1. This programme contains
some strong language
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2. Hello.
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3. Good evening, good evening,
good evening, good evening.
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4. Welcome to QI, where we are having
a veritable chimp's tea party
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5. with jam, jelly and juice.
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6. Joining me for my midnight feast, we
have the jam-smothered Jo Brand...
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7. .. the jelly-slathered
Liza Tarbuck...
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8. .. the juice-bedribbled
Sue Perkins...
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9. .. and - don't do that
on the floor, please - Alan Davies.
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10. Well, it's a midnight feast,
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11. and just in case anyone sees
Matron coming,
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12. I've equipped my pals with buzzers.
Jo goes...
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13. .. Liza goes...
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14. .. Sue goes...
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15. .. and Alan goes...
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16. Party time!
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17. And what begins with J
and appears to be alive?
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18. Is it me?
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19. You begin with J, and are most
magnificently, radiantly alive.
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20. He's on the turn.
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21. Liza. James Blunt.
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22. Closer, I grant you.
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23. Yeah? Jeremy Clarkson. Oh!
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24. This is something that appears to be
alive and quite obviously isn't.
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25. Jedward, then.
I'm revising my statement.
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26. Oh, Sue, so much work to do!
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27. Yes, in order to find out
if the brain is working, there's
a machine that is used by doctors,
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28. an electroencephalograph.
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29. You can tell if a brain is alive
by attaching it.
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30. And there is something that
quite manifestly isn't alive,
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31. but if you attach that same machine
to it,
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32. will give off the same signals
as a brain.
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33. Is it jelly?
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34. Yes. Fucking hell!
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35. I can't quite believe
how intelligent I am sometimes.
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36. I know... How did I get that?
It was wonderful.
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37. You're a genius. Is it any type
of jelly, or is it...?
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38. Sort of large jelly in a mould
on which you could fit
the electrodes of an EEG.
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39. That kind of jelly, right.
From its EEG results alone,
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40. it would not qualify as
sufficiently dead
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41. to have its life support removed.
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42. That's the point.
I know that seems insane.
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43. All the other jellies sitting round
the bedside weeping!
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44. Yes!
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45. "He's still alive, he's still alive!
You can't turn it off!"
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46. Comforting one another.
There's one outside having a fag...
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47. "One wobble for yes,
two wobbles for no!"
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48. Neurologist Edwin Upton examined
the electroencephalography
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49. of gelatine desserts, as he put it,
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50. to make a serious point
about brain death.
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51. Because what happens is,
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52. the jelly picks up extraneous
electrical signals in the room
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53. from sources like respirators,
IV drips, even ringing telephones.
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54. The implication is that
a brain apparently generating
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55. similar signals may in fact be
quite dead.
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56. On the other hand,
it may well be quite alive.
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57. It isn't enough to use an EEG
to tell whether someone's alive.
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58. A jelly is always wobbling
just a little bit.
It's always wobbling a little bit.
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59. But it is rather extraordinary,
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60. an amazing thought -
at least, I think it is.
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61. Lovely thought.
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62. It doesn't mean EEGs are useless,
they just have to be considered
with other things
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63. to suggest whether or not someone is
conscious or alive.
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64. Is that an excitable jelly just
there that's suddenly flatlined?
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65. That's probably enough jelly
for the moment.
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66. There may be more, you never know.
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67. Jelly's made from boiled-up pigskin.
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68. Name as many uses for a pig
as you can.
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69. Erm... Bacon.
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70. Bacon is one. Truffle snuffling.
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71. Medicine stuff?
Medicine cases for tablets?
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72. Oh, for women in pregnancy.
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73. Doesn't it bring on...?
For inducing pregnancy.
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74. It's pig's hormones. It does
if one runs through your front room.
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75. "Ah!" Pft!
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76. Absolutely staggering,
what you can get out of a pig.
Yoghurt. Yes! I have a list.
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77. Christien Meindertsma wrote a book
called Pig 05049,
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78. which was an anonymous pig,
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79. and beyond the obvious foodstuffs,
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80. she found the different parts
of this animal offered
the following pork derivatives.
