Peaceful Bible Bedtime Stories for Kids
Peaceful Bible Bedtime Stories for Children | Faith-Filled Tales to End the Day
Estimated read time: 1:20
Summary
In this Sleepy Stories video, children are invited into a world of enchanting tales rooted in faith and imagination to usher them into a peaceful sleep. The featured story revolves around a wise girl whose cleverness surpasses even the king, leading to a series of challenges and witty responses that showcase her intelligence. The narrative beautifully concludes with a heartwarming marriage between her and the king, signifying the rewards of wisdom and wit. Another tale includes Snow White and Rose Red, whose kindness and courage bring prosperity and happiness. These stories are filled with simple moral lessons delivered with warmth and charm, making bedtime a joyful experience for young listeners.
Highlights
- Dive into a story where a young girl's wits are sharper than the king's, bringing unexpected twists! 🏰
- Experience the tale of Snow White and Rose Red, whose pure hearts protect them from harm and lead to mystical encounters. 🌹
- The clever girl finds creative solutions to the king's impossible demands, proving the power of intelligence. 💡
Key Takeaways
- Cleverness can outwit even the mightiest, as shown by the wise girl who impressively tackles impossible tasks set by the king. 🧠
- True worth isn't in possessions but in people and the love we share with them, as highlighted by the girl's ultimate choice. 💖
- Kindness and bravery like that of Snow White and Rose Red can lead to magical friendships and exciting adventures. 🐻
Overview
Welcome to a land of dreams and lessons where the veil between reality and fairy tales blurs for just long enough to lull young listeners into a slumber. In this episode, the wise girl outwits a king with challenges that seem insurmountable, proving that intelligence and cleverness will always prevail over brute strength. Her journey from a simple girl to queen is filled with clever negotiations and heartwarming moments.
Meanwhile, join Snow White and Rose Red as they navigate a world filled with magic and mystery, their innocence and generosity keeping them safe in a forest teeming with hidden treasures and friendly beasts. Their loyalty to each other and gentle spirits teach the value of sisterly love and kindness toward all creatures.
These bedtime stories, wrapped in soothing narration and gentle music, make for a delightful end to any day. They are not just tales for children to dream to, but stories imbued with morals that children carry with them upon waking.
Chapters
- 00:00 - 01:00: Introduction The chapter introduces the purpose of 'Sleepy Stories,' a collection of magical tales designed to help listeners relax and fall asleep. It invites listeners to join the journey through enchanting stories filled with valuable lessons, setting the stage for a calming and soothing experience.
- 01:00 - 18:00: The Wise Girl In the chapter titled 'The Wise Girl', the narrative explores a world of fairy tales originating from diverse cultures globally. Every evening promises a unique journey, permeating with dreams and fascination, inviting readers to immerse themselves in a realm of night-time narratives. The storytelling aims to provide solace and tranquility, encouraging a transition into a serene and rejuvenating slumber, as it wraps up with a heartfelt wish for a pleasant night filled with sweet dreams.
- 18:00 - 40:00: Snow White and Rose Red The chapter introduces a girl who is wiser than the king and his counselors, a rare attribute that makes her father exceedingly proud. He boasts extensively about her intelligence both locally and beyond. The chapter captures a moment where the father's pride leads him to speak to a neighbor about his daughter's cleverness.
