Episode 4 The Hour


Episode 4

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Transcript


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This programme contains some strong language

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-I'm trying to find out about the man you work for.

-Mr Cilenti's influence should not be underestimated.

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This time next year every one of those countries will be committed to nuclear armament.

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-The repercussions will be felt by all our children.

-That is an exhilarating team...

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of which you own 50%.

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With eyes on the other half.

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-Have you ever looked for her?

-I'm going now.

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Because I have. I don't have her birth certificate.

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I believe that journalists who share their contacts are ultimately rewarded.

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I think I'd like to call in my reward now.

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A word of advice to you and your friends at The Hour.

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Drink my champagne, eat my oysters, but don't think for a moment you won't pay.

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I think someone's been in my flat. It's from Cilenti.

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Your friend must be turning a blind eye to the man's misdeeds.

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Cilenti's got a leading Police Commander in his pocket.

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We all have our weaknesses, Mr Madden.

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Most of us manage to keep them within the boundaries of the law.

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And if that fails? Could you contain yourself?

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The Standard's already carrying it.

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Christ.

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"To ask an American if a nuclear accord between the United States and Great Britain

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"is a union of equals is to presume that we are looking for an equal.

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"Britain is the car park and we are asking them

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"to act as valets for our missiles.

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"But make this clear - they neither own nor get to drive the car."

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-What was Colonel Finch thinking?

-He clearly wasn't.

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He's made a fool of us and an ass of himself.

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Happy New Year, one and all.

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Let's hope not. We can't make good news without bad.

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These were taken in Paris, mid-December.

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A lunchtime gathering alongside the NATO conference.

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Whilst the real work was being done by the heads of state

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in the other room.

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These are the men in attendance to grease the wheels.

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So, Finch and NATO lead?

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We'll see. Isaac see if we can get Priestly on the show.

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It's important we have the anti-nuclear view.

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Oh, do we really have to have Priestley on?

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I mean, what's Macmillan supposed to do?

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Better to have American-controlled missiles than no missiles at all, surely.

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Bet that's the way the country thinks.

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Balance, Mr Madden. The age-old concept of.

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Something to counteract the fact that Colonel Finch and these men

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taking us to the brink of a nuclear war are all grinning like schoolboys.

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So, the Pentagon wants to build these bases

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and have us pay for them?

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LIX: At the cost of twenty million.

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And I presume these are the men who will benefit from it.

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LIX: Put enough men of influence around a conference table

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-and there'll always be those looking for the crumbs.

-Vultures.

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-Well put, Sweetheart.

-I presume Uncovered are also running with Finch.

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It'll take a typhoon in Tipperary to topple this.

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You'll find me with our friends in personnel this afternoon.

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Those whose contract is up and may be thinking of

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asking for an increase in salary should tread carefully.

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This is the BBC, not the MoD. Contracts cannot be ignored.

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-Did you read it?

-I did.

-And?

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Interesting. Very interesting, but if you plan to break a story of police corruption on The Hour...

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Hector's interview with Stern prepared the ground. Lead with Finch this week by all means...

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Thank you, I will, because this isn't ready. This can't lead.

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But you think it's a good story.

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Without analysis. Without evidence.

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We are journalists Mr Lyon, not detectives.

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An influx of foreign girls who've found employment at El Paradis.

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Norman Pike forcing statutory tenants from their flats and replacing them with Cilenti's girls.

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A police officer who, when he's not assaulting prostitutes, is covering for those that employ them.

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-I think we're not doing badly.

-It's clearly more than just a couple of corrupt plods.

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It's organised crime, systematic, organised crime, greased by a deep level of police collusion.

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If you plan to expose ingrained police corruption ignored by a complicit Commander,

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then you may have the best story of the year and it is only January.

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But dig deeper. Go further. Find new sources.

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If you can't find new sources, find new ways of talking to old ones.

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But that will take time.

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So take time. Until then, NATO still leads the show.

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Didn't I do enough last week? Bloody Sunday Telegraph thought so.

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"A bare-knuckle brawl" was their assessment.

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-It was brilliant, Hector. Really. I...I couldn't have done better myself.

-Thank you.

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But you know there is more.

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You had him against the ropes, Hector but you didn't throw the final punch.

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You can't ask us not to expose him. It is going to happen.

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I can't betray him.

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He's a corrupt officer whose handiwork almost cost you your career.

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Give him the chance to whistle-blow.

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And then what? We can't protect him.

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His career is already blown.

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Just call him.

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I used to think that getting under your skin was a form of sport, now I look on it as a moral duty.

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Let me think, man!

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What next?

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Randall was right. Old sources, new methods.

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My turn. The only people who know more about these men,

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are the women they are involved with.

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-Moneypenny...

-She's our only source.

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I have that translation for Miss Storm.

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Oh, er, well, you might find her in her office.

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We need the money.

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Of course. It's fine.

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I'll, er, I'll go and check on Mr Wengrow's homework.

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Oh, thank you, darling. You are a marvel.

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-A bientot.

-Goodbye.

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I'm going. I'm going. Freddie doesn't like me in the office.

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-I never said that.

-You didn't have to.

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Mr Wengrow.

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The paperwork for El Paradis. Every six months,

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Mr Cilenti has to apply for a fresh licence.

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He's blatantly contravening the licensing hours

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and yet the police never make any objections.

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Inspections are always carried out by an "S Attwood." I assume...

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Never assume.

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..he's the same detective Attwood that signed a report that stated

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there was insufficient evidence to prosecute Mr Pike for assault a few weeks back.

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Or rather, co-signed with an "L Stern."

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-Isaac, I presume, when you go home tonight, your mother will be waiting.

-Yes.

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I'd like you to thank her for me,

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for having the foresight to deliver a son.

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PHONE RINGS

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Hello?

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Er, Miss Ramirez? It's Miss Rowley from The Hour.

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'I was wondering if I might speak with you again.'

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Don't call me here. How did you get this number?

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Through...through a contact.

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She's fine. Miss Delaine. She's fine.

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'Until the next time.'

