A hilarious celebration of lifelong female friendship Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin

Pat Mitchell: So I was thinking
about female friendship a lot,

and by the way, these two women,

I’m very honored to say,

have been my friends
for a very long time, too.

Jane Fonda: Yes we have.

PM: And one of the things
that I read about female friendship

is something that Cervantes said.

He said, “You can tell
a lot about someone,”

in this case a woman,

“by the company that she keeps.”

So let’s start with –

(Laughter)

JF: We’re in big trouble.

Lily Tomlin: Hand me one of those waters,

I’m extremely dry.

(Laughter)

JF: You’re taking up our time.

We have a very limited –

LT: Just being with her
sucks the life out of me.

(Laughter)

JF: You ain’t seen nothing yet.

Anyway – sorry.

PM: So tell me, what do you
look for in a friend?

LT: I look for someone
who has a sense of fun,

who’s audacious,

who’s forthcoming, who has politics,

who has even a small scrap
of passion for the planet,

someone who’s decent,
has a sense of justice

and who thinks I’m worthwhile.

(Laughter)

(Applause)

JF: You know, I was thinking this morning,

I don’t even know what I would do
without my women friends.

I mean it’s, “I have my friends,
therefore I am.”

LT: (Laughter)

JF: No, it’s true.

I exist because I have
my women friends. They –

You’re one of them.

I don’t know about you. But anyway –

(Laughter)

You know, they make me stronger,
they make me smarter,

they make me braver.

They tap me on the shoulder when I might
be in need of course-correcting.

And most of them are
a good deal younger than me, too.

You know? I mean, it’s nice –
LT: Thank you.

(Laughter)

JF: No, I do, I include you in that,
because listen, you know –

it’s nice to have somebody still around
to play with and learn from

when you’re getting toward the end.

I’m approaching –
I’ll be there sooner than you.

LT: No, I’m glad to have you
parallel aging alongside me.

(Laughter)

JF: I’m showing you the way.

(Laughter)

LT: Well, you are and you have.

PM: Well, as we grow older,

and as we go through
different kinds of life’s journeys,

what do you do to keep
your friendships vital and alive?

LT: Well you have to use a lot of –

JF: She doesn’t invite me over much,
I’ll tell you that.

LT: I have to use a lot of social media –

You be quiet now. And so –

(Laughter)

LT: And I look through my emails,
I look through my texts

to find my friends,

so I can answer them
as quickly as possible,

because I know they need my counsel.

(Laughter)

They need my support,

because most of my friends
are writers, or activists, or actors,

and you’re all three …

and a long string
of other descriptive phrases,

and I want to get to you
as soon as possible,

I want you to know that I’m there for you.

JF: Do you do emojis?

LT: Oh …
JF: No?

LT: That’s embarrassing.
JF: I’m really into emojis.

LT: No, I spell out my –

I spell out my words of happiness
and congratulations,

and sadness.

JF: You spell it right out –

LT: I spell it, every letter.

(Laughter)

JF: Such a purist.

You know, as I’ve gotten older,

I’ve understood more
the importance of friendships,

and so, I really make an effort

to reach out and make play dates –
not let too much time go by.

I read a lot

so, as Lily knows all too well,

my books that I like,
I send to my friends.

LT: When we knew we would be here today

you sent me a lot of books
about women, female friendships,

and I was so surprised
to see how many books,

how much research
has been done recently –

JF: And were you grateful?
LT: I was grateful.

(Laughter)

PM: And –

LT: Wait, no, it’s really important
because this is another example

of how women are overlooked,
put aside, marginalized.

There’s been very little
research done on us,

even though we volunteered lots of times.

JF: That’s for sure.

(Laughter)

LT: This is really exciting,
and you all will be interested in this.

The Harvard Medical School study has shown

that women who have
close female friendships

are less likely to develop impairments –

physical impairments as they age,

and they are likely to be seen
to be living much more vital, exciting –

JF: And longer –

LT: Joyful lives.

JF: We live five years longer than men.

LT: I think I’d trade the years for joy.

(Laughter)

LT: But the most important
part is they found –

the results were so exciting
and so conclusive –

the researchers found

that not having close female friends
is detrimental to your health,

as much as smoking or being overweight.

JF: And there’s something else, too –

LT: I’ve said my part, so …

(Laughter)

JF: OK, well, listen to my part,
because there’s an additional thing.

