a century ago
britain ruled over a quarter of the
planet
in this series i will go in search of
britain's imperial past
i have found gold and
uncover its legacies
how did a small island on the edge of
europe
end up dominating the world he
turned a miserable group of accountants
into swashbuckling pirates
from its proudest achievements to its
most shameful
failures we're ripped away from mother
africa
into a strange land and how
has the history of empire transformed
britain
we became the black people of britain on
this journey i uncover
the extraordinary story of the biggest
empire
that the world has ever seen
in this program i'm exploring the jewel
in the crown of
empire the way that britain established
its rule here
would provide a model for the
globalization of today
in india britain's imperial power was
founded upon one of the world's first
great multinational companies unlike
today's corporate giants
it exercised political power directly
with guns
this company went in for a type of
exploitation
that the world has not seen they had a
divine
right to rule it was as simple as that
opportunities to trade and corporate
greed
led britain into entanglements all over
the world
but in india those base motives were
gradually converted
into the pomp grandeur and glory
of the british raj
india has long gripped the british
imagination
a vast and exotic subcontinent home to
ancient civilizations
powerful rulers and untold riches
here britain honed its imperial skills
and possessing india attracted the
grudging aberration of rivals
and added to british power
this is the queen victoria memorial hall
dedicated to the empress of india
the raj was at its pinnacle during her
reign
it was in a way the perfection of the
colonial idea
a moment when britain was totally
committed to the governance
of the queen's 300 million subjects here
and when
india seemed indispensable to britain's
prestige
[Applause]
at the time of queen victoria's death in
1901
britain ruled over a quarter of the
planet
and 400 million people
no other possession competed with the
glamour of
india with its capital at calcutta
british authority did not originate with
the state or military conquest
the father of empire in india the man
responsible for securing british power
was a businessman he was bold
opportunistic
and visionary some would say a greedy
villain
the back wall of these houses must be
the outer wall of the clive house
clues about how robert clive led a
profit-hungry corporation
with its own private army to rule over
millions
lie hidden in these back streets the
fine brick work of the clive house now
forms
one side of that little street clive
completely transformed britain's role in
india
but his former home now lies in ruins
all
but forgotten ah
this filthy rubbish strewn passageway is
now the way
into the house had any was the main
entrance
although there are steps left here and
the place has been taken over by crows
and goodness knows what other creatures
and this must have been a spectacularly
grand room
where there's been some restoration i
think look at these wonderful classical
pillars i imagine before they were
rendered and maybe
made to look like marble clive took over
a mughal villa of a single story
and he added another one and here you
see the uh
two stories robert clive
was the delinquent son of a minor
shropshire landowner
when he was 17 his family bought him a
job
in the east india company it had existed
for more than a century
but this young firebrand would lead it
to become
a superpower i found one of the
present-day inhabitants
beautiful high ceiling here this could
also have been a grand room
and here i think the main entrance
very handsome flight of rounded steps
and the visitor will be confronted with
this set of magnificent arches
very imposing
clive knew how to live the
india that clive stepped into was ruled
by the mughals
at its height their mighty empire
stretched from modern day
afghanistan down the length of the
subcontinent
they built awe-inspiring forts mosques
and mausoleums that express their
immense wealth
and power but in the 18th century the
mughal empire was fracturing
and clive challenged its waning power
with the help
of the east india company's private army
with no military training he deployed
the company's troops against the french
in india
and when the mughals occupied calcutta
he expelled them at the battle of
plassey
in 1757. with actions like that
the company was transformed from a
trading venture
into a military and imperial power
and robert clive became the undisputed
ruler
of bengal
[Music]
the traders of the east india company
had ventured in search of
fortunes for themselves and their
shareholders in britain
at that time india offered a dazzling
concentration of riches
representing well over a fifth of the
world's
wealth
here's what lured the european powers to
india
pepper spices silks cottons
perfumes the appetite for such fineries
was insatiable for 150 years the british
east india company
competed with others to win or force
trading concessions
from the wealthy mughals
[Music]
jawa sierka is a noted historian
and a former secretary of india's
ministry of culture
how did it happen that a man who's
bought his position as a clerk
becomes a military leader he came into
the clerk and pushed his pen for two
dull years
didn't excite him much but then when the
battle started
he showed an extraordinary courage he
had an inbuilt suicidal
streak and that earned him
