Heavyweight - #29 Elyse
Episode Date: November 21, 2019When Elyse was 21, her father, Billy, disappeared without explanation. When Elyse finally learned of his whereabouts, she was shocked by the new life he was living. Now, for the first time in five yea...rs, Billy and Elyse sit down to talk. Credits Heavyweight is hosted and produced by Jonathan Goldstein. This episode was produced by BA Parker, Kalila Holt, and Stevie Lane. Editing by Jorge Just. Special thanks to Emily Condon, Kaitlin Roberts, Alex Goldman, Caitlin Kenney, Alex Blumberg, and Jackie Cohen. The show was mixed by Bobby Lord. Music by Christine Fellows, John K Samson, Blue Dot Sessions, Bobby Lord, Michael Hearst, and Shanghai Restoration Project. Our theme song is by The Weakerthans courtesy of Epitaph Records, and our ad music is by Haley Shaw. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello?
Hey, how is it that a seal keeps balls on their nose?
May I go now?
No, no, I have something serious.
If I have to have groceries in the house, then I've got to paint the door, so...
You're painting the door to your house?
Yeah, I'm going to paint the door red. It's going to be very nice.
But you know what a red door symbolizes, right?
No.
Le pont rouge is a bordello. door symbolizes, right? No. Le port rouge is a bordello.
You're kidding, right?
That's how sailors would know.
They would have them down by the vieux port,
and they would be able to know where they could make whoopie for money.
Hang on.
Qu'est-ce que c'est?
Au revoir, Jacques.
Sorry, Don.
Who's that?
That's my neighbor.
Could you ask him about the red door?
Jacques?
The red door.
I have a question for you.
I wanted to print my red door.
My friend says it means a water pipe.
No, I don't know.
I don't know.
It's a joke. From Gimlet Media, I'm Jonathan Goldstein, and this is Heavyweight.
Today's episode, Elise. So now what happens? They're just going to call?
We'll see.
Oh boy, get ready for...
A while back, my producers and I decided to try a phone-in episode.
Larry King, Rush Limbaugh, and other Goldstein-esque personalities had found success with them.
So why, I wondered from the depths of my ignorance, couldn't I?
And so, full of hubris and hope,
we open the phone lines and invite the whole world to call in
with a small moment from their past.
Something to revisit and resolve.
All during the course of a five-minute phone call.
This is why I got into this business,
the feeling of live radio.
As I'm to learn, the thing about a phone-in show
is that you need people to phone in.
And nobody is.
How's everyone's day?
But just as I'm starting to wonder if Gimlet Media has forgotten to pay its telephone bill again...
Oh, here we go. We're ready. Nope, we're answering. All right.
Hello, this is Jonathan speaking.
Hi, Jonathan.
How's it going?
It's going okay.
Is this, what's your name?
Elise.
This is, I'm very surprised I got through.
This is so exciting.
I guess you really lucked out.
Elise is a longtime listener, first-time caller from Washington, D.C.
Elise is a longtime listener, first-time caller from Washington, D.C.
And as it turns out, her call proves not only the first of the day, but also the last.
And this is not just because we don't receive any other calls.
It's because I'm completely drawn in by the story Elise tells me about herself and her dad.
What's his name?
Billy.
Billy?
Yeah.
So I guess I basically am
estranged from my father.
When Elise was a kid,
Billy was the fun parent.
The one who always had hours to play with her.
The guy who, in spite
of being something of a macho man,
gave himself over to playing beauty salon.
Even allowing Elise to paint his toenails.
Before the estrangement,
Billy and Elise were really close,
which is why not having any relationship now
hurts the way it does.
He was my dad.
Like, our idea of a family vacation
was to, like, show up in a country with no plan
and, like, rent a car and just, like, drive around.
And it was amazing.
That's what life with Dad was like.
It was like every day was an adventure.
Even the way Billy met Elise's mom was like something out of a movie,
the first act of a film noir.
Billy was an Englishman driving through Chattanooga on a tourist visa
when he got into
a terrible car accident, and the physical therapist assigned to him was Elise's mom.
Billy was still in a wheelchair when he talked her into sneaking him out of the hospital for
their first date. Pretty soon after, they got married and had Elise. Billy never went back to England.
