1. This programme contains some
strong language.
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2. Well, good evening, good evening,
good evening, good evening,
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3. good evening, good evening,
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4. and to some extent, good evening,
and welcome to QI,
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5. where tonight, the joint is jumping!
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6. Lots of hoops to get through,
so let's meet our jumpers.
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7. A classy thoroughbred,
Julian Clary.
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8. Fit as a flea, Ross Noble.
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9. The human pogo stick, Bill Bailey.
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10. And a nice, warm, woolly top,
Alan Davies.
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11. Very kind.
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12. There we are.
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13. So, they're all got
buzzers, and Julian goes...
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14. "Jump Around"
by House of Pain
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15. I'm not happy.
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16. Something to do with jumping
in there, I believe,
in the pop music sphere.
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17. Ross goes...
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18. "Jump"
by the Pointer Sisters
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19. Good overbite.
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20. That also had "jump." Bill goes...
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21. "Jump"
by Van Halen
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22. I've no idea what that means.
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23. That was a Van Halen!
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24. Alan goes...
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25. "Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport"
by Rolf Harris
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26. Aw. A little jumpy thing, too.
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27. So, it's "jumpers."
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28. First tonight, I'd like you all
to give me your impression of some
Mexican jumping beans.
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29. "Hello there,
we are jumping beans.
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30. "We like to do the jumping,
we cannot help ourselves."
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31. "Higher!"
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32. I have to say, there is...
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33. They're not jumping.
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34. ..A slight embarrassment here.
What's happened?
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35. We ordered the Mexican jumping
beans over the internet,
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36. and they arrived in
fully jumping form...
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37. but they have since died.
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38. I think you've been had.
This is a hazelnut.
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39. Yeah.
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40. It looks like... I know it looks
like a hazelnut.
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41. Here they are.
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42. They're more like "Mexican
fidgeting beans."
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43. Yeah.
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44. Can I just say that, in a
wildlife documentary, that's a pretty
poor excuse, isn't it? Yeah, it is.
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45. "We had some snakes earlier, but
when they came in the post..."
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46. "DHL tried to wedge them
through the..."
I know. It's deeply shaming.
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47. How were they mistreated, then?
What's happened? Well...
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48. Because Springwatch will
hear of this!
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49. I know.
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50. Can we revive them with some
powdered Doritos?
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51. Play some Mexican music and they'll
be up and running again.
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52. I've cracked one open, there's
something in it. There is.
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53. A tiny battery. Yes.
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54. There's a creature.
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55. There IS a creature in there,
there's a larva.
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56. A larva which has now sadly died..
They've hatched. They've become...
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57. Is it a flea of some kind?
Is it a Coleoptera? Is it from
the Coleopteras?
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58. You're wanting to say "beetle",
aren't you?
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59. I want to say "beetle". I said
"Coleoptera". Which is even...
To try and do my best.
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60. ..A really smart way of saying
"beetle".
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61. Yeah, because this is that sort
of programme, isn't it?
It's not BBC Breakfast,
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62. where they have pin-heads
who wouldn't know a...
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63. I want you to say not
"Coleoptera", but "Lepidoptera".
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64. Oh! You mean butterflies?
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65. Well... moths. Moths?
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66. Yes. They're the larva of a moth.
Ah, right.
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67. And to be fair, they are seeds,
not beans.
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68. Up to 20 million of them are
exported from Mexico, every year,
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69. around the world, as a novelty...
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70. For comedy purposes.
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71. Yeah, for comedy purposes.
Anyway, the "Mexican jumping bean"
isn't really a bean, but it does
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72. jump and it does come from Mexico.
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73. From the Sonoran Desert, in fact.
Oh, right.
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74. In Sonora, we're going to stay.
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75. What's unusual about Bailey's
pocket mouse?
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76. Wait a minute!
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77. Obviously, Bailey's pocket
mouse doesn't look like that.
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78. No.
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79. If you take away the handsome
features, that's it -
Bailey's pocket mouse.
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80. Is it some sort of desert mouse
that doesn't drink, or something?
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81. Well, you're almost right.
You're very close.
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82. Oh, it does drink, but only
Bailey's.
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83. That's right.
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84. It shins up the bottle, like that.
And it brings its own miniature
parasol.
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85. There is a particular oil-bearing
plant in Mexico...
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86. Jojoba.
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87. Yes!
