Steve Jobs. You might have heard of him. He was a founder of a corporation called Apple. You might have heard of that too.
Your Apple though, not mine.
My Apple was founded by the Beatles. Apple Corps. And back then it was argued [idealistically] that the point of it was to establish a new environment for creating a new music – one that went beyond the “business as usual” model that invariably revolved solely around making a buck.
Your Apple however is more about the creation of a company that revolves around inventing the technology that we use to communicate any and all content. In fact, the content is basically beside the point. Or, perhaps, to put it another way, it is content that is clearly in sync with our new Holy Trinity: consumption, pop culture and celebrity.
But who was Steve Jobs? And how did he become the man that we think we know he was?
That is basically why films like this are made. We know generally who he was but few of us have any really clear understanding of what actually lies below the surface. Many of course use his computer technology. And many are aware of just how instrumental he was in regard to creating the modern world that we live in today.
But: What about all the rest?
Actually though this is not really that sort of film at all. We don’t go back to the day he was born. Instead, we focus in on three crucial junctures in his adult life. The rest we sort of have to figure out for ourselves.
Is there then a teleology here? An ontology? Something that goes beyond a subjective narrative of one particular existential life?
For example: Was he a “good” man more or less than he was a “bad” man? Or, as with all the rest of us lesser mortals, does that depend entirely on who you ask?
Basically, this is the “inside story” of shit that folks like me don’t even really care about. Or care about considerably less than the manner in which identity, conflicting value judgments and political power are far more intriguing to discuss. To discuss in this particular context. But then time and again they cut to the crowds in the hall stamping their feet in anticipation of the next Great Technological Unveiling. As though in the end it really wasn’t just about embracing the next generation of that Holy Trinity.
Either that or [one suspects] the Defense Department.
As for Job’s “personal life” he was generally as fucked up as all the rest of us. Or maybe it was because he was adopted.
As for all the shit that passed back and forth between Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak, I’m backing Woz. I think.
Of course all of this basically antedates the Smartphone. Not to mention Steve Job’s death.[/b]
IMDb
[b]The three sequences in the film were filmed on 16mm, 35mm, and digital to illustrate the advancement in Apple’s technology across the 16 years depicted of Jobs’ life.
Michael Fassbender said in an interview that Christian Bale who exited the project in November 2014 would have been “perfect” to play Steve Jobs. “I thought to myself: Christian Bale is perfect, why isn’t he doing it?” The actor told The Hollywood Reporter while promoting the film in London. “I actually called him up and told him that myself.”
Several memorable scenes in the movie never happened in real life. Some of these are the scene where Jobs’ little daughter uses his computer to draw a picture, the reconciliation between John Sculley and Jobs, most of the arguments with Steve Wozniak and the final scene between Jobs and his now-grown up daughter. On the other hand, the infamous scene where it’s implied that Jobs splashes his feet in the toilet bowl to calm himself down did actually happen. This was one of Jobs’ infamous quirks and Michael Fassbender himself asked to do it in the movie, since it wasn’t in Sorkin’s script. [/b]
at wiki: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Jobs_(2015_film
trailer: youtu.be/aEr6K1bwIVs
STEVE JOBS [2015]
Directed by Danny Boyle
Arthur C. Clarke [being interviewed on television in front of a room-sized computer]: And with that movie 2001, you’re projecting us into the 21st century. I brought along my son Jonathan who in the year 2001 will be the same age as I am now. Maybe he will be better adjusted to this kind of world that you’re trying to portray. The big difference, when he grows up…In fact, if we wanted to wait till the year 2001… He will have in his own house not a computer as big as this, but at least a console through which he can talk to his friendly local computer and get all the information he needs for his everyday life, like his bank statements, his theater reservations, all the information you need in the course of living in a complex modern society. This will be in a compact form in his own house. He’ll have a television screen, like these here, and a keyboard. And he’ll talk to the computer and get information from it. And he’ll take it as much for granted as we take the telephone.
Reporter: I wonder, though, what sort of a life would it be like in social terms? I mean, if our whole life is built around the computer, do we become a computer-dependent society?
Clarke: In some ways, but they will also enrich our society because it will make it possible for us to live, really, anywhere we like. Any businessman and executive could live almost anywhere on Earth and still do his business through a device like this. And this is a wonderful thing. It means we won’t have to be stuck in cities. We’ll be able to live out in the country or wherever we please.
