Storytelling
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:29:00
I kind of came
to terms with myself.

:29:02
I realized I had done
what I had to do,

:29:05
- and it was time to move on.
- ( toilet flushes )

:29:08
What did you do after
you gave up on acting?

:29:11
I went to law school,
if you can believe that.

:29:15
- I believe it.
- Well, it was really...

:29:19
all kind of a joke and a rip-off,
the whole thing,

:29:23
- so I dropped out.
- That's too bad.

:29:26
Well, but then
it got me writing,

:29:28
so that was a good thing.
:29:30
Anything I might know about?
:29:32
Well...
:29:34
I kind of let things go
on this novel I'd been really into.

:29:37
The whole publishing industry
is totally corrupt.

:29:40
Really, it's finished.
:29:43
That's too bad.
:29:45
I worked over at a homeless shelter
for a while,

:29:47
drove a cab to pay the rent,
:29:50
but that was...
:29:52
I mean, I have some dignity.
:29:54
That's good.
So then what do you do now?

:29:57
I'm a documentary filmmaker.
:29:59
Oh? Anything
I might have seen?

:30:01
Not yet.
I'm hoping to get a grant

:30:04
for this one project
on teenagers.

:30:07
Remember when
we were teenagers?

:30:10
Yeah, you didn't want
to take me to the prom.

:30:14
I-- I don't
remember that.

:30:17
I do.
:30:20
Well-- but
It was so long ago.

:30:24
We were so different
back then.

:30:30
Well, anyway...
:30:32
I'm looking for subjects
for this documentary

:30:35
on teenage life
in suburbia.

:30:37
It's kind of an exploration
of the psyche,

:30:40
of its mythology.
:30:42
I wrote to Derrida to see
if he'd like to do the narration,

:30:46
but everything's still kind of
in development at this point.

:30:49
Huh.
:30:51
I work in a shoe store
right now.

:30:54
But it's cool,
I'm not ashamed.

:30:57
I have a much stronger
sense of self now.


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