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(knocks on door, dog barks)
>> ALMA: Who is that, huh?
Who is it?
It's your brother.
(kissing)
I was going through pictures,
and I wanted you to see some.
>> DONNIE: Paul is the first
Wahlberg to graduate from high
school.
I'm the second to graduate from
high school.
And as the eighth of nine kids,
he was a role model for me.
>> ALMA: That was Easter
picture.
Nobody wanted to get dressed up.
>> PAUL: Well, it's all hand-me-
downs.
>> ALMA: I beg your pardon.
School clothes were hand-me-
downs, Easter we'd take out
a loan.
>> PAUL: Yeah, from a loan
shark, probably.
>> ALMA: (laughs) Once that was
from a loan shark, yeah.
>> PAUL: I'm sure.
>> ALMA: Yeah, it was.
We had nothing.
Um, I don't know if they knew
they had nothing, but I didn't,
I didn't feel that way.
I thought we had everything.
>> PAUL: Which one is this?
>> ALMA: That's Mark when he
was doing The Perfect Storm.
>> PAUL: Oh, my goodness.
>> ALMA: We were up in
Gloucester.
I want to meet George Clooney.
>> PAUL: Oh, that's right, so
I'm sure you just raced right up
there.
>> ALMA: That's why I went.
>> MARK: She's such an amazing
person, she has so much to
offer, and she's a Wahlberg,
she's a ham.
I mean, just between you and I,
off camera, you guys are all
(bleep).
She's gonna run all you (bleep)
into the ground.
>> ALMA: My three favorite sons.
>> PAUL: Yeah, but in varying
degrees, in varying order.
>> ALMA: Paul, you know you're
my favorite.
>> PAUL: Yeah, because I'm in
the room.
>> ALMA: No, no, no, no.
You are my favorite.
>> PAUL: We'll see.
The funny thing with my mother
is she will always say,
"Of course you're my favorite."
As soon as someone puts the
screws to you, "No, no, no,
you're my favorite now."
>> DONNIE: If you put her on
a lie detector test, there will
only be one favorite.
Me.
>> PAUL: I think you just use
this as a ploy because you want
the people who aren't your
favorites at the time, they have
to work harder and treat you
better.
>> ALMA: I got one of them
coming to me, "You said I was
your favorite.
How come he's saying you said he
was the favorite?"
Whatever... (laughs)
>> PAUL: Growing up in
Dorchester, Massachusetts, there
were nine of us kids under one
roof.
All of my friends were like,
"Oh, you know, this is a middle
class neighborhood."
I'm like, "There's no middle
class-- we're-we're poor."
>> ALMA: 5:00 was dinnertime.
>> DONNIE: That was the one time
of day when we'd know we'd all
be together.
>> ALMA: It used to be,
"Aw, God, those Wahlberg kids."
And today, it's, "Whoa!
It's the Wahlbergs."
>> PAUL: How are you?
My mission in life was always to
open my own restaurant.
Being in business with my
brothers was never the plan.
>> WOMAN: Mark! Mark!
Donnie!
>> PAUL: Tots are up!
>> MARK: My brother is the star.
He's the chef, he's the one that
I always say is the most
talented in the family.
>> PAUL: I love burgers, so we
changed our old dinner table
into our family business.
>> MARK: It always comes down to
family and having each other's
back.
>> DONNIE: We want to conquer
this together, and we're up for
the challenge.
>> PAUL: This is our family,
our story and our burgers.
(indistinct chatter)
(man yelling)
>> PAUL: I want this food to
come out fast and furious.
All right, thanks, guys.
I love burgers.
Just that greasy, cheesy, some
fries and a Coke--
I'm a happy guy.
Having this opportunity to open
a burger restaurant was just
picture perfect for me.
The hard part is that I've got
Mark up in California doing his
thing, I got Donnie in New York
doing his thing, but I'm here
every day.
I'm the one that it falls on to
make sure that everything is
running smoothly.
Form all the burgers 'cause you
want to do one step after
another-- boom, boom, boom.
Every single burger that goes
out reminds me of who we are
and where we came from.
>> DONNIE: When we were kids, we
always had meals together, the
nine of us.
There were a lot of mouths to
feed and a lot of bills to pay
and it wasn't always easy,
so my father would make burgers.
When he would make those
burgers, the whole house would
smell like the sizzling ground
beef.
All of what is in this
restaurant really comes from
those days.
When you look in the restaurant,
it tells a story, you know,
we're, you know, from
Dorchester, triple decker, the
map, so you see the journey that
we've been on, and it's really
an American story.
Hello, ladies.
I got to go across the street.
Wahlburgers isn't the
first restaurant we opened as a
family.
Mark, Donnie and I, we opened
Alma Nove.
Alma's my mother's name and
Nove's Italian for "nine" for
her nine children.
Not only is the restaurant named
after my mother, she works
there.
>> WOMAN: Is there a spot
available at the bar?
>> ALMA: Absolutely.
I love meeting people.
I love it when they come in, and
I greet them, and I'll take
them to their table.
>> WOMAN: Are you Alma?
>> ALMA: I am.
Now they come in and ask for me.
How good does that feel?
I love it.
Well, then I'll sit with yous
then, for a minute.
>> DONNIE: None of us do
anything without our mom's
backing.
She is the matriarch
of this family.
She is...
she's the guiding light, man.
>> WOMAN 2: So, rumor has it
you have nine children.
>> ALMA: Yes.
Like me, don't like me,
whatever.
I don't have to be any certain
way for anybody anymore.
I can just be me.
(laughter)
Which is usually a little on the
nutty side, but I don't care.
>> WOMAN: Where's Paul today?
Running around like crazy like
he always is?
(laughs)
>> ALMA: He makes me tired.
I'll be up at the hostess
station and here he comes...
whizzing across the street from
Wahlburgers.
Oh, my God, back and forth, back
and forth, back and forth.
He never stops.
And I'm like, "Paul, when do you
sleep?"
He's going across the street,
he's picking papers up all the
way across the street.
There's empty boxes, he's
picking them all up.
>> PAUL: Do we have a plunger?
>> ALMA: Next thing he's
plunging the sink.
>> PAUL: Guys, make sure nothing
else goes into this hand sink.
>> ALMA: He's here, he's there,
he's up, he's down.
>> PAUL: Looking sweet.
You keep doing what you're
doing.
Tell your mom and dad I said
hello.
>> MAN: All right.
>> ALMA: He is nonstop.