Instead, he stayed with his family in Chattanooga and became a successful used car salesman.
I have a lot of things in my upbringing and life
with him to be very grateful for,
in addition to all the craziness.
In reference to her dad,
Elise brings up craziness a lot.
Like the crazy way Billy ruined her credit
by opening a business in her name. Like the crazy way Billy ruined her credit by opening a business
in her name.
Or the crazy time
he drove home
a brand new car
only to have cops
come looking for it
with their guns drawn.
Or the crazy way
he destroyed
his 24-year marriage
with a series of affairs.
There's one Christmas
where he bailed on the family
only to spend the holiday
with another woman.
And for all of these things, no matter how jarring or painful, Elise has found it in herself to forgive her
father. But there's one thing she hasn't been able to forgive. About five years ago, he moved out of
the country without telling us. Us is Elise and her mom.
Elise's parents had been married her whole life,
but had recently separated
around the time of his disappearance.
Her last good memory of her dad
is watching him wave from the crowd
as she crossed the stage at her college graduation.
Days later, he disappeared.
And disappeared is the word for it.
Elise says that when she went over to his house,
she found food rotting in the refrigerator,
and all the furniture still there.
For a week, Elise had no idea what had happened to her father.
And then, she received an email. It simply
said he'd be gone for a little while,
and that email was the best way to stay in touch.
There was no further
explanation.
The next time she heard from him was on her
birthday. Six months later,
a Christmas note.
And that's more or less been the pattern for the
last five years.
On holidays and my birthday and stuff like that,
his emails are very short, like three sentences or less,
sort of happy whatever holiday it is.
I hope you're well.
Love, Dad.
At first, Elise tried responding.
She'd express some of her pain and anger
in hopes of provoking a more substantial
dialogue, but Billy would refuse to engage. So after an email pressing her father for answers,
a few months would pass with no response, and then an email would land in Elise's inbox,
wishing her a happy whatever holiday it is and hoping she's well, love dad, as though nothing
was ever expressed and nothing was ever asked of him.
Eventually, Elise stopped responding to his emails entirely.
We don't have a mailing address for him.
I don't have his phone number.
Like, the only connection I have to him
is his Comcast email address.
Do you know where he's living?
He's in the Philippines.
That's all I know.
My mom has it pinpointed to, like, a region, but, like, there was never, like, he never told me where he was living? He's in the Philippines. That's all I know. My mom has it pinpointed to like a region,
but like there was never like,
he never told me where he was going or why.
He never explained why he left.
And this is what Elise wants,
an explanation for his departure,
an emotional, honest conversation
where she can ask him why and what happened.
Because in the five years since she last saw him,
a lot has happened.
He started a new family.
He also has like a wife and a kid.
Uh-huh.
And then he actually named his new daughter my name.
Elise.
Oh my God.
I just find it so insulting.
It's just such a transparent replacement.
Like, I moved to a country and, like, made a new you.
So when people search for Elise on Facebook,
the first result that comes up is new Elise
and the page Billy made for her.
Which means old Elise is forced to constantly explain
that this is her dad's new daughter from his new family, who also just so happens to have her name.
Like, he just wants me to, like, love him and be happy with him again.
But the elephant in the room is that he's living mysteriously somewhere for half a decade, and we've never discussed it.
Elise feels like she and Billy are living in two different realities.
She, in the one where her father abandoned her.
And he, in the one where he did nothing wrong.
She wants her dad to validate what she's seen and
felt, to understand. Otherwise, how can they move forward? Are you wanting to have a relationship
with him? Part of me is because he's also, he's like diabetic and like he's just kind of old and
sick and might die and I might never know. He's 65 and possibly working a very physically taxing job.
He was working on container ships when he first moved over. And I've been passively choosing the
route of not having a relationship, but the fear and the guilt gets worse with time.
And what would pursuing a relationship look like?
And what would pursuing a relationship look like?
That's what I'm trying to figure out.
It's like, yeah.
I mean, he's my dad.
And I feel like he's trying to maintain a relationship with me,
and I just don't know how to work past it.
I know I can sometimes come across as something of a meddler, but I only decide to get involved in the business of upturning people's entire lives after hours, sometimes even days, of
careful consideration.