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88. And it was thought for many
years that the Bailey's mouse
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89. was the only one that could
tolerate eating it,
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90. because it is, basically,
disgusting to all other animals.
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91. So they can survive on shampoo?
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92. Well, that's the point, yeah. It has
then become a useful oil.
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93. Since whaling stopped, it has some
of the same properties as whale oil.
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94. A lot easier to apprehend.
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95. Yeah, than a whale, exactly.
You just get hold of a jojoba plant
and it gives off this oil.
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96. But very few animals eat it. And
very few animals are tolerant of it,
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97. because it is a disgusting oil.
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98. But not if you're a Bailey's mouse,
it's not.
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99. Exactly. And it was thought to be
the only animal that could eat it,
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100. and, in fact, three others have
since been discovered
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101. that are also capable
of surviving on jojoba.
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102. Pete Burns.
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103. Pete Burns is one.
Shaun Ryder is another.
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104. Yes.
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105. Bez. And Bez, yes. That's your three
go-to jojoba guys.
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106. As an oil, it's a laxative, and so
some people use it as a frying oil,
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107. except that when you fry things
in it,
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108. it just runs through you.
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109. So it's just a good way
of keeping on a diet.
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110. But mostly Jojoba is used for?
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111. Shampoo. Your skin.
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112. Your skin, shampoo, cosmetics
and things.
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113. Yes.
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114. Who was it who made jojoba famous?
Billy Connolly.
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115. Billy Connolly, exactly, did a
famous routine about...
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116. "Jojoba.
What's that? What the fuck's that,
jojoba? Jojoba?"
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117. He has a way of repeating words,
Billy Connolly,
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118. that I remember many years ago,
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119. when, for the first time, he was
elected President of Israel,
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120. and I got this phone call...
Billy Connolly was? No.
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121. I may have...
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122. "Mate, I'll
tell you what. Israel, it's a lovely
place."
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123. I may have phrased this the wrong
way, but this particular person
had been,
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124. and the phone rang and it was
Billy Connolly. He didn't introduce
himself, he just went,
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125. "Benjamin Netanyahu?"
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126. And I said, "What?" He said,
"Benjamin Netanyahu?"
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127. And I said, "Sorry, who is this?"
He went, "Benjamin Netanyahu?
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128. "What's that about? For fuck's sake,
Benjamin Netanyahu?"
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129. And then he put the phone down.
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130. It was Billy Connolly riffing on
the name "Benjamin Netanyahu."
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131. Yeah, and he would have done
the same with "jojoba."
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132. "Jojoba."Jojoba."
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133. "The month before November," that
was the joke, wasn't it? Exactly.
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134. Sometimes Paul O'Grady phones me up
and just goes...
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135. "Ooh, ah,
ah, fucking shite..."
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136. Then hangs up.
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137. "What's that, get that, no, stop it.
No, don't."
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138. He doesn't say, "No, don't." Doesn't
he? No, that's Frankie Howerd.
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139. Oh, damn!
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140. So easily confused.
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141. That was your jojoba.
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142. Now, who put jolly jumpers on
their skyscrapers?
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143. Is it Cockney rhyming slang?
"Jumpers on your skyscrapers."
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144. Doesn't rhyme with anything,
how could it be?
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145. It makes no sense at all.
Cockney not-rhyming slang.
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146. "I'll put a jumper on
the skyscraper."What's a
skyscraper?"
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147. It rhymes with "rapers,"
that's all I can...
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148. Oh, stop it. Stop it right now. No.
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149. They swoop out of the sky
and have you.
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150. "A horrible bunch
of skyscrapers."
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151. Go back in time, go back in
time, before tall buildings.
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152. What was a skyscraper before there
were such things? A tree?
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153. No.
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154. A hut. Was it an erection?
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155. No. No, it wasn't that.
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156. Some sort of plane or
aviation device, was that it?
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157. Look at the picture, and think...
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158. A sail, a mast...! Oh!
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159. Yes. The top one was
called the skyscraper,
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160. but above it, there
would be another one,
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161. which was called the jolly jumper.
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162. And the jolly jumper was
the highest sail on a boat.
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163. So, it would be a sailor who would
put a jolly jumper on a skyscraper.
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164. Ah!
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165. Isn't that pleasing?
That is quite...
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166. Yeah. I'm glad you're interested.
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167. Crow's nest - vest!
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168. Spinnaker... Spinnaker...
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169. Football commentator!
