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00:00Hi, I'm Carrie Fisher, and this is 1977.
00:53For me, 1977 seems like a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away.
01:00I was locked in battle with an evil empire whose ultimate weapon, the Death Star, was
01:04trained on my home planet, threatening total annihilation at any moment.
01:08And that's just during the day.
01:11But 1977 here on Earth, you know, it really wasn't that different.
01:15It was also the year of the empire, the British Empire.
01:20There were loyal protectors of the realm, a band of rebels bent on bringing down the
01:26establishment, and a handsome young hero to save the day.
01:30But we begin our story of 1977 in outer space, where man made perhaps his greatest discovery
01:38of the decade.
02:04What exactly is space dust?
02:06Well, largely cometary debris.
02:08A comet, after all, is really a dirty ice ball.
02:12And when that's heated, it begins to evaporate, and throws off dust and, of course, gas also.
02:16I've always believed that it actually does come from outer space, this stuff.
02:19And I don't know how they got it into packets, really.
02:20I suppose they must have had some kind of big funnel that went round the atmosphere, or
02:24the stratosphere.
02:25But in the 70s, a sample of this where we're collected.
02:28Wait a minute.
02:29What?
02:30If it floats around and out of space, how can you be sure that it's not going to harm
02:33you?
02:33But we all took that risk.
02:35Orange!
02:37Fantastic, sports fans.
02:39I can see it from here.
02:41It's orange.
02:42Let me put my visor up.
02:44Could you eat space dust?
02:46I suppose you could, without eating dirt.
02:49I would recommend it most times, though.
02:51I mean, I don't remember the first time I tried space dust, but I remember why you liked
02:54it.
02:54The reason why you liked it is because it exploded in your mouth.
02:56You know?
02:57You put something in your mouth, and it was like lots of little, tiny, popping frogs hitting
03:01the top of your, you know, hitting the roof of your mouth.
03:04It was brilliant.
03:05He was to put loads of space dust in the mouth, and they'd go right up the other kids' ears.
03:08I was like, listen, listen!
03:10Hey!
03:11Hey!
03:12Hey!
03:13Hey!
03:16Hey!
03:16You just got all this stuff on your tongue.
03:19It's cracking.
03:20Can you hear it?
03:23One can of Coke, two packets of space dust, and your head would blow off.
03:28You put space dust in your mouth and a mouthful of Coca-Cola, and your head would blow off.
03:31Don't laugh.
03:32It's true.
03:32The police say it's terrible.
03:34It's highly addictive.
03:34I was thinking, yeah.
03:36We, I've had loads of it.
03:37Let me tell you it always.
03:38Our newsagent took the lead and took space dust off the shelf.
03:41And the boss don't mind sometimes if you're at the food.
03:46There should have been a warning about more than 25 packs in a day, but I just saw it as
03:51an experiment.
03:53I met pack after pack after pack, and all I got was that lovely kind of...
04:01Lethal.
04:01...in my mouth, and diarrhoea.
04:04Where was the entertainment in that?
04:12Greetings. I am Thar. I bring you a galactic new comic, 2000 AD, with adventures from the future, including the
04:18new invincible Dan Dare.
04:20Also a genuine Thargan space spinner, free. Get 2000 AD now.
04:24The world went disco crazy in the 70s, and in 1977, one film, one man, and one dance move became
04:33its enduring image.
04:35Get to the back of the queue, girls.
04:38It's John Travolta in Saturday Night Fever.
04:51When John first came in, we were at a dance school in Beverly Hills.
04:55He comes in, he says, well, I already know how to dance.
04:58I said, okay, go ahead, John.
05:04His little butt crack was sticking out of his pants, you know, and he was walking around like this.
05:09So I let him go for about a minute, and I said, okay, John, now sit down.
05:17I started dancing for him. I did a couple of Russian leaps. I did the knee drops.
05:21I started doing the point and locking up.
05:25And he just froze. He goes, that's it. This is what I want to learn.
05:31He's very good, huh?
05:32He's the best. Hey, man, he's great. He's the king out there.
05:36John Travolta in Saturday Night Fever.
05:39The first X film I ever saw, I was 13, and I went with my mum.
05:46Naughty mum.
05:48John had the classic look, too. He had the blue eyes, the dark hair.
05:53You know, he had the whole thing going for him.
05:59John Travolta was fantastically cool, I think, particularly for a 13-year-old girl living near Watford.
06:05Hairy chest, massive medallion.
06:09Big, silky, cheap sort of flowery open shirt, and just real nut-crushing, high-waisted trousers.
06:15It was very sexy.
06:17He was sort of in touch with his sensitive side. There was a lot of stuff about hair.
06:22I'm from the village, which borders on Little Italy.
06:27And I have to say that John Travolta got the character right.
06:31I don't think it was a stretch for him.
06:32You know how many times somebody told me I was good in my life?
06:35Two, two, twice.
06:36Just raise today and dance and dance at the disco.
06:40She can dance, you know that?
06:41She's got the wrong partner, of course, but she can dance.
06:45He is disco. I don't care what they say.
06:47John Travolta is disco.
06:52I'm surprised they haven't put a statue up now of a John Travolta pose.
07:01He could never get off the dance floor. He used to wave at me and I would have to go
07:05and get him away from the women.
07:07They were so turned on by the way he moved that they would literally get out of their chairs and
07:13come over and wait in line just to dance with him.
07:16What's the best way to get over with a lady, right?
07:19Look good, smell good, dance your best. You got amazed.
07:24Saturday Night Fever made John Travolta an icon.
07:28Girls around the world wanted a guy like Tony and boy, did guys want to be like Tony.
07:34They wanted to look like him, dress like him and move like him.
07:41After the success of Saturday Night Fever, 77 was really the year for disco.
07:47Burn, baby, burn, burn. Burn, baby, burn. Burn, baby, burn. Burn, baby, burn. Burn, baby, burn.
08:03It did explode. It exploded on the scene.
08:06I remember coming out of the cinema, desperate to get to my own club, and we would be racing out
08:12to do all this dance.
08:13and it was a buzz that John Travolts had put into it all.
08:16The music became clearly the dominant force on the planet.
08:24When those lights are coming down and they're pulsating on the floor,
08:27you don't really look because you can't see anybody seeing down or out there,
08:31so you really lose all inhibitions.
08:35We're dancing like this, we're picking up our partners, spinning around,
08:39and all of a sudden you do a little bit more than the next guy,
08:41and before long you were doing the splits on the floor.