>> PAUL: How was everything?
>> WOMAN: Good.
>> PAUL: Oh, excellent, great.
>> MARK: He just loves to please
his customers.
There's nobody that works harder
than him.
>> PAUL: Make sure that this
area's squared away, cleaned up.
Anything we don't need, get rid
of.
>> DONNIE: Running a restaurant
is like producing ten movies at
the same time.
>> PAUL: Watch your head, back.
>> DONNIE: You're not just
acting in the movie, you're
producing, directing.
He has to oversee everything.
We got more chowder heating.
>> MARK: He is such a worry
wart.
>> PAUL: What happened to the
mushrooms?
>> MARK: Every time I see him,
he usually ages a couple of
years every couple of months.
>> ALMA: He needs somebody, I
think, to take some of the load
off of him.
Paul, Paul!
Where are you going?
>> PAUL: I'll catch up in a bit.
I'll be back.
>> ALMA: All right.
>> PAUL: Yup.
If I stop for a moment, I forget
where I was going, so I just
have to kind of, like, scoot by
her as quick as I can because
the hands are coming out.
It's like, "Come here, Paul.
Let me tell you what's
happening."
>> ALMA: See what I mean?
>> WOMAN: I do.
>> ALMA: Back and forth, back
and forth.
He needs an assistant.
He really needs somebody he can
count on, um, to assist him
in a lot of things that he
doesn't really need to be doing
all the time.
>> WOMAN: Did you run it by him?
>> ALMA: Not yet.
>> WOMAN: No?
(both laugh)
Good luck with that.
>> PAUL: Two kids burgers,
both of them with fries.
So, it's a big week coming up.
I got Donnie coming into town,
looking for new locations for
our next restaurant.
I've got Mark coming into town
for his movie premiere.
And every time one of these guys
comes into town, we try to have
a meal together.
And it's not always easy.
But it's very important because
it's gonna be my only
opportunity to speak with Mark
about these locations that we're
looking at.
>> ALMA: Hey, Paul.
>> PAUL: Oh, hey, Mom.
>> ALMA: So, is this the meat
for tomorrow?
>> PAUL: Yeah, he didn't like
the steak we had the last time.
So these are the items that are
gonna be available.
We've got tenderloin.
I got some sirloin.
>> ALMA: Mm-hmm.
>> PAUL: I've got aged rib eyes,
and I've got veal porterhouse.
>> ALMA: That's the one I want,
right there.
>> PAUL: What you want is this.
This is a prime rib eye...
>> ALMA: Paul, I want that one.
>> PAUL: It's okay.
>> ALMA: That's the one.
>> PAUL: You'll have that one.
My mother knows what she likes,
she knows what she's looking
for.
I have to deliver.
'Cause I still want to be the
favorite.
>> ALMA: You look awful tired,
Paul.
>> PAUL: I'm fine, I'm fine.
This is... it goes with the
territory.
I got to just jump through,
make it, get everything ready,
get everything squared away...
>> ALMA: I know it, but I don't
like all this on you.
>> PAUL: It's fine.
>> ALMA: That's one of the
reasons that you really need
somebody helping you out, doing
some things for you.
>> PAUL: My mother's telling me,
"You work too hard, you-you-you
need to slow down.
You need to delegate."
>> ALMA: I have the perfect girl
in mind to help you.
Look at how well it worked out,
Paul, when you brought me in.
It helped me, it helped you.
It's wonderful.
>> PAUL: Yeah, but it's named
Alma Nove.
Alma's your name.
Her name isn't Wahlburgers.
I don't know this person.
You have to let me handle it on
my... my way.
>> ALMA: He can do everything.
And I hate to say it, but I
think he got that from me.
(chuckles) Because that's
exactly how I was.
I can do it; I can do anything.
Let people help you.
>> PAUL: I know. I know.
>> ALMA: Can't do the whole
thing yourself.
He is like me.
I'm having a moment.
>> PAUL: Well, let me finish
this up.
I got Donnie coming here in a
couple of minutes.
We're supposed to go and look at
locations, and-and... my day's
never gonna end, so let me
finish up.
>> ALMA: All right, honey.
(indistinct chatter)
>> PAUL: How are you?
The first restaurant we opened
in Hingham, Massachusetts,
15 miles south of Boston.
Everything's going great, so now
the next step is opening the
next restaurant.
And where is that gonna be?
Mark and Donnie, they think that
this is something that can just
go global instantly.
I don't think they realize
exactly how much work it takes.
>> MARK: The plan was always to
build a franchise, and Paul is
very precious with every piece
of meat that he flips, every
piece of cheese that he lays
on that burger, he wants it to
be special.
But I want to build multiple
restaurants.
And the train has left
the station.
So the stakes are a lot higher.
>> PAUL: At the end of the day,
you have to deliver.
And that falls on me.
It doesn't fall on Mark,
doesn't fall on Donnie,
doesn't fall on my mother.
It falls on me.
>> DONNIE: I'm in town today to
look at some locations for a
possible second Wahlburgers.
What's up?
I inherit my mom's care
for Paul.
You doing okay?
>> PAUL: Yeah, I'm doing
all right.
>> DONNIE: You sure?
>> PAUL: Yeah.
>> ALMA: It's a lot of fun most
of the time when Donnie and Paul
are together because they give
each other the business.
>> DONNIE: How's my burger
doing?
>> PAUL: It's doing
unbelievable.
But we're gonna change it up.
>> DONNIE: What are you gonna
put up instead?
>> PAUL: A buffalo
chicken burger.
>> DONNIE: Why do you want
to change it?
You just put it up.
You just said it's doing well.
>> PAUL: It's the burger
of the month.
It lasts for a month.
At the end of the month,
we go to another burger.
>> DONNIE: January has a layover
from the holidays
and (bleep), Paul.
>> PAUL: You're absolutely
right.
Let me make it up to you.
We'll put it up. No!
End of the month, new burger!
>> DONNIE: It sells great.
It sells great, and you're
gonna take it down.
Paul, who named my burger,
anyway?
>> PAUL: I did.
>> DONNIE: Donnie's Double D,
like...
What is a Double D burger?
I like *** as much as the
next guy, but...
I don't want it to be the name
of my hamburger.
>> PAUL: It's sounds perfect:
Dorchester Donnie's burger.
>> DONNIE: Donnie's Double D...
I can't even get past
the (bleep) name.
Great, thanks, Paul.
>> PAUL: The pressure is huge
opening up the second location.
