Skip to playerSkip to main contentSkip to footer
  • 5/23/2025
SurrealEstate - Season 3 Episode 7 -
A Slice of Afterlife
#CinemaJourney
Transcript
00:00I was just wondering if you're all right yeah I'm fine
00:05sweet of you to ask I think tag is crushing on you Susan I'm crashed
00:16this program is presented with described video
00:21this program contains coarse language and scenes that may be frightening to
00:30some viewers viewer discretion is advised
00:36previously on Surreal Estate I was just wondering if you're all right yeah I'm
00:40fine sweet of you to ask I think tag is crushing on you Susan I'm crashed they
00:49want me to tell you not every soul needs a kick in the ass
00:55Tyler it's about Tyler McNeil Tyler is obsessed with Luke Roman
01:19Tim what please can we just go got something stay in the car no Tim
01:49go go
02:04here is a title search insurance hmm a settlement statement as negotiated
02:12they're leaving
02:19go go
02:33here is a title search insurance hmm settlement statement as negotiated
02:41they're leaving some of the appliances and the window coverings and this is my
02:47favorite part oh cash deals more rare than a happy marriage and far more
03:01fungible especially for first-time homebuyers Bitcoin paid off oh so that's
03:09the Crawford group yeah it made sense tax-wise the pressures to my corporation
03:15well it's been a treat next time you have a quick cash deal nobody needs to
03:23know we're sitting right here bye
03:29you'll have to excuse Rita she may come off as a cold unfeeling ruthless house
03:36selling machine so what are you moving in we're actually um we're not done yet
03:44we heard that your agency is special well we like to think so we heard from a
03:55guy that you understand stuff that a lot of other people don't
04:03that is fair to say off as a cold unfeeling ruthless house selling
04:11machine so what are you moving in we're actually um we're not done yet we heard
04:21that your agency is special well we like to think so we heard from a guy that you
04:30understand stuff that a lot of other people don't that is fair to say but
04:41this house I don't think it has the type of problem that I think you are talking
04:46about not yet
04:52maybe you should just tell us exactly what you're talking about
04:58um for the past three years we've been on the lam the lamp we have moved in and
05:08out of 22 homes if you can call a place that you've lived for two weeks a home
05:15because every single time it finds us we've tried everything exorcisms
05:22witch doctors dream catchers Lutherans we're tired of running exhausted and now
05:30we have a baby due in a few weeks it's time to make a stand well you still
05:36haven't told us what it is that is following I don't know what do you call
05:43it a curse a monster a following thing we just we want you to take care of it
05:53you know zap it or whatever zap it yeah that's what you do right of running
06:01exhausted and now we have a baby due in a few weeks it's time to make a stand
06:08well you still haven't told us what it is that is following I don't know what
06:17do you call it a curse a monster a following thing we just we want you to
06:25take care of it you know zap it or whatever zap it yeah that's what you do
06:33right
06:43it's the thing I get a twitch like a sixth sense only one that makes you want
06:49to sneeze so what's it telling you this time the vandals are hiding something do
06:54you mind checking them out for me family history past residences business dealings
06:59anything you can find father hi Luke great to hear from you did you get my
07:07message yeah about that I just want to let you know that I've decided it's best
07:12if we not partner on this housing venture at this time I'm sorry what well
07:21it's just that I spoke with my partner Susan and well she's uncomfortable with
07:24the basic philosophy behind the deal your partner doesn't like the philosophy
07:31yeah I can't say that I necessarily disagree I thought this was our deal
07:38Luke it was but in a deal like this Susan and I well we have to be on the
07:42same page it's not gonna work Tyler I'm sorry
07:47you
08:02it's just that I spoke with my partner Susan and well she's uncomfortable with
08:07the basic philosophy behind the deal your partner doesn't like the philosophy
08:12Well, we have to be on the same page.
08:15It's not going to work, Tyler.
08:16I'm sorry.
08:22If I wasn't such a seasoned professional,
08:24my feelings might be hurt.
08:26You don't want me for an enemy, Luke.
08:28No, I don't.
08:29It's not personal.
08:30It's business.
08:32I'm aware of that.
08:39I'm disappointed I didn't get a chance
08:41to pitch Susan directly.
08:42You're obviously close.
08:45Very.
08:48Well then, just forget I ever walked into your world
08:52and offered you the deal of a lifetime.
08:56Right.
08:57Thanks for understanding.