more and more pips on his shoulder and
he rose very fast
what change do you think robert clyde
brought about in the east india company
no one before him or after him was such
a buccaneer
without his bravado without his
excesses without his stratagem his
cunning his
ruthlessness in getting things done
which are most
untrader-like he turned
a miserable group of
accountants into swashbuckling pirates
he turned the east india company into
a power to reckon with battlefield
success
and backroom deals gave clive the
leverage to force
an extraordinary concession from the
mughals
the right to collect bengals taxes
a company of traders answerable to no
one but its shareholders
now has the power of empress
and that unleashed an era of rapacious
corporate greed clive made a lot of
money
he would never have made that in short
share
or they would not make it anywhere
it was mind-boggling for the east india
company
profit was king as long as the
corporation made money
employees were free to line their own
pockets too
clive now one of britain's wealthiest
men bought up grand houses back home
and stuff them with priceless indian
treasures
company men like him also use their
plundered riches
to acquire political power in britain
putting mps on the payroll
and buying elections to parliament here
in bengal
the greed went unchecked it had
disastrous consequences
one-third of the population of this
province
which was 30 million one-third that's
almost 10
million people died and the brits
are held responsible even till today
they died how starvation starvation he
started tampering around with natural
lines of supply
storage taxing over taxing so
the peasants fled their farms
it's so very much part of the psyche
that we had what this called this great
man-made famine
the east india company after robert
clive the way he develops it
can you compare it to anything in our
modern life this company went in for a
type of exploitation
that the world has not seen the
convergence
of profit with state power
with military power is the prototype
of all transnational exploitative
company that you've seen
the actions of the east india company
caused scandal in britain
with parliamentarians condemning the
rampant greed
and corruption the east india company's
mismanagement in bengal sent its shares
crashing but as in the recent banking
crisis
it was deemed too big to fail it was
bailed out by the government
which acquired influence over how it was
run
in a sort of public private partnership
within a year robert clive was dead in
mysterious circumstances
samuel johnson said he'd acquired his
fortunes by such
crimes that his consciousness of them
impelled him
to cut his own throat others have
suggested that he overdosed
on the highly addictive drug that would
become the east india company's most
profitable
commodity its trade would turn the
company
backed by the british state into
history's biggest
narcotics dealer
by the 1770s the traders of the east
india company
had laid the foundations of britain's
empire in india
calcutta was at its heart and its
arteries of international trade
reached across the globe
[Music]
from the west coast of africa british
ships carried enslaved people
to the caribbean to grow sugar for the
british market
from china east india company ships
brought the tea
on which the british were hooked but to
quench britain's growing
thirst the company needed to sell
chinese people
a product they wanted to buy the answer
was a highly addictive drug grown here
in britain's
indian territories in the
opium agency of the east india company
two thousand five hundred clerks in a
hundred offices
toiled to control the cultivation of the
narcotic
by indian farmers its quality and its
transport
to warehouses like this the highly
profitable
export of a few thousand tonnes per year
kept a swathe of china's population
addicted
and when their government objected
britain fought two wars
rather than give up the trade all that
was about buying china tea so that the
british empire could enjoy
a lovely cuppa
at the end of the 18th century britain
appointed a governor general
with a grand imperial plan richard
wellesley
was a close ally of the prime minister
william pitt
he'd been politically ambitious at home
and in india
was attracted more by power than profit
under his governorship the east india
company's private armies
marched across india conquering vast
territories
and installing puppet princes
[Music]
with wellesley at the helm this great
multinational company
was creating empire
richard wellesley was the elder brother
of the man who would become
the duke of wellington he was
responsible not only for
government house in calcutta but also
this more
personal villa of the caesars out here
at barrett poor
the british in india ruled over regional
royalty
and aristocracy leaders of great
wealth who dressed flamboyantly and
built palaces of extraordinary
ostentation
and wellesley believed that the imperial
power should not be outdone
in display
in 1801 wellesley started building
this palatial country retreat for the
governor general
15 miles upriver from calcutta
a magnificent entrance you might say but
in fact this is
simply the back door to the garden
the principal approach which would have
been experienced by visitors
lies on the other side where at the
moment major works are underway
wellesley was imitating mughal splendor
but he expressed it in an unmistakably
british style