Again, it is just technology. Which can then be used to sustain any sort of business at all. For example you can run a sweat shop using it. Or facilitate a sex-slave operation.
[b]Steve: We need the computer to say hello.
Andy: You’re not hearing me. It’s not going to say hello.
Steve: Just fix it.
Andy: Fix it?
Steve: Yeah.
Andy: In 40 minutes?
Steve: Fix it.
Andy: I can’t.
Steve: Who’s the person who can?
Andy: I’m the person who can, and I can’t.
…
Steve: Two days ago, we ran a Super Bowl ad that could’ve won the Oscar for Best Short Film. There are more people who can tell you about the ad than can tell you who won the game.
Joanna: I understand, but the ad said the Mac was gonna save the world. It didn’t say it was gonna say hello.
…
Andy: Part of the problem is we can recompile, but if it’s a hardware problem, we can’t get into the back.
Joanna: Why not?
Andy [to Steve] Do you wanna tell her or should I?
Joanna: Why can’t he get into the machine?
Andy: You need special tools.
Joanna: What kind of special tools? Just take a screwdriver.
Andy: He didn’t want users to be able to open it. You need special tools.
…
Steve: The exit signs have to be off or we’re not gonna get a full blackout.
Andrea: We’ve spoken to the building manager and the fire marshal.
Steve: And?
Andrea: They’re absolutely no way they’re letting us turn the exit signs off.
Steve: I’ll pay whatever the fine is.
Andrea: The fine is they’re gonna come in and tell everyone to leave.
Steve: You explained to the fire marshal that we’re in here changing the world.
Andrea: Well…
Steve: Did you?
Andrea: Yes, but unless we can also change the properties of fire, he doesn’t care.
Joanna: Steve…
Steve: If a fire causes a stampede to the unmarked exits, it will have been well worth it for those who survive. For those who don’t, less so, but still pretty good.
Andrea: Listen…
Steve: I need it to go black, real black. Get rid of the exit signs, and don’t let me know how you did it.
…
Joanna: You need special tools to open the Mac?
Steve: You knew it was a closed system.
Joanna: I didn’t know literally. Jesus. And if you keep alienating people for no reason, there’s gonna be no one left for it to say hello to.
Steve: It’s not for no reason. We blow this and IBM will own the next 50 years like a Batman villain. Remember the phone company? That’s what Bell was called, “the phone company.” IBM will be the computer company. Ten years later they’ll be the information company, and that’s very bad for the human race
…
Joanna: We’re not gonna sell a million in the first 90 days.
Steve: Everyone, everyone, everyone, everyone is waiting for the Mac.
Joanna: Maybe. But what happens when they find out that for $2,495, there’s nothing you can do with it?
…
Steve: You can complain about memory or you can complain about price, but you can’t do both at the same time. Memory is what costs money…Look at their faces when they see what it is. They won’t know what they’re looking at or why they like it, but they’ll know they want it.
…
Lisa [to Joanna]: My dad named a computer after me.
Steve: I’m not your…Actually, do you know what a coincidence is, Lisa? Like if you met someone. You made a new friend and her name was Lisa too. That would be a coincidence. “Lisa” stands for “Local Integrated Systems Architecture.” L-I-S-A. It’s a coincidence.
Joanna: You about done?
…
Lisa: So it was the other way around. I was named after the computer.
Steve: Nothing was named after anybody. It’s a coincidence.
Joanna [to Lisa]: Come on.
…
Chrissann [reading from Time magazine]: “Jobs insists”… I am quoting… “…twenty-eight percent of the male population of the United States could be the father.”
Steve: I wasn’t saying you’ve slept with 28% of American men. I was using an algorithm based on the blood test which said there was a 94.1% chance that I’m the father.
…
Chrissann: I applied for welfare yesterday.
Steve: I’m sorry?
Chrissann: Hello! I said I applied for welfare yesterday. The Time article said your Apple stock was worth $441 million, and I wanted to ask you how you felt about that.
Steve: Well, I feel like Apple stock has been dramatically undervalued.
Chrissann: Your daughter and her mother…
Steve: Chrisann…
Chrissann: …are on welfare. We’re living in a hovel in Menlo Park. We can’t pay the heating bills. She sleeps in a parka. Your daughter…
Steve: She’s not my daughter!
