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00:00279,000 children still in London.
00:05Whilst I'm sure they're not all here, quite a number are.
00:09Down here on the platforms of the famous Piccadilly Tube in the heart of London's West End.
00:15It's one of the saddest results of the war that women, children and men have to be here at all.
00:22Many are bombed out of their homes.
00:25All look tired, but they feel safe here, a good hundred feet below ground,
00:31and their spirit and fortitude are simply grand.
00:38Here they come, first Her Majesty the Queen, it comes into view, then the King,
00:42in the uniform of the Admiral of the Fleet, the two princesses standing on the balcony listen to the crowd.
00:55Do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do
01:25gathered to share this historic day with the king and queen is one dense mass of people people in
01:30the gayest colors red white and blue rosettes red white and blue hats streamers flags listen to the
01:38trumpet swing blow blow blow blow listen to the trombones go this is the bbc home service
01:55come on tell the band to strike up which song was our victory song dedicated to the
02:06man who's won the war now start the procession we're glad we walked behind the man who smoked
02:17we follow the man whose master plan has carried us through the war
02:25one sniff of the old havana we'd follow him right to pujima we're glad we walked behind the man who
02:34smoked the big cigar
02:42japan with all her treachery and greed remains unsubdue the injuries she has inflicted upon
02:51great britain the united states and other countries and her detestable cruelties call for justice and
03:00retribution we may allow ourselves a brief period of rejoicing today and tomorrow wednesday and victory
03:13in europe day i went up there to see their v80 yeah did they keep the king and queen thousands of
03:20people dancing and singing they're all they're wonderful yeah right so i didn't see the king and
03:27queen of course but there's too many people back there it's a lovely day that was that was really nice
03:33that was really nice of that was i mean there there were streamers all over the place and we all had
03:45hats on at walrus you know at this moment how wonderful mr churchill has come out onto the ministry of health
03:52balcony
03:57this is your victory victory of the cause of freedom
04:07in every day
04:14in all our long history we have never seen a greater day than this
04:27they did come out on the balcony with churchill tremendous roar went up
04:31flosser roars seem to last a long time now listen the band is playing land of hope and glory
04:37and the crowd is singing and this suddenly has become a very moving moment for mr churchill too is
04:43singing and he is conducting the singing of this song will you listen please the great thing was to
04:51not to recognize that we're all dressed down and everybody was in uniform anybody who wasn't in
04:59uniform looked out of place i was out i wasn't allowed to join the army because i was too young and um
05:05um services i should say and so so i was rather sort of kept at the back
05:11and as i said everything was so short you know everything was loud and black and
05:31and blooming that's why of course that the this v day was a wonderful sort of uh you know sunburst of
05:41glory i went with a group of other young people up to trafalgar square square on the train
05:54to trafalgar square to see the celebrations then which were very spectacular my memory mostly is
06:02about how many people there were and the pushing and shoving and how you couldn't get to see all the
06:07things you would have liked to have seen and how packed trafalgar square was but it was an exciting time
06:19that was a wonderful shadow of war has passed far from our farms and homes in these islands we may at last
06:28make one pause for thanksgiving and then turn our thoughts to the tasks all over the world which peace in europe brings with us
06:39we must all sing together birds of feather and the crowd will soon roll by
06:49the queen and i know the ordeals which you have endured throughout the commonwealth and empire we
07:09are proud and shared some of them with you and we know also that we shall all face the future together
07:18with stern resolve and truth that our reserves willpower and vitality are in exhaustion there is
07:25great comfort in the thought that the years of darkness and danger in which are the children of
07:31our country who have grown up are over
07:43all seemed to happen just like building the shelters i can't remember anybody organizing it
07:47but it was going to just going to be a party and everybody brought out trestle tables or any old
07:52tables that they had all the women baked everybody brought what they could lemonade or
07:58i mean there was very little alcohol if any i mean alcohol was i think quite difficult um to get
08:03hold of so possibly there was now i might not have possibly known about it but otherwise it was
08:08just great big tables full of food and balloons and paper hats anything you could get and things
