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00:00I found you
00:01I found you
00:02I found you
00:03I found you
00:04Where are you?
00:06Where are you?
00:07It's like perfect and he's in the world
00:08I'm fine, I'm fine
00:10I'm fine
00:10I'm fine
00:10How are you?
00:13I'm fine
00:14I'm fine
00:15I'm fine
00:17But...
00:17I have to give them to the Pfizer today
00:20Michael Beauclis will get rid of me
00:21Who is your brother?
00:23Yeah, my brother
00:24He's an actor
00:25He doesn't want to work
00:26He doesn't want to work
00:27I have to move
00:29I'll see you in my life
00:32And...
00:33Speaking of perfection
00:35There's someone I'd like you to meet
00:36A girl
00:37What do you mean?
00:39No...
00:40That's why I...
00:41I'll give you something else
00:43If...
00:44I'll give you London
00:45I'll meet you
00:46I'll meet you
00:47It's fine
00:49Well...
00:49You can talk to me
00:51My brother
00:51Are you in Los Angeles?
00:53Are you in Los Angeles?
00:53Are you in Los Angeles?
00:54Are you in Los Angeles?
00:58I said that
00:59She's worth it
01:02Welcome to Monarchy The Nation Decides
01:05The biggest live debate ever staged on television
01:08Good evening
01:10There's only one thing the country's been talking about
01:12And that's this program
01:13And your role in the future of the monarchy
01:15These two telephone numbers will stay on screen throughout the program
01:19As we ask
01:20Do you want a monarchy?
01:21Don't forget
01:22There are 14,000 lines open
01:24And they'll be open all through News at 10
01:28The real reason why this program's on
01:30Is because we're facing the prospect of Charles III
01:32He is going to divide this country
01:34And that is why people want to choose their next head of state
01:39The overall public feeling is that the royals are failing us
01:43The fact is that the cost of the House of Windsor
01:47Compared to the cost of any other monarchy in Europe
01:50Is astronomical
01:53Let's the Windsors
01:54Let them retire
01:55Let them go away
01:56Marry whom they choose
01:57While we choose our own head of state
01:59You have vated
02:00No
02:01No
02:01You have vated
02:03No
02:03Quickly
02:04Are they ready for money?
02:05My contention is this would be a very grey and drab country
02:07Without the colour that the royal family brings it
02:09Because the people of this country want to have the freedom to be citizens rather than subjects
02:14You have vated
02:15No
02:16You have vated
02:17No
02:18If you want to see a King Charles and a Queen Camilla
02:21Hold up a blue card
02:22If you don't then please hold up a red card
02:25It looks like no
02:26Have royal scandals damaged the country's reputation?
02:30I think an overwhelming majority says yes
02:33No
02:33In our final show of voting cards we want all audience to tell us
02:36If you want a monarchy show a blue card
02:38No
02:38If you don't then please use the red card
02:41Happy birthday to you
02:45Happy birthday to you
02:49Happy birthday dear Millibut
02:53Happy birthday to you
02:58So welcome
03:01Is it from you?
03:03Yes
03:03From me
03:04Oh
03:05What is it?
03:08Just what I need
03:09Well I swear by them
03:11There's a Shiny
03:17It's one of mine. It's some tuna mill.
03:21It's good. Thank you. Thank you.
03:25I saved best till last.
03:29Oh, this will be good.
03:31What is this?
03:33Oh, it's a...
03:42That's terrible.
03:44You like it?
03:46Oh, that is absolutely...
03:48I think you should put it above your bed.
03:50You always buy the best presents.
03:54You win anything this week? No, not.
03:56I don't suppose any of you watched that programme the other night, the monarchy debate.
04:00Oh, God, it was awful.
04:01I'm afraid I went to bed. I started.
04:05And then when I saw it was going in our favour, I switched it off.
04:07In our favour?
04:09Sure, I saw it that way.
04:11Is the royal family value for money?
04:13More than half said no.
04:15Can you name three useful things the royals do?
04:1983% couldn't.
04:21Do you want a referendum to decide the future of the monarchy?
04:2470% said yes.
04:26Does anyone want King Charles III?
04:28100% said no.
04:30Oh, shit.
04:31You naughty boys.
04:34Now with the general election and its weight...
04:36What are the opponents predicting?
04:37A landslide.
04:38A Mr Blair and the Labour Party.
04:41So I think we can safely say that wholesale change is afoot.
04:45Hmm.
