Everybody Hates Chris s03e18 Episode Script

Everybody Hates Earth Day

CHRIS: Every school year, there were always days when students had to do special assignments.
Good morning, everybody.
Some were easy, like Thanksgiving.
TEACHER: Your assignment is to write a report about what you're thankful for.
And Martin Luther King Day.
Your assignment is to report about what you would dream about if you were about to be shot.
Some were a lot harder.
This week is my favorite holiday: Earth Day.
Or, as you would say, Chris, "Earf Day.
" If you live on Earth, isn't every day Earth Day? What's Earth Day? Well, Chris, people are destroying the planet with things like plastic bags and cans, bottles, and indestructible foodstuffs.
On Earth Day we put forth our best efforts to save the planet.
I thought saving the planet was a waste of time, because I was too busy trying to save me.
I tried saving my face.
I tried saving my ass.
I even tried saving my future kid's ass.
To this day, I love geography.
Your assignment is to do something you think will help save the Earth.
Greg.
You mean something like building a solar-powered tanning bed? Isn't that what the beach is? That's very good, Greg.
Chris, what would you like to do? I knew my dad had a truck and Bed-Stuy was a mess.
So I had the perfect project.
Uh, collect cans and recycle them? That's wonderful.
Then you could take the money and do something for the environment.
You could plant a tree.
Maybe I could plant my foot in your b-- ( funky hip-hop theme playing ) ~ Oh, make it funky now ~ Having my father help me with my Earth Day project seemed like a great idea until he found out about it.
Earth Day? It's the day we try to save the Earth.
I have a project to do too.
Well, Earth Day must not be too important if I still got to go to work.
Are the banks closed? You still got to feed the parking meters? And what are you doing to save the Earth? I'm recycling cans, and the money I make I'm going to use to help the environment.
Just like Bono.
I don't know, Chris.
Sounds like it might take too much time.
Julius, your son is trying to save the Earth.
Are you going to help him or not? My father had been asked that question before, and there was only one right answer, whether it was something minor: Are you going to do the dishes or not? Or something major: Are you going to propose to me or not? Here you go, baby.
Oh! Thank you.
See? Sure, I'll help you out.
Here's your first can.
I hope you get an A.
Thanks, Dad.
What are you doing, boy? I have to build a car out of this piece of wood.
I want to know what you're doing with my potatoes.
That's how I'm going to power it.
It's environmentally friendly.
You wasting my potatoes is butt-whipping friendly.
Wait till he finds out Drew's making the engine out of steak.
Listen to this: "Dear parent, "your daughter Tonya has been cited "for a conduct violation, "and your presence is being requested for a conference.
" What kind of conduct violation? She said I was being rude and belligerent.
Ain't no damn body rude and belligerent.
I'm going to go down there and show them what rude and belligerent is.
No kidding.
Rude and belligerent.
While I had my father on my side, my mother was going to get a teacher off of Tonya's back.
I don't see why I have to take a whole day off of work to come down here for this nonsense.
I don't think it's nonsense.
Tonya was exhibiting aggressive behavior toward a classmate.
I just wanted you to be aware of it.
I was just trying to read, and she wouldn't be quiet.
Girl, you interrupt me again, I'm going to knock the sound out of your mouth.
How was she being aggressive? Apparently, Tonya turned toward her study partner and said this: You'll get to hear it on the unrated DVD.
Did you say this? Sorta.
Well, she was trying to study, right? That's not the point.
Oh, well, I think it is.
This is school, and her behavior will not be tolerated.
Her behavior? What about the other little girl's behavior? Why don't you have her mother come down here and tell her kid to shut up while my baby is trying to study? That's neither here nor there.
Then please, where is it? What I'd like to ask is do you know where Tonya got this language from? My mother had two answers to that question.
Answer A: She got it from this knot I'm about to put upside your head.
And answer B: Well, I don't know, but it won't happen again.
