1. Good evening, good evening,
good evening, good evening,
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2. good evening, good evening,
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3. and welcome to "QI"
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4. where tonight our
topic is journeys,
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5. and let's see who's in
the arrivals hall today.
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6. All the way up from down
under, it's Cal Wilson.
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7. Hello.
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8. The only way here is from
Essex, Phill Jupitus.
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9. And from Port Talbot Parkway
stopping at Pyle Bridgend,
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10. Pencoed, Llanharan, Pontyclun,
Ninian Park
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11. and Cardiff Central, Rob Brydon.
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12. And bearing the label not
wanted on voyage, Alan Davies.
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13. And they all have little
buzzer noises, and Cal goes.
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14. And Rob goes.
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15. Phill goes.
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16. Which you do in fact, don't you?
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17. - I do.
- Yeah, and Alan goes.
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18. That's your chosen
mode of transport.
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19. Well, we've traveled
a lot, Alan,
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20. and one of the places we
traveled to a few months ago
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21. was Australia and that's
where we found Cal.
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22. Who is New Zealand's perhaps
greatest stand up comedian
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23. - and works mostly in Melbourne
- Without a doubt.
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24. now, don't you?
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25. Yes, I do, I do.
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26. I've got the antipodes covered.
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27. Yeah.
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28. But we liked you so much we
smuggled you in our luggage
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29. and we brought you back
here, so welcome.
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30. Thank you, and I make
a better souvenir
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31. than an interesting
keyring, I suppose.
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32. Exactly, exactly.
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33. Well, I did want a koala, but—
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34. A stuffed koala.
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35. - It's not on apparently.
- No.
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36. The journey of a thousand
miles begins
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37. with a single question.
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38. Where the hell did I
leave my passport?
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39. I lost mine in a plane once,
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40. and it had gone down
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41. - under the cushion of my seat.
- Aw.
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42. Yeah.
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43. - The actual plane seat.
- Yep.
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44. And I was on the plane, I
refused to get off the plane.
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45. Yeah, you have to get
your seat disassembled,
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46. I've had that.
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47. And eventually I found it.
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48. That was the end of the story.
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49. Oh, that's a beautiful story.
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50. That is a lovely, lovely story.
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51. Stephen, is that Alan
Davies or is it, hang on,
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52. is it Peter Ustinov.
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53. That was a hell of an
anecdote, don't you think?
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54. If that is the level
of the bar this evening
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55. I may go home.
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56. Is it you, specifically you,
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57. where did you leave
your passport?
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58. No, it's this technique,
the University of Wisconsin,
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59. when you lose something,
it actually helps to say
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60. the name of the thing
that you have lost
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61. or you are looking for.
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62. - Dignity.
- Yes.
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63. Very good.
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64. Good, you see?
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65. Congratulations.
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66. For me, that would
make me worse.
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67. I would just draw
attention to it.
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68. Your wallet has a name?
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69. Well, no, just—
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70. Peregrine!
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71. Peregrine!
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72. Peregrine.
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73. That's how.
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74. - It might work.
- It has now.
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75. Yes, from now on it will
be called Peregrine.
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76. But anyway, that's
not the point.
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77. The point is, for example,
you open a cutlery draw
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78. and where the hell is the
garlic peeler or whatever.
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79. But if you just say
garlic peeler—
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80. - Yes, the garlic peeler.
- It might be.
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81. Andrew!
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82. Andrew!
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83. You're missing my point
about names here.
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84. I just mean the word
we give the thing.
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85. Its normal description
as found in a dictionary,
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86. not from a list of given names.
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87. It isn't Julian the
cheese grater.
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88. It isn't Barbera the corkscrew.
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89. So what did you do?
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90. You have to say "wallet,
wallet, wallet."
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91. What, we say, "keys, keys,
keys, keys, keys, keys."
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92. Yeah, exactly, so you say
bottle opener, bottle opener,
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93. you've got more chance
of seeing it.
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94. - You're—
- Money, money, money, money.
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95. Gold, gold.
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96. You know that phrase it was
just staring me in the face
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97. and you somehow couldn't see it,
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98. the act of speaking does
something in your brain
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99. that actually allows your
eyes to see it more clearly.
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100. That seems to be demonstrated.
