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  • 5/28/2025
The Good Doctor Season 6 Episode 16
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Transcript
00:00She's smart, she's tough, she'll fight for you.
00:02I've been impressed with her every time.
00:04How many times have you been sued?
00:06Twice, just twice.
00:07But when you run a hospital, it's good to know a good lawyer.
00:10Hey, Aaron.
00:11Janet, hi.
00:13Oh, my gosh, did it happen?
00:15Did you play Pebble Beach?
00:16I did, and it was the worst mistake of my life.
00:18Hello, I am Dr. Sean Murphy
00:20of San Jose St. Bonaventure Hospital.
00:22Your client?
00:23Yes, Aaron has told me a lot about you.
00:26Congratulations on all your...
00:27Is this billable time?
00:29It is, but it will be paid for by your insurance company,
00:33and I have good news.
00:36$300,000 that will be paid by your malpractice insurance.
00:41All you have to do is sign some documents
00:43and agree to a six-month supervisory period.
00:46You can still practice medicine,
00:47it just means another doctor would have to sign off
00:50on all your decisions.
00:51Excuse me, that is not good news.
00:56Can it be anyone?
00:58Anyone qualified.
00:59So, Park, Morgan, it could be anyone you trust.
01:04It could be me.
01:05I have worked very hard to be an attending
01:08to prove that I don't need anyone's approval
01:10to do what I think should be done,
01:12which is often different from what Dr. Park or Morgan
01:15or you think should be done.
01:17Also, it is very humiliating
01:23What if he says no?
01:25We go to trial.
01:26And if he loses at trial?
01:27The money will still be paid by the insurance company,
01:30but the bigger issue is that a report and the court's decision
01:33will be sent to the California Medical Board,
01:35and they will make a decision about whether
01:38you have a future as a doctor.
01:46I'll settle.
01:50I need to go to the bathroom.
02:03Excuse me.
02:04Excuse me.
02:05Excuse me.
02:06You're Dr. Sean Murphy, Mr. It's 10 a.m.?
02:10Yes, hello.
02:11My name is Joni DeGroot.
02:14I'm curious about cancer patients.
02:17I'm curious about cancer patients whose exposure
02:19came from formaldehyde in pressed wood office furniture.
02:23Have you had a case like that?
02:25No, nor have I read about that.
02:27If you have a case where that is alleged,
02:29I would not be a good consultant.
02:31It's not for a case.
02:36Thank you, Dr. Murphy.
02:37Tell Ms. Stewart to review my update on Carter v. Willis
02:40before finalizing your NDA.
02:42The Idaho District Court made this story
02:44and I'm sorry to say it's just vulnerable.
03:01Are you working on my case?
03:03You should not be in here.
03:05This is my office.
03:06No one is supposed to come into my office.
03:09Okay.
03:15I'm not officially on your case.
03:18But I read the file.
03:20It was amazing how you created arterial clamps
03:22out of pieces of an aluminum can.
03:24Yes.
03:25Why is everything covered in plastic?
03:27They're getting ready to paint.
03:28I thought it was because of your obsessive-compulsive disorder.
03:35I used to have a closet for an office.
03:37Did you choose this instead of sharing an office?
03:39It's not a closet, it's an office.
03:41Small.
03:42Even smaller than my closet.
03:44This is all I need.
03:45I don't meet with clients and it's very private
03:47so I'm not disturbed while I'm doing my research.
03:49Or your rituals.
03:52Nice to meet you, Jonita Groot.
03:53You're settling your case?
03:57Yes.
03:58Ms. Stewart and Dr. Glassman say it is for the best.
04:02Your settlement includes a supervisory period.
04:04Yes, six months.
04:08Doesn't seem right, does it?
04:11That you should be punished for saving a man's life.
04:17You've overcome a lot.
04:19To have that kind of mark on your record
04:22seems very humiliating.
04:29I see you're still in the big office.
04:31Your partner uprising wasn't as bad as you feared, huh?
04:34It's an ongoing battle.
04:38Joni, I'm with a client.
04:42No, she is.
04:45Joni is my lawyer now.
