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The Crown S05E06 [Full Movie] [Recommended]Full EP - Full
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00:00You
00:17Buckingham Palace
00:18Certainly, sir
00:24Last winter, we shot over 12,000 pheasants between us, but that doesn't account for individual tallies
00:31So to spice things up, I told Lester to put the names of guns and individual scores up in the
00:36smoking room
00:37That's a wonderful idea
00:39Look at this salon war issue
00:41How many pheasants do you suppose Papa shot last weekend?
00:44It should be carmine pink, but instead it's almost lilac
00:47106 pheas
00:49This war's a horrible thing, but its effect on the ink supply is made for some remarkable shades
00:53Hunchie here!
00:58Hunchie here!
01:00Hunchie here!
01:01Hunchie here!
01:02Hunchie here!
01:05Hunchie here!
01:07Hunchie here!
01:15Hunchie here!
01:16Hunchie here!
01:18Hunchie here!
01:28Hunchie here!
01:29Hunchie here!
01:45Hunchie here!
01:47Hunchie here!
02:11Hunchie here!
02:13Hunchie here!
02:24Hunchie here!
02:26Hunchie here!
02:31Hunchie here!
02:33Hunchie here!
02:35Hunchie here!
02:37Hunchie here!
02:39Hunchie here!
02:40Hunchie here!
02:41Hunchie here!
02:42Hunchie here!
03:12Better than mine
03:23Николай Александрович, Александра Петровна
03:27Да
03:29Мне прислали дебешу касательно бывшей императорской семьи
03:33Вы должны немедленно одеться
03:36Мне предписано отправить вас в более безопасное место
03:41Повторяю, вас перевезут в более безопасное место
03:49Это кусок Георга, я не оставить нас спить
03:52Не бросит нас на произвол судьбы
03:54Ты думаешь, он спозвёт?
03:57Он подождётся на микроволке?
04:00Конечно, нет
04:06Слава Богу, слава Богу
04:14Алексей, душенька, просыпайся
04:19Девочки, девочки, мы уезжаем, просыпайтесь, просыпайтесь
04:23Кусан Георг, собирайтесь
04:25Собирайтесь, мы уезжаем
04:27Мы уезжаем, мы уезжаем
04:31Мы уезжаем в Англию
04:39Субтитры создавал DimaTorzok
05:01Ну девочки, ну пожалуйста
05:08Ну и, как говорится, семейный портрет на дорожку
05:11Пусть все видят и знают, что с вами ничего не случилось
05:19Да, конечно
05:24Пусть все видят и знают, что с вами ничего не случилось
05:26А что, тут и стульев нет?
05:29Принести я сделаю
05:31Сейчас
05:33Девочки, вы подождите
05:34У вас стул обожался
05:35Быстро
05:36Услушайся, хорошо
05:37Так точно
05:38Ну помалючи
05:40Вот тут и тут
05:49Красавец ты мой
05:51Нитеснитесь, сударний
05:52Нитеснитесь
05:54С той стороны тоже
05:56Хорошо
06:02Мы готовы
06:04Фотограф
06:06Скоро зайдет
06:08Долго не задержимся
06:19Долго не задержимся
06:44Ввиду того, что ваши родственники в Европе продолжают наступление на советскую Россию
06:50Урал-исполком постановил вас расстрелять
06:54Что, что?
06:58Это зрачная революция
07:00Это зрачная революция
07:01Это зрачная революция
07:02Это зрачная революция
07:04Дальше
07:10Реак-бери
07:11Oh, my God.
07:41Oh, my God.
07:56Congratulations, gentlemen.
07:58Very good day.
08:02Shall we?
08:03As you can do to the day.
08:05To the day.
08:11Oh, my God.
08:23Come on, come on.
08:26Good.
08:30Oh, my God.
09:23Oh, my God.
09:26Oh, my God.
09:44Oh, my God.
10:38It must have been a fascinating trip.
10:42It was.
10:43The first Western leader to visit Moscow since the coup.
10:47I am curious to hear your impressions of Mr. Yeltsin.
10:50When the coup was launched, he could easily have compromised with the plotters, tried to make a deal with them,
10:56but he never wavered, and the people love him for it.
11:00That said, I'm not certain I've seen him sober yet.
11:06But I thought you had spent several days in his company.
11:09I did.
11:10He can't have been drunk all that time.
11:13I think he might have been.
