1 00:00:00,120 --> 00:00:00,960 Speaker 1: Happy Friday. 2 00:00:01,280 --> 00:00:03,560 Speaker 2: It's the jam Nation podcast with Jonesi, Demanda and what 3 00:00:03,680 --> 00:00:04,760 Speaker 2: a somber Friday. 4 00:00:04,840 --> 00:00:08,720 Speaker 3: It's been, what an incredible day. We threw our show 5 00:00:08,760 --> 00:00:12,320 Speaker 3: over to celebrating the life of Queen Elizabeth. What a 6 00:00:12,400 --> 00:00:16,200 Speaker 3: life of service. We crossed to Hugh Whittfield, across to 7 00:00:16,280 --> 00:00:19,320 Speaker 3: Lucy McDonald and Tracy Vogue, correspondents who are all over 8 00:00:19,360 --> 00:00:19,720 Speaker 3: the UK. 9 00:00:20,120 --> 00:00:22,160 Speaker 1: Correspondence from seven, nine and ten. 10 00:00:22,400 --> 00:00:26,080 Speaker 3: That's right. The Queen apparently every morning was woken by 11 00:00:26,120 --> 00:00:29,520 Speaker 3: bagpipes outside her window. She loved the bagpipes. So fight 12 00:00:29,560 --> 00:00:32,600 Speaker 3: for your flashback songs with bagpipes. 13 00:00:32,040 --> 00:00:35,240 Speaker 2: Songs with bagpipes. We also had some great stats about 14 00:00:35,240 --> 00:00:37,600 Speaker 2: the Queen. You came up with some really interesting facts 15 00:00:37,640 --> 00:00:39,040 Speaker 2: as well, stuff that I did not. 16 00:00:39,400 --> 00:00:42,080 Speaker 3: We also, well, I did went the blood many times. 17 00:00:42,400 --> 00:00:52,680 Speaker 1: Enjoy our podcast. 18 00:00:52,680 --> 00:00:54,920 Speaker 4: Now about a miracle of recording. We have so many 19 00:00:54,920 --> 00:00:55,600 Speaker 4: requests for. 20 00:00:55,640 --> 00:00:56,400 Speaker 5: Them to do it again. 21 00:00:56,520 --> 00:00:59,680 Speaker 3: Mistress Amanda's ms Keller Amanda. 22 00:00:59,320 --> 00:01:00,400 Speaker 4: Doesn't work alone. 23 00:01:01,920 --> 00:01:04,880 Speaker 3: Their friend making the tools of the train. 24 00:01:04,959 --> 00:01:07,720 Speaker 2: I've heard them describe him as a drunken idiot. 25 00:01:09,160 --> 00:01:13,120 Speaker 6: The legendary poet Jonesy Amanda, the actress. 26 00:01:13,160 --> 00:01:17,280 Speaker 3: Congratulations, we're there right now. Jersey and Amanda, you're doing 27 00:01:17,319 --> 00:01:17,960 Speaker 3: a great job. 28 00:01:18,520 --> 00:01:23,120 Speaker 1: It could anyone but his Selfie giant now the good radio. 29 00:01:23,400 --> 00:01:28,000 Speaker 4: Sorry, but of a tangle twist set. 30 00:01:27,360 --> 00:01:30,000 Speaker 1: And Amanda, shoot Timy. 31 00:01:30,640 --> 00:01:33,240 Speaker 2: We're on the air the ninth of September, and on 32 00:01:33,280 --> 00:01:36,440 Speaker 2: this day the Queen passed away in England at six 33 00:01:36,480 --> 00:01:38,880 Speaker 2: point thirty. As they're sitting down to their tea, they 34 00:01:38,920 --> 00:01:40,200 Speaker 2: would have heard this on the BBC. 35 00:01:40,480 --> 00:01:44,520 Speaker 7: This is BBC News from London. Buckingham Palace has announced 36 00:01:44,520 --> 00:01:47,720 Speaker 7: the death of her Majesty Queen Elizabeth ID. 37 00:01:49,080 --> 00:01:49,600 Speaker 1: Wow. 38 00:01:50,280 --> 00:01:53,320 Speaker 3: You know, extraordinary scenes that we're seeing people flocking to 39 00:01:53,400 --> 00:01:55,720 Speaker 3: leave flowers at Buckingham Palace. She was in bell Moral, 40 00:01:55,760 --> 00:02:01,160 Speaker 3: surrounded by family. Apparently we have a new king, King 41 00:02:01,280 --> 00:02:06,760 Speaker 3: Charles the Third. His siblings Princess Anne, Prince Andrew and 42 00:02:06,880 --> 00:02:11,120 Speaker 3: Prince Edward would have kissed Charles's hand. That's this huge protocol. 43 00:02:11,560 --> 00:02:15,079 Speaker 3: The queen passes away instantly, the monarchy moves into its 44 00:02:15,120 --> 00:02:18,400 Speaker 3: next stage. But what a huge outpouring of grief for 45 00:02:18,480 --> 00:02:20,400 Speaker 3: all of us, for the queen, whether you're a monarchas 46 00:02:20,760 --> 00:02:22,960 Speaker 3: or a publican. I don't cry, but I'm looking at 47 00:02:22,960 --> 00:02:23,920 Speaker 3: all the images on the TV. 48 00:02:24,360 --> 00:02:26,800 Speaker 1: What a day I know it's a big day. 49 00:02:27,440 --> 00:02:30,160 Speaker 2: I remember where I was when I heard it. I'd 50 00:02:30,160 --> 00:02:32,400 Speaker 2: missed all the texts this morning. I didn't check my phone. 51 00:02:32,440 --> 00:02:32,959 Speaker 2: I got to work. 52 00:02:33,160 --> 00:02:34,639 Speaker 3: Where you were? You only heard it two hours? 53 00:02:34,720 --> 00:02:34,919 Speaker 8: Yeah? 54 00:02:35,000 --> 00:02:37,720 Speaker 2: No, But it's just like I saw Jack Yeowe in 55 00:02:37,760 --> 00:02:39,280 Speaker 2: the carpike I was get off on my motorbike and 56 00:02:39,360 --> 00:02:40,200 Speaker 2: said it's a sad day. 57 00:02:40,200 --> 00:02:42,520 Speaker 1: I said, what's happened? She said, the Queen's die and 58 00:02:42,560 --> 00:02:43,519 Speaker 1: I went, WHOA? 59 00:02:43,639 --> 00:02:45,679 Speaker 3: I know? And the fact is she was ninety six, 60 00:02:45,840 --> 00:02:48,560 Speaker 3: she hadn't been well. Her family were arriving at bell 61 00:02:48,600 --> 00:02:52,200 Speaker 3: Morral throughout the morning. People thought something's not right here, 62 00:02:53,160 --> 00:02:58,000 Speaker 3: and yet people are shocked at it still feels shocking 63 00:02:58,240 --> 00:03:00,960 Speaker 3: that the Queen has gone. The bedrock of modern England 64 00:03:01,000 --> 00:03:03,840 Speaker 3: has gone, and England really is at a crossroads with Brexit, 65 00:03:04,280 --> 00:03:06,960 Speaker 3: with Boris Yelton and the mess that he's created. They 66 00:03:07,000 --> 00:03:10,960 Speaker 3: have a new Boris Johnson. Boris what a throwback, but 67 00:03:11,000 --> 00:03:12,520 Speaker 3: the mess that he kind of created for a lot 68 00:03:12,560 --> 00:03:16,520 Speaker 3: of Britons that people felt dissatisfied with him. They have 69 00:03:16,560 --> 00:03:19,959 Speaker 3: a new Prime Minister. There's fractions and fighting within the 70 00:03:20,040 --> 00:03:23,160 Speaker 3: royal family. The queen was the bedrock to everything that 71 00:03:23,280 --> 00:03:26,720 Speaker 3: was okay. I think England's going to really be finding 72 00:03:26,760 --> 00:03:29,720 Speaker 3: it hard to find their feet after this. And wouldn't 73 00:03:29,720 --> 00:03:32,520 Speaker 3: it be wonderful and a big part of being royal. Yes, 74 00:03:32,520 --> 00:03:35,880 Speaker 3: there's all those protocols, but it's a pr job. If 75 00:03:36,000 --> 00:03:39,120 Speaker 3: Prince William and Kate and Harry and Meghan can stand 76 00:03:39,200 --> 00:03:42,640 Speaker 3: up side by side and throw out all the antagonism, 77 00:03:42,800 --> 00:03:45,280 Speaker 3: I think that would be a huge move right now. 78 00:03:45,120 --> 00:03:46,520 Speaker 1: Certainly the world is watching that. 79 00:03:46,840 --> 00:03:49,760 Speaker 3: Yeah, absolutely, But you know, the Queen gave an entire 80 00:03:49,880 --> 00:03:53,160 Speaker 3: life of service. When you look at Donald Trump, there 81 00:03:53,160 --> 00:03:55,400 Speaker 3: are people who were and maybe Boris Johnson was one 82 00:03:55,440 --> 00:03:58,320 Speaker 3: two in it for ego, where was your service? Every 83 00:03:58,400 --> 00:04:00,520 Speaker 3: day the Queen was briefed on things that were happening 84 00:04:00,560 --> 00:04:02,280 Speaker 3: in the Commonwealth. She was up to date with the 85 00:04:02,320 --> 00:04:06,280 Speaker 3: world events. She worked every single day. She was extraordinary. 86 00:04:06,360 --> 00:04:09,680 Speaker 2: We'll be crossing over to places like Bao Morale and 87 00:04:09,840 --> 00:04:12,480 Speaker 2: Buckingham Palace and things like that throughout the show. 88 00:04:12,480 --> 00:04:13,640 Speaker 1: Here we will, whilst. 89 00:04:13,440 --> 00:04:15,520 Speaker 2: We also weave in the other fruits of the pie 90 00:04:15,600 --> 00:04:17,680 Speaker 2: that is this show. We're all in this together, the 91 00:04:17,800 --> 00:04:20,839 Speaker 2: Magnificent Seven. It starts right here right now. What's the question? 92 00:04:21,240 --> 00:04:24,200 Speaker 3: Question one? And It's Queen theme today to honor the 93 00:04:24,200 --> 00:04:26,840 Speaker 3: passing of the Queen. Long Live the Queen, Well, yes, 94 00:04:27,400 --> 00:04:29,800 Speaker 3: long live the King is what we say now. But 95 00:04:29,880 --> 00:04:33,320 Speaker 3: what nickname did the Queen's family used most often for 96 00:04:33,360 --> 00:04:33,960 Speaker 3: the Queen. 97 00:04:36,320 --> 00:04:40,000 Speaker 1: Podcast WSFM. Hello there, it's Jonesy and Amanda. 98 00:04:40,120 --> 00:04:44,039 Speaker 2: If you're just waking up, Queen Elizabeth has passed away. 99 00:04:45,200 --> 00:04:46,720 Speaker 3: Big news this morning. 100 00:04:46,440 --> 00:04:47,040 Speaker 1: Big news. 101 00:04:48,279 --> 00:04:52,160 Speaker 2: Use that in your life, You've you've always wondered, you know, 102 00:04:52,480 --> 00:04:53,560 Speaker 2: when's that going to happen? 103 00:04:54,000 --> 00:04:57,239 Speaker 3: It's it's been a long time, you know, she's ninety six, 104 00:04:57,400 --> 00:04:59,760 Speaker 3: and yet it's still shocking to say the words, isn't it? 105 00:05:00,080 --> 00:05:00,360 Speaker 9: It is? 106 00:05:00,560 --> 00:05:02,680 Speaker 1: Yes, it's shocking. I'm genuinely sad. 107 00:05:02,839 --> 00:05:03,360 Speaker 3: Yeah, me too. 108 00:05:03,480 --> 00:05:06,360 Speaker 2: Queen is the one through thing in our lives. Yeah yeah, 109 00:05:07,000 --> 00:05:09,200 Speaker 2: And we continue to go on. We have the magnificent 110 00:05:09,240 --> 00:05:10,960 Speaker 2: seven seven questions. Can you go the way and answer 111 00:05:11,000 --> 00:05:12,080 Speaker 2: our seven questions correctly? 112 00:05:12,440 --> 00:05:13,680 Speaker 3: They are themed around the Queen. 113 00:05:14,040 --> 00:05:15,800 Speaker 1: Say if you do that, Amanda will say. 114 00:05:15,839 --> 00:05:18,800 Speaker 3: Say congratulations and let's pass on your best to the 115 00:05:18,880 --> 00:05:19,400 Speaker 3: royal family. 116 00:05:19,520 --> 00:05:21,640 Speaker 1: James and Windsor appropriate. 117 00:05:21,800 --> 00:05:25,279 Speaker 3: Hello, James, there are you going? We're going okay? How 118 00:05:25,320 --> 00:05:27,040 Speaker 3: are you feeling this news this morning? 119 00:05:28,160 --> 00:05:31,960 Speaker 10: Oh, look at it a shame, but she always did 120 00:05:31,960 --> 00:05:34,200 Speaker 10: her job very well and right to the end as well. 121 00:05:34,240 --> 00:05:37,640 Speaker 3: I guess that's how I feel. I'm a Republican, but 122 00:05:37,680 --> 00:05:40,200 Speaker 3: I think the Queen has done an incredible job. Well, 123 00:05:40,240 --> 00:05:42,520 Speaker 3: let's get through these questions. Question one, what nickname did 124 00:05:42,560 --> 00:05:46,680 Speaker 3: the queen's family use for her? Most often Lily Bit? 125 00:05:46,800 --> 00:05:50,760 Speaker 3: And Harry and Meghan's daughters are lily Bit, Lily lily Bit. 126 00:05:51,080 --> 00:05:53,640 Speaker 1: How old was Queen Elizabeth when she became queen? 127 00:05:55,839 --> 00:05:58,640 Speaker 3: She was twenty she was twenty five? Yeah, and well 128 00:05:58,680 --> 00:06:03,000 Speaker 3: her her father died so unexpectedly. She had married, she 129 00:06:03,040 --> 00:06:05,719 Speaker 3: had young children. She wasn't expecting to be queen for 130 00:06:05,839 --> 00:06:10,120 Speaker 3: years and years, which brings us to question three. Where 131 00:06:10,200 --> 00:06:11,920 Speaker 3: is this iconic moment from? 132 00:06:11,960 --> 00:06:17,159 Speaker 11: Perhaps you would like a marmalade sandwich? I always keep 133 00:06:17,200 --> 00:06:22,040 Speaker 11: one for emergencies, so do I? 134 00:06:22,040 --> 00:06:26,080 Speaker 12: I keep mine in here. 135 00:06:27,520 --> 00:06:39,400 Speaker 1: For Nita? The party is about to start? Your mostyn 136 00:06:40,839 --> 00:06:44,640 Speaker 1: Where's it from? Did you pretty much give the answer? Everything? 137 00:06:45,600 --> 00:06:47,799 Speaker 3: That's very kind. I knew it to make me cry. 138 00:06:48,600 --> 00:06:49,359 Speaker 3: I've gotten the blood. 139 00:06:49,720 --> 00:06:50,200 Speaker 13: This was a. 140 00:06:50,160 --> 00:06:54,240 Speaker 3: Scene filmed with I'm allowed to say who Paddington Paddington Bear? 141 00:06:54,680 --> 00:06:55,680 Speaker 3: And what was the event. 142 00:06:57,400 --> 00:07:00,080 Speaker 6: I think it was the recent common. 143 00:07:00,600 --> 00:07:06,560 Speaker 2: There no games, James Lind's in caring about Hello, Heleen, Hello. 144 00:07:06,200 --> 00:07:06,920 Speaker 5: Hello, Hello. 145 00:07:07,000 --> 00:07:08,200 Speaker 13: I've had a little cry already. 146 00:07:08,440 --> 00:07:11,200 Speaker 3: Oh I know it is. I don't want to cry today, 147 00:07:11,200 --> 00:07:13,400 Speaker 3: but I can't help but a hearing Paddington set me off. 148 00:07:14,600 --> 00:07:16,760 Speaker 13: It's kind of sweet, isn't it. It really is a sweet, 149 00:07:17,040 --> 00:07:19,360 Speaker 13: lovely woman. And she's I mean, you're the same age 150 00:07:19,360 --> 00:07:22,320 Speaker 13: as me, as you know a man. Yes, she's been 151 00:07:22,360 --> 00:07:24,080 Speaker 13: there all of our lives. And I remember as a 152 00:07:24,080 --> 00:07:26,640 Speaker 13: little girl who was such a stowy deficient young woman, 153 00:07:26,680 --> 00:07:29,280 Speaker 13: and I was something I aspired to old Lynn. 154 00:07:30,760 --> 00:07:32,920 Speaker 3: And well do you know where that iconic, iconic moment 155 00:07:33,000 --> 00:07:33,440 Speaker 3: was from. 156 00:07:34,160 --> 00:07:37,120 Speaker 13: It was part of the platin Ju belief celebration that 157 00:07:37,120 --> 00:07:37,600 Speaker 13: that came out. 158 00:07:37,640 --> 00:07:40,880 Speaker 1: It was so cute, so cute, so cute. I liked 159 00:07:40,880 --> 00:07:42,800 Speaker 1: when she was when she jumped out of the plane 160 00:07:42,840 --> 00:07:44,000 Speaker 1: with James Bond. 161 00:07:44,160 --> 00:07:46,160 Speaker 3: That's right for these good London Olympics. 162 00:07:46,400 --> 00:07:49,400 Speaker 2: The Queen didn't use an alarm clock. Instead, what woke 163 00:07:49,440 --> 00:07:50,760 Speaker 2: her up each morning? 164 00:07:50,800 --> 00:07:52,080 Speaker 1: This is a multiple choice question. 165 00:07:52,160 --> 00:07:56,960 Speaker 2: Lynn was an AA bagpiper, b a church choir or 166 00:07:57,080 --> 00:07:58,760 Speaker 2: sea opera music. 167 00:08:00,120 --> 00:08:02,520 Speaker 13: I'm going to go opera music the other don't seem real? 168 00:08:03,040 --> 00:08:05,440 Speaker 3: No, not for music? And Len, how are you recovering? 169 00:08:05,440 --> 00:08:06,600 Speaker 3: I know you've been in hospital. 170 00:08:11,520 --> 00:08:12,480 Speaker 1: Greg's in Marylands? 171 00:08:12,480 --> 00:08:15,880 Speaker 3: Hello Greg, good morning, good morning. The queen didn't use 172 00:08:15,880 --> 00:08:18,320 Speaker 3: an alarm clock. What woke her each morning? Was it 173 00:08:18,360 --> 00:08:24,600 Speaker 3: a bagpiper or a church choir? It was a bagpiper. 174 00:08:24,920 --> 00:08:27,600 Speaker 3: It would pipe outside her window every morning. 175 00:08:27,680 --> 00:08:29,880 Speaker 1: And what happens if you wanted to sleep in she 176 00:08:29,920 --> 00:08:30,520 Speaker 1: did snooze. 