04:47She will be representing me at trial.
05:11I have a new lawyer.
05:15I have a new client.
05:17How did you get the partner to change their minds?
05:19The client insisted that I represent him instead of Janet Stewart.
05:24What?
05:32You stole your boss's client.
05:35And what does Glassman think about this?
05:37He said it was my decision.
05:39Did he say that in a neutral way or an angry way?
05:47Angry.
05:49He is worried about Joni's lack of experience,
05:52but she's smart, and because of her OCD,
05:54she is very thorough and understands my situation.
05:57OCD? You mean she's really neat and organized?
06:01No, that is not OCD.
06:02She has repetitive intrusive thoughts
06:04that cause excessive anxiety,
06:05which she manages with ritual behavior.
06:09And when you say lack of experience?
06:12This will be her first trial.
06:16I get to go to court. I get to be a real lawyer.
06:20Which is great, very exciting, but it's also court.
06:25All those people, the judge, the jury, the other lawyers,
06:29and everyone looking at you, watching while you do that.
06:35Do that?
06:37I am practicing exposure to contaminants and noises.
06:40I can adapt, I can hide it.
06:44But that's the upside of your current setup.
06:46You don't have to hide it.
06:47Because they're hiding me.
07:02Pockets.
07:03Your outfit's for court on the pockets.
07:05When you need a tap, put your hand in there.
07:08No one will know.
07:14Just don't be late.
07:18You're late.
07:23I thought you had this worked out.
07:24I know, I know, I know. Sorry.
07:26The bus stalled right in the middle of Hastings.
07:29Do you want me to call the VTA and check if that's true?
07:33No.
07:34Sorry, it won't happen again.
07:43The night of the accident, you were coming from where?
07:45I was giving Sean a lift home.
07:47We had grabbed dinner together after work.
07:50Did either of you have alcohol with dinner?
07:52I had a beer and Sean didn't.
07:58Joni, your tapping is distracting Dr. Park.
08:01I'm okay.
08:05Tap three times or bad things will happen.
08:07Your shift that day, how long was it?
08:10Did you or Dr. Murphy have any difficult surgeries?
08:12Nothing unusual.
08:14I had an endectomy, 22-year-old patient, no issues.
08:18Tap three times or bad things will happen.
08:21Tap three times or bad things will happen.
08:25Tap three times or bad things will happen.
08:28Tap three times or bad things will happen.
08:31Joni, I'm sure you have more questions for Dr. Park.
08:42You and Dr. Murphy left the restaurant around what time?
08:46A little after 10.30 p.m.
08:48We were on Hellyer, coming through the wooded section of the park.
08:51Between the rain and the turns, I was driving pretty slowly.
09:01But then, there was a car in the road.
09:15I'm a doctor. My name is Alex Park.
09:17I need to examine.
09:18Where's Bob?
09:19I need you to hold still.
09:20Scalp laceration.
09:23Was there anyone else in the car?
09:25Yes, my brother Bob. He was driving.
09:32Hello?
09:44He was thrown out.
09:56Bob?
10:02Bob!
10:06I found Bob!
10:07He is bleeding from his radial artery.
10:17We need to move him!
10:19I can't leave her!
10:32Come on!
10:40Okay, Bob!
10:59That's wrong.
11:00What?
11:03You didn't bring him that way.
11:05Yes, I did.
11:07No, you didn't.
11:09Yes, you did.
11:10No, he didn't. You couldn't have. There was a log there.
11:31Most people's brains prioritize details. Weed out what seems unimportant.
11:36My brain doesn't.
11:39Why does it matter what Rajshank took out of the woods? The case isn't...
11:41It matters, because if that way was blocked, I must have taken him this way.
11:49I would have had to angle the spinal board, which could have caused neurological injury,
11:52which could mean my neuro exam was off, which could mean...
11:56I didn't need to amputate his hand.
12:05This seems like a good time for a break.
12:08Tell me about your decision to amputate the plaintiff's hand.
12:12His breathing became labored, and his pulse was thready.
12:18He had no capillary refill.
12:21He had no amputation.
12:23No amputation.
12:25No amputation.
