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00:00 [Sounds of water]
00:16 [Bleep]
00:17 [Bleep]
00:18 A huge explosion now, raining debris on all of us.
00:22 We better get out of the way!
00:23 [Screaming]
00:29 [Music]
00:55 Every street in New York is called Broadway.
00:57 It's not every street.
00:59 But there's so many of them.
01:01 It's the same Broadway.
01:03 It's the same Broadway.
01:04 Yes, it starts here, it goes all the way, when it ends in the tip of the Bronx, it changes name and it goes all the way to Canada.
01:13 [Inaudible]
01:18 Yeah, because it was the broadest street.
01:20 [Laughter]
01:22 Now, do you know why we call these little sections that look like a triangle, squares?
01:28 Did anybody figure that out?
01:30 Like Times Square, but it's actually a triangle, right?
01:33 Union Square, but it's a little triangle.
01:36 Well, those triangles are four.
01:38 Because every time Broadway would connect with another avenue, it would create this little section.
01:47 So, everywhere there's a triangle, there is Broadway.
01:53 [Inaudible]
01:58 [Inaudible]
02:10 [Inaudible]
02:18 [Inaudible]
02:28 He's not going to wait for like another two hours.
02:30 [Inaudible]
02:32 [Inaudible]
02:46 [Inaudible]
02:58 Still a little bit here.
03:00 [Inaudible]
03:03 [Inaudible]
03:15 [Inaudible]
03:38 Hello.
03:39 [Inaudible]
04:05 Dollars and credit cards.
04:07 [Inaudible]
04:13 And they would set up coffee shops and that's what they would do their training.
04:16 And then they say, you know what? There's something here, you know?
04:19 We could make something of this.
04:21 Why don't we make it official?
04:22 So, they made it official.
04:24 And that was the beginning of it.
04:26 And then the stuff it should be near.
04:28 And now you have this beautiful building with the Lady of Justice at the top.
04:34 And this building underwent a lot of renovations.
04:37 Most of the construction that you see of the older buildings is to retrofit them.
04:43 To make this greener.
04:45 Why? Because the city gives you a lot of tax credits.
04:48 They will turn the building green.
04:50 Meaning you consume less electricity, you consume less water.
04:54 You're more accessible to the disability community.
04:59 Because again, it's old buildings.
05:01 You forget about that.
05:04 Especially when something is landmark.
05:06 And you cannot change anything on it.
05:08 But we have an infant lifestyle.
05:11 We need to make concessions for people.
05:13 [Inaudible]
05:16 So, that's why the city incentivizes businesses to provide those services.
05:21 Because it makes a nice life.
05:23 And I've seen people, let me tell you, this is heartbreaking.
05:26 I was at Bryant Park.
05:27 And there's only one way to get to the top.
05:32 It's only three steps.
05:33 But the guy had a motorized car.
05:36 It's really like 500 meters.
05:37 600 pounds?
05:38 [Inaudible]
05:42 Community church, as you can see, to get in, we need to get all our stuff off.
05:46 Is it worth it? You guys want to do it?
05:48 Talk to you guys.
05:49 Yeah.
05:50 Yeah.
05:51 We can.
05:52 What happened?
05:53 [Inaudible]
05:55 You know what I mean?
05:56 So, if you can't see me, just look up and look at the monkey.
05:59 All right, let's go.
06:00 Let's go in.
06:01 Okay.
06:03 [Inaudible]
06:07 [Inaudible]
06:11 [Inaudible]
06:15 [Inaudible]
06:18 [Inaudible]
06:21 [Inaudible]
06:24 [Inaudible]
06:27 [Inaudible]
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06:54 [Inaudible]
06:57 [Inaudible]
07:00 The first one burned when almost everything around here burned in 1838.
07:06 Then the second one, they built it so bad, it just collapsed.
07:10 They took the rest of it down.
07:12 And then this beautiful one.
07:14 This is not only a beautiful church, it's a very rich church.
07:19 They actually own 70 other churches in New York City.
07:22 Including, they used to, we're going to go in a little bit and say,
07:25 Holtz Chapel used to be the chapel of this church.
07:28 And what is that?
07:30 Brown, right?
07:32 And also this used to be where Columbia University first set foot.
07:39 New York City used to be, no it wasn't Columbia back then, it was King's College back then.
