First broadcast 29th December 2016.
Charlie Brooker
Al Campbell Barry Shitpeas
Diane Morgan Philomena Cunk
Brian Cox
Simon McCoy
Charlie Brooker
Al Campbell Barry Shitpeas
Diane Morgan Philomena Cunk
Brian Cox
Simon McCoy
Category
📺
TVTranscript
00:00:00It's going to be depressing for everyone and...
00:00:06You're not paid at all?
00:00:12All right, we've got to do it.
00:00:30Hello, I'm Charlie Brooker and you're watching 2016 Wipe, a programme about things that happened during 2016. Things like this.
00:00:43The past 12 months have overflowed with harrowing conflict, terror attacks, celebrity deaths and general upheaval.
00:00:502016 has been a year so huge and scary I've had to invent a new word to describe it.
00:00:55Shipmungus.
00:00:57Britain sensationally voted to leave the EU. The votes split the nation into real people versus elitists.
00:01:03And if you don't know which is which, well, former city trader Nigel Farage is a real person, whereas refugee-loving Gary Lineker is an elitist.
00:01:10Even though, as this tragic footage reveals, he can't afford clothes.
00:01:14Former Labour shadow chancellor Ed Balls wowed the nation with his incredible appearances on Strictly Come Dancing.
00:01:20Not to be outdone, Jeremy Corbyn astonished millions by dancing on Labour's grave.
00:01:25Following an election campaign in which he insulted and alienated Mexicans, Muslims, military families, minority groups and women,
00:01:32Donald Trump rode to victory by appealing to just one white male.
00:01:37There's a lot to get through, but we'll get through it together. Let's start with January.
00:01:43As 2016 dawned, there was one cause for optimism, which was that at least it wasn't 2015 anymore.
00:01:482015 had left us on our knees, experiencing one dispiriting blow after another, just like your mum.
00:01:54But 2016 was bound to be better, if only by default. And sure enough, it began fairly innocently.
00:02:00Take a look at this. You may just be able to make out a puddle.
00:02:06Oh, goody, I like this sort of news. It's just like news without the news in it.
00:02:10Believe it or not, for a fairly long time yesterday, this very scene became an online sensation.
00:02:15Yes, gripping live footage of pedestrians trying to navigate a big puddle in Newcastle went viral on social media
00:02:22and soon everyone was planning their own puddle-based programming.
00:02:25We could look forward to the Great British Lake Off, Splash in the Attic, Welly Addicts, Downpour Abbey, Pool Dark,
00:02:30Dripper Street, The Apprentice and, of course, Puddle Fix It.
00:02:34Oh, let me have a laugh. Have you seen the state of this year?
00:02:38Anyhow, no sooner had it been catapulted to worldwide fame than in harrowing scenes,
00:02:43Newcastle Council wiped the puddle off the face of the road. Murderers!
00:02:47And not long after the puddle left us, the world wept an entire ocean, thanks to some other news.
00:02:53Unsuspecting Heart FM listeners were among the first to find out what had happened.
00:02:57Right now, 8.30, here's the latest.
00:03:00From Global's newsroom, I'm Fiona Winchester. David Cameron has died...
00:03:04David Bowie has died after a secret...
00:03:07Good evening. It is not often we begin a news programme like this with the death of a rock star,
00:03:12but David Bowie was no ordinary star and his was no ordinary death.
00:03:16Didn't fall in a puddle, did he?
00:03:18Yes, the news sombrely announced that iconic musician David Bowie had died,
00:03:22leading to a heartfelt outpouring of grief and briefly turning the coverage
00:03:26into every BBC Four music documentary you've ever seen.
00:03:30When Ziggy Stardust came out, I was 12 years old.
00:03:33It said on the back, play at maximum volume,
00:03:36so I put my head between two speakers on the floor and did.
00:03:40Journalist and tinnitus software Paul Mason there.
00:03:43There was this David Bowie bloke who was a genius.
00:03:46He was a pop star and also a spaceman,
00:03:49and he became the first person to discover there were spiders on Mars.
00:03:53What was inspiring was how he overcame this massive stutter.
00:03:57I mean, sometimes you could still hear it when he sang.
00:04:00Ch-ch-ch-ch-changes
00:04:02Turn and face the strange
00:04:04Ch-ch-ch-changes
00:04:06He sang about things no-one had bothered writing songs about before,
00:04:10like space travel and fame and Les Dennis.
00:04:14And about salmon fishing.
00:04:18And about someone making love with his eagle.
00:04:21Making love with his eagle
00:04:24Which is sort of sick, come to think of it.
00:04:27He had all these different personalities,
00:04:29like Harry Potter, Peter Cook,
00:04:32Rue Lelenska, David Bowie, David Bowie.
00:04:35I mean, it was like he was on shuffle mode.
00:04:37You never knew who was going to be next.
00:04:39Ziggy played for time
00:04:41I liked Ziggy Stardust and the funky businessman thing he did in the 80s,
00:04:45but my favourite of all David Bowie's personas has to be Prince.
00:04:49Be beautiful
00:04:53Turn me on
00:04:55But obviously that died with him.
00:04:57Bowie was always a trailblazer,
00:04:59but in 2016 he sadly kick-started a hot new trend for celebrities dying.
00:05:03Alan Rickman, Terry Wogan, Paul Daniels, Gary Shandling,
00:05:07Ronnie Corbett, Victoria Wood, Prince,
00:05:09Muhammad Ali, Carolina Hearn,
00:05:11Gene Wilder, Leonard Cohen, Andrew Sachs,
00:05:13A. A. Gill and Ian McCaskill, they all left us.
00:05:16So if there really is a star man waiting in the sky,
00:05:18it's probably just because there's a queue up there.
00:05:20In February, Prime Minister-oid David Campbell-Konk
00:05:23stood outside number 10 at his silly little podium,
00:05:25coming out with some boring rubbish about some referendum that wasn't going to matter.
00:05:30I believe that Britain will be safer, stronger and better off in a reformed European Union.
00:05:38Don't know why they're even televising this.
00:05:40Tilt the camera down, there might be a puddle near his feet. That's real news.
00:05:43Don't be in any doubt, this is one of the biggest political moments for years.
00:05:48Whatever. Remain or win, obviously.
00:05:54In the early stages of the campaign, the Remain side seemed quietly confident,
00:05:57as if they didn't really need to put their backs into it,
00:05:59because in all likelihood they were going to win.
00:06:02The hashtag for today is hashtag students in.
00:06:05By contrast, the Leave campaign had grassroots support from everyday folks,
00:06:09such as Michael Gove, seen here slumming it on a dress-down Friday.
00:06:12Gove's inclusion was particularly juicy as far as the news was concerned,
00:06:16because him and Cameron had been confidants,
00:06:18so they were watching him closely, like he was a rare creature they'd spotted in the wild.
00:06:22This is Michael Gove. Was that a difficult decision, Mr Gove?
00:06:25Oh, look at that. You caught him. 500 points.
00:06:28It's just like a game, this. Pokemon Gove.
00:06:30Days later, Leave bagged an even bigger working-class hero
00:06:33in the form of horny-handed everyman, Bullingdon Club grandee,
00:06:36Telegraph columnist and Megabucks TV star Alexander Boris de Pfeffel-Johnson,
00:06:41seen here failing to enter No. 10 in a visual metaphor for his entire year.
00:06:45Of course, this decision was seen by many, including ITV News.
00:06:48It's less about BoJ's desire to leave than his desire to lead.
00:06:52Boris, quite close colleagues of yours do say
00:06:56that they see it as your pitch to be Tory leader.
00:06:59Are you sure that's not the case?
00:07:01It's not, and I want to make one thing absolutely clear.
00:07:07Oh, look out, I think he's crashed. Someone hit him with a shoe.
00:07:10Whatever happens at the end of this, and I've said this to the Prime Minister,
00:07:15he's got to stay.
00:07:16For now, the PM was staying, on his arse, on Andrew Marr's sofa,
00:07:19where he was having to field questions
00:07:21about his ultra-loyal Bullingdon pals' defection to the Leave camp.
00:07:24I would say to Boris what I say to everybody else.
00:07:27I was never near that pig.
00:07:28We will be safer, we'll be stronger.
00:07:30Safer, stronger, better off inside the EU.
00:07:32Well, of course you do, because that's what everyone thinks.
00:07:35Mark my words, come June, this will all be over in five minutes.
00:07:40Queen Lizzo McToo turned 90 this year,
00:07:42which is impressive by anyone's standards.
00:07:44And as the news made crystal clear, many were keen to mark the occasion.
00:07:47The Keep Britain Tidy campaign encouraged her madges subjects
00:07:50to get out and pick up litter, or clean for the Queen.