Because they only –
for years, decades –

they only researched men when they
were trying to understand stress,

only very recently have they researched
what happens to women when we’re stressed,

and it turns out
that when we’re stressed – women,

our bodies get flooded by oxytocin.

Which is a feel-good, calming,
stress-reducing hormone.

Which is also increased
when we’re with our women friends.

And I do think that’s one reason
why we live longer.

And I feel so bad for men
because they don’t have that.

Testosterone in men
diminishes the effects of oxytocin.

LT: Well, when you and I
and Dolly made “9 to 5” …

JF: Oh –

LT: We laughed, we did,
we laughed so much,

we found we had so much in common
and we’re so different.

Here she is, like Hollywood royalty,

I’m like a tough kid from Detroit,

[Dolly’s] a Southern kid
from a poor town in Tennessee,

and we found we were so in sync as women,

and we must have –

we laughed – we must have added
at least a decade onto our lifespans.

JF: I think – we sure
crossed our legs a lot.

(Laughter)

If you know what I mean.

LT: I think we all know what you mean.

(Laughter)

PM: You’re adding decades
to our lives right now.

So among the books that Jane
sent us both to read on female friendship

was one by a woman we admire greatly,
Sister Joan Chittister,

who said about female friendship

that women friends
are not just a social act,

they’re a spiritual act.

Do you think of your friends as spiritual?

Do they add something
spiritual to your lives?

LT: Spiritual – I absolutely think that.

Because – especially people
you’ve known a long time,

people you’ve spent time with –

I can see the spiritual
essence inside them,

the tenderness, the vulnerability.

There’s actually kind of a love,
an element of love in the relationship.

I just see deeply into your soul.

PM: Do you think that, Jane –

LT: But I have special powers.

JF: Well, there’s all kinds of friends.

There’s business friends,
and party friends,

I’ve got a lot of those.

(Laughter)

But the oxytocin-producing
friendships have …

They feel spiritual
because it’s a heart opening, right?

You know, we go deep. And –

I find that I shed tears a lot
with my intimate friends.

Not because I’m sad but because
I’m so touched and inspired by them.

LT: And you know one of you
is going to go soon.

(Laughter)

PM: Well, two of us are sitting here,
Lily, which one are you talking about?

(Laughter)

And I always think, when women
talk about their friendships,

that men always look a little mystified.

What are the differences, in your opinion,

between men friendships
and women friendships?

JF: There’s a lot of difference,

and I think we have to have
a lot of empathy for men –

(Laughter)

that they don’t have what we have.

Which I think may be why they die sooner.

(Laughter)

I have a lot of compassion for men,

because women, no kidding, we –

women’s relationships, our friendships
are full disclosure, we go deep.

They’re revelatory.

We risk vulnerability –
this is something men don’t do.

I mean how many times
have I asked you, “Am I doing OK?”

“Did I really screw up there?”

PM: You’re doing great.

(Laughter)

JF: But I mean, we ask questions like that

of our women friends,

and men don’t.

You know, people describe women’s
relationships as face-to-face,

whereas men’s friendships
are more side-by-side.

LT: I mean most of the time
men don’t want to reveal their emotions,

they want to bury deeper feelings.

I mean, that’s the general,
conventional thought.

They would rather go off in their man cave
and watch a game or hit golf balls,

or talk about sports,
or hunting, or cars or have sex.

I mean, it’s just the kind of –
it’s a more manly behavior.

JF: You meant –
LT: They talk about sex.

I meant they might have sex

if they could get somebody
in their man cave to –

(Laughter)

JF: You know something, though,
that I find very interesting –

and again, psychologists didn’t know this
until relatively recently –

is that men are born every bit
as relational as women are.

If you look at films
of newborn baby boys and girls,

you’ll see the baby boys
just like the girls,

gazing into their mother’s eyes,

you know, needing that relational
exchange of energy.

When the mother looks away,
they could see the dismay on the child,

even the boy would cry.

They need relationship.

So the question is why,
as they grow older, does that change?

And the answer is patriarchal culture,

which says to boys and young men

that to be needing of relationship,
to be emotional with someone is girly.

That a real man doesn’t ask
directions or express a need,

they don’t go to doctors if they feel bad.

They don’t ask for help.