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170. So, erm, anyway, talking
on skyscrapers and jumping -
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171. and jumping is of course our theme -
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172. there's a famous kind of jumping
that originated in Polynesia.
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173. Bungee? Bungee?
Bungee jumping - how did that begin?
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174. It was the tribesmen with the twines,
tying themselves up. Yes.
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175. They used vines.
Yeah. Vines, twines... Yeah.
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176. Rhyming slang, wasn't it?
Vine, twine...
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177. Swine, bine... Yeah.
No, no, vines. So, they tie
it round, and then they jump,
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178. but they didn't sort of go like that.
They'd tie it round their ankle.
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179. It would go into the mud, their head,
right into the mud. Exactly.
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180. And we have film of precisely that.
Here you are - it's pretty scary.
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181. Woah!
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182. That's...
What an idiot! Ha-ha-ha!
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183. Look at them,
laughing their heads off!
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184. That's the Pentecost Islands,
in the South Seas,
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185. where it was first observed.
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186. And do you know who brought
it to the world's attention?
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187. Butlins. Er, no.
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188. It was David Attenborough,
50 years ago,
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189. did a documentary in
which he showed this,
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190. and then Oxford Dangerous Sports
Society started doing it
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191. off Clifton Suspension Bridge...
Yes.
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192. But the first
official bungee jumping
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193. was done by
AJ Hackett in New Zealand.
New Zealand, Queenstown.
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194. Near Queenstown. There's the bridge.
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195. And you're about to
see a superhero -
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196. a man of astounding
courage and bravery -
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197. do a bungee jump off the
original AJ Hackett bridge.
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198. There he is. Can you see him there?
He's fat,
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199. he's... It's... It's me!
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200. Whoah! Ooh, ow!
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201. There I am. That
was me bungee jumping,
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202. just last... earlier
this year, in fact.
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203. Goodness me!
And do you know, the weird thing is,
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204. I am the biggest coward in the
world. The moment... The moment
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205. I was picked up by the relief boat,
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206. I said, "I want to do it again!"
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207. The adrenaline surge is so enormous,
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208. it is the biggest fun I've ever had.
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209. Does it... does it
pull at your ankles?
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210. The major problem usually
is detached retinas, actually.
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211. Yes.
People get pop-eyed.
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212. What about when we went scuba-diving
and your mask was too tight?
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213. Oh! No, no, no.
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214. His eyes nearly came
out of his head! Oh!
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215. Inside the mask, these massive eyes!
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216. We're all going, "Look at Bill!
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217. "Check he's all right!" When
we found out he was all right,
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218. I laughed... I laughed my head off!
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219. No, wait... The thing is,
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220. Wait, wait, wait, wait! Rewind!
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221. Can we just go back to
the bit where you said,
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222. when you checked I was all right,
you laughed your...
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223. You were laughing from the minute
my face came out of the water.
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224. There was blood
pouring out of my eyes,
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225. and every... You had no idea at all!
I had no idea.
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226. I was going, "What?" And people
were going, "Oh, my...!"
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227. "Aaagh!"Oh, my god!"
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228. I went, "What? What?" Like
Carrie or something, with blood
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229. streaming from my eyes.
These huge great eyeballs -
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230. it took quite a long time for them
to recede as well. Yes, it did.
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231. And lot of laughing was going on.
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232. I thought you had some
sort of magnifying mask on,
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233. but when you took the mask off,
they were still enormous! Enormous.
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234. Oh! Anyway, there's an even
more extreme form of jumping,
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235. which is bungee in the dark,
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236. where you can't tell how far
you've fallen. Bungee in the dark?
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237. Bungee In The Dark, please!
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238. You have no idea how far
you're going to fall!
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239. What are bungee
ropes usually made of?
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240. Elastic. Erm, latex, yeah.
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241. Oh, I've got a suit in latex!
Have you?
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242. Just had it made.
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243. I would like a photograph
sent to me of that, please.
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244. In 2008, one Carl Dionisio
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245. used one made from 18,500 whats
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246. joined together?
Socks. Also latex...
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247. Elastic bands? Tights? Condoms?
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248. Condoms is the right answer.
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249. That's the greatest
condom bungee of all time.
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250. If they all inflated, it
would be like the scene from Up
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251. when the house turns...
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252. It would indeed. And was there
just loads of really tired women?
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253. Just... just in his garden? Yes!
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254. Anyway, so jumping off a bridge
turns out to be as easy as
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255. falling off a log.
