1. Gooooooooooood evening,
good evening, good evening,
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2. good evening, good evening,
good evening
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3. and welcome to an episode of QI
that's all about inventions
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4. and discoveries, in fact
anything that's "just the job".
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5. They say that the greatest
of all inventors is accident.
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6. With that in mind, let's meet the
tremendously timely, Jason Manford.
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7. The consistently coincidental,
Jeremy Clarkson.
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8. The stupefyingly serendipitous
Sandi Toksvig.
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9. And an accident waiting
to happen, Alan Davies.
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10. So, let's hear your
Alexander Graham Bells.
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11. Jason goes...
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12. - It's all right. - Jeremy goes...
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13. Is it going to be a car horn?
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14. - No. - Surprising. Sandi goes...
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15. I want something trim.
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16. Good guess. And Alan goes...
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17. "Ride Of The Valkyries"
By Wagner
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18. Oh.
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19. Oh.
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20. - I could listen to this for ever.
- He loves this one.
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21. It's a 14 and a half hour...
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22. - Orgasm. - It's a Wagner ring tone.
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23. Isn't that wonderful? I could
listen to that for ever.
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24. Anyway, so, let's begin with
an interesting question.
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25. What were chainsaws
originally invented for?
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26. Proctology.
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27. - Wow! That's scary.
Yeah, that's a...
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28. - Slicing an arse in half. - Yeah.
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29. - Well, do you know, you were in
the right area. Really?
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30. - I have to say. I mean...
- Circumcision.
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31. What I mean is, you began
straight away with medicine.
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32. You didn't say trees or, you know,
cutting down, you know, buildings.
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33. Oh, cutting off legs.
So, like bones and...
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34. Bones is the right answer.
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35. Yes, in particular it was
a rather unpleasant procedure.
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36. Oh, don't, it'll be a boy thing
against a girl thing. It will be.
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37. - Well, not against, in order to...
- Well no, no, but it...
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38. It was doctors trying to help.
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39. Oh, I know what it is.
I know what it is.
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40. It'll be a boy thinking a woman's
taking far too long over labour
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41. going, "Oh, I can't stand all that
panting, I know,
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42. "we'll get a chain saw and just cut
that baby out." That's what it is.
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43. Do you know, you're
absolutely right.
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44. Oh, my God!
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45. It was in... it was in 1783.
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46. That's no excuse.
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47. It was two Scots doctors called
John Aitken and James Jeffrey,
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48. and it was called a symphysiotomy
and it was a procedure
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49. to widen the pelvis if the baby's
head was too large to pass through.
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50. Oh, can you hear the high tone of
all those sighs in the audience?
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51. - What I like about this picture...
- It's a bit eye-watering.
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52. It's a ladies' ward, so of course
there is some baking going on
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53. on the left-hand side. Yes.
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54. Oh, that's right, there is.
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55. A little cake display case
of buns in the oven, Stephen,
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56. - you see what I did there.
- Buns in the oven!
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57. - They didn't really, darling?
- I'm afraid they did.
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58. When I say chain saw,
it was literally a chain,
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59. - it was like a watch chain in fact.
- Ah, right. - It was an up and down...
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60. So it wasn't a full
lumberjack giving it...
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61. ..it's a boy!
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62. They hadn't yet invented the
internal combustion engine.
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63. And caesarean sections, they were...
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64. - Caesarean sections have replaced the
same idea, that the... - Phew.
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65. Yes, quite, exactly.
It's a bit of a relief.
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66. It would have been easier to do
the caesarean section, I think.
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67. Sawing the pelvic bone in half
is not as easy as maybe just
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68. - a small incision in... - I know, you
would have thought they have...
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69. Pop it out of the sun roof.
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70. But this was before
antiseptic surgery
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71. and of course it was before
any kind of anaesthetic.
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72. Was there not a meeting?
You know what I mean?
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73. There was not a meeting where
someone goes, "I've got it."
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74. And they go, "What?" And they go,
"Chain saw, isn't it?"
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75. Well, they looked at a watch chain
and they said, you know, if you can,
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76. we could sort of ease away the bone
like that, rather than using a saw.
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77. I know, everyone's wincing.
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78. Have we got another question that
isn't about that?
