:27:01
Pays the bills. How are you, Don?
:27:05
Ah, it's...
:27:07
...day today.
:27:09
If she saw how good you look
right now, she'd be back.
:27:13
You tell her that
if you see her, will you?
:27:17
- I read the O'Brian piece.
- Yeah, it's tough.
:27:21
I'm a pinko.
I slant the news.
:27:24
I'm just waiting for him
to say my wife left me too.
:27:27
- Nobody worth their salt reads him.
- You read him.
:27:31
Well, see, I rest my case.
:27:34
- Does Paley read him?
- Bill Paley's not gonna do anything.
:27:41
Thanks, Ed.
:27:43
I just came by to tell you
how great the Lieutenant piece was.
:27:47
- Thanks. - How's the fallout?
- Mostly good, surprisingly.
:27:50
Is this the start?
Are you taking sides?
:27:55
It's just a little poke
with a stick, see what happens.
:27:58
You let me know if I can help.
:28:00
But you're a pinko.
:28:04
I'll see you.
:28:21
Hey, Joe! What's all this
Radulovich junk you're putting out?
:28:23
I can't talk to you now. I have
to get this film back to New York.
:28:26
What would you say if I told you...
:28:28
...that Murrow was
on the Soviet payroll in 1935?
:28:32
- Uh! Charlie, you wanna...
- Sure. I'll set up outside.
:28:37
McCarthy going
tot he Eisenhower dinner?
:28:39
- I have no idea. Id on't keep the
Senator's calendar for him! - Really?
:28:46
Have you ever seen any spy films?
You don't hand me a classified folder!
:28:50
You're supposed to slip it
into my briefcase!
:28:52
I didnt know who to give
this information to, Paley or Murrow.
:28:55
As you can imagine, Fred and I
aren't very friendly. No pun intended.
:28:59
No pun elocuted.