:46:10
- Admiral, may I ask you a question?
- Don't call me Admiral.
:46:16
You used to call me Jim.
What's your question?
:46:24
Your use of language
has altered since our arrival.
:46:26
It is currently laced
with more colourful metaphors.
:46:31
- "Double dumb-ass on you."
- The profanity?
:46:34
That's the way they talk. Nobody pays
any attention unless you swear.
:46:40
- Look at the literature of the period.
- For example?
:46:44
The works of Jacqueline Susann.
The novels of Harold Robbins.
:46:50
"The Giants".
:47:01
The next showing of "The World
of Whales" begins in five minutes.
:47:11
Here I go.
:47:16
Good morning, I'm your guide
this morning. I'm Dr Gillian Taylor.
:47:22
I'm assistant director
of the Maritime Cetacean Institute.
:47:29
The Cetacean Institute
is the only museum devoted to whales.
:47:35
We have a great deal to offer,
:47:38
but that is small compared
to what we don't know about whales.
:47:43
One commonly held misconception
is that whales are fish.
:47:47
They're not.
They're mammals like you and me.
:47:49
Warm blooded, breathing air and
producing milk to nurse their young.
:47:54
- Do whales attack people?
- No.
:47:57
Most whales don't have teeth,
they have a gum-like tissue