There’s a quote that I really like,

“Men fear that becoming ‘we’
will erase his ‘I’.”

You know, his sense of self.

Whereas women’s sense of self
has always been kind of porous.

But our “we” is our saving grace,

it’s what makes us strong.

It’s not that we’re better than men,

we just don’t have
our masculinity to prove.

LT: And, well –

JF: That’s a Gloria Steinem quote.

So we can express our humanity –
LT: I know who Gloria Steinem is.

JF: I know you know who she is,
but I think it’s a –

(Laughter)

No, but it’s a great quote, I think.

We’re not better than men, we just
don’t have our masculinity to prove.

And that’s really important.

LT: But men are
so inculcated in the culture

to be comfortable in the patriarchy.

And we’ve got to make
something different happen.

JF: Women’s friendships
are like a renewable source of power.

LT: Well, that’s what’s exciting
about this subject.

It’s because our friendships –

female friendships
are just a hop to our sisterhood,

and sisterhood can be
a very powerful force,

to give the world –

to make it what it should be –

the things that humans desperately need.

PM: It is why we’re talking about it,

because women’s friendships are,

as you said, Jane,

a renewable source of power.

So how do we use that power?

JF: Well, women are the fastest growing
demographic in the world,

especially older women.

And if we harness our power,
we can change the world.

And guess what? We need to.

(Applause)

And we need to do it soon.

And one of the things
that we need to do –

and we can do it as women –

for one thing, we kind of set
the consumer standards.

We need to consume less.

We in the Western world
need to consume less

and when we buy things, we need to
buy things that are made locally,

when we buy food, we need to buy food
that’s grown locally.

We are the ones
that need to get off the grid.

We need to make ourselves
independent from fossil fuels.

And the fossil fuel companies –

the Exxons and the Shell Oils
and those bad guys –

cause they are –

are going to tell us that we can’t do it
without going back to the Stone Age.

You know, that the alternatives
just aren’t quite there yet,

and that’s not true.

There are countries in the world right now

that are living mostly on renewable
energy and doing just fine.

And they tell us that if we do
wean ourselves from fossil fuel

that we’re going to be
back in the Stone Age,

and in fact, if we begin
to use renewable energy,

and not drill in the Arctic,
and not drill –

LT: Oh, boy.

JF: And not drill
in the Alberta tar sands –

Right.

That we will be –

there will be more democracy
and more jobs and more well-being,

and it’s women that are
going to lead the way.

LT: Maybe we have the momentum
to start a third-wave feminist movement

with our sisterhood around the world,

with women we don’t see,
women we may never meet,

but we join together that way,

because –

Aristotle said –

most people –

people would die without male friendships.

And the operative word here was “male.”

Because they thought that friendships
should be between equals

and women were not considered equal –

JF: They didn’t think
we had souls even, the Greeks.

LT: No, exactly. That shows you
just how limited Aristotle was.

(Laughter)

And wait, no, here’s the best part.

It’s like, you know,
men do need women now.

The planet needs women.

The US Constitution needs women.

We are not even in the Constitution.

JF: You’re talking about
the Equal Rights Amendment.

LT: Right.

Justice Ginsberg said something like –

every constitution that’s been written
since the end of World War II

included a provision that made women
citizens of equal stature,

but ours does not.

So that would be a good place to start.

Very, very mild –

JF: Right.

(Applause)

And gender equality, it’s like a tide,

it would lift all boats, not just women.

PM: Needing new role models
on how to do that.

How to be friends,

how to think about our power
in different ways,

as consumers,

as citizens of the world,

and this is what makes Jane and Lily

a role model of how
women can be friends –

for a very long time,

and even if they occasionally disagree.

Thank you.

Thank you both.

(Applause)

JF: Thanks.

LT: Thank you.

JF: Thank you.

(Applause)

Pat Mitchell:所以我一直在
思考女性友谊

,顺便说一句,

我很荣幸地说,这两位女性

也是我
很长时间以来的朋友。

简方达:是的,我们有。

PM:
我读到的关于女性友谊

的一件事是塞万提斯所说的。

他说,“你可以通过她所拥有的公司来
讲述一个人,”

在这种情况下是一个

女人。

所以让我们开始——

(笑声)

JF:我们遇到了大麻烦。

莉莉·汤姆林:给我一杯水,

我很干。

(笑声)

JF:你占用了我们的时间。

我们有一个非常有限的——

LT:光是和她
在一起就会让我失去生命。

(笑声)

JF:你什么都没看到。

无论如何——对不起。

PM:那么告诉我,你
在朋友身上寻找什么?

