1. Well! Good evening, good evening,
good evening, good evening,
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2. good evening, good evening,
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3. good evening,
good evening, good evening,
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4. and welcome to QI, where
we're all feeling rather jolly.
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5. Here to tickle our ribs are four
jolly good fellows.
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6. The jovial Rob Brydon.
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7. The jocular Tim Vine.
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8. The jubilant Julia Zemiro.
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9. And Jesus, it's Alan Davies.
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10. Ah, well, so if anyone wants to
go beyond a joke tonight,
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11. they'll have to jingle their jangles
and Julia goes...
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12. - Oh, it's an animal from my country.
- Yeah.
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13. - That's nice, a bird, a kookaburra,
thank you. - It is a kookaburra,
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14. - well spotted. Tim goes...
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15. Oh, it's an animal from my country.
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16. And Rob goes...
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17. - Aw! It's an animal from the country.
- Yeah.
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18. - And Alan goes...
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19. - Wow. - Fabulous.
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20. So, simple question, who's Hapi?
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21. - He's happy in the picture. - Yes. - Yes.
- Old men with young ladies. Or...
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22. old ladies with young men.
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23. - I was going to say... - Why not?
- They may be gerontophiles.
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24. - Not me. - Not you? No, fair enough. OK.
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25. - It's one of the dwarfs.
- True, as in the old joke.
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26. - Six out of seven dwarfs aren't
Happy. - I can't believe it!
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27. - They haven't got that on the
klaxon? - No, they haven't.
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28. This is a Hapi
whose name is happy, spelt H-A-P-I.
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29. - Edwin Starr had a song,
H-A-P-P-Y Radio. - Oh really? - Yeah.
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30. - Anyway, continue. - No, that's good.
It's good - good information.
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31. We love good information
here, as you know.
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32. - We have to go back to a previous
civilisation. - Is it... Um, no.
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33. - Aztecs. - Egyptian. - Egyptian is right.
- Oh, get stuffed, I can't believe it!
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34. - When you get it right,
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35. you don't have to insult me.
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36. - No, I know. - You can
accept your points gracefully.
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37. That picture is actually
the backdrop to a famous game show -
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38. I'll Name That Tomb In One.
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39. - Very good.
- What sort of reaction is that?
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40. - It's one Tim is very used to.
- It's what I'm used to, yes. - Yes.
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41. That's what you sphinx.
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42. - So that is the god... - A very unusual
mind we have on this show. - It is.
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43. This is a god called Hapi,
who was always represented to have
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44. been faintly pot-bellied and sort
of hermaphroditic with breasts.
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45. Hapi had breasts,
though was not considered female,
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46. and had a sort of harem of...?
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47. - Ladies. - Men. - Animals. - No.
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48. - Men. Boys.
- Castrati. - Frogs. - Frogs? - Yeah.
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49. Frogs, Tim.
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50. Er, hang on.
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51. There'll be a pun in a minute.
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52. Do you think if the frogs in the
harem really started to get it on
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53. with each other, and one of them
whipped out a camcorder,
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54. would that be frogs'-porn?
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55. Oh!
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56. You are a malign influence.
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57. The worrying thing is, I have
actually done that joke in the past.
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58. - It's too late now, it's too late.
- He's the thief of bad gags.
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59. The fact is, Hapi was the god
who was responsible for
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60. the flooding of the Nile, which was
an annual event, took place in July
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61. and was cause of much celebration.
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62. If you've ever been up
or down the Nile,
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63. you will know that it's really just
this great carving of green
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64. through a desert, which is all made
fertile by this river.
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65. So it was... The whole civilisation
was predicated on the flooding
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66. of the Nile
and Hapi was the god who caused it.
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67. So, moving on, what's the jolliest,
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68. but frankly most dangerous thing
you can buy in a joke shop?
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69. - Tim? - I went to a joke shop. I said,
"What are you actually selling here?"
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70. He said, "Nothing,
we're not a real shop."
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71. Anyway, I've got some jokes here
that give you an example. Here we
are.
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72. And almost all of these
were invented by one man,
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73. who could be regarded as the father
of the joke shop.
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74. Have some nuts, Tim.
