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01x01 - Summon Your Witnesses

Posted: 12/04/22 20:57
by bunniefuu
- (SIREN WAILING)

- (HORNS HONKING)

(CELL PHONE VIBRATING)

LIBBY: Toby Fleishman awoke

one morning inside the city

he'd lived in all his adult life,

which was suddenly, somehow,

now crawling with women who wanted him.

Not just any women.

Women who were self-actualized

and independent

and who knew what they wanted.

Women who seemed kind.

Women who seemed

motivated and available.

But also some who just sent

over a picture of a G-string.

Or their side boob. Or their under-boob.

Or their just plain regular boob.

It was more than

a newly divorced man could take

after 15 years of marriage.

All this, after a youth

full of romantic rejection?

All this, after placing

a lifetime bet on one woman?

Who could have predicted this?

Who could have predicted

that there was such life in him yet?

But these women were

not objects to Toby.

They were his mentors.

No, they were his heroes.

They were teaching him how to

live now that he was suddenly,

somehow, no longer living with Rachel.

Each morning, he would wake up

with an overwhelming sense of panic

in that new apartment of his.

Where was he? Where was she?

Where was his home?

"Something is wrong," he'd think.

"I am in trouble."

For Rachel was no

longer in bed with him.

She was no longer griping about her day.

I'll have to spend the day

cleaning up that mess

with a lunch I don't even have time for.

LIBBY: She was no longer just

coming home from the gym

in a less black mood than usual.

It was a disaster.

It was a complete disaster.

Maybe it will be fine. I don't know.

I'll be home late, so I'll need

that prescription picked up.

LIBBY: She was no longer applying

a thick layer

of black liquid eyeliner

to her upper eyelid

with the precision

of an arthroscopy robot.

Are the kids ready already?

(CELL PHONE VIBRATES)

But on this particular morning,

she was also not

in the much nicer home

that was just hers now.

RACHEL: A spot opened up

at that yoga thing upstate, Everglade,

so the kids are with you, FYI.

FYI? FYI, I dropped the kids off

a day early?

What were you thinking?

I said, a spot opened up.

They're not groceries, okay?

They are children.

What if I hadn't checked my phone?

What if I'd been called to the hospital

in the middle of the night?

Well, that didn't happen, right?

Good news.

I have plans tonight.

I'm not supposed to have them

until tomorrow.

It's just one night. Call Mona.

I want to be with them when I have them.

I don't want to leave

them with a sitter.

That's you.

I didn't think you could say anything

shittier than you said last night.

Be this aggressive in your career.

That's very nice. Very mature.

LIBBY: They went back and forth

for a while.

All the while, Toby tried to remember

exactly what he'd said

last night that was so bad.

(SPEAKING INDISTINCTLY)

But he couldn't remember.

I can't believe you'd do that.

Waking them up like that.

I have to secure my oxygen mask,

you know, before theirs.

Of course, your oxygen, I forgot.

Listen, it's been a hard month.

I just need some me time.

All of your time is you time, Rachel.

These days, he only ever said her name

at the end of sentences.

All right, I gotta go, okay?

I'm running late now.

Which was just as well

because his boner was gone.

(SIGHS)

All right, come on, guys. Let's go.

I'm so tired.

Well, I am excited

'cause I get you a full day early.

And here, I think your mother

left some clothes for you here.

There you go.

These are for the Hamptons.

These aren't for camp.

LIBBY: The subtext of everything Hannah

said these days was,

"You f*cking idiot."

I wanted Corn Chex, not flakes.

You f*cking idiot.

Okay.

Hannah, these corn flakes are amazing.

You have to try them.

Okay. All right.

Mwah! Thank you, buddy.

No, we gotta go. We gotta go.

Come on. Come on.

Of all the ways Toby so far resented

Rachel's mismanagement of that morning,

the biggest was an unplanned

visit to that den of dread,

that locus of late capitalist society,

the 92nd Street Y.

Forget what you know

about Ys in general,

this place, with its

ridiculous parent population

and a nursery school

you had to put your kids

on the waiting list for at conception

was as infected by the Upper East Side

as anything else that came

into contact with it.

Okay, bye, Hannah.

Toby, hey! Fancy seeing you here.

- Hey.

- Where's Rachel?

- Working as always?

- (CHUCKLES) Yeah.

Agency won't run itself, I guess.

Hey, that's her line.

LIBBY: Rachel was a theater agent,

best known as the person

who discovered Alejandra Lopez,

the creator of Presidentrix!

It was so brilliant

that it set the New York

theatergoing world on fire

and reinvented Broadway.

Presidentrix! was everywhere.

There were parodies.

- ALEJANDRA: You're just the wife!

- I'm just

I'm just the something.

All right. Look, hold your applause.

LIBBY: And, oh, boy,

was there some merch.

- Take care.

- Thanks, yeah.

She had a swear on her shirt.

Yeah, ignore it.

Okay, I'll see you later, Solly.

You're picking us up? Not Mona?

Yeah, it's all me.

CYNDI: Toby!

I keep meaning to reach out to you.

How are you doing?