09:00I'll be in touch.
09:01Bye.
09:12Great little partner you got there.
09:15It'd be a shame if something happened to her.
09:20Claire?
09:21Did you find it?
09:22Yep.
09:32What was it about six months ago that you couldn't
09:41stop long enough to talk to me?
09:46Did you want to share something?
09:48if something happened to her.
09:52Claire?
09:53Did you find it?
09:54Yep.
10:19Do you think we should have told them?
10:21They don't need to know.
10:23But...
10:25what if that helps them?
10:28To know the whole picture, I mean.
10:30To know that it's my mother?
10:32Come on, Tim.
10:34What kind of monster am I
10:36to not only be glad that my mother is dead
10:39but to actually want her deader than dead?
10:42What kind of daughter?
10:44What kind of person?
10:48Claire?
10:52Something's not right.
10:54We're heading to the hospital.
10:56Now.
10:57Okay.
10:58Okay.
11:14All the tests came back normal.
11:16Thank God.
11:17You do have some preeclampsia.
11:19High blood pressure.
11:20Now, in and of itself, that's not a concern.
11:23But it's vital you keep stressors to an absolute minimum.
11:26No problem.
11:29Thank you, Dr. Nesbitt.
11:33We're gonna be fine.
11:35Hey.
11:36Everything is gonna be fine.
11:39We have the perfect place to call home.
11:41The Roman Ireland people are working the problem
11:44and I'm gonna make sure nothing touches us.
11:47Or her.
11:52Okay.
11:55Good morning.
11:56A little something from us to you.
11:58Thank you, Susan.
12:00Of course.
12:02Everything good with your lovely new home?
12:04There's one...
12:08thing.
12:09The toaster?
12:10It's not ours.
12:11The previous owners left it behind.
12:13Oh.
12:14Okay.
12:15Well, let's just donate it to Goodwill or somebody.
12:18See, that's the thing.
12:19Every time we put it out on the curb
12:21or drop it at the Goodwill,
12:23it shows up back on our counter again.
12:25Oh.
12:26That's unusual.
12:28But that's not all.
12:32I thought my right rear looked a little low.
12:34Sorry?
12:36This toaster is predicting that I'm gonna have a flat tire today.
12:39It's a toaster of destiny.
12:41Just the other day, the toaster popped up an image of a baseball.
12:44And on that same day,
12:45a kid next door hit a home run through our window.
12:49Just as a toaster prophesied.
12:54All right.
12:57It's gone.
12:58I will, uh, dispose of it in the appropriate manner.
13:02All right?
13:03Enjoy the house.
13:08He'll be back.
13:11So, looking through the names of these dummy corporations
13:13they've been setting up, obviously,
13:14in an effort to hide from someone or something,
13:17I look through the names.
13:18The Cagney Corporation.
13:20Gable, Inc.
13:21The Rosebud Company.
13:23See the pattern?
13:24Pattern?
13:25Old movies.
13:26These people are obviously old movie buffs.
13:28Now, what was the name of the company that bought their new house?
13:31The Crawford Group.
13:32Bingo.
13:36Joan Crawford?
13:38Won an Oscar for Mildred Pierce in 1946?
13:41No more wire hangers!
13:44Ever!
13:47Sorry.
13:48Total flyby.
13:49Okay, okay, okay.
13:50Uh, so, Faye Dunaway plays Joan Crawford
13:52as a not-very-cool mom,
13:54which led me down a rabbit hole
13:55towards the obvious conclusion
13:56that the entity tracking the Bendels
13:58and messing with their shit
13:59is, in fact, another not-very-cool mom.
14:02The mother of the woman?
14:03Claire.
14:04Claire.
14:05Claire's mother, Emma Shields,
14:06died three years ago,
14:08the precise time the hauntings began,
14:10which happens to be the last time
14:12the Bendels had a permanent address.
14:14I also unearthed several complaints
14:16during their time
14:17jumping from hotel to motel to house rental.
14:19In one disturbingly specific account,
14:22the words,
14:23and I'm quoting the police report here,
14:25were crudely carved into walls and headboards.
14:32Claire?
14:33Clary Bear as sympathetic affectation?
14:35No, I get it,
14:36but it's just,
14:38why wouldn't they tell us?
14:40Well, in a rather dark left turn
14:42down Research Boulevard
14:43just a block away
14:44from potentially criminal violation
14:45of Privacy Statues Avenue,
14:46it happened along Claire's childhood health records.
