1. Gooooood evening,
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2. good evening, good evening,
good evening, good evening
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3. and welcome to an episode of QI
that is jam-packed with J words.
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4. Joining me to joust and jostle
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5. in tonight's J-themed jamboree
are the jazzy Bill Bailey...
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6. .. the jest-propelled Jimmy Carr...
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7. .. the jasmine-scented
Victoria Coren...
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8. .. and that jolly jackanapes
Alan Davies.
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9. We have fantastically obscure
and recondite J buzzers.
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10. Bill goes...
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11. That's a jarana.
Oh, it's jarana, yes.
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12. It's a Mexican percussive...
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13. Yes, you strum it.
With a "J"...
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14. Exactly. Victoria goes...
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15. That's a Finnish instrument
called a jouhikko.
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16. And Jimmy goes...
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17. I don't imagine I'll get this.
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18. Good.
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19. Correct. Well, I think
we both know. Tell them.
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20. It's actually a Russian instrument.
It's a jalalaika.
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21. Finally, Alan goes...
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22. Jewish harp. It is.
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23. It was originally called a jaws harp
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24. because it's played
in the mouth like that.
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25. Anyway, to get you in the mood,
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26. what do these
unfamiliar J words mean?
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27. There are lots of them.
Janker. I've heard of jankers.
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28. That's an army thing, isn't it? Yes.
Jankers is an army punishment.
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29. Cleaning latrines
or peeling 10,000 spuds.
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30. That's right, you're put on jankers.
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31. It looks like lots of them
are minced oaths.
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32. What was that? A minced...?
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33. A minced oath.
Like saying "fudge" or "sugar".
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34. Like a bowdlerised version
of a swear word.
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35. Like saying, "by...
carbonate of soda."
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36. Or "shut the front door!"
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37. Or fu... crying out loud!
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38. Have you ever said that? What,
fu-crying... Fu-crying out loud?
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39. Works very well.
Or fu-Christ's sake.
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40. For photographers that follow you.
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41. "Why don't you just
f... otograph someone else?"
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42. A jollop?
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43. It's a juice, some sort of unguent.
Some sort of...
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44. A jollop is actually
a turkey's wattle.
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45. I'm going to say, "bluff."
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46. Sorry, is it the wrong game?
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47. It's a good word, yeah.
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48. Or it can mean a strong liquor.
Jollop - a strong liquor?
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49. Don't. I didn't say anything.
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50. I didn't say anything.
I was going to, but I didn't.
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51. A jentacular, jentacular...
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52. Is this what friends of
Jennifer Aniston say
how she looks before she goes out?
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53. No. It means
"pertaining to breakfast".
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54. It does not. Why?
Why do you need that, though?
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55. In your life? Well, you have a lunchy
word. It's a lunchy type of thing.
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56. It's a breakfasty type of thing.
What's a lunch word, then?
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57. So you would say
toast is a bit jentacular? Yeah.
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58. This toast is jentacular!
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59. When has anyone ever said that, ever?
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60. These are unusual words,
I grant you.
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61. So we don't need to know that word,
is what you're saying? No.
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62. So I need to forget that now
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63. cos that's taken vital space
I need for pin numbers,
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64. really useful things, in my brain.
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65. Not what I should say
about breakfast. "Ooh, it's 11!
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66. "Oh, it's unjentacular!
What an idiot!"
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67. Here to astonish you... Go on.
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68. One of these words on this board
has 28 separate meanings.
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69. I'm going to put those meanings up.
Tell me which word it is.
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70. Back passage, vagina, penis.
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71. Jobbie! Junt!
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72. Jobbie, you think?
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73. Jigger. We're getting a lot of
jiggering from the audience.
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74. It must be jigger. I'm with jigger.
Jigger is the right answer.
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75. I'm going to share
five points with Victoria
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76. and five points with the audience.
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77. The word jigger
has all those definitions.
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78. It's a measuring device -
a jigger of rum.
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79. A snooker rest,
an odd-looking person, Bill.
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80. Sorry, just an odd-looking person.
A distillery.
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81. Don't say vagina and point to me.
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82. Again. Penis and...
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83. Woman's coat. That's a nice...
thingummy.
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84. People do complain that there aren't
any good words for vagina.
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85. There's no way of saying it
that sounds nice.
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86. Jigger is not the answer.
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87. I think twinkle cave.
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88. Twinkle cave?
