Christin asked...
Can you tell us of a favorite memory with each of your siblings growing up?
was, "Can you tell us a favorite memory with each of your siblings from growing up?" Is there a certain memory with Katie, a certain memory with Antoinette, a certain memory with that? Well, Katie was 10 years older, but it wasn't like I was her little sister. She was more, we had to listen to her almost as a junior authority figure. Yeah, right. She wanted us to make sure we had to answer to her. Like one time, I was just coming to a memory match. That's a memory. Somebody had asked me to the prom, but early I think I was only a freshman then, so I called up and I said, "Oh, I'd like to go." And she said, "Well, what are you going to wear?" Yeah, so that was the end of that. Right, right. And maybe I'll swap and give you this if you want to... Well, what is this? This is not for what we were talking about, that way. Oh, just to hold it? Yeah. Okay. Yeah. That's something different. So, okay, and then what about your other siblings? Yeah, I told you the story about Katie, but I don't know whether... Yes. Do you want me to tell that or not? I mean, again, this is sort of up to you. Yeah, no, we all got along very well. I think once I told you, Daniel, about the fur coat. Yes, so why don't you... Okay, tell me that again, because I think that's pretty good. Okay, yeah, that was about 19. And she had this fur coat, and one time when she and my mother went out, I thought, "Well, this is a good time for me to try it on, put a little lipstick on." And before I knew it, they turned around and came back. So, I took off the coat, smeared off the lipstick, but Katie said, "You have lipstick on." And I said, "No, no. It's pomade. I don't know where I knew about pomade." And Tony used to like to tease me a lot. Like I was not the little sister. I was more like... The sidekick. You're keeping in line. One time somebody at school, I was at eighth grade, said that I looked like Dorothy Le Moore. I didn't know who Dorothy Le Moore was. So I came home and I, at the dinner table, I said, "Oh, well, at school they said I look like Dorothy Le Moore." So Tony started in. Oh, so now she thinks she looks like Tony Le Moore, Dorothy Le Moore. And with Antoinette, I think the biggest memories, her love of books, but every Monday we went to the library, which was a long way to go. And you were allowed to take out five books. But the biggest treat was on the way home. You stopped and we got a worth of Washington pie, which in essence was, that was on a Monday. In essence, I think it was all the leftover bakery stuff that they put together in a little square. And that was two cents... Two cents per square. Did I cover everybody? Tony Antoinette.