But then, I've never hosted a call-in show before. And so, adrenalized by the single flashing light on my switchboard
and the imperial perch of my slightly elevated swivel chair,
I dive in.
Would you want me to call him up?
And I say this, by the way, like,
with the idea that this could be a terrible, terrible idea.
I'm not championing this idea.
This could be a stupid idea.
It's better than any of the ideas
that I've had for the past five years.
So yeah, I think it would be helpful.
My idea is to serve as Elise's emotional advance scout,
to call up her dad and see if he might be ready
after all this time to talk to Elise and offer some answers. Given what Elise has told me about her dad and see if he might be ready, after all this time, to talk to Elise and offer some answers.
Given what Elise has told me about her dad,
I can't say I'm optimistic about that.
But then again, I can't say I'm optimistic about anything.
Good luck with the rest of your calls.
No one's going to call anyway, so...
I'm so sorry.
No, this was a good call-in show.
And so it comes to pass that I email Billy.
As I await his response, I imagine various scenarios.
Maybe Billy will treat me like a student loan officer.
Sorry, sir, you've got the wrong Billy, he might say.
Or perhaps he'll try to convince me I have the story all wrong,
that Elise and her mom are the
real villains.
After a week and a half,
I finally hear back from Billy,
and his actual response is more
surprising than any I might have imagined.
It's just a simple note
apologizing for the delay.
Billy explains it's the rainy season in the Philippines,
and it's been messing with his internet.
But, he says, he really wants to talk to me.
To be honest with you, he writes,
you were the only hope I have of communicating with Elise.
Hello? Oh, hi. This is Jonathan Goldstein speaking. Hey, Jonathan. It's a terrible evening here again. Thunder and lightning, as I told you, rainy season. So, but anyway, so Elise contacted you.
Although Elise's last memory
of her dad
was at her graduation ceremony,
Billy has a different
final memory.
And as he describes it,
it was one of the most
painful moments of his life.
It was in the midst
of the separation
from Elise's mom.
I was walking out of the garage carrying a box,
and you can see straight into the house from the driveway.
And Elise was in the dining room.
Well, when she saw me, she darted back into the living room
and kind of hid herself so I couldn't see her.
But I know for a fact that she saw me
because we made eye contact.
I get that this had to have been painful for Billy,
but as Elise's interlocutor,
I tell him this isn't about his pain,
it's about his daughter's pain and her anger. And if they're to speak, he should be prepared for that. I can't imagine that
something Billy wants to hear, and I'm worried how he'll react. As far as her feeling anger on her mother's behalf.
That, I can assure you,
is completely understandable.
Once again, Billy has managed to surprise me.
I basically, put me bluntly,
shit all over that woman on many occasions.
There was one particular Sunday morning that she was up cooking breakfast,
and the phone rings, and there's a woman on the phone.
And the woman says, hey, this is Angela.
Can I speak to Billy?
And my wife said, well, who are you?
And she just opened the door.
She said, well, I'm his girlfriend.
Can you imagine a wife getting up on a conversation like that on a Sunday morning in the middle of breakfast
saying I'm your husband's girlfriend?
If Elise broke that with you
I can assure you that every single
word that she says
is accurate
and if it's not a really
ugly picture
she's left something out because trust me
it's a really
ugly picture
but there's absolutely
nothing that I won't be completely a good picture. But there's absolutely nothing
that I won't be completely honest
and open about.
The only thing that I have absolutely
no problem discussing
anything with you.
After hearing everything Elise had to say
about Billy's unwillingness to own up,
his refusal to engage,
I was expecting the worst. But Billy seems genuinely remorseful, apologetic, and even eager
to hear his daughter out. He tells me he kept his distance out of fear that Elise didn't want
to hear from him at all. But he thinks about her all the time. I don't know if it's because I'm getting older.
I don't know if it's because I feel like I've lost my daughter.
I don't know what it is.
But I was really excited when I found out
that she had reached out to you to make contact with me,
because to me that means she wants to get our relationship back,
and that is desperately what I want. I love you. has your chance at the number one feeling, winning, which beats even the 27th best feeling,
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Elise.
Hi.