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81. From the skin alone, safety gloves,
cosmetic surgery.
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82. Collagen comes from pig skin. Oh.
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83. Energy bars, which also have
collagen in, low-fat butter,
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84. chewing gum, X-ray film,
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85. drug capsules, bread-flour improver,
made from pig hair,
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86. would you believe? Wow! The skin is
also used for tattoo practice.
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87. And ballistic gelatine.
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88. That's just the skin. Then there's
the internal organs. Pet food...
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89. Tambourine skins are made from
a pig's bladder.
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90. For the old tambourine.
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91. I knew those folkies were evil.
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92. There are many thousands of people
who are alive because of
a pig's valve from their heart.
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93. From the bones, cheap wine corks,
would you believe?
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94. Stabilising propellant
in bullet-making,
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95. ink-jet paper, concrete,
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96. match heads, bone china,
train brakes, yoghurt,
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97. which you correctly mentioned.
What's a train brake?
It's for stopping a train.
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98. Like where you go to Scotland
for the weekend? For stopping it.
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99. Just a trotter out.
He just leans forward.
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100. Fabric softener. Who knew?
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101. Beer, wine, ice cream.
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102. From the fat,
biodiesels, soap, shampoos, crayons.
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103. From the blood,
cigarette filters, amazingly,
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104. toothpaste and paintbrushes.
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105. Chemical-weapons testing -
the ears are used
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106. in chemical-weapons testing.
Don't ask me why.
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107. I should hasten to add
that not all toothpaste
and not all yoghurt contain it.
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108. But if you are a Muslim or Jewish,
you've got a problem discovering
what's got pig in it.
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109. Have your work cut out.
You have your work cut out,
like a silhouettist.
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110. According to Bloomberg, there are
42 major areas of manufacturing
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111. that entirely rely on pork products.
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112. It's quite astonishing
what that one animal can do.
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113. And it's the only farmyard animal,
if you discount truffle hunting,
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114. that is only useful when dead.
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115. Oh, you say that, you've never
gambled with a pig, come on!
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116. They're terrible gamblers.
Poker, blackjack...
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117. But obviously,
ducks and geese and hens lay eggs
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118. and goats and cows give milk
and sheep give...
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119. Companionship. Love. I know they do
offer those, it is true.
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120. My brother's got a pig,
and that's very true of that one.
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121. They are very endearing animals.
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122. Tell her to be careful, though,
because I knew a farmer
that had a heart attack
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123. while he was feeding his pigs,
and they ate him.
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124. Oh, yes, well, I'm afraid...
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125. You don't want to get into a pen
with one
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126. that's approaching sexual maturity,
as I know to my cost.
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127. Really? Yes. It's basically like...
How are the piglets?
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128. They've got names, Alan!
It's like...
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129. Porky and Perkins!
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130. Pinky and Perkins!
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131. It's scary, it's like a pork piano,
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132. cos they breed pigs very long now,
cos everyone likes chops.
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133. So you get incredibly long pigs.
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134. With a huge row of udders
you can see on the sow, can't you?
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135. And it just runs at you
in a sort of matey way.
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136. This was obviously the boar, the
male. Yes, she wasn't interested.
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137. Although I was trying to
catch her eye.
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138. A lovely thought.
Anyway, there you are.
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139. From jelly to juice.
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140. I've got jumbo wrists
and I'm covered in tit juice.
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141. What have I been up to?
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142. You've changed!
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143. Is it a night out with
Tarbuck and Perkins?
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144. Jumbo wrists and covered in
tit juice.
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145. Sounds like a milk maid to me.
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146. Do you mean tit juice as in bosoms
or as in a bird?
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147. Nor, indeed, neither.
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148. It's an occupational hazard.
Fishermen? Fishing.
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149. It is a fisherman's
occupational hazard.
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150. There is a fishing boat.
There's Lara covered in tit juice.