08:44And I actually remember being in San Francisco
08:46and I was asked to put the girl down and would I mind leaving the club?
08:54Everybody was going to dance classes. I've never seen anything like it.
08:58You could find old people and young kids in these dance classes
09:01doing the electric slide and the hustle and the Latin hustle and all these steps.
09:06People that couldn't dance learned how to dance
09:10just so they could go out on the weekends and not look dumb.
09:14Hand on the hip, do it again.
09:15One, two, one, two, turn it over.
09:20Grayson's Groovers.
09:21With the attitude.
09:28Are you as good in bed as you're on that dance floor?
09:44You couldn't go on the disco floor with some raggedy shoes on
09:47because you've got lights on the floor,
09:49you have lights on the ceiling,
09:51you have lights on the side of you,
09:53so you've got to be a part of that bright light when it hits you,
09:55and if it hits you and you ain't looking good,
09:57you might as well just sit back down.
10:01We all went and got white suits,
10:03and we all went like that.
10:05It was never questioned, you know,
10:06an open shirt, hairy chest,
10:09and a medallion on lots of older men.
10:17You had to be a medallion man to have any respect.
10:20If you're on the dance floor, you had to have your open shirt,
10:23you had to have your cool right down there.
10:26It was quite a normal figure, though, in the north.
10:28In Scotland, somebody's got an uncle like that, you know.
10:34It was all sexual.
10:36It was showing off.
10:37It was just the peacocks and the cockerels in the farmyard.
10:40That's what the guys were doing.
10:41The women were letting us do that.
10:52And then, of course, they started doing parodies on it, you know,
10:55and it becomes a joke after a while because it was so popular.
10:59Like everything good, it all has to come to an end when it's commercialized.
11:04It's the world-famous Bee Gees,
11:06who have sold more records than any other group called the Bee Gees
11:08in the entire history of the world.
11:11Some people have implied that your high voices,
11:14coupled with the long hair, shirt open to the navel,
11:16revealing hairy chest and medallion look,
11:18suggest that you're somewhat less than masculine
11:21and that you...
11:22Look the other way!
11:25Exactly.
11:26What do you say to that?
11:27Well, you can't do by the way I use my work
11:30on the world as many.
11:32Ha, ha, ha, ha.
11:36The Dallian man moved out.
11:38You see, dancing, you can't last forever.
11:41It's a short-lived kind of thing.
11:43Literally.
11:44Bang.
11:45When.
11:45He was purely the 70s.
11:48Pity, guess I liked him a lot.
11:50Somebody help me.
11:53Somebody help me.
12:00What separates the men from the boys?
12:02Their wheels, of course.
12:04The roller skates were out,
12:05but boy, if you didn't have a set of wheels back in 77,
12:08you were nowhere, man.
12:23Skateboarding could have changed my life, but it didn't.
12:25It just caused me a lot of pain and a lot of bitterness.
12:43It was massive.
12:44What do you remember?
12:45It was a craze.
12:46It was big.
12:47Every kid had a skateboard and everyone just got into skating.
12:51Everyone wanted to surf the pavements.
12:53The actual boards themselves were kind of a rubbery plastic, normally blue,
12:57with matching wheels that were very, very fast.
13:00It was very narrow, very fast, and quite dangerous.
13:02London's biggest toy shop prepares for the skateboard invasion.
13:05With skateboard prices, 85 pounds for this one.
13:11Of course, there has to be expensive, protective clothing.
13:15My very first skateboard was called a Black Knight,
13:19and it was a wood plank that they were mass marketing and selling,
13:25but they had metal wheels.
13:26They were like old clip-on roller skating wheels,
13:30and they were the worst.
13:34I liked it, but then I was aware that if I went on it too much,
13:37I would get one big fat leg and one skinny one,
13:40which wouldn't have looked good in my tight pants.
13:43Once I got used to the feel of being on a skateboard
13:46and learned to make turns, I began to enjoy myself.
13:50You used to get Coke cans out,
13:52and you used to weave in and out,
13:54slalom in and out of Coke cans.
13:55You used to do handstands and all little freestyle tricks.
13:58It's all your own.
14:00You're not a team player.
14:01It's all about individuality.
14:02You make a trick, it's yours.
14:04You did it.
14:05No-one helped you.
14:06You did it.
14:06Do you want to give me a push?
14:08Yeah, okay.
14:10Okay.
14:12I feel like my skateboard's gone.
14:14Excuse me.
14:15I was absolutely useless at it.
14:17You had to have the most highly defined sense of balance
14:20to stay on these things, and I just didn't have it,
14:22and it was only certain boys who could do it.
14:25I would try it and come a cropper.
14:28You'd hit a pebble,
14:30and all of a sudden,
14:31what was doing 20 miles an hour,
14:33all of a sudden it's doing zero miles an hour,
14:35except your body's now doing 20 miles an hour
14:37and getting launched off of it forward,
14:40you know, flying.
14:41All of a sudden, you'd be like,
14:42whoo!
14:47Everybody wanted to get on that bandwagon.
14:49What do you call the turn at the other end?
14:51Is it?
14:53Yeah, yeah.
14:53What about looping the loop?
14:55Yeah.
14:56They wanted to be seen to be down with the kids,
14:58hanging out with the kids.
14:59I haven't done it for such a long time.
15:02I've tried it.
15:03I have got one of me own.
15:05Had I known in advance that there was skateboarding here,
15:08I would, of course, have bought a helmet
15:11and all the other protected paraphernalia.
15:18To be seen standing on a little skateboard, you know,
15:22pathetic pose.
15:23I hope I haven't ruined it, are you?
15:24Thanks a lot, Elliot.
15:27I know what you mean.
15:28It takes a lot of time to get the balance, doesn't it?
15:30I know.
15:30Oh, well, I must practice.
15:35I got quite cocky.
15:36I remember doing a quite spectacular manoeuvre down a hill
15:38and one of my friends was at the bottom of the hill
15:41and I sort of came to a natural halt
15:43and I gave this look like,
15:45huh, you do that.
15:46And I just felt a flat on my face.
15:48I don't know why.
15:49I'd come to a perfect stop.
15:54But as the kids took to the streets,
15:56so the accident rate soared.
15:58Soon, the demand on local councils
15:59to provide safe areas for the sport became overwhelming.
16:03Because kids were out there on the pavement,
16:05they were seen as a danger.
