Out of Sight
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1:20:02
- You like bourbon?
- I love it.

1:20:04
We got that out of the way. Tell me,
Celeste, what do you do for a living?

1:20:08
I'm a sales rep,
and I came here to call on a customer,

1:20:11
but they gave me a hard time
'cause I'm a girl.

1:20:14
Is that how
you think of yourself?

1:20:16
- As a sales rep?
- As a girl.

1:20:18
- Yeah, I don't have a problem with it.
- I like your hair.

1:20:20
- I like your outfit.
- Actually, this is
my second favorite outfit.

1:20:24
I had a first favorite, but it got
ruined and I had to get rid of it.

1:20:27
- You did?
- It smelled.

1:20:29
- Really? Having it
cleaned didn't help?
- No.

1:20:32
So tell me, Gary,
what do you do for a living?

1:20:34
- How far do you want
to go with this?
- Don't say anything yet.

1:20:37
I don't think it works
if we're somebody else.

1:20:39
I mean, Gary and Celeste,
what do they know about anything?

1:20:41
- Well, this is your game,
I've never played before.
- It's not a game.

1:20:44
It's not something you play.
1:20:46
Well, does this make
any sense to you?

1:20:48
It doesn't have to.
It's something that happens.

1:20:51
It's like seeing
someone for the first time--
like you could be passing on the street,

1:20:56
and you look at each other
and for a few seconds...

1:20:59
there's this kind of a recognition--
like you both know something.

1:21:03
The next moment,
the person's gone,

1:21:06
and it's too late
to do anything about it.

1:21:09
And you always remember it,
because it was there, and you let it go,

1:21:12
and you think to yourself,
"What if I had stopped?
If I had said something?"

1:21:15
"What if?"
1:21:17
"What if?"
1:21:19
And it may only happen
a few times in your life.

1:21:26
- Or once.
- Or once.


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