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David Letterman Remembers Robin Williams

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    (applause)
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    (Letterman) Thank you,
    I guess a lot of us,
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    most of us, have been
    thinking about Robin Williams.
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    I believe we found out a week ago
    that he had died.
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    Many things come to mind
    in a situation like this,
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    and, of course, more questions are
    raised than can possibly be answered,
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    but I started reflecting about it.
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    I knew Robin Williams for 38 years.
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    38 years, which, in and of itself,
    is crazy how time...
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    (applause)
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    And I met him at The Comedy Store.
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    He and I were kids, along with myself
    and Jay Leno, and Tom Dreesen
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    and Tim Thomerson, and Johnny Dark,
    and Elayne Boosler,
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    and on and on, and Jimmy Walker.
    And we were all out there
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    at The Comedy Store and we wanted
    to make people laugh.
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    We wanted to get on the Tonight show,
    we wanted something because
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    we all felt that we were funny.
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    In those days, we were working
    for free drinks--
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    some were working
    for more free drinks than others.
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    (laughter)
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    So you would go on stage,
    and then you would do your little skits,
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    and then you would come off stage,
    and if there was a new guy
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    coming on, you'd want to stick around
    and make fun of the new guy.
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    (man) Sure.
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    Because we were all worried
    that somebody else is coming in
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    who's really funny, and then we'll have
    to go back, in my case, to Indiana.
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    - Yes.
    - (laughter)
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    And I can remember the night
    my friend George Miller
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    and I, who was a very funny comic,
    and was on this show many times,
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    we were at The Comedy Store
    and they introduced Robin Williams.
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    And, for some reason,
    in the beginning he was
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    introduced as being from Scotland.
    They said he was Scottish.
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    So now we're stumped.
    We don't know.
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    There's a Scottish guy, really,
    coming to the United States?
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    So we were feeling pretty smug
    about our position right away
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    because it's gonna be haggis
    and that kind of crap.
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    (laughter)
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    So we're relaxed.
    We're ready to go.
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    And, all of a sudden,
    he comes up on stage
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    and you know what it is.
    It's like nothing we had
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    ever seen before.
    Nothing we had ever imagined before.
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    We'd go home at night and are writing
    our little jokes about stuff,
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    and this guy comes in
    and we're like morning dew.
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    - He comes in like a hurricane.
    - Yeah.
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    And now the longer he was on stage,
    the worse we feel about ourselves.
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    (laughter)
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    And because it's not stopping!
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    And then he finishes and I thought,
    "Well, that's it. They're gonna have
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    to put an end to show business
    because what could happen after this?"
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    And then we get to see this
    night after night after night,
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    and we didn't approach him
    because we were afraid of him.
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    Honest to God.
    You though, "Holy crap!
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    There goes my chance at show business
    because of this guy from Scotland."
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    (laughter)
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    And then, like shot out of a cannon,
    he goes and he's on the Happy Day's show.
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    And then from the Happy Day's show,
    he gets to be on Mork and Mindy.
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    Now there's some structure to his life.
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    He's not at The Comedy Store every night
    because he's got an actual job.
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    (laughter)
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    So the rest of us can pretend
    that it never happened.
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    (laughter)
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    But, yet then, he goes from Mork and Mindy,
    and then he starts making movie
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    after movie after movie.
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    He's nominated four times
    for an Academy Award.
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    And it wasn't really until Paul and I
    started the NBC version of this show,
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    which, by the way,
    is still running in Mexico--
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    - It is.
    - (laughter)
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    Very popular.
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    (applause)
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    But it wasn't until then that I
    got to really know Robin Williams
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    because he would come on
    to promote movies,
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    or concerts or whatever
    he was talking about,
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    and he was always so gracious,
    and we would talk about the old times.
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    Never did he act like,
    "Oh, I knew you guys were scared
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    because I was so good."
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    And it was just a pleasure to know the guy.
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    And he was a gentleman and delightful,
    and even in the old days,
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    he was kind enough to ask me
    to appear on his Mork and Mindy show.
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    Now this is a double edged sword.
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    (laughter)
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    Because he did it only
    because he was trying
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    to help other fledgling,
    starting out comics.
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    - Makes sense.
    - Right.
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    The other side of the sword is I have
    no business being on that show.
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    I can't...I have no business
    being on this show.
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    (laughter and applause)
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    But he gave me a job!