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89. It's a less offensive term
for a fu-fu.
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90. So jigger is back passage,
vagina, penis...
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91. Well, that's confusing right there.
Straightaway.
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92. "Just stick it in me jigger."
"What?"
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93. "You're going to
have to be more specific, love."
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94. "Do you mean jigger
one or jigger two?"
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95. It's also a golf club. So if
you ask your caddy, "Do you think
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96. "I should pull my jigger out for
this shot? What do you think?"
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97. Yeah, get your jigger out,
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98. rest it on your jigger, stick it
in my jigger, mind the jigger.
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99. What about Ouija board?
You're at a party.
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100. "Let's all put our fingers
together on your jigger."
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101. "It's moving. Is it doing that
by itself or are we making it?"
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102. Potter's wheel.
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103. That's what they used to put on the
TV when they ran out of programmes.
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104. "Put the jigger on. NOT THAT ONE!"
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105. Revolving. Revolving jigger.
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106. Certain words do double duty.
Certain words do triple duty.
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107. Words like jigger
seem to do multiple duty.
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108. But what's the one thing
we can all agree
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109. Hitler, Stalin and Franco got right
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110. and Mussolini got wrong?
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111. Mussolini surrendered.
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112. Well no, there's something
the three moustachioed dictators
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113. loathed and detested
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114. but Mussolini rather liked.
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115. Erm... Pasta. Yes.
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116. Say what you want
about Simon Schama,
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117. he'd never come up with that.
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118. Let's stick with the letter J.
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119. Jackets with jeans,
like Clarkson. No.
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120. Oh! Was it double denim?
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121. That again doesn't begin with J.
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122. J, J, J, jizz...
The 20th century...
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123. Yes! You're close.
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124. I'm close?
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125. 20th century.
You only got one vowel out.
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126. Jazz! Jazz! Jazz music.
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127. I disagree with this question.
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128. Our very, very naughty people
have suggested
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129. that Hitler, Stalin and Franco
were right for disliking jazz.
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130. I personally love jazz.
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131. So you're saying that
Hitler didn't like jazz?
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132. Not just didn't like it.
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133. The more I hear about this guy,
the less I like him. I know.
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134. I know. I agree. Jazz was,
to the Germans, inimical.
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135. They thought it was total evil.
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136. It was completely against
everything they stood for.
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137. Mussolini, oddly enough,
for all his faults -
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138. and let's face it,
they were many and grievous -
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139. he listened to jazz in private.
His son, Romano,
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140. was one of post-war Italy's
most celebrated jazz musicians.
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141. He played with Dizzy Gillespie,
Duke Ellington and Chet Baker.
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142. You can't get much higher than that
in the jazz world.
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143. Wasn't that Hitler's thing with
comedy? He didn't like Jewish comedy
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144. cos he if you laugh with someone,
presumably the same with music -
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145. if you enjoy their music,
you couldn't hate them.
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146. What you are experiencing there
is cognitive dissonance.
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147. Cognitive dissonance
is exactly right.
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148. I think you'll find that's it.
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149. Take the audience through
cognitive dissonance.
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150. Never mind them, take me
through cognitive dissonance.
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151. It's exactly what you described -
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152. the ability to hold two opposing
opinions at the same time.
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153. They seem to contradict each other,
but actually humans can do that.
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154. Here's cognitive dissonance.
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155. Here I am on QI,
like you see on the television.
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156. It's quite nice, everyone seems
nice, I'm having a nice time.
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157. And yet, we've had the question,
"What did Hitler get right?"
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158. Which is exactly what
my grandmother told me would happen
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159. if I went on television.
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160. Last night, I had an anxiety dream
about coming on here.
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161. I was so terrified of it.
In the dream, I was sitting here.
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162. I think I was on the other side.
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163. An you were asking the question
very sternly. No. Yes.
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164. The question was, "Why was the March
Hare so important to the Aztecs?"
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165. I didn't know the answer.
And I... "Do they worship it?"
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166. And the screens went,
"Worship it! Worship it!
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167. Which was absolutely terrifying.
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168. Stephen, ask the question.
Let's make it happen.
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169. I'm such an amateur,
I didn't even Google the answer.
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170. That's an amazing dream. That's
very specific. It's not like...
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171. I dream, "Oh, I went up to the shops
and bought some milk and bread."
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172. I wake up and go, "Where is it?"