12:27No amputation.
12:29No amputation.
12:31No amputation.
12:33No amputation.
12:35No amputation.
12:37His hand was irreversibly damaged from lack of blood flow.
12:41It was leaking toxins that would stop his heart before he reached the hospital.
12:45I need to amputate his hand.
12:47The ambulance is two minutes away.
12:49But ambulances do not carry amputation kits.
12:52There's no time.
13:07No amputation.
13:09No amputation.
13:11No amputation.
13:13No amputation.
13:15No amputation.
13:17No amputation.
13:19No amputation.
13:21No amputation.
13:23Once I removed the hand, we traveled safely to the hospital.
13:31That's not quite how I remember it.
13:38The ambulance is two minutes away.
13:41I need to amputate his hand.
13:43There's no time.
13:48Sean, it could be a basal spasm.
13:51The ambulance is here.
13:53We'll have a calcium channel blocker that might restore the blood flow.
14:01Sean, are you sure?
14:08Yeah.
14:17Interesting.
14:20This is a disaster.
14:22He has to settle. You have to talk him into accepting the settlement.
14:26No, it doesn't change the underlying merits.
14:28It changes the testimony. It changes our testimony.
14:31One of our witnesses is going to testify that our client screwed up.
14:34His view of the accident is almost exactly what their expert...
14:38What are you doing?
14:40I'll talk to Dr. Park and counsel him on it.
14:42No, I mean to my books.
14:44I straighten one? Or two?
14:46Listen to me.
14:48Taking this case to trial with that client and you as counsel...
14:53Fix this or bad things will happen.
14:55You cannot win a case if the jury doesn't like you.
14:59If you make them uncomfortable...
15:01Fix this or bad things will happen.
15:02Fix this or bad things will happen.
15:04Fix this or bad things will happen.
15:06Fix this or bad things will happen.
15:08Fix this or bad things will happen.
15:13Yeah.
15:15You can't control yourself in my office.
15:17How are you going to control yourself in court?
15:23Texas v. Marquez.
15:25What?
15:27425 Federal Digest, page 734.
15:29Um, you're going to have to give me a little more...
15:32Dr. Marquez was caught entering his high school carrying a Swiss Army knife.
15:37He was charged with being on school property with a weapon.
15:40But they set up the metal detectors outside the front door.
15:45The case was dismissed.
15:47Interesting.
15:49But different state, different court, different law.
15:53Same principle.
15:55I don't think I can convince a judge that that is...
15:57Let me try.
15:59Oh, I have to go.
16:08Stop, stop, stop.
16:10I'm about to test the lactate levels in Bob's hand.
16:13This will prove definitively if I was right to amputate.
16:16No, this will tell you nothing.
16:18Medically, it will.
16:20Legally, morally, this will tell you nothing.
16:22This test will tell me the truth.
16:25Was that...
16:26Was that a laugh?
16:29It was a scoff.
16:31Why would you scoff at the truth?
16:33What truth?
16:35There's only one.
16:37There's a single, correct answer to any question.
16:39But there are a lot of questions.
16:41You're asking what was the right thing to do then, given what you know now, which is a stupid question.
16:45I don't like to use the word stupid.
16:47Desperate, then, for an answer.
16:49But whatever that test says, we have to share it with the other side.
16:52If it goes the way you want, we will definitely win your case.
16:54If it goes the other way, we will definitely lose your case.
16:57But neither result will tell you if you did the right thing, given what you knew at the time.
17:03So, the real question here is...
17:06Do you believe in that test more than you believe in me?
17:24Why?
17:26Why am I doing what you just asked me to do?
17:31Why do you have so much confidence in me?
17:35I'm a lawyer with OCD.
17:39I work out of a closet.
17:42I was late to the only meeting you had with me.
17:45Why do you trust me more than the test?
17:47Because the test doesn't care.
17:57That's a good answer.
18:03We're going to have a motion to dismiss tomorrow at 10am.
18:06Don't be late.
18:16One, two, three.
18:18One, two, three.
18:20One, two, three.
18:22One, two...
18:24We'll be okay.
18:26Only if I do this right.
