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CROWD SHOUTS
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CHEERING
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Have a look at this,
ladies and gentlemen.
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ROCK MUSIC
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We don't have to send in our money.
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We've just got to stop asking
starving people...
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..to give back the money
our government's lent them,
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plus interest.
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That's about it.
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CHEERING
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Sounds good.
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But the banks won't cancel the debts
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unless the politicians
tell the banks to do that.
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And the politicians
won't tell the banks
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unless we tell them to do that.
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So that's why I'm here.
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Are you with me?
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CHEERING
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Are you?
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ARCHIVE: It's 12 noon in London,
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7am in Philadelphia.
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And around the world
it's time for Live Aid.
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40 years ago, music brought
the world together
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to fight a famine in Ethiopia.
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# We could be heroes... #
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32 million human beings dying of
hunger in a world of surplus food.
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And it's this simple thing
that drives me nuts.
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It all began with a song.
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The most remarkable number one ever.
It sold a million in a week.
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Well, that's more than any other
record in the history of music.
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CHEERING
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It inspired Live Aid, one of the
biggest global events in history.
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To be honest, it seemed
a harebrained scheme.
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It seemed like
this could never happen.
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I remember the stadium shaking.
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I was singing my face off, honey.
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# It was 20 years ago today
Sergeant Pepper... #
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20 years on, Live 8 challenged
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the leaders of the world's
richest countries
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to address the causes of poverty
in Africa.
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People were saying, "Why the hell
are we going to spend money
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"over in Africa when we got road
problems in my state?
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I said to Bob, "I'll do
the politics, you do the public."
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Nothing can ever repair
the damage colonisation,
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slavery did.
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Nothing.
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But this was demonstrating
what we can do.
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This is the story of how a pop song
inspired a movement
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that secured tens of billions
of pounds for Africa.
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You can't change the world
with a song, or even a concert,
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but you can plant a seed.
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# Sergeant Pepper's
Lonely Hearts Club Band! #
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2003,
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I'm back in Ethiopia.
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NEWS: 20 years ago, he formed
Band Aid to raise millions of pounds
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in famine relief. Now he's back to
highlight a new crisis in Ethiopia,
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a country where 12 million people
now face starvation.
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I go to visit an orphanage,
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and I see these children
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whose parents have died
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because of no food.
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It annoys me to tears
of frustration.
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I go ballistic at this point,
as ever.
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"Get me Downing Street!"
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We were in Evian
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for the G8 summit, hosted by Chirac.
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And an urgent message came
from the switchboard,
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Number 10 switchboard,
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that Bob Geldof
needed to speak to Tony.
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Fortunately, I was next to Tony,
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and these things could happen there
easier than other places.
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Kate handed me the phone,
said, "It's Bob."
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He came on the phone,
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and, as ever with Bob,
went straight to the point.
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I remember shouting,
"It's happening again!"
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And he said, "Stop shouting.
What's happening?"
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He just said, "Look, the situation
in Africa is absolutely dire.
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"It's gone off the agenda.
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"We've got to see how we revive..."
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Not just revive
the sort of Band Aid campaign,
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but put Africa on the agenda
of the top leaders in the world.
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So I got a meeting
with the Prime Minister.
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And the thrust of my argument was,
people dying of hunger
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and dying of no hope
will not get resolved
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until we get to the nub
of what poverty is.
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And the first thing
that has to happen is
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we remove debt from the poorest
countries of the world.
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So, the issue of Africa's debt
was a massive, massive problem,
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because a lot of countries
were paying vast amounts of money
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in interest on a debt that, frankly,
it was highly unlikely
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they were ever going to be able
to repay in full,
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without devastating their country.
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It was stunting their growth,
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it was making them unable
to fund basic public services.
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We needed someone who would chair
a commission
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that's been asked to eliminate debt.
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I said,
"It can't be an African leader,
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"because African leaders
are essentially powerless.
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If it's Blair, then he's
the Prime Minister of Britain -
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deeply popular, except for Iraq -
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and he's going to chair the G8.
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He said, "All right, let's do it."
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I wouldn't have reacted in
that way at anyone, but it was him,
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with his track record,
his commitment, his knowledge,
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his dedication -
and therefore it made sense.
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NEWS: So today, Sir Bob Geldof
was back, this time flanked
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by the Secretary of State
for International Development,
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Hilary Benn,
to launch a new initiative -
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a Commission for Africa.
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Bob - crucially it was his idea,
the Commission for Africa,
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so he was driving the political
agenda INSIDE government,
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which was incredible.
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It's almost like a report card
of the Live Aid generation,
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who became animated and activated
by this subject,
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a subject that was nowhere on the
world political agenda 20 years ago.
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I think there were 17 members.
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You had African politicians,
you had African business leaders,
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but you also had
G8 representatives
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and the UK government.
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NEWS: Tonight, Mr Blair arrived in
the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa,
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for a meeting
of his Africa Commission.
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The African Commission,
you can read it both ways.
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One is that it was generally a
good-faith effort to support Africa.
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The other way you could read it is,
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well, actually, Tony Blair,
it suited his narrative
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to cast himself as some saviour.
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When I come and see
what is happening here
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and see what could happen,
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I know that however difficult
politics is,
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there is at least one noble cause
worth fighting for.
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And it's here, on this continent.
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After the meeting
and the press conference,
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a Sun journalist said that
he had been to a little town
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two hours away
and had identified and found Birhan,
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the symbol of the crisis and famine
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in '85.
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So the request was,
"Would Tony meet her?"
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which, of course,
the answer was yes.
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I remember her coming in
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and she had a great presence
about her, actually.
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Tony - you know, he had
this kind of "Gosh, Bob,"
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you know this sort of expression
that he had on.
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And, you know,
I hadn't expected this coup.
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Tony talked about the impact
she'd had on him
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and the rest of the world.
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It was a very moving meeting.
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I mean, in politics you don't
often get many moments where you...
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..think, "Well, that was good
that we did that. That was good."
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And she brought home to me that
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the whole thing that we were trying
to do was important,
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because many people didn't survive,
weren't surviving.
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But her being there was
a representation of the fact
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it was possible to do something.
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The UK was going to host
the G8 summit in 2005.
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G8 summits, they are useful
for leaders to come together
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and talk about things,
but they don't have big consequence.
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I was very determined
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that we should try and make this
a meaningful summit,
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where we were going
to try and do huge things,
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particularly on Africa.
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The key to everything about getting
other G8 leaders was Bush.
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To begin with at least, I think
he thought it was a bit crazy.
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We should be talking about
the normal things - the economy,
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a bit about global security,
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and then get out of town
as fast as possible.
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Good morning, Tony.
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How are you?
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I told the people here that
one of my customary habits
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is to check in with my friend
in Great Britain,
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so I'm glad
that we are able to talk today.
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Because the relationship was
a very close relationship and...
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You know, there are...
people who would disagree
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with how close it was
for all sorts of obvious reasons.
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But because it was so close,
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we were in constant conversation
with each other.
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And I thought there was a chance,
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because we had formed
this commission
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that Bob had asked us to do.
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And then you had Bono.
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Bob was "effing this"
and "effing that",
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even with presidents
and prime ministers!
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And Bono had this kind
of deep empathy with people,
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and knew how to kind of appeal
to their inner souls.
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# The heart is a bloom
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# It shoots up through stony ground
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# But there's no room... #
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Bono and I are REALLY good friends
and very close.
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By this time, he was a global
mega-superstar. I wasn't.
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# Don't let it get away
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# It's a beautiful day
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# Touch me, touch me... #
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He wants to give the world
a great big hug,
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and I want to punch its lights out.
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Live Aid -
it began a journey for all of us,
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a lot of people on that stage,
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from what you might call charity
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to what you might call justice.
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I don't believe anything like that
would have happened without...
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..without Bob.
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I had the fortune of working with,
you know, Bob Geldof and Bono.
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We had a lot of momentum on
debt cancellation in 2000 and 2001.
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But we had not completed the job.
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The HIV Aids emergency
was running out of control.
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We had not focused on that as much.
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NEWS: The United Nations says
36 million people around the world
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have HIV or Aids, and 3 million
will die in the next year -
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80% of them in Africa.
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What was happening with HIV Aids
on the continent of Africa
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was about to undo everything.
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And so the discussion was...
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..what more could we do
alongside debt on HIV Aids?
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The organisation we founded
was Data -
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Data.org.
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Bob comes up with Data
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as an acronym.
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The three biggest challenges
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to the continent of Africa.
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Debt. Aids. And trade.
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I became aware of Bono
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and his - at the time it was
called Data - organisation
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a few months
into the Bush presidency.
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But they were...
a pretty rinky-dink operation.
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He's right. We were rinky-dink.
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That's correct, actually.
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I think it's true.
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But that was, if I can say so,
the genius of the strategy.
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So we're not coming in here
doing press conferences,
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we are never going to...
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I said, "Bono will never sing
in Washington DC.
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"Not Happy Birthday, not "how are
you doing?", not a verse from One.
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Nothing.
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They were asking for Bono to have
a meeting with Condoleezza Rice.
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Morning. Good morning. Morning.
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I said I would present it to her.
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I myself
was a bit sceptical about that.
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Jendayi Frazer came in
and she said,
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"Bono - do you know who that is?"
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And I said, "Er, yes.
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"I'm a huge fan of U2.
I would love to meet Bono."
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I think she was a little surprised.
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It was very weird
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for the National Security Advisor
to meet a pop star.
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Bono came talking about the facts.
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00:14:04,720 --> 00:14:08,640
He came with a very substantive
policy agenda.
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My goal always was to know more
than the staff.
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And Bono, to his great credit,
really took to that.
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He was like, "Yeah,
I'm going to know more than them."
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And that shocked people, you know,
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00:14:19,080 --> 00:14:22,960
cos they don't expect well-known
people to know the numbers.