08:13that people made their own decorations and we just had a marvelous time and then somebody dragged a
08:18piano out and played because they did nearly everybody parlors had pianos then and people could play and
08:23everybody danced and it was glorious it was gorgeous and the world gets back some whole sense what a day
08:30for celebration that will be when somebody shouts the fights up and it's time to put the lights up
08:40then the first thing to be lit up will be me i'm going to get lit up when the lights go up in london
08:53well i remember being at home not having to go i'd left school and i was then at business college at
09:17martins and as far as i remember everybody was at home and they got in the streets and they were sort of
09:28shouting and cheering and waving flags about and some of them were very sad they'd lost husbands and
09:42boyfriends and all the rest of it but personally i think as a 17 year old i was just happy the war was
09:52over and we could do as we please more or less pretty short of food but we looked forward to having good
10:01meals and going to the shop and buying things clothes and everything which we couldn't buy then
10:10everything was home cold barns me as a 10 11 12 year old asking my grandfather about various things to
10:19do with the e-day so his plan was that they would have a party for the locals in a barn ordinary barn
10:29he did describe it as a very happy event although he said i caught myself looking up several times and
10:36uh catching my wife's eye my grandmother who was penelope he used to call melop he said i remember
10:44looking up at nellop and she was definitely muted she was quiet um and this reflected the fact that
10:52their eldest son my uncle david was still out in malay and of course uh this is true many many families
10:59on v-day they had the joy of celebrating mixed with a lot of in some cases anxiety and of course a lot
11:07of overt sadness and he um right here that of the people who came uh many were able to um walk to their
11:19houses within minutes one couple who had come uh had been had walked two and a half miles to get to us
11:26from a village small village outside the town and they walked the two and a half miles back later
11:31that afternoon and instead of getting back to enjoy their evening they found a telegram waiting for them
11:41can you imagine that mr and mrs peters found a telegram informing them that their son malcolm had been
11:48killed in an air crash the previous week and that telegram reached them on um on that very day and
11:57they didn't find out until that evening as far as we were concerned that was a new life
12:10we had quite a few sort churches and church related things round the old marketplace because the city hall
12:21wasn't built then and um yes we had a lot of celebrations and we had a um st peter mancroft and all
12:30those rang all their bells what they still had because some of the churches the bells had been taken
12:40away and i suppose used in some way or other used the metal i think there was lots of boys that we knew
12:49who'd the end part of the war had been called up because they were away they were in the air force and
12:58the army and all sorts and the navy because although the war ended and you thought good that's the end of
13:08rationing it wasn't there was still a shortage of food shortage of sweet things shortage of or difficult
13:20for you to do lots of things you couldn't you went down to the coast you couldn't get down on the beach
13:29because there was all the um wine knitting and all the things to stop invasions and whatnot so you had to
13:40make the best of it and being youngsters we got on our bikes and went down to sea pooling and backed and
13:49that on our bikes but we had to sit on the other side of the dunes on the land side because there was
13:59i suppose the beaches were still mine i say to my missus i say we ought to win wars more often
14:06because i ain't seen no salad cream since 1940 but bugger me he had bottles of the stuff on the table
14:12our gratitude to all our splendid allies goes forth from all our hearts in this island and throughout the british empire
14:29for this victory we join in offering our thanks to the providence which has guided and sustained us
14:37through the dark days of adversity our rejoicing is sobered and subdued by a supreme consciousness of
14:46the terrible price we have paid to rid the world of hitler and his evil band i think it was ve day
14:56and my mother and i went down to newcastle into the city center and with the crowds and my mother sort of
15:06wanted to show me exactly what it was all about and everybody was very merry and cheerful yes i remember
15:14that that was on ve day
15:25the north right from the east coast over to liverpool in the northwest was an absolute
15:39industrial powerhouse during the war all the major centers had been brutally battered by the luft draft
15:46and every community every street had a long list of sons husbands and loved ones who were never coming
15:54home alongside all those civilians who had perished they partied hard when ve day came there was a massive