16:07Then grannies were supposedly getting knocked over on pavements
16:09because there was no skate park.
16:11The council in Luton came up with the idea
16:13of a Dissue swimming pool
16:14and the kids skated in.
16:16Skateboards gave teenagers the freedom of their own wheels.
16:20But freedom at what price?
16:23Safe from the traffic, no problem to pedestrians.
16:26The only worry came from the bruises, sprains and brakes.
16:29In fact, the national hospital bill clicked up to 6 million pounds.
16:34It would be great finding that L that was just a sheer,
16:37you know, and then seeing your mate go down
16:39and then realising that it was a one-way street
16:41and there were cars only coming off.
16:46Being a big lad, picked up a fair bit more momentum than most.
16:50If it were a speed trial, I'd have won.
16:55Uh-oh, what part of me is going to get hurt?
16:57It's going to be a knee, a hand, or elbows.
17:01And most often, it was definitely the knees.
17:03The knees went through some hell.
17:09I had a full, like, restructure done
17:12and I thought,
17:14it might come out lucky with this
17:16cos you might actually get a better face
17:17and swines managed to actually recreate the face I had.
17:27It's a different world for a growing-up girl.
17:30Girls' World is specially for girls
17:32to learn about make-up and hair-styling.
17:35For a growing-up girl.
17:37And here's Kitchen Centre.
17:39No batteries, no electricity,
17:41just everything needed to play cooks.
17:43It can even blend drinks.
17:45For a growing-up girl.
17:49Kitchen Centre and Girls' World.
17:51Two great growing-up ideas for girls from Paletoy.
17:56You know, being a teenager in 1977
17:58was not an easy thing.
18:00Well, hey, being a teenager at all
18:01isn't an easy thing.
18:02You've got parents, you've got teachers,
18:05you've got to get a boyfriend.
18:06And asking for a date,
18:07well, you didn't.
18:08Your friend did it.
18:10But in 1977, girls got help.
18:13And boys got easy.
18:28Blue Jeans came along in 1977 when I was 10.
18:31And I was very keen on these magazines,
18:33but my parents actually wouldn't let me get them.
18:39I mean, I was a complete junkie already by then, actually.
18:43And obviously reading Mum's Cosmo at the same time.
18:46We just got my school, like, and pass them around.
18:50Every young girl needs a little help with growing up.
18:53And in 77, they were prepared to pay good pocket money for it.
18:58They trade upon every young girl's desire
19:01to worship pop stars and wear makeup.
19:03And I think that a lot of people make a lot of money out of it.
19:06Money-making rubbish,
19:08or are they cheerful entertainment
19:10with good ideas and helpful advice?
19:13I used to read Blue Jeans,
19:16and I used to always run up to the shop and buy it,
19:18and they used to have these, you know,
19:19top tips for makeup and top tips, you know,
19:22for boys and how to talk to them and what you do.
19:24Jackie's got something for everyone.
19:26A butterfly stick pin.
19:27It's free, it's fun.
19:29Wear it here, wear it there.
19:30You can wear it anywhere.
19:32Jackie, tops for pops, who, too.
19:34Butterfly stick pin, free for you.
19:35Only in Jackie tomorrow.
19:37Tell me, A, B, C or D,
19:38am I an optimist?
19:40Am I a pessimist?
19:41Am I out going,
19:42Oh, yes, more about me.
19:43Blue Jeans, and particularly Jackie,
19:46were very important magazines.
19:47What they share is their willingness
19:49to give information to young women
19:51in a way that they hadn't been given to them before.
19:55I mean, you can laugh at them as much as you like,
19:56you know, and they are hilarious
19:57and kind of full of useless romantic nonsense in those days,
20:01but at least they're an attempt to talk to people,
20:04you know, on their own level, like.
20:05You are very self-involved at that age.
20:08You are very anxious about the changes within you.
20:12I mean, physical changes, emotional changes.
20:14Your hormones are raging one way or the other.
20:16Don't leave me this way
20:21I can't survive
20:24Can't stay alive
20:26What they want to know is how to be beautiful,
20:29how to be attractive,
20:30how to be the person
20:30that everybody wants to be friends with,
20:32how to be the girl that attracts boys
20:36when you feel fat, unloved and spotty.
20:40We get hundreds of problem letters every week
20:43from kids who don't know what to do
20:45about their parents or their living conditions
20:49or their lifestyle
20:51or more serious problems.
20:53I mean, sex, it was all a bit sort of,
20:55my boyfriend wants to kiss me, I'm not ready,
20:57you know, that kind of thing, rather sweet and naive.
20:59Girls write in going,
21:00I was practising kissing on my hand
21:02and I'm not sure,
21:03and I kissed my pillow
21:03and I'm not sure how to do it.
21:05It was always the same answer,
21:06which was just like,
21:06oh, well, it doesn't really matter
21:08and it'll feel right if it feels right.
21:09I mean, basically,
21:10you can't tell somebody how to do it, can you?
21:13They answered questions
21:14which most adults would consider
21:15to be incredibly trivial,
21:16which was,
21:17what is a French kiss, you know,
21:18and will, you know,
21:19Les out of the Bay City Rollers like me
21:21if I've got boss eyes
21:22and, you know,
21:23how can I get rid of my acne, you know,
21:26and all these things
21:27which are incredibly difficult
21:28for teenagers to ask each other,
21:30let alone parents.
21:31Who cares about old people?
21:33My great memory of Jackie
21:34is the Cathy and Claire problem page
21:36and I remember when I was about nine or ten,
21:39even later on,
21:39my friends and I would sit around
21:40trying to make up problems
21:42to say to them,
21:43but they,
21:44because we knew nothing about sex,
21:45they were completely stupid,
21:46like,
21:46I've had sex with a dog,
21:48what should I do when I get pregnant?
21:49And, of course,
21:50naturally,
21:50they saw right through us
21:52and they were never published.
21:53I know your eyes
21:55in the morning sun
21:57I feel you touch me
21:59in the palm
22:00The photo stories
22:01in those kind of magazines
22:02seemed incredibly exotic
22:02because before that,
22:03we had Bunty
22:04and then you suddenly had,
22:05you know,
22:05lots of people,
22:06you know,
22:07you know,
22:07from Leicester
22:08acting out,
22:09you know,
22:09kind of,
22:11real true life problems.
22:14Could anything be more glamorous?
