Browse content similar to 14/09/2016. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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Hi lads. Where are you from? You are not going to understand any of this | :00:18. | :00:26. | |
interview, Ron. It's going to be a different language. Yes, everybody, | :00:27. | :00:32. | |
that really was John Bishop meeting Ron Howard, Sir Paul McCartney and | :00:33. | :00:38. | |
Ringo Starr. We have a big Beatles exclusive filmed for the One Show. | :00:39. | :00:41. | |
Part one coming up soon. That is after we meet an actor who has taken | :00:42. | :00:46. | |
on every kind of foeu can imagine from the T-rex in Jurassic Park. Oh. | :00:47. | :00:57. | |
To Tommy Shelby's Peaky Blinders. . Now he's facing a tougher challenge. | :00:58. | :01:03. | |
A I hate you teenager. . I hate you. I hope you die. Me too. You might as | :01:04. | :01:11. | |
well kill me now. Don't kill me. Please welcome Sam Neil and Julian | :01:12. | :01:12. | |
Dennison. So we saw you there in Hunt for the | :01:13. | :01:21. | |
Wilderpeople, we will talk about it later. We need to say a big thank | :01:22. | :01:25. | |
you to you, Sam. It's your birthday today. Happy birthday. No, thank | :01:26. | :01:29. | |
you. Thank you for sharing your birthday with us. I didn't say | :01:30. | :01:34. | |
anything. Someone found that out. Really? That was supposed to be a | :01:35. | :01:39. | |
secret, you know. Did you tell Julian. Did you get him anything. We | :01:40. | :01:45. | |
got him a card. Before we came here the adults had shame pain. We had a | :01:46. | :01:49. | |
little cake. We brought out a little cake. He didn't want us to sing | :01:50. | :01:53. | |
happy birthday. We will see what we can sort out before you leave. | :01:54. | :01:58. | |
Since their break-up in 1970, the surviving Beatles have | :01:59. | :02:00. | |
only very occasionally appeared together on-screen. | :02:01. | :02:04. | |
It's a very big deal then for us to get an exclusive interview | :02:05. | :02:07. | |
the day before the release of Ron Howard's new documentary. | :02:08. | :02:10. | |
We knew they'd want to be interviewed by someone who really | :02:11. | :02:13. | |
spoke their language, so we put in a call to a man who's | :02:14. | :02:16. | |
This might look like an ordinary rooftop in London, I'm stood where | :02:17. | :02:25. | |
The Beatles played their last ever concert. The rooftop was above their | :02:26. | :02:34. | |
very own Apple Record headquarters. The year was 1969. Yes, that's me. | :02:35. | :02:40. | |
There's no time for messing around. I'm actually outside Abbey Road | :02:41. | :02:46. | |
Studios we are about to meet Ron Howard and Paul and Ringo. | :02:47. | :02:54. | |
Everybody, how do you do? Why do they scream? I don't know. I | :02:55. | :02:59. | |
couldn't tell you. May name is Paul McCartney. This is Ringo Starr. This | :03:00. | :03:04. | |
is John Lennon. I'm George Harrison. I've seen the film. It's brilliant. | :03:05. | :03:08. | |
It's exciting. For you, Ron, you've made other stuff in the past that | :03:09. | :03:14. | |
Frost, Nixon and so on, this was real footage did that put an onus of | :03:15. | :03:17. | |
responsibility on you Tremendous responsibility. I feel that when I'm | :03:18. | :03:24. | |
dealing with a story based on real events. They said, go make your | :03:25. | :03:30. | |
film. I really appreciate it. Fans, I wanted to try to be able to make | :03:31. | :03:33. | |
sure that they would be respected. I wanted to tell a movie. If you knew | :03:34. | :03:39. | |
the music and you thought you knew The Beatles you would learn more. To | :03:40. | :03:43. | |
be honest, as a fan, that's what it felt like. I was looking at your | :03:44. | :03:59. | |
gigs in August 1963, you were doing the Odeon and then Hollywood. An | :04:00. | :04:03. | |
amazing ride. The thing about America was, we'd seen British stars | :04:04. | :04:07. | |
go over to America and not really make it. Yeah. So we were kind of | :04:08. | :04:13. | |