11:20Not least because I think I may have been.
11:25But once you get used to the table slamming and the profanity, he's straightforward and likable.
11:34And it turns out...
11:38Mr. Yeltsin is something of an Anglophile.
11:42Really?
11:43Obsessed with the idea of meeting me, apparently.
11:46And receiving a formal invitation to the palace.
11:49That's nice.
11:51Is that all you have to say?
11:52Sorry, I'm late, that's all.
11:53What for now?
11:55Flight to Munich, then to Hamburg for a Duke of Edinburgh award ceremony, followed by a World Wildlife Fund event
12:02in Brazil, then Alaska, Canada, then back to London.
12:07We managed to combine it all with a couple of carriage-driving competitions, too.
12:13Ah, here it is.
12:15Did you ever get tired?
12:17Only by sitting still.
12:19We're different that way.
12:22Yes.
12:24More and more different.
12:30Right.
12:31I'm off.
12:36See you in three weeks.
12:37Yes.
13:05The Duke of Edinburgh had invited me to watch him compete at the Cannon Ground, which is an easy course,
13:13so long as the shackle doesn't pop off as you're crossing the Duke Hunt.
13:17Which it did for His Royal Highness, who, I seem to recall, refused to let go of the reins.
13:24Before I flew through the air like a graceful parabola, landing on my head in the grass.
13:30And yet, still, he persuaded me to pursue carriage driving as a hobby.
13:34And I've never looked back.
13:46The Duke of Edinburgh's award was hailed today as the world's leading youth achievement programme.
13:53It's founder and patron, Prince Philip, was in Germany for the occasion.
13:57Then he set off for a whistle-stop tour of Sao Paulo, Alaska, and Nova Scotia.
14:02A typically busy schedule for a public servant who, in his eighth decade, shows no sign of slowing down.
14:09The Queen, meanwhile, is preparing to meet the Russian president, Boris Yeltsin, on his first official visit to Britain.
14:16The trip heralds a new era of strong ties and cooperation.
14:21The first Anglo-Russian friendship treaty since 1766 will be signed.
14:29It was Lenin himself who refugedly said,
14:33There are decades where nothing happens.
14:36There are weeks where decades happen.
14:39The Prime Minister has grown rather fond of President Yeltsin and is keen that we give him lunch at the
14:44palace.
14:45Yes, I'd heard that.
14:49I did a little research on Mr. Yeltsin.
14:52It turns out that as a younger man, he was a regional official in the Urals.
14:58First secretary of the party committee in Svedlovsk, Oblist, to be precise.
15:06Svedlovsk is the name given to the city formerly known as Yekaterinburg.
15:12Yes.
15:14Which is where Ipatiev House was located.
15:24Go on.
15:37Welcome to Buckingham Palace, your ex-wife.
15:39Would you like to follow me?
15:43Should I take a cruise?
16:01Would you like to know a secret about the Russian people?
16:05Please, please.
16:10In our heart of hearts, we are all still monarchists.
16:14Even at the height of Stalin's purchase,
16:19when a Soviet citizen tells a story,
16:24we start by saying not once upon a time,
16:29but in the good為e цariske vreemme.
16:32In the goodитariiske times,
16:34to the good57atimes.
16:55Your majesty, I have a request that you would come to Moscow on a state visit to celebrate
17:10the end of communism and the restoration of democracy. I'm flattered by your invitation.
17:17But there is something you should have considered before extending it.
17:24What is it?
17:26Epatyev house.
17:29Where Zarniklas and his family, beloved cousins of my grandfather, King George V, were murdered by the Bolsheviks.
17:38I understand you personally gave the order for that house to be demolished, an act of great disrespect to my
17:46family's memory.
17:56Yes, its demolition was a shameful piece of communist barbarism.
18:03But it was the 1970s, and I was just a local functioner.
18:08And the orders came from the very top, from Andropov and Brezhnev themselves.
18:15The Romanov's deserve a decent burial.
18:26Your majesty, I agree.
18:33And you have my word, that I will do everything I can to restore their dignity.
18:39Good.
18:42Then we can discuss royal visits.
18:49Mr. President, on the left, please.
18:57That's it.
18:59And three, two, one.
19:03Gentlemen, on the top row.
19:06A little to your left, thank you.
19:08We all know well, the blood of Romanov's.
19:11On these horses, and not the Kremlin, I would recommend her to be careful in the expressions.