250
00:14:22,960 --> 00:14:25,640
It was very clear
after just a few minutes
251
00:14:25,640 --> 00:14:29,360
that Bono wanted
to talk about the Aids pandemic,
252
00:14:29,360 --> 00:14:33,080
and he wanted to talk about
the possibility of US leadership
253
00:14:33,080 --> 00:14:35,880
in taking on that challenge.
254
00:14:35,880 --> 00:14:39,240
This was 6,000 Africans dying
every day
255
00:14:39,240 --> 00:14:42,960
of a preventable treatable disease
concerning HIV.
256
00:14:42,960 --> 00:14:45,240
But they don't have to.
257
00:14:45,240 --> 00:14:50,480
If that population was anywhere
else, there is a treatment.
258
00:14:50,480 --> 00:14:53,160
And we just have
to get it affordable
259
00:14:53,160 --> 00:14:55,160
and accessible to these people.
260
00:14:58,960 --> 00:15:01,400
I was a little bit worried
about bringing Bono in
261
00:15:01,400 --> 00:15:02,800
to see the President.
262
00:15:02,800 --> 00:15:05,680
The President, his tastes go toward
country music,
263
00:15:05,680 --> 00:15:07,440
not toward rock music.
264
00:15:07,440 --> 00:15:10,560
The President did not do
that sort of thing often,
265
00:15:10,560 --> 00:15:14,200
because he felt that rock stars
would be using
266
00:15:14,200 --> 00:15:18,320
the White House platform to advance
their own celebrity.
267
00:15:18,320 --> 00:15:20,480
And so Josh is briefing me,
268
00:15:20,480 --> 00:15:22,720
you know, you'll stand here, you'll
say to Bono this, Bono that.
269
00:15:22,720 --> 00:15:24,320
I said, "I got it, Josh. I got it."
270
00:15:24,320 --> 00:15:27,040
And he's leaving the Oval Office and
he turns over his shoulder and said,
271
00:15:27,040 --> 00:15:29,000
"You do know who Bono is,
don't you?"
272
00:15:29,000 --> 00:15:30,680
And I said, "Yeah, he married Cher."
273
00:15:32,240 --> 00:15:35,200
And I turned around
and I looked at his face
274
00:15:35,200 --> 00:15:38,600
and I could not tell
whether he was kidding,
275
00:15:38,600 --> 00:15:43,400
and I said, "No, that's Sonny Bono,
who is dead."
276
00:15:43,400 --> 00:15:45,920
And in comes the great star, Bono.
277
00:15:47,040 --> 00:15:49,280
He surprised me by giving me
a Bible.
278
00:15:49,280 --> 00:15:51,520
I don't think this was a way
to make me like him,
279
00:15:51,520 --> 00:15:54,720
I think it was a way
he really wanted to share with me
280
00:15:54,720 --> 00:15:56,520
a part of his being.
281
00:15:56,520 --> 00:15:58,760
I knew he was a man of faith
282
00:15:58,760 --> 00:16:04,360
and I thought he might enjoy
this ancient Irish Bible.
283
00:16:05,960 --> 00:16:09,360
The first 10 or 15 minutes of
the conversation
284
00:16:09,360 --> 00:16:11,680
between President Bush and Bono
285
00:16:11,680 --> 00:16:15,600
was about the meaning of religion
in the public sphere.
286
00:16:15,600 --> 00:16:18,600
Well, he made the case about people
dying of Aids.
287
00:16:18,600 --> 00:16:22,240
I had campaigned and told people
288
00:16:22,240 --> 00:16:24,480
a guiding principle of
my administration
289
00:16:24,480 --> 00:16:26,040
was all life is precious
290
00:16:26,040 --> 00:16:28,120
and we're all God's children.
291
00:16:28,120 --> 00:16:31,560
I asked George Bush,
"Is there a hierarchy to sin?"
292
00:16:33,080 --> 00:16:35,800
He gave me the best answer
anyone ever gave me. He said,
293
00:16:35,800 --> 00:16:38,960
"Er, the sin of omission?"
294
00:16:38,960 --> 00:16:41,200
The sin of omission.
295
00:16:41,200 --> 00:16:43,320
Well, the sin of omission
would be to say,
296
00:16:43,320 --> 00:16:45,160
"Oh, I'm not going to do it
cos I'm too busy,
297
00:16:45,160 --> 00:16:47,000
"or cos, you know, whatever,
298
00:16:47,000 --> 00:16:48,840
"and we'll let all those people
die."
299
00:16:48,840 --> 00:16:51,320
I'm being informed
that there's a pandemic destroying
300
00:16:51,320 --> 00:16:54,520
an entire generation of people
on the continent of Africa,
301
00:16:54,520 --> 00:16:57,720
and at the time
that I'm the President of...
302
00:16:57,720 --> 00:17:00,560
..which I consider the most generous
nation in the world,
303
00:17:00,560 --> 00:17:02,360
and we're doing nothing about it.
304
00:17:02,360 --> 00:17:04,200
It struck my heart.
305
00:17:06,600 --> 00:17:09,760
As unappealing as it was
to U2's audience,
306
00:17:09,760 --> 00:17:15,920
having their singer hang out
with a Republican,
307
00:17:15,920 --> 00:17:22,720
it was just as much a bad photo op
for them.
308
00:17:23,960 --> 00:17:29,240
A year passed from that fateful day
when Bono met President Bush,
309
00:17:29,240 --> 00:17:31,920
and I assumed Bono was wondering,
310
00:17:31,920 --> 00:17:35,240
"OK, what's happening
with Aids relief?"
311
00:17:35,240 --> 00:17:38,520
And the President had decided
that he wanted to do it
312
00:17:38,520 --> 00:17:40,560
in his State of the Union,
313
00:17:40,560 --> 00:17:47,720
which is the moment
when the biggest ideas come forward.
314
00:17:47,720 --> 00:17:49,800
APPLAUSE
315
00:17:47,720 --> 00:17:49,800
I asked the Congress to commit
316
00:17:49,800 --> 00:17:52,800
$15 billion
over the next five years,
317
00:17:52,800 --> 00:17:55,520
including nearly $10 billion
in new money,
318
00:17:55,520 --> 00:17:57,600
to turn the tide against Aids
319
00:17:57,600 --> 00:18:01,000
in the most afflicted nations
of Africa and the Caribbean.
320
00:18:01,960 --> 00:18:04,360
APPLAUSE
321
00:18:06,560 --> 00:18:07,800
Bono got George Bush
322
00:18:07,800 --> 00:18:11,640
to give $15 billion to black people
323
00:18:11,640 --> 00:18:14,680
who don't vote, who have Aids.
324
00:18:14,680 --> 00:18:17,920
I think a great nation also should
be a compassionate nation.
325
00:18:17,920 --> 00:18:20,200
Nothing more compassionate than
helping people who are condemned
326
00:18:20,200 --> 00:18:21,880
to death live.
327
00:18:21,880 --> 00:18:26,720
Pepfar, the President's emergency
plan for Aids relief,
328
00:18:26,720 --> 00:18:31,440
is the largest health intervention
in the history
329
00:18:31,440 --> 00:18:33,320
of health interventions.
330
00:18:33,320 --> 00:18:38,280
It has saved 26 million lives.
331
00:18:38,280 --> 00:18:40,920
Bono, he never stopped pushing,
332
00:18:40,920 --> 00:18:46,640
but he was also moving on
to other topics
333
00:18:46,640 --> 00:18:50,000
in development,
including debt relief.
334
00:18:54,720 --> 00:18:57,240
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
335
00:19:02,600 --> 00:19:05,600
I've come because
Prime Minister Blair asked me -
336
00:19:05,600 --> 00:19:07,880
and he may regret it.
337
00:19:07,880 --> 00:19:09,240
LAUGHTER
338
00:19:09,240 --> 00:19:11,320
In the largest sense,
339
00:19:11,320 --> 00:19:18,480
I'm here because of a journey
that began in 1984, '85,
340
00:19:18,480 --> 00:19:20,960
with Band Aid and Live Aid.
341
00:19:22,400 --> 00:19:23,840
Live Aid raised
342
00:19:23,840 --> 00:19:27,280
200 million or something like that.
343
00:19:27,280 --> 00:19:31,360
That's what the African
continent's paying every week
344
00:19:31,360 --> 00:19:33,040
in debt service.
345
00:19:33,040 --> 00:19:36,240
Shouldn't we be offering
these struggling economies
346
00:19:36,240 --> 00:19:39,120
across the world a brand-new start
347
00:19:39,120 --> 00:19:42,800
by lifting that debt burden
from them?
348
00:19:42,800 --> 00:19:46,280
That was the journey from charity
to justice right there.
349
00:19:46,280 --> 00:19:48,920
The Prime Minister's
Africa Commission,
350
00:19:48,920 --> 00:19:52,160
this can be a radical landmark.
351
00:19:52,160 --> 00:19:54,400
It will have to be...
352
00:19:54,400 --> 00:19:56,000
..if Bob Geldof has his way,
353
00:19:56,000 --> 00:20:00,400
and it is hard not to give
Bob Geldof his way, is it not?
354
00:20:00,400 --> 00:20:01,680
LAUGHTER
355
00:20:06,760 --> 00:20:11,200
The Commission for Africa report
set out the broad agenda. It kind of
356
00:20:11,200 --> 00:20:14,800
created the road map, or
as Tony Blair called it, the bible
357
00:20:14,800 --> 00:20:19,280
of what he finally wanted
at the G8 meeting in Gleneagles.
358
00:20:19,280 --> 00:20:25,080
This thing here is so doable.
359
00:20:25,080 --> 00:20:27,440
NEWS: The plan for Africa
is radical,
360
00:20:27,440 --> 00:20:30,240
including a 100% cancellation
of debt,
361
00:20:30,240 --> 00:20:34,280
doubling aid to £26 billion a year
in the first instance,
362
00:20:34,280 --> 00:20:37,360
and removing unfair trade barriers
so that Africa can sell
363
00:20:37,360 --> 00:20:39,320
goods to the developed world.
