01:48Round my hometown, ooh, the people I've made.
01:54Round my hometown, I'm out of there.
01:59I can't just explain what's your feeling about that.
02:02The world you look to me is you haven't been in a town to join me.
02:06That's a little out of my mind.
02:08I mean, about fighting him, how do you think he would make him?
02:11I would love to fight.
02:12I like it in the city when the air is so thick and opaque.
02:19I love it to see everybody in shops, go shops and shades.
02:26I like it in the city when two worlds collide.
02:35You get the people and the government, everybody taking different sides.
02:42Shows that we ain't gonna stand shit, shows that we are united.
02:47Shows that we ain't gonna take it.
02:50Shows that we ain't gonna stand shit, shows that we are united.
02:55Shows that we ain't gonna stand.
03:49Are the wonders of my world? Are the wonders of this world? Are the wonders of my world, of my world, yeah, of my world, of my world, yeah.
04:19Ladies and gentlemen, 40 years ago, the entire sports universe was tuned in to Madison Square Garden, New York City.
04:28The event was known as the Battle of Champions. In the golden age of heavyweights, two champions, each with a claim to the title and undefeated records, rose to the top and faced each other that night.
04:41In one corner, Muhammad Ali. In the other corner, 206 pounds of chiseled ebony steel, the son of a South Carolina sharecropper who fought his way to an Olympic gold medal and then to the top of the heavyweight division.
05:01On that night, only one man left the ring after 15 rounds. He was undisputed, the undefeated heavyweight champion of the world.
05:13His name, Smokin' Joel Frazier.
05:17Ladies and gentlemen, on behalf of Nevada Governor Brian Sandoval and the Nevada State Athletic Commission, HBO Sports and Bob Arum's Top Ranked Boxing,
05:33Please rise at this time as we toll a memorial count of 10 and say farewell to beloved Joe Frazier.