00:07:53The idea is that we all spruce up our communities this weekend
00:07:57ahead of the Queen turning 90.
00:07:59Yeah, come on, proles, let's get cleaning.
00:08:02Despite high-profile support from Leave campaign mega-patriots
00:08:05Boris Johnson and Michael Gove,
00:08:07who posed for these delightfully persuasive promo shots,
00:08:10the campaign proved a little divisive.
00:08:12Some people thought it was a bit patronising to ask citizens
00:08:15to put on a little bib and go around picking crap up off the floor
00:08:18in demeaning scenes like this,
00:08:20although campaign fan and celebrity estate agent Kirsty Thingamaposh
00:08:23disagreed in the face of tough questioning on Good Morning Plebs.
00:08:26I mean Britain.
00:08:28There have been people saying, why should we clean for the Queen?
00:08:31We're not peasants scrubbing the streets.
00:08:33Speak for yourself, I am. I know my place.
00:08:35There are always people who don't want to join in.
00:08:37Whatever you're doing, there are people who are going to whinge about it.
00:08:40This is a valuable cleaning time.
00:08:42Come on, proles, for Queen and country.
00:08:44There's a lot to be said for feeling in control.
00:08:46We all want to feel in control.
00:08:48I'm in control here. I'm taking back control.
00:08:51When you go out and you do a litter pick,
00:08:53you're gathering together with a group of people
00:08:56who all feel as you do, you've got a common enemy...
00:08:58We're foreigners. ..that is litter.
00:09:00Oh, yes, of course.
00:09:02But if clean for the Queen was an unofficial tribute,
00:09:05the official birthday tribute was even more spectacular.
00:09:08And to welcome this knight from his musical finder Neverland,
00:09:11please welcome Gary Barlow.
00:09:13Oh, good. I love Gary Barlow.
00:09:15Although I can't help thinking he's trying to drop the Queen
00:09:18a subtle hint about knighthoods here.
00:09:20SOMETHING ABOUT THIS KNIGHT
00:09:23SOMETHING ABOUT THIS KNIGHT
00:09:26Here's Something About This Knight.
00:09:28He sounds like Sir Elton John.
00:09:30Do Candle In The Wind. Actually, probably best if you don't.
00:09:33I can feel it
00:09:35I'm swimming in the air
00:09:37Something just beyond compare
00:09:40Oh, fucking bloody, bloody air!
00:09:44The show chiefly consisted of horse displays.
00:09:47In fact, it had more horse in it than Catherine the Great,
00:09:49and the Queen loved every minute.
00:09:51And even if you hated horses, you could entertain yourself
00:09:53by noting how the stadium slowly filled with horse shit
00:09:56as the evening wore on. By the end, it was a right state.
00:09:59And you know what to do when there's a mess.
00:10:01Come on, Kirsty Oldsop. Come on, Michael Gove.
00:10:03Go on, clean for the Queen. Get your fucking bibs on.
00:10:05Go on, do it. Do it now, or it's treason.
00:10:08This year, to make people laugh and save money,
00:10:10the BBC brought back loads of old sitcoms like Steptoe and Son
00:10:14and Are You Being Served? and a new version of Porridge.
00:10:17And then they did Forty Towers, but they had to change the name,
00:10:21so they called it The Night Manager instead.
00:10:23I hope no-one would notice.
00:10:25It looked all glossy and modern, but it was basically the same as Forty Towers.
00:10:29Like, it was still about this tall, sort of nervous bloke
00:10:31who's in charge of a hotel.
00:10:33Anyway, the big problem was, it wasn't very funny.
00:10:36Like, in old Forty Towers, it was always hilarious
00:10:38when the guests got crossed with Basil.
00:10:40I think this is probably the worst hotel we've ever stayed in.
00:10:43But in The Night Manager, it was just sort of horrible and tense.
00:10:46Do you know where my family are? Open the room. Open the room.
00:10:49Which one? In the proper Forty Towers,
00:10:51when Basil went into a room with a sexy lady,
00:10:54he'd get into a side-splitting misunderstanding.
00:10:56LAUGHTER
00:11:01But the Basil in The Night Manager
00:11:03would just end up earnestly having sex with her.
00:11:07When Forty Towers' Basil finds a dead guest,
00:11:09it's just the start of a rib-tickling sequence of events
00:11:12where he has to keep hiding the body till you're absolutely falling about.
00:11:15Oh, sorry, sorry, can't be like that. Sorry.
00:11:19But when rebooted modern Night Manager Basil finds a dead guest in a room,
00:11:23he just gets all sad and he has this intense emotional meltdown,
00:11:27which was nothing like as funny as the sort of meltdowns proper Basil used to have.
00:11:31LAUGHTER
00:11:34We've forgotten what comedy is in this country.
00:11:37Meanwhile, in America, something was going on
00:11:39which I can't ignore any longer in this programme.
00:11:42Try as I might for my own mental wellbeing.
00:11:44Cue nightmarish dystopian news footage.
00:11:47Enemies of freedom
00:11:51Face the music
00:11:52Come on, boys, take them down
00:11:55President Donald Trump
00:11:57Donald Trump knows how to make America great
00:12:01Deal from strength or get crushed every time
00:12:06Yes, news coverage was increasingly dominated
00:12:08by retiring wallflower Donald J Trump.
00:12:11Who's going to pay for the wall?
00:12:13Who?
00:12:16Trump seemed completely unelectable as the news made clear
00:12:19he'd been rude about Mexicans, rude about Muslims
00:12:21and even rude about a disabled reporter.
00:12:23You've got to see this guy.
00:12:24I don't know what I said. I don't remember.
00:12:27The Republicans had plenty of other contenders
00:12:29who on the news looked like the kind of president you get in movies.
00:12:32Yet here they were, being thrashed by a man
00:12:34who resembles a clingfilm parcel of Frankfurt and meat
00:12:36that's been kicked through a yellow cobweb.
00:12:38How tough is it to take property from an elderly woman?
00:12:41Let me talk. Quiet.
00:12:42Some fought back in equally childish fashion.
00:12:44Marco Rubio was all over the networks mocking Trump's hand size.
00:12:48And you know what they say about men with small hands?
00:12:52Trump wasn't taking that shit.
00:12:54And in unprecedented scenes, he was seen bragging
00:12:56about the size of his knob on live television.
00:12:59He referred to my hands. If they're small,
00:13:01something else must be small.
00:13:03I guarantee you there's no problem. I guarantee it.
00:13:06I suppose it's refreshing, really, for a potential president
00:13:08to be this candid. I mean, we don't know how big
00:13:10other presidents' penises have been
00:13:12because Mount Rushmore stops at the neck.
00:13:14Sad vampire Ted Cruz was now Trump's final target.
00:13:17Mad donkey Trump immediately set about trolling the shit out of him.
00:13:20First, by tweeting an unflattering photo of Cruz's wife.
00:13:23I don't get angry often.
00:13:26But you mess with my wife, you mess with my kids,
00:13:28that'll do it every time.
00:13:30Donald, you're a snivelling coward, and leave Heidi the hell alone.
00:13:33Feisty scenes, and there was equally tetchy coverage
00:13:35when Trump slagged off Cruz's dad.
00:13:37Donald Trump alleges that my dad was involved in assassinating JFK.
00:13:42Lee Harvey Oswald's son there, whining like a snowflake cuck.
00:13:46At first, the media seemed to find all of this wryly amusing,
00:13:49smirking throughout Trump's ascent like they were watching
00:13:51an adorable toddler playing with a power tool,
00:13:54without apparently considering that he might just learn how to switch it on.
00:13:57Trump was increasingly unstoppable, and even he seemed surprised,
00:14:00speaking here at a televised event where he embraced the host
00:14:03and then mimed he was a wanker.
00:14:05I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody,
00:14:08and I wouldn't lose any voters, OK?
00:14:10Only if it's someone Putin wants you to shoot.
00:14:12Not all the famous people who died this year were real, you know.
00:14:15Yes, in the face of a terminal illness, Albert Square Stalwart Peggy Mitchell
00:14:19decided she just couldn't carry on.
00:14:21Get it? Carry on! It's a reference joke, love.
00:14:24Rather than suffer the gruelling, ongoing indignity of being in EastEnders,
00:14:28she chose to write herself out of existence for good in a suicide plot,
00:14:31thereby becoming pretty much the only Londoner who voted to leave.
00:14:35With her grip on sanity slipping, in her final moments,
00:14:38Peggy had a vision of old sparring partner Pat Butcher.
00:14:41I might have known it was you.
00:14:44I think Pat could have been one of David Bowie's personas, come to think of it.