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173. I thought, "I'm sure I went
up the shop and got it but...
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174. "That's a crazy dream. Must have been
that blue cheese I had last night."
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175. But that's really...
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176. Yeah, definately
the blue cheese was the issue.
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177. "Blue cheese."
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178. Were you actually asleep?
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179. Or was this a sort of premonition?
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180. We'll find out. Yes, we will.
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181. Can we just confirm,
this is happening now? Yes.
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182. We're not in one of Vicky's dreams,
cos that would be...
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183. That'd be brilliant!
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184. You could be the March Hare.
I'll be the Aztecs...
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185. Bring it on.
Let's get some blue cheese.
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186. So, now, here are four J birds.
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187. What immediately comes to mind
when you look at them?
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188. Wings. It's J I'm after.
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189. There is something
that allows you to recognise them
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190. that a bird-spotter
would call their...
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191. Jizz. Yes!
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192. Yes. You knew that?
I'm a twitcher, aren't I? Yes!
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193. Jizz is an acronym, not...
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194. don't think of where
you might think it's going.
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195. It's the General Impression,
Size and Shape.
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196. It came from being able
to spot planes in the war.
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197. You could spot the outline
of planes from underneath.
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198. It was a military term, GISS,
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199. but birders use it too. Everything
you say is believed by many
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200. but unfortunately,
there's no evidence for that.
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201. So while you got the word
absolutely right
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202. and there are points
pouring your way,
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203. the actual explanation is not
proven. So there'd be a book
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204. or I could look up the internet
at home, "Jizz on birds,"
and that is fine.
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205. Yes.
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206. Absolutely right.
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207. I've got a lot of growing up to do,
is all I know.
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208. The pop etymology is that
it might be "just is".
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209. In other words,
you can't say specifically
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210. why that aeroplane is Spitfire or
that bird is a siskin. It just is.
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211. Or even "gist",
the essence, the gist.
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212. Yeah. But no-one's quite sure.
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213. The other kind of jizz is
a contraction of the word jism.
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214. What does that mean?
Jism, jisar, jisat, jisarum.
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215. I could tell you where it
comes from. I could show you! No!
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216. You're not to do that.
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217. Again. Too late? Yes.
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218. Jism has a meaning. Can you imagine
what jism might mean?
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219. It means spirit or energy.
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220. Yeah. "I withhold my jism. I deny
them..." You shouldn't do that.
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221. Is that meant to encourage us?
What's that doing?
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222. It's spiritual energy.
Oh, yeah, sure
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223. That looks like we're trying to sell
some sort of massage CD.
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224. Here's a top jizz fact. Go on.
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225. Imagine one little sperm.
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226. Tiny-winey little sperm.
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227. They're very, very small.
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228. You couldn't see it
with the naked eye.
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229. No bigger than an acorn.
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230. You know about computers
and memories and things.
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231. They have information on them,
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232. which is expressed in terms
of bytes, kilobytes or megabytes.
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233. How much information do you think
is in the DNA of one little sperm?
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234. I think it just says, "Swim."
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235. So - what, one bit? One bit.
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236. One bit. One bit of information -
swim that way.
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237. Either one bit
or one trillion bits.
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238. It's 37.5 megabytes.
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239. Which means that
a normal ejaculation...
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240. Talk about your hard drive.
.. represents...
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241. Is this... just after
you've logged off?
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242. Just going to plug in
my dongle, Bill.
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243. How many more of these can we...?
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244. Before we go home.
As long as it's not a floppy.
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245. You can still hold
a lot in a floppy.
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246. A normal male ejaculation,
if there is such a thing...
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247. I came here
to talk about the Aztecs.
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248. Will you accept
my personal apology, Victoria?
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249. ..is equivalent of 15,875 gigabytes.
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250. That's 15.8 terabytes.
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251. That's about 7,500 laptops' worth
of information in one ejaculation.
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252. It's gone to waste,
just thrown away.
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253. Well, not necessarily.
Down the end of a sock!
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254. Stop it. What? He started it.
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255. Yes, jizz, as you knew
as a bird-spotter,
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256. is that indefinable something,
the shape, the gait, the outline
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257. that allows you to identify a bird.
But we have
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258. the four birds we showed you.
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259. Thought you were going to say,
"We have some jizz." No!
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260. "We have some birds you can
identify here by their jizz."
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261. We literally do. Oh, look.
