"I still can't understand why Pete would wanna go into politics." "Maybe he wants to do something to help his city." "Since when did a politician wanna help anybody except himself?" " They're all crooks and liars." " Oh, come on, Mark." "There's a lot of good, honest people in public office." "Honest?" "You can't be honest." "You tell the truth, you don't get elected." "Whose fault is that?" "The politician or the people who vote for him?" "Both." "The people want the government to be everything for them." "But they won't elect the guy who says they're gonna have to pay for it." "I mean, we're getting to be like a bunch of spoiled kids with bad parents." "Would you tell me why we're going to your friend's campaign headquarters to help?" "Because Pete Nelson is not a politician." "He's a cop who worked his way through law school." "Thinks he can make a difference." "Man, you look in the dictionary under the word "integrity,"" "you'll find Pete's picture there." "Then he's running for mayor because he wants to do something for his city." " Isn't that what I just said?" " Yeah, one of us said it." "The other one said he doesn't trust any politicians." "What are you listening to him for?" "He doesn't even look like a politician." "How would you know what a politician looks like?" " Hey, Pete, how are you?" " Hey." "Oh, you always were good at sneaking up on people." "Listen, I want you to meet my friend Jonathan Smith." "Listen, we kind of work together these days, if that's all right with you." " Welcome aboard." " Thank you." "I can use all the help I can get." "Come in, I'll show you around." "Where are you taking us?" "To a smoke-filled room?" "As a matter of fact, I am." "Except nobody smokes anymore." "Ann, look who I found out on the street." "Mark Gordon." "Oakland's finest." " How you doing?" " Oh, I'm fine." "I'm so glad to see you." "I'd like you to meet my campaign manager, Phil Schott." "Phil, this is Mark Gordon and Jonathan Smith." "Our new advance men." "We've already got advance men, professional advance men." "That's the problem." "You professionals treat me like I'm running for president." "Now, I can't even go to the bathroom without a press release." "I've known Mark Gordon for 20 years." "He's a buddy, not a PR man." "Besides, if anyone can keep his perspective under fire," " it's Mark Gordon." " Right." "Perspective doesn't win elections, Pete." "Money wins elections." "Media exposure wins elections." "Advertising wins elections." "You'll have to forgive Phil." "He doesn't have much faith in the voter." "I don't have much faith in anything, except getting my candidate up on the podium with a smile on his face come election night." "There is only one rule in politics, that's to win." "Richard Osbourne knows that rule, believe me." "Who's Richard Osbourne?" "He's the enemy." "Right, Dad?" "Don't tell me this is Jeff." "Well, it'd better be or I've been feeding the wrong boy all these years." "This is the guy who threw the first pass you ever caught, son." "And now he's All City Tight End, Mark." " You're Mark Gordon?" " Yeah, that's right." "Well, I'll be." "The last time I saw you, you were about this high." "I remember you being a little bigger too." "Well, everybody changes over the years." "Almost everybody." "I can't promise to change the system overnight, but I guarantee you that if I'm elected mayor, there will be enough books in the schoolrooms and the kids will be able to play in their schoolyard without fear." "That's what the last mayor said." "Now, what makes you different?" "The last mayor didn't make you pay the price." "What price?" "Higher taxes?" "I won't rule out higher taxes if necessary." "Look, in Japan, teachers are in the upper 10 percent of the wage scale." "In the United States, they're in the bottom 10 percent." "But I'm talking about what you, what you must pay as parents." "The best teacher in the world is a parent." "The best crime prevention I know of is the example parents give their children at home." "You believe that Nelson?" "First he won't rule out higher taxes, then he wants the people to solve their own problems." "You see, people want answers, they don't want lectures." "Yeah, well, whatever he's saying, it's working." "These overnight tracking polls still have him with higher integrity numbers than you have and lower negatives." "Well, we'll see what Pete Nelson's integrity numbers are after we nail his father-in-law." "Pratt, how are you and the U.S. Attorney doing on the Steelgrave case?" "Of course he did inside trading and he cheated on his taxes." "Nobody made that kind of money by being honest." "That's what I'd like to hear." "Yeah." "Don't let anybody know where you got this idea." " Dad." " What?" "Are we still going to the game on Saturday?" "What game?" "The game between Taft and Kennedy." "What, you want me to go watch Nelson's kid beat your school?" "Jeff Nelson isn't that good." "We can beat them." ""We?" "We?" What are you talking about, "We?"" "You didn't even make the team." "Sheila, I wanna go over these debate notes." "Good idea." "Look, I