07:44 And Columbia also owns a lot of land.
07:47 They actually own all the land where Rockefeller Center is.
07:51 Plus all their land on their campus.
07:54 Now what did the guy that built Grand Central say?
08:02 Real estate, real estate, real estate.
08:04 That's the New York City way of saying it.
08:07 So on this ground, if you have time to come back later and explore the tombstones,
08:12 you're going to see a lot of famous people.
08:14 Including Robert Fulton.
08:16 What is he famous for?
08:18 He invented or perfected, some people would say, the steam engine.
08:22 Yes, before that it was not easy to get around.
08:26 You had to pedal and push, right?
08:30 So he perfected the steam engine.
08:32 And that allowed for a lot of other things.
08:37 Like people moving to Brooklyn for the first time.
08:40 And as usual, the first people to be able to move are the well-to-do.
08:44 So that's when you end up over there with beautiful Brooklyn Heights.
08:47 Anybody been there yet?
08:49 Beautiful homes over there.
08:51 Brooklyn Heights, by the Brooklyn Bridge.
08:55 So yes, they were the first ones.
08:57 So you could take a ferry all the way there.
08:59 You can still do that today.
09:01 It's not a prestigious thing anymore.
09:03 And then it allowed also for the birth of the Brooklyn Bridge.
09:07 One technology could be created and meant another until it began today.
09:13 Things that people would think is magic, right?
09:17 Literally.
09:18 The technology is so advanced.
09:20 Anybody heard about the headset from Apple?
09:24 It tricks you into thinking that it's not over.
09:28 Suspended bridge, right?
09:31 The concept for us, that makes no sense.
09:33 A suspended bridge?
09:34 You think that's crazy?
09:35 We have suspended tunnels.
09:38 Yes, when you go to New Jersey.
09:40 You guys need to cross?
09:41 Go ahead.
09:43 Sure, that's okay.
09:49 When you take any transportation to get out of New Jersey that's underwater,
09:53 those are suspended tunnels.
09:55 Because if they weren't, they would just snap.
09:59 I hope you're not going through New Jersey and now you're not going to make it.
10:05 So yes, the first suspended bridge, the tunnel.
10:11 It was already scary enough by now.
10:15 Every street in New York is called Broadway.
10:17 It's not every street.
10:19 There are so many of them.
10:21 It's the same Broadway.
10:23 Yes, it starts here.
10:25 It goes all the way.
10:27 When it ends at the tip of the Bronx, it changes name and it goes all the way to Canada.
10:34 It's also called Broadway.
10:37 Yes, because it was the broadest street.
10:42 Do you know why we call these little sections that look like triangle squares?
10:48 Did anybody figure that out?
10:50 It looks like Times Square, but it's actually a triangle.
10:53 Union Square, but it's a little triangle.
10:56 Those triangles are formed because every time Broadway would connect with another avenue,
11:05 it would create this little section.
11:08 Everywhere there's a triangle, there is Broadway.
11:13 It's called a square because the word square also means public space in the old times.
11:19 So those are public spaces.
11:21 The way their name was, as the city continued to build uptown,
11:25 they wanted to incentivize businesses to move so that they could pay taxes.
11:31 So they named Times Square for the newspaper because they wanted to encourage them to move there.
11:36 Herald Square for a newspaper that used to be called The Herald, which no longer exists.
11:41 Union Square because that was the birth of the union, the labor force.
11:46 People being able to not work until they pass out,
11:50 work in closed spaces until the fire kills them.
11:54 So remember, everywhere there's a triangle, there's Broadway.
11:58 It's a great reference point because there's always a subway on Broadway.
12:03 Remember that.
12:04 So if you're lost, just tell them, "Where's Broadway?"
12:07 And you walk 10 blocks and you'll find a subway, I promise you.
12:11 Alright, any questions?
12:14 Let's go.
12:15 Next to me is the cast iron.
12:23 Usually you don't see them around here, you see those in SoHo.
12:26 That building is 55 stories.
12:29 The Twin Towers used to be twice that size.
12:31 So look at it and just get a sense of how tall it used to be.
12:36 The new one is not as tall now.
12:40 It's not as tall because of the antennae.
12:43 And then this little part here, anybody remembers?
12:52 During the--I mean, half of you guys were in the war.