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151. Yeah. Awash with it. Yeah.
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152. You get jumbo wrist simply from
repetitive strain injury
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153. from gutting the fish.
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154. But tit juice conjunctivitis,
to give its proper name,
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155. is the acute swelling of the eyes
caused by the juice of tits -
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156. which are sometimes called duffs,
but tits is the most common name -
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157. which are described in
the Ship Captain's Medical Guide as
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158. marine growths that look like suet
dumplings with finger-like growths
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159. protruding from them.
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160. When they get caught in
fishing nets, they explode,
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161. releasing millions of
tiny silicon needles,
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162. which go into the fisherman's eyes.
Oh, God!
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163. So that's what causes the swelling.
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164. Is this sort of stuff
just generally in lakes and oceans?
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165. Well, if you work every day
amongst fish,
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166. there's all kinds of stuff on there
aside from the fish
you're trying to catch.
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167. For example, there's a thing called
Dogger Bank itch.
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168. I'm guilty as charged!
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169. You do, don't you?
You got Dogger Bank there!
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170. All I said was...!
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171. You can also get haddock rash.
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172. Haddock rash?
Why are you looking at me?
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173. That's an inflammation between
the fingers from gutting wet fish.
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174. I do often take a fish to bed
with me,
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175. and then I can say to my husband,
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176. "Not tonight, dear,
I've got a HADDOCK."
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177. That's very good.
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178. It does sound like when you've just
given birth as well,
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179. with all those fittings,
you do have swollen bits.
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180. Oh, yes, yes, yes, a lot of women,
when they give birth, can't take
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181. their wedding ring off ever again,
can they?
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182. No, and they're pissed off about it.
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183. Tit juice conjunctivitis,
jumbo wrist and Dogger Bank itch
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184. are occupational hazards
of fishermen.
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185. Now, describe
Marie-Antoinette's breast cups.
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186. Oh, yes, I know the answer to this,
cos I've seen one.
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187. Not her bosoms, but...
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188. They modelled various plates
and cups and things
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189. on breasts, on boobs.
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190. I hate the word breasts.
Let's just say jugs. Tits.
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191. I like titties. Norks. Do you?
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192. You heard it here first!
Will you say that again?
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193. No, as a word, titties.
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194. "I like titties"!
It's official! It is!
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195. I'm rather old-fashioned.
Titties. I like titties.
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196. One of them had a little nipple,
as well. Absolutely right.
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197. It was during that phase she had,
which was started by
Madame de Pompadour,
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198. which was pretending to be
a peasant.
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199. She lived in the most sophisticated,
glittering palace in the world,
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200. in Versailles, but she liked to
pretend to be a milkmaid.
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201. She had gold churns hanging off her
and things like that.
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202. This was considered to be
incredibly... That's a massive cow!
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203. Look at the size of it! Or a very
small little girl, one or the other.
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204. Anyway, the great porcelain works of
Sevres, in France,
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205. made for her at the command of
King Louis XVI,
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206. these extraordinary cups,
which were like breasts -
there, you can see the nipple -
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207. out of which she would drink milk.
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208. That's the kind
you're talking about. Yeah.
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209. They're on display in Petit Trianon,
which was her little farmyard,
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210. her play farmyard,
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211. and you can buy replicas if you wish
to have one in your own house.
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212. I'm sure... I do.
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213. I want two! You know where to go.
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214. I want the pair! You should have
a pair, to be honest.
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215. A matching pair, ideally. No-one
wants to drink out of a lone boob.
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216. There is a bra makers who say
they can tell what size you are
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217. just by looking at you.
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218. Which I think is quite impressive,
so I had to go along and find out.
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219. And they usher you into a room
and get you to take everything off.
This woman looked at me and went,
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220. "Hmm, not quite as bad as
I'd expected."
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221. Bloody cheek!
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222. What a nerve! I know.
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223. I had the same thing, you know,
you go down and you have to
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224. gurge yourself up for these things,
you're showing your...
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225. .. titties off...
