Adult Chris Quote #455

Quote from Adult Chris in Everybody Hates Mr. Levine

Adult Chris: [v.o.] After his daughter left, for the first time, I saw Mr. Levine out on the streets, but with everything that happened, I figured it was best to leave him alone until I didn't have a choice.
Chris: Mr. Levine, it's me, Chris, let me in. Let me in.
Mr. Levine: Hey, hey, hey. Last time I let you in, I went to the hospital, almost got shipped to the farm, you did me a favor, I saw my daughter, me and Doc patched it up. You happy? Now, beat it.
Adult Chris: [v.o.] And with that, Mr. Levine taught me everything I needed to know about White people.

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 ‘Everybody Hates Mr. Levine’ Quotes

Quote from Greg

Chris: She said hi. So what?
Greg: No, she said, "Hi, Chris and Greg." You were nowhere near me. I've got no identity. I'm sick of it. I'm not Greg, I'm Chris-and-Greg. I'm just a sidekick.
Chris: You're not a sidekick.
Adult Chris: [v.o.] That's what Batman told Robin.
Greg: Yeah, you're right. Sidekicks have their own identities. Tonto, Hutch, Watson, Robin, Kato, Tattoo, Chong, Poncho, 99, Tubbs. I don't want to be Chris-and- Greg for the rest of my life.
[fantasy - a newscast:]
News Anchor: Governor Chris-and-Greg was arrested today on prostitution and racketeering charges. Governor Chris-and-Greg was elected two years ago on a law and order platform, and now Governor Chris-and-Greg faces up to three years in prison.
[reality:]
Greg: Why is it Chris and Greg anyways? Why isn't it Greg and Chris?
Adult Chris: [v.o.] Because it's not your show.

Quote from Julius

Tonya: Where were you, Daddy?
Julius: I was asleep.
Rochelle: You slept through the worst blackout in ten years?
Julius: What's the difference? I wouldn't have seen it if I was awake and I couldn't see it in my sleep. [chuckles]
Rochelle: Oh, well, since you got so much sleep, you go get dinner. Sit down, kids.

Quote from Adult Chris

Adult Chris: [v.o.] There's always one White person left in a Black neighborhood after all the other ones leave. Maybe he was going to tell the others when it was safe to come back.