04:46Speaking of wholesale change, what are we going to do about Hong Kong?
04:49A great Chinese takeaway.
04:51Right.
04:51She didn't just say that.
04:53Why?
04:53Hong Kong's eyes, the Chinese are taking it away.
04:56Taking it back.
04:56Philip and I are due to be in Canada on the day of the handover.
04:59They're suggesting Charles go to Hong Kong in our place.
05:02Hong Kong is clearly the more significant occasion.
05:05Shouldn't you be there as sovereign?
05:07A monarch should never attend celebrations when a colony cuts ties.
05:12It's undignified.
05:13It's like attending the wedding of someone you once loved and trying to look happy for them.
05:17Been there, done that.
05:19You go to Canada, darling.
05:21Let Charles do Hong Kong.
05:25Hey.
05:26DENNIS ascend Hallo
05:37Hi.
05:40Oh, my God.
05:42Okay.
05:43incorrectly.
05:47Kelly?
05:48Meet g4?
05:50G4, meet Kelly.
05:51Oh my God.
06:05You're telling me you had no idea your husband was robbing a bank at that time?
06:11No, I'm telling you.
06:14I was probably out shopping or having lunch.
06:17You know, the things women like me do.
06:24Don't be frightened to play in that bass line a little sexy.
06:27Try again.
06:36No, I told you.
06:39I was probably out shopping or having lunch.
06:43You know, the things women like me do.
06:49Mrs. Farnham, I have no idea what women like you do.
06:53But your husband's looking at 15 years.
06:57Wait, how do I feel about that?
06:59She's angry.
07:01Sick of being betrayed.
07:03The anger is all in her next line.
07:05Okay.
07:07I am tired of being unwanted.
07:11Someone as gorgeous as you could never be unwanted.
07:15Wait, that's not a line.
07:18I just went off script.
07:20That is how he truly feels.
07:22The character?
07:24Or you?
07:30What the...
07:31We definitely made the right choice with these architects.
07:34You really think your dad will pay for it?
07:37I hope so.
07:40But he can be hard to predict.
07:42What will make the difference?
07:45If he likes you.
07:48Well, that's pressure.
07:49But he will like you.
07:52What's not to like?
07:57You said he likes Scandi girls.
08:06You could be Scandinavian.
08:08I'm from Kentucky.
08:10You could.
08:24They're asking for three days.
08:25Including travel.
08:28Hong Kong's a long way to go for three days.
08:31Unless Mrs. Parker Bowles and I
08:34combine it with a
08:35short holiday afterwards.
08:39on Britannia.
08:41Which is her final voyage.
08:45We could invite some friends.
08:48Leave it with me, sir.
08:53Why'd it not also be an opportunity
08:54for me to meet with Mr. Blair?
08:58Why would he be in Hong Kong?
09:00As British Prime Minister.
09:01He's got to win the general election first.
09:03Why, no, but
09:05surely that's just a question
09:06of how big his majority will be.
09:08True.
09:09And I've always felt, actually,
09:10there could be a productive alliance there.
09:13Two men of a similar age?
09:15Both committed and impatient for change?
09:18I'll speak to his people.
09:31Right, table four.
09:32Two logs for salad.
09:33One saddle of lamb.
09:34One ticket supreme.
09:35Sex.
09:37Right, service, please.
09:38Table sixteen.
09:38One, two, three.
09:45One, two, three.
09:46Oh, sir.
09:46Nada.
09:46Yes, sir.
09:47Sam, sir.
09:48Sam, sir.
09:53Hello.
09:55How are you?
09:57Hello.
09:59What's that?
10:01I mean, I'm going to get you back here.
10:08I'm going to get you back here.
10:10Yeah, no.
10:13I'm going to get you back here.
10:14But I'm not happy for you or for me.
10:18Is it a bad sign that they're speaking Arabic to each other?
10:21No, they always do that.
10:24Does it bother you?
10:26I mean, it's a bit rude.
10:29You get used to it.
10:30Do you agree or not?
10:32Of course.
10:34I don't ask where you're seen.
10:36Do they have great money?
10:38From our level, we have to take our money.
10:43Do you speak Arabic?
10:45Yes.
10:46At my age, it's hard.
10:48And anyway, most of the time you don't need to speak the language to know what they're saying.
11:06And what's with all the sanitizing?
11:09Oh, you get used to that too.
11:12But I like a clean hands-on man.
11:14Don't you?
