Class Action
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:41:02
- Yes. Yes.
- Wanna see 'em?

:41:07
Oh, no. Oh my God!
:41:09
Look at all your hair!
:41:14
You had a beautiful mother, Magpie.
Look at that. My God.

:41:20
Magpie?
:41:22
You haven't called me that since...
I must have been 12.

:41:25
Yeah.
:41:28
- The prettiest, smartest...
- Yeah.

:41:30
...mouthiest kid.
:41:38
- Ah, the People's Park Festival.
- Oh, yeah.

:41:42
- 1967, '68.
- Yeah.

:41:56
They don't make marches like they used to.
:41:59
Do you remember this?
:42:01
No, only what I read in the paper.
You left Mom and me at home. Of course.

:42:07
I'd just turned 13.
:42:10
My first boyfriend had dumped me.
And I could have used you.

:42:14
Young love was always
your mother's line, Margaret.

:42:18
I was busy trying to keep
the planet in one piece.

:42:21
Burning a few bras in the process.
:42:23
I was more interested
in burning draft cards.

:42:25
Really? I thought you were more
interested in the women's movement.

:42:30
Relationships were more casual
in those days. It was just more open.

:42:36
Oh, please!
I'm so tired of the '60s crap.

:42:40
I was on the road for six,
nine months at a time.

:42:42
None of this ever meant anything to me.
:42:48
Not even Alice Worth?

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