12:55 During the Iraq War, it was the biggest protest in the history of humanity.
13:02 And you can see some of the people protesting in SoHo, the five corners of the street.
13:07 This is a cicada park.
13:09 So you've probably seen a lot of these.
13:11 One of the perks, after Giuliani started giving incentives to the developers,
13:17 was to create open spaces.
13:19 There weren't enough open spaces for us and for you guys.
13:23 So places like this you can come and hang out.
13:25 Some of them have restrooms, some of them are indoors,
13:28 because I mean, winter is wonderful.
13:31 And they get tax breaks.
13:33 We get--some of them have, you know, cute coffee shops or food.
13:37 The food here is pretty good because this is feeding the people that work around here.
13:42 New York City, on average, is no business a year, right?
13:48 If you don't make it--what is it, 90% of them don't even make it past the year?
13:53 So here you're competing with hundreds of thousands of businesses,
13:57 which means if the food is not good, you're not going to be there not even a year.
14:01 So they're here, and they've been here for a long time.
14:05 But not only that, that they're offering food for the people that live in the area.
14:09 Those food vendors and a lot of the street vendors that have tables and the whole operation,
14:15 only the veterans, the veterans of war, get those permits.
14:21 So when you support those businesses, you're supporting the veteran and you're supporting the person.
14:27 I mean, if you see somebody that just puts their stuff on the ground, on the blanket,
14:32 and you see them rushing to put it all and run away, that's definitely not a veteran.
14:38 That's what we call an opportunist.
14:41 So don't be afraid of the food trucks because they're actually heavily regulated.
14:45 The food is cheaper because they pay less overhead.
14:48 And see how nice it is.
14:52 You get the food, you sit down.
14:54 This is the right place.
14:57 There's more over there, and there's all kinds of choices.
15:02 Let's continue to St. Paul's.
15:05 St. Paul's Chapel, as I mentioned earlier, this used to be the chapel for Trinity Church.
15:11 So this has a lot of past history and a lot of present history.
15:15 The past history is that George Washington used this place as a working place,
15:19 and they still haven't used it.
15:24 The recent history, during the 9/11 disaster, the tree, there used to be a tree in the back,
15:31 and that tree took all that hit, and this church was able to shut it down.
15:37 The impact is now destroyed.
15:39 And because of the proximity to the destruction, this is where they had the center for all the first responders.
15:47 This is where they would bring anybody that they could find, they would bring here.
15:50 The fire fighters, the MTAs, the EMTs, it was here for about two years.
15:56 This was the place.
15:58 The connection, if you talk about a year, we cleaned up all that.
16:02 And all, and so that's the beautiful history.
16:05 And it's still here, gorgeous.
16:09 And, you know, I'm going to always talk about it.
16:13 Did anybody have to do it in the sun while they were walking on the sidewalk?
16:16 Not crossing the street, on the sidewalk.
16:18 Anybody got to do that?
16:22 It's nice in the summer, but imagine it in the winter, right, that breeze when it's like chill, a little bit of.
16:28 So we decided, you know what, we can't keep building like this, we'll have no sun.
16:33 And that's why when you go past the building, they step back, that's called a setback wall.
16:39 So on the first, the first like five floors, they step back and then they go up, and that allows the sun to come.
16:47 On one side of the street, all people.
16:50 You guys remember the sun on the sunny side of the street?
16:54 That makes sense now, doesn't it?
16:58 You don't know the jazz tune?
17:00 I can't seem to say my line.
17:03 But, I can't seem to say my line.
17:07 But there's the sun, and that's why, because there's only one sunny side of the street in New York City.
17:12 When you go past 14, not yet, there's zero.
17:17 But, some jazz, big jazz bands, they have a namescape street.
17:23 So, again, do you guys want to go in or do you guys want to go straight to see the memorial, the Tower of London?
17:30 It's your choice.
17:32 We've seen it in a lot of movies, including Hicks, the romantic comedy.
17:39 Usually in the suburbs, there's like an art installation there, that's one of the things we like to do in the suburbs.
17:44 We pay starving artists to play something and the rest of the year we forget about.
17:48 But it's nice. This is the City Hall. This is one of the few City Halls where they conduct government business in the United States.
17:57 It's a great place. Almost every day is great.
18:00 You have the First Amendment, people have freedom of speech, it's one of the things that we can do.