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226. And this woman's just come in, with
three people that she's training,
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227. gone like that with the curtain,
looked at me and went,
"Can't help you," and shut it again.
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228. I was like that...
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229. Shocking. Yeah, really was shocking.
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230. "I'll make you a bra,
but I can't help you."
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231. We don't get this problem
from our underpanters, do we?
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232. We certainly do not.
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233. Mr Klein will hand over
his pants to you
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234. without any opprobrious comments.
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235. How extraordinary.
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236. The things you girls go through.
Poor us!
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237. Brr! It's been...
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238. There are those titties again!
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239. "Brr!"
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240. Tonight's the night you turn!
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241. What's the other myth about
Marie Antoinette's breasts
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242. that has persisted to this day?
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243. To do with another drink. They lived
on after her death. No! Champagne?
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244. Champagne comes in either a flute
or tulip glass or in a...?
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245. In a nipple, kind of...
A coupe, it's called a coupe.
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246. And there was this idea that
the coupe was based on
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247. the size and shape of
Marie Antoinette's breasts.
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248. But the standard coupe, it appears,
would make her a 36B,
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249. and paintings show she was likely
to be a little bigger than that.
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250. I love it that someone's done
that research! Yes.
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251. You know those fantastic
massive china cooking bowls
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252. that have a lip on the edge of them?
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253. Oh, yes.
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254. They're based on my titties.
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255. Are they?
You know an ironing board?
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256. They're based on mine. Oh, stop it!
No, no, no, no.
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257. I'm saying nothing!
You've all got lovely, lovely...
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258. I've seen St Paul's!
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259. Wouldn't it be dull
if every street had exactly
the same frontage everywhere?
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260. It would be dull if all girls had
the same the same frontage.
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261. You've all got lovely frontages.
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262. Now, some milk.
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263. Milk and the fad for dairy was
very popular amongst French nobles,
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264. right up until the point
when the guillotine cured
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265. all their problems permanently.
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266. So, what's the smallest thing
that you can milk?
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267. It's got to be a mammal, hasn't it?
Cos only mammals produce milk.
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268. That's not strictly true. Uh-oh!
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269. An insect? It's an insect, yes.
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270. Cockroach? It ruins the lives
of thousands.
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271. Mosquito? Not quite as bad
as a mosquito,
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272. which ruins the lives of millions.
Tsetse fly.
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273. Tsetse fly is the right answer.
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274. The tsetse fly is unique.
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275. They're very ugly and unpleasant,
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276. and if you've been bitten by one,
it's horrible.
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277. It's disgustingly painful.
Have you been bitten by one?
Yes, very painful.
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278. In Kenya somewhere.
Really, really unpleasant.
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279. I did not get sleeping sickness,
fortunately,
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280. which kills about 48,000 people
a year.
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281. But this is unique.
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282. The female fly keeps her eggs
and larvae inside her uterus,
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283. where she makes a liquid
rich in fats
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284. called intrauterine milk.
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285. She eventually gives birth
to one larva at a time,
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286. so it's genuinely suckled by
its mother.
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287. So, it's sucking from, like,
a milk sack?
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288. Yes, this intrauterine milk.
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289. Extraordinary, isn't it?
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290. But otherwise, it's a vicious
creature and much unwanted.
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291. They're also host to a symbiotic
bacterium called Wigglesworthia,
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292. named after someone called,
of course, Jones. No!
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293. No, Wigglesworth.
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294. He was an expert on kissing bugs,
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295. which are blood-sucking insects
that kiss you around the mouth
and lips, very unpleasant.
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296. I've had a few of them. Ha, yes!
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297. They bite humans on the face
and lips,
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298. and as they feed,
they also defecate, annoyingly.
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299. And as they defecate, the parasite
inside their faeces causes...
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300. I've been out with blokes like that.
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301. I don't know why
you're looking at me! Not you!
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302. .. causes something called
Chagas disease,
which is extremely unpleasant.
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303. Cheggers? Not Cheggers, no!
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304. It makes you strip off.
