SCOTT: You do realize your’e not on TV, right?
STEVE: No.
SCOTT: You’re not on TV.
STEVE (facing somewhere between heaven and the camera):The problem with Scott is that he just doesn’t understand the nature of reality. He’s a good guy. Really, he is. He just doesn’t get that in any infinitely sized object, every point is the center point. In this infinitely large universe, I am, therefore, the center of the universe.
SCOTT: You know I can hear you, right?
STEVE: Scott, all this witless banter is making me thirsty, go get me a cup of coffee.
SCOTT: Dude.
STEVE (looking at Scott with one eyebrow raised)
SCOTT: Fine. I wanted one anyway. You’re ridiculous.
STEVE (looking at the camera): Someday he’ll understand.
[Themesong Music & Credits start to roll]
[Title in “Comic Lettering”: Episode 1: The pilot]
Scene 2:
[On a random dock, at a random nameless lake, somewhere in the Northeastern Part of North America]
STEVE [casting with a crappy little-kid “Hello Kitty” fishing pole and reel] You know the world would be a happier place if there were a male version of Hello Kitty.
MIKE [changing a lure and casting his very expensive manly spincaster on a nifty graphite rod]: No it wouldn’t.
STEVE: Sure it would. Gender is cool. Almost everyone I know has one.
MIKE [Rolling his eyes]: That was almost the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard.
STEVE: But not the actual stupidest?
MIKE: It might have been.
STEVE: But you’re not sure?
[A fish hits Steve’s line]
MIKE [Indicating with his eyes where STEVE should be looking]
STEVE: I’d think, if it were the actual ‘stupidest thing you ever heard’ [making air quotes with one hand] you’d remember.
[the back of a fish at least as big as STEVE swirls around in front of the dock]
MIKE (eyes bugging out): [pointing with his rod]
STEVE: It’s not that Hello Kitty has to be female, persay, it’s just that it is defacto girlish.
MIKE: [gesturing wildly with his rod]
STEVE: [Turning toward the space between the camera and heaven] I’m not sure he is aware just how phallic that whole motion is.
MIKE: [Primal Scream]
STEVE: [reels in his line] I guess I had a bite, the baits gone.
Scene 3:
[In a random cube farm in a random business somewhere in a generically accented North American City]
MIKE: I’m telling you, the fish was bigger than him.
SCOTT: Don’t exaggerate. It’s bad enough I have to listen to him 9hrs a day, 5 days a week, 50 weeks a year until I die. Don’t make it worse. For the love of God, don’t make it worse.
MIKE [Somewhere between exasperated and devastated]: I. Really — never mind.
SCOTT: Did you catch anything.
MIKE [Banging head against his desk hard enough that his phone goes off the hook and randomly dials NIALL at the Customer Service desk]
NIALL: (over the speaker phone) Hi Mike, what do you need?
SCOTT: I don’t think he meant to call you NIALL, he was just banging his head against his desk and it happened.
NIALL: (over speaker phone) [a loud sigh then a dial tone]
STEVE: Why is MIKE banging his head against his desk?
SCOTT: He didn’t catch any fish.
STEVE: [Turns to the space between the camera and heaven] It’s not easy for everyone to understand the way the universe works. MIKE has a hard time seeing the truth of things – fishing isn’t supposed to be so stressful. The man needs to learn to relax.
MIKE: [Primal Scream]
SCOTT (Looks at STEVE then at MIKE): MIKE, do you need a coffee?
MIKE: [grunts]
Scene 4:
[At a coffee shop across the street from the generic business where STEVE works]
STEVE: I’d like a small black coffee with extra black.
KID BEHIND COUNTER: Extra black?
STEVE: Yes please.
KID BEHIND COUNTER: I have no idea what that means.
STEVE: Well, I like my coffee black.
KID BEHIND COUNTER: Ok. I can do that.
STEVE: Great, can you add some extra black to it? I think that’s the part I like.
KID BEHIND COUNTER: [Vacant Stare]
PILOT: Stop screwing with the kid, some of us are in a hurry.
STEVE: I don’t think it’ll take him any extra time to give me extra black.
PILOT: THere is no such thing as..
STEVE: OF course there is.
PILOT: No there isn’t.
STEVE: Are you saying that the coffee he will serve me will be completely opaque?
PILOT: What the hell is wrong with you?
STEVE: Nothing, I just want extra black.
PILOT: You’re an idiot.
STEVE [Turns toward space between camera and heaven]: The problem here is that time is really a matter of perception. Regardless whether Einstein is right or wrong, it is a fact that if you’re waiting for something, time slows and if you need to be somewhere, time speeds up. I think it has situational awareness.
PILOT: You stupid son of a…. [making a fist with his right hand and readying it for a swing]
KID BEHIND THE COUNTER: Here you go sir
STEVE: [Turning back to the counter reaching into his pocket for change, drops a quarter and bends down to get it.