18:06 They can go to church if they want to.
18:08 Anybody remembers the Woolworth Building?
18:12 No.
18:14 The Woolworth Building?
18:16 The guys are so young.
18:18 How about Food Locker?
18:20 Food Locker?
18:22 You know how you go to the store and there's like, ooh, items on sale?
18:28 That didn't exist.
18:30 Before, the way you shop, you would go to the merchant and they would assess you,
18:35 "Okay, so you got a nice dress, you look like you got nice shoes, okay, so this item is going to cost this much."
18:41 That's how business was done. People charge you based on how they assessed that you could pay.
18:47 Then, because of Woolworth, his name was Woolworth, he stuttered.
18:53 He couldn't talk. He saved his life.
18:55 So they left him in the store and the guy told him, "Okay, you got to sell something or you're out of here."
19:00 And he was freaking out, so what he decided to do, he put a whole bunch of items outside on the table
19:05 and put five cents on all of them.
19:07 And they all sold. And that was the birth of modern shopping.
19:12 He became so rich, he actually built this building,
19:17 paid for it with nickels and dimes, because that's what he was famous for, his stores.
19:21 Everything was in nickel or a dime. How cool is that?
19:25 It was the tallest building for about nine years.
19:29 It's made of terracotta.
19:31 Terracotta is like ceramic. It's a very unique look.
19:34 We'll be able to see it as we walk away towards the peperoria.
19:38 Before, you used to be able to go in there. Now it's apartments.
19:43 But, yes, again, new beginnings one more time.
19:48 The beginning of shopping. Who doesn't like to go and get a sale, right?
19:52 And all because he couldn't talk, because he stuttered.
19:55 He stuttered just like that.
19:57 Human ingenuity once again.
19:59 So make sure as we walk out, once again, because of summer,
20:02 there's so much going on over here.
20:04 So how about we just walk around and then we'll talk afterwards, yes?
20:11 So you guys can take it all in, yeah?
20:13 So remember, if you get distracted, stay where you can see me.
20:17 You guys.
20:20 All right?
20:22 Yes, stay where you can see me, please.
20:27 Yes, stay where you can see me, please.
20:30 [Motorcycle engine]
20:38 [Indistinct chatter]
20:52 [Motorcycle engine]
21:06 [Motorcycle engine]
21:22 [Motorcycle engine]
21:44 [Indistinct chatter]
22:00 [Music]
22:26 The cockpit's not answering. Somebody's stabbed in business class.
22:30 And I think there's mains that we can't breathe.
22:33 I don't know. I think we're getting hijacked.
22:35 We have some claims. Stay quiet and you'll be okay.
22:38 We're turning to the airport.
22:40 [Music]
22:57 If you're just joining us, you're looking at dramatic pictures of New York's World Trade Center in Lower Manhattan,
23:03 where a short time ago we were told that a plane crashed into the upper floors of the westernmost tower.
23:11 [Clock ticking]
23:13 [Airplane engine]
23:21 I was somewhere between 74 and 72 in that stairwell when the plane, the second plane, went through our building.
23:29 It went through our building between floors 77 and 82.
23:33 So we were just a few floors below the strike zone.
23:39 I never felt anything like that in my life.
23:42 That building, that fire-stripped wall that we're inside, this concrete bunker, starts to shake so violently back and forth.
23:52 The handrail is breaking away from the wall.
23:55 That's the chance we had for the first time to encounter the police and the firefighters and the paramedics from New York City and the Florida Department.
24:03 Just the looks in their eyes. No words. Just the looks in their eyes.
24:10 They knew that they were going up in the U, but they were never coming back.
24:16 [Music]
24:24 It looked like it was on purpose.
24:26 You saw a plane?
24:28 Yes, I just saw a plane go into the building.
24:31 Why do you say that was definitely on purpose?
24:34 Because it just flew straight in.
24:37 [Airplane engine]
24:50 [Indistinct chatter]
24:56 [Airplane engine]
25:09 [Airplane engine]
25:12 [Airplane engine]
25:16 [Airplane engine]
25:22 [Indistinct chatter]
25:40 One of the pictures about this building, because of the metal and the glass, it absorbs the color of the sky.
25:47 You notice?
25:49 So you get it, like if you go right in front of the emphasis, you get that, that gives you that infinity sense that it never ends.
