:30:04
So, when you're working on...
:30:09
whatever it is
you're working on...
:30:13
I mean...
:30:14
how do you see the heart
as anything more than a--
:30:17
-Than a pump?
-Yeah.
:30:20
I mean, in the end,
it's just an organ, right?
:30:24
But, symbolically...
:30:26
Your heart
can fit right in my hand.
:30:29
The heart is this
incredibly smart machine.
:30:33
It beats seventy to eighty
times a minute...
:30:35
and in the space
of each beat...
:30:37
sends deoxygenated blood
to your lungs...
:30:39
and oxygenated blood
to all your organs.
:30:42
Cut the aorta,
and you'll release...
:30:44
a jet of blood
that hits the ceiling.
:30:46
Now, who needs
to use it as a symbol...
:30:49
when the thing itself
is so magnificent?
:30:53
-The thing itself.
-Hmm.
:31:00
Well, as a symbol,
it should be replaced.
:31:02
The heart's had its day.
:31:04
Why not the kidney as a symbol
of love, or the liver?
:31:07
Hmm.
"You broke my liver."
:31:10
"My liver aches for you"?
:31:12
Doesn't rhyme as well...
:31:15
you know, for country songs
and Shakespeare.
:31:18
Sure it does.
:31:19
I'm aquiver.
:31:21
Please deliver.
:31:24
Deep as a river,
my love, my liver.
:31:29
I just can't--
:31:35
Hello?
:31:37
Hi.
Oscar's here, visiting.
:31:41
Yeah.
:31:44
I know. OK.
:31:46
Your father says,
"Don't forget...
:31:48
"we're having dinner tonight."
:31:50
I haven't forgotten!
:31:54
He says, "Did you ask
Miranda Spear to join us?"
:31:58
-Who?
-Miranda--