Adaptation.
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:32:01
Right. Right!
:32:04
Boy, you know your stuff.
:32:05
No, not really. I'm just learning.
:32:08
Epiphytes grow on trees,
but they're not parasites.

:32:11
They get all their nourishment
from the air and the rain.

:32:14
Well, I'm impressed. That's great.
:32:18
There are more than 30,000 kinds
of orchids in the world.

:32:21
- Wow, that's a lot, huh?
- Yeah. Yeah.

:32:25
Yeah.
:32:26
So I'll be right back with an extra-large
slice of key lime pie for my orchid expert.

:32:31
But... So anyway,
I was also wondering...

:32:36
I'm going up to Santa Barbara this
Saturday for an orchid show, and I...

:32:43
- I'm sorry.
- Well...

:32:44
- I apologize. I'm sorry.
- So I'll just be right back with your pie.

:32:58
There are more than 30,000
known orchid species.

:33:02
One looks like a turtle.
:33:05
One looks like a monkey.
:33:08
One looks like an onion.
:33:10
One looks like a schoolteacher.
:33:12
One looks like a gymnast.
:33:14
One looks like that girl in high school
with creamy skin.

:33:18
One looks like a New York
intellectual...

:33:20
...with whom you do the Sunday
Times crossword puzzle in bed.

:33:23
One looks like a Midwestern
beauty queen.

:33:25
One looks like Amelia.
:33:28
One has eyes that dance.
:33:30
One has eyes that contain
the sadness of the world.

:33:38
So I got married,
and me and my beautiful new wife...

:33:41
...my now ex-wife, the bitch...
:33:45
...opened up a nursery.
:33:47
People started coming out
of the woodwork to ask me stuff...

:33:50
...and admire my plants
and admire me.

:33:56
I think some people were really spending
time with me because they were lonely.


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