22:16I mean,
22:16now girls of that age
22:17want to be supermodels,
22:18then we just wanted to appear
22:20in a photo love story.
22:23It was always the same thing.
22:25He took his glasses on,
22:26she stood there and went,
22:27he's quite good looking,
22:28isn't he?
22:29And they'd just run off and kiss
22:31and he'd just set the picture
22:32going,
22:33wow,
22:33that's how to do it.
22:34That was glamour.
22:37Breaking us down
22:40When they all should let us be
22:44We belong to you
22:47There's no noodle like pot
22:49Noodle as a noodle
22:50It's the food you'll love the best
22:52There's no noodle like hot noodle
22:54When you've tasted one
22:55You'll want to try the rest
22:57It's all coming back to you
22:58Chicken and mushroom
22:59There is, isn't there?
23:00There's beef and tomato
23:01which tasted like dirt
23:02My favourite flavour
23:04was beef and tomato
23:06because it had the traditional sense
23:08of a Sunday lunch
23:09do you know what I mean
23:10combined with noodles
23:12and so
23:13when I was living in that bed sit
23:15you know,
23:15I could sit there and go
23:16wouldn't it be nice
23:17if all my family
23:18be around here now
23:19to enjoy this swimmer
23:20and it's sad
23:21that I got chased out of town
23:27Pot noodles
23:28I felt like an astronaut
23:29having pot noodles
23:30because it was like
23:30this is it
23:31this is the future
23:33In the future
23:34we'll all wear silver suits
23:35with, you know,
23:36diagonal zips
23:36and be eating stuff
23:37like pot noodles
23:38you know,
23:38you just add boiling water
23:40and it transforms
23:40into a nutritious meal
23:41In an instant, effectively
23:44There must be a moment
23:45in your day
23:46when you'd welcome
23:46a heart-filling snack
23:48The product was first launched
23:49in 1977
23:50Pot noodles!
23:51It went ballistic
23:53The one and only pot noodle
23:54The rest is history
23:55For those hungry moments
23:57in your day
23:57It was a genuine first
23:59for the UK market
24:00and for the food industry
24:01Something different
24:02something really tasty
24:04So here it is
24:06new pot noodle
24:07People didn't know
24:08how to use it
24:08what it was there for
24:10what to do with it
24:11and they had to be educated
24:12And all you need
24:13to make pot noodle
24:14is a kettle
24:14then eat hot from the pot
24:17There's a line
24:18on the pot noodle
24:19and you should be
24:19really careful
24:20like that
24:21and make sure
24:21it didn't go above
24:22because that might
24:22ruin the taste
24:23If you filled it right up
24:25you could also get
24:26three rounds of bread
24:27folded
24:28dunked in
24:29Do you know what I mean?
24:30That was more of a
24:30because it wasn't really
24:31a full meal
24:32Do you know what I mean?
24:33It was more like
24:34a fancy starter
24:35parts of flavour
24:36parts of flavour
24:38parts of warmth
24:38parts of taste
24:40It's essential that
24:41you let this pot noodle
24:42stew in its own juices
24:44for about 20 minutes
24:46to get the maximum effect
24:47let the monosodium glutamate
24:48go throughout
24:49and completely
24:51unclag the noodles
24:52Don't fuss mum
24:53You know what I like?
24:54Tender pasta noodles
24:55with vegetables
24:56and soy or pieces
24:57in a rich savoury sauce
24:58Now mind your shirt
25:00Gerald
25:01It's not really
25:02a traditional thing
25:02you go back to your mum's
25:03thought is it?
25:04It's like
25:04no one makes a pot noodle
25:05like my old mum
25:06Hungry kettle?
25:07Right
25:07I'd have quite liked it
25:09if I hadn't been given
25:09a pot noodle
25:09when I'd gone on to my mum
25:10it was old pies
25:11when I was a boy
25:12It was seen as the food
25:13of dropouts
25:15Do you know what I mean?
25:15In a shop
25:16if someone had come in
25:17and bought a load of pot noodles
25:18the women in the shop
25:19would go
25:19watch him
25:20he's probably a burglar
25:21or he hasn't got a job
25:23Blooming tight
25:24is out here Sarge
25:25Put the kettle on
25:26I've been charged 15 pounds
25:28fed thin starters
25:30in you know
25:30in restaurants
25:31not anything like
25:32the taste sensation
25:33that a pot noodle is
25:34basically absolute crap
25:36Golden wonder
25:37pot noodle
25:38and pot rice
25:39It's a real
25:40success story for Britain
25:41It's a classic food
25:42for drunks
25:43really
25:44and just when I was
25:45reaching that point
25:46in my life
25:46when the alcohol
25:47made sense
25:48There's no noodle
25:49like a pot
25:50Noodle as a noodle
25:51it's the food
25:52you'll learn the best
25:53Pot noodles
25:54probably kept me alive
25:55I owe them a lot more
25:56I shouldn't slag them off
25:57you know what I mean
25:57because they were my only friend
26:01for a while
26:02Hot noodles
26:06Imagine a world
26:08without Wallace and Gromit
26:09without Creature Comfort
26:11without Chicken Run
26:12well they owe it all
26:13to this little guy
26:14they owe it all to Morph
26:19Morph was born
26:20in the children's TV series
26:22Take Heart
26:23It was a show
26:25where Tony Hart
26:26got to do all the things
26:27you weren't allowed to do
26:28in art lessons
26:29at school
26:31basically throwing paint around
26:34Take Heart
26:35with Tony Hart
26:36Hello
26:37Just mixing up some paint
26:39Lovely man though
26:41but I think you're off his head
26:42because he talked him off
26:43you know
26:44a bit of plasticine
26:46come on
26:51Oh dear
26:52and then he had that loser
26:54Mr Bennett running around
26:55You can lend me a hand
26:56off to the gallery
26:56Lend you one now
26:57if you like
26:57Mr Hart
26:58Thanks
27:00It got in the way
27:01I think
27:02and I thought it'd come in handy
27:04You know
27:05I just wanted to see him draw
27:07really
27:08I think I'll try
27:09pastel drawing now
27:10Just get it ready
27:12I was left
27:13to my own resources
27:15to discover
27:17different ways
27:19of interesting
27:20amazing sometimes
27:22and now
27:23something messy
27:25and certainly surprising
27:27viewers
27:32You did enjoy
27:33and they'd always show
27:34upside down
27:38and he'd do like
27:39a moon
27:40and then he'd
27:40do like
27:41and then
27:42you'd go on
27:43what is it
27:44what is it
27:44is it a kangaroo
27:46and then it'd turn
27:48upside down
27:48and he'd frame it
27:50and it'd be the moonlight
27:51on some dustbins
27:55Now it's time to have a look
27:57at your paintings
27:57it's time for the gallery
27:59Everyone remembers the gallery
28:01and I remember it had
28:02the thing from the Day Hunter
28:05Gavin has made a tissue paper
28:08one leg into duck
28:13The gallery
28:14became very, very popular
28:18Sophie sent this picture in
28:21and you can see
28:23she's created a beach effect
28:24by using sand
28:27and then he'd never
28:28got them back
28:28so we never sent anything in
28:30because he said
28:31we can't return your pictures
28:32and I think
28:33what's that on that
28:34really, Tony, is it?
