- 2 days ago
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00:00THE END
00:13Ma? Ma, where are you?
00:15Yo, keep it down, boy.
00:18Where's my Ma?
00:19You learned to knock?
00:21Where's she at?
00:22Go home, Levi.
00:23Grandma and Annie be wondering where you are.
00:25Levi?
00:26Ma.
00:30Why are you here?
00:32Did he do that to you?
00:34Go home, okay?
00:35Go home?
00:36No!
00:37Have you ever hit my mom again?
00:41What?
00:42Levi?
00:43No!
00:44No!
00:45My God!
00:46No!
00:47No!
00:48No!
00:49My God!
00:50No!
00:51No!
00:52No!
00:53And the winner of the U2 tickets is Barbara Ludzinski,
00:59Barbara Ludzinski of Legal Services of Pittsburgh!
01:01Yes!
01:02I got the tickets and you don't got none.
01:05I won the tickets and you can't come with me.
01:08Nick, who's the lucky lady?
01:10It's Louie.
01:12Sweet, Nick.
01:13That's really sweet.
01:14Ah, Mr. Fallon.
01:19I got a case for you.
01:20Morning, Alvin.
01:21Morning, Louie.
01:23Morning.
01:24Morning, Nick.
01:26Hi.
01:27Her name's Maria Brodczyk.
01:28She's a Polish immigrant whose 16-year-old son wants to be emancipated from her.
01:31She's waiting in the broom closet.
01:32Oh, okay.
01:33Thanks.
01:39Mrs. Brizzyk, your son is asking to be emancipated.
01:43He wants the court to grant him some of the rights of an adult.
01:45Hi.
01:46My name is Maria Brodczyk.
01:48What is your name?
01:50Nicholas Fallon.
01:51Please, uh, Mr. Fallon, explain.
01:54Uh, your son doesn't want to live with you anymore.
01:58He's only 16.
02:00He moved in with a woman who is much older.
02:02Oh, that's a problem.
02:03Yeah.
02:04She's pregnant with what she says my son's child.
02:06Oh, then he's living away from home.
02:08He'll be supporting a child.
02:09He's already independent.
02:11The judge is just going to acknowledge that reality.
02:13He is not ready.
02:14Okay, then.
02:15I'll ask social services to do a home visit and then we'll talk.
02:18Well, okay.
02:19Where is she?
02:20We're in the meeting room.
02:21Hey, good luck.
02:22Listen, Barbara, do you think this is...
02:23Excuse me.
02:24Can I help you?
02:25Sure.
02:26Could you direct me to Louisa Archer's office?
02:27Louisa in there.
02:28Thanks.
02:29Hey, guys.
02:30Sweetheart.
02:31What are you doing here?
02:32I'm going to surprise you.
02:33Okay.
02:34Hey, guys.
02:35How are you doing?
02:36Sweetheart.
02:37What are you doing here?
02:39I'm going to surprise you.
02:40Okay.
02:41How are you doing here?
02:42I'm going to surprise you.
02:43I'm going to surprise you.
02:44I'm going to surprise you.
02:46Okay.
02:47I am sentencing you to 1,500 hours of community service, using your skills as a corporate attorney to work as a child advocate.
03:10,,
03:20,,
03:26I love you, I love you, I love you.
03:56What about the doctors?
04:01Trey got shot in the stomach, so nobody knows if he's gonna live.
04:08I'll do everything I can for Levi.
04:11Levi, you're worried about your nephew.
04:15My boyfriend's gonna die, James. I ain't got nothing else.
04:20My boyfriend's gonna die.
04:25Morning, Dan.
04:28Yeah, right in here.
04:30Morning, right here. How are you?
04:35Here's the offer.
04:3768 cents per hour aggregate with 48 cents going to wages,
04:4012 to pension, 8 to the health fund.
04:43One extra vacation day.
04:46Okay, if you need notepads or coffee, we'll...
04:50This won't take long.
04:52We'll be in my office.
04:59I think everything's gonna be okay.
05:02If they say no to this offer, I'm gonna have to close up shop.
05:07After 28 years.
05:115% increase, retroactive to October 1st.
05:15Pretty good.
