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李家声《当幸福来敲门》英文电影台词打印版

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2021-01-20 10:12
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植树节的资料-描写雪的古诗句

2021年1月20日发(作者:邓若曾)
Time to get up, man.

- All right, Dad.
- Come on.

Should be here soon.

- I think I should make a list.
- What do mean?

- For your birthday gifts?
- Yeah.

You know you're only getting
a couple of things, right?

Yeah, I know. Just to look at
and study so I can choose better.

Okay, well, that's smart.
Yeah, make a list.

Can you spell everything
you're thinking of?

- I think so.
- All right. That's good.

- How you doing in here, man?
- Okay.

Can we go to the park today, after?

No, I gotta go to Oakland.
Well, maybe, we'll see.

Give me a kiss.

I'll talk to you later.

Excuse me.

Oh, excuse me...

...when is somebody
gonna clean this off?

And the Y?
The Y
. We talked about this.

It's an I in
There's no Y in

I'm Chris Gardner.

I met my father for the first time
when I was 28 years old.

And I made up my mind
as a young kid...

...that when I had children...

...my children were gonna know
who their father was.

This is part of my life story.

This part is called

What's that?

It's a time machine, isn't it?

Seems like a time machine.

That seems like a time machine.
It's a time machine. Take me with you.

This machine...

...this machine on my lap...

This guy, he has a time machine.

He travels in the past
with this machine and...

- it is not a time machine.

It's a portable
bone-density scanner.

A medical device I sell for a living.

Thank you for the opportunity
to discuss it with you.

- I appreciate it.
- We just don't need it, Chris.

It's unnecessary and expensive.

- Well, maybe next...
- Thank you.

It gave a slightly denser picture
than an x-ray for twice the money.

- Hey.
- Hey, baby.

- What happened?
- No, nothing.

Look, I can't get Christopher today.

Oh, no, you don't, Chris.
I'm back on at 7.

I know. I have got to go to Oakland.

So I gotta get Christopher home,
feed him, bathe him...

...get him in bed,
and be back here by 7?

- Yes.
- And we got the tax-bill notice today.

- What are you gonna do about that?
- Look, this is what we gotta do.

You see that car? The one
with the pretty yellow shoe on it?

That's mine.

There's no parking near hospitals.

That's what happens
when you're always in a rush.

Thanks anyway. Very much.

- Maybe next quarter.
- It's possible.

I needed to sell at least two scanners
a month for rent and daycare.

I'd have to sell one more...

...to pay off all of those tickets
under my windshield wiper.

The problem is...

...I haven't sold any for a while.

Since when do you not like
macaroni and cheese?

Since birth?

- What's that?
- What?

- What is this?
- It's a gift for Christopher.

- From who?
- Cynthia from work.

It's for adults. Chris can't use it.
She didn't know.

What are you supposed
to do with it?

Make every side the same color.

Did you pay the taxes?

No, I'm gonna
have to file an extension.

- You already filed an extension.
- Yeah, well, I gotta file another one.

That's... It's $$650.
I'll have it in the next month.

That means interest, right?

- And a penalty?
- Yeah, a little bit.

Look, why don't you let me do this?
All right, just relax. Okay?

- Come here. Calm down.
- I have to go back to work.

Let's get ready for bed.
Hey, put your plate in the sink.

A few days ago I was presented
with a report I'd asked for...

...a comprehensive audit, if you will,
of our economic condition.

You won't like it. I didn't like it.

But we have to face the truth...

...and then go to work
to turn things around.

And make no mistake about it,
we can turn them around.

The federal budget is out of control.

And we face runaway deficits
of almost $$80 billion...

...for this budget year
that ends September 30th.

That deficit is larger than
the entire federal budget in 1957.

And so is the almost $$80 billion...

...we will pay in interest
this year on the national debt.

Twenty years ago, in 1960...

...our federal government payroll
was less than $$ 13 billion.

Today it is 75 billion.

During these 20 years, our population
has only increased by 23.3 percent...

Man, I got two questions for you:

What do you do?
And how do you do it?

- I'm a stockbroker.
- Stockbroker. Oh, goodness.

Had to go to college
to be a stockbroker, huh?

You don't have to. Have to be good
with numbers and good with people.

- That's it.
- Hey, you take care.

I'll let you hang on to my car
for the weekend.

- But I need it back for Monday.
- Feed the meter.

I still remember that moment.

They all looked
so damn happy to me.

