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[Above: The trailer for 'All the President's Men.' Wouldn't work so well today. Computer keystrokes don't have the same drama as typewriters.]

I'd say it was the biggest laugh that actor Robert Redford ever got. He was more the straight man for the joke. But only he was on camera at the moment, so.

Thirty-nine years ago tonight, the movie version of "All the President's Men" opened. (Yes, you are that old.) That day, or soon thereafter, I was in a packed theater to see the movie.

Early on, Redford, playing Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward, is on the phone trying to figure out the convoluted links that may, or may not, connect the third-rate burglary at the Watergate office building to the White House. He's talking to some political functionary and asking him uncomfortable questions. The subject of the interview doesn't like Redford's approach.

"That's a b—-s—- question," says the voice on the phone. "That's a question straight out of Wichita, Kansas."

Woodward protests that he's from Illinois. But nobody in the theater heard the next two or three lines, because we were all laughing so hard.

Did I mention that I was seeing the movie in Wichita, Kansas?

Sorry.