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75. - What happens when you open
the nuts? Oh no.
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76. I'm guessing I could aim
this at Rob...
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77. - You're guessing.
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78. And it's hours of laughter.
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79. Tim, that reminds me of last
Saturday evening, in an odd way.
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80. It's a man called
Soren Sorensen Adams.
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81. And he started life working
for a coal-tar derivative company.
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82. And coal-tar derivatives have many
uses, one of which was for a dye.
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83. And the particular dye
that came from coal-tar
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84. had the bizarre side effect
of making people sneeze.
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85. So the company managed to isolate
the ingredient
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86. that made people sneeze
and took it out.
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87. And he happened to be passing
and he saw
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88. these great barrels of the stuff
that made people sneeze.
He thought, "I'll have those."
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89. So he founded
The Cachoo Sneezing Powder Company,
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90. and it was a huge, huge success.
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91. He sold 15,000 worth of Cachoo,
just in the first year,
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92. a vast sum in 1910,
which is around the time we are.
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93. But 25 years later, it was
banned by the FDA for being toxic.
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94. - Oh. - But he had meantime...
- After several deaths.
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95. Yes.
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96. Meantime, he had invented
the squirting lapel flower.
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97. - Oh. - Oh. - That would fool anybody,
wouldn't it? - Oldie but a goody, yes.
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98. There we go. It has a little ring.
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99. - I used to have one of those. - There's
a... - Oh... - Hey! Highly amusing.
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100. - Help yourself to a dog turd.
Oops, there we are. - Eurgh.
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101. They're different. The old ones
were hard plastic, that's squidgy.
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102. - You're touching that. Eurgh.
- It's really quite unpleasant.
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103. Oh... Oh, dear!
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104. That is horrible, isn't it?
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105. Eurgh!
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106. - Even if that isn't a dog turd,
that's a horrible thing to do.
- Uuuuugh!
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107. Oh, my God!
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108. - Oh! - If you swallow that...
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109. If I swallow it, it's going to come
out the other end, that'll be good.
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110. What is it then? Fake or not?
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111. Then it would be a real false turd.
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112. Oh, actually, Alan,
I'm just getting a...
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113. just getting a message there's been
a bit of a mix-up, apparently.
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114. - This is a real one! - Oh dear.
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115. And here's a... Here's a...
You can cut your finger off.
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116. Or you could try this pen.
Try writing something with the pen.
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117. Oh, this is going to be hilarious.
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118. - Go on then. - Oh dear.
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119. - I never touched it! - Did he get
a shock? - I think so.
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120. That is... I'm really sorry,
because that is quite a severe
electric shock.
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121. - It's not...
- I'll just take your word for it.
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122. It's not insignificant, that one.
That is barely a joke.
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123. - It's not funny at all, Stephen!
- I'm so sorry. I'm so sorry.
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124. - Give it back to me. - That
really hurt. - Aaah. A bendy pencil.
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125. - I don't want a bendy pencil!
- A joy buzzer.
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126. He sold three million of these
during the Depression.
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127. - When you shake hands with someone
with one of those?
- That's right, you put
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128. the sort of ring on your finger so
it looks sort of normal. And then...
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129. - Can you buzz me? - Yeah,
you want to shake hands. Like that.
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130. - It doesn't give you a shock. - It's
a bit of a letdown. - It's just a buzz.
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131. He passed on... I say
"he passed on this", I don't mean...
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132. He thought this was
too vulgar to sell -
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133. the standard whoopee cushion. You
might want to blow that up. Yeah.
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134. It's not Soren Lorensen, who's
the imaginary friend in the Charlie
and Lola books is it?
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135. No, it's not. It's Soren Sorensen
Adams. It's quite difficult to...
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136. Is this a joke whoopee cushion
you can't blow up?
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137. It is difficult to get
the sphincter open, isn't it?
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138. - Woah!
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139. Ah, there we go, that's right.
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140. Maybe while Alan isn't looking...
Alan, lean over here for a second.
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141. That's it, take the false egg,
which is hilarious.
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142. That was possibly
the least convincing whoopee cushion
noise I've ever heard.
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143. Silent but deadly. - Yeah.
- It was strangely realistic. - Yeah.