Hi, how are you?
Good.
Nice to meet you.
Nice to meet you too.
I've invited Elise to my office in Brooklyn so that we can call her father together.
It will be the first time in five years that Elise hears Billy's voice.
How are you feeling?
Very nervous.
You are?
Yeah.
Do you want some coffee?
Nothing calms the Kishkas better than a nice cup of coffee.
Elise declines and we settle in for some small talk
while I set up the call.
As we chat, I'm struck by Elise's cultural sensitivity.
Wasn't it Canada Day recently?
It was. Happy Canada Day.
Thank you.
I fumble around,
incapable of an appropriately
reciprocal well-wish.
Hmm. We're three days after
Canada Day, so that makes it the
third, maybe the fourth of July?
Nah, I got nothing.
I tell Elise about my conversation with Billy,
how remorseful and open to talking he seemed.
She's still worried,
but says she wasn't even expecting things to progress this far.
I'm very surprised he spoke to you.
I'm very surprised he was candid with you.
So that's a positive.
Right.
And that's a positive. Right. And that's a change.
Yeah.
So do you want to,
shall we try this?
Sure.
Make the call?
Yeah.
So it's Monday,
six in the evening,
so it is 6 a.m.
Oof.
In the Philippines.
It's early.
Yeah.
Well, let's try him.
Okay.
Hello?
Hello, is this Bill?
Yes.
Hi, Bill.
This is Jonathan Goldstein speaking.
Hi, buddy.
What's going on?
Well, I'm here with Elise.
Hey, Dad.
Hi. Hi, honey. How are you?
I'm good. How are you?
Everything is good this end.
That's good.
Everything is good this end.
That's good.
I'm glad that you approached Jonathan.
Any communication that we can get, I think, is really good.
Yeah.
I'm sorry it took such a long time.
It's okay, honey.
I understand you have things to work through and problems,
and yes, things went wrong towards the end,
and yes, they're 100% my fault.
But if you think back, we shared a lot of great times.
But Elise isn't here to talk about the great times.
She's here to talk about the bad times. She's here to talk about the bad times.
In fact, she's written up some notes to make sure she doesn't leave any of her feelings or questions unsaid.
The notes are in her hand, but she isn't looking at them.
Instead, she speaks from the heart.
Okay.
Okay.
I have thought about emailing you back.
I've just been so angry that I didn't think it would be productive.
And, like, I have just wanted to, like, yell at you or cry or cuss you out for leaving and not explaining anything.
But I don't feel that, like, intense anger anymore.
And I am sad that we don't have a relationship like we used to.
don't have a relationship like we used to. But I feel like every time I let you back in and I forgive you for whatever has happened before, you end up just breaking my heart again.
And I do find it very insulting that you gave another child my name, my first and last name.
my name, my first and last name. And I don't know. I don't know what relationship we're going to have in the future. I just, I had to sort of get some of this out for any of
that to be possible.
Billy is silent for a while.
When he finally does respond,
he skips right over the big question
about his leaving without explanation
and focuses on the second question instead,
the question of Elisa's name.
Well, I can tell you
that it was her mother who loves the name Elyse.
I should have contested and said, no, let's rethink this one, but I didn't, Elyse, to be honest with you.
And I should have done.
The Filipino culture and the Filipino thinking is different.
I'll give you another example.
One of your favorite dogs was Charlie.
Okay. I've never owned
a German Shepherd over here, but we had a dog.
But because of the stories that I've told,
what did they call the dog? Charlie. By the look on her face, Elise doesn't seem reassured by the
fact that, like her, Charlie, the beloved German Shepherd from her childhood, had also been
replaced. Although I haven't been to the Philippines, it feels as though Billy is throwing
an entire country under the bus to save his own hide. In the silence, I try to bring things back
to what I think is Billy's strongest suit, his seemingly renewed capacity for repentance.
I want Elise to hear what I heard in Billy during our first conversation,
so I try to steer things in that direction.
Bill, you mentioned feeling regret. What would you do differently if you had a chance to do
things over? I don't think that the final outcome
would change much, to be honest with you.
But I should have called for a family meeting
and I should have gone over it in detail
with times and dates and plans.
with times and dates and plans.
