Thursday, August 7, 2008

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Numb3rs

FBI agent Don Eppes (Rob Morrow) stars in Numb3rs TV Show. He recruits his younger brother Charlie (David Krumholtz), a mathematical genius and college professor, to help solve some of his more difficult crimes. Although many in the bureau are skeptical of Charlie’s involvement, he finds support among his college colleagues and demonstrates his skills. The series also stars Sabrina Lloyd, Peter MacNicol, Judd Hirsch, and Alimi Ballard.

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Numb3rs season 4 spoiler becareful

July 24th, 2008 by admin

Let’s Download Numb3rs Episodes

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Rob Morrow

July 13th, 2008 by admin

Before he became widely celebrated as FBI Agent Don Eppes on NUMB3RS, Rob Morrow was best known for his critically acclaimed portrayal of New York doctor Joel Fleischman on the hit television series, Northern Exposure. For his work on this show, he received two Golden Globe and three Emmy Award nominations for “Best Actor in a Dramatic Series,” and moved into writing and directing.

Son of Murray Morrow, an industrial lighting manufacturer, and Diane Morrow. Rob’s parents divorced when he was 9. A native New-Yorker, he started his theatre career working for Tom O’Horgan and Norman Mailer.

Rob married actress Debbon Ayer in 1998, and they welcomed their first child, daughter Tu Simone Ayer Morrow, on April 25, 2001. Rob and Debbie also co-produced Maze in 2000, an independent feature in which he wrote, directed, produced and starred. Maze won the audience choice honorable mention award at Cinequest at the San Jose Film Festival in March 2001.

Credits as an actor also include Quiz Show (1994), Mother (1996/II), Last Dance (1996), The Day Lincoln Was Shot (1998 ), The Emperor’s Club (2002), and Guru (2002).

Rob made his directorial debut with The Silent Alarm, which premiered at the 1993 Seattle Film Festival, and went on to screen at the Hamptons, Boston, Edinburgh, and Sundance Film Festivals, with its television debut on Bravo. Rob directed several episodes of Street Time as well as an episode of HBO’s Oz (1997) and CBS’s Joan of Arcadia (2003).

Other film projects include Shopping and Night’s Noontime.

He is committed to the theatre as a founding member of the nonprofit ensemble Naked Angels, along with Marisa Tomei, Fisher Stevens, Ron Rifkin and Nancy Travis, among others. He has also appeared in Third Street at the Circle Repertory Theatre and London’s West End production of Birdy.

Rob is on the Board of Directors of Project ALS. Co-founded by Jenifer Estess, who was diagnosed with ALS in 1997. Project ALS is committed to funding the research necessary for finding effective treatments and a cure for people living with ALS, a fatal neuromuscular disease.

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David Krumholtz

July 13th, 2008 by admin

Name: David Krumholtz

Birthday: May 15, 1978

Birthplace: New York,

David Krumholtz Trivia:

  • Played Neil in the original pilot for the comedy series Suddenly Susan. After the pilot was shot, the format of the show was changed and the character later became Todd Stites and went to David Strickland.
  • Atteneded Stephen A Halsey Junior High School in Forest Hills, Queens.

David Krumholtz Detailed Biography:

David Krumholtz (born May 15, 1978 in Queens, New York) is an American actor who currently stars in the CBS television show NUMB3RS.