364
00:20:39,320 --> 00:20:41,720
I said to Bob, you know,
365
00:20:41,720 --> 00:20:44,440
"I'll do the politics,
you do the public,
366
00:20:44,440 --> 00:20:46,360
"but you've got to give me help
with those politics
367
00:20:46,360 --> 00:20:48,160
"by mobilising the public
in favour of this,
368
00:20:48,160 --> 00:20:49,840
"cos a lot of people are going to be
saying to me,
369
00:20:49,840 --> 00:20:51,840
" 'Why are you making all of this
commitment to Africa?' "
370
00:20:51,840 --> 00:20:55,120
I'd sworn to the Prime Minister
371
00:20:55,120 --> 00:20:56,840
that I would do the public
372
00:20:56,840 --> 00:20:59,680
if he implemented
the Commission for Africa...
373
00:21:00,680 --> 00:21:03,320
..which was the cancellation of debt
to the poorest
374
00:21:03,320 --> 00:21:04,560
and a doubling of aid.
375
00:21:04,560 --> 00:21:07,040
I thought that I could be
a good bridge between
376
00:21:07,040 --> 00:21:10,120
the complexity
of the Commission for Africa
377
00:21:10,120 --> 00:21:13,480
and the simplicity of what
the public might respond to.
378
00:21:13,480 --> 00:21:16,480
Myself and Bono and Bob spoke often
379
00:21:16,480 --> 00:21:20,880
and we believed that we could come
up with an interesting campaign,
380
00:21:20,880 --> 00:21:23,800
which was a campaign that turned
into Make Poverty History.
381
00:21:23,800 --> 00:21:27,720
Our motto was
launch, launch, and launch again.
382
00:21:27,720 --> 00:21:30,160
We just launched as many times
as we could.
383
00:21:30,160 --> 00:21:32,920
Then we had this opportunity
for Nelson Mandela
384
00:21:32,920 --> 00:21:35,560
to launch it again.
385
00:21:35,560 --> 00:21:39,960
Millions of people in the world's
poorest countries,
386
00:21:39,960 --> 00:21:43,160
they are trapped in the prison
of poverty.
387
00:21:44,280 --> 00:21:48,680
It is time to set them free.
388
00:21:48,680 --> 00:21:51,640
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
389
00:21:48,680 --> 00:21:51,640
Mandela's presence was
390
00:21:51,640 --> 00:21:55,080
to bring a very strong African
leadership to it,
391
00:21:55,080 --> 00:21:57,480
and my presence was to say,
392
00:21:57,480 --> 00:21:59,680
"Well,
we're organising globally,"
393
00:21:59,680 --> 00:22:01,760
and to bring a global presence
to it.
394
00:22:01,760 --> 00:22:05,840
Even that launch was heavy celebrity
focused, right?
395
00:22:05,840 --> 00:22:09,680
Of course, a conversation broke out
about celebrocracy,
396
00:22:09,680 --> 00:22:13,120
which is the domination
of public space by celebrities.
397
00:22:13,120 --> 00:22:18,320
But I had to convince folks
that the blunt truth is
398
00:22:18,320 --> 00:22:21,400
we had access to people in power,
399
00:22:21,400 --> 00:22:27,320
but nothing like what the
celebrities were able to deliver.
400
00:22:27,320 --> 00:22:31,640
It seemed to me that if the
Make Poverty History campaign
401
00:22:31,640 --> 00:22:36,880
could have a...second Live Aid,
402
00:22:36,880 --> 00:22:41,000
then it might be possible to make it
something which was noisy
403
00:22:41,000 --> 00:22:45,160
and popular and famous
and therefore more effective.
404
00:22:45,160 --> 00:22:51,240
I can't overdramatise
how much of a refusenik I was.
405
00:22:51,240 --> 00:22:54,760
I was not going to do this.
406
00:22:56,080 --> 00:22:59,360
Then Bono, who knows me very well,
407
00:22:59,360 --> 00:23:00,920
came and said...
408
00:23:00,920 --> 00:23:03,160
Imagine if Paul McCartney...
409
00:23:03,160 --> 00:23:04,920
# 20 years ago today
410
00:23:04,920 --> 00:23:06,760
# Sergeant Pepper taught the band
to play... #
411
00:23:06,760 --> 00:23:09,400
It WAS 20 years ago today.
412
00:23:10,440 --> 00:23:12,720
Live Aid was 20 years ago today.
413
00:23:12,720 --> 00:23:15,240
Walking onstage,
414
00:23:15,240 --> 00:23:16,480
Paul McCartney...
415
00:23:17,920 --> 00:23:19,960
..and U2.
416
00:23:19,960 --> 00:23:21,600
And I went...
417
00:23:24,960 --> 00:23:26,280
..cos he had me.
418
00:23:27,280 --> 00:23:30,360
Then you got a sense
that it might be magnificent.
419
00:23:30,360 --> 00:23:32,520
And he came up with Live 8,
420
00:23:32,520 --> 00:23:35,520
in other words do a concert
in each of the G8 countries.
421
00:23:36,680 --> 00:23:38,280
I call up Harvey.
422
00:23:38,280 --> 00:23:41,040
He goes, "We're not fucking doing it
again!"
423
00:23:41,040 --> 00:23:43,240
You know, so... And I said,
424
00:23:43,240 --> 00:23:45,200
"No, we're not.
425
00:23:45,200 --> 00:23:48,520
"This time it's in eight places,"
you know?
426
00:23:48,520 --> 00:23:51,040
Well, I have,
15 times in the last week.
427
00:23:51,040 --> 00:23:52,720
He's an awkward bugger.
428
00:23:52,720 --> 00:23:55,760
If he wants something,
he doesn't stop.
429
00:23:56,840 --> 00:23:59,600
I had an office with a spare sofa
430
00:23:59,600 --> 00:24:01,640
and a very tolerant staff.
431
00:24:01,640 --> 00:24:04,520
Hello? Bob always had his phone
on speaker,
432
00:24:04,520 --> 00:24:07,800
which meant that you could hear
every conversation he ever had,
433
00:24:07,800 --> 00:24:11,120
and he talks very loud
in order to convince people.
434
00:24:11,120 --> 00:24:15,360
Did I have to call all these people
again?
435
00:24:15,360 --> 00:24:21,520
The embarrassment of it, you've
no idea how I have to steel myself.
436
00:24:22,560 --> 00:24:24,880
I sort of said,
"Hey, Pete, it's Bob."
437
00:24:24,880 --> 00:24:27,280
Or, "Madge, it's Geldof again."
438
00:24:27,280 --> 00:24:29,120
It's not. It's like...
439
00:24:29,120 --> 00:24:30,400
Mick?
440
00:24:31,520 --> 00:24:32,680
It's Bob.
441
00:24:34,360 --> 00:24:36,400
Hi, Bob. I'm here to haunt you.
442
00:24:40,360 --> 00:24:43,040
APPLAUSE
443
00:24:40,360 --> 00:24:43,040
NEWS: Bob Geldof walked into
444
00:24:43,040 --> 00:24:46,560
a London hotel today to do
what he had promised never to do,
445
00:24:46,560 --> 00:24:49,000
stage another concert
like Live Aid.
446
00:24:49,000 --> 00:24:50,400
Good morning.
447
00:24:53,480 --> 00:24:56,320
July the 2nd isn't the end of
our 20-year trek,
448
00:24:56,320 --> 00:24:59,000
it's the beginning of the final leg.
449
00:24:59,000 --> 00:25:02,440
What Live Aid did joyously,
enthusiastically,
450
00:25:02,440 --> 00:25:04,640
was open up the avenues of
possibility.
451
00:25:04,640 --> 00:25:07,280
Finally, Live 8 invites you
to walk down them.
452
00:25:08,440 --> 00:25:10,000
When was the last G8?
453
00:25:10,000 --> 00:25:12,280
When did you ever read about it?
454
00:25:12,280 --> 00:25:14,240
When will...? What was the agenda?
455
00:25:14,240 --> 00:25:16,680
And did you know the leaders had
even gone?
456
00:25:16,680 --> 00:25:18,760
And when they came back,
did the press question them?
457
00:25:18,760 --> 00:25:20,480
No.
458
00:25:20,480 --> 00:25:23,200
A million people on the streets
459
00:25:23,200 --> 00:25:25,120
of every capital city,
460
00:25:25,120 --> 00:25:26,560
that was my plan,
461
00:25:26,560 --> 00:25:28,920
so that the journalists were totally
focused
462
00:25:28,920 --> 00:25:30,560
and it was called Live 8.
463
00:25:30,560 --> 00:25:32,320
8, 8, everywhere.
464
00:25:33,920 --> 00:25:37,200
I get a call from the President of
the Nelson Mandela Foundation
465
00:25:37,200 --> 00:25:38,480
who says to me...
466
00:25:39,640 --> 00:25:41,760
.."Kumi,
467
00:25:41,760 --> 00:25:44,000
"Mandela is very upset
468
00:25:44,000 --> 00:25:47,080
"that there's no concert in Africa.
469
00:25:47,080 --> 00:25:49,800
"I mean, these guys are talking
about Africa, Africa, Africa
470
00:25:49,800 --> 00:25:51,560
"and there's nothing in Africa.
How can that be?"
471
00:25:51,560 --> 00:25:55,400
And the logic was, you know,
if we had something,
472
00:25:55,400 --> 00:25:59,360
even if it was smaller-scale than
the other eight concerts,
473
00:25:59,360 --> 00:26:02,480
at least Africa is not invisibilised
474
00:26:02,480 --> 00:26:06,520
and then you don't have
the white man saviour complex.
475
00:26:06,520 --> 00:26:09,360
I said, "OK, I think we can
pull it off in Johannesburg."
