Here and Now (2018) s01e05 Episode Script

From Sun Up to Sun Down

1 Henry? (RINGTONE CHIME) They made my work a joke on the news.
And you're just supposed to do nothing? All we need is money.
What about Steve Benjamin? Right, he's in Portland! A new patient had a dream about my mother.
I read about "porous mind".
You think that's possible? I don't know.
I'd like to take a look at your game.
I'll send you a link.
Anything happen when you were in jail? Wider.
Duc, this is Carmen.
Carmen is an intuitive.
- You mean like a psychic? - Uh, no.
You give me a shout sometime.
The theme of the video is "My Portland".
I'll assign you partners.
Well, hello there.
- What is that? - Looks like it came off something.
- It's a sex toy.
- Oh.
- It's for us.
- Who else? Mijo.
(SHRIEK) (SCREAMING) Ramon! You're safe.
(AUDREY SIGHS) Did you recognize this woman? No, I've (SNIFFLES) never seen her before.
But she called me mijo, so I guess Mijo! she was my mother.
(SIGHS) My biological mother.
- "Mijo"? - Yeah, it it it means "my son.
" But then, uh, these four gashes appeared on her cheek, right here, like this, like like in my dream about your mother when when she used her fingernails to make the four gashes in her face.
You never told me that.
Of course I did, Fred.
(BREATHING HARD) Didn't I? I totally did.
I totally did, because that was the fucking freakiest part of the whole fucking dream.
(WHIPPING) - (SCREAMS) It's 11:11, the four gashes in her face.
That's 11:11.
Fuck me.
Fuck me.
FARID: And what about my mother in your dream? Do you remember anything else she might have told you besides "Dareh miyad"? No, Fred, I I don't remember, okay? So maybe maybe this is the part where you give me the fucking drugs? - Huh? - Yes, right.
Wh-wh-what is it that you're giving me? - What are you giving me? - Uh - I, uh - (PEN SCRATCHES) I'm gonna prescribe a low dose of Seroquel, it can help you sleep at night.
- Are you still using weed? - Yeah.
(FARID SPEAKS, MUFFLED) (RAMON SPEAKS, MUFFLED) No more fucking weed, Fred, all right? (SHOUTS) Fucking make it stop! - Should we go in? - We're not supposed to go in.
I'm going in.
RAMON: How about you fucking help me make it stop, okay? - What's happening? - Nothing, I'm just fucking crazy! It's all fucking good! I'm sorry.
You can't just walk in like this! - What are you prescribing him? - I can't share that with you.
- Seroquel.
Yeah.
- AUDREY: Seroquel? That's a sedating antipsychotic.
So we're diagnosing him now? We are not doing anything, Ms.
Bayer, and this is just to help him sleep at night.
I think amisulpride would be better.
No, I disagree.
I disagree, and this interference in his treatment has to stop.
- His treatment is not working.
- His treatment hasn't even started.
I just gave him a prescription.
AUDREY: I am not going to wait around for him to hurt himself.
- Well, there's no indication he might.
- Yet! What the fuck are we waiting for? You are asking me to rush diagnosis.
Yes.
Yes, I am.
Doctor, my my wife was a therapist for years.
- She has - All due respect, a therapist is not a doctor.
I told you this would happen again, but you didn't listen.
- Mom! - I understand you're all upset, but please calm down.
- Please don't be condescending to her.
- Yes, please don't.
- Mom, can we just please go? - Okay, baby.
Just calm down.
I am calm! I just wanna get the fuck out of here.
- (BREATHING HARD) - Okay, sweetie.
(RAMON MUTTERS) For fuck's sakes.
There has to be something more that you can do.
Mr.
Boatwright, I just gave him medication.
Now we're gonna have to wait and see if it works.
Anything more at this point could be dangerous for him.
It's already dangerous.
Whatever this is, he can't stop it.
We'll be in touch.
(DOOR CLOSES) (DISTANT, MUFFLED VOICES SHOUTING) - (BIRDS CHIRPING) - (KIDS SHOUTING PLAYFULLY) ASHLEY: Oh, man.
- Are you gonna make new friends today? - Uh-huh.
(GASPS) - Mrs.
Collins, hi! - Miss Lisa.
Hailey, say hello to Miss Lisa.
Oh, somebody's being shy today, but I hope not too shy, because we have a new student, and, Hailey, I think you'd make the best cubby-buddy for him.
- (GASPS) Ooh! - Would you like to share your cubby? (LISA AND ASHLEY LAUGH) You're just gonna love his mom.
- Jamila! - Oh.
Okay.
Jamila, this is who I was telling you about.
This is Ashley and her little peanut, Hailey.
- Nice to meet you.
- Hey, girl.
Okay, I gotta round up the troops.
I knew you two would hit it off.