Peaceful Bible Bedtime Stories for Children | Faith-Filled Tales to End the Day Transcription
- 00:00 - 00:30 Welcome to Sleepy Stories, the place where magical tales filled with valuable lessons help you relax and drift into a peaceful sleep. Join us as we journey through enchanting
- 00:30 - 01:00 fairy tales from all over the world, making every night a new adventure filled with dreams and wonder. Now, settle down, relax, and let these stories guide you into a deep and restful sleep. Wishing you a good night and sweet dreams. The wise
- 01:00 - 01:30 girl. There was once a girl who was wiser than the king and all his counselors. There never was anything like it. Her father was so proud of her that he boasted about her cleverness at home and abroad. He could not keep his tongue still about it. One day he was boasting to one of his neighbors and he said,
- 01:30 - 02:00 "The girl is so clever that not even the king himself could ask her a question she couldn't answer or read her a riddle she couldn't unravel. Now, it's so chance the king was sitting at a window nearby, and he overheard what the girl's father was saying. The next day, he sent for the man to come before him. I hear you have a daughter who is so clever that no one in the
- 02:00 - 02:30 kingdom can equal her. And is that so? asked the king. Yes, it was no more than the truth. Too much could not be said of her wit and cleverness. That was well, and the king was glad to hear it. He had 30 eggs. They were fresh and good, but it would take a clever person to hatch chickens
- 02:30 - 03:00 out of them. He then bade his chancellor, "Get the eggs and give them to the man." "Take these home to your daughter," said the king, "and bid her hatch them out for me. If she succeeds, she shall have a bag of money for her pains. But if she fails, you shall be beaten as a vain boaster." The man was troubled when he
- 03:00 - 03:30 heard this. Still, his daughter was so clever, he was almost sure she could hatch out the eggs. He carried them home to her and told her exactly what the king had said, and it did not take the girl long to find out that the eggs had been boiled. When she told her father that, he made a great to-do. That was a pretty
- 03:30 - 04:00 trick for the king to have played upon him. Now he would have to take a beating and all the neighbors would hear about it. Would to heaven he had never had a daughter at all if that was what came of it. The girl, however, bade him be of good cheer. "Go to bed and sleep quietly," said she. I will think of some way out of the trouble. No harm shall
- 04:00 - 04:30 come to you, even though I have to go to the palace myself and take the beating in your place." The next day, the girl gave her father a bag of boiled beans and bad him take them out to a certain place where the king rode by every day. Wait until you see him coming, said she, and then
- 04:30 - 05:00 begin to sew the beans. At the same time, he was to call out this, that, and the other so loudly that the king could not help but hear him. The man took the bag of beans and went out to the field his daughter had spoken of. He waited until he saw the king coming and then he
- 05:00 - 05:30 began to sew the beans and at the same time to cry aloud, "Come son, come rain. Heaven grant that these boiled beans may yield me a good crop." The king was surprised that anyone should be so stupid as to think boiled beans would grow and yield a crop. He did not recognize the man, for he had only seen him once, and he stopped his
- 05:30 - 06:00 horse to speak to him. "My poor man," said he, "how can you expect boiled beans to grow? Do you not know that that is impossible? Whatever the king commands should be possible, answered the man. And if chickens can hatch from boiled eggs, why should not boiled beans yield a crop?
- 06:00 - 06:30 When the king heard this, he looked at the man more closely, and then he recognized him as the father of the clever daughter. "You have indeed a clever daughter," said he. "Take your beans home and bring me back the eggs I gave you." The man was very glad when he heard that, and made haste to obey. He carried the beans home and then took
- 06:30 - 07:00 the eggs and brought them back to the palace of the king. After the king had received the eggs, he gave the man a handful of flax. "Take this to your clever daughter," he said, "and bid her make for me within the week a full set of sails for a large ship. If she does this, she shall receive the half of my