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79. Would it heal? Presumably
not very well.
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80. Well, they then went on to use
the same thing, for example,
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81. if someone had a bit of diseased
bone, they would do the same thing,
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82. they would sort of take it and
they'd go up and down like that,
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83. and then they'd do it lower down and
the two bits would fuse together,
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84. and they'd have a stiff arm, but it
would get rid of the diseased bone.
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85. It was called an osteotome.
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86. It eventually became like a
chain saw, you can see one here.
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87. - That is more like a chain saw.
- My God! You don't want that...
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88. - But pretty unpleasant. - You
don't want that coming at you.
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89. You really don't.
You really, really don't.
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90. I remember my wife had a baby,
I remember it well...
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91. - I was going to say. - Yeah...
- Kind of thing you wouldn't forget.
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92. It was a grand day,
but when she had a baby,
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93. and there's a point where
you go in to see the fella
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94. - who's going to sort it out on the
day. - Obstetrician?
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95. That's him, yeah, he's got
an official title.
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96. And you go and see him, and as the
husband, he says,
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97. "Right, you sit there on a chair."
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98. And then he pulls the curtain across
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99. while him and your wife
are in this thing,
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100. while he has a little dabble,
or whatever he's doing.
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101. - It's a bit intimate, isn't it?
- You go, "I've seen it, mate."
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102. Do you know what I mean? There's
nothing... this is why we're here.
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103. Well, you don't look when that
happens though, do you,
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104. at the moment of conception?
Do you actually have a look?
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105. You're looking into...
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106. Surely... Surely... Sorry.
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107. I think I was watching...
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108. Stephen doesn't need to know,
Jason, he doesn't need to know.
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109. Well, I thought you were gazing
lovingly into her eyes while...
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110. Gazing lovingly... gazing lovingly
at the Bourne Identity,
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111. which is still on the television.
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112. - As you reach for your drink.
- Oh, I'm...
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113. What do you think, darling, that he's
got a periscope at the moment of...?
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114. I'm sorry, I'm sorry, look...
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115. I don't know why you and I
are having this conversation.
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116. It's true.
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117. After the invention of the
internal combustion engine,
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118. where we're getting Jeremy
to his home territory now,
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119. eventually by 1920
they were small enough
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120. - to be able to have a hand-powered...
chain. - Cut down trees.
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121. - And then they cut down trees.
Exactly. - Yes.
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122. Well, anyway, there you are.
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123. Chainsaws were originally
invented for midwives.
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124. Staying in that general area,
unfortunately,
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125. explain how an electric
jockstrap works.
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126. Is there going to be
a demonstration?
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127. - Do you know, I kind of wish there
were.Is that what this is?
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128. - No. - Argh, oh! That's what this is.
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129. Is it a warming thing, or...?
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130. An electric anything takes us
into a period of time.
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131. - Galvanism. It's Victorian,
galvanism. - Galvan, exactly.
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132. Everybody thought electricity
would cure everything,
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133. stimulate everything
and achieve everything.
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134. And so at the back of every
newspaper there was an electrical
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135. something, a galvanic bath, but
these were electric jockstraps.
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136. Well, presumably, because they had
all sorts of things to stop boys
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137. playing with themselves,
it must have been...
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138. that would stop you, wouldn't it?
It would stop you, wouldn't it?
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139. - If you had a shock in your pants.
- No, I'm thinking it might be nice.
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140. - Yes. - Oh, really? - You're
spot-on. We men know that.
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141. Because there are certain code
words in Victorian English.
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142. "Nervous and general debility,
lost vigour, decline,
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143. "and the whole train of gloomy
attendants,"
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144. was standard code for impotence.
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145. Enter the Heidelberg electric belt.
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146. There it is.
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147. - It's a bit high up, isn't it? - Yes.
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148. Oh, I see, so actually there's
the thing down there.
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149. That's really kind of buzzing away
in the important area.
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150. And that is actually going to cause
you to, well, I'm afraid
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151. the phrase is probably embarrassing,
they advise seminal economy.
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152. - They're advising against...
- Is that with easyJet? - Yeah.
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153. They're advising against
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154. "wantonly jettisoning too much
nervous substance."