Mark wants to do his thing,
Donnie wants to do his thing.
I have to convince Mark and
Donnie that Boston is the place.
And it's gonna be very
difficult.
Boston's home.
In my heart of hearts,
that's where we belong.
>> DONNIE: There are a lot of
people out there in the city
who are hoping for our success.
But there are also people who
are hoping for our failure.
They'll be lining up to shine
light on the fact that we
opened up a restaurant with this
famous name and screwed it up
right in our home city.
You ready to go? Let's go.
>> ALMA (laughs): You never know
what's gonna happen when they're
together.
>> DONNIE: No, you can't
have any.
>> PAUL: Aw, come...
>> DONNIE: You can't have any.
You sold out on my burger.
>> PAUL: No, I didn't sell out
on anything.
>> DONNIE: Traitor. No, here.
Have a bite. I'm just teasing.
I just try to always connect
with him on a human level.
You know, it's easy to say
"Yeah, yeah, I'm doing great."
Then one day you wake up
and you're not doing great.
So we joke, we play, we tease
each other.
Did you hear that Mom said I was
her favorite?
>> PAUL: Yeah, 'cause you were
in the room.
>> DONNIE: Mm-mm.
She tells each one of us we're
her favorite, when we're in
her company.
>> ALMA: Donnie loves, loves
to tell everybody that he's
my favorite.
>> DONNIE: You press her,
she'll tell you the truth.
Donnie's her favorite.
>> ALMA: And then the whole
thing starts. (laughs)
>> DONNIE: She said it in
front of witnesses.
>> PAUL: Witnesses?
>> DONNIE: End of discussion.
>> PAUL: As long as I'm in the
conversation, that's all
that matters.
>> DONNIE: Mmm!
You were in the conversation--
as not her favorite.
(Donnie laughs)
(Donnie groans)
Hey.
>> WOMAN: Hey, Donnie,
how are you?
>> DONNIE: Good to see ya.
I thought we were gonna look
at a location in Boston.
>> WOMAN: We are!
>> DONNIE: No, this is the
(bleep) North Pole!
Paul chose the coldest day
in history to go look at these
new locations.
I'm...
>> PAUL: So, this is just
over 4,000?
>> WOMAN: It's 4,200.
>> PAUL: 4,200? If the space is
good, you can pretty much
duplicate what we have over
there, you know?
Right away, I look across the
street, there's a competitor.
I gotta tell you, though,
being directly across the street
from Tasty Burger, I just don't
know if I want to be that
second guy on the street.
I don't want to muscle in
on another location because it
just paints a bad picture
for you.
I don't know if I want to be
that guy.
>> DONNIE: There's gonna be
competition wherever we go
in the city.
>> WOMAN: Right, right.
>> DONNIE: So to have sympathy
for another business is
not really a reason to not
open our business.
Paul doesn't want to open within
500 miles of McDonalds 'cause
he doesn't want to hurt
McDonalds's feelings.
You think they would, they would
have sympathy for us?
>> PAUL: No.
>> DONNIE: They're not gonna
have sympathy for us.
They're gonna come in and
try to crush us.
We gotta get it right.
If we get it wrong,
we're screwed.
I don't want to be there
the day they're boarding up
a Wahlburgers 'cause we
rushed into the city when
we weren't ready and we
screwed this thing up.
Well, you don't love it 'cause
of that burger joint, I don't
like the foot traffic.
>> PAUL: No.
>> DONNIE: So let's just go see
the next place and let's see
how we like that.
>> PAUL: All right, let's
do that.
>> DONNIE: This is it, man.
He's got the name on the sign,
he's got me and Mark's full
backing, full participation,
but we're not crazy.
Our name's on the line.
And if he doesn't get it right,
I mean, McDonalds is
always hiring.
>> PAUL: So we've got this great
location in Hingham.
This is all gonna be
a new street.
>> WOMAN: This is all gonna be
a new street.
>> PAUL: This is all gonna be
a new streetscape...
>> WOMAN: Yep.
>> PAUL: Now it's time to find
a new location in Boston.
You know, that's the next
big step.
So we go to the second location,
iconic area, right behind
Fenway Park.
>> WOMAN: People just like
to be down here, especially
during a Yankees-Red Sox game.
You know, people are crazy.
>> PAUL: Ain't that the truth.
>> DONNIE: It's exciting to
think about being this close
to Fenway Park.
There's no greater symbol of
Boston than the Boston Red Sox.
Okay.
>> WOMAN: Now, this space
has the height fall.
>> DONNIE: So, what's the total
square footage?
>> WOMAN: It's just under 4,000.
>> DONNIE: So it's about what
we have now.
>> PAUL: Yeah. You look at the
space, it's got the great
height on the ceilings.
It just, it feels right.
What do you think?
>> DONNIE: I like it.
>> PAUL: You like it?
>> DONNIE: What do you think?
>> PAUL: I like it.
>> DONNIE: It feels like it
could be Wahlburgers.
To be close to Fenway park,
to be a part of that culture,
it raises the stakes a lot.
>> PAUL: Well, I think we should
put it on the list, and then
I'll talk to Mark about it.
>> PAUL: You can see the twinkle
in Donnie's eye.
He gets it.
But I still have to turn around
and convince Mark.
And that's gonna be the hard one
because he's already, in the
back of his mind, that this
isn't the direction that
we should go.
If we're both on board with it,
I think it's definitely
something we can talk
to him about.
>> WOMAN: I'm here to see
Paul Wahlberg.
>> HOSTESS: Okay, just one
moment.
>> WOMAN: Sure. Thank you.
>> ALMA: I met this girl Kari.
Very confident, very capable.
I set up an interview for her,
with Paul.
I think her and Paul would
get along good if he
relinquishes his full control
of everything.
>> PAUL: So, who do we got
that's coming in?
>> KARI: Hi, Paul, your mom
sent me for an interview
to be your assistant.
>> PAUL: I don't need to deal
with this right now.
But you know, you got to listen
to Mom, gotta listen to what
she says.
How do you know my mother?
>> KARI: My mother and your
mother are friends.
And my mother was talking about
how I was looking for a job,
and Alma said...
>> PAUL: So she decided...
Okay, perfect.
My mother's tenacious.
So when she brings something
to me, she wants results.
You know, "You really need
to hire someone.
You really need to hire someone.
She wants to get her way, and
I'm kind of resistant again,
because I do things my way.
I do things as I see fit.
Have you ever worked in a
restaurant?
