Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 7 weeks ago
The Crown S05E08 [Full Movie] [Full Story]Full EP - Full
Transcript
00:28Transcription by CastingWords
00:58Transcription by CastingWords
01:11Transcription by CastingWords
01:24Transcription by CastingWords
01:28has been renewed for a further 10 years.
01:35The fruits of months, indeed years,
01:39of careful negotiation over which I presided,
01:43and whose outcome, I should say,
01:45I played no small part in influencing.
01:50But will it be me who gets the credit?
01:54Oh, no.
01:56That will go to our illustrious director general
01:58in his Armani suits and his slip-on shoes,
02:03speaking a language that doesn't come from England,
02:06but from some management training course in America.
02:09There's no need to do this.
02:12A man so blinkered, so obsessed with the threat posed
02:16by these new satellite channels
02:18that he fails to see the glaringly obvious
02:20that it is our very difference from these channels
02:24upon which the survival of the BBC depends,
02:27not our similarity.
02:29It is our refusal to depart
02:31from the Wreathian public broadcasting ideals
02:35to inform,
02:37to educate,
02:38and only then to entertain
02:42that makes us who we are.
02:45Well, thank you, Gideon.
02:46And who are we?
02:47We are the British Broadcasting Corporation,
02:52the BBC.
02:55We're Aunty.
02:57A nickname I have always cherished.
03:00Why?
03:01Because Aunty
03:02always knows best.
03:05But does John Burt
03:07cherish the nickname
03:09Oh, no.
03:12To him,
03:13Aunty is an insult
03:14because it's not modern,
03:16it's not progressive,
03:18it's not avant-garde.
03:23Heaven's sake, John.
03:25What's not to love
03:26about a favourite aunt?
03:31I just thought,
03:34you're young,
03:35you might understand.
03:37But there is new trouble.
03:39I might understand it
03:40if it had been made
03:41within my lifetime.
03:42Yes, you're right,
03:43it's been with us for years.
03:45Might even be a rental.
03:46Elephant seals.
03:48Why don't you just buy
03:49a big new one?
03:50I don't want a big new one.
03:52But it would come
03:53with the right sockets
03:54and jacks.
03:55You could get satellite TV as well,
03:57with hundreds of different channels
03:58from all over the world.
03:59What?
04:00And abandon the BBC?
04:01I can't do that.
04:03You wouldn't be abandoning
04:04the BBC, Granny.
04:05Switching to satellite
04:06would be seen as a betrayal
04:07of the national broadcaster
04:08by the head of state.
04:10It would be treason.
04:11Like me becoming a Catholic.
04:13And just imagine this place
04:15with a huge horrid dish
04:16on the roof,
04:17like a spaceship.
04:18They could hide that.
04:19You could just close your ears,
04:21bury your head in the sand,
04:23and pretend you don't know
04:23what's going on.
04:25Yes, I think I can do that.
04:28I'll see if we could get you
04:29that specialist racing channel.
04:32You mean like at the betting shops?
04:34With night races?
04:35From America?
04:37I'd never do any work.
04:39You're a racehorse owner.
04:40It's part of your work.
04:44Our king's egg
04:47is still safe.
04:50Oh, yes, you're right.
04:52It does seem to have had better days.
04:58Even the televisions
04:59are metaphors in this place.
05:00Huh?
05:18Oh, no.
07:02Morning.
07:03Morning, Martin.
07:06Good morning.
07:07Good morning.
07:07My honour.
07:07Morning all.
07:08How are we?
07:08Good morning.
07:17Good morning.
07:19Got a second?
07:20Yeah.
07:21Close the door.
07:22Good morning.
07:23Good morning.
07:24Good morning.
07:38Good morning.
07:41Good morning.
07:43Good morning.
07:45Good morning.
07:57Good morning.
08:01Good morning.
