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00:09I was born in New York, July 1st, 1977.
00:13My mom is Phoebe Buell.
00:16She was a really beautiful model in the 70s.
00:20My mom was only 23 when she had me.
00:23My story is kind of complex.
00:25My mother had a boyfriend named Todd Rundgren.
00:28When I was born, Todd knew that I might not be his child,
00:32but he wanted to protect me, and I was raised as Liv Rundgren.
00:36Todd was just dad to me.
00:38But then when I was 8, my mom introduced me to her friend Steven Tyler,
00:43who was the lead singer in the rock band Aerosmith.
00:45But eventually I figured it out that he was my dad.
00:48My mom and I moved to New York City the summer that I turned 12.
00:53I started modeling, and then I was asked to go on a few auditions,
00:57and I very quickly got my first part in a film.
01:00So I sort of fell in love with acting as I was discovering it.
01:05Honestly, I have never made a movie that I just didn't absolutely love the experience of.
01:10I feel very lucky that I've always been able to follow my heart.
01:16My mother was born in Virginia Beach.
01:19She was in bands and is a musician and lives in Nashville now.
01:23And my dad had always grown up coming up here to New Hampshire.
01:28My dad's name is Steven Tyler, but that's sort of his stage name.
01:33The family name is Tallarico.
01:35My grandfather's name was Victor.
01:37Victor was a classical pianist.
01:39He was very musical.
01:42His father was Giovanni Tallarico from Italy.
01:46Susan Tallarico was my dad's mother.
01:49Her last name was Blanche.
01:52When I look back at pictures, I can see something in her face that I can't totally put my finger
01:58on.
01:58I want to know.
01:59I want to discover more.
02:01I feel so excited to be able to go back and to have this moment to get to know myself
02:07in a way.
02:08Because through your learning about your family, you're learning more about who you are.
02:20So I've sent what little I do know about my family to a genealogist who's been doing some research.
02:26And today I'm meeting him at a nearby library to see what he's come up with.
02:30Hi.
02:31Hi, Liv.
02:32Nice to meet you.
02:33Well, I was able to find some information about your father's side of the family.
02:38I wanted to show you a family tree.
02:41Oh, wow. Look at that.
02:42So there's my grandmother, Susan Blanche.
02:45Blanche.
02:45And my grandmother's mother, Bessie June.
02:48And then Robert Elliott.
02:50He was her father.
02:51And Robert Elliott's father was George Washington Elliott.
02:55And then George Washington Elliott's father was Robert J. Elliott.
02:59Okay.
02:59So this is great, great, great, great grandfather.
03:02Four times great grandfather.
03:04Wow.
03:06That's amazing.
03:07So who are these guys?
03:09So I found some documents.
03:11This is so exciting.
03:12It's so funny.
03:13We're going to look at the U.S. Federal Census records.
03:16We're going to start with the year 1860.
03:20Free inhabitants in the town of Assable in the county of Clinton, state of New York.
03:28So there's Elliott.
03:30Yeah.
03:30So there's the household right there.
03:32Robert Elliott.
03:34Wow.
03:36So it says he's 60 years old.
03:38So he was born around 1800.
03:40Right.
03:41Okay.
03:42What does it say Robert was?
03:44He is a shoemaker.
03:45A shoemaker.
03:46Amazing.
03:47So Elizabeth is his wife.
03:48Mm-hmm.
03:49Emily, daughter 24.
03:51George, 23.
03:52So that's George Washington Elliott, who's my great, great, great grandfather.
03:58Correct.
03:58Okay.
03:59Josephine, 14.
04:01Benjamin, 12.
04:03That is the family.
04:04And do we know where they're from?
04:06What their ancestry is?
04:08This column over here gives us their places of birth.
04:10His birthplace is New York, according to the census.
04:14Wow.
04:14Okay.
04:15We're going to jump ahead 10 years to the 1870 census.
04:22Okay.
04:22So this is New York.
04:25Mm-hmm.
04:27Okay.
04:27Here's Robert Elliott, 69, male.
04:31No.
04:33Here.
04:33You'll notice the race column here.
04:36Oh.
04:37Everything says white except for Robert Elliott says M.
04:43What's M?
04:44M was an abbreviation for mulatto.
04:46Okay.
04:46So mulatto is an old 19th century term intended to mean a person of mixed European and African
04:53descent.
04:54Okay.