16:03emotional outpouring especially from the factories who organized parties and celebrations this was
16:10tinged with anxiety about what lay ahead in the post-war economy but for now they were happy to eat
16:15drunk and celebrate i was at raf bosworth in leicestershire we were all excited to know it was all over
16:23and it was arranged by somebody i suppose it was a senior official that we would all enjoy ourselves in
16:31the montford hall in leicester and we did celebrate you know plenty of dancing and plenty of drink and we
16:39thoroughly enjoyed ourselves
16:51i would ask you all to remember those of our comrades who fell in the struggle
17:06they gave their lives that others might have freedom and no man can do more than that took a couple of
17:13days to really sink in because his senses were so tense what's you know all you could hear were church bells
17:23which were marvelous and when the news came through we looked at these things and my my team i said
17:32eight of them we said well there's only one place i think john and that's the nearest pub so we went down
17:40to the nearest pub celebrated all the work we've done in the gun stores and thanks to the future and it was such a relief
18:00so
18:13some folks put much reliance on politics and science there's only one hero for me
18:19it's praise we should be roaring a man who thought of pouring the first boiling water on duty
18:28i like a nice cup of tea in the morning for to start the day you see
18:35and at half past eleven well my idea of heaven is a nice cup of tea
18:41cardiff during the second world war was a strategic center
18:45primarily for coal and steel and the germans targeted it with heavy bombing raids right up to 1944
18:51the e day came and it was a huge relief people took to the streets all over there was a massive
18:57celebration in cardiff where 355 civilians had died at the height of the raids
19:03the welsh of course are famed for their sense of community and this was greatly evident as people
19:08came together in the streets and made merry with the little that they had there are tales of bakers
19:13working 24 hours to satisfy the demand for sandwich loaves with something of a blind eye being turned
19:19into rationing that day at least
19:34and when it's time for bed there's a lot to be said for the night
19:38to that then let us turn our thoughts on this day of just a triumph and proud sorrow and tomorrow take up our
19:50work again resolved as a people to do nothing unworthy of those who died first and to make the world such a
19:58world as they would have desire for their children
20:07at the present time it is of paramount importance that the women and girls of our country be given
20:14training so that they may do their share in the war emergency how this training is given and who does
20:23it is of great interest to us all fix your eyes on the horizons swing your ears about size up the day
20:29and date look in on prayer and thanksgiving song and laughter dated planet earth may 8 1945 you
20:39mother in saint louis on the mississippi who's first born as a visitor in magdeburg on the elbe
20:46thank god i'll get my boy back instead of a telegram you patient wife of bridgeport whose husband
20:52sat it out inside a nazi prison now we'll be home for longer than a furlough now we can see our
20:57daughter for the first time she's two years old strange to think they've never met in farmhouse of
21:04step and upland in mining villages with regimented chimneys in apartments of executives where decor is
21:12impeccable and genuine utrillos hang in tenements where l trains go by every seven minutes with a rack and
21:19roar it's top of the evening hip hip hooray how about another drink out and a very good times being
21:26had by all meanwhile the crowds gather
21:35crowds in times square piccadilly nevsky prospect crowds in the loop crowds on the boulevard
21:40gaiety and neon laughter and the blare of horns headlines cheerful as a christmas poster noise and
21:46glitter this is it kid this is the day this is what we've been waiting for
22:02this is the army mr joe no private rooms or telephone you had your breakfast in bed before but you
22:24won't have it there anymore this is the army mr green we like the barracks nice and clean
22:36you had a house made to clean your floor but she won't help you out anymore
22:43do what the buglers command they're in the army and not in the band this is the army mr brown put this
22:56tremendous machine of ours which has made this victory possible to work for peace we can look
23:03forward forward forward to the greatest age in the history of mankind that's what we propose to do
23:17you had a house made to clean your floor but she won't help you out
23:38meanwhile hitler's nose is rubbed good and hard in the mud of humiliation
23:43germany bans germany bans all heil hitler greetings all nazi salutes and the number of german prisoners in
23:51american british hands runs into so many millions it may be more than the combined total of all american