177 00:08:30,560 --> 00:08:33,319 Speaker 3: Well, let's just say I think it happened at nine am. 178 00:08:33,480 --> 00:08:35,720 Speaker 3: So if you want to sleep longer than that, bad luck. 179 00:08:36,360 --> 00:08:36,920 Speaker 3: You're the queen. 180 00:08:36,960 --> 00:08:38,719 Speaker 1: Get up, ye, I'll be terrible. You've got to hang 181 00:08:38,760 --> 00:08:41,600 Speaker 1: over in the bagpipe? Okay? 182 00:08:42,160 --> 00:08:43,280 Speaker 3: Can you play something else? 183 00:08:44,040 --> 00:08:49,479 Speaker 1: What year to Queen Elizabeth Mary Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. 184 00:08:49,600 --> 00:08:50,959 Speaker 3: That's hard? How about what decade? 185 00:08:56,200 --> 00:08:56,400 Speaker 8: You know? 186 00:08:56,520 --> 00:08:58,160 Speaker 1: Sonya of Liverpool? And I might know this? 187 00:08:58,320 --> 00:09:01,800 Speaker 3: Hello Sonya, good morning. How are you very well? Do 188 00:09:01,840 --> 00:09:03,679 Speaker 3: you know the year? If you don't know the year, 189 00:09:03,720 --> 00:09:04,640 Speaker 3: will take the decade? 190 00:09:06,160 --> 00:09:07,520 Speaker 14: The Ford nineteen fourties? 191 00:09:08,080 --> 00:09:08,760 Speaker 3: It was it was. 192 00:09:08,760 --> 00:09:10,200 Speaker 1: Nineteen forty seven. 193 00:09:10,240 --> 00:09:12,200 Speaker 3: Yea, yeah, yeah. They got two and a half thousand 194 00:09:12,280 --> 00:09:14,760 Speaker 3: wedding gifts when they got married. That's a lot of breadmakers, 195 00:09:15,000 --> 00:09:17,840 Speaker 3: a lot of bread makers and a lot of salad balls. 196 00:09:17,760 --> 00:09:21,880 Speaker 1: Other than English. What language did the queen speak fluently? 197 00:09:24,120 --> 00:09:25,400 Speaker 14: Or was it a multiple question? 198 00:09:25,559 --> 00:09:26,199 Speaker 3: Or no? 199 00:09:26,200 --> 00:09:26,240 Speaker 15: No? 200 00:09:27,520 --> 00:09:28,800 Speaker 1: What did you break out in it? 201 00:09:29,120 --> 00:09:30,400 Speaker 3: What might it be? You think. 202 00:09:32,160 --> 00:09:34,160 Speaker 14: It has a French It was French? 203 00:09:34,880 --> 00:09:38,360 Speaker 3: It was French. Question seven? How many children did the 204 00:09:38,400 --> 00:09:38,880 Speaker 3: Queen have? 205 00:09:42,480 --> 00:09:46,160 Speaker 14: Of children? And pair of one to three? Four? 206 00:09:46,440 --> 00:09:48,840 Speaker 3: Four? She may be trying to disown Andrew at some point, 207 00:09:48,880 --> 00:09:49,680 Speaker 3: but there were four. 208 00:09:49,880 --> 00:09:52,000 Speaker 1: Actually, what's going to happen with Andrew at the funeral 209 00:09:52,000 --> 00:09:52,480 Speaker 1: and stuff? 210 00:09:52,600 --> 00:09:54,760 Speaker 3: Well, he's you know, his mam has passed away. He 211 00:09:54,800 --> 00:09:55,800 Speaker 3: has to be part of all that. 212 00:09:56,520 --> 00:09:59,120 Speaker 2: Congratulations to you, Sony, you've won the jam pack. It's 213 00:09:59,120 --> 00:09:59,800 Speaker 2: all coming away too. 214 00:10:00,040 --> 00:10:01,040 Speaker 1: Undred and fifty dollars. 215 00:10:00,800 --> 00:10:04,839 Speaker 2: Designer Appliance voucher, your premium Appliance Specialist two hundred and 216 00:10:04,880 --> 00:10:07,600 Speaker 2: twelve paramatter raid Cabaden have found me passed to the. 217 00:10:07,720 --> 00:10:08,720 Speaker 1: Four Will Drive Show. 218 00:10:08,760 --> 00:10:10,560 Speaker 2: The four Will Drive and Adventure Show is back at 219 00:10:10,559 --> 00:10:12,959 Speaker 2: Easton Creek and Jo's in demandic character chews few to 220 00:10:12,960 --> 00:10:14,280 Speaker 2: color and in some state of pencils. 221 00:10:14,440 --> 00:10:16,000 Speaker 16: Sonya, anything you'd like to add? 222 00:10:17,400 --> 00:10:20,880 Speaker 3: No, it's a sad day It is a sad day, Sonya, 223 00:10:20,920 --> 00:10:22,040 Speaker 3: and I think a lot of people will be hit 224 00:10:22,080 --> 00:10:23,320 Speaker 3: by it, even if they weren't aware. 225 00:10:23,360 --> 00:10:25,280 Speaker 1: They like a little bit kind of emotions. 226 00:10:25,400 --> 00:10:29,040 Speaker 3: Oh, absolutely absolutely. As Lynn said, you know, she's been 227 00:10:29,080 --> 00:10:33,719 Speaker 3: there for us as young women right through. My admiration 228 00:10:33,800 --> 00:10:35,160 Speaker 3: for her was enormous. 229 00:10:34,760 --> 00:10:37,360 Speaker 1: And Lynn was right when she said the Queen was 230 00:10:37,480 --> 00:10:44,000 Speaker 1: very aspirational. Somber day. Queen Elizabeth has passed away six 231 00:10:44,120 --> 00:10:46,360 Speaker 1: thirty last night in the UK. 232 00:10:46,559 --> 00:10:49,839 Speaker 3: Yeah, the news broke here about three point thirty three 233 00:10:49,960 --> 00:10:54,440 Speaker 3: thirty am. The Queen is incredible. As I said earlier, 234 00:10:54,480 --> 00:10:58,439 Speaker 3: she devoted her life to service, and many judged her 235 00:10:58,800 --> 00:11:02,600 Speaker 3: because of the duties and the sacrifices she made in 236 00:11:02,679 --> 00:11:05,680 Speaker 3: terms of her mothering, etc. But she knew that this 237 00:11:05,880 --> 00:11:08,080 Speaker 3: job was forever. He she is at twenty one, she 238 00:11:08,160 --> 00:11:09,200 Speaker 3: wasn't even queen yet. 239 00:11:10,160 --> 00:11:14,520 Speaker 17: I decare before you all, with her life, whether it 240 00:11:14,640 --> 00:11:18,520 Speaker 17: be long or short, shall be devoted to your service 241 00:11:19,360 --> 00:11:22,920 Speaker 17: and to the service of our great Imperial family to 242 00:11:23,000 --> 00:11:27,240 Speaker 17: which we all belong. But I shall not have strength 243 00:11:27,320 --> 00:11:31,480 Speaker 17: to carry out this resolution alone unless you'll join in 244 00:11:31,520 --> 00:11:34,240 Speaker 17: it with me. As I now invite you to do, 245 00:11:35,800 --> 00:11:40,440 Speaker 17: I know that your support will be unfairingly given. God 246 00:11:40,520 --> 00:11:44,199 Speaker 17: help me to make good my vow, and God bless 247 00:11:44,280 --> 00:11:46,760 Speaker 17: all of you who are willing to share in it. 248 00:11:47,200 --> 00:11:49,080 Speaker 3: As she said, whether my life belong or short. She 249 00:11:49,200 --> 00:11:52,000 Speaker 3: was the longest serving monarch seventy years, is the longest 250 00:11:52,000 --> 00:11:55,240 Speaker 3: serving monarch in British history, and Charles has had the longest. 251 00:11:56,080 --> 00:11:58,559 Speaker 3: In turn, what's it called, like an apprenticeship? I guess 252 00:11:58,600 --> 00:12:01,080 Speaker 3: he will be the oldest monarch to take the throne. 253 00:12:01,160 --> 00:12:02,400 Speaker 1: So she was born to serve. 254 00:12:02,520 --> 00:12:05,840 Speaker 3: Well, that's what everyone says, born to serve, but not really. 255 00:12:05,880 --> 00:12:09,319 Speaker 3: It was her uncle Edward the seventh, her father's brother, 256 00:12:09,520 --> 00:12:11,640 Speaker 3: Edward the seventh, who fell in love with Wallace Simpson, 257 00:12:12,240 --> 00:12:14,679 Speaker 3: and he was told she was twice divorced. As the 258 00:12:15,120 --> 00:12:17,280 Speaker 3: head of the royal family or also head of the 259 00:12:17,360 --> 00:12:20,800 Speaker 3: Church of England, a divorce wasn't allowed. They tried to 260 00:12:20,920 --> 00:12:26,200 Speaker 3: break up that relationship. If he had married Wallace, I 261 00:12:26,240 --> 00:12:28,280 Speaker 3: don't think. I don't think from what I've read, she 262 00:12:28,320 --> 00:12:31,240 Speaker 3: was capable of having children, and so it would have 263 00:12:31,280 --> 00:12:34,320 Speaker 3: gone to Elizabeth anyway. But if he had cave to 264 00:12:34,400 --> 00:12:37,240 Speaker 3: family pressure and had married someone else and had gone 265 00:12:37,240 --> 00:12:39,800 Speaker 3: on to be king and had a family of his own. 266 00:12:40,640 --> 00:12:44,960 Speaker 3: This entire bloodline that we see now of Elizabeth and 267 00:12:45,080 --> 00:12:48,679 Speaker 3: Charles and William would never have happened. That is the 268 00:12:48,679 --> 00:12:51,760 Speaker 3: sliding doors of America, of the royal family. It's what 269 00:12:51,800 --> 00:12:55,559 Speaker 3: I find so fascinating about it. It's all happenstance and 270 00:12:55,760 --> 00:12:59,680 Speaker 3: luck and bad luck and moments that lead us to 271 00:12:59,720 --> 00:13:05,000 Speaker 3: the queen through all of history being this extraordinary monarch. Amazing, 272 00:13:05,080 --> 00:13:05,480 Speaker 3: isn't it. 273 00:13:05,800 --> 00:13:14,839 Speaker 18: Jonesy and Amanda Germ podcast. 274 00:13:13,640 --> 00:13:16,000 Speaker 2: Well, this is a day that will go down in history, 275 00:13:16,080 --> 00:13:18,640 Speaker 2: the ninth of September. Where were you when you found 276 00:13:18,640 --> 00:13:20,679 Speaker 2: out about Queen Elizabeth passing away? 277 00:13:20,720 --> 00:13:22,600 Speaker 3: You might just be waking up now hearing the news. 278 00:13:22,600 --> 00:13:25,800 Speaker 3: Now Queen Elizabeth has passed away. At by Morals, the. 279 00:13:25,800 --> 00:13:29,040 Speaker 2: Most cynical person has a degree of sadness because she 280 00:13:29,120 --> 00:13:31,439 Speaker 2: has been the through line through our lives. 281 00:13:31,200 --> 00:13:34,800 Speaker 3: And everyone recognizes the hard work she did, the stoic 282 00:13:34,880 --> 00:13:38,679 Speaker 3: person she was, the sense of duty that she did. 283 00:13:38,720 --> 00:13:40,880 Speaker 3: We don't always see that these days in our in 284 00:13:40,920 --> 00:13:43,520 Speaker 3: our public she could call herself a public servant. We 285 00:13:43,559 --> 00:13:44,360 Speaker 3: don't always see that. 286 00:13:44,520 --> 00:13:48,400 Speaker 2: Hugh Whitfield, our UK correspondent, he's outside Boomoral Castle. We're 287 00:13:48,440 --> 00:13:50,439 Speaker 2: going to cross him, surely, but I'm going to flick 288 00:13:50,480 --> 00:13:51,920 Speaker 2: through the Jermanac because. 289 00:13:53,160 --> 00:13:53,679 Speaker 1: Here we go. 290 00:13:53,760 --> 00:13:57,480 Speaker 2: On the fourth of June this year, Rod Stewart performed 291 00:13:57,480 --> 00:14:01,120 Speaker 2: at the Queen's Platinum Jubilee Buckingham Palace. You remember he 292 00:14:01,160 --> 00:14:02,640 Speaker 2: did Sweet Caroline. 293 00:14:09,720 --> 00:14:12,120 Speaker 3: I think it's a big football anthem in yeah, yeah, 294 00:14:12,280 --> 00:14:14,040 Speaker 3: everyone likes it's a good sing, a long one. 295 00:14:14,160 --> 00:14:16,720 Speaker 2: The BBC wanted him to sing it, he didn't necessarily 296 00:14:16,760 --> 00:14:20,440 Speaker 2: want to sing it. Elvis Costello criticized his performance, saying, 297 00:14:20,440 --> 00:14:23,520 Speaker 2: the fans call him. I know you all love him 298 00:14:23,760 --> 00:14:26,080 Speaker 2: and he's one of yours and everything, But Rod, what 299 00:14:26,240 --> 00:14:28,880 Speaker 2: the f I mean? I've been in show business forty 300 00:14:28,880 --> 00:14:31,400 Speaker 2: five years, so I know I think two. You could 301 00:14:31,400 --> 00:14:34,840 Speaker 2: have at least done hot legs or you wear it well. 302 00:14:34,720 --> 00:14:35,720 Speaker 3: Hot legs for the Queen. 303 00:14:35,760 --> 00:14:37,600 Speaker 16: I did you do hot legs for the Queen? 304 00:14:37,880 --> 00:14:40,840 Speaker 1: But you could do this one. I love this song, 305 00:14:41,160 --> 00:14:42,720 Speaker 1: We love this sum. 306 00:14:44,240 --> 00:14:48,080 Speaker 2: And Hugh Whitfield, our UK correspondent from Channel seven, is 307 00:14:48,120 --> 00:14:48,520 Speaker 2: with us. 308 00:14:48,640 --> 00:14:52,360 Speaker 3: Hello Hugh, Hello, Na, good morning, Hello Hugh. You you're 309 00:14:52,400 --> 00:14:55,760 Speaker 3: at Balmoral Castle. What have you seen that led up 310 00:14:55,800 --> 00:15:00,000 Speaker 3: to the announcement that the Queen had passed today? 311 00:15:00,080 --> 00:15:03,600 Speaker 13: We had that news last night your time that doctors 312 00:15:03,640 --> 00:15:07,800 Speaker 13: were concerned for the Queen's health and that they said 313 00:15:07,800 --> 00:15:10,520 Speaker 13: that the Queen was comfortable. Now none of that was 314 00:15:10,560 --> 00:15:13,840 Speaker 13: good news. And then over the course of the after 315 00:15:14,000 --> 00:15:17,640 Speaker 13: particularly late on, members of the royal family gathered here 316 00:15:17,760 --> 00:15:20,160 Speaker 13: at Balmoral. Charles and Camilla were not far away at 317 00:15:20,160 --> 00:15:23,160 Speaker 13: their hemank Berkel. Princess Anne was also in Scotland. But 318 00:15:23,760 --> 00:15:27,440 Speaker 13: other senior royals, Prince Andrew, Prince Edward, his wife Sophie, 319 00:15:27,440 --> 00:15:30,920 Speaker 13: Prince William as well jumped on a plane. They flew 320 00:15:30,960 --> 00:15:33,560 Speaker 13: to Aberdeen. They came up here in a convoy to 321 00:15:33,600 --> 00:15:37,680 Speaker 13: Balmoral to see the Queen. Unfortunately, it does seem as 322 00:15:37,680 --> 00:15:40,040 Speaker 13: though Prince Harry did not make it up here in time. 323 00:15:40,360 --> 00:15:43,640 Speaker 13: We saw him being driven in after the queen's desk 324 00:15:44,520 --> 00:15:48,280 Speaker 13: was announced. That all led up to that statement that 325 00:15:48,360 --> 00:15:51,600 Speaker 13: came through at three point thirty in the morning Sydney time, 326 00:15:52,080 --> 00:15:54,680 Speaker 13: six thirty in the evening here that the climbing passed away, 327 00:15:55,560 --> 00:15:58,840 Speaker 13: followed by a statement from King Charles deferred as he 328 00:15:59,080 --> 00:16:03,160 Speaker 13: is now his reign picking up where his mother left 329 00:16:03,200 --> 00:16:06,560 Speaker 13: golf after her extraordinary seventy years on the throne. 330 00:16:06,200 --> 00:16:08,040 Speaker 3: And in the midst of his grief. He really has 331 00:16:08,080 --> 00:16:10,040 Speaker 3: to step up because he has a lot of duties 332 00:16:10,080 --> 00:16:12,600 Speaker 3: coming his way in the next few days and weeks, doesn't. 333 00:16:12,360 --> 00:16:16,520 Speaker 13: He he does, His reign begins immediately, you know that 334 00:16:16,560 --> 00:16:22,120 Speaker 13: there is a rerain is continuous but also broken in 335 00:16:22,800 --> 00:16:25,840 Speaker 13: that as soon as the Queen died, Charles became king. 336 00:16:26,600 --> 00:16:29,320 Speaker 13: It is immediate in the way that the monarchy works 337 00:16:29,480 --> 00:16:34,800 Speaker 13: by divine right, almost Charles immediately takes on all that 338 00:16:34,880 --> 00:16:37,720 Speaker 13: responsibility as the head of stated not just the UK, 339 00:16:37,920 --> 00:16:42,760 Speaker 13: but Australia, fifteen realm nations right around the world. And 340 00:16:42,840 --> 00:16:44,440 Speaker 13: what we're going to see over the next ten to 341 00:16:44,560 --> 00:16:47,080 Speaker 13: twelve days is a commemoration of the Queen's life, a 342 00:16:47,120 --> 00:16:51,760 Speaker 13: celebration of her life with formalities and events and services 343 00:16:51,760 --> 00:16:54,000 Speaker 13: that will take place in London and across the UK, 344 00:16:54,360 --> 00:16:57,760 Speaker 13: but also the beginning of Charless reign, and that will 345 00:16:57,760 --> 00:17:02,560 Speaker 13: involve visits around the UK and important meetings that he 346 00:17:02,600 --> 00:17:07,600 Speaker 13: will need to attend to be proclaimed king. So it 347 00:17:08,560 --> 00:17:10,600 Speaker 13: is a busy time for him at a moment of 348 00:17:10,920 --> 00:17:14,640 Speaker 13: immense morning, but it is also something that his mother 349 00:17:14,720 --> 00:17:17,040 Speaker 13: did and he will keep that in the back of 350 00:17:17,080 --> 00:17:18,159 Speaker 13: his mind, I'm sure. 351 00:17:18,000 --> 00:17:20,919 Speaker 2: And bow moral what's the mood like outside the castle. 