How are the kids doing?

Well, we're okay.

It's a change for sure.

I've been waiting to run into you

to tell you myself

what I hope you already know,

but we're not leaving your life.

We're not going anywhere.

We are your friends, too.

LIBBY: It never didn't shock him

that this was who Rachel cared about.

As a measure of self-protection,

Toby thought about a P

he'd slept with a few nights before.

He couldn't quite remember her name.

Jamie, Jasmine? Jill?

Had things been hard long?

Um, yes I mean, no.

I mean, it wasn't a spur-of-the-moment

decision or anything,

if that's what you're asking.

But Cyndi wanted information.

These days, everyone did.

Did you have a date night?

Were you fighting at that

parent-teacher conference?

But you looked so happy

at the spring gala.

The questions were never

about the Fleishmans,

but about the person's own marriage.

Do we argue too much?

Are our fights too vicious?

Do we have enough sex?

Are we too miserable?

How miserable is too miserable?

- Jenny!

- (MOANING)

The physical therapist's name was Jenny!

Well, obviously the girls

are still thick as thieves.

So you can count on us

to make sure nothing changes that.

- (CELL PHONE CHIMES)

- Sorry

We're here for you.

TESS: "Hoping we're still on tonight."

Sorry, this is work.

- I have a biopsy.

- You're still at the hospital?

- People are still getting sick.

- (CHUCKLES)

Supply and demand.

- Yeah.

- Yeah, anyway,

it was great to see you.

We gotta do dinner

sometime with the kids

'cause we had so much fun last time.

LIBBY: But had they?

It's 40 years old.

It's made by these Roman monks.

They only make eight cases a year.

- Mmm. I taste that.

- Mmm-hmm.

- SAM: I want in.

- TODD: I have a hookup.

- Can't say who.

- Come on, man.

LIBBY: The same crowd every time.

Rachel's school mom friends,

whose husbands

were a chronic condition

that Toby had to manage.

There was Todd Leffer,

who was a portfolio manager

at a distressed debt fund

and who didn't not

have a photo of himself

next to a dead giraffe

and a live Trump son.

There was Rich Hertz,

whose name was literally Rich,

and whose father had made

his fortune in the '80s

by buying up life insurance policies

on people who had AIDS.

And then there was the alpha

homecoming king,

Sam Rothberg, a vice president

at a pharmaceutical company

who rose to prominence pushing Vicodin

on every housewife in the country.

Except for his own wife,

who was already besotted with Xanax.

So, how's the liver business, my man?

Well, you know,

people still get sick, so

TODD: Let me ask you something.

If your kids said that they

wanted to get into medicine,

what would you say?

TOBY: No. You don't get it, okay?

It was an insult. He was insulting me.

This guy made his money buying up

underwater mortgages in states

with expedited eviction laws

so they can kick out

the tenants and go condo,

and he asks me if I would ever lead

my poor children into my shameful life?

Well, would you?

TOBY: Mrs. Fields, hi.

This is Dr. Fleishman.

Is now a good time?

By the time he was done

with his residency,

medicine had undergone such upheaval

that suddenly even being a specialist

at a top hospital in Manhattan

wouldn't earn enough to offer

Rachel the lifestyle

to which she so badly wanted

to become accustomed.

She never understood

that his job was its own reward

and its own comfort.

Particularly in those first delicate

weeks following his divorce.

And, Clay, what is the most

common vascular mass?

Hepatocellular carcinoma.

That would be correct

if a hepatocellular carcinoma

were either vascular

or the most common anything.

It's a hemangioma.

I'm sorry, Clay, I

Listen, guys,

I don't know if this is

an appropriate thing,

but I'm gonna say it anyway.

I'm getting a divorce.

I don't mean to be an assh*le.

And if I am, forgive me.

- Are you okay?

- Yeah, I'm okay.

So, what are you doing now?

We saw a psychologist to figure out

how to make sure the kids are okay.

I moved into a new place recently.

Great, but are you on the apps yet?

What?

Okay, this is gonna be fun.

I had a JDate account

Do people have JDate accounts?

JOANIE: This is different.

It's not that different.

It's still scary.

Well, you still do it.

- Yes, I do.

- (JOANIE CHUCKLES)

Okay, so, there's a couple.

What is this? Sorry,

what am I looking at?

So, that's her lighthouse.

Her lighthouse?

You know, it's to indicate

a person's readiness.

- Her readiness?

- Like if she's available.

- Okay.

- And horny. (LAUGHS)

Wait. You do this, too?

You see what I mean?

Okay. Thank you.

I'm gonna We'll table this.

- We have patients to get to.

- Right.

Those lives will not save themselves.

Get me to the OR, stat!

I mean, you are playing God.

Yeah, no one's dying tonight.

Not on my watch.

LIBBY: He watched the apps

passively for a week or two,

- not engaging at all

- See you Monday.

until one weekend.

Rachel had taken the kids

out to the Hamptons.

It was his first-ever

weekend without them,

and he missed them so much

he thought he might die.

The app asked him,

"What is your fave movie?"

(TOBY READING)

It was Twister.