>> KARI: I was a hostess for
a year, and that's my only
experience in a restaurant.
But at the end of the day, I'm
looking to be your assistant.
I'm looking to be the person you
would call if you need
something.
>> PAUL: I know that I have no
shot to win.
I'm not gonna do anything to
disappoint my mother.
>> KARI: I feel like I can do
this job.
>> PAUL: So, look...
>> KARI: Give me a chance.
>> PAUL: How 'bout this?
I'll give you an opportunity,
you know?
I'll do this to make my mother
happy.
We'll bring you onboard, okay?
And then we'll just kind of
figure it out.
Couple of days, couple of weeks,
if it doesn't fit, we'll just go
our separate ways, okay?
>> KARI: Sounds fair.
>> ALMA: I think she'd be
perfect to be the one to...
assist Paul.
It's getting Paul to let her
assist him is gonna be the
challenge.
>> PAUL: Boylston Street's the
way to go.
You know, it's right at Fenway
Park, it's right where, you
know, everything's happening,
during the summer especially.
>> ALMA: Yeah, I agree.
>> PAUL: The hard part is that
I've got Mark on the West Coast,
you've got Donnie in New York
and other investors, so trying
to get all of these entities
together to really, you know,
push this forward has been very,
very difficult.
Donnie loved it.
Donnie thought it was
definitely, you know, the way
to go.
It's too bad 'cause, I mean,
Donnie's got to go back to New
York and, you know, Mark comes
in.
You know how he... how he can
be.
You know, in his business, what
he says is, you know, what he
wants and what he gets.
>> ALMA: Can't imagine opening
the second one somewhere
far away.
I can't even imagine it.
>> PAUL: No.
It-it makes no sense.
>> ALMA: It doesn't... no, it
doesn't.
>> PAUL: Well, he's got all his
buddies chirping in his ear.
"Oh, we should do it here, we
should do it there."
Everybody wants to open it
somewhere.
>> ALMA: Well, we'll just chirp
louder, that's all.
You know what, Paul, we're near
Dorchester.
Let's go by the old
neighborhood.
Come on, that'd be fun.
>> PAUL: I don't think they'll
let us in there anymore.
People just... kind of shook
their heads when you mention
"Wahlberg."
>> ALMA: "All those Wahlbergs."
(chuckles)
>> PAUL: Those (bleep) damn
Wahlbergs.
>> ALMA: I used to live right up
that street.
That was my street.
I am a proud Dorchester girl.
Always have been, always will
be.
>> PAUL: That used to be my
barber shop, right there.
>> ALMA: Oh, yeah.
There's the Chinese food.
>> PAUL: Wasn't New Year's
without it.
It's great being home, because
everywhere you go, you know,
some... a memory pops into
your head.
Oh, the Carney Hospital.
How many times you have to come
up there to get me?
>> ALMA: Oh, my God, Paul...
I... too many.
>> PAUL: When I was a kid, you
know, I was an accident waiting
to happen and everybody knew it.
So you remember when I hit the
chain here, going across the
driveway?
Ended up at the Carney.
>> ALMA: Yep.
He was so clumsy.
I'd be talking to him and he'd
be walking and would walk right
into the doorframe.
>> PAUL: We were playing
football here and I fell and I
ended up getting stitches in my
hand.
>> ALMA: He would fall up the
stairs, fall down the stairs...
Accident for every occasion.
There used to be a joke at the
hospital.
The minute I walked in, they'd
say, "Oh, hey, Alma."
(laughs)
"Which one is it now?"
Um...
But it was usually Paul.
>> PAUL: During the blizzard of
'78, we were sledding down that
hill.
One kid ended up in the
hospital.
Imagine, someone had to go to
the hospital.
>> ALMA: And it wasn't you.
>> PAUL: No.
I remember when I told my mother
that I was gonna be a chef, she
cried.
>> ALMA: And I was like, "Oh,
God, Paul, please don't do
that.
Oh, my God, you're gonna burn
all your fingers or cut them
off.
Or whatever... I'm-I'm really
afraid for you."
>> DONNIE: When I was in high
school and Paul was going to
cooking school, he had these
chef jackets that were really
cool.
My buddy, uh, Danny Wood and I--
from New Kids on the Block-- we
used to borrow his cooking
jackets and wear them to high
school dances with a bow tie and
gloves, and we would, you know,
break-dance and, uh, Paul would
get pissed off 'cause, uh, I
stole his, uh, cooking clothes.
>> PAUL: Well, since we're here,
we'll go by the old house.
Love to see it.
>> ALMA: Me, too.
>> PAUL: We were living in a
triple-decker down near South
Boston.
My father plays a number with
the ***.
He wins.
First thing: "We're gettin' out
of here."
>> ALMA: We were gonna buy a
house.
That was gonna be the down
payment for a house.
>> PAUL: Holy smoke.
>> ALMA: Wow.
>> PAUL: We used to think that
this was, like, so much space.
>> ALMA: We thought we were in a
palace.
>> PAUL: So we're in the
triple-decker, everybody's
jammed in...
My parents are sleeping in the
dining room.
So we get to Mercier Ave and
we're in heaven.
>> ALMA: That was my bedroom.
That was the living room.
That was the dining room.
>> DONNIE: When we were kids,
dinnertime was... you know, it
was just a special time, I
guess.
Our family had a lot of ups and
downs.
One of us was usually locked up
or running away or something,
but the times that we could all
be together, sharing anything
positive, was, um... was always
a special time for us.
>> PAUL: We were behind there
and then our room was in the
back here.
We used to take Mark and throw
him from one bed to another and
use the wall as a backstop to
make sure he didn't fall off.
When he got older, working out,
started getting a little bigger,
you know... payback time.
>> ALMA: To me, though,
basically everything looks the
same.
I think.
>> PAUL: Not to me.
>> ALMA: So that brought back a
lot of memories, seeing it.
Most of it was really happy,
happy thoughts.
Some were sad.
That was my room, me and Dad.
>> PAUL: Yeah.
>> ALMA: And Debbie had that
room.
>> PAUL: Yep.
>> ALMA: 'Cause she was the, you
know, oldest.
>> PAUL: Yeah.
She says, you know, "There's
Debbie's room."
You know, "There's Debbie's
room."
And, um... it's hard, because I
know where she's going.
>> ALMA: If Debbie was alive,
boy, she would... she'd love to
see this.
>> PAUL: Oh, yeah.
>> ALMA: Yeah.