24:00and british troops on all european battlefronts if any army has ever suffered greater humiliation
24:07i'm unable to recall it peace in europe there'll be hundreds of headlines now all rich in human interest
24:19things have come to pass which few living men thought probable general de gaulle with a price on his head
24:27shoot this man on sight says a french quizling
24:30one man standing alone calling to his countrymen to realize france had only lost the battle
24:43who would have said on that dark day when hitler danced at compion
24:48that de gaulle would stand today in notre dame offering thanksgiving for the victory
24:53that this one man standing alone would be the leader of his people in the great hour of victory
25:02and the men who put a price on his head fugitives all prisoners
25:13victory echoes across a thankful europe as parisians turn out in holiday mood
25:18and general de gaulle pays tribute to the undying spirit of liberty
25:41the refrains that i tell them are more beautiful that beautiful days
25:45it's been a few days
25:49it's been a few days and the springtime is an love
25:53my place is lost on the borders of a jardin
25:59on me l'a jamais rendu and pourtant I know
26:05that's when i saw the biggest parade in my life on the shoulders of my father tell us about that
26:34what you this was a profound moment for you well i they closed off the chance every day if you ever
26:42been to paris that's the biggest main street in the world that i know of that they have 42 soldiers
26:52lined up coming down abreast coming down the chance that we say and i'm standing on my father's
27:00shoulder washing the parade and we're all you go to paris which happens to be my birthday
27:13i'm driving my car through paris and i see all these flags i said oh they know i was coming
27:19and it happened to be salvation for the liberation of paris
27:34there is no frenchman born who does not feel at this moment the deepest emotion be he in france in
27:41america or the farther shore of this global war out of the suffering france has born there rises a
27:47people are dedicated to liberté égalité fraternité may i please add one word to my country man
27:55mes chers amis je n'ai que le temps de vous crier merci et de vous dire que notre pensée à nous si
28:02loin des combats va aujourd'hui d'abord vers nos prisonniers eussent-ils nous être bientôt rendus
28:08et nous trouver tous unis et résolus à leur prouver que leur long martyr n'a pas été souffert en vain
28:17et nous
28:19unis et résolus à leur et oui
28:27et nous
28:28il
28:30il
28:31The End
29:01The End
29:31In the presence of Lieutenant General Carl Spat
29:34Air Chief Marshal Sarofa Tedder
29:37Field Marshal Zhukov
29:39And General de Tassinier
29:41There was some anxiety in many quarters today
29:45When ten hours went by without any proclamation in Moscow
29:48Russia evidently waited for the official hour
29:52One minute past six tonight
29:54Eastern wartime
29:56And Russia evidently waited for the ratification in Berlin
30:00For the crowning hour of German humiliation
30:03Unconditional surrender and the capital where the war was planned
30:08And they evidently waited for the final death rattle in Dresden and Prague
30:14Where the fighting came to an end but a few hours ago
30:17And surrender became official one hour ago
30:20And now the guns are quiet everywhere in Europe
30:24And the lights are on
30:26And the hearts of men and women are lifted in thanksgiving
30:29As millions say tonight
30:31Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord
30:35Peace in Europe
30:37Peace in Europe
30:40Tomorrow we shall pay a particular tribute
30:46To the heroic Russian comrade
30:51Whom's prowess in the field
30:54Has been one of the grand contributions
30:58To the general victory
31:01Lord of the skull
31:02The army from dando to the enemy
31:05Against the monk
31:07He lives in the enemy
31:08That laboriously
31:20Isn'tas
31:21Motivation
31:22아빠
31:23He
31:23He
31:24George
31:25As
31:27соответ
31:28News generally travels
31:56by wireless printing press and radio
31:58and it moves lightning fast
31:59and its impact is powerful and violent.
32:02But an older medium
32:03carried today's news.
32:05There was no impact of violence.
32:08It was a church bill.
32:10And the news it brought
32:11reached into human hearts.
32:14I've heard people say
32:15we've always had war
32:16and we shall always have more war.
32:19And there just isn't anything
32:20we can do about it.
32:22And today one saw
32:23the long lines of men and women
32:25filing into houses of worship
32:26for prayer and thanksgiving.
32:28And one realized again
32:30nothing, nothing will ever lift
32:33human hearts as high
32:35as a bell tolling its message
32:38in one word, peace.
32:40One had to be there
32:41to see it all and feel it.
32:43One had to be near the mother
32:44who fell to her knees
32:45and raised the careworn face to God
32:47and loud enough for all
32:49who were near to hear every word.
32:51Heard her say,
32:52Oh, God, I've lost one boy.
32:55Bring my second back to me.
32:57Oh, God, I need him so.
33:00Thank you, Gabriel Heater.