huh the first thing the scale of it
superb proportions
wonderful tall ceilings
marbled floor this is just the rear
veranda
and into the ballroom and although from
the outside
it really could pass as a british
stately home
i think not so inside there are an
almost uncountable number
of double doors because the point was
that air
should flow i should have arrived
under the portico protected from the
typhoon
and then it would have come up one of
these twin staircases
and then i should have arrived here in
the entrance
lobby this is the proper way to enter
the house
these days baratpoi is home to the
bengali police
training academy and is being
painstakingly restored
by its director general sherman mitra
sherman during wellesley's tenure what
happened to the british empire was it
expanding the empire wasn't established
during the time it was part of the east
india company
but he had a vision towards that he
acquired a lot of land
he also fought a lot of wars and i would
say
while doing this he realized if one has
to control india
one has to be like a raja or a king or a
maharaja
and that's how he built these grand
palaces and mansions and how do you view
that now because in a way he was
foreseeing
the future of the british empire indeed
he was creating the future of the
british empire
yes this is one of the important markers
establishing
big mansions big houses uh
government houses so that people
they have come to rule are awestruck
what did the east india company think of
that oh
they were horrified they rebuked him
they called him back in 1805 and said
that
we have sent you to for trade this is
not what you should be doing
you are a free nation you are a republic
why why do you want to restore colonial
history
uh i'm not talking about whether
colonialism was good or bad or whatever
but certainly it was uh a part of our
shared history
and this particular building was built
with the hard work of our craftsmen
indian craftsmen true might be designed
by
britishers but it's part of our shared
global architecture
so how can i deny our past
when richard wellesley left india there
was no mistaking
that the british had assumed control but
in the subsequent decades
influential voices at home argued that
it wasn't enough
for the company to rule india their view
was that the british
had to civilize it too despite company
resistance
parliament was convinced to allow
christian missionaries
into india it would lead to tensions
especially amongst the troops on which
british rule depended
[Music]
the east india company's armies
consisted mainly of
indian soldiers known as sepoys
the company behaved insensitively
toppling local rulers
arbitrarily and greedily trampling on
local hierarchies and customs
whilst the sepoys feared that christian
missionaries
were out to destroy their religions
these issues were emotive
explosively so less than a mile from the
governor general's barrackpore retreat
one sea pi was pushed to the point of
insurrection
the british introduced the enfield rifle
to load it
the sepai was required to bite off the
end of the cartridge
which might have been greased with
either pig or cow fat
one was repugnant to muslims and the
other two hindus
on the 29th march 1857
a devout upper caste hindu sepoy
called mango pandi in disgust
urged his fellow soldiers to rise up in
revolt and he
himself attacked two officers
legend has it that he was hanged by the
british from a banyan tree
it was an incident at the start of the
year
of the indian rebellion an event which
will prove extremely bloodthirsty
and of great political significance
rebellion in the army swiftly spread to
the civilians
of north and central india for the
british the uprising of an
indigenous population who greatly
outnumbered them
was the stuff of nightmares murderous
attacks on europeans
were met with brutal reprisals to
understand why company rule broke down
in such a shockingly violent way i'm
meeting historian professor
rudrangshu mukherjee what do you think
mango pandit's reasons for going on his
rampage
there was the persistent
and very deep fear among the sepoys
that there was a full-blown conspiracy
on the part of the british government
to spoil the caste and the religion of
the seaports
the british government was seen to be
interfering
with the way people lived their lives
and the way
society had been held together had been
made to function
for generations and centuries this list
of insensitivities who's to blame for
this who is insensitive the british
government the east india company
the individual where does it come from
these
are administrators who are coming out to
india and they find a society that is
completely
alien to them and they think that
this is an inferior civilization because
they don't
match up to our european standards
therefore
it is our duty to change and civilize
these people of india
so does that mean that these people with
attitudes that we now regard as
appalling yes so condescending so
contemptuous
does it mean that nonetheless they could
themselves have been
conscientious and well-meaning yes but
they were totally insensitive to
what impact their policies would have on
the people who were being affected
by those policies there's a mismatch
there complete divorce between
intention and consequence
the number of people killed during the
rebellion and its aftermath
is almost unimaginable 800
000 people died the great majority of
them
indians when the news reached britain