352 00:17:20,960 --> 00:17:22,240 Speaker 2: There's a lot of people there. 353 00:17:23,680 --> 00:17:28,520 Speaker 13: Not as gratiately. Unfortunately, there's not ay the size of 354 00:17:28,560 --> 00:17:31,280 Speaker 13: London here at bull Moral. It is a remote rural 355 00:17:31,320 --> 00:17:35,359 Speaker 13: location for about an hour and fifteen minutes west of Aberdeen, 356 00:17:35,560 --> 00:17:38,240 Speaker 13: the closest big city about kind of the people, so 357 00:17:38,359 --> 00:17:41,400 Speaker 13: many Michaels who are familiar with Balmoral. 358 00:17:41,480 --> 00:17:41,880 Speaker 14: They know. 359 00:17:43,320 --> 00:17:46,720 Speaker 13: About the royal family coming here every summer, coming here 360 00:17:46,760 --> 00:17:51,200 Speaker 13: to lays and flowers lined up along the stone wall 361 00:17:51,240 --> 00:17:55,160 Speaker 13: at the gates here to Balmoral Castle. Now a slow 362 00:17:55,280 --> 00:17:58,040 Speaker 13: dribble over the course of the evening and a lot 363 00:17:58,040 --> 00:18:01,639 Speaker 13: of people reflecting in the rain about the impacts that 364 00:18:01,640 --> 00:18:04,480 Speaker 13: the Queen has had on their lives on this area 365 00:18:04,680 --> 00:18:06,840 Speaker 13: as well. You know, the Queen's a big employer here, 366 00:18:06,840 --> 00:18:09,600 Speaker 13: the bell morrel of state employees people in this local district. 367 00:18:10,000 --> 00:18:14,560 Speaker 13: It keeps food on family's tables, so it will have 368 00:18:14,600 --> 00:18:16,840 Speaker 13: a big impact on this little community as well. 369 00:18:16,920 --> 00:18:17,080 Speaker 14: Well. 370 00:18:17,160 --> 00:18:19,960 Speaker 1: Hugh, thank you for joining us. Hugh Whittfield, our UK 371 00:18:20,080 --> 00:18:22,800 Speaker 1: correspondent for Channel seven. Thank you for joining us. 372 00:18:24,000 --> 00:18:25,160 Speaker 3: Thank you guys, Thanks you. 373 00:18:27,280 --> 00:18:32,000 Speaker 1: Podcast WSFM. Hello there, it's Jonesy and Amanda. On any 374 00:18:32,000 --> 00:18:34,040 Speaker 1: other day it would be a normal day, except this. 375 00:18:34,040 --> 00:18:37,520 Speaker 16: Day the Queen has passed away, the ninth of September. 376 00:18:37,760 --> 00:18:39,480 Speaker 16: Where were you when you heard the news? I was 377 00:18:39,480 --> 00:18:40,560 Speaker 16: in the car park at work. 378 00:18:40,720 --> 00:18:42,680 Speaker 3: Well, this might be the moment you're hearing it now 379 00:18:42,720 --> 00:18:44,600 Speaker 3: and there's been a huge outpouring of grief. And no 380 00:18:44,640 --> 00:18:46,880 Speaker 3: matter how you feel about the royal family and the monarchy, 381 00:18:47,359 --> 00:18:50,880 Speaker 3: the Queen is so revered, so respected for the incredible 382 00:18:51,359 --> 00:18:54,960 Speaker 3: life's service that she's dedicated her life to. 383 00:18:55,640 --> 00:18:55,840 Speaker 14: You know. 384 00:18:56,359 --> 00:18:59,760 Speaker 2: She had a quirky list of top ten songs which 385 00:18:59,760 --> 00:19:01,840 Speaker 2: has been and put together. Will this come up on 386 00:19:01,880 --> 00:19:03,480 Speaker 2: the iHeartRadio playlist? 387 00:19:03,480 --> 00:19:03,880 Speaker 1: Do you think? 388 00:19:03,920 --> 00:19:04,080 Speaker 19: Well? 389 00:19:04,080 --> 00:19:07,600 Speaker 3: And maybe it should. She liked a musical. She loved this. 390 00:19:11,040 --> 00:19:14,920 Speaker 20: Where the wind comes sweeping down the plane and the 391 00:19:15,080 --> 00:19:16,119 Speaker 20: weave and. 392 00:19:15,920 --> 00:19:19,439 Speaker 12: We can shows smells sweet when the wind comes. 393 00:19:19,480 --> 00:19:23,960 Speaker 3: That's how she also liked this one. Anything you can do, 394 00:19:24,119 --> 00:19:25,840 Speaker 3: I can do better from any Get your gun? 395 00:19:25,920 --> 00:19:27,480 Speaker 1: Do anything better than you? 396 00:19:27,640 --> 00:19:28,320 Speaker 21: Oh your cat? 397 00:19:28,359 --> 00:19:29,640 Speaker 3: Yes I can't right your care? 398 00:19:29,720 --> 00:19:30,359 Speaker 22: Yes I can't. 399 00:19:30,720 --> 00:19:32,000 Speaker 1: Can That could be our theme song? 400 00:19:32,160 --> 00:19:32,639 Speaker 3: You could? 401 00:19:33,240 --> 00:19:33,600 Speaker 4: What else? 402 00:19:34,000 --> 00:19:36,800 Speaker 3: This one's quite emotional. This one's called sing. It's Gary 403 00:19:36,840 --> 00:19:39,760 Speaker 3: Barlow and the Commonwealth Fan featuring military wives. 404 00:19:39,760 --> 00:19:45,479 Speaker 1: The Military Wives. 405 00:19:46,080 --> 00:19:46,760 Speaker 3: Everything's going to. 406 00:19:46,800 --> 00:19:50,200 Speaker 1: Set me off. So she likes Freda scared. 407 00:19:51,160 --> 00:19:51,920 Speaker 3: She liked this one. 408 00:19:53,000 --> 00:19:55,320 Speaker 1: I'm of course. 409 00:19:55,640 --> 00:19:57,960 Speaker 3: She loves violin and the white Cups of Dover. Well, 410 00:20:03,359 --> 00:20:07,679 Speaker 3: I'm crying via Lyonna, what's happening? Lips of. 411 00:20:09,240 --> 00:20:10,600 Speaker 1: The boys are coming back home? 412 00:20:10,720 --> 00:20:13,280 Speaker 3: The war one will stopped me crying. She also loved 413 00:20:13,280 --> 00:20:17,520 Speaker 3: George Formby, Let's drive my tears. 414 00:20:18,080 --> 00:20:21,840 Speaker 1: Used to love George Forby. She loved the hymns. 415 00:20:25,920 --> 00:20:31,720 Speaker 3: And this one number nine on those I don't know 416 00:20:31,760 --> 00:20:33,560 Speaker 3: this Lester Lannon Medley, what's that? 417 00:20:33,960 --> 00:20:34,160 Speaker 14: Oh? 418 00:20:34,240 --> 00:20:36,280 Speaker 3: This her dancing days with Prince Philip. 419 00:20:38,359 --> 00:20:40,520 Speaker 1: She liked a good regimental march as well. 420 00:20:42,240 --> 00:20:50,280 Speaker 3: It is number ten. Should we played of these in full? 421 00:20:52,880 --> 00:20:53,600 Speaker 3: George Formby? 422 00:20:53,720 --> 00:20:56,520 Speaker 1: Maybe let's get George forbyond. 423 00:20:57,520 --> 00:21:00,160 Speaker 2: So five for your flace back today? Well, actually it's 424 00:21:00,160 --> 00:21:00,960 Speaker 2: not going to be one of those. 425 00:21:01,119 --> 00:21:04,320 Speaker 3: No. A not has just appeared under my under the 426 00:21:04,320 --> 00:21:07,800 Speaker 3: door from management. The queen had bagpipes waking her up 427 00:21:07,840 --> 00:21:11,600 Speaker 3: every morning. She loved the bagpipes. Oh, this morning we 428 00:21:11,640 --> 00:21:14,200 Speaker 3: woke to the news that the Queen has died. Today's 429 00:21:14,200 --> 00:21:17,160 Speaker 3: category songs with bagpipes to honor the Queen. 430 00:21:17,320 --> 00:21:18,160 Speaker 1: I got one already. 431 00:21:18,320 --> 00:21:20,959 Speaker 3: Songs with bagpipes. Well, you know, Liam plays the bagpipes, 432 00:21:21,040 --> 00:21:22,920 Speaker 3: So I've got a favorite that he used to play 433 00:21:22,920 --> 00:21:23,520 Speaker 3: with the bagpipe. 434 00:21:23,680 --> 00:21:26,760 Speaker 1: Will you cry? I don't know, because he's not that bad. 435 00:21:27,880 --> 00:21:32,000 Speaker 3: He was excellent, and I came to love the bagpipes. Anyway, 436 00:21:32,560 --> 00:21:34,160 Speaker 3: I know I'm on a roller coaster. 437 00:21:34,280 --> 00:21:35,119 Speaker 1: Put George four. 438 00:21:36,480 --> 00:21:46,200 Speaker 22: George leaning, Lady goes by it is you're a giant. 439 00:21:50,640 --> 00:21:52,399 Speaker 1: There's a couple of questions that I have to ask you. 440 00:21:52,480 --> 00:21:54,640 Speaker 3: I don't answer questions, just answer a question. 441 00:21:54,760 --> 00:21:55,919 Speaker 1: Okay, what's in it for me? 442 00:21:56,880 --> 00:21:57,280 Speaker 14: Dollars? 443 00:21:57,280 --> 00:21:58,480 Speaker 20: A dollar rewards? 444 00:22:00,960 --> 00:22:03,760 Speaker 2: Well, it's an extraordinary day today with the passing of 445 00:22:03,840 --> 00:22:04,720 Speaker 2: Queen Elizabeth. 446 00:22:04,920 --> 00:22:08,640 Speaker 1: But life goes on while we live the Queen. 447 00:22:08,560 --> 00:22:10,920 Speaker 3: Long live the King. We say today, yeah, but we 448 00:22:10,960 --> 00:22:13,320 Speaker 3: will be reflecting and we'll be asking you how you're 449 00:22:13,359 --> 00:22:15,719 Speaker 3: feeling today. But let's cheose someone up by seeing if 450 00:22:15,720 --> 00:22:17,080 Speaker 3: they can win ten thousand dollars. 451 00:22:16,920 --> 00:22:19,280 Speaker 2: Right here, right now, we have ten thousand dollars up 452 00:22:19,280 --> 00:22:20,920 Speaker 2: for grabs. All you have to do is answer ten 453 00:22:21,000 --> 00:22:24,000 Speaker 2: questions in sixty seconds. And don't purpoo this because it's 454 00:22:24,000 --> 00:22:26,320 Speaker 2: been done four times this year alone. 455 00:22:26,400 --> 00:22:29,240 Speaker 3: We have ten questions, We have sixty seconds on the clock. 456 00:22:29,520 --> 00:22:31,960 Speaker 3: When you get on answer the question, if you hesitate 457 00:22:32,000 --> 00:22:33,960 Speaker 3: or if you're wrong, you're out and someone takes your place. 458 00:22:34,040 --> 00:22:36,439 Speaker 1: It's a somber day, Stephen, of like art, how are you? 459 00:22:37,960 --> 00:22:39,960 Speaker 23: I am very good, thanks James and Amanda. 460 00:22:40,000 --> 00:22:41,040 Speaker 13: But it is pretty sad. 461 00:22:41,240 --> 00:22:42,040 Speaker 3: It is a sad day. 462 00:22:42,119 --> 00:22:44,000 Speaker 14: It's quite an amazing woman. 463 00:22:44,040 --> 00:22:46,720 Speaker 1: Really, what a life, lind Well, maybe you should do 464 00:22:46,760 --> 00:22:48,120 Speaker 1: this for the Queen. Stephen. 465 00:22:49,119 --> 00:22:52,720 Speaker 23: I'd what a black shirt today in remembrance because I 466 00:22:52,720 --> 00:22:54,440 Speaker 23: think it's just fitting to somebody. 467 00:22:54,200 --> 00:22:56,520 Speaker 2: Who's really given up their life for something they probably 468 00:22:57,440 --> 00:22:58,439 Speaker 2: possibly didn't want to do. 469 00:22:58,840 --> 00:23:01,000 Speaker 3: Yeah, you make a very good Stephen. 470 00:23:01,040 --> 00:23:02,840 Speaker 2: You know it's funny this morning I was gonna wear 471 00:23:02,840 --> 00:23:04,560 Speaker 2: a black shirt, but I went with this white. 472 00:23:04,440 --> 00:23:07,120 Speaker 3: And I put on your black jumper before I knew. 473 00:23:07,760 --> 00:23:10,000 Speaker 3: All right, Steven, Well let's see how we go. Let's 474 00:23:10,000 --> 00:23:11,920 Speaker 3: see how lucks and hold on and good luck. Here 475 00:23:11,920 --> 00:23:15,080 Speaker 3: we go. Question one Saturday Night Live is filmed in 476 00:23:15,080 --> 00:23:17,720 Speaker 3: which city. 477 00:23:16,880 --> 00:23:19,240 Speaker 14: Los Angeles. 478 00:23:19,359 --> 00:23:21,680 Speaker 3: Jeremy's in Red First Saturday Night Live is filmed in 479 00:23:21,720 --> 00:23:25,480 Speaker 3: which city, New York. Question two forty forty is known 480 00:23:25,480 --> 00:23:30,159 Speaker 3: as what score in tennis? Question three PG Tips is 481 00:23:30,200 --> 00:23:30,800 Speaker 3: a brand of what. 482 00:23:30,840 --> 00:23:36,440 Speaker 1: Drink coler Peter's in Falcon Brig. 483 00:23:36,320 --> 00:23:42,880 Speaker 3: PG Tips is a brand of which drink tea. Question four, 484 00:23:43,040 --> 00:23:45,000 Speaker 3: which pop Star canceled is World two of this week 485 00:23:45,040 --> 00:23:45,800 Speaker 3: due to ill health. 486 00:23:49,240 --> 00:23:50,800 Speaker 1: Christians in Campbellton. 487 00:23:50,359 --> 00:23:52,240 Speaker 3: Which pop Star canceled is World two of this week 488 00:23:52,280 --> 00:23:53,040 Speaker 3: due to ill health. 489 00:23:55,960 --> 00:23:57,720 Speaker 1: Tony's in Croud, which Popstar. 490 00:23:57,440 --> 00:23:58,840 Speaker 3: Canceled as world tour is due to ill health. 491 00:23:58,840 --> 00:23:59,640 Speaker 4: This week. 492 00:24:03,000 --> 00:24:04,480 Speaker 1: Helen's in Connell's Point, which. 493 00:24:04,280 --> 00:24:06,439 Speaker 3: Pumpstar canceled as well too this week your ill. 494 00:24:06,320 --> 00:24:08,240 Speaker 24: Health heldon John. 495 00:24:09,520 --> 00:24:10,600 Speaker 1: Susan's in Roselands. 496 00:24:11,200 --> 00:24:16,639 Speaker 3: Question five, the famous wine Grange is made by which company? 497 00:24:16,920 --> 00:24:17,600 Speaker 1: Penfalls? 498 00:24:18,560 --> 00:24:21,040 Speaker 3: Ah, Yes, you got the Justin Bieber question. That seemed 499 00:24:21,040 --> 00:24:21,920 Speaker 3: to throw a few. 500 00:24:24,400 --> 00:24:25,840 Speaker 1: If you're just getting out of bed. 501 00:24:26,080 --> 00:24:27,840 Speaker 2: I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but 502 00:24:27,920 --> 00:24:29,480 Speaker 2: Queen Elizabeth has passed away. 503 00:24:29,640 --> 00:24:31,680 Speaker 3: The Queen has passed away this morning, and you know, 504 00:24:31,720 --> 00:24:33,000 Speaker 3: at this time of the day, you don't have your 505 00:24:33,119 --> 00:24:37,159 Speaker 3: armor on. I've been sobbing for ours, so of our producers. 506 00:24:37,320 --> 00:24:40,560 Speaker 1: That's okay. You can grieve the queen, that's okay. 507 00:24:40,840 --> 00:24:43,720 Speaker 3: She was an extraordinary woman, a life of service which 508 00:24:43,720 --> 00:24:45,840 Speaker 3: we don't often see. Just amazing and. 509 00:24:45,800 --> 00:24:48,240 Speaker 2: Tribute to flying in around the world, as you'd imagine, 510 00:24:48,560 --> 00:24:51,479 Speaker 2: and great stories as well. I liked when you were 511 00:24:51,520 --> 00:24:55,280 Speaker 2: talking before about how she became the accidental monarch, because 512 00:24:55,320 --> 00:24:59,040 Speaker 2: I was presumed that she was born into No, she wasn't. 513 00:24:59,280 --> 00:25:02,040 Speaker 3: Edward the Seventh was her father's brother, the eldest son 514 00:25:02,840 --> 00:25:05,800 Speaker 3: of the previous king. He fell in love with Wallace Simpson, 515 00:25:05,840 --> 00:25:08,399 Speaker 3: and as the head of the country, the head of 516 00:25:08,440 --> 00:25:12,240 Speaker 3: the church, and he wasn't allowed to marry a divorcee. 517 00:25:12,359 --> 00:25:16,160 Speaker 3: She'd been twice divorced, so he abdicated to marry her. 518 00:25:16,600 --> 00:25:20,640 Speaker 3: If he'd married her, I've read that she wasn't able 519 00:25:20,640 --> 00:25:22,840 Speaker 3: to have children, so it still would have gone to Elizabeth. 520 00:25:23,400 --> 00:25:26,920 Speaker 3: If he'd fallen to family pressure and married somebody else 521 00:25:27,200 --> 00:25:32,480 Speaker 3: and had a child with them, Elizabeth Charles William, all 522 00:25:32,560 --> 00:25:34,919 Speaker 3: of this would not have happened. And that's what's so 523 00:25:35,040 --> 00:25:39,200 Speaker 3: extraordinary about the history of the royal family. It's happenstance, 524 00:25:39,280 --> 00:25:43,040 Speaker 3: it's sliding doors, it's luck, it's fight, you're fighting, it's wars, 525 00:25:43,080 --> 00:25:47,760 Speaker 3: it's love scandal. To bring you to this incredible reign 526 00:25:47,800 --> 00:25:49,480 Speaker 3: of seventy years of the Queen. 