04:55If you'll look at the way that the census taker, he's really emphasized the M.
05:00Yeah.
05:01It's much thicker.
05:02But going back to the 1860 census, 10 years prior, he's not recorded as anything other
05:08than white.
05:09But why was that if he wasn't white?
05:12This is...
05:13Okay.
05:13This is the mystery here.
05:14Okay.
05:15We've got two different records here that give us differing information about his race.
05:18So we can't say for sure whether he does have African ancestry or not.
05:23And is this where you hit a wall?
05:24Can you go further back?
05:25Is there...
05:26For now, this is as much as I was able to find, but we know in 1870 he's living in
05:30Clinton
05:30County, New York.
05:31And so there's bound to be some more records about him in Clinton County.
05:35So we're on the hunt for Robert J. Elliott.
05:37Thank you, Joseph, so much.
05:39It was nice to meet you.
05:39My pleasure.
05:39Clinton County, here I come.
05:43The 1860 census said that my four times great-grandfather, Robert J. Elliott, once lived in Clinton County, New York.
05:51Also, the 1870 census suggested that he was of mixed race.
05:55I would love to know more about him, so I've come to the city of Plattsburgh, New York,
05:59to meet a historian who's been researching him for me.
06:03Hi, Erica.
06:04Nice to meet you and Liv.
06:05Good to meet you.
06:06Good morning.
06:06Let's start with this right here.
06:10I'd like you to take a look.
06:11Beautiful old book.
06:12Okay.
06:12History of Essex County, New York, with illustrations, 1885.
06:17Oh, my God.
06:17It's so pretty.
06:19Robert Elliott was from Mossable Village, which was sort of between Clinton County and Essex County.
06:25Okay.
06:26So what I've done is looked through documents in each of those places.
06:29Okay.
06:29Where am I going?
06:30There should be a marker in there I've put in for you.
06:33Let's take a scan and see if you see anything.
06:38Robert Elliott, a colored man, settled in the town at an early day.
06:43So this says that my four times great-grandfather was black or biracial.
06:47Right.
06:48So where did he come from and who was he?
06:50So let's take a look.
06:57What's that?
06:58A replica of the Plattsburgh Republican.
07:03Newspaper.
07:03Mm-hmm.
07:04Saturday morning, June 26th, 1875.
07:08Mm-hmm.
07:09A sable chasm, 70 years ago.
07:14Wow.
07:15And we also have a magnifying glass.
07:16Let's see.
07:17Okay.
07:17That might help.
07:19Robert Elliott, when a small boy in some manner fell under the charge or guardianship of Captain Wright.
07:27Elliott, who was a drummer boy at the Siege of Plattsburgh.
07:31Oh my God.
07:31This is so, so cool.
07:33I can't take it.
07:34My father was a drummer.
07:36That's how he started.
07:38And then eventually, someone let him get up and sing, but he's always been a drummer.
07:42Wow.
07:43Yeah.
07:43So, we've learned a couple of things.
07:46He was a drummer boy.
07:47Wow.
07:47And he was coming under the guardianship of...
07:50Captain Wright?
07:51Yep.
07:52To be under the guardianship of someone meant perhaps you were an indentured servant.
07:57Okay.
07:57Especially as a person of color, as a mixed race.
08:00Okay.
08:00They sort of owned you?
08:01Was it like a purchase sort of thing?
08:03For people who were enslaved, they were considered the property of another person until death.
08:10Okay.
08:10For indentured servitude, it was a little different.
08:12You typically gave over as a servant a certain number of years, and you agreed to serve that person.
08:19And typically, they'd give you shelter, clothing, food, perhaps you learned a trade.
08:26That was a much better version for someone.
08:29Well, at least there could be an end in sight.
08:32So, in 1799, New York begins to end slavery.
08:36And it says, all people born to enslaved women would be held as indentured servants.
08:44Okay.
08:45Men up until the age of 28.
08:47So, Robert Elliott could have fallen into this category.
08:51So, that would have meant that Robert Elliott's mother was a slave and he was born in that environment.
08:57Very possibly.
08:58Well, eventually, Robert Elliott becomes free.
09:01And he names his son George Washington?
09:04Yes.
09:05So, he's the one that carries on my line.
09:07Right.
09:07Do we know anything else about George?
09:09Yeah.
09:10So, he's born in 1837.
09:11He becomes of age to serve right around the moment of the Civil War.