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155. - Which basically...
- Is that what they called it?
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156. That's code for semen. In other
words, it's essentially a sex toy.
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157. - "Wantonly jettisoning." - It is...
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158. Don't wantonly jettison
your nervous substance.
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159. I like the idea of nervous semen
just coming out going...
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160. "Woaaah."
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161. He's quite camp.
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162. Perhaps he's having problems
with his virility
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163. - cos he's sleeping with the wrong sex.
- Well, it might be that.
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164. But there genuinely was an item,
as you can see, hugely advertised,
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165. there were lots of different...
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166. So is it designed then to lift
the dormant chap or to de-nervify
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167. - the semen? - It's basically
designed saying,
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168. "Would you like to enjoy the
experience of a little bit
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169. "of a tingling down there
that maybe has disappeared?"
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170. But it probably was just like,
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171. "That's a damn good thing to
take to a hotel room."
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172. - Why have they gone out of fashion?
- I know.
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173. Are these still for sale?
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174. I feel like if Ann Summers
did them, you could see,
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175. not in the upstairs bit, the
downstairs bit of Ann Summers...
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176. Tell me about this,
Jason, because I...
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177. Upstairs is like, just like
chocolate willies and that.
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178. Downstairs... someone's going
to get hurt, Stephen.
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179. Really? I've never been in an Ann
Summers. You'd think it would be
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180. - the other way round, you'd have to
go upstairs... - No, you come in
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181. at ground floor level. I'm only going
off our nearest twelve branches.
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182. Yes, right.
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183. But, yeah, that's the normal one.
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184. And then you sort of pop downstairs,
you know, anniversary, or whatever...
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185. Good gracious.
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186. But the other thing about that
is you got ten days free trial.
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187. - Wow! - I don't know if you can see,
but it's actually printed there.
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188. What if you send it back
and it goes to somebody else?
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189. That's what I'm worried about
with the free trial.
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190. I know, exactly. You're using
a used one.
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191. It is going to get much more
acceptable and decent,
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192. this programme, I promise you,
as we move on. So anyway,
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193. what was your great-grandmother
doing down the back of the sofa?
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194. Was she, was she a Borrower?
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195. Was she a Borrower?
No, she wasn't a Borrower.
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196. I come from a particularly
small family,
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197. and we lost many, in various
pieces of furniture.
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198. I had an aunt went through a cane
chair, we never saw her again.
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199. Was she dead and been
cremated and you spilt it?
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200. What was happening around the time
of one's great-grandmother,
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201. - what sort of...? - They were using
the elderly to stuff sofas.
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202. About a hundred years ago families
began to do a thing in order to
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203. register their lives and formalise
their existences, after weddings.
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204. - Photographs. - Photographs, exactly.
- So Victorian...
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205. And particularly their babies,
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206. they liked to have their
babies photographed,
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207. but exposure times were quite long
and how do you keep a baby still?
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208. - Oh, I've seen this! This is
this weird thing. - Heroin.
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209. There's loads of pictures of them.
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210. - They've got like sheets
over their head. - Yes.
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211. - And they're sort of holding
the child in place. - Exactly.
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212. They're called "hidden mother
photographs".
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213. - They're terrifying, there's
a website of them. - Yes.
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214. - And they're terrifying, yeah. Look at
that. - Look, there's one. - Oh, wow!
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215. - That's horrible! - It's like
a woman in a burqa.
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216. Yes. It's horrible. Extraordinary.
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217. There's the mother pretending to be
a sofa or an item of furniture,
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218. keeping her baby quiet
and still enough
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219. for the exposure time
of the photograph.
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220. We've got another one where the
mother looks a bit like a carpet.
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221. I mean it's really. There...
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222. - That's not even a baby!
- I know, it's a young girl.
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223. - There is a whole class of these.
- Yeah.
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224. "Don't move, you bitch, don't move."
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225. And you, Jason, definitely
get the points there
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226. - for having known about them. - It's
terrifying. - They are rather peculiar.
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227. It's brilliant though,
there's hundreds
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228. and they're all sinister, like,
rather than just let the kid
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229. - stand by itself, you've gone,
"Go and stand with that ghost." - Yes.
