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Titanic Sinks Tonight Season 1 Episode 2

Titanic Sinks Tonight
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Transcript
00:00I was afraid of the sea but I listened to the people who said take the new
00:17Titanic she cannot come to any harm new inventions have made a safe
00:30he told me that apparently we'd struck something
00:50I didn't become alarmed there was no danger they said
01:05I told her to come at once we were sinking
01:11you can imagine the chaos and the fear and the terror of finding water in your cabin and your
01:20in the bowels of the ship it makes me panic just thinking about it the story of the Titanic is
01:26the human condition spread out pinned on a board for us to examine then came the terrible cry women
01:36and children women and children two men lifted me up and put me in a boat it's these small decisions
01:45these little butterfly effect moments that change the outcome
01:48it really was every man for himself
02:05my heart stood still
02:09if we're gonna die best to die gripping something
02:26it's a split second decision what would you do what would I do
02:32it was a terrible sight men swimming and sinking
02:43I've been brought up to believe in a hell after death
02:57for now I think I went through a hell that night
03:06I don't know
03:16and I don't know
03:17I can't believe in a man for anyone
03:19I don't know.
03:49I don't know.
04:11Mr. Harvey ordered me to fetch some men down.
04:14I got between 15 and 20.
04:19The engineers put the pumps on.
04:28They also would have gone off duty stairs on.
04:34Right now on the Titanic, there's a red alert emergency.
04:38Down below in the boiler room, all the crew, the firemen that would normally be down there have been called back on ship to try to pump out the water that is flooding into the compartment.
04:54Imagine it, there's steam everywhere.
04:58There's the groaning, creaking, splitting sounds of the ship itself.
05:02It's terrifying.
05:06They are like soldiers going into battle.
05:09With five compartments flooded, the Titanic is going to sink.
05:15They have around an hour and a half until it's going to disappear below the waves.
05:20They're never going to get all of the water out of the ship.
05:23Can they hold it back just a little bit longer in order to try and save everybody on board?
05:28What I think is unfortunate in Titanic is that the captain had not established a mechanism whereby he was getting information.
05:45About what the actual damage was in various parts of the ship.
06:02This is something that there should have been being worked on much earlier.
06:06As a result, time was lost.
06:09Once you begin to understand that you are really up against it in terms of time, it goes from we can't save the ship,
06:18but can we get the passengers from the Titanic to a rescue ship before the Titanic sinks?
06:25The captain knows that the decisions that are made in the coming minutes, hours,
06:30ultimately that will be the decider on how many people will make it off of the ship alive.
06:39Send a call for assistance, ordered the captain.
06:57Which call should I send?
06:59The Regulation International call for help.
07:02Just that.
07:04And the captain was gone.
07:06The next moment we sent an urgent distress call.
07:15So in the radio room right now, it's a race against time.
07:21The operators must send out the distress signal.
07:24It's the standard Morse code signal that will tell shipping in the area that the Titanic is in trouble and needs help.
07:34These two young men, they're in their twenties, and now are responsible for seeking rescue for the unsinkable ship Titanic.
07:45My boats were along the port side.
07:54My idea was that I'd lower the boats and transfer passengers.
07:59It would be perfectly safe in that smooth sea until another ship picked them up.
08:03All right, gentlemen. You know what to do.
08:04You know what to do.
08:05Up to this time, we hadn't had chance for a boat drill, beyond just lowering some of the boats in Southampton.
08:12The crew of the Titanic had been put through a fine sift and care taken that there were no misfits.
08:19The tap on the shoulder and indication with the hand was quite sufficient to set the men about the different jobs.
08:41Clearing away boat covers, hauling tight the falls,
08:46Clearing away the boat covers, hauling tight the falls, ready for lowering.
08:52We're not going to see hysteria.
08:55We're not even going to see anxiety at this point.
08:57Not least because the information is distorted and fragmented.
09:02Nobody is thinking that the ship is going to sink.
09:05Only Captain Smith really knows the extent of what is happening.
09:09The water, having reached F-deck, showed me she'd been badly hold.
09:19Although I knew it was serious, I had not a thought that it was likely to prove fatal.
09:24I figured that she'd go so far until she balanced her buoyancy and there she would remain.
09:33The Captain doesn't share the information he has with all the officers, that the ship is going down.