476
00:26:14,480 --> 00:26:17,480
NEWS: This global gig is going
to make itself heard.
477
00:26:18,600 --> 00:26:20,920
NEWS: Shows will run
throughout today.
478
00:26:20,920 --> 00:26:23,640
They're intended to put pressure on
the leaders of the G8 countries
479
00:26:23,640 --> 00:26:25,280
to tackle global poverty.
480
00:26:25,280 --> 00:26:27,240
As many as 200,000 people
481
00:26:27,240 --> 00:26:29,400
are expected in Hyde Park in London.
482
00:26:29,400 --> 00:26:31,840
Everybody here's not only here
for the music,
483
00:26:31,840 --> 00:26:35,320
but they're just to show
that we, as a nation, are committed
484
00:26:35,320 --> 00:26:36,880
to ending poverty.
485
00:26:36,880 --> 00:26:38,040
CHEERING
486
00:26:38,040 --> 00:26:40,000
PRESENTER: It's two o'clock
in London
487
00:26:40,000 --> 00:26:42,560
on July the 2nd, 2005.
488
00:26:42,560 --> 00:26:44,480
Hyde Park welcomes the world
489
00:26:44,480 --> 00:26:46,040
to Live 8.
490
00:26:47,800 --> 00:26:49,560
Just the start of Live 8,
491
00:26:49,560 --> 00:26:52,600
U2, we're in our dressing room,
492
00:26:52,600 --> 00:26:55,960
we close the door,
have this prayer thing.
493
00:26:55,960 --> 00:26:58,880
Our manager, Dennis Sheehan,
God rest his soul,
494
00:26:58,880 --> 00:27:01,440
he knows nobody can come in
in that moment,
495
00:27:01,440 --> 00:27:02,800
it's a private moment.
496
00:27:02,800 --> 00:27:04,720
HE KNOCKS ON TABLE
497
00:27:04,720 --> 00:27:06,720
Don't answer the door.
498
00:27:06,720 --> 00:27:08,560
Finish the prayer.
499
00:27:08,560 --> 00:27:10,600
I ask Dennis, I said,
500
00:27:10,600 --> 00:27:12,360
"What was that at the door?"
501
00:27:12,360 --> 00:27:14,520
He said, "Oh, that was, erm...
502
00:27:14,520 --> 00:27:16,640
"That was Sir Paul McCartney."
503
00:27:16,640 --> 00:27:19,440
I said, "Paul McCartney? Oh, God."
504
00:27:19,440 --> 00:27:21,520
Ran out.
505
00:27:21,520 --> 00:27:23,000
I go, "Paul!
506
00:27:23,960 --> 00:27:26,640
"So sorry."
He said, "What were you doing?
507
00:27:26,640 --> 00:27:28,200
"What were you doing?"
508
00:27:28,200 --> 00:27:30,480
I said, "We just have a little
prayer moment, you know?
509
00:27:30,480 --> 00:27:32,040
"One of those prayer moments."
510
00:27:32,040 --> 00:27:34,000
"Why didn't you ask me? Why...?
511
00:27:34,000 --> 00:27:36,840
"I mean, if you'd asked me,
I'd love to be part of that."
512
00:27:36,840 --> 00:27:39,640
He said, "Have it again, with me."
513
00:27:42,480 --> 00:27:44,200
It was the most poetic prayer.
514
00:27:45,640 --> 00:27:47,080
And then we went onstage.
515
00:27:50,320 --> 00:27:52,960
CHEERING
516
00:27:55,080 --> 00:27:58,280
MUSIC: Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts
Club Band by The Beatles
517
00:28:04,040 --> 00:28:06,240
# Well, it was 20 years ago today
518
00:28:06,240 --> 00:28:08,880
# Sergeant Pepper taught the band
to play
519
00:28:08,880 --> 00:28:11,200
# They've been going in and out
of style
520
00:28:11,200 --> 00:28:14,040
# But they're guaranteed
to raise a smile
521
00:28:14,040 --> 00:28:16,400
# So let me introduce to you
522
00:28:16,400 --> 00:28:19,360
# The band you've known
for all these years
523
00:28:19,360 --> 00:28:24,320
# Sergeant Pepper's
Lonely Hearts Club Band... #
524
00:28:25,800 --> 00:28:28,760
They went onstage
and we opened the show
525
00:28:28,760 --> 00:28:33,040
with a fanfare, and there it was,
"20 years ago today".
526
00:28:37,440 --> 00:28:42,040
# We're Sergeant Pepper's
Lonely Hearts Club Band
527
00:28:42,040 --> 00:28:45,920
# We hope you will enjoy
the show... #
528
00:28:47,520 --> 00:28:50,360
As we heard the names of who was
going to be performing
529
00:28:50,360 --> 00:28:52,160
in the London concert,
530
00:28:52,160 --> 00:28:54,680
people were getting concerned that
actually they were not seeing
531
00:28:54,680 --> 00:28:56,120
African names,
532
00:28:56,120 --> 00:29:00,840
and it's not like Africa
as a continent is poor
533
00:29:00,840 --> 00:29:02,200
in musical talent.
534
00:29:03,560 --> 00:29:07,560
Will it alter the politics of the G8
535
00:29:07,560 --> 00:29:10,920
to have genius African musicians on?
536
00:29:10,920 --> 00:29:14,440
Will it force the G8
to do what we ask?
537
00:29:14,440 --> 00:29:15,600
No.
538
00:29:15,600 --> 00:29:18,640
I think we all consistently
disagreed with Bob on this,
539
00:29:18,640 --> 00:29:20,360
myself and Bono.
540
00:29:20,360 --> 00:29:23,120
It was clear that, you know,
there should be more
541
00:29:23,120 --> 00:29:25,600
African representation in Live 8.
542
00:29:25,600 --> 00:29:28,280
And there was a great
African musician, Youssou N'Dour.
543
00:29:28,280 --> 00:29:31,840
He did perform. I wish his voice had
been heard more.
544
00:29:31,840 --> 00:29:33,240
Thank you!
545
00:29:49,440 --> 00:29:50,960
# Boul ma sene
546
00:29:52,000 --> 00:29:55,320
# Boul ma guiss madi re nga fokni
mane
547
00:29:55,320 --> 00:30:02,080
# Khamouma li neka thi sama souf
ak thi guinaw... #
548
00:30:02,080 --> 00:30:07,600
Youssou N'Dour was a key voice
in making the argument
549
00:30:07,600 --> 00:30:11,800
that debt cancellation, for example,
should be done in such a way
550
00:30:11,800 --> 00:30:15,040
as African citizens could keep
an eye on their leaders
551
00:30:15,040 --> 00:30:17,760
and keep an eye on how the money
was spent.
552
00:30:17,760 --> 00:30:21,080
So he was able to articulate
that nuanced point
553
00:30:21,080 --> 00:30:25,080
in a way that it was very hard for,
you know, Irish rock stars to do.
554
00:30:25,080 --> 00:30:28,640
# Beaucoup de sentiments de races
qui font qu'ils desesperent
555
00:30:28,640 --> 00:30:30,240
# Je veux les deux mains ouvertes
556
00:30:30,240 --> 00:30:33,360
# Des amis pour parler de leurs
peines et de leur joie
557
00:30:33,360 --> 00:30:36,600
# Pour qu'ils leur aient des infos
qui ne divisent pas
558
00:30:36,600 --> 00:30:38,760
# Changez... #
559
00:30:38,760 --> 00:30:46,880
We did our best to make it more
involving of African acts...
560
00:30:49,200 --> 00:30:51,080
..and failed.
561
00:30:51,080 --> 00:30:52,600
We fucked up.
562
00:30:52,600 --> 00:30:55,080
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
563
00:30:55,080 --> 00:30:56,600
Africa!
564
00:30:56,600 --> 00:31:00,840
United! Thank you!
565
00:31:00,840 --> 00:31:04,760
What we had that none of the other
concerts had,
566
00:31:04,760 --> 00:31:10,040
we had the most moral,
ethical human being
567
00:31:10,040 --> 00:31:13,600
who was going to be in Johannesburg,
and that was Nelson Mandela.
568
00:31:13,600 --> 00:31:15,640
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
569
00:31:17,040 --> 00:31:18,920
I am pleased...
570
00:31:20,680 --> 00:31:22,320
..to be here today...
571
00:31:23,800 --> 00:31:28,120
..to support Africa standing tall
against poverty...
572
00:31:29,680 --> 00:31:31,280
..in concert...
573
00:31:32,520 --> 00:31:35,040
..with Live 8.
574
00:31:35,040 --> 00:31:37,600
CHEERING
575
00:31:39,480 --> 00:31:41,920
Generations to come
576
00:31:41,920 --> 00:31:44,720
will judge our leaders
577
00:31:44,720 --> 00:31:47,360
by the decisions they make
578
00:31:47,360 --> 00:31:49,240
in the coming weeks.
579
00:31:49,240 --> 00:31:51,040
CHEERING
580
00:31:52,640 --> 00:31:54,480
Hyde Park, make some noise for
581
00:31:54,480 --> 00:31:56,200
Ms Dynamite!
582
00:31:58,080 --> 00:31:59,680
It's so beautiful to be here.
583
00:31:59,680 --> 00:32:02,200
It's so beautiful to see
all of these beautiful faces
584
00:32:02,200 --> 00:32:03,440
in front of me.
585
00:32:05,720 --> 00:32:09,320
We, as a nation, have robbed,
killed,
586
00:32:09,320 --> 00:32:13,120
stolen and tortured the Third World
for centuries.
587
00:32:13,120 --> 00:32:15,120
If there is a debt to be paid,
588
00:32:15,120 --> 00:32:17,120
surely we're the ones that owe.