- 07:00 - 07:30 kingdom as a reward. But if she fails, you shall have a drubbing that you will not soon forget." The man returned to his home, loudly lamenting his hard lot. "What is the matter?" asked his daughter. "Has the king set another task that I must do?" Yes, that he had. And her father showed her the flax the king
- 07:30 - 08:00 had sent her and gave her the message. "Do not be troubled," said the girl. "No harm shall come to you. Go to bed and sleep quietly, and tomorrow I will send the king an answer that will satisfy him." The man believed what his daughter said. He went to bed and slept quietly. The next day, the girl gave her
- 08:00 - 08:30 father a small piece of wood. "Carry this to the king," said she. "Tell him I am ready to make the sails, but first let him make me of this wood a large ship, that I may fit the sails to it." The father did as the girl bade him, and the king was surprised at the cleverness of the girl in returning him such an answer. "That is all very well," said
- 08:30 - 09:00 he, "and I will excuse her from this task. But here, here is a glass mug. Take it home to your clever daughter. Tell her it is my command that she dip out the waters from the ocean bed so that I can ride over the bottom dry shod. If she does this, I will take her for my wife, but if she fails, you shall
- 09:00 - 09:30 be beaten within an inch of your life." The man took the mug and hastened home, weeping aloud and bemoning his fate. "Well, and what is it?" asked his daughter. "What does the king demand of me now?" The man gave her the glass mug and told her what the king had said. "Do
- 09:30 - 10:00 not be troubled," said the girl. Go to bed and sleep in peace. You shall not be beaten, and soon I shall be reigning as queen over all this land." The man had trust in her. He went to bed and slept and dreamed. He saw her sitting by the king with a crown on her head. The next day, the girl gave her
- 10:00 - 10:30 father a bunch of toe. Take this to the king, she said. Tell him you have given me the mug and I am willing to dip the sea dry, but first let him take this toe and stop up all the rivers that flow into the ocean. The man did as his daughter bade him. He took the toe to the king and told him exactly what the
- 10:30 - 11:00 girl had said. Then the king saw that the girl was indeed a clever one, and he sent for her to come before him. She came just as she was in her homespun dress and her rough shoes and with a cap on her head. But for all her mean clothing, she was as pretty and fine as a flower, and the king was not
- 11:00 - 11:30 slow to see it. Still, he wanted to make sure for himself, that she was as clever as her messages had been. Tell me, said he, what sound can be heard the farthest throughout the world? The thunder that echoes through heaven and earth, answered the girl. And your own royal commands that go from lip to lip.
- 11:30 - 12:00 This reply pleased the king greatly. "And now tell me," said he, exactly what is my royal scepter worth? "It is worth exactly as much as the power for which it stands," the girl replied. The king was so well satisfied with the way the girl answered that he no longer hesitated. He determined that she should be his
- 12:00 - 12:30 queen and that they should be married at once. The girl had something to say to this, however. I am but a poor girl, said she, and my ways are not your ways. It may well be that you will tire of me or that you may be angry with me sometime and send me back to my father's
- 12:30 - 13:00 house to leave. Promise that if this should happen, you will allow me to carry back with me from the castle the thing that has grown most precious to me. The king was willing to agree to this, but the girl was not satisfied until he had written down his promise and signed it with his own royal hand. Then she and
- 13:00 - 13:30 the king were married with the greatest magnificence, and she came to live in the palace and reign over the land. Now, while the girl was still only a peasant, she had been well content to dress in homespun and live as a peasant should. But after she became queen, she would wear nothing but the most magnificent robes and jewels and
- 13:30 - 14:00 ornaments, for that seemed to her only right and proper for a queen. But the king, who was of a very jealous nature, thought his wife did not care at all for him, but only for the fine things he could give her. One time the king and queen were to ride abroad together and the queen spent so much time in dressing herself that the