(ASHLEY CHUCKLES POLITELY) She knew we would hit it off.
- So, um, your son Baldwin.
- Baldwin.
(WHISPERS) That is such a beautiful name.
Hey, Hailey, say hi to Baldwin.
JAMILA: Oh, baby, you need your lotion.
Uh, yes, we we know.
We were running late today.
I got you, girl.
I make my own Shea butter blend a little jojoba, tarragon.
It is the only way to moisturize.
Let's see.
All right.
There you go, baby.
Okay? You should be fine now.
(CHUCKLES) (SIGHS) You want me to come up with you? No, that's okay.
Listen.
I know you're feeling uncertain right now about everything that's going to happen, but for the time being, you're okay.
You need to live in that.
Don't worry about the future.
Just live in the here and the now.
I know, Dad.
I read your book.
I'm sorry.
No apologies.
No apologies.
I'm having lunch with your sister.
Do you wanna join us? No.
I think I just wanna go upstairs and crash, work on my game or something.
Hey.
We're gonna figure this out.
We're gonna fix this.
I promise.
Hmm? (MOUTHS) (DOOR CLOSES) (DISTANT SIREN WAILING) (HENRY SLURPS) Hey.
Morning.
Go-Gurt? Are you fucking kidding me? So, why don't you go ahead and tell me what I did wrong, 'cause I gotta be at work in 20 minutes, and I don't see what the problem is.
You disappeared for two days, Henry, in the middle of the night, all right? - No note, no phone call.
- I forgot my phone, man.
You're lying to me.
No, man.
I didn't know you were trying to get ahold of me.
It happened again, okay? At my niece's birthday party, I had some kind of freak-out, - and I fucking saw something.
- Shit.
I fucking needed you there, and you weren't there, so fuck you, man, all right? Just strolling into my house, eating my Go-Gurt, and using my bed like it's fucking nothing, man! All right? What you did, it's just it's fucking bullshit.
What did I do, man? You fucking left in the middle of the night.
Look, I'm s Oh God.
All right.
I'm not used to telling people where I'm going, 'cause no one's ever fucking cared where I go, so I'm sorry I'm not a fucking expert at dealing with this fucking shit.
I'm not your shrink.
I never said I would be.
My friend, he relapsed, okay? He texted me the other night, because he was gonna fucking hurt himself, and I had to go.
And that's the fucking truth.
(SIGHS) - Okay.
- No, I, um, I get it.
(SIGHS) - I just wish you would've called.
- Shit.
I know.
I know.
(SNIFFLES) Your friend didn't have a phone? I don't have your number memorized.
Why? Because nobody knows anybody's number anymore.
- That's not true.
I - What's mine? (CHUCKLES) - See? Yeah, I don't know why you just don't spring for a new laptop.
I would've tossed it after the first 10 times it crashed.
AUDREY (ON PHONE): I know, I know.
I'm meeting Steven Benjamin this afternoon.
The damn thing couldn't have picked a worse time to freeze again.
DUC (ON PHONE): Steven Benjamin? Wow.
If you get the job, tell him you'll need a Macbook Pro 24.
- It's only what, 30,000.
- (SCOFFS) Yes.
Yes, the first thing I'll do is demand expensive gifts.
If the battery is dead again on your father's laptop, I swear - (COMPUTER CHIMES) - (MIMICS CHIME) Sweetie, listen, I'm gonna have to push our run/walk back half an hour.
I wanna Google some family therapists we can go to.
I grew up around mental disorder.
I'm not gonna wait till your brother seriously hurts himself for a doctor to finally give a damn.
Mom.
Mom.
Breathe.
You're making yourself crazy.
Um, I'll meet you at 12:30.
DUC: You know, constantly rescheduling meetings is a form of aggression.
(KEYBOARD CLACKS) That's great, sweetie.
I'll see you then.
(CLICKS) (CLICKING) (CLICKS) (GASPS) (GASPS) (BREATHES SHAKILY) (PANTING, SNIFFLING) - (LAPTOP CLOSES) - (GRUNTS, PANTS) Oh - - (INDISTINCT CHATTERING) - Hey, Dad.
- Hey.
Ah.
Call your old man out of the blue to have lunch.
- I feel so lucky.
- (CHUCKLES) I'm sorry I'm late.
I, uh (SIGHS) I just needed to go around the corner and pick up a few things.
What'd you get me? Think you got enough lotion there? Yes, one for every purse.
I'm never gonna be caught empty-handed again.
- Hmm? - Didn't have lotion for Hailey this morning, and one of the other moms let me borrow hers, and, uh, and it just made me I don't know feel so ashamed.
- Why did I feel like that? - Your mother's the therapist.
I can only dissect the concept of shame into a thousand subconcepts, until we don't even know what we're talking about anymore.