aware of that. We said to our manager - we can't go over until we | :04:14. | :04:18. | |
have a Number 1. We will wait until we had a number 1. We waited and | :04:19. | :04:25. | |
waited. Something suddenly there was a Telegraph - I Want To Hold Your | :04:26. | :04:32. | |
Hand. A A bloke came in. You couldn't have imagined the reaction? | :04:33. | :04:36. | |
We were booked by Ed Sullivan months before. The DJs in New York started | :04:37. | :04:42. | |
playing our music. Everything came together. | :04:43. | :04:46. | |
NEWS REEL: Apparently, they will make a | :04:47. | :04:49. | |
concerted effort to get into the building. 74 million people watched | :04:50. | :04:53. | |
that show, 60% of all televisions in America, which I believe including | :04:54. | :04:59. | |
the television in your house. In California. Also for me, my brother, | :05:00. | :05:04. | |
our Eddie, got me into your music. I was about 10. I saw you as grown men | :05:05. | :05:10. | |
in suits. You were kids. You were 21, you were 23, George was 20. The | :05:11. | :05:15. | |
confidence that you have in the press enter is views is staggering. | :05:16. | :05:22. | |
We had each other to hold on to. -- interviews. Where are we going The | :05:23. | :05:32. | |
top. They would say, to the topper most. I'm an only child. Suddenly I | :05:33. | :05:38. | |
had three brothers who cared and looked out for me. We looked out for | :05:39. | :05:42. | |
each other. I felt sorry for Elvis. He was on his own. People in America | :05:43. | :05:53. | |
just saw us like - BANG. We had been to Hamburg, Liverpool, Aintree | :05:54. | :05:56. | |
Institute. All the little places. We had developed this thing where we | :05:57. | :05:59. | |
could joke amongst each other. Physical he said something I knew | :06:00. | :06:03. | |
what I'd say. John knew what he'd do. Do you need a haircut at all? No | :06:04. | :06:10. | |
thanks. I had one yesterday. We had this whole act. We appeared in | :06:11. | :06:15. | |
America. They saw it all - Fully formed. Fully formed. You had been | :06:16. | :06:20. | |
with the band for two years at that That's why they point. Made it! | :06:21. | :06:28. | |
Exactly. It then became a band. John is in his element there. Stay tuned | :06:29. | :06:34. | |
we will hear more from John, Ron and Paul and Ringo later on including | :06:35. | :06:40. | |
the day when Paul and Ringo realised The Beatles would never play live | :06:41. | :06:44. | |
again. Remarkable insight. Sam you loved that. You mentioned all the | :06:45. | :06:47. | |
locations everything you were seeing there. I completely grew up with The | :06:48. | :06:53. | |
Beatles. Their lives were parallel with them. I measure my teenage | :06:54. | :06:57. | |
years against theirs, you know. I could not be more excited to see | :06:58. | :07:03. | |
this film. Apart from our film which is... Don't get too carried away. | :07:04. | :07:10. | |
Shall we talk about Hunt for the Wilderpeople. Maybe. You play this | :07:11. | :07:16. | |
teenager that inner city teenager. You meet this kind of grumpy man of | :07:17. | :07:20. | |
the woods. Let us start at the beginning and how you actually meet | :07:21. | :07:27. | |
and why. So the producers of the film called me and Taika Waititi the | :07:28. | :07:31. | |
director had done a commercial with me a few years before that he asked | :07:32. | :07:36. | |
if I wanted to get into the film. I said, yes. Then we ended up hearing | :07:37. | :07:42. | |
about the other cast in the film. To be honest... He'd never heard of me. | :07:43. | :07:50. | |
I had never heard of Sam. I did search him on Google, went on | :07:51. | :07:53. | |
Wikipedia. I saw he was in Jurassic Park. I'm like - cool. I finally... | :07:54. | :08:00. | |
Had you seen Jurassic Park? I have seen half of it, I fell asleep. | :08:01. | :08:08. | |
LAUGHTER. When I first met him I walked into the room and saw the | :08:09. | :08:11. | |
movies he had been in. I walked into the room he was standing up eating | :08:12. | :08:15. | |
