:52:04
But?
:52:06
A smart person
knows who she's living with.
:52:12
Gentlemen, I really don't want you
to worry about this...
:52:19
That's beautiful.
:52:24
OK.
:52:25
I think you'll enjoy David Copperfield.
:52:27
Anything by Dickens is wonderful.
:52:29
What is this crap?
:52:32
It's Haydn, Op. 111.
:52:34
- It's a classical piece, Harry.
- Classic piece of shit if you ask me.
:52:38
I like it.
:52:39
It's good before bed.
:52:42
So, the Fifth Amendment
to the Constitution
:52:44
says that you can't testify
against yourself.
:52:47
How would that even work?
It seems physically impossible.
:52:51
- You're teaching her about the Fifth?
- Well, the Constitution. I thought...
:52:56
It's not your job to think.
Get her to think.
:52:58
- Harry!
- It's OK, Billie.
:53:01
First of all, she knows how to think.
:53:03
And second, she...
:53:05
I need her so she can talk at parties,
not pass some ancient history test.
:53:08
You think the Constitution
is ancient history?
:53:12
- Work on her, not me.
- No extra charge.
:53:15
I don't need nothing you could tell me.
:53:17
- There's a lot he could tell you.
- I'll bet!
:53:20
Who's Tom Paine, for instance?
:53:23
What do I care? If he's not buying
from me, why should I care?
:53:27
You're so smart,
who's Dave Righetti?
:53:30
Left-handed pitcher for the Giants,
:53:33
pitched a no-hitter for the Yanks in '83.
:53:36
So what are you, some kind of genius?
:53:39
- No.
- I fire geniuses every day.
:53:43
- Clearly.
- The more I see you, the less I like you.
:53:48
Is that the way you talk
to your senator friends, too, Harry?
:53:58
I'm gonna tell you this once.