09:15Okay.
09:15So, did he serve in the war?
09:17So, what do we have here?
09:19George W. Elliott.
09:20Wow.
09:20Okay.
09:21He was in the military.
09:22Mm-hmm.
09:25U.S. Army Register of Enlistments.
09:28These are the dates from 1859 to 1863.
09:33Okay.
09:34Elliot.
09:35Lots of Elliot's.
09:39There it is.
09:41Elliot.
09:43George W.
09:45Clintonsville.
09:46Okay.
09:46NY.
09:47What is that?
09:48Oh, that was...
09:48This is hair color and eye color.
09:51And what does that say?
09:53That's a shortcut for black.
09:55Okay.
09:55And then this was a description of complexion.
09:58Okay.
09:59And what's that squiggle?
10:00Looks like it says dark.
10:02He's got black hair, black eyes, dark skin.
10:08He's 23.
10:09This is really the outset of the Civil War.
10:13In September of 1861, Abraham Lincoln, he was going to need more help with the war.
10:19Okay.
10:19So, he sent out a call for volunteers, for troops.
10:22Okay.
10:22Many replied to this call by enlisting.
10:25And it looks like George Washington Elliot did so as well.
10:28So, you were allowed...
10:29It wasn't like you had to be white to be in the army?
10:31Well, Abraham Lincoln was unwilling to accept black recruits.
10:35By 1861, they were not fighting in the war.
10:38So, this document suggests that George Washington Elliot did not define himself as black.
10:44Okay.
10:44And we also don't know how he saw himself.
10:48Maybe he didn't see himself as black.
10:50Maybe he made a purposeful statement to pass for white so that he could participate in the war.
10:57We don't know.
10:58Wow.
10:58So, that's so...
10:59Wow.
10:59That's very interesting.
11:01Now, let's look over here because this is a list of professions.
11:04What does that say?
11:04I cannot make that word out.
11:06It says musician.
11:08Oh, my God.
11:10Wow.
11:16That's crazy.
11:19Clearly, he defined himself as a musician.
11:22But he was a musician fighting in the war.
11:24Oh, my God.
11:25This is so intense.
11:28Wow.
11:28So, I really come from music on all sides.
11:31Wow.
11:32Is there more information about George?
11:34I think our paper trail has ended here.
11:37But if you'd like to check out more of his enlistment records, there are records in Washington,
11:44D.C.
11:45Wow.
11:45For the military.
11:47Amazing.
11:50So, I'm on my way to Washington, D.C.
11:59I'm hoping to find out more about my three times great-grandfather's Civil War service.
12:04Hi, Brian.
12:05Nice to meet you, Ryan.
12:06Nice to meet you.
12:06So, these are copies of original documents that are at the National Archives.
12:09Okay.
12:09What do we have here?
12:14Muster role of Captain Newberry's Company.
12:17Company H of the 1st Battalion, 12th Regiment of Infantry, Army of the United States,
12:26from the 30th day of August 1862, when last mustered, to the 31st day of October 1862.
12:36So, how old was George Eliot in 1862?
12:41So, he was born in 1837.
12:43So, he would be about 25 at this point.
12:45Wow.
12:46This is the muster role for George Eliot's company.
12:49Okay.
12:49And so, the muster role kind of serves as the attendance record.
12:51Let's see.
12:54George Eliot, my three times great-grandfather.
12:59There we go.
13:01There he is.
13:02George Eliot.
13:03And then the other column here is that you can see his rank.
13:06What does that say?
13:07So, it says M-U-S.
13:09Musician.
13:09Musician.
13:10Do you know what kind of musician he was?
13:13So, from my research I found that he was actually a drummer.
13:16That's wild.
13:17Like his father.
13:18Yeah.
13:18That is amazing.
13:20So, he was a field musician.
13:21These are the people that would play a reveille to wake the company up in the morning.
13:24Or, you know, when they're on the battlefield, they would play the call for to cease fire or to start
13:28firing.
13:29So, they're actually more...
13:30So, it's kind of a language in a way.
13:31It is.
13:32So, it's a really crucial function to people in the Civil War.
13:34Okay.
13:35So, turning back to the documents, there's some more that we can learn from this muster role here.
13:39Okay.
13:39If you want to turn it around to the other side.
13:44And then, this information is the record of events that have happened in this period of time.
13:48So, do you want to read that?