Now, how could these weights
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256. give you an extra 6.5 inches?
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257. Hang 'em from your cock.
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258. Oh, dear.
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259. Wow. Is it to do with
stretching out your
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260. spine? No.
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261. There's some sort of inscription
on here. Yes - in what language?
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262. Sort of... San... Greek, I'd say.
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263. If we put...
Greek is the right answer.
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264. Ah, right. This is
the new Greek currency.
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265. Er...
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266. Hang on a second,
I'll just get Wilma.
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267. Erm...
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268. You had it the wrong way up!
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269. - I got no signal, nothing!
- Just do it that way.
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270. No, the other way up - that's it.
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271. The mad thing is, if Bill and I were
to put these two things together,
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272. we would unleash the apocalypse.
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273. So, you're not allowed to, yeah.
Keep them away.
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274. They're called halteres,
they're Greek,
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275. and they gave you an
extra 6.5 inches advantage
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276. at a sporting event. Yeah? Yeah.
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277. Punting with rocks.
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278. Is it that if you're hurling
them with the other hand,
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279. and that weight gives you more
of a spin? That's a thought.
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280. It's certainly an event
in which you are judged
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281. by the greatest distance
you have covered.
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282. Well, the long jump is...
Long jumping.
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283. You use these. At first, when
people found them, they thought
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284. they might be used
as a handicap system
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285. for people who were better at
long jumping, to hold them back,
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286. but actually, you wind it up,
you wind it up and wind it up
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287. and then you jump, and it gives
you an extra 6.5 inches advantage.
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288. And also, you look like that.
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289. You can see them depicted there,
a pair of them hanging on the plate.
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290. Is there some sort of
checking system in the Olympics
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291. to check that people
aren't, you know,
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292. giving themselves an advantage?
Well, nowadays,
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293. you would not be allowed
to do that, to use these.
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294. Metal implants in their knuckles.
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295. You get nipples, and then, you know,
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296. the piercings - big
magnet at the other end...
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297. Urrrgh!
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298. You go knockers
first across the line.
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299. Standing long jumps existed
until 1912 in the Olympics.
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300. You didn't run up,
you just went, yagh!
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301. And the record is 12ft 2".
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302. No way. And it so happens... What?
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303. .. that the distance
between there and there
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304. is exactly 12ft 2".
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305. Have you heard of Fierljeppen?
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306. Leppen. It sounds Scandinavian.
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307. It exists in East Anglia and Frisia,
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308. mostly in Holland, though.
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309. Oh, jumping, jumping the...
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310. - Jumping the canals.
- .. the dykes.
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311. Jumping between the dykes
using a pole. It's a big sport.
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312. We do it in Norfolk,
where I come from.
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313. You know they've got bridges now?
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314. It's so much less fun.
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315. And you can actually see some...
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316. Mock ye not.
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317. Watch some film of
some splendid Fierljeppen performers
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318. and you will be impressed.
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319. Here you are. Big run.
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320. Whoa! And...
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321. Yes! And didn't even fall over.
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322. Oh, look at that.
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323. Less fortunate.
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324. Just to prove
it's not as easy as you think.
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325. And... oh...
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326. There you are. Fierljeppen.
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327. Oh... That's a good one.
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328. Yeah. You could watch that forever,
couldn't you?
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329. They should do that instead of
straightforward pole dancing,
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330. they should just have
a loose brass pole,
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331. then a woman in her pants runs out.
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332. "Wahey!" And then
it's less sexual, you know,
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333. - you can watch her arcing.
- I think it is sexual, mate.
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334. You're in desperate,
desperate need of help, Ross.
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335. How about jumping camels?
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336. What? Jumping camels?
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337. Jumping camels? Yeah.
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338. What, do you mean without any
kind of a chit-chat before, just...?
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339. "Jump the beast."
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340. Just straight in. In the Yemen.
In the desert as well. In the Yemen.
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341. I don't believe a camel can jump.
I don't think it can lift itself.
It's not the camels jumping.
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342. Do you jump from one camel
to another? It's more than that.
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343. Think Eddie Kidd.
Oh, jumping over, right. Yeah.
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344. Stunt bikes.
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345. Stunt, not bike, though. Oh.
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346. Just simply by your own human power,
leaping over camels. What?
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347. The record is six.
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348. One human being can run up
and leap over six dromedaries.
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349. With a trampoline or something?
