1:17:02
I don't know. I just kind
of remember. I mean, how do you
remember your phone number?
1:17:06
You just do.
1:17:08
- Have you studied organic chemistry?
- A little bit.
1:17:10
- Oh, just for fun?
- Yeah, for kicks.
1:17:13
Yeah, it's so much fun
studying organic chemistry.
1:17:16
- Are you mad?
- [ Laughs ]
1:17:18
Have you completely
lost your mind?
1:17:21
Nobody studies it for fun.
It's not a necessity,
especially for someone like you.
1:17:25
- Someone like me?
- Yeah.
1:17:28
Someone who divides their time, fairly
evenly, between batting cages and bars.
1:17:32
- I would hardly say it was a necessity.
- Oh.
1:17:36
You know, there are very
smart people here at Harvard.
1:17:39
Even they have to study,
because this is really hard.
1:17:43
And yet... you do it
so easily. I don't understand.
1:17:48
I don't understand
how your mind works.
1:17:51
- Did you play the piano?
- I want to talk about this.
1:17:53
No, I'm trying to explain it to you.
Do you play the piano?
1:17:55
- Yeah, a bit.
- So when you look at
a piano, you see Mozart.
1:17:59
- I see "Chopsticks."
- All right, well, Beethoven, okay?
1:18:03
He looked at a piano, and it just
made sense to him. He could just play.
1:18:07
- So what are you saying?
You play the piano?
- Not a lick.
1:18:09
I look at a piano, I see a bunch of
keys, three pedals and a box of wood.
1:18:13
But Beethoven, Mozart--
They saw it. They could just play.
1:18:17
I couldn't paint you a picture.
I probably can't hit the ball
out of Fenway.
1:18:21
- And I can't play the piano.
- But you can do my
O-chem paper in under an hour.
1:18:26
Right. Well, I mean, when
it came to stuff like that,
I could always just play.
1:18:33
That's the best
I can explain it.
1:18:35
- Come here.
I have to tell you something.
- Huh?
1:18:39
- I have to tell you something.
- Oh.
1:18:42
Well--
1:18:57
- It's not fair.
- What's not fair? What?