589
00:32:18,120 --> 00:32:20,920
CHEERING
590
00:32:27,520 --> 00:32:32,040
# Old pirates, yes, they rob I
591
00:32:32,040 --> 00:32:34,960
# Sold I to the merchant ship
592
00:32:36,360 --> 00:32:40,680
# Minutes after they took I
593
00:32:40,680 --> 00:32:44,000
# From the bottomless pit
594
00:32:44,000 --> 00:32:48,400
# But my hand was made strong
595
00:32:48,400 --> 00:32:52,120
# By the hand of the Almighty
596
00:32:52,120 --> 00:32:57,160
# We forward in this generation
597
00:32:57,160 --> 00:33:00,880
# Triumphantly
598
00:33:00,880 --> 00:33:03,960
# So won't you help to sing
599
00:33:03,960 --> 00:33:07,840
# Redemption song?
600
00:33:08,960 --> 00:33:11,000
# What's going on?
Nothing's changed
601
00:33:11,000 --> 00:33:13,120
# We're still exploiting the poor
602
00:33:13,120 --> 00:33:15,400
# Slavery never ended, no
603
00:33:15,400 --> 00:33:17,440
# It just changed course
604
00:33:17,440 --> 00:33:19,360
# Aids and free trade
605
00:33:19,360 --> 00:33:21,440
# Decimating the young
606
00:33:21,440 --> 00:33:25,320
# Famine everywhere
but why never a shortage of guns?
607
00:33:25,320 --> 00:33:27,440
# Conflict all over the globe
608
00:33:27,440 --> 00:33:29,760
# It's dictated by our leaders
609
00:33:29,760 --> 00:33:31,440
# War in the motherland... #
610
00:33:31,440 --> 00:33:33,640
BOTH: # But no African arms dealers
611
00:33:33,640 --> 00:33:35,720
# The West robbed the Third World
612
00:33:35,720 --> 00:33:37,520
# Of every single cent
613
00:33:37,520 --> 00:33:39,640
# Now there's Third World debt
614
00:33:39,640 --> 00:33:41,720
# How does that make sense?
615
00:33:41,720 --> 00:33:44,800
# Won't you help to sing
616
00:33:44,800 --> 00:33:47,240
# These songs of freedom?
617
00:33:47,240 --> 00:33:52,240
# Redemption song. #
618
00:33:53,400 --> 00:33:55,080
Thank you so much.
619
00:33:55,080 --> 00:33:57,280
Well, thank you, Ms Dy-Na-Mi-Tee!
620
00:33:57,280 --> 00:33:59,440
JONATHAN ROSS: Well, I'm going
to hand you downstairs to Jo,
621
00:33:59,440 --> 00:34:01,880
because she has Lenny Henry
with her. Jo?
622
00:34:01,880 --> 00:34:03,720
Lenny, is there a lack today...?
623
00:34:03,720 --> 00:34:06,440
I had to represent
so many black people today.
624
00:34:06,440 --> 00:34:07,720
But was it a problem for you today?
625
00:34:07,720 --> 00:34:09,920
Actually, what's been very,
very good is that
626
00:34:09,920 --> 00:34:12,080
there's been more than you think,
actually.
627
00:34:12,080 --> 00:34:13,600
And I think that's all right.
628
00:34:13,600 --> 00:34:14,960
I've enjoyed it today.
629
00:34:14,960 --> 00:34:18,280
There's always a criticism
about not being enough black acts.
630
00:34:18,280 --> 00:34:21,360
I didn't care whether they were
black, brown, green or yellow.
631
00:34:21,360 --> 00:34:22,920
If they were a big act,
632
00:34:22,920 --> 00:34:27,120
and they were great,
and they wanted to play, great.
633
00:34:27,120 --> 00:34:33,440
I want to say hello to Philadelphia.
Welcome, America, to Live 8!
634
00:34:33,440 --> 00:34:36,040
CHEERING
635
00:34:36,040 --> 00:34:39,640
And the reason that millions of you
have tuned in
636
00:34:39,640 --> 00:34:42,040
is because every three seconds,
637
00:34:42,040 --> 00:34:45,400
in one of the poorest countries
in the world,
638
00:34:45,400 --> 00:34:49,560
a child dies
as a result of extreme poverty.
639
00:34:49,560 --> 00:34:51,200
Please watch this.
640
00:34:53,200 --> 00:34:59,000
The click campaign was a way
of making the reality,
641
00:34:59,000 --> 00:35:00,800
the horror of the thing...
642
00:35:02,360 --> 00:35:04,680
..immediately accessible.
643
00:35:04,680 --> 00:35:06,120
CLICK
644
00:35:08,240 --> 00:35:09,480
Dead.
645
00:35:12,600 --> 00:35:15,080
Everybody, let me see your hands!
646
00:35:15,080 --> 00:35:16,640
Let me see your hands!
647
00:35:16,640 --> 00:35:19,120
All over the world, here we go.
648
00:35:21,880 --> 00:35:24,520
CLICKING
649
00:35:26,920 --> 00:35:29,560
Let these world leaders know.
650
00:35:29,560 --> 00:35:32,240
If you were a politician
sitting in Gleneagles
651
00:35:32,240 --> 00:35:35,840
and the screen splits up
to the world all going click,
652
00:35:35,840 --> 00:35:37,760
you're going to go, "Ah."
653
00:35:37,760 --> 00:35:39,480
And if I was a political adviser,
654
00:35:39,480 --> 00:35:41,320
I'd say,
"Prime Minister, Mr President,
655
00:35:41,320 --> 00:35:43,840
"can I just show you this?"
You know?
656
00:35:45,680 --> 00:35:48,080
Thank you for being
a part of Live 8.
657
00:35:48,080 --> 00:35:50,040
CHEERING
658
00:35:50,040 --> 00:35:52,520
I know for us
we're the young generation,
659
00:35:52,520 --> 00:35:54,520
and a lot of young people
look up to us,
660
00:35:54,520 --> 00:35:56,680
so we actually,
one of the reasons we're here is
661
00:35:56,680 --> 00:35:58,600
to take advantage of the celebrity.
662
00:35:58,600 --> 00:36:00,600
# Say my name, say my name... #
663
00:36:00,600 --> 00:36:04,280
We've been to Africa
and we've seen the children,
664
00:36:04,280 --> 00:36:06,720
so anything we can do to help,
we're here.
665
00:36:06,720 --> 00:36:08,560
# I know you say
that I am assuming things
666
00:36:08,560 --> 00:36:10,160
# Something's goin' down,
that's the way it seems
667
00:36:10,160 --> 00:36:11,800
# Shouldn't be no reason
why you're actin' strange
668
00:36:11,800 --> 00:36:13,440
# If nobody's holdin' you back
from me
669
00:36:13,440 --> 00:36:15,280
# Cos I know how you usually do
670
00:36:15,280 --> 00:36:17,040
# Where you're sayin' everything
to me times two
671
00:36:17,040 --> 00:36:18,560
# Why can't you just tell the truth?
672
00:36:18,560 --> 00:36:21,160
# If somebody's there
then tell me who... #
673
00:36:21,160 --> 00:36:25,760
You see, the difference
between '85 and '05.
674
00:36:25,760 --> 00:36:28,280
In '85 we had Tina...
675
00:36:29,520 --> 00:36:32,160
..Patti LaBelle,
Teddy Pendergrass,
676
00:36:32,160 --> 00:36:34,440
but it wasn't Michael Jackson,
it wasn't Stevie Wonder.
677
00:36:34,440 --> 00:36:36,520
At Live 8, we had Destiny's Child,
678
00:36:36,520 --> 00:36:39,120
Beyonce, Will Smith, Jay-Z.
679
00:36:39,120 --> 00:36:40,400
CHEERING
680
00:36:41,840 --> 00:36:44,920
You know, they're spending billions
and billions of dollars
681
00:36:44,920 --> 00:36:46,680
to kill people.
682
00:36:46,680 --> 00:36:49,840
We just spent billions and billions
of dollars to help people live,
683
00:36:49,840 --> 00:36:51,680
and we appreciate all y'all help.
684
00:36:54,520 --> 00:36:57,400
I don't want to get too political.
Let's play some music, man.
685
00:36:57,400 --> 00:36:59,040
Come on! Come on, Jay.
686
00:36:59,040 --> 00:37:01,320
# Who you know fresher than Hov?
Riddle me that
687
00:37:01,320 --> 00:37:03,640
# The rest of y'all know
where I'm lyrically at
688
00:37:03,640 --> 00:37:05,200
# Can't none of y'all mirror me back
689
00:37:05,200 --> 00:37:07,880
# Yeah, hearing me rap is like
hearing G Rap in his prime
690
00:37:07,880 --> 00:37:10,280
# I'm young HO,
rap's Grateful Dead
691
00:37:10,280 --> 00:37:12,360
# Back to take over the globe,
now break bread
692
00:37:12,360 --> 00:37:14,720
# I'm in Boeing jets, Global Express
693
00:37:14,720 --> 00:37:16,720
# Out the country
but the Blueberry still connect
694
00:37:16,720 --> 00:37:18,040
# I'm on the low but the yacht... #
695
00:37:18,040 --> 00:37:20,120
As I said, there are gigs going on
all over the world,
696
00:37:20,120 --> 00:37:21,640
so let's see what's happening
in Paris.
697
00:37:21,640 --> 00:37:23,400
It's with the Chateau de Versailles,
I believe.
698
00:37:24,920 --> 00:37:28,040
CHEERING
699
00:37:28,040 --> 00:37:29,840
Bonsoir, Paris!
700
00:37:33,200 --> 00:37:34,800
Comment allez-vous?
701
00:37:34,800 --> 00:37:36,680
CHEERING
702
00:37:36,680 --> 00:37:38,080
This is Moscow.
703
00:37:39,640 --> 00:37:41,400
Tokyo.
704
00:37:41,400 --> 00:37:43,320
This is Canada.
705
00:37:43,320 --> 00:37:45,320
Huge gathering there in Berlin.