grapes and looked very serious. I thought he would hate me. I finally | :08:16. | :08:19. | |
got to know him and he's a great man. It mirrors the film in a sense, | :08:20. | :08:26. | |
doesn't it? Definitely. You become a reluctant dad to your teen. Except I | :08:27. | :08:32. | |
liked him right away. More than that, I knew him. I'd seen all his | :08:33. | :08:37. | |
work. No you haven't, stopped lying. I'd seen Shopping and in the | :08:38. | :08:42. | |
commercial that you did with Taika Waititi. I knew all of his stuff, | :08:43. | :08:48. | |
but he never heard of me. How do the two characters you play get thrown | :08:49. | :08:52. | |
together in in the film He is fostered out. He's a kid that no-one | :08:53. | :08:57. | |
wants. He ends up, this is the end of the road, with me and my wife. It | :08:58. | :09:05. | |
ends up being this kind of awesome adventure with dogs and kids... | :09:06. | :09:11. | |
Tanks. Which had the whole of the New Zealand Army working with us. We | :09:12. | :09:15. | |
were actually working with the army training. It was really cool. This | :09:16. | :09:21. | |
big safety meeting. One of the cast drivers was walking back from lunch | :09:22. | :09:27. | |
and almost stood on a grenade. It was pretty dangerous. That is where | :09:28. | :09:32. | |
the hunt part comes in. There is a revelation that happens in the woods | :09:33. | :09:36. | |
which leads to the fact that you stay there much longer than you were | :09:37. | :09:41. | |
expecting. Let's look. Read something stupid anyway. Only people | :09:42. | :09:49. | |
who can't read say things like that. What? NO! You can't read. Watch it, | :09:50. | :09:58. | |
pal. You're like one of those people who are Raised By Wolves. Hey - me | :09:59. | :10:03. | |
no read. What is this. This is words. Me stupid. You little... | :10:04. | :10:10. | |
Ahhh! Come on, let's get you comfortable. | :10:11. | :10:19. | |
APPLAUSE Looked incredibly painful. I do my own stunts. Your character | :10:20. | :10:26. | |
Hector can't read. The characters teach each other an awful lot during | :10:27. | :10:32. | |
the film. If you get stuck with a kid in the bush with you will learn | :10:33. | :10:36. | |
something. . How annoying they are and the music they like. You | :10:37. | :10:39. | |
mentioned the New Zealand Army your dad was in the Army. We have a | :10:40. | :10:42. | |
beautiful picture with so many medals as well. You must have done a | :10:43. | :10:46. | |
lot of camping when you were younger. You must be a man of the | :10:47. | :10:50. | |
woods. There he is with the Queen. There you go. My aunt used to say, | :10:51. | :10:55. | |
your father, he was a good-looking man. As opposed to me, you know! No, | :10:56. | :11:03. | |
he was, you know, he went through the war. . He went through Italy for | :11:04. | :11:11. | |
three three years. You would think he would be competent in camping. | :11:12. | :11:15. | |
When we went camping in the bush there would be some kind of | :11:16. | :11:19. | |
catastrophe. He would pitch the tenths tents in the wrong place, we | :11:20. | :11:23. | |
would be flooded out. Blown off a mountain. He was hopeless. I don't | :11:24. | :11:27. | |
know how he got through the war. How did he get all the medals I know. He | :11:28. | :11:33. | |
was a wonderful man. I miss him. Julian, you mentioned the director, | :11:34. | :11:37. | |
Taika Waititi, who directoring this, he is doing the next Thor. We hear | :11:38. | :11:43. | |
you have your eye on a role in that. We took the liberty, right, of | :11:44. | :11:48. | |
thinking this may go well for you because we mocked something up. A | :11:49. | :11:55. | |
poster. A beauty. Can I keep that? You can have that. Can I hang it on | :11:56. | :12:00. | |
my wall. There is a glass front. We took it off as it shines on | :12:01. | :12:05. | |
television. You can get Sam's face in the background. Potentially. Take | :12:06. | :12:10. | |
that with you. Good luck. Hunt for the Wilderpeople is in cinemas from | :12:11. | :12:12. | |