11:16And then I'll bring you all the things they take from you.
11:18How do you do it?
11:20The money I'm doing from the movies I'm producing.
11:24I don't want to go to Roscoe.
11:26I'll bring you one too.
11:27And I don't like me.
11:29This company is a big deal.
11:31From the film to the other.
11:33And it's all for the money.
11:36And every single worker will take care of you.
11:38It's going to be more than a single person to get respect.
11:42But to give you a good idea,
11:44the only thing you're leading to your child is to have is the power of you.
11:47I said,
12:15You two having a nice chat?
12:16What?
12:18We are.
12:23You okay, baby?
12:25I like no more, baby.
12:361974 was the last time they won an election, and it is a vast majority.
12:40But nothing can take away the magnitude of the Labour victory.
12:42They got four million more votes than the Conservatives.
12:45This is Tony Flair's hour.
12:48Everyone knows it.
12:57Well, a new dawn has broken, has it not?
13:01We have been elected as new Labour, and we will govern as new Labour.
13:10And as we head into the millennium, we have the opportunity to change Britain.
13:28It is strange, the human capacity for self-deception.
13:35Despite all the polls, I still felt I had a chance of winning.
13:42Instead, my party has just suffered its worst defeat in memory.
13:50I do hope the history books will judge my premiership rather more kindly than the electorate has.
13:55Whatever the historians make of it, you will always rank highly in my personal table of Prime Ministers.
14:02Very highly.
14:05I shall miss your calm, forthright, dependable presence.
14:11And I'm especially grateful to you for your help with the Waleses.
14:16I am still frustrated I was never able to resolve the issue of the Royal Yacht.
14:20And I gather the Labour Party is still committed to decommissioning her.
14:26Yes.
14:30It is just possible that the scale of his victory will make Mr Blair magnanimous,
14:35and I could try having a word through back channels,
14:38and I might be able to persuade his administration to keep her after all.
14:42That would mean the world to me.
14:55What do you make of him?
14:58Mr Blair.
15:00Oh, I shouldn't have done that.
15:04The oft-touted criticism is that his leadership style is a triumph of image over substance.
15:10Much attention is also paid to his age.
15:13Forty-three, I checked.
15:14The youngest Prime Minister since Lord Liverpool in 1812.
15:19But whatever the criticisms, there's no denying his achievements.
15:22He's broken the stranglehold the unions had over his party and made Labour electable again,
15:27which is no mean feat.
15:30And he has caught the mood of the country in a way that I clearly failed to do.
15:35Let's see.
15:37True statesmanship is not confined to a time in public office.
15:41And you're still a young man too.
15:57Your Majesty.
16:20One moment, darling.
16:43Congratulations.
16:45Thank you, John.
16:47It's a funny old business.
16:49One day you're Prime Minister, arguably the most, well, second most important person in the country.
16:55And the next you lose your job, your car, and you're evicted from your home.
17:00Or before lunch.
17:10I left a note for you on, er, on your desk.
17:15Good luck.
17:20Good luck.
17:36Good luck.
17:37Good luck.
17:39Good luck.
17:40Good luck.
17:40Good luck.
17:41Good luck.
17:42Good luck.
17:43Good luck.
17:44Good luck.
17:44Good luck.
17:45Good luck.
17:45Good luck.
17:46Good luck.
17:47The Prime Minister, Your Majesty.
17:49Your Majesty.
17:50Prime Minister.
17:51The new Prime Minister came to see me today.
17:53So, how are you settling in?
17:56After some polite chitchat, I brought up the Royal Yacht Britannia,
17:59hoping for a last-minute reprieve,
18:03and he offered a new idea.
18:06A brand-new yacht, but not paid for by the government.
18:10What?
18:11How, then?
18:12By private finance, at a cost of some £65 million,
18:18which means that...
18:20Whichever individual or company pays for it would own the yacht
18:23and then lease it back to the government
18:24whenever the royal family required its use.
18:27What, like a rental?
18:28Like Avis?
18:30Actually, it's not that unusual.
18:32In the modern commercial world, that's what they do for shipping containers and oil tankers.
18:37Britannia isn't a shipping container.
18:39She has a royal yacht and a symbolic representation of your mother.
18:43So, what are they suggesting?
18:45That H.M.Y. Britannia sponsored by McVitie's biscuits be emblazoned on the side?
18:50They're suggesting the yacht would no longer be Britannia.