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305. It makes you take your clothes off
on Channel 5.
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306. No, it's Chagas, not Cheggers.
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307. But the Wigglesworthia
is interesting
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308. as it has the smallest genome of
any known living thing.
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309. So it's very important in genetics
to discover it as an organism
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310. to see what the absolute minimum
genome necessary is for life.
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311. We've got some quite small gnomes
in our garden, as well.
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312. No, GENOME... Oh, no...
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313. You've got the fishing genome,
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314. crossing-the-bridge genome...
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315. The G is silent. The IT genome!
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316. What's interesting and might save
hundreds of thousands
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317. of African lives is that, without
that particular Wigglesworthia,
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318. female tsetse flies are sterile.
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319. So, we could eradicate them
as a problem in Africa,
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320. which would be a good thing.
Anyway, that's the tsetse fly.
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321. It's only a centimetre long,
not even a mammal,
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322. but it gives birth to live young,
which it feeds on milk.
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323. It's party-treat time now.
Isn't this exciting?
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324. I've got something
really interesting for you to try.
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325. It's powdered Miracle Berry.
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326. You should have a little cup
like this.
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327. If you instantly put that pill
in your cup in your mouth...
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328. Promise it's not going to hurt you.
We don't even question!
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329. Don't swallow it. We're just
doing it! "Yes, Stephen!"
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330. Please do it, don't swallow it.
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331. "Show me your titties."
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332. We've been down this road
before, mister! It's from fruit.
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333. It's in. "Only bite it when you see
the whites of the eyes!"
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334. Don't bite it, don't bite it, just
roll it round your mouth and tongue.
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335. It's quite sweet.
It takes a little time to work,
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336. but when it does work,
it's rather extraordinary.
It's like a dead Refresher.
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337. Is my head just going to open
like that?
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338. But just try to do a bit of action
on it,
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339. just so you can get it
to dissolve...
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340. Spread it all over your tongue.
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341. It is quite miraculous. It's why
it's called the Miracle Fruit,
it's rather exciting.
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342. I slightly crunched mine.
Don't swallow it.
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343. Why not?
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344. Keep it in your mouth.
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345. There's a good reason, I want for it
to cover all of your tongue,
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346. cos it does something extraordinary
to your tongue,
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347. that's what you're going to
discover. So keep sucking.
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348. I must remember this speech!
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349. Can you look away?
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350. If you made them swallow...
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351. "It does something extraordinary
to your tongue!
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352. "Don't swallow it!"
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353. Do you feel you've more or less
coated yourself in it?
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354. What it does, it gets rid of
your tongue's ability
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355. to detect sour and bitter,
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356. so I want you to take a bite on
this lemon.
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357. You'll find when you bite on
the lemon, it's not exactly sweet,
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358. but it really takes away 90% of
its sourness.
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359. I'm going in.
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360. I've done it.
I've done a lot of coating.
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361. Oh, that's delicious!
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362. Extraordinary.
That's good, isn't it?
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363. None of you has really pulled
an "Agh" face.
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364. That's like a really sweet orange.
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365. Exactly. It's bizarre.
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366. I'm going to regret it later. It is
a most extraordinary experience.
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367. That'll last about half an hour,
20 minutes, half an hour.
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368. I'm going to have chronic gastritis
in 20 minutes.
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369. It was very populous, Miracle Fruit.
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370. They used to have parties where they
had a rainbow of different flavours
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371. that would occur
because it takes away
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372. your ability to taste the bitter
or the sour,
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373. or, indeed, the salt,
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374. so everything becomes sweet but
retains a little of its own flavour.
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375. But it does work. Amazing.
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376. It is. Although it is vitamin C,
so internally, I'm rebelling.
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377. Just the fact it might have been
slightly healthy!
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378. A friend of mine used to go
and feed the horse
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379. at the bottom of his garden
when he was a kid
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380. bits of lemon, because it used to
make brilliant faces when he...
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381. That's just naughty! It is cruel.
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382. That's very naughty.