00:14:47Ziggy Fagash.
00:14:49In a moving finale, Peggy gobbled down some death pills
00:14:51and left both the square and her beloved boob-headed sons, Grant and Phil.
00:14:54They're not as young as they used to be.
00:14:56In fact, as you could tell from the moving scenes in which he found Peggy's body,
00:14:59Phil's so out of shape he gets exhausted operating a light switch.
00:15:04HE BREATHES HEAVILY
00:15:10Having come across the prone form of his mother
00:15:12for hopefully the first time in his life,
00:15:14Phil tried to console himself by reading a letter Peggy had left him
00:15:17while sitting on the official Albert Square grief bench,
00:15:20only to finally give up when he remembered he can't read.
00:15:26Adding insult to injury for Phil,
00:15:28Peggy's grave was located a long walk away up a hill accessible only on foot.
00:15:33But the BBC had at least given his mum the most BBC send-off in history,
00:15:37cos she was buried beneath a Bake Off showstopper.
00:15:40In June, that pesky referendum was drawing nearer.
00:15:43Lucky old Team Remain had three secret weapons.
00:15:46Weapon number one, relatable everyman George Osborne.
00:15:49All aboard for Britain remaining in the European Union.
00:15:54Weapon number two, beloved national figurehead David Cameron,
00:15:58seen here winning over an audience of millennials in a sparky online debate.
00:16:02So I'm voting Remain, but nothing to do with you guys.
00:16:05I hate the Tories, I'm just going to say you've fucked everything up in this country.
00:16:09You've screwed students, you've screwed the disabled, the vulnerable.
00:16:12Don't forget the pig.
00:16:14Also popular with young folk, weapon number three, Jeremy Corbyn.
00:16:17This fiery proponent of Remain made a series of sparky media appearances,
00:16:21such as the time he appeared on accessible comedy vehicle The Last Leg
00:16:25to ooze pro-EU enthusiasm like a stone oozes blood.
00:16:29On a scale of one to ten, where one couldn't really care less about the EU,
00:16:33and ten is on jumping on the couch like Tom Cruise on Oprah.
00:16:36How passionate are you about staying in the EU?
00:16:39Oh, I put myself in the upper half of the five to ten,
00:16:43so we're looking at seven, seven and a half.
00:16:45Ooh, not quite. Maybe seven.
00:16:47Facing this outrageously pumped-up opposition was the Leave campaign,
00:16:50which was actually more like two campaigns.
00:16:52Campaign one was the A-list Vote Leave gang,
00:16:55spearheaded by clean-for-the-queeners Michael Gove and Boris Johnson.
00:16:58Scrupulously polite Michael Gove was out and about,
00:17:01brightening up the news considerably,
00:17:03confidently putting his case for British sovereignty
00:17:05and denying he had any political ambitions.
00:17:08When Mr Cameron steps down in the future,
00:17:10are you considering a leadership bid?
00:17:12Steve, I can tell you I'm absolutely not.
00:17:15Couldn't be clearer. I'm sure I'll never have to refer to this clip ever again.
00:17:18Meanwhile, Bozza was driving around the country in a bus
00:17:21with a startling figure printed up the side.
00:17:23350 million a week for the NHS. That's a lot of plasters.
00:17:27And it's printed on the side of a bus,
00:17:29so British law dictates that this must and will happen,
00:17:32although ITV's Tom Bradby seemed notably unimpressed.
00:17:35Let's deal with your arguments. One of them is on the side of this bus.
00:17:38We send 350 million to Europe. We don't.
00:17:41And you know we don't. No, we don't. You know we don't.
00:17:44Admit that that figure is grotesquely misleading at best.
00:17:47No, I won't. I won't. I won't.
00:17:49Meanwhile, Leave campaign number two was Leave.eu,
00:17:52fronted by Nigel Farage.
00:17:54Farage had actually quit UKIP last year,
00:17:56only to reappear once again,
00:17:58the human equivalent of a pop-up advert you just can't click away.
00:18:01He was all over the news, causing controversy
00:18:03by implying a vote to remain could risk
00:18:05Cologne-style mass sex attacks occurring in Britain.
00:18:08Mrs Merkel has made a very big error
00:18:11in allowing a very large number of young males
00:18:14to come into Germany unaccompanied.
00:18:17And let's be honest, some of the cultures they come from
00:18:20treat women completely differently to our Western values.
00:18:23Yeah, Nigel's got no time for anyone who disrespects women.
00:18:26Well, unless they're important.
00:18:28Then he stands in a gold room pissing his pants at their locker room talk,
00:18:31as you can see from this gaudy souvenir snap.
00:18:33Meanwhile, the polls were shifting, sometimes putting Leave in the lead.
00:18:36Team Remain were getting worried, so they started pulling out the stops.
00:18:39Cameron appeared on Channel 4 News
00:18:41to repeat his stronger-in mantra yet again,
00:18:43but this time in pinkface.
00:18:45I think we are better off, safer and stronger,
00:18:47as part of a European Union.
00:18:49Oh, my God, he's off the Cameron pink scale.
00:18:51Look, this pumps me up. Right now, he's gone past Gammon.
00:18:54He's going to blow.
00:18:56Soon, Team Remain was Project Fear.
00:18:58They said if we voted Leave, there'd be a financial catastrophe,
00:19:01an emergency budget, maybe even a war.
00:19:03Society would spiral out of control.
00:19:05Brangelina would split up.
00:19:07The iPhone 7 wouldn't have a headphone jack.
00:19:09The £5 note would be full of animal fat.
00:19:11The Bake Off would f*** off and Ed Balls would dance live on television.
00:19:14It was all beyond belief.
00:19:16Well, Boris certainly seemed to think so,
00:19:18as the news made abundantly clear.
00:19:20All those who prophesy gloom and doom for British business,
00:19:24look at, look at, I say their pants are on fire.
00:19:27You know you're standing there calling them liars in front of that bus, yeah?
00:19:30Britain had never gone to war at sea against itself before,
00:19:33but thanks to the divisive magic of the referendum, that's what happened.
00:19:36Yes, Nigel Farage bobbed up the Thames,
00:19:38accompanied by a flotilla of pro-Leave boats,
00:19:40but was rudely interrupted when a rival Remain boat,
00:19:43captained by swearing live aide Gibbon Bob Geldof,
00:19:46pulled up alongside to calmly debate the issues in a dignified manner.
00:19:50Nigel, you're a fraud.
00:19:53Britain makes more money than any other country in Europe from fishing.
00:19:58Britain has the second largest quota for fish in Europe after Denmark.
00:20:04Yeah, stick with it, the chorus gets catchy.
00:20:06It was hard to escape a growing sense that this was all spiralling out of control.
00:20:10The next morning, Farage unveiled a contentious poster
00:20:13depicting a line of Syrian refugees fleeing a war zone.
00:20:16Typical foreigners, only been here five minutes
00:20:18and they've already landed a cushy job in advertising.
00:20:21As Farage posed for snaps, it looked like he was stood at the front of the queue,
00:20:24a bit like his Huguenot ancestors were when they migrated here.
00:20:27The poster was headlined Breaking Point, and it felt like we were reaching one.
00:20:31And then...
00:20:34Tonight at ten, tributes to the Labour MP Jo Cox,
00:20:37who's died after being stabbed and shot on a street in West Yorkshire.
00:20:41She was 41, married with two young children
00:20:44and was elected to Parliament just over a year ago.
00:20:47What words did you hear?
00:20:49The words I heard him say was, Britain first, I'll put Britain first.
00:20:52When asked his name, the man in the dock said,
00:20:54my name is death to traitors, freedom for Britain.
00:20:58This was the first politically motivated killing of a sitting MP in decades
00:21:02and it stunned and appalled both sides of the EU debate and the nation as a whole.
00:21:07Come the day of the vote itself, opinion appeared to have swung back Remain's way.
00:21:11Obviously, because Remain was going to win.
00:21:14As the polls closed, Remain seemed buoyant,
00:21:17while prominent Leave types already appeared to be conceding defeat.
00:21:20No, I'm not conceding.
00:21:22Yeah, you are, or you might as well. Loser.
00:21:24But my sense of this is that the government's registration scheme,
00:21:28getting two million voters on, the 48-hour extension,
00:21:31may be what tips the balance. I hope I'm wrong.
00:21:34Well, there's no point in me staying up for this.
00:21:36The result's not in doubt, so I'm off to bed.
00:21:38Over there, in the corner of the studio. Night, night.
00:21:50Oh, I slept in my clothes.
00:21:53I wonder how much Remain won by.
00:21:55This will be a victory for real people.
00:21:59A victory for ordinary people.
00:22:02A victory for decent people.