No, there's a small amount of dirt
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350. laid up as a kind of jumping-off
point, but no trampoline.
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351. So, now, what did the
environmentalist say to the camel?
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352. "Stop farting." Isn't it
they produce a lot of methane?
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353. Yes, they do. Where in particular?
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354. Out of their arse?
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355. Why did I ask? Just a guess.
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356. But no, there is a particular place
where camels are... Known for it.
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357. .. extremely numerous. Egypt.
Yes, but this is a place where...
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358. Australia, is it Australia?
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359. Australia. They've got more
wild camels in Australia
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360. than anywhere else on the planet.
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361. Exactly, they have the highest
number of feral camels.
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362. In fact, they have
1.2 million of them.
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363. They're like rats, they're vermin.
Yeah.
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364. They get in your house,
it's a nightmare. And you can see...
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365. Only that sign could be Australia,
couldn't it? Look at it.
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366. Camel, wombat, kangaroo.
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367. But the fact is,
they export them to Arabia,
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368. for meat and for racing.
That's right.
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369. Because they're a finer,
a finer sort of species of camel.
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370. They were brought over originally
as a pack animal to Australia.
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371. They seemed very natural
because Australia is a dry country
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372. and camels survive well,
obviously, in dry climates.
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373. People thought, "perfect". But of
course, they bred and bred and bred
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374. and suddenly you've got
these million point two camels.
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375. And they do an enormous amount
of anal wind expulsion.
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376. They were on at Download, actually.
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377. 45...
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378. It's actually... They supported
Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark!
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379. To be fair to them, it's not so much
anal as oral. Oh, yeah.
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380. It's 45 kilograms of methane a year.
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381. It's quite extraordinary. It's a
sixth the amount of the average car.
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382. So, now there's a company
called North West Carbon,
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383. which has set up a thing where
you offset your carbon footprint,
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384. if you're an Australian car driver,
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385. by paying this company
to go and shoot camels.
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386. Which is...
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387. basically a bit unfair,
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388. because, let's face it,
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389. Europeans with cars are as unnatural
to Australia as camels are,
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390. and it seems a bit unfair.
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391. Why shouldn't the camels
shoot the humans? Yes.
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392. Here's a thing, though.
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393. While we're talking about
all this whole business of ecology,
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394. Sainsbury's, the supermarket chain,
very useful supermarket chain.
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395. The great thing about Sainsbury's,
it keeps the scum out of Waitrose.
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396. All right, here's an initiative
announced by Sainsbury's. Go on.
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397. By reducing the diameter
of the tube of a loo roll
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398. from 123mm to 112mm,
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399. right, just 11mm reduction,
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400. they will be able to fit
more rolls into the same lorry.
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401. Given the scale
of the loo roll market -
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402. we use 45 to 50 rolls a year each!
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403. And that's including you.
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404. I do that of a weekend.
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405. Yes, all right.
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406. This will mean
500 fewer lorry trips a year,
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407. just by doing that,
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408. by reducing the centre tube by 11mm.
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409. Wow. This is the principal difference
between men and women, in my view.
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410. The amount of loo roll
that women use is unbelievable.
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411. I mean, a roll can go in one visit.
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412. Really? To be fair, though...
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413. Just wrapping it round.
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414. What's that?
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415. At least women don't pee
all over the floor.
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416. You know that's not true.
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417. Ah, a lot of women clapping there.
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418. Obviously, they do use more loo roll
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419. but it's a lot harder for them
to shake than it is for us,
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420. do you know what I mean?
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421. Cheeky flick, everything's fine.
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422. For a woman to do that,
she's got to get on a swing.
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423. Or one of those power plates,
you know, the ones that go...
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424. Right.
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425. Just, go like this.
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426. One of those.
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427. You wouldn't need a power plate.
All you need is a vibrating loo.
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428. Oh, that's it, there you go.
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429. You sit on it, you have a wee,
press a button...
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430. Trouble with that is,
they'd never get off it.
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431. "Where is she?"
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432. "Are you coming out of there?"
"I'm nearly there!"
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433. Oh, God. Oh, God.
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434. "I think I've got diarrhoea."
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435. Now here's the question, here's...
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436. The Shake n' Vac.
Drink and leave the water.
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437. I have to tell you, I have to tell
you that the little baby Jesus,
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438. whom I have never believed in,
until this minute,
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439. has told me to change the subject.