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You didn't just come because you were worried about Miss Delaine.

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I suspect you also came because you were worried for yourself.

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Please, just...just half an hour, nothing more. Somewhere neutral.

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'No-one need ever know that we spoke.'

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I don't know what you want from me.

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'We want to expose Cilenti but we need information.'

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You have more power than you think.

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There's a museum. The Petrie Museum.

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Take the 19 to Knightsbridge

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'and it's three stops thereafter. Shall we say one o'clock?'

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-I'm late.

-Well, I'll drive you.

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No, thanks.

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I never know where I am with you, Rosa.

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What?

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Jeanie's free.

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How did it go?

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She hung up on me.

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-She'll be there.

-How do you know?

-I just do.

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PHONES RING AND TYPEWRITERS CLATTER

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I'll be off shortly.

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Right. Do you really feel the need to inform me of that?

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I almost telephoned you.

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Really?

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I saw a musical.

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-A musical.

-Why not?

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I was in the West End and I do sometimes, I thought...

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I hate musicals.

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Yes, that's what I thought.

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It might have been interesting, though, to...

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-I wish that you had.

-LIX LAUGHS

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-What?

-You. This. This hovering.

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They've found her.

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QUIETLY: What?

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My contacts. They think they've found her.

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Right.

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They'll send me their paperwork, etc.

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Right.

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-Lix...

-I couldn't.

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I...

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I thought that it was the...

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There was this family, about an hour outside of Paris.

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They were...

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very...

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He took her.

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It wasn't official.

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I just...

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They just looked so right with her.

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And, er, at that time, when war broke out, I was outside Amiens.

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I went back and...

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a neighbour told me that they'd, er, taken her somewhere safe.

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I... Well...

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I... I told myself that she was safe.

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And I haven't heard from them since.

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No address, just...

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just gone.

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So, you'll, er, you'll let me know.

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Yes, as soon as the...

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-It's important that you and I, we...

-Yeah.

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Rather than...push it to the back of the drawer.

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As can happen.

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You've smoked that awful short.

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Shit.

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Shit, shit.

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Can you put me through to Commander Stern, please? Grosvenor 2352.

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PHONE BUZZES

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Yes?

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-'Hello?'

-I don't know why I'm calling you.

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In fact, I'd rather do anything than have this conversation.

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'But old habits die hard.'

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-Hector, erm...

-'I wouldn't do to my worst enemy what you did to that girl.'

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But every vice has its excuse ready. My father always said that.

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So I'd like to believe that it was a moment of madness.

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And I want to believe that you are truly sorry

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-'for what happened.'

-Hector, I...

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'But then I remember the past.'

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And I find these memories, these snatches coming to me...

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'more and more.'

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-The war was a long time ago.

-'Some things you just don't forget.'

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Miss Rowley and Mr Lyon are brilliant journalists and they smell a good story.

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Mr Attwood's name has been mentioned in connection with yours.

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And in connection with the club.

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Lieutenant?

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Well, say something, man, for Christ's sake!

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-They are still pursuing Mr Cilenti?

-'Yes.'

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You're talking about a man who will ruin both of us.

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Your entire team if he has to. You will all be compromised.

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-'The man is relentless.'

-Well, then find a way to stop him.

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'I presume you're joking. You can't honestly think that I haven't thought of that before.'

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Well, then talk to us. It's the only way to keep you clear of the story.

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It'd be professional suicide. Don't be ridiculous.

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-'You'll have to throw us something, Lieutenant.'

-And if I don't?

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-They'll expose you anyway.

-'What, further humiliation live on air?'

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I saved your fucking life, Hector, now you save mine!

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That man.

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I've seen him at the club with Miss Delaine.

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We need a list of everyone who was at this nuclear summit.

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Does he work for NATO?

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That would certainly raise the calibre of the men on Cilenti's payroll.

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Ask Rosa Maria.

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Does she know what any of her clients do? How they might help Cilenti?

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I'll do my best.

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Do you recognise him, Lix?

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No. He's not a politician or a head of state.

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-Are you sure?

-Darling, I can recite the name of every minister,

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Prime Minister and President in my sleep.

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Going down?

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Actually, I was hoping to take you out for lunch.

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-I can't.

-I want to kiss you.

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Oh? I wouldn't.

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-Bob in accounts gets awfully jealous.

-Mr Lyon.

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-Good Christmas?

-Yes. We rang in the New Year.

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I'd better get going. I'm meeting my one-time best man.

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Now working for Auntie on the Sports desk. Dinner?

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Bring wine.

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Love to.

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You're not invited.

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-Very good.

-Are you going to Sports?

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-What?

-I thought you were going to Sports.

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Yes.

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White. She prefers white.

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KNOCK AT DOOR

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-Oh, Mr Kendall.

-Just passing.

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Huh! I don't believe you. You know my contract's up.

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I'm just the carrier pigeon,

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but you must know we will match any raise they offer.

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Right.

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And we can certainly get you a bigger office than this.

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Where do you have all your meetings?

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In Bel's... Miss Rowley's office.

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How does one spread out work in here?

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With difficulty.

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-Bear it in mind.

-I will.

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To be frank, expectations are low, they are notoriously tight

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and probably won't offer me anything better.

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We'll keep your seat warm. Maybe get a meeting with the team in the calendar?

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Talk to Miss Cooper. She keeps my diary.

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Mr McCain on line one. He was wondering if you might be free for a drink.

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-Was he?

-I'll be off. Miss Cooper? Expect a call from me.

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-Divine. Hector, sweetie, have you had a chance to look over the Priestley for tomorrow?

-Er, no.

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-Well I'd appreciate it, if you would.

-Look, just leave them on my desk.

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They're already on your desk.

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Darling, you've got the weight of the world on your shoulders today. Whatever's the matter?

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Just not sleeping very well.

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Are you in trouble?

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Yes. A debt of sorts.

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A man in debt is a slave.

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Oh, Hector darling, I often think the only thing holding you together is that bloody coat.

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I'm fine.

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Good. Then buck up and let's see that fire in your belly.

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What fire?