A family meeting about leaving your family was not the do-over I was expecting.
After having heard the level of Old Testament shame
he'd expressed in our first phone call,
I'm surprised that Billy's now talking
in the language of meetings and launch dates.
Elise stares down at the floor.
She looks at me.
Billy's not giving her what she needs,
so she puts it to him as directly as she can.
Like, you have to understand that you just disappeared
and I had no context.
Like, I want to know what you were thinking when you left
and, like, why you left.
So, like, what happened?
Well, there are lots of things that I would like to explain to you regarding my leaving.
I'm here. I'm listening. if there's anything you want to say
well
there were several
several things that
happened Elise
it's a long story that I would like to explain to you step by step.
Got kind of a really busy schedule today.
Is there any, like, brief overview?
Is there any, like, brief overview?
Well, yeah, honey, I can answer your questions.
I have an explanation, you know, for what happened.
And I would be more than happy to explain it to you in detail.
But then, nothing.
The conversation goes round and round.
Billy reassures Elise that he has explanations.
Explanations of every length and level of detail.
It's just that he never actually shares any.
I'll be more than happy to do that.
Every question that you may have.
Is there anything you've wanted to say to me?
Like, right now you're just telling me that you're going to tell me.
Like, do you have anything to ask?
Billy likes to talk about talking about hard things,
but not actually talking about them.
Still, Elise keeps pushing.
I understand that it's very painful for you, but I... There have been so many times when we've just glossed over insane things that have happened, crazy things.
I understand that there's got to be
explanations for things
that got said and actions
that got taken and things that got done
and then when all of that
is done and Elise
has asked her last question
and I have told her
every single thing that I want to tell her
and I appreciate it.
Billy's not making any headway talking about the past, so he turns the conversation to
the future.
I'm really hoping that before I do actually leave this place, I get to see you at least
one more time.
I don't want to that much one more time.
I don't want to die without seeing you again.
I really don't.
Yeah, I don't... I don't want that either.
And with that,
Elise's hands fall into her lap.
As an interlocutor,
there isn't much for me to do.
Elise hears what Billy is saying
and not saying,
and she doesn't need
any help to understand.
So I do the only thing I can.
I sit beside her,
commiserating with raised eyebrows
and puzzled looks,
saying without words,
I see the same things you do.
And it's not you.
For the rest of the call,
Elise stays quiet and allows Billy to talk,
though it feels as though he's mostly talking to himself.
It's going to be okay.
But don't look backwards anymore, honey.
Don't go backwards.
There's too much pain back there.
It kills me daily.
Don't go back there.
It's just our response to the things that happened back then
that left me forward.
It's just so painful.
It hurts.
It hurts a lot.
As Billy tries to push away the past while cowering from the future,
the present takes hold, the one Billy can't deny. I know I'm totally, totally responsible for.
Oh, goodness.
So if there are any other explanations that I should give to you,
Elise. You know, I'll be more
than happy to do that.
I will be more than happy
to spend my evening
starting to explain that to you.
Billy promises that that evening
he'll send Elise an email.
An email that will explain
everything.
But it never arrives.
Not that night, or the next,
or any night in the months that follow.
I will
email you later today, okay, Elyse?
Yeah.
Okay.
Elyse, thank you. I. Thank you.
I really appreciate it.
Okay, Bill.
Well, have a good rest of the day.
Yeah, thanks for talking, Dad.
I appreciate it.
Okay.
Have a great day, honey.
You too.
Have a great evening.
Thanks. Bye. Thanks.
Bye.
Okay.
How are you doing?
Once we're off the phone, Elise and I go over what just happened.
She tells me she felt steamrolled, and I tell her that I felt it too.
I wasn't really sure what I wanted to get out of it.
I don't think that everyone gets sort of a, like, equally agreeable, compromised ending.
But for a long time, I felt like the burden of us not
having a relationship was on me because he would email and i would never respond and that was kind
of the end of it and i feel like now that i have tried to contact him like the burden of us not
having whatever relationship i think we should have is not as much on me.
I feel a lot less guilt now.
We'll never be as close as it sounds like he wanted us to be.
I don't think that's likely.
And, like, maybe it's okay that I don't push for that.