Why couldn't I look like that?

I'm gonna try to get home by 6.

I'm gonna stop by a brokerage firm
after work.

- For what?
- I wanna see about a job there.

Yeah? What job?

You know, when I...

When I was a kid, I could go through
a math book in a week.

So I'm gonna go see about
what job they got down there.

What job?

Stockbroker.

- Stockbroker?
- Yeah.

Not an astronaut?

Don't talk to me like that, Linda.

I'm gonna go down and see about this,
and I'm gonna do it during the day.

You should probably
do your sales calls.

I don't need you to tell me
about my sales calls, Linda.

I got three of them
before the damn office is even open.

Do you remember
that rent is due next week?

Probably not.

We're already two months behind.

Next week we'll owe three months.

I've been pulling double shifts
for four months now, Chris.

Just sell what's in your contract.
Get us out of that business.

Linda, that is what I am trying to do.

This is what I'm trying to do
for my family...

...for you and for Christopher.

What's the matter with you?

Linda.

Linda.

This part of my life
is called

Can I ask you a favor, miss?

Do you mind if I leave this here
with you just for five minutes?

I have a meeting in there
and I don't wanna carry that...

...looking smalltime.

Here is a dollar and I'll give you
more money when I come back out.

Okay? It's not valuable.
You can't sell it anywhere.

I can't even sell it, and it's my job.
All right?

- Chris? Tim Brophy, Resources.
- Yes. How are you?

- Come with me.
- Yes, sir.

Let me see if I can find you
an application for our internship.

I'm afraid that's all we can do for you.
See, this is a satellite office.

Jay Twistle in the main office,
he oversees Witter Resources.

I mean, I'm... You know,
I'm just this office.

As you can see, we got a hell of lot
of applications here, so...

Normally I have a resume sheet,
but I can't seem to find it anywhere.

- We...
- Thank you very much.

I need to go.

I'll bring this back.

- Thank you.
- Okay.

Trusting a hippie girl with my scanner.
Why did I do that?

Excuse me. Excuse me.

Like I said, this part of my life
is called

Hey! Hey! Hey! Don't move!
Don't move! Stay!

Stop! Stop!

Don't move!
Stop this! Stop the train!

Stop! Stop!

The program took just 20 people
every six months.

One got the job.

There were three blank lines after


I didn't need that many lines.

Try and sleep. It's late.

It's a puzzle measuring just 3 inches
by 3 inches on each side...

...made up of multiple colors
that you twist and turn...

...and try to get
to a solid color on each side.

This little cube
is the gift sensation of 1981.

Don't expect to solve it easily.

Although we did encounter
one math professor at USF...

...who took just 30 minutes on his.

This is as far as I've gotten
on mine.

As you can see,
I still have a long way to go.

This is Jim Finnerty reporting
for KJSF in Richmond.

Hey, wake up.

Eat.

- Bye, Mom.
- Bye, baby.

- Come back without that, please.
- Oh, yeah, I'm going to.

So go ahead, say goodbye to it,
because I'm coming back without it.

Goodbye and good riddance.

You ain't had to add
the

Bye, Mom.

Bye.

It's written as P-P-Y
, but it's
supposed to be an I in

- Is it an adjective?
- No, actually it's a noun.

But it's not spelled right.

- Is
- Yeah, that's spelled right.

But that's not part of the motto,
so you're not supposed to learn that.

That's an adult word to show anger
and other things.

- But just don't use that one, okay?
- Okay.

What's that say
on the back of your bag?

My nickname.

We pick nicknames.

- Oh, yeah? What's it say?
-

- Did you have a nickname?
- Yep.

- What?
-

- What's that?
- I grew up in Louisiana, near Texas.

Everybody wears cowboy hats.
And a ten-gallon's a big hat.

I was smart back then,
so they called me Ten-Gallon Head.

- Hoss wears that hat.
- Hoss?

Hoss Cartwright on Bonanza.

- How do you know Bonanza?
- We watch it at Mrs. Chu's.

- You watch Bonanza at daycare?
- Yeah.

When? When do you watch it?

- After snack? After your nap?
- After Love Boat.

I made my list for my birthday.

- Yeah, what'd you put on there?
- A basketball or an ant farm.

- He says he's been watching TV.
- Oh, little TV for history.

- Love Boat?
- For history. Navy.

That's not the Navy.

I mean, he could
watch television at home.

We're paying you $$ 150 a month.
If he's gonna be sitting around...