00:22:04Hi, yeah, sorry, I think there's something wrong with my television.
00:22:08It's showing images and sounds from a universe I don't recognise.
00:22:12We would have done it without having to fight,
00:22:16without a single bullet being fired.
00:22:20Let June the 23rd go down in our history as our Independence Day.
00:22:27By contrast, Dobbo Cambo did the walk of shame to his podium
00:22:30and handed in his notice.
00:22:32I was absolutely clear about my belief that Britain is stronger,
00:22:36safer and better off inside the European Union.
00:22:39Yeah, you can stop saying that now, mate.
00:22:41As Cameron retreated inside to lick his wounds,
00:22:44across-town Boris Johnson stepped out into Brexit Britain
00:22:47to taste his new-found popularity.
00:22:50Shame on you, Boris! You're just like Boris Johnson!
00:22:55Even though they'd won a surprise victory,
00:22:57Boris and Gove were acutely aware millions of people hadn't voted Leave,
00:23:01so they were at pains not to look too triumphalist
00:23:03and pulled sort of sick and haunted expressions instead,
00:23:06which was thoughtful of them, and Boris struck a conciliatory tone.
00:23:10This does not mean that the United Kingdom will be in any way less united,
00:23:16nor indeed does it mean that it will be any less European
00:23:22or any less un-f***ed.
00:23:24It quickly turned out, courtesy of cheery breakfast shows,
00:23:27that some of the promises made during the campaign
00:23:29weren't worth the bust they were written on.
00:23:31The £350 million a week we send to the EU,
00:23:34which we will no longer send to the EU,
00:23:36can you guarantee that's going to go to the NHS?
00:23:39No, I can't, and I would never have made that claim.
00:23:42Christ! Well, I guess it wasn't his bust.
00:23:45Anyway, what's going to happen with immigration?
00:23:47Come on, CNN, be responsible. Ask one of the Leavers.
00:23:50Are you then saying that this immigration is going to be much lighter...
00:23:54So our issue... ..than you all promised?
00:23:56I have never, ever made any commitment on numbers, ever.
00:24:00Well, at least there's some sort of plan, yeah?
00:24:03Where's that Faisal Islam on Sky News?
00:24:05I think he's talked to one of the Leavers about it, yeah?
00:24:07I said to him, so where's the plan? Can we see the Brexit plan now?
00:24:10There is no plan.
00:24:11The Leave campaign don't have a post-Brexit plan.
00:24:14Number 10 should have had a plan.
00:24:18LAUGHTER
00:24:20Everything felt a bit upside down.
00:24:22Even the news, which normally tells you things they know,
00:24:25was reduced to simply listing things they didn't know.
00:24:28We don't know when the formal process of withdrawing will begin.
00:24:31We don't know if the French and the Germans
00:24:33will lock us out of the single market.
00:24:35We don't know who will be prime minister.
00:24:37We don't even necessarily know who the leader of the opposition will be.
00:24:40We don't know if there will be another general election this year,
00:24:43and we don't know if the UK will actually hold together as a country.
00:24:47Join us after the break for everything we don't know about the weather.
00:24:50In the aftermath of the results,
00:24:52some people simply couldn't comprehend what was happening,
00:24:55particularly people in the London media bubble.
00:24:57Well, obviously I didn't, but why did some people vote Leave?
00:25:00What can I learn from them?
00:25:02Well, to find out, I've got a Leave voter here in the studio with me.
00:25:05Hello, you voted Leave. What's wrong with you?
00:25:07I wouldn't say there's anything wrong with...
00:25:09Hang on, hang on. I wanted a northern one.
00:25:11What, a proper one? Is this the best we could do?
00:25:13This.
00:25:14All right, fine. OK. Go on.
00:25:16For years, the concerns of people like you...
00:25:18Do you know what concerns me? Your racism.
00:25:20I'm not racist.
00:25:21Ooh, ooh, ooh, I'm not racist, but ooh, this is you.
00:25:24Ooh! Ooh!
00:25:25You make me sick.
00:25:26Unlike me, you are racist and you're simple and you're stupid
00:25:29and you've ruined this country.
00:25:31Do you know how much an espresso coffee pods are going to cost me now?
00:25:34A f***ing fortune.
00:25:35Why don't you think before you act?
00:25:38Not that the metropolitan elite was entirely imagining the role of xenophobia.
00:25:42Following the vote, an apparent spike in hate crimes was recorded.
00:25:45And there were plenty of examples of people who'd apparently voted Leave
00:25:49in the belief Leave was actually an instruction
00:25:51aimed at anyone they considered not one of us, as the news made clear.
00:25:55It's all about immigration, right?
00:25:58It's not about trade or Europe or anything like that.
00:26:01It's all about immigration.
00:26:03It's to stop the Muslims from coming into this country. Simple as that.
00:26:06See, now that's what I'm after. Why didn't we book him?
00:26:09Ever since Jeremy Clarkson punched his way out of his BBC contract
00:26:13and swanned off to Amazon along with his sidekicks,
00:26:15viewers were wondering how the rebooted Top Gear might fare.
00:26:19But before the new series had even made it to our screens,
00:26:21it was already grinding people's gears.
00:26:23The new presenter of the BBC's Top Gear, Chris Evans,
00:26:26has apologised unreservedly after scenes for his new series
00:26:29were filmed near the Cenotaph yesterday.
00:26:31Yes, a stunt in which a muscle car did doughnuts
00:26:3440 metres from the Cenotaph prompted fuming headlines.
00:26:37Say what you like about Jeremy Clarkson.
00:26:39He wouldn't pull doughnuts in front of a revered war memorial.
00:26:43Unless it was somewhere like Argentina.
00:26:45Then he'd drop a caravan full of Mexicans onto it.
00:26:47And it'd be hilarious.
00:26:49Instead, this blurry amateur footage of the one where Joey disrespects
00:26:52the fallen was so offensive it was displayed repeatedly
00:26:55on websites and news channels.
00:26:57Unless he's drawing a poppy in skid marks, that is disgraceful.
00:27:00Soon, red top whipping boy Chris Evans stumbled into the cameras
00:27:03to apologise and promise we'd never see the obscene scenes we'd just seen.
00:27:07That footage will definitely not go on there, no question about it.
00:27:10And top military brass were also grateful.
00:27:12Well, I'm very glad that the BBC have both apologised for what happened
00:27:18and effectively indicated they won't be screening it.
00:27:20Quite right, they won't. This will never see the light of day.
00:27:24Weeks later, the show itself made its BBC Two debut.
00:27:28And with the nation's papers wishing the new presenter well,
00:27:30the scene was set for Evans and co to put criticism to bed
00:27:33by knocking the first show right out of the park.
00:27:36Please welcome Matt LeBlanc!
00:27:40As well as Matt, the blanket had everything the old top gear had
00:27:43except Clarkson, May and Hammond and several million viewers.
00:27:46So something had to give.
00:27:50We're bringing you some news just into us here at the BBC
00:27:53that Chris Evans has resigned from the television programme Top Gear.
00:27:58Yes, in a shocking impossible to predict development, Evans quit
00:28:01and experts immediately jumped in front of eager news cameras
00:28:04to explain exactly what had gone wrong.
00:28:06Top Gear with the new series made a huge mistake,
00:28:09a huge mistake on the first show that they aired.
00:28:12It wasn't very good.
00:28:13Oh, that's their mistake, if only they'd made it good!
00:28:17Ironically, the critics say after its poor start,
00:28:20the show had become pretty good by the end of the series,
00:28:23though most of the good bits did not involve Chris Evans.
00:28:26Hmm, just like life, really.
00:28:28This year, just in case you got bored during those four or five seconds each day
00:28:32when you're not already staring at your phone,
00:28:34a game came along to fill the gap.
00:28:36Yes, Pokemon Go, the augmented reality creature collecting sensation,
00:28:39was all the rage with both children and adult-sized children.
00:28:43Soon, avid players were scouring local parks, canals and areas of wasteland
00:28:47trying to pick up exotic creatures like your dad did in the 1980s,
00:28:50except unlike him, they were desperately trying to fill their balls.
00:28:54I'm implying your father had sex with strangers in parks.
00:28:57The game had been a big hit in the US and was about to appear in Britain,
00:29:01and as chirpy Good Morning Britain made clear,
00:29:03even Piers Morgan couldn't wait.
00:29:05I'm looking to see if I can get the app on my phone.
00:29:07You can't get it here yet.
00:29:09No, but I've got a little proxy to get it from America.
00:29:11Probably not allowed to do that, am I?
00:29:13Probably not, but I'm sure you'd never do anything illegal with a phone.