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The one I saw in your interview with Commander Stern.

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Er, tell McCain, eight o'clock. Wherever he wants.

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Yes, Mr Madden.

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-How long have you worked at El Paradis?

-Two years.

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-And did you know Miss Delaine before?

-No.

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The men who come into the club.

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Do you recognise any of them there? Successful, powerful men.

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-Do you, do you ever get their names?

-If Cilenti tells us to.

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If he wants us to talk to them,

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if he wants us to get them to drink more, talk more.

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If he wants us to get them in a photo.

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And...and why would he want that?

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All men are the same when you unbutton their trousers.

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We're just the honey before the sting.

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He blackmails them?

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You wouldn't have come to see me if you didn't want my help.

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For whatever reason, you... You pushed us in the direction of those photographs. Why?

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No successful man wants to be photographed with a whore.

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But it's a glamorous club. You're a beautiful girl.

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Those photographs are in the press every day of the week.

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We are whores when Mr Cilenti needs us to be.

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So that's how he blackmails them. What happens next?

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Whatever he wants. Passports for foreign girls. Needs a licence.

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Needs to cover something up. Policemen, politicians, stars.

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All the same.

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If they don't pay up, they get a little envelope.

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Then another one.

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He's here.

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Get me something.

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Get me evidence of blackmail and I will get the story out.

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-We can help you.

-No, you can't.

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Anything to prove Cilenti's doing this

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and I will run it on The Hour. He won't harm you.

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-He will be gone, I promise you.

-Goodbye, Miss Rowley.

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-DOOR OPENS

-Mr Madden?

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They're ready for you now.

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-Mr Madden.

-Mr Chapman.

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-We could have shared a taxi.

-I prefer to walk.

0:18:550:18:59

Nothing like an annual review to kick-start the year, Mr Madden.

0:18:590:19:02

-Indeed.

-Get behind the man in front of the camera.

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Please.

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Can't pretend.

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We're really rather pleased with the progress of The Hour, Mr Madden,

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after last year's difficulties.

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Mr Brown has been telling us what an exemplary front man

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you have been for your team.

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Your interview with the Police Commander being a high-point.

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Is that so?

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I understand you're being courted by ITV.

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I would expect nothing less,

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but one must protect one's investment.

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We wish today to reiterate

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what an important asset to the corporation you are, Mr Madden.

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A fact affirmed by Mr Brown, but obvious for all to see.

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Mr Madden is not simply the front man of The Hour...

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..he's the essence.

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A former serviceman, his is the reliable voice that,

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in these dark and difficult times, the public can respect.

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In you they trust.

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While, of course, we cannot be held to ransom,

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we hope to make you an offer

0:20:090:20:11

that you consider commensurate with your talents.

0:20:110:20:14

And in the spirit of whatever the other side is offering -

0:20:140:20:17

-that way, your decision can be purely...

-Ethical.

0:20:170:20:20

-Quite.

-Further to which, we should at some stage

0:20:200:20:23

discuss which other programmes might benefit

0:20:230:20:25

from having you at the helm, Mr Madden.

0:20:250:20:28

-I don't know what to say.

-"Thank you" would be a start.

0:20:310:20:34

Mr Lyon? I've got that list from the Summit lunch.

0:20:380:20:41

-Three Brits - if we disregard McCain...

-Always.

0:20:410:20:43

..and the rest, who are a pretty even smattering of politicians

0:20:430:20:46

and corporate names from the NATO member states.

0:20:460:20:48

But still no name for him.

0:20:480:20:50

-Your eye's twitching.

-Is it?

-You working late?

0:20:500:20:54

Oh, yes. Difficult last act.

0:20:540:20:56

-With a play, do they pay you by the word or by the line?

-Um...

0:20:560:20:59

They don't pay you at all?

0:20:590:21:01

No, they've paid me. They're putting it on the radio.

0:21:010:21:04

Isaac, that's brilliant, bloody well done.

0:21:040:21:07

-I'd rather no fuss.

-I hope you're not leaving.

0:21:070:21:10

Check the Palais.

0:21:100:21:12

Lix says that's where they all stayed. Cross reference.

0:21:120:21:15

Bel?

0:21:230:21:24

-She won't know we're here.

-Breathe.

-Shit.

-Breathe.

-Shit.

0:21:270:21:30

What did she say?

0:21:310:21:33

They're blackmailing Stern.

0:21:350:21:37

Any man of influence - barrister, doctor, actor, minister -

0:21:370:21:43

foolish enough to pass through the doors of El Paradis

0:21:430:21:47

is hurriedly introduced to one of Cilenti's sirens.

0:21:470:21:50

All Miss Delaine and Miss Ramirez have to do

0:21:560:22:00

is to take them home and stand by their front door and kiss them

0:22:000:22:04

and there is somebody there to take their photograph, from a distance.

0:22:040:22:08

A honey-trap.

0:22:080:22:09

Cilenti, conceivably,

0:22:100:22:12

could have information on half the men in London.

0:22:120:22:15

So what does Cilenti want from the man at the NATO summit?

0:22:150:22:18

Miss Delaine was all over him at the club.

0:22:180:22:21

Oh, Christ, what have I done?

0:22:210:22:22

What have I done?

0:22:240:22:26

It's brilliant.

0:22:260:22:27

It's just paper.

0:22:300:22:33

-He followed us.

-So we've rattled him.

0:22:330:22:35

-What is it?

-It's a threat from Cilenti.

0:22:350:22:38

We have to tell the story this week.

0:22:380:22:40

We have to tell it now.

0:22:420:22:44

In Borneo, when a man wants to warn his enemy he's coming for him,

0:22:460:22:49

he binds the dried entrails of his dead elders to a clay pot

0:22:490:22:53

and leaves it at the door.

0:22:530:22:54

Keep going.

0:22:560:22:57

Even though he's threatening a member of our team?

0:22:570:23:00

To him who is in fear, everything rustles.

0:23:000:23:03

-Anything else?

-No. Not yet.

0:23:030:23:05

I've got that name. Francis Tufnell. He owns an engineering company.