- 14:00 - 14:30 king was kept waiting and he became very angry when she appeared before him. He would not even look at her. You care nothing for me, but only for the jewels and fine clothes you wear, he cried. Take with you those that are the most precious to you, as I promised you, and return to your father's
- 14:30 - 15:00 house. I will no longer have a wife who cares only for my possessions and not at all for me. Very well, the girl was willing to go. And I will be happier in my father's house than I was when I first met you, said she. Nevertheless, she begged that
- 15:00 - 15:30 she might spend one more night in the palace, and that she and the king might s together once again before she returned home. To this the king agreed, for he still loved her, even though he was so angry with her. So he and his wife sed together that evening, and just at the last, the queen took a golden cup and filled it
- 15:30 - 16:00 with wine. Then when the king was not looking, she put a sleeping potion in the wine and gave it to him to drink. He took it and drank to the very last drop, suspecting nothing, but soon after he sank down among the cushions in a deep sleep. Then the queen caused him to be carried to her father's house and laid in the bed
- 16:00 - 16:30 there. [Music] When the king awoke the next morning, he was very much surprised to find himself in the peasants's cottage. He raised himself upon his elbow to look about him, and at once the girl came to the bedside, and she was again dressed in the coarse and common clothes she had worn before she was
- 16:30 - 17:00 married. What means this? asked the king. And how came I hear. My dear husband, said the girl, your promise was that if you ever sent me back to my father's house, I might carry with me the thing that had become most precious to me in the castle. You are that most precious thing, and I care
- 17:00 - 17:30 for nothing else, except as it makes me pleasing in your sight." Then the king could no longer feel jealous or angry with her. He clasped her in his arms, and they kissed each other tenderly. That same day they returned to the palace and from that time on the king and his peasant queen live together in
- 17:30 - 18:00 the greatest love and happiness. [Music] [Music]
- 18:00 - 18:30 Snow White and Rose [Music] Red. A poor widow once lived in a little cottage with a garden in front of it in which grew two rose trees, one bearing
- 18:30 - 19:00 white roses and the other red. She had two children who were just like the two rose trees. One was called Snow White and the other Rose Red. And they were the sweetest and best children in the world. Always diligent and always cheerful. But Snow White was quieter and
- 19:00 - 19:30 more gentle than Rose Red. [Music] Rose Red loved to run about the fields and meadows and to pick flowers and catch butterflies, but Snow White sat at home with her mother and helped her in the household or read aloud to her when there was no work to do. The two children loved each other so dearly that
- 19:30 - 20:00 they always walked about hand in hand whenever they went out together. And when Snow White said, "We will never desert each other," Rose Red answered, "No, not as long as we live." And the mother added, "Whatever one gets, she shall share with the other. They often roamed about in the woods
- 20:00 - 20:30 gathering berries, and no beast offered to hurt them. On the contrary, they came up to them in the most confiding manner. The little hair would eat a cabbage leaf from their hands. The deer graze beside them. The stagwood bound past them merrily, and the birds remained on the branches and sang to them with all their
- 20:30 - 21:00 might. No evil ever befell them. If they carried late in the wood, and night overtook them. They laid down together on the moss and slept till morning. and their mother knew they were quite safe and never felt anxious about [Music] them. Once when they had slept all night in the wood and had been wakened by the
- 21:00 - 21:30 morning sun, they perceived a beautiful child in a shining white robe sitting close to their resting place. The figure got up, looked at them kindly, but said nothing, and vanished into the wood. And when they looked round about them, they became aware that they had slept quite close to a precipice, over which they would
- 21:30 - 22:00 certainly have fallen had they gone on a few steps further in the darkness. And when they told their mother of their adventure, she said, "What they had seen must have been the angel that guards good children." Snow White and Rose Red kept their mother's cottage so beautifully clean and neat that it was a pleasure to