18:53She would have a new name.
18:56Johan?
18:58New Britannia.
19:05I'd rather like it.
19:08Wait, wasn't that Blair's political slogan?
19:11Yes.
19:11Oh, come on.
19:12Next they'll want his grinning face on the side with a big red rosette.
19:17I said if those were the terms of the royal yacht's existence,
19:19I would sooner it be decommissioned.
19:24So, that's the decision.
19:27Charles' trip to Hong Kong will be her last official trip.
19:31After 43 years of service and more than a million nautical miles around the globe.
19:39The royal yacht is to be retired.
19:45It was the first time I've seen it so clearly.
19:49The toll that the past few years have taken on her.
19:53And her distress or her grief was not for the royal yacht, nor her precious memories.
19:59It was for herself and the institution she represents.
20:04Like she felt she was being decommissioned.
20:08In which case, you must be ready, sir.
20:11And the country must start to prepare for you as the future.
20:15To that end, I had a look at the itinerary
20:17and I've managed to find some time for you to meet with the Prime Minister one-on-one on the
20:20royal yacht.
20:22They also identified one or two places in the speech
20:25that Buckingham Palace has sent for you to read out at the farewell ceremony,
20:28just to tweak it a bit.
20:30Just to give it a bit more of your voice.
20:35The only thing I haven't been able to change is, um, business class seats.
20:40The politicians, Foreign Secretary Robin Cook,
20:43former Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd,
20:45and, um, former Prime Minister Edward Heath are all going first class.
20:50And the heir to the throne is in business?
20:53Afraid so.
20:54Afraid so.
20:58Doesn't that tell you everything?
21:03You're going to have to be very brave.
21:07But I promise you, you'll survive.
21:35Look, I'll talk to you.
21:36I'm not going to ask you, though.
21:37Did you come back?
21:38Did you come back?
21:38I'll ask you, sir.
21:40I'll ask you.
21:42I'll ask you.
21:42I mean, the excitement is,
21:44is to be in a position trying to do this stuff.
21:47Squeeze the other part.
21:56Prince Charles flew into Hong Kong today
21:58as the final countdown to the handover begins.
22:01The Foreign Secretary, Robin Cook,
22:03criticized China's plans to send in troops
22:05hours after the handover.
22:06Though they called me today.
22:09Tell me he paid a deposit
22:10on the house in Malibu.
22:13Good.
22:14Be happy for him.
22:16But what if he actually proposes
22:18to this girl?
22:20Then we will give him
22:21a magnificent wedding
22:24in Paris
22:25with a reception at the Ritz.
22:28Or in Scotland,
22:29in your castle.
22:31My firstborn son
22:33marrying him, model.
22:36That's all I was.
22:44You were
22:45so much more than him, model.
22:50You were a socialite.
22:53Bringing into China a territory
22:54that has little appetite
22:56for authoritarian rules.
23:18and you were
23:39ORGAN PLAYS
23:58I'm feeling a bit gloomy this evening.
24:00Do you want to spoil your night?
24:01No, we will spoil it only by not coming.
24:04Just one course.
24:06Twenty minutes.
24:08All right.
24:09All right.
24:10Yeah?
24:38I thought after the divorce I'd be this happy, smiley thing again, but I'm more glum than ever.
24:43It's Commander's 50th birthday coming up and Charles wants to throw a big party at Igo.
24:48I don't want to be in the country for that.
24:51Where to go?
24:53I had plans to take the boys to America for a summer holiday, but it was shut down for security
24:58reasons.
25:00So...
25:01Why don't you come to Saint-Tropez with us?
25:04Please?
25:06No, I won't inflict all this on you.
25:14My bodyguards are all special forces, so you will be fine.
25:19For the boys, there will be speedboats and jet skis and movies and burgers and french fries.
25:29For you, there will be sunshine and shopping and the big New York.
25:37And the helicopter and the plane to get you there.
25:41You will think it's all very Egyptian and vulgar, but you will love it.
25:51So?
25:54Promise me you will think about it.
25:57Hmm?
25:59Mm-hmm.
26:30Your Excellency, Prime Minister, ladies and gentlemen.
26:40I've been asked by Her Majesty the Queen to read the following message.
26:47Five hours from now, the Union flag will be lowered.
26:52The flag of China will fly over Hong Kong.
26:56And more than a century and a half of British administration will have come to an end.
27:03And now the people of Hong Kong can look to a new future.