The app asked him,

"How do you like to spend

a rainy Saturday?"

"Doing a crossword puzzle."

Watching porn and masturbating.

"Fave food?"

Caesar salad. With shrimp.

It was steamed chicken and vegetables,

no sauce, no oil.

"What is your sun, moon, and ascendant?"

TOBY: What is an ascendant?

Maybe he had tried to pump

himself up in some answers,

but he'd been honest

about the important stuff.

And then it asked, "How single are you?"

I'm divorced.

LIBBY: That was true.

The app needed a pic.

(CAMERA SNAPS)

- WOMAN 1: Hey, you.

- WOMAN 2: Hi.

- WOMAN 3: Hi!

- WOMAN 4: Hi. How are you?

- Tongue emoji.

- You're cute.

- You're a doctor?

- Good for you.

- Vampire emoji.

- Where do you live?

- Where do you live?

- Brooklyn.

In Queens.

Like a doctor in a hospital

or a doctor of English?

Where is the liver?

If you're an assh*le

I've been down that road.

And no thank you.

I grew up in LA, too.

LIBBY: Friends,

he lost a full Saturday right there.

WOMAN 1: I went into social work,

and I miss it all the time.

WOMAN 2: I've had too much to drink.

- LIBBY: Then the weekend.

- WOMAN 3: Winding down with wine.

- WOMAN 4: I'm into older guys.

- WOMAN 5: You remind me of someone.

- WOMAN 6: Grandpa emoji.

- WOMAN 7: You're hot.

WOMAN 8: "Angry with smoke

coming from mouth" emoji

LIBBY: You have to understand

that Toby was not exactly

a desired property in his youth.

WOMAN 9: You're so handsome.

Where have you been all my life?

WOMAN 10: Possible samba

in evening gown emoji.

WOMAN 11: Glass of milk emoji.

Enough about me. What about you?

WOMAN 12: My dad was a doctor.

- Purple devil emoji.

- I was just

LIBBY: By late Sunday, his cheeks

hurt from expressing joy and wonder,

and his wrist and hand were sore

from repetitive stress.

WOMAN 13: Will I get to

see that cute face soon?

LIBBY: But then, he suddenly realized

this was real.

Very little on Earth stands still.

That forward momentum is always

available to pluck you from your sadness

and invite you to rejoin the living.

WOMAN 14: "So, am I seeing you?

Question mark, question mark.

"Don't leave me hanging, cutie."

TOBY: "Sorry. Yes.

Looking forward to it."

- (CELL PHONE RINGS)

- Oh, shit.

Yeah. Joanie. Hi.

Yeah, I am on my way up.

Look at that. Look at that.

It's good as new.

No scarring.

It's like nothing ever happened.

Huh. You have to love the liver.

I mean, seriously,

show me a more life-affirming organ.

I mean, look at it.

Look what it can recover from.

We should all be like the liver.

Livers behave in erratic ways.

The liver is unique

in the way that it heals.

It's full of forgiveness.

It understands that you need a few

chances before you get your life right.

And it doesn't just forgive you.

You know, it

You know, it practically forgets.

(JOANIE CHUCKLES POLITELY)

LIBBY: On the darkest days

of his marriage,

Toby attended to his hospital business.

Out of the corner of his eyes

was always the liver,

whispering to him that one day

there would not be much sign

of all of this damage,

that he would regenerate, too.

Toby, we have a new patient

up from the ER.

That's great. Yeah. Let's go.

I'm a liver specialist. I was called

in because your wife is jaundiced.

Right. Okay.

Do you want to tell us what happened?

She was slurring a little,

and not making sense.

She was clumsier than usual.

Finally, I said we

should go see a doctor.

Then we got in the car, and on the way,

she passed out.

Maybe she's asleep?

We're gonna figure that out.

She's in good hands now.

Nurse Ortiz is gonna show you

to our family lounge,

and we're going to examine your wife

and figure out what's going on.

What's going on here?

Yeah, it's alcoholic cirrhosis.

- Okay.

- She went on a bender.

Probably been a

secret drinker for years.

You seem pretty sure about that. Joanie?

- He said she was slurring.

- Okay. What did he actually say?

He said she was clumsy and slurring.

- She's a drunk.

- Phillip!

I'm sorry. Alcoholic.

A person with alcoholism.

An alcoholic-American.

Yeah. Okay. Listen, the husband,

he said that she was

clumsier than usual.

So, whatever this is, it's been going

on longer than just the last week.

What else?

Is she on an antidepressant?

She's on Zoloft, as of a month ago.

How'd you know that?

- TOBY: Get her internist on the phone.

- Okay.

You saw her a month ago,

and prescribed Zoloft.

INTERNIST: She said

she was feeling down.

- Her AST/ALT wasn't elevated?

- I didn't check LFTs.

You didn't check.

Okay, well, she has an AST of 145

and an ALT of 103 and a bili of 14.

She is en-encephalopathic

and coagulopathic.

Her total cholesterol is 98.

She's in liver failure.

Yellow as a highlighter.

Listen, my whole practice

is these women in their 40s

who become depressed and drink

more than they should at lunch.