05:17Last few deals, the most we could hope for was 3.2%.
05:21It's not enough.
05:23Coker, hey, you get your slice no matter what, Kelsey.
05:27All you care about is picking up your dues and making your union money.
05:32We asked for 7%.
05:34We asked for some profit sharing.
05:36I don't see any of that in these pages.
05:38If you wrote this down, the National Union Office may not pay the workers their strike funds.
05:43Then we'll break the union.
05:45That's crazy.
05:46I promised the workers 7%.
05:48I'm gonna deliver it.
05:50Why are you doing this?
05:52It's what we deserve.
05:56You're ready.
06:08I'm sorry, Gary.
06:09It's a good offer.
06:23You recommending the contract or aren't you?
06:26Can you do better?
06:31That was it.
06:32We'll put the contract to a vote of the full membership.
06:36With a negative recommendation.
06:45Do you want to tell me what happened?
06:47Yeah, I did what I had to do.
06:50Looked after my mom.
06:52She asked you to?
06:53I mean, I knew she was getting beat up.
06:55Everybody knew.
06:56If you ever bothered to stop by and give us a call, you would have known that for yourself.
06:59Did she ask you to go over to our house and protect her?
07:02Mom called Grandma Annie.
07:03She said Trey was hitting her again.
07:05So you went over there to check on her?
07:07Yeah.
07:10And the gun?
07:11Did you bring it with you?
07:13Nah, nah, it was Mom's.
07:14So you used your mother's gun?
07:16Well, Trey went for it first.
07:17But you knew where it was.
07:18You knew it was there when you went into the house.
07:19Why are you being so hard on me, man?
07:21Because that's exactly what the DA's gonna do when he goes for a life sentence.
07:24I ain't scared of the DA, man.
07:26He should be.
07:28This case goes to criminal court.
07:30The jury's gonna take one look at you and decide they'll feel a lot safer with you behind bars for the next 50 years.
07:36I didn't even mean to pull the trigger, man.
07:39He grabbed it and we struggled and then it just went off.
07:45If I can persuade the judge to try you in juvenile court, I might be able to get you home.
07:53Okay, here.
07:54Concentrate.
07:55Hey.
07:56I got a date with Heather Morgan.
07:57You know, the girl from the cosmetics counter?
07:58Yeah, so the thing is, I told her that I had tickets to the U2 concert on Thursday, but the problem is that it's completely sold out.
08:11Barbara Lozinski.
08:12What?
08:13The legal service is the redhead.
08:14She won tickets.
08:15Minette?
08:24I didn't mean to just come by.
08:26I didn't even really know where you were working.
08:29I had, of all things, a meeting with a theater company.
08:34They're doing an Ibsen piece, and then I got here and I thought, I just get too depressed doing Ibsen in Pittsburgh in winter.
08:43So, well, I think about you from time to time, and I guess I was just curious to see how you were, what you looked like, and if you ever thought of me.
09:01Because I think about you a little, sometimes, and some days even more than that.
09:12Where are you staying?
09:14That hotel by Station Square.
09:18Well, I'll pick you up at 7.
09:21Okay.
09:28Where am I, Annie?
09:29Hey, baby.
09:32Give me that.
09:33Hey, Tyler.
09:34Hey, Aaron.
09:43I've been meaning to come by.
09:45I know you got me in your heart.
09:48I know that.
09:51Levi says that Angie called you about getting beat up.
09:54Is that true?
09:55She calls sometimes.
09:57She always calls back and tells us not to worry.
10:00Did Levi spend a lot of time with Trey?
10:02Some.
10:03Did he get along with him?
10:05No.
10:07Because if he had any other type of relationship with him, you know.
10:10What are you saying, baby?
10:13If Trey sold drugs, if Levi ever helped him with anything like that.
10:16No, baby.
10:17No, no.
10:18I would have known.
10:19I told him, just be truthful with me.
10:22I told him, Grandma or Annie, don't judge.
10:25I'm gonna try and get his case moved to juvenile court.
10:29Try and get him home detention.
10:32You think you can handle looking after him?
10:33I looked after him.
10:34I looked after you.
10:40Would you get that for me?
10:47Hello?