Yes.
Thank you, but I will pass.
How is Ramon? Ah.
Well he started medication.
Hmm.
Okay.
That's a good thing, right? I hope so.
How are you? - How's life? - Um It's good.
It's good.
I, uh, I I have everything I ever wanted.
I'm super lucky.
Okay.
What's wrong with this picture? What's going on? Sometimes I just feel so fucking responsible for everything.
I love my husband.
I love my daughter.
I love my job, my family, my whole life, but I just it feels like there's something Missing? And I don't know what anything means anymore.
- Fuck.
I know that feeling.
- (LAUGHS) Sometimes it feels like the world's falling apart, like everything is upside down.
Mm-hmm.
So much hatred going around.
It's gotta be worse for you, right? I'm overwhelmed, and I'm a white guy.
Yeah, Dad, not every problem I have has to do with being black.
No, I'm sorry.
You know, I grew up around total white privilege, which I'm grateful for, but sometimes I just really think that that may raise a bigger deal than if I'd grown up around people who were actually like me.
We always tried our best to introduce you to Liberian culture I don't need to read about being African in a book.
When people see me, they don't see a Liberian.
They see a black woman.
Ashley, every time that we wanted to talk to you - about race you refused to.
- Yes? Well, that's because it's not a thing that you could possibly understand.
Oh my God, you never have to worry about a cop thinking that you're a fucking thief because you have a fancy purse, and you never, ever have to worry about one just feeling you up, because they know that if you fight back, then they'll just beat you up, and they'll get away with it.
Is that what happened to you in jail? - I - You gotta report this cop.
(LAUGHING) Oh.
That right there is the difference between the world that you live in and the world I live in.
(LAUGHS) - Ashley.
Oh.
(SIGHS) I knew those shoes would look great on you.
Here we are in the luxurious Director Park.
It was opened in 2009, and it is 0.
46 acres.
NAVID: Is that a lot? Probably.
I don't know what an acre is.
- I'm not fucking Amish.
- (PHONE CHIMES) It was named for some investor guy's grandparents.
NAVID: Are you just reading that off your phone? - No.
- (PHONE CHIMES) Over here, we have the giant chess pieces, and over there, is the fountain.
We took my niece here last summer.
When it's hot, kids can go there to frolic or I don't know shit in the water, I guess.
What the fuck are you doing here? KRISTEN: My laundry.
What does it look like we're doing? This stupid project.
Quit copying our video, assholes.
This park was our idea.
Wait, it it's literally everyone's idea.
(INDISTINCT CHATTERING) Fuck off.
(QUIETLY) She - This is so stupid.
- (PHONE CHIMES) Cut.
You know, I thought we really captured some lightning in a bottle there.
I was riveted.
I am not putting my name on something so obvious that even fucking Kara Pruitt and Becca Koats were able to think of it.
All we have to do is turn in something, and we pass.
Okay, but I don't want it to be lame, vanilla Portland.
Get a life, Portland! Okay, why don't we go someplace that nobody in our class has ever been before, like the vegan strip club? Yeah, 'cause everyone knows strip clubs save their platinum talent for 11:00 a.
m.
on a Monday.
Okay, fine, not there, but I don't know.
This video is supposed to be why Portland is meaningful for us.
I wanna show Portland unknown, the places that nobody likes to talk about.
Let's fucking say something.
All right, I am so full, I don't even know why I got this.
- You want it? - No.
- Okay, do you ever eat? - (NAVID LAUGHS) No, I'm fasting for Ramadan.
I can't eat or drink anything from sunup to sundown.
So, you're pretty serious about that stuff, huh? I guess.
Like, my mom and I, we fast 'cause fasting, it teaches empathy, what it's like for people who are poor and don't have food, so we're more grateful for what we do have.
And it teaches you to control your urges and to and to be stronger than temptation.
- You get that all from skipping lunch? - (BOTH LAUGH) Praise Allah.
So, what are you? Uh, well, technically, I'm a quarter Jewish, but I'm not anything.
So, what, you don't think there's any kind of higher power in the universe? Something bigger than ourselves happening? I don't know.
I never thought about it.
(LAUGHS) NAVID: So you only accept what's in front of you? What's in front of us is awful.
There has to be something better.
(INDISTINCT CHATTERING) (BOAT HORN BLARES) DUC: I think Ramon just has too much on his plate trying to graduate, get a job.
He's some sort of finalist for this big game expo, and he's been really stressed out, and I think it's I didn't know that.
Why didn't I know that? I should've known that.
You okay? Yeah, yeah, I'm fine.
But still, millions of people juggle just as much if not more every day, and they don't start hallucinating.
And this guy your brother's been hanging out with, I don't know what kind of drugs he has your brother doing.