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144. I just smothered it completely.
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145. - Alan's wearing a whoopee cushion
silencer on his jeans. - Very sensible.
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146. The best one is the fart...
the remote-control fart machine.
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147. - Yeah. - Have you got one of
those? - Of course I have. Yes.
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148. - Has anyone got one?
- How does it work?
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149. - You've got to get one.
- They are marvellous.
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150. You just, at Christmas...
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151. You bury it under the cushion
near your aunt.
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152. Yes, it's funny even if you just
put it under your dog's basket,
because the dog...
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153. - Absolutely. - The dog goes like that.
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154. - I'll take a picture. Alan, smile.
- No, what's going to happen now!
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155. Oh. It's supposed to be water.
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156. Anyway, we can probably put
away our little tray of fun toys,
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157. having electrocuted Alan, which
was the purpose of the evening.
Maybe you could pass me your...
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158. - How do you blow it up then?
- Could you pass me your turd?
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159. Woo. That's meant...
I think if you over, maybe.
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160. Have a go.
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161. That's better!
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162. - One of these has never had a round
of applause from 600 people before.
- Yeah.
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163. I read somewhere that this was
"the intellectual quiz show"
and you can see why.
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164. Now, one of the things
I want to prepare you for is to see
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165. if you can,
during the course of today's lesson,
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166. prepare, in any spare moments
you have, a limerick for me.
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167. - You know what a limerick is? - Yes.
- Aside from being a county in
- Ireland. It's a town.
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168. - Yes.
- There was an old man from Limerick,
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169. who was unaware of the short,
often humorous, poems
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170. that shared the same name
as his home town.
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171. Very, very good. Anyway,
so do be ready for that.
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172. But we've got a quicky for you.
What happens if you put
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173. someone's hand in a bowl of water
while they're sleeping?
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174. They have a little widdle,
don't they?
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175. Oh, no!
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176. - they don't have a little widdle.
- They don't?
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177. No, it's a total myth.
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178. Total myth, perpetuated by
schoolchildren and others.
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179. All kinds of experiments
have been done.
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180. That splendid programme,
Myth Busters, tried it.
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181. Zero wetting ensued. There's no
reason why it should happen.
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182. - It must have happened once.
- Well, by coincidence, possibly.
- By coincidence.
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183. That coincidence
was assumed to be causal
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184. and from that moment on
the myth was born.
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185. You can try it at home, I recommend
it, with your spouses and children.
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186. Like the one where
if you wet yourself
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187. while driving, you crash the car.
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188. - I would frankly...
- Has that not happened to everyone?
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189. If I crashed a car,
I think I would wet myself.
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190. - It's the other way round. - That's
what's interesting about the
experiment. - Yeah, it is. Absolutely.
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191. What about when you fall asleep
and you wake up
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192. and you've had half your eyebrow
shaved off?
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193. - Then you have bad friends.
- I do have hideous friends.
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194. - Yeah, cos that's the other thing
that can happen. - Yeah.
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195. It's all right,
I'm over it, it's fine.
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196. - You had your eyebrows shaved off?
- Yeah, you know?
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197. Obviously no-one's had it happen.
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198. Yeah, you fall asleep and someone
goes, "Oh, this will be even
funnier."
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199. Put your hand in a bottle of thing
and voom, voom, you wake up
and you look hideous.
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200. - That's just vile! - I'm Australian.
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201. Anyway, so there you go.
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202. What would be the best flavour for
an exploding sandwich?
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203. - Tim Vine?
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204. Cheese and ham grenade.
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205. Very good.
Very good. Excellent. There is...
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206. - No, is it wrong then? - It's wrong.
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207. Well, I mean it would explode,
obviously.
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208. Sauerkraut and cabbage can make you
explode, on a different level,
also funny.
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209. This one would make you explode on
that level too. It's in fact
a classic English sandwich,
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210. as in
The Importance Of Being Ernest.
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211. - What are the sandwiches that
Aunt Augusta particularly liked?
- Watercress. - Cucumber? - Mustard.
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212. She particularly liked
cucumber sandwiches.
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213. But this a very specific
species of cucumber.
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214. There it is, you see,
it's quite spiky.