10:51All right.
10:54Yeah.
10:55What is the baby?
10:56That was Angie.
11:05Trey died.
11:21If Dan lives with that woman, he will never go to college.
11:27And I didn't move in here so he can work on a factory line.
11:32How would my son do better than I have?
11:35Mrs. Brodczyk, social services has approved your son's apartment.
11:43That hurts your case.
11:45So what now?
11:47Well, I need to know more about your son, whether he's ever been in trouble in school or with the police.
11:52Yes. Once I had to pick him up from a police station because of misunderstanding.
11:57What happened?
11:59He put a video game in his pocket and walked out. An accident.
12:05Right.
12:07Your son lives on his own, pays all his own bills. Unless there's something worse, no judge is going to refuse his emancipation.
12:14He was not dropped out of school. He was actually expelled.
12:24Why?
12:26He's a sweet boy, but somehow he always get in fights and I think they pick on him.
12:31Okay, we'll bring the school records tomorrow. Our hearing is at 10 o'clock at Judge Sutton's courtroom and I'll meet you a quarter off.
12:40Okay?
12:41Thanks.
12:42My understanding is he went for the gun.
12:48Barry, it was self-defense.
12:50Look, I can't just reduce this to manslaughter because the kid's your nephew. The best I can do is second degree murder.
12:54If you ask for manslaughter instead of murder, it gives the judge justification to move it to juvenile court.
12:59Look, burdens on your nephew to prove that he should be tried as a juvenile offender. You want to take this to a transfer hearing in front of Judge Herring? Have at it.
13:12So are you actually going to stay in Pittsburgh forever?
13:16No, I don't think so.
13:21You're staying forever.
13:23Do you want a drink?
13:26No.
13:30So are you seeing anybody?
13:32No.
13:37Have you had a relationship since me?
13:40No.
13:41What happened?
13:45I thought we were doing so well together.
13:48You liked the firm in New York.
13:50We were having a lot of fun. We were looking for apartments.
13:54My father offered me a job.
14:00Well, um, they offered me that part in the play.
14:04That's good.
14:05I mean, I'm really tired of New York. I'm so tired of auditioning and the people and the bars and, you know, I really want a family one of these days.
14:19I need to find a place where I feel like I can be a part of something.
14:25What I'm trying to say is, I guess, not right now, but maybe in some time.
14:32You and me, maybe we could do something like that together.
14:41You and me.
14:42You and me.
14:43You and me.
14:44You and me.
14:45Mrs. Bratak, do you believe your son is responsible enough to live on his own?
14:53He's a very responsible boy. He should come home.
14:58Has Dan ever been in any legal trouble?
15:01No, never.
15:03Are you sure?
15:04Yes, I'm sure.
15:09What about trouble with school?
15:12Danny's a very good boy.
15:17Uh, Your Honor, I'd like to have a moment with my client.
15:20Make it quick.
15:24You told me he got expelled for fighting.
15:27Ms. Bratak, what about the shoplifting?
15:30You want me to say that?
15:31Yes.
15:32In front of the judge?
15:33Well, if you want him back.
15:35I can't.
15:37Not in the court.
15:39Not with Danny sitting right there.
15:41Well, you have to give me something.
15:43He's cabin against my union. Does that count?
15:46Well, you didn't tell me you're on strike.
15:48I'm sorry, it's embarrassing.
15:50Where?
15:52Dave Electric.
15:54Your Honor, I've just...
15:56I've just been made aware of a previously undisclosed conflict of interest.
15:59Mr. Fallon, I'm not going to permit you to derail this hearing
16:02halfway through just because it's not going well for you.
16:05Your Honor, my colleague can pick up where I left off.
16:09Let's get to it.
16:11Your Honor, we submit that the evidence in this case establishes that my client, Levi Mooney, should be tried as a juvenile offender and not as an adult.
16:18With respect, the defendant is not even close to meeting his burden.
16:21The facts simply do not support his self-defense arguments.
16:24Why the victim's own mother even testified that she did not fear for her life.
16:28Trey Jones was pointing a loaded gun at my client.
16:31His life was in danger. It was self-defense.