28:35Not very good, is it?
28:36I'm working hard on something
28:37and I'm sending it in
28:38and you just can't be asked
28:39sending it back
28:40I don't think it's quite
28:41as simple as that somehow
28:43Here you are, Morph
28:44this is for you
28:49Wacky little sod, Morph
28:51I said blow, not suck
29:02He was not just humanoid
29:06He was human
29:07I will be king
29:14It's actually become quite difficult
29:16to keep writing for a solo character
29:18so he's started to introduce
29:20other characters
29:22The first character we introduced
29:23was actually a nail brush
29:24which actually was like a dog
29:26it was like his pet dog
29:27They give him a franchise, don't they?
29:30Very anarchic character
29:34It's not funny, Morph
29:37It's everywhere, weren't it?
29:38Who knows?
29:39It's all in you
29:40We can hear us
29:44Just for when you go
29:48I think Tony always felt
29:50there was a danger
29:51of him being slightly usurped
29:52Morph, is this mess
29:54by any chance
29:55anything to do with you?
29:56Because he was so animated
29:58Oh, not a man
30:00His personality started to build up
30:03And there was definitely a rivalry
30:04between the two of them
30:07I don't think so
30:09You know, there isn't time
30:10for that sort of rivalry
30:12in this world
30:15But I also think he then realised
30:17it was a great plus for the show
30:18because I think a lot of people
30:19watch the show for more
30:22He just like to get a mallet
30:24and squash him
30:27Bye-bye
30:29He'd be gone
30:30before you could get to him
30:31because he dreamed to
30:51Green slime in a pot
30:52that didn't do anything
30:53It just came in that tub
30:55and you just whacked it out
30:57in this dollop
30:58and let it run
30:59all through your fingers
31:00It feels nasty
31:03but you know it's not nasty
31:05but it just feels like
31:05you just want to go
31:12All boys use to terrorise the girls
31:14because they take little bits off
31:16and flick it up like bogeys
31:17and flick it at you
31:18and you'd know it was slime
31:20it wasn't really bogey
31:21but it was the most revolting thing
31:23The only thing you could do
31:24was sort of make fart noises
31:25by pushing your fist into it
31:27Yes sir
31:30Already taught me
31:31What we used to do
31:32is like we'd come home
31:32and just take a little bit off
31:34and run inside and go
31:36Mum
31:39Skim out
31:51The task of protecting Britain's
31:53national security in 77
31:55fell into the hands
31:56of two fearless young men
31:58They fought fire with fire
32:00with whatever means necessary
32:03They were cool
32:04They were handsome
32:06and they drove a Ford Capri
32:10They're professionals
32:16There's only one thing
32:17I want to say
32:17about the professionals
32:24And he'd walk out Gordon Jackson
32:26and he'd route up his coat
32:27and then it'll start
32:29You watch that
32:30Put that on
32:32It's a phenomena
32:33It has a huge number of fans
32:36most of whom
32:37probably wouldn't admit to it
32:38outside of the confines
32:40of their living room
32:42But people will watch it
32:43again and again
32:44and again
32:44I heard what the man said
32:54It was really good
32:56You just wanted to do
32:56roly polies all over the place
32:59Or did you?
33:00Was it just me?
33:01I don't know
33:06Policemen had been
33:07sort of done to death
33:08by then
33:08George Cowley
33:09who had been
33:11the rather unlikely head
33:13of MI5
33:14was asked to set up
33:15this new organisation
33:17Criminal Intelligence 5
33:19CI5
33:20And they had a very broad
33:22remit from the home office
33:23which meant really
33:24that they could
33:25do anything they wanted
33:32A typical professionals episode
33:34will begin with
33:35a pre-title sequence
33:36which has often got
33:37very little to do
33:37with the rest of the plot
33:44You'll then get a couple
33:45of scenes of
33:46Bodie and Doyle
33:53Cowley will then
33:54call them in
33:54Bodie
33:55Doyle
33:56hold on a moment
33:57And there will then be
33:58approximately 40 minutes
34:00of car chases
34:01which end with
34:01a very big explosion
34:08That was great
34:09I mean you're talking
34:10about the 70s
34:10and there's not many
34:12shows that have
34:14touched it really
34:14I don't think
34:15It was action
34:16it was packed
34:17you know
34:18lots of screeching
34:19car chases
34:20they're really tough
34:21and they used to
34:22wear tight jeans
34:23I remember that
34:25Loved them
34:26to the point of
34:27making my own
34:28magazine fanzine
34:29for my own enjoyment
34:30What a lovely thought
34:31I think the reason
34:33that the programme works
34:34is very much
34:35the interaction
34:35between the three
34:36central characters
34:37Balloon doesn't go up
34:38to a 5.30 sir
34:40It's just 5 now
34:42No that's long enough
34:43Give us a chance
34:44to check out the area
34:45It's because it's
34:46very much a stereotype
34:47but I think the
34:48Bodie and Doyle
34:48characters work largely
34:49because of the
34:51way they play off
34:52each other
34:52Well that's
34:53drug squad business
34:55What are you two
34:56some kind of music
34:57hall act
34:57Whatever we are
34:59you made us
35:00Ta-da
35:02I think Bodie and Doyle
35:03were meant to have
35:04a fairly abrasive
35:06relationship
35:06which wasn't
35:09too difficult
35:09we did have
35:11a fairly abrasive
35:12relationship
35:12Eric Sutton
35:13push her
35:13you stay with her
35:14Stay with her
35:16The characters
35:17just evolved
35:18we just gradually
35:20pasted them on
35:22ourselves bit by bit
35:23because there was
35:24not really very much
35:25in the writing
35:25which gave us
35:27a character to play
35:28so we had to invent
35:29them ourselves
35:30Put out an APB
35:31You said it would be
35:32too late
35:33It's too late
35:33to stop it
35:50You've got Bodie who's a
35:51sort of bonehead character
35:53Don't get any argument
35:54from me
35:54Very much a sort of
35:5670s hard man
35:57And Bodie was a sport like that
35:59Sir
35:59Yes sir
36:00Doyle
36:00Sir
36:01It was the coffee
36:02you know
36:02The coffee machine
36:04Fucking down all the time
36:06when they talk like that
36:07You've got Martin Shaw
36:08who's the
36:09Kevin Keegan
36:10with
36:10a liberal attitude
36:14Doyle was
36:15always played
36:16the sort of
36:17more gentleman
36:18like for goodness sake
36:19Bodie
36:19Thank you
36:19And then you've got
36:21Cowley
36:21who's a sort of
36:22very much a throwback
36:23to British films
36:24of the 1950s
36:25the sort of
36:25barking
36:26Sergeant Major
36:27type character
36:27So get over there
36:29Fast
36:29The professionals
36:30were suave
36:31and sophisticated
36:32but the nation
36:33was divided over them
36:35Which one was
36:36better looking?