00:29:16As the show proved, the craze was getting out of hand and was also a safety hazard.
00:29:20Watch where you're going, there's a lamppost there.
00:29:22And as alarming footage showed, mass Pokemobs were erupting
00:29:25whenever a rare creature was discovered.
00:29:27Thank God that's the only time this year we'll see huge crowds of Americans
00:29:30blindly following a ridiculous monster.
00:29:32Nevertheless, Pokemon Go was a positive game, and as the news made clear,
00:29:35it was encouraging people to get out of the house and make new friends.
00:29:38Dead ones.
00:29:40I woke up this morning and I wanted to go get a water Pokemon,
00:29:44so I just got up and went for my little walk.
00:29:46She instead found a body lying face down in the river.
00:29:50To check he was dead, she had to Pokemon Go.
00:29:52Sticking with tech, this was the year VR went mainstream.
00:29:55For one thing, it formed the basis of a task on The Apprentice.
00:29:58It was shocking when candidates met a pixelated Lord Sugar
00:30:01inside a vector-based boardroom.
00:30:03Good morning. Welcome to the future.
00:30:06Oh, no, I hate boss levels.
00:30:09And there were illuminating scenes when snooker legend Ronnie O'Sullivan
00:30:12got to grips with some very immersive gaming tech.
00:30:15Oh, Jesus!
00:30:18Did you try and lean on a table?
00:30:20Yeah.
00:30:22That's scary.
00:30:24Little musical interlude now as I pretend my desk is a piano.
00:30:32Anyway, back to Brexit.
00:30:34Ever since David Cameron had given in his notice,
00:30:36the race was on to find us a new improved prime minister.
00:30:39The front-runner was Boris Johnson,
00:30:41who'd stabbed his friend Cameron in the back to get this far.
00:30:44Of course, his pal Michael Gove was completely out of the running.
00:30:47I mean, we all remember the convincing moment he'd said this on Sky News.
00:30:50Are you considering a leadership bid?
00:30:52Steve, I can tell you I'm absolutely not.
00:30:54Three, two, one...
00:30:57Just hours before the former mayor of London
00:31:00was expected to declare he was running,
00:31:02his Leave campaign ally Michael Gove stepped in
00:31:05and stunned Westminster by announcing
00:31:07he'd decided to run for leader himself.
00:31:09This was a move of Machiavellian genius on Gove's part,
00:31:12leaving him expertly positioned
00:31:14as the shiftiest, least trusted man in politics.
00:31:16Boris now said he wouldn't stand for leader after all.
00:31:19I have concluded that person cannot be me.
00:31:23With Bozzer gone, the remaining contenders were lined up on the news
00:31:27like unlockable character options in the worst iPad game of all time.
00:31:30In the first round, the fox was culled, typical Tory move.
00:31:33Then Crabbe stepped aside. Well, he is a crab.
00:31:36That left human spitting image puppet Gove,
00:31:38nurse ratchet Theresa May
00:31:40and a sort of dark side Mary Berry figure called Andrea Ledsom.
00:31:45Previously so unheard of, she probably had to look herself up on Wikipedia
00:31:48when she heard she was running.
00:31:50Come the first round, Gove turned out to be as popular as a turd in a soft play.
00:31:53I'm naturally disappointed that I haven't been able to make it through
00:31:57to the final round of this leadership contest.
00:31:59So now we were down to Theresa May and Andrea Ledsom,
00:32:04who'd amassed a loyal band of followers that had admired her every move
00:32:07since they'd first heard of her five minutes ago.
00:32:09What do we want? Claims of a leader!
00:32:11When do we want it? Now!
00:32:13But wait, she immediately wrecked it all with an explosive interview
00:32:16claiming being a parent made her a better candidate than May,
00:32:19and that did for her ambitions.
00:32:21I am therefore withdrawing from the leadership election.
00:32:24Well, she's out, so that was the last we were ever going to hear of Earl.
00:32:30Andrea... Andrea Leds thing.
00:32:33Now the leading levers have left, only pro-Remain Theresa May remained.
00:32:37Among the Remains, trying to operate the levers.
00:32:39But first, we all had to say a fond farewell to David Cameron.
00:32:43Now, as we've pointed out before on this show,
00:32:45as the exhaustive news coverage shows,
00:32:47Campbell knows has a habit of nonchalantly wandering off
00:32:49the moment he's had enough of a situation.
00:32:51And in his final seconds, he didn't disappoint.
00:32:53I expect to go to the palace and offer my resignation
00:32:56so we'll have a new prime minister in that building behind me
00:32:59by Wednesday evening.
00:33:01Thank you very much.
00:33:14Right.
00:33:16Now the decks were clear and our shiny new prime minister, T May I,
00:33:20went to Buckhouse to meet the real Queen
00:33:22and immediately won her over by walking in doing a madness nutty dance.
00:33:26Meanwhile, outside, Sky News sat reverently reporting the great royal hook-up
00:33:30when they were suddenly interrupted by what I can only describe
00:33:33as a typical modern tit.
00:33:35Because, as I say, when your prime minister...
00:33:37Royal TV, guys, Jack Jones TV, check me out, Facebook, woo-hoo!
00:33:40Tickle, wiggle, wiggle!
00:33:42There's someone who will never be prime minister.
00:33:44Brazil hosted the Olympics this August
00:33:46and straight away it was one of the most colourful games in history.
00:33:49And the coverage was vibrant from beginning to end,
00:33:51from the eye-popping pizazz of the thrilling opening ceremony
00:33:54to the shimmering bile green of the pool.
00:33:56It was a great Olympics for Team GB.
00:33:58There were incredible scenes as Muslim immigrant Mo Farah
00:34:01stormed to a record-breaking victory, cheered on by 48% of the country.
00:34:05In fact, following a series of stunning victories,
00:34:07Britain's athletes were feverishly hoarding gold,
00:34:10which wasn't simply good for national morale,
00:34:12but was also sound economic advice following the collapse of the pound.
00:34:15And that wasn't the only Great British contest.
00:34:17There was this sort of tent-based cookery programme thing
00:34:20called the Great British Bake Off.
00:34:22It was like one born every minute for cakes.
00:34:25Like, you saw loads of cakes being born and people getting emotional,
00:34:29only it was more equal opportunities
00:34:32because men got to give birth to cakes as well as women.
00:34:35Not out of the bums or anything, that would affect the taste,
00:34:38but out of ovens.
00:34:40Even though it was all about baking, they never did bake potatoes,
00:34:44which is a missed opportunity,
00:34:46because a baked potato is the single hardest thing there is to cook.
00:34:50It had all these great people on it,
00:34:52like Sue Mellon and Lady Penelope and Hollywood Paul,
00:34:56and they became like a family, except you genuinely loved them.
00:34:59But then it turned out it isn't run like a normal village fave.
00:35:03There's this big company who make it, and they wanted more money,
00:35:06but the BBC wouldn't cough up,
00:35:08and everyone was almost as cross as they got
00:35:10at the time that lady dropped that cat in a bin.
00:35:12The Great British Bake Off is to move to Channel 4.
00:35:16The programme belonged on the BBC One,
00:35:18because that's as British as it gets when you think about it.
00:35:22The other channels are foreign compared to BBC One.
00:35:25Like, ITV looks all snazzy and stupid, so it's sort of America.
00:35:31And Channel 4's all weird and arty and sort of pervy,
00:35:36like, I don't know, Holland or something.
00:35:38Sky gets beamed down from space, so that's not British,
00:35:41that's fucking Martian.
00:35:43So BBC One is the only proper British channel left, apart from Dave.
00:35:48I don't know why people were so worried about Channel 4 taking the bake off.
00:35:51I mean, they handle programming sensitively,
00:35:54take their recent spin on Blind Date, Naked Attraction,
00:35:57a relentless foray into titillation and bumillation
00:36:00in which singletons weed out potential partners
00:36:02based on their body parts alone.
00:36:04We need to see the bottom half of the bodies, please.
00:36:09Oh!
00:36:11Basically, it was just like Deal or No Deal,
00:36:13but with six anonymous penises instead of one called Noel.
00:36:16And it was the height of romance as contestants wound up inspecting genitals
00:36:19like farmers at a livestock auction.
00:36:21I'm a bit concerned because I don't think I'll be able to sit on him
00:36:25because he looks a bit bigger than me.
00:36:27And that wasn't the only contest where you had to weigh up
00:36:29which prick you thought you could best withstand.
00:36:32Labour leader and plant ducker Jeremy Corbyn
00:36:34was under attack from his own party.
00:36:36Some felt he didn't even want the ultimate top job
00:36:38as a testy exchange showcased by Channel 4 News made clear.
00:36:41Do you really ever want to be prime minister?