...watching TV all day,
we're taking him out of here.

Go pay more at other daycare
if you don't like Navy TV.

You late pay anyway.
You complain. I complain.

Can you at least put the dog upstairs
in your room or something?

Bye.

I was waiting for
Witter Resource head Jay Twistle...

...whose name sounded so delightful,
like he'd give me a job and a hug.

I just had to show him I was good
with numbers and good with people.

- Morning, Mr. Twistle.
- Good morning.

- Mr. Twistle, Chris Gardner.
- Hi.

I wanted to drop this off personally
and make your acquaintance.

I thought I'd catch you on the way in.
I'd love the opportunity to discuss...

...what may seem like weaknesses
on my application.

We'll start with this, and we'll call you
if we wanna sit down.

- Yes, sir. You have a great day.
- You too.

Hey, yeah, how you doing?

This is Chris Gardner calling
for Dr. Delsey.

Yeah, I'm running a little late
for a sales call.

I was wondering if...
Yeah, Osteo National.

Right. We can still? Half an hour?

Yes. Beautiful. Beautiful.
Thank you, thank you.

Hey! Hey!

Hey!

This part of my life...

- Wait!
...this part here...

...it's called

Hey! Hey!

Wait!

Hey! Wait!

That was my stolen machine.

Unless she was with
a guy who sold them too.

Which was unlikely...

...because I was the only one
selling them in the Bay Area.

I spent our entire life savings
on these things.

It was such
a revolutionary machine.

- Can you feel it, baby?
- Oh, yeah.

You got me doing all the work.

What I didn't know
is that doctors and hospitals...

...would consider them
unnecessary luxuries.

I even asked the landlord
to take a picture.

So if I lost one, it was like losing
a month's groceries.

Hey, hey! Wait! Wait!

Hey, get back here!

Hey, man, I...

- Who's he?
- He's that guy...

- Did you forget?
- Forget what?

You're not supposed
to have any of those.

- Yeah, I know.
- You have two now.

Hey.

Hey, Mom.

One, two, three!

- That's a basketball!
- Hey, hey. What do you mean?

You don't know that
that's a basketball.

This could be an ant farm. This could
be a microscope or anything.

- No, it's not.
- There, there.

All right, come on.
Open him up. Open him up.

- That paper's a little heavy, huh?
- Yeah, but I got it.

You should've seen me
out there today.

Somebody stole a scanner.
I had to run the old girl down...

Whatever.

- What?
- Whatever, Chris.

What the hell
you got attitude about?

-
- Every day's got some damn story.

Hey, Roy. Roy!

Can you beat your little rug
when nobody's out here?

There's dust and shit all over.

- I'm trying to keep a clean house.
- Hey, wait a second.

Look, Linda, relax.

We're gonna come out of this.
Everything is gonna be fine, all right?

You said that before,
when I got pregnant.

- So you don't trust me now?
- Whatever. I don't care.

- Taxi!
- Mr. Twistle.

- Yeah, hi.
- Hi. Chris Gardner.

Yeah, hi. Listen.
What can I do for you?

I submitted an application for the
intern program about a month ago...

...and I would just love
to sit with you briefly...

Listen, I'm going
to Noe Valley, Chris.

- Take care of yourself.
- Mr. Twistle.

Actually, I'm on my way
to Noe Valley also.

How about we share a ride?

- All right, get in.
- All right.

So when I was in the Navy,
I worked for a doctor...

...who loved to play golf,
hours every day...

...and I would actually
perform medical procedures...

...when he'd leave me in the office.

So I'm used to being in a position
where I have to make decisions and...

Mr. Twistle, listen.
This is a very important...

I'm sorry. I'm sorry.
This thing's impossible.

- I can do it.
- No, you can't. No one can.

- That's bullshit.
- No, I'm pretty sure I can do it.

- No, you can't.
- Let me see it.

Give it here.

Oh, yeah. Oh, wow,
you really messed it up.

Sorry.

It looks like it works around a swivel,
so the center pieces never move.

So if it's yellow in the center,
that's the yellow side.

If it's red in the center,
that's the red side.

- Okay.
- So... You can slow down.

Listen, we can drive around all day.
I don't believe you can do this.

- Yeah, I can.
- No, you can't.

- Yes, I can.
- No, you can't.

I'm telling you, no one can.

See? That's all I ever do.

You almost have this side.

Holy cow.

- You almost had that one.
- I'm gonna get it.