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262. Yep. They all begin with
J, that's your clue.
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263. I'm going to say that's a jayhawk.
That's not a hawk, is it? Look at it.
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264. What are you saying? That, swooping
down and picking up a rabbit?
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265. Look, that's it to scale, Bill.
That's the size of it.
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266. Oh, right. Oh, it's a long way off.
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267. It's massive! Have you seen
a hawk's beak and eye?
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268. A hawk's... Yes!
It's not the common hawk.
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269. It's a raptor. That's not a raptor,
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270. that's a flipping flycatcher
or something.
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271. You are very good, it's
a flycatcher. It's a flycatcher,
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272. there you go. He is good, he is good.
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273. Yeah, don't mess with a jizzmeister.
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274. Hey, I was second on that.
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275. No, you weren't, you weren't even
close. I came second. A hawk?
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276. You just mentioned a type of bird,
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277. that's not coming second. Stick up
the next one. I'm sure I'll get it.
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278. Just to finish it,
that was a flycatcher,
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279. it was a Juan Fernandez tit-tyrant.
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280. A crested...
Oh, God, here we go again.
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281. Wait a minute.
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282. Oh, tit-tyrant, oh...
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283. "A Juan Fernandez tit-tyrant."
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284. A crested, spotty-chested member
of the tyrant flycatcher...
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285. A spotty-chested member?
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286. There are points for knowing where
the Juan Fernandez Islands are.
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287. Breast Cock Lane?
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288. That's the spirit!
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289. Now you're getting it.
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290. You are getting into it very much.
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291. The Juan Fernandez Islands?
Somewhere in South America. Chile.
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292. Chile. Fair enough, yep, OK.
The next bird, this black one here.
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293. It's some sort of... What is that,
a bird of para... No, that's not...
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294. It's got massive green... feet.
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295. It's a weaver bird, in fact.
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296. If I tell you it's a weaver bird,
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297. you'll probably know
it comes from...? Yorkshire.
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298. Yeah.
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299. It's Jackson's widowbird.
Jackson's widowbird? The next one.
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300. At least name the type of bird
that it is. Jabiru, it's a stork.
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301. And it is a jabiru, correct answer.
Yes, of course. Very good.
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302. This man is good.
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303. That is a jabiru, it's a stork,
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304. and it can be five foot tall
with a nine-foot wingspan.
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305. It's a hell of a stork. Well
spotted. This man is impressive.
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306. Oh, thank you. OK, and the last one.
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307. Oh, it's very punk rock,
it's from...
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308. I would say it's from the '70s.
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309. Jedward.
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310. We'll allow you that.
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311. I think he could be called
the Jedward bird from now on,
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312. it does have another J word.
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313. Do you know what type of bird
that is, Bill? It's, erm...
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314. Hawk. It's a hawk!
Look at the size of its beak!
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315. How can it pick up a rabbit?
Those are oranges!
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316. It's actually a waxwing.
It's a waxwing.
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317. It's a Japanese waxwing. Oh, it's
a Japanese one! Japanese waxwing,
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318. found in Japan, China
and Eastern Russia. Very good. OK.
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319. What did Watson do
twice as often as Holmes?
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320. Oh, I don't want to say now.
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321. I guess he had more
time on his hands. Stick with it.
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322. What did he do twice...?
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323. Oh, I do know. It's, er...
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324. it's, er... ejaculate.
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325. Ejaculate is the right answer!
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326. This is the one thing
I know about Sherlock Homes
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327. because it's in the book.
It's an old term meaning to...
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328. To exclaim, expostulate.
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329. He constantly... "'But, Holmes!'
I ejaculated" you get a lot.
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330. I mean, the books are brilliant
anyway. They are.
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331. But every 20 pages,
that happens and you go...
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332. Yes, there are 23 ejaculations
in the canon, as it's known.
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333. They call it the canon? Christ!
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334. The canon is the...
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335. And one up the spout. Oh, Christ.
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336. As in the word "canonical".
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337. I give to you the canon.
Yeah. Stand back!
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338. There's approximately
23 ejaculations.
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339. 48 terabytes of information
are coming your way.
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340. Stand by! You're a very lucky lady.
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341. Watson ejaculates 11 times.
Christ on a bike!
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342. Holmes on one occasion refers to
Watson's ejaculations of wonder
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343. being invaluable to his art.