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215. - The exploding cucumber of Panama.
- There's the fuse.
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216. - Yes, it's the exploding cucumber.
It's the squirting or exploding
cucumber. - Come on.
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217. It's a Mediterranean plant
and, when touched,
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218. it propels its seeds
in a sticky mucus at over 60mph.
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219. - You're pointing at Rob.
- I'm not pointing at Rob.
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220. I'm just saying
when that picture came up,
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221. we looked across at each other
and we both went, "Oh, testicles."
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222. - I mean it's clear. Didn't we? Were
you? - But can we be very clear,
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223. I do not propel my seeds
in a sticky mucus at 80mph.
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224. And certainly not up to 30 feet.
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225. - No, not... Well, on a good day,
on a good day. - In the teens.
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226. So you can see it's being
touched here
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227. and you can see the effect
of the operation of it exploding.
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228. If you look carefully. Boing! Yeah,
that's... I mean it's a sexual act.
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229. I mean it is spreading its seed.
And you can see the seeds flying
everywhere. Woah!
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230. - Does it do that to itself?
- Well no, it's...
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231. Because that looks like another
bit of it.
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232. Yeah, when it's very, very ripe
and it falls, it will do it,
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233. but otherwise
when touched it will also do it.
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234. Its actual Linnaean name
is Ecballium elaterium,
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235. which translates as the squirting
squirter, ecballium as in
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236. ballistics, it throws out, and
that's the forceful ejection of its
seeds.
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237. But the elaterium is the fact that
is a violent purgative.
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238. So it's a squirting squirter that
gives you the squirts.
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239. So, yes, it would... it would make
you explode from behind as well.
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240. - So in that sense it's fully
explosive. - Great!
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241. - Now, what's the worst place to be
licked by a goat? - Oh!
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242. At your parents' house.
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243. - The perineum.
- Well, the perineum would be
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244. - a bit unpleasant...
- What bizarre set of circumstances
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245. would result in you being,
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246. having your perineum well
and truly licked by a goat?
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247. What he said is not the right
answer, I ought to tell you.
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248. - So it's not the perineum? - No, it's
not. - Is it to do with the tongue
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249. because it's so raspy and...?
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250. It is to do with
the raspiness of the goat's tongue.
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251. It was used as a torture.
You would tie someone to a tree,
so their legs were sticking out.
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252. - Not licking the feet? - Bare feet
and cover the feet...
- They did it with pigs too.
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253. Cover the feet with honey
and the goat would lick it.
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254. At first it would be a pleasant
tickling sensation,
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255. and then it would
rip off layers of skin.
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256. - It was horrible. - Ugh. - I know.
- It would have livened up that
scene in Goldfinger, wouldn't it?
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257. He's tied down and the laser
beam comes between his legs.
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258. If he'd said, you know,
"Oh, my God, no! Not the goat."
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259. "Ah, Mr Bond, I put some honey onto
the underside on your foot.
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260. "You might call it your sole!
Ah ha ha.
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261. - "Bring in the goat."
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262. And he goes, "Oh, no, no, not the
goat. It's a furry goat. No. Oh."
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263. And then he goes,
"Actually that's quite pleasant."
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264. And he says, "Soon the pleasure
will turn to pain,
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265. "Mr Bond." And then he said,
"You expect me to talk?"
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266. - "No. I expect you to die."
- Well, yes.
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267. But Franciscus Brunus,
a late Medieval jurist
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268. and expert on torture, said in 1502,
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269. "I hear this is a very hard torture
and totally safe."
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270. Tickling was used in
the stocks as well.
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271. You tickled people's
feet in the stocks.
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272. And in the Han Dynasty in China
they used tickling a lot.
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273. Now let's see how your J
for "jeography" is.
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274. Lots of points for the right answer
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275. and a measly minus ten for a wrong
one, so try and be right.
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276. What's the name of
the largest mountain in Japan?
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277. - Fuji. - Is the right answer!
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278. Yes. It's an active volcano,
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279. although it hasn't
actually erupted for 200 years.
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280. - So it's probably about due. - Yeah,
it probably is. - Vesuvius is overdue.
