Let's Go to Prison
(LET'S GO TO PRISON PLAYING)
# There's a place I know,
come along with me
# Just break some laws
and you get in free
# Three hots and a cot
# An orange jumpsuit
# Your name's a number
# Now, ain't that a hoot?
# Throw out that list
of things to do
# The State's got plans
for you
# Let's go to prison
# Stir
# Let's go to prison. Stir
# Now, it's corrections
officer, not called a guard
# Now, won't you kids
go play in the yard?
# Yeah, walk an earth circle
or lift some weights
# Might get lucky,
might get some date
# Ain't talking hoops
when I say man-on-man
# It's zone defense,
do what you can
# Let's go to prison
# Big house
# Let's go to prison
# Yeah
# Lock up
# Trading smokes
for toilet booze
# Snitch gives you up
to the screws
# Bought yourself
some time in the hole
# They'll throw you a Bible
to save your soul
# Oh, ho-ho, Lord
# Doing a nickel
# Doing a dime
# You know you're innocent
# You didn't do the crime
# This place takes patience
# You will find
# But as long as you're here
# Just have a good time
# In Angola, Attica, Sing Sing
# Let's go to prison!
Come on now!
# San Quentin, Tehachapi
# It's called prison
# Let's go, let's go!
# Prison, Alcatraz
# Come on, let's go! #
JOHN:
Our justice system sucks.
You know, there are over
two million Americans
behind bars.
That's a little larger
than the population
of Houston.
(ALL CHEERING)
Every year,
there are enough children
born in prison to fill
250 Little League teams
and enough people
are raped in prison
to fill a stadium
more than three times.
Can you picture that?
Three stadiums full of people
raping each other?
I know I can.
My name's John Lyshitski.
I just got out of prison.
(MUSIC PLAYING)
I don't know.
Do you have
anything bigger?
Yeah.
That's more like it.
If I had a nickel
for every time
I've been incarcerated,
I'd have 15 cents.
It all started when
I was eight years old.
I stole the Publishers
Clearing House
prize patrol van.
Thought there'd be
a million bucks inside.
Where's the check?
Where's the check?
Wait!
They caught me when I tried
to cash the giant check.
That was the first time I met
Judge Nelson Biederman,
who changed my life
with the magic word.
Guilty.
You see, Johnny,
the reason we have
all these laws
and rules to live by
is so that
we can help guide
all the little boys
with big dreams
and a chance
for a bright future,
and so that
we could help protect them
from worthless scum
like you.
Seven years,
juvenile detention.
JOHN:
And with that,Judge Biederman
began my trip
through the justice machine.
The machine works.
It took me,
a confused child,
and turned me
into a for-real,
no-sh*t felon.
Hey!
Hit the ground,
motherfuckers
or I'll fill you
full of more holes
than the A**hole Day parade.
There's an
A**hole Day parade?
Motherf***er.
Guilty.
Four years,
and if being a moron
were a crime, Mr. Lyshitski,
you would never see
the light of day again.
JOHN:
I got out againwhen I was 24.
Then that same ass-wipe,
Judge Biederman,
sent me back
when I was 24 and a half.
Four to seven years.
The next time
you steal a car,
Mr. Lyshitski,
check to see if there
are lights on the roof.
(LAUGHING)
You liked that one?
JOHN:
I'm out again,and I intend to spread
the pain around.
Starting with
His Honor himself.
Take him down piece by piece.
Kick off his dog,
strangle his cat,
sh*t in his pillowcase,
burn down his garage.
Then I'll get really creative.
Hello?
Hi. Is this the
municipal courthouse?
Great.
My name is Ken Kennedy.
I'm calling from
the Chicago Tribune.
Yes, we're doing
a story down here
on some of the city's
longest-serving public figures
and we would love to see
Judge Nelson Biederman III
at work.
So could you tell us
which times this week
that he will be on the bench?
Uh-huh.
And how long ago
did you say that he died?
Three days! F***!
(CLINKING)
(MUSIC PLAYING)
Who's got a
six-letter synonym
for "deprived of"?
Robbed.
Anybody want to buy me
a champagne drink?
15 bucks for a lap dance.
Yeah, I'm not that horny.
I just got out of prison.
JOHN:
Holy sh*t!"Nelson Biederman the IVth."
I guess
when one door slams shut,
another one swings open.
Well, look out, Nelly.
You're about to meet
the other man
your father helped raise.
BARKER:
Crimes are everywhere.
They're in our parks,
they're in our streets,
and they're in our schools.
That's why I need you
to be part of...
Where the hell
are you guys?
Well, why the hell
do I have to be here
if you don't?
Yeah, I know
he was my father.
Thanks for the
f***ing newsflash.
Don't give me
that sh*t, Duane.
JOHN:
Hello, Nelly.I give you now
the new chairman
of the Biederman Foundation
whose generosity
has made this all possible,
Nelson Biederman IV.
I want to thank you all
for attending this honorarium
for my dear,
departed Daddy.
Now, boys and girls,
are you ready to have
your minds blown?
Well, what you got, Nelson?
A lot of people didn't think
that this neighborhood needed
a $7-million,
original Yoko Ono.
Well, those people didn't
grow up on these streets.
And maybe I didn't either,
but I am forced
to drive through here
on my way to the airport
and I believe that
anything that I can do
to make your lives and
my drive more beautiful
is worth doing.
That's why I,
Nelson Biederman IV,
in honor of my late father,
officially declare
Judge Nelson Biederman III
Park open.
(PEOPLE APPLAUDING)
DUANE:
Biederman Foundation.
Duane.
Oh, hello?
It's me, Nelson.
Who is this?
Nelson. Listen to me, Duane.
That is the last time
that I go to
one of those goddamn events
with Sergeant Barker.
Excuse me, who?
Sergeant Barker,
the dog that hates
crack and stuff.
Listen to me, Duane.
I'm gonna be in the office
in half an hour.
When I get there,
there better be a Fresca
waiting for me
and when I say Fresca,
I mean Fresca.
It better not be
a Fanta or a Sprite
or a Bubble Up or a 7Up.
I want it to be
a f***ing Fresca!
Do you understand me?
Yes, sir.
(MO VE THIS PLAYING
ON CAR STEREO)
(SINGING)
Oh my. Look at this.
(TIRES SCREECHING)
(GASPING)
(GRUNTS)
(GLASS SMASHING)
(IN KOREAN)
(IN KOREAN)
Okay.
No! No!
(SCREAMS)
PHARMACIST:
We have no money.(SIRENS WAILING)
JOHN:
Look at this.Old Nelson IV's got his pinky
caught in the same machine
his daddy threw me into.
The boys in
the legal department think
the best
course of action would
be for you to plead guilty,
plea bargain to keep this
as quiet as possible,
and step down as chairman
of the Foundation.
Well, then,
you tell the boys
in the legal department
that they are
a bunch of dipshits,
because I am innocent.
Well, apparently,
the police have a videotape
of you committing the crime.
You, or one of those other
cadaverous bag-of-bone a-holes
sitting at that table,
better strap on
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"Let's Go to Prison" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 26 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/let's_go_to_prison_12485>.
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