14:49Whoa, her medical records?
14:51Isn't that a HIPAA violation?
14:54I'm not telling anyone.
14:55Are you?
14:57Nope.
14:58Well, no harm done.
15:00Anyway, turns out young Claire
15:01was a regular at their local hospital ER.
15:03She suffered dozens of seemingly normal
15:05adolescent injuries,
15:06burns, hematomas, broken bones,
15:08nothing in and of itself alarming
15:10until one notes that she was there
15:12three or four times a year
15:13throughout her young life.
15:18Any news?
15:19Nothing definite,
15:20but we do have a theory.
15:24Claire, tell me about your mother.
15:33We didn't come here for family therapy.
15:35We came to you because of...
15:37Yes, for all of the...
15:39Zapping.
15:40I know.
15:41But without all of the details
15:42pertinent to a situation,
15:44it can be difficult to get to that point.
15:57It's not as if
15:59my mother was just
16:01mean.
16:04Evil.
16:06She was pure evil.
16:09I was like three,
16:11but I remember having these
16:13tiny little bruises all over my body,
16:16always in places that the daycare workers
16:18wouldn't see.
16:21I just thought that I
16:23needed to be nicer
16:25so that Mother would like me more.
16:29But no matter what I tried,
16:32making up songs about her,
16:33giving her drawings,
16:34it just, it made her...
16:38angry.
16:41By the time
16:43I was in my teens,
16:45she started calling me
16:48ugly and stupid.
16:51She used to tape up
16:52the corners of my mouth
16:54to teach me to smile more.
16:58She said it was for my own good.
17:00She said it was for my own good,
17:02that she was teaching me
17:04to be ready for all the misery
17:06and disappointment of life.
17:10And afterwards, she would,
17:13she would always smile
17:15and say,
17:18I only wish you well.
17:21I'm so sorry.
17:24See?
17:25Somebody knows the truth,
17:26and the world didn't end.
17:31I'm so sorry, babe.
17:35You didn't sign up for this.
17:38I did sign up for this.
17:40All of it.
17:42If it's part of you,
17:43it's part of me.
17:45And hey,
17:47lots of husbands don't get on
17:48with their mother-in-law.
17:51It's kind of a cliché.
18:01Oh, my God.
18:03The picture.
18:04It's straight.
18:10She's here.
18:20Bhavin, Anika, morning.
18:22It's back.
18:25I don't get it.
18:26How did it...
18:27That's what it does.
18:28That's what it does.
18:29My tire blew out on the expressway.
18:31I had to change it on the side of the road.
18:33Here's the toaster of the day.
18:35It's nobody we know.
18:37Do you recognize him?
18:39Um,
18:40he looks sort of like
18:42a fireman I met recently.
18:44Let me send a courier to pick up the toaster.
18:46It's time to get my research guy on this.
18:48And, Anika,
18:49save me that slice, would you?
18:51Sure.
18:54She's here.
18:56How do you know?
18:57Mother hates disorder,
18:59so whenever we move into a new place,
19:01we leave something hanging on the wall that's crooked.
19:03We know she'll straighten it out.
19:05Did she?
19:06Oh, yeah.
19:07But that's just the beginning.
19:08Next, she'll be organizing our shoes
19:11by the front door
19:12and rearranging the cutlery drawer.
19:14Don't let her mess with knives.
19:16And then there's the smell.
19:18Liniment cream.
19:19She used to smear it all over her hands.
19:21In the music box?
19:23Playing in the middle of the night?
19:25And then the pinches.
19:28Welts popping up all over my body.
19:32And then, all of a sudden,
19:34she's there.
19:36And that's when all hell breaks loose.
19:41This might sound obvious,
19:42but have you ever tried just talking to her?
19:45When people die,
19:46get stuck in the minors,
19:47can't move on to the show,
19:49it's often because they have some unfinished business.
19:53Maybe Emma just wants to meet her only grandchild.
19:57That is exactly what we're afraid of.
20:00Guys, you don't get it.
20:02She's not lost.
20:04She's not searching.
20:06She's not unfinished.
20:08She's not even human.
20:09She wasn't even human when she was human.
20:12She just wants to mess with us.
20:13She just wants to torture me
20:14and everybody that I love.
20:16Okay.
20:18We get it.
20:19But if you're okay with it,
20:20I would like to try talking first.
20:27You're the experts.