David Krumholtz in NUMB3RS David Krumholtz began his acting career at the age of 13 when he followed his friends to an open audition for the Broadway play Conversations with my Father (1992). He won the role of Young Charlie opposite Tony-winner Judd Hirsch, and actors Tony Shalhoub and Jason Biggs (also making his Broadway debut). Soon after his run on Broadway, David co-starred in two feature films: Life With Mikey (1993) opposite Michael J. Fox and Addams Family Values (1993) opposite Christina Ricci. For his role in Mikey, David was nominated for a 1993 Young Artist Award. Although his work in these two films garnered him critical attention, David is probably best known by children and the young-at-heart as the sarcastic head elf Bernard from The Santa Clause (1994) and its 2002 sequel The Santa Clause 2. In 1994, David co-starred in his first television series, Monty, with Henry Winkler. The show only lasted a few episodes. David would star in several short-lived series over the years. He did a number television pilots, some of which made it to the air, and none of which lasted more than 13 episodes. Along the way, he had the opportunity to work with Jason Bateman (Chicago Sons, 1997), Tom Selleck (The Closer, 1998), Jon Cryer (The Trouble with Normal, 2000), and Rob Lowe (The Lyon’s Den, 2003). It wasn’t until CBS renewed “NUMB3RS” for a 2005-2006 second season that David got the opportunity to film a fourteenth episode of a television series. Along with his starring roles on television, David made memorable guest appearances on ER, Law and Order, Undeclared, Lucky, and Freaks and Geeks. David Krumholtz in The Santa Clause David amassed a healthy filmography in addition to his television work. He broke out of the children’s movie genre with The Ice Storm (1997), directed by Ang Lee, and Slums of Beverly Hills (1998), starring Alan Arkin and Natasha Lyonne. In 1999, David starred as Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s Shakespeare-costumed friend, Michael Eckman, in the popular teen movie 10 Things I Hate About You. That same year, he portrayed a completely different teen character - that of Yussel, a young conflicted Jewish man in Liberty Heights. It was the role of Yussel that brought David to the attention of actor and filmmaker Edward Burns, who then cast him in the 2001 independent movie Sidewalks of New York. Playing the romantic and slightly obsessive Benny, David was on a path to larger, more complex film roles. His first role as a leading man came in 2002, when he played opposite Milla Jovovich in the romantic comedy You Stupid Man. David successfully carried the film, but most never got a chance to see the movie, which was released only in Europe and parts of Asia. It wasn’t until Big Shot: Confessions of a Campus Bookie premiered on FX Networks that America got to see David in a leading role. David Krumholtz in Big Shot Big Shot was a true story based on the Arizona State University basketball fixing scandal of the Early 1990s. David played Benny Silman, a college student and campus bookmaker who was jailed for his part in shaving points off key ASU basketball games. Benny was unlike any character David played prior, and garnered critical praise for his performance, proving that he was not just a sidekick. In 2004, David again played lead, this time reuniting with Edward Burns for the independent film The Last Hold-Outs. The following year he played Max in My Suicidal Sweetheart (formerly Max and Grace), where he once again starred opposite actress Natasha Lyonne. David also returned to smaller key roles in the successful films Ray and Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle - two very different movies released in 2004. In September of 2005, he was seen in Joss Whedon’s science fiction film Serenity as Mr. Universe. Currently, David is enjoying his time working on the hit series NUMB3RS. He plays Charlie Eppes, a mathematical genius who helps his brother Don (Rob Morrow), an FBI agent, solve crimes using math. The cast of NUMB3RS also includes Judd Hirsch, the man who gave David his start in acting back in 1992 on the Broadway stage. Television critic Matt Roush (TV Guide) called David’s work on NUMB3RS “probably his best TV work to date.” David currently resides in Los Angeles, California where he films NUMB3RS.


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Watch Numb3rs TV Show Online

June 29th, 2008 by admin

Inspired by actual cases and experiences, Numb3rs TV Show depicts the confluence of police work and mathematics in solving crime. An FBI agent recruits his mathematical genius brother to help solve a wide range of challenging crimes in Los Angeles from a very different perspective.

Numb3rs02

Numb3rs stars David Krumholtz as Charlie Eppes, Rob Morrow as Don Eppes, Judd Hirsch as Alan Eppes, Peter MacNicol as Larry Fleinhardt, Alimi Ballard as David Sinclair, Navi Rawat as Amita Ramanujan, Diane Farr as Megan Reeves, and Dylan Bruno as Colby Granger.

Ridley Scott, Tony Scott, Barry Schindel, David W. Zucker, Nicolas Falacci, and

Cheryl Heuton are executive producers of Numb3rs, which was created by Cheryl Heuton and Nicolas Falacci. Numb3rs is produced by Scott Free in association with Paramount Network Television for CBS.

Watch Numb3rs TV Show Online

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‘Shark’ Alum Joins ‘Numbers’

June 28th, 2008 by admin

When CBS rolled out its list of 25th-hour pickups last month, Shark didn’t make it to the happy list and its run ended at the close of its sophomore season. Among those that were left unemployed by its cancellation was Sophina Brown, who had essayed the role of Raina Troy.