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230. - It's weird. - Well, the mother
will be talking to the child,
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231. saying, "It's all right, darling,
sit still, I'm going to hold you."
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232. The chair's talking!
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233. "I am a sofa, ha-ha-ha!"
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234. We have for you probably the first
ever photograph of a human being,
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235. which is rather exciting.
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236. It's from the 1840s and it's
by Louis Daguerre himself.
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237. He took a photograph, in those days
very long exposure,
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238. and all the people who were there
would have moved through as a blur,
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239. you wouldn't have seen,
but there is a boot boy
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240. with a customer with his leg up as
it were, and you can see that
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241. and we can probably circle it for
you and give it a little bit of a...
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242. And that is the first human being,
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243. or pair of human beings,
ever photographed.
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244. - It's rather wonderful, isn't it? - How
long's he take doing them shoes then?
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245. Yeah, I know. It's surprising.
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246. - It was a ten-minute
exposure, in fact. - Oh, OK.
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247. That's not too bad then.
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248. - It was in 1838, that's how
long ago it was. - Wow.
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249. And we have a photograph for you
and you have to identify
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250. who the person is in the photograph,
which... Who's that?
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251. Is that Bruce Forsyth?
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252. - It's not Bruce Forsyth, no.
In the early years.
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253. It's quite surprising,
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254. it's someone you would not imagine
there would be a photograph of.
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255. - OK. Can you give us a country?
- He's British.
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256. He was Prime Minister
of the United Kingdom.
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257. Oh, Prime Minister of Britain.
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258. But he was from an Irish family.
Actually the Duke of Wellington.
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259. - Wow! Duke of Wellington.
- Yeah. The victor of Waterloo.
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260. As an old man. He looks surprisingly
benign, considering his reputation.
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261. - But isn't it amazing there is a
photograph of him? - I had no idea.
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262. - Yeah. It's rather fabulous.
- That's a great picture.
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263. - It is actually a lovely picture,
isn't it? - It is, yeah.
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264. Anyway, let's move onto something
very, very different.
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265. Name something interesting
you can do with a Slinky.
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266. - Well, it's a...
- Well, you can't untangle it.
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267. That's certainly... Oh, God, I got
through so many as a child.
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268. - They're the most, it is the most...
- Wasn't it? Oh.
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269. You go to the top of the stairs, and
go, "Look at this, it's, oh, no!"
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270. - And then that would be it and your
toy. - We've given you some stairs,
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271. you can take your stairs and your
Slinky out and demonstrate.
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272. - Oh, wow. - There may be young people
in the audience
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273. - who've never had the excitement.
- You're going to love this.
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274. - You can attach it to your... - This is,
I'm going back, look at that!
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275. Yeah!
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276. - Isn't that fun?
- They're the best things.
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277. Oh, dear, you may have pointed
it in the wrong direction.
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278. - I'm literally the happiest
man in the world. - Brilliant.
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279. Hey! That was a beauty.
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280. But he invented this out of, he was
a suspension designer, wasn't he?
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281. He was a naval officer,
his name is Richard James.
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282. And it was in 194...
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283. It's called the Alan Effect.
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284. No! You don't do it like that.
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285. You lift the top.
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286. Somebody go and get him
a Raleigh trike.
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287. How can you not work a Slinky?
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288. How can you not do that?
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289. Yeah!
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290. Can you imagine giving this
to a child now and going,
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291. "That's it, that's your gift.
Have a toy, happy Christmas."
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292. Whatever you do, don't attach
it to your electric jockstrap.
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293. - No, absolutely. - Didn't he
invent it by accident? - Yes.
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294. He was making coiled springs
and he invented...
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295. He was an American naval officer
and he literally knocked over
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296. a spring, and it went for a walk,
and he thought,
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297. "Oh, that's interesting." And so he
developed and he experimented
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298. - and he came up with the Slinky.
And more than... - Look, to be fair,
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299. - it was his wife who thought it would
make a good toy. - Yes, it's true.
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300. Let us remember that sometimes women
get overlooked in these things.
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301. More than 300 million were sold,
which is an incredible number.
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302. All to me, because
I kept breaking them.
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303. Yeah, I know, because they tangle
up. Now if you'll put them away...