25:56 [Airplane engine]
26:14 [Airplane engine]
26:17 [Airplane engine]
26:33 Stabilizing the electric grid. In the summer, of course, it's a lot harder down there.
26:38 You already know that too, right, if you take the subway.
26:41 So they need to go on more power.
26:44 So that's why the smoke. Sometimes, like when you come into winter, there's not as many pipes.
26:50 They put the pipes so that the steam, there's actually no smoke, it's steam.
26:55 Like when you boil water.
26:57 [Music]
27:06 Walked up to him and leaned over and said, "A second plane hit the second tower. America is under attack."
27:14 Today we've had a national tragedy. Terrorism against our nation will not stand.
27:19 [Music]
27:27 [Airplane engine]
27:32 I was going to work and when I heard this huge noise, I said, "Get out of the car."
27:38 Then we saw the plane was coming down and around this area, the wing was up and down this way.
27:45 Then it was the second, just crashed right away.
27:49 [Music]
27:58 [Screaming]
28:07 First we hear the sound, the twisting steam and the crumbling concrete of what once was the South Tower.
28:14 The building that we had been in just eight, nine minutes earlier.
28:18 [Music]
28:22 [Music]
28:37 My husband, Tom Burnett, he was a passenger on flight 93 that morning.
28:42 The phone rang in on call waiting.
28:46 It was Tom.
28:50 He said, "Tom, you're okay." He said, "No, I'm not."
28:55 He said, "I'm on an airplane that's been hijacked. It's flight 93 from Newark to San Francisco."
29:03 He said, "They have already stabbed a guy and they're trying to get into the cockpit."
29:11 On his fourth and final call, he said they were waiting until they were over a rural area to take back the airplane.
29:19 As we sat there listening, I said to him, "You sit down. You be still. Be quiet and don't draw attention to yourself."
29:27 He didn't listen. He screamed into the phone, "No. No. No. If they're going to crash this plane, we're going to do something."
29:36 He hung up the phone and led the crew and passengers down the aisle and into the cockpit.
29:41 United 93, have you got information on that yet?
29:44 Yeah, he's down.
29:45 He's down?
29:46 Yes.
29:47 He did not land because we have confirmation.
29:49 He did not land.
29:50 Oh, he's down?
29:51 Yeah, somewhere up northeast of Camp David.
29:53 The tallest building in the Western Hemisphere, it's got 1,776 feet.
30:01 Anybody know what that number means?
30:04 The year of America's independence.
30:06 The year of America's independence. It was very important that they reach that height.
30:10 The building itself is only 102 stories. The originals were 110. It's actually the antenna.
30:18 Let me tell you, it took a lot for this building to be officially named the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere.
30:25 Why? Because the Sears Tower, anybody been to Chicago?
30:29 Seen the Sears Tower? They had that title for a really long time.
30:34 They said, "Wait a minute. Wait a minute. It's just the antenna. That's no big deal.
30:39 We had to put a lot of money to build floors. Why did you get the title?"
30:43 So they took this old building to court.
30:45 They lost because there's too much emotion with that date, right?
30:50 And it wasn't on technicality. It was on an emotional pull that the building won.
30:58 So if you feel fancy, there is a restaurant up there. There's an observatory.
31:03 You have to make reservations, of course.
31:05 The view is fantastic. There's two floors that you can see the entire view of most of the downtown area.
31:13 And as you can see, it's gorgeous. It's a very green building.
31:17 It has technology that allows you to circulate the air.
31:21 So you can get the best electricity.
31:24 The windows themselves have some stuff in it that allows it to allow more sun in the winter.
31:31 But heat and less sun in the summer.
31:35 We're working on it every day.
31:38 It's not only that. It turned out that the guys make beautiful things and a ton of crappy things.
31:44 They collapse. They fall.
31:47 So we're keeping our fingers crossed that this one is not.
31:50 A lot of these things like the building is staying.
31:54 [Unintelligible]
32:02 So one of the--
32:03 [Unintelligible]
32:10 [Unintelligible]
32:17 [Unintelligible]
32:46 [Unintelligible]
32:56 [Music]
33:08 [Music]
33:28 [Music]
33:38 [Music]
33:48 [Music]
34:08 [Music]
34:30 [Music]
34:51 The police officer told everybody to form a human chain.