36:38If you liked
36:39the professionals
36:40you had to like
36:41one or the other
36:42I was totally
36:43in love
36:46with Lewis Collins
36:47I have got a secret
36:49to tell you
36:50You
36:51are her favourite
36:56That was my idea
37:00of
37:01a dark
37:02swarthy
37:03looking
37:03hunky bloke
37:04and he was so cool
37:05Right credit card
37:06opened so many doors
37:07Oh God
37:08this is so bad
37:12In 1977
37:14the empire
37:15was strong
37:15Elizabeth II's reign
37:17had lasted
37:1825 great years
37:19and to mark
37:21this occasion
37:21there was to be
37:22an enormous celebration
37:23the length
37:23and breadth
37:24of the country
37:25for queen
37:26and for country
37:27and a day off
37:28in school
37:29which is really
37:30the main thing
37:31right?
37:33The jubilee
37:34was a memorable day
37:36and had to be
37:37commemorated
37:38in the traditional way
37:39which meant
37:40buying a plate
37:42or at least
37:43a mug
37:44I've got quite a collection
37:45of 1977
37:46silver jubilee
37:47memorabilia
37:48and it's all
37:48been kept
37:49out of a tongue
37:50in cheek
37:50and collected
37:51through a kind
37:52of a subversive way
37:55I know I've got
37:56a lovely plate
37:57from 1977
37:58the stupid little flags
38:00perfect condition
38:03the images of the queen
38:04that were allowed
38:05to be printed
38:05are just absolutely
38:07hilarious
38:07and the mugs
38:08and everything around
38:09it was just
38:10brilliant
38:11I've got in the region
38:13I suppose
38:13about 250 mugs
38:15not all different
38:16some of them
38:16are sets
38:17you just don't realise
38:18how dated
38:201977
38:20the queen
38:21and the way
38:22we celebrate it
38:22looked
38:23it was very
38:24very funny
38:24in actual fact
38:25it was very charming
38:27it was so banal
38:28in 1977
38:29there wasn't the cynicism
38:30that was going to come in
38:32ten years later
38:33so there was great warmth
38:34and love
38:35and that's my abiding memory
38:36of it
38:36and of course
38:37this incredible figure
38:39in this shocking pink
38:47I was one of the senior footmen
38:50at the palace
38:50at that time
38:52as we left the palace
38:54the queen came round
38:55she looked at us
38:56and she said
38:56the boys can't walk
38:58all the way to St Paul's
38:59with those pumps on
39:00which we were very grateful for
39:02because they were very uncomfortable
39:04and she said
39:05get slip-ons
39:07now there's the horses
39:09and there's horse muck
39:10comes onto the road
39:12that we were supposed
39:13to walk through this
39:15a lot of us
39:16didn't want to
39:16basically
39:17with the tights
39:18and everything we had on
39:19in case
39:20perhaps we skidded
39:21or something
39:24I was a girl guide
39:26a patrol leader
39:27so took all that military
39:29sort of thing
39:29quite seriously
39:30really excited
39:31about carrying the flag
39:35the children went in
39:36fancy dress
39:37that sort of thing
39:37red, white and blue
39:38totem poles
39:39whatever they were
39:40the parties
39:41the dressings up
39:42that brought everyone together
39:44and I think anything
39:45that brings people together
39:46must be good
39:47it must be
39:48these children are gonna have
39:50a very good party
39:59maybe their schools
40:00were let out early
40:02to have a party
40:03he did get a day off school
40:05it meant a lot to the children
40:06I feel
40:07and the youngsters
40:08because it was special
40:19I was a punk in 1977
40:21so obviously it would have
40:22nothing to do with
40:23anything like the Queen's Jubilee
40:26and even though I hated school
40:27and even though I hated school
40:27I remember trudging
40:28resolutely
40:29and hanging out by the gates
40:30and getting a caretaker
40:31to let me in
40:32so I could go to school
40:33on that day
40:33because I did not want
40:34to be allowed
40:35to go home and watch it on TV
40:36which I thought was disgusting
40:44In 1977 in Britain
40:46a band of rebels
40:48disillusioned with the establishment
40:50burst onto the music scene
40:52their weapons were
40:53a song
40:54and a safety pin
40:55and a God save the Queen
40:57they were the Sex Pistons
41:05God save the Queen
41:08the fascist regime
41:11they made you a moron
41:14God save the Queen
41:16you know
41:16the fascist regime
41:17and all that
41:18it upset so many people
41:20extreme distaste
41:23I do remember
41:24being quite sort of shocked
41:26but then thinking
41:27hey what the hell
41:28you bought it then
41:30to say that you were
41:31challenging system
41:32and your parents hated it
41:33and your grandparents hated it
41:35I think it's just trash
41:36by the way
41:36there's no future
41:38no future
41:40no future for you
41:42it was an alternative
41:44national anthem
41:45you know
41:45it's a symbolic attack
41:48on ways of controlling
41:49the way people think
41:50about themselves
41:52and their place
41:53in the world
41:54God save the Queen
41:55the fascist regime
41:56she made you a moron
41:58yes the Queen
41:59would be concerned
42:00because it wasn't
42:02a personal attack
42:02on her personally
42:03it was what she represents
42:04no I think it should have
42:06been banned
42:06quite honestly
42:07banned
42:08I wish I could have
42:09banned it
42:14one week after EMI
42:16dumped the sex pistols
42:17A&M records picked them up
42:19and staged a contract
42:20signing ceremony
42:21in front of Buckingham Palace
42:23and to sign outside
42:25Buckingham Palace
42:27showed very clearly
42:29that there was
42:31barbarians at the gates
42:33ready to knock them down
42:37someone thought it would be
42:38wonderful to go on a news
42:39programme
42:40no no
42:40what was the rude word
42:42shit
42:43it was live
42:44go on you've got another
42:45five seconds
42:46say something outrageous
42:47you dirty bastard
42:48go on again
42:49that man who talked like that
42:51and he was absolutely
42:51outraged
42:52and you just think
42:52oh god
42:53thank god for punk
42:55because it changed
42:56it changed something
42:58I'll be seeing you soon
43:00I have
43:00I'm not seeing you again
43:01I am an anti-christ
43:05I am an anti-christ
43:08I adored the fact
43:09that they were so bad
43:11what did you think of them?