19:19And we can put her in the back.
19:25What did he say?
19:28How thrilled he is to be here.
19:31He's very kind.
19:33Very good.
19:44And thank you.
19:45And thank you.
20:16Ha, ha, ha, ha.
20:16Ha, ha, ha, ha.
20:48Ha, ha, ha.
20:49Ha, ha, ha.
20:52Ha, ha, ha, ha.
20:53Ha, ha, ha, ha.
20:54Ha, ha, ha, ha.
20:55Right here, right?
20:58And sure enough, they soon found bones.
21:09It was clear a horrific murder had taken place in line with historical accounts.
21:18Skulls smashed in by rifle butts, bullets embedded in temples.
21:35After the slaughter, it seems the Bolsheviks doused the bodies in acid, burned their clothes and buried them in a
21:44mass grave.
21:45What's that?
21:50The authorities are confident that these are indeed the Romanov remains.
21:57But because of the acid damage, the authentication process has hit something of a dead end.
22:05Russian pathologists have been painstakingly assembling the fragments, grouping them by sex and cross-referencing with dental records.
22:16But there's only so much they can do, which is why they have now come to us.
22:23And more particularly, His Royal Highness the Duke of Edinburgh.
22:34I'm told the best way to identify and authenticate the remains is through DNA.
22:40And it turns out the best, the only place in the world for bone DNA sequencing is here, in England.
22:48Aldermaston, yes.
22:50And apparently, because of the age of the bones, they can only use a particular kind of DNA that passes
22:56through the maternal line.
22:58Mitochondrial.
23:00Oh, you knew that?
23:02Yes.
23:03How?
23:06I read.
23:11Anyway, since your maternal grandmother, Princess Victoria of Hesse, was Empress Alexandra's elder sister, making the Tsar's wife.
23:21My great aunt, yes.
23:23It turns out you can be incredibly useful.
23:26That's a first.
23:28How?
23:29By helping them to prove if the remains are, or are not, Romanov's.
23:33By giving a sample of whatever it is that they need.
23:36Can you be more specific?
23:40Hair, blood, saliva?
23:43Didn't you ask?
23:46No.
23:49Why not?
23:51Weren't you curious?
23:53Not even a little bit?
24:02To get to my DNA, they took a sample of my blood, which they vacuum sealed in a plastic bag.
24:09Then they have to extract it.
24:10Yes.
24:11Using these strange machines.
24:13Look, you see?
24:14I did a drawing there.
24:16Then to separate it all out, they use this centrifuge.
24:20Oh, yes.
24:21Eventually, all you're left with is this tiny amount of DNA, which they subject to an electrical current.
24:29It's amazing what they're doing.
24:30500 years ago, they'd have been called alchemists.
24:33It is alchemy.
24:34What started out as a file of my blood has been transformed into this image.
24:39A unique pattern of parallel bands called lanes.
24:42The idea behind it is that we compare these bands with those of the Romanovs and, um...
24:50Hey, presto.
24:51It was a match?
24:53Yes.
24:53With 98.5% certainty.
24:56Which means the case can be closed and the Romanovs buried with dignity.
25:00All thanks to you?
25:02No, thanks to science.
25:03No, to you.
25:05You were the key.
25:06It was your DNA that unlocked a mystery.
25:09All I did was give a sample.
25:10Science did the rest.
25:11But thanks to this, we'll be able to learn much about your family and their final days.
25:18You don't find this exciting?
25:21Seeing one's entire essence and history...
25:24What, reduced to a series of banal, anonymous lines?
25:27I'm sorry.
25:28There is nothing banal about this.
25:30This is our essence, our lives, written in another glorious language.
25:35Nigel, can you just keep it down, please?
25:38I'm sorry, sir.
25:39I'm a little deaf.
25:41And the implications that no matter what choices we make, our basic code remains the same is so...
25:49Determinous?
25:52Profound.
25:54We're used to looking at genetic predisposition for diseases.
25:57But what about behavior?
25:59Our decisions?
26:00Do we really have any choice at all?
26:03Is any of it really an accident?
26:05That we're even here, in this moment, talking about this?
26:11Or...
26:12Is it somehow all preordained?
26:23Where do you live?
26:25Where do you live?
26:28I live in Moscow.
26:30I live in Moscow.
26:31It's had the most extraordinary effect on him.