I think he creates his own universe.
Like, I lived, I was a permanent resident of, like, Billy World for a number of years,
and I was glad to get off the ride.
Like, you don't get to live in the universe that you create and expect it not to affect other people have been affected.
In recent months, Elise has been corresponding with a British man named Martin.
And Martin was able to help Elise answer the question of why her father left
in a way that Billy himself couldn't.
Martin believes he's Billy's son, born before Billy left England for Chattanooga.
So unlike Elise, Martin grew up without a father.
Because like Elise, one day, without warning, his father left,
moved to another country, and started another family.
And from what Martin is saying, he's not the only one.
There's another man living in England, he tells her,
who also believes that Billy is his father.
The two of them have been trying to reach Billy for years.
In fact, it turns out that Martin and Elise have brushed against each other before,
a long time ago.
When Elise was growing up, she remembers the home phone ringing,
usually around the holidays,
and a young man with her father's accent on the line
asking to speak to Billy.
Back then, Billy said Martin was a distant cousin.
And all these years later, Martin still feels like he's being pushed away.
He just wants Billy to acknowledge him.
In learning about Martin and her other possible half-brother,
how her story has repeated itself over and over,
Elise has found the answer she needed.
The answer Billy himself was never able to give her.
It isn't about her, or about Martin, or anyone else. The reason Billy
did what Billy did is because that's what Billy does.
Martin and the other possible half-brother are planning to take a DNA test, and they'd like Elise to take one too.
If their DNA matches hers, Martin says, it's all the proof they'll need.
Billy will have to accept them as his own.
When I talk to her on the phone about it later on,
Elise says she isn't sure a DNA test will give Martin the thing he's looking for.
But she does want to help.
Knowing how much I wanted closure,
it would definitely be good to be able to provide him some.
So the next time she and Martin speak,
she'll offer him this.
Whatever relationship you have in your head
that you want with him is probably not possible.
And, like, I can confirm that you're genetically related,
but that doesn't guarantee that he will be a presence in your life
in a way that you want,
because he is not able to do that for me.
In other words, Elise will tell Martin,
I see the same things you do, and it's not you.
A few months after our call with her father,
Elise and I check back in.
She tells me she still hasn't heard from Billy,
but she suspects that, around the holidays,
like always,
she'll get that three-sentence email.
And when she does, this time, she'll get that three-sentence email. And when she does,
this time, she'll write him back. Happy whatever holiday it is, she'll write. Hope you're well. Love, Elise. අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි Now that the furniture's returning to its goodwill home
Now that the last month's rent is scheming with the damage deposit.
Take this moment to decide.
If we meant it, if we tried.
Or felt around for far too much.
From things that accidentally touched.
This episode of Heavyweight was produced by me, Jonathan Goldstein, Accidentally touched and Jackie Cohen. Bobby Lord mixed the episode with original music by Christine Fellows, John K. Sampson,
Michael Hurst, and Bobby Lord.
Additional music credits can be found on our website,
gimletmedia.com slash heavyweight.
Our theme song is by The Weaker Thans,
courtesy of Epitaph Records,
and our ad music is by Haley Shaw.
Follow us on Twitter at heavyweight or email us at heavyweight at gimletmedia.com.
You can listen for free on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.
We'll be gone for the holidays, but back with a new episode in December.
In the meantime, we'll leave you with something you didn't even know you were waiting for.
This year's Thanksgiving song by heavyweight audio engineer Bobby Lord.
It's a special treat to share with the whole family
once you're tired of talking to each other.
Take it away, Bob!
I'm Jonathan. I'm Jonathan. I'm Jonathan. I'm Jonathan. I'm Jonathan Goldstein.
It is Goldstein. Goldstein. Goldstein. Goldstein. Goldstein.
It is Goldstein. I'm Jonathan. I'm Jonathan. I'm Jonathan. I'm Jonathan. I'm Jonathan. I'm Jonathan. I don't listen to podcasts.
I'm rapidly becoming Tony Shalhoub, I think.
I'm rapidly becoming Tony Shalhoub
We've wasted our lives
I'm rapidly becoming Tony Shalhoub
We've wasted our lives
I'm rapidly becoming Tony Shalhoub