this Friday. Sam and Julian aren't the only | :12:13. | :12:16. | |
ones who've been getting up close and personal | :12:17. | :12:19. | |
with the great outdoors recently. Here's Miranda with the story | :12:20. | :12:21. | |
of what must surely be This summer a wildlife mystery has | :12:22. | :12:31. | |
been perplexing bird-watchers right across Europe. There were sightings | :12:32. | :12:36. | |
of a huge lone bird flying thousands of miles away from its nearest | :12:37. | :12:41. | |
colonies of Greece, Romania and Bulgaria. It seems to have been | :12:42. | :12:46. | |
blown off course to Poland, Germany and then France. It arrived here in | :12:47. | :12:53. | |
Cornwall. The bird was a dalmatian pelican and it reached UK shores in | :12:54. | :12:56. | |
May of this year. It's thought that this is the first time a wild one | :12:57. | :13:00. | |
has been spotted here for hundreds if not thousands of years. A | :13:01. | :13:07. | |
pelican's bill can grow to around 40 centimetres and its wing span can | :13:08. | :13:11. | |
reach three meters. I'm hoping it will be easy to spot, but I've not | :13:12. | :13:15. | |
seen it yet. The bird made a temporary home here at Drift | :13:16. | :13:22. | |
Reservoir where flush are plentiful. Dave is lucky to have seen it in | :13:23. | :13:27. | |
flight from the RSPB. It was being attacked by a little bird, then when | :13:28. | :13:32. | |
I looked at it properly it was a buzzard. How do we know this is the | :13:33. | :13:36. | |
same bird seen in Poland? On the right-wing, one of the flight | :13:37. | :13:40. | |
feathers has snapped off. If you have a good photograph of the bird | :13:41. | :13:43. | |
you can tell it's the same one. The bird seems to be wary of people and | :13:44. | :13:48. | |
when the fishermen walk around the edge of the reservoir it gets up and | :13:49. | :13:53. | |
flies off and doesn't come back. He is not here. It has moved up to | :13:54. | :14:05. | |
Plymouth. It is's on estuary. We are going to Plymouth. We believe he has | :14:06. | :14:11. | |
flown over 40 miles per day. We are against the clock as we head to | :14:12. | :14:15. | |
where the bird was last spotted. We have a window of a few hours either | :14:16. | :14:20. | |
side of high tide where we can get out on to the river or we will end | :14:21. | :14:25. | |
up stranded in the mud. We are travelling from the Barbican in | :14:26. | :14:30. | |
Plymouth up the River with Bruce Taggert. Looking from the river you | :14:31. | :14:34. | |
have. Much more opportunity of finding the | :14:35. | :14:38. | |
bird from varyingious observation points online. We are going to where | :14:39. | :14:45. | |
it was seen two-days ago. It's an amaidsing bird. I hope we can find | :14:46. | :14:48. | |
it for you. All eyes on the water then. Yes. OK. We spend and hour | :14:49. | :14:55. | |
cruising up the river keeping our eyes peeled hoping with every turn | :14:56. | :14:58. | |
we will spot our pelican, but nothing. Then, one of our crew spots | :14:59. | :15:05. | |
a big white bird. Straight ahead. I had seen that earlier. A swan. I | :15:06. | :15:11. | |
think. Oh, actually. What? That's it. No, you're joking, really? Yeah. | :15:12. | :15:16. | |
No o. Oh, my God, it is. That's amazing. Absolutely | :15:17. | :15:33. | |
incredible. I've only ever seen pelicans once in awhile before, and | :15:34. | :15:37. | |
it wasn't in the UK. This is extraordinary. It is the first time | :15:38. | :15:42. | |
we have had one of these on our shores in around 2000 years. It is | :15:43. | :15:46. | |
one of the rarest, the biggest pelican. There are so many things to | :15:47. | :15:54. | |
get excited about. The pelican lives up to its shy nature and takes off | :15:55. | :16:00. | |
over the hills and out of sight before we can get a proper look. He | :16:01. | :16:04. | |
is miles away. The other night that his birds for you. But then we are | :16:05. | :16:12. | |