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304. Do you mind if I keep the stairs?
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305. Because there's a few shelves in the
kitchen that I still can't reach.
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306. You're very welcome.
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307. But what we do have is a very
extraordinary effect that happens
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308. if you drop a Slinky, which
is that when you let go of it,
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309. the bottom does not move.
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310. Watch the film and you'll see
what I mean.
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311. It's actually really astonishing.
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312. It's a very peculiar effect.
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313. Watch the bottom of the Slinky,
as it actually happens,
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314. in very high speed camera.
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315. - The bottom is completely still.
Isn't that amazing? - Oh, wow.
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316. - Wow! - That is a really bizarre effect.
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317. And they can't really explain
quite why that happens.
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318. Oh, I bet James May could.
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319. "No, no, you see,
the thing is..." Oh, God!
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320. Is there a use for this discovery?
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321. Maybe Jason's idea
of crossing it with
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322. the Heidelberg electric jockstrap
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323. may result in a really quite
remarkable experience.
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324. - You'll see me on the next series
of Dragons' Den. - Yeah.
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325. "I have jettisoned wantonly,
but it hasn't hit the floor."
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326. It is a great phrase, wantonly
to jettison, isn't it?
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327. It really is marvellous. Anyway.
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328. Now, we've got more toys to play
with, so put the Slinky away.
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329. I'm going to ask you, basically
this simple question,
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330. - why are jerries better
than flimsies? - Jerry?
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331. - When we say a jerry, there are
jerries, jerry...? - Jerry cans.
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332. Jerry cans. Jerry cans.
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333. - And what were jerry cans?
- Well, it's for petrol.
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334. - It's a thing that was used
in the war, wasn't it? - By whom?
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335. Well, presumably by the Germans.
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336. That's... We eventually used them,
but firstly by the Germans.
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337. And we had something else
called the flimsy.
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338. And unfortunately, the flimsy
was absolutely cack.
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339. But didn't the name give it away?
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340. We only won the war by nicking
all their ideas.
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341. Yeah. On the left is a jerry can.
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342. And there on the right is a flimsy.
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343. And General Auchinleck, who was
the predecessor of Montgomery
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344. in the Eighth Army, actually said
this about the flimsy. He said,
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345. "The flimsy is an ill-constructed
container for carrying fuel,"
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346. he said, "leaked 30%
of its fuel between base
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347. "and consumer, with huge
consequences in lost lives,
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348. "battles and shipping."
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349. So British soldiers basically
spent their life
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350. trying to steal the jerry can.
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351. To the extent the Germans started
booby-trapping them,
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352. cos they knew that the British
wanted to steal them,
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353. cos they were the most desirable
object, the jerry can.
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354. I have two of them for you.
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355. They are absolutely astonishing,
incredible inventions.
Copy !req
356. Basically they're a
single weld, like this.
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357. They have this fabulous cap,
they have an inner lining,
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358. which means they can carry
water or petrol.
Copy !req
359. This thing opens and what's called
a donkey dick comes out.
Copy !req
360. - It was nicknamed the donkey dick.
But rather cleverly... - So similar.
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361. It's been a hell of a show
for me, I tell you.
Copy !req
362. But even, I mean they have
this little indentation here.
Copy !req
363. - What do you think that does?
- Strength. - It strengthens it,
Copy !req
364. - but also in heat, it... - It allows it
to expand. - It allows it to expand.
Copy !req
365. And the handles are absolute genius,
because if you have two empty ones,
Copy !req
366. you can hold them together
using the handles.
Copy !req
367. - One here... I'm going to stand up
like so... - Standing.
Copy !req
368. So you simply hold them like that,
using that, but also,
Copy !req
369. when you're holding it, you hand it
to someone else, there's a handle.
Copy !req
370. - You simply take it, like that.
- Oh, I see. - And they are...
Copy !req
371. Getting the donkey's dick
out now, sir.
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372. You won't be able to,
it's really, really stiff.
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373. God!
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374. It's amazing! It's a real talent.
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375. - I'm so sorry. How do I do it?
- I don't know how you do it.
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376. It's amazing. I love it.
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377. But that is genuinely one of the
most brilliant designs ever made.