08:08that's my big hero i'm all right how's school good made any new friends freddie's been over
08:18from mja that's nice now a couple of guys in my house who i think have become new friends
08:25good well mommy might have made a new friend too
08:34okay right now just a friend friend but i hope i've become a special friend
08:38and i wanted you to be the first to know
08:45do you have to tell me these things
08:52well i thought you'd be happy for me i just prefer if you didn't talk to me about this stuff
08:58i never know what to say it's embarrassing it's hard enough with you being in the news all the time
09:06you're only making things harder
09:12ready i have to go even so right
09:27happy birthday to you
09:31happy birthday to you happy birthday dear sue
09:52it doesn't look as though i'm going to be able to make cheltenham this year
09:54really someone very inconsiderate arranged for the french president to visit if you can't get there
10:00in person ma'am you can always catch the highlights on itv channel four channel four that's it i thought
10:07cheltenham was on the bbc it was for 40 years then channel four paid more than five times what the
10:14bbc
10:14was paying we couldn't afford to hold onto it but it's cheltenham the gold cup can't you do anything
10:19about it you whisper in hubby's ear or perform some magic in the bedroom
10:31the queen was not her normal self today
10:35she was surrounded by some of her dearest friends yet
10:40seemed a little flat poor woman those children have a lot to answer for
10:47each day brings fresh horrors in the newspapers
10:51i was thinking could the bbc do something to cheer her up
10:55remind everyone how hard she works how lucky we are to have her
11:01it's her 70th birthday coming up that's a nice idea one of your specials
11:07show our appreciation i'll talk to the director general for my sins thank you
11:43go on all the top brass
11:46you'll be fine
11:51what do we think her agenda is
11:56i think she has multiple agendas
11:59she feels misunderstood she feels angry she wants to be vindicated
12:06you think she'll be critical of the monarchy critical of charles certainly
12:14well explain something to me she could go anywhere in the world with this how did she get her to
12:19do it with you
12:22it's not with me though is it it's the bbc
12:29she's doing it with us because she feels safe understood and protected
12:38he's being modest it is martin too when he when he puts his mind to something he can be very
12:44persuasive
12:51all right give me a day or two i need to think about it about what about the ethics of
12:58giving a national platform to someone with such a personal agenda
13:02there'll be plenty of people that violently object not least our own chairman i see what about him
13:08well apart from having outdated notions of the bbc plays not just in national life but in the british soul
13:15he happens to be the husband of the queen's most senior lady in waiting
13:19he'd rather lose his left leg than have this go out
13:22now come on you didn't know that he lost his right one in the war
13:29amputated and a prisoner of war camp
13:39john
13:49do you cast his office called he wants to see you did they say why they just said it was
13:56urgent and
13:56if you could possibly make time this afternoon
14:01good afternoon sir good afternoon
14:07as you know i've never sought to interfere in editorial matters or influence program makers in any
14:13way as dg that's your sphere but as i reach the end of my tenure i wonder if you might
14:20allow me one
14:21exception i'd like us to do something for the queen some sort of tribute about how hard she works and
14:31how bloody lucky we are to have her and that's why you've asked me here today
14:38yes as to ask the question is that very cheeky of me because whatever one may think of the royal
14:47family
14:48she has been remarkable and doesn't in my view get the credit or the gratitude she deserves
14:55and isn't that one of the many things that the bbc is for to kiss the ring
15:02if you like i can see it's an unfashionable line to take but for better or worse i believe it
15:10is
15:10part of the british character to have a monarchy take that away and what are you left with an egalitarian
15:16modern republic but not britain a new britain a different britain not great britain it's the same
15:26with the bbc take away the bbc and what are you left with a country but not britain in that
15:34way the
15:34two institutions crown and bbc are inherently intertwined reflected incidentally in the fact
15:40that we exist thanks to a royal charter you see the monarchy as part of the architecture of this country
15:48i do but more and more people have grown to see it simply as part of the furniture
15:55something they've grown up with but not something that can't be rearranged thrown out if need be or
16:01replaced and the same goes for the bbc poll after poll show that people are crying out for change from
16:07the post-war era into something much more to a crass commercial satellite era controlled by rupert murdoch
16:14with limitless choice and a thousand different channels all offering rubbish
16:21look i know my role is not to interfere i just thought i've been chairman now for almost 10 years
16:28my full term and i've never asked a thing i know you've been quite as a mouse duty and i
16:34do this
16:34not for myself but for a country it has been my privilege to serve my whole life
16:44oh come on john a nice one-off program in the grand bbc style that brings us all together to
16:52celebrate one of our greatest assets and say thank you ma'am
17:10steve hewlett steve it's john that bonfire night thing we discussed let's go for it
17:25so
17:34so
18:30Hi.
