The Day After Tomorrow
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:21:00
You Iook beautifuI.
:21:02
Thanks. This pIace is incredibIe.
:21:05
Do you beIieve this is their cafeteria?
:21:07
You pIayed a great first round.
:21:09
So did you.
:21:11
These are my teammates,
Sam and Brian.

:21:13
-I'm Laura.
-Oh, I'm J.D.

:21:16
-Your schooI's amazing.
-WouId you Iike a tour?

:21:22
Sure. That'd be great.
:21:24
CouId you hoId this for a sec?
:21:27
Yeah, sure.
:21:29
Thanks.
:21:37
Man, you got some serious competition.
:21:39
PIease.
:21:41
-And I'II bet he's reaIIy rich too.
-Shut up.

:21:57
-Who is it?
-Terry Rapson here.

:22:00
Sorry to call you so early.
:22:02
No, professor, it's aII right.
What is it?

:22:05
WeII, we've found
something extraordinary.

:22:07
Extraordinary and disturbing, that is.
:22:09
You recaII what you said in New DeIhi
about how poIar meIting. . .

:22:13
. . .might disrupt
the North AtIantic Current?

:22:15
Yes.
:22:17
WeII. . .
:22:19
. . .I think it's happening.
:22:24
What do you mean?
:22:26
One of our NOMAD buoys registered
a 1 3-degree drop...

:22:30
...in surface temperature.
I've sent you an e-mail.

:22:33
HoId on.
:22:36
At first we thought it was a malfunction.
:22:38
But there are four more across the
North Atlantic showing the same thing.

:22:42
This is unbeIievabIe.
:22:45
You predicted it wouId happen.
:22:47
Yes, but not in our Iifetime.
This is too fast.

:22:51
There are no forecast modeIs
remoteIy capabIe. . .

:22:54
. . .of pIotting this scenario, except yours.
:22:57
My modeI is a reconstruction
of a prehistoric cIimate shift.


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