0:23:050:23:09

Made his money in scrap metal, post war.

0:23:090:23:11

We've been cross-referencing names

0:23:110:23:13

trying to identify everyone at the NATO summit.

0:23:130:23:15

-Because?

-This man. At the summit lunch.

0:23:150:23:19

I've seen him at El Paradis. With Miss Delaine.

0:23:190:23:21

We think Mr Cilenti may be deliberately encouraging

0:23:210:23:24

compromising situations in order to blackmail men like Commander Stern.

0:23:240:23:28

-And others.

-An industry magnate?

0:23:280:23:30

-Possibly.

-Strictly, Mr Wengrow is on the home desk,

0:23:300:23:35

-but one suspects the reach of this particular story goes beyond our remit.

-Yes.

0:23:350:23:39

The question one should be asking

0:23:390:23:42

is what is an industry magnate doing among diplomats?

0:23:420:23:45

Was there really nowhere better we could meet?

0:23:510:23:53

Dear, dear, Hector. I know you don't bear a grudge.

0:23:530:23:55

What is El Paradis without you, hmm?

0:23:550:23:58

For goodness' sake, take off that coat.

0:23:580:24:00

You look as if you're waiting to be evacuated.

0:24:000:24:02

-Whisky, no ice.

-No, thank you.

-My friend will have the same.

0:24:040:24:07

Pretty girl.

0:24:080:24:10

Why do you do it, Angus?

0:24:110:24:13

You don't find that young woman remotely attractive.

0:24:130:24:15

Actually, I've just met an absolutely lovely girl. Vera.

0:24:150:24:19

A distant cousin. We've been to the theatre, twice.

0:24:190:24:22

Look, I've not come to fight.

0:24:220:24:24

You put on an absolutely marvellous display of your prowess

0:24:240:24:28

at that Orphanage Trust party thingamajig.

0:24:280:24:30

Let us not repeat that.

0:24:300:24:32

I have a story for you.

0:24:320:24:34

Too late, we're on air tomorrow. We've got our story.

0:24:340:24:37

-Finch, the missiles? Obviously?

-No point in denying it.

0:24:370:24:40

No, no, I can see the appeal. Thank you.

0:24:400:24:43

Mm.

0:24:430:24:45

Might have something else for you. Something a little stronger.

0:24:450:24:48

Been some slight trouble at the Treasury.

0:24:500:24:53

-Treasury?

-Mm-hm.

0:24:530:24:55

Well, I won't bore you with the details,

0:24:550:24:57

suffice to say, the entire Cabinet are looking to spend money,

0:24:570:25:01

not least in defence, and the Chancellor is adamant they can't.

0:25:010:25:05

So? Sack Thorneycroft.

0:25:070:25:09

If you sack the Chancellor, you risk exposing the fact that he's right.

0:25:090:25:12

Thorneycroft and his colleagues, Powell and Birch,

0:25:120:25:16

are on the brink of resignation.

0:25:160:25:18

It's a case of "cut spending or else".

0:25:180:25:20

The cabinet are in session as we speak.

0:25:200:25:23

You think you're in trouble, Hector?

0:25:240:25:26

Poor old Harold has never had it so bad.

0:25:260:25:30

Why bring this to us?

0:25:300:25:32

What has happened to Downing Street in the last few days

0:25:330:25:37

could well bring down the government.

0:25:370:25:39

That's not what I asked.

0:25:390:25:41

Well, it makes for better copy than Finch.

0:25:410:25:43

I'm giving you first dibs, Hector.

0:25:430:25:45

Just get your chaps down to Westminster tomorrow

0:25:450:25:48

-and watch it unfold.

-It won't work. He hasn't resigned yet.

0:25:480:25:50

Well, he will have done by the time you've gone on air.

0:25:500:25:53

Yeah, leaving us with what? No time to react.

0:25:530:25:56

Even with the tip we'll be no further ahead than any other news outfit.

0:25:560:25:59

And I can't pitch a discussion on rumoured resignation. It's hearsay.

0:25:590:26:03

Miss Rowley won't buy it. Nor will Brown.

0:26:030:26:06

Well then, I'll give you the whole scoop, hmm?

0:26:060:26:09

Thorneycroft is itching to talk.

0:26:090:26:11

Well, he will be.

0:26:110:26:13

You bring your camera, I'll bring the Chancellor,

0:26:130:26:16

we meet at Westminster.

0:26:160:26:17

-The interview is yours.

-Exclusively?

0:26:170:26:20

I may not be Evelyn Waugh, Hector,

0:26:200:26:22

but I do know the meaning of the word "scoop".

0:26:220:26:24

-Same again? Same again.

-No, no, I'm not staying.

0:26:260:26:29

Think about it, Hector.

0:26:290:26:31

If I don't hear from you, Uncovered are the next in line.

0:26:310:26:35

Good evening, Mr Madden.

0:26:440:26:45

Actually, maybe I will stay for another drink.

0:26:520:26:55

PHONE RINGS

0:26:580:27:00

-Yes?

-It's me.

0:27:040:27:06

'Hello, me.'

0:27:060:27:07

-What are you doing?

-I'm... I'm working.

0:27:070:27:11

'24 hours till we go out.'

0:27:110:27:12

Are you quite all right?

0:27:120:27:14

'Yes, I'm fine.'

0:27:140:27:16

You don't sound it. You sound tense.

0:27:160:27:19

Erm...

0:27:190:27:21

It's... It's just been one of those days.

0:27:210:27:23

'Tell me.'

0:27:230:27:26

No, I don't do that.

0:27:260:27:29

Oh, well. That's a shame.

0:27:290:27:30

Because I've been commended for my listening.

0:27:300:27:33

No. Sorry. Erm...you'll just have to get used to tense.

0:27:350:27:39

'What time tonight?'

0:27:410:27:42

Erm...nine?

0:27:420:27:46

'You still there?'

0:27:470:27:49

Jane's away for the night. With her grandmother.

0:27:490:27:53

Right.

0:27:550:27:57

'And now your silence is making me even tenser.'

0:27:590:28:03

I'll see you later.