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281. It's right next to Naples
and it's overdue
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282. and there's no way of predicting
when it will erupt.
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283. - No, I know. - They told us this when
we went to see it on a school trip!
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284. That'll cheer you up, won't it(?)
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285. They said... This is in the days
before 'Ealth and Safety, They took
you up into the crater to...
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286. Any minute now we're expecting it.
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287. It's overdue, we're standing in
the crater of it -
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288. a party of schoolchildren - and to
get there you had to walk across
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289. - a lava flow that had a sulphur crust
that was about that thick. - Woah.
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290. And so you walked across it
and there were places where
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291. it had fallen through and had
just a small fence round it
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292. and underneath was - blurp,
blurp - a volcanic mire.
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293. - Yeah, I know, it's amazing, isn't
it? - And they said to us, "Walk in
pairs and don't jump up and down."
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294. That was the safety brief.
We gathered together
and jumped up and down together.
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295. Of course you did.
Because they told you not to.
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296. Because as 12-year-old boys,
what are we doing to do?
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297. Anyway, so can you name a Caribbean
island group beginning with B?
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298. Bahamas.
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299. Oh, Alan got there first.
And I'm afraid
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300. - they're not Caribbean,
no, they're Atlantic. - What?
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301. They're not in the Caribbean, the
Bahamas, they're in the Atlantic.
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302. - I've been on holiday to them.
I've done a lot of holidays.
- Yes, you have.
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303. There is an island group beginning
with B in the Caribbean.
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304. - British Virgin. - Very good in the
audience. - That was a superb accent!
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305. Someone shouted out one of
the rarest things you could
possibly imagine, British Virgin!
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306. I wouldn't have accepted Barbados
because it's a single island.
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307. - It's only one island, Barbados.
- Exactly. There you go.
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308. - The Bahamas are not in the
Caribbean? - No, I know, big surprise.
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309. This bloke came up and said,
"I'm going to dress up as a small
island off the coast of Italy."
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310. I said, "Don't be so silly."
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311. Yes.
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312. - Finally on "jeography", which
country crosses the most time zones?
- Is it...
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313. - Oh. - Yeah, go on, go on, do it, do
it. - Come along. - Oh, all right.
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314. Go on, hey. - Wales.
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315. You see, I told you!
I knew not to do it.
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316. - And yet you won. - And you and you're
like, "Go on, do it." - At least you
didn't get a klaxon.
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317. Well, it was my first...
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318. - Yeah? - Canada. - No, it's not Canada.
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319. - I'm afraid we did... - I think it's a
trick, because I think it's going to
be a country that's got outposts.
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320. Possessions, you're correct.
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321. - Is it the United Kingdom?
- It's not the United Kingdom.
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322. We don't count our possessions as
all being part of the mother
country,
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323. but one ex-colonial power
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324. does regard all its outlying
possessions as being
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325. - part of the mother country.
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326. - France. - France?
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327. France is right.
Oh, yes, you got the buzzer,
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328. I'll have to give it to Julia.
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329. - Yes. - You were just too lazy to buzz.
- Well, I was...
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330. You've got to use the buzzer,
that's the rule.
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331. Exactly.
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332. Yes, so France
has 12 different time zones.
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333. The US has 11 time zones,
because of Hawaii being all the way,
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334. and Russia nine.
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335. Now, what is the longest
thing about this animal?
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336. Oh, its cock.
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337. - Oh, dear, oh, dear. - Its ears.
- It's a bilby. That's a bilby.
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338. - It's not a bilby.
- Oh, I just lost a point. - Is it not?
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339. And the longest thing
is not the ears,
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340. we rather hid the longest thing.
It's a cute little creature.
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341. - Is it its tail? - It is the tail.
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342. - Well done, and let's have a look.
- Points! - I was going to say tail!
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343. - Aw. - Oh, look at that.
- It's a cute little thing.
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344. - Look at him! - It hops like a little
kangaroo. - It's easy to catch
him, you stick your foot down.
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345. There it goes.
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346. - It lives in the Gobi Desert.
That is cute.
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347. And it has a very long tail,
as you can see,
that it uses for balance
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348. and, rather like a kangaroo,
it can also sit up on it.
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349. Very, very endearing.