13:49Okay. Oh boy, here we go.
13:50The company left Centerville and participated in the Maryland Campaign.
13:55The company with the remainder of the battalion were on picket the night before the Battle of Antietam.
14:04Mm-hmm.
14:06And acted as support for Captain Tibble and Robinson's batteries during that battle.
14:14The Battle of Antietam, that was a very important Civil War battle.
14:18It was when the Confederates started to invade the North.
14:21It was the bloodiest single day in American history to that point.
14:24And the Union suffered over 12,000 casualties.
14:26Wow.
14:27So, your three times great grandfather was there for the Battle of Antietam.
14:31Wow.
14:31What would happen to the musician after he did his calls and then they started fighting?
14:36He was classified as a non-combatant.
14:39So, he didn't carry a rifle when he was playing the drum.
14:41Oftentimes, the drummers and other musicians were taken as stretcher bearers,
14:45or they might be used in surgery to actually hold people down during amputations.
14:49He was definitely right in the middle of all of the carnage and confusion of that battle.
14:53So, you were kind of helping with the wounded and, yeah, wow.
14:56Filling in wherever they could.
14:58Yeah.
14:59So, we have another muster roll here.
15:01Okay, so this is Company D, June 1863 through August 1863.
15:08So, we're a year later.
15:10Yeah, so he's 26 now.
15:1126.
15:17Oh, there.
15:18There he is.
15:19Elliot, George.
15:20Okay.
15:21If you notice, something has changed here since the last document.
15:24Okay.
15:25If you look at the column that says rank.
15:27There's a lot of dittos.
15:29He's a private.
15:31Not a musician.
15:32So, now he's actually enlisted on the front lines.
15:34Okay.
15:34So, he's in the infantry now.
15:36He's holding a weapon.
15:37How would that have happened?
15:39So, at this time in the war, by 1863, there are a lot of casualties.
15:43A lot of people being wounded, dying.
15:45All of a sudden, there's this need for more men.
15:47And so, he might have actually volunteered.
15:49Yeah, I would imagine it would have been very frustrating to stand there and not be able to help.
15:54I would feel that way, but...
15:56Yeah.
15:56So, as much danger as he was in before, it seems like he might be in more danger now.
16:00You know, he's on the front lines.
16:01So, you can flip over and find that section again on the back.
16:07Let's see.
16:08So, what were they doing on July 2nd, 3rd, and 4th?
16:12Engaged with the enemy near Gettysburg.
16:16Wow.
16:18So, that's another very famous, important battle in the Civil War.
16:21Yeah, I do know of that one.
16:22And so, now knowing that your ancestor was involved in Antietam and he went on to Gettysburg,
16:27I think that you should go there next to find out what you can about George Eliot at Gettysburg.
16:34Oh, boy.
16:35Wow.
16:36There's been so many layers to the story.
16:39It's really intense.
16:42So, now we're going to Gettysburg, and I'm not sure of what George Eliot's outcome is.
16:48I'm not sure if he survived.
16:49I guess we'll find out.
16:58We are about to drive into the actual site where the Battle of Gettysburg happened.
17:05We live our lives every day, and we forget how important these battles were,
17:10and how blessed we are to have the freedom that we have now.
17:17Hi.
17:17Hi.
17:19How are you?
17:20I'm fine. I'm Peter.
17:21Nice to meet you, Peter.
17:22Wow.
17:22Welcome to Gettysburg.
17:23This is where George Washington Eliot saw fighting.
17:27And he fought right here, where we're standing.
17:29That's great.
17:30It is, yeah. It's pretty amazing.
17:31So, this is where George's regiment took extraordinary casualties.
17:37And this little valley below us was called the Valley of Death.
17:40Oh, boy.
17:43On the 1st of July, 1863, the Confederate Army made a bold attempt to invade the North,
17:49clashing with Union forces near Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.
17:53At first, scattered Union defenses struggled to hold off the advancing Confederates,
17:58but by the second day of fighting, Union General George Meade had assembled the full might of his army,
18:04including George Eliot's regiment, the 12th U.S. Infantry,
18:08who marched over the hill to face the Confederate troops in the valley below.
18:13Everything was sort of hanging into balance when Eliot's regiment appeared on the scene.
18:19So, what was happening here with the other side?
18:21So, the Confederate soldiers were behind you.
18:23He was lurking off into those woods.