Have a nice day.
Tonya, come on.
I want to get transferred.
Girl, don't backtalk me right now.
Now is not the time.
At Doc's I was setting out on my master plan.
If you want to save the Earth, you better figure out what to do about them Russians.
They got bombs.
My whole family worked in the fields.
I hate fields.
I love concrete.
You can't grow cotton on concrete.
I help the environment by driving as much as I can.
You ever ride that train? That train is filthy, man.
You know it's dirty as hell when rats got footies on.
You want to save this planet? Get rid of them trains.
Get rid of them trains.
I help the environment by wearing wigs.
People put a whole lot of chemicals in their hair.
Then they wash it out.
It goes right into the river.
People got to drink that water.
When you done with a wig, just flush it down the toilet.
If it ends up in your glass, well, at least you can see it.
I use "I Can't Believe This Is Not Margarine.
" It tastes real great.
Plus it has paudridridamadra- hydraglycerin.
That saves cows.
If the Earth died, that would be tragic, but I sure like to sell that coffin.
So how'd it go with Tonya? Her teacher is crazy.
That's how it went.
What happened? I was trying to study and this girl kept talking so I told her: ROCHELLE: "If you don't shut up I'm going to slap the chatter out of you.
" And she left me alone.
Wow, you sound just like mom.
No, she doesn't.
She does.
I mean, just a little.
So you think that this is my fault? Well, you do kind of always yell.
Okay, then fine, I'll stop.
( all laughing ) What? That's funny? Yes.
You're going to stop yelling? Yes, I'm going to stop yelling.
You just watch.
I got five dollars says you won't last a week.
Bet.
My money's on him.
My father had promised to help me collect cans, but all he was collecting was some shut-eye.
Dad.
Dad.
You think we can go out and get started? Started on what? Collecting cans.
What cans? For my project.
What project? My school project.
What school project? Collecting cans.
Chris, I'm tired.
Can't you do it yourself? Yeah, I guess I can start by myself.
A kid collecting cans with his dad is recycling.
A kid collecting cans by himself is bum practice.
Dad? Well, Earth, just us.
CHRIS: Since my dad wouldn't help me, It looked like I'd have to save the Earth all on my own.
Unfortunately, you could turn in cans for money, and every bum in Bed-Stuy knew it.
They may be bums, but they're not lazy bums.
Hey, Chris.
What are you doing in there? Collecting cans.
Turn in enough, get a lot of cash, plus, it's good for the environment.
What are you doing, soldier? I'm trying to collect cans too.
It's for my Earth Day project.
Want to collect cans around here? You got to be quick.
Yeah, I guess so.
Got to be quicker than that.
And not mind sitting in garbage.
( garbage flushing ) After a few days, I could see that my recycling project was no can do.
You've got to be quick to get the cans.
That's a big business.
I thought my dad was going to be helping me.
This was supposed to be easy.
Maybe you should switch projects.
Yeah, now all I have to do is come up with a solar-powered excuse.
I'd help you, but I ran into a major problem.
What happened? While I was making my tanning bed, I accidentally invented an incandescent light bulb that won't burn out for 600 years.
That's amazing.
Then you'll definitely get an A.
I can't turn that in.
Why not? Are you crazy? I'd be a marked man.
I'm not taking down every major power company in the nation.
They'd have me killed in a minute.
So I decided to switch projects.
I'm going with a dung-powered radar system.
U.
S.
patent number D349127.
So what are you going to do? Well, I figure there's a bunch of cans around here somewhere.
I might as well just keep looking.
See these two little cup-like things? Mm-hm? MAN ( on TV ): Put the potatoes in them.
Take one of these little electrodes and plunge it into the potato there, and take the other one and plunge it into the other potato.
CHRIS: Back at home, my mother needed help too.
Drew, what is all this stuff on the table? Boy, you better clean this table before I knock--! Are you yelling? No.