- Who even is he? - Henry? I talked to him.
He still doesn't know where he's going.
It's kind of weird, but I think they really like each other.
(SCOFFS) Well, that's ridiculous.
The man is like 45, dating a 22-year-old college student.
He's not 45, he's almost 30, and I think you're just looking for reasons to not like him.
No.
I'm looking for reasons why my son is hallucinating, and it all started when he met this guy.
And Aah-aah! Whoa.
What's up? (SIGHS) Cramp.
(LAUGHS) Your brother thinks he knows this guy, but he doesn't.
Trust me.
This is gonna hurt him.
You know, Mom, that cramp is a physical expression of your feelings, and if you don't push through it, there's Oh my God.
If it will make you stop.
Uh-huh.
I will never stop.
Because look at this.
Got you going, Mom.
Never stop.
FARID: And I've only known this patient for a few weeks.
How could he know that about my mother? I don't know.
Maybe it's just countertransference.
He described something similar that happened to you, and you think he must be talking about you.
But twice he has dreamt or imagined a woman with four gashes in her cheek.
- Once that woman was actually my mother.
- He claims, after seeing a picture of her.
Well, the woman in his hallucination called him mijo.
A woman called me mijo outside the marijuana dispensary.
That is just a coincidence.
Mijo is a very common word.
No.
And the four gashes make up the number 11:11.
- That's my birthday.
(SIGHS) - Farid.
Is it a coincidence that the woman in his dream spoke Farsi to him, a language he doesn't know? And is it just a coincidence that that the girl Navid hangs out with - is this patient's sister? - Okay.
You know what to do when you get like this.
Just stop.
Breathe.
(BREATHES DEEPLY) Good.
You're taking your medication, right? - (SCOFFS) Layla.
- Because I won't - have you - I am taking my medication.
Because I won't have you ignoring your doctor again and becoming erratic.
Navid is older now.
He will see it, his father disappearing.
I can't protect him from that.
Did you tell him about my mother? - Did you? - Ah (SIGHS) I would never tell him something like that with you knowing.
No.
Never.
- Maybe you let it slip.
- Oh, Farid.
Stop, please, enough.
I'm too hungry for this.
Well, maybe you shouldn't fast.
Just shut up.
Those are for Uncle Amir.
(WHOOSHING) - (CHIMES) - (WINGS FLUTTERING) (SNIFFLES, CLEARS THROAT) (WATER RUNNING) - (PHONE RINGING) - (PEOPLE CHATTERING) AUDREY: Thank you.
No worries.
Wait.
Is it 1982? - (CHUCKLES) Hey, you.
- (CHUCKLES) AUDREY: I know.
It's the been too long.
You look I mean, you you haven't aged a day.
Well, you look fantastic.
A few billion dollars really agrees with you.
Oh, stop.
No, it's not a few billion.
(CHUCKLES) - It's like one, maybe two, max.
- The - (LAUGHS) - The wooden dome.
- Yeah.
- It's like a beehive.
- Yup.
(SIGHS) Yup.
(CHUCKLES) God.
It's been forever.
How's Greg? Oh.
(CLEARS THROAT) You know, full of surprises.
How's Nancy? - Nina? - Nina.
Yeah, Nina.
How is she? Well, my lawyer tells me I just bought her a house in Milan, so I'd imagine she's great.
I'm sorry to hear that.
She was lovely seemed lovely in the Christmas cards.
- Very lovely.
- (BOTH LAUGH) She could be.
Uh, and the family's good? Kids? You've got three, right? - Four.
Mmm.
- Four? Wow.
That's quite the brood.
Yeah, well, one's mine, three are adopted.
- Oh, that's great.
I bet they enjoy - No.
- What? - They're mine.
I I don't know why I said it like that.
They're all mine.
You okay? I'm fine.
May I have a a glass of water, please? Yeah, of course.
(DOOR OPENS) Why do you like watching two guys fucking? (LAUGHS) Gay porn just feels more honest.
You watch porn for the honesty? (LAUGHS) No, but it's like Okay, like, if there's a girl, straight or lesbian Mm-hmm it always feels kind of exploitative, you know? Like it's purely for the enjoyment of the straight dudes beating off to it.
But two guys fucking? Seems like they're actually enjoying each other.
Women can't just enjoy having sex? No, they can, but it's like Okay, like, you can't fake a cum shot, right? That's as real as it gets.
And then there's the voyeur thing, like, "I caught these two guys doing something that I'm not supposed to see them doing, and they" They what? KRISTEN: I think that's my brother's boyfriend.
We're following him, aren't we? Yeah.
(TRAFFIC SOUNDS ECHOING) So, what now? So, after all this time not a word.
What do you mean? Oh, come on.
You've been here a couple of years now, right? No coffee, no phone call.