09:38And precisely why he hasn't shared it remains a mystery.
09:43It may be a strategy he doesn't want them to panic.
09:47Maybe it reflects an internal chaos.
09:49He doesn't know who to tell or when.
09:52The reality is, for the crew in the Titanic at this moment,
09:56they have no idea what level of catastrophe they're in.
09:59They just know they have a job to do.
10:08There are 2,208 passengers on board.
10:35They won't all fit in the lifeboats, so the lifeboats will have to do shuttle runs.
10:39Take passengers to the rescue ship, come back, and then take the next lot of passengers.
10:46It's physically possible for them to save all the passengers, but they have to do it in an orderly fashion.
10:52And the people who are going to go first are those whose rooms are closest to the boat deck,
10:56and those are the first-class passengers.
10:58In this emergency plan, the wealthy and the powerful have an innate advantage.
11:04They are top of the list.
11:10Suddenly, orders came down.
11:13Everybody to the boats.
11:15All stewards and stewardesses were on duty in their sections to assist and direct people.
11:28I continued through my section, trying to reassure, reminding people to put on warm clothing,
11:36take blankets and valuables.
11:38Violet Jessup is a first-class stewardess.
11:44She's 24 years old.
11:45She's the youngest stewardess on board.
11:48The first-class stewards and stewardesses really are the ones who are responsible
11:52for making this evacuation process happen.
11:56They have to demonstrate extraordinary self-control and put these other people first.
12:02Of course, we reiterated from room to room that it was just precautionary measure.
12:13Everywhere I found extraordinary calmness.
12:20People who'd been asleep were dressing, fumbling, sleepy-eyed with buttons.
12:27They were unemotional.
12:35Probably thinking, as I did, that it was all too fantastic.
12:43The first-class passengers have invested financially.
12:47They've spent a lot on their tickets.
12:49They've invested psychologically in this being safe and luxurious.
12:53And they therefore cannot believe that it can be anything but that.
13:01It's such a leap of imagination to go against everything they've internalised about this experience
13:07and start to believe that something might be going wrong.
13:15Stuart knocked at the door.
13:17Sorry to alarm you, madam, but the captain's orders are that all passengers should put on life-belts.
13:28He laughed and joked as he helped us.
13:32Wrap up warmly.
13:33We may have a little trip for an hour or so in one of the lifeboats.
13:37Very fetching colour, is that it?
13:38Cosmo was so brave to try and keep us in good spirits, making a bad jest as to how unappetising we both looked in those sickly white life preservers.
13:54Lucy Lady Duff Gordon is one of the most prominent people on board.
13:59After divorcing her previous husband, she managed to build up her business, which is a fashion design house, into a multi-million pound enterprise.
14:10And this is a time when many women don't even have bank accounts.
14:14So she's obviously extraordinary.
14:16She's very resourceful.
14:18And that will come to be important.
14:20I put on a heavy crepe scarf, I wore the big squirrel coat, bought my little velveteen ring bag.
14:32It all looked so pretty, just like a bedroom on land.
14:37It didn't seem possible there could be any danger.
14:43A bit of vase of flowers on the washstand slid off and fell to the floor.
14:50It didn't seem possible there could be any taste.
14:53The door was also gathered full, 2 absolutons.
14:55The door was used for being outside, the two
15:05cleared to be rained that just as to the дорог si'eniz.
15:09It's a Bean party third night for being outside.
15:11It would drive from the C Dougie.
15:15It's not been up to C Dougie this week.
15:18It could help you with the greenomes here, but it might be a certain burger.
15:19Slowly people started, some joking, taking their time about it.
15:30To those few who showed concern, a reassuring answer was, there are plenty of boats in the
15:36vicinity.
15:37They'll be with us any moment now.
15:49I heard the crow's nest report a light on the bow.
15:58I went on the bridge right away and found this light.
16:09It was two masthead lights of a steamer just below the horizon.
16:16You could not only see her lights with the naked eye, you could see the lights of her
16:20portals.
16:21The Boxall can see the nearest ship to the Titanic, which is the Californian.
16:28She's very close by, about 14 miles.
16:32The Californian had already communicated with the Titanic earlier that evening that she was
16:39going to spend the night in the ice flow because it was too dangerous to continue.
16:44The Californian would be able to reach Titanic before she sinks.