Chrissann: Because, as reported by Time magazine, I’ve slept with 28% of the men in America?
Steve: No.
Chrissann: All of them, exactly nine months before Lisa was born!![/b]
Even if Lisa isn’t his daughter, the guy here isn’t any less than a complete fucking scumbag here, right?
[b]Andy [back to the “hello” crisis]: We’re not a pit crew at Daytona. This can’t be fixed in seconds.
Steve: You didn’t have seconds, you had three weeks. The universe was created in a third of that time.
Andy: Well, someday you’ll have to tell us how you did it.
…
Steve: Here’s what I’m gonna do. I’m gonna announce the names of everyone who designed the launch demo. I’m gonna introduce everyone and ask them to stand up. The bag was designed by Susan Kare. The Macintosh font that’s scrolling across the screen was designed by Steve Capps. The starry night and skywriting was Bruce Horn. MacPaint, MacWrite, Alice, down to the calculator. And then I’m gonna say the voice demo that didn’t work was designed by Andy Hertzfeld.
Andy: Steve…
Steve: Five-in-six is your chance of surviving the first round of Russian roulette, and you’ve reversed those odds. So unless you wanna be disgraced in front of your friends, family, colleagues, stockholders and the press, I wouldn’t stand here arguing. I’d go try and get some more bullets out of the gun. Do it, Andy!
…
Steve: Woz wants me to acknowledge the Apple II team.
Joanna: You must be able to see that she looks like you.
…
Steve [to Joanna about the Mac launch]: The two most significant events of the twentieth century: the Allies win the war, and this.
…
Steve: The test said I…
Joanna: I don’t care what the test said. I don’t care about 94.1% or the insane algorithm you used to get to 28% of American men.
Steve: I’m buying her a new house. I’m giving her money.
Joanna: There’s a small girl who believes you’re her father. That’s all. That’s all the math there is. She believes it. What are you gonna do about that?
Steve: God sent his only son on a suicide mission, but we like him anyway because he made trees.[/b]
Ego and money. Isn’t that basically what he is all about? Well, up to this point.
[b]Woz: The slots are what allowed the Apple II to run, for just one example, VisiCalc, which from my guess single-handedly sold between 200,000 and 300,000 machines. They want slots.
Steve: They don’t get a vote. When Dylan wrote “Shelter from the Storm,” he didn’t ask people to contribute to the lyrics. Plays don’t stop so the playwright can ask the audience what scene they’d like to see next.
…
Woz: Computers aren’t paintings.
Steve: Fuck you. I’m gonna say “fuck you” every time you say that until you either die or stop.
Woz: Computers aren’t paintings.
Steve: Fuck you. Yes, they are, and what I want is a closed system. End-to-end control. Completely incompatible with anything.
Woz: Computers aren’t supposed to have human flaws. I’m not going to build this one with yours.
…
Joanna: Please, you have to tell me why it’s so important for it to say “hello”.
Steve: Hollywood, they make computers scary things. See how this reminds you of a friendly face? That the disk slot is a goofy grin? It’s warm and it’s playful and it needs to say “hello”!
Joanna: The computer in 2001 said “hello” all the time and it still scared the shit out of me.
…
John: Did we use skinheads as extras on that Superbowel commercial? A couple of people have told me that.
Steve: Yeah.
John: We paid skinheads? I’ve got skinheads on my payroll?
Steve: They had a look you wanted.
John: The skinheads?
Steve: Yeah.
John: Okay, let’s keep that to ourselves.[/b]
Or, sure, they could have been Nazis. Or probably were.
[b]Reporter [on TV]: The Macintosh, Apple’s near mythological home computer, has gotten off to a rocky start in its battle with industry titan IBM. With sales originally projected to be a million in the first quarter, Apple has sold only 35,000 of the user-friendly machines in the months since it’s been available to customers.
Reporter: The insistence by Steve Jobs that it have what’s called end-to-end control, which is a way of saying that it’s not compatible with most outside hardware or software, is the Shakespearean flaw in a machine that had potential.
Reporter: Apple Computers closed two of its factories today in the wake of disappointing sales. Do you know how many Macs were sold last month? 500.
Reporter: In a move that surprised some but not all on Wall Street, the board of directors of Apple Computers voted today to fire its cofounder Steve Jobs. Did he jump or was he pushed?