Brown is back among the gainfully working now, after being tapped to fill in a void on another CBS show, Numb3rs.

Brown joins the cast of the crime procedural when Numbers returns to our small screens this fall. According to The Hollywood Reporter, Brown will come in as Nikki Donat, an adrenaline junkie, who also happens to be a former officer with the LAPD. She becomes a junior agent with the Los Angeles FBI team in what is reportedly a recurring gig for now, with the possibility of eventually turning regular.

Brown will be stepping into some fairly big shows coming into Numb3rs, where she is reportedly meant to fill in the void left behind by the departure of Diane Farr. Farr, who had essayed the role of Megan Reeves on the series, opted out of renewing her contract at the end of the recently concluded fourth season.

“I’m not leaving because I’m having babies. I’m leaving because I’m going to do a different job,” Farr told TV Guide last month. “I think after three years, most actors feel the need to see what else they can use their brain for. Numb3rs was such a perfect job. It was easy and it was fun and it was good people.”

The actress also addressed the potential fallout or discontent some fans may have felt about her exit, in relation to her onscreen romance with Peter MacNicol’s character on the series: “It was easy and fun - and if anyone’s not satisfied with the end of Megan and Larry’s story, I hope they understand that after the strike there was very little time to write something fantastic. It’s not because people didn’t like Larry or Megan.”

Source: The Hollywood Reporter, TV Guide

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When Worlds Collide

June 24th, 2008 by admin

Episode Number: 79 Season Num: 4 First Aired: Friday May 16, 2008 Prod Code: n/a

Writer: Nicolas Falacci, Cheryl Heuton

Director: John Behring

Star: Diane Farr (Megan Reeves), Rob Morrow (Don Eppes), Navi Rawat (Amita Ramanujan), Judd Hirsch (Alan Eppes), Alimi Ballard (David Sinclair), David Krumholtz (Charlie Eppes), Dylan Bruno (Colby Granger)

Guest Star: Barber Ali (The Real Hassan Mazari), Meera Simhan (Asha Rafiq), Shawn Doyle (Shane O’Hanahan), Ravi Kapoor (Phil Sanjrani), Nick Jaine (Benjamin Rajar), Zeljko Ivanek (William Fraley), Roman Mitichyan (Kaleen Rafiq), David Valcin (Sport Coat #1), John Hawkinson (Attorney), Michael Balsley (Cop), Kevin Symons (CIA Officer), Shan Ali (Hadi Rafiq), Tiya Sircar (Shaza Rafiq), Paul Vincent O’Connor (Max Flaherty)

In the season finale, Don and Charlie work together on a case that ends up with them going head to head about their personal beliefs, and one team member will walk away forever.

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Memorable quotes

June 16th, 2008 by admin

Charlie Eppes: Everything is numbers.