Really? Good for you.

I got to go treat your patient now.

Sorry. You shouldn't do that.

Here's the thing.

This woman's doctor could have helped

if he'd taken her seriously.

She wouldn't be having neurological

symptoms and a failing liver.

Guys, insurance is not gonna pay

for more than 15 minutes.

You still have to listen. Okay?

You have to take that time as a loss.

You have to ask

questions and give a shit.

What did our friend Dr. Osler say?

You remember? Listen to the patient.

She is telling you her diagnosis.

Okay. So, go ahead.

Look harder.

(SIGHS)

JOANIE: Oh, my God.

The patient has a ring of copper

around her iris.

- It's Wilson's.

- Yeah.

Yeah, I've only seen it once before.

(JOANIE CHUCKLES)

Do you see that?

God, it's so beautiful.

Yeah.

As life-threatening diseases go,

it is a pretty one.

It means her body

doesn't process copper.

So, usually it presents

as what you called clumsiness.

All it takes is one night of drinking

for this to happen.

She went to Vegas

with friends last weekend

for, like, a bachelorette thing.

That's really good to know.

Dr. Clifton here will take

a more detailed history.

- Okay?

- And what do I do?

Tell your job you need a few days off,

then call your family and friends

so they can help with your kids.

And we will tell you when

we know something, all right?

All right. Take care.

- Thanks.

- Yeah.

So, never?

I'm a middle-aged housewife.

- I've been domesticated.

- You're a legend.

Not pot? Not even cigarettes?

- Cigarettes?

- Hey.

Are you crazy?

What would the other mothers

even say about me?

I'd be a pariah.

Do you realize that the only thing Libby

ever inhales into her lungs anymore

- is the New Jersey pollution?

- TOBY: Yes. She grew up.

- I endorse this.

- Thank you.

I knew this guy who lived

literally beneath a cave.

Not in it, beneath it, in Argentina.

And he grew this one strain of pot

that he combined with this extract,

so you're high,

but you don't know you're high.

Sorry. What does that even mean?

But I think I want to know if I'm high.

- Am I high right now?

- Am I high right now?

No. I'd be hungrier if I were high.

- I'm not.

- (CHUCKLES) Telltale sign.

- You ready?

- LIBBY: Wait a minute.

I am hungry.

- Tuna sandwich, please.

- Thanks.

Wait. Excuse me. Sorry.

The American Medical Association

recommends eating tuna fish

once a month, if that.

Those people are animals.

So, a tuna sandwich

would be amazing, thank you.

SETH: I'm gonna have the Lumberjack,

and can I have a grilled cheese

on the side?

Wow. Child.

I will have the spinach

and egg white omelet,

no butter and very little oil.

- SERVER: French fries or home fries?

- (LAUGHS)

No, no, neither.

And no bread, please.

- I love it.

- SERVER: Okay.

Thank you.

LIBBY: The three of us had been

getting together regularly

for the first time in years,

ever since Toby called to tell us

that he was getting a divorce.

So, it's crazy because,

when you're in space,

no matter where you are,

you feel like you're in the center.

Have you considered that maybe

you shouldn't have been a lawyer?

Only every day.

How was your day?

- (SIGHS) Fine. It was nothing.

- (PHONE VIBRATING)

Toby Fleishman?

Elizabeth Slater. Toby Fleishman.

God!

It's Epstein now, but, yeah, hi.

- Hi?

- Hello.

I am calling to tell you

that I am getting a divorce.

I'm doing this on the advice

of a therapist,

who thinks it would be healing

to reach out to people I haven't seen

since my marriage was falling apart.

LIBBY: I was stunned.

I'm stunned.

I just moved out.

I have the kids every other weekend

and on weekdays when she's working late.

It was hard for a long time.

We actually went to a couples therapist

who said that we have

three of the four horsemen

of the marital apocalypse.

What are those?

Contempt, I think, was the first one.

Defensiveness.

And shutting down You know what?

I can't remember the fourth.

Was it being a total f*cking b*tch?

(CHUCKLES) Elizabeth. Maybe.

I hated her.

I mean, I Can I say that?

I know I just said that,

but, like, can I say that?

Yeah, I know, I know.

It's been a while, Elizabeth.

What, like 10 years? Or 12?

It's been since you didn't

bother showing up to my wedding.

So, 12 years.

I'm so sorry. It was so hard.

Yeah. I mean,

you should have called me, you know?

It was a nightmare.

We would fight in public.

I'm so sorry.

I couldn't.

You still should have called me.

LIBBY: We made arrangements

to see each other immediately,

and I took a brief leave from my life

as a housewife in New Jersey

to come into the big city.

- Hi.

- Hi.

- Hello.

- Hi.

- Okay. Come on.

- Yeah.

- Come on in. Come on in.

- Let's hug.

Should we get something to eat?

No. I'm good. I ate on Tuesday.

- Are you doing okay?

- Yes, I am okay.

Okay.

I don't know. I worry about the kids.

I hate weekends when I don't have them.