…
Woz: You can’t write code… you’re not an engineer… you’re not a designer…you can’t put a hammer to a nail. I built the circuit board. The graphical interface was stolen from Xerox Parc. Jef Raskin was the leader of the Mac team before you threw him off his own project! Someone else designed the box! So how come ten times in a day, I read Steve Jobs is a genius? What do you do?
Steve: I play the orchestra, and you’re a good musician. You sit right there and you’re the best in your row.
Woz: I came here to clear the air. Do you know why I came here?
Steve: Didn’t you just answer that?
Woz: I came here 'cause you’re gonna get killed. Your computer’s gonna fail. You got a college and university advisory board telling you they need a powerful work station for two to three thousand. You priced NeXT at sixty-five hundred, and that doesn’t include the optional three thousand dollar hardrive which people will discover isn’t optional, because the optical disk is too weak to do anything, and the twenty-five hundred dollar laser printer brings the total to twelve thousand dollars, and in the entire world you are the only person that cares that it’s housed in a perfect cube. You’re gonna get killed. And I came here to stand next to you while that happens 'cause that’s what friends do… that’s what men do. I don’t need your pass. We go back, so don’t talk to me like I’m other people. I’m the only one that knows that this guy here is someone you invented. I’m standing by you because that perfect cube - that does nothing - is about to be the single biggest failure in the history of personal computing.
Steve: Tell me something else I don’t know.
…
Joanna: I’m begging you to manage expectations.
Steve: Have I ever let you down?
Joanna: Every single goddamn time.
Steve: Then I’m due.
…
Steve [of the NeXT Cube]: I guess, in layman’s terms, you’d have to say we don’t have an OS.
Joel: An operating system? What do you mean?
Steve: Well, the OS is what runs the computer. In fact, it sort of is the computer.
Joel: How has it been running? How’s it gonna run this morning? What do you mean, you don’t have an OS?
Steve: It’s like this. Avie Tevanian is our chief software designer, and he wrote a demo program. It’s like we built a great car, but we haven’t built the engine. So we put a golf cart battery in there to make it go for a bit. All this computer knows how to do right now is demonstrate itself.
Joel: You’re telling me the only thing you’ve built is a black cube?
Steve: Yes. Yeah. But isn’t it the coolest black cube you’ve ever seen?
…
Steve: The board’s concerns that we didn’t show the product in the Suoerbowl ad?
John: Among other things, but my question was…
Steve: What other things? I’m asking because I’m curious. You said “among other things.”
John: Among other things, it was set in a dystopian galaxy. It took place on a planet where we don’t live. It was dark and the opposite of our brand. And we didn’t show the product. People talked about the ad but most of them didn’t know what we were selling.
Steve: The Mac needs to sell for 1,995.
John: There is no market research telling us the Mac is failing because it’s overpriced. It’s telling us that people don’t like it because they think it doesn’t do anything. It’s closed, end-to-end. We didn’t know it wasn’t what people wanted, but it isn’t. They want slots, they want choices, they want options. The way we buy stereos…mix and match components.
Steve: John, listen to me. Whoever said the customer is always right was, I promise you, a customer.
…
John: It had skinheads in it.
Steve: She was liberating them.
John: Liberating the skinheads.
Steve: The ad didn’t have anything to do with fucking skinheads. We used them as fucking extras. Nobody even knows they were skinheads.
John: I’m just saying the board had concerns…
Steve: You invented lifestyle advertising. And our brand was my brand.
John: My job is to make a recommendation to the board. We showed a lot of happy people drinking Pepsi. We didn’t say the world was going to end if you bought a Dr. Pepper. And we showed the product. We showed it being opened, we showed it being poured, being consumed.
…
Steve: You didn’t want the ad because you were trying to kill the Mac two months before it launched.
John: You are fucking delusional.
Steve: Can I mention something to you?
John: Sure.
Steve: I have no earthly idea why you’re here.
John: The story of why and how you left Apple, which is quickly becoming mythologized, isn’t true.
Steve: I’m gonna take this to the board myself.
John: Don’t do that.
Steve: I am doing that.
John: You can’t.
Steve: Why?
John: They believe you’re no longer necessary to this company.[/b]
This exchange keeps going back and forth in time. There’s the part about, what, being creative? innovative? “cool”?..and the part about dollars and cents.