18:36My brother called me. He's a little concerned.
18:39What about?
18:39You. Frankly.
18:43He said he made notes in your first meeting, which didn't tally with the notes he took in the second.
18:48In the first, you said MI5 were watching me, and in the second, you said MI6.
18:52Actually, I think you could be both.
18:56He said there were other inconsistencies.
18:59And now he regrets introducing us, and he wants me to have nothing more to do with you.
19:02Okay.
19:05Two things.
19:08This is quite normal, and to be honest, I was expecting a last-minute wobble.
19:12I think you chose the date for the interview, November the 5th, bonfire night, deliberately.
19:21Well, only because I knew everyone would be busy. Not symbolically.
19:24The 13 members of the gunpowder plot in 1605 also almost pulled out at the last minute,
19:29and it took the ringleader to encourage them to stick with it.
19:32Well, maybe he shouldn't have.
19:34Not only were they unsuccessful, they were hung, drawn, and quartered.
19:36The difference is, we will be successful. I promise.
19:46What was the second thing?
19:48What?
19:50You said two things.
19:56I think they might have gone to your brother.
19:59No.
19:59These are serious people.
20:02That kind of change of heart is just too irrational.
20:06Too random.
20:09Which is why I think the sooner we get this done, the better.
20:23Today is the 5th of November,
20:28which is a significant day in the British calendar.
20:32Guy Fawkes night.
20:34What do we know about Guy Fawkes himself?
20:38He was a rebel.
20:41Little more than just a rebel.
20:43A terrorist?
20:44In a manner of speaking, his cause was certainly political.
20:50A traitor?
20:52A traitor.
20:53That's right.
20:54Maybe England's most famous traitor.
20:58And what do we mean when we call someone a traitor?
21:03A traitor commits the crime of treason,
21:09which derives from the French trahir,
21:11to betray.
21:13Well, there are different kinds of treason.
21:16A petty treason, which could simply be a wife killing her husband,
21:19or a servant killing their master.
21:23But Guy Fawkes and his co-conspirators committed high treason.
21:30Which means?
21:32Trying to kill the king.
21:35That's right.
21:37Trying to kill the king.
21:39Guy Fawkes was working with 12 other men.
21:42The ringleader was a man by the name of Robert Catesby.
21:45And together, they devised the gunpowder plot of 1605,
21:52as it has come to be known.
21:54A plan by disaffected Catholics
21:58to blow up the houses of Parliament
22:01on a day they knew the king, the queen,
22:06and the Prince of Wales would be present.
22:09The state opening of Parliament on November 5th.
22:15In the days before, under the cover of darkness,
22:18they entered a cellar.
22:20They were only beneath the House of Lords.
22:23They filled it with 36 barrels of gunpowder.
22:29Now Fawkes' job that night
22:30was to light the all-important fuse.
22:35His goal was to slaughter
22:37the entire Protestant establishment
22:40in one fell swoop.
22:42An act
22:44that would change the country forever.
22:56Good evening.
23:00Good night.
23:02Good night.
23:28We're here to deliver the new hi-fi audio equipment.
23:40She's expecting me.
23:45Good night.
23:55Good night.
23:59Good night.
24:00Good night.
24:02Good night.
24:04Good night.
24:05Good night.
24:06Good night.
24:06Good night.
24:07Good night.
24:08Good night.
24:08Good night.
24:09Good night.
24:10Good night.
24:10Good night.
24:11Good night.
24:45Here we go.
24:47Why?
24:48Why?
24:51Why?
25:08Sounds good.
25:09Just good.
25:30Could you click this on, please, your old Alice?
25:53Okay, Martin.