527 00:25:49,400 --> 00:26:00,240 Speaker 25: Speaking of all those things, fight for your flashback two 528 00:26:00,240 --> 00:26:03,439 Speaker 25: songs into one song leaves and today's Fight for Your 529 00:26:03,480 --> 00:26:05,359 Speaker 25: Flashback is dedicated to the Queen. 530 00:26:05,560 --> 00:26:08,640 Speaker 2: The Queen had bagpipes waking her up every morning. This 531 00:26:08,680 --> 00:26:10,800 Speaker 2: morning we wake up to the news that the Queen 532 00:26:10,840 --> 00:26:15,800 Speaker 2: has died. Today's category songs with bag only one song 533 00:26:15,840 --> 00:26:17,800 Speaker 2: with bagpipes, and it went pop. 534 00:26:17,560 --> 00:26:19,880 Speaker 1: Into my mind and I reckon the Queen would love 535 00:26:19,920 --> 00:26:23,560 Speaker 1: this a CDC long Way to the Top. 536 00:26:31,760 --> 00:26:35,520 Speaker 3: My son Liam plays the bagpipes and he used to 537 00:26:35,520 --> 00:26:38,840 Speaker 3: play this song. Oh stop crying. 538 00:26:38,560 --> 00:26:40,240 Speaker 2: But do you want me to way every time you cry? 539 00:26:40,600 --> 00:26:42,760 Speaker 2: The Queen Also, like George Formby. 540 00:26:42,520 --> 00:26:44,200 Speaker 3: Let's don't bring out the form be do you want 541 00:26:44,200 --> 00:26:47,280 Speaker 3: to put the form beyond? You're right, teas have gone. 542 00:26:47,359 --> 00:26:51,280 Speaker 3: I'm okay now just keep going. But how's this? This 543 00:26:51,400 --> 00:26:55,000 Speaker 3: is the one of the most famous bagpipe solos ever. 544 00:26:55,520 --> 00:27:03,240 Speaker 3: You're the voice John Farner. Liam played this. Oh a 545 00:27:03,359 --> 00:27:04,840 Speaker 3: million reasons to cross? 546 00:27:06,040 --> 00:27:08,800 Speaker 2: That is a battle of the Titans, isn't it just 547 00:27:08,960 --> 00:27:10,520 Speaker 2: the battle of the bagpipes? 548 00:27:10,880 --> 00:27:14,760 Speaker 3: Okay? Well, Fight for Your Flashback thirteen WSFM or go 549 00:27:14,760 --> 00:27:17,359 Speaker 3: to our Instagram story at Jonesy and Amanda and George 550 00:27:17,359 --> 00:27:22,280 Speaker 3: Formby is not one of the options off the Street 551 00:27:22,359 --> 00:27:27,040 Speaker 3: in case lady goes by days, that's not one of 552 00:27:27,080 --> 00:27:29,120 Speaker 3: the options. 553 00:27:30,680 --> 00:27:35,000 Speaker 18: Podcast Jonesy and Amanda in the Morning one oh one 554 00:27:35,080 --> 00:27:36,840 Speaker 18: point seven w s ACM. 555 00:27:36,920 --> 00:27:37,400 Speaker 1: Hello there. 556 00:27:37,440 --> 00:27:40,320 Speaker 2: Friday, the ninth of September will go down as the 557 00:27:40,400 --> 00:27:42,720 Speaker 2: day that we found out that the Queen had passed away. 558 00:27:43,000 --> 00:27:45,240 Speaker 3: This has happened just a few hours ago. 559 00:27:45,680 --> 00:27:48,320 Speaker 2: Today's five for your flashback. It's all about the Queen. 560 00:27:48,320 --> 00:27:50,919 Speaker 2: Today the Queen has died. Bagpipes used to wake her 561 00:27:51,000 --> 00:27:51,840 Speaker 2: up every morning. 562 00:27:52,000 --> 00:27:52,760 Speaker 3: Love the bagpipe. 563 00:27:52,800 --> 00:27:54,879 Speaker 2: We have an alarm clock. The Queen would have a bagpipe. 564 00:27:54,920 --> 00:27:56,560 Speaker 2: She wanted you to hit it on the head and 565 00:27:56,760 --> 00:27:57,120 Speaker 2: make it. 566 00:27:57,119 --> 00:27:59,280 Speaker 3: Snooze so you get an extra minute sleep. 567 00:27:59,320 --> 00:28:00,639 Speaker 1: I need another ten minutes. 568 00:28:01,000 --> 00:28:05,200 Speaker 2: But in the meantime, our songs today songs with bagpipes 569 00:28:05,400 --> 00:28:08,480 Speaker 2: in them. You can't go any more bagpipe here than this. 570 00:28:14,520 --> 00:28:15,480 Speaker 1: Long way to the top. 571 00:28:16,000 --> 00:28:18,240 Speaker 3: I think you can go bagpipe here than that. I've 572 00:28:18,280 --> 00:28:25,160 Speaker 3: gone with John farn and you're the voice. Everything's making 573 00:28:25,200 --> 00:28:25,959 Speaker 3: me go there, Boup. 574 00:28:26,119 --> 00:28:28,800 Speaker 2: I'm lucky I'm not hosting a TV show that doing 575 00:28:29,119 --> 00:28:33,080 Speaker 2: you are with Koshish. I could be sitting there, okay, 576 00:28:35,040 --> 00:28:38,560 Speaker 2: you know, maybe because I can run you like a kite. 577 00:28:38,600 --> 00:28:39,080 Speaker 1: If I play a. 578 00:28:39,080 --> 00:28:44,320 Speaker 3: Little bit of Vira Lyn, Oh, stop, what's happened on 579 00:28:44,440 --> 00:28:45,400 Speaker 3: Private Vira Lin? 580 00:28:46,280 --> 00:28:48,560 Speaker 1: And then if I put on George Form. 581 00:28:48,000 --> 00:28:52,440 Speaker 3: Leaning on the Lamp, He's gone. That's another one of 582 00:28:52,440 --> 00:28:55,040 Speaker 3: the Queen's favorite songs, but we've chosen not to play it. 583 00:28:55,120 --> 00:28:59,440 Speaker 1: Wenita is in North Richmond. Hello Anita, good morning guys. 584 00:28:59,440 --> 00:29:00,000 Speaker 24: How are you? 585 00:29:00,080 --> 00:29:00,200 Speaker 14: Oh? 586 00:29:00,240 --> 00:29:01,200 Speaker 3: How are you feeling today? 587 00:29:01,240 --> 00:29:02,520 Speaker 1: Anita? Not all good? 588 00:29:02,720 --> 00:29:07,200 Speaker 13: Absolutely said to stated, really really broken my heart. 589 00:29:07,280 --> 00:29:08,680 Speaker 24: You're such a wonderful woman. 590 00:29:08,800 --> 00:29:11,320 Speaker 3: And isn't it an amazing When she was ninety six, we 591 00:29:11,400 --> 00:29:14,000 Speaker 3: knew this train of grief was coming at us. But 592 00:29:14,040 --> 00:29:15,480 Speaker 3: it's so awful. 593 00:29:15,120 --> 00:29:18,280 Speaker 24: Today it just shocks you, doesn't it. You You think 594 00:29:18,320 --> 00:29:19,520 Speaker 24: she'd live on forever. 595 00:29:19,960 --> 00:29:22,600 Speaker 14: Yeah, it's horrible, just horrible. 596 00:29:22,680 --> 00:29:25,360 Speaker 3: Which of our bagpipe songs is floating your boat today? 597 00:29:26,280 --> 00:29:28,960 Speaker 24: I'm going with Jonesy with a C D C. I 598 00:29:28,960 --> 00:29:32,520 Speaker 24: mean these boys were all English as well, and they 599 00:29:32,840 --> 00:29:35,360 Speaker 24: lived their life over there too. After a straight but yeah, 600 00:29:35,360 --> 00:29:36,440 Speaker 24: I'm going with Jonesy. 601 00:29:36,640 --> 00:29:37,920 Speaker 3: Look, I don't want to be in pickie pants, but 602 00:29:37,960 --> 00:29:40,360 Speaker 3: I think John Farnan was born in England as well. 603 00:29:40,840 --> 00:29:45,200 Speaker 1: But still break out the George Form, Thank. 604 00:29:45,040 --> 00:29:47,959 Speaker 3: You Oneita will take more of your calls. 605 00:29:48,080 --> 00:29:49,400 Speaker 1: Today is an emotional day. 606 00:29:49,560 --> 00:29:53,560 Speaker 3: Oh, hugely emotional today. Whether a monarchist or a republican, 607 00:29:53,760 --> 00:29:56,320 Speaker 3: everyone respected the Queen. It's a really tough day. 608 00:29:56,480 --> 00:29:59,320 Speaker 2: And that's why five V your flashback is dedicated dedicated to 609 00:29:59,360 --> 00:30:03,720 Speaker 2: her majesty. Today it's songs with bagpipes IDC. 610 00:30:04,240 --> 00:30:05,480 Speaker 1: It's a long way to the top. 611 00:30:07,000 --> 00:30:09,600 Speaker 2: The Queen would be awoken from her sleep with this 612 00:30:09,760 --> 00:30:11,000 Speaker 2: every morning, every morning. 613 00:30:11,040 --> 00:30:13,440 Speaker 3: Maybe not this song, but every morning a bagpipe would 614 00:30:13,640 --> 00:30:16,720 Speaker 3: be outside her window waking her up. I've gone with 615 00:30:16,920 --> 00:30:23,760 Speaker 3: this one. John Farnham, you the voice. Let's see what 616 00:30:23,760 --> 00:30:25,560 Speaker 3: you want to hear today. We've got Justin and old 617 00:30:25,560 --> 00:30:28,120 Speaker 3: To and Gabby. Hi, Justin, how are you going on? 618 00:30:28,520 --> 00:30:33,520 Speaker 10: Jas Man? I gave a Queenye mean my wife she's 619 00:30:33,560 --> 00:30:36,520 Speaker 10: been up all night watching it and when the news 620 00:30:36,520 --> 00:30:38,720 Speaker 10: come across, she woke me up earlier this morning to 621 00:30:38,800 --> 00:30:40,800 Speaker 10: tell me it's very, very sad. 622 00:30:40,920 --> 00:30:42,400 Speaker 3: Has she had a little sob justin? 623 00:30:43,200 --> 00:30:46,080 Speaker 10: Oh yeah, she's been sobbing or no, my wife and 624 00:30:46,200 --> 00:30:48,880 Speaker 10: she she loves the queeny. 625 00:30:49,880 --> 00:30:51,400 Speaker 3: Well, what song would you like to hear today? 626 00:30:52,000 --> 00:30:52,440 Speaker 14: Well? 627 00:30:52,760 --> 00:30:55,480 Speaker 10: In what you guys said in the way the things 628 00:30:55,520 --> 00:30:58,600 Speaker 10: could have gone. If her father had done different things, 629 00:30:59,000 --> 00:31:01,240 Speaker 10: she may not have been Queen. I think it was 630 00:31:01,280 --> 00:31:02,400 Speaker 10: a long way to the top. 631 00:31:03,320 --> 00:31:07,400 Speaker 1: You nice context, well, I said, justin. Well done. Diane's 632 00:31:07,400 --> 00:31:08,520 Speaker 1: in Glenwood Hills. 633 00:31:08,560 --> 00:31:11,240 Speaker 3: Hello Diane, good morning. 634 00:31:11,360 --> 00:31:12,200 Speaker 24: How are we? 635 00:31:12,200 --> 00:31:13,680 Speaker 3: We're okay? How are you today? 636 00:31:15,240 --> 00:31:16,320 Speaker 26: I'm really good, Amanda. 637 00:31:16,360 --> 00:31:18,480 Speaker 13: But if you start crying again, it's just going to 638 00:31:18,520 --> 00:31:19,040 Speaker 13: be all over. 639 00:31:19,120 --> 00:31:20,840 Speaker 3: Red Rover, I know we might have to put on 640 00:31:20,880 --> 00:31:24,560 Speaker 3: George for this has stopped me crying. It might work 641 00:31:24,640 --> 00:31:24,920 Speaker 3: for you. 642 00:31:25,160 --> 00:31:25,920 Speaker 1: The Queen loved this. 643 00:31:26,320 --> 00:31:29,120 Speaker 3: The Queen loved this, but that's not on offer today. 644 00:31:29,160 --> 00:31:30,640 Speaker 3: Which of the songs would you like to hear? 645 00:31:31,520 --> 00:31:32,760 Speaker 20: Amanda? I'm going with you. 646 00:31:32,840 --> 00:31:35,320 Speaker 23: I already had predicted both of you which songs you 647 00:31:35,320 --> 00:31:37,760 Speaker 23: were picking, and I thought she's gonna do n finam 648 00:31:37,760 --> 00:31:40,080 Speaker 23: you're the voice, and you know what the Queen was 649 00:31:40,080 --> 00:31:40,720 Speaker 23: the voice. 650 00:31:40,880 --> 00:31:42,920 Speaker 26: Oh you've got my vote. 651 00:31:42,960 --> 00:31:44,280 Speaker 3: Oh Diane, you've set me off. 652 00:31:44,400 --> 00:31:45,040 Speaker 1: Break out the. 653 00:31:47,080 --> 00:31:49,560 Speaker 3: All right, we'll take more of you your votes and 654 00:31:49,680 --> 00:31:52,240 Speaker 3: we'll be playing the winning song, and we're also going 655 00:31:52,280 --> 00:31:56,880 Speaker 3: to be crossing to the UK. Jonesy and Amanda Podcast. 656 00:32:04,280 --> 00:32:06,640 Speaker 4: Fight for Your Flashback. 657 00:32:06,800 --> 00:32:10,239 Speaker 2: Two songs into one song leaves and today is a 658 00:32:10,280 --> 00:32:12,600 Speaker 2: sad day marked with sadness. If you're just getting out 659 00:32:12,640 --> 00:32:15,160 Speaker 2: of bed now you've just discovered that the Queen has 660 00:32:15,200 --> 00:32:16,280 Speaker 2: passed away overnight. 661 00:32:16,400 --> 00:32:20,200 Speaker 3: Oh, very sad scenes in Australia, in the Commonwealth, in England. 662 00:32:20,200 --> 00:32:22,360 Speaker 3: Doesn't matter how you feel about the monarchy. The Queen 663 00:32:22,560 --> 00:32:26,200 Speaker 3: was an extraordinary person. She said that she didn't see 664 00:32:26,200 --> 00:32:29,440 Speaker 3: herself as a leader. She saw herself as a servant 665 00:32:29,720 --> 00:32:32,680 Speaker 3: and that was how she lived her life. What an extraordinary, 666 00:32:32,640 --> 00:32:35,360 Speaker 3: extraordinary woman. And the last year going about the last 667 00:32:35,400 --> 00:32:37,560 Speaker 3: few years, going about her business with a broken heart, 668 00:32:38,480 --> 00:32:43,360 Speaker 3: dealing with COVID, dealing with political ructions in the UK, 669 00:32:44,040 --> 00:32:47,440 Speaker 3: the grace of her exit at ninety six, it's extraordinary. 670 00:32:47,720 --> 00:32:50,160 Speaker 2: We're talking about the playlist of her top ten songs. 671 00:32:50,200 --> 00:32:51,960 Speaker 2: She was a big fan of musicals. She was a 672 00:32:51,960 --> 00:32:53,920 Speaker 2: big fan of via Ln. She loved via Lyn. 673 00:32:55,640 --> 00:32:57,840 Speaker 3: Again, I don't know what you're doing. You're trying to 674 00:32:57,880 --> 00:32:58,040 Speaker 3: make me. 675 00:32:58,400 --> 00:33:00,840 Speaker 1: I don't want to make you cry. I'm saying it's 676 00:33:00,840 --> 00:33:01,960 Speaker 1: almost Pavlovian. 677 00:33:01,960 --> 00:33:02,120 Speaker 14: Though. 678 00:33:02,160 --> 00:33:05,360 Speaker 1: I put this on, look at your eyes and then 679 00:33:05,360 --> 00:33:06,840 Speaker 1: if I put on George Formby. 680 00:33:06,640 --> 00:33:08,920 Speaker 3: Her other favorite, my eyes dry up. 681 00:33:11,600 --> 00:33:15,080 Speaker 1: Wasn't this guy the highest entertainer entertainer in the UK. 682 00:33:15,360 --> 00:33:19,080 Speaker 3: He was also a wartime entertainer, and that's part of 683 00:33:19,080 --> 00:33:22,040 Speaker 3: the sliding doors of history too. If Edward the Eighth, 684 00:33:22,160 --> 00:33:25,680 Speaker 3: who was her uncle, had taken the throne, recent documents 685 00:33:25,720 --> 00:33:28,760 Speaker 3: have said he was a Nazi sympathizer, so the fate 686 00:33:28,840 --> 00:33:31,440 Speaker 3: of England would be all of us as allies, would 687 00:33:31,440 --> 00:33:32,240 Speaker 3: be very different. 688 00:33:32,280 --> 00:33:35,440 Speaker 16: If he'd been king, could have England become well. 689 00:33:35,480 --> 00:33:39,280 Speaker 3: He was hoping that when Germany it was looking like 690 00:33:40,000 --> 00:33:41,959 Speaker 3: it might win the war, he was trying to get 691 00:33:42,000 --> 00:33:44,160 Speaker 3: him with the Germans so they'd put him back after 692 00:33:44,200 --> 00:33:48,720 Speaker 3: his abdication as a public king right. So if he'd 693 00:33:48,760 --> 00:33:50,760 Speaker 3: stayed as king, I don't know whether he still would 694 00:33:50,760 --> 00:33:54,280 Speaker 3: have been a sympathizer. But the sliding doors of history 695 00:33:54,440 --> 00:33:58,960 Speaker 3: created this incredible seventy year reign of Queen Elizabeth II. 696 00:33:59,480 --> 00:34:02,680 Speaker 1: Your flash because the Queen also loved bagpipes. 697 00:34:02,720 --> 00:34:05,880 Speaker 2: Should be awoken every day by the sound of bagpipes, 698 00:34:05,880 --> 00:34:07,880 Speaker 2: and I'd like to think that her Majesty would be 699 00:34:07,960 --> 00:34:10,080 Speaker 2: in her slumber and she would wake to this. 700 00:34:16,640 --> 00:34:22,000 Speaker 3: If not that one, how about this one? 701 00:34:23,000 --> 00:34:25,240 Speaker 1: Soue ginormous Australian songs. 702 00:34:25,280 --> 00:34:27,880 Speaker 3: There, let's see what you want to hear today? Joe's 703 00:34:27,880 --> 00:34:29,440 Speaker 3: in Paramatta. How are you going, Joe? 704 00:34:30,440 --> 00:34:30,640 Speaker 7: Oh? 705 00:34:30,920 --> 00:34:31,520 Speaker 24: Very really fair. 706 00:34:31,719 --> 00:34:34,600 Speaker 23: Actually I haven't stopped crying all morning, so I understand. 