20:30The courier just brought her by.
20:31Great.
20:32So what's your take?
20:36Can I be honest with you?
20:39You know, I've always been a freelancer.
20:40You know, a hired gun.
20:42Between that and my particular predilection
20:44for not going out in the world
20:45where there are bears and mimes
20:46and falling pieces of space debris,
20:48I tend to, you know, fly solo.
20:54This gig with Roman Ireland
20:55is the first time I've ever been a part of anything
20:57resembling a team, and I like it.
21:01I like it more than I thought I would.
21:04We like it, too.
21:08But I wouldn't say it's like a family
21:09because I hate people who say anything is like a family
21:11because the only thing like a family is a family,
21:13and I say that as someone
21:14who's never had a family myself,
21:15so let's just say Roman Ireland
21:17feels like home, and I like it here.
21:26So, back to the toaster.
21:30Look what it served up this morning.
21:33Huh.
21:34Is this anybody you know?
21:37Just a friend.
21:39Apparently the toaster gives the user
21:40glimpses into the future.
21:42Do you mind digging into this thing?
21:43I can do.
21:45Great, thanks, Tech.
21:47So, this friend,
21:50are you going to see him soon?
21:54Apparently.
21:55He's on the toast.
21:59Bye, Susan.
22:13Bye.
22:30Yeah, I feel you, Mom.
22:44Please.
22:46I'm beggin' you.
22:48Please.
22:50Please.
22:52Please.
22:53Please.
23:10Please.
23:13Wait, toasters didn't always pop?
23:18They did not.
23:19And because they did not, the looming danger of burnt toast was omnipresent, much like
23:23the threat of nuclear war today.
23:25But all that changed, minus the nuclear war, when this guy came along.
23:29Charles Streit invented the toaster on a timer in 1921.
23:33Brilliant.
23:34Visionary.
23:35World changing in its application of the Maillard reaction, which, as you know, is a chemical
23:38reaction between amino acids and reducing sugars to create melanoidins, the compounds
23:42which give brown food its distinct flavor.
23:45Everybody knows that.
23:46But for Streit, toasters became an obsession, and it wasn't long before he entered the
23:50shadowy world of the occult.
23:52The occult?
23:53That is, it's just toast.
23:55Well, not to Streit.
23:57In his twisted, brilliant mind, Streit came to believe that by manipulating the melanoidins,
24:02he was not only able to predict the future, but burn it onto a slice of bread.
24:06So how did it find its way back to the Battelle's house?
24:09Ah, so it seems that Streit had a protégé named Alan McMasters.
24:13McMasters was sad to see Streit's slow descent into madness, so in the late 20s, he stole
24:19the clairvoyant toaster out of the lab one night and hid it in his own home.
24:23He died in that same house in 1929, and on that very same site today...
24:27The Battelle's house.
24:31So that's why the toaster keeps ending up back there.
24:34It is drawn to the only home it ever knew, but yearns for its creator.
24:38Wow.
24:39Yeah, you don't really see that kind of loyalty in a small appliance.
24:42Thanks, Tag.
24:43It's really great work.
24:45Shall I send the toaster back?
24:47My guess is it'll find its way back to the Battelle's on its own.
24:52Emma?
25:07Emma?
25:10Emma?
25:12Emma.
25:22Emma?
25:36Oh, hi.
25:38Who are you?
25:41How can you be?
25:43Why are you here?
25:45This isn't your world anymore.
25:49Oh, but I'm not finished with it yet.
25:52I'm gonna be a grandma.
25:55Emma, don't.
25:57Where's Claire, the brat?
25:59No, she can't raise a child.
26:02She's too weak.
26:04Too stupid.
26:06Emma.
26:07No.
26:08That child needs me.
26:10The only chance she's got.
26:13I can teach her things, secret things.
26:16Things that her mother was never smart enough to grasp.
26:24You need to leave them alone and go back to her.
26:29Get out of my grandbaby's nursery!
26:37And, um, tell Claire I'm coming.
26:43Don't worry.
26:45I only wish you well.
26:53Hey.
26:54Well, not so great, really.
26:56How's Brad?
26:58No, I don't think so.
27:00Listen, Susan, we're gonna have to regroup here in a bit.
27:02Can you transfer me to August?
27:04I need a little something from this toolkit.
27:08Okay.
27:09Text me the address and I'll meet you.
27:12Well, for the second time today, I feel more than a little bit stupid.