16:33We plan to establish that Mr. Mooney entered that home with the intent to kill Mr. Jones.
16:37He was protecting himself and his mother.
16:41Now, he's a smart kid who stands an excellent chance of rehabilitation.
16:44Your Honor, if he is convicted under the juvenile system, Mr. Mooney can only be detained until he's 21 years old.
16:50That may not be enough time for his rehabilitation.
16:53I have reviewed the psychiatric evaluations regarding this case.
16:56And I have taken into account the impact of the crime on the victim, on the community at large, and the degree of the child's culpability.
17:07This case will be tried in the juvenile system.
17:13That's good.
17:15This is Stark.
17:21Look, I'm doing good right now. I'm making $9 an hour.
17:23You want to tell us where that is?
17:26Davey Electric. I'm a replacement worker.
17:30Then what happens when the strike ends?
17:33I lose my job.
17:35Your Honor, Daniel Brochick has dropped out of school.
17:39His employment situation is tenuous at best.
17:42I think it would be a grave disservice to him and to the community to pull him out of Mrs. Brochick's home.
17:48No further questions.
17:50You may step down.
17:53Mr. Brochick is working, he's living independently, and he wants to care for the mother of his child.
18:07The court has no choice but to recognize his emancipation.
18:12Adjourned.
18:14Okay, sure.
18:16All right.
18:18I'm sorry, Ms. Brochick. If you want to appeal the ruling, Ms. Archer is a very capable lawyer.
18:24You are a good lawyer. I want you to represent me.
18:27Yeah, you're on strike against Davey Electric and I represent them. That's a conflict of interest.
18:32What will happen?
18:33I could be disbarred.
18:34That's crazy. How come?
18:35Well, it could appear as if I am using you to advance Mr. Davey's interests.
18:40Well, tell Mr. Davey that the women I work with, they still want to go back to the job.
18:45Who doesn't want to go back?
18:46A shop steward named Tim Coker riles up the young man. They think he cares about what we get. But I know I hear things and I know he's planning to run for a government position.
18:59Call Ms. Archer if you wish to pursue an appeal.
19:10I represent a woman at Legal Services.
19:13And?
19:15She's striking against Davey Electric.
19:19That's a huge conflict of interest.
19:22I know. I handed her off the moment I found out.
19:24I talked to her. After.
19:29Now, can I talk to you about this?
19:32If you're sure it was after.
19:33Yes, it was after.
19:35Well, there isn't as much support for the strike as you might think.
19:42What did she tell you?
19:44Coker, one of the shop stewards over there, he's promoting the strike. Now, he may be planning a run for political office.
19:49Using a union as a base for a political campaign? A labor relations board will be all over that.
19:55I know.
19:56I know.
20:05Tim.
20:08I think we can end this thing.
20:10I'm listening?
20:11I think it would be very good for you if you got credit for ending the strike.
20:15Did you bring me an offer or didn't you?
20:17They're not gonna move on the money. Any higher and it would be cheaper to close down the plan.
20:21Davey took a million dollar bonus last year.
20:23That has nothing to do with the offer.
20:25I think it does.
20:28What are you running for? Councilman?
20:31Out of your mind?
20:32County executive then.
20:36Did you come down here and blackmail me?
20:38No. I came to find out if it was true.
20:42You recommend the contract and we don't have a problem.
20:46You think they'll believe you instead of me?
20:48We're gonna find out.
20:53Hey boys.
20:54The judge transferred the case to juvenile court.
20:55That means we can probably get him home detention.
20:56Thank you baby.
20:57But that means you're gonna have to come to court to testify.
20:58They're not gonna give Levi that kind of sentence unless they believe you can handle him.
20:59I can do it.
21:00Otherwise they'll just put him in a high security juvenile shelter.
21:02It would be no different from being in jail.
21:03I think I'm cold honey.
21:04Go get your coat.
21:05I don't know where it is.
21:06It's in your room.
21:07Go get it.
21:08I don't know where it is.
21:09I don't know where it is.
21:10I'll get it.
21:11Let the boy get his own jacket.
21:12Where are my auntie?
21:13What's going on?
21:14I don't know where it is.
21:15I don't know where it is.