Charlie Eppes: Larry, something went wrong, and I don’t know what, and now it’s like I can’t even think.
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: Well, let me guess: you tried to solve a problem involving human behavior, and it blew up in your face.
Charlie Eppes: Yeah, pretty much.
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: Okay, well, Charles, you are a mathematician, you’re always looking for the elegant solution. Human behavior is rarely, if ever, elegant. The universe is full of these odd bumps and twists. You know, perhaps you need to make your equation less elegant, more complicated; less precise, more descriptive. It’s not going to be as pretty, but it might work a little bit better. Charlie, when you’re working on human problems, there’s going to be pain and disappointment. You gotta ask yourself, is it worth it?
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: You know that it’s considered unsolvable?
Charlie Eppes: Well, certainly people who have failed to solve it might think that.
Don Eppes: Look, please don’t do this.
Charlie Eppes: Don’t do what, Don? Go ahead. Go ahead and try to tell me what it is that I’m doing. You don’t even know what it is I’m doing.
Don Eppes: Actually, I do. The thing is, I don’t think you do.
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: Okay, I’m going to go contemplate the koi pond.
Don Eppes: Charlie, look, you helped us find these guys once before. You can do it again. Come on.
Charlie Eppes: Why, so you can get shot again?
Don Eppes: No, buddy, look. Understand, I appreciate you care about me, but it’s not going to happen.
Charlie Eppes: Statistically, you’re dead now. You understand what that means? A man aimed a gun at your head and fired. The fact that you survived is an anomaly, and it’s unlikely to be the outcome of a second such encounter.
Charlie Eppes: Please, understand, sometimes I can’t choose what I work on. I can’t follow through on a line of thinking just because I want to, or, or because it’s needed. I have to work on what’s in my head. And right now, this is what’s in my head.
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: You know, here’s a discussion: Why is it that we remember the past and not the future?
Charlie Eppes: That’s a tough one, Larry.
Alan Eppes: Aren’t you going to introduce me to your girlfriend?
Charlie Eppes: You’ve met her before, she’s not my girlfriend, I’m her thesis advisor.
Alan Eppes: Does that mean she can’t be your girlfriend?
Charlie Eppes: It’s, uh, it’s against the rules.
Alan Eppes: Well, screw the rules. What’s more important, learning or love? Well, I’m sure there’s no rule against the father of her thesis advisor asking her out.
Charlie Eppes: Go for it, go right ahead, be my guest.
Amita Ramanujan: Thank you. Actually, I’m spoken for, Mr. Eppes.
Alan Eppes: Oh, really?
Amita Ramanujan: Back in Madras, my parents arranged for marriage to a family friend, a nice Hindu banker from Goa.
Charlie Eppes: Really? Getting married?
Amita Ramanujan: God, no, he’s a total ass.
Alan Eppes: Oh.
Charlie Eppes: Dad, you’re, like, hovering over us, and we have so much work to do.
Alan Eppes: I thought you already helped your brother out on this case.
Charlie Eppes: Something this complex needed to be checked and rechecked.
Alan Eppes: There’s one thing you and your brother have in common: On some things, you’re both very thorough; other stuff, you completely miss.
Charlie Eppes: There’s something else that has to be considered.
Don Eppes: Like what?
Charlie Eppes: Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle. Heisenberg noted that the act of observation will effect the observed; in other words, when you watch something, you change it, and uh, uh, for example, an electron, you know, you can’t really measure it without bumping into it in some small way. Any physical act of observation requires interaction with a form of energy, like light, and that will change the nature of the electron, its path of travel.
Don Eppes: Hold on. You know I got, like, a C in physics, so just take me through how this relates to the case.
Charlie Eppes: Don, you’ve observed the robbers. They know it. That will change their actions.
Don Eppes: I guess I was inspired by Mr. Heisenberg, just like Charlie here suggested.
Alan Eppes: Heisenberg? What do you mean, the physicist?
Don Eppes: Yeah.
Alan Eppes: Oh. Your brother goes into a dangerous confrontation with heavily armed felons, and you prepare him with a lecture on the movement of subatomic particles?
Charlie Eppes: Yep. It worked, didn’t it?
Alan Eppes: You know, Don and Charlie, they graduated high school on the same day.
Terry Lake: Thank you. Don’s mentioned it. A few times.
Alan Eppes: Kind of puts an edge on that sibling rivalry thing, you know.
Terry Lake: I’m sure it does. Having a kid like Charlie had to put some unusual pressure on the family. How old was he when you first realized he was exceptional?