there was outrage at the scale of the
violence out of this horror
a reformed empire would emerge
personified by an
empress who claimed to rule india's
teeming millions
with the affection of a mother
[Music]
the shocking violence of the indian
rebellion
shook british rule in india to its core
after a year of bloodshed control was
restored
but the british government could no
longer allow the company
to rule the government removed the east
india company
from control its corruption had long
been an embarrassment
and formalized rule by the crown queen
victoria would become the empress of
india
commencing the high point of the british
raj
queen victoria would be portrayed as
mother
to her subjects in india the company's
monumental buildings were repurposed
and sumptuous new ones were built
creating a capital city worthy of
india's status as the jewel in the crown
of the british empire this
magnificent dome born aloft by 28
corinthian columns
is the old post office and a metaphor
for british colonial rule
staff mainly by indians the postal
service spread out
across the country bringing letter
deliveries
to all after the rebellion just 20
000 british officials and soldiers were
required
to run indian civil servants and troops
who administered a subcontinent of 300
million
to understand how the empire now claimed
legitimacy and distance
itself from the east india company i'm
speaking to anthony khachaturian
a kolkata historian and writer so after
1857
what would you say about the british
rebooting of its empire here in india
they had to truly start governing it
couldn't just be
hoarding chess full of diamonds from
from the minds of hyderabad
queen victoria's proclamation says we
are here to provide you with equal
governance and fair play and trade
for everybody everybody will be treated
equally we will not impose religion on
you
but the giveaway is right at the end
there are two three words along the
lines of
but don't forget we are here to rule you
because you are our subjects how do you
think it's possible
that only about 20 000 british officials
and soldiers
are able to administer india all of
india
going across from from what we now call
pakistan right the way across
bangladesh was chopped up into 250 yard
districts
and they broke it down so every district
had a
indian civil services officer and a
police superintendent
and these were the two left and right
hands of the empire they were the be-all
and end-all for those districts
it strikes me that the british took
their imperial duties
seriously in the sense that for example
the second sons
of important families in britain would
come out here for decades they'd bring
up their families here
and they would in a way be committed to
india they had a supreme belief that
they were sent out here by
the queen herself and god above her they
had a divine right to rule
it was as simple as that
[Music]
[Applause]
towards the end of queen victoria's
reign a man took
charge determined to exhibit the
splendors of the raj
george nathaniel kirsten came from an
old aristocratic family
and in india he would perfect the
empire's display
in the most grandiose way
this footage from 1911 shows the scale
of the delhi durbars
a spectacular imperial pageant pioneered
by him
in 1903. it's a huge huge statement
turzon is trying to put across that the
age of rapacity of loot
have now ended now it is about the king
emperor
ruling india it's about governance this
is the grand statement
that all of you kings and maharaja's
from across the country
come down here on bended knee and accept
the
the right of the king emperor to rule
across the country in harmony
kerzen would also give an old company
institution
a new lease of life a barrackpore
the viceroys and their families could
take their leisure
in an exclusive british enclave
calcutta was then the capital of
british india that meant an immense
area including even present-day burma
and so from here was ruled
an enormous number of human beings and
to this place
came people from all over the empire
so would i be right in thinking this is
the ballroom yes it is
it is a ballroom with as you can see a
sprung flow
historian manabi mitra has researched
the rarefied world
of bharatpaw when it was home to the
empire's leaders
at play it was probably one of the most
celebrated ballrooms of british india
because
everybody who was somebody and was close
enough
to marriage the viceroy's attention came
here
we have people like randolph churchill
winston churchill
george v as well as royalty and nobility
from all across europe and here's a
rather surprising item
a fireplace would you need such a thing
here
barrackpore was an approximation of home
it was a grafting of a piece of little
england
on an indian territory so i suppose the
fireplace was used
as a reminder that here was a little
slice of england
these photographs captured the british
in india when they were off duty
they show a world of characteristically
british pursuits
the lifestyle of britain's upper classes
transplanted to asia
but how did the raj's rulers relate to
the india
all around them so what we have here
is a typical round of tiffin
which would have the usual fish dish in
the meat dish
but done in a little different way this
is roast lamb as you can see
should i serve you oh thank you very
much
oh and this looks delicious what is this
yes this is maligotoni soup
it's soup made with lentils and chicken
broth
delightful all right today i'm being
served