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101. Reminds me of that
phrase, Stephen,
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102. couldn't see the wood
for the trees.
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103. Have you ever come across
that phrase before?
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104. I have, I have.
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105. - One used to understand it.
- What I basically means is,
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106. you're looking at, wait,
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107. - you're looking for wood.
- Yes, yeah.
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108. - Not in the way you might.
- No, not in that sense.
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109. Yeah.
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110. You're looking for wood,
and you're looking at trees.
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111. Yes.
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112. So you are in essence
looking at wood.
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113. They're wood aren't they?
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114. I've got it, Alan.
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115. But you're seeing trees
so you can't see the wood
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116. - for the trees.
- The trees.
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117. And I think in a funny
old way it's a little bit
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118. like what you're talking
about, isn't it?
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119. - Almost exactly not, yeah.
- Yeah, yeah.
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120. No, it's nice, it's nice
you brought that up,
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121. it's a good one.
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122. Now the other thing,
before I finish,
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123. the other thing I'd
like to bring up
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124. is this whole business
now with passports,
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125. they don't like you to
smile in the photographs.
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126. Oh, no.
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127. When I grew up,
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128. - a smile was almost mandatory.
- A happy grin, yup.
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129. - Like if you're.
- Yup.
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130. But now you have to look
like you're suspected
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131. of having done something.
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132. I look like a Russian prison
guard in my passport photo.
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133. I can see that, I can
see that, absolutely.
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134. A hatchet-faced Silesian
fishwife.
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135. Every single Photo-Me
booth I get into
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136. appears to be set on pedophile.
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137. Try and recreate that look
for us now, could you?
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138. Right, for a kick off,
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139. what you have to do
in a Photo-Me booth
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140. is they don't let you
wear glasses either,
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141. and also because the camera
lens is behind a mirror
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142. and you don't know
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143. - where it really is.
- Yeah. You're always looking
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144. - slightly off, so.
- Oh, that's true.
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145. Is it down, so, okay,
this is the look.
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146. Stay away from my children.
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147. It gets you out of a lot of
babysitting duties though,
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148. doesn't it, let's be honest.
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149. Bet our passports would probably
look quite good together
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150. 'cause you're the pedophile
and I'm the prison guard.
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151. - Yeah, we should
- Wow, what a pair.
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152. travel together.
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153. I'm with my Kiwi handler.
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154. Do kiwi's have handlers?
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155. They're not very good
for anything.
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156. Are they edible?
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157. We're not allowed to eat them.
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158. Like swans.
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159. I mean the Queen's allowed them.
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160. - Is the Queen allowed kiwis?
- I don't think she is,
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161. - as a matter of fact.
- I mean, could she just eat
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162. anything she wants 'cause
she's the Queen?
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163. I wouldn't be the one
to tell her not to.
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164. - But, no, no.
- I imagine not.
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165. Stop eating that kiwi,
you dreadful old woman.
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166. I imagine that you'd
be a bit more polite.
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167. You are Stephen Fry
off the telly.
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168. You don't have to do
the dreadful old woman
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169. - bit on the end.
- No, but it would be
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170. a dreadful thing to do.
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171. You could say, "Stop
eating that kiwi, ma'am,
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172. - "have some jam."
- Ma'am, exactly.
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173. Exactly, exactly.
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174. Your Majesty, put
the puffin down.
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175. Let's just have a
load of situations
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176. where we're telling the Queen
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177. - to stop eating things.
- That sounds like
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178. a children's game.
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179. We'll now have a round of Your
Majesty, put the puffin down.
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180. You're the Queen, so, a-one,
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181. - two, three.
- Trousers off.
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182. Your Majesty, put
the puffin down.
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183. Yes, very good.
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184. Anyway, I don't know why
we, or how we got there,
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185. but that's what journeys
do to you.
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186. Anyway, describe the
travel arrangements
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187. of the Japanese flying snail.
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188. Where is it going?
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189. It probably won't travel
more than 11 miles,
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190. but very fast.
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191. Does it drop?
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192. - Yes, but—
- Is it a fall?
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193. Yeah, but how would it get up?
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194. They haven't got wings,
have they, you see?
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195. No, they haven't, but we
haven't got wings and we fly.
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196. How do we do it?
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197. - Right, in an airplane.
- We get in an airplane.
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198. - We get in something.