I freak out when I wake up

in my new apartment,

which is like a hovel compared to

the palace I just moved out of.

- Sure.

- Seriously.

But

I think I'm past the hard part.

And, yeah, I think I'm, like,

actually up to the interesting part.

Look at this.

What is that?

It's like a bevy of

interested sexual partners

that comprises the underlayer

of this city, apparently.

Might have been here forever.

Toby Fleishman.

Hot damn.

Can you imagine all those years

I couldn't even get

return eye contact, and

I cannot believe that this is

where life has deposited you.

Listen, I know it feels

like we haven't been in touch,

but I get the magazine,

and I look, like,

every month for your name,

and I read the stories,

and, Lib, it is like

your voice in my ears.

I'm proud of you, you know?

Yeah. I'm not at the magazine anymore.

I'm not anywhere anymore.

This is

Yeah.

Our friend Seth had fewer questions.

Dude.

The world is your

oyster now. Lick it up.

- I'm trying, you know, to

- I have a great idea.

- Yeah?

- Go to your apartment, put on shorts.

- Why?

- We're gonna go to yoga.

It's Saturday night.

It's Saturday afternoon. Trust me.

What? I can't. I just had a drink.

The place I go to is owned by

a guy who trained under Bikram.

He started a splinter group

that nearly brought

the Indian political

system to its knees.

- Really?

- Yes.

Do you know who goes to yoga?

- Girls.

- Yeah, right.

Going to yoga shows a woman

how evolved you are

and how not set you are

on maintaining the patriarchy

she so loathes and fears.

I got to get home.

And aren't you dating someone?

I'm doing this for you, not me.

How high is your closing rate?

It's like 60%.

It's 30%. I can't keep track.

You should be at 100%.

You should only be closing right now.

You are prime time now. You are golden.

- Are you being picky?

- I'd put my penis

in a he-donkey right now,

that's how picky I'm being.

So what's the problem?

The problem? I don't know.

I'm getting out of a marriage

to a woman who wouldn't

let me pee standing up.

I have some healing to do.

I really missed you, man.

Go put those shorts on.

Then Toby invited us to his new place

when his kids were

with Rachel one weekend,

the three of us together

for the first time in 15 years.

Didn't want to move downtown?

My kids are up here,

and I work across the park,

so I'm kind of like

a prisoner of the Upper East Side

until The Hague

mandates that I can leave.

You need new shades.

Yes, I know. I also need a new toaster.

Rachel has a good toaster.

Well, I pronounce this place

completely delightful.

I love this apartment.

It reminds me of the first place

Adam and I had together.

- Yeah?

- Mmm-hmm.

It reminds me of our

dorm room in Israel.

- LIBBY: Very mean.

- I mean, I love it.

I mean, I hated the place

that Rachel put us in.

Had these high ceilings.

They made the doormen

dress like they were in the military.

(CHUCKLES)

Divorce is like that old Othello game.

You start your marriage

with all the discs white, right?

Then there are some black discs

along the way.

You fight, but ultimately, you laugh

and it's fine because the board

is still mostly white, right?

But then something happens

and the marriage falls apart,

and suddenly the entire board is black.

Is that how you play Othello?

They should probably change

the name Othello, you know?

Yeah, so now even the good memories

are tinged with darkness.

They're tainted, rotten from the start.

LIBBY: Not all of them.

Yes, man, all of them. Okay?

Now you look back on all those memories,

like the honeymoon fight,

a disagreement on a child's name,

and suddenly they're no longer

innocuous fights.

Now they're foreshadowing.

When we get married, we really

have no way to fully understand

what forever means, you know?

SETH: That's what I say.

Marriage is for suckers.

How are you gonna know

how you're gonna feel

in three times the amount

of years you've been alive for?

You were how old

- when you got married?

- Twenty-six.

- Thirty.

- Thirty.

Has your brain even stopped growing?

Does your brain grow?

I was ridiculous in my 20s.

Who would I have married?

What kind of decision or choice

would I have made?

You grow up. You change.

Like the show Friends.

I used to like Friends

when it first came out.

Now I hear that opening music,

it makes me want to k*ll myself.

Definitely should not watch Friends.

What I'm saying is I keep seeing people

outgrow the people that they were with,

and now all the guys at work, my work,

are these, like, miserable,

desperate creatures

who get way too wasted at

other people's bachelor parties

because they're dreading going home.

But you know what?

I was at their weddings. I saw them.

They were in love.

They were happy that day.

You and Rachel were happy that day.

- Yeah, we were.

- Yeah, you really were.

SETH: So, how could

an intelligent observer of this

ever decide to choose it?

Hmm.

Are you still going to therapy?

No. The apps are like my therapy.

It's like group therapy,

except at the end,

you get to put your penis

in the therapist's mouth.

- My therapist does that.

- (CHUCKLES)

LIBBY: So we met, and we laughed.

And in our laughter,

I heard something dangerous,

which was the sound of our youth.

Which landed us here, on the day

that Rachel dropped the kids off

at Toby's apartment

a full day earlier than expected.

She does whatever she wants.

