Lyrics American Dreamers - Goran Bregovic , Johnny Depp
One
thing
I
was
sure
of,
that
my
uncle
Leo
was
definitely
the
hero
of
my
childhood.
The
smell
of
his
"Old
Spice"
cologne
carried
me
back
into
that
lost
childhood
more
than
the
home
movies
did.
My
uncle
didn′t
know
it,
but
It
was
the
sweet,
cheap
smell
of
car
dealers
that
took
me
back,
and
made
me
dissolve
into
a
dream
of
the
past.
Leo
was
the
last
dinosaur
that
smelled
of
cheap
cologne.
And
he
believed
in
the
American
dream.
I
was
crazy
about
him,
because
he
believed
in
miracles.
And
Even
though
he
lived
inside
of
life
and
sold
Cadillacs,
he
always
looked
like
a
ten-year-old
boy
whose
sleeves
were
too
long.
When
I
was
ten,
Leo
gave
me
this
great
movie
camera.
And
My
mother
always
hoped
I'd
become
the
next
Milton
Berle.
But
dreams
of
houses,
and
cars,
and
fresh-cut
lawns
aren′t
dreams
when
they
become
real.
And
somehow
I
understood
what
my
mother
meant
by
"Good
morning,
Columbus."
And
even
if
my
mother
didn't
like
what
I
was
doing
with
my
life,
I
think
she'd
understand.
When
I
was
11,
I
got
this
really
weird
earache
that
wouldn′t
go
away.
I
went
to
about
a
hundred
doctors
but
none
of
them
could
help
me...
So
what
Leo
did
was
he
went
into
Mexico,
and
brought
back
this
fat
lady
witch
doctor
who
did
this
mumbo-jumbo
and
fixed
me
right
up.
I
was
grateful,
but
somehow
I
thought
I
might′ve
been
better
off
mute.
All
in
all,
I
had
a
very
happy
childhood.
My
father
was
a
border
guard,
who
spent
most
of
his
life
trying
to
keep
people
from
crossing
lines.
Every
night
for
15
years,
he'd
go
out
and
smooth
down
the
road
between
Mexico
and
Arizona,
and
every
morning
he′d
be
out
there
looking
for
footprints
in
the
dirt.
But
my
father
always
said
that
work
was
like
a
hat
you
put
on
your
head.
And
even
if
you
didn't
have
pants,
you
didn′t
have
to
walk
down
the
street
ashamed
of
your
ass,
so
long
as
you
had
a
hat.
And
if
somebody
was
to
ask
me
why
I
don't
get
up
right
now
and
take
the
next
train
back
to
New
York,
it′s
because
you
can't
say
no
to
your
childhood
hero.
I
decided
to
be
his
best
man,
but
one
thing
I
was
sure
of:
No
matter
how
much
I
loved
the
smell
of
cheap
cologne,
I
was
never
going
to
become
my
uncle,
and
I
was
never
going
to
sell
Cadillacs.
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