Alan Eppes: He was three when he multiplied four-digit numbers in his head. By the age of four, he needed special teachers, special classes. My wife - I mean, his mother and I, we put a lot of time into his education. It was Don who was the one who had to get used to taking care of himself.
Terry Lake: Well, he might have gotten used to it, but I’m not sure he’s as good at it as he thinks he is.
Alan Eppes: Well, it’s hard for him to ask anyone for help. And it’s really hard for him to ask Charlie.
Charlie Eppes: Guy was a pompous ass.
Alan Eppes: Yeah, yeah, sure. I need you to come to dinner… at the house, on Wednesday. I have a date.
Don Eppes: Oh yeah? A date? Hey, well, that’s good. With who?
Alan Eppes: Well, it’s someone Art knows from yoga. Yeah, her name’s Jill. He says she’s smart, she’s funny, and, uh, quite flexible. So, I, I, eh, I, wh-, we’re having dinner at the house, and I would like you to be there.
Don Eppes: Hey, look, hey. No. Just take her somewhere low-key, you’ll do fine.
Alan Eppes: Look, it’s my first date in over thirty-five years; I would like memorable instead of low-key.
Don Eppes: Low-key and memorable aren’t mutually exclusive. You know what my favorite date ever was? Pepperoni pizza at a laundromat.
Alan Eppes: Yes, which explains the conspicuous absence of grandchildren. So, Wednesday, 7:30. Bring a date?
Charlie Eppes: It’s from someone who says she’s a fan of my work on low dimensional topology. And she’s a fan of my… hair.
Charlie Eppes: You know, this isn’t the first time I’ve received a love letter. When I published my first article in the American Journal of Mathematics I was invited to spend the weekend at a bed and breakfast in Santa Barbara.
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: Yeah? Did you go?
Charlie Eppes: Ah, I was fourteen. My mother had to break the news to a very embarrassed female professor at Berkley.
Don Eppes: [picks up paper airplane off floor] Who made this?
Charlie Eppes: Me. Why?
Don Eppes: Well, wings are a little thin here, buddy.
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: Hey, wait, wait, let me see this.
Charlie Eppes: Forgive me if all my years of advanced applied mathematics take issue with that assessment.
Don Eppes: Yeah, well, you’ll forgive me if all my years of high school detention say I’m right.
Don Eppes: So what does all your behavioral science training tell you about a grown man who still lives with his mother?
Megan Reeves: Probably about the same as two brothers still mooching meals at their dad’s house three nights a week.
Amita Ramanujan: Charlie, where did you learn all this stuff about assassination?
Charlie Eppes: If I told you that I’d have to kill you.
Amita Ramanujan: Okay, seriously.
Charlie Eppes: Seriously.
Charlie Eppes: Hey, hey, don’t get all Fleinhart on me. It’s just the Physics Department paper airplane contest.
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: Fl-Fleinhart? Since when did my last name become a predicate adjective?
Charlie Eppes: Since your students started using it that way.
Colby Granger: You assaulted a federal agent with a deadly weapon.
Henry Korfelt: It was a Volkswagen.
Charlie Eppes: Why do they want pictures of us?
Don Eppes: Just…”Calls back” He’s a famous mathematician!
Charlie Eppes: Don’t do that.
Don Eppes: Hey, get your vogue on, Charlie.
Alan Eppes: Checkmate.
Don Eppes: Checkmate.
Charlie Eppes: Oh, yeah, I see. You guys are ganging up on me, huh? You did that on purpose, that little distraction thing.
Charlie Eppes: What are you doing here?
Don Eppes: Hey. Well, I’m ready to party like it’s 1899.
Don Eppes: Hey, Dad. What are you doing here?
Alan Eppes: Well, I-I like coming whenever Charlie gives one of these math-for-dummies lectures. It’s the only time I actually understand what he’s talking about.
Alan Eppes: Ah, I’m just a little nervous.
Terry Lake: Don’t worry-everything looks wonderful. In fact, your son could learn a few things from you. Know where we went on our first date?
Don Eppes: All right, all right, all right, all right.
Terry Lake: The laundromat. Dinner was pizza.
Don Eppes: A little professionalism…
Alan Eppes: You don’t say… How interesting.
Don Eppes: Dad, sorry, we gotta go.
Alan Eppes: Sure, right. Couldn’t get any worse.
Don Eppes: Listen: alcohol. Lots of alcohol.
Alan Eppes: For who?
Security Guard: Excuse me? What’re you doing?
Charlie Eppes: Simple experiment. It’s a pendulum.
Security Guard: Sir, you and the pendulum need to leave.
Charlie Eppes: Okay. It drew an ellipse.
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: In twenty years of teaching, I have never received evaluation comments like these. Boring - me! Intellectually, uh, inaccessible.
Charlie Eppes: I thought we came up on this hike to get your mind off this ridiculous thing.
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: I mean, one-one student even said I’m out of touch in cutting-edge thinking in multidimensional theory. That one alone kept me up at night.
Charlie Eppes: Everybody gets bad evaluations now and then, come on.