Very entertaining.
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383. I'm going to have one later.
I'm going to give one to a friend.
Sure you are!
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384. It's just so bad!
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385. Makes it taste so much nicer!
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386. It's just... We've witnessed
something big tonight!
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387. It's all over.
"It tastes lovely for half an hour."
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388. "My favourite word
is titties!"
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389. It's not sour any more, is it?
Not sour any more.
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390. You are so bad! Honestly, honestly.
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391. "It does amazing things
to your tongue."
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392. You are so naughty tonight.
I'm very, very disappointed.
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393. I thought the girls would be
well behaved, but I'm just so wrong.
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394. We are! You said,
"Put it in your mouth."
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395. We just put it in our mouths.
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396. That's what girls are so good at,
it's the innocent, wide-eyed...
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397. Ooh. Anyway, Miracle Berries
have the miraculous property
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398. of making sour things taste sweet.
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399. So, now,
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400. which international institution had
one man and his dog as members?
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401. That was it?
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402. No, they had lots and lots of
other members.
But they weren't men, presumably?
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403. All the others were women.
And human.
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404. The WI? Yes, the WI.
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405. Really? And Lassie.
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406. The WI...
It wasn't that particular man -
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407. this is an example,
in case you're stupid,
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408. of what a man and his dog look like.
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409. Cos you might not know.
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410. He's literally blowing smoke up
its arse.
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411. "Bloody dog moved!"Well, we'll
have to use it, we're out of film!"
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412. When the WI was formed,
the nascent WI, this particular man,
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413. Colonel Richard Stapleton-Cotton,
was an enormous fan,
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414. a great admirer, and so...
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415. Popped a frock on!
He and his dog Tinker were both
members and paid their annual fees.
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416. But they were the only males
ever to be members.
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417. Guess which country
the WI was started in.
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418. Canada. Yes, good God!
How did you do that?
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419. I'm on a roll, I just know WI stuff!
I don't know!
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420. Started in Canada, absolutely right.
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421. It was the Women's Department of
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422. the Farmers' Institute of
South Wentworth,
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423. with the aim to promote
that knowledge of household science
which will lead to
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424. improvement in
household architecture,
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425. with special attention
to home sanitation.
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426. Though, then, of course,
it broadened its horizons.
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427. It was said that the WI should be
grave and gay, which is nice.
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428. Yep, that sounds like me.
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429. And should explore the world
together and learn as much about
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430. growing roses in your garden or
trimming hats as about
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431. darkest Africa or Bolshevism.
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432. Which is why they're also famous for
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433. having lecturers coming to address
them. They absorbed knowledge.
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434. And they do an extraordinary amount
of charity work.
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435. They donate 24 million hours of
their time
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436. to community work
every year in the UK.
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437. There's a double J association
with the WI,
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438. as it's our letter J.
It's a sort of nickname for them.
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439. Jam and Jerusalem.
Jam and Jerusalem.
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440. Jerusalem is their anthem
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441. and jam-making is what people think
they do.
Copy !req
442. Obviously, their remit is wider,
and they were very patriotic
during the war,
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443. did all kinds of things,
especially with rabbits.
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444. "Turning bunnies into bombs"
was their slogan,
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445. as they tried to breed rabbits
for food.
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446. That picture we saw earlier,
I wish I'd been born in that time.
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447. You like those dowdy hats?
I like those.
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448. I wouldn't have had to make any
effort whatsoever. It looks great.
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449. But everybody
spoke like that.
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450. They talk like that all the time.
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451. Look at those berets. Amazing.
They don't look very cheerful,
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452. and one of them's knitting.
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453. One-handed, which is really
saying something.
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454. There's Arthur Askey on the end!
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455. They're voting, "Shall we allow
the Colonel and his dog to become
members?" and they all voted yes.
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456. "Who's been felt up by the Colonel?"
"I have."
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457. "Dirty little bugger.
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458. "That dog, always sniffing around."
Oh, dear.