707 00:34:35,680 --> 00:34:38,200 Speaker 3: Yeah, it's one of those days, isn't it. We knew 708 00:34:38,200 --> 00:34:40,520 Speaker 3: it was her coming. She was ninety six, and yet 709 00:34:40,960 --> 00:34:43,360 Speaker 3: the emotions just ripping through us. What would you like 710 00:34:43,400 --> 00:34:47,359 Speaker 3: to hear today, Joe, She's gone. The emotions ripped right 711 00:34:47,400 --> 00:34:47,759 Speaker 3: through her. 712 00:34:47,920 --> 00:34:50,400 Speaker 1: Maybe it was was it George? Was it George Formby 713 00:34:50,440 --> 00:34:51,359 Speaker 1: that scared her off? 714 00:34:51,480 --> 00:34:54,160 Speaker 3: I am leaning on the you're going to scare everyone 715 00:34:54,200 --> 00:34:54,720 Speaker 3: that stopping. 716 00:34:55,000 --> 00:34:56,240 Speaker 1: Peter's in vulcan Bridge. 717 00:34:56,239 --> 00:34:58,799 Speaker 14: Hello, Peter, good morning to you both. 718 00:34:59,160 --> 00:35:00,000 Speaker 3: Fight for your flashback. 719 00:35:00,160 --> 00:35:02,800 Speaker 14: Peter, well, it's. 720 00:35:02,680 --> 00:35:05,640 Speaker 6: A very sad day. I used to serving as an 721 00:35:05,680 --> 00:35:13,080 Speaker 6: Royal Australian engineer, so she was my boss for sorry 722 00:35:13,120 --> 00:35:18,000 Speaker 6: PTSD sort of. There's no emotional field up but two 723 00:35:18,040 --> 00:35:19,960 Speaker 6: ripper songs, but I have to go with jonesy. 724 00:35:20,760 --> 00:35:22,880 Speaker 1: So Pete, did you ever did you ever meet the Queen? 725 00:35:23,600 --> 00:35:27,839 Speaker 6: No? No, i am The last parade I did in 726 00:35:27,960 --> 00:35:32,759 Speaker 6: service was with the d D Quentin Bryce yep, but 727 00:35:33,040 --> 00:35:37,200 Speaker 6: no I never got to meet any of the or anything. 728 00:35:37,400 --> 00:35:41,239 Speaker 3: And I think the Queen was the first monarch to 729 00:35:42,040 --> 00:35:44,120 Speaker 3: she she had got a job. She trained as a 730 00:35:44,120 --> 00:35:47,680 Speaker 3: mechanic during the war. She worked so hard. 731 00:35:48,520 --> 00:35:50,280 Speaker 1: You were away around the land drivers. 732 00:35:50,360 --> 00:35:54,120 Speaker 3: Yeah, amazing, Peter, We're all feeling it well. 733 00:35:54,120 --> 00:35:56,560 Speaker 1: Thanks Pete. Kathleen is in camps. 734 00:35:56,719 --> 00:35:58,760 Speaker 3: Hi, Kathleen, how are you traveling today? 735 00:36:00,040 --> 00:36:00,320 Speaker 24: Thanks? 736 00:36:00,520 --> 00:36:01,120 Speaker 14: Quite shocked. 737 00:36:01,719 --> 00:36:04,880 Speaker 5: I'm bout for you, Amanda, the Queen was the voice. 738 00:36:05,160 --> 00:36:08,560 Speaker 3: Yes, absolutely, thank you, Kathleen. The owners in West Pennett Hills, Hello, 739 00:36:08,640 --> 00:36:10,080 Speaker 3: fi owner for your flashback. 740 00:36:10,760 --> 00:36:13,120 Speaker 19: Oh can I vote for John d because Bond Scott 741 00:36:13,160 --> 00:36:15,760 Speaker 19: was actually born in Scotland and she died in bou Moral, 742 00:36:15,800 --> 00:36:16,640 Speaker 19: which is in Scotland. 743 00:36:16,760 --> 00:36:19,160 Speaker 3: True, absolutely, you can thank you. 744 00:36:19,280 --> 00:36:21,200 Speaker 1: Lind'sy caring about Hello Lynn. 745 00:36:21,960 --> 00:36:23,040 Speaker 13: Hello again. 746 00:36:23,320 --> 00:36:23,640 Speaker 3: Hello. 747 00:36:24,760 --> 00:36:25,120 Speaker 10: Well. 748 00:36:25,440 --> 00:36:27,680 Speaker 13: Johnny Farnon himself has had a bit of a rough 749 00:36:27,719 --> 00:36:30,719 Speaker 13: trot of life. He's been in hospital with a significant 750 00:36:31,200 --> 00:36:34,160 Speaker 13: surgery on his jaw following cancer. So I think it's 751 00:36:34,200 --> 00:36:36,560 Speaker 13: quite fitting that Johnny Farnon and the Queen are both 752 00:36:36,560 --> 00:36:40,520 Speaker 13: celebrated in one go and so Amanda, I'm very pleased 753 00:36:40,520 --> 00:36:42,399 Speaker 13: to inform you that you are the winner. 754 00:36:43,360 --> 00:36:44,000 Speaker 3: Thank you. 755 00:36:44,000 --> 00:36:45,360 Speaker 1: No George Formby there. 756 00:36:45,280 --> 00:36:48,200 Speaker 3: No George Formby here. We are You're the Voice John 757 00:36:48,239 --> 00:36:49,680 Speaker 3: Farnham sure. 758 00:36:50,440 --> 00:36:52,880 Speaker 1: Winner of five for your flashback John Farnham's You're. 759 00:36:52,719 --> 00:36:55,239 Speaker 16: The Voice beat ac DC's It's a long way to 760 00:36:55,280 --> 00:36:55,640 Speaker 16: the top. 761 00:36:55,880 --> 00:36:56,760 Speaker 1: If you want to rock. 762 00:36:56,600 --> 00:36:59,840 Speaker 3: And roll songs with bagpipes. Queen she loved the bagpipe. 763 00:37:00,200 --> 00:37:00,800 Speaker 1: Great songs. 764 00:37:00,840 --> 00:37:02,560 Speaker 2: If you've just got out of bed, the Queen has 765 00:37:02,600 --> 00:37:05,799 Speaker 2: passed away, and I keep bearing that in mind. Is 766 00:37:05,800 --> 00:37:07,520 Speaker 2: like people who are just waking up with his news. 767 00:37:07,600 --> 00:37:09,400 Speaker 2: We've known this since three point thirty this morning, but 768 00:37:09,440 --> 00:37:12,120 Speaker 2: still at the same time, it's with a degree of 769 00:37:12,120 --> 00:37:13,920 Speaker 2: sadness and everyone the sixty. 770 00:37:13,640 --> 00:37:16,000 Speaker 3: Three on the show today has been shaky. 771 00:37:15,640 --> 00:37:17,399 Speaker 2: And that's why we're going down to the Jonesy demand 772 00:37:17,440 --> 00:37:19,960 Speaker 2: of arms for the pub test, and we're talking today 773 00:37:20,640 --> 00:37:23,680 Speaker 2: what queen moment for you passes the pub test? 774 00:37:23,760 --> 00:37:26,319 Speaker 3: You know you might ever get George Formby ready because 775 00:37:26,320 --> 00:37:27,160 Speaker 3: I know I'm going to cry. 776 00:37:27,680 --> 00:37:30,959 Speaker 27: I love that moment, you know, Jubilee when she heard 777 00:37:31,000 --> 00:37:35,640 Speaker 27: a little comedy sketch with Paddington Bear and her face, 778 00:37:35,800 --> 00:37:39,280 Speaker 27: just the light that shone through her face, it was beautiful. 779 00:37:39,440 --> 00:37:44,640 Speaker 11: Perhaps you would like a marmalade sandwich. I always keep 780 00:37:44,680 --> 00:37:46,680 Speaker 11: one for emergencies, so. 781 00:37:46,760 --> 00:37:50,840 Speaker 3: Do I keep mining here. 782 00:37:55,040 --> 00:38:01,480 Speaker 12: Anita, the party he was about to start. 783 00:38:01,719 --> 00:38:02,600 Speaker 4: Your mother's. 784 00:38:05,880 --> 00:38:09,240 Speaker 1: Happy. Do you believe him? 785 00:38:09,320 --> 00:38:14,040 Speaker 11: Thank you everything, that's very kind. 786 00:38:15,040 --> 00:38:17,280 Speaker 16: No, I'm just reached for a tissue. 787 00:38:17,680 --> 00:38:18,400 Speaker 1: You're making me go. 788 00:38:20,080 --> 00:38:22,800 Speaker 3: All right, what's your what's your favorite que moment? 789 00:38:22,920 --> 00:38:25,920 Speaker 2: My favorite queen moment is and we touched on this recently. 790 00:38:26,320 --> 00:38:30,000 Speaker 2: She was on the grounds of Bowmorral with her security detail. 791 00:38:30,400 --> 00:38:32,480 Speaker 2: His name was Dick, and they're walking on and they 792 00:38:32,480 --> 00:38:35,240 Speaker 2: come across some American tourists. 793 00:38:34,680 --> 00:38:38,319 Speaker 21: And normally on his picnic sites you meet nobody. But 794 00:38:38,400 --> 00:38:40,600 Speaker 21: there was two hikers coming towards us, and the Queen 795 00:38:40,600 --> 00:38:42,880 Speaker 21: would always stop and say hello, and it was two 796 00:38:42,920 --> 00:38:46,080 Speaker 21: Americans on a walking holiday. And it was clear from 797 00:38:46,080 --> 00:38:49,000 Speaker 21: the moment that we first stopped they hadn't recognized the Queen, 798 00:38:49,040 --> 00:38:52,200 Speaker 21: which is fine. And the American gentleman was telling the 799 00:38:52,280 --> 00:38:55,000 Speaker 21: Queen where he came from, where they were going to next, 800 00:38:55,280 --> 00:38:58,000 Speaker 21: and where they've been to in Britain, and I could 801 00:38:58,000 --> 00:39:00,000 Speaker 21: see it coming and sure enough he said with Madge, 802 00:39:00,320 --> 00:39:03,000 Speaker 21: and where do you live? And she said, well, I 803 00:39:03,000 --> 00:39:04,880 Speaker 21: live in London, but I've got a holiday home just 804 00:39:04,920 --> 00:39:08,000 Speaker 21: the other side of the hills. And he said, well, 805 00:39:08,120 --> 00:39:09,680 Speaker 21: how often have you been coming up here? 806 00:39:10,480 --> 00:39:10,640 Speaker 8: Oh? 807 00:39:10,719 --> 00:39:12,279 Speaker 21: She said, I've been coming up here ever since I 808 00:39:12,320 --> 00:39:15,319 Speaker 21: was little girl, so over eighty years and you can 809 00:39:15,360 --> 00:39:15,920 Speaker 21: see the clogs. 810 00:39:15,920 --> 00:39:16,120 Speaker 14: Thinking. 811 00:39:16,160 --> 00:39:17,440 Speaker 21: He said, well, if you've been coming up here for 812 00:39:17,520 --> 00:39:21,200 Speaker 21: eighty years, you must have met the Queen, and as 813 00:39:21,280 --> 00:39:23,399 Speaker 21: quick as a flash, says, well I haven't. The dick 814 00:39:23,440 --> 00:39:27,360 Speaker 21: here meets her regularly. So the guy said to me, 815 00:39:27,600 --> 00:39:30,160 Speaker 21: you've met the queen? What she like? And because I 816 00:39:30,200 --> 00:39:31,640 Speaker 21: was with her a long time and I knew I 817 00:39:31,640 --> 00:39:33,520 Speaker 21: could pull a leg, I said, oh, she can be 818 00:39:33,600 --> 00:39:36,799 Speaker 21: very cantankerous at times, but she's got a lovely sense 819 00:39:36,840 --> 00:39:39,080 Speaker 21: of humor. And you know, the next thing I knew, 820 00:39:39,239 --> 00:39:41,960 Speaker 21: this guy comes around, puts his arm around my shoulder, 821 00:39:42,200 --> 00:39:44,319 Speaker 21: and before I could see what's happening, he gets his 822 00:39:44,360 --> 00:39:46,520 Speaker 21: camera gives it to the queen. He says, can you 823 00:39:46,560 --> 00:39:47,279 Speaker 21: take a picture of. 824 00:39:47,320 --> 00:39:47,839 Speaker 1: Two of us? 825 00:39:49,560 --> 00:39:51,480 Speaker 3: That's sorry, I love it, love it. 826 00:39:51,600 --> 00:39:54,480 Speaker 1: So that's basically what it is. And please, you might 827 00:39:54,520 --> 00:39:56,200 Speaker 1: have met the queen. I'd love to hear from that 828 00:39:56,640 --> 00:39:57,279 Speaker 1: whatever you. 829 00:39:57,880 --> 00:40:00,799 Speaker 3: Whatever you feel like saying, today is the day which 830 00:40:00,920 --> 00:40:02,080 Speaker 3: moment passes the. 831 00:40:02,040 --> 00:40:05,040 Speaker 2: Punt thirteen WSFM. We'd love to hear from you. We'll 832 00:40:05,040 --> 00:40:06,680 Speaker 2: have that for you at eight o'clock. 833 00:40:08,400 --> 00:40:11,319 Speaker 3: Podcast. Well, we've woken to the news this morning that 834 00:40:11,360 --> 00:40:14,359 Speaker 3: her Majesty the Queen Elizabeth I has died peacefully at 835 00:40:14,400 --> 00:40:15,479 Speaker 3: the age of ninety six. 836 00:40:15,840 --> 00:40:16,239 Speaker 1: She was at. 837 00:40:16,200 --> 00:40:19,040 Speaker 3: Bamorral Castle in Scotland. Her family were gathering to be 838 00:40:19,120 --> 00:40:22,399 Speaker 3: with her throughout the day. Chow Ten's UK correspondent Lucy 839 00:40:22,520 --> 00:40:26,440 Speaker 3: McDonald is on her way to bow Moral. Hello Lucy, 840 00:40:26,800 --> 00:40:30,520 Speaker 3: Hello there, what a day. What would the protocol have been? 841 00:40:30,760 --> 00:40:33,440 Speaker 3: And it's a terrible thing to talk about at the 842 00:40:33,440 --> 00:40:37,280 Speaker 3: moment of her passing. What's the actual protocol that takes place? 843 00:40:38,960 --> 00:40:42,160 Speaker 5: Well, I think it actually has taken us all a 844 00:40:42,160 --> 00:40:45,719 Speaker 5: bit by surprise how quickly it happened. So the protocol 845 00:40:45,719 --> 00:40:50,800 Speaker 5: that I was expecting wasn't the protocol actually happened the Queen. 846 00:40:50,840 --> 00:40:53,239 Speaker 5: If she had died in London or the South, the 847 00:40:53,360 --> 00:40:57,360 Speaker 5: code was London Bridge is down, but actually she was 848 00:40:57,480 --> 00:41:01,360 Speaker 5: many hundreds of miles away in by morel in Scotland, 849 00:41:02,160 --> 00:41:05,680 Speaker 5: So the code for that I think was unicorn. So 850 00:41:06,160 --> 00:41:08,920 Speaker 5: had she been in London, I think the news was 851 00:41:08,920 --> 00:41:11,040 Speaker 5: going to be broken the next day at eight in 852 00:41:11,080 --> 00:41:15,520 Speaker 5: the morning because family leaders of other Commonwealth countries have 853 00:41:15,640 --> 00:41:18,560 Speaker 5: to be told first, but it just seemed to happen 854 00:41:18,680 --> 00:41:21,279 Speaker 5: very quickly, and it felt very surreal. There was an 855 00:41:21,280 --> 00:41:25,360 Speaker 5: announcement around lunchtime saying the Queen's doctors are concerned for 856 00:41:25,480 --> 00:41:29,920 Speaker 5: Her Majesty's health and they've recommended to remain under medical supervision. 857 00:41:29,960 --> 00:41:33,439 Speaker 5: And that's pretty unprecedented from the palace. So I think 858 00:41:33,480 --> 00:41:38,840 Speaker 5: everybody expected something to happen, but I don't think anyone 859 00:41:38,880 --> 00:41:42,080 Speaker 5: really expects it to happen so quickly. But you're right, 860 00:41:42,160 --> 00:41:44,680 Speaker 5: there is very much a protocol that will happen over 861 00:41:44,680 --> 00:41:48,840 Speaker 5: the next few days, and I guess a lot of 862 00:41:48,880 --> 00:41:51,480 Speaker 5: people around the world, around the country will take comfort 863 00:41:51,480 --> 00:41:54,839 Speaker 5: in that ritual that we now have a U king, 864 00:41:55,000 --> 00:41:57,160 Speaker 5: So it's not God soap the Queen, it's God SOPHI. 865 00:41:57,280 --> 00:42:02,200 Speaker 5: King Charles is King Charles the Third. And over the 866 00:42:02,200 --> 00:42:04,680 Speaker 5: next ten or twelve days, it is quite a well 867 00:42:04,760 --> 00:42:08,080 Speaker 5: orchestrated events that will happen. 868 00:42:08,480 --> 00:42:12,839 Speaker 2: Yeah, and with Liz Trust being sworn in forty eight 869 00:42:12,880 --> 00:42:15,920 Speaker 2: hours ago, so almost one of the last officials to 870 00:42:15,960 --> 00:42:17,040 Speaker 2: see the Queen alive. 871 00:42:18,560 --> 00:42:21,680 Speaker 5: Yeah, absolutely. And I don't know if you've seen that 872 00:42:21,719 --> 00:42:24,880 Speaker 5: footage or the picture of the Queen and Liz trust, 873 00:42:24,920 --> 00:42:26,520 Speaker 5: and she does have a very big bruise on her 874 00:42:26,680 --> 00:42:29,400 Speaker 5: on her hand, and there's been lots of speculation, you know, 875 00:42:29,800 --> 00:42:30,759 Speaker 5: has she had a fall? 876 00:42:30,920 --> 00:42:31,080 Speaker 19: Is it? 877 00:42:31,120 --> 00:42:33,960 Speaker 5: You know, when you become older you do bruise more easily. 878 00:42:34,400 --> 00:42:36,279 Speaker 5: And now people saying perhaps it was a drip in 879 00:42:36,320 --> 00:42:41,200 Speaker 5: her hand, and how incredible to be that poorly presumably, 880 00:42:41,280 --> 00:42:43,200 Speaker 5: I mean, this is all speculation. We don't know the 881 00:42:43,200 --> 00:42:45,719 Speaker 5: cause of death. And then she died peacefully at her 882 00:42:45,719 --> 00:42:50,840 Speaker 5: beloved our moral but how I mean the Queen always 883 00:42:50,840 --> 00:42:54,480 Speaker 5: said that she devoted her life to duty. To be 884 00:42:54,840 --> 00:42:57,520 Speaker 5: so poorly and to you know, swear in the next 885 00:42:57,760 --> 00:43:02,480 Speaker 5: Prime Minister is a credible testament to the woman she was. 886 00:43:02,920 --> 00:43:05,279 Speaker 3: And know also that Liz trusted that the Queen is 887 00:43:05,320 --> 00:43:09,680 Speaker 3: the bedrock upon which modern Britain was forged. And people 888 00:43:09,680 --> 00:43:13,359 Speaker 3: are pouring into Buckingham Palace to pay respects. What's the 889 00:43:13,360 --> 00:43:15,360 Speaker 3: mood like all over England at the moment? 