LT:我寻找
一个有趣的人,

大胆的

人,积极的人,有政治意识的

人,甚至
对地球有一点热情的

人,正派的人,
有正义感

并且认为我是 值得。

(笑声)

(掌声)

JF:你知道,我今天早上在想,

我什至不知道
没有我的女性朋友我会做什么。

我的意思是,“我有我的朋友,
所以我在。”

LT:(笑声)

JF:不,这是真的。

我存在是因为我有
我的女性朋友。 他们——

你是他们中的一员。

我不知道你。 但无论如何——

(笑声)

你知道,它们让我更强大,
它们让我更聪明,

它们让我更勇敢。

当我可能需要纠正路线时,他们会拍拍我的肩膀

他们中的大多数人
也比我年轻很多。

你懂? 我的意思是,这很好–
LT:谢谢。

(笑声)

JF:不,我愿意,我把你也包括在内,
因为听着,你知道——

当你接近尾声时,有人还在
身边玩耍和学习是件好事

我快到了——
我会比你早到。

LT:不,我很高兴你能
和我一起衰老。

(笑声)

JF:我在给你指路。

(笑声)

LT:嗯,你是而且你有。

PM:嗯,随着年龄的增长

,随着我们经历
不同类型的人生旅程,

你会做些什么来让
你的友谊保持活力和活力?

LT:嗯,你必须使用很多——

JF:她不会邀请我太多,
我会告诉你的。

LT:我必须使用很多社交媒体——

你现在安静点。 所以–

(笑声)

LT:我翻阅我的电子邮件,
翻阅我的

短信寻找我的朋友,

所以我可以尽快回复他们

因为我知道他们需要我的建议。

(笑声)

他们需要我的支持,

因为我的大多数朋友
都是作家、活动家或演员,

而你们都是三个……

还有
一长串其他描述性的短语

,我想尽快找到你
可能,

我想让你知道我在你身边。

JF:你做表情符号吗?

LT:哦……
JF:没有?

LT:这很尴尬。
JF:我真的很喜欢表情符号。

LT:不,我拼出我的——

我拼出我的幸福
、祝贺

和悲伤的话。

JF: 你把它拼出来——

LT: 我拼出来,每一个字母。

(笑声)

JF:真是个纯粹主义者。

你知道,随着年龄的增长,我越来越

了解
友谊的重要性

,所以,我真的很努力

去接触和约会——
不要让太多的时间过去。

我读了很多书

,正如莉莉非常清楚的

那样,我喜欢的书,
我会寄给我的朋友。

LT:当我们知道我们今天会在这里时,

你给我寄了很多
关于女性、女性友谊的书

,我很惊讶
地看到最近有多少书,做

了多少研究
——

JF:你感激吗?
LT:我很感激。

(笑声)

PM:而且–

LT:等等,不,这真的很重要,
因为这是另一个

女性被忽视、
搁置、边缘化的例子。

尽管我们自愿做了很多次,但对我们的研究很少。

JF:那是肯定的。

(笑声)

LT:这真的很令人兴奋
,你们都会对此感兴趣。

哈佛医学院的研究

表明,与女性有
亲密友谊

的女性不太可能出现障碍——

随着年龄的增长,身体会出现障碍,

而且她们很可能被
认为生活得更有活力、更令人兴奋——

JF:而且时间更长—— -

LT:快乐的生活。

JF:我们比男人多活五年。

LT:我想我会用岁月换取快乐。

(笑声)

LT:但最重要的
部分是他们发现

——结果是如此令人兴奋
和如此确凿

——研究人员

发现没有亲密的女性
朋友对你的健康有害,

就像吸烟或超重一样。

JF: 还有其他的——

LT: 我已经说了我的部分,所以…

(笑声)