0:28:030:28:05

Yep.

0:28:050:28:07

Turn it off.

0:28:370:28:39

And disappoint your guests, Mr Cilenti?

0:28:390:28:42

They're not my guests. Get them out.

0:28:420:28:44

-Sorry, gentlemen.

-Ah...what?

0:28:510:28:54

Right, how do we get this story to lead tomorrow?

0:28:540:28:57

This was taken a few weeks ago.

0:28:570:28:59

It's Mr Tufnell again.

0:28:590:29:01

And here's a list of Mr Tufnell's professional activities

0:29:010:29:04

through the years. They seem pretty legitimate.

0:29:040:29:06

He's clearly made a considerable amount of money.

0:29:060:29:08

But the trail goes blank during the war.

0:29:080:29:11

No military record, so I asked Mr Wengrow

0:29:110:29:13

to find out what he was doing from '39 to '45.

0:29:130:29:15

The only name I could find was a Francesco Tufo

0:29:150:29:18

who was interned in a POW camp on the Isle of Man.

0:29:180:29:22

The same Francesco Tufo who started a small company here in '46,

0:29:220:29:26

specialising in springs for pens, cars, etc.

0:29:260:29:29

-Mrs Lyon again.

-Take another message, please.

0:29:290:29:31

She wants you to pick up some food for this evening.

0:29:310:29:35

Ron's. All I could find. Some sort of schnapps.

0:29:350:29:38

Oh, thank you. Well, er... beggars can't be choosers.

0:29:380:29:40

A year later, that firm was sold and a second one was started

0:29:400:29:44

by a man now known as Francis Tufnell. He changed his name.

0:29:440:29:49

Presumably to grease his path.

0:29:490:29:50

But the really interesting thing

0:29:500:29:53

is the name of one of his co-compatriots

0:29:530:29:55

in the Prisoner of War camp -

0:29:550:29:57

Mr Raphael Cilenti.

0:29:570:29:59

Might want your spectacles.

0:30:000:30:02

There.

0:30:090:30:11

And guess who is on Mr Tufnell's board of directors?

0:30:120:30:15

Raphael Cilenti.

0:30:150:30:17

And the name of the company in line to secure a million pound contract

0:30:170:30:20

on the bases post the NATO summit?

0:30:200:30:22

Tufnell Engineering.

0:30:230:30:25

The same military bases which will house the American missiles.

0:30:250:30:30

Kiki isn't a honey trap for Mr Tufnell -

0:30:300:30:33

she's a New Year's bonus.

0:30:330:30:35

Or a gift from one friend to another.

0:30:350:30:39

This blows Finch and the NATO summit out of the water.

0:30:410:30:45

Excuse me.

0:30:450:30:47

Excuse me.

0:30:500:30:52

All is well, Miss Delaine?

0:30:520:30:54

-Thank you, Mr Cilenti.

-Mr Tufnell.

0:30:540:30:56

-I hope you're being very nice to my friend this evening.

-Always.

0:30:560:31:00

Good girl. Whatever he wants?

0:31:000:31:03

Yes, Mr Cilenti.

0:31:030:31:05

No concern of yours, Miss Delaine.

0:31:050:31:08

All is happy tonight.

0:31:080:31:10

Mr Madden. May I offer you a table?

0:31:110:31:13

No, thank you, Mr Cilenti, the view's just fine here.

0:31:130:31:17

-Excuse me, could I have a word?

-Of course.

0:31:170:31:19

-Miss Delaine?

-I'll call the management.

0:31:310:31:33

I'm not here to harangue you.

0:31:330:31:36

I'm not asking you to explain why you did what you did.

0:31:360:31:39

I'm warning you -

0:31:390:31:40

whatever Commander Stern did to you before, he will do it again.

0:31:400:31:45

You're... You're too young to understand what war does to men.

0:31:450:31:49

It shatters you, it exposes the worst part of you

0:31:490:31:52

and makes you want to destroy even the most beautiful things.

0:31:520:31:55

I don't understand.

0:31:550:31:57

I wish you could.

0:31:570:31:58

Go away.

0:31:580:32:01

Go away!

0:32:010:32:02

Got any more of that?

0:32:250:32:27

Cilenti's got me sitting at the top table again tonight.

0:32:270:32:31

You're stupid.

0:32:310:32:33

We're not exclusive.

0:32:330:32:34

Your Commander know that?

0:32:340:32:36

I'm in trouble.

0:32:410:32:43

Rosa!

0:32:530:32:55

Go back to your gentleman. Don't let them see you with me.

0:32:550:32:57

Please!

0:32:570:32:59

Get out while you can, Kiki, promise me.

0:33:020:33:06

You can get free from all of this.

0:33:060:33:07

So can you.

0:33:070:33:09

Wish me luck.

0:33:100:33:12

# I believe

0:33:310:33:35

# In doing what I can

0:33:350:33:39

# In crying when I must... #

0:33:390:33:43

Your lady...

0:33:440:33:46

She's been talking?

0:33:470:33:49

No, that don't mean nothing. Rosa just likes a gab.

0:33:490:33:53

You can't help yourself when you hear her sing.

0:33:530:33:55

She'll never be Miss Delaine.

0:33:550:33:58

You won't get a better dancer.

0:33:580:34:00

Dancers are easy to find.

0:34:000:34:02

Take care of it.

0:34:050:34:07

# Someone affectionate

0:34:130:34:17

# And dear

0:34:170:34:22

# Cares would be ended

0:34:220:34:26

# If I knew that he

0:34:260:34:31

# Wanted to have me near. #

0:34:310:34:37

You're too much. You really are too much.

0:34:400:34:44

Laurie was just reminding me of that terribly funny dinner

0:34:440:34:47

we had at the Plaza Cafe, Coronation Day. Do you remember?

0:34:470:34:51

Drinking ourselves silly

0:34:510:34:52

and toasting the new Queen to the early hours.

0:34:520:34:55

What are you doing here?

0:34:550:34:57

I was passing.

0:34:570:34:59

Marnie, could you leave us alone, please?