18:28I have to start over.
18:34One, two, three.
18:36One, two, three.
18:38Mom, we'll be okay.
18:40I have to start over.
18:43One, two, three.
18:44One, two, three.
18:46Mom, we'll be okay.
18:49One, two, three.
18:51One, two, three.
18:53Joni DeGroot for the defense, Your Honor.
18:55Yes, I can see your name right here on top of your brief.
18:58Excellent. May I say what a privilege it is?
19:00No. No, you may not.
19:02You were just here to argue this motion,
19:05which is a novel argument.
19:09Thank you, Your Honor.
19:11It wasn't completely a compliment.
19:20Dr. Murphy cannot be held liable for professional misconduct
19:23because Dr. Murphy was not acting in a professional capacity.
19:26He was a Good Samaritan.
19:28And you're taking the position
19:30that the Good Samaritan exception stayed in effect
19:32even after the ambulance arrived.
19:34Yes, because he didn't do the amputation in the ambulance.
19:37He was outside the ambulance.
19:39He chose not to do the amputation in the ambulance.
19:41To save your client's life. He had no time.
19:42The ambulance was right there.
19:44Right there? What does that mean?
19:46Would it have been right there if he was ten feet away?
19:48A hundred feet? Or a half a mile?
19:50All interesting questions for another case.
19:52He was five feet away.
19:54Outside is outside.
19:56The statute specifies protection if the care happens
19:58at the scene of an emergency.
20:00Counsel is using a technical distinction that...
20:02Counsel is using the law.
20:04Statutory interpretation rules require, Your Honor,
20:06to give effect, if possible,
20:08to every clause and word of a statute
20:10avoiding if it may be any construction,
20:12including
20:26You just stopped?
20:29I've lost my train of thought.
20:31You said you didn't think you could win this motion.
20:33I would have finished it.
20:36I...
20:40I heard a squeak.
20:42I needed two more squeaks to complete the set.
20:48They pulled the settlement offer.
20:54And the partners met.
20:58You're off the case.
21:00They told you?
21:03The vote was unanimous.
21:05You are a good researcher.
21:11You are a database that thinks.
21:14But you need to accept that you are not.
21:18And you are never going to be a good lawyer.
21:23No, no, no.
21:25Joni is my lawyer.
21:27It is my case, my choice.
21:29And your career that's riding on this.
21:33Joni's deficits are more significant than you think they are.
21:38Everybody said that about me.
21:40Do you know why your office is a closet?
21:43Joni has had issues since she started here.
21:45She was late a lot.
21:47Her first assignment, her first motion, she missed it.
21:51She must have had a good reason.
21:54She saw someone drowning.
21:56She was on her way to court, driving by the bay, and she saw something.
22:00She stopped, called the police.
22:02They shut down the road, searched the water.
22:04Joni knew she saw a log, a wave, nothing.
22:10But her mind wouldn't let her accept that it was nothing.
22:14We found out this had happened twice before.
22:18Why didn't you fire her?
22:20Because she threatened to sue us,
22:22arguing that firing her would be a violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act.
22:27Was it?
22:28I'm not sure I don't think so.
22:30But this brief that she wrote,
22:33most impressive thing I've ever read.
22:36So she doesn't need an office because she doesn't need to meet with clients
22:40because she does research.
22:43Just research.
22:46She cannot be your trial attorney.
22:54I hate her.
22:55I don't.
22:56She stuffed you in a closet, set you up to fail?
22:59She's done more.
23:00She hired me.
23:01She saved.
23:02She sent you to court on your own?
23:03What was she expecting?
23:04She expected me to do the job.
23:05So did I.
23:08She could have been there.
23:09It was my idea, my argument, my case.
23:13My failure.
23:30Why do you want to be a lawyer?
23:43Why did you threaten to sue?
23:46Why do you want to be there?
23:49They're a very good firm.
23:51Interesting files, important cases.
23:54It's not like I have huge options.
23:56I meant, why do you want to be a lawyer?
24:03A lawyer saved our family.
24:09Our father died in a car accident when I was eight.
24:13That's when my OCD started.