18:25Okay.
18:26And so, Eliot and his comrades came over this ridge line,
18:30and then suddenly, they hear coming out of the woods these howling screams of Confederate soldiers.
18:35The Confederates were noted for what was called the Rebel Yell.
18:41You need to imagine a kaleidoscope of images.
18:45You have thousands of men rushing towards us.
18:48A great crash of musketry, artillery fire, tremendous amount of smoke, bullets whizzing by, men are falling.
18:55So, George is still alive through all of this?
18:58Yeah, yeah.
19:00So, he did walk away?
19:01He walked away.
19:01That's wild.
19:02He walked away.
19:03Is it luck?
19:04I mean, I can't even imagine in that moment.
19:07Bullets whizzing all around you, and you're sort of still alive.
19:10After intense fighting and heavy losses for both sides, the Union army finally forced the Confederates to retreat.
19:19When the shooting stopped, 7,000 men lay dead at Gettysburg, and 33,000 more were wounded.
19:26It was the bloodiest battle of the entire Civil War, but ultimately, a victory for the Union.
19:33George Washington Elliott was part of this crucial battle, which represented a key turning point in the war.
19:39If you look out into this valley and imagine George here, and imagine him walking away from Gettysburg,
19:45knowing that he was, in the eyes of his comrades, a full soldier.
19:49He had now shouldered a musket, and as we know, he was a man of colour.
19:54Now, his comrades probably didn't know that.
19:57But he knew that.
19:58Yes.
19:59But knowing also the attitudes toward African Americans amongst Union soldiers was far from charitable.
20:05There were plenty of white northerners who believed slavery was wrong.
20:08Most did not.
20:10Most had the most vile attitudes toward African Americans.
20:15It must have been quite personal for him, because his father was an indentured servant as well,
20:21to be fighting against the South and all that they stood for.
20:24Maybe all along he wanted to fight for who he was.
20:27Yeah.
20:28And what he believed in.
20:30Yeah.
20:30So what is this document?
20:32This is a document that gives you a little clue about what happened after the war.
20:36This was an application to get federal support for injuries that he sustained during the war.
20:42Declaration for Original Invalid Pension.
20:45Yes.
20:46On this 29th day of January, 1,890.
20:51So 1890.
20:53It says he was age 52.
20:55Age 52.
20:55So this is quite a bit if he was 25 when he was fighting.
21:00So he lived a good many years after the war.
21:02Oh, and it says musician.
21:04He is now partly disabled.
21:06Disabled, yeah.
21:07Got you.
21:07Oh, his signature.
21:08His signature, which is cool, yeah.
21:10And there you have it.
21:10So he's moved to Schuylerville in Saratoga, New York.
21:18Amazing.
21:20Yeah?
21:20Thank you so much.
21:22It was a pleasure.
21:26There's so many parts of this story that are just so incredible and completely blowing my
21:32mind.
21:33I feel so proud of George.
21:39So we're in Saratoga County this morning in New York.
21:42I'm really looking forward to finding out a little bit more about George.
21:46I'm really excited to see what he went on to do with his life.
21:51I have found some documents for you to look at if you're interested.
21:54Okay.
21:54So here's the first one.
21:55I'm very interested.
21:57The official souvenir historical week.
22:021912, October.
22:04So there's a marker in the book you can look for.
22:10Stop it.
22:13What?
22:15Oh my God.
22:17That's crazy.
22:19I can't even look.
22:22Wow.
22:24Is that him?
22:25The mustache?
22:26That's him.
22:26Wow.
22:27He doesn't look anything like I imagined him to look.
22:30That's crazy.
22:32Mr. and Mrs. George Elliott and family, Schuylerville, New York.
22:37Wow.
22:38Consisting of 17 children and 9 grandchildren.
22:41I wish I could go and hang out with them all.
22:47Mr. Elliott is a veteran of the Civil War, member of Schuylerville Lodge.
22:52F and A M.
22:54Home chapter.
22:56So F and A M is the Free and Accepted Masons.
23:00Okay.
23:00So he was a member of the Masonic Lodge.
23:03They're like a brotherhood.
23:04It was exclusively men.
23:07And it was...
23:07It's not a cult.
23:08No.
23:08Okay.
23:09I feel like I've only ever heard about it as sort of a...
23:12Right.
23:12Oh, this is a very mysterious kind of...
23:14But that's not really what they stand for.
