| I love to smoke. |
| I smoke seven thousand packs a day, ok. |
| And I am never fucking
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| quitting! |
| I don’t care how many laws they make. |
| What’s the law now?
|
| You can only smoke in your apartment, under a blanket, with all the lights out?
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| Is that the rule now, huh?! |
| The cops are outside, «We know you have the
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| cigarettes. |
| Come out of the house with the cigarettes above your head.
|
| ««You'll never get me copper! |
| I’m never coming out, you hear? |
| I got a
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| cigarette machine right here in my bedroom. |
| Yeah, see? |
| Yeah!»
|
| Know what I’m gonna do? |
| I’m gonna get one of those tracheotomies.
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| So I can smoke two cigarettes at the same time, ahhhhh! |
| I’m gonna get nine
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| tracheotomies all the way around my neck. |
| I’ll be Tracheotomie Man!
|
| «He can smoke a pack at a time! |
| He’s Tracheotomie Man!»
|
| I’m looking forward to cancer, man. |
| I want that throat cancer. |
| That’s the best
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| kind. |
| You know why? |
| You get that throat cancer, you get that voice box thing.
|
| Know what I’m talking about? |
| (talking in voice box style; indistinct) Sure
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| it’s scary, but you can make a lot of money with a voice box. |
| Get a voice box,
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| walking around the streets of Manhattan, «You got any spare change?
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| ««Here's my whole wallet, get away from me! |
| Ahh!»
|
| Imagine a whole family with voice boxes. |
| That’d be creepy, wouldn’t it?
|
| They’d be out in that backyard everyday during the summer. |
| «Dad,
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| can we go to the beach?» |
| «Yes, get your mother and the dog. |
| We’ll leave right
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| now. |
| Sparky, come here.» |
| «Arf Arf Arf Arf Arf Arf Arf» Ahhhh!
|
| Or the ultimate irony. |
| A guy with a voice box pulling up to the drive through
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| window at McDonald’s. |
| That has to suck, huh? |
| «Can I help you?» |
| «Big Mac and a large order of fries.» |
| «Stop making fun of me.» |
| «I'm not making
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| fun of you.» |
| «I'm getting the manager.» |
| «Get the fucking manager, I don’t care.
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| I can remember a time in this country when men were PROUD to get cancer,
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| goddamn it! |
| When it was a sign of manhood! |
| John Wayne had cancer twice.
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| Second time, they took out one of his lungs. |
| He said, «Take 'em both!
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| Cuz I don’t fuckin' need 'em! |
| I’ll grow gills and breathe like a fish!»
|
| Babe Ruth, greatest baseball player to ever play the game. |
| He had a voice box.
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| He was the first American to have a voice box. |
| Yeah! |
| «This is Babe Ruth,
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| the Sultan of Swat, the Bambino, I smoke twenty-five goddamn black cuban
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| cigars a day. |
| I had meat for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. |
| I fucked eighteen
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| prostitutes a night! |
| 'course, I’m dead now. |
| I’m up here in heaven.
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| Lou Gehrig is up here with me. |
| God love Lou Gehrig. |
| Jesus Christ,
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| poor Lou Gehrig. |
| Died of Lou Gehrig’s disease. |
| How the hell did he not see
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| that coming? |
| You know. |
| We used to tell him, Lou, there’s a disease with your
|
| name all over it, pal! |
| There ain’t no Babe Ruth disease, I’ll tell you that
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| much right now. |
| Have a hot dog and a Hummer. |
| Go ahead, it’s on me.»
|
| I don’t know. |
| Personally, I think Billy Martin said it best when he said, «Hey!
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| I can drive!»
|
| Because we tried to be nice to you non-smokers. |
| We fucking tried. |
| Okay?
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| You wanted your own sections in the restaurants. |
| We gave you that, huh.
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| But that wasn’t enough for you. |
| Then you wanted the airplanes. |
| We gave you the
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| whole goddamn plane! |
| You happy now? |
| You own the fucking plane! |
| I’d like an
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| explanation about that one folks because I will guarantee you if the plane is
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| going down, the first announcement you’re gonna hear is, «Folks,
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| this is your Captain speaking. |
| Look, uhm, light 'em up, 'cause we’re going
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| down, okay. |
| I got a carton of Camels non-filters, I’ll see you on the ground.
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| Take it easy.» |
| Actually, it’d be more like this, «This is your Captain
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| speaking. |
| Smoke 'em if ya got 'em. |
| Rrrr Rrrr»
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| The filter’s the best part. |
| That’s where they put the heroine. |
| Only us real
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| good smokers know that fucking secret
|
| Yeah, we tried to be nice to you non-smokers. |
| We tried. |
| But you just fucking
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| badger us, you know? |
| You won’t leave us a-LONE! |
| You got all your little
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| speeches you’re always giving to us. |
| All these little facts that you dig out of
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| a newspaper or pamphlet and you store that little nugget in your little fucking |
| head, and we light up and you spew 'em out at us, don’t ya? |
| I love these little
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| facts. |
| «Well you know. |
| Smoking takes ten years off your life.» |
| Well it’s the
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| ten worst years, isn’t it folks? |
| It’s the ones at the end! |
| It’s the wheelchair
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| adult diaper kidney dialysis fucking years. |
| You can have those years!
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| We don’t want 'em, alright?! |
| And I guarantee if I’m still alive,
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| I’ll be smoking then. |
| I’ll be in my wheelchair, with my adult diapers on and
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| my twenty-five year old non- smoking born again christian son behind me.
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| I’ll be going, «Hey! |
| Make sure you wipe this time. |
| I was itching all week for
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| Christ’s sake! |
| And get me some more wippets. |
| I’m almost out, you fucking pussy!
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| Come on!»
|
| Because you’re always telling us, «You know, if you quit smoking now,
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| every cigarette takes six minutes off your life. |
| If you quit now you can live
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| an extra ten years. |
| If you quit now, you can live an extra twenty years.
|
| «Hey, I got two words for you, okay? |
| Jim Fixx. |
| Remember Jim Fixx?
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| The big famous jogging guy? |
| Jogged fifteen miles a day. |
| Did a jogging book.
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| Did a jogging video. |
| Dropped out of a massive heart attack when?
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| When he was fucking jogging, that’s when! |
| What do you wanna bet it was two
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| smokers who found the body the next morning and went, «Hey! |
| That’s Jim Fixx,
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| isn’t it?» |
| «Wow, what a fucking tragedy. |
| Come on, lets go buy some buds.»
|
| It’s always the yogurt sprout eating motherfuckers who get run over buy a bus
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| drive by a guy who smokes three and a half packs a day. |
| «Sorry officer,
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| I didn’t see him. |
| I was too busy smoking!» |