I shouldn't have been surprised

to see our kids sleep-marched

to the apartment at 4:00 a.m.

4:00 a.m.! Sorry.

I'm angry all over again.

I thought she would at least be

a good divorce partner.

Why would you think that?

She was a terrible wife.

Yeah, no, I know.

I thought we had an agreement

where we'd put each other through enough

and we could be normal to each other.

But what I remember is that

I'm normal, and she's crazy, and

that's why this could never work out.

Sorry. I had a date tonight.

Let me see.

Okay. Here you go.

All right. What do you think of her?

Oh. Nice.

How old is she?

- Let me see.

- I don't know.

She said she's 39.

- No.

- No?

- She's not 39.

- No?

Weird fact about dating

is no one is actually 39 or 29.

There's 40 or 30.

They shouldn't let you use those ages

because they don't exist.

How did it go with the zoologist?

It was really freaky.

She wanted me to choke her.

- What?

- Yeah, yeah. That happens all the time.

Women have been let loose.

They are emancipated.

That is the opposite of emancipation.

They're doing that

because they saw it in porn.

- What did you do?

- I told her I took an oath.

I'm serious. A person

could die like that.

I told her that.

What does your oath say

about her being a naughty girl

who needs some very light spanking?

(CHUCKLES) Come on. Come on. No, no, no.

What were we talking about?

- Ages.

- Oh, yeah. Right.

When I was on the apps, you know,

I would put my search interest

from 21 to 28.

That way, the oldest woman

I would get is 35.

- Beat the system.

- Stop it.

TOBY: I don't really like

the younger women.

- SETH: You don't?

- No.

I mean, hey, come on.

We're not that old, you know?

I don't think women our age are old.

The younger ones hate us less.

Have you thought that

all the way through?

Am I wrong?

I don't know.

I'm just You know,

it makes a girl start to wonder

how she might do on the produce market.

You don't have to worry about it.

- You're married.

- He was married.

I did go out on a couple dates

with a 25-year-old,

until I changed my search parameters

to 39 to 47, you know,

'cause if they want to have kids,

I don't want to waste their time.

But also

You know, also, I can't be with someone

who doesn't understand consequences.

How the world will have its way with you

despite your careful planning

and good behavior.

- Yikes, dude.

- I know. I'm sorry.

I'm just so angry at Rachel,

who is old enough

to understand consequences.

And yet! And yet!

Uh

May the townsfolk

know of her promiscuity

and stone her in the square.

(CHUCKLES) No, that is not nice.

- LIBBY: And may the next man

- Yeah?

who visits her undercarriage

- TOBY: Yes.

- have a big sneeze.

TOBY: Oh, no, please. No, no, no.

And the sneeze travels up her vag*na

and causes an embolism.

(LAUGHS) That's not how embolisms work.

LIBBY: I'm pretty sure that's

how embolism works.

Thank you for taking my side.

LIBBY: Anytime.

Okay. I should go.

You guys can split that.

- Yeah.

- Thanks so much.

TOBY: Thank you.

All right. Love you.

Okay.

- Bye.

- Bye.

Bye-bye.

TOBY: Hey! Was today good?

Hello to you.

There's a STEM contest at the Y.

Can we enter it?

If you win, you get to be

in a science fair in September.

I think we can arrange that.

I have what Mom calls

"the competitive edge"

because I have a science dad.

Okay. Here comes the bus.

Hey, what's going on?

I'm not going on the bus.

Hannah. Come on.

No.

You're so embarrassing.

Okay. This is nonsense.

Come with us right now,

or you're not going to Lexi's.

Can we just take a cab?

Look, you have to be able to,

like, live among people

without wanting or needing

to be like them.

You have to know our values.

Not wanting to be seen on a bus,

that's not good.

Not wanting to take a bus

is not a good value,

for like a million reasons.

- Hey, Dad.

- Yeah?

Can I get golf lessons?

You want golf Yeah. Yeah, sure.

I'll look into it, buddy.

LIBBY: For the 10th time that day,

Toby was forced to ask

the question that occurred to him

nearly every few minutes

since his separation

How did I get here?

How did I become a divorced guy?

How could my kids be so much

like these people

when they also so resembled me?

How did he get here?

- SOLLY: Hey, Dad?

- Yes.

I think I found our project.

Can we do quantum superposition?

It's like Schrödinger's cat.

Maybe. I just don't want to be k*lling

living things.

There's no way to do it

without a dead cat?

We'll figure something out, okay?

- Hey, Dad?

- Yeah.

Can we get a dog?

Oh, God. Are you serious?

I don't know. Check with your mother.

I got to get changed.

- Where are you going?

- He's going on a date.

- Thank you, Hannah.

- SOLLY: What?

Don't you want to work on our project?

I do. You have play dates

with your friends?

Adults have those, too.

And it's healthy. It's, like, normal.

- Yeah. Mona.

- Mona!

Thank you so much for coming.

- MONA: Hi!

- I really do appreciate it.

- WOMAN ON TV: It's a Halloween party.

- Hi, Mona.

Hey, babe. Nice to see you.

Mona, you're a lifesaver.