27:10As the old certainties give way,
27:13I feel hopeful that Hong Kong's unique character and spirit
27:19will be a lesson to the world of independence and progress.
27:30This strong sense of identity,
27:35this deep commitment to its own way of doing things,
27:40has been the engine of Hong Kong's spectacular success.
27:46By preserving these liberties,
27:48we are not merely protecting a people's way of life.
27:51We are inviting the world to learn from their example.
27:59I wish you all a successful transition
28:03and a prosperous and peaceful future.
28:38Prime Minister, Your Royal Highness.
28:40Prime Minister, I'm so grateful to you for making the time.
28:43Your Royal Highness.
28:44Look at you.
28:45The first Prime Minister, young enough to be the Queen's son.
28:49Winston Churchill, who sat in that armchair a great many times, was old enough to be her grandfather.
28:54Anton Heedon, Harold Macmillan, her father.
28:56Wilson and Heath, her husbands.
28:58Mrs. Thatcher, her twin sister.
29:00And you, her son.
29:02Which I suppose, by extension, would make us...
29:05Brothers?
29:06Yes.
29:08Two men of the same age and generation.
29:10Hopefully with a similar mindset.
29:14And I want to say, if this meeting is about the decommissioning of the yacht,
29:18I want you to know, especially in light of having been shown around her today, how bad I feel.
29:23Why?
29:25Well, I...
29:26Please.
29:26I suppose I wasn't prepared for how striking she'd be up close, or how remarkable the sense of tradition is
29:33that you get aboard her, or...
29:36I suppose it almost makes one regret the decision...
29:38To get rid of her.
29:40To get rid of her.
29:40Really?
29:42And here am I thinking the opposite.
29:44The very thing that has brought us here to Hong Kong has made clear that there's no point clinging to
29:49the past.
29:51We must be excited by the future.
29:53And what an example you've set with your party.
29:55You've taken a rusty old socialist tractor and turned it into a gleaming modern sports car.
30:01And look how the public has responded.
30:03I hope so.
30:08I probably shouldn't say this, but...
30:12I think the royal family needs a similar renovation.
30:16Not just in terms of size and cost, though certainly those things too, but...
30:21Also in terms of attitudes.
30:24My parents can be a little hidebound in their ideas about, for example, how I should be permitted to live.
30:36Divorces and second marriages.
30:38These things exist.
30:40And the reality of many people today.
30:46You understand that.
30:48And you understand the public mood perhaps better than anyone.
30:51Don't you think they'd prefer to see a happy, remarried Prince of Wales rather than an unhappy, unmarried one?
31:00It was pretty gobsmacking what he was doing.
31:03He... effectively briefing against his own mother.
31:05Hmm.
31:07But I have some sympathy with him.
31:09Can't be much fun being the Prince of Wales if you're an impressive man.
31:13Is he?
31:15Oh yes, with energy and a brain and a conscience and a beating heart and a genuine desire to engage
31:23and make a difference.
31:25Hmm.
31:25Same with this yacht.
31:27Magnificent though she is.
31:28The fact is she's done over a million miles.
31:31Her glories belong to the past.
31:33She's not fit for purpose today.
31:35Of course I have enormous respect for the people who advise the Queen but let's be honest, there's a lot
31:41of grey hair there and they do display a certain tone deafness at times.
31:48But if we want to preserve what's best about the Crown, then two modern forward-thinking men might need to
31:56work together to help protect not only the monarch's future but as heir to the throne, my future too.
32:12To be stuck in a system that wants to be nothing, no one, without a voice.
32:18Fearful sidelong glances and the leader of the bush will attach themselves to this palace at an actual right.
32:23Sooner, the model will change the city.
32:29That is so good.
32:31Yeah?
32:34It would be like being trapped for eternity in opposition.
32:37I mean, we had 18 years.
32:39That was bad enough.
32:39He's already had 50.
32:43It can't be easy to know your own mother as the final say on who you can or can't marry.
32:52Imagine if your mum had a veto over me.
32:57She wouldn't have to head.
33:05Hong Kong's new dawn heralded a new military power today.
33:09Troops of China's People's Liberation Army, the PLA, trundled across the border as a friendly invasion.
33:15But it is the sight of armoured personnel carriers that has stirred particular unease in some quarters.
33:21The Prince of Wales barracks on Hong Kong Island was the British military headquarters until midnight last night.
33:27But no more.
33:29Today, inscrutable Chinese sentries came face to face with expatriate revellers.