21:16I don't know where it is.
21:17I'll get it.
21:18Let the boy get his own jacket.
21:20Where are my auntie?
21:21I don't know where it is.
21:22I don't know where it is.
21:23I don't know where it is.
21:25I don't know where it is.
21:26I don't know where it is.
21:29I'll get it.
21:30Let the boy get his own jacket!
21:34Who am I, Annie?
21:37What's going on?
21:40Your place is coming apart.
21:43This isn't like you.
21:45Grandma and Annie hasn't been doing so good, baby.
21:49and so good, baby.
21:55Can you get out of that chair, Annie?
21:58It's very, very hard.
22:03How long have you been like this?
22:05I don't know, baby.
22:07And the kids?
22:08I didn't want to go to the doctor.
22:11If they find me too sick or tell somebody,
22:15they'll take the kids away.
22:19Send an ambulance to 121 Hill Street.
22:31My grandmother can't get out.
22:46Um, uh, Jake?
22:49Barbara.
22:49Yeah, what brings you over here?
22:51Hey, well, I mean, Nick's been telling me about the place so much.
22:53Oh, Jake came over because I told him about the U2 tickets you won.
22:56Oh, you want to go with me?
22:59Actually, I need two tickets.
23:00Well, I really want to go.
23:03I'll give you 250 bucks for him.
23:05No.
23:06$300?
23:06No.
23:08He, uh, promised a girl he met
23:10at a cosmetics counter
23:12that he'd take her.
23:14You promised her?
23:16Sort of.
23:17Well, that's what you told me.
23:18And you don't know if she likes you
23:20or she wants to go to the concert
23:21and you have the tickets
23:22and you're willing to take the risk.
23:24Please.
23:26Sorry.
23:27Right.
23:28Okay.
23:28My choice.
23:29Okay.
23:31Jake.
23:33Blow her off.
23:34She's not worth your time.
23:35You and I can go.
23:38As friends.
23:40We'll have fun.
23:44Okay.
23:45Great.
23:46Okay.
23:48Hey, just who I wanted to see.
23:51Yeah.
23:51Uh, Brian wants to go to the symphony tonight
23:53and I want to go dancing afterwards
23:55but I don't know where to take him.
23:56Well, I...
23:57Hey, why don't we all get together
23:59after the concert and have drinks?
24:01No, I...
24:02What's wrong with you?
24:04It'll be fun.
24:05Yeah.
24:06Let's, uh, meet at the incline at 10.30.
24:08Okay.
24:08Fine.
24:09Okay.
24:11Cool.
24:26She had a stroke
24:27in the last three months.
24:31Paralyzed her left leg and arm
24:33and...
24:34and she has diabetes too.
24:36What's going to happen to her?
24:38The doctor says
24:38we should put her in a nursing home.
24:44Dammit, Angie.
24:45Why didn't you check on her more often?
24:47Why didn't you?
24:49She wasn't raising my child.
24:51I didn't have time either.
24:53And what were you doing?
24:55You don't have a job.
24:56I've had a hard time of it.
25:01I didn't get no breaks like you did.
25:03You don't want to take Levi?
25:04He's going into a shelter.
25:06I can't handle that boy.
25:07No, you can't or you don't want to.
25:09I've never been a good mother.
25:13You're going to get a job
25:14and I'm going to help you take care of him.
25:16So when were you going to do that?
25:22Huh?
25:23I'll make it a priority.
25:26You ever think maybe
25:27I don't want him back?
25:30Huh?
25:31After what he did,
25:33you ever think to ask me that?
25:34No contract, no work!
25:58No contract, no work!
26:00No contract, no work!
26:02I'm scared!
26:03I can't see my family!
26:11Mom, let me go.
26:12Denny, it's wrong. It's wrong to cross the door.
26:15Mom, don't.
26:16Then I'm going with you.
26:24Denny, it's wrong. You hear me?
26:26I've taken my job!
26:28What are you doing? Let him go!
26:31Stop!
26:33Let him go!
26:34Denny!
26:38Stop it!
26:39Don't hurt him!
26:41You bastard!
26:43No, you don't want to do it. Let it go. Just let it go.