think the harder we hit the drug issue, the better." "I mean, it's headline stuff every day now." "You can't go wrong." "Well, I wanna drop that bombshell on Nelson tonight." "I thought you wanted to save that one for a while." "Well, no, I think it's good timing right now." "Because, look, it got Ginsburg out in nothing flat." "How are you doing today?" "There's seats right there for you." "How are you doing?" "Nice to see you here." "Follow these guys here." " You're Richie Osbourne, aren't you?" " Yeah, what of it?" "I'm Jeff Nelson." "I'm Pete Nelson's son." "Yeah, I know who you are." " Hey, you go to Taft, don't you?" " Yeah." " We play you guys Saturday." " So what?" " That was Jeff Nelson?" " You know it was, Mom." "His picture's only in the paper every other day." "We can't escape it." "It's in the news every day." "And both of you know what I'm talking about." "What are you gonna do about the drug problem in our city, Mr. Osbourne?" "Warren, as district attorney of this city for the last four years," "I've prosecuted more drug offenders than anyone in the whole state." "Now, unlike my opponent, I wholeheartedly endorse the new procedures given to us by the court and the police to deal with the scum who would poison our children." "Zero tolerance." "Searching trash, hot pursuit, looking through school lockers." "I mean, finally, we're getting the tools to bring those who deal with drugs to their knees." "Mr. Nelson." "There is no more pressing problem in our society today than drug abuse." "When our children aren't safe from drugs even in our elementary schools, then it's time for drastic action." "But it's my opinion that action should centre on education and interdiction, not the hysterical tramplings of our constitutional rights as favoured by Mr. Osbourne." "Drug dealers have no rights." "That's the kind of demagogic rhetoric that confuses the issue." "All American citizens have rights until proven guilty of a crime." "That's what this country has fought" "But what kind of message are we sending our young people when our own government makes deals with drug dealers and foreign governments while taking away the constitutional rights of its own citizens?" "That's exactly the kind of remark" "I'd expect to hear from a former drug user." "How did they get that?" "Those are pretty serious charges, Mr. Osbourne." "I don't make charges I can't back up." "I believe Mr. Osbourne is alluding to a period twenty years ago, when I was in college." "If it weren't for people like you in the '60s, we wouldn't have any drug addicts in the '80s." "I admit I smoked marijuana when I was in Berkeley." "We all do things when we're young that we aren't proud of." "If we didn't make mistakes, we'd never learn." "I've tried to teach my own son about the horror of drugs including this nation's most vicious killer, alcohol." "When you give your body and your mind over to a chemical, nothing good can happen." "And I promise you that drug dealers and drug users will be prosecuted just as vigorously under a Nelson administration as they would be under my opponent's." "I'd also like to add that if the DA's office wasn't so busy rummaging through people's they'd know that I worked for six years in the Oakland Police Department in the Narcotics Division." "My office is interested in truth and justice, not excuses." "When it comes to getting tough on crime, you don't sound very much like a cop." "Maybe that's why you became a lawyer, because you're interested in defending criminals instead of arresting them." "That's okay." "That's okay." " Good morning." " Good morning, honey." " Your breakfast is on the table." " Thank you." "Well, you ready for the Taft game, son?" "We better be." "The city championship's on the line." "I hope that little dust-up with Osbourne on the marijuana issue last night doesn't get a lot of tongues wagging at school." "Most of the kids are pretty cool about things like that, Dad." "You're still gonna get some flack, you know that." "I can handle it." "Not easy being in the public eye, is it?" " Dad, I said I can handle it." " All right." "I gotta go." "I don't wanna miss geography class." "You mean you don't wanna miss Tracy Clark before geography class." "Dad, when you're right, you're right." " Bye, Mom." " Bye." "I didn't want Jeff to see this." ""U.S. Attorney indicts financier." "Bill Steelgrave is accused of insider trading and tax fraud." "Steelgrave, father-in-law of mayoral candidate Pete Nelson, will be indicted in federal court next week."" "Oh, God, now they're attacking your father." "Welcome to the wonderful world of politics." "Thanks." "There you go, Richie, just like you like them." "Cut it." "Is that good for you?" "All right, that was fine." "Now we're gonna do that walking shot." "Come on." "Richie." "Come on, Richie, let's move it." "There we go, all right." " One big happy family." " Shut up." " Stand up straight." " I am." "Okay, dolly, zoom, we're gonna keep it tight three." "Okay?" "We're all set." "Okay, now I want you to start walking toward me." "Big smiles." "That's