Look at that.

You're almost there.

- 17.10.
- This is me.

Good job.

- Goodbye.
- Yeah. I'll see you soon.

Where are you going, sir?

Excuse me, sir.
Where are you going, please?

Two... A couple of blocks.

- Just flip around.
- Okay.

Hey! Stop it! Hey!

- Where are you going? Come here!
- No!

- No, no, no!
- You asshole, give me my money!

- Give me my money.
- Please stop.

- Please, please, please!
- Son of a bitch.

Please! He should've paid you!

- Come here!
- I'm sorry.

- I'm so sorry.
- I'll kick your ass!

- I'm sorry!
- Idiot.

I'll get you!

I'm going to kill you!
I'm going to kill you!

Hey!

Stop it, you son of a bitch!

Stop him!

Stop him!

The doors are closing.

Please stand clear of the doors.

No! No! No!

No!

- Hello?
- Hey, yeah.

Sorry I couldn't
make it home on time.

- Chris, I missed my shift.
- Yeah, I know. I'm sorry about that.

Look, I'm on my way right now.
Are you all right with Christopher?

I'm leaving. Chris, I'm leaving.

- What?
- Did you hear what I said?

I have my things together,
and I'm taking our son...

...and we're gonna leave now.

I'm gonna put the phone down.

- Linda, wait a minute. Hold it, hold...
- I'm going to leave. We are leaving.

It was right then that I started
thinking about Thomas Jefferson...

...the Declaration of Independence...

...and the part about our right to life,
liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

And I remember thinking:

How did he know
to put the

That maybe happiness is something
that we can only pursue.

And maybe we can actually
never have it...

...no matter what.

How did he know that?

Linda. Linda.

- Hello?
- Chris.

- Who is this?
- Jay Twistle.

- Hey.
- Dean Witter.

Yeah, of course. How are you?

I'm fine. Listen, do you still
wanna come in and talk?

Yes, sir. Absolutely.

I'll tell you what. Come on by
day after tomorrow, in the morning.

We're interviewing for the internships.
You got a pen and paper?

Yes. Yes, I do.

- Hold on one second.
- All right.

Hello?

- Chris?
- Go ahead. I have one.

Write this number down so you can
call my secretary, Janice.

- She can give you all the specifics.
- Yep.

- Okay, 415.
- 415.

- 864.
- 864.

- 0256.
- 0256.

- Yeah, extension 4796.
- 4796.

- Right. Call her tomorrow.
- Yes, sir. 415-864-0256.

- Okay, buddy.
- All right, yes.

- Thank you very much.
- We'll see you soon.

864-0256.

4796. Janice.

- Chris.
- Hey.

Did you? Have you seen
Linda and Christopher?

- No. You catch the game last night?
- No, no.

You didn't see that, 118, 1?

Excuse me, did Linda
and Christopher come in here?

- No, I haven't see them.
- 119-120. Double overtime.

Moons hits a three-pointer
at 17 seconds left.

Wayne, Wayne, Wayne.

Can't talk to you
about numbers right now.

- What's your problem with numbers?
- 864-2...

- And you owe me money.
- Yeah.

You owe me $$ 14.

I'm gonna get that to you.

I need my money.
I need my money.

Fourteen's a number.

Hey, don't you ever take my son
away from me again.

- You hear me?
- Leave me alone!

Don't take my son away
from me again.

Do you understand
what I'm saying to you?

Don't you walk away from me when
I'm talking to you. Do you hear me?

- Do you wanna leave?
- Yeah.

- You wanna leave?
- Yes, I want to leave!

Get the hell out of here,
then, Linda.

Get the hell out of here.
Christopher's staying with me.

You're the one that dragged
us down. You hear me?

- You are so weak.
- No. I am not happy anymore.

- I'm just not happy!
- Then go get happy, Linda!

Just go get happy.

But Christopher's living with me.

- Stop!
- Did you hear what I said?

Christopher's living with me!

Hey. Come on, let's go.

- How you doing, Mrs. Chu?
- Hi.

- Where's Mom?
- Look, just get your stuff.

But she told me she was
coming to pick me up today.

Yeah, I know.

I talked to Mom earlier.
Everything's fine, okay?

Where do I sleep tonight?

Let me ask you something.
Are you happy?

- Yeah.
- All right. Because I'm happy.

And if you're happy and I'm happy,
then that's a good thing, right?

- Yeah.
- All right.

You're sleeping with me.