706
00:37:46,920 --> 00:37:49,200
In Rome, we have a band performing
called Nek.
707
00:37:49,200 --> 00:37:50,520
Grazie!
708
00:37:51,520 --> 00:37:53,440
Alla prossima.
709
00:37:54,640 --> 00:37:56,840
Over 200,000 people have gathered
here today in London.
710
00:37:56,840 --> 00:37:59,680
A worldwide audience we think
of in the region of
711
00:37:59,680 --> 00:38:02,000
5 billion people.
712
00:38:02,000 --> 00:38:03,600
Hi.
713
00:38:03,600 --> 00:38:05,920
You were great.
That's Jeanne, my missus.
714
00:38:05,920 --> 00:38:07,520
Hello. That's Tiger.
715
00:38:07,520 --> 00:38:11,720
AS VOICEOVER: Madonna is not only
an avatar of the '80s,
716
00:38:11,720 --> 00:38:15,800
but became emblematic of the whole
adventure of Live Aid
717
00:38:15,800 --> 00:38:17,080
through to Live 8.
718
00:38:23,600 --> 00:38:25,400
See this little girl?
719
00:38:25,400 --> 00:38:28,360
She had ten minutes to live
20 years ago.
720
00:38:28,360 --> 00:38:32,720
And because we did a concert
in this city and in Philadelphia,
721
00:38:32,720 --> 00:38:34,640
and all of you came and...
722
00:38:34,640 --> 00:38:38,000
Last week,
she did her agricultural exams
723
00:38:38,000 --> 00:38:41,520
in the school she goes to in
the northern Ethiopian Highlands.
724
00:38:41,520 --> 00:38:43,640
She's here tonight,
this little girl.
725
00:38:44,680 --> 00:38:46,040
Birhan.
726
00:38:46,040 --> 00:38:47,920
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
727
00:38:47,920 --> 00:38:50,960
Don't let them tell us
that this doesn't work.
728
00:38:56,920 --> 00:39:01,280
Ladies and gentlemen,
from one immensely strong woman
729
00:39:01,280 --> 00:39:04,920
to another,
the queen bee of rock and roll,
730
00:39:04,920 --> 00:39:06,520
Madonna!
731
00:39:22,760 --> 00:39:26,400
# Oooh... #
732
00:39:35,880 --> 00:39:37,120
Wow.
733
00:39:42,160 --> 00:39:46,800
# Life is a mystery
734
00:39:46,800 --> 00:39:51,160
# Everyone must stand alone... #
735
00:39:51,160 --> 00:39:57,840
Madonna, this healthy, beautiful,
talented woman onstage
736
00:39:57,840 --> 00:40:03,360
with this infant who had seconds
to live 20 years ago.
737
00:40:03,360 --> 00:40:07,280
If anything could have told
the journey of Band Aid,
738
00:40:07,280 --> 00:40:09,040
it was this image.
739
00:40:10,560 --> 00:40:14,480
# When you call my name,
it's like a little prayer
740
00:40:14,480 --> 00:40:16,280
# I'm down on my knees... #
741
00:40:24,360 --> 00:40:28,000
# Just like a prayer,
you know I'll take you there... #
742
00:40:42,760 --> 00:40:46,840
# When you call my name,
it's like a little prayer
743
00:40:46,840 --> 00:40:51,040
# I'm down on my knees,
I wanna take you there... #
744
00:40:53,280 --> 00:40:54,960
Yeah, quite a lot.
745
00:40:56,720 --> 00:40:59,200
Well, Harvey's been stressed
for fucking weeks.
746
00:41:00,720 --> 00:41:02,280
Let's go now.
747
00:41:02,280 --> 00:41:03,560
Can we go now?
748
00:41:05,440 --> 00:41:08,080
One, two, three, four!
749
00:41:11,360 --> 00:41:13,280
# Ooh-ooh
750
00:41:21,800 --> 00:41:25,160
# Every breath you take
751
00:41:25,160 --> 00:41:29,520
# And every move you make
752
00:41:29,520 --> 00:41:33,240
# Every bond you break,
every step you take
753
00:41:33,240 --> 00:41:35,040
# I'll be watching you... #
754
00:41:36,600 --> 00:41:40,440
Spitting Image had used that song,
Every Breath You Take,
755
00:41:40,440 --> 00:41:43,280
as the end song of one their shows,
756
00:41:43,280 --> 00:41:45,640
and "we'll be watching you",
757
00:41:45,640 --> 00:41:49,200
and it was all of the world leaders
were puppets.
758
00:41:49,200 --> 00:41:50,760
# We'll be watching you... #
759
00:41:50,760 --> 00:41:52,200
So I took that as my lead.
760
00:41:52,200 --> 00:41:54,840
That's what the song
became about that day,
761
00:41:54,840 --> 00:41:56,440
we'd be watching you.
762
00:41:56,440 --> 00:41:58,120
Surveillance the other way.
763
00:41:58,120 --> 00:42:00,160
# Democracy
764
00:42:01,400 --> 00:42:03,800
# This is the daily plan
765
00:42:04,960 --> 00:42:08,720
# No matter we say... #
766
00:42:08,720 --> 00:42:11,880
You can't change the world
with a song,
767
00:42:11,880 --> 00:42:13,720
or even a concert,
768
00:42:13,720 --> 00:42:15,760
but you can plant a seed.
769
00:42:15,760 --> 00:42:18,960
If you plant a seed in a young mind
770
00:42:18,960 --> 00:42:22,760
about fairness, about human rights,
771
00:42:22,760 --> 00:42:27,520
about the nature of governments,
772
00:42:27,520 --> 00:42:29,440
that seed can bear fruit,
773
00:42:29,440 --> 00:42:31,200
and it does.
774
00:42:31,200 --> 00:42:32,840
# Every single day
775
00:42:32,840 --> 00:42:35,680
# Every word you say
776
00:42:41,400 --> 00:42:49,080
# Yeah, oh-oh-oh-oh. #
777
00:42:49,080 --> 00:42:51,360
CHEERING
778
00:42:53,680 --> 00:42:55,920
We did overrun.
779
00:42:55,920 --> 00:42:57,840
It was a problem,
780
00:42:57,840 --> 00:43:00,120
and I had to deal with
781
00:43:00,120 --> 00:43:02,440
a platoon of policemen
782
00:43:02,440 --> 00:43:05,120
marching towards the stage
783
00:43:05,120 --> 00:43:09,720
at just about 15 minutes
before the official curfew time.
784
00:43:09,720 --> 00:43:11,720
And I was threatening them,
you know?
785
00:43:11,720 --> 00:43:14,600
I said, "Pull the fucking plug."
786
00:43:14,600 --> 00:43:17,520
They didn't quite understand
787
00:43:17,520 --> 00:43:23,280
that the planet, 3.2 billion people,
were watching.
788
00:43:23,280 --> 00:43:24,800
And they didn't care.
789
00:43:25,960 --> 00:43:27,920
And I was going ape-wire,
790
00:43:27,920 --> 00:43:30,800
I was so afraid
we wouldn't get to Paul.
791
00:43:32,240 --> 00:43:34,680
Someone found Tessa Jowell,
792
00:43:34,680 --> 00:43:36,800
who was having a nice time
watching the show,
793
00:43:36,800 --> 00:43:38,480
and dragged her backstage.
794
00:43:38,480 --> 00:43:40,720
He came through the crowd
795
00:43:40,720 --> 00:43:44,240
and said to my kids,
796
00:43:44,240 --> 00:43:46,280
"I need to borrow your mum."
797
00:43:46,280 --> 00:43:47,840
I said to the guys,
798
00:43:47,840 --> 00:43:50,040
"The Minister for Culture is coming.
799
00:43:50,040 --> 00:43:53,960
"I advise you to get your hand away
from that plug."
800
00:43:53,960 --> 00:43:56,560
I didn't expect to be
on the front line
801
00:43:56,560 --> 00:43:58,680
of whether or not
the concert carried on.
802
00:43:58,680 --> 00:44:02,480
I simply said,
"This is on my shoulders."
803
00:44:02,480 --> 00:44:05,720
She said - very cold, very strict -
804
00:44:05,720 --> 00:44:08,200
"I am telling you now,
805
00:44:08,200 --> 00:44:10,920
"with the authority
of the Prime Minister...
806
00:44:12,160 --> 00:44:16,320
.."that this concert finishes
appropriately."
807
00:44:16,320 --> 00:44:17,640
Done.
808
00:44:17,640 --> 00:44:21,200
Pop and politics at this point
809
00:44:21,200 --> 00:44:24,200
had blended almost seamlessly.
810
00:44:26,120 --> 00:44:31,160
# Na-na-na, na-na-na-na... #
811
00:44:31,160 --> 00:44:32,320
Come on!
812
00:44:32,320 --> 00:44:35,920
# Na-na-na-na, hey, Jude... #
813
00:44:35,920 --> 00:44:39,240
Come on, everybody,
don't keep me waiting!
814
00:44:39,240 --> 00:44:44,960
# Na-na-na, na-na-na-na
815
00:44:44,960 --> 00:44:50,080
# Na-na-na-na, hey, Jude
816
00:44:51,720 --> 00:44:57,640
# Na-na-na, na-na-na-na
817
00:44:57,640 --> 00:45:01,520
# Na-na-na-na, hey, Jude... #
818
00:45:01,520 --> 00:45:03,880
Ah, we hope
you're going to hear us.
819
00:45:03,880 --> 00:45:06,080
We hope you're going to hear us!
820
00:45:06,080 --> 00:45:10,680
# Na-na-na, na-na-na-na
821
00:45:10,680 --> 00:45:16,440
# Na-na-na-na, hey, Jude
822
00:45:16,440 --> 00:45:18,800
# Yeah... #
823
00:45:18,800 --> 00:45:22,080
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
824
00:45:25,760 --> 00:45:28,080
# Ohh, oh-oh-oh. #
825
00:45:32,560 --> 00:45:34,160
Thank you!