>> MARK: My sister passed away
the same day my daughter was
born, and you are never supposed
to bury your own child.
And she's never really been
the same.
>> ALMA: I just would not accept
the fact that she was... was
gone.
But everybody noticed, and I
eventually noticed-- I didn't
laugh anymore.
I'm telling you, Paul...
>> MARK: And she really started
to stay at home and she just
kind of started to become really
reclusive.
>> ALMA: I mean, you kept asking
me to come to work and I kept
saying "no."
>> PAUL: I know.
>> ALMA: "I don't want to, I
can't."
Whatever.
And then one day, I just said
"yes."
(laughs)
>> PAUL: That was a good day.
>> ALMA: It wasn't because you
offered me pay.
>> PAUL: I know.
>> ALMA: It was just... I said,
"I-I want to try it."
>> PAUL: I thought it would be
really good for her if she came
and worked at the restaurant.
I did really think that that
would be a good fit for her.
>> ALMA: It was the best day.
It was the best day.
It was the day I started to
come alive.
>> PAUL: Well, it was good.
>> ALMA: And I am so grateful,
Paul.
>> MARK: The restaurant is
bringing her out again, and
she's such an amazing person,
she has so much to offer to so
many people.
And now she's just flourishing.
>> ALMA: And you are the best.
>> PAUL: Thank you.
>> ALMA: Oh, love you.
>> PAUL: Love you, too.
>> ALMA: It truly brought me
back to life.
It truly was... a gift.
Yeah.
That's what Paul gave to me.
Yep, really nice.
>> PAUL: Goodness.
I know that she says all of the
nice things about what it did
for her.
But what it did for me...
>> ALMA: Thanks, honey.
>> PAUL: I needed to make that
connection.
You know, I-I don't talk about
it much, but... it's something
that I needed.
And I wanted to make happen.
And I take one last look around,
you know, remembering and having
that moment together.
Those are the moments that
matter.
Everything else is just stuff,
but having that time with my
mother where she's my mom
again-- it's really special.
(indistinct conversations)
>> KARI: Hey.
>> Hey.
>> KARI: How are you?
>> WOMAN: I'm great.
>> KARI: Yeah.
>> PAUL: My mother's telling me,
"You work too hard."
Ma being Ma, she pushes forward,
and we go ahead, and we decide
that we're gonna bring Kari on
board as an assistant.
>> KARI: You guys need me for
anything?
So, I've been working for Paul
for a couple of days now, and
it's not really going that well.
>> ALMA: How's it going with
Paul? How are you...?
>> KARI: Well, he doesn't
really talk to me.
>> ALMA: Yup.
>> KARI: And I think the only
time he realizes I'm in the
office is when he walks by it...
>> ALMA: Right.
>> KARI: ...and casually looks
in.
>> ALMA: Right.
>> KARI: And then he's, like,
"Oh, that's right.
She's in there."
I'm having a hard time breaking
through, and he's not adjusting
well to me being around.
I end up being this weirdo just
standing there.
>> ALMA: Yeah, yeah.
>> KARI: Mm-hmm.
>> ALMA: That's Paul.
>> KARI: Yeah.
>> ALMA: Yeah, absolutely.
It's unbelievable.
He makes... he makes me crazy.
>> KARI: Has he always been like
this?
>> ALMA: Yes, yes, he's always
been like that since he was a
little kid.
That's who he is.
If I was to describe him to
you...
>> KARI: Right.
>> ALMA: He's a doer.
>> KARI: Well, I'm just gonna
have to make it so I'm there
every time he turns around.
I'm pretty much just gonna cram
myself down his throat, I think.
If I have to make him angry just
so he says a few words to me,
I think that I can do that.
>> ALMA: That's okay.
>> KARI: Yeah.
>> ALMA: Absolutely.
Kari's got some edge, and when
I'm talking with her, or I'm
listening to her, I'm, like,
"I think she grew up in
Dorchester."
(laughs)
>> KARI: Here he comes now.
>> ALMA: There you go.
>> KARI: Thank you.
I'm gonna go right up there, and
I'm gonna force him to let me
help him.
Hey.
>> PAUL: Hey.
>> KARI: What are you doing?
>> PAUL: Just trying to get
through the day.
>> KARI: Yeah?
>> PAUL: I got the events coming
up, so I want to get...
>> KARI: Well, that's what I was
gonna ask you about.
Do you think that you need any
help?
>> PAUL: No, I should be fine.
>> KARI: Whenever I try to talk
to Paul, he's always looking
somewhere else.
I don't even think he knows that
I'm in front of him.
So, what do you think I should
do?
>> PAUL: I'm not sure yet.
>> KARI: Maybe...
>> PAUL: I'm trying... I'm
trying to figure that out.
She's great, but I do things the
way I know, and it's hard for me
to turn that over to someone
new.
I know it's hard for you, but,
you know, I just got to figure
it out.
>> KARI: Okay.
>> PAUL: And then, you know,
once I know, I'll let you know.
>> KARI: You will?
>> PAUL: I will.
>> KARI: All right.
>> PAUL: Wouldn't lie to you.
>> KARI: Okay.
(phone ringing)
>> You're ringing.
>> PAUL: And then, my blood goes
goes cold.
You want to do something?
Take care of these two guys.
>> MAN: Paulie!
>> KARI: And I turn around
and... Laurel and Hardy come
walking through the door.
>> Who's this beautiful lady?
>> PAUL: This is Kari.
Kari, this is Drama and this is
Nacho.
>> KARI: Hi, nice to meet you.
>> DRAMA: Yeah, you, too.
>> NACHO: Nice to meet you.
>> DRAMA: I'm Johnny Alves,
otherwise known as Johnny Drama.
I've been with the Wahlbergs
for, like, 25 years.
>> NACHO: My name's Henry Laun,
A.K.A. Nacho.
I'm a very good friend of Mark
Wahlberg's.
>> PAUL: What are you guys doing
here?
>> DRAMA: What do you mean?
It's a free country.
What do you... We came to eat,
buddy.
What are you... Come on.
>> PAUL: That's fine, but you
guys are paying for it.
No free lunches.
>> DRAMA: And I'm like, "Listen,
this is America.
I don't want anything.
I just want a nice burger, I
want a nice atmosphere and I
want a little love from you,
Paulie-- that's it, buddy."
>> PAUL: Be nice, all right?
I'll see you later.
>> DRAMA: Paulie, I'll see you
later, bro.
