Sweet Home Alabama
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:54:04
Afternoon.
:54:06
Can I help you?
:54:07
Barry Lowenstein,
"New York Post."

:54:09
Ho-ho, boy,
am I glad to see you.

:54:13
I'll tell you, it's, uh...
:54:15
definitely, uh,
another world down here.

:54:19
Did you say the "Post"?
:54:21
Yes, I did. I was hoping to get an
interview with you and your family...

:54:24
maybe, um, a few pictures
if you don't mind?

:54:27
No.
I mean, uh, yes, I do...

:54:30
mind.
:54:31
They're not here.
:54:35
This is just
as you described it.

:54:37
It must have been amazing,
huh, growing up here?

:54:41
Like a fantasy.
:54:42
Would you mind if I take
a quick look inside?

:54:46
Actually, I'm on my way out.
:54:48
I'll come back, then.
:54:49
Uh, uh, okay,
but just a peek.

:54:55
This is it...
home sweet home.

:54:59
How old is this place?
:55:02
It was built by my, uh,
great-great-great-grandfather,...

:55:06
Charles Carmichael, in 1853.
:55:08
Oh, boy, I bet you slid down
this banister a time or two.

:55:13
And over here we have
the, um...

:55:19
kitchen, but who hasn't
seen one of those?

:55:22
Let's start over here.
:55:38
Now, this is my favorite room.
:55:40
It was part of the, um,
Underground Railroad.

:55:45
Why are we whispering?
:55:47
The whole place is haunted...
:55:50
by ghosts of, um,
the Civil War soldiers.


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