24:15I was very worried that my mother would die, too.
24:17So you developed risk tolerance.
24:20I was very worried that my mother would die, too.
24:22So you developed rituals meant to prevent her?
24:28And she didn't die.
24:30But she did drink.
24:35Bad things happened.
24:37A lot of people made a lot of mistakes.
24:40Our mother.
24:43Some overworked social workers.
24:46Some foster parents.
24:49A judge.
24:52But one person made it all right again.
24:58A lawyer.
25:06Goonie.
25:09I still want you as my lawyer.
25:11Dr. Murphy, I made a huge mistake.
25:16Because I have a problem.
25:20We all have problems.
25:26I'll talk to Janet.
25:35Dr. Murphy wants you as first chair, so you're first chair.
25:38I'm first chair.
25:39You are not first chair.
25:40I'm not first chair.
25:41You are a figurehead.
25:42You are a figurehead.
25:43You will sit in your first chair, and you will not say a word.
25:45You will not stand up.
25:46You will not object.
25:47If you have to tap, you will tap quietly on your leg.
25:51Now, wish me luck.
25:53Good luck.
25:56In your expert opinion, when Dr. Murphy concluded that my client's hand was irreversibly damaged and needed to be amputated...
26:02He was wrong.
26:03The lack of blood flow was caused by a temporary condition known as vasospasm.
26:08Which can occur after a trauma, such as a car accident.
26:11Vessels temporarily clamped down, cutting off the flow of blood.
26:14In this case, Mr. Patton's ulnar artery spasmed.
26:17And this condition is treatable?
26:19Yes. With an injection of calcium channel blocker.
26:22Which was available in the ambulance that night.
26:28Your witness.
26:30Any last minute ideas? Anything we can challenge him on medically?
26:34It wasn't vasospasm?
26:36Anything we could prove?
26:38Prove?
26:42Dr. Rutenberg, are you being paid by the plaintiff's attorney for your testimony today?
26:47I am.
26:48Then you can hardly consider yourself unbiased.
26:50It's routine for experts to be paid.
26:54And I admit I am biased.
26:56Excuse me, excuse me, excuse me.
26:58Traumatic vasospasm doesn't occur in isolated vessels, but rather the entire affected limb, right?
27:04Yes, of course.
27:05Can you visually identify a damaged or occluded vessel versus one in vasospasm?
27:10Yes.
27:12So.
27:20This one.
27:21Occluded.
27:23Vasospasm.
27:26Vasospasm.
27:29Occluded.
27:30Not vasospasm.
27:32No.
27:33Objection, your honor. Is this testimony or the MCAT?
27:36Goes to the witness's expertise.
27:37Oh, he's definitely an expert.
27:40That last photo, which did not show vasospasm, that was a pathology image of Mr. Patton's radial artery.
27:47And if his radial artery didn't vasospasm, then according to your expert testimony, his ulnar artery didn't either. Is that correct?
27:54It's possible.
27:57But we'd only know for sure if Dr. Murphy had given the calcium channel blocker.
28:11I'm sorry.
28:12You're not great at taking direction, are you?
28:14No, I shouldn't.
28:15And you only still have a job because you threatened to sue us.
28:17I'm sorry.
28:20I'm not wanted in a lot of places. I make people feel uncomfortable.
28:25If I let that stop me, I wouldn't be anywhere.
28:28At my first job, I was the only female associate.
28:34Tomorrow?
28:37Your first chair.
28:38Your first chair.
28:40Actual first chair.
28:42Good luck.
28:53Nice work. This is good stuff.
28:57The carpal tunnel research is really interesting. A pre-existing condition mitigates our client's response.
29:02I'm not going to use that.
29:05It could help reduce damages.
29:06If damages are even one dollar, it means Dr. Murphy was negligent, which means his medical license will be at risk. We need total victory.
29:13Okay, so what's your theory on this? How are you going to approach this witness?
29:18I'm going to establish that he's a dick.
29:24I can't do my job.
29:27I can't even hold my niece.
29:33No more questions, Your Honor.
29:46Dr. Murphy saved your life.
29:48Is that a question?