Well, when I moved here, the ink wasn't even dry from the divorce papers.
I wasn't particularly pleasant to be around.
Can I be honest with you? Because you've been lying this whole time? I actually saw you a few days ago.
Please say you didn't see me on the news.
(MUFFLED GRUNT) Okay, look.
I didn't say what you saw.
I mean, I did, technically, but they way they edited they they purposely I can't tell you how many 10-second sound bytes of me have been edited so that I look like a hippy-dippy liberal asshole.
Well, lucky you.
I would have given anything to look like a hippy-dippy liberal asshole instead of a raging white supremacist asshole.
(LAUGHS) No.
Well, I didn't believe that for a second.
I thought, "No.
That's not the Audrey Bayer who got arrested with me at Berkley protesting Reagan.
" (SIGHS) Isn't it so nice to know that kids today get to experience the joys of protesting a D-list celebrity president? - God.
- Yeah, well (CHUCKLES) Well, kids today, they only show up to protest because they need a great selfie with somebody getting pepper-sprayed behind them.
They're the most connected generation we've ever had.
What are you talking about? They're fighting just as hard as we did, if not harder.
Social media is how they mobilize.
Black Lives Matter, Resist Marches they're not indifferent, Steven, they're angry.
Everybody's angry.
I'm angry.
I've tried to figure out every possible way to prevent drought, to keep crops sustaining, fighting carbon emissions.
That's a losing battle.
We'll be lucky if we last another 50 years.
Fifty years? That's not lucky.
That's surrender.
And I don't accept that.
The world is not ours anymore, and if our kids are gonna fix it, even just live in it, then their anger (SIGHS) They have to be taught that they can't just be cruel to each other, killing each other like we did, our parents did.
They can be better than us, you know? So, that's what you're teaching them in these schools? Did, until my funding got yanked.
I want you to come back present to my board a proposal, a budget, convince these assholes who write the checks that you are a great investment.
- Sound good? - Of course.
- MALCOLM (ON PHONE): Hey, babe.
- Hey.
MALCOLM: We're doing dinner tonight with the Williamses.
- Who? - Uh, your friend from school, Jamila.
I'm not following.
Hailey's cubby-buddy? His mom.
Wait.
Malcolm, we just met these people, and we're already doing dinner? That's Look, why don't you just Uber over and we'll do wine o'clock.
You know what? Let's do it.
Yeah.
I'd like to get to know them better, and their little boy could be very nice for Hailey to play with.
- It'll be good.
- MALCOLM: Yes.
Thank you.
Heart emoji, trophy emoji, kissing face emoji! - Yes! - ASHLEY: Oh my God.
Babe, we talked about this.
Emoji is not a language.
- (LAUGHS) I'm sorry.
I love you.
- ASHLEY: I love you too.
- (PHONE RINGS) - (SIGHS) Okay.
I just don't understand it.
We have three handicap parking spaces just sitting out there, but MacDowell here is the only one of us that actually has a handicap placard.
- I have one too.
- Oh, come on, Rubin, you don't need it.
I have poor circulation to my legs.
Your foot falls asleep.
Big deal.
Jesus Christ.
If we could maybe discuss something serious for a moment? Yes.
Thank you.
They have changed the soap in the bathroom to this weird, orange, gravelly whatchamacallit.
I mean, come on, are we a university or a sewage plant? Oh my God.
Boatwright, do you have something you'd like to add? Yes, actually.
Um What are we doing here? Having a faculty meeting.
Great, then why aren't we talking about how the number of students declaring philosophy as a major has steadily declined over the last 20 years.
- The Internet? - No.
Yes.
- WHITTAKER: I know.
- No.
No, it's because what we are doing isn't viscerally connected to anything.
These ancient philosophers we talk about, they were men of action, literary giants, emperors of free thought.
They lived in it.
They fought for it.
They were persecuted for it.
The church even killed them for it! And here we are, thousands of years later, just decaying in an ivory tower of insignificant, old, white men complaining about orange fucking soap.
(WOMAN CLEARS THROAT) GREG: Nobody gives a shit! That's the problem! (SHOUTS) Nobody gives a shit! (DISTANT CHURCH BELL RINGING) Greg, are you drunk? No.
I'm not drunk.
DEAN: Were you drunk at the biennial ethics conference last month? We understand you were very entertaining.
I can assure you I was not drunk then, and I am not drunk now.
Well, I'd watch my behavior if I were you.
Things you thought were charming when you were 20 are just embarrassing at 60.
The job opportunity was just too good for Corey to pass up, and I was glad to leave Charleston.
I mean, don't get me wrong, South Carolina is beautiful and all, but it's still the South.
I tell you what, though, God certainly put His plan in motion on this one.
- You cannot predict these things.
- Mm-mmm.