25:54When you're ready.
25:58We can stop any time.
25:59But the tapes run for 32 minutes.
26:02So we'll be breaking to change them over every half hour or so.
26:11All good?
26:14Okay.
26:20Ready?
26:21I know.
26:29You're all highness.
26:31I love you.
26:44You're all highness.
26:50I'm sorry.
26:51Do things really do, and do all this trouble.
27:06Well, you're welcome.
27:21Oh, they're cold.
27:22Oh, they're cold.
27:26I got a little bit.
27:27Yeah.
27:33Where's this guy?
27:35This way, this way.
27:37This way.
27:43No!
27:44No!
28:17No!
29:01Morning.
29:07Good morning.
29:08Checking in?
29:09No.
29:10I'm here to meet a friend.
29:12I believe he's staying in the Duchess of yours.
29:14York suite. And the name? Catesby. Right. I'll let him know you're here.
29:25Hi, your guest has arrived. Can I send him up? Thank you. So it's just through to the bar,
29:35right up the stairs, down the long corridor, and it's the fourth door on the right.
29:46Always together.
29:47I knew you were 20 years old.
30:38Well, I expected it to be dynamite.
30:41Sensational, John.
30:42Biggest coup of our careers.
30:44Yeah, but what I've just seen could end our careers, too.
30:46Not to mention what it might do to her.
30:54I guarantee she will talk to someone, if not us.
30:57Ask yourself how you would feel if this went out on CBS or ABC or ITV or Channel 4.
31:05Yeah, still, we'll be giving a platform to a very hurt, very unstable woman
31:09who clearly wants to inflate significant damage on the monarchy.
31:15In the end, it's going to be your call, John.
31:20Go back.
31:22This part here.
31:24Do you believe Prince Charles will be king?
31:30Diana's insisted on telling the queen personally.
31:33Is that right?
31:33Tomorrow.
31:35So if you're going to kill this, you need to let us know before the end of play today
31:38so we can stop her.
31:40It's very demanding.
31:42Suffocating.
31:43Fuck the hell.
32:11Look me in the eyes and tell me I'm not going to regret this.
32:19You won't.
32:26Apparently, satellite dishes have now been installed in all the royal households.
32:30Oh!
32:30As long as they're out of sight.
32:32Plus, the specialist racing channel you wanted.
32:34Like in the betting shops.
32:36Did you hear that, mummy?
32:37Oh, really?
32:38Look, simple instructions on all the remotes.
32:41May I see?
32:43Oh, printed in a nice, large, idiot-proof font.
32:47Well, what about the soaps?
32:49Not that we ever watch those.
32:51Well, 23 is UK gold.
32:53Right?
32:54All repeats of Dallas, Knott's Landing and the bill.
32:59Oh, God.
33:00Please tell me you have no idea what I'm talking about.
33:03Not a clue.
33:04Well, then, I mean...
33:05That's my favourite.
33:07No, I don't know.
33:08What?
33:10At 80...
33:11Would you put the racing back on?
33:12I seem to have got lost.
33:13Keep a grip on your pride, if not your bank balance.
33:16Oh, it's so sad to see us struggle to understand a medium with which she's inextricably linked.
33:251936, the year she became heir to the throne,
33:27the first BBC programme was broadcast from Alexandra Palace.
33:33Of course, barely anyone had televisions then.
33:36Now, that all changed with her coronation.
33:40People would say it's in their millions to watch it.
33:43Just one channel, BBC, a few hours of educational broadcasting,
33:48with God save the Queen at the end of every day.
33:51Quite right.
33:53And commercial television arrived, do you remember?
33:55I do.
33:56Oh, in colour?
33:57Oh, that was a shock.
33:59Then there were three channels, then a fourth.
34:03Now, a hundred.
34:04Ma'am.
34:05Who's that?
34:05You've just had a call from the Princess of Wales.
34:08She has asked to see you on an urgent matter.
34:12When?
34:13She was hoping for this evening.
34:17I should be going.
34:20Homework.
34:24Honey.
34:25William.
34:27Craig, come on.