>> KARI: If I can prove to Paul
that I can deal with these two
lunatics, then he's got to trust
me for something.
So, I'm excited to finally meet
you guys.
Little bit of a legend around
here.
>> DRAMA: I've been with Mark
for, like... since he was 17
years old.
I was hired by Donnie to watch
Marky when he gets out of jail
'cause he was actually in jail.
>> MARK: They hired Johnny,
basically, like, babysitting me.
>> DRAMA: What I did was...
everything, from training him...
>> MARK: We'd train together,
we'd hang out.
>> DRAMA: ...to cooking, to
cleaning, to doing the laundry.
You'll ask Mark.
Cousin used to do it all.
>> KARI: You are the Drama from
Entourage?
>> DRAMA: Yeah, I'm the real
Johnny Drama.
But do you want to hear a funny
story?
>> KARI: Yeah.
>> DRAMA: When they were having
auditions...
>> KARI: Yeah.
>> DRAMA: ...they called me in,
and I didn't get the part.
(laughs)
Johnny Drama don't get Johnny
Drama?
That's crazy. I mean... dude.
Yeah, get a good laugh.
>> NACHO: He-he couldn't play
himself.
>> KARI: You didn't get the part
to be you.
Sad.
>> DRAMA: It's the biggest joke
around.
Drama couldn't get Drama.
Nobody can be Johnny Drama but
Johnny Drama.
Nobody.
>> KARI: What's your deal?
>> DRAMA: You don't know the
Extreme? Nacho?
>> NACHO: I've known Mark over
20 years.
First time I met him, he jumped
me.
Two freakin' days in the
neighborhood, I'm walking down
the street.
>> KARI: Oh.
Maybe that's the way people
greet each other in Dorchester.
>> NACHO: But after that, we
became good friends.
Nacho Extreme, the human
Dumpster.
>> MARK: I said, "Can you eat
the shell of that lobster?"
He was, "Cash is king."
>> NACHO: I've eaten lobsters in
the shell, chicken feet, cigars,
hot sauce.
Sticks of butter.
>> KARI: Sticks of butter.
Sticks of butter?
(groans)
What does that do to your
stomach?
>> DRAMA: Nothing to him.
>> KARI: Nothing?
>> KARI: Your mom must be proud.
>> ALMA: Well, well, well, well,
well, look who's here.
>> DRAMA: I love Alma.
She was the mother to all of us,
not only just to her kids, to
all the little underlings that
used to hang around.
>> ALMA: This is the week of
Mark's premiere, so I don't want
no game-playing.
>> DRAMA: No, no, no, no.
>> ALMA: None of this kind of
baloney.
>> DRAMA: Not this week.
Hey, listen, we met Kari over
here.
>> ALMA: Yes, she's wonderful,
isn't she?
>> DRAMA: How long's she been
here?
>> ALMA: Couple of days.
>> DRAMA: Nacho, 200 bucks she
don't last a week.
>> KARI: Wait, why do you have a
week on me?
>> DRAMA: Oh, no, it's nothing
personal or anything like that.
It's just the way Paul operates.
He's... I'm surprised you lasted
two days.
>> KARI: These guys are taking
bets on how long I'll last.
>> ALMA: 100 bucks that she's
here six months from now and
then on.
>> DRAMA: So I got two bets.
I got $100 from her and $200
from you.
Deal.
Rhett, how are you, honey?
Good to see you.
Can I have an ice cold draft,
honey?
>> RHETT: Great, sure.
How 'bout you?
>> NACHO: Same thing.
>> RHETT: Can I actually grab
a card?
We'll start a tab?
>> DRAMA: Card?
>> NACHO: We're family!
>> KARI: I just heard Paul.
He said you got to pay.
>> DRAMA: Are you kidding me?
>> KARI: I'm very serious.
It's not happening.
Not on my watch.
Sorry.
>> DRAMA: Oh, man, I can't stand
this already.
>> NACHO: I'm Nacho Extreme!
>> DRAMA: I hope it is two days.
>> ALMA: I was, "Yes. Great."
Boy, am I proud of you, honey.
>> KARI: Oh, well, thank you
very much.
>> ALMA: You'll be around
a long, long time.
Oh, yeah, she's gonna be great.
We need her. (chuckles)
I'll talk to you later.
>> KARI: All right, have
a good night.
>> DRAMA: Good seeing you,
my love.
>> ALMA: Okay.
>> DRAMA: Are you kidding me?
We come here, you said we got
free carte blanche.
We hold it down here at
Wahlburgers, you know what I'm
saying?
This is what we do.
We do what we do.
We bring the party, bro.
We ain't gonna pay, huh?
Come on, Nacho.
>> WOMAN: Thank you.
>> PAUL: It's the day of the
premiere.
Mark's coming into town.
The movie's two hours.
It starts at 7:30.
By 20 past 9:00, we want to be
ready to go.
For me, it's just that long
scramble to make sure that
everybody's doing what they're
supposed to be doing, having
everything in place.
They're gonna have a deejay
outside and we'll have music
inside, all right?
Thanks, guys.
>> DONNIE: In a movie, you get
take after take after take.
If you screw it up, if the
lighting isn't right, if
something's wrong, you can just
redo it.
Um, in the restaurant business,
you can't redo it.
>> PAUL: You can get these in
the walk-in.
And then I'm gonna get...
There's a few more coming over.
I've got 300 people coming in.
I've got my long list of things
that have to be accomplished,
and that falls on me.
How's it looking? Oh, beautiful.
It was a huge amount of pressure
on me because Mark's coming into
town.
They're gonna get into the
restaurant that way, correct?
All right.
If I fall on my face with this,
why would he trust me opening
another location?
I don't want to look bad.
I don't want to make the
business look bad.
I need to be ready.
This is gonna happen.
>> MAN: So, how many Cokes have
you had today?
>> PAUL: Eleven-teen.
Mark's my kid brother.
He's the baby of the family, but
when he shows up, everything
changes because the circus comes
along with him.
>> MARK: I had a hectic day in
New York doing publicity for
the movie.
And then I go rush to the
airport to get on the plane.
>> MAN: Marky.
>> MARK: How are you?
>> MAN: What's going on, man?
>> MARK: And then I'm met by my
dear childhood friend, who's
actually been able to be an
investor in the business.
It's great to see him.
Come on, we're going to
Wahlburgers.
Sparky, it's a good thing to
be... you know, that you're my
only friend that ain't, uh...
that are in jail.
