in a carrier bag,
24:41er, building a cathedral out of ham,
24:44er, licking Hillary Clinton's face.
24:47I mean, my problem is, I just keep having these crazy-sounding
24:52but endearingly adolescent ideas,
24:54and then I'm forced to write shows and books
24:57and make TV programmes about them.
24:59I mean, sometimes I wish that I could just have the crazy bet,
25:02er, without it furthering my career in any way,
25:04but, of course, no-one will let me.
25:07Not least your flatmates, I should imagine,
25:09cos they all have a tendency to get involved in drunken bets
25:12and then publish books about them as well, don't they?
25:14Afraid so, yeah.
25:15Er, it did get a bit crowded back in the flat
25:18when Steve was setting up the merchant bank in the bath
25:21and Pete was using camels instead of the tube for a year
25:23and I invited everyone with the same birthday
25:25to come and live with me.
25:27Oh, dear.
25:28And then we had to find somewhere to put all the money.
25:31LAUGHTER
25:32Time for master's cheese.
25:40Oh, thanks.
25:42No, Cheezoid, that's not cheese, that's petrol.
25:46Petrol?
25:47Yes.
25:48But petrol goes in car.
25:51Oh, shit.
25:53LAUGHTER
25:54Oh, Cheezoid, you've filled the tank with brie.
26:00Petrol.
26:02Shut up.
26:03Sorry, master.
26:06Cheezoid hates self.
26:09LAUGHTER
26:09Cheddar status.
26:12Ten days to use by date.
26:15Breeze status.
26:16Forty-eight hours to use by date.
26:19Primula status.
26:21In tube.
26:28Petrol status.
26:30Four.
26:31Petrol status.
26:33Four.
26:34Shut up, Cheezoid!
26:35죄.
26:36LAUGHTER
26:37Hate self.
26:38Hate self.
26:39Hate self.
26:40Hate self.
26:41Hate self.
26:44LAUGHTER
26:44Cheeseye.
26:52Cheezoid.
26:52Cheezoid killed self.
26:55Cheeseye killed self.
26:56With pet chill.
26:58LAUGHTER
26:58LAUGHTER
26:59Why pet chill not burn?
27:03No, Cheezoid.
27:04That's not petrol petrol petrol. That's cheese not petrol. No, I tell
27:16My cheese I don't say cheese I so lonely
27:24So when do they use the kilns I just told you they don't use kilns there are no kilns
27:29What so you're telling me that you don't have to heat up milk to turn it into cheese?
27:33That's exactly what I'm saying. You don't get cheese just by cooking milk
27:37But that's how it was discovered someone left some milk on a hot stone and it turned into cheese that isn't true
27:42That's how they used to store it when they have too much milk. They didn't have fridges David. I accept that Rob
27:48So how do they turn the cheese back into milk?
27:50You can't turn cheese back into milk apply heat to cheese and what you get is melted cheese not milk
27:57You don't know what the hell you're talking about do you? I know how cheese is made. Oh really?
28:02Yes, yes, well you you take milk and and then you leave it to not not ferment exactly
28:08But then you scrape up you separate the curds and whey
28:11This isn't a nursery rhyme David and then you leave it until they put it in the kiln until it forms a hard skin
28:18So it doesn't fall to bits cheese doesn't form its own skin. They put that skin on they put the skin on
28:24Yes, did you hear what you just said they put the skin on what see the edam has a particularly red skin because of the
28:30Temperature they bake the milk and not claiming to be a fucking scientist David. I just know they don't put that out
28:36How do they put the skin? I don't know they put the fucking skin on what are we talking about that?
28:40I didn't start it. You've got a problem. You've got a problem
28:42You've got a problem
28:44You've got a problem
28:46Lot of anger
28:48Lot of anger
28:50You've got a problem
28:52You've got a problem
28:54You've got a problem
28:56You've got a problem
28:58You've got a problem
29:00You've got a problem
29:02You've got a problem
29:04You've got a problem
29:06You've got a problem
29:08You've got a problem
29:10You've got a problem
29:12You've got a problem
29:14You've got a problem
29:16You've got a problem
29:18You
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