Christmas in July
prev.
play.
mark.
next.

:53:25
- It was gonna be nice, wasn't it?
- (Sniffs)

:53:30
Stop it, honey.
Come on, now, cut it out. Come on.

:53:43
Come in.
:53:45
- I hope I'm not intruding?
- No, sir, I was just coming to see you.

:53:49
We stopped to look at the office...
:53:51
- So I see. I hope you like it.
- It's beautiful.

:53:53
It isn't every young man who gets his own
office and a private secretary at your age.

:53:57
With many of them
I'd be afraid it would go to their heads

:54:01
- but you have your feet on the ground.
- Thank you, sir.

:54:04
I mean it sincerely. Mr Jenkins and I
discussed our little meeting after you left

:54:09
and I want you to know that we were
genuinely impressed - genuinely so.

:54:14
- That's nice to hear...
- The more we thought about your ideas

:54:17
the more aware we became of their
pungency, their brevity, their crispness.

:54:22
- Thank you, sir, it's...
- You have a genuine talent for slogans.

:54:27
It must be like having an ear for music.
:54:29
Take me, I sing flat. You, on the other hand,
are a born sloganeer.

:54:33
"It's bred in the bean." Hot ziggety!
:54:36
Well, it's certainly wonderful to hear, Mr
Baxter. You've made me feel a lot better.

:54:42
They're still the same ideas, aren't they?
:54:45
If they were good this afternoon
they're still good. They're the same.

:54:50
- Of course they are.
- Of course they are.

:54:52
- I'm not quite sure I have your thought.
- You still think they're good, don't you?

:54:58
Well, of course I do. Why?

prev.
next.