Sweetie.
When you get a chance, would you mind putting this stuff away, so I-I-I can set the table for dinner? Yeah, I'll do it in a minute.
Hi, Tonya.
Did Daddy say you could have ice cream before dinner? Nope, but I got hungry.
But Tonya, it's almost dinnertime.
I don't want you to ruin your appetite-- Mama, don't worry about it.
I'm going to eat my dinner.
This is like watching a volcano almost erupt.
Outside calm, inside furious.
Tonya, why are you reading at the table? Why aren't you eating dinner? I'm just not hungry.
ROCHELLE: Hm, well, maybe it's all that ice cream you had before dinner.
Yeah, maybe.
JULIUS: Who said you could eat ice cream before dinner? Nobody.
ROCHELLE: That's the problem.
What? Nothing.
So, Chris, how's your project coming along? Okay.
Um, me and Dad are just trying to figure out a time that's good for us to go looking for cans.
Yeah, we're working on the time.
Oh, okay, that's nice.
I'm sure you two will work it out.
I'm not.
Well, I finally figured out my project.
I hope you figured out how to clean that mess up.
I-I built a potato clock.
Now all I have to do is paint it.
Paint? On my dining room table? Mm-hm.
Oh, no, you don't.
You're not getting me.
I'm keeping that five dollars.
Paint all you want.
Paint 20 potatoes if you have to, Drew.
Are those my good potatoes? Not anymore.
Yeah, but I'll chop 'em up and make French fries after I turn my project in.
Hey, check it out.
I put a calendar on the front.
TONYA: I thought you were supposed to be making a car.
I thought you were supposed to be eating your dinner.
I was, but the potatoes were too weak to run it.
I wonder how many potatoes we need to get rid of the light bill.
Enough to make mashed potatoes for the next million years.
So Dad, you think you could pick me up after school tomorrow? For what? To pick up cans.
Yeah, yeah, cans.
No problem.
Work tomorrow? No problem.
Unfortunately for me, if you offer my dad a job, he forgot about everything else.
So Dad, I'm going to come straight home after school tomorrow, okay? Oh, I'm sorry, Chris.
I just picked up an extra shift.
I get paid time and a half, but, hey, you're doing okay, though, right? Yeah, Dad, I'm fine.
All right, I knew you would.
You're the man.
That's my boy.
We learned the reason my mother yelled wasn't because she liked yelling, it was because if she didn't yell, no one would hear her.
Drew, wake up.
Hey-- Chris, you're going to be late.
I'm coming.
Okay, fine.
Don't go to school.
Grow up stupid.
Tonya, wake up, baby.
All right, all right.
Five more minutes.
( chuckles ) See? Oh, this is what I'm talking about.
I try to be nice and this is the thanks I get.
Yeah, I try not to be rude and belligerent.
If I wasn't, nothing would get done around here.
But that's okay.
Oh, okay, I guess I'm supposed to clean this up too? Oh, no, no, no problem, Mr.
Potato.
I'll clean you up.
I have nothing else better to do.
No, please, you sit right there.
I'll be back.
No, really, stay! No, it's okay.
It's okay, because-- Uh-oh.
Now, that is just nasty.
After searching around, I found a few cans, but what I really needed was some help.
~ Whoa, oh, mercy Mercy me ~ There he is, officer.
That's the man.
~ Oh, things ain't what ~ COP: Hold it right there.
That's my boy.
If I ever needed my dad's help, I needed it then.
Dad? Dad! Dad! Ah, dang it.
Wait! Move, move, move.
Dad? I'm not your daddy.
( breaks screech ) ( truck beeping ) Am I? No.
Thank you, God.
( crinkling ) To get cans to recycle, first I had to cycle them.
Hey, baby, what you doing? I looked everywhere and I couldn't find any cans.
So I figured I'd get my own.
Want a soda? Yeah, thanks.