34:28No, I'm coming, too.
34:30Oh, well, thank you.
34:37William.
34:37So, what is it, if you've got the right to be all ceases?
35:02Your highness.
35:25Mama, thank you for seeing me.
35:30There's something I wanted you to hear from me first.
35:32And I expect, as a consequence, you're going to think even less of me than you already do.
35:36Why don't I be the judge of that?
35:41I've given an interview.
35:44What kind of interview?
35:46A full, rather frank interview to the BBC.
35:51She'll go out on Monday the 20th.
35:54Why?
35:58I felt the need to clear a few things up.
36:01About my marriage.
36:03No, honestly.
36:04It's like a broken record.
36:06About the fact that I've so often been shut out.
36:10Left to cope on my own.
36:13And that I've suffered.
36:15From a lack of sympathy.
36:17And feeling.
36:18And compassion.
36:20Haven't we heard all this before?
36:22A thousand times.
36:24Haven't we read it in newspaper articles a thousand times?
36:27Does it not occur to you that if you feel the need to clear a few things up,
36:31a public forum might not be the best place to do it?
36:35That such matters would best be discussed in private with the people involved?
36:38I've tried that.
36:39When?
36:42On numerous occasions over the years, I've asked to see you so that we might talk face-to-face.
36:47And on every occasion, you refused or were unavailable.
36:52I accept it's not easy navigating this family.
36:56And I can understand why you might think we're all a bit remote.
37:00But there is another word for remote.
37:03Busy.
37:05We are all busy people with busy diaries, rarely under the same roof for two nights at a time.
37:11And none of us, not one senior member of the royal family, has a spare ten minutes to think about
37:17themselves,
37:18let alone you or how we might best make your life miserable.
37:22On the contrary, it might surprise you to learn we all spend a great deal of time doing the opposite.
37:28Because when people, armies of people, say to me,
37:33what has that girl done now?
37:34Who does she think she is?
37:36What do you imagine I say?
37:38Oh, Lord, yes, Diane's awful, a nightmare.
37:41What a mistake that was.
37:43Not once.
37:45Not a single time.
37:49Your wife to my eldest son, mother to my grandsons,
37:52and a valued senior member of this family.
37:55So I defend you each and every time,
37:59loyally, emphatically, to the hilt.
38:09The enemy you imagine I am,
38:11the hostility you imagine we all feel,
38:16is a figment of your imagination.
38:21Is it?
38:25Yes.
38:27All
38:29any of us want, Diana,
38:32is for you
38:35to be happy.
38:38And one day to be our next queen.
38:48I suppose it's already too late to stop this.
38:54Yes.
38:57Have you told William?
39:01Not yet.
39:02No.
39:03Poor child.
39:05As if he hasn't got enough to worry about already.
39:07He's stronger than you think.
39:08I didn't say I thought he was weak.
39:10I said he's a child and has enough to worry about already.
39:17Well, I'll tell him not to watch it.
39:19Well, I hope you don't mind if Philip and I don't watch either.
39:23Monday the 20th happens to be our wedding anniversary.
39:2848 years.
39:33Congratulations.
39:36I'm happy for you.
39:40That's all I would have wished for myself.
39:52That's all I would have wished for myself.
40:11I mean, nothing.
40:14I mean, nothing.
40:17I mean, nothing.
40:20I mean, nothing.
40:26Excuse me, come.
40:31Sit.
40:37I'm here to let you know that the BBC has indeed made a special programme
40:43about the monarchy which we will announce on Tuesday.
40:46Tuesday the 14th?
40:48Yes.
40:48The Prince of Wales' birthday.
40:51If I may say that is uncharacteristically sentimental of you, John.
40:55It was the date she insisted the announcement be made.
40:59The Queen touching she should want to do that.
41:02I've always said as a mother she adores him, really.
41:07It's not the Queen.
41:11Which she are you talking about?
41:15It's the Queen's golden jubilee in seven years' time.
41:18The BBC will make countless programmes justifiably celebrating Her Majesty then.