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: Yeah, yeah, says the professor who never received less than a rave.
Charlie Eppes: As with any large group, there are responses that cover the entire spectrum. I once had a girl in my combinatorics seminar tell me that I was disorganized and I taught too fast.
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: That’s an accurate observation, actually.
Alan Eppes: Old man?
Charlie Eppes: I use it strictly as a term of endearment, Father.
Alan Eppes: Well, get ready, my little boy, ’cause this old man is gonna kick your ass.
Charlie Eppes: What are ya gonna do? You gonna cheat again?
Alan Eppes: I’m getting the Scrabble board.
[Alan walks away and Charlie has a terrified look on his face]
Charlie Eppes: Uh. uh… Th… Scrabble’s missing a piece!
[Charlie and Alan are golfing and Charlie tries to hit the ball, but misses]
Alan Eppes: That was better.
Charlie Eppes: What?
Alan Eppes: It was! You almost hit the ball.
Charlie Eppes: You know, I’m the king at basketball, I-I-I can snowboard, I’m the best at video games, I’m even getting over my fear of rock climbing. But I still, I can’t hit this little white ball.
[Charlie connects the computer game Minesweeper to the bank robberies]
Charlie Eppes: You see this game, Larry? You’ve got to clear the mines without blowing any up. Each time you clear a square, a numerical value is revealed. That number tells you exactly how many squares containing mines are directly adjacent to that square. This allows you to predict where the next mine will be located and then the more boxes revealed the more accurately one can predict the location of the mines. The pattern used in these bank robberies is similar to this kind of problem-solving pattern. These robbers have used the banks they’ve been robbing to tell them which ones to rob next.
[repeated line]
Don Eppes: Three, two, one; execute!
Charlie Eppes: When we’re working together, we talk and we laugh, and there’s? an energy. And I don’t understand why that doesn’t work outside the office. Why don’t we have anything else to talk about?
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: You know, you’re making an underlying assumption here that I question.
Charlie Eppes: What’s that?
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: That there’s something else you have to talk about. See, when you see two people unable to talk about politics or movies…
Charlie Eppes: Hey, movies, I - I can - I can talk about - I just saw the penguin movie.
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: I see two extraordinary minds that can communicate on the purest level a man and woman can interface on.
[pauses to think]
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: Okay, second purest.
Charlie Eppes: Geek love.
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: Hey, no better kind.
Colby Granger: Colonel in Special Ops said he was the bastard son of Clint Eastwood and Yoda.
Charlie Eppes: [Larry has been waxing philosophical] Is that the kind of stuff you talk about with Megan at lunch?
Don Eppes: [Don and Dad are surprised; Larry looks at Charlie, who grins mischievously] Wait, ho-ho-hold on. You and Megan went out to lunch?
Alan Eppes: Oh, please tell me you ordered something other than white food.
[the Eppes men laugh]
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: [trying to maintain some dignity] This was a meal shared by two inquisitive minds in an intellectual pursuit.
Charlie Eppes: [grinning bigger] Of course it was, like all your lunches with David. Oh, and with Colby.
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: [matter-of-factly] A gamma ray burst will release more energy in ten seconds than the sun will emit in its entire ten-billion-year lifespan.
Don Eppes: I got it, what’s the Hulk’s real name?
Charlie Eppes: Um, Bruce Banner.
Don Eppes: That’s right. I mean, didn’t gamma rays turn him into the Hulk?
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: [still matter-of-factly] They come from the furthest ends of the universe, and after 45 years, we’re still uncertain of their origin.
[turns to leave]
Alan Eppes: And?
Dr. Larry Fleinhardt: [pointedly matter-of-fact] And we’re closer to an answer on *that* than the three of you are ever going to get on *this*.
[smirks slightly, and closes the door behind him]
Charlie Eppes: Don’t call me Chuck.
Don Eppes: What if I called you ‘chuckie’?
Charlie Eppes: What if I called you ‘Donald’?
Don Eppes: What if I called you ‘nerd’?
Don Eppes: So, about your dream?
Charlie Eppes: Dad got shot. It was during a holdup, at the deli. It was… pretty upsetting.
Don Eppes: Yeah, I’m sure…
Charlie Eppes: And… mom made pancakes.
Don Eppes: [pauses] Pancakes?
Charlie Eppes: [shrugs] I don’t even dream normal…

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2 comments:

Devid said...

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jeeter said...

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