26:33Not just the science, but connecting with his own past.
26:38You know how he's always been.
26:40Restlessly searching and scratching away, trying to make sense of who he is or what he is.
26:45He's always been something of a mongrel.
26:47Well, the uncovering of the Romanov remains seems to have reawakened a fascination in him with all things Russian.
26:55Why?
26:56The person he's related to, the Tsarina, was born Alex of Hesse and was German, not Russian.
27:05It's German as white sausage.
27:08Don't tell Philip that.
27:09Because now that it has been confirmed that we are going to Russia, he's been reading book after book.
27:15Please don't.
27:16Yes, connecting with his orthodox roots.
27:19God help us.
27:20Oh, I'm all for it.
27:21It's so good to have him engaged again.
27:24As recently as felt as though we've been growing apart.
27:27But this Russian trip feels like a shared adventure.
27:31A shared passion.
27:34We have so few shared interests these days.
28:00What did the window cleaner see in the Kremlin?
28:06Nothing.
28:08That's the trouble with iron curtains.
28:17It's very good.
28:35That was a nice podcast that everyone had a great day.
28:39This weekend, we were all for great days.
28:40We were all for this present, right?
28:54I don't know.
28:55I was in the middle of it.
28:55It's very nice.
28:56It's very good.
28:57It was pretty sweet.
28:57That's it.
29:03I'm not sure you were all for that.
29:03We were all for a happy place while we were living in the world.
29:42Very nice to see you.
29:44Ваше Величество.
29:45Ваше Величество.
29:47Ваше Весочество.
30:03Ваше Величество.
30:05Ваше Величество.
30:28Ваше Величество.
30:30history thanks in part to family ties there has always been a strong bond
30:41between our countries but in recent years that close alliance has become
30:51estranged warm ties of kinship became frozen into a decades-long winter
31:09there have been times where we have seemed to live in different worlds
31:40in making this historic trip I hope to usher in not merely a thaw but a comprehensive new footing
31:51based on cooperation understanding and respect
32:05oh
32:11oh
32:13oh
32:33A new era of partnership
32:36in which both of us
32:40can flourish together.
33:20this is very disappointing
33:23we come all this way on the understanding that my relatives will finally be buried to discover
33:28the burial can't take place why not one or two of the bodies still remain unidentified
33:33and russian orthodox authorities continue to demand certainty they haven't mistaken the
33:38czar's body for his cook for example this is before we get to infighting between the Russian
33:43government and various factions of the Romanov family not to mention the local authorities of
33:49Moscow st. Petersburg and Yekaterinburg about when and where the burial should take place I'll give
33:54it time the great Russian bear is taking its first steps after years in captivity and suffering bound
34:02to be dysfunction and it's not just disappointing regarding that disappointing for us too I had
34:13hoped we would spend more time together on this trip I've barely seen you I've been busy clearly
34:19exploring among other things the grotesque injustices visited upon my relatives by your relatives let's
34:26not get proprietorial about relatives and reminding myself not only how much I gained but how much I
34:35gave up when I married you such as my career my autonomy my faith you might recall I was born
34:45honestly a
34:46convention of genealogists couldn't work out what you were born I was born Orthodox just one of our many
34:54many differences how else are we different after 47 years of marriage we might ask ourselves how are we
35:05still alike we've got different interests different passions different churches I'm more energetic more
35:19more curious curious your desire for calm for stability for silence not question not to probe not to provoke
35:30interrogate has sometimes left me what lonely I wish this DNA business had never happened
35:48my disenchantment long predates that oh so tell me how have you addressed this disenchantment and loneliness
36:10is it not the time and place I disagree it's the perfect time and place
36:18well I've had to seek companionship well I've had to seek companionship elsewhere
36:24companionship yes companionship intellectual companionship spiritual companionship
36:35oh Lord I told you this is the wrong time who
36:48well in essence it's a group of us a gang a community of friends focused on carriage driving and competitions
37:00and house parties all right
37:05and I suppose the closest friendship is with Penny
37:09and I suppose the closest friendship is with Penny
37:11Rumsey
37:16your godson's wife
37:18friendship Lilibet
37:20friendship Lilibet
37:21she's half your age
37:24couldn't it just be a secretary a nice girl from the typing pool with a short skirt and adoring
37:29eyes it's not that sort of companionship that would just make me even more lonely penny is in
37:33the family a married woman yes and entirely focused on her marriage and her duty who would
37:39never compromise you but it does compromise me it compromises me me as your soulmate
38:03and if I ask you
38:09to end your companionship that would be a mistake
38:18I don't want to be asked to give up something when I've done nothing wrong
38:24but I accept that the newspapers and some other idiots might see me in the company of a beautiful
38:29young woman and well jump to the wrong conclusions so I'd like you to do something
38:40what I'd like you to befriend penny
38:44I'd like you to be seen with penny
38:46you're asking me to legitimize your
38:50my friendship my companionship yes
38:56you might learn something too
39:03tell me what would I learn
39:04how the Romanovs really met their death
39:07we already know that
39:09they were slaughtered by the Bolsheviks
39:11the Bolsheviks pulled their triggers and used their bayonets
39:17but who has the blood on their hands
39:20nevermind significant
39:20who has an arrow
39:22thank you
39:22thank you
39:22thank you
39:24thank you
39:25thank you
39:36thank you
39:37thank you
39:38thank you
39:39thank you
39:50thank the тест
40:44Welcome to Windsor Castle, Lady Ronson.