- 22:00 - 22:30 go into it. In summer, Rose Red looked after the house. And every morning before her mother awoke, she placed a bunch of flowers before the bed. From each tree a rose. In winter, Snow White lit the fire and put on the kettle, which was made of brass, but so beautifully polished that it shone like gold. In the evening when
- 22:30 - 23:00 the snowflakes fell, their mother said, "Snow White, go and close the shutters." And they drew round the fire. While the mother put on her spectacles and read aloud from a big book, and the two girls listened and sat and span. Beside them on the ground lay a little lamb and behind them perched a little white dove with its head tucked under
- 23:00 - 23:30 its wings. One evening as they sat thus cozily together someone knocked at the door as though he desired admittance. The mother said, "Rose red, open the door quickly. It must be some traveler seeking shelter." Rose Red hastened to unbar the door and thought she saw a poor man standing in the
- 23:30 - 24:00 darkness outside, but it was no such thing, only a bear, who poked his thick black head through the door. Rose Red screamed aloud and sprang back in terror. The lamb began to bleet. The dove flapped its wings and Snow White ran and hid behind her mother's bed. But the bear began to speak and said, "Don't be afraid. I won't hurt
- 24:00 - 24:30 you. I am half frozen and only wish to warm myself a little. My poor bear," said the mother. "Lie down by the fire. only take care you don't burn your [Music] fur. Then she called out, "Snow, white and rose red, come out. The bear will do you no harm. He is a good, honest
- 24:30 - 25:00 creature." So they both came out of their hiding places. And gradually the lamb and dove drew near, too, and they all forgot their fear. The bear asked the children to beat the snow a little out of his fur, and they fetched a brush and scrubbed him till he was dry. Then the beast stretched himself in front of the fire and growled
- 25:00 - 25:30 quite happily and comfortably. The children soon grew quite at their ease with him and led their helpless guest a fearful life. They tugged his fur with their hands, put their small feet on his back and rolled him about here and there, or took a hazel wand and beat him with it. And if he growled,
- 25:30 - 26:00 they only laughed. The bear submitted to everything with the best possible good nature. Only when they went too far, he cried. Oh children, spare my life. Snow, white, and rose, red, don't beat your dear friend dead. When it was time to retire for the night
- 26:00 - 26:30 and the others went to bed, the mother said to the bear, "You can lie there on the half in heaven's name. It will be shelter for you from the cold and wet." As soon as day dawned, the children led him out, and he trotted over the snow into the wood. From this time on, the bear came every evening at the same hour and laid down by the half and let the
- 26:30 - 27:00 children play what pranks they liked with him. And they got so accustomed to him that the door was never shut till their black friend had made his appearance. When spring came and all outside was green, the bear said one morning to Snow White. "Now I must go
- 27:00 - 27:30 away and not return again the whole summer." "Where are you going to, dear Bear?" asked Snow White. I must go to the wood and protect my treasure from the wicked dwarfs. In winter, when the earth is frozen hard, they are obliged to remain underground, for they can't work their way through. But now, when the sun has
- 27:30 - 28:00 thawed and warmed the ground, they break through and come up above to spy the land and steal what they can. What once falls into their hands and into their caves is not easily brought back to light. Snow White was quite sad over their friend's departure. And when she unbarred the
- 28:00 - 28:30 door for him, the bear stepping out caught a piece of his fur in the door knocker. And Snow White thought she caught sight of glittering gold beneath it, but she couldn't be certain of it. and the bear ran hastily away and soon disappeared behind the trees. A short time after this, the
- 28:30 - 29:00 mothers sent the children into the wood to collect They came in their wanderings upon a big tree which lay felled on the ground. And on the trunk among the long grass, they noticed something jumping up and down, but what it was they couldn't distinguish. When they approached nearer, they perceived a dwarf with a wisened face and a beard a yard long.