0:34:590:35:01

I'm sorry, Laurie. I'm terribly sorry. Hector?

0:35:010:35:05

Please do as I say.

0:35:060:35:08

Don't ever come to my house uninvited.

0:35:160:35:19

-Hector...

-I blotted it from my mind cos it was wartime.

0:35:190:35:23

Trieste, stuck in that warehouse for God knows how long.

0:35:230:35:27

Finally we had a night off in that...god-awful village.

0:35:270:35:30

One girl to service all of us. You went first.

0:35:320:35:34

-Remember?

-Yes, well, I'm not going to have this conversation.

0:35:340:35:37

So I'm shown into this squalid back room and there cowering on the bed...

0:35:370:35:42

She'd been beaten black and blue.

0:35:420:35:45

When I sat next to you on the way back, never said a word.

0:35:450:35:48

I'll never forget what you did for me.

0:35:510:35:54

And I'd hoped one day to repay the favour but...

0:35:540:35:57

..I can't.

0:35:590:36:01

And I can't stop The Hour

0:36:010:36:02

-from exposing the corruption in your force.

-Christ!

0:36:020:36:06

It's out of my control.

0:36:060:36:08

It'll ruin me.

0:36:080:36:09

Now, you owe me.

0:36:110:36:13

You have to do something!

0:36:130:36:15

I can buy you a week, but you stay away.

0:36:150:36:19

From here and, if you've any sense, from that young woman.

0:36:190:36:22

I can't!

0:36:220:36:24

Then you're a fool.

0:36:240:36:27

You're not the only one in her life.

0:36:290:36:32

Tell me you understand that.

0:36:320:36:34

I'm sorry. I'm so sorry.

0:36:410:36:44

You haven't done anything yet.

0:36:440:36:45

FREE JAZZ PLAYS

0:36:500:36:52

I know, I know, I know...

0:37:010:37:03

It's all right. Michael bought supper.

0:37:030:37:06

Come.

0:37:070:37:08

We have another pair of hands.

0:37:100:37:12

You can lick while I fold.

0:37:120:37:14

Can it wait till morning? I have to go to bed.

0:37:140:37:18

Michael, Anne, Phillip? My husband, Freddie.

0:37:180:37:23

Ah, the man who tells the world what's happening, eh?

0:37:230:37:26

I try.

0:37:260:37:28

Michael's heard Priestley speak.

0:37:280:37:29

He's been asked to work on the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.

0:37:290:37:32

That's marvellous. Pie and chips for two.

0:37:320:37:35

Excuse me.

0:37:350:37:36

Rude.

0:37:410:37:43

-My house.

-OUR house.

0:37:430:37:44

You know, there's a reason

0:37:460:37:47

people write music down before they play it.

0:37:470:37:49

It sounds better that way.

0:37:490:37:50

-You're so patronising.

-Me patronising?

0:37:500:37:53

You've got Karl Marx, Groucho Marx and Gertrude Stein

0:37:530:37:56

conspiring revolution in my front room.

0:37:560:37:59

Well, at least they are doing something. Trying to do something.

0:37:590:38:02

I just need to sleep.

0:38:040:38:06

Freddie, don't you care?

0:38:060:38:08

Do you know this craziness going on in the world?

0:38:080:38:10

Missiles creating more missiles,

0:38:100:38:12

ours to be pointed at the Soviets, theirs to be pointed back at us!

0:38:120:38:16

On and on it will go, Freddie. Every day, horrible, horrible news.

0:38:160:38:19

What do you think I do all day

0:38:190:38:21

but try to make sense of those horrible stories?

0:38:210:38:23

Well, this is how we do it! This is how to effect change.

0:38:230:38:27

Same as you telling your story, except we don't have to wear a suit.

0:38:270:38:30

This suit pays the bills.

0:38:300:38:32

Is this our life, Freddie?

0:38:340:38:36

Why do you think I work every night, late?

0:38:360:38:38

Trying to deliver the most truthful perspective I can.

0:38:380:38:41

Because it's easier than to be here.

0:38:410:38:43

With me.

0:38:430:38:45

Because then you can be with her.

0:38:450:38:48

With Bel.

0:38:480:38:49

Say it's not true.

0:38:500:38:52

It's not true.

0:38:550:38:58

Liar.

0:38:580:38:59

The poor man had to get his wife to retype every letter after I'd gone.

0:39:040:39:11

In the end, he said,

0:39:110:39:13

"Well, if you can't type, maybe you'd be better at finding the story."

0:39:130:39:17

And you were.

0:39:180:39:20

My first story was a fire in the East End.

0:39:220:39:25

A faulty boiler.

0:39:260:39:27

It killed two families, and orphaned a twelve-year-old boy.

0:39:280:39:32

I door-stepped the landlord until he admitted he was at fault.

0:39:330:39:38

It made page six.

0:39:380:39:40

All my girlfriends were at dire dinner parties

0:39:410:39:46

trying to find the perfect husband. They still despair of me, but...

0:39:460:39:49

..how can I hide what's really important,

0:39:510:39:54

what really can change the world?

0:39:540:39:57

It's the simple act of telling someone's story.

0:39:590:40:02

But not forever?

0:40:040:40:05

No? Why can't I do it forever?

0:40:050:40:07

Ah, talking about something you don't want to talk about.

0:40:070:40:10

That thing you don't do again.

0:40:100:40:11

We got Priestley. On tomorrow's programme.

0:40:140:40:17

He just confirmed.

0:40:170:40:19

No. How?

0:40:190:40:21

But if it's about the news, she will talk about it.

0:40:210:40:24

And so passionately on her subject.

0:40:250:40:28

I'm just very persuasive.

0:40:300:40:32

When I set my heart on something...

0:40:320:40:34

-DUSTBIN CLATTERS

-You're still on edge.

0:40:360:40:39

Let's not be newsmen tonight.

0:40:410:40:43

Let's just be...

0:40:430:40:45

SHE BREATHES HEAVILY

0:42:000:42:03

No, go back to sleep.

0:42:340:42:36

I didn't know you were dropping by today.