it." "How can the voters resist this family?" "And cut it." "We'll go one more time." "Okay, this time, I don't want you to follow him the whole way." "Don't pan with him." "Let him walk up, okay?" "Richard, these are the latest tracking polls." " These are the latest?" " Yeah, they're the overnights." "You're still 10 points behind Nelson." "Twenty points with women." "The only group you're leading with is white males over 50." "Well, these can't be right." "Nelson is an admitted drug user." "And his father-in-law is a crook." "Yeah, I can't figure it either, but the numbers don't lie." "People must like him." "Or they don't like me." "Look at all these negatives." "They'd like you, Dad, if you gave them a chance." "If you spent some more time talking to them, like Nelson does." "What, are you a political consultant?" "You can't even get into college, but you know how to run a campaign, huh?" "He was just trying to help, Richard." "Yeah, well, I don't want his help." "He can't help himself, so how can I expect him to help me?" "Mr. Osbourne, we're losing the light." "Yeah, we're losing the light." "We're losing the damn election." "Come on, let's get this over with." "Hey, Richie, come on." "Come on, please." "I hate wearing tuxedos." "I feel like a penguin in a straitjacket." "You mean you feel auk-ward?" "What's funny?" "Auk-ward, auk." "A-U-K." "An auk." "An auk, it's a type of penguin." "It's a joke." "Oh, that's funny." "These just came across the wire on the city news service." "Look at those numbers." "We've got that weasel Osbourne by the short hairs." "Come on, you know I don't trust polls, Phil." "Maybe you don't, but these folks sure do." "May I have your attention, folks?" "May I have your attention, folks?" "I'd like to announce the results of the latest mayoralty tracking poll taken over the past 24 hours." "Pete Nelson, 53 percent." "Richard Osbourne, 42 percent with 5 percent undecided." " We got them now." " Hey, don't be so sure." "Remember Thomas Dewey would've been the 33rd President of the United States if candidates were elected by polls." "Come on, Jonathan, don't be such a killjoy." "I'll tell you what, you don't remind me of Thomas Dewey and I won't remind you of your auk-ward joke." "As I told you at the start of the evening, we're gonna keep the speeches brief." "Thank you." "And to lead off the evening, I'd like to introduce a young man who I am sure knows Pete Nelson better than any other man in this room." "He's a well-known gentleman in his own right." "He's an honour student, an All CityTight End and a son to make any father proud." "Jeff Nelson." "Thank you." "Thank you very much." "When my father asked me to introduce him here this evening." "I was, well, I was very proud, because, well, it gives me a chance to be his son." "You know, when I was younger, my father worked as a policeman." "And at night, he'd go to school to study law." "Now, that's not an easy task." "You know, but somehow, he always found time for his family." "For Mom and for me." "He coached me in T-ball, and then Pop Warner." "He loved sports." "But he always made sure I kept them in perspective." "Made sure my education came first." "He taught me to love reading." "And he showed me how hard work can give a person a sense of pride." "He taught me how to be a man." "Oh, he was rough on me when he had to." "Trust me." "He doesn't abide telling lies." "Mistakes he can understand, but lies he won't put up with." "But I'll tell you one thing, he was always gentle with me when I was hurt." "I know this kind of thing embarrasses you, Dad, but it's your fault for asking me to introduce you." "Ladies and gentlemen, I give you the next mayor and the best father any kid could ever have, Pete Nelson." " Jeff." " Hey, morning, Mr. Lee." "I received a disturbing phone call this morning." "A boy who said he was a student here at Kennedy, but who wouldn't give me his name, told me you were selling marijuana here at school." "What?" "I'm afraid I'm gonna have to search your locker, Jeff." "You're gonna search my locker because of some anonymous phone call?" "That's right, son." "I'm sorry." "I'll open it for you." "You know, I know as a parent the pride a father has in his children." "I mean, my own son, Richie, is a senior in high school like Jeff Nelson." "And my first reaction was, there but for the grace of God go I." "Come on, turn the television off." "I don't wanna watch this hypocrite." "I also know as a parent you have to talk to them." "You have to try to understand them." "I ask for one favour, one lousy favour, turn off the television." "Mark, you were closer to the set than I was." "This lousy motel doesn't have remote control, you do." "I'm sorry, Jon." "This whole thing with Pete and Jeff and the campaign." "I mean, Pete would make a great mayor." "And I know Jeff wasn't selling drugs in his school." "That kid hasn't touched anything stronger than wheat germ." "Well, you're right about that." "It wasn't his." "I mean, all you gotta do is look at him" " It wasn't?" " No." "You know that for a fact?" "Of