What church do you and your family go to? - Oh, we don't.
- Oh.
That's a shame.
(LAUGHS) Babe, you have to see this guy on the grill.
I mean, the way he brines his meat seriously, you should be viral.
Ah.
You know, they say that brining is somewhat of a lost art - Mmm.
- and it is, sadly.
(BOTH LAUGH) You know, Malcolm was telling us earlier - you work in fashion.
- Yes, I do.
Yeah.
- Has her own retail site.
- And a store in the Pearl.
Seriously, Ashley, I'd love to be more like you and know everything about why people wear, like those stupid rubber shoes with the individual toes? (LAUGHTER) - Stuff like that, right? Style and coordination, yeah, that's a that's a part of what I do.
Uh, but I wanted to be a history major when I was in school, and the more classes I took, the more I just kept noticing how fashion is indicative of everything, really I mean, economic status, social changes.
It's a visual representation of history right as it's unfolding in front of your eyes.
- Hmm.
Nice.
- (MUMBLES) And her website guarantees delivery in two to three business days, or it's 15% off your next order.
(LAUGHTER) It's a great deal.
(MOUSE CLICKING) (KEYBOARD CLACKING) (KNOCK ON DOOR) (KNOCK ON DOOR) What's up, Baby Jesus? Hey.
What are you doing here? I was just in the neighborhood, figured I'd come by, see how you're feeling.
(SIGHS) - (DOOR CLOSES) - DUC: Yikes.
I swear, everybody in this family just figures they can come by.
I mean, does nobody know how to use a phone, Duc? Oh yeah, we do.
You're the one who screens and doesn't seem to know how to call us back.
RAMON: None of what I saw feels random.
I don't know what it means, but it means something.
I'm sure it's confusing.
But, you know, there are things you can control.
Sleeping, what you're eating, how you live.
If you just clean up, create an organized living space, maybe it won't all feel so overwhelming.
Oh yeah? Is that proven? If I put away my dishes, I'll stop hallucinating? You know, when I was in the cave, I, um I saw this woman.
I think, um she was my mom.
- What? - She called me mijo.
Huh.
You remember your mom your birth mom, right? (MAN GRUNTING) (MAN 2 GRUNTING) (SIGHS) Ramon, that's behind me.
That was a long time ago.
That it doesn't matter.
But see but see, what if what if all this that that's happening to me, what if (SIGHS) - what if it's me trying to force myself - (PHONE BUZZES) to remember, because I I need to remember.
I know that there's something that I need to remember, - something that I need to know, Duc.
- You were 10 months old when Mom and Dad brought you here.
Nobody remembers anything from when they were that young.
(SIGHS) Mm-hmm.
DUC: Ram Look, just Just don't start looking behind you for some sort of - You might not like what you find.
- Yeah.
(SIGHS) They've been in there for almost two hours.
Yup.
What do you think they're doing? Probably hoboning.
What? Hoboning, like when you fuck a homeless person.
Ho-boning.
(LAUGHS) That's not funny.
Wait, do you really think so? What else could he be doing in there for two hours? It doesn't always take two hours, you know? It can take, like, six minutes.
(GRUNTS) Who have you been having sex with for six minutes? Nobody that you know.
- (TAPS) - Nobody.
So you have.
Once.
- How was it? - Great.
It was great.
- Have you? - Nope.
KRISTEN: Have you ever done, like, anything? I almost got head once, but I kinda got stage fright.
Trust me, you're not missing much.
Why? What happened when you did it? - Nothing.
- Come on, you can't just drop a teaser like that.
Okay, fine.
(INHALES DEEPLY) A couple nights ago at Madison Conway's house.
- What, you went down on Madison Conway? - (LAUGHS) No.
God! I mean, if I was drunk maybe, but no.
Robb Spencer.
Robb Spencer is gay.
No, he isn't.
- (SCOFFS) Okay.
- He isn't.
Trust me.
I know a gay guy when I see one.
Yeah, I know.
You see them online at least three times a day.
(LAUGHS) You're an asshole.
KRISTEN: Shh it.
- What do we do? - Hide.
Hide.
(PHONE BEEPS) Hoboning.
I knew it.
What do I do? I think you should really tell your brother.
No.
If his boyfriend is cheating on him with a homeless guy, - he has a right to know.
- No, but I don't It's gonna, like, rip his heart out.
(WHIRRING) (RINGING) (RINGING STOPS) Hey, hon, I'm, uh having one of those days.
I don't know.
Everything just feels off.
I missed you.
Can't wait to hear about how the big meeting went.
Well, uh hope you scored.
You deserve it.
(INDISTINCT CHATTERING) (SIGHS) I'm so sorry I'm late.
- The bus took forever.
- Oh.
Oh, it's no problem.
Uh, you're okay with ice tea? Uh, yeah.