16:51Captain Smith, we've spotted a steamer on the horizon.
16:57I told the captain about this ship.
17:00He said, tell them to come at once.
17:03He is sinking.
17:04He is sinking.
17:10After the signal had been sent out.
17:29After the signal had been sent out, the ether seemed to be dead.
17:42No reply came through.
17:47Californian isn't picking up any signals.
17:50The radio operator has gone to bed, not because he's negligent,
17:53but because he's allowed to go to bed.
17:55There's no duty to stay in the radio room all night
17:57and many ships did not ask this of their operators.
18:07But then, suddenly, a chance message comes in
18:11from a wireless operator on another ship, the Carpathia.
18:18I was about to retire.
18:21I'd taken my coat off.
18:23I should have been turning in in about ten minutes.
18:25Called the Titanic.
18:34And his only answer was,
18:36Struckerberg.
18:38Come at once.
18:42We told her our position and said we were sinking by the head.
18:44I asked him if he intended me to go get the ship turned round immediately.
18:53And he said yes.
18:55Quick.
18:58The operator went to tell his captain.
19:02The Carpathia is a transatlantic steamship.
19:05She's fast, but she's going in the other direction.
19:08Jack Phillips hears that the radio operator is going to tell the captain
19:14that Titanic is in trouble.
19:17The captain of the Carpathia will then make the decision about what to do.
19:22And that usually means to turn your vessel towards the ship that is in distress.
19:27That's the rule of the sea.
19:29So here is a chance of rescue.
19:33As long as Carpathia is able to get there in time.
19:38Women and children only.
20:03Women and children only.
20:05Though we'd been warned by the stewards to be going away in a boat,
20:10it didn't seem possible that all this could actually be happening.
20:19It was the strangest scene.
20:22People bundled up in old clothes, boarding lifeboats in the night.
20:28Pew seemed to want to brave the dark sea in an open boat.
20:35And it was only after considerable coaxing that many went at all.
20:42People don't want to get in.
20:45Why would you want to get out of your warm bed and go in a lifeboat into the freezing water when there's no problem?
20:50You wouldn't.
20:52This is like a really annoying fire drill at school.
20:56And everybody says, no, I'll just stay here until it's finished.
21:01At that point in time, the general public weren't really trusted.
21:05Keeping people in ignorance was considered better.
21:07And we know today that actually people will respond much more sensibly in an emergency
21:12if they do have some information.
21:14That information was completely lacking at this point on Titanic.
21:26We were just walking forward when a sailor tried to drag me away from Cosmo.
21:45The officers called for women and children.
21:52So Captain Smith has ordered that women and children should be evacuated and they should be prioritized.
22:00On the port side, the second officer, Officer Lightoller, interprets it as women and children only.
22:09The consequence of this is that if you are a family turning up on the port side, you will be separated and the men will not be allowed on the lifeboats.
22:21Saving the lives of women and children comes from deep in the Edwardian mindset.
22:29Women at the time are seen as having a kind of childish status.
22:34I mean, this is before they've been allowed to vote.
22:36And they are perceived to have a physical and mental weakness that means that men have to be their protectors.
22:45Please step back, sir. Please step back.
22:50I have no such ideas about my husband.
22:53It would have been too awful to have been alone.
22:58Every time Officer Lightoller prevents a man from getting into a lifeboat,
23:02there is the possibility that his wife won't go.
23:06That they will stay on board the ship.
23:08So he's actually potentially endangering the lives of the precise people he's been told to prioritize to save.
23:17Go!
23:32In a great emergency like that, where there were limited facilities, could you not have put more people into boats?
23:48I did not know it was urgent then.
23:51I had no idea it was urgent.
23:54You did not know it was urgent?
23:57Nothing like it.
24:00It was urgent.
24:04I was there.
24:06Yes, sir.
24:08Lightoller wants to do a good job, clearly.
24:11Maybe if he'd known the ship was sinking, he would have allowed men in to fill up the spaces in the lifeboats.
24:19But because the captain is withholding information, people like Lightoller can't do their job properly,
24:25and this will have disastrous consequences.