826
00:45:34,160 --> 00:45:36,240
See you in Edinburgh.
827
00:45:41,000 --> 00:45:43,520
BAGPIPES SKIRL
828
00:45:46,720 --> 00:45:49,880
We hadn't got the Africa deal
before the summit began,
829
00:45:49,880 --> 00:45:52,240
it wasn't across the line,
830
00:45:52,240 --> 00:45:55,000
and there was still quite a lot
of opposition to it.
831
00:45:55,000 --> 00:45:59,360
The Americans had a strategy
for a while that the top issue
832
00:45:59,360 --> 00:46:02,480
that would get agreed at Gleneagles
would be debt cancellation,
833
00:46:02,480 --> 00:46:05,400
and we wanted a doubling of aid
for Africa as well.
834
00:46:05,400 --> 00:46:08,160
On Africa, I was negotiating
835
00:46:08,160 --> 00:46:10,520
the text with Faryar Shirzad
836
00:46:10,520 --> 00:46:12,560
as he was flying in with Bush.
837
00:46:14,200 --> 00:46:18,160
Michael and I essentially had
to kind of figure that process out.
838
00:46:18,160 --> 00:46:19,200
I kept saying to him,
839
00:46:19,200 --> 00:46:21,720
"Listen, we can pledge to double
development assistance,
840
00:46:21,720 --> 00:46:25,600
"but committing to do it,
well, is a complicated thing."
841
00:46:25,600 --> 00:46:28,320
And we had three or four hours
on the phone,
842
00:46:28,320 --> 00:46:33,160
with me in Gleneagles, him in the
plane, trying to get him to agree.
843
00:46:33,160 --> 00:46:35,640
There was no relationship
the President had around the world
844
00:46:35,640 --> 00:46:38,360
that was closer than the one he had
with Tony Blair,
845
00:46:38,360 --> 00:46:41,320
and so he made it very clear to me
that this summit had to be
846
00:46:41,320 --> 00:46:44,080
a success, an outside success,
for the Prime Minister.
847
00:46:46,560 --> 00:46:49,040
BAND PLAYS: Hail To The Chief
848
00:46:54,720 --> 00:46:57,960
You get to places like Gleneagles,
849
00:46:57,960 --> 00:47:04,280
where a character like
President Bush is more than bemused
850
00:47:04,280 --> 00:47:09,480
at the sight of myself and Bob
running around.
851
00:47:11,080 --> 00:47:13,640
And I didn't have any clue
who "Geldorf" was.
852
00:47:13,640 --> 00:47:16,080
Yeah, he and Bono came in and...
853
00:47:16,080 --> 00:47:18,160
Bono, at least somewhat presentable.
854
00:47:18,160 --> 00:47:21,560
Geldorf looked like he'd crawled out
from underneath the ground.
855
00:47:21,560 --> 00:47:25,000
But he was a good guy.
He cared deeply, and...
856
00:47:25,000 --> 00:47:27,520
LAUGHS: ..I'm sure
I insisted upon the picture,
857
00:47:27,520 --> 00:47:29,960
to prove I actually met Geldorf.
858
00:47:29,960 --> 00:47:34,440
I personally felt like it was
almost arrogant of us being there,
859
00:47:34,440 --> 00:47:37,360
but it was very nice of
the Prime Minister to have us there.
860
00:47:39,240 --> 00:47:41,800
So the corridors, which once
would have been
861
00:47:41,800 --> 00:47:44,320
just the G8 leaders having
a fireside chat,
862
00:47:44,320 --> 00:47:48,360
now were full of us all
making sure that
863
00:47:48,360 --> 00:47:51,000
the partnership with Africa
and the developing world
864
00:47:51,000 --> 00:47:53,960
was part of the conversation
in a central way.
865
00:48:17,680 --> 00:48:20,960
The Prime Minister and the President
had a private breakfast that morning
866
00:48:20,960 --> 00:48:23,360
and then joined the setting.
867
00:48:24,400 --> 00:48:26,160
There was kind of a patio area
868
00:48:26,160 --> 00:48:29,720
and an inner lounge
that was available to the leaders.
869
00:48:29,720 --> 00:48:34,360
The meeting started, but it had only
been going, I suppose,
870
00:48:34,360 --> 00:48:38,280
15, 20 minutes or so,
when news began to come in.
871
00:48:38,280 --> 00:48:40,840
Newsbeat. In the last few minutes,
we've been getting reports
872
00:48:40,840 --> 00:48:43,120
of an explosion
between Liverpool Street
873
00:48:43,120 --> 00:48:44,680
and Aldgate Stations in London.
874
00:48:44,680 --> 00:48:47,520
All the windows were blown out
on one of the trains.
875
00:48:47,520 --> 00:48:50,320
An eyewitness described a loud bang
and black smoke...
876
00:48:50,320 --> 00:48:52,440
The police have declared it
a major incident.
877
00:48:52,440 --> 00:48:55,280
I remember Jonathan coming in
and telling me,
878
00:48:55,280 --> 00:48:57,840
"There's been a set of incidents
in London,
879
00:48:57,840 --> 00:49:00,000
"and we don't know
exactly what's happened,
880
00:49:00,000 --> 00:49:02,040
"but we think
it's a terrorist attack."
881
00:49:02,040 --> 00:49:05,000
The Prime Minister was quite shaken
by the news that he had heard,
882
00:49:05,000 --> 00:49:08,720
and he shared it with
the other leaders at that point.
883
00:49:08,720 --> 00:49:11,360
President Bush spoke up first.
884
00:49:11,360 --> 00:49:13,240
I told Blair, "Get down to London.
885
00:49:13,240 --> 00:49:15,880
"We can handle our own up here,"
you know?
886
00:49:15,880 --> 00:49:17,840
"Get down there and do your job."
887
00:49:19,560 --> 00:49:22,360
And then the question was,
"Well, what'll happen to the G8?"
888
00:49:22,360 --> 00:49:25,080
And they agreed, "Well, the G8
must go on, because if it stops,
889
00:49:25,080 --> 00:49:27,360
"then the terrorists will be seen
to have won."
890
00:49:31,200 --> 00:49:36,800
Today's bombings will not weaken
in any way our resolve...
891
00:49:38,560 --> 00:49:42,640
..to uphold the most deeply held
principles of our societies.
892
00:49:44,760 --> 00:49:48,200
We shall prevail,
and they shall not.
893
00:49:48,200 --> 00:49:51,280
NEWS: There were at least
six explosions, the Home Secretary
894
00:49:51,280 --> 00:49:55,400
has just confirmed, one of them
on a bus packed with commuters.
895
00:49:55,400 --> 00:49:59,680
I remember just looking
and being a bit confused by this,
896
00:49:59,680 --> 00:50:03,200
being horrified by the bombs.
897
00:50:03,200 --> 00:50:06,040
I mean, for a moment, we just...
We had to collect ourselves.
898
00:50:06,040 --> 00:50:07,840
We had to say,
"OK, what are we going to do now?"
899
00:50:07,840 --> 00:50:10,760
We had to group and say,
"What's the next plan?"
900
00:50:16,520 --> 00:50:20,360
With Tony Blair gone, it was
then agreed that I would then...
901
00:50:20,360 --> 00:50:23,480
I would then chair the meeting
at lunch.
902
00:50:23,480 --> 00:50:25,880
You know, him leaving,
it could've all fractured.
903
00:50:25,880 --> 00:50:28,600
One of those leaders
could've taken advantage of it,
904
00:50:28,600 --> 00:50:32,000
blocked the issues we were still
trying to get across the line.
905
00:50:32,000 --> 00:50:35,040
Schroeder found the text
quite difficult to accept,
906
00:50:35,040 --> 00:50:36,800
particularly the text on Africa.
907
00:50:36,800 --> 00:50:38,760
The Germans were not on board.
908
00:50:38,760 --> 00:50:42,120
Aid to Africa wasn't seen
as a particularly German thing.
909
00:50:42,120 --> 00:50:45,240
Germany was more interested
in Eastern Europe and so on.
910
00:50:45,240 --> 00:50:48,760
The German Chancellor, Gerhard
Schroeder, I'd had a beer with him.
911
00:50:48,760 --> 00:50:51,600
I say, "Look,
I'm actually going to Berlin,
912
00:50:51,600 --> 00:50:53,480
"coming to a stadium near you,
913
00:50:53,480 --> 00:50:55,840
"and I am going to have
to tell people
914
00:50:55,840 --> 00:50:58,920
"if you're signing
or you're not signing.
915
00:50:58,920 --> 00:51:02,280
"So...are we in or are we out?"
916
00:51:04,000 --> 00:51:06,880
Like a good politician,
he doesn't agree.
917
00:51:06,880 --> 00:51:10,720
I go to Berlin, I do call him out.
918
00:51:11,840 --> 00:51:16,280
Leadership means that between
all these rich countries,
919
00:51:16,280 --> 00:51:21,760
we get $50 billion a year
for the poorest of the poor,
920
00:51:21,760 --> 00:51:26,400
something we have not yet got today.
921
00:51:26,400 --> 00:51:30,160
And so we do not applaud
the Chancellor.
922
00:51:31,360 --> 00:51:32,400
But if...
923
00:51:33,880 --> 00:51:35,240
..he can deliver this...
924
00:51:36,640 --> 00:51:38,400
..by four o'clock tomorrow...
925
00:51:39,800 --> 00:51:43,120
..your Chancellor, in my mind,
926
00:51:43,120 --> 00:51:46,400
will be a hero.
927
00:51:43,120 --> 00:51:46,400
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
928
00:51:52,320 --> 00:51:55,480
Tony Blair came back from London,
exhausted.
929
00:51:55,480 --> 00:51:58,120
Quite late that evening,
he called me
930
00:51:58,120 --> 00:52:00,520
and said, "Look, what's been
going on while I've been away?"