- Oh, I've got the answer
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199. - to this.
- We get in
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200. a conveyance of flight.
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201. They hop on a bird or
a creature with wings,
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202. - a bird.
- Yes.
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203. Could have been a bat.
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204. Could have been a bat,
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205. could have been a bat or a bird.
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206. - Yep.
- Or a strange hybrid
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207. of bird-bat.
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208. They hop on to a creature
with the ability to fly.
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209. But 11 miles, that's
very, very high.
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210. It's not the height, it's not
the altitude, they travel.
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211. - They're not going up.
- I've got it in my head
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212. that they're dropping 11 miles.
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213. No, no, no.
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214. It's not a voluntary act.
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215. They get eaten by birds.
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216. There are two types of birds
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217. on the little island
of Hahajima.
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218. Hahajima, it's one of
the Ogasawara Islands
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219. south of Japan, as you can see.
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220. And there is the Japanese
white eye
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221. and the brown eyed bulbul,
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222. which are two types of bird.
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223. There they are, and they
eat this particular snail,
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224. and about 15% of them
survive the process
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225. and are excreted out alive.
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226. And so, they're kind of
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227. - spreading their genes
- Is this to scale?
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228. further around, yeah.
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229. Because that seems unlikely.
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230. No, it's not.
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231. That would be a seriously
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232. - weighed down bulbul.
- That snail could eat
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233. that bird, I'd back the snail.
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234. Is the bird on the left,
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235. is that a white ring
round its eye
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236. or has it just excreted
a full size snail?
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237. Oh!
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238. Whoa!
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239. It could be up to between 30
minutes or two hours later
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240. that it passes through the
bird's system, as it were.
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241. And the bird can fly
about 11 miles per hour.
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242. Does the snail go into
its own shell?
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243. By which, I don't mean, get
a little self-conscious.
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244. - Does he retreat into his shell
- I should imagine he would.
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245. to take shelter?
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246. I should imagine he would.
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247. But don't they pick them
out of the shell anyway?
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248. Don't they get in the.
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249. Like you do in a restaurant
with a little special fork.
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250. - They've got a special fork.
- Which is called Arnold,
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251. by the way,
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252. - in case you need to find it.
- I'm writing it down.
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253. Arnold, Arnold.
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254. Ice cream scoop called Vanessa.
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255. Yes,
so anyway—
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256. What would you call one
of those pizza cutters?
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257. The rolly pizza cutter.
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258. Clement.
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259. Clement, fair enough.
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260. Can we call it Dave?
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261. Well, there you are.
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262. Yes, good, so the cry
goes up, abandon ship now,
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263. that's our next question,
abandon ship.
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264. Now, we are proud Britons
and one proud Kiwi.
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265. What do we say next?
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266. What do we chaps say?
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267. Women and children first.
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268. As far as we know that's
only ever been cried twice.
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269. It's called the Birkenhead
Drill,
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270. and it happened on board a
ship called the Birkenhead,
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271. but that was 'cause the
captain pointed a gun
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272. at his crew and said,
"Women and children first."
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273. This has not been an idea
that especially existed before
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274. and in fact it's
very un-British.
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275. Women have a lesser
chance of surviving
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276. if a British ship sinks
than a continental one.
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277. - That's good to know.
- Yup.
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278. So we aren't the gallant
creatures that we thought we
were,
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279. at all.
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280. The Titanic was the other one
in which the men were told
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281. to stand back.
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282. And there was, we've
had this on "QI" before,
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283. there was one crew member
who survived,
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284. went all the way
home to Liverpool
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285. and he had the door slammed
in his face by his mother
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286. who was ashamed of him
for having survived.
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287. - But in fact—
- She sounds nice.
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288. Yeah, charming.
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289. Clearly extraordinary.
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290. Well, I mean, unbelievable.
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291. But, obviously you want
a fair number of fit,
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292. strong people who know
their way around the waters,
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293. as it were, once you're
in the life boat.
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294. 'Cause if it's all
women and children
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295. there's not really gonna
be that much necessarily
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296. - use in being in a lifeboat.
- That's a little
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297. bit sexist, Stephen.
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298. You need at least one crew
member who can navigate
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299. by the stars or who can
operate the oars efficiently.
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300. Or isn't going, "Oh, look,
there's a fish over there!