41:24In the meantime, we thought an in-depth panorama interview
41:28with the Princess of Wales might be more relevant.
41:31What?
41:32Why would the BBC give her the time of day, let alone an interview?
41:36The girl's a loose cannon!
41:38We've not always seen eye-to-eye, Juki,
41:40but as chairman and director general,
41:42we always agreed that we'd go to any lengths
41:45to do what we felt was best for the organisation.
41:47This will kill it.
41:48It's my view that this may counter-define the BBC.
41:52Kill it!
41:53This will destroy us!
41:55Look, I simply wanted to let you know the news directly.
41:59You'll find yourself on the wrong side of history, John!
42:02Thanks for seeing me.
42:04The wrong side of history!
42:12A very warm welcome to the 67th Royal Variety Performance,
42:17a charity event to support the Entertainment Artist Benevolent Fund,
42:22coming to you from London's West End
42:23on the occasion of Her Majesty the Queen's 48th wedding anniversary.
42:28Many congratulations to the Queen
42:29and His Royal Highness the Duke of Edinburgh.
42:32The stars have taken their places behind the curtain
42:35for what promises to be a memorable night.
42:48You want all my love
42:52and my devotion
42:56You want my love and soul
43:00right on the line
43:05I had no doubt
43:08that I could love you
43:11forever
43:12The only trouble is
43:17you really don't have the time
43:21You've got one night only
43:24One night only
43:26That's all I have to spare
43:31One night only
43:32Let's not pretend again
43:43Your Royal Highness
43:44Do you genuinely believe
43:48Darling, you're missing it
43:49That members of the Royal Household
43:51have been out to get you?
43:55When I separated
43:56from the Prince of Wales
43:57I was seen as
43:58problem number one
44:01The first of my kind
44:08When your first son was born
44:10that must have been a very happy moment
44:12When William was born
44:14I became unwell
44:17with
44:19postnatal depression
44:21Just
44:23wanted to stay in bed all day
44:25It was
44:26a very dark place
44:29Did you reach out for help?
44:32Well I suppose if you're
44:33the first person in a family
44:34to ever feel
44:35low
44:37then it's pretty hard
44:38to get the support that you need
44:40so
44:42you suffer alone
45:06What impact did the illness
45:09have on your marriage?
45:11Well it gave people a marvellous new label
45:12to pin on me
45:14Diana's crazy
45:16I should be sent to her home
45:22But
45:23what better way
45:24to break down a personality
45:26than by isolating it?
45:32Your husband is said to have
45:35rekindled his relationship
45:37with Mrs. Camilla Parker Bowles
45:38around 1986
45:40Did this
45:41contribute to the breakdown
45:43of your marriage?
45:43Well there were three of us
45:44in this marriage
45:45so it was a bit crowded
45:50Was I devastated?
45:53Yes
45:55Did I feel like a failure?
46:02Reflecting back
46:03You say that the royal family
46:05has effectively given up on you
46:07Why do you think that is?
46:09Because I don't do things
46:10the way they do
46:12Because I want to
46:13connect with people
46:15emotionally
46:16and comfort them
46:19in distress
46:20And this isn't something
46:21the royal family provides?
46:23Well you have to remember
46:24I didn't just marry
46:26into a family
46:26I married into a system
46:28But I won't go
46:29quietly
46:31I'll battle
46:31till the end
46:37What impact
46:38do you think
46:39the breakdown of your marriage
46:40had on Prince William?
46:45Well he's a boy
46:46that's a
46:47a serious thinker
46:48so
46:49it's hard to know
46:50the impact
46:51just yet
46:52We'll have to wait
46:53a few years to see
46:54You were right
46:56Yes
46:57I'm fine
47:00Do you believe
47:02Prince Charles
47:03will be king?
47:05Well who knows
47:06what fate will bring
47:07It's a very demanding
47:08and suffocating
47:10role
47:11and
47:11Charles was always
47:12conflicted
47:13about it
47:14Oh God
47:15Because I know him
47:16so well
47:17I would think
47:18that the top job
47:19Would put big
47:22limits
47:22on him
47:23and
47:24I'm not sure
47:25how he would cope
47:26with that
47:26What the hell
47:27is she doing?