40:47The Queen is down by the stables.
40:49Carly?
40:53Indeed, ma'am, though, sanction is looking a little spooky, I'm afraid.
40:56Oh.
40:57He may be troubled.
40:58Oh, he hasn't lost his appetite, has he?
41:01No, clearly.
41:02Well, just keep up the good work.
41:04Okay.
41:06Lady Rumsey has arrived, ma'am.
41:12It's Emily, isn't it?
41:14Yes, ma'am.
41:15How are you settling in?
41:16Very well, thank you, ma'am.
41:17They're keeping you hard at work.
41:19Of course.
41:20Well, thank you very much.
41:22I'll pop back in tomorrow.
41:23See you tomorrow, ma'am.
41:32Good morning.
41:33Good morning, Majesty.
41:34Very hearty breakfast.
41:36He's a greedy lad.
41:37Mm.
41:39Your Majesty.
41:41Shall we walk?
41:50The Duke of Edinburgh, ma'am.
41:55Said you might have a theory about who's to blame for the murder of the Russian imperial family.
42:01Ah, it's not my theory, ma'am.
42:03I'm just a curious student.
42:05That's such an attractive quality.
42:08Curiosity.
42:09Some historians suggest that your grandparents, George V and Queen Mary, were presented with a clear opportunity to save the
42:17Romanians, but chose not to.
42:19I can't imagine such a thing.
42:22King George and Tsar Nicholas were first cousins.
42:25They even looked alike.
42:26No, my grandfather would never, could never, do anything to harm his beloved Nicky.
42:33It's possible the motivation came from elsewhere, as suggested by one or two other accounts I read.
42:40Hmm.
42:40How many did you read?
42:42Oh, half a dozen.
42:43Good heavens.
42:45On the English side.
42:47A few more on the Russian side.
42:48Ah.
42:49That will have impressed him.
42:53And have been alerted to a source here at the archives in Windsor.
43:08Hello, Ruth.
43:10Good morning.
43:13Good morning.
43:15Your Majesty.
43:22So.
43:22Yes.
43:25The diaries of young Edward VIII, where he described a breakfast with his parents in 1917, and a letter that
43:35had come from the Prime Minister, Lloyd George.
43:40The letter stated that he had agreed to send a ship to bring the Romanovs to safety here in England,
43:45but wanted the King's agreement.
43:49Shall I go back with a yes?
43:53To their rescue.
43:59Show it to your mother.
44:02Her judgment is unfailingly better than mine.
44:11What say you, my lord?
44:14Do we send the ship?
44:21No.
44:28You see, there was a rivalry between the two women.
44:31Oh.
44:35Excuse me.
44:47Yes.
44:48So there was a rivalry between the two women that went all the way back to their time as young
44:54German princesses, before they were married.
44:57Alexandra was prettier and from a grander family.
45:01But it was my clever grandmother, Mary, the Queen Victoria initially wanted the eldest son of Edward VII.
45:06Yes.
45:08But only after Alexandra had first rejected him and married Nikolai Romanov instead.
45:15Hence the rivalry.
45:16Mary didn't want the prettier grander.
45:21It's a nice theory.
45:25But quite aside from the fact that my grandmother was devotedly married to King George, I'm surprised none of the
45:30thirteen books or more, which you so impressively read in all their languages, focused on what I believe to be
45:35the real reason Queen Mary didn't want to have Alexandra here in England.