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    In those days,
    jobs were hard to come by,
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    and there I was, and I
    was on Mork and Mindy,
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    and I can remember between
    the dress rehearsal
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    and the actual taping of the show,
    the director of the program,
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    - Howard...Howard...Howard Shore--
    - Howard Storm.
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    Storm. Howard Storm comes up to me
    and he says, "Well, you've been trying
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    all week, so this is your last chance."
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    - (laughter)
    - Oh.
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    So even to the detriment of the show,
    Robin was kind enough to invite
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    me to come on because he thought,
    "Why can't I spread this around
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    and have some of my friends
    share in my success?"
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    Which is exactly what he did.
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    He then was on our show,
    this show and the old show,
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    - a total of merely 50 times.
    - A total of 50 times?
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    - 50 times. 50 times.
    - (applause)
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    And two things would happen
    because Robin was on the program.
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    - One: I didn't have to do anything.
    - Yes.
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    (laughter)
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    All I had to do was sit here
    and watch the machine.
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    Yeah.
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    And two: People would watch.
    If they know Robin was on the show,
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    the viewership would go up
    because they wanted to see Robin.
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    And, believe me, that wasn't
    just true of television.
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    I believe that was true
    of the kind of guy he was.
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    People were drawn to him
    because of this electricity.
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    Whatever it was he radiated,
    that propelled him and powered him.
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    And then he came back
    after my heart surgery,
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    Robin was nice enough
    to come on that night
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    and it was very, very funny
    and very, very appropriate.
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    And here is a picture
    that I will now cherish,
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    even more than I had previously.
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    - There are four people right there.
    - Wow.
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    Two of which wildly funny,
    insanely funny. Two are not.
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    (laughter and applause)
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    (Letterman) The handsome woman
    there is Mitzi Shore.
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    She owned The Comedy Store.
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    We all, the three of us, worked there.
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    I think Robin and I, it'd be
    safe to say,we started there.
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    Richard Prior was already Richard Prior,
    but he would work there
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    and the guy in the middle,
    I trimmed hedges.
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    (laughter)
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    - So we would like to--
    - (applause)
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    We put together a segment
    of Robin William's appearances,
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    and moreover, more than anything,
    it will make you laugh
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    and, really, that's what we
    should take from this.
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    He could make you laugh
    under any circumstances.
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    - Here he is on our show.
    - (applause)
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    It's from the Gandhi on Ice collection!
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    (laughter)
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    Oh, god, how you doin', Mr. Williams?
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    God, Mrs. Doubtfire is very funny.
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    You know, you're much more attractive
    as an older woman.
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    (laughter)
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    - (Letterman) Hold 'em! Hold 'em!
    - Okay, I got 'em. I GOT 'EM!
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    - Alright!
    - (Williams) TAKE IT EASY, DAMMIT!
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    - Our next--
    - It's my first day on the job!
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    Aren't you glad you didn't
    see this in the surgery?
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    - "Hey, Dave! It's me!"
    - (laughter)
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    - Take it's gonna be real funny.
    - (laughter)
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    Well, you had a television show,
    Mork and Mindy.
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    - Nice.
    - And the producers,
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    for some unknown reason,
    invited me for a little thing on the show.
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    - That's right! You played a--
    - I've never seen anything.
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    I'm not bringing myself
    to watch it until tonight.
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    - You have it here?!
    - (laughter and cheering)
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    Somebody has stolen my Rolls-Royce!
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    Well, don't worry, Ellsworth.
    Losing your Rolls-Royce is a concept.
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    - Getting it back is a reality.
    - (laughter)
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    It's amazing when you win the Academy Award,
    you have about a week
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    where everyone's like,
    "Hey, Good Will Hunting! Way to go.
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    Good Will Hunting,
    Academy Award. Way to go."
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    And two weeks later, it's like,
    "Hey, Mork! How are ya'?"
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    (laughter)
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    (reflective music)
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    (applause)
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    God bless you, my friend!
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    (reflective music)
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    (applause)
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    Oh my, that's...
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    well...
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    What I will add here is
    beyond being a very talented man,
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    and a good friend,
    and a gentleman,
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    I am sorry, like everybody else,
    I had no idea that the man
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    was in pain, that the man was suffering.
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    But what a guy.
    Robin Williams.
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    - We'll be right back, ladies and gentlemen.
    - (applause)
Title:
David Letterman Remembers Robin Williams
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Video Language:
English
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Duration:
10:29

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