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459. Anyway, Colonel Stapleton-Cotton
was his name, and his dog, Tinker.
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460. They're the only two non-females
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461. ever to be admitted to
the Women's Institute.
Copy !req
462. I've got something interesting
to show you now.
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463. So, I want you to tell me
what it is.
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464. Quite simply, what's the name for
one of these?
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465. Well, it's a toby jug.
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466. This is known as a character jug.
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467. If you want to know
what a toby jug looks like...
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468. ..it's that. Wow, isn't that pretty!
A toby jug is the whole person.
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469. If it's a head,
it's called a character jug.
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470. But I've got something
more interesting, I think,
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471. which I hope you're going to like.
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472. It's got water in it.
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473. All you have to do is drink
the water without spilling it.
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474. It's got holes in it.
And so if you lift it...
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475. It's got holes in it,
so that's not going to work.
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476. Do you see? No!
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477. It's gone down my sleeve!
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478. So you've got to try
and work it out.
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479. Right, I'm going to hollow out
this biro and use it as a straw.
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480. Like that? I'm evolving.
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481. Ah, you're getting there.
What are you doing?
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482. No, don't pour it, cos the water
will come up. Look at the handle.
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483. The handle is connected to
the bottom, so if you could suck
one of those tubes...
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484. Cover the holes.
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485. The other hole.
And then suck through there.
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486. But there's a secret hole you've got
to cover, too. Hole there.
Get those two.
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487. Look under the handle,
look under the top of the handle.
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488. Oh. There's a hole there.
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489. If you cover that
and the other two holes,
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490. then you release...
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491. Bit of a palaver. Yes!
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492. Oh, Sue! Just an electrical hazard
waiting... Go like this.
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493. That's it, now you can suck it.
Don't tip it!
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494. Bollocks!
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495. Liza got there first.
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496. You got the principle straight away.
It's like evolution.
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497. Now I know how to do it,
I want to have a go.
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498. Couldn't we just have
some sandwiches?
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499. I've got every hole covered!
No, you haven't.
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500. Don't drink from the top!
You have to suck from... Look.
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501. Suck from there? Show her.
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502. Are you sucking from there, right?
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503. I'm sucking from there
and holding there.
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504. And have you found the other hole?
Yes. Now suck it.
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505. No, don't tip it!
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506. Suck without tipping!
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507. It's a hollow handle. The point is
the handle is hollow.
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508. It's a wet T-shirt competition!
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509. If you hand it to me here,
I'll try and show you.
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510. "An awful thing about how to drink
and not to spill will try
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511. "the utmost of your skill."
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512. And this one says, "To drink
and not to spill will try the utmost
of your skill." Exactly...
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513. Mine says,
"You're an idiot, Perkins."
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514. So, this is a hollow... This is
hollow, there's water in the bottom,
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515. it's got a little stop, like a flute
or a recorder here,
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516. so you've got to cover that up,
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517. and it's got a hole here
and a hole here.
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518. If I do that, I can now just
simply suck.
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519. But it's a little puzzle jug,
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520. we thought you might have
a little fun with it.
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521. Which brings us to
the sticky end of the scores.
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522. And my word!
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523. I've never seen anything like it
in my all my born puff.
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524. In last place, with a magisterial...
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525. She did start with
two minus tens in a row,
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526. so she didn't do that badly after,
but she ended with minus 22,
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527. Sue Perkins!
Copy !req
528. And on a highly-creditable
minus five, Liza Tarbuck!
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529. Thank you very much. Thank you.
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530. Well! Well, well, well, well,
which one, which one, which one?
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531. One of you got four points.
Four whole points.
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532. Four plus points. Please,
for the feminists, let it be a lady.
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533. It's Jo Brand! Oh, it is!
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534. Which can only bring us to
the astonishing news
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535. that tonight's winner,
with plus 11, is Alan Davies!
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536. Women on television has failed!
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537. Well, we can call him
a jammy bugger.
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538. And that's all from
Liza, Sue, Jo, Alan and me.
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539. Goodnight.
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