24:29what one wants is to have a very good relationship a band of brothers and when you've got that you
24:38must keep them informed of what's going on and what we call nowadays mission command in other
24:44words you let them know what you want to achieve overall you tell them all the facts and then you
24:49let them get on with it i think the captain smith was overwhelmed by the enormity of what was
24:54happening and was not really grasping it and taking charge
25:24the operator returned and told us the carpathia was putting about and heading for us
25:35our captain had left us at this time philip stopped me to run and tell him what the carpathia had
25:44answered i went through an awful mass of people to his cabin the decks were full
25:56i came back and heard philip's giving the carpathia fuller directions he told me to put my clothes on
26:07until that moment i forgot i wasn't dressed
26:13i went to me cabin and dressed and brought an overcoat to philip's
26:20it was very cold i slipped the overcoat on him while it worked
26:25imagine the relief in the radio room carpathia has answered the distress call is coming their way
26:35but although she's going as fast as she can she's having to go through the same ice field
26:44where titanic has floundered
26:47she's four hours away and titanic isn't going to stay afloat that long
26:55the nearest ship to titanic is the californian but the radio operators still asleep
27:11nobody is aware of any problem on the titanic
27:15the crew of the titanic have to think on their feet so they start to use morse lamps and send a
27:25signal using light rather than sound the ship was close enough i thought to read our electric morse
27:33signal so i signaled her
27:35i told her to come at once we were sinking
27:42the captain was with me most of the time we were signaling
27:47i would signal with the morse and then go back and look at the ship
27:51i cannot say i saw any reply
27:59in a crisis you just have to increase your chances of survival survival is all about probability
28:13you know throwing as much muck at the wall as possible and seeing what sticks
28:17then we started sending off these distress rockets the quartermaster and i on the bridge
28:25they go right up into the air and throw stars
28:34you know
28:42you
28:44so
28:46Oh
29:16right now the water is rising up through the body of the ship
29:23the waterproof bulkheads only went up to a certain level
29:27and by this stage water was tipping over bulkheads and cascading into the next
29:31compartment so compartment after compartment was being filled by water
29:40and as this mass of water breaches the bulkheads it starts flowing back on itself
29:46making cascades and waterfalls coming down the narrow staircases
30:07third-class passengers in the bowels of the ship are at most risk
30:11they were really left in the dark they are wading through water they're not aware of what's going
30:19on the rescue mission going on in the upper decks had to work it out themselves
30:27my husband had left some money in our cabin and there were all our clothes
30:33and things that we were taking to america
30:43salini is from hardin which was in lebanon and she's a newlywed bride and her older husband is
30:53taking her to live with him in america they are caught between going up to the higher decks
31:00and the desire to keep their belongings
31:04it's easy to underestimate just how important things are to a migrant to someone who's leaving
31:12home forever do you want to arrive in in new york destitute with nothing to your name
31:19nothing to pay for a room of course not
31:22we returned to try and get our clothes money and jewelry we started down for them
31:37but the water on our deck was waist deep we never got there
32:00depending on where you are in the ship right now you're going to start seeing a lot of water
32:04water the third class passengers in particular water in any quantity is terrifying because you
32:13can't push it away you can't fight it people are now seeing evidence with their own eyes it's not
32:19rumor it's not gossip it's not even that they're waiting to be told they can see feel that there is a
32:25problem
32:36by this time the the ship seemed to have tilted forward a little
32:41and we heard queer noises as if the ship was being pulled about
33:00charlotte collier is a second class passenger she's traveling with her husband harvey
33:04and her eight-year-old daughter marjorie charlotte has health issues she has tuberculosis
33:09so she's eager to find a new climate for her health as well as whatever economic benefit they
33:15might get from migrating
33:21whilst this whole hour has passed in which the first class passengers are being evacuated
33:28they were told to stay in their cabin
33:31they are sitting there and worrying and no one is telling them anything
33:41suddenly we heard people running along the passageway in front of our door
33:47their feet reminded me of rats scurrying i could see my face had grown very white
34:04my husband stammered when he spoke to me he said we had better go on deck
34:10and see what's wrong
34:19for anyone that was feeling confused or was just following the rules
34:24it's very clear something major is now happening it's going to be terrifying especially if you're a
34:32parent with a young child