[b]John: I can’t put it more simply than this: We need to put our resources into updating the Apple II.
Steve: By taking resources from the Mac.
John: It’s failing. That’s a fact.
Steve: It’s overpriced.
John: There is no evidence…
Steve: I’m the evidence! I’m the world’s leading expert on the Mac, John! What’s your resume?
John: You’re issuing contradictory instructions, you’re insubordinate, you make people miserable, our top engineers are fleeing to Sun, Dell, HP, Wall Street doesn’t know who’s driving the bus, we’ve lost hundreds of millions in value and I’m the CEO of Apple, Steve, that’s my resume!
Steve: But before that, you sold carbonated sugar water right? I sat in a fucking garage with Wozniak and invented the future, because artists lead and hacks ask for a show of hands.
John: Alright, well… this guy’s outta control. I’m perfectly willing to hand in my resignation tonight. But if you want me to stay, you can’t have Steve. Settle him out. He can keep a share of stock so he gets our newsletter. I’d like the secretary to call for a vote.
Steve: I fucking dare you.
…
Steve: Now, I absolutely understand why you’re upset. And I want people to know the truth too.
Joanna: It’s time.
Steve: Got it.
John: You’re gonna end me, aren’t you?
Steve: You’re being ridiculous. I’m gonna sit center court and watch you do it yourself. Then I’m gonna order a nice meal with a '55 Margaux and sign some autographs.
John: Jesus Christ…
Steve: You want some advice, Pepsi Generation? Don’t send Woz out to slap me around in the press. Anybody else… you, Markkula, Arthur Rock. Anyone but Rain Man.
…
Joanna [to Steve]: When did you change your mind and start building the Steve Jobs Revenge Machine?
…
Steve [to Joanna]: You remember Skylab? It was an unmanned satellite NASA sent up in the early '70s on a data gathering mission. The thing is, when they sent it up, they didn’t know yet how they were gonna get it back. But they felt like they were close enough that in the eight years it was gonna be up there, they’d figure it out. They’re on their way now. They didn’t. So after eight years, it came crashing down in a thousand-mile swath across the Indian Ocean.[/b]
There’s a lesson in there somewhere.
Reporter [on TV]: More than a year after it was first unveiled to industry insiders, the NeXT Computer is finally available in stores.
Reporter: And it appears to be two strikes in a row for Steve Jobs. Students and educators are finding it difficult to justify the machine’s high cost.
Reporter: So much for the black cube. NeXT just sold its factory to Canon and laid off half its employees.
Tom Brokaw: In the world of computers, it’s kill or be killed…
Dan Rather: Apple Computer has fallen on hard times…
Connie Chung: It is laying off about 2,500 people.
Reporter: Apple is continuing to lose market share, with no new innovations in the pipeline except the Newton, a pet project of CEO John Sculley. If you really want to be mobile, you want a Newton PDA. But then again, maybe you don’t.
Reporter: In 1980, Apple had 30% of the market. Today, Apple has only 3.2 percent.
But then comes the internet. Talk about a game changer. And Steve Jobs returns to Apple with the iMac.
[b]Bill Gates on TV: “The only thing Apple’s providing now is leadership in colors.”
Joanna: Don’t worry about it.
Steve: What does Bill Gates have against me? He dropped out of a better school than I dropped out of.
Joanna: If I give you some real projections, will you promise not to repeat them from the stage?
Steve: What do you mean, “real projections”? What have you been giving me?
Joanna: Conservative projections.
Steve: Marketing’s been lying to me?
Joanna: We’ve been managing expectations so that you don’t not.
Steve: What are the real projections?
Joanna: We’re gonna sell a million units in the first 90 days. 20,000 a month after that.
Steve: Holy shit.
Joanna: What’s more, 32% of the sales are going to go to people buying a computer for the first time. And 12% are going to people using some kind of Windows machine. That’s what Bill Gates has against you.
…
Andy: Why do you want people to dislike you?
Steve: I don’t want people to dislike me. I’m indifferent to whether they dislike me.
Andy: Since it doesn’t matter, I always have.
Steve: Really? I’ve always liked you a lot. That’s too bad.
…
Joel [of a huge photograph on the wall]: Who’s this one?