Copy !req
378. - It's never been improved. - But they
still lost. - They still did lose.
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379. One of the reasons they lost
is that by the end of the war,
Copy !req
380. we produced 21 million of the
jerry cans, and I will quote
Copy !req
381. President Roosevelt, who said,
"Without these cans, it would
Copy !req
382. "have been impossible for our armies
to cut their way across France
Copy !req
383. "at a lightning pace which exceeded
even the German blitzkrieg of 1940."
Copy !req
384. So basically we won the war by
stealing the Germans' jerry can,
Copy !req
385. because the movement of vehicles
Copy !req
386. and therefore of petrol, is
absolutely essential in war.
Copy !req
387. - So is that where the word, so the
word flimsy has come from that? - No.
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388. - No. Flimsy existed as a word. - OK.
Copy !req
389. They were called flimsies because
they were just so shite.
Copy !req
390. Oh, I see, right.
Copy !req
391. They were just square metal
boxes that rotted and leaked
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392. - and were useless. - OK.
Copy !req
393. And these designs were, I mean
almost every aspect of them...
Copy !req
394. and not only that, they floated,
which the British ones didn't do.
Copy !req
395. So the Germans could drop them
at sea or in rivers,
Copy !req
396. I mean, they were kind of
the iPod of the day,
Copy !req
397. they were just the most
perfect design imaginable.
Copy !req
398. On the other hand, what's the least
promising invention in history?
Copy !req
399. Something that people thought
wasn't going to be a success?
Copy !req
400. Yeah, least welcomed and then turned
out to be most successful.
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401. It wasn't the energy-saving
light bulb?
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402. Because that's one, that's an
invention that for me...
Copy !req
403. - Yeah, but that's been forced
upon us, hasn't it? - Yes.
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404. And it's the worst invention.
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405. - "I need this room to be light
in about an hour." - Yeah.
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406. I leave them on 24 hours a day
so that I can read a book
Copy !req
407. when I go to bed at night.
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408. This was invented by a man
called Sylvan Goldberg,
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409. but you wouldn't think of it
as an invention
Copy !req
410. and yet I suppose it is,
and it's the shopping trolley.
Copy !req
411. And men thought it was effeminate
to walk around a shop
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412. pushing a trolley, and women
thought it was an insult
Copy !req
413. to their ability to carry a basket.
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414. "Perfectly capable of carrying
baskets, I don't need you to do it."
Copy !req
415. So he invented it in 1938,
and for two years
Copy !req
416. he paid people basically just
to wander round supermarkets.
Copy !req
417. Or the early shops wheeling them, so
people got used to the sight of it.
Copy !req
418. - And then he died in 1984. - Did he
pay them to wear those clothes?
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419. Someone must have paid her to wear
that outfit, I would have thought.
Copy !req
420. Sylvan Goldberg died in 1984
worth 400 million.
Copy !req
421. - That's a lot of pound coins.
- So, he kept the... Yes.
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422. - Very good. - It's a lot of clogged
canals, is what it is.
Copy !req
423. It's a lot of clogged canals
as well, yes. So it did work.
Copy !req
424. Another example was bubble gum,
Copy !req
425. which was invented by a man
called Frank Fleer in 1906.
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426. He called it "Blibber-Blubber."
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427. But unfortunately, his particular
recipe meant that once
Copy !req
428. the bubble had burst, you had to
use turpentine to get it off.
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429. - Which is in itself toxic anyway.
That's brilliant.
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430. So if you've ever got any form of
gum, particularly nicotine gum...
Copy !req
431. - In your hair? - No, on the screen
of an iPhone. - Oh, no. Is that...?
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432. That's what I want an invention for,
I've just decided.
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433. If you get the gum on
the front of an iPhone,
Copy !req
434. there is no way of removing it.
Hammer, chisel.
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435. There must be an app.
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436. - The nicotine gum removal app.
- Very good. Very good.
Copy !req
437. And I think Sandi will
approve of this as well,
Copy !req
438. we ought to hear it for
Mary Anderson. 1903.
Copy !req
439. - Ah, Mary Anderson. - Do you know
about Mary Anderson? - I do.
Copy !req
440. - Tell me about her. - She invented
the windscreen wiper.