PILOT [swinging at STEVE’s head misses and catches the KID BEHIND THE COUNTER right in the nose]
Scene 5:
[In front of the Coffee Shop with the KID BEHIND THE COUNTER and the PILOT separated and talking to police in the background.]
POLICE [With a notepad]: Extra Black?
STEVE: Yessir.
POLICE: Is that some sort of racial thing? Are you trying to start trouble?
STEVE: No sir.
POLICE: What does it even mean?
STEVE: My friend SCOTT got me a coffee the other day, and I was thinking how it would taste better if it were blacker. So, today, when I got here, I thought I’d just ask for extra black.
POLICE: Are you retarded?
STEVE: If I were, would I know?
POLICE: Are you sassing me?
STEVE: I think I”m a bit too manly to sass.
POLICE: [Pauses, takes a deep breath]: TEll me what happened.
STEVE: When? [Turns to the space between the camera and Heaven] This is the problem with narrative, there is no beginning or end. Everything is middle. Everything is past tense.
POLICE: What the hell is wrong with you? Do you need to be brought in for observation?
PILOT [Yelling over from behind] See! Do you see what I mean, the man is a lunatic.
STEVE: No sir.
POLICE: So what happened here?
STEVE: I didn’t see anything. I bent down to pick up a quarter and that man hit the kid behind the counter.
POLICE: So you turned and missed the entire exchange?
STEVE: Yes sir.
POLICE: Get out of here. I’ve got your info, if we need you, we’ll call.
SCENE 6:
[By the reception desk of a nameless business in a nameless town somewhere in North America]
NIALL: The kid still has the shiner.
SCOTT: Yeah, I saw that. Did you hear what he said?
NIALL: I just heard he caused the whole thing and that the owner asked him not to come in again.
SCOTT: He asked for extra black in his coffee?
NIALL: Freakin’ racist pig!
SCOTT: I don’t think black coffee is racist.
NIALL: It sounds racist.
SCOTT: Yeah, but I am pretty sure ordering black coffee isn’t racist.
NIALL: But with EXTRA BLACK??? No wonder they don’t want him back in there.
SCOTT: Dude’s not right.
NIALL: True that.
[Door opens]
PILOT: I’m looking for a STEVE?
NIALL: Can I ask what this is about?
PILOT: I Just need to give him some paperwork.
NIALL: One second. [Dial’s STEVE] Steve? Yeah, there’s someone here with paperwork for you?
NIALL: He’ll be right down. You can wait right over there. [Points to a couch]
PILOT: Thank you.
[Elevator dings and STEVE steps off]
STEVE [tilts head]: Can I help you?
PILOT: My therapist told me I should apologize to you.
STEVE: For what?
PILOT: For trying to take a swing at you.
STEVE: You didn’t hit me though.
PILOT: Still, I tried. I”m sorry about that.
STEVE: Don’t worry about it.
PILOT: I heard you can’t get coffee over there anymore?
STEVE: At least for now. They think I’m racist.
PILOT [nodding]
STEVE: What can you do? I think if there were some masculine version fo Hello Kitty a lot of this could have been avoided.
PILOT [opens mouth, then closes it]
STEVE: I think it’s just a gender thing.
PILOT: Whatever you say. Hey, I just wanted to give you this and tell you how sorry I am about what happened.
[Hands STEVE an envelope]
STEVE: What’s this?
PILOT: Just a little something something.
STEVE: A plane ticket?
PILOT: [Shrugs] See ya. [Walks out]
NIALL: WHere’s it to?
STEVE: Anywhere.
SCENE 7:
[On a random dock on a random lake in a random part of North America]
STEVE [casting his Hello KItty fishing pole]: Maybe Smurfs are the answer.
MIKE [Changing his lure] What’s the question?
SCOTT: There is no answer.
MIKE: I have an extra pole if you want to fish SCOTT.
SCOTT [shrugs and then looks at STEVE]: How was Paris?
STEVE [Turns to the space between the Camera and Heaven] Every place is really no better or worse than any other place. This is difficult for most people to accept, but it is a fact. There is nothing intrinsically better about one location in spacetime over another.
SCOTT: You do know you’re not on TV, right?
MIKE: I don’t think he thinks he’s on TV, I think he thinks he’s God.
STEVE: Paris was fine. I think I learned something important.
SCOTT: Oh God.
MIKE: What?
STEVE: Smurfs are the masculine Hello Kitty.
SCOTT: Why is that important?
STEVE: It answers some of my questions about gender roles in modern society.
MIKE: What questions?
SCOTT: Why would you ask that?
MIKE [shrugging loudly]
STEVE: I think smurfs represent the violence inherent in masculine identity, where Hello Kitty exposes the peaceful nature of the feminine.
SCOTT: Dude, smurfs are not violent.
MIKE: He’s right.
STEVE [Turns to the space between heaven and the camera] Clearly they’re not comfortable with their sexuality.
[the giant fish whirls in front of the dock]
MIKE & SCOTT stare at the fish as STEVE casts again.
[THEME MUSIC AND CREDITS ROLL]