26:46Denny, are you alright?
26:47Mom.
26:48I don't.
26:49Hold up. I think I missed him.
26:51Mom.
26:52I told you, you cannot do this.
26:54Mom, just let me go.
26:56You need the money.
26:58Help!
27:00Help!
27:02Help!
27:03Help!
27:05Thank you, Mr. Fallon.
27:09Now, tell me something.
27:11Is it true that you want to break the union?
27:13No.
27:14Well, that's what they told us.
27:15No, we are trying to broker a deal that is fair for everyone.
27:17Fair?
27:18What, like you guys get everything and leave us with squat?
27:21Yeah.
27:22What do you care, Coker?
27:23You're out of here whether we do a deal or not.
27:25What the hell are you talking about?
27:27I'm talking about the 500 signatures you handed into the county elections board.
27:31You'll say anything to line your own pockets, Fallon.
27:36You did a real man's job.
27:37You wouldn't turn your back on me.
27:38Yeah.
27:39Kill them off.
27:42Better believe it.
27:47Never mind, guys.
27:48Come on.
27:49Let's break this up.
27:50He's a suit.
27:51What do you expect?
27:52They're not thinking about us.
27:53No, we got them.
27:54We're talking about them.
27:55Get it done.
27:56Get it done.
27:57Get it done.
27:58Get it done.
27:59Get it done.
28:09Hey, baby.
28:12Hey, Annie.
28:14Found a place for you over at St. Agatha's.
28:17It's decent.
28:18The state covers most of the bill.
28:21What about the little ones?
28:24No matter what, I'm gonna find them good homes.
28:31You got to promise me you keep them together.
28:35All right, Annie.
28:39You look after Levi yourself.
28:41Annie.
28:42Angela's not fit.
28:45I should know I raised you both.
28:47Levi needs a strong hand.
28:51And you need family in your life, James.
28:57I did good by you.
28:59You go ahead and do good by Levi.
29:02Louisa and I met at a college mixer.
29:12It was the last week of spring term, and I was leaving for med school in ten days, right?
29:17So, I'm thinking to myself, way to go, Brian.
29:20You meet the girl of your dreams, and now you have to leave for Columbus, of all places.
29:24Yeah, but it ended up great.
29:26Louisa came to Pittsburgh.
29:27It's a three-hour drive, so whenever I get a break, we see each other.
29:31What about you two?
29:32What about us?
29:33How long have you been together?
29:35We broke up five years ago.
29:37Oh.
29:39We were together when Nick lived in New York.
29:43And then he left, and I didn't come with him.
29:46I didn't know that you lived in New York, Nick.
29:48He practiced at Swan and Cranston.
29:52Wow.
29:53It's a huge firm.
29:57How was the symphony?
29:59Mahler sixth, two new experimental short pieces, and the toccata and fugue in D minor.
30:05Bach.
30:06Sounds terrific.
30:07How was the experimental stuff?
30:10Fair.
30:11Atonal.
30:12I thought you hated classical music.
30:14Well, Brian likes it, so...
30:18Brian, you, uh, interested in the law?
30:22I leave that stuff to Lulu.
30:23She's always been into saving the world, and I just stick to science.
30:27You ever seen her in court?
30:29No.
30:30You should.
30:31See her.
30:32Yeah, I've been busy.
30:34Sorry, honey.
30:36She's very passionate in court.
30:39She's a passionate girl.
30:41Ooh, are you gonna continue to practice once, uh, Brian's done with his...
30:47Residency?
30:49Of course.
30:50Part-time?
30:51No, not part-time.
30:53Well, you say that now.
30:55You know, I've always liked Mahler.
31:02No, I hate classical music.
31:06Actually, I wanted to go for the new stuff.
31:09What do you do in New York?
31:12I'm an actress.
31:13I wanted to go in the arts, but my father told me to think about what I was about to do before I went and screwed up my life.
31:22You know, you should think about what you're about to do before you screw up your life.
31:26I'm an actress.
31:27Wow.
31:29What are you talking about?
31:30What did you just say about me screwing up my life?
31:31Well, come on.
31:32I can see where this is going, Lulu.