course you know that for a fact." "Who was it?" "Who planted the stuff?" "It was Osbourne, wasn't it?" " I can't tell you who it was." " What do you mean you can't tell me?" "You don't tell me then Pete loses the election." "Not to mention what's gonna happen to Jeff." "I can't tell you who it was because I don't know." "Even if I did know, we couldn't prove it." "Kid's innocent, he's being crucified." "We've gotta do something." "Now, it was Osbourne." "You know it was Osbourne, and I know it." "Now, I'm gonna do something to prove that." " Bye." " Bye." "That was great." "Martha, let's get going." "There's no way we can keep our heads in the sand any longer." "Working mothers make up more and more of today's work force, yet our city has only three daycare centres in operation." "That's not only bad government, it's bad politics." " Pete." "Pete." " Excuse me." " What is it?" " Daddy's in the hospital." "It's his heart again." "Jeff went straight over there." "Can you come now?" "I'm sorry, something's come up." "Family matter." "I have to go to the hospital." "Now you get that look off your face." "It'll take more than a little palpitation of the ticker for me to cash in my chips." " You got us worried, though." " Well, stop worrying." "I'm not gonna kick off until my name is cleared." "I'm not paying those lawyers all that money just to miss my day in court." "You wouldn't be in court if it wasn't for me." "Dad, Pete's thinking about giving up the race." "He what?" "Is that true?" "We've talked about it." "Last couple of days have been rough on everyone." "Rough, maybe." "Nobody ever said politics was easy." "I remember once, reading about an English MP." "His name was Burke." " Edmund Burke." " Grandpa." "Edmund Burke was Irish and he lived in the 17th century." "Irish, of course." "I'm glad to se that our schools are teaching something other than computer Ping-Pong." "Anyway, this Burke was a member of one of the most corrupt British Parliaments." "So bad that many of the best men would have nothing to do with politics." "And one day, his countrymen were complaining to him about the sorry state of the parliament and how the king was driving their country to ruin." "Well, old Burke fixed these fellows with a hard stare and said:" ""For evil to triumph, good men must do nothing."" "Seems to me those words mean as much today as they did then." "What do you think?" "Maybe even more." "What are you doing?" "Nothing." "Yes, you are." "What are you doing?" "I'm not doing anything." "Why don't you go ride your bike?" "I know what you're doing." "You're looking for food." "Yeah, right." "You're a bum, aren't you?" "No, I am not a bum." "Now why don't you go ride your trike?" "If you're not a bum, then why are you looking for food?" "Look, I am not looking for food and I am not a bum." "All right." "All right." "You look like a bum." "Excuse me." "I'm looking for some rolling papers." "A friend of mine said I could buy them here." "Sure, you can buy them here." "How many do you want?" "One'll be fine." "I also need some tobacco." "We only sell pipe tobacco." "You sell cigarette rolling papers, but you don't sell cigarette tobacco?" "Right." "There's no law against it." "All the stores do it." "Everybody knows what the papers are for." " It'll be 66 cents." " You sell a lot of these?" "Look, what's your game, mister?" "You some kind of cop?" "Actually, I'm a private investigator." " You're a PI?" " Yeah." "I need some information on this market sales slip." " It's from two days ago." " I know." "We got a magazine, bag of potato chips, packet of cigarette papers." "Hey, cigarette papers." "This guy smokes doobie too." "It says, "Charge," there on the slip, but it doesn't say who charged it." "Well, I wasn't here two days ago, but it'd be easy to find out." "All our charge customers have these numbers." "All I'd have to do would be to..." "Look it up." "And tell you this customer's name is Osbourne." "4419 Loma Linda Drive." "Thanks." "Hey, mister, you forgot to pay for the papers." "I don't smoke." "This slip proves that somebody in the Osbourne family, probably Richie, bought a pack of cigarette rolling papers the day before Jeff was framed." "Where did you get this slip, Mark?" "Where did you get it?" "Osbourne trash." "I had a hunch about Osbourne." "Only way I could prove it was to go through his trash." "With Osbourne's account number on that slip, all we have to do is point the reporters in the right direction." "They'll find enough witnesses." "Are you sure, Mark, this is Osbourne's?" "The clerk wouldn't lie." "Not for 40 bucks." "You mean, you bribed someone for this information?" "Give him a break, Pete." "He saved your kid's reputation, not to mention the election." "What more do you want?" "I can't wait to see the look on Osbourne's face when he finds out we searched his trash." "Hoisted on his own petard." "I just can't believe Osbourne would do something like this." "We have to give him a chance to explain." "Explain?" "His kid didn't think this scheme up on his own." "I don't have to tell you, Pete, if