:45:01
I figured since
I'd gone this far...
:45:06
I might as well just turn back
:45:08
and keep right on going.
:45:09
when I got tired, I slept.
:45:13
when I got hungry, I ate.
:45:15
When I had to go...
:45:17
you know...
:45:19
I went.
:45:20
And so...
:45:22
you just ran.
:45:25
Yeah.
:45:27
# Lookin' out at the road
rushin' under my wheels #
:45:33
# Lookin' back
at the years gone by #
:45:36
# Like so many summer fields #
:45:40
# ln'65, I was 17 #
:45:43
# And runnin' up one on one #
:45:47
# I don't know
where I'm runnin' now #
:45:49
# I'm just runnin' on #
:45:52
# Runnin' on #
:45:54
# Runnin' on empty #
:45:56
# Runnin' on #
:45:58
# Runnin' dry #
:45:59
# Runnin' on... ##
:46:00
I'd think a lot...
:46:02
about Mama and Bubba
and Lieutenant Dan.
:46:06
But most of all,
:46:08
I thought about Jenny.
:46:10
I thought about her a lot.
:46:14
For more than two years,
:46:15
a man named Forrest Gump,
:46:17
a gardener from Greenbow, Alabama,
stopping only to sleep,
:46:20
has been running across America.
:46:22
Charles Cooper
brings you this report.
:46:24
For the fourth time
:46:25
on his journey across America,
:46:27
Forrest Gump, the gardener
from Greenbow, Alabama,
:46:29
is about to cross
the Mississippi River again today.
:46:32
I'll be damned. Forrest?
:46:34
Sir, where are you running?
:46:36
Are you doing this
for world peace?
:46:38
Are you doing this
for the homeless?
:46:40
Are you running
for women's rights?
:46:42
The environment?
:46:43
they just couldn't believe
:46:45
that Somebody would do
all that running
:46:47
for no particular reason.
:46:48
Why are you doing this?
:46:50
I just felt like running.
:46:52
I just felt like runnin'.
:46:55
That's you.
:46:56
I can't believe it's really you.
:46:58
Now...for some reason,