treated to one final glimpse of this spectacular bird. He's back! He's | :16:13. | :16:18. | |
playing with us, though. He will come round again in a minute. | :16:19. | :16:26. | |
Dropping. So good. He has just gone down below the horizon. One more | :16:27. | :16:32. | |
glimpse will stop I got it. Will the Dalmatian pelican's sheer size and | :16:33. | :16:35. | |
lack of competition here mean that it is happy with its solitary | :16:36. | :16:41. | |
existence, will be lower of a mate joint back? Whatever happens, that | :16:42. | :16:45. | |
has been the most remarkable bird I have ever seen here in the UK. -- | :16:46. | :16:52. | |
draw it back? We have spoken to the RSPB today, | :16:53. | :16:57. | |
and they believe it has spent the last two weeks in Loepoll in core | :16:58. | :17:00. | |
model stop if you're driving downline mike, keep your eyes peeled | :17:01. | :17:11. | |
for a pelican crossing! Bumble boom, boom! We were talking about a big | :17:12. | :17:20. | |
Bird, which takes us on to big creatures. It was not dinosaurs that | :17:21. | :17:24. | |
were the problem, we heard, it was the weather. We nearly died in the | :17:25. | :17:30. | |
hurricane. There was a hurricane that came through and it was a | :17:31. | :17:38. | |
direct hit. We were filming on an island, it destroyed the set and the | :17:39. | :17:43. | |
hotel we were staying in, and we had to beat it back to California. We | :17:44. | :17:49. | |
weren't really expecting that. We turned up to work one morning and I | :17:50. | :17:54. | |
said, we're just going to stay in the hotel because there is a | :17:55. | :17:57. | |
hurricane expected at three o'clock. It was the first we had heard of it. | :17:58. | :18:02. | |
Julian, let's talk about your life as a 13-year-old. You have had a | :18:03. | :18:06. | |
great career already, Sam has mentioned the films you have been | :18:07. | :18:10. | |
in, and you want to be successful in so on, but how does school and all | :18:11. | :18:15. | |
that fit in with your life? Yeah, school... | :18:16. | :18:20. | |
LAUGHTER Forgot about that. They are a big | :18:21. | :18:25. | |
support, so they help me with work and they are definitely a help. Just | :18:26. | :18:29. | |
doing schoolwork here and there, catching up. I am going to take the | :18:30. | :18:36. | |
last three years of acting to concentrate on school. So one more | :18:37. | :18:43. | |
year of being able to do acting and stuff like that, so it should be | :18:44. | :18:47. | |
good, but it has been great working with Sam. I still have to do my | :18:48. | :18:54. | |
schoolwork. And you still have farm work. In your world, Helena Bonham | :18:55. | :19:00. | |
Carter has just given birth to Graham Norton, and the dad is James | :19:01. | :19:07. | |
Nesbitt. I'm not going mad, am I? I have lots of animals with different | :19:08. | :19:15. | |
names. My best friend is a pig called Angelica, who is actually a | :19:16. | :19:24. | |
bloke. Talk about giving somebody a complex. That my sheep. They are | :19:25. | :19:32. | |
lovely. -- that is my sheep. Look how they adore me. The look of love! | :19:33. | :19:39. | |
You don't get that from sheep very often. With Dame Sarah Storey taking | :19:40. | :19:50. | |
Britain's Paralympic gold medal haul beyond 2012, we are seeing inspiring | :19:51. | :19:54. | |
stories every day of triumph over adversity. Our next film features a | :19:55. | :19:59. | |
man who knows about that. A double Paralympian and a familiar face to | :20:00. | :20:03. | |
those watching the games. I'm Sean Rose. I've represented my | :20:04. | :20:08. | |
country at two Paralympics and won a string of other medals too, but I | :20:09. | :20:13. | |
was not always on four wheels. I started my working life in the RAF. | :20:14. | :20:17. | |
I was a physical training instructor with everything ahead of me until my | :20:18. | :20:21. | |
skiing accident. I came over the brow of a hill, hit some wet snow, | :20:22. | :20:26. | |
and it stopped my feet dead. I was thrown at the front of my skis and I | :20:27. | :20:31. | |