>> MAN: Mark and I grew up
together.
Always got into trouble.
>> MARK: I did a bad thing
in that place.
That place used to be a stereo
store.
Anytime you saw the police
lights coming, it was somebody
in our family who was getting
arrested.
There was no such thing as
police escorts.
>> MAN: So tonight, you know,
Mark, everybody's gonna want to
talk about the second
location...
>> MARK: Okay.
>> MAN: ...of Wahlburgers, so...
>> MARK: I don't mind talking
about second location, but I'm
not... I'm not going for any
okeydoke, dude.
I'm adamant about finding the
key location.
We've had offers to go
everywhere-- Dubai, Abu Dhabi,
you know, Vegas, airports...
I'm not, you know, that "one
burger at a time" guy.
I want to build multiple
locations and build a business.
How's Paul doing in-in this?
>> MAN: I got him covered.
>> PAUL: So, if we get... Let's
get everybody together.
We'll grab everybody and we'll
go through a quick breakdown.
>> MARK: Is he calm?
>> MAN: He's Paul.
>> PAUL: So, tonight it's gonna
play out like this.
The movie's gonna start at 7:30.
It's about a two-hour movie.
In that time, we're gonna get
everything squared away.
At 9:30, this place is gonna
fill up.
We got 300 people coming in.
>> MARK: He stresses over every
single thing that goes out of
the kitchen.
>> PAUL: A lot of people, this
is the first time they've been
in the restaurant, so we want to
make sure that we make them
happy and they know what we're
all about.
It's gonna get hectic, it's
gonna get chaotic.
>> MAN: Can you see sweat
pouring down him?
>> MARK: Oh, I see him aging ten
years in two hours.
>> PAUL: Mark's on his way,
Billy went to pick him up.
>> ALMA: Good.
>> PAUL: They should be here
probably in the next 20 minutes.
>> ALMA: Mark comes to town, he
knows... he's got to come and
see his mother.
>> MARK: I can't wait to see my
mother, but there's a 99.9%
chance that she's gonna just
tear into me for one reason or
another.
>> PAUL: No, he's, like, three
minutes away.
I just spoke to him.
He'll be at Wahlburgers in a
couple of minutes.
>> BILLY: Mark, do you want me
to go with you?
What do you want me to do?
>> MARK: Well, I don't know.
We'll figure it out.
>> BILLY: You tell me.
>> MARK: Let's just wave for
everybody. Hi.
>> MAN: We're getting let out
back by the theaters, back by
the theaters...
>> MARK: Yeah, and then
we'll go over to Wahlburgers.
We'll get everything done here
and then we'll go.
>> BILLY: One minute I'm in the
SUV having a quiet moment on the
way here with Mark like he's no
movie star.
SUV pulls up, we jump out and
it's, like, bam.
(crowd cheering)
The crowd just swarms him and,
uh, I'm just standing back, left
going, "Oh, here we go."
>> PAUL: Hello? Where's Mark?
The only thing on my mind is the
one shot that I have to make
this pitch to Mark that Boston's
the place.
You know, he gets... he gets
lost.
But he's doing his job.
He's working the crowd.
He's doing all the things that
are important for him.
I don't know if he's gonna have
time for me, and that's really
gonna be frustrating.
Did you see him?
>> ALMA: All these people and
here he comes, and I can't even
get near him.
I would love to just be able to
have that moment, and then I'll
go about my business.
>> MARK: Did you get it?
>> WOMAN: Yes, thank you.
>> MARK: Okay. Uh, cool.
Let me go see my brother.
>> PAUL: I'm standing there and
I get... I look over, he looks
at me and we have that moment,
we have that connection, and
that's the best part of the day.
Everything else just falls by
the wayside.
>> MARK: You're eerily calm
right now.
The king of all stress has this
eerie calm about him.
I don't know how long it's gonna
last, but how are you?
Can I get a hug and a kiss from
my mother?
>> ALMA: Mmm!
>> MARK: I love you.
I know your favorite son is
here, but I'm the baby.
I get no attention anymore.
No love.
Like you took the baba and
binky away, and now you give it
to him.
>> ALMA: Oh, oh.
Mark's still the baby.
I used to call him Monkey,
because he had this raggedy
monkey that he would not let me
throw away.
>> MARK: I love you.
>> ALMA: Love you, too.
Mwah!
>> MARK: I was the favorite, I
was the baby when I was in
trouble.
Now, all of a sudden, Paul?
What-what... what the (bleep)
did he do to become the
favorite, you know?
You ready for tonight?
You excited?
>> PAUL: Yeah. Yeah,
everything's good.
>> MARK: When the movie's going,
though, can I go eat at Alma
Nove?
>> PAUL: Yeah, you're all set.
>> MARK: We'll go talk over
there?
>> PAUL: Yeah. We'll talk over
there, I got the menus all set.
>> MARK: Okay.
>> PAUL: We do the screenings of
these movies.
Mark's seen the movie 15 times
already, but he knows that it's
an opportunity for us to all sit
down and have a meal together,
which is really important to us.
>> MARK: I need something super
healthy, but I need food.
>> PAUL: For Mark, it's a chance
to relax and have dinner, but
I've got to make this pitch.
This is my one shot to convince
him that Boston is the next
logical step, because if we're
not in this together, it's just
gonna crumble.
So what do you think?
To me, we need to stick around
Boston, that's the big thing.
>> MAN: Yeah.
>> PAUL: And we looked at these
locations, we know what we're
doing.
>> MARK: We're trying to build a
business and a franchise, not a
sub shop on the corner of
the neighborhood.
(cheering, excited conversation)
>> PAUL: So, Mark's here, circus
is in town, but I've only got
one shot to make this pitch.
So what do you think?
To me, we need to stick around
Boston, that's the big thing.
>> MAN: Yeah.
>> PAUL: And we looked at these
locations, we know what we're
doing.
>> MARK: We're trying to build a
business and a franchise, not a
sub shop on the corner of
the neighborhood.
I don't care if it's something
that's sentimental to my mom, or
to my brother.
We're building a business here.
We've got to find the best
possible location.
I want this to be an event.
I've had offers to do
everywhere.
Abu Dhabi, Dubai, London, you...
Ireland, everywhere.
>> ALMA: Well, I knew it might
not be a very pleasant
conversation.
>> MARK: I don't care.
If we're gonna do this thing,
we need a high-traffic area
where there's a lot of foot
traffic.
This is a business, so...
>> BILLY: You could do almost
like a...