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301. "Let's go over there."
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302. I wasn't gonna be the one to
say that, I'm glad you did.
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303. Referring to the Birkenhead
Drill, it's not common.
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304. Anyway, how long would
it take you to bicycle
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305. from Land's End to the
northern most part of Britain?
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306. What, John o'
Groats, you mean?
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307. Oh!
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308. Very mean of me, wasn't it?
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309. No, no, ask clear, well
defined questions.
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310. We just like to make
you say things.
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311. You can't buzz buzz
me on chitchat.
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312. No, it's not the northern
most part of Britain.
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313. Is it not?
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314. No, surprisingly.
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315. It sort of advertises
itself as such,
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316. and it has a little hut.
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317. There's the last house in
Scotland in John o' Groats.
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318. Oh, there's one of those
boys in calipers
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319. with a slot in his box, I
haven't seen one of those
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320. - for years!
- A long time ago, I know.
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321. There was always one of
those on the high street
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322. when I was a kid.
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323. Well, it used to be called
the Spastic Society,
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324. it's now SCOPE, I
think, isn't it.
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325. You put a penny in and he was
still there the next week.
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326. Put the penny in to
make him go away.
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327. I thought it would get
him better, the poor lad.
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328. Oh, bless.
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329. Look at him there, he's
obviously on his holidays there,
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330. isn't he?
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331. I used to like those ones
where you put the penny in
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332. and it just rolled round and
round and round and round
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333. and round and round and round.
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334. We had a guide dog, you
put the penny in its head.
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335. You had a lifeboat one
where they put the penny in
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336. - and the lifeboat came out.
- That's right!
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337. - You know, I like that.
- Always putting pennies
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338. in things.
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339. There's a brilliant model
of Queen Victoria's dog
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340. in Sydney outside the
Queen Victoria building,
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341. and it's like a, you put
a donation, but it talks.
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342. So it's a little highland
terrier and it says
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343. in very beautiful
newsreader tones,
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344. "During my lifetime,
because of my good deeds,
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345. "after my death I was
granted the power of speech."
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346. Like this, and then it goes,
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347. "If you put a coin in the box,
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348. "I will say thank you."
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349. And then it pauses
and then it goes,
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350. "Thank you.
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351. "Woof."
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352. That lad said nothing to me.
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353. Not a word.
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354. Every week I put something
in his box.
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355. Do you put it in the
box or is it his head?
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356. He's got a slot in his box,
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357. he might have two slots.
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358. Some of them would
have two slots.
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359. Two slots in their box.
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360. Yeah, women have, no, stop.
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361. I resign.
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362. Yes, quite, absolutely shameful.
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363. We've established this
is not your area.
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364. - Yeah, exactly.
- He looks a little bit like—
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365. It's like you're talking
about Narnia or somewhere.
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366. A fantastical land
you've only heard about.
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367. Exactly.
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368. You make your way through
the fur coats and suddenly—
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369. Oh!
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370. Oh, dear, oh dear.
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371. Wielding a coin.
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372. - A single coin.
- And for a while
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373. you have a magical time but
then you meet an ice maiden.
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374. Oh, dear god.
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375. Anyway, yes—
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376. You're telling me
there's somewhere further
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377. than John o' Groats?
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378. There is indeed, Dunnet Head.
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379. That's the actual northern
most spot.
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380. So if you've gone all
the way to John o' Groats
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381. and you haven't gone there.
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382. You wouldn't cycle on
there though, would you?
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383. - It's a bit bumpy.
- It's rather beautiful,
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384. isn't it?
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385. It's about 603 miles,
as the crow flies,
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386. but by road it's
about 800 miles.
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387. Cyclists could take 10
to 14 days doing it.
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388. The record for running
the route,
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389. what would you say is?
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390. Can we have a guess?
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391. You couldn't do it in less
than a week, could you?
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392. No, no.
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393. It's nine days and two hours,
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394. which is pretty damn good going.
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395. Pretty damn good going.
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396. - I'll say.
- Very good.
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397. In 2005 a golfer named David
Sullivan hit a golf ball
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398. all the way.
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399. Took him seven weeks.
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400. I don't know what his score was.
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401. It would be awful if he didn't
fill in his card correctly
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402. at the end.
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403. Disqualified.