Great.
Well, um, so you just happened upon my card, huh? Mmm, not really.
I threw my crystals in the Willamette River and your face appeared in the water.
- That's um - Oh my God, I'm joking.
I just liked talking to you at the party.
(CHUCKLES) Hey.
Um, thanks for meeting me here.
I'm celibate.
Because nobody wants to sleep with you? (LAUGHS) No.
No.
Okay, because I was gonna say you seem kind enough.
I mean, surely there's someone out there willing to sleep with you.
No.
Okay.
(CHUCKLES) If I wanted to, I could definitely find someone to more than just like that.
- Yeah.
- (SIGHS) But the point is I don't want to with anyone.
It's my choice.
Okay.
- I mean, no offense.
- I am not offended.
I just didn't want you to get the wrong idea about us, this tea.
I am so glad you just said that.
- Oh yeah? - 'Cause I'll admit, for a second after I texted you, I thought, "Oh crap.
He's gonna think this is a date.
It's gonna be a disaster.
" Yeah, I don't know.
"Disaster"? I just got out of a very complicated relationship.
I mean, it was good at first, and he was nice until he wasn't, at all, so when it comes to relationships right now, I just I I can't.
It's just Exhausting.
Exactly.
The apps and the dating sites, - there's there's like 400 of them.
- (BOTH LAUGH) And honestly, I can't it's it's It's, like, suffocating.
- Yeah.
- Yeah.
So good.
But I am really always in the market for someone to grab a tea with.
- (GLASS TAPS) - To not fucking.
- I can not fuck all day.
(GIGGLES) - (GLASSES CLINK) (CHUCKLES) - (JAZZ MUSIC PLAYS) - (WOMEN LAUGH) Oh, this pecan pie, it's amazing.
Oh, it's my mother's recipe.
It's a teaspoon of sugar, a handful of nuts, - and five cups of butter.
- (LAUGHS) She's coming to stay with us for a few weeks.
Lord help us, I swear, every time that woman comes with a suitcase full of Land O'Lakes.
- (LAUGHS) - COREY: Unless it's a thermal suitcase, that's a scientifically impossible way for butter to travel.
Oh.
He defies the stereotype that all engineers - have a hilarious sense of humor.
- (LAUGHS) - Love you.
- Love you too.
You know, girl, if you were a history buff in school, I'd love to pick your brain about something.
- I'm not really a buff, so I've been reading up on this city, and there is something that really irks me about this place.
Oh, don't start with the utopia thing again.
Ashley, will you please tell my husband about how Portland was founded as a white utopia? - A? - A white utopia? Yeah, it was illegal for black people to be here until 1926.
Probably why every white person I meet is always saying, (MOCKINGLY) "Oh my God, I love Portland.
It's heaven.
" Meanwhile, I can count on one hand the people of color I see on the street.
It's true.
She texts me every time she sees one.
- We're up to like three? Four.
- Like four, yeah.
- (COREY AND JAMILA CHUCKLE) - Did you know about this? No.
Why would I know No.
No.
Well, it happened almost a hundred years ago.
It's not like that anymore.
Thank God for the younger generation.
All the teenagers here do is hang a black effigy in front of their school.
Ugh.
Yeah, that was Kristen's school.
- Who's Kristen? - Oh, Ashley's sister.
Oh my God, Ashley, is she safe there? All those white supremacists running around fucking KKK High? - Pardon my French.
- No, her sister is fine.
She's white.
- Really? - Yeah.
Yeah, Ashley's adopted.
BOTH: Oh.
I didn't know your parents were white.
That makes sense.
That house must've cost a buck.
Corey, he's fucking funny.
- Mmm.
- Oh, the Williamses are great.
We should definitely do this again soon.
I don't know.
They seemed kind of judgy.
Really? I didn't get that at all.
Hmm.
(GRUNTS) (GROANS) You got pretty quiet during pie.
Are you good? Why did you tell them I'm adopted? Because you are.
But why did you feel like you had to explain it to them? - I didn't explain it.
- Mmm.
No, I I just I said it.
It's not exactly a secret.
They're your parents.
- My white parents.
- Yeah, they're white.
What's the big deal? I mean, my parents are white.
It's just a fact.
(ENGINE STARTS) What? What? (CHIMES) (WINGS FLUTTERING) (CRACKLES) (GASPS) (PEOPLE SCREAMING) WOMAN: Farid (BREATHES SHAKILY) Farid? Are you okay? Yeah.
I'm just getting a cold.
You should lay down.
Navid and I are breaking fast.
Do you want me to bring you back something? - No, I'm good.
I need to finish this.
- Okay.
It's okay.
(SIGHS) (PANTING, MOANING) - (WHISPERING) Oh yeah.
Oh yeah.
