[both yell] -[Teddy] Why are we going up? -No! No! No! [grunting]
The Man from Toronto
2.5s
Oh, for the love of God, we almost died.
The Man from Toronto
1.3s
Marty's Fitness.
The Man from Toronto
7.7s
One brisk afternoon, while we were fishing on the frozen lake, we saw a large form approaching.
The Man from Toronto
1.7s
He was a kind man.
The Man from Toronto
3.4s
He taught me many useful things.
The Man from Toronto
7.9s
I was raised by my grandfather on a frozen lake 50 miles from nowhere.
The Man from Toronto
9.5s
[man on radio] Good morning, Yorktown. It's ten past eight on a beautiful Monday morning. None of my kids talk to me. I don't know where they are. [Teddy] Look who's up, huh? Happy birthday.
The Man from Toronto
1.3s
What time is it?
The Man from Toronto
3.3s
No! -[gunshots] -[prisoner groans]
The Man from Toronto
14.5s
-I mean, who really needs addresses? -My customers. Then they'll call you, Marty. You left out the phone number too. Dammit, did I? Teddy, you're a nice guy. You really are. But I need a dude with some grit. I got grit.
The Man from Toronto
1.7s
Aw, come on.
The Man from Toronto
3.5s
Ah! Ah! [men screaming]
The Man from Toronto
2.5s
Or made a giant mistake.
The Man from Toronto
2.8s
Some cut-rate operator just got lucky?
The Man from Toronto
8.3s
It was a grizzly. My grandfather yelled at me to run, so I took off as fast as my little legs would carry me.
The Man from Toronto
12.7s
I share this with you because when you beg for your life, I'm not gonna hear your screams. [steam whistling] Any feeling I once had dried up on that frozen lake long ago.
The Man from Toronto
17.6s
And when I looked back, I learned the last thing that my unfortunate grandfather would ever teach me. Bears have very sharp claws, which they use to fillet the skin off their still-breathing victims.