1:12:06
I'm not sure
you understand, Sean.
1:12:08
- What don't I understand?
- Here you go, guys.
1:12:11
- Thanks, Tim.
- Yeah, thank you.
1:12:14
Just so you don't
get sticky fingers.
1:12:17
Tim, can you help us?
1:12:19
We're tryin'
to settle a bet.
1:12:21
Uh-oh.
1:12:23
- Ever heard of Jonas Salk?
- Sure. Cured polio.
1:12:26
-Ever heard of Albert Einstein?
-Hey.
1:12:29
[ Pool Balls Clattering ]
1:12:31
How about Gerald Lambeau?
Ever heard of him?
1:12:34
- No.
- Thank you, Tim.
1:12:38
- So who won the bet?
- I did.
1:12:42
This isn't about me, Sean.
1:12:46
I'm nothing compared
to this young man.
1:12:52
You ever hear of
Gerald Lambeau?
1:12:54
In 1905 there were hundreds
of professors renown for
their study of the universe.
1:12:58
But it was a 26-year-old
Swiss patent clerk,
1:13:03
doing physics in his spare time,
who changed the world.
1:13:05
Can you imagine if Einstein
would have given that up...
1:13:07
just to get drunk with his buddies
in Vienna every night.
1:13:10
We all would have
lost something.
1:13:12
Tim would never
have heard of him.
1:13:14
- Pretty dramatic, Gerry.
- No, it isn't, Sean.
1:13:17
This boy has that gift.
1:13:20
He just doesn't got the direction,
but we can give that to him.
1:13:23
Hey, Gerry, in the 1960s,
there was a young man graduated
from University of Michigan.
1:13:28
Did some brilliant work
in mathematics.
1:13:31
Specifically,
bounded harmonic functions.
1:13:33
Then he went on to Berkeley.
He was assistant professor.
Showed amazing potential.
1:13:36
Then he moved to Montana, and
he blew the competition away.
1:13:39
- Yeah, so who was he?
- Ted Kaczynski.
1:13:42
Haven't heard of him.
1:13:44
- Hey, Timmy!
- Yo!
1:13:46
- Who's Ted Kaczynski?
- Unabomber.
1:13:50
That's exactly
what I'm talking about.
1:13:53
- We gotta give this kid direction.
- Yeah--
1:13:55
He can contribute to the world,
and we can help him do that.
1:13:58
Direction's one thing.
Manipulation's another.