JF: 好吧,听我说,
因为还有一个额外的东西。

因为他们只是——
多年来,几十年——

他们
只在试图理解压力时研究男性,

直到最近他们才研究
女性在压力下会发生什么

,结果
证明当我们压力时—— - 女人,

我们的身体被催产素淹没了。

这是一种感觉良好、镇静、
减压的荷尔蒙。

当我们和女性朋友在一起时,这种情况也会增加。

我确实认为这是
我们寿命更长的原因之一。

我为男人感到难过,
因为他们没有。

男性的睾酮
降低了催产素的作用。

LT:嗯,当你和我
以及多莉制作“9 比 5”时……

JF:哦–

LT:我们笑了,我们笑了,
我们笑了很多,

我们发现我们有很多共同点
,我们是如此 不同的。

她在这里,就像好莱坞的皇室成员,

我就像一个来自底特律的坚强孩子,

[多莉的]
来自田纳西州一个贫穷小镇的南方孩子

,我们发现我们作为女性是如此同步,

而且我们必须——

我们笑了 ——
我们的寿命肯定增加了至少十年。

JF:我认为——我们确实
经常交叉双腿。

(笑声)

如果你明白我的意思。

LT:我想我们都知道你的意思。

(笑声)

PM:你
现在给我们的生活增加了几十年。

所以在简
寄给我们读的关于女性友谊

的书中,有一本我们非常敬佩的女人,
琼·奇蒂斯特修女,

她谈到女性友谊时

说,女性
朋友不仅仅是一种社会行为,

它们是一种精神行为。

你认为你的朋友是属灵的吗?

他们是否
为你的生活增添了一些精神上的东西?

LT:精神上的——我绝对这么认为。

因为——尤其是
你认识很久的

人,和你共度时光的人——

我能看到
他们内心的精神本质

,温柔,脆弱。

实际上有一种爱,
一种爱的元素。

我只是深入你的灵魂。

PM:你这么认为吗,Jane–

LT:但我有特殊的能力。

JF:嗯,有各种各样的朋友。

有商业朋友
和派对朋友,

我有很多。

(笑声)

但是产生催产素的
友谊…

他们感到精神,
因为这是一个心灵的开放,对吧?

你知道,我们深入。 而且——

我发现
我和亲密的朋友经常流泪。

不是因为我难过,而是因为
我深受他们的感动和启发。

LT:而且你知道你们中的一个人
很快就会离开。

(笑声)

PM:嗯,我们两个坐在这里,
莉莉,你说的是哪一个?

(笑声)

而且我一直认为,当女人
谈论她们的友谊时

,男人总是看起来有点神秘。

在您看来,

男性友谊
和女性友谊之间有什么区别?

JF:有很多不同

,我认为我们必须
对男人有很多同情——

(笑声

)他们没有我们所拥有的。

我认为这可能是他们死得更快的原因。

(笑声)

我对男人很有同情心,

因为女人,不开玩笑,我们——

女人的关系,我们的友谊
是完全公开的,我们深入。

它们很有启发性。

我们冒着脆弱的风险——
这是男人不会做的事情。

我的意思是
我问过你多少次,“我还好吗?”

“我真的搞砸了吗?”

PM:你做得很好。

(笑声)

JF:但我的意思是,我们会问

女性朋友这样的问题,

而男性不会。

你知道,人们将女性的
关系描述为面对面的关系,

而男性的
友谊更多地是肩并肩的。

LT:我的意思是大多数时候
男人不想暴露他们的情绪,

他们想埋葬更深的感情。

我的意思是,这是普遍的、
传统的想法。

他们宁愿去他们的男人
洞里看比赛或打高尔夫球,

或谈论运动,
或打猎,或汽车或做爱。

我的意思是,这只是一种 -
这是一种更男子气概的行为。

JF:你的意思是——
LT:他们谈论性。

我的意思是,

如果他们能
在他们的男人洞穴里找人,他们可能会发生性关系——

(笑声)

JF:不过,你知道一些
我觉得很有趣的事情——

再说一次,心理学家直到最近才知道这一点
——

是男人生来
就和女人一样有关系。

如果你看
刚出生的男婴和女婴的电影,

你会看到男婴
就像女孩一样,

凝视着他们母亲的眼睛,

你知道,需要这种关系性
的能量交换。

当母亲移开视线时,
他们可以看到孩子的沮丧,

甚至男孩也会哭。

他们需要关系。

所以问题是
,为什么随着年龄的增长,这种情况会发生变化?