went in head first, like a javelin. I | :20:32. | :20:42. | |
came up look down. I couldn't feel my legs, couldn't move. I was taken | :20:43. | :20:46. | |
to hospital and x-ray. The doctor said, look, you don't need to be a | :20:47. | :20:49. | |
doctor to see that that is broken. I crushed a vertebra, causing spinal | :20:50. | :20:51. | |
damage and leaving me paralysed. The day after my accident, the doctor | :20:52. | :20:54. | |
asked if I had any questions. I said, can I have a pen and paper? I | :20:55. | :20:58. | |
wrote a list of sports I thought I could still do. It became a bucket | :20:59. | :21:03. | |
list and I began to take them off. They became my motivation, to get | :21:04. | :21:07. | |
back into sport. I soon found out that skiing was still very much an | :21:08. | :21:15. | |
option. This is Snow Zone in Milton Keynes. I trained here for the 2006 | :21:16. | :21:22. | |
and 2010 Paralympics. About a year after my accident, I was doing | :21:23. | :21:27. | |
research and found a charity that organised skiing trips. I was | :21:28. | :21:31. | |
apprehensive to start with. I was going to be in base a bold | :21:32. | :21:35. | |
equipment. I made two or three turns and all I wanted to do was make this | :21:36. | :21:41. | |
thing go faster. -- I was going to be in disabled equipment. The | :21:42. | :21:49. | |
manager of the British ski team recognised my enthusiasm and took me | :21:50. | :21:53. | |
on board. We need to develop young skiers and get the next generation | :21:54. | :21:55. | |
along. Taika the I had a sports psychologist to | :21:56. | :22:07. | |
help put me back in the right frame of mind and that is where the | :22:08. | :22:11. | |
backroom staff came into play. It was one of the most exciting periods | :22:12. | :22:15. | |
in my life, and I am amazed at what you've done since. Now I am a double | :22:16. | :22:22. | |
winter Paralympian and a World Cup gold medallist for downhill skiing, | :22:23. | :22:27. | |
and a world champion water skier. It doesn't stop there. It is about new | :22:28. | :22:32. | |
challenges, and for me, this year, I have come back from travelling | :22:33. | :22:39. | |
across the largest glazier in Europe. I am at the birthplace of | :22:40. | :22:45. | |
Paralympics where the use of sport in the rehabilitation began - Stoke | :22:46. | :22:48. | |
Mandeville. I am here to give a lecture about the role sport can | :22:49. | :22:52. | |
play in giving patients a renewed sense of direction and purpose. | :22:53. | :22:57. | |
First, I'm meeting Mandy, who just like me, nearly 20 years ago, is | :22:58. | :23:02. | |
undergoing treatment for a spinal-cord injury. That includes | :23:03. | :23:07. | |
basketball for her. I'm from Hastings, and to come here to treat | :23:08. | :23:12. | |
my injury was just like, I had to do it. And you are using the power of | :23:13. | :23:17. | |
sport to rehabilitate yourself. Absolutely. Argued the rough one -- | :23:18. | :23:29. | |
are you the rough one? My life has improved since my accident. I am | :23:30. | :23:33. | |
married with two children, and life is different, it's better. I'm not | :23:34. | :23:37. | |
going to teach you to suck eggs, because you have been through your | :23:38. | :23:40. | |
own problems. If your dreams don't scare you, they are not big enough. | :23:41. | :23:45. | |
I love that saying. I had these crazy, big dreams in my head. I was | :23:46. | :23:51. | |
like, can I be the best water skier in the welcome as Mike I don't know. | :23:52. | :23:55. | |
How can I do it? Dreams seem far-away at times when you are in | :23:56. | :24:00. | |
this position. There is one question I am always asked. What have you not | :24:01. | :24:07. | |
done? Scuba-diving? I have done it a bit. You know, when you have a curry | :24:08. | :24:15. | |
and you start off, you get a bit and you want a bit more. It gets spicier | :24:16. | :24:21. | |
and spicier. You don't go there from the first day, do you? You get used | :24:22. | :24:25. | |