47:31Some might view this
47:33as you taking revenge
47:35on the Prince of Wales
47:37But I don't speak
47:39with bitterness
47:39or anger
47:41but
47:42sorrow
47:44because
47:45our marriage
47:46has failed
47:52Do you think
47:53you'll ever be queen?
47:59I'd like to be a queen
48:00of people's hearts
48:02in people's hearts
48:04but I don't
48:05visit myself
48:06ever being queen
48:07of this country
48:08No
48:09I don't think
48:10many people
48:10will be calling for that
48:11When I say people
48:12I mean those at the top
48:13on my husband's side
48:15because they've decided
48:16that I'm
48:17an issue
48:18full stop
48:19a liability
48:23But
48:24someone's gotta go out
48:25onto the streets
48:26give people the love
48:27that they need
48:30Your old highness
48:31thank you
48:48Princess Diana
48:49hit the airwaves
48:49in England tonight
48:50talking about her life
48:51her broken marriage
48:52and her future
48:53Princess Diana
48:54told the BBC
48:57interview with me
48:58Princess Diana
48:58The astonishing interview
48:59has left the palace
49:00shocked and concerned
49:01They were so stunned
49:03they didn't issue
49:03any statement last night
49:05but I don't think
49:06they can hide behind that
49:07I really think
49:08they're going to have
49:09to say something
49:10The accusations
49:11against the royal family
49:12in particular
49:13Prince Charles
49:14were astronomical
49:32a great many honest
49:34decent people work
49:36at the BBC
49:37and on their behalf
49:39and mine
49:40I'm so sorry
49:42Diana had the decency
49:44to warn me in advance
49:46but no one
49:47was prepared for this
49:49I blame myself entirely
49:52and will of course
49:53hand in my resignation
49:54There's no need
49:55Dukie
49:55There's every need
49:57ma'am
49:58I'm already hearing
49:59shocking rumours
50:00about how the interview
50:00was secured
50:02How can I effectively
50:04govern when it's not
50:05a corporation
50:06I recognise anymore
50:10It's not a world
50:12I recognise anymore
50:38Caso de Campo
50:40is just a stroll
50:41from the airstrip
50:42whether you fly yourself
50:43Don't take the
50:44Best penalty
50:45whoever killed
50:45Livy Culla
50:46Best penalty
50:48whoever killed
50:48a condor
50:49because a condor
50:50was super
50:50La favorita
50:51de Manuel Noriega
50:52Let me
51:00Five star customer pick
51:03Frivolous
51:05And they have these
51:06kind of long black
51:10Yards away from
51:11$2 plus any toll
51:12Item number
51:13is
51:14Wildlife
51:18Couldn't we just
51:19find the BBC
51:27the BBC
51:30If you're the light
51:33I shall
51:34define
51:36In deep
51:37our reverence
51:40praise
51:42In deep
51:43our reverence
52:14CHOIR SINGS
52:44CHOIR SINGS
52:55CHOIR SINGS
52:57CHOIR SINGS
53:01CHOIR SINGS
53:06CHOIR SINGS
53:25CHOIR SINGS
53:26CHOIR SINGS
53:36CHOIR SINGS
53:39CHOIR SINGS
53:40CHOIR SINGS
53:40CHOIR SINGS
53:42CHOIR SINGS
53:44CHOIR SINGS
53:45CHOIR SINGS
53:46CHOIR SINGS
53:47CHOIR SINGS
53:49CHOIR SINGS
53:49CHOIR SINGS
53:50CHOIR SINGS
54:06CHOIR SINGS
54:08.
54:38.
55:08.
55:09.
55:10.
55:10.
55:10.
55:10.
55:10.
55:11.
55:11.
55:11.
55:12.
55:12.
55:12.
55:12.
55:12.
55:13.
55:13.
55:13.
55:13.
55:13.
55:13.
55:13.
55:13.
55:13.
55:13.
55:13.
55:14.
55:14.
55:14.
Comments

Recommended