33:02Gabriel Heater with up-to-the-minute
33:03news of the world
33:04was presented this evening
33:05by Farhan's Toothpaste.
33:07Ladies and gentlemen,
33:13this is one of the days
33:15we've been looking forward to
33:16for so long.
33:17This is one of the days
33:19for which men left
33:20their wives and children,
33:22their jobs and their professions
33:23to put on uniforms
33:25and give their days
33:27and their lives
33:27to end tyranny and aggression
33:30we hope forever.
33:32But this is just one of the days.
33:34There's another day coming
33:35and may it be soon
33:37when we can celebrate
33:38complete victory.
33:40But to leave our jobs now
33:41and quit when the task
33:42is only half finished
33:43would be false
33:45to the wives and children
33:46our fighting men left behind.
33:48Perhaps you know
33:49that radio programs
33:50like this one
33:51are recorded
33:52and sent to our fighting forces
33:53everywhere overseas
33:54for their entertainment
33:56and to bring them
33:57a smile or two from home.
33:59This is our job.
34:01The thing we know best
34:03how to do.
34:03So let's all keep going
34:05keep working
34:06and keep faith
34:07with the ones
34:08who are still doing battle
34:09for the things
34:10we believe in.
34:12Good night.
34:12Good night all.
34:13Go take my sons
34:20where'er they be
34:23and bring them safely home
34:34This is the National Broadcasting Company.
34:41The whole world
34:48must be cleansed
34:49of the evil
34:50The power of our people
34:52to defend themselves
34:53against all enemies
34:55will be proved
34:56in the Pacific War
34:57as it has been proved
34:59in Europe
35:00For the triumph of spirit
35:03and of arms
35:04which we have won
35:06and for its promise
35:08to the peoples everywhere
35:09who join us
35:11who join us
35:11in the love of freedom
35:12It is fitting
35:13that we as a nation
35:15give thanks
35:16to almighty God
35:18who has strengthened us
35:19and given us
35:21the victory
35:21Now, therefore
35:23I, Harry S. Truman
35:26President of the United States
35:28of America
35:29do hereby appoint
35:31Sunday, May 13, 1945
35:35to be a day of prayer
35:38I call upon the people
35:40of the United States
35:41whatever their faith
35:44to unite
35:45in offering
35:46joyful thanks to God
35:48for the victory
35:49we have won
35:50and to pray
35:52that he will support us
35:54to the end
35:55of our present struggle
35:56and guide us
35:58into the ways
35:58of peace
35:59I also call upon
36:02my countrymen
36:03to dedicate
36:04this day of prayer
36:05to the memory
36:07of those
36:08who have given
36:08their lives
36:09to make possible
36:11our victory
36:12In witness for us
36:15I have hereunto
36:16set my hand
36:18and caused the seal
36:19of the United States
36:20of America
36:21to be a faith
36:22Ladies and gentlemen
36:24you have just heard
36:25the President
36:26of the United States
36:27Now, our National Anthem
36:45of the United States
36:46of America
36:47of America
36:48of America
36:49of America
36:50of America
36:51of America
36:52of America
36:53of America
36:54of America
36:55of America
36:57of America
36:58of America
36:59of America
37:00of America
37:01of America
37:02of America
37:03of America
37:04of America
37:05of America
37:06of America
37:07of America
37:08of America
37:09of America
37:10of America
37:11of America
37:12of America
37:13of America
37:14First day of the false report
37:44of the war's end, we were, I think, at Lenz, Austria, and I remember a wild celebration
37:57going on, the war is over, and there were many of the striped uniform concentration camp
38:09people on the streets.
38:12And I was called in to drive a half-track for Major Tuthill, two radio operators, Major
38:21Tuthill and I, to follow a Russian staff car.
38:28And we took off like mad, following the Russians.
38:32And I remember driving up the road to the camp.
38:39There were the ex-prisoners going up and down the road.
38:44There are no words to describe this sense of freedom and this jubilation that took place
38:51during this liberation time.
38:53And of course, now we were seeing army uniforms and the allied soldiers were headquartered
39:00wherever they were, and the soldiers were walking the streets.
39:04And my girlfriend and I had a little, tiny pad each because there was still not stuff
39:10in the stores.
39:11They were still basically shuttered.