Osbourne had this on you, he'd go straight to the press." "And I don't have to tell you, I'm not Richard Osbourne." "Yeah." "Yeah." "Yeah." "Sheila, you know, that's a swing of over 20 points." "No, no, I'll play it very low-key at the debate tonight." "Yes." "One father understanding the pain of another." "Don't worry." "You know, I didn't just come to town on a load of hay." "Sheila, we're in, you know that?" "I'll see you tonight." "We're ready and the car's waiting." "Oh, that was Sheila, just got the results of the latest poll." "Nelson is down by ten and I'm up by 11." "So what do you think of that, Mrs. Mayor?" "It's wonderful." "That Nelson kid, I could kiss him, that big speech he made about his old man." "Well, he buried him." "I can't wait to get to that debate tonight." "And you, you gotta stand up straight, you gotta watch your posture." "You'll be the son of the next mayor." "Let's go." "Of course he's gonna win." "You've seen the polls." "No, no, we won't forget." "I will." "I'll tell him." "Okay, bye." "Richie, get that, please." "Richie, I'd like to have a word with your father if I could." "You work for Nelson, don't you?" "What do you want?" "Yeah, my name's Jonathan Smith." "Mr. Nelson asked me to come over and try to arrange a meeting with you tonight, privately, before the debate." "He wants to see me now?" "What about?" "He's dropping out, right?" "All I know is it's a private matter." "Anything that he wants to say in front of me, he can say in front of my family, so if he's so anxious to see me, you tell him to come here himself." "I'll tell him." "It's over, I guarantee it." "He knows it, he knows it." "He just wants to avoid that debate because he knows it's a done deal." "Sheila, chill up the champagne." "Come on in." "Hi, Pete, what's on your mind?" "This isn't easy for me, Richard." "Well, I'm sure it's not." "My campaign has found evidence that leads us to conclude that your son Richie planted the marijuana and papers in Jeff's locker." "Well, I know you're desperate, but that's absurd." "This is a photocopy of a market receipt charged to your account." "One of the items is a pack of cigarette papers like those found in Jeff's locker." "What do you mean, a photocopy?" "How did you get my market receipt?" "I'm afraid you can blame me for that." "I went through your trash." "You had your people go into my trash?" "You?" "The protector of the Constitution?" "You know, I should sue you for slander." "You know, accusing me and my family for setting up your drugged-out kid." "Why don't you ask your son if he bought those papers?" "I don't have to." "Richie?" "The clerk will be able to identify you, son." "There's no use lying about it." "Richie?" "Richie?" "It's true." "I planted the stuff." "I'll be happy to let you speak first, Richard, if you wanna clear the air." "But I have to warn you, if you don't say anything about this matter," "I'll be forced to talk about it." "Not to hurt Richie, but to redeem my own son's name." "I swear I didn't know anything about this, Pete." "Yeah, I believe you." "Well, what we need now is some serious damage control." "No, Sheila, what we need now is for our family to talk, alone." " We have a debate starting in a few" " Get out." "Do you know what you've done?" "Do you?" "Do you know what you've done?" " I'm sorry." " You're sorry." "You hear that, Liz?" "He's sorry." "He's cost me the election." "Why did you do it, Richie?" "Why did he do it?" "Because he's stupid, that's why." "It doesn't make any difference, it's over." "Let him answer." "Why, Richie?" "I wanted to do something to help Dad." "Help me?" "Oh, help me." "Let him finish." "You were always making such a big deal over Nelson's kid." "I knew you wished you had a son like that." "And I hated him, because I knew." "So I did it." "So you'd win and wouldn't wanna have a son like him." "I love you, Dad." "I'm sorry." "Please forgive me." "No, get away from me." "Richie." "Richie." "Even now, with your own son begging for your love and mercy, you can't stop being the candidate." "The hell with your son." "The election's the important thing." "What he did was wrong." "It was stupid." "Are you trying to justify it?" "What Richie did he did out of pain." "Out of hurt." "He was desperate and tried to help his father the only way he knew how." "Political hardball is what you'd call it." "Negative campaigning taken to its logical conclusion by a 17-year-old boy." "You seed an investigation into Nelson's father-in-law." "Richie plants seeds on Nelson's son." "There's a difference, Liz." "Maybe in degree, not in kind." "This conversation is getting us nowhere." "I've got five minutes to try to salvage my political career." "Your career." "Always your career." "For 20 years, I have listened to you moralizing and speechifying about justice and truth." "You know, the funny part is, a part of me really believed that." "I should have known why all these years, you never had any time for your son." "He wasn't old enough to vote." "Welcome to the final League of Women Voters' Debate for this year's