When We Were Kings
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:46:02
So, when I do this here
he can understand.

:46:05
Now he will believe in me
:46:06
because he feels
that I have shared with him

:46:09
the same anguish and anxiety,
the same pain that he has felt.

:46:13
It's a big difference.
:46:15
What would happen
if you took a small part

:46:18
of the vast sums of money
being made from the fight

:46:21
and put it into something that was...
:46:24
that would help a number of people
rather than a few?

:46:27
This is my dream and desire,
:46:29
and I feel that I would need...
white counterparts to do this here.

:46:35
I would say let me engender a large
amount of money, if it's possible,

:46:40
and then don't just let the money
sit there and wither away and die

:46:44
but put it into the sun so it could
germinate, blossom and grow.

:46:49
(Hauser) 'He's a remarkable man.
:46:51
'Don King is one of
the brightest people I've ever met,

:46:55
'he's one of the most
charismatic people I've ever met,

:46:59
'he's one of the hardest working
people I've ever met.'

:47:03
He is also totally amoral
:47:06
and I can't think of a man who has
done more to demoralise fighters,

:47:12
exploit from fighters and ruin
fighters' careers than Don King.

:47:17
But you have to give him his due
:47:20
for what he did to make Muhammad Ali
versus George Foreman in Zaire.

:47:24
And nobody does anything for nothing.
:47:28
You understand that?
:47:29
Fight or no fight,
what business are we in?

:47:32
- Music!
- I was starting to wonder.

:47:35
I felt like
we've been in the fight business.


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