23:16Yeah.
23:17It may have even elevated his status in society that he was a member of the Masons.
23:21Okay.
23:21So it would have been more a structured organization that would have been connecting to other maybe
23:29people in Schuylerville that were of his class and giving back in charity.
23:35And in fact, there's a...
23:36Something else here.
23:38Mm-hmm.
23:39That will...
23:41Wow.
23:42No way.
23:45That's crazy.
23:49I can see my dad and his face so much, especially now at the age that he is.
23:54That's wild.
23:56So this would be his Mason's uniform.
23:59At this time, the Masons had two separate organizations in Saratoga Springs.
24:05They had the regular Masons and then they had the colored Masons.
24:08And he was a member of the Masons.
24:11So with all of the documentation we have here, it seems that he identified as a white.
24:18Yeah.
24:18That's very interesting.
24:20Society at that time, it would have probably been a lot easier to be a white man.
24:25Yeah.
24:26He and his wife are buried nearby in Schuylerville.
24:30Really?
24:30So if you'd like to pay your respects...
24:32I'm gonna cry again.
24:38This morning I'm in Schuylerville and I've asked my dad to meet me here so that I can
24:42fill him in on all my adventures and everything that I've learned about our family.
24:46Okay, well I'm so excited that you came all the way here to be with me so I could share
24:51with you.
24:51We've always talked about your Italian side of all musicians, but you never knew about
24:56your mom's side.
24:57That was a mystery.
24:59So we traced the family tree back to my four times great-grandfather, Robert Elliott,
25:04who is your great-great-great-grandfather.
25:08They sort of think that Robert Elliott Sr. might have been an indentured servant.
25:13Wow.
25:14He was in the War of 1812.
25:17Yeah?
25:17And he was a drummer.
25:19Holy .
25:21Oh my God, that's too good.
25:22And you were a drummer first, right?
25:24Was that your first instrument?
25:25Yeah.
25:25Yeah.
25:26So then Robert Elliott had a son named George Washington Elliott.
25:30And we found that he had enlisted in the Civil War and he signed up as a white man.
25:37He was a drummer in the Civil War.
25:39I'm so loving this.
25:41Oh my God.
25:43It explains it.
25:44This is the best.
25:45I have a picture of your great-great-grandfather, George Elliott.
25:53Well, here.
25:54You can look.
25:55Wow.
25:59Oh my God.
26:02That's really him?
26:03Yeah.
26:05That's beautiful.
26:08Black five generations ago.
26:11That intestinal fortitude that they had to work for.
26:15What a struggle and battle that must have been.
26:17Yeah.
26:18George had met a wife back in Plattsburgh and married her.
26:22And they went on to have 17 children together.
26:28God.
26:29We have pictures too.
26:30I can show you.
26:32Oh my God.
26:33That's George Elliott and his wife.
26:35And this is all 17 of their children.
26:39Amazing.
26:40And they are buried here in this town.
26:43Yeah.
26:44I'm going to take you to the cemetery so we can go see them.
26:48Okay.
27:00Look at these Tsum Tsums.
27:02Look at that.
27:04Wow.
27:05This is very beautiful.
27:09Wow.
27:12This has been completely life-changing and I'll never be the same again after this experience.
27:19And that's kind of a huge statement to say.
27:22Um, but it's really, really true.
27:26Who's this?
27:28Oh, here it is.
27:29Where?
27:30Right here.
27:31George Washington Elliott.
27:33Wow.
27:35It's just completely touched my heart and expanded my horizons.
27:40And it's just sort of given me that little northern star in the sky of following your own inner compass.
27:47And what you believe in.
27:50Hmm.
27:50Oh, and then there's Eliza, his wife.
27:53I just feel like kind of reset in understanding more about myself and who I am.
27:59And I suppose how I want my life to go and the kind of mother I want to be and
28:05the person that I want to be.
28:07And, um, how I would want to be remembered someday as well.
28:13This is fabulous.
28:15A friend who's been trying to do it or she's doing it.
28:17I can't tell you.
28:18I can't tell you what we're doing.
28:18And we're going to eat.
28:21Let's see.
28:21Let's see.
28:26I'm a doctor.
28:26Oh, it's a friend who's got together.
28:26Oh, for some reason.
28:26Oh, I'm a doctor.
28:27Oh, I'm a doctor.
28:30Oh, I'm a doctor.