33:37The Prince of Wales has asked permission to take the princes with her on a summer holiday in the south
33:48of France, as guests of Mohamed Al-Fayed.
33:53Shall we go back with a no?
33:55That would be my preference.
33:57But it is Diana's turn with the boys this year.
34:01Which is what I'm told divorced couples call parenting.
34:04So it's none of my business.
34:07Well.
34:08Was that the bit?
34:09I'm bracing myself for the pieces.
34:13The Prince of Wales is believed to have granted the Prime Minister a private audience while in Hong Kong before
34:26heading off on a private holiday with Mrs. Parker Bowles and some friends on the Royal Yacht.
34:34But I've taken the liberty of drafting a statement clarifying that the holiday was at the Prince's expense.
34:43But that doesn't deal with the private audience.
34:47What do you think they discussed?
34:49The ostensible subject was the future of Britain in the region.
34:57You ask the Prince of Wales to come and see me as soon as he has a moment.
35:01Ma'am.
35:07And before she is decommissioned, do you think I might be allowed to say my own private farewell to Britannia?
35:16Of course.
35:20Let me arrange that.
35:50You're all hers.
36:01You're all hers.
36:20The Prince of Wales, Your Majesty.
36:27Mummy.
36:34How was Canada?
36:35Wonderful, thank you.
36:37Not a spot of rain.
36:38No, I'm afraid I got the rain.
36:40Almost drowned out my speech.
36:42My speech.
36:44I hope it didn't spoil your subsequent holiday in the...
36:48Where was it?
36:49Manila and the Paracel Islands.
36:53I must say I was surprised to hear of the trip.
36:55And that you would use the Royal Yacht as a place to conduct your affair with Mrs. Parker Bowles.
37:05My affair, Mummy.
37:07I'm an unmarried man.
37:09Divorced man whose wife is still alive.
37:13Are we really having this conversation?
37:17Camilla and I are mature, willing adults.
37:20No doubting the willing.
37:21Who make one another happy.
37:22No doubting that, either.
37:24But isn't it time you asked yourself, what good can ultimately come of it, when the public is so against
37:30it?
37:32This is madness.
37:33I tend to agree.
37:36For years, Diana has washed her dirty linen in public.
37:40She's thrown endless grenades over the palace gates, trying to blow us all up.
37:45And throughout this, Camilla has remained a model of discretion and decency and dignity.
37:52And yet you save your most bitter condemnation for her.
37:59The Prime Minister.
38:01Ah, yes, the Prime Minister.
38:02A young man who understands the public better than anyone told me that what they want is a happy heir
38:08to the throne,
38:08whose private life reflects the world as they see it.
38:11I don't want to get drawn on Mr. Blair, or whether he understands the people better than me or not.
38:15Well, I say at this moment he does.
38:16But I do want to make clear that the only person in this family to have a direct relationship with
38:20the First Minister is the Sovereign.
38:22Which will one day be me?
38:23One day, but not yet.
38:25When?
38:25You should know the answer to that question better than anyone, because, God willing, you will one day take the
38:29oath yourself.
38:30This job is for life.
38:34Well, let's just hope there's still an institution for me to take the oath for.
38:37I don't think it's my behaviour that's threatening its survival.
38:39Isn't it?
38:42It hasn't been on my watch that there's been a complete breakdown of authority,
38:45that a programme on national television has made such a mockery of us.
38:49The vote, as I understand it, went comfortably in our favour, less in yours.
39:04In Hong Kong, I saw how easy it is to dispose of us.
39:10Buildings renamed, your head removed from the stamps.
39:14150 years of living under the crown, they could have been shot of us more quickly.
39:20That's what happens when we fail to move with the times.
39:27You can't be blamed for living a long life.
39:33But you have to accept that your values were shaped by Queen Mary.
39:38Yes. Proud of it.
39:41Hers by Queen Victoria.
39:42Proud of that, too.
39:46I'm just worried, Mummy, that...
39:49If we continue to hold on to these Victorian notions of how the monarchy should look,
39:53how it should feel...
39:56then the world will move on.
39:59And those who come after you will be...
40:03will be left with nothing.
40:04No, but always...
40:10No, it's broken 1, 2, 3...
40:18No, it Gibson.
40:24No, it's broken.
40:31No, it's broken.
40:32No, it's broken.
40:34Come at it.
40:56Your Majesty.
41:09I'm sorry.