mayoral race." "Now, by mutual agreement," "Richard Osbourne will be speaking first, and then Pete Nelson." "Ladies and gentlemen, District Attorney Richard Osbourne." "Warren." "Ladies and gentlemen, before I make my introductory remarks," "I would like to relay some information that I received shortly before I came on stage tonight." "I'm sure you're all aware of the fact that my opponent's son was suspended from school last week." "Marijuana was found in his locker." "I have just been told by my son, Richie, that Jeff Nelson was the victim of a cruel prank." "A prank that I sadly report was perpetrated by my son." "I would like to take this opportunity to apologise to my friend, Pete, to his lovely wife, Ann, and to his son." "I knew nothing of Richie's action, and as difficult as it is for me," "I would just like to say I take heart in the fact that when we make a mistake, we can learn from it." "I know that Richie has already learned a great deal from his error in judgement." "An error of a son trying to help his father win an election." "But I know that I've learned a great deal." "I have learned that a father can only do his best, that both of us, both parent and child, must be assume responsibility for our deeds." "Now, I will stand by Richie, as I've always done, but I will not shield him from his guilt." "A guilt that is his alone." "You're the DA." "Why don't you prosecute him?" "Think how good that'd look in the press." ""DA shows no favouritism, convicts own son."" "That should be worth ten points in the election polls." "Obviously, my wife is very distraught by this affair." "I'm sure you understand that." "Ladies and gentlemen, Pete Nelson." "Before I came here tonight, I had a speech all prepared." "It was about the future of our city and my role in that future." "But then listening to Richard, I began to wonder if the important thing about this election, indeed, all elections, isn't what the politician can do for the citizen, but what the citizen should do for himself and his community." "Travelling our city the past few months," "I haven't seen a lot of hope." "I've seen fear, I've seen cynicism and I've seen apathy." "People ask why our country has lost it's competitive edge." "Why its citizens have lost their pride." "It's because politicians like myself ask for your vote by telling you that everything will be all right." "By giving you the good news, but not the bad." "By placating you, the voter, not challenging you." "Every day, I'm flooded with polling information telling me what to do to boost my numbers with black women or white men." "That's my son-in-law." "Everything about politics today is to appease and appeal to the various voting groups." "Tell them what they wanna hear, not what they need to hear." "Give it to us, Pete." "If this country is about freedom and equality, why do we have black polls and white polls and women's polls and age polls and income polls?" "What's he doing?" "He's being a leader instead of a politician." "Is that how you bring people together?" "By separating them?" "Well, I don't think so." "But campaign managers tell you that you need the information in order to know what promises to make the different voting groups." "And that's how you win." "And winning is everything." "And don't worry about those promises once you're elected, because you don't have to keep them." "The people are so used to broken promises, they don't care anymore." "Politics has become a game packaged by Madison Avenue." "You wanna appeal to men, they film you throwing a football." "You wanna appeal to women, you kiss the babies." "And whatever you do, don't sweat." "Because sweating is the kiss of death on television." "Well, I'm here to warn you that if I'm elected mayor of this city," "I'm going to sweat, because it's a tough job, and you're gonna have to sweat too." "Because having a city that you can be proud of is a tough job." "And in order to get that job done, we're gonna have to work together as a team and stop thinking about ourselves." "I dream of a city with pride, where people care about each other." "Not just with words, but with actions." "We have to help the poor." "We have to educate our children." "We have to clean up our environment." "And we have to make our streets safe again for all our people." "But I can't promise you all those things, although my campaign manager would like me to, because it's not up to me." "It's up to us." "This is our city, this is our country." "And what happens to it is up to all of us." "Thank you." "Heck of a speech he made tonight, wasn't it?" "Yeah, it sure was." "Think it could ever happen?" "What?" "You know, like what he was saying, you know, people working together, helping each other to make this city, this country, the kind of place it should be." "You think that could ever be?" "I don't know." "It's like Pete said, it's up to all of us." "Yeah." "Hey, what are you doing throwing your trash in the street?" "Big deal." "What do you care?" "I care about you trashing up this city." "That's what we got street cleaners for, stupid."