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441. You're absolutely,
you are a fountain of...
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442. Well, what I love about that is
that it had to be a woman who
Copy !req
443. invented the windscreen wiper,
because up until then
Copy !req
444. men had been going, "Don't be silly,
dear, I can see perfectly well."
Copy !req
445. So, of course it was a woman
who invented it.
Copy !req
446. Unfortunately, yes,
she noticed tram drivers,
Copy !req
447. street car drivers, having to stop
and move snow away
Copy !req
448. and she invented it in 1903,
Copy !req
449. and really there just
weren't enough cars.
Copy !req
450. And by the time it was useful,
her patent had elapsed,
Copy !req
451. - so she made not a cent from it. - Oh.
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452. It's the same as Dorothy Levitt,
who invented the rear view mirror.
Copy !req
453. So women enabled you to see where
you were going and where you'd been.
Copy !req
454. Oh, they did it to do
their lipstick, come on.
Copy !req
455. Dorothy Levitt recommended that
you take your compact mirror
Copy !req
456. and place it on the dash so that
you could see behind you
Copy !req
457. and she was the person who invented
the rear view mirror.
Copy !req
458. But again, she didn't make any money
out of it,
Copy !req
459. because there was no patent
available for it.
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460. - I'm very impressed you knew about
Mary Anderson. - Thank you very much.
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461. And we should indeed pay
due courtesy to her.
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462. Anyway, what about the
dry-ear ear dryer?
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463. It's a machine to dry
your ears. OK.
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464. "Drying your ears has never been
simpler or more effective,
Copy !req
465. "the device blows hot air
into your ear."
Copy !req
466. Although the instructions advise you
to dry your ears first with a towel.
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467. - Is this contemporary, this is
modern? - Yes, it's a real invention.
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468. - All you need is a tube, don't you?
- But it's modern? - Modern, yeah.
Copy !req
469. - You just need a tube. - Yeah.
Or a hairdryer would do the job.
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470. You don't even need that, Stephen,
you just need a tube.
Copy !req
471. - But most people have hairdryers.
- Yeah, but a tube, just a tube!
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472. A tube would do it.
I know, you're right.
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473. Anyway, here's
a marvellous question,
Copy !req
474. what was wrong with the first
sound recording device?
Copy !req
475. Didn't work? Didn't have
any speakers?
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476. Well, it was that it recorded
sound perfectly well...
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477. - But you couldn't play it back.
- Yes. - Play it back.
Copy !req
478. You couldn't play it back.
A man called Martinville,
Copy !req
479. he was a Frenchman,
Copy !req
480. he used burnt soot and it
registered sound waves on it.
Copy !req
481. But they sort of scratched it out,
didn't they?
Copy !req
482. But recently it was reverse
engineered and engineers
Copy !req
483. managed to get the sound back
of him singing Au Clair de la Lune.
Copy !req
484. Is that the thing they played on
Radio 4 and Charlotte Green
Copy !req
485. - cried with laughter, was it? - Would
you like to hear that moment?
Copy !req
486. It was one of my favourite
moments of all time.
Copy !req
487. Unfortunately, she had to announce
the death of Abby Mann
Copy !req
488. and she couldn't help
corpsing, bless her.
Copy !req
489. So listen to this, because you'll
hear the oldest-ever sound recording
Copy !req
490. plus the unfortunate
event that followed.
Copy !req
491. Charlotte Green: 'American historians
have discovered what they think
Copy !req
492. 'is the earliest recording of the
human voice, made on a device
Copy !req
493. 'which scratched sound waves onto
paper blackened by smoke.
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494. 'It was made in 1860, 17 years before
Thomas Edison first demonstrated
Copy !req
495. 'the gramophone, and featured an
excerpt from a French song,
Copy !req
496. 'Au Clair de la Lune.'
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497. 'The... the
award-winning screenwriter,
Copy !req
498. 'Abby Mann, has died
at the age of 80.' Oh, no.
Copy !req
499. 'He won an Academy award in 1961
for Judgment at Nuremberg.
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500. 'Excuse me, sorry.
Copy !req
501. 'Abby Mann also won several
Emmys, including...'
Copy !req
502. 'Including
one in 1973 for...
