| I’m sick and tired of my generation getting blamed for the state of the planet.
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| I’m sick of my generation getting called the TV generation. |
| «Well all you guys
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| do is watch TV.» |
| What’d you expect?! |
| We watched Lee Harvey Oswald get shot live
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| on TV one Sunday morning, we were afraid to change the fucking channel for the
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| next thirty years. |
| «This show sucks.» |
| «Yeah, but somebody might get shot during
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| the commercial. |
| Now hang on!» |
| That’s what’s wrong with this country.
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| We always shoot the wrong guys. |
| We shoot JFK, we shoot RFK, and it comes to
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| Teddy, we go, «Ahh, leave him alone. |
| He’ll fuck it up himself, no problem.
|
| You know?» |
| Biggest target in the whole goddamn Kennedy family. |
| He weighs about
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| seven thousand pounds. |
| You could shoot a bullet in Los Angeles and hit him in
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| the ass in Boston five minutes later. |
| He’d be standing on the lawn at the
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| Kennedy compound going, «Ah-ah-ah-ah, there’s a bullet in my ass! |
| Ah-ah-ah-ah!»
|
| Ted Kennedy. |
| Good senator, but a bad date. |
| You know what I’m saying, folks?
|
| One of those guys who gets home at four o’clock in the morning and goes, «What did I forget? |
| Oh! |
| The fucking girl! |
| What’s the matter with me?
|
| Jesus, where are my pants?! |
| Holy shit!»
|
| Because I’ll tell you folks. |
| We got a real problem with guns in this country.
|
| We have people snapping almost twice, three, four, five times a year. |
| Right?
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| People just snap. |
| They can’t take it anymore. |
| They just snap, they go into
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| McDonalds and kill fifteen people. |
| I mean, what the fuck is going on down at
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| the post office? |
| Every six months some guy gets fired, comes back and kills all
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| his co-workers. |
| If I worked at the post office as a supervisor, I wouldn’t lay
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| anybody off for the next twenty-five fucking years. |
| I’d just walk around going,
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| «Hanrahan, what’re you doing?» |
| «Nothing.» |
| «Well, keep it up, you’re doing a
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| great job! |
| Jesus. |
| I’ll tell ya.»
|
| And I am sick and tired for New York taking the blame in this country for the
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| crime problem. |
| You know, whenever you read a fact chart, it always says Detroit
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| leads the world in rape and murder and everything else, but New York takes the
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| blame. |
| «New York’s a cess pool. |
| It’s a cess pool of filth and crime.
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| We’re moving.» |
| Hey! |
| I just moved here four years ago, and I’m not leaving,
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| because this is the most exciting place in the world to live. |
| Oh yeah! |
| Yeah!
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| There are so many ways to die in New York City, come on! |
| Race riots,
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| drive by shootings, subway crashes, construction cranes collapsing on the
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| sidewalks, manhole covers blowing up, asbestos shooting into the sky.
|
| We had a subway crash here a couple of years ago. |
| Five people died.
|
| The next day they found the driver was drunk and hooked on crack.
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| Folks, this makes Disneyland look like a fucking bike ride, doesn’t it?
|
| «Your driver today is Edward. |
| He’s drunk and hooked on crack. |
| The man sitting
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| next to you has a loaded nine-millimeter. |
| Good luck, folks!» |
| «Honey,
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| get the camera out! |
| This is gonna be fucking great!»
|
| Yeah, I love living in New York, man, and people who live in New York,
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| we wear that fact like a badge right on our sleeve because we know that fact
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| impresses everybody! |
| «I was in Vietnam.» |
| «So what? |
| I live in New York!» |
| «Really?
|
| «Yeah, because New York teaches you to live life the way it should be lived.
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| Moment to moment. |
| Yes!
|
| (music begins in background)
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| Because every moment in New York could be your last. |
| Oh yeah, yeah. |
| You…
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| could be walking down the street tomorrow, feeling good about yourself,
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| drink free, drug free, looking forward to the future and somebody accidently
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| nudges their poodle off of a 75th floor ledge. |
| Doink! |
| And he’s headed for the
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| ground at a hundred and seventy five thousand miles per hour. |
| (howling) And
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| cur-chunk! |
| He’s impeded in your head! |
| You’re dead on contact. |
| The headline in
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| the Post the next day reads, «Man killed by best friend.» |
| People cut the
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| article out and they laugh about it at the office and you’re forever remembered
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| as the poodle man! |
| «I knew the poodle man and he hated fucking poodles.»
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| New York teaches you to live life moment to moment and street by street and |
| beat to beat. |
| Because we’ve all played that street to street game in New York,
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| haven’t we? |
| Yes, we have. |
| Good block. |
| Bad block. |
| Ooooh. |
| Good block. |
| Bad block.
|
| Oooo-Ooooh. |
| Gun block. |
| Crack block. |
| Oooo-Ooooh. |
| Asbestos block. |
| Poodle block!
|
| Poodle block!
|
| Because most people think, «Life sucks, and then you die.» |
| I disagree.
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| I think life sucks, then you get cancer. |
| Then you go into chemotherapy.
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| You lose all your hair, you feel bad about yourself. |
| Then all of the sudden
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| the cancer goes into remission. |
| You look good you feel good, you’re going great,
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| and all of the sudden you have a stroke. |
| You can’t move your right side.
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| And one day you step off the curb at 68th by Lincoln Center and BANG!
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| You get hit by a bus and then, maybe, you die
|
| Because I think Jim Henson said it best when he said, «Anybody got any aspirin?
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| I think I got a cold.» |
| And a chill filled the room. |
| We all have this
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| incredible attachment to the Muppets, don’t we? |
| «We love the Muppets!
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| They’re so cute!» |
| Did you hear about Jim Henson’s funeral? |
| Here in New York
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| City, huh? |
| Kermit the Frog and Big Bird sang «It's Not Easy Being Green»
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| at Jim Henson’s funeral. |
| If I’m fifty-six years old when I kick the bucket and
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| a fucking sock is singing at my funeral, I’m gonna pop out of the coffin and go,
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| «Hey! |
| What the hell is this about? |
| Sammy Davis Jr. gets Frank Sinatra,
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| and I get a fucking sock?! |
| I’m pissed off now!» |