31:33I mean, you marry a doctor, you stop working, you have a bunch of kids, you move to the suburbs.
31:38Next thing you know, you turn into one of these resigned people that forgot they ever had the fire in their stomach in the first...
31:42What the hell are you talking about?
31:44You. I'm just talking about you.
31:45You don't know anything about me.
31:46Well, I think I do.
31:48Nick, we're just trying to have a good time here.
31:50It's our night out.
31:52Brian.
31:56You're right. I'm sorry.
31:59Sorry.
32:04I can't wait to get out of Columbus and get back to New York.
32:07I'm trying to persuade Lulu to move with me.
32:10Well, I'm sure she'll go with you, Brian.
32:12I mean, she's just acting like she wants to stick around here and do her work.
32:14Really, she's just waiting for you to finish up so she can move to Westchester and get that little office and work part-time.
32:20Lulu, maybe we should just go.
32:22Yes, I think we should just go.
32:26It was really good. Hey, Lulu.
32:33What happened?
32:34Nick just got into an argument with that girl.
32:39I'm Barbara. This is Jake.
32:41Oh, sorry.
32:42Minette. Hi.
32:44Jake, hey.
32:46Well, um...
32:48We had fun.
32:51We really did. We had great fun.
32:55Good for you.
32:57Let's go.
32:59Bye.
33:04Please say something again.
33:05No.
33:11Hey, should I just check out of here and come over to your place?
33:16Sure.
33:18Okay.
33:21No.
33:23No.
33:25What?
33:26I don't know. I don't know.
33:28Nick.
33:30Minette, this is just not going to work out.
33:31It's that girl.
33:34No, it's...
33:39Yeah.
33:41Yeah, she likes you, too.
33:42Yeah, well, I...
33:45Kind of ruins the fun for everybody else, seeing the two of you together.
33:48What do you mean?
33:49Oh, you know, you're just living your life, and...
33:55Everything's just going fine, and then you meet someone.
33:59You can't stand the way you feel around them. It's just...
34:02You're overwhelmed.
34:06And...
34:08You hate yourself for being less than what you think they are to you.
34:12Yeah, you know.
34:14Yeah, well...
34:16That's how I've always felt around you, Nick.
34:21So...
34:25Yeah, this wasn't fair. I just...
34:29I know.
34:31I just thought I'd give it a shot.
34:33See where you were.
34:34But you should go.
34:37I should go tomorrow. We should just go.
34:41I should go tomorrow. We should just go.
34:42I should just go.
35:05Hey, what's wrong?
35:10Alvin.
35:13If you were advocating for my nephew...
35:18Would you tell him to take this placement?
35:22Yes, I would.
35:26And Levi can be a handful.
35:28I hardly even know him.
35:30And I'm ready to make him a big part of my life.
35:34Well...
35:36You don't have to do this.
35:42Sure I do.
35:48You believe you are a suitable guardian?
35:50I'm his uncle.
35:52And I'm a responsible member of society.
35:55And I can handle him.
35:57I still hope his mother wants to change her mind and...
36:01Take care of him, but until that happens...
36:04And if that doesn't happen?
36:06And I'll stick by him until he's ready.
36:08If he's placed into locked detention in his delinquency hearing?
36:11And I'll still be proud to be his guardian.
36:13And I'll work hard on his behalf to get him home as soon as possible.
36:16I'll grant you custody of your nephew, Levi.
36:21I'll grant you custody of your nephew, Levi.
36:31The vote's happening in two hours.
36:33Davey wants us to be there.
36:34I'm trying to be there.
36:55Mr. Fallon!
36:57Hi.
36:58I'll catch up.
36:59The owners.
37:01You think they're good people?
37:03Well, yeah.
37:04They're like any other people.
37:06They're in a tough situation at the moment.
37:09Just trying to work it out.
37:11Lady!
37:13Hey!
37:14Lady!
37:18Do you know my name?
37:20Sure.
37:22You work here in wiring and electric, right?
37:24Yeah.
37:25My name is Maria Brachek.
37:27And I work in shipping.
37:29And I'm a single mother who had worked here longer than you, Mr. Kolker.
37:32Listen, Maria.