You can have a costume brought to you

on a day other than Halloween.

- Guess I should be punished.

- Well, that can be arranged.

Whoa! Hey, is this really the best

thing to watch right now?

You ruin everything!

- Okay.

- Those sunglasses

LIBBY: He had emerged that summer

like a newborn baby seal

with his eyes clamped shut.

But now they were open,

and he was a student again.

And in this short time,

he had learned a million new things.

Among them was the fact

that if you skew your vision just right,

you could see the world

as his dating app presented it,

with New York as a city full of people

with only one imperative,

to f*ck or lick or suck

or finger or apply hot breath

to a warm body with

a compatible schedule.

As he tried to get his bearings

these last few months,

he enjoyed the simplicity of that.

Hey.

Are you Alex?

I'm No, I'm Toby.

Yeah, of course you are.

And he learned that he wasn't

alone in his search

for someone to talk to

and kiss and ignite,

even if it was just for a night.

He was meeting a woman named Tess

that he'd been exchanging

dirty messages with for a week.

He tried to remember what she

looked like, but she'd sent

too many pictures of body parts

in the meantime,

and he realized he'd lost

the plot on her face.

Bicep emoji.

Shrug with "What are you

gonna do?" arms emoji.

Hi. Hi.

TESS: He turned 50 and got depressed,

so I sent him on a

survival skills weekend

with a famous life coach.

It cost $10,000 for a weekend.

Oh, my God.

- She's a shaman now.

- I would hope so.

Well, he comes back and says

he wants to start having threesomes.

I'm surprised, but I also think,

"Look at this beautiful life."

So I say sure.

You know, we'll need some rules,

but why not?

I'm not dead yet.

Well, that is very generous of you.

Well, turns out he wants to have

threesomes with other women.

Two other women.

- None of them me.

- No!

No. That is insane.

Wait, so the life coach

told him to do this?

She told him to live his truth,

or whatever.

His truth?

I swear, you think you know someone,

and then they do something

you could not have predicted

in your wildest dreams.

- Boy, isn't that the truth.

- (BOTH CHUCKLE)

That's my truth.

So, how did you guys meet?

You know, it's funny.

In a threesome.

LIBBY: But what Toby really

learned the whole summer

was that he was wanted again.

(MOANS) Toby! Oh, yes!

He was wanted on top.

He was wanted on bottom.

Get down.

They wanted him on all fours,

which was new for him.

Yes, ma'am.

They wanted him to go slower.

They wanted him to go faster.

They wanted to know

if he was gonna come hard.

- They wanted him to come to Mommy.

- (LAUGHS)

- They wanted to call him Daddy.

- (MOANING)

He was madly in love with each of them.

On these nights, he didn't wonder why

this had happened to him.

Albert. My man.

On these nights,

he was grateful life was long

and he got to experience

all of these new things.

He had been so lost.

And each night, he became just

a little more found.

I know. We can do relativity.

Yeah. Yeah.

That's actually not a bad idea.

- (CELL PHONE RINGS)

- HANNAH: Oh!

That might be for me.

TESS: "Good morning, Doctor."

Who's Tess?

Tess? Oh, she's a resident.

She's a fellow.

She's a new patient.

She's a good patient.

"That was fun last night."

"I just bought a piece of lingerie

you'll enjoy removing."

"Cat with heart eyes emoji,"

"poison skull emoji, robot arm emoji."

- I found a corner!

- Yeah, I'll be right there.

- "Tomorrow night?"

- Dad.

"My kids. Your place?"

Two pieces that connect!

I got it, buddy.

- TOBY: "Thumbs up emoji."

- "Say 6:00?"

I'll see if I can find another.

Yeah. Just hold on to it.

"866 East 91st Street.

Any time after 5:00."

"Laughing and crying emoji."

What if I need to call you?

I'm sure the Leffers have a landline.

Or Cyndi's phone.

You've never called me from a sleepover.

Can't you just get me a phone?

I will get you a phone

on your 12th birthday.

That's in four months.

Well, then, you get to be my baby

for four more months.

(HANNAH SCOFFS)

LIBBY: On their way to

the sleepover at the Leffers',

Toby felt the same

anxiety he always felt

leaving his daughter

on the front lines of a social w*r zone.

But he was momentarily distracted

as they passed a brownstone doorway

that he'd ended up

getting a hand job in a week ago

from a writer he'd been out with.

Is it too late to switch

my bat mitzvah venue?

You know, I think we already printed

up invitations, and there's a deposit.

I still don't have a dress.

It's not till November.

And you know your haftarah.

That's the most important thing.

HANNAH: Sure, Dad.

Fleishmans! Hello!

- Hi, Mrs. Leffer.

- Hi, honey.

Lexi!

Hannah, you have to see this.

Hello, Dr. Fleishman.

Hi, Lexi.

Hey, Hannah, if you need me

Honey Yeah, okay.

So, big plans for you boys tonight?

We're going book shopping.

Nice.

How's the good doctor?

Oh, Toby!

We were gonna have you and the kids

to the club next weekend,

but Todd says

you don't play tennis or golf?