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440. So... Aw! All right. We're going
to jump. I was just getting started.
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441. We're going to jump to Spain.
We're on a roll.
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442. We're on a roll! We're on a roll!
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443. We're on a roll! Come on! Come on!
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444. Why do these babies
have nothing to fear?
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445. There are men jumping over them,
but why have they nothing to fear?
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446. Yes. It's a real event
that happens in Spain.
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447. Baby jumping?
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448. Baby jumping, it's the
baby jumping festival, El Colacho.
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449. El Colacho! Yes. Yes, of course.
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450. Near Burgos in Northern Spain,
in the Castrillo de Murcia.
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451. The reason is that these babies have
been purged of their original sin
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452. in this ceremony, so that
if they die, they won't go to hell.
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453. Burgos has the largest cathedral
in Spain.
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454. It's absolutely enormous.
It's a very huge cathedral. Yeah.
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455. I love the concept of original sin.
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456. It's like you go to confess
and you go in and the priest goes,
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457. "That's not original enough."
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458. It's derivative sin.
"All right, then, I got a transit van
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459. "and then pushed it
into a bouncy castle."
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460. "Yep, I haven't heard that before.
You can have a blessing."
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461. The Catholic Church is slightly
embarrassed about this festival...
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462. I was thinking,
on the vibrating loo,
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463. you'd have different speeds,
wouldn't you?
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464. Like a dial.
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465. Like side to side, forwards
and backwards, round and round.
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466. But basically...
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467. Al, then one like the waltzers
that goes like that.
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468. There are no reports
of injured babies.
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469. Oh, all right.
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470. So you may prefer
to indulge in a Japanese ceremony
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471. called the Hadaka Matsuri.
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472. It's the Naked Festival.
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473. Raw baby eating. Yeah, it takes place
in Okayama. There they are.
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474. A 500-year-old event.
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475. It culminates in 9,000 men
in loincloths, wrestling in mud.
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476. Are they all men?
Some of them look like women.
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477. They're all men. There's a woman
in the middle there, surely.
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478. No, she's a man. He's a man.
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479. And in the end, the lucky man
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480. gets thrown a pair of sticks by
a Shinto priest at around midnight
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481. and the winner thrusts the sticks
into a wooden box filled with rice
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482. and is granted
a year of happiness.
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483. It seems a perfectly normal way
to behave, to me, don't you think?
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484. So run me through it again.
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485. You get a pair of sticks...
9,000 naked men wrestle in mud.
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486. And then eventually...
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487. ..a Shinto priest throws
two sticks to the winner,
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488. who sticks it in some rice
and is granted happiness.
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489. OK. Yeah. I love rice.
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490. Five stars on Tripadvisor,
this, wouldn't it? Yeah.
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491. All right, we're now going to have
something incredibly exciting -
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492. at least, I hope it's exciting.
It's a jolly jape.
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493. I do love my jolly japes.
I love a jolly jape.
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494. I've got here a little...
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495. What I'm going to try and do
is try and create something
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496. that will make you think, "No!
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497. "No, Stephen, this is not possible!
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498. "Stephen, I will now bow down
and worship you forever."
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499. I'm going to try and create...
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500. a square bubble.
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501. No! "Shut up, Stephen!"
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502. I'm on the verge of worshipping
you forever. Yeah, exactly.
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503. How would you not be?
A square bubble.
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504. Shut the front door.
So I've got this here,
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505. can you see that bubble there?
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506. Oh! Wow!
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507. It's not yet square,
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508. but if I blow...
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509. Look at that!
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510. No way!
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511. Square bubble. Oh!
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512. Square bubble!
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513. How amazing is that?
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514. Very cool.
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515. On television, virtually live,
as live, as we say,
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516. it's probably the only interesting
and important thing
I've ever done in my life.
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517. But I'm proud, and thank you
for enjoying my square bubble.
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518. Well, that's the jolly jape.
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519. And on that bubble-shell,
I jump over to the scoreboard.
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520. I suppose I have to begin
at the bottom.
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521. Julian... No!
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522. Unfortunately, you scored
minus seven points.
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523. Alan, you are at third place,
with minus four. Thank you.
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524. In second place, with five points,
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525. Ross Noble.
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526. And just one point ahead,
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527. on plus six, is Bill Bailey.
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528. Well, that's all from Julian, Ross,
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529. Bill, Alan and me. Be adorable
to each other always. Good night.
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