a tiffin lunch the kind of food that
would have been enjoyed by the raj's top
brass
and their guests i'm gonna try the
malaga tony
in their social life did the british
ever invite
indians here the thing about government
house bharapur was that it was
a kind of a sacred inviolable zone where
only friends would be invited but waited
upon
hand and foot by indians i assume yes
in all the photographs that we have seen
of dining under the banyan tree we
see an army of boba cheese and kit mud
cars and
servers standing behind in full regalia
but always to wait upon the sahebs what
about the indians that were on the
outside who
probably couldn't even see in what did
what did they feel about this way of
life
in this spark there are two portions one
is the private portion and the public
portion
and in the public portion people were
allowed so
they were allowed to have a glimpse of
the park they could
come and gape at the imperial markers
and they could look at them approvingly
[Music]
the british in india were always a tiny
minority
the imperial institutions that they
created
allowed them to rule over a vast
population
but a challenge to british supremacy was
brewing
within one of the institutions that have
made the raj
a success
trans started running in calcutta in
1901
the british famously covered india in
railway tracks
built for their own purposes of course
but nonetheless a useful legacy
of infrastructure the colonists also
decided that they needed
a broad class of indian educated
to be the administrators of the empire
but of course such educated civil
servants
would form the nucleus of those looking
for self-government
and later demanding independence
then in 1905 kerzen made a controversial
decision
with long-lasting consequences for the
empire in
india bengal was india's largest
province
with a population of 85 million people
kerzen decided it would be easier for
the british to rule
if it was split into two he partitioned
it
along religious lines with the western
province being majority hindu
and the eastern being majority muslim
[Music]
the british decision to partition bengal
was met
with massive anger from these
riverbanks the writer rabindranath
tagore led
a great procession declaring a day of
national mourning
india was set on the path of peaceful
but
wounding protest
this song played the key role in the
partition of bengal
around 1905 the nobel laureate tagore
he composed this song because this song
was written as a poem
in the mid-19th century musicians
surendra malik
and sumyajit das come from old kolkata
[Music]
families
[Music]
what he was saying was that you can't
have your mother split into two
the country should not be split into two
it was a song which brought hindus
muslims
everyone together on the streets and
gave them the power to fight
thank you so much for the beautiful
voice you haven't how well you play
how did you both feel performing that
it has a lot of bloodshed involved in it
passion of people to get their
motherland
for them so it's not just a song for us
it gives a big goosebump whenever we
perform this
what was tagore's view of the british
raj
i think from 1905 and the partition of
bengal because he quite
understood the political game that was
happening of
not only splitting the land of india but
splitting
the major religion uh of india
you know the muslims that way and the
hindus that sway and
in a way dividing them to rule them
british people would probably think um
the struggle for indian independence
gandhi but all of the things we've been
talking about well most of them
are while gandhi is still in south
africa so
for you is tagore as bigger figure maybe
a bigger figure
in the movement as gandhi yes the
partition had hurt bangladesh and india
the two parts of bengal so
these were the places which created the
platform for the nehru's gandhis and the
faces of the
movement to stand where they are today
the british reversed their decision and
reunited bengal in 1911
but their insensitivity had launched
india's independence movement
when the empire was drawn into the great
war indians offered their support
but demanded new freedoms
for centuries mughal india was one of
the world's great
powers it controlled a fifth of the
world's wealth
but that changed when the british came
i went to the factory that sounds like
the 19th century
and looks like a renaissance painting
these beautiful
shafts of light which are illuminating
the dust
which is everywhere in the air
in 19th century india factories like
this were rare
at that time britain was the workshop of
the world
and india's once thriving economy had
been reduced to a supplier
of raw materials for british factories
for robert clive cotton was one of the
great riches of
india but then jute a versatile and
cheap crop which had been used for
millennia
was found to have new uses for rope
for sacking and as a backing for
linoleum
during the first world war britain
needed india to
ramp up its manufacturing output bengali
jute production went into
overdrive for sandbags and tarpaulins
in the trenches and 1.4 million
indians answered britain's call to arms
india's tremendous sacrifice for empire
emboldened it to make demands
when britain went to war in 1914 it
summoned forces from across the empire
hugely boosting the numbers that could
be deployed
indians fought tenaciously for empire
but also with future freedom in mind
for why should not india gain as its
reward
the same self-government by then enjoyed