You're staying at home,
where you belong, all right?

Christopher.

Hey, listen. I need the rent.

I can't wait anymore.

Yeah, I'm good for that, Charlie.
I'm gonna get it.

Why don't you go two blocks over
at the Mission Inn motel?

It's half what you pay here.

Listen, Chris. I need you out
of here in the morning.

The hell am I supposed
to be out of here tomorrow?

I got painters coming in.

- All right, look. I need more time.
- No.

All right, I'll paint it myself.

All right, but I just... I gotta have some
more time... I got my son up in here.

All right. One week.
And you paint it.

Chris Gardner?

Yeah. What happened?

- Payable to the City of San Francisco.
- Does it have to be the full amount?

You gotta pay each parking ticket,
otherwise, you're staying.

This is all I got.

You verify at 9:30
tomorrow morning.

- What?
- You gotta stay until this thing clears.

No.

No, I can't spend the night here.

- I have to pick up my son.
- You verify at 9:30 tomorrow.

Sir, I have a job interview at Dean
Witter at 10:15 tomorrow morning.

- I cannot stay...
- 9:30 tomorrow morning.

What am I supposed to do
with my son?

- Is there anyone else who can?
- I take care of him.

Maybe we can go and have
Social Services pick him up.

All right.
Can I have my phone call, please?

- Hello.
- Hey.

What do you want?

You gotta get Christopher
from daycare. I can't.

Just keep him for the night and I'm...
And... Just one night.

What happened?

I'll pick him up
from daycare tomorrow.

I'm gonna go right...
You can just...

You can drop him off
and I'll pick him up.

- No.
- Come on, Linda.

- Why you doing that?
- No, I wanna take him to the park.

To Golden Gate
after daycare tomorrow.

- How is he?
- He's fine.

All right, just... All right,
take him to the park...

...and bring him back, all right?

All right, just bring me my son back.

Okay?

Linda?

I'll bring him back around 6.

All right, all right.

Thank you.

Bye.

I'm okay?

Excuse me. Excuse me.

Yes, I did.

Mr. Gardner.

This way.

It'll be right this way.

What is the word on that one?

Chris Gardner.

Chris Gardner.

How are you? Good morning.

Chris Gardner. Chris Gardner.
Good to see you again.

Chris Gardner. Pleasure.

I've been sitting there
for the last half-hour...

...trying to come up with a story...

...that would explain my being here
dressed like this.

And I wanted to come up with a story
that would demonstrate qualities...

...that I'm sure you all admire here,
like earnestness or diligence.

Team-playing, something.
And I couldn't think of anything.

So the truth is...

...I was arrested
for failure to pay parking tickets.

Parking tickets?

And I ran all the way here from
the Polk Station, the police station.

What were you doing
before you were arrested?

I was painting my apartment.

Is it dry now?

I hope so.

Jay says you're pretty determined.

He's been waiting outside
the front of the building...

...with some 40-pound gizmo
for over a month.

- He said you're smart.
- Well, I like to think so.

- And you want to learn this business?
- Yes, sir, I wanna learn.

Have you already started learning
on your own?

Absolutely.

- Jay?
- Yes, sir.

How many times
have you seen Chris?

I don't know.
One too many, apparently.

- Was he ever dressed like this?
- No.

No. Jacket and tie.

First in your class in school?

- High school?
- Yes, sir.

- How many in the class?
- Twelve.

It was a small town.

- I'll say.
- But I was also first in my radar class...

...in the Navy,
and that was a class of 20.

Can I say something?

I'm the type of person...

...if you ask me a question,
and I don't know the answer...

...l'm gonna tell you
that I don't know.

But I bet you what.

I know how to find the answer,
and I will find the answer.

Is that fair enough?

Chris.

What would you say
if a guy walked in for an interview...

...without a shirt on...

...and I hired him?
What would you say?

He must've had on
some really nice pants.

Chris, I don't know how you did it
dressed as a garbage man...

...but you pulled it off.
- Thank you, Mr. Twistle.

Hey, now you can call me Jay.
We'll talk to you soon.

All right, so I'll let you know, Jay.


What do you mean?

Yeah, I'll give you a call
tomorrow sometime...

What are you talking?
You hounded me for this.

- You stood here...
- Listen, there's no salary.

- No.
- I was not aware of that.

My circumstances
have changed some...

...and I need to be certain that I'll be...
- All right. Okay.

Tonight.

I swear I will fill your spot. I promise.