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350. The ears are thought to be,
you know, to let the cool...
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351. to cool itself -
the blood cools through the ears.
That looks rather dead, that one.
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352. Well, he's got a... He's treated
himself to a Kinder Surprise.
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353. - He's swallowed the toy and choked on
it. - Yeah. And it's called a jerboa.
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354. - Jerboa. - It's called a jerboa
with a J, hence our J.
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355. It's from an Arabian word in fact,
meaning "flesh of the loins",
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356. rather oddly.
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357. But it's the same
origin as the word gerbil.
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358. And what is it about humans
and big ears?
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359. - They get bigger. - They get bigger.
- The ears get bigger.
- Yeah, I mean old...
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360. So does the nose, is that right?
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361. Old men do seem to have longer ears,
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362. but the trouble is, no-one's
done a study where they've measured
their ears when they were younger
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363. because it could well be,
it's logical...
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364. - The head's getting smaller.
- .. that having large ears
is a predictor of a long life.
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365. - I know what that man
did for a living. - What's that?
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366. He was a bowler hat model.
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367. That is a weird-looking guy.
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368. - He was a very fine bowler hat model
- I've got quite big ears,
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369. but I can also see what it's like to
be someone whose ears are flat
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370. against the side of their head,
because I can go like that.
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371. - Oh, my goodness.
- And I can hold it,
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372. and it's like having
an instant face-lift, like that.
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373. - How do you do that? - Well, I can't
really talk like this as well. - I see.
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374. I'll tell you later.
It means I can do a thing like
when you do it on a roller coaster
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375. and you're just going
over the top, you go...
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376. I bet your so-called serious brother
Jeremy can't do that.
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377. - He can't do that. - Yeah.
There's another way.
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378. He could host a phone-in about it
though, couldn't he?
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379. He could. Call in
if you can wiggle your ears.
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380. Having a problem with your ears?
Give us a ring now. Go on.
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381. He did once on his show
genuinely have...
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382. I thought they were running out
of things to do that day.
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383. He said, "Please..." And,
honestly, it wasn't a joke,
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384. he said, "Please phone in
if the sound of your own voice
terrifies you."
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385. That was a phone-in topic.
And did anyone call in?
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386. - People rang in screaming, "Argh!"
- Any calls? - Get someone else to ring.
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387. - Yeah, they had some people ring up.
- Sobbing.
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388. Help me, I'm so afraid!
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389. Anyway, why would the King of France
enjoy a naive salad for starters?
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390. He's got a tiny head, has
he got massive ears under that wig?
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391. Of course, naive backwards is?
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392. - Evian. - Evian, as in the water.
- Is it?
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393. - Isn't it? Evian. - Yeah...
Yes, it is... - Yes, it is. - ..Mr Fry.
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394. So it's not that it's backwards
that it's relevant,
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395. but it's that the letters
of naive make Evian,
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396. and the letters of naive
salad could be rearranged to make...
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397. - Dallas. - No, that would be,
that would be two Is, darling.
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398. - You're absolutely right, carry on.
- Yes, yeah. Naive salad.
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399. See if we can rearrange them.
Anyone in the audience who can see
what's going on?
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400. - Alive. - Alan... Davies!
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401. Aah, yeah! - Naive salad.
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402. - Of course, I think your middle name
is Roger, isn't it? - It is.
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403. So Alan R Davies would be
"anal adviser",
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404. um, which might be even better.
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405. The King of France might enjoy
an anal adviser.
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406. Must get a business card
done immediately.
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407. Or you could be "a ladies van".
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408. But the point is,
the Kings of France enjoyed
an Anagrammateur Royale -
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409. a royal anagrammer.
It was like a court jester.
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410. He would make up
flattering anagrams of your name.
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411. We probably know the famous ones
like Britney Spears is an anagram
of?
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412. Presbyterians, rather strangely,
but it is.
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413. Virginia Bottomley, who was a Tory
MP under Margaret Thatcher,
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414. anagramatises into
"I'm an evil Tory bigot".
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415. Which is just one of those things.
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416. And you get ones...
The ones which always fascinate me
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417. is laptop machines is
an anagram of Apple Macintosh,
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418. - which is very extraordinary,
isn't it? - Oh, wacky.