00:36:44Of course. I want to lead this party.
00:36:46I want to lead this party in order to put forward an alternative
00:36:50and lead this party to win the election.
00:36:52I haven't heard the phrase, I want to be prime minister.
00:36:55Well, you've just heard it now. Of course I want to be.
00:36:57No, no, say it.
00:36:58I've just said it to you, OK?
00:37:00I want to be prime minister.
00:37:01No, I've just said it to you, please.
00:37:03I want to be prime minister.
00:37:04No, I've just said it to you, please.
00:37:05Many of his own MPs felt hard left Corbyn
00:37:07had actually been soft remain, thereby helping the right
00:37:10and the Leave campaign, which they believed wasn't right.
00:37:12So they started to leave, left, right and centre.
00:37:14And as more of them left, the more he remained,
00:37:16saying staying was his right, which left the left in a right state.
00:37:19Following a vote of no confidence,
00:37:21it was Labour's turn to have a leadership contest
00:37:23and the tetchy Grandmorph was up against Owen Smith,
00:37:25a man so dull he made Ed Miliband look like David Miliband.
00:37:29A huge challenge for Brexit-era Labour
00:37:31is proving it's in touch with real people.
00:37:33So to test the contender's everyday cred,
00:37:35Victoria Derbyshire showed Smith and Corbyn pictures of famous folk
00:37:39to see if they knew who they were.
00:37:41Can you name, Owen Smith, who is in this photo?
00:37:45Taylor Swift. And...
00:37:48..is that Justin Bieber?
00:37:49Well done. He's absolutely right.
00:37:51OK, good start. Now, for a bonus point, who the hell is this?
00:37:54Jeremy Corbyn, do you know who these two men are?
00:37:57And which one is which?
00:38:00I cannot name them. I'm really sorry.
00:38:02You think that's tough? Try getting him to recognise Ant and Semitism.
00:38:05But if Ant and Dec proved tricky, public transport was even trickier.
00:38:09Yes, during a fact-finding mission to Newcastle,
00:38:11during which he hoped to find out who Ant and Dec are,
00:38:13Corbyn ran into trouble when he found himself confronted
00:38:16by far fewer seats than expected, which you'd think he'd be used to by now.
00:38:19In heart-rending scenes, he was forced to sit on the floor
00:38:22in the twisty bit that stinks of bog
00:38:24and make a convincingly spontaneous statement.
00:38:26Today, this train is completely ram-packed.
00:38:28The reality is there's not enough trains. We need more of them.
00:38:32But his sit-down protest soon led to a stand-up row
00:38:35and a bemused reaction from Sky News.
00:38:37Now, this is a bit weird.
00:38:39A row's developing over claims made by Jeremy Corbyn
00:38:42that a train service he used between London and Newcastle was ram-packed.
00:38:47Yes, Virgin Trains released CCTV footage
00:38:50showing there were actually no rams on board the train,
00:38:52and not only that, Corbyn had apparently walked past several empty seats
00:38:55in order to make his point.
00:38:57I'm surprised they just didn't bollock him for having a forged ticket.
00:39:00I mean, look at that. The sizing's at least three centimetres off.
00:39:03In the end, even Traingate couldn't derail Corbyn.
00:39:06Eventually, when the vote was tallied, Owen Smith was soundly defeated.
00:39:09He now looked set to spend the rest of his political career
00:39:12toiling in irrelevance and complete obscurity alongside Jeremy Corbyn.
00:39:16Meanwhile, in America, Trump and Clinton had become
00:39:19the official candidates of their respective parties.
00:39:21The stand-out moment of the Democratic Convention
00:39:23was a moving speech from the Muslim parents of a fallen soldier,
00:39:26scolding Trump for his comments on Muslims.
00:39:29Donald Trump, have you even read the United States Constitution?
00:39:34CHEERING
00:39:37I will gladly lend you my copy.
00:39:41Has it got pictures in it? Because if not, I'll level with you.
00:39:44I don't think you'll bother.
00:39:46Trump responded by belittling the cons in a shocking interview.
00:39:49If you look at his wife, she was standing there, she had nothing to say.
00:39:52Probably maybe she wasn't allowed to have anything to say, you tell me.
00:39:55Traditionally in America, attacking grieving families
00:39:58is about as big a vote winner as wiping your bum on a live baby.
00:40:01Then in a startling televised speech, he said this.
00:40:04ISIS is honouring President Obama.
00:40:09He is the founder of ISIS.
00:40:11What? Sorry, what? Of ISIS?
00:40:13He's the founder of ISIS.
00:40:15What, you mean metaphorically, or...?
00:40:17He founded ISIS.
00:40:19Oh, right, you actually mean this mental stuff your mouth is saying.
00:40:22By now, Trump was conducting a voyage to the bottom of the sea in polling terms,
00:40:26but then disaster struck for Hillary as she caught pneumonia,
00:40:29and alarming footage emerged of her apparently almost collapsing into her car.
00:40:33No, I'm not taking her, mate, not in that state. 50 quid cleaning charge.
00:40:37Soon Trump enjoyed a sizeable bounce in the polls,
00:40:39so all eyes were trained anxiously on the first debate.
00:40:42But Trump's performance was underwhelming, something he blamed on his microphone,
00:40:45which had undermined him by accurately conveying everything he'd said.
00:40:48No wonder you've been fighting ISIS your entire adult life.
00:40:52Well, that's a... Go to the... Please, the fact-checkers.
00:40:56And he was about to have even worse luck with mics.
00:40:59Donald Trump was doing really well in his campaign.
00:41:02Like, he hadn't put a foot wrong.
00:41:04And then suddenly this video came out that put him in a totally new light.
00:41:08And he didn't seem as nice as he thought he was
00:41:10when he was just shouting about Muslims and Mexicans.
00:41:13You can do anything. Grab them by the pussy.
00:41:17The bloke he'd said this stuff to was this sort of snickering gimp boy
00:41:20called Billy Bush, and everyone was so disgusted with him, he got fired.
00:41:24The NBC TV network has sacked Billy Bush as host of the Today Show.
00:41:28But there was literally nothing anyone could do to punish Donald Trump.
00:41:32They had literally no choice but to go ahead and vote for him.
00:41:36After the tape appeared, all these women came out to say
00:41:39he'd done creepy things to them too,
00:41:41but there wasn't really any evidence that he'd actually do stuff like that,
00:41:45apart from the recording of him saying he did.
00:41:48And that was just his word against his.
00:41:50A whole slew of Republican congressmen and women, senators, others,
00:41:55have come out today saying that Donald Trump should stand down.
00:41:58Well, there's no coming back from this. Trump's had it. H-A-D-D-I-T had it.
00:42:03But he hadn't. As a street-fighting carnival strongman,
00:42:06Trump operates the Chicago way.
00:42:08You pull a knife, he pulls a gun.
00:42:10You send one of his to the hospital, he sends one of yours to the morgue.
00:42:13And whenever an accusation was flung at him,
00:42:15he hit back twice as hard, with his little hands.
00:42:18Sure enough, just before the second debate,
00:42:20Trump arranged a press event conference full of women
00:42:22claiming Bill Clinton was a sex monster and rapist.
00:42:25Yeah, you know, it was around here the background giggles
00:42:28had really drained out of the campaign.
00:42:30The whole thing was depressing and gruelling,
00:42:32and as the second debate opened, as the news noted,
00:42:34the mood was incredibly sour.
00:42:36For the first time ever in a presidential debate,
00:42:38not even a suggestion of a handshake.
00:42:41That's odd. Trump's normally keen to shake hands. I've seen the tape.
00:42:44Uh, I don't know what I said. Uh, I don't remember!
00:42:47Throughout the debate, a glowering Trump followed Clinton around
00:42:50like a terracotta stalker.
00:42:52It's just awfully good that someone with the temperament of Donald Trump
00:42:56is not in charge of the law in our country.
00:42:59Because you'd be in jail.
00:43:01Secretary Clinton.
00:43:03It was another negative performance
00:43:05with yet more bad consequences for the Donald.
00:43:08The Trump plan has effectively, on a call with other Republican leaders,
00:43:12pulled the plug on Donald Trump.
00:43:14Oh, well, he's super finished now.
00:43:16I mean, he was finished before, but now he's harambe finished.
00:43:19We can all rest easy. Mark my words.
00:43:21Donald Trump will never, ever, ever be president.
00:43:24November brought us plenty of top-flight TV.
00:43:27Planet Earth 2 provided a cheery distraction from the state of the world
00:43:31with soothing footage of creatures dying in godless oblivion.
00:43:34Ed Balls made the nation chuckle
00:43:36with a string of hilarious performances on Strictly Come Dancing.