890 00:43:17,480 --> 00:43:19,520 Speaker 5: I think people are in shock. It was one of 891 00:43:19,520 --> 00:43:22,200 Speaker 5: those things that you knew was inevitable because the Queen 892 00:43:22,320 --> 00:43:24,960 Speaker 5: was ninety six, you had seventy years on the throne, 893 00:43:25,840 --> 00:43:28,239 Speaker 5: but it was something that you never really expected. You 894 00:43:28,320 --> 00:43:31,319 Speaker 5: kind of thought she would go on forever. I found 895 00:43:31,360 --> 00:43:33,959 Speaker 5: out while I was I watched the six thirty news 896 00:43:34,000 --> 00:43:37,480 Speaker 5: and thought, oh, okay, that's fine, it hasn't happened. We're okay. 897 00:43:37,600 --> 00:43:39,239 Speaker 5: I went to walk my dog and I found out 898 00:43:39,680 --> 00:43:42,920 Speaker 5: from a text and I literally ran home and my 899 00:43:43,000 --> 00:43:47,000 Speaker 5: phone hasn't stopped buzzing all evening. I think people are 900 00:43:47,080 --> 00:43:50,799 Speaker 5: just very shocked, and it's come quite a difficult time 901 00:43:50,880 --> 00:43:54,799 Speaker 5: in our country's history. So I'm leaving very I think 902 00:43:54,840 --> 00:43:57,400 Speaker 5: even if you are a republican, if you're a monarchist, 903 00:43:57,840 --> 00:44:01,479 Speaker 5: I think it's a real time of some reflection about 904 00:44:01,520 --> 00:44:05,520 Speaker 5: where the UK is right now, and the loss of 905 00:44:05,719 --> 00:44:11,120 Speaker 5: the Queen underpins all that. Really, it just felt very happy. 906 00:44:11,120 --> 00:44:12,680 Speaker 3: It is sad. It's a very very sad. 907 00:44:12,840 --> 00:44:13,120 Speaker 1: Lucy. 908 00:44:13,200 --> 00:44:15,319 Speaker 2: Thank you for bringing us into your world with this, 909 00:44:15,800 --> 00:44:19,319 Speaker 2: uh the projects, Your UK correspondent, Lucy McDonald, thank you 910 00:44:19,360 --> 00:44:20,080 Speaker 2: for joining. 911 00:44:19,920 --> 00:44:24,440 Speaker 14: Us, no problem. When gone. 912 00:44:25,480 --> 00:44:28,959 Speaker 11: I want you to get on right now. 913 00:44:29,200 --> 00:44:31,680 Speaker 20: Go to your windows, open them, stick your. 914 00:44:31,600 --> 00:44:32,640 Speaker 5: Head on a jel. 915 00:44:36,640 --> 00:44:38,799 Speaker 2: Let's get on down to the jonesy demands of the 916 00:44:38,800 --> 00:44:40,120 Speaker 2: pub test and today. 917 00:44:40,680 --> 00:44:42,000 Speaker 1: Say what you want about the queen. 918 00:44:42,080 --> 00:44:45,640 Speaker 2: But the one thing that I'm learning today with her passing, 919 00:44:46,000 --> 00:44:47,920 Speaker 2: she's the common thread through all our lives. 920 00:44:48,000 --> 00:44:52,759 Speaker 3: Oh, she absolutely is. So the pub tist this morning, Well, 921 00:44:52,760 --> 00:44:53,719 Speaker 3: what's your favorite queen? 922 00:44:54,000 --> 00:44:54,239 Speaker 1: Queen? 923 00:44:54,239 --> 00:44:56,080 Speaker 3: My moment for you passes the pub tist. I've got 924 00:44:56,120 --> 00:44:58,040 Speaker 3: my tissue at the ready because I cry every on 925 00:44:58,160 --> 00:45:00,840 Speaker 3: I hear this. This was that beauty full little vignette 926 00:45:00,880 --> 00:45:03,719 Speaker 3: there was filmed to celebrate her jubilee with Paddington Bear. 927 00:45:04,040 --> 00:45:08,440 Speaker 11: Perhaps he would like a marmalade sandwich. I always keep 928 00:45:08,480 --> 00:45:12,360 Speaker 11: one for emergencies, so do I. 929 00:45:12,360 --> 00:45:16,520 Speaker 12: I keep mine in here. 930 00:45:17,840 --> 00:45:19,000 Speaker 1: For Nita. 931 00:45:19,120 --> 00:45:20,880 Speaker 4: The party is about to start. 932 00:45:21,080 --> 00:45:25,960 Speaker 1: Your most happy Do you believe him? And thank you for. 933 00:45:26,160 --> 00:45:32,680 Speaker 3: Everything that's very kind? I cried, Ben, and I cried 934 00:45:32,719 --> 00:45:34,239 Speaker 3: all morning, and I'm crying now. 935 00:45:34,360 --> 00:45:35,560 Speaker 1: Well here's something that's different. 936 00:45:35,600 --> 00:45:40,000 Speaker 2: What about that story about her protective service guy Dick. 937 00:45:40,560 --> 00:45:44,680 Speaker 2: They're out strolling around Baumoral Castle and they come across 938 00:45:44,800 --> 00:45:46,719 Speaker 2: some American tourists. 939 00:45:46,200 --> 00:45:49,880 Speaker 21: And normally on these picnic sites you meet nobody. But 940 00:45:49,960 --> 00:45:52,160 Speaker 21: there was two hikers coming towards us, and the Queen 941 00:45:52,160 --> 00:45:54,440 Speaker 21: would always stop and say hello. And it was two 942 00:45:54,480 --> 00:45:57,640 Speaker 21: Americans on a walking holiday, and it was clear from 943 00:45:57,640 --> 00:46:00,560 Speaker 21: the moment that we first stopped they hadn't recognized the Queen, 944 00:46:00,560 --> 00:46:03,759 Speaker 21: which is fine, and the American gentleman was telling the 945 00:46:03,800 --> 00:46:06,520 Speaker 21: Queen where he came from, where they were going to next, 946 00:46:06,800 --> 00:46:09,520 Speaker 21: and where they've been to in Britain, and I could 947 00:46:09,520 --> 00:46:11,840 Speaker 21: see it coming, and sure enough he said to her, majesty, 948 00:46:11,880 --> 00:46:14,560 Speaker 21: and where do you live? And she said, well, I 949 00:46:14,560 --> 00:46:16,440 Speaker 21: live in London, but I've got a holiday home just 950 00:46:16,480 --> 00:46:17,280 Speaker 21: the other side. 951 00:46:17,080 --> 00:46:17,640 Speaker 4: Of the hills. 952 00:46:18,880 --> 00:46:20,839 Speaker 21: And he said, well, how often have you'd be coming 953 00:46:20,920 --> 00:46:21,239 Speaker 21: up here? 954 00:46:22,000 --> 00:46:22,160 Speaker 14: Oh? 955 00:46:22,239 --> 00:46:23,840 Speaker 21: She said, I've been coming up here ever since I 956 00:46:23,880 --> 00:46:26,879 Speaker 21: was little girl, so over eighty years. And you could 957 00:46:26,920 --> 00:46:28,360 Speaker 21: see the clogs thinking. He said, well, if you'd be 958 00:46:28,440 --> 00:46:30,839 Speaker 21: coming up you for eighty years, you must have met 959 00:46:30,840 --> 00:46:33,960 Speaker 21: the Queen, and as quick as a flash, says, well, 960 00:46:34,000 --> 00:46:38,239 Speaker 21: I haven't, but Dickie meets her regular leg. So the 961 00:46:38,280 --> 00:46:39,920 Speaker 21: guy said to me, oh, you've met the queen. 962 00:46:40,040 --> 00:46:40,640 Speaker 23: What you like? 963 00:46:41,200 --> 00:46:42,640 Speaker 21: And because I was with her a long time and 964 00:46:42,719 --> 00:46:44,560 Speaker 21: I knew I could pull a leg, I said, oh, 965 00:46:44,719 --> 00:46:47,640 Speaker 21: she could be very cantangrous at times, but she's got 966 00:46:47,640 --> 00:46:50,640 Speaker 21: a lovely sense of humor. Anyway, the next thing I knew, 967 00:46:50,800 --> 00:46:53,480 Speaker 21: this guy comes around put his arm around my shoulder, 968 00:46:53,760 --> 00:46:55,759 Speaker 21: and before I could see what was happening. He gets 969 00:46:55,760 --> 00:46:57,960 Speaker 21: his camera, gives it to the queen. He says, can 970 00:46:58,000 --> 00:46:59,239 Speaker 21: you take a picture of the two of. 971 00:46:59,239 --> 00:47:02,319 Speaker 1: Us, take a picture of the man that met the queen. 972 00:47:02,400 --> 00:47:02,560 Speaker 5: Yeah. 973 00:47:02,560 --> 00:47:04,319 Speaker 3: And when he gets time he shows his photos of people. 974 00:47:04,320 --> 00:47:05,600 Speaker 3: They go, you know who that is? 975 00:47:05,960 --> 00:47:08,400 Speaker 1: And that's what we're talking about. What queen moment passes 976 00:47:08,440 --> 00:47:09,080 Speaker 1: the pub test. 977 00:47:09,239 --> 00:47:13,200 Speaker 26: My favorite queen moment was just like Amanda with Paddington Bear. 978 00:47:13,640 --> 00:47:17,200 Speaker 26: She was a wonderful woman with such good humor. 979 00:47:17,360 --> 00:47:17,839 Speaker 8: She was a. 980 00:47:17,840 --> 00:47:21,879 Speaker 26: Lady, she was a leader, and she was much loved. 981 00:47:21,800 --> 00:47:24,279 Speaker 6: And may she rest in Pete where she was with 982 00:47:24,440 --> 00:47:27,640 Speaker 6: Daniel Craig in a Bond movie many years ago. 983 00:47:27,880 --> 00:47:30,719 Speaker 22: I at my first stop, the Queen came to Australia 984 00:47:30,719 --> 00:47:32,680 Speaker 22: and she was going to be in Martin Place. So 985 00:47:32,760 --> 00:47:35,080 Speaker 22: I went down in my lunch hour to Martin Place 986 00:47:35,320 --> 00:47:37,920 Speaker 22: and waving little flag seeing the Queen. And I was 987 00:47:37,920 --> 00:47:40,880 Speaker 22: fifteen minutes late back and they dosed me fifteen minutes. 988 00:47:41,320 --> 00:47:44,200 Speaker 15: I was well worth a My favorite queen moment I 989 00:47:44,360 --> 00:47:45,640 Speaker 15: was about eight or nine. 990 00:47:46,080 --> 00:47:49,120 Speaker 19: My mum is Dutch, my dad's English. And they said 991 00:47:49,160 --> 00:47:50,360 Speaker 19: we're going to go and meet. 992 00:47:50,160 --> 00:47:50,960 Speaker 20: The Queen today. 993 00:47:51,040 --> 00:47:53,680 Speaker 19: So she dressed me and my sister and our father's skirts, 994 00:47:54,239 --> 00:47:58,640 Speaker 19: our homemade croached is a top. We go down to 995 00:47:58,680 --> 00:48:01,600 Speaker 19: the Sydney Harbor where Bitter for corry care. 996 00:48:01,800 --> 00:48:04,960 Speaker 15: We had our flag and it both goes up the harbor. 997 00:48:05,800 --> 00:48:06,239 Speaker 13: That was it. 998 00:48:06,880 --> 00:48:08,840 Speaker 15: I was just told to the point of my queen 999 00:48:08,920 --> 00:48:11,480 Speaker 15: moment was seeing the boat and I cannot for the 1000 00:48:11,560 --> 00:48:13,600 Speaker 15: life remember me what it was thought, but I just 1001 00:48:13,719 --> 00:48:15,200 Speaker 15: remember the moment of wearing. 1002 00:48:14,920 --> 00:48:19,200 Speaker 19: A target skirt and a flag and the crowd in 1003 00:48:19,280 --> 00:48:20,319 Speaker 19: the crowd with my mom. 1004 00:48:20,400 --> 00:48:23,799 Speaker 28: My mum was a huge queen for them. And when 1005 00:48:23,840 --> 00:48:28,040 Speaker 28: the Queen came to Australia Open Mountain Hospital, I took 1006 00:48:28,080 --> 00:48:31,640 Speaker 28: my mum's line the stress for our Later the Queen 1007 00:48:31,719 --> 00:48:35,560 Speaker 28: just to drive briefly passed and look on my mom's 1008 00:48:35,640 --> 00:48:40,480 Speaker 28: face was the Queen, but a mix second was this place. 1009 00:48:40,800 --> 00:48:42,640 Speaker 20: I was in the Sea Scouts of England when I 1010 00:48:42,719 --> 00:48:46,799 Speaker 20: was a young lad and I used to sail a 1011 00:48:46,880 --> 00:48:51,680 Speaker 20: mirror dingdi and also canoe to get the Queen's badge 1012 00:48:52,200 --> 00:48:57,360 Speaker 20: for our troupe. And one year she came along to 1013 00:48:57,440 --> 00:49:00,919 Speaker 20: meet the troope and I got to meet the Yeah, 1014 00:49:01,480 --> 00:49:03,680 Speaker 20: I loved the Queen. I've been a fan of the 1015 00:49:03,760 --> 00:49:06,759 Speaker 20: queen since I was a little and everything that's going 1016 00:49:06,800 --> 00:49:09,200 Speaker 20: on in the world at the moment, I think the 1017 00:49:09,280 --> 00:49:13,040 Speaker 20: last thing that we needed was to lose Lizzie Wow. 1018 00:49:13,360 --> 00:49:15,839 Speaker 3: Oh. You know when you look how the queen meets 1019 00:49:15,880 --> 00:49:20,240 Speaker 3: all those people and it's just another day in her life, 1020 00:49:20,480 --> 00:49:23,200 Speaker 3: but that moment is everything to the person whose hands 1021 00:49:23,200 --> 00:49:26,000 Speaker 3: she is shaking, and she understood the gravitas of that. 1022 00:49:26,480 --> 00:49:29,680 Speaker 3: She was present and she worked hard and shook hands 1023 00:49:29,719 --> 00:49:30,320 Speaker 3: every day. 1024 00:49:30,200 --> 00:49:31,760 Speaker 26: Of a life shumation. 1025 00:49:33,480 --> 00:49:36,279 Speaker 3: Well, we're crossing now to Tracy Vow. She's Channel nine's 1026 00:49:36,280 --> 00:49:39,480 Speaker 3: European correspondent. She's at Buckingham Palace where crowds are growing 1027 00:49:39,480 --> 00:49:43,880 Speaker 3: and people are laying flowers. Hello tracycy, Oh. 1028 00:49:43,719 --> 00:49:45,280 Speaker 23: Good morning to you guys back home. 1029 00:49:46,080 --> 00:49:47,840 Speaker 3: What a morning. And you know they say loves a 1030 00:49:47,920 --> 00:49:51,240 Speaker 3: doing word, which the queen lived. I've been very emotional, 1031 00:49:51,320 --> 00:49:53,319 Speaker 3: lived out a whole life. But I think that's why 1032 00:49:53,320 --> 00:49:56,400 Speaker 3: people are laying flowers too, that they want to do something, 1033 00:49:56,480 --> 00:49:58,200 Speaker 3: they want to show respect for the queen. 1034 00:49:59,320 --> 00:49:59,800 Speaker 14: That's fine. 1035 00:50:00,120 --> 00:50:02,759 Speaker 23: That emotion you've just got right there, amount that's been 1036 00:50:02,800 --> 00:50:07,400 Speaker 23: reflected right across the crowd here in front of Buckingham Palace, 1037 00:50:07,440 --> 00:50:10,440 Speaker 23: and it's been just growing and growing as the night 1038 00:50:10,480 --> 00:50:14,000 Speaker 23: has gone on. We're past eleven pm here now and 1039 00:50:14,080 --> 00:50:17,400 Speaker 23: it's like as if it's just during the day. I 1040 00:50:17,600 --> 00:50:19,600 Speaker 23: went out into the crowd just a moment ago actually 1041 00:50:19,800 --> 00:50:22,440 Speaker 23: and spoke to a couple of people and some of 1042 00:50:22,440 --> 00:50:25,600 Speaker 23: them had just gone out for dinner and came straight 1043 00:50:25,640 --> 00:50:28,120 Speaker 23: here wanted to pay their respects and reflect. I mean, 1044 00:50:28,160 --> 00:50:30,200 Speaker 23: she's been at the Helm for seventy years and all 1045 00:50:30,200 --> 00:50:32,880 Speaker 23: of these people just don't know any different. And for 1046 00:50:32,960 --> 00:50:36,080 Speaker 23: the people of England, you've seen that constant through seventy 1047 00:50:36,160 --> 00:50:40,040 Speaker 23: years of societal change, and for them now it's just 1048 00:50:40,120 --> 00:50:42,600 Speaker 23: so One person actually said he just didn't know how 1049 00:50:42,640 --> 00:50:46,440 Speaker 23: to feel because he's reduced whole life and the Queen's 1050 00:50:46,440 --> 00:50:50,160 Speaker 23: been there and now she's no longer there. So there's 1051 00:50:50,160 --> 00:50:53,239 Speaker 23: also a sense of celebration too, guys. We've heard the 1052 00:50:53,280 --> 00:50:57,760 Speaker 23: anthem being played and some cheering and clupping, so it's somber, 1053 00:50:57,800 --> 00:50:59,279 Speaker 23: but there's also some celebrations. 1054 00:50:59,360 --> 00:51:01,880 Speaker 1: Move because it could be a good go two ways. 1055 00:51:02,120 --> 00:51:05,080 Speaker 2: Was England's fractured at the moment, and with the passing 1056 00:51:05,080 --> 00:51:08,520 Speaker 2: of the Queen, this could actually either make it more 1057 00:51:08,560 --> 00:51:11,320 Speaker 2: fractious or could actually galvanize the country. 