Yeah, I play basketball.

No kidding?

- LIBBY: f*ck you, Todd.

- Mmm-hmm.

Good for you.

You ever get an outdoor hand job, Todd?

Well, okay.

Rachel will be picking up the girls

to take them to the show at about 4:00.

"You're just the wife." (CHUCKLES)

Curtain's at 7:00.

And Rachel has

reservations at Joe Allen.

Isn't she the nicest?

Well, you call Hannah

if you need anything, okay?

She doesn't have a phone yet.

- CYNDI: Toby!

- Yeah?

Get that girl a phone!

(CHUCKLES) You boys have

a good night, okay?

Bye, guys. Bye, Solly.

TOBY: "Leffers expecting you at 4:00

for Joe Allen and show."

- (MESSAGE SENDS)

- Hey, what do you got?

Let's see

4,000 Facts About the Universe.

This is good. And this

No, this one's more for grown-ups.

They don't have so many

relativity books for kids.

Well, yeah, that makes sense.

Okay, go with those.

SOLLY: We'll take these two.

MAN: All right.

Is that gonna be it for you?

- (PHONE RINGING)

- SOLLY: Yeah.

You've reached Rachel Fleishman.

If this is urgent, you can call

my assistant Simone at

So, the same thing happens

at the same time.

Mmm-hmm.

If someone else observes it

at a different angle

Yeah, it means it's also true, though.

Here. You know what?

Put out your thumb like this.

Yeah. Good.

Now close your right eye.

Yeah. Good. Now close your left.

It's weird, right?

It's like a different perspective,

but they're both reality.

LIBBY: Suddenly it occurred to Toby

that he hadn't heard a thing from Rachel

since their phone conversation

on Friday morning.

"Question mark. Question mark."

"Where are you, Rachel?"

"It's Sunday."

"I am so sick of this shit."

CYNDI: "Hey, Toby, it's 4:30",

"and I haven't heard from Rachel,"

"and Todd and I have to head out

for a golf tournament."

We got to go. Come on, we got to go.

Look, your dad's here now.

- Hey.

- Where's Mom?

Mom's running late.

I think her yoga retreat ran over.

I don't know. Maybe Hi.

Maybe they all fell asleep.

That's not funny.

She would not miss this. It's her work.

Come back to my place

and she can pick you up there.

No, no, I am not taking

Lexi to your apartment.

Hey, how about you're not going

anywhere if you keep this up?

Oh, my God.

LIBBY: It was right then that

Toby started to wonder

whether it was weird

that he hadn't heard from her

since their conversation

on Friday morning.

No dismissive eye-rolling,

no middle finger emoji,

no three dots.

She wouldn't just blow him off.

She wouldn't reserve seats for a show

that she helped put up

and leave the box office hanging.

She wouldn't even let

the maître d' at Joe Allen down.

Toby? Yes.

The Joe Allen maître d'? No.

What?

- (CELL PHONE RINGS)

- Hi.

This is where your dad lives?

It's just temporary.

It's not temporary.

Can't really talk right now.

Okay.

Okay, bye.

Hi.

How was your day in the actual world?

ADAM: You didn't miss anything.

The real world is highly overrated.

How was everything

here in paradise, huh?

LIBBY: Lately I couldn't stop thinking

about Toby on his dates.

Coming home alone,

coming home with someone.

I didn't have a thing for him,

and I didn't want to be divorced.

It's that Toby's life

was no longer predictable.

He had somehow had the sense

of possibility returned to him.

I'd been feeling so old.

Here was Toby, exact same age,

just realizing how young he was.

I couldn't believe that it was

possible for two people

to be the same age

and feel so different.

Which one of us was right?

Which is a way of saying I was going

through something, too, right then,

but I couldn't name it yet.

Are you Elizabeth Slater?

I was.

Sign this, please.

Yeah.

- Thanks.

- Thank you.

But this isn't about me.

I don't know what

you think you're doing,

but I have two kids at my apartment

for a 7:00 curtain, and it is 5:55.

- (KNOCKING AT DOOR)

- Yeah. What? What?

- Yeah.

- We missed our reservation!

We'll never get there!

I don't know where she is!

If I called, she'd pick up!

- She hates you!

- Enough!

- (DOORBELL RINGS)

- Oh! Thank God.

(LAUGHS)

Mom!

- (SCREAMING)

- Toby!

I am so sorry. I had a change of plans.

- Whose kids are those?

- Mine.

One's a friend of my daughter's,

the tall one No matter.

- I'm not here to be humiliated.

- I'm not trying to.

- I am so sorry.

- f*ck off!

Yeah.

Dad. Dad. Where is Mom?

Yeah, that woman had

the wrong apartment.

- (CRYING)

- Are you okay, buddy?

She knew your name.

- I don't know why I'm crying.

- Oh, God. It's okay.

I hate you! Where is Mom?

- I don't know, Hannah!

- Where is Mom?

TOBY: "Where are you?"

LIBBY: Where was she?

HANNAH: This is so embarrassing!

I hate you!

- (SIRENS WAILING)

- (HORNS HONKING)