45:39And it had nothing to do with rivalry between two women.
45:43My grandmother was far too busy protecting the monarchy against a popular revolt to worry about being looked down upon
45:49by Alexandra.
45:51Giving asylum to the Romanovs presented a much greater threat.
45:56There was widespread opposition to the Tsarina in England, as she was seen as pro-German at the very time
46:03we were at war with them.
46:09Your Majesty.
46:13The truth is, Queen Mary was devastated when she heard they'd been killed.
46:20Your Majesty, the Tsar, is dead.
46:32But a sovereign, one cannot show those emotions, so one buries them.
46:40And that silence becomes part of one's own DNA.
46:47But how commendable of you to show such interest and do all that reading.
46:55Since the death of my daughter, I sort of disappeared into books.
47:04And carriage driving?
47:06Yes.
47:07Yes.
47:09That's been a huge help.
47:10It's quite a gang.
47:12So I gather.
47:16It's not Norton's thing.
47:19No.
47:22Our interests, our lives seem to grow further and further apart.
47:30I could never leave him.
47:32Nor Broadlands.
47:35Leonora's grave is there.
47:37And I need to see that every day.
47:40And the house needs me to focus on it.
47:43He needs me too.
47:46I'm glad to hear of your sense of duty.
47:50And of your commitment to your marriage.
47:52And to a house that has been so important to me personally.
47:57Philip and I honeymooned at Broadlands, as you know.
48:00Yes.
48:01Yes.
48:09It's important people understand how close the ties are between our families.
48:14And should they happen to see the Duke of Edinburgh out and about with a beautiful younger companion,
48:19It would be an irritation if they felt at liberty to jump to any wrong conclusions.
48:26So why don't you come in the car with me to church this Christmas at Sandringham.
48:31To nip all that in the bud.
48:49smell?
48:59Yes.
48:59It won't.
49:08It would be an early afternoon.
49:09I will tell you.
49:16I have someone.
49:16Oh, thank you.
49:19letter in the house.
49:19I have someone.
50:29Merry Christmas.
50:43Merry Christmas.
50:46Merry Christmas.
50:46This is Timmy.
50:47Please come and live in Buckingham Palace with me.
51:17the prime minister your majesty
51:19prime minister your majesty
51:23i'm delighted to say russian scientists have now confirmed the final set of remains as czar
51:29nicholas which means the official burial of the imperial family can take place
51:34oh good in his phone call with me positively giddy president yeltsin said he hoped a line
51:42could be drawn under the matter once and for all and that friendship and cooperation between
51:46our two countries could resume was that giddiness or or tipsiness good question
51:56i believe yeltsin is sincere in his desire for democracy one just wishes he led with greater
52:05sobriety authority reports out of russia suggest the landscape is dangerously unstable
52:10and the worry is it will result in the need for hard-line leadership again and we will
52:16be back to square one except i prefer to think of square one with russia as a state of friendship
52:24not enmity one forgets our two nations thanks in part to family ties have been more successful
52:31as allies than enemies seen like that the revolution and cold war are a blip in an otherwise long
52:39and happy marriage speaking of happy marriages congratulations are in order your wedding
52:45anniversary this weekend yes 47 years and counting
52:55you and mrs major 24 years this year
53:04we must all be doing something right
53:15one of the most memorable accounts of a long successful marriage comes from dostoevsky's wife
53:23anna she and feodor were she said of contrasting character different temperaments entirely opposing views
53:34yet they never tried to change one another nor interfere with the other's soul
53:41this she believed enabled her and her husband to live in harmony
53:49by having nothing whatsoever in common
53:56the key to a happy marriage it seems
54:12no you're the least bit interested
54:16and leave it good talk good talk where's it going are you ready come along come along come along here
54:24now where's that where's that where's that let's go along here don'ts don'ts come along are you ready oh there
54:31you go
54:33very good very good that's another one who wants a treat who wants a treat come here come here
54:42good good good good
54:47good good guys
54:47good
54:47good
54:47good
54:47good
54:47good
54:47Are you ready?
54:49Where's the door?
54:52Where's the door?
54:53Where's it?
55:18Where's the door?
55:46Transcription by CastingWords
56:16CastingWords
56:26CastingWords
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57:58CastingWords
57:59You
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