27:27Well?
27:29There's something.
27:31I don't know.
27:32Is it straight?
27:35I'm gonna head out and give it a try.
27:41Okay.
28:06I believe you have something of mine.
28:09They told me non-enzymatic browning was incongruous with precognition.
28:14They called me mad.
28:17Well, who's mad now?
28:20Are you sure that's a rhetorical question, Mr. Strite?
28:25Charles Strite.
28:27Remember that name with the great seers and prognosticators.
28:31The great visionaries of the ages.
28:33Toastradamus.
28:35That son of a bitch McMasters.
28:38He was jealous of my genius.
28:40He stole my device.
28:42And do you know who put him up to it?
28:44All those cheap bastards who control Big Bread.
28:48It's a big, yeasty, gluten-packed cartel of evil.
28:55May I?
29:06You two probably want to be alone.
29:13You have righted a horrible wrong.
29:16Pretty much what I do.
29:28What happened?
29:29Where's the toaster?
29:31It's...
29:33It's gone.
29:36To a better place.
29:42I just can't stand the thought of that...
29:46Of her in the nursery.
29:49I know. I...
29:51I'm sorry, Claire. We had to try.
29:57It's scary enough just becoming a mom, you know?
30:02I wasn't planning on it.
30:04I didn't want to continue the pattern.
30:07But...
30:09Now it's happening and...
30:12It actually gives me hope.
30:16It's like...
30:17It's a chance for me to break free from all of the awful memories and...
30:23Forge a new path.
30:25Your husband said it.
30:27It's time for you to make your stand.
30:36Hi.
30:37Code your own, please.
30:53Hey.
30:54Hey.
30:55Hi.
30:56You look...
30:57So great.
30:59Yeah, I hope this place is okay.
31:01One of the guys at the station said it was the spot.
31:04Oh.
31:05But I forgot to mention it was a date, so...
31:07Oh, my God.
31:08This is a date?
31:10Uh...
31:12Well...
31:13I'm just kidding.
31:15I have a curl streak.
31:16Jeez.
31:17Don't do that.
31:18I'm surprisingly fragile.
31:23Thanks.
31:24I'll get whatever she's having.
31:27So...
31:28Save any little old ladies holding cats stuck up in trees from any fires today?
31:33Oh, God, yeah.
31:34Three before lunch, actually.
31:35Oh, wow.
31:36Yeah.
31:37How about you?
31:39Small kitchen appliance issue at one place, but...
31:42Nothing I can't handle.
31:43I bet.
31:45My mom used to clean other people's homes for a living.
31:49Sometimes I'd go with her and...
31:51We would walk through these amazing homes.
31:54And she would say,
31:55Someday, Charlie, we're gonna have one of these places.
32:00We never got there.
32:01Oh, I'm so sorry.
32:03No, no, no.
32:04I see you helping people like my mom get the places that make their dreams come true.
32:08That's so awesome.
32:10Yes.
32:11Yes, it absolutely is.
32:15Oh, thank you.
32:18Cheers.
32:20Cheers.
32:27I'm glad you texted.
32:29I was gonna a bunch of times, but I just...
32:31I was nervous.
32:33Why?
32:34You're totally out of my league.
32:41My mom always told me to look out for the nice guys.
32:44Guys you might fall for.
32:46She said they're out there, but they hide.
32:49She sounds like a character.
32:51She was.
32:52I lost her a little over a year ago.
32:54Oh, my God, I am so sorry.
32:56No, I was just thinking how much she'd love you.
33:00So...
33:02I'm a nice guy?
33:04I think you might be.
33:06Yeah.
33:08But I found where you were hiding.
33:16I'm sorry.
33:47Mom.
34:01In two time.
34:03One, two, three.
34:06I'm gonna make you just like me.
34:11Fingers.
34:13Hair so fine.
34:16You're not mommy's girl.
34:20You're mine.
34:33Ready?
34:38No.
34:39What?
34:40Wait, what is it?
34:41Is it a baby?
34:42No, no.
34:46She's attached to Claire like a pernicious weed sprouting out of a crack in the sidewalk.
34:52I've designed a new device with a dual processor.
34:56So the severance of the connection and the atomization of the spirit can happen simultaneously.
35:01Along with short term storage of the residual consciousness.
35:04Do you think it'll work?
35:06Certainty is for toasters.
35:09Good point.
35:10It will work, but not quickly.