43:13crap
43:13by being bad
43:14I thought they were good
43:16brilliant
43:17what did you like about them?
43:19everything
43:19the way they dress
43:20the way they
43:21they just
43:21the way they sing
43:23everything
43:23well I think seeing the pistols
43:25was like stepping on a landmine
43:28you know
43:29it just blew up
43:30your whole world view
43:31the audience was this angry beast
43:33that Rotten was winding up
43:34and the look
43:35and the theatre
43:36of the whole thing
43:38was electric
43:39I got no reason
43:41it's not too much
43:42get our way
43:44I know
43:47how to learn
43:50people of Cyrus
43:51it struck a chord
43:52you know
43:53and we became
43:53the
43:55you know
43:56the standard bearers
43:57for that whole
43:58generation of people
44:04over the last 12 months
44:05punk rock
44:06has become
44:06almost a battle cry
44:08in British society
44:09for many people
44:09it's a bigger threat
44:10to our way of life
44:11than Russian communism
44:12or hyperinflation
44:14degrading and disgusting
44:15with our children
44:16to hear and see
44:17such things
44:21I'm good looking
44:22and I have a good figure
44:23in girls like me
44:24well it's lowering
44:25the standard
44:26of our people
44:27I've never seen
44:28or heard
44:29the sex pistols
44:30and frankly
44:31I'm rather glad
44:31I didn't
44:32because after all
44:33all pop
44:33you sound to me
44:34rather like
44:34tomcats being put
44:36through a men's
44:36it frightened people
44:40it frightened the police
44:41it frightened old people
44:43it frightened
44:44the state really
44:45and it rocked
44:46you know
44:46it rocked
44:47British society
44:49I think it was the last
44:50time when you were
44:51brought up at school
44:52believing in the kind
44:54of residue of empire
44:55by the mid 70s
44:57I think people like
44:58the sex pistols
44:58coming out of schools
44:59whenever they did
45:01realised that
45:02there was basically
45:03just a slag heap
45:04waiting for them
45:05I wanted to do
45:06something for me
45:06because look at me
45:07now
45:08I'm nothing
45:25I don't have any heroes
45:28they're all useless
45:30the sex pistols
45:31current record
45:32God Save the Queen
45:33is at number one
45:34in the capital headline today
45:35there was no number one
45:37that week
45:39it's like their knighthood
45:40really that
45:41you know
45:41that's better than
45:43a knighthood
45:43isn't it
45:43you can't have number one
45:45because the sex pistols
45:45are number one
45:46so number one
45:47has to go this week
45:48God Save the Queen
45:49was the number one single
45:51in Jubilee week
45:53banned from playing it anywhere
45:55the sex pistols
45:56took to the River Thames
45:57on Jubilee Day itself
45:59forget the feeling
46:01you've been trapped
46:01banned on the land
46:04we decided to play
46:05our tribute
46:06to the Queen
46:07from the river
46:08between the hours
46:10of 6 and 8pm
46:11the sex pistols
46:12played their songs
46:14beneath the bridges
46:15of London
46:21God Save the Queen
46:24the fascist regime
46:27it made you a moron
46:30potential pace bomb
46:33we never set out to shop
46:36we just set out to
46:38tell the story as we see it
46:39speak our minds
46:40be blunt
46:42be full for it
46:44England's three men
46:46God Save the Queen
46:58the river police
46:59encircled us
47:01and no matter how many
47:02Newcastle brown ale bottles
47:04were thrown over the side
47:07we were eventually drawn back
47:12and I and others
47:15were arrested
47:17we mean it
47:18man
47:20and that was history
47:29I'm the Robot King
47:31from Planets R
47:32I'll beam away
47:34your Milky Boss
47:35oh no you won't
47:36it's the Milky Boss
47:38King
47:40the Milky Boss
47:41the Milky Boss
47:41is running
47:42the Milky Boss
47:43the Milky Boss
47:43is just conquering
47:44the Milky Boss
47:46is in every fight
47:47this old Milky Boss
47:48the Milky Boss
47:50is running
47:54being in Star Wars
47:56changed my life
47:57it made Princess Leia
47:59famous
48:00and I just
48:01happened to look like her
48:02it made me into
48:03an action figure
48:04a Pez dispenser
48:05a shampoo bottle
48:06and a soap
48:07and no matter
48:09where I go
48:09or what I accomplish
48:10in this life
48:12it will say
48:12on my gravestone
48:14here lies
48:15Princess Leia Organa
48:17and her incredibly
48:18weird hairstyle
48:22Joey get us out of here
48:23it's here
48:24it's that movie
48:25Star Wars was massive
48:27the most obsessive thing
48:29that I'd ever got into
48:30I have you now
48:33wow
48:34into the garbage
48:37unbelievable
48:38unbelievable
48:43there had been a whole generation
48:45maybe two generations
48:46of children
48:46growing up
48:47without this kind of
48:49swashbuckling action
48:50adventure
48:51for luck
48:54we knew that the science fiction
48:56fans would all turn out
48:57because they knew about it
48:58and they were going to come
48:58the first week
48:59because that's when
49:00they wanted to see it
49:00it was only after the first week
49:02and the lines kept coming
49:04that we realized
49:05that we might be on to something
49:06the attendance of Star Wars
49:08has been almost astronomic
49:10queues are still forming
49:11in America
49:12more money was taken
49:13at box offices
49:14in one week
49:15than for the prestigious
49:16George
49:21people wanted clear-cut heroes
49:23and clear-cut villains
49:24and clear-cut morality
49:25so you have
49:26you know
49:26almost a sort of
49:27stripped down comic strip
49:29kind of plot
49:30I'd wanted to be a priest
49:32but I liked fighting
49:34and this combined the two
49:36because you had the spiritual
49:37but you got to cut
49:38blokes' arms off
49:39didn't you
49:39with lightsabers
49:41sort of a fairy tale
49:43there's a princess
49:44and there's
49:44the wise man
49:46and there's the rogue
49:47and there's the hero
49:48everybody has that
49:50Leia fantasy
49:51help me Obi-Wan Kenobi
49:53you're my only hope
49:55she's beautiful
49:57beautiful Harrison Ford
49:58not a bad bit of rescuing
50:00we just talked about
50:01Lick's gunwaker
50:02there's a very bad feeling
50:03about this
50:04for a lot of these people
50:05it was like
50:06living through the whole experience
50:08it was sitting through two hours
50:09and actually living
50:10through the adventure
50:11and they wanted to do it again
50:15I've gone to see Luke Skywalker
50:17I don't want anybody
50:18to see a film
50:20314 times
50:21you watch the movie
50:23a few more times
50:23you start going
50:24oh
50:25Han Solo
50:26Han Solo's cool
50:27Han Solo
50:28and he's my favourite goodie
50:30when you start
50:31growing up
50:32yeah growing up
50:33when you grow up
50:35you start going
50:36oh no
50:36Darth Vader's the cool
50:37oh Stormtroopers
50:38now Mark
50:39only a master of evil
50:42not
50:42all of that energy
50:44was there
50:45in the archetypal sense
50:47of a classic myth
50:48what's this?