- 29:00 - 29:30 The end of the beard was jammed into a clif of the tree, and the little man sprang about like a dog on a chain, and didn't seem to know what he was to do. He glared at the girls with his fiery red eyes and screamed out, "What are you standing there for? Can't you come and help me? What were you doing, little man?" asked Rose
- 29:30 - 30:00 Red. "You stupid, inquisitive goose," replied the dwarf. "I wanted to split the tree in order to get little chips of wood for our kitchen fire. Those thick logs that serve to make fires for course. greedy people like yourselves quite burn up all the little food we need. I had successfully
- 30:00 - 30:30 driven in the wedge, and all was going well, but the cursed wood was so slippery that it suddenly sprang out. And the tree closed up so rapidly that I had no time to take my beautiful white beard out. So here I am stuck fast and I can't get away. And you silly smoothfaced milk and water girls just
- 30:30 - 31:00 stand and laugh. What wretches you [Music] are. The children did all in their power, but they couldn't get the beard out. It was wedged in far too firmly. I will run and fetch somebody, said Rose Red. Crazy blockheads, snapped the dwarf. What's the good of calling anyone
- 31:00 - 31:30 else? You're already too too many for me. Does nothing better occur to you than that? Don't be so impatient, said Snow White. I'll see you get help. and taking her scissors out of her pocket, she cut off the end of his beard. As soon as the dwarf felt himself free, he seized a bag full of gold which
- 31:30 - 32:00 was hidden among the roots of the tree, lifted it up, and muttered aloud, "Curse these rude wretches! Cutting off a piece of my splendid beard." With these words, he swung the bag over his back and disappeared without as much as looking at the children again. Shortly after this, Snow White and Rose Red went out to get a dish of fish. As
- 32:00 - 32:30 they approached the stream, they saw something which looked like an enormous grasshopper springing toward the water as if it were going to jump in. They ran forward and recognized their old friend, the dwarf. "Where are you going to?" asked Rose Red. "You're surely not going to jump into the water. I'm not such a
- 32:30 - 33:00 fool," screamed the dwarf. "Don't you see that cursed fish is trying to drag me in?" The little man had been sitting on the bank fishing when unfortunately the wind had entangled his beard in the line. And when immediately afterward a big fish bit, the feeble little creature had no strength to pull
- 33:00 - 33:30 it out. The fish had the upper fin and dragged the dwarf toward him. He clung on with all his might to every Russian blade of grass, but it didn't help him much. He had to follow every movement of the fish and was in great danger of being drawn into the water. The girls came up just at the right
- 33:30 - 34:00 moment, held him firm, and did all they could to disentangle his beard from the line. But in vain, beard and line were in a hopeless muddle. Nothing remained but to produce the scissors and cut the beard, by which a small part of it was sacrificed. [Music] When the dwarf perceived what they were about, he yelled to them, "Do you call
- 34:00 - 34:30 that manners you towed stools to disfigure a fellow's face? It wasn't enough that you shortened my beard before. But you must now needs cut off the best bit of it. I can't appear like this before my own people. I wish you'd been in Jericho first. Then he fetched a sack of pearls that lay among the rushes, and without
- 34:30 - 35:00 saying another word, he dragged it away and disappeared behind a stone. It happened that soon after this, the mother sent the two girls to the town to buy needles, thread, laces, and ribbons. Their road led over a heath where huge boulders of rock lay scattered here and there. While trudging along, they saw a big bird hovering in
- 35:00 - 35:30 the air, circling slowly above them, but always descending lower, till at last it settled on a rock not far from them. Immediately afterward, they heard a sharp, piercing cry. They ran forward and saw with horror that the eagle had pounced on their old friend, the dwarf, and was about to
- 35:30 - 36:00 carry him off. The tenderhearted children seized hold of the little man, and struggled so long with the bird that at last he let go his prey. When the dwarf had recovered from the first shock, he screamed in his screeching voice, "Couldn't you have treated me more carefully? You have torn my thin little coat all to shreds, useless, awkward
- 36:00 - 36:30 hussies that you are." Then he took a bag of precious stones and vanished under the rocks into his cave. The girls were accustomed to his ingratitude and went on their way and did their business in town. On their way home, as they were again passing the heath, they surprised the dwarf pouring
- 36:30 - 37:00 out his precious stones on an open space, for he had thought no one would pass by at so late an hour. The evening sun shone on the glittering stones, and they glanced and gleamed so beautifully that the children stood still and gazed on them. "What are you standing there gaping for?" screamed the dwarf, and his ashen
- 37:00 - 37:30 gray face became scarlet with rage. He was about to go off with these angry words when a sudden growl was heard and a black bear trotted out of the wood. The dwarf jumped up in great fright, but he hadn't time to reach his place of retreat, for the bear was already close to [Music]
- 37:30 - 38:00 him. Then he cried in terror, "Dear Mr. to bear. Spare me. I'll give you all my treasure. Look at those beautiful, precious stones lying there. Spare my life. What pleasure would you get from a poor feeble little fellow like me? You won't feel me between your teeth. There, lay hold of these two wicked girls. They
- 38:00 - 38:30 will be a tender morsel for you, as fat as young quailes. Eat them up for heaven's sake. But the bear, paying no attention to his words, gave the evil little creature one blow with his paw, and he never moved again. The girls had run away, but the bear called after them,
- 38:30 - 39:00 "Snow, white, and rose read, don't be afraid. Wait, and I'll come with you." Then they recognized his voice and stood still. And when the bear was quite close to them, his skin suddenly fell off. And a beautiful man stood beside them all dressed in gold. "I am a king's son," he
- 39:00 - 39:30 said, "and have been doomed by that unholy little dwarf who had stolen my treasure to roam about the woods as a wild bear till his death should set me free." Now he has got his wellmerited [Music] punishment. Snow White married him and
- 39:30 - 40:00 Rose read his brother and they divided the great treasure the dwarf had collected in his cave between them. The old mother lived for many years peacefully with her children, and she carried the two rose trees with her, and they stood in front of her window, and every year they bore the finest red and white roses.