Copy !req
503. 'For a film which featured a...'
Copy !req
504. 'A police detective called...'
Copy !req
505. 'The character, on whom
a long-running TV series
Copy !req
506. 'was eventually based.'
Copy !req
507. Charlotte Green's great
contribution.
Copy !req
508. There's somebody in the corner
of the room going...
Copy !req
509. "We haven't got it, we're going to
have to go with the item anyway.
Copy !req
510. "I'll do it, I'll do it, I'll do it,
I know what it sounds like."
Copy !req
511. "They'll never know, they'll
never know. Don't laugh."
Copy !req
512. - So this one you could record into it,
but then nobody could hear it? - Yes.
Copy !req
513. Could you not just get that for
Jedward, like for their next album?
Copy !req
514. - They have a lovely day out, that's
fine. - Everything would be perfect.
Copy !req
515. - Nobody has to suffer. - You're right.
You're absolutely right.
Copy !req
516. OK, so now we're going
to go for a jolly jape,
Copy !req
517. and I have an extraordinary pendulum
swing that my friends here
Copy !req
518. are going to bring on and I'm going
to show you a remarkable action.
Copy !req
519. It's handmade by our chief
science elf, Will Bowen,
Copy !req
520. who's a bit of a genius, and it's an
effect that was first noted
Copy !req
521. by Galileo, that's how old it is.
But you don't see many of these
Copy !req
522. and I think it would make
a great executive toy.
Copy !req
523. So I'm going to lay this down here,
Copy !req
524. and push it and let go.
Copy !req
525. And it will start to go in this
rather beautiful...
Copy !req
526. - Look at that, isn't that lovely?
- Oh, wow.
Copy !req
527. But, it's better than that, because
then it starts to get a bit,
Copy !req
528. get a bit ordinary.
Copy !req
529. And then it starts to move into
a different sort of rhythm
Copy !req
530. and then they start to get
in step, like that.
Copy !req
531. Ooh, look at that, they're starting
to move together again.
Copy !req
532. But then something really
amazing happens as well,
Copy !req
533. which is they go back
into their wave formation,
Copy !req
534. which is about to happen.
Copy !req
535. It's a whole long process,
but it's utterly predictable
Copy !req
536. and it follows very specific
laws of physics.
Copy !req
537. And here it goes
back into its waves again.
Copy !req
538. Look at that.
Copy !req
539. I think that's pretty
amazing, isn't it?
Copy !req
540. And it will carry on doing that,
and as you can see,
Copy !req
541. it will carry on going through
those cycles behind us,
Copy !req
542. and it's a principle, as I say,
that Galileo worked out.
Copy !req
543. The central bob makes 60
swings in a minute.
Copy !req
544. The one to its left does 59
in 60 seconds, and so on.
Copy !req
545. And it means after one minute
they're back to where they started.
Copy !req
546. It doesn't matter how far
you push a pendulum,
Copy !req
547. it still takes the
same amount of time
Copy !req
548. to swing from one side to the other.
Copy !req
549. And it's using that that makes
it go in and out of sync
Copy !req
550. in these different ways. There it
is. It's the Galileo Pendulum
Copy !req
551. and wouldn't it make
a great executive toy?
Copy !req
552. Well, that's all the inventions
we've got time for this week,
Copy !req
553. except of course for the scores.
Copy !req
554. And believe me,
these are not invented,
Copy !req
555. much as though people may believe
it, the scores are rigorously
Copy !req
556. and scientifically worked out.
Copy !req
557. And in first place, with an
extraordinary plus 13
Copy !req
558. is Sandi Toksvig.
Copy !req
559. Wow!
Copy !req
560. And only ten points behind
in second place with plus three,
Copy !req
561. - Jeremy Clarkson. - A plus!
Copy !req
562. Why am I clapping?
Copy !req
563. And very impressive from
Jason Manford, with plus two! Wow!
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564. I don't know how I got that.
Copy !req
565. And I'm afraid the smallest swing
of the pendulum, minus eight,
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566. Alan Davies.
Copy !req
567. And that's all from Jason,
Jeremy, Sandi, Alan and me.
Copy !req
568. Thank you, be extremely kind to
each other for ever and good night.
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