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404. Was it a putter?
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405. Did he mean to do it?
Did he mean to do it?
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406. Or was he just trying
to get it in the hole?
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407. He was just
playing it where it lies.
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408. "I've lost it again."
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409. It would land in the
back of a lorry
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410. going the other direction.
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411. "Christ!"
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412. I feel sorry for the
bloke that was standing
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413. waiting for him,
holding the flag.
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414. Yes.
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415. So people have done it, all
kinds of different ways.
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416. In 1911 there was a
motorcycle record of 29 hours
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417. and 12 minutes, which led
to a ban on further attempts
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418. because the time necessarily
proved
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419. that they'd been breaking
the speed limit,
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420. which was 20 miles per hour.
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421. Now, here's a bird you might
see near John o' Groats.
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422. What is it?
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423. - Well.
- Gannet.
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424. - Is it a fulmar?
- Not a gannet.
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425. It's not a fulmar.
Copy !req
426. Is it the one puffin
the Queen hasn't eaten?
Copy !req
427. It is a puffin!
Copy !req
428. Well done.
Copy !req
429. - It's a puffin.
- It's a puffin.
Copy !req
430. Yes, we usually think
of puffin's
Copy !req
431. - as looking
- Where's its beak?
Copy !req
432. more like this.
Copy !req
433. It's a bill.
Copy !req
434. - Exactly.
- Photoshop, Photoshop.
Copy !req
435. Once they've had sex,
Copy !req
436. - and it's winter.
- It's a ninja puffin.
Copy !req
437. Once they've had sex,
and it's winter
Copy !req
438. they don't need to look
all bright like that,
Copy !req
439. and so they go all dull.
Copy !req
440. But its beak,
Copy !req
441. its beak is,
Copy !req
442. well I suppose its beak
Copy !req
443. - is shrunk enough.
- It falls off. It falls off.
Copy !req
444. Falls off?
Copy !req
445. - Yes.
- What?
Copy !req
446. Yep, I know.
Copy !req
447. They just have to attract
a mate and then once—
Copy !req
448. The dirty, dirty puffins.
Copy !req
449. Is it the equivalent of
a woman losing her figure
Copy !req
450. after she's got married?
Copy !req
451. I suppose.
Copy !req
452. The minute the ring goes
on they just go to pieces.
Copy !req
453. Oh, now behave.
Copy !req
454. To me it looks more
like the equivalent
Copy !req
455. of a woman taking her
padded bra off.
Copy !req
456. That's what it looks like.
Copy !req
457. - Yeah, yeah.
- Yes.
Copy !req
458. She's just not making an
effort anymore, is she?
Copy !req
459. The eye there, has that just
been stuck on the other eye?
Copy !req
460. Yeah, again, it's the
color there, it's all—
Copy !req
461. Just blind.
Copy !req
462. I look great.
Copy !req
463. Ought to look
brighter and sexy.
Copy !req
464. "Oh! Hello."
Copy !req
465. They rather sweetly
pair for life,
Copy !req
466. male and female puffins,
Copy !req
467. and they make together
one egg a year.
Copy !req
468. So once they've mated,
they don't need to attract
Copy !req
469. each other anymore.
Copy !req
470. So for the winter season,
when they're busy feeding,
Copy !req
471. and then they put on
Copy !req
472. - their spring makeup.
- "I remember when
Copy !req
473. "you cared about me."
Copy !req
474. Exactly,
but then they—
Copy !req
475. "You used to have a pink beak.
Copy !req
476. "Used to put the eye makeup on."
Copy !req
477. - It comes back again.
- It comes back?
Copy !req
478. Yeah, but they're lovely,
lovely little creatures,
Copy !req
479. aren't they?
Copy !req
480. Do you know what a baby
puffin is called?
Copy !req
481. A puff.
Copy !req
482. It's a puffling.
Copy !req
483. Isn't that lovely?
Copy !req
484. - Aw.
- Aw.
Copy !req
485. So, exactly, aw.
Copy !req
486. That's like something
out of "Harry Potter."
Copy !req
487. Aw, they love that.
Copy !req
488. Say it again, they loved it.
Copy !req
489. Puffling.
Copy !req
490. Aw.
Copy !req
491. How many people now
have a new nickname
Copy !req
492. for their partner?