to it along the way, simple stepping stones. And that is what life is | :24:26. | :24:31. | |
about. The stepping stones get a bit better all the time. | :24:32. | :24:37. | |
What an inspirational man. And a brilliant quote, isn't it? If you're | :24:38. | :24:41. | |
not scared by your dreams, they are not big enough. What an amazing | :24:42. | :24:46. | |
thing to say. Do you have something you would still like to do? I'm | :24:47. | :24:53. | |
terrified of heights. Me as well. I will never jump out of an aeroplane | :24:54. | :24:59. | |
or gold bungee jumping. That was going to be the end of the show! | :25:00. | :25:03. | |
Whereabouts is see the second part of our exclusive Beatles interview. | :25:04. | :25:08. | |
Let's head back to Abbey Road for more of when John Bishop met the | :25:09. | :25:14. | |
Beatles. I remember vividly showing up at a | :25:15. | :25:19. | |
show, being in ordinary clothes and then taking out a little suitcase | :25:20. | :25:25. | |
with the suit and the shirt will stop you would be each individual | :25:26. | :25:28. | |
and then you would put the Beatles suit on. And then you were like... | :25:29. | :25:37. | |
You were in the Beatles. There are a few things in the film that stand | :25:38. | :25:42. | |
out. One is your refusal to play to a segregated audience in | :25:43. | :25:49. | |
Jacksonville. I had to say about was surprised by anything, it was not | :25:50. | :25:54. | |
that they would do that, but they had these great principles and a | :25:55. | :25:57. | |
personal view of things and they let it guide them. That is audacity, but | :25:58. | :26:03. | |
they had a good guide. To us, it wasn't audacity. It was just come | :26:04. | :26:08. | |
off what do you think? We didn't even need to ask. We were trying to | :26:09. | :26:19. | |
out- Little Richard each other. There was one point you said you | :26:20. | :26:28. | |
could not hear Shea Stadium. I was trying to find my place. I couldn't | :26:29. | :26:38. | |
hear nothing. Was it a decision to say, we're not going to play live, | :26:39. | :26:44. | |
or was it that George said you didn't -- he didn't want to do it | :26:45. | :26:48. | |
and you will agree? We were all getting fed up, and I think I was | :26:49. | :26:52. | |
the last one to give in. We were hustled into this meat wagon, which | :26:53. | :26:57. | |
was just like a box. We were sliding around inside it. And we're all | :26:58. | :27:08. | |
looking at each other. It was time. Creatively, you grew from that | :27:09. | :27:16. | |
moment. The new musical express... They had an article. We still | :27:17. | :27:25. | |
remember it! These are the bits you remember. We were in here making | :27:26. | :27:30. | |
Sergeant Pepper, so we knew we were onto something good. There were | :27:31. | :27:33. | |
these little articles coming out, the Beatles have dried up, it's | :27:34. | :27:38. | |
over. We're going... LAUGHTER | :27:39. | :27:43. | |
It has been remastered now I'm listening to it, I know you have a | :27:44. | :27:47. | |
CD coming out. It must have been great for you to hear what you were | :27:48. | :27:52. | |
actually doing. It was great, because we were good! It was four | :27:53. | :27:59. | |
lads on a journey. And a great journey. We are grateful for you | :28:00. | :28:05. | |
giving it back to us. It is a good interview, isn't it? I am really | :28:06. | :28:10. | |
looking forward to the documentary. Julian, tell us what you were saying | :28:11. | :28:15. | |
about your uncle's car. We travel up and down the country a lot, and we | :28:16. | :28:21. | |
decided to put the Beatles on. We put this CD in in the car, listened | :28:22. | :28:29. | |
to some music, and the CD got stuck. It is probably still in the car. It | :28:30. | :28:36. | |
is the Beatles. It's constantly playing. So you know all the words, | :28:37. | :28:40. | |
like John Bishop? Pole is in cinemas from tomorrow. | :28:41. | :29:02. | |
That is all for tonight. A big -- the Beatles: | :29:03. | :29:04. |