931
00:52:00,520 --> 00:52:03,960
I said to Tony Blair, "Look, you're
going to have to talk to Schroeder."
932
00:52:04,960 --> 00:52:06,760
And then he went down into the bar
933
00:52:06,760 --> 00:52:12,480
with all the leaders there
and their wives. I remember him...
934
00:52:12,480 --> 00:52:16,000
Not to exaggerate, but he had
Schroeder up against a wall,
935
00:52:16,000 --> 00:52:19,160
saying, "We're going to do
this deal, aren't we, Gerhard?"
936
00:52:19,160 --> 00:52:22,760
And at that moment,
I think Schroeder gave in
937
00:52:22,760 --> 00:52:25,440
and we got across the line
with the Germans.
938
00:52:27,560 --> 00:52:30,200
What had been really hanging
in the balance,
939
00:52:30,200 --> 00:52:33,200
in terms of getting the commitment,
it came through.
940
00:52:33,200 --> 00:52:37,000
And all the leaders
played their part in that.
941
00:52:37,000 --> 00:52:40,120
To be frank, even President Putin
played his part in that.
942
00:52:40,120 --> 00:52:42,600
You know, he had the ability
to wreck that whole summit
943
00:52:42,600 --> 00:52:45,400
if he wanted to, and he didn't.
944
00:52:45,400 --> 00:52:47,360
He's Putin, you know?
945
00:52:47,360 --> 00:52:51,960
We did it with all the leaders
standing there, signing up to it,
946
00:52:51,960 --> 00:52:54,400
with the African leaders
in attendance.
947
00:53:09,920 --> 00:53:14,000
It was definitely
the most extraordinary weekend
948
00:53:14,000 --> 00:53:16,680
I had in my time as Prime Minister.
949
00:53:16,680 --> 00:53:18,200
It was...
950
00:53:19,360 --> 00:53:24,960
..probably one of the last moments
of truly global solidarity...
951
00:53:26,160 --> 00:53:27,400
..that I can remember.
952
00:53:42,600 --> 00:53:44,560
NEWS: The figures agreed
sound immense -
953
00:53:44,560 --> 00:53:48,480
$50 billion extra in aid
for the developing world by 2010,
954
00:53:48,480 --> 00:53:51,320
$25 billion of that for Africa.
955
00:53:51,320 --> 00:53:55,760
A number of the NGOs in this area
are saying that 2010 is too late,
956
00:53:55,760 --> 00:53:58,840
that the money is needed
more urgently in Africa now.
957
00:54:00,400 --> 00:54:02,600
This is a natural course of events.
958
00:54:02,600 --> 00:54:06,000
You get fed up with
parts of the NGO community,
959
00:54:06,000 --> 00:54:08,320
because whatever you do
is never enough,
960
00:54:08,320 --> 00:54:10,520
and they ask you to do something,
you do it
961
00:54:10,520 --> 00:54:12,160
and they still criticise you.
962
00:54:12,160 --> 00:54:14,280
And Bob and Bono
just weren't like that at all.
963
00:54:14,280 --> 00:54:19,360
Debt relief equivalent to billions
was a giant leap,
964
00:54:19,360 --> 00:54:23,360
to the benefit of most of
the impoverished states.
965
00:54:23,360 --> 00:54:26,800
NEWS: Disappointment with the deal -
and some of its famous backers -
966
00:54:26,800 --> 00:54:29,280
came to a head
later in the afternoon.
967
00:54:29,280 --> 00:54:32,160
The fact that aid was delayed
till 2010
968
00:54:32,160 --> 00:54:35,480
meant there's a lot of room
for wriggle-out, right?
969
00:54:35,480 --> 00:54:37,480
Because five years,
people have forgotten,
970
00:54:37,480 --> 00:54:39,960
the context has changed,
all of that.
971
00:54:39,960 --> 00:54:42,880
Our reading is that the G8
has listened,
972
00:54:42,880 --> 00:54:46,360
but their response has not been
a roar but a whisper.
973
00:54:46,360 --> 00:54:49,560
I do my "People roared
and G8 whispered,"
974
00:54:49,560 --> 00:54:53,560
and then Bob takes the thing
and goes...
975
00:54:55,280 --> 00:54:57,960
.."According to my calculation,
this is how many lives will be
976
00:54:57,960 --> 00:55:00,040
"saved as a result of
this aid money,"
977
00:55:00,040 --> 00:55:02,280
which will come five years later.
978
00:55:02,280 --> 00:55:06,640
When did ten million people alive
become a whisper?
979
00:55:06,640 --> 00:55:09,080
At what point was that a whisper?
980
00:55:10,760 --> 00:55:12,520
APPLAUSE
981
00:55:12,520 --> 00:55:15,960
It was a very, very intense moment.
982
00:55:15,960 --> 00:55:19,880
I'm just thinking,
"We're getting through this
983
00:55:19,880 --> 00:55:25,880
"and we're advancing our cause
and we're not over."
984
00:55:25,880 --> 00:55:28,840
A mountain has been climbed,
985
00:55:28,840 --> 00:55:34,120
and...only to reveal higher peaks,
for sure, on the other side of it.
986
00:55:34,120 --> 00:55:37,160
But it's worth just stopping
for a second
987
00:55:37,160 --> 00:55:40,960
and looking back down the valley
at where we've all come.
988
00:55:42,240 --> 00:55:45,320
Doubling aid to Africa
has not been easy.
989
00:55:45,320 --> 00:55:47,080
What Bono said, we could live with.
990
00:55:48,280 --> 00:55:51,920
You know, after the event was over,
Bono said, "Every army needs
991
00:55:51,920 --> 00:55:56,760
"to have a mad general,
and Geldof is our mad general."
992
00:55:56,760 --> 00:55:58,440
CHEERING
993
00:55:58,440 --> 00:56:01,000
MUSIC: Do They Know It's Christmas?
by Band Aid
994
00:56:06,600 --> 00:56:14,400
# At Christmas-time,
it's no time to be afraid
995
00:56:14,400 --> 00:56:20,960
# It's Christmas-time
Let in light and banish shade
996
00:56:22,440 --> 00:56:30,200
# And in our world of plenty,
we can spread a smile of joy... #
997
00:56:46,440 --> 00:56:49,880
I think there were very many
good people, with good intentions,
998
00:56:49,880 --> 00:56:54,280
that were involved
both with Live Aid and Live 8.
999
00:56:54,280 --> 00:56:59,400
I think that there was
not enough sensitivity
1000
00:56:59,400 --> 00:57:03,440
to understanding that it's not right
1001
00:57:03,440 --> 00:57:09,160
for a bunch of predominantly
white male folks to get together
1002
00:57:09,160 --> 00:57:11,480
and say, "We're going to frame
a continent like this."
1003
00:57:11,480 --> 00:57:16,600
# Tonight, thank God it's them
instead of you... #
1004
00:57:16,600 --> 00:57:19,600
Getting this stuff right
is really hard,
1005
00:57:19,600 --> 00:57:24,800
because you are essentially
raising an alarm.
1006
00:57:24,800 --> 00:57:28,400
What Bob and Bono and others
have done over the years
1007
00:57:28,400 --> 00:57:30,800
has resulted in, I don't know,
1008
00:57:30,800 --> 00:57:33,360
probably millions of people living
who otherwise would have died,
1009
00:57:33,360 --> 00:57:36,960
and I don't think
there's any type of, you know,
1010
00:57:36,960 --> 00:57:40,320
remote ideological argument that
should stand in the way of that.
1011
00:57:40,320 --> 00:57:43,640
# Feed the world... #
1012
00:57:45,600 --> 00:57:49,720
The 20th anniversary
was just a convergence of...
1013
00:57:51,320 --> 00:57:55,960
..good fortune and good actors
on the world stage.
1014
00:57:55,960 --> 00:57:58,320
But what's happening now in politics
1015
00:57:58,320 --> 00:58:03,400
means this anniversary could be
a funeral...
1016
00:58:04,760 --> 00:58:07,280
..for the last 40 years.
1017
00:58:09,560 --> 00:58:11,440
It was unique.
1018
00:58:11,440 --> 00:58:13,560
It has saved lives.
1019
00:58:13,560 --> 00:58:18,200
But now, can we bring
this kind of passion,
1020
00:58:18,200 --> 00:58:23,080
can we involve human beings
across the world
1021
00:58:23,080 --> 00:58:28,120
to act the way you acted
in the 1980s to save lives?
1022
00:58:30,800 --> 00:58:34,360
What I love is that
there are younger people,
1023
00:58:34,360 --> 00:58:38,280
and they say, "We're not going
to do it like they did it" -
1024
00:58:38,280 --> 00:58:41,160
and they're right,
cos I don't think that'll work -
1025
00:58:41,160 --> 00:58:44,920
"but I can utilise
this new stuff I've got
1026
00:58:44,920 --> 00:58:48,920
"to do something weird and mad
and wild."
1027
00:58:48,920 --> 00:58:52,960
And if that's what we leave behind,
1028
00:58:52,960 --> 00:58:57,120
then that's what I'd love to be
the parting shot.
1029
00:58:58,320 --> 00:59:02,120
That's the end of our show!
You've been a fantastic audience!
1030
00:59:02,120 --> 00:59:05,440
Thank you, thank you very much!
1031
00:59:05,440 --> 00:59:07,520
CHEERING
1032
00:59:07,520 --> 00:59:09,720
We're back to Philadelphia now.
1033
00:59:09,720 --> 00:59:11,760
Thank you very much for coming.
1034
00:59:11,760 --> 00:59:14,920
Please leave the stadium
slowly and quietly.
1035
00:59:14,920 --> 00:59:18,480
It's been the most fantastic day.
Thank you, thank you!
1036
00:59:18,480 --> 00:59:21,160
CHEERING
1037
00:59:18,480 --> 00:59:21,160
Over to you, Philadelphia!
127898
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