答案是父权文化

,它对男孩和年轻男人

说,需要关系,
与某人有感情是少女感。

真正的男人不会问
路或表达需求,

如果他们感觉不好,他们不会去看医生。

他们不寻求帮助。

有一句话我很喜欢,

“男人害怕成为‘我们’
会抹去他的‘我’。”

你知道,他的自我意识。

而女性的自我意识
一直是多孔的。

但我们的“我们”是我们的救命之恩,

它让我们变得强大。

不是我们比男人强,

我们只是
没有阳刚之气来证明。

LT:而且,嗯–

JF:这是格洛丽亚·斯泰纳姆的名言。

所以我们可以表达我们的人性——
LT:我知道 Gloria Steinem 是谁。

JF:我知道你知道她是谁,
但我认为这是一个——

(笑声)

不,但这是一个很棒的引述,我认为。

我们并不比男人好,我们只是
没有我们的男子气概来证明。

这真的很重要。

LT:但是男人
在文化中如此受灌输,以至于

在父权制中感到自在。

我们必须让
一些不同的事情发生。

JF:女性的
友谊就像一种可再生的能量来源。

LT:嗯,这就是这个主题令人兴奋的地方

这是因为我们的友谊——

女性友谊
只是我们姐妹情谊的一个跳跃

,姐妹情谊可以成为
一种非常强大的力量,

给世界

——让它成为它应该的样子——

人类迫切需要的东西。

PM:这就是我们谈论它的

原因,因为

正如你所说,女性的友谊是

一种可再生的能量来源。

那么我们如何使用这种力量呢?

JF:嗯,女性是世界上增长最快的
人口,

尤其是老年女性。

如果我们利用我们的力量,
我们可以改变世界。

你猜怎么着? 我们要。

(掌声

)我们需要尽快做。

我们需要做的一

件事——作为女性,我们可以做到

——一方面,我们设定
了消费者标准。

我们需要减少消费。

我们在西方世界
需要减少消费

,当我们购买东西时,我们需要
购买当地制造的东西,

当我们购买食物时,我们需要购买
当地种植的食物。

我们
是需要脱离电网的人。

我们需要使自己
独立于化石燃料。

化石燃料公司

——埃克森和壳牌石油公司
以及那些坏人——

因为他们是

——会告诉我们,如果不回到石器时代,我们就无法做到

你知道,替代品
还没有完全出现

,这不是真的。

现在世界上有些国家

主要依靠可再生
能源生活并且做得很好。

他们告诉我们,如果我们真的
摆脱化石燃料

,我们将
回到石器时代

,事实上,如果我们
开始使用可再生能源,

而不是在北极钻探,
而不是钻探——

LT:哦,孩子。

JF: 不要
在艾伯塔省的焦油砂中

钻探——对。

我们将会——

会有更多的民主
、更多的工作和更多的福祉,

而女性
将引领潮流。

LT:也许我们有动力

与我们在世界各地的姐妹会一起发起第三波女权主义运动,

与我们看不见的
女性,我们可能永远不会遇到的女性

一起,但我们以这种方式团结在一起,

因为——

亚里士多德说——

大多数人——

如果没有男性友谊,人们就会死去。

这里的关键词是“男性”。

因为他们认为友谊
应该是平等的

,女性不被认为是平等的——

JF:他们甚至不认为
我们有灵魂,希腊人。

LT:不,确切地说。 这向你展示
了亚里士多德是多么的有限。

(笑声

) 等等,不,这是最好的部分。

就像,你知道的,
现在男人确实需要女人。

这个星球需要女性。

美国宪法需要女性。

我们甚至不在宪法中。

JF:你说的
是平等权利修正案。

LT:对。

金斯伯格大法官说过类似的话——自二战结束以来

制定的每一部宪法都

包括一项规定女性
公民具有同等地位的条款,

但我们的宪法没有。

所以这将是一个很好的起点。

非常非常温和——

JF:对。

(掌声)

还有性别平等,就像潮水一样,

它会掀起所有的船,而不仅仅是女性。

PM:需要新的榜样
来说明如何做到这一点。

如何成为朋友,

如何以不同的方式思考我们的力量

作为消费者,

作为世界公民

,这就是让简和莉莉

成为
女性如何成为朋友的榜样的原因——

在很长一段时间内,

以及 即使他们偶尔不同意。

谢谢你。

谢谢你俩。

(掌声)

JF:谢谢。

LT:谢谢。

JF:谢谢。

(掌声)