50:49prestige of being able
50:50to save scenes
50:51in Star Wars
50:52is something akin to royalty
50:53really
50:53it's a good film
50:54but get a life
50:59in Britain alone
51:0030 different manufacturers
51:02have cashed in
51:03with a galaxy of goodies
51:06merchandising
51:06it became a huge
51:07profit centre
51:08and it was really
51:08the first time
51:09that it had ever
51:09been done on that scale
51:10everybody was sort of
51:11astonished by it
51:12you could buy
51:13Star Wars
51:14anything
51:15there was nothing
51:15you couldn't buy
51:23I am so many
51:24different sizes
51:25of dolls
51:26that it's distressing
51:27and I always thought
51:28they looked like
51:29Eddie Munster
51:32I was obsessed with it
51:33and I only had
51:35one figure
51:36I had as a kid
51:37three and a half inch figures
51:38and those were to me
51:39it
51:40I had Obi-Wan
51:43and he was cast
51:44in flows
51:47and I was
51:47I was so gutted
51:48because I got
51:49I really started
51:50to resent Obi-Wan
51:51and it was wrong
51:52with me
51:53and I ended up
51:54this is like
51:55so awful
51:56but I sawed
51:57his legs off
52:01once you've got them
52:02all you still
52:03kind of
52:04want more
52:05my mate
52:06had all of them
52:07do you know what I mean
52:08and he was a nice
52:09enough lad
52:09but he wasn't that
52:09interesting
52:10but you knew
52:11you were playing
52:11with him for all
52:12the wrong reasons
52:12what is it
52:14your father's
52:15lightsaber
52:16the lightsaber
52:18when I got it
52:19it was like
52:19it was a torch
52:21with a piece of plastic
52:22on the end
52:23it wasn't quite
52:23you couldn't even play
52:24with it in the dark
52:25and it was like
52:25summer
52:26whack whack whack whack
52:27because all the kids
52:28used to beat me up
52:29with it
52:29and it like
52:30it stings
52:31but it doesn't leave a mark
52:32I did have an ex-husband
52:34that stuck pins
52:34in one of the dolls
52:37to be beat up
52:38with your own
52:39lightsaber
52:39as a kid
52:40with him
52:40said over you
52:41feel the force
52:42you little jedi
52:43shite
52:43I was a soap
52:46a shampoo
52:47I was sheets
52:48star wars
52:49dovey
52:49star wars
52:50garage doors
52:51you know like
52:52can we have one of them
52:52we haven't got a garage
52:53well can we have one
52:54can we build a garage
52:55star wars pyjamas
52:56star wars
52:57lunchbox
52:58the original cardboard
52:58cut out death star
52:59star wars wallpaper
53:01it's in mint condition
53:03star wars
53:04bloody
53:05bobble hats
53:06it's beautiful
53:07you couldn't nick money
53:09quick enough
53:09to get the stuff
53:10do you know what I mean
53:11if money is all that you love
53:12then that's what you'll receive
53:15we signed away our likeness
53:17we weren't gonna use our likeness
53:18we weren't gonna need it ourselves anyway
53:21this isn't mine
53:22thank god
53:30and there you have it
53:321977
53:34a year of struggle
53:35a year of celebration
53:36a year of change
53:38and a year I've been trying desperately
53:40to forget
53:42clearly without much success
53:45because you and me woman
53:48we got a lot of things on our minds
53:51you know what I mean
53:56walking on the beaches
53:57looking at the beaches
54:00well you just take a look over there
54:05is she trying to get out of that clitoris
54:10liberation for women
54:11that's what I preach
54:13preacher man
54:21next week
54:22it's 1978
54:26I'm Linda Carter
54:27and welcome to the
54:291978
54:32whether it's still called Simon
54:33I don't know
54:34it was always an odd name
54:34Kenny
54:36why doesn't the Incredible Hulk
54:37have more dialogue
54:38we can do anything
54:40a song at the piano
54:41from the young American singer
54:43Dean Friedman
54:44oh boy
54:45Kate Bush
54:46nipples
54:47you couldn't miss the nipples
54:48confirmed
54:49you could hang teacups on them
54:51the top trumps
54:52were fantastic
54:52you don't really believe that
54:55dum dum dum dum
54:56dum dum dum dum
55:01jump a ride
55:02free
55:02riding
55:03driving
55:03bullet
55:04wearing
55:04all dressed up
55:05getting down
55:05striking out
55:06thinking
55:06buzz
55:07jump
55:07disco bump
55:07in
55:0817
55:08and