00:43:39Sadly, his ascent to the top was cut short
00:43:41after shocking footage emerged of him grabbing a woman by the pussy.
00:43:44There were heartwarming scenes as Danny Dyer appeared on Who Do You Think You Are?
00:43:48Or as he calls it, Who Do You Think You F***ing Well Are?
00:43:51You f***ing want some, do you? Come on, then, you c***!
00:43:54Can't be.
00:43:58A direct descendant from Edward III.
00:44:02Danny discovered he was distantly related to Edward III.
00:44:05Personally, I always held him down as something of a Richard III.
00:44:08A bit of Cockney rhyming slang there.
00:44:10This show isn't just for the metropolitan elite.
00:44:12OK, who am I kidding, it is.
00:44:14Also in November, having vanquished Chris Evans,
00:44:16Clarkson & Co popped up on Amazon with their rival show, The Grand Tour,
00:44:20in which Jezza immediately made the most of his new beeblous freedom.
00:44:24It's very unlikely I'm going to be fired now because we're on the Internet.
00:44:30Which means I could pleasure a horse.
00:44:33Bet you could take it from 0 to 60 gallons in 4.3 seconds.
00:44:36You'd never be allowed to say that on the BBC.
00:44:38Mainly, though, The Grand Tour was an excuse for the wheel-bound goodies
00:44:41to flex some overpowered new budgetary muscles.
00:44:44Anyway, the BBC clearly now has to compete with streaming services
00:44:48and their massive blockbuster budgets,
00:44:50which is why I'm talking to you now in Cinemascope
00:44:52and blending these banknotes.
00:44:55Ever since Britain had voted for Brexit,
00:44:57people had been squabbling over exactly what that Brexit should mean,
00:45:00so haunted art gallery owner Theresa May had to show up on the news explaining it.
00:45:04Brexit means Brexit.
00:45:06And then keep explaining it.
00:45:08Brexit means Brexit.
00:45:10Over and over again.
00:45:11As I have said, Brexit means Brexit.
00:45:13But it turned out some people had misheard her
00:45:15and thought Brexit meant something else.
00:45:17I respect the mandate she has.
00:45:19She said earlier in the week that Brexit means breakfast.
00:45:22And now people were worrying about the impact of breakfast.
00:45:25The government is hurtling towards a chaotic breakfast.
00:45:29While others were talking it up.
00:45:31Mark my words, we will make breakfast, Brexit, a success.
00:45:36Things were getting farcical, but luckily,
00:45:38Theresa May was on hand once again to remind us just what Brexit means.
00:45:42I've been clear that Brexit means Brexit.
00:45:44But then the conversation turned to different types of Brexit,
00:45:47like soft Brexit.
00:45:48Soft Brexit.
00:45:49And hard Brexit.
00:45:50Hard Brexit.
00:45:51What next?
00:45:52Stealth Brexit?
00:45:53Trans Brexit?
00:45:54Reverse Brexit?
00:45:55Virtua Brexit?
00:45:56Sea Salty Caramel Brexit?
00:45:58The whole thing was just chaos.
00:46:00So then Her Great Grey Majesty had to come out
00:46:02and clear it all up once and for all.
00:46:04People talk about the sort of Brexit that there is going to be.
00:46:07Is it hard, soft?
00:46:08Is it grey, white?
00:46:09Grey or white?
00:46:10What the f***?
00:46:11Actually, we want a red, white and blue Brexit.
00:46:14That is the right Brexit for the United Kingdom.
00:46:17So there you go.
00:46:18Red, white and blue Brexit.
00:46:19I mean, God knows what that is.
00:46:20But it's a patriot, so it's all right by us.
00:46:22And anyone who disagrees is talking Britain down.
00:46:25Before the referendum, the people who wanted us to leave Europe
00:46:28were angry all the time.
00:46:30We were being ruled by unelected people in Brussels
00:46:34and I don't like it.
00:46:36And the good thing about Brexit result was that afterwards,
00:46:39they stayed angry.
00:46:40We voted to come out, we should have come out.
00:46:42Like it or not, that was the democratic decision.
00:46:44But now all the Remainers were angry too.
00:46:46Shame on you!
00:46:48So it brought the whole country together.
00:46:50There was this big row about Particle 50.
00:46:53You'd think if Particle 50 was that important,
00:46:55it'd be Particle 1.
00:46:57I should have renumbered it so we'd know.
00:46:59Theresa May had wanted to start Brexit without a Commons vote,
00:47:03but a group of campaigners mounted a legal challenge.
00:47:06You could see the papers got really angry about that
00:47:09and quite right too.
00:47:10Some of them printed these useful guides
00:47:12to who you should hate on the front pages.
00:47:16And I'm sick of having my will defied by the likes of them.
00:47:19Some of the Remain camp said,
00:47:21even though it was a simple yes-no question,
00:47:23we've got the answer wrong,
00:47:24so we should have another go with a second referendum.
00:47:27And they had a point, like,
00:47:29basically loads of people only voted leave as a protest
00:47:32because they'd never been listened to.
00:47:34But that's not a proper reason.
00:47:36So we should ignore those idiots, chuck their ballots in the bin
00:47:39and do it again properly, like in a real democracy.
00:47:42Do you remember a few years ago
00:47:43when people described absolutely everything as meh?
00:47:46Everywhere you'd look on the internet, there it was, meh.
00:47:49A big, bored shrug.
00:47:50We moaned that everything was sort of mediocre and bland.
00:47:53Not anymore, no.
00:47:54Now everything's either shit or brilliant
00:47:56and there's no in-between and everyone's furious.
00:47:59Stick your head in the internet now
00:48:01and it's like a f***ing screaming convention,
00:48:03black ants versus red ants.
00:48:04It's as if everyone's been radicalised.
00:48:06And therefore, in Brexit Britain,
00:48:08you're either a knuckle-dragging racist
00:48:10or a metropolitan elitist.
00:48:12Those are the only two roles available, sorry.
00:48:14But we know those are caricatures.
00:48:16Out here, away from the fantasy hellscape that lives in here,
00:48:19most of us are bland and meh and reasonable.
00:48:22And I miss it. I miss meh.
00:48:24How did we get so polarised?
00:48:26Well, some people say it's thanks to the bubble.
00:48:29Not a nice bubble, like in an aero,
00:48:31but a bad bubble that goes round your brain
00:48:33and stops new ideas getting in.
00:48:35The echo chamber.
00:48:36Echo chamber.
00:48:37Echo chamber.
00:48:38Echo chamber.
00:48:40Eventually, the bubbles around people got so big
00:48:42they needed their own news services
00:48:44so the people trapped inside could keep up
00:48:46with the sort of stuff they'd like to imagine was happening outside.
00:48:49This fake news was miles better than normal news.
00:48:51I mean, if you tell me that Hillary Clinton's been a bit hypocritical
00:48:54about the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement,
00:48:56I wouldn't even hear the end of the sentence.
00:48:58It's so boring, I'd just be looking at your teeth and judging you.
00:49:01But if you say she's part of a pedo ring
00:49:03based in a pizza restaurant, I'll remember that forever.
00:49:06Speaking of which, let's head back to America.
00:49:09Polling day had arrived in the USA,
00:49:11and despite a last-minute setback for Clinton over emails,
00:49:14all the polls indicated she was set for victory.
00:49:16And not just in the opinion polls, the general feeling was good too.
00:49:19All the experts agreed she had it in the bag.
00:49:22Clinton probably will be the United States' next president.
00:49:26It's basically a done deal.
00:49:28No point staying up to watch, even.
00:49:30I mean, imagine if Trump did win.
00:49:32Shows like this would be pointless.
00:49:34People like me would be out of a job anyway.
00:49:36I'd be yesterday's prick.
00:49:39Anyway, I'll see you in the morning.
00:49:51Oh, that's better. Oh, I slept like a baby.
00:49:54I think I'll just put the news on and watch Hillary's victory speech.
00:49:58Donald Trump will be the 45th president of the United States.
00:50:04What started off as unlikely, impossible, is now reality.
00:50:11He said he was always a winner.
00:50:13This did not come without controversy.
00:50:35The American Dream
00:50:44Beginning on January 20th, 2017,
00:50:47Americans will experience government incompetence like they have never, ever seen.
00:50:53No tolerance, no sympathy, no decency.
00:50:57It's me.
00:50:59I'm sorry, Ms. Clinton.
00:51:01This is for real.
00:51:03And it turned out to be a massive surprise,
00:51:06even though I told a trillion lies.
00:51:09I'm sorry, Ms. Clinton.
00:51:11This is for real.
00:51:14And by the way, let this be a warning.