29:49Not really. Seems pretty obvious.
29:51I meant...
29:52I know what you meant. I'll rephrase.
29:54What kind of person is Dr. Murphy?
29:56I meant...
29:57I know what you meant. I'll rephrase.
29:58What kind of person sues a person who saved their life?
30:02Do you sue people who buy you Christmas presents you don't want, or only the weird ones you figure the jury won't like?
30:07Objection compound and argumentative.
30:10Sustained.
30:11I'm a victim here.
30:13You were driving, right?
30:15Yes.
30:16Over the speed limit?
30:18I'm not sure.
30:19According to police analysis of your skid marks?
30:22Yes, a little.
30:23You were going at least 70 in a 40 zone. You were ejected out the car window?
30:27Yes.
30:28So you weren't wearing a seatbelt?
30:30I'm not sure.
30:31It was fastened behind you?
30:33Yes.
30:34So, all things considered, maybe a better adjective than victim would be lucky.
30:40Withdrawn.
30:41Do you feel any guilt over any of this?
30:43You're asking me if I feel guilty about wanting to be compensated for losing...
30:47No, I'm asking you if you feel guilty about driving recklessly, flipping your car, and almost killing your sister.
30:54The mother of your niece.
30:57Yeah, a little.
31:00Is she suing you for...
31:02Two more squeaks.
31:04Two more squeaks.
31:06Two more squeaks.
31:08Two more squeaks.
31:18Counsel, do we have a problem?
31:21Again?
31:30One moment.
31:34Don't win cheap. You're better than this.
31:36I am fighting for my client.
31:38If she can't handle a little adversity, then she shouldn't be here.
31:42Don't let that dick prove people like me right.
31:54Mr. Stewart, I will hold you in contempt.
32:03If Dr. Murphy had been a not-nice person and just driven on, you'd be dead.
32:08If Dr. Murphy had been a not-nice person and just driven on, you'd be dead.
32:12And his career wouldn't hang in the balance.
32:14Objection calls for speculation.
32:16Not a lot.
32:17The objection is sustained.
32:18Ms. Stewart, I am finding you in contempt.
32:21That stunt just cost you $5,000.
32:23You're lucky it's not assault.
32:26Now, Mr. Groot, you may continue.
32:33Thank you, Your Honor.
32:34Thank you, Your Honor.
32:35Mr. Patton, the night of the accident...
32:41Hey.
32:42I'm so sorry. I know that it happened again.
32:44Shut up.
32:45You're doing fantastic, but you still have Murphy's testimony.
32:48We need the jury to like him.
32:50They need to think he did nothing wrong.
32:52Have you given thought to how you're going to do that?
32:56Yes, I have.
32:59Did you do anything wrong at the scene of the accident?
33:02Objection leading...
33:03Yes.
33:06Withdrawn.
33:12I did four things wrong.
33:15I applied the tourniquet at the brachial artery instead of mid-forearm.
33:19I laid out the clamps after the makeshift vascular clips.
33:22I only did two wipe-downs of the surgical field,
33:24and I angled the spinal board as I moved Mr. Patton out of the woods,
33:28because a log was in the way.
33:30Were any of those mistakes relevant?
33:32They were to me.
33:36But I don't believe they affected the patient's outcome.
33:39Given where you sit today, right now,
33:42do you think one of the things that you and Dr. Park did wrong was stopping?
33:47No.
33:48Then Mr. Patton would be dead.
33:50And the amputation, was that the right thing to do?
33:57I don't know.
33:59But I know that if I had to do it all over again...
34:04I would stop.
34:06I would help.
34:09And I would amputate.
34:13Dr. Murphy, you're different.
34:18Tell me about yourself.
34:20Objection, vague and irrelevant.
34:23Your challenges, the obstacles you've overcome.
34:26Marginally less vague, still completely irrelevant.
34:28And yet, I will allow.
34:34I have Autism Spectrum Disorder.
34:39I have always had Autism Spectrum Disorder.
34:44I have also always wanted to be a doctor.
34:49Many people thought that couldn't happen.
34:57Let me go.
35:00Let me go.