1058 00:51:12,239 --> 00:51:15,719 Speaker 23: Well, look, it's been a huge week of transition for 1059 00:51:15,800 --> 00:51:18,120 Speaker 23: the people of England. They've just got a new Prime minister. 1060 00:51:18,680 --> 00:51:23,040 Speaker 23: They're dealing with the cost of living issues, energy prices 1061 00:51:23,040 --> 00:51:25,879 Speaker 23: are going up and it's winter here now, so there's 1062 00:51:25,920 --> 00:51:28,960 Speaker 23: a huge sense of anxiety uncertainty for the future here 1063 00:51:29,000 --> 00:51:31,799 Speaker 23: in England and now the passing of their queen. But 1064 00:51:32,160 --> 00:51:35,080 Speaker 23: we must remember she has spent I guess the last 1065 00:51:35,080 --> 00:51:37,160 Speaker 23: couple of months to a year to try and sort 1066 00:51:37,160 --> 00:51:39,520 Speaker 23: of I guess, Bruce, the fact that the future is 1067 00:51:39,560 --> 00:51:43,640 Speaker 23: bright within the royal family, promoting obviously now now King 1068 00:51:43,680 --> 00:51:46,239 Speaker 23: William the Third, Sorry I kept King Charles the Third, 1069 00:51:46,239 --> 00:51:50,640 Speaker 23: I should say, and also now Prince William and Author 1070 00:51:50,800 --> 00:51:55,360 Speaker 23: Kate also stepping up even more so in those senior roles. 1071 00:51:55,360 --> 00:51:59,080 Speaker 23: So she wants to really reflect that the people of 1072 00:51:59,120 --> 00:52:00,000 Speaker 23: England are in good hand. 1073 00:52:00,680 --> 00:52:03,120 Speaker 3: You know, what I'd've been interested to see is that 1074 00:52:03,120 --> 00:52:05,480 Speaker 3: there's a big part of being of pr that goes 1075 00:52:05,520 --> 00:52:07,319 Speaker 3: with being a member of the royal family. The Queen 1076 00:52:07,360 --> 00:52:09,759 Speaker 3: worked very hard politically as well behind the scenes, and 1077 00:52:10,040 --> 00:52:12,959 Speaker 3: was very knowledgeable, but there's a pr is a big role. 1078 00:52:13,400 --> 00:52:15,759 Speaker 3: What it would make a huge difference wouldn't it if 1079 00:52:15,800 --> 00:52:19,560 Speaker 3: Harry and Meghan could stand alongside Kate and William as 1080 00:52:19,560 --> 00:52:22,280 Speaker 3: a united front. Harry didn't make it to say goodbye 1081 00:52:22,320 --> 00:52:24,040 Speaker 3: to the Queen today, but what are the chances that 1082 00:52:24,080 --> 00:52:25,959 Speaker 3: there might heal that rift? 1083 00:52:27,000 --> 00:52:27,160 Speaker 21: Oh? 1084 00:52:27,200 --> 00:52:30,399 Speaker 23: Look, I think it came in such sadness for the Queen. 1085 00:52:30,600 --> 00:52:33,479 Speaker 23: I guess, as we would know, guys, that she would 1086 00:52:33,480 --> 00:52:37,520 Speaker 23: see her grandson drifting apart in that way, but also 1087 00:52:37,640 --> 00:52:40,800 Speaker 23: just to the king now to see his own sons 1088 00:52:42,160 --> 00:52:46,560 Speaker 23: not speaking at all. And unfortunately that roof has been 1089 00:52:46,600 --> 00:52:50,799 Speaker 23: growing and growing and more publicized in recent weeks with 1090 00:52:50,920 --> 00:52:54,440 Speaker 23: all those reports and interviews being held by Meghan. But 1091 00:52:55,200 --> 00:52:59,480 Speaker 23: today's about the Queen, and I think what I guess 1092 00:52:59,480 --> 00:53:03,000 Speaker 23: her past as well reminds people of what was good 1093 00:53:03,200 --> 00:53:05,640 Speaker 23: about about her and what she did for the country 1094 00:53:05,680 --> 00:53:08,759 Speaker 23: and for the world, I suppose, And I think for 1095 00:53:08,840 --> 00:53:11,640 Speaker 23: the next at least, you know, ten days, you know, 1096 00:53:11,680 --> 00:53:13,640 Speaker 23: we we've got ten days of mourning at a funeral. 1097 00:53:14,200 --> 00:53:16,880 Speaker 23: It's just all going to be about the queen and 1098 00:53:17,200 --> 00:53:21,080 Speaker 23: got so many memories, so many memories to live through 1099 00:53:21,120 --> 00:53:22,400 Speaker 23: after seventy years. 1100 00:53:22,160 --> 00:53:23,759 Speaker 3: What does days of mourning mean? 1101 00:53:25,680 --> 00:53:26,560 Speaker 14: So there's there is a. 1102 00:53:26,480 --> 00:53:29,920 Speaker 23: Process, so we will hear from Prince Cha, sorry, the King, 1103 00:53:30,040 --> 00:53:36,600 Speaker 23: King Charles. I it's New Years, definitely new for a 1104 00:53:36,680 --> 00:53:40,920 Speaker 23: national address, a televised address. Her body will then be 1105 00:53:41,120 --> 00:53:46,120 Speaker 23: moved and then there's also three days of lying in 1106 00:53:46,239 --> 00:53:49,319 Speaker 23: state so people can stream through it and see the queen, 1107 00:53:50,120 --> 00:53:52,719 Speaker 23: and then a funeral is held on ten day on 1108 00:53:52,760 --> 00:53:58,440 Speaker 23: the tenth day, so it is a long process, but 1109 00:53:58,600 --> 00:54:03,799 Speaker 23: I guess you know that's that's the magnitude of It's 1110 00:54:03,840 --> 00:54:07,360 Speaker 23: a moment in history, guys. And I suppose that's why 1111 00:54:07,680 --> 00:54:10,960 Speaker 23: any such the tradition that they have to sort of 1112 00:54:10,960 --> 00:54:11,719 Speaker 23: have these. 1113 00:54:11,719 --> 00:54:14,800 Speaker 3: These rituals, which I think are really rich, the rituals. 1114 00:54:14,920 --> 00:54:17,040 Speaker 1: I like the rituals. I'm kind of into. 1115 00:54:16,800 --> 00:54:21,120 Speaker 23: It, and hopefully they're not lost. Yeah, the queen has 1116 00:54:21,160 --> 00:54:23,880 Speaker 23: passed away and the modern eye of course with all family, 1117 00:54:24,280 --> 00:54:26,520 Speaker 23: but hopefully they're not lost. I also love this to 1118 00:54:26,640 --> 00:54:29,360 Speaker 23: rituals and tradition, and I do have I do have 1119 00:54:29,400 --> 00:54:32,759 Speaker 23: a soft spot for the queen. And it really was 1120 00:54:32,760 --> 00:54:35,040 Speaker 23: a moment. I was out here actually when the news 1121 00:54:35,040 --> 00:54:38,440 Speaker 23: broke at six point thirty in the evening London time, 1122 00:54:39,680 --> 00:54:41,560 Speaker 23: and it was a real moment in history. 1123 00:54:41,760 --> 00:54:42,360 Speaker 3: Wow. 1124 00:54:42,640 --> 00:54:45,719 Speaker 2: Wow, Well, Tracy, thank you for sharing that with us. 1125 00:54:45,760 --> 00:54:50,040 Speaker 2: Tracy vo Is Channel nine's European correspondent. Thank you so much, Thank. 1126 00:54:49,880 --> 00:54:50,400 Speaker 3: You, Tracy. 1127 00:54:51,239 --> 00:54:55,440 Speaker 12: Thanks guys, Jonesy and Amanda Germ podcast. 1128 00:54:56,640 --> 00:55:01,560 Speaker 11: Fine Luxury, Tropical Holidays, one with your name on its 1129 00:55:01,760 --> 00:55:03,800 Speaker 11: films Win Your Way out of Winter. 1130 00:55:05,400 --> 00:55:07,360 Speaker 2: Well it's a somber day, but this week we have 1131 00:55:07,440 --> 00:55:09,520 Speaker 2: been putting you on the standby list to win your 1132 00:55:09,560 --> 00:55:11,879 Speaker 2: way out of winter. Every Friday we call the winter 1133 00:55:12,239 --> 00:55:14,920 Speaker 2: and send them somewhere fabulous and tropical. 1134 00:55:15,040 --> 00:55:20,280 Speaker 3: This week it's Thailand. Pouquette flights eleven nights, eleven nights 1135 00:55:20,560 --> 00:55:23,759 Speaker 3: at the High Regency in Pouquette, Thailand. We cover all 1136 00:55:23,800 --> 00:55:26,920 Speaker 3: on ground, transfer, spending money. What an amazing trip. 1137 00:55:27,280 --> 00:55:30,680 Speaker 2: We've got our person here, make small talk while I 1138 00:55:30,760 --> 00:55:31,640 Speaker 2: dial up the number. 1139 00:55:32,080 --> 00:55:34,480 Speaker 1: You know what we should do? We should because we 1140 00:55:34,520 --> 00:55:37,480 Speaker 1: should sing one night in Bangkok, but it's Pouquette. Yeah, 1141 00:55:37,480 --> 00:55:40,440 Speaker 1: but well and it's more than at night. 1142 00:55:40,800 --> 00:55:45,400 Speaker 2: Okay, Well listen, no fun under a lot of pressure here. 1143 00:55:58,480 --> 00:56:06,520 Speaker 1: Week in po care is that the anchor of reesepeak. 1144 00:56:08,640 --> 00:56:14,480 Speaker 3: Is that the anchor something tells me that you're a 1145 00:56:14,600 --> 00:56:16,759 Speaker 3: very happy person to be heading to Thailand. 1146 00:56:20,000 --> 00:56:20,919 Speaker 24: Oh my god, I've. 1147 00:56:20,840 --> 00:56:23,800 Speaker 15: Been up to five o'clock with my phone in my hand. 1148 00:56:24,480 --> 00:56:27,600 Speaker 3: Well, bi anchor, it is you. Congratulations, eleven nights at 1149 00:56:27,600 --> 00:56:31,240 Speaker 3: the Heart Regency Pouquet in Thailand, covering your spending money, 1150 00:56:31,480 --> 00:56:36,960 Speaker 3: all your transfers. You're going to love it. Such a 1151 00:56:36,960 --> 00:56:37,480 Speaker 3: sad day. 1152 00:56:37,520 --> 00:56:38,839 Speaker 1: It's nice to be able to give. 1153 00:56:38,760 --> 00:56:41,600 Speaker 2: Someone away, but I'm pretty sure that it's it's nice 1154 00:56:41,600 --> 00:56:42,560 Speaker 2: to just hear you being here. 1155 00:56:42,719 --> 00:56:45,600 Speaker 3: Absolutely, you've cheered all of us up the anka. Thank you, 1156 00:56:45,640 --> 00:56:46,080 Speaker 3: good on. 1157 00:56:46,040 --> 00:56:48,200 Speaker 14: You, thank you. 1158 00:56:49,320 --> 00:56:53,080 Speaker 1: There she goes hit very hard by the Queen's bicycle. 1159 00:56:53,160 --> 00:56:57,279 Speaker 9: Well, you know we're giving away all right now, we 1160 00:56:58,080 --> 00:57:01,320 Speaker 9: feel today, we feel won't give away the next week, 1161 00:57:01,600 --> 00:57:04,600 Speaker 9: the next week's prize. Out of respect for the Queen, 1162 00:57:04,640 --> 00:57:07,680 Speaker 9: we won't be having competitions today, but Monday morning at 1163 00:57:07,760 --> 00:57:09,280 Speaker 9: nine o'clock he will announce. 1164 00:57:09,400 --> 00:57:10,439 Speaker 1: And apparently we've been. 1165 00:57:10,360 --> 00:57:12,919 Speaker 3: Told we've left the best till lost. 1166 00:57:12,920 --> 00:57:14,040 Speaker 1: Wouldn't tell that to be eNCA. 1167 00:57:14,280 --> 00:57:15,880 Speaker 3: No, next week's going to be amazing. 1168 00:57:16,080 --> 00:57:20,680 Speaker 2: It's twenty two tonight and thank you that's coming up WSFM. 1169 00:57:21,600 --> 00:57:25,480 Speaker 3: What a morning. The three point thirty Australian time, it 1170 00:57:25,520 --> 00:57:27,800 Speaker 3: was announced that the Queen had passed away. It's been 1171 00:57:27,840 --> 00:57:30,280 Speaker 3: a big outpouring of emotion for me as much as 1172 00:57:30,320 --> 00:57:30,800 Speaker 3: anything else. 1173 00:57:30,800 --> 00:57:32,760 Speaker 1: How would you go if you were hosting the show 1174 00:57:32,800 --> 00:57:33,400 Speaker 1: with Kaishi? 1175 00:57:33,680 --> 00:57:36,920 Speaker 3: I would have to have a nail in my hand. 1176 00:57:37,040 --> 00:57:39,800 Speaker 2: Yeah, Amanda, we're gonna have to break out the station 1177 00:57:39,880 --> 00:57:40,320 Speaker 2: and clean it. 1178 00:57:40,520 --> 00:57:42,840 Speaker 1: You can keep going on the boom, very weepy. 1179 00:57:42,880 --> 00:57:44,120 Speaker 3: And it started win a friend of mine set. 1180 00:57:44,280 --> 00:57:46,800 Speaker 2: We'll say this though. Someone sent us a message before. 1181 00:57:47,160 --> 00:57:48,760 Speaker 2: So they're watching the TV the news. 1182 00:57:48,560 --> 00:57:49,160 Speaker 1: About the queen. 1183 00:57:49,400 --> 00:57:52,280 Speaker 2: Not a tear switched over to us. It was full 1184 00:57:52,520 --> 00:57:53,560 Speaker 2: blown waterworks. 1185 00:57:53,600 --> 00:57:55,760 Speaker 1: Did they want that? Maybe because I. 1186 00:57:55,680 --> 00:57:58,439 Speaker 2: Think you know, and I'm not a big royal fan 1187 00:57:58,560 --> 00:58:01,640 Speaker 2: or anything like that, but constant about the Queen. 1188 00:58:02,040 --> 00:58:03,920 Speaker 1: I'm fifty four. She's been a part of my life. 1189 00:58:03,960 --> 00:58:05,640 Speaker 1: Of course, I don't know anything else. She's my mom. 1190 00:58:06,000 --> 00:58:08,360 Speaker 2: We know my mum who's seventy eight. She doesn't know 1191 00:58:08,360 --> 00:58:11,120 Speaker 2: any difference. No, that she is like Highlander, you know 1192 00:58:11,200 --> 00:58:11,920 Speaker 2: the movie Highlands. 1193 00:58:11,960 --> 00:58:15,960 Speaker 3: The Queens really is. And we play this grab earlier. 1194 00:58:16,200 --> 00:58:18,800 Speaker 3: This this is a speech the Queen made when she 1195 00:58:18,960 --> 00:58:21,000 Speaker 3: was twenty one. She wasn't even queen yet. 1196 00:58:21,640 --> 00:58:22,800 Speaker 17: II to care before you. 1197 00:58:22,880 --> 00:58:24,760 Speaker 14: All, it's my her. 1198 00:58:24,680 --> 00:58:29,160 Speaker 17: Life, whether it be long or short, shall be devoted 1199 00:58:29,200 --> 00:58:32,640 Speaker 17: to your service and to the service of our great 1200 00:58:32,760 --> 00:58:37,800 Speaker 17: imperial family to which we all belong. But I shall 1201 00:58:37,840 --> 00:58:42,240 Speaker 17: not have strength to carry out this resolution alone unless 1202 00:58:42,240 --> 00:58:45,200 Speaker 17: you'll join in it with me, as I now invite 1203 00:58:45,240 --> 00:58:45,720 Speaker 17: you to do. 1204 00:58:47,240 --> 00:58:47,720 Speaker 24: I know that. 1205 00:58:47,800 --> 00:58:52,520 Speaker 17: Joseph Wort will be unfeelingly giveful. God help me to 1206 00:58:52,560 --> 00:58:57,000 Speaker 17: make good my vow, and godless all of you who 1207 00:58:57,000 --> 00:58:58,520 Speaker 17: are willing to share in it. 1208 00:58:58,520 --> 00:59:00,760 Speaker 3: It's amazing. There's she's twenty one, and she says, whether 1209 00:59:00,800 --> 00:59:03,040 Speaker 3: my life is long or short? She has died at 1210 00:59:03,120 --> 00:59:07,360 Speaker 3: ninety six, the world's longest or England's longest serving monarch. 1211 00:59:07,520 --> 00:59:10,520 Speaker 2: Something you taught me this morning was born into service. 1212 00:59:10,600 --> 00:59:12,600 Speaker 2: I just presumed that she was born into service. 1213 00:59:12,600 --> 00:59:15,040 Speaker 3: Well, she was born as a princess, yes, but she 1214 00:59:15,160 --> 00:59:18,640 Speaker 3: wasn't destined to be queen. Her uncle Edward the eighth 1215 00:59:19,680 --> 00:59:21,000 Speaker 3: fell in love with a married woman. 1216 00:59:21,320 --> 00:59:22,160 Speaker 1: This was Wallace Simpson. 1217 00:59:22,200 --> 00:59:24,960 Speaker 3: Wallace Simpson, she'd been married twice before, and he is 1218 00:59:25,040 --> 00:59:27,880 Speaker 3: king was also supposed to be head of the Church 1219 00:59:28,040 --> 00:59:32,479 Speaker 3: Church of England. They didn't sanction divorce, so the huge 1220 00:59:32,520 --> 00:59:35,320 Speaker 3: pressure was put on him to not marry her. If 1221 00:59:35,320 --> 00:59:39,560 Speaker 3: he'd married Wallace and stayed still as king, I'd read 1222 00:59:39,560 --> 00:59:41,160 Speaker 3: that she wasn't able to have children, so it would 1223 00:59:41,160 --> 00:59:43,480 Speaker 3: have gone to Elizabeth anyway. But if he'd bound to 1224 00:59:43,480 --> 00:59:45,560 Speaker 3: pressure and had married someone else and had heirs of 1225 00:59:45,600 --> 00:59:48,960 Speaker 3: his own, this rich scene that has been the bedrock 1226 00:59:49,040 --> 00:59:52,320 Speaker 3: of modern England, ye would never have had the sliding 1227 00:59:52,320 --> 00:59:53,800 Speaker 3: doors of monarchy its extra in. 1228 00:59:53,720 --> 00:59:58,200 Speaker 2: A situation Prince Charles and Prince Die Charles and die 1229 00:59:58,240 --> 00:59:59,200 Speaker 2: because he didn't really want it. 1230 00:59:59,240 --> 01:00:02,000 Speaker 1: He wanted to marry Miller, didn't he all along? That's right, 1231 01:00:02,120 --> 01:00:03,080 Speaker 1: But she was a divorce a. 1232 01:00:03,320 --> 01:00:05,600 Speaker 3: No, she wasn't divorced. She just wasn't seen. I don't 1233 01:00:05,600 --> 01:00:08,800 Speaker 3: think he was stuffing her around. So she went off 1234 01:00:08,800 --> 01:00:12,440 Speaker 3: and married somebody else. But this is the thing. She's had, 1235 01:00:12,480 --> 01:00:16,240 Speaker 3: this incredible life of service, and she said it said 1236 01:00:16,360 --> 01:00:18,680 Speaker 3: that she never saw herself as a ruler, but as 1237 01:00:18,680 --> 01:00:21,760 Speaker 3: a servant. And this is the stuff that makes me emotional. 