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419. And in Japan they had a similar
sort of wordplay fest,
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420. which is where someone would start
off with a haiku - five, seven,
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421. five syllables - and then someone
would add a seven syllable line.
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422. It was called the maeku-zuke,
responding to the front line.
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423. And you'd end up making some
witty or satirical poem on the fly.
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424. And that's why
I asked you to write a limerick.
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425. - So have you got a limerick for me?
Any of you? I hope you have. - I do.
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426. - Oh, go on then. - Girls first. - Yeah.
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427. I carouse in a style bacchanalian
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428. But I sleep in a way marsupalian
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429. I like to eat cheese
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430. But I never say please
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431. Yes, I'm French
but I'm also Australian.
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432. Oh, that's very good!
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433. It's certainly better than
the one I know about an Australian.
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434. There was a young man from Australia
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435. Who painted his arse like a dahlia.
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436. Twopence a smell
Was all very well
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437. But threepence a lick was a failure.
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438. - Alan, what have you got for us?
- I've got:
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439. There once was a show on TV
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440. That was always
the smart place to be
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441. I'm fully aware
You'd rather be there
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442. But instead you're stuck here
with me.
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443. Oh, very good.
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444. I like it.
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445. I've...
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446. I've got one about Rob Brydon.
Ooh.
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447. - Ooh! - Just because I've found
something that rhymes with Brydon.
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448. There was a young man
called Rob Brydon,
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449. Whose favourite film
was the Poseidon...
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450. Adventure...
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451. .. and he...
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452. Would watch it regularly
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453. That funny old man called Rob Brydon.
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454. Very good. Excellent because that's
not an easy rhyme. Yeah, yeah.
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455. It's easy to win on QI
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456. You don't need an IQ that's high
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457. Try not to be haughty
Just be a bit naughty
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458. And make sure you please
Stephen Fry.
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459. Yo, I like it! Very good.
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460. I say.
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461. Highly flattering. Many points.
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462. Appearing one night on QI
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463. I made up three facts on the fly
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464. The first was untrue
The second was too
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465. And the third
was about the size of my cock.
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466. And it was no exaggeration, Julia.
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467. Yes. Rob, what have you got for us?
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468. Nothing, as will become evident.
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469. There once was a chap
called Tim Vine...
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470. Oh, hello.
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471. Whose punning was simply sublime
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472. Sat next to Alan... Oh, bugger!
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473. OK.
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474. There once was a man
called Tim Vine
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475. Whose punning
was more than just fine
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476. Sat on the panel
With no end of flannel
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477. That lovely young chap
called Tim Vine.
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478. Tim Vine.
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479. Oh, that's very good,
very good. Very, very fine.
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480. Here's one I read in one
of the Piccolo book of jokes.
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481. There was a young man from Devizes
Whose ears were different sizes
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482. One was quite small
And no use at all
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483. The other was huge and won prizes.
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484. Oh, that's very sweet.
I like that. Excellent. Well,
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485. the strange thing
about limericks is no-one knows why
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486. they are called limericks.
They seem to have no relationship to
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487. the town of Limerick,
but they are and continue to be
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488. popular
and sometimes excessively rude.
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489. There was a young chaplain
from Kings
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490. Who talked about God and such things
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491. But his real desire
Was a boy in the choir
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492. With a bottom like jelly on springs.
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493. - There we go. - Lovely.
- Fair enough.Top that! - Yeah.
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494. That brings us to the somewhat
predictable punchline that we
call the scores.
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495. Let's see what's been happening.
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496. Well, divine as he is,
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497. I'm afraid in last place
with -27 is Tim Vine.
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498. In a...
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499. The beau of the valleys is in third
place with -6, Rob Brydon.
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500. Not good.
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501. And far from a failure,
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502. that wonderful Franco-Australian
Julia, with -3.
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503. Oh, phew. Thank you.
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504. It makes men gasp
and stretch their eyes,
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505. Alan Davies is clear winner
with +12!
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506. So that's all
from Rob, Julia, Tim, Alan and me.
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507. Thank you, good night
and be extremely pleasant
to each other. Bye-bye.
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