34:39when we went on board the titanic every possession was with us
34:46neither of us took any belongings from the cabin
34:49my husband even left his watch lying on his pillow
34:53i had a big dolly that i got two christmases before
35:01and we were in such a hurry that i i left it behind
35:07i cried for my dolly but we couldn't go back
35:10when we reached the deck there was a great many people
35:24some of them were crying
35:39i was crying for my doll but nobody could go back and get her
35:43it's just a precaution okay
35:49an officer said we should put on life preservers
35:53so mother put one on me and then fastened one around herself papa put one on two
36:00so mother put one on me and then fastened one on me and then fastened one on me and then
36:06my husband stepped over to an officer and asked him a question
36:13i heard him shout back
36:16keep calm there's no danger
36:21nobody's telling anybody what's going on
36:24the captain knows a few of the officers know but it's important to keep this away because
36:30of panic but now because of the noise the tilt people are realizing that something is wrong
36:53all the water that have been thrown on the fans is just making the stock all thick was steam
37:01mr shepherds was walking across in a hurry to do something
37:10and he fell down the hole and broke his leg
37:12he lifted him up and carried him
37:29there was a knocking noise
37:33all at once i saw a wave of green foam tearing between the boilers
37:37a rush of water came through
37:45i never stopped to look i just jumped for the escape ladder
37:50a huge wave of green water comes flying through into the room because the coal bunker has been
38:08gradually filling up and filling up and filling up with the pressure and then it bursts and suddenly
38:13it's all over them another engineer jonathan shepard has already slipped and broken his leg so he can't escape this wall of water
38:24and he's the first casualty to die on the titanic
38:39i went off the escape and into the main alleyway
38:51the
39:01titanic was slowing down by the edge
39:04water was coming down the alleyway from forward
39:07now that boiler room five is filled with water the engineers realize that all their efforts are futile
39:20there's no point pumping it out anymore it's coming in faster than anyone can manage it
39:26this is a moment of terror
39:34and certainty
39:36perhaps this is the first moment where these brave men realize that the ship is going to go down
39:52the other side of the ship is going to go down the other side of the ship
40:00all passengers upstairs
40:01upstairs at last
40:03i i i returned to my room
40:15i began tidying up folding my nightgown putting everything in its place
40:23there was there was no sound
40:25titanic might have been in dock and all the crew gone home
40:42i saw stanley at the door watching me
40:44and he he almost shouted at me as he seized my arm
40:52my god don't you realize this ship will sink you have to follow the rest upstairs as quickly as possible
41:03sinking
41:04the word
41:11repeated itself without fully fully entering my understanding
41:21my mind could not accept that the super perfect creation was to do so futile a thing as sink
41:30of course titanic couldn't be sinking
41:52suddenly there was a commotion near one of the gangways and
41:58we saw a stoker come up from below
42:04all the fingers of one hand had been cut off
42:10blood was running from the stumps and was spattered on his face and clothes
42:19it brought up a picture of smashed engines and
42:27mangled human bodies
42:30i went over to speak to him
42:33i asked him if there was any danger
42:37danger
42:39i should say so
42:42it's hell down below
42:46this ship will sink like a stone
42:48at this moment i got my first grip of fear
43:08the boat
43:15those in charge herded us towards the nearest boat
43:23then
43:24above the clamor came the terrible cry
43:27lower the boat
43:29lower the boat
43:30women and children
43:32women and children only
43:33that's women and children only
43:37someone was shouting these last few words over and over again
43:41women and children only
43:43that's women and children only
43:44it might be that light holler has this kind of rigid view of the world he's come in with a set of rules
43:59it might be that under this stressful situation it's the only way he can function
44:04he can't cope with more information and more decision making so he just sticks to this one option
44:17the
44:24cosmo
44:25pleaded with me
44:27while three or four boats were launched but i refused
44:32i only said promise me that whatever you do you will not let them separate us
44:38and i clung to him
44:40he saw that there was no use resisting me
44:42we'll go around to the starboard side of course we said it might be better there
45:05one of the pivotal facts about the loading of the lifeboats is this
45:09there are different protocols on each side of the ship
45:14on the starboard side officer murdoch's approach is more pragmatic it's more flexible
45:24was better for although there were crowds there was no confusion
45:33the lifeboats were being quietly filled
45:35if you emerge on the starboard side
45:41then officer murdoch might well allow the men to join the women and their children if there are