00:51:16I do not believe in global warming.
00:51:19The damage and devastation that can be inflicted by my administration
00:51:24is an international humiliation.
00:51:26And although I put America first in our nation,
00:51:31the integration situation is worse.
00:51:34Decades of progress are being reversed.
00:51:37I will be one of the worst presidents ever, ever, ever, ever, ever,
00:51:44never, ever before has our country had a president as bad as me.
00:51:49You know, I might not be politically correct,
00:51:51but I will be politically inept.
00:51:54This political stuff is nasty.
00:51:56Some of our big supporters are Nazis.
00:51:59Hail Trump!
00:52:00USA! USA! USA!
00:52:06All things considered, you could be forgiven for thinking it might be the apocalypse.
00:52:10But what is an apocalypse anyway?
00:52:12Well, here to find out, it's our very own Philomena Kunk
00:52:15with one of her moments of wonder.
00:52:25A million years ago,
00:52:27Nostradamus predicted the world would end
00:52:30in a huge mess called a pokalypse.
00:52:33The word pokalypse is posh dictionary code for the end of days.
00:52:38And the end of days means sunset, which happens all the time.
00:52:42That's probably why the world didn't end,
00:52:44just because Nostradamus said it would.
00:52:46But Nostradamus wasn't the only person who reckoned that was true.
00:52:50As well as inventing Minecraft,
00:52:52the ancient Mayan civilisation predicted the world
00:52:56as we knew it would end in 2012.
00:52:59But luckily, it turned out just to be sea facts that ended.
00:53:03And that's only the whole world if you're over 60 and housebound.
00:53:07Another pokalypse was predicted by Mother Shipton,
00:53:10a mystic from Yorkshire who lived in a cave,
00:53:13which, at the time, was believed to be the end of the world.
00:53:17A mystic from Yorkshire who lived in a cave,
00:53:20which, at the time, was better than living in Yorkshire,
00:53:23just like it also is now.
00:53:25She wrote,
00:53:27The world to an end will come in 1881.
00:53:31A claim which has recently been debunked by experts
00:53:35through a careful process of looking around
00:53:38and seeing the world still here.
00:53:41The good news is the world hasn't ended yet.
00:53:44Scientists say it one day definitely will.
00:53:47But what sort of ending will it have?
00:53:49A sad ending with a disaster or a happy one with a song?
00:53:53To find out, I spoke to expert science man
00:53:56and former DREAM keyboardist Dr Brian Cox.
00:54:00How will the world end?
00:54:02Well, the sun will run out of fuel in about four billion years or so
00:54:07and actually before that it will begin to swell up, expand,
00:54:12and so we think the Earth will get incinerated.
00:54:15Do you think we might be able to do something about it?
00:54:18Stop it being incinerated?
00:54:20Yeah, stop it being incinerated. Or the sun burning the Earth.
00:54:23Can't we put it out with a big hose or something?
00:54:26It's an inevitable consequence of the laws of nature.
00:54:29You're pleased with that, are you? You're happy with that?
00:54:32You can live with that?
00:54:34Well, there's nothing I can do.
00:54:36Also, the Andromeda galaxy is going to hit us.
00:54:39A whole galaxy is going to hit us? Yeah.
00:54:42On about the same timescale, actually.
00:54:45So as the sun runs out of fuel and expands and incinerates the Earth,
00:54:50a galaxy of 400 billion stars is going to collide with us.
00:54:54You're much gloomier than I expected because you're quite a smiler.
00:54:58Well, yeah, it's quite a long time in the future.
00:55:01You said things can only get better.
00:55:05So where can we trust anything you ever say now?
00:55:08Yeah, it's a gross misunderstanding of the laws of nature.
00:55:11It's one of the most misleading and scientifically inaccurate
00:55:15pop songs that's ever been written.
00:55:17Catchy, though.
00:55:19Yeah, but it's just inaccurate, scientifically inaccurate.
00:55:22Things get worse.
00:55:24So after the universe ends, there'll be nothing?
00:55:27Depends what you mean by after the universe ends.
00:55:30When it's exploded.
00:55:32Well, it's not going to explode. It's going to, we think,
00:55:35carry on expanding. Right. Forever.
00:55:38Well, that'll be fine, won't it? We need the space.
00:55:41You get to the point that it carries on doing that,
00:55:44then galaxies get ripped apart,
00:55:46and then solar systems get ripped apart,
00:55:49and then even planets get ripped apart,
00:55:51and even atoms get ripped apart.
00:55:53But so what?
00:55:55All the stars will die.
00:55:57Even all the black holes that are left,
00:56:00the final end points of the most massive stars will evaporate away.
00:56:04So could we fall down a black hole?
00:56:07Yeah, you could fall into one.
00:56:09Is that the same? Because I heard that you could be...
00:56:12If, you know, this is one way that the world could end,
00:56:16is that we're all just sucked off through a hole?
00:56:20It's, er... I mean, that must be terrible.
00:56:22Can you imagine what it would feel like to be sucked off through a hole?
00:56:26Yeah.
00:56:282016 might have looked like the end of the world as we know it,
00:56:31and I feel fine,
00:56:33but at least right now the apocalypse hasn't come,
00:56:36and who knows, maybe it never will.
00:56:39But there's no point sitting around worrying about the apocalypse
00:56:42when what we should be really scared of is Armageddon.
00:56:47Next time on Moments of Wonder, I'll be asking,
00:56:50if air is really there, how come we can't grab it?
00:56:55As December arrived, the world grappled with the notion
00:56:58that despite losing the popular vote by several million,
00:57:01Donald Trump, worried about grabbing women by the pussy,
00:57:04was about to get his finger on the red button.
00:57:06As the news expertly relayed footage of furious protests,
00:57:09there were initially confusing signals from the president-elect
00:57:12as he seemed to row back on some of his pre-election promises.
00:57:15Perhaps most shocking of all, having said he'd be tough on terrorism,
00:57:18he met with the founder of ISIS and even shook his hand.
00:57:21The unpredictable Donald was also spewing angry tweets
00:57:24and stuffing his administration with hardliners.
00:57:26Many feared Trump might now pursue a white supremacist agenda,
00:57:29but according to him, it's going to be more of a tangerine supremacist agenda.
00:57:32So-called outsider Trump also appointed generals and corporate CEOs
00:57:35to major positions, including a guy with links to Putin.
00:57:38This was especially eye-opening as the CIA was claiming Russian hackers
00:57:42had deliberately aided Trump's ascent,
00:57:44something Trump himself was eager to jump in front of the news cameras to poo-poo.
00:57:48Once they hack, if you don't catch them in the act, you're not going to catch them.
00:57:51They have no idea if it's Russia or China or somebody.
00:57:55It could be somebody sitting in a bed someplace.
00:57:57Yeah, they could be anywhere in the world.
00:57:59I mean, Moscow, Vladivostok, St. Petersburg. We'll probably never know.
00:58:04Let's face it, 2016's been atrocious for many reasons.
00:58:08Appalling terror attacks, unending conflict, celebrity deaths,
00:58:12widespread polarisation, fear, paranoia, despair, honey G.
00:58:18You know what? From now on, I'm just going to watch fake news.
00:58:20It's much better. It's got its own channel now. It's great. Watch.
00:58:24This is fake BBC news. The headlines tonight.
00:58:28The world of politics is stunned as president-elect Donald Trump
00:58:31is revealed to be a persona created by the musician David Bowie.
00:58:35Bowie, who is still alive, plans to tour as Trump next spring
00:58:39alongside rapper Kanye West.
00:58:41All differences over this summer's Brexit vote put aside
00:58:44as scientists discover the existence of particle 51,
00:58:47which renders the process of leaving the EU both simple and physically enjoyable.
00:58:52Well, we knew there were 50 particles, but this changes everything.
00:58:55It makes everything I said about the apocalypse complete bullshit.
00:58:59Bake Off back on.
00:59:01A last-minute deal sees the great British Bake Off return to BBC One.
00:59:05But Paul Hollywood won't be returning,
00:59:07having already signed a contract for Channel 4's naked attraction.
00:59:11I want to lie on him. I feel like he'd be the best cuddler.
00:59:14And 2016 has all been a dream.
00:59:17You've been asleep the whole time...
00:59:20Oh! Oh, it's still January.
00:59:23Oh, I just dreamt about a horrible year.
00:59:26I wonder what's really happening.
00:59:28Take a look at this.
00:59:31Oh, what lovely puddle.
00:59:36Well, that's all we've got time for this year.
00:59:38I'll see you presently.
00:59:40Till next time, do take care and go away.
00:59:49Do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do
01:00:12Do-do-do-do-do...
01:00:14Right.