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344. Watson does ejaculate
from his very heart
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345. in the direction of his fiancee.
Holmes gives six,
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346. but there is one where it's
quite hard to tell who it is. So...
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347. That can happen, Stephen, yeah.
Who's ejaculating here?
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348. Let's just, let's just... imagine.
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349. "So he sat as I dropped off
to sleep, and so he sat,
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350. "when a sudden ejaculation
caused me to wake up."
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351. "I found..." Have you ever been
woken up by a sudden ejaculation?
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352. Stop! We've talked enough
about your dreams.
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353. There's a fellow called Phelps
in the wonderful story
The Naval Treaty.
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354. He ejaculates three times, actually.
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355. The only other ejaculator
is Mrs Sinclair's husband,
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356. who ejaculates from
a second-floor window.
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357. This is the most fun
I've ever had on this show.
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358. So, now, who first used
the expression "OMG?"
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359. Was it Hannah Montana? It wasn't
Hannah Montana. That was my guess.
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360. It was a good guess,
a reasonable guess. I'm guessing
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361. that in the past, it's meant
something else. No, as "Oh, my God."
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362. "Oh, my God..." Jesus. Not J...!
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363. No, this is genuinely
a use of OMG in a communication.
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364. Is it going to be
on a Morse Code...?
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365. No, though funnily enough,
you're in the right area, it was...
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366. Military? Kissinger?
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367. Not military, naval. It was
two of the great naval figures
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368. of the First World War.
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369. Who was the First Lord of the
Admiralty during the...? Oh!
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370. Erm, I have no idea. Churchill.
Winston Churchill.
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371. But the great Lord Fisher, in 1917,
wrote a letter to Winston Churchill
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372. saying, "I hear that a new order
of knighthoods is on the tapis",
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373. meaning on the carpet.
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374. "OMG, shower it on the Admiralty."
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375. Hmm! So there you are - "Oh, my God."
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376. What year was that, sorry?
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377. 1917. OMG. Yeah, OMG.
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378. That's a really good fact.
That's a good fact, isn't it?
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379. Can we be certain
he meant "Oh, my God"?
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380. Yes, definitely, he put
"Oh, my God" in brackets afterwards.
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381. He wrote,
"OMG, brackets, Oh, my God."
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382. That rather ruined the point
of abbreviating it to save time!
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383. As he was the first user,
I guess he had to explain it.
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384. "OMG, by which I mean, of course,
the longer expression Oh, my God."
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385. Eric Partridge's
Dictionary of Abbreviations in 1942
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386. contained dozens of SMS-friendly
examples such as "agn" for again,
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387. "mth" for month and "gd" for good.
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388. So they pre-existed.
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389. But I heard someone vocalise "LOL".
I actually heard...
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390. Someone said "LOL"
as opposed to laugh.
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391. It was two kids in the street,
told them a joke
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392. and she went "lol", like that.
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393. Rather than laugh?
Rather than laugh.
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394. That's just some horrible
post-Orwellian nightmare. It is.
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395. How amazing is that going to be
at stand-up gigs? If people just...
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396. An audience starts going "lol"?
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397. Let's just try it.
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398. After three, just say the word "lol"
with as little expression as you can.
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399. Here we go. One, two, three.
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400. Lol.
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401. Tim Minchin has actually suggested
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402. that because people don't
laugh out loud when they say "LOL",
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403. he suggests "MAS -
mildly amused smirk."
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404. Which could be quite good,
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405. because that's what happens. Or
"NELI" is another one you could have.
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406. "Not even laughing inwardly."
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407. But you'll be impressed to know
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408. that in 1659 is the first use
of "to unfriend."
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409. Which we thought was
a modern Facebook phrase.
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410. But "to unfriend"
was used by Thomas Fuller,
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411. who wrote to theologist John Heylyn,
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412. "I hope, sir, that we are
not mutually unfriended
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413. "by this difference
which hath happened betwixt us."
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414. Yes, and then I believe
his friend wrote back
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415. that he "liked" that message.
Yes, exactly.
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416. Anyway, where do
Arabic numbers come from?
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417. Ooh.
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418. I... don't know.
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419. Interesting fact, though, the oasis
is about 110 miles that way.
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420. No, that's the chart position. In...
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421. ..in the Yemen.
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422. They're not as big there, are they?
Nah, they don't like it.
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423. What do we mean by Arabic numbers?