37:33You know, they pay guys like him to say whatever they think it's gonna take to end the strike.
37:37They're not looking out for your interests.
37:39You know, I have a car.
37:41And an apartment.
37:43And last year, for vacation, I went to North Carolina.
37:46For a woman like me, this is a great job.
37:49For you, I don't know.
37:50You're young, you like to fight.
37:52And you know what?
37:53You wanna risk everything we have?
37:54Why?
37:56They're using you.
37:57Davey Electric gave me this job.
38:00And I cannot think they're bad people.
38:02Excuse me.
38:03Hey.
38:04David, thank you, buddy.
38:05Thanks, guys.
38:06He's coming back.
38:08And we're back.
38:16So what happened?
38:19Struck a deal with the D.A.
38:2218 months home detention and probation.
38:25probation. So what does that mean? It means I'm going to be in your life from now on. You live in my home by my rules and if you don't stay right by me then you go directly to jail. I'm going to be on your back watching you. That means that you go to school every day. I found that you skipped and I'm going to personally whoop your ass. That means you stay away from drugs and anybody who uses them I found that you've been using and you will be very, very sorry.
38:56You get violent, you go to jail. You cheat, you steal, you lie. You even think about any of those things. First you answer to me. Then you answer to the courts.
39:06I was the one who brought in health insurance. Before the union came, I put in wheelchair ramps. I kick in for tuition for anybody who wants to take classes at Pitt.
39:31Because I wish we had those kinds of things when I was on the line.
39:35Well, you did it because it's the right thing to do, Gary.
39:39Once in a while it'd be nice if someone didn't throw it right in your face.
39:45Well, they're going to keep throwing it in your face, but it was the right thing to do.
39:50All right, thank you.
39:55They approved the contract.
39:57What was the vote?
39:59215 for, 201 against.
40:04Well, that's pretty good news.
40:06So what are you going to do? Go out and celebrate?
40:08I'm going back to work.
40:10Good man, Gary. That's great.
40:11Thanks.
40:12That's really great.
40:12Thanks.
40:20Hi.
40:21Hi.
40:22My son. He came home.
40:24Oh, good.
40:25And the girl says he's not the father of your baby.
40:28I made you some kalachi kid there on your desk.
40:31Oh, you didn't have to do that.
40:32No, no. It's okay. It's okay.
40:35For a friend, it's okay.
40:38Bye, Mr. Fallon.
40:39Bye.
40:41It's okay. Thanks.
40:42It's open.
41:10Um...
41:11I got these for you on Monday.
41:15Because I had in my mind that maybe we could spend some time together,
41:19which seemed like a good idea the night before when I couldn't sleep.
41:23And I was thinking of you.
41:26And I got up and I went and bought them.
41:28And, uh...
41:29I felt like an ass.
41:33And, uh, I got mad.
41:34But, uh, listen...
41:36Brian seems like a very normal, decent guy.
41:42And you're probably very happy with him.
41:44And I know they're kind of dead, but they weren't when I bought them.
41:57I mean, what I mean is...
42:04What I mean is...
42:05I, um...
42:09I want you to have them.
42:12And, um...
42:13I'm sorry that I acted like an idiot.
42:19Brian asked me.
42:26What?
42:28To marry him.
42:29Okay.
42:36Well, that's great.
42:37That's great.
42:39Well, congratulations.
42:41That's great.
42:42Thank you very much.
43:12Thank you very much.
43:42Thank you very much.
43:43Thank you very much.
43:44Thank you very much.
43:45Thank you very much.
43:46Thank you very much.
43:47Thank you very much.
43:48Thank you very much.
43:49Thank you very much.
43:50Thank you very much.
43:51Thank you very much.
43:52Thank you very much.
43:53Thank you very much.
43:54Thank you very much.
43:55Thank you very much.
43:56Thank you very much.
43:57Thank you very much.
43:58Thank you very much.
43:59Thank you very much.
44:00Thank you very much.
44:01Thank you very much.
44:02Thank you very much.
44:04Thank you very much.
44:05Thank you very much.
44:06Thank you very much.
44:07Thank you very much.
44:08Thank you very much.
44:09Thank you very much.
44:10Thank you very much.
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