0:42:520:42:55

You had a visitor?

0:42:550:42:58

-Just a friend.

-Yeah. Whore.

0:42:580:43:01

Did you honestly think I was only yours?

0:43:070:43:10

Do you honestly think it's enough, sitting in waiting for YOU to visit?

0:43:100:43:16

The arrogance.

0:43:160:43:19

All of you thinking you're the one.

0:43:190:43:21

Go on, then - hit me.

0:43:250:43:28

You want to do it so...

0:43:290:43:31

I love you.

0:43:310:43:34

I love you, too.

0:43:340:43:36

You stupid little girl.

0:43:440:43:47

You have no idea what you've done.

0:43:470:43:50

You don't even know what you've done to me.

0:43:500:43:52

You can tell Mr Cilenti...

0:44:190:44:21

..that I won't be requiring you any more.

0:44:240:44:27

Hector?

0:44:500:44:52

There are things I haven't told you about the war.

0:44:590:45:02

Things that we did.

0:45:050:45:07

Terrible things.

0:45:080:45:10

Laurie took over once, when I couldn't...

0:45:120:45:15

When, as his commanding officer, I...

0:45:190:45:22

I couldn't give orders.

0:45:220:45:24

He used a man as a shield,

0:45:260:45:29

a French man, intent on giving us away.

0:45:290:45:32

He got us out.

0:45:360:45:39

Oh, Hector...

0:45:390:45:41

He got us out, Marnie.

0:45:460:45:48

-Oh...

-SHE CLEARS HER THROAT

0:46:130:46:17

Are you ready?

0:46:170:46:19

-Do you want me to...?

-Yes, please.

0:46:340:46:36

Her name is Sofia.

0:46:490:46:51

Oh. They kept her name.

0:46:510:46:53

Sofia Malfrand.

0:46:560:46:58

She probably doesn't even speak English.

0:47:010:47:04

She's at the Conservatoire.

0:47:040:47:07

Studying music.

0:47:070:47:09

Music? Oh.

0:47:120:47:14

Sofia.

0:47:170:47:19

19.

0:47:210:47:23

Done?

0:47:490:47:50

Yes.

0:47:500:47:51

Good.

0:47:550:47:56

A list of high profile men, most of them in government,

0:48:010:48:03

who have been entertained at El Paradis

0:48:030:48:05

who clearly are using their influence

0:48:050:48:07

to support Cilenti's life over here.

0:48:070:48:08

-Your source at El Paradis?

-I've been calling her all morning.

0:48:080:48:11

-She's not picking up. She's too frightened.

-And Priestley?

0:48:110:48:14

-Decided to go on ITV.

-On Uncovered.

0:48:140:48:16

Thank you, Mr Wengrow.

0:48:160:48:17

I wasn't expecting to see him getting gonged on Take Your Pick.

0:48:170:48:21

-Mr Madden.

-Morning, Hector.

0:48:210:48:23

We don't need Priestley. This is the story.

0:48:240:48:27

A criminal whose business empire is allowed to exist

0:48:290:48:32

due to widespread police corruption,

0:48:320:48:34

a fact for which we now have evidence,

0:48:340:48:37

who maintains his power by blackmailing people of influence,

0:48:370:48:41

and who also may be profiteering

0:48:410:48:44

from contracts related to the imminent arrival of missiles.

0:48:440:48:48

His corruption goes nuclear.

0:48:480:48:50

-Very good.

-There is a time issue here.

0:48:510:48:54

Our contacts, our sources,

0:48:540:48:56

may have endangered themselves by talking to us.

0:48:560:48:59

A young woman, she gave us the story.

0:48:590:49:01

If we run it tonight, if we go public,

0:49:010:49:04

it quashes the chance of repercussions for her.

0:49:040:49:06

-You're suggesting tonight?

-Yes.

0:49:060:49:08

Really? I mean, it's a good story but...

0:49:080:49:11

But?

0:49:110:49:13

You might want to save it for another week.

0:49:130:49:16

The Chancellor is going to resign.

0:49:160:49:18

It's not been announced yet,

0:49:190:49:21

but, er, McCain has offered us the exclusive.

0:49:210:49:24

A 30-minute interview with the Chancellor this evening,

0:49:240:49:27

live from Westminster.

0:49:270:49:28

So why is Mr McCain giving this to The Hour?

0:49:280:49:31

-He owes me.

-Oh, you can't be serious.

0:49:310:49:33

-That's an incredible lead, Hector.

-It's deflection, is what it is. It couldn't be more obvious!

0:49:330:49:38

Can't you just be pleased?

0:49:380:49:39

Must you always be the one to get the scoop, Freddie?

0:49:390:49:41

This is the scoop!

0:49:410:49:43

While you were drinking whisky and jockeying for a pay rise,

0:49:430:49:45

we were working through the night to get this story. And for what?

0:49:450:49:48

All McCain wants is to bury the anti-nuclear story

0:49:480:49:51

and the Colonel's gaffe. It's deflection.

0:49:510:49:53

That's his job, to bury bad news.

0:49:530:49:55

A 30-minute interview plus analysis...

0:49:550:49:58

it doesn't give time for anything else.

0:49:580:50:00

In terms of public interest,

0:50:000:50:01

you know this is the more important story.

0:50:010:50:03

We can't ignore a scoop like this.

0:50:030:50:04

He's right. Mr Wengrow? Talk to the outside broadcast unit.

0:50:040:50:08

See if they can get the Roving Eye. I'll speak to McCain.

0:50:080:50:11

We asked this girl to put her neck on the line!

0:50:110:50:14

If we weren't going to run the story, we would never have done that.

0:50:140:50:17

We have to run it now.

0:50:170:50:19

It's a corruption story. It'll wait a week.

0:50:190:50:22

Our priority has to be to cover political developments such as these.

0:50:220:50:26

Lix?

0:50:260:50:28

It's the much bigger story, darling.

0:50:290:50:32

Mr Madden to speak to the Chancellor,

0:50:320:50:34

Mr Lyon to link from the studio.