- Are you close? Almost.
Almost.
RAMON: Do it.
Do it.
- No, no, no, I'll wait.
- I want you to cum too.
Yeah? I will, but just go.
(GRUNTING) (MOANING) RAMON: Oh.
Jesus.
Oh yeah.
(KISSING) Hey.
Hey.
What is it? I'm sorry.
For what? You're right.
I should've been with you at that party.
Stop.
Your friend needed you.
No, you needed me.
I'm sorry.
I am.
(CHUCKLES) (SIGHS) (WHISPERS) Stay.
RAMON: Where's the south? - HENRY: What? - RAMON: On your compass on your arm.
You're missing the south.
No, I'm not missing anything.
Is your family there? Yeah.
(CLEARS THROAT) Where? - Waco.
- Texas? Yeah.
You know, I've never been there.
Oh.
Maybe sometime if you want we could go see them.
Yeah.
(SCOFFS) No, I don't think they, um No, there's nothing in Waco.
I don't want to go back there.
Maybe we could go to somewhere new then.
Well, why would you want to go anywhere else when we got everything we want right here? Cletus.
I love you.
You don't have to say it back.
I just wanted to say it.
Aud? Aud? Audrey? Aud? Oh, there you are.
I have something I want to tell you.
Hear me out.
The other day we were talking about taking a trip, and I was thinking, "Yeah, we could go back and visit New York or Berlin.
" Then I started thinking, "Well, let's not repeat ourselves.
"Let's go someplace new.
Let's go someplace we've never been before, a place we can create an entirely new memory.
" And then I realized, "Antarctica.
" I know.
I know exactly what you're thinking.
We always said, "Never a cruise," but they have ones you can take through the Arctic Peninsula.
They have lectures on sea life.
We could feed the penguins.
You know I've always wanted to feed a penguin.
Honestly, the time to go is now.
It's melting, and soon enough it'll be gone, so what do you think? Sounds expensive.
You'd have to stop taking $900 out of the ATM every month.
- What are you talking about? - Our bank statements.
I've noticed that you withdraw $300 out of our checking account at least three times a month.
What's that for? Just cash to have on hand.
Nothing specific.
Really? Because it's never 200.
It's never 500.
It's always exactly three.
That seems oddly specific, Simon.
Oh.
I, uh Oh fuck.
Okay.
I, um I'm I'm sorry.
Oh God.
Wow.
You know, I thought It's stupid, but but for a second there I thought "Here it comes.
"Here comes the story the lie.
" I would never lie to you.
(LAUGHING) Look, that that isn't a thing.
Okay? It's nothing.
It's it's It's a prostitute, Greg! Well, she's not really a prostitute.
She's She she's putting herself through law school.
Sh Oh, for fuck's (STAMMERS) They're always putting themselves through law school, Greg! What? Did you think she was gonna tell you she needed the money to jam heroin up her eyeball? You used this on her, didn't you? No.
I swear, I didn't even buy that.
You said you bought it for me.
I didn't.
I for I forgot it was even in the glove compartment.
I wasn't gonna use that.
She sh She gave it to me.
You regifted me a cock sling from a hooker? Of all the stupid things to do, not erasing your search history.
My God, you've become a cliché.
There is one in particular that was my favorite.
The one about, um May I? Would you do the honor? No.
(SNIFFLES) Please read.
You want me to read this? "Thank you again for yesterday.
I forgot" "I forgot what it's like to want somebody.
" (SIGHS) When I wrote this, I didn't It doesn't mean anything.
Actually I think it's the most interesting thing you've written in years.
GREG (MUFFLED): Honey, I know you're hurt AUDREY (MUFFLED): Really? You know I'm hurt? (SPEAKS INDISTINCTLY) GREG: Okay, what? You're gonna throw away everything (CLATTERS) AUDREY: I'm not gonna throw anything away! Oh God.
What the fuck did you - Get out! Get the fuck out! - (DOOR SLAMS) Go on! GREG: I'm going! (STOMPING FOOTSTEPS) - AUDREY: Get out! - GREG: Okay! (DOOR SLAMS) Wouldn't you love to love her? Takes to the sky like a bird in flight And who will be her lover? All your life you've never seen A woman taken by the wind Would you stay if she promised to you heaven? Will you ever win? She is like a cat in the dark And then she is the darkness She rules her life Like a fine skylark And when the sky is starless All your life you've never seen A woman taken by the wind Would you stay if she promised you heaven? Will you ever win? Rhiannon She rings like a bell through the night And wouldn't you love to love her? She rules her life like a bird in flight And who will be her lover? All your life you've never seen A woman taken by the wind Would you stay If she promised you heaven? Will you ever win? Rhiannon Taken by, taken by the sky Taken by Taken by the sky Taken by Taken by the sky
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