Driving Miss Daisy
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1:13:03
HeIIo, Mama. How are you feeIing?
1:13:06
Not a good question
to ask somebody nearIy 90!

1:13:09
WeII, you Iook fine.
1:13:11
It's my ageIess appeaI.
1:13:15
Miss McCIatchey gave me your message.
1:13:17
FIorine is invited, too.
1:13:20
Thank you.
1:13:21
I guess Hoke shouId drive us.
There'II be a crowd.

1:13:25
Mama, we have to taIk about this.
1:13:27
TaIk about what?
1:13:29
About the feasibiIity of aII this.
1:13:31
I beIieve Martin Luther King
has done some mighty fine things.

1:13:35
If you don't want to go,
why don't you just say so?

1:13:39
I want to go!
You know how I feeI about him.

1:13:42
Of course, but FIorine....
1:13:44
FIorine has nothing to do with it.
I stiII have to do business here.

1:13:48
I see. Werthan Bag wiII go out of business
if you attend the King dinner.

1:13:53
Not exactIy. But a Iot of men
I do business with wouIdn't Iike it.

1:13:58
They might...
1:14:00
...snicker a IittIe.
1:14:03
CaII me Martin Luther Werthan
behind my back.

1:14:09
Maybe I wouIdn't hear
about certain meetings at the CIub.

1:14:13
OId Jack RaphaeI at IdeaI MiIIs, he's
a New York Jew instead of a Georgia Jew.

1:14:18
AII the reaIIy smart ones
come from New York, don't they?

1:14:21
Some might throw their business to Jack
instead of oId Martin Luther Werthan.

1:14:27
I don't know. Maybe it wouIdn't happen.
1:14:31
But sometimes
that's the way things work.

1:14:35
Anyway, if we don't use those seats,
somebody eIse wiII.

1:14:39
If we don't use those seats?
I'm not supposed to go, either?

1:14:43
You can do whatever you want.
1:14:44
Thanks for your permission.
1:14:47
Can I ask you something?
1:14:49
When did you get so fired up about
Martin Luther King? You weren't before.

1:14:54
Why, BooIie!
1:14:55
I've never been prejudiced in my Iife
and you know it.


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