If you back out, you know what
I'll look like to the partners?

Yes, an ass... A-hole.

Yeah, an ass A-hole, all the way.

You are a piece of work.

Tonight.

There was no salary.

Not even a reasonable promise
of a job.

One intern was hired at the end
of the program from a pool of 20.

And if you weren't that guy...

...you couldn't even apply
the six months' training...

...to another brokerage.

The only resource I would have
for six months...

...would be my six scanners,
which I could still try to sell.

If I sold them all,
maybe we might get by.

- I got him. I got him.
- He's asleep.

All right.

Okay, baby.

I got it.

I'm going to New York.

My sister's boyfriend...

...opened a restaurant,
and they may have a job for me there.

So I'm going to New York, Chris.

Christopher's staying with me.

I'm his mom, you know?

He should be with his mom.

I should have him, right?

You know
you can't take care of him.

What are you gonna do for money?

I had an interview
at Dean Witter for an internship...

...and I got it.

So I'm gonna stand out
in my program.

Salesman to intern's backwards.

No, it's not.

I gotta go.

Tell him I love him, okay?

And...

I know you'll take care of him, Chris.

I know that.

- Dean Witter.
- Yes, hi.

Yes, I'd like to leave a message
for Mr. Jay Twistle.

- Your name?
- Yeah, my name is Chris Gardner.

The message is:

Thank you very much
for inviting me into the program.

I really appreciate it and I'd be
very pleased to accept your invitation.

Is that all?

Yes, that's it.

- Okay.
- Thank you.

Bye.

- Be careful with that.
- What?

Be care... Go ahead.

- Are we there?
- Yep.

- Hey, you know what today is?
- Yeah.

- What?
- Saturday.

- You know what Saturday is, right?
- Yeah.

- What?
- Basketball.

- You wanna go play some basketball?
- Okay.

All right, then we're gonna go
sell a bone-density scanner.

- How about that? Wanna do that?
- No.

Hey, Dad. I'm going pro.

I'm going pro.

Okay.

Yeah, I don't know, you know.

You'll probably be about as good
as I was.

That's kind of the way it works,
you know. I was below average.

You know, so you'll probably
ultimately rank...

...somewhere around there,
you know, so...

...I really... You'll excel at
a lot of things, just not this.

I don't want you shooting
this ball all day and night.

- All right?
- All right.

Okay.

All right, go ahead.

Hey.

Don't ever let somebody tell you...

...you can't do something.

Not even me.

- All right?
- All right.

You got a dream...

...you gotta protect it.

People can't do something
themselves...

...they wanna tell you
you can't do it.

If you want something,
go get it. Period.

Let's go.

Dad, why did we move to a motel?

Dad, why did we move to a motel?

I told you. Because I'm getting
a better job.

- You gotta trust me, all right?
- I trust you.

All right, here.
Come on, come on. Keep up.

Dad, when's Mom coming back?

Dad, when's Mom coming back?

I don't know, Christopher.

Dad, listen to this.

One day, a man was drowning
in the water.

And a boat came by and said,


He said,
God will save me.

Then another boat came by.
Said,

And he said,
God will save me.

Then he drowned,
and he went to heaven.

And he said,
why didn't you save me?

And God said,
two big boats, you dummy.

Do you like it?

Yeah, that's very funny, man.
Give me your hand.

- Thank you very much, sir.
- Yes, sir.

- You got the bill of sale here.
- Yes.

All the information you'll need.

Thank you very much
for your business.

Thank you.

One hundred, 200,
20, 40, 45, 46...

...7, 8, 9, 10.

Thank you.

- Hey, you want one of those?
- No, it's okay.

Come on, you can have one.
Which one?

- You like that one? How much?
- Twenty- five cents.

This part of my life
is called

The 1200 building is
Medley Industrial and Sanko Oil.

The building across the street
is Lee-Ray Shipping.

In a couple weeks,
you'll get call sheets...

...with the phone numbers
of employees...

...from every Fortune 500 company
in the financial district.

You will be pooling
from 60 Fortune companies.

You will mainly be cold- calling
potential clients.

植树节的资料-描写雪的古诗句


植树节的资料-描写雪的古诗句


植树节的资料-描写雪的古诗句


植树节的资料-描写雪的古诗句


植树节的资料-描写雪的古诗句


植树节的资料-描写雪的古诗句


植树节的资料-描写雪的古诗句


植树节的资料-描写雪的古诗句



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