Blast from the Past
prev.
play.
mark.
next.

1:01:00
I’m not promising anything.
1:01:04
-Are you OK?
-Mm-hmm.

1:01:10
I see snow--
1:01:13
lots of snow...
1:01:15
way up north.
1:01:18
Are we getting hot?
1:01:24
You live in Alaska...
1:01:26
and the only way in and out
of your place is by plane.

1:01:30
And you definitely came here
for food and supplies...

1:01:33
and to find a wife.
1:01:38
That was right?
1:01:40
Got goose bumps all over me.
1:01:41
I’m clairvoyant, butthead.
1:01:43
Why wouldn't you just go
to Nome...

1:01:46
to get supplies and a wife?
1:01:47
Isn't that a lot closer?
1:01:49
Yeah, right. That's where
you'd go to find girls--

1:01:52
Nome.
1:01:53
He's gay, by the way.
1:01:56
Well, good for you.
1:01:59
Well, we try.
1:02:01
Can I ask you some questions?
1:02:05
When did Alaska become a state?
1:02:07
1959.
1:02:08
And who owned it before we did?
1:02:10
Russia.
1:02:12
And when did we get it
from them?

1:02:13
1867--Seward's folly.
1:02:15
We purchased it for seven
point two million dollars--

1:02:18
a tidy sum then as well as now.
1:02:20
I’m quoting my father,
of course.

1:02:22
All right,
what's the state capital?

1:02:24
Juneau.
1:02:25
Hello? It’s Anchorage. Gotcha.
1:02:29
Sorry. That's the largest city.
1:02:37
Where's he going?
1:02:38
He's going to check
your answers on his computer.

1:02:42
He has a computer?
1:02:43
-Sure.
-In the house?

1:02:45
No, actually,
it's in the backyard.

1:02:48
Of course it's in the house.
It’s in there.

1:02:49
May I be excused, please?
1:02:52
Thank you.

prev.
next.