34:54 And we held on to each other and he flashed a light.
34:57 He directed us to building five and we went out building five.
35:00 Did you see people bleeding? What did you see?
35:02 Everybody could see-- Do you want blood? Here's blood.
35:05 Everybody's bleeding. People are laying all over the floor. It's horrible.
35:08 It was as though day turned to night. I'm sure you've heard the description already.
35:12 It was unbelievable, like a war zone.
35:14 I felt horrified because it's like you don't know what's coming.
35:16 They kept saying another plane coming and all you hear was this rumbling.
35:21 People were crying. People were jumping out the window.
35:24 People were waving, trying to say, "Help me."
35:27 You see their arms and then you saw the man jump down and he just--
35:31 Everybody was jumping. It was crazy.
35:34 [Music]
36:02 [Music]
36:12 Today, our fellow citizens, our way of life, our very freedom came under attack
36:18 in a series of deliberate and deadly terrorist acts.
36:23 These acts of mass murder were intended to frighten our nation into chaos and retreat.
36:29 But they have failed. Our country is strong.
36:33 [Music]
36:52 My birthday was September 9th, so I had just turned 9.
36:56 My dad was one of the 23 police officers, same as Ramon Suarez.
37:01 I miss him a lot. I really do.
37:07 Seeing his name in the memorial, it means everything.
37:12 On September 11th, 2001, the World Trade Center was attacked.
37:17 It became known as Ground Zero.
37:20 After years of hard work and rebuilding,
37:23 the entire site has been transformed into one of beauty and of remembrance.
37:28 At its heart is the National 9/11 Memorial.
37:32 Millions of visitors from all around the world come to this site to pay their respects each year.
37:38 What they see are two enormous reflecting pools
37:42 that sit in the very footprints of where the Twin Towers stood.
37:46 The pools are surrounded by bronze panels inscribed with the names of the nearly 3,000 people who died
37:52 in the attacks of 2001 and the World Trade Center bombing in 1993.
37:58 When you come to the memorial, you come up to the edge of each one of these voids,
38:01 and you see this enormous empty space in front of you.
38:04 It's a space that can't be filled and will not be filled.
38:07 It is there where you encounter the names of the dead.
38:10 First, the impression you have as a visitor is how many names there are.
38:16 It's a sea of names over an ocean of tears.
38:19 The memorial plaza, made up of hundreds of swamp white oak trees, surrounds the memorial pools.
38:26 One tree is different.
38:28 It is a calorie pear tree, now known as the survivor tree.
38:33 This tree was at the site on September 11, 2001.
38:37 It was discovered in a pile of rubble by some recovery workers.
38:41 It was nursed back to health and returned here.
38:44 And in some sense, it really embodies the whole experience of 9/11 in a living being.
38:49 It is damaged, but it also shows a tremendous amount of new growth.
38:54 And now there are no words to describe how bad it was.
38:58 The massive debris field, the smell of death completely took over your whole being.
39:03 To work out of that to where we are now, it was a slow, hard process.
39:08 As bad as 9/11 was, it demonstrated that when the times require, we do have the capacity
39:15 to come together and take care of each other with limitless compassion.
39:19 I remember that day.
39:21 I remember where I was and what I was doing.
39:24 My generation, we remember growing up with it.
39:28 It's like you were part of history.
39:31 It makes me very proud to know that my dad went out the way for strangers.
39:36 That's what I call a hero.
39:38 Nobody ever wants to forget those people that passed away that day.
39:42 Those people were brothers, wives, mothers, sisters, friends.
39:47 And those people should be remembered in every way possible.
39:50 Every single person that comes here is making a contribution.
39:54 You truly are our future.
39:57 Thank you.
39:59 [Music]
40:03 [Music]
40:08 [Music]
40:13 [Music]
40:18 [Music]
40:23 [Music]
40:28 [Music]
40:33 [Music]
40:38 [Music]
40:43 [Music]
40:48 [Music]
40:53 [Music]
40:58 [Music]
41:03 [Music]
41:08 [Music]
41:13 [Music]
41:18 [Music]
41:23 [Music]
41:28 [Music]
41:33 [Music]
41:38 [Music]
41:43 [Music]
41:48 [Music]
41:53 [Music]
41:58 [Music]
42:03 [Music]
42:08 (gentle music)