35:13Think dial-up internet and dot matrix printers.
35:16Got it.
35:17Let's get moving.
35:20You're sure this won't hurt Claire and the baby?
35:22Not a scratch.
35:24Grandma, on the other hand, should be contained.
35:27But she must be transferred quickly to a stereo receptacle.
35:30And the device takes time.
35:35Wasn't that in the nursery?
35:36I brought it down here.
35:38I didn't want to get anywhere near them.
35:40Tim?
35:41It's okay, babe.
35:43No, it's not.
35:45My water just broke.
35:48Tim, let's get Claire to the hospital.
35:51Stay where you are.
35:56It's not ready.
36:00Clary, there.
36:02Step away.
36:04I only want my grandbaby.
36:08No.
36:11You can't have her.
36:14I can.
36:20Get away from her, you bitch!
36:26What did you say?
36:28I said no!
36:32You're no mother.
36:33Not to me.
36:34Not to anyone.
36:36You are a vicious, cruel shrew whose time has come and gone.
36:41And you can't hurt me anymore.
36:43Ever.
36:48You're hurting me.
36:52Get out of here.
36:54Leave now.
36:56And never come back.
36:59After all I've done for you.
37:01You can't treat me like that.
37:12Leave.
37:15Oh, dear.
37:16What's oh, dear?
37:17Short-term storage just became very, very short-term.
37:21How short?
37:22Seconds.
37:23We need something else to put it in.
37:24Now!
37:25Here!
37:31We need something to secure it.
37:33What, like a ritual or a spell?
37:35I was thinking more along the lines of packing tape.
37:38Oh, sure.
37:41Okay.
37:45We did it.
37:48You did it, Claire.
37:51This is a lovely moment, really.
37:53But do you think maybe somebody could get me to the hospital?
37:58Yeah.
37:59You good?
38:00Yeah.
38:01Okay, let's go!
38:03Hey, baby!
38:04Hey!
38:07Susan told me about this place.
38:09She said it's small, but very deep.
38:13Sounds perfect.
38:36Goodbye, Mother.
38:39I only wish you well.
39:06Dad?
39:08Come on, Tag.
39:09Open up.
39:22So, hi.
39:25You're taller than I pictured you.
39:27Yeah, I get that a lot.
39:30Come in.
39:31Something to drink?
39:32I've got bottled water or...
39:34Water?
39:35No, no, I'm good.
39:36I'm good, thank you.
39:39Oh, here's the report on that brick of yours.
39:41It's fairly specific.
39:43Thanks, Tag.
39:47Oh, can I get your opinion on something?
39:50Sure.
39:51For the past six months, I've been trying to figure out what kind of flooring to put in.
39:55I go back and forth.
39:56Some days I'm liking the old frosted oak plank,
39:58and other days I'm leaning towards the dark maple.
40:00Then again, I have my tile days as well.
40:02I even flirted with linoleum once, but it turns out I had screwed up my meds.
40:06Dark maple.
40:09Yeah?
40:10Yeah, you have this massive space, all this whiteness and light.
40:14Dark maple will give it richness and contrast.
40:17Richness.
40:18Contrast.
40:21Damn, you're good.
40:23Yeah.
40:24Listen, I won't stay.
40:25It's just, um...
40:27Tag, what you said about being a part of the team.
40:30It was nice.
40:31It was true.
40:32So, these came in today.
40:35I ordered them for all of our employees.
40:37Kind of incurably analog, and I think stuff like this matters.
40:42Whether you were in the office or not, you are one of us.
40:45Tag Guinness, the answer guy.
40:47Roman Island real estate.
40:50I remember when I got my first business cards.
40:52I was so emotional.
40:54I thought,
40:55Somebody thinks enough of me to put it on 14-point card stock.
41:01It mattered.
41:04It matters.
41:09Anyway, have a good night.
41:12Thank you, Susan.
41:13You're welcome.
41:15And I'll see you, uh, you know, up on the screen.
41:20You know, up on the screen.
41:35Wow.
41:50Wow.
41:57Susan Ireland, rest in peace.
42:14Hi, you've reached Susan Ireland.
42:49Hi.
43:19Hi.
43:49Susan!
44:03Susan!
44:07Susan!
44:19Susan!
44:34No.
44:38No!
44:43It's going to be okay, Tag.
44:46Your hair smells really nice.
44:57Oh, Tag.
44:59No.
45:01No.
45:15No.