>> MARK: ...if it's not gonna be
successful, we're not doing it.
>> PAUL: Mark's not used to
getting resistance.
You know, he says what he wants,
and people pretty much go along.
So I have to fight the good
fight to make sure that he sees
that this is the right direction
for us to go.
But I agree with all the foot
traffic stuff.
>> MARK: I'm just talking about
how important it is to find the
right location.
>> ALMA: Right.
My-my thoughts were, I just
couldn't see taking it out of
Boston.
>> MAN: Right.
>> ALMA: Not yet, anyway.
>> PAUL: Then Ma chimes in.
All bets are off.
>> ALMA: This is home, this is
where we grew up, and this is
where we need to start from.
That's all that matters to me.
>> PAUL: So, in a split second,
we go from grown men to
ten-year-old kids sitting around
a table.
Ma's laying down the law.
We have to listen.
>> ALMA: This is who we are,
this is where we're from, and
this is where we belong.
>> PAUL: She speaks, we obey.
That's how it works.
>> MARK: All right.
I run my life, I run my world,
but my mother comes around, and
she just imposes her will on me.
When it comes down to it, she
runs the show.
>> PAUL: So, we're in agreement,
we're gonna do it in Boston?
>> MARK: I trust you.
You built this business.
You're the talent that we
believe in.
Whatever you want to do.
>> PAUL: Now it's all coming
together.
This is right.
I can feel it.
This is where we're supposed to
be at this time.
>> MARK: To Boston.
>> BILLY: Saluté.
>> ALMA: There you go.
>> MARK: To home, to family.
>> ALMA: It's you, you (bleep)
star.
>> BILLY: Yeah.
>> MARK: I want to be able to
spend quality time with my
family, because once we go to
the party, it's crazy.
(crowd chatter)
>> PAUL: We have this party.
You know, everybody's excited,
but at the end of the day,
everybody loves the food, and
that's the rush that I get.
That's the most important thing.
>> MAN: Great burgers!
>> PAUL: Oh, thank you.
>> MARK: My brother is the star.
He's the chef.
He's the one that I always say
is the most talented in the
family.
Hey... I'm throwing bread.
Hey, man.
I love you.
This is our business.
This is for our family and for
our future, so the stakes are a
lot higher, but I think it
always comes down to family and
us sticking together and having
each other's back.
>> MAN: Yes.
>> ALMA: Family is everything.
They fight, they argue, they
don't agree, but when push comes
to shove, and you need your
family, your family needs to be
there.
>> DONNIE: To me, this
restaurant is a lot more than
just, you know, capitalizing on
the coincidence of our name,
working with the word
"hamburger."
I know cooking means a lot more
to Paul than that.
>> PAUL: Excuse me.
Making people happy-- that's
what I live for.
It's not about the fame, it's
not about the money, the
celebrity.
It's knowing, at the end of the
day, that everybody was happy.
That's what drives me.
And it's, like, "(bleep),
we did it."
The moment comes, and you feel
it, and you know it.
Then it's gone.
It goes by quick, 'cause, next
day rolls around, it's time to
go back at it.
>> MAN: Whatever they want,
guys-- that's what we mean.
(Paul sighs)
>> PAUL: I'm not do...
I don't want to do any more of
these.
>> ALMA: But you did great,
Paul.
It was beautiful.
>> PAUL: Oh, thanks.
It's just...
>> ALMA: I think Mark was very,
very happy.
If this chain happens, and this
takes off, Paul's gonna need
help.
Can't carry all that, that's for
sure.
You getting feeling more
comfortable with Kari now,
and...?
>> PAUL: It's been, like, three
days.
>> ALMA: I know, Paul, but you'd
be like that three months from
now.
>> PAUL: She has to be
aggressive, she has to be
assertive, she has to make it
happen.
>> ALMA: I think she is.
You should have seen her with
Nacho and Drama.
The look on their faces when she
said, "You got to pay."
Come on, that was beautiful.
>> PAUL: Well, if she can deal
with those two idiots, then...
then maybe there's a chance.
>> ALMA: Just be a little bit
open to letting her do a little
bit more, that's all.
>> PAUL: Well, I'm not gonna
promise anything, but we'll see
what happens.
>> ALMA: Okay, that's a deal,
Paul.
>> PAUL: It's hard enough
dealing with a bunch of
Wahlbergs, never mind having
this other person.
And if she thinks she's gonna be
Ma's favorite, she's crazy.
>> ALMA: Be a good boy.
>> DONNIE: I'm gonna call her
right now.
>> ALMA: Donnie.
>> DONNIE: Hello, Mother.
Who's your really favorite,
between you and me?
>> ALMA: You are my favorite.
You've always been my favorite.
(Donnie whoops)
>> DONNIE: Thanks, Mom.
I'll see you in a little while.
I told you.
I told you.
>> MARK: We have to open a
Wahlburgers in China.
Well, the name "Wahlberg" used
to be synonymous with court
appearances and trouble.
We're going everywhere--
Dubai, Hong Kong.
>> PAUL: You just think I pull
this out of my ***.
>> DONNIE: You know, Paul said
he wanted to make you a
burger-of-the-month, Jenny.
>> JENNY: Really?
I think it's pretty awesome.
I've got a wiener named after
me.
>> PAUL: You've got six guys
working for you, Michael Bay's
got 35 guys working for him.
I get me.
>> MARK: What more do you need?
You're a big star now, Paul.
>> PAUL: Mark's my kid brother.
Some people think I'm Donnie.
It's a little different than
what I expected.
>> DONNIE: Well, it's a hair
salon, Paul.
We got to turn it into a
restaurant.
>> WOMAN: Oh, my God.
What is this?
>> ALMA: Donnie's tail.
>> DONNIE: Mark and I
would kill each other to win a
game of sock football.
Me and Mark decided...
>> DRAMA: Yeah.
>> DONNIE: ...since music is
such a big part of the Wahlberg
story, that we need to have a
jingle for the restaurant.
>> PAUL: There are no jingle for
the restaurant.
>> DRAMA: ♪ Breakfast
As a matter of fact
Tater tots, onion strings
♪ Or maybe a frappé
That's why I always
Keeping coming back... ♪
>> ALMA: Oh, no! Oh, God.
>> DONNIE: Come on, Chef Paul!
>> MARK: Go get him.
This business-- Wahlburgers-- is
actually bringing us closer
together.
(Mark whooping)
>> MARK: Bye, guys.
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