1238 01:00:21,840 --> 01:00:25,600 Speaker 3: And the last year she fulfilled all these duties through COVID, 1239 01:00:25,600 --> 01:00:27,480 Speaker 3: through all of that, with the broken heart she'd lost 1240 01:00:27,840 --> 01:00:32,840 Speaker 3: Prince Philip. The jubilee celebrations. Just two days ago she 1241 01:00:33,040 --> 01:00:35,800 Speaker 3: met the new Prime Minister. There's a state of fluxity. 1242 01:00:35,880 --> 01:00:39,760 Speaker 3: Prime Minister fifteen. She has seen Winston Churchill. 1243 01:00:39,840 --> 01:00:41,760 Speaker 1: She was haying with Winston church She is. 1244 01:00:41,760 --> 01:00:44,600 Speaker 3: The extraordinary long line of her. And yet this morning 1245 01:00:44,640 --> 01:00:46,560 Speaker 3: we have a new king. Apparently what happens in the 1246 01:00:46,600 --> 01:00:50,680 Speaker 3: minute the Queen passes away is Charles is now known 1247 01:00:50,920 --> 01:00:54,000 Speaker 3: as King Charles the Third, and his siblings would have 1248 01:00:54,080 --> 01:00:58,640 Speaker 3: kissed his hand and long lived the king and Camilla 1249 01:00:58,840 --> 01:01:02,240 Speaker 3: will be Queen CON's sort. And that's what's interesting too. 1250 01:01:02,280 --> 01:01:05,360 Speaker 3: The Queen went out of her way recently to give 1251 01:01:05,400 --> 01:01:08,000 Speaker 3: at her jubilee, she said, in the fullness of time, 1252 01:01:08,080 --> 01:01:10,600 Speaker 3: my son Charles becomes king, I know you'll give him 1253 01:01:10,640 --> 01:01:12,720 Speaker 3: and his wife Camilla the same support you've given me. 1254 01:01:13,120 --> 01:01:15,920 Speaker 3: It's my sincereous wish that when the time comes, Camilla 1255 01:01:15,960 --> 01:01:18,560 Speaker 3: will be known as Queen Consort as she continues her 1256 01:01:18,600 --> 01:01:22,400 Speaker 3: own loyal service. So that's the Queen saying, I'm sanctioning 1257 01:01:22,840 --> 01:01:24,880 Speaker 3: Queen Camilla, go for it. 1258 01:01:24,960 --> 01:01:25,680 Speaker 1: I like the stats. 1259 01:01:25,680 --> 01:01:28,520 Speaker 2: When they got married in the forties, they got two 1260 01:01:29,000 --> 01:01:31,800 Speaker 2: five hundred wedding gifts her and Philip. 1261 01:01:31,680 --> 01:01:34,280 Speaker 3: A lot of Thermo mixes. You see, do you know 1262 01:01:34,320 --> 01:01:37,160 Speaker 3: the stuff with her handbag? Oh and I cried earlier 1263 01:01:37,160 --> 01:01:39,160 Speaker 3: when we played that scene with Paddington. 1264 01:01:38,840 --> 01:01:41,720 Speaker 1: Bed the marmalade said marmalade. 1265 01:01:41,280 --> 01:01:43,920 Speaker 3: Sandwich in her handbag, but her purse is used to 1266 01:01:43,960 --> 01:01:47,360 Speaker 3: signal her staff. Apparently, it is said that when she 1267 01:01:47,400 --> 01:01:50,080 Speaker 3: places the bag on the table, it means she wants 1268 01:01:50,120 --> 01:01:53,080 Speaker 3: to leave within five minutes. If she places the bag 1269 01:01:53,120 --> 01:01:56,320 Speaker 3: on the floor, she's not enjoying the conversation and wants 1270 01:01:56,400 --> 01:01:57,240 Speaker 3: to be rescued. 1271 01:01:57,480 --> 01:01:59,240 Speaker 1: So be a whole lot of people hearing this this morning. 1272 01:01:59,360 --> 01:02:03,880 Speaker 9: Go hang on, Ken, the bag was on the floor, 1273 01:02:04,560 --> 01:02:05,960 Speaker 9: on the floor, Corny took it. 1274 01:02:07,920 --> 01:02:13,600 Speaker 3: But you know Charles the third new coins. 1275 01:02:12,440 --> 01:02:13,760 Speaker 1: Yeah, and plates. 1276 01:02:13,800 --> 01:02:17,080 Speaker 2: There's going to be a boom on commemorative plates. But 1277 01:02:17,200 --> 01:02:19,960 Speaker 2: Charles does Charles have to wait a year after her. 1278 01:02:19,960 --> 01:02:22,960 Speaker 3: Funeral, as did the queen, as when she's. 1279 01:02:22,360 --> 01:02:23,680 Speaker 1: Going to be king for a hot minute. 1280 01:02:23,760 --> 01:02:27,000 Speaker 3: When the Queen was crowned, that was a year after 1281 01:02:27,040 --> 01:02:28,880 Speaker 3: her father had died. I think that was the. 1282 01:02:28,800 --> 01:02:31,000 Speaker 1: First twenty five Yeah, there. 1283 01:02:30,920 --> 01:02:33,800 Speaker 3: Was the first live broadcast of a television event. How 1284 01:02:33,800 --> 01:02:36,680 Speaker 3: old is Charles He's I think seventy three, so he's. 1285 01:02:36,520 --> 01:02:38,760 Speaker 1: The same age as Paul's down in Geene Simmons from 1286 01:02:38,800 --> 01:02:39,200 Speaker 1: Kiss and. 1287 01:02:39,360 --> 01:02:42,200 Speaker 3: He should dress like that and the coronation, but he 1288 01:02:42,200 --> 01:02:45,840 Speaker 3: he's had a very long apprenticeship. As we know, he 1289 01:02:45,920 --> 01:02:50,200 Speaker 3: is the oldest monarch to take the throat right. Well, 1290 01:02:50,320 --> 01:02:51,160 Speaker 3: what a day? 1291 01:02:51,440 --> 01:02:54,200 Speaker 1: Well we've done got a special gibber jabbit. 1292 01:02:54,320 --> 01:02:55,920 Speaker 3: Oh no, am I going to need tissues? 1293 01:02:56,040 --> 01:02:57,720 Speaker 2: This is going to be I'm gonna have to break 1294 01:02:57,720 --> 01:03:01,720 Speaker 2: out the George formby one of the Queen's pavorite acts. 1295 01:03:02,320 --> 01:03:07,080 Speaker 1: It's your eyes, it's still to go dry. We've got 1296 01:03:07,080 --> 01:03:09,320 Speaker 1: a special tribute to the Queen coming up next to 1297 01:03:09,360 --> 01:03:11,360 Speaker 1: twelve tonight relation. 1298 01:03:13,360 --> 01:03:16,120 Speaker 18: Jonesy and Amanda in the morning one oh one point 1299 01:03:16,200 --> 01:03:17,680 Speaker 18: seven ws. 1300 01:03:17,360 --> 01:03:18,560 Speaker 1: ACM Are you okay? 1301 01:03:19,040 --> 01:03:21,680 Speaker 3: No, no, I think if anyone deserves our tears, it 1302 01:03:21,760 --> 01:03:22,280 Speaker 3: is the Queen. 1303 01:03:22,360 --> 01:03:26,000 Speaker 1: Of course. Ninth of September twenty twenty two will be 1304 01:03:26,200 --> 01:03:26,840 Speaker 1: known as an. 1305 01:03:26,720 --> 01:03:29,360 Speaker 3: Extraordinary day and I'm glad we got to share it 1306 01:03:29,400 --> 01:03:32,560 Speaker 3: together this morning. We've all been on the journey for 1307 01:03:32,600 --> 01:03:33,560 Speaker 3: the last few hours. 1308 01:03:33,640 --> 01:03:35,160 Speaker 1: Now, how's your tissue situation. 1309 01:03:35,200 --> 01:03:36,560 Speaker 3: I've got one of them at the ready because I 1310 01:03:36,600 --> 01:03:38,560 Speaker 3: think you're going to need tissues in this next bit 1311 01:03:38,600 --> 01:03:39,880 Speaker 3: that we've compiled here. 1312 01:03:40,080 --> 01:03:43,840 Speaker 7: This is BBC News from London. Buckingham Palace has announced 1313 01:03:43,840 --> 01:03:48,120 Speaker 7: the death of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth Second the Queen 1314 01:03:48,320 --> 01:03:51,440 Speaker 7: died peacefully at Balmoral this afternoon. 1315 01:04:00,880 --> 01:04:07,920 Speaker 29: What we are all devastated by the news that we 1316 01:04:08,000 --> 01:04:10,960 Speaker 29: have just heard from bal Morale. The death of her 1317 01:04:11,040 --> 01:04:14,240 Speaker 29: Majesty the Queen is a huge shock to the nation 1318 01:04:15,000 --> 01:04:19,600 Speaker 29: and to the world. Queen Elizabeth was the rock on 1319 01:04:19,680 --> 01:04:23,200 Speaker 29: which modern Britain was built. She was the very spirit 1320 01:04:23,560 --> 01:04:30,720 Speaker 29: of great Britain and that spirit will endure somesic. 1321 01:04:31,400 --> 01:04:34,440 Speaker 1: Book listen. 1322 01:04:34,960 --> 01:04:36,800 Speaker 8: In a way, I didn't have an apprenticeship. 1323 01:04:36,840 --> 01:04:40,840 Speaker 12: My father died much too young, and so it was 1324 01:04:40,880 --> 01:04:45,000 Speaker 12: all of very sudden kind of taking on and making 1325 01:04:45,040 --> 01:04:49,560 Speaker 12: the best job you can. It's a question of maturing 1326 01:04:49,840 --> 01:04:53,960 Speaker 12: into something thats got used to doing and accepting the 1327 01:04:54,000 --> 01:04:58,840 Speaker 12: fact that here you are and it's your fate. Because 1328 01:04:58,920 --> 01:05:00,880 Speaker 12: I think continuity is very important. 1329 01:05:01,240 --> 01:05:12,440 Speaker 8: It is a job for life. 1330 01:05:14,160 --> 01:05:16,000 Speaker 20: She's been there all of our lives and I remember 1331 01:05:16,040 --> 01:05:16,760 Speaker 20: as a little. 1332 01:05:16,520 --> 01:05:18,920 Speaker 13: Girl she was such a stowy, defficient young woman and 1333 01:05:19,000 --> 01:05:19,920 Speaker 13: know something I aspired. 1334 01:05:20,240 --> 01:05:23,240 Speaker 6: That's a very sad day. I used to serve as 1335 01:05:23,280 --> 01:05:24,840 Speaker 6: an Royal Australian engineer, so. 1336 01:05:25,280 --> 01:05:27,640 Speaker 20: She was my boss for TBLA. 1337 01:05:29,560 --> 01:05:33,479 Speaker 6: Sorry PTSD, you sort of didn't absolutely didn't stay. 1338 01:05:33,560 --> 01:05:35,800 Speaker 13: That's really really broken my heart. 1339 01:05:35,920 --> 01:05:38,440 Speaker 3: You're such a wonderful woman, and isn't an amazing When 1340 01:05:38,760 --> 01:05:41,600 Speaker 3: it was ninety six, we knew this train of grief 1341 01:05:41,760 --> 01:05:44,160 Speaker 3: was coming at us, But it's so awful. 1342 01:05:43,760 --> 01:05:46,640 Speaker 24: Today it just shocks you, doesn't it. You You think 1343 01:05:46,680 --> 01:05:47,880 Speaker 24: she'd live on forever. 1344 01:05:59,200 --> 01:06:02,800 Speaker 17: I'd be careful for you all. With my whole life, 1345 01:06:03,200 --> 01:06:06,880 Speaker 17: whether it be long or short, shall be devoted to 1346 01:06:06,960 --> 01:06:11,520 Speaker 17: your service and to the service of our great Imperial family, 1347 01:06:11,920 --> 01:06:15,840 Speaker 17: to which we all belong. But I shall not have 1348 01:06:15,880 --> 01:06:20,360 Speaker 17: strength to carry out this resolution alone unless you'll join 1349 01:06:20,440 --> 01:06:23,240 Speaker 17: in it with me. As I now invite you to do. 1350 01:06:24,880 --> 01:06:27,760 Speaker 17: I know that your support will be unfailingly given. 1351 01:06:29,280 --> 01:06:30,200 Speaker 14: God help me to. 1352 01:06:30,160 --> 01:06:33,680 Speaker 17: Make good my vow, and God bless all. 1353 01:06:33,560 --> 01:06:35,680 Speaker 24: Of you who are willing to share me. 1354 01:06:36,960 --> 01:06:40,880 Speaker 26: My favorite queen moment was just like Amanda with Harrington Bear. 1355 01:06:41,360 --> 01:06:45,200 Speaker 26: She was a wonderful woman with such good humor. She 1356 01:06:45,280 --> 01:06:48,440 Speaker 26: was a lady, she was a leader, and she was 1357 01:06:48,640 --> 01:06:49,680 Speaker 26: much loved. 1358 01:06:49,520 --> 01:06:50,840 Speaker 28: And may she rest in peace. 1359 01:06:51,280 --> 01:06:54,480 Speaker 22: Many years ago I my first job. The Queen came 1360 01:06:54,520 --> 01:06:56,880 Speaker 22: to Australia and she was going to be a Martin Place. 1361 01:06:57,040 --> 01:06:59,200 Speaker 22: So I went down in my lun shower to Martin 1362 01:06:59,280 --> 01:07:02,280 Speaker 22: Place and waving little flag seeing the Queen, and I 1363 01:07:02,320 --> 01:07:05,360 Speaker 22: was fifteen minutes late back and they dosed me fifteen minutes. 1364 01:07:05,800 --> 01:07:08,880 Speaker 15: I was well worth a favorite queen moment. I was 1365 01:07:08,920 --> 01:07:10,160 Speaker 15: about eight or nine. 1366 01:07:10,600 --> 01:07:13,640 Speaker 19: My mum is Dutch, my dad's English, and they said, 1367 01:07:13,680 --> 01:07:15,600 Speaker 19: we're going to go and meet the Queen today. So 1368 01:07:15,720 --> 01:07:18,480 Speaker 19: she dressed me and my sister in our father skirts, 1369 01:07:18,760 --> 01:07:21,760 Speaker 19: our homemade croached this at top. 1370 01:07:22,360 --> 01:07:24,000 Speaker 15: We go down to the Sydney. 1371 01:07:23,760 --> 01:07:26,160 Speaker 19: Harbor where at this is mccorry's Cares. 1372 01:07:26,320 --> 01:07:29,480 Speaker 15: We had our flags and a boat goes up the harbor. 1373 01:07:30,320 --> 01:07:30,720 Speaker 20: That was it. 1374 01:07:31,360 --> 01:07:33,320 Speaker 15: I was just told to the point of my queen 1375 01:07:33,440 --> 01:07:36,000 Speaker 15: moment with seeing the boat, and I cannot for the 1376 01:07:36,080 --> 01:07:38,120 Speaker 15: life remember me what it was thought, but I just 1377 01:07:38,200 --> 01:07:42,280 Speaker 15: remember the moment of wearing a tartar skirt and a flag. 1378 01:07:42,560 --> 01:07:44,440 Speaker 20: I was in the Sea Scouts of England when I 1379 01:07:44,520 --> 01:07:48,600 Speaker 20: was a young lad, and I used to sail a 1380 01:07:48,680 --> 01:07:53,960 Speaker 20: mirror dinghi and also canoe to get the Queen's bags 1381 01:07:54,000 --> 01:07:59,200 Speaker 20: for our troop. And one year she came along to 1382 01:07:59,240 --> 01:08:02,080 Speaker 20: meet the troope and I've got to make the claim. 1383 01:08:02,320 --> 01:08:05,240 Speaker 20: Oh yeah, I love the coin of being a fair 1384 01:08:05,320 --> 01:08:07,680 Speaker 20: with the coin since I was a little and with 1385 01:08:07,840 --> 01:08:10,880 Speaker 20: everythingess going on the world at the moment, I think 1386 01:08:10,880 --> 01:08:13,520 Speaker 20: the last thing that we needed us to lose Lizzie. 1387 01:08:16,360 --> 01:08:20,320 Speaker 12: While we have faced challenges before, this one is different. 1388 01:08:21,680 --> 01:08:24,599 Speaker 12: This time we join with all nations across the globe 1389 01:08:25,120 --> 01:08:29,599 Speaker 12: in a common endeavor, using the great advances of science 1390 01:08:30,600 --> 01:08:36,840 Speaker 12: and our instinctive compassion to heal. We will succeed, and 1391 01:08:36,960 --> 01:08:39,040 Speaker 12: that success will belong to every. 1392 01:08:38,760 --> 01:08:39,320 Speaker 3: One of us. 1393 01:08:40,560 --> 01:08:43,439 Speaker 12: We should take comfort that while we may have more 1394 01:08:43,520 --> 01:08:48,200 Speaker 12: still to endure, better days will return. We will be 1395 01:08:48,320 --> 01:08:52,200 Speaker 12: with our friends again, we will be with our families again. 1396 01:08:53,240 --> 01:08:54,439 Speaker 3: We will meet again. 1397 01:08:55,760 --> 01:08:58,720 Speaker 12: But for now, I send my thanks and warmest good 1398 01:08:58,720 --> 01:08:59,880 Speaker 12: wishes to you all. 1399 01:09:00,200 --> 01:09:14,200 Speaker 18: Oh Jonesy and Amanda podcast catch up on what you've 1400 01:09:14,200 --> 01:09:16,320 Speaker 18: missed on the free iHeartRadio app.