We mean the ones we use, don't we?
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424. I presume you mean how people who
speak or write Arabic write numbers.
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425. No, we call our numbers
Arabic numbers. Do we?
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426. I thought our numbers... OK.
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427. Roman alphabet and Arabic numerals.
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428. And Gregorian... chanting.
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429. And French... pastries.
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430. Come on, you must know this.
Danish pastries, German mustard...
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431. Is it Persia?
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432. No, it's not Persia. It's not
going to be in Arabia, is it?
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433. It's not Arabia. It's just
outside Arabia. Arabia Parkway.
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434. It's actually Hindu. In Arabic
they call them Hindu numbers.
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435. In fact, in Arabic numbers
we have very little in common.
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436. You can see a car number plate here
and you'll see that on the left
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437. is 29-5994
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438. and on the right,
that is the Arabic for 29-5994.
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439. And as you see, it's only the 9
that is actually the same.
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440. So they're not Arabic numbers at
all. No, we tend to call them that.
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441. We should start...
Let's call them Hindu numbers.
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442. We should call them Hindu numbers,
exactly right.
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443. Or we could call them "numbers".
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444. Yeah, but what's the fun in that?
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445. Yeah, quite. I want you to tell me,
because it's quite interesting,
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446. and that's the name of the game,
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447. which is the only number
in the English language
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448. which, when written out,
is in alphabetical order?
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449. Erm... eight.
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450. No. OK, well, seven. 43.
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451. Eight is good, but I comes after G.
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452. OK, I'm going to have to guess,
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453. because there's not enough time
and I'm dyslexic. One. Two.
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454. Two. No. Three.
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455. O comes before T.
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456. So they have to be
in alphabetical order.
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457. Oh, I see. Ohh. Forty.
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458. Yes! Well done.
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459. Very good.
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460. Were you going through
all the numbers?
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461. I bet I was going through all the
numbers at the same time you were.
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462. 40 is the one. Alan was on three
when you got there.
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463. You three were all talking
and we're sitting going,
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464. "No, not that one, no..."
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465. All right. Why was the March Hare
so important to the Aztecs?
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466. No!
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467. You see?
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468. The thing is, Victoria,
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469. whatever you dreamt was the answer
IS the right answer.
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470. Yeah, but I know the answer isn't,
"Did they worship it?" Because...
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471. I think you'll find
I said that's NOT the answer.
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472. What the answer actually is,
I don't know.
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473. Why is a raven like a writing desk?
It's that sort of question.
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474. It is. Maybe for years
people will now debate this.
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475. 50 years from now,
people will be asking,
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476. "Why was the March Hare
important to the Aztecs?"
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477. There is a kind of answer that maybe
your subconscious somehow knew.
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478. They worshipped rabbits, not hares.
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479. So some part of your brain knew
that Aztecs worshipped rabbits.
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480. They honestly...?
Aztecs worshipped rabbits? It's true.
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481. I swear to you I didn't know that.
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482. I swear, and I think
they're going to believe me.
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483. I'll go even further than this.
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484. There are many people who believe
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485. that the rabbits that the Aztecs
worshipped were jackrabbits,
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486. which are, in fact,
technically a type of hare.
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487. And a J word, which makes it even
better. And a J word. This is spooky!
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488. So, Victoria Coren...
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489. Burn the witch!
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490. Witch!
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491. Absolutely spooky.
You didn't see that one coming,
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492. and yet you did.
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493. I dreamt a thing
that I didn't think I knew
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494. that you say is nearly
a fact beginning with J? Yeah.
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495. This world is far more mysterious
than we give it credit for.
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496. Isn't it just? I know.
Which brings us to the scores!
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497. I don't know whether to do this
backwards or forwards.
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498. I'll go backwards, actually,
with our last place. It's noble
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499. but it's -22. Jimmy Carr!
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500. I took a few for the team!
I took a couple for the team.
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501. But I'm always happy to see,
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502. in somewhere as high as third place,
Alan Davies with -6!
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503. Thank you very much.
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504. And this is astonishing.
With +10, Bill Bailey.
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505. I never get +10.
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506. Really? Really? No.
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507. And the madwoman
who dreams of Aztecs and hares,
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508. Victoria Coren on +13!
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509. Well, that's all from Victoria,
Jimmy, Bill, Alan and me.
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510. Be gloriously good to each other,
thank you and goodnight.
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