39:13And the two words of English, actually English three by the time I came to this country, but
39:17the first two words I learned were signature please.
39:21And we invented this activity.
39:23We would go to a soldier and hand him his pen and his study pencil and ask for a signature.
39:30And I still have those too someplace.
39:32A little pad of signatures, even some exes where they couldn't obviously write.
39:39And again, mostly British and Canadians.
39:43And I remember that the other one was candy and please.
39:47So we would give them, we would ask for their signature and then we would ask for candy
39:52please.
39:53Because of course they had thrown this stuff from the trucks as they came through, the
39:57tanks and so on.
39:59And there was this great loving and rejoicing and great love for the Americans and the British.
40:10We were liberated the last day of the war.
40:14That was Peter.
40:17May 8, 1945.
40:19That was the day of our liberation.
40:22At the end of it, we usually sing a song which says, God, let us, give us, give us a chance
40:34to get to freedom, get to Poland, get back to Poland, to our country.
40:44It gave us spirit.
40:46It gave us a reason to live again.
40:50An American got up and he says, you are all free.
40:55We are Americans.
40:56You are all free.
40:57You don't have to be afraid of them.
40:58He worked here at the Ghani, a nice mezuzah, you know, you know, like this.
41:02And all of a sudden, they pulled out by four, five Yiddish Jewish flags.
41:09And they stand up and he says, who is that Jew?
41:13Because we had a few French people over there too.
41:15And another national, most often Jew.
41:17He said, you stay here and we're going to play the Jewish hand.
41:21They put him in trucks and jeeps and they took him to hospitals or they made tents.
41:32And they put him in.
41:33They gave him water.
41:35They gave him packets from the Red Cross.
41:40They let us know that the soldiers are coming.
41:45And we went out to greet the American soldiers.
41:50And we dropped to their feet and we kissed their boots.
41:54There's some of them that couldn't walk.
41:57They were just crawling.
41:58They picked up and carried the men into the camps.
42:04I would ask you all to remember those of our comrades who fell in the struggle.
42:09They gave their lives that others might have freedom.
42:14And no man can do more than that.
42:20There'll be bluebirds over the white cliffs of Dover.
42:35Tomorrow just you wait and see.
42:43The German war is therefore at an end.
42:47After years of intense preparation, Germany hurled herself on Poland at the beginning of September 1939.
42:58And in pursuance of our guarantee to Poland and in common with the French Republic, Great Britain, the British Empire and Commonwealth of Nations declared war upon this foul aggression.
43:14Finally, almost the whole world was combined against the evil doers who are now prostrate before us.
43:23But let us not forget for a moment the toils and efforts that lie ahead.
43:29We must now devote all our strength and resources to the completion of our task, both at home and abroad.
43:41Advance Britannia.
43:44Long live the cause of freedom.
43:47God save the King.
43:48There'll be love and laughter and peace ever after.
43:57Tomorrow when the world is free.
44:04Men and women, you have fought, striven and endured to your utmost.
44:13None knows that better than I do.
44:16And as your King, I thank with a full heart those who bore arms so valiantly on land and sea or in the air.
44:27And all civilians who, shouldering their many burdens, have carried them unfinchingly without complaint.
44:35Those memories in our minds, let us think what it was that has upheld us through nearly six years of suffering and peril.
44:45The knowledge that everything was at stake.
44:48Our freedom.
44:49Our independence.
44:50Our very existence as a people.
44:54But the knowledge also that in defending ourselves, we were defending the liberties of the whole world.
45:02that our cause was the cause not of this nation only, not of this empire and commonwealth only,
45:10but of every land where freedom is cherished and law and liberty go hand in hand.
45:19We still wait and see.
45:30We're gonna hang out the washing on the sea tree.
45:34Have you any dirty washing mother dear?
45:38Embarking on an epic expedition next Sunday night,
45:41explorer and conservationist Leveson Wood on the migration trail in Botswana,
45:45walking with elephants at nine.
45:48Homeland next tonight.
45:50Eight seasons, 96 episodes.
45:52After nearly ten years on our screens, the time has come to wrap it up.
45:56The sensational series finale is coming.
45:59The
46:05The
46:06The
46:07The
46:09The
46:11The
46:13The
46:15The
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