Steve: Alan Turing. Single-handedly won World War II and, for an encore, invented the computer. He won’t be part of the campaign though.
Joel: Why not?
Steve: 'Cause you just had to ask me who he was.
…
Joel: He killed himself by taking a bite of a poison apple… Alan Turing.
Steve: Yeah. There should be statues of that man. His name should be on the lips of schoolchildren.
Joel: The rainbow flag apple with a bite taken out… That’s where it came from?
Steve: No, we picked it off a list of friendly-sounding words. But wouldn’t it be great if that had been the story behind it?
…
Steve: This is a product launch, not a luncheon. The last thing I want to do is connect the iMac to…
Woz: To the only successful product that this company has ever made. I’m sorry to be blunt, but that happens to be the truth. The Lisa was a failure. The Macintosh was a failure. I don’t like talking like this, but I am tired of being Ringo when I know I was John.
Steve: Everybody loves Ringo.
Woz: And I’m tired of being patronized by you.
Steve; You think John became John by winning a raffle, Woz? You think he tricked somebody or hit George Harrison over the head? He was John because he was John.
…
Steve: You came a half-inch from putting this company out of business. Now who do I see about that? I’m letting you keep your job. You get a pass.
Woz: You know, when people used to ask me what the difference was between me and Steve Jobs, I would say Steve was the big-picture guy and I liked a solid workbench. When people ask me what the difference is now, I say “Steve’s an asshole.” Your products are better than you are, brother.
Steve: That’s the idea, brother. And knowing that, that’s the difference.
Woz: It’s not binary. You can be decent and gifted at the same time.
…
Joanna: Do you remember the cover of Time?
Steve: What are you talking about?
Joanna: What was on the cover?
DSteve: A computer.
Joanna: No. It was a sculpture of a computer. It was a sculpture. Time would have had to have commissioned it months in advance. You were never in the conversation for Man of the Year. Nobody lost you anything. So what else are you sure about?
…
Steve: A lawyer couple adopted me first, then gave me back after a month. They changed their mind. Then my parents adopted me. My biological mother had stipulated that whoever took me had to be college-educated, wealthy and Catholic. Paul and Clara Jobs were none of those things, so my biological mother wouldn’t sign the adoption papers.
John: What happened?
Steve: There was a legal battle that went on for a while. My mother said she refused to love me for the first year. You know, in case they had to give me back.
John: You can’t refuse to love someone, Steve.
Steve: Yeah, it turns out you can.
John: What the hell can a one-month-old do that’s so bad his parents give him back?
…
Lisa: I have Internet access at school. I read an old copy of Time, and I asked my mom some questions about my family history.
Steve; That was…Time wrote a mangled piece of journal. You were never supposed to read that.
Lisa: I had two different Harvard statisticians try to reverse-engineer the equation that you came up with to prove that 28% of American men could be my father.
Steve: Honey, I…
Lisa: You know, my mother might be a troubled woman, but what’s your excuse? That’s why I’m not impressed with your story, Dad. It’s that you knew what I was going through, and you didn’t do anything about it, and that makes you an unconscionable coward. And not for nothing, but “think” is a verb, all right, making “different” an adverb. You’re asking people to think differently. And you can talk about the Bauhaus movement and Braun and “Simplicity is sophistication” and Issey Miyake uniforms and Bob Dylan lyrics all you want, but that thing…
[she points to a photograph of the iMac]
Lisa: …looks like Judy Jetson’s Easy-Bake oven.
…
Steve: The computer. The Lisa. You know what it stood for? Behind my back, at the office, you know what it stood for?
Lisa: Local Integrated System Architecture. I was five. Why couldn’t you just lie?
Steve: I did. Of course it was named after you. Local Integrated System Architecture doesn’t even mean anything.
Lisa: Why’d you say it wasn’t all those years?
Steve: I honestly don’t know.
Lisa: Why’d you say you weren’t my father?
Steve: I’m poorly made.
…
Steve: I’m gonna put music in your pocket.
Lisa: What?
Steve: A hundred songs. A thousand songs. Five hundred songs. Somewhere between five hundred and a thousand songs. Right in your pocket. Because I can’t stand looking at that ridiculous Walkman anymore. You’re carrying around a brick playing a cassette tape. We’re not savages. I’m gonna put a thousand songs in your pocket.
Lisa: You can do that? [/b]