You mean to tell me you and your daddy couldn't find one can? I didn't want to tell on my dad, but I didn't want to lie.
Well, Dad hasn't really had any time to come looking for cans with me.
He's been working.
Really.
My project was on its last leg.
And for my mother, that was the last straw.
Julius, wake up! Oh, oh, what's going on? What? What? I thought you were gonna help Chris with his homework.
I was.
I am.
When? I don't-- Rochelle, I've been working.
Oh, and I've just been laying around the house all day? Is that what it is? I ask you to help that boy with one homework assignment, in what, 15 years? And you can't even do that! All I ask you to do is take the boy and pick up some cans.
I'm sorry.
"I'm sorry.
" You ought to be! Your son needed your help with one school assignment, but no, you were too busy.
But, baby-- But-but-but what? Are you going to help him or not? Mm.
That's exactly what I thought.
Hm.
Take your money.
I'm ba-ack! After school I was in for a big surprise.
Dad? What's wrong? What happened? Whoa, calm down.
I'm here to help you with your Earth Day project.
I thought you had to work.
I do.
Now, let's go get these cans.
~ People, let me tell you About my best friend ~ ~ He's a warm-hearted person Who loves me to the end ~ ~ Now, people, let me tell you About my best friend ~ ~ He's a one boy Cuddly toy ~ ~ My up, my down My pride and joy ~ ~ People, let me tell you About him ~ ~ He's so much fun ~ ~ Whether we're talkin' Man to man ~ ~ Or whether we're talking Son to son ~ ~ 'Cause he's my best friend ~ ~ Yes, he's my best friend ~ ( both laughing ) ( singers scatting ) Looks pretty full.
Yeah, so you want to take it to the recycling center? No, let's take it first thing in the morning.
Yeah.
( mellow theme playing ) So, Tonya, I know you heard me scream yesterday.
Yeah, are you sorry? No, I'm not sorry and I'll tell you why.
You can only talk that way to someone when you love them.
But you have to be nice to the people that you don't know.
But that doesn't make any sense.
No, it doesn't make any sense, but it so happens to be true.
Like when Bush got reelected.
How can it be true if it doesn't make any sense? Because that's just the way the truth is.
Oh.
So this means that I'm going to go back to yelling at everybody.
Because you love us? Exactly.
So I can yell at you too? Mm, if you want the fillings knocked out of your face, go right ahead.
( giggling ) I'd collected cans, now it was time to cash in.
Sorry you had to miss work for this, Dad.
That's okay.
So how much money did you make? One hundred? $200? Six.
Six hundred dollars? No, six dollars.
I can't do anything with this.
How am I supposed to save the Earth with six dollars? You know what, Chris? To some people six dollars is a lot of money.
You said you wanted to help the planet.
I just hope he knows this is cash, not a salad.
Hey, Kill Moves.
Konnichiwa! Oh.
Hey, Chris.
I got something for you.
Uh, what's this for? Earth Day.
Earth Day, huh? Hm, thanks.
Hey.
Happy Earth Day.
Let's get you to school.
People talk about saving the planet by picking up cans and bottles, but the one thing I learned from Earth Day was that saving the planet meant a lot to me, but doing it with my father meant the world to me.
( engine starts ) So, Chris, tell us about your Earth Day project.
Oh, well, me and my dad collected a truckful of cans.
Chris, that's wonderful.
And I gave the money to somebody less fortunate.
I mean, there's no reason to save the Earth if you can't save the people.
Oh, Chris, that's so profound.
Other than the fact that you can see, Stevie Wonder's got nothing on you.
I know in my heart, that money is somehow going to help us all.
So we have four cans of aerosol spray paint, one pack of cigarettes, a gallon of whisky, and one container of "I Can't Believe It's Not Margarine.
" Would that be paper or plastic? Plastic.
~ Everybody hates Chris ~ CHRIS: Happy Earth Day.
( funky hip-hop theme playing )
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