45:49spaces left so there's murdoch allowing men to fill up the spare places why not murdoch doesn't want
45:57to split families up
45:58and light hollow had a stricter more patriarchal view perhaps of men should sacrifice themselves for
46:15women and children but the fact that it was happening on the same ship at the same time
46:20shows just how vague this policy was
46:25so it matters very much which side of the ship you're on if you're a man
46:42i was walking up and down the bridge saw white lights in the sky
47:09in the direction of this other steamer
47:16i thought perhaps the ship was in communication with some other ship
47:20or possibly signaling to us to tell us she had big icebergs around her
47:25didn't occur to me the ship was in distress
47:27i just thought there were white rockets that's all it might have been anything
47:36we called her up repeatedly on the morse lamp and received no answer whatsoever
47:41some people say she replied to our rockets and our signals but i didn't see any of them
47:55we'll never know why there was miscommunication between the californian and titanic there seems to
48:01been some confusion about the color of these rockets were they distress signals it's also possible
48:09that boxall didn't see californians morse lamp reply because there's something strange about the
48:15atmospheric conditions that night you've got this weird effect of warm air underneath and colder air
48:22on top which is creating a kind of mirage effect shapes are being distorted in the darkness
48:38what a chance her captain missed
48:42he could have laid his ship right alongside the titanic and taken
48:46practically every soul on board
48:52however he didn't
49:01this must be the bitterest blow for those people who could see the ship nearby
49:08i don't think it was bad faith i don't think it was negligence i think everything conspired that night
49:13to go against titanic's chances of safety and salvation
49:28so
49:34because the earlier lifeboats went out half full
50:00there are now only about 900 places left on the lifeboats and more than 2 000 people on board the
50:09ship if people don't get onto a lifeboat they will go down with the titanic
50:15suddenly we saw some sailors who were launching a little boat it was captain's special boat
50:32lucy duff gordon knows that she needs to get off the ship this is the moment to take one of those spaces
50:46my husband asked the officer if we might get into it
50:58we were helped in followed by two american men who came up at the last minute
51:03there is something here about being in the right place in the right time but also seizing the opportunity
51:15and having the confidence to do so
51:22i think that class probably had a huge impact on people's sense of entitlement to safety to rescue
51:27you probably did assume that if you bought a first class ticket then that would buy you survival
51:37they are people who are important in the world they see themselves as having more value
51:42than people in steerage and there they are as a couple sitting safely in a lifeboat
51:50i shall never forget how black and deep the water looked below us
52:05men standing nearby joked with us because we were going out on the ocean
52:09you'll get your death of cold out there amid the ice
52:24i found myself clinging to my husband's arm with little marjorie beside me
52:54i did not want to leave him
52:59charlotte knows she'll be separated from her husband
53:01not knowing if and when they'd be reunited i think she probably was just thinking
53:05please no not this i want to survive but not not at this cost
53:09the dilemmas that you just have to accept in that moment those are
53:19yeah those are heavy
53:23officer lightoll there you know the man's been at sea since he was 13. he doesn't have that
53:31understanding of what it means when a woman is clinging to her husband when a child
53:35is crying for their father he just goes ahead with what he believes to be right
53:44but it's not objectively right
53:47from what you have said you discriminated entirely in the interest of the women and children
53:52in filling those lifeboats yes why did you do that because of the captain's orders
54:00or because of the rule of the sea the rule of human nature
54:05the deck seemed to be slipping under my feet i hung onto my husband's arm
54:17and although he was very brave and not trembling
54:27i saw his face was white as paper
54:33port or starboard
54:37that sliding doors moment will determine who survives and who doesn't
54:40keep moving along the deck we are filling the lifeboats women and children only that's women
54:46and children only women and children women and children
54:52they struck utter terror into my heart and now they'll ring in my ears till i die
55:10so
55:22so
55:24so
55:26so
55:40There was a lot of confusion.
55:48People crying, swearing and praying.
55:53There's a really stark disadvantage facing third-class passengers.
55:58Chief officer shoved one of the revolvers into my hands.
56:01Chekhov said you can't put a gun in the room and not use it.
56:06All of the order has been lost.
56:09I called out.
56:10Don't shoot.
56:11Don't shoot.
56:12Don't shoot.
56:14Don't shoot.
56:16Don't shoot.
56:17Don't shoot.
56:18Don't shoot.
56:19Don't shoot.
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