by australia
and canada
in the great war britain promised india
self-government
but in its aftermath those promises were
broken
then a terrible massacre occurred in
amritsar
in this place called the jallianwala
bark
british troops opened fire on unarmed
civilians
gathered in peaceful protest
the slaughter was a turning point for
many indians
convincing them that they must break
free
well how did indians feel when in 1939
yet again the british empire asked them
to go and fight
in 1939 the situation was much more
complex
kashic roy is a professor of military
history the political class
they are more clever that it should not
be in 1919 again
then that's why the congress said that
britain must declare a debt for
independence
otherwise congress would not give
support what is the view towards the
first world war of mohandas gandhi
and what is his view towards the second
world war between first world war and
second world war gandhi's view
completely you know transformed
he said don't believe the british the
british will again go back to their
promises as they have done
after first world war nobody could
really trust
britain in world war ii britain once
again mobilized the empire
despite resistance from indian leaders
indian troops would play a crucial role
in the allies victory
but even as indian soldiers fought in
theaters of war
across the globe here in bengal a
catastrophic famine
brought death to millions
how important is the bengal famine of
1943
in the story of india it is our
holocaust
i mean everybody knows about the jewish
holocaust but very few in the world
knows about the bengal holocaust
engineered by the british
so much that's your view that it was
engineered by the british
yeah it was structural because whatever
food was there in bengal bengali tend to
be
sucked out to feed the army
remember imperialism mostly dependent
not nearly on brute force but also on
confidence
moral legitimacy so that completely
washed away
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with the broken promise to india over
home rule
and the massacre ageland wallabag and
later
with the famine during the war time in
bengal
british trustworthiness legitimacy
and prestige bled away and indian
non-violence became unstoppably
victorious
britain partitioned india from pakistan
and gave them both independence in 1947.
in the seven decades since india has
rediscovered its power
and has become a global economic force
once more
but how does it deal with its history of
subjugation
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when you look back at the british in
indian history the fact that
indians were not allowed at the top
table the massacre at
amritsar the famine in bengal are these
still things that really
wrankle they do wrangle in some minds
especially in people who are directly
affected by these things
jayanta sengupta is curator of the
victoria memorial hall
the most visited monument in kolkata and
the most visible relic of its british
past
but by and large i think we have come to
terms with that
and the british rule notwithstanding how
exploitative and how brutal the empire
was
uh is part of our beach is part of our
soul
and we carry it with acceptance and
tolerance
how do the british in their long time in
india change
india if you look at the economic impact
of how the british ruled india
the industries the artisanal industries
declined
it was reduced to a raw material
producing country geared to the british
colonial interests
those who want to put the best loss on
british rule
talk about good administration railways
justice education a single language
what do you make of those things these
things were created in order to serve
the interests of the empire
but if it was not a part of
good governance in the colonial period
it has given us a legacy which we have
shaped to our best interests
over the long run the indians took it on
and then
made it into an expression of india's
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democracy
britain came to india to exploit it
the east india company looted its wealth
and toppled its rulers
the indian lived as a second-class
citizen in his own country
but british colonial rule brought
together
2 000 ethnic groups in a single country
and gave it a unifying language and
infrastructure and government and
systems of law
and education the india of today
the world's largest democracy one of its
largest economies
is inevitably the product of the
relationship
between india and britain
a number of india's industries have
boomed and become multinationals
heavily invested in the british economy
today as india's wealth grows it's
easier to understand
that this subcontinent was once a
repository of riches
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in the next program i discover how
britain's empire was built by
pirates they were given permission from
the king of england to plunder
and plunder they did how millions were
ripped from their homelands
and stripped off their identities i
cannot say exactly where i'm from
i just can't trace that back
and michael's empire journey continues
next friday at 9.
and when empirical shareholders got
their dividends they spent it on some
serious stuff 10 ways the victorians
changed britain
new tomorrow at 7 50. next tonight they
may hate our songs but we
love the show especially when eurovision
goes
horribly wrong in just a tick
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