These are the additions I noticed:
John's statement about George (I think from Lennon Remembers) that he wouldn't buy his album, that ATMP means nothing to him, and that George should be grateful that he could learn from John and Paul.
The addiction of John and Linda's performance of "Love in strange" in the background when the song "Bless you" sounded with the line: "Love is strange".
Excerpt from a 1975 interview with John in which he says he wonders what Paul thought of his performance of "I Saw Her Standing There" at Madison Square Garden.
The questionnaire, in which John described Paul as extraordinary, Bowie as thin etc., was supplemented with pictures.
The ending (which kinda broke my heart).
Michael Parkinson: What was sad too was the way it drove a wedge between your relationship, you and John – was it always a spiky relationship? I mean, you said you loved him-
Paul: Yes M: -and that love comes through in the book. Did he love you? P: Yeah. I don’t think it was… Yeah, I think he did actually. *laughs* We’ll check. Just excuse me for a moment. ‘John, come on, baby, did, yes.’ Yeah, I think he did, yeah. It wasn’t actually a spiky relationship at all. It was, uh, very warm, very close and very loving, I think. All The Beatles. We used to say, I think we were amongst the first sort of men to come out openly – and you remember, it was quite sort of strange in those days, we’re talking about a long time ago now when homosexuality was still sort of largely illegal – we used to say ‘I love him’ on interviews and the interviewers would get slightly taken aback, a man saying he loved someone. But I think, quite genuinely, we really did and I still do. Um, but the business thing came right in the middle of it, the lawyers came along with the business thing and I talked to John many years. Because the great saving grace was we did put our relationship back together.
M: You did, it-
P: Thank god for that! Because I don’t know what I’d do now with him gone if we hadn’t. I think I would be, uh, wracked with all sorts of guilt. But we did.
John and Paul during the Beatles press conference in Atlantic City (September 9, 1964)
"This blurring of sexual lines was part of the creative mix of the culture, but it also had its dark side. The homoerotic subculture had as a nasty by-product a virulent strain of misogyny. .. the [redlands] trial and acquittal bonded Mick and Keith--but it created a very odd dynamic. For Keith it was just an alliance within the group, but for mick it was a lot more than that. It has all the irrationally and passion of a love affair. Lennon and McCartney had a similar bond between them".----Marianne Faithfull
Marianne Faithful with Paul
FHIS IS SO SICK AND TWISTED. “John had to have a warm and loving side for me to stand him all those years” FUCKFCKUK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK
“John and I were two of the luckiest people in the twentieth century to have found each other” IS LITERALLY VILLAINOUS. LUCKIEST PEOPLE ALIVE IJ YHE WORLD JUST TO KNOW EACH OTHER. TO HAVE FOUND EACH OTHER
“He was absolutely wonderful and I did love him” PAUL MCCARTNEY WHEN I CATCH YOU
So you mean to tell me that every song in the Gimme Some Truth Deluxe Book is accompanied by commentary on its inception, instruments used and musicians who played on the track and then you get to I Know (I Know) and they decide to forgo all of that and end up just including quotes from John about missing England, Paul, old friends, about trying to talk to each other after not seeing each other and having a hard time signing the Beatles dissolution papers?
The jig is UP.
what if I just jump off a bridge
Rewatching parts of Get Back and I am once again asking—why does John only direct his comment regarding Yoko’s divorce coming through to Paul? Like not even a glance at George or Ringo or Billy? Excuse me, what is going on?
Paul McCartney and George Harrison messing around backstage before their gig at the ABC Cinema in Manchester. The footage is from The Beatles Come To Town. (20 Nov. 1963)
source
“Q - Did The Beatles get on each other’s nerves a lot? They were always so closely confined in their hotel rooms?“ "No. It was surprising. They always had a suite. George and Ringo stayed together in one room, and John and Paul in the other bedroom, and a big, big room in between.”
— Gary James’ Interview With The Beatles’ Road Manager Bob Bonis
THE JAMES PAUL MCCARTNEY SHOW (1973)