0:50:340:50:36

You're doing this to cover your chum, Hector.

0:50:360:50:39

His news is ordered by government and you bloody know it.

0:50:390:50:42

That government runs this country

0:50:420:50:44

and any changes to the cabinet is of public interest.

0:50:440:50:47

Shame on you, Hector.

0:50:470:50:48

Er, Mr Brown, I wanted to thank you...

0:50:540:50:56

Not necessary. Not if you're going to stay.

0:50:560:50:58

Post? On my desk, please, and call Miss Ramirez again.

0:51:090:51:13

Oh, Ron, back a bit with that,

0:51:130:51:14

we want to light Mr Lyon, not interrogate him.

0:51:140:51:17

Hello.

0:51:190:51:21

It's beautiful. All the lights.

0:51:210:51:23

Are you looking for Freddie? He's upstairs.

0:51:230:51:26

Do you mind?

0:51:270:51:28

No, not at all.

0:51:280:51:30

We're doing a live link with Westminster.

0:51:360:51:39

Exciting?

0:51:400:51:42

I suppose so.

0:51:420:51:44

Will you give Freddie a message?

0:51:440:51:46

But you can give it to him yourself.

0:51:460:51:48

My train leaves soon.

0:51:480:51:50

Please just tell him I'm going away for a couple of days.

0:51:500:51:54

With friends.

0:51:540:51:56

A holiday?

0:51:560:51:58

No. Not exactly.

0:51:580:52:00

How can one have a holiday when we live like this?

0:52:000:52:02

People in this city, they understand best

0:52:030:52:05

what's happening in the world -

0:52:050:52:08

the nuclear threat, what it means for ordinary people.

0:52:080:52:11

Yet they do nothing about it.

0:52:130:52:15

Er, Camille...

0:52:200:52:21

Are you all right?

0:52:230:52:24

Yeah.

0:52:240:52:26

Look after him.

0:52:270:52:29

It's what he wants.

0:52:290:52:31

What you both want.

0:52:310:52:33

Um...that's not true.

0:52:330:52:36

Yes, it is. You just can't admit it.

0:52:360:52:38

PHONE RINGS

0:52:440:52:46

RINGING CONTINUES

0:52:540:52:56

20 minutes, Miss Rowley wants everyone on the floor.

0:53:020:53:06

OK, just through here.

0:53:100:53:12

The Chancellor is just about to release his press statement.

0:53:150:53:18

Ready for D-Day?

0:53:180:53:20

Well, as ready as I was for the real thing, Angus.

0:53:200:53:22

Yeah. Then Mr Thorneycroft should have little to fear, I imagine.

0:53:220:53:25

He will be ready for you presently.

0:53:250:53:28

Oh, erm, they're... They're waiting for you downstairs.

0:53:380:53:42

We've just got to get on with it, Freddie. No complaining.

0:53:440:53:46

Who's complaining?

0:53:460:53:48

Sorry.

0:53:530:53:55

Not even a dent.

0:53:570:53:59

Camille dropped by.

0:54:020:54:03

She said she was going away for a few days.

0:54:030:54:06

Right.

0:54:080:54:09

I asked her to wait but, erm...

0:54:110:54:14

We keep fighting.

0:54:140:54:16

Right.

0:54:160:54:18

About you.

0:54:200:54:22

She says all I care about is the story.

0:54:260:54:29

The story and...

0:54:310:54:33

..you.

0:54:340:54:36

Miss Ramirez is just not answering.

0:54:380:54:41

McCain.

0:55:050:55:08

Oh, my...

0:55:080:55:10

Five minutes, ladies and gentlemen! Five minutes, please!

0:55:120:55:17

Mr Brown.

0:55:170:55:19

What if we aren't covering the Chancellor story

0:55:190:55:21

because McCain wants to sink the gaffe? What if we're covering it

0:55:210:55:24

because somewhere Cilenti is pulling McCain's strings?

0:55:240:55:27

What if we are about to go live

0:55:270:55:28

with the very story Cilenti wants us to run?

0:55:280:55:31

Courtesy of our contact?

0:55:310:55:33

Oh, she hasn't answered.

0:55:330:55:35

Too late. Too damn late!

0:55:350:55:38

Mr Lyon?

0:55:400:55:42

Thanks, Isaac.

0:55:480:55:49

-Hector. Chancellor, Mr Madden.

-Mr Thorneycroft.

0:55:490:55:52

Stand by, everyone, we're going live in 25 seconds and cue grams.

0:55:520:55:57

Mr Wengrow, tell Mr Madden we're coming to him in 20 seconds.

0:55:570:56:00

Ten...nine...

0:56:030:56:05

eight...seven...

0:56:050:56:07

six...

0:56:070:56:09

'Good evening and welcome to The Hour,

0:56:150:56:18

'the most important 60 minutes of your week.

0:56:180:56:21

'Tonight we will be taking you live to Westminster

0:56:210:56:23

'to bring you the news that in the last few minutes the Chancellor...'

0:56:230:56:27

Tufnell's here.

0:56:310:56:33

I have looked into Tufnell Engineering.

0:56:330:56:35

There is a buyer investing heavily in their shares.

0:56:350:56:38

It's an offshore company listed as Castlecore.

0:56:380:56:40

-That's you.

-Christ!

0:56:400:56:42

Who are Castlecore?

0:56:420:56:44

Sign now, Mr Madden,

0:56:440:56:45

I knew it was coming. Just hope he reads the small print.

0:56:450:56:49

It might be better if he didn't.

0:56:490:56:50

You women are all the same - showgirls and whores.

0:56:500:56:54

Rein this in. Rein this in now. You know what Freddie's like.

0:56:540:56:57

They will kill you.

0:56:570:56:59

You are charging towards a loaded gun

0:56:590:57:00

and you think you can miraculously dodge the bullet. You can't.

0:57:000:57:03

This is a raid.

0:57:030:57:05

Where's Rosa?

0:57:060:57:08

-Holiday.

-Liar.

0:57:080:57:09

Christ.

0:57:090:57:10

What have we done?

0:57:100:57:12

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