35:07Hey.
35:11I think I'm better at asking questions than giving speeches.
35:14Closings are tricky.
35:16It helps to actually say the words, not just mutter them.
35:20Can I say them now?
35:24You want my feedback?
35:26If I don't like it, I'm going to tell you, bluntly.
35:30You know that, right?
35:31Because you've been so tactful with me up until now.
35:45My mentor told me that criminal law is about justice,
35:50whereas civil law is about one thing and one thing only.
35:56Money.
35:58You can't undo what's been done.
36:02The best you can do is compensate, financially.
36:06But that's wrong.
36:08Everything we do in this room is about justice.
36:13We can't change what's happened, but maybe, just maybe,
36:17we can change what will happen.
36:20We can encourage people to care, to care about strangers.
36:24That's not your closing.
36:25It's a good closing.
36:26It's a very good closing.
36:28It was your closing, a long time ago.
36:31My mentor said that to me.
36:33I developed it into an effective closing.
36:35Did you believe it, about justice, that we can change the future?
36:42I did.
36:44But not anymore.
36:47Maybe if my mentor gave me advice,
36:50I could turn it into something effective.
36:54You consider me a mentor?
36:58You did inspire me.
37:03I will give you one piece of advice.
37:11You're not me.
37:14You're not me.
37:17Not once in this trial have you done what I would have done,
37:22or what I wanted you to do.
37:25So far, it's worked.
37:30I see no reason to change now.
37:44My mentor told me.
37:48My mentor told me.
37:51My mentor told me
37:54that people don't like me.
37:58That I make them uncomfortable.
38:01She's right.
38:04And people don't like my client, either.
38:09We're different.
38:11We're different.
38:14But we're all different.
38:16You've worn purple every day of this trial.
38:19I assume because you love it.
38:22And because you want it to be your thing.
38:25You've got those mutton chops.
38:27They're great. They're fun.
38:29They make you, you.
38:32But when we start to get judged based on our differences,
38:34it's not fun anymore.
38:36And fair enough.
38:37This is a courtroom.
38:38You are literally here to judge my client.
38:42But please don't judge him based on the way that he talks.
38:46Or on how he doesn't look at you.
38:49Or on his awkward mannerisms.
38:52Judge him on who he is.
38:57At every moment of his life,
38:59he has tried to make a difference.
39:01Tried to make things a little better.
39:03Please don't punish him for that.
39:08Please.
39:09Do what the plaintiff should have done.
39:14Say thank you.
39:34I think it's time we found a way back home
39:40You lose so many things you love as you grow
39:47I miss the days when I was just a kid
39:52My fear became my shadow, I swear it did
39:57Wherever is your heart, I call home
40:03Wherever is your heart, I call home
40:08Though your feet may take you far from me, I know
40:14Wherever is your heart, I call home
40:18I call home
40:23You made me feel like I was always falling
40:28Always falling down without a place to land
40:33Somewhere in the distance, I heard you calling
40:38Oh, it hurts so bad to let go of your hand
40:43Though your feet may take you far from me, I know
40:48Wherever is your heart, I call home
40:53You are a good lawyer.
41:03The jury's back.
41:07Oh, God, forgive my mind
41:09Oh, God, forgive my mind
41:11When I call home
41:14When I call home
41:17I won, Mom.
41:19She was brilliant.
41:21I think you need to seriously consider picking your new favorite chocolate.
41:24We gotta go, Mom.
41:25People are buying Joanie lots of drinks.
41:27We love you.
41:32I never doubted you.
41:34Yeah, you did.
41:36Because you love me.
41:40Sean!
41:41Oh, Joanie.
41:42Tequila.
41:43Stat.
41:44Pretty good, huh?
41:45We did very well.
41:47We need to celebrate.
41:48We are celebrating.
41:52This is definitely not what you want to be doing right now.
41:57Wherever is your heart, I call home
42:02Wherever is your heart, I call home
42:04You want to see this?
42:06Nope, not my thing.
42:08Wherever is your heart, I call home
42:12All your fears, they take you far from the unknown
42:17Wherever is your heart, I call home

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