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- 78:30 - 79:00 Heat. Heat. Heat.
- 79:00 - 79:30 [Music] [Music]
- 79:30 - 80:00 Heat. Heat. N.
- 80:00 - 80:30 [Music]
- 80:30 - 81:00 [Music]
- 81:00 - 81:30 Heat.
- 81:30 - 82:00 [Music] Heat. Heat. Heat. [Music]
- 82:00 - 82:30 N. Heat. Heat. [Music]
- 82:30 - 83:00 [Applause]
- 83:00 - 83:30 [Music] Heat. Heat. [Music]
- 83:30 - 84:00 [Music]
- 84:00 - 84:30 [Music]
- 84:30 - 85:00 [Applause]
- 85:00 - 85:30 [Music]
- 85:30 - 86:00 do. Hey
- 86:00 - 86:30 [Music]
- 86:30 - 87:00 Heat. Heat. N.
- 87:00 - 87:30 [Music]
- 87:30 - 88:00 [Applause]
- 88:00 - 88:30 [Music]
- 88:30 - 89:00 [Music]
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- 89:30 - 90:00 [Music]
- 90:00 - 90:30 [Music]
- 90:30 - 91:00 [Music]
- 91:00 - 91:30 [Music]
- 91:30 - 92:00 Heat. Heat.
- 92:00 - 92:30 [Music]
- 92:30 - 93:00 Heat. Heat.
- 93:00 - 93:30 [Music]
- 93:30 - 94:00 Heat. Heat.
- 94:00 - 94:30 [Music]
- 94:30 - 95:00 Heat.
- 95:00 - 95:30 Heat. Hey. Hey. Hey.
- 95:30 - 96:00 [Music]
- 96:00 - 96:30 [Music]
- 96:30 - 97:00 [Applause]
- 97:00 - 97:30 [Music]
- 97:30 - 98:00 Heat. Heat.
- 98:00 - 98:30 [Music]
- 98:30 - 99:00 [Music]
- 99:00 - 99:30 Heat. Heat.
- 99:30 - 100:00 [Music]
- 100:00 - 100:30 [Music]
- 100:30 - 101:00 Heat. Heat.
- 101:00 - 101:30 [Music]
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- 102:00 - 102:30 [Music]
- 102:30 - 103:00 [Applause]
- 103:00 - 103:30 [Music]
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- 104:30 - 105:00 [Applause]
- 105:00 - 105:30 [Music]
- 105:30 - 106:00 Hey, hey,
- 106:00 - 106:30 hey.
- 106:30 - 107:00 [Music]
- 107:00 - 107:30 Heat. Hey. Hey.
- 107:30 - 108:00 [Music]
- 108:00 - 108:30 me.
- 108:30 - 109:00 [Music]
- 109:00 - 109:30 Heat. Heat.
- 109:30 - 110:00 [Music]
- 110:00 - 110:30 Heat. Heat.
- 110:30 - 111:00 [Music]