Copy !req
493. Exactly.
Copy !req
494. - Their partner did you say?
- Yes.
Copy !req
495. For a moment I thought you
were gonna say their penis.
Copy !req
496. For some people that
is their partner.
Copy !req
497. My puffling.
Copy !req
498. Aren't there like
those party hats
Copy !req
499. you can get with
a bit of elastic.
Copy !req
500. The one on the left,
he looks like, wooh.
Copy !req
501. Honestly, a toucan could do
great on that puffin island.
Copy !req
502. - You imagine.
- He'd score big time.
Copy !req
503. Aw, nelly.
Copy !req
504. Oh, yeah.
Copy !req
505. Hey, ladies, yeah.
Copy !req
506. Well they spend their time—
Copy !req
507. "From the tropics.
Copy !req
508. "This doesn't fall off after.
Copy !req
509. "I'm keeping this.
Copy !req
510. "Yeah, I've still got
the Guinness money."
Copy !req
511. Yeah, he'd be freezing
cold though, wouldn't he?
Copy !req
512. After a while.
Copy !req
513. "Aw, how do you do
this up here?"
Copy !req
514. - It's true.
- Oh, would his beak
Copy !req
515. get smaller in the weather?
Copy !req
516. Are these just arctic toucans?
Copy !req
517. No, they're not actually.
Copy !req
518. They're a kind of auk, in fact.
Copy !req
519. Most of those you'll find
in the north Atlantic,
Copy !req
520. and these, indeed, John
o' Groats would be
Copy !req
521. a very good place to seem them.
Copy !req
522. Not Auckland.
Copy !req
523. Not Auckland, oddly enough.
Copy !req
524. That's spelled with a
C, a little redundant C.
Copy !req
525. Oh, course it is.
Copy !req
526. Yeah, but out to sea
they're pelagic,
Copy !req
527. they have little backward
barbed rows of things,
Copy !req
528. basically to store fish
in their mouth.
Copy !req
529. But they're lovely,
lovely creatures,
Copy !req
530. and of course the Catholic
Church counted them as fish
Copy !req
531. so you could eat
them on Fridays.
Copy !req
532. Good, so, anyway, for
evolutionary reasons
Copy !req
533. puffins' beaks fall
off after sex,
Copy !req
534. assuming you believe
in evolution.
Copy !req
535. What was the name of the
naturalist on board the Beagle?
Copy !req
536. Charles Darwin, you mean.
Copy !req
537. Oh.
Copy !req
538. Oh, Fry!
Copy !req
539. This is a whole new
tactic he's doing.
Copy !req
540. He wasn't the naturalist on board
the Beagle, oddly enough.
Copy !req
541. There was an official
naturalist on board the Beagle
Copy !req
542. and it wasn't Charles Darwin.
Copy !req
543. He was the?
Copy !req
544. - I don't care anymore!
- Oh, you're angry, I'm sorry.
Copy !req
545. Phillip, I wish
Copy !req
546. - it hadn't happened to you.
- It was the cook.
Copy !req
547. It wasn't the cook, no.
Copy !req
548. He was the figurehead
on the prow.
Copy !req
549. It wasn't that either.
Copy !req
550. He was in fact the geologist.
Copy !req
551. The geologist.
Copy !req
552. It was the doctor, his
name was McCormick
Copy !req
553. who was the official naturalist
Copy !req
554. and he really resented
Darwin being there.
Copy !req
555. It was rather snobbish
British 19th century reasons,
Copy !req
556. he said FitzRoy, whose
voyage it was,
Copy !req
557. wanted a gentleman
companion and Charles Darwin
Copy !req
558. fitted the bill rather
than the doctor.
Copy !req
559. On Christmas day in 1835,
Copy !req
560. there's the young Darwin before
he grew that massive beard,
Copy !req
561. they went to Tierra del
Fuego, the land of the fire,
Copy !req
562. right down below South America.
Copy !req
563. And there Darwin was
very astonished to note
Copy !req
564. what happened when the
local people had a famine.
Copy !req
565. What they turned to eat.
Copy !req
566. Can you imagine what
it is that they ate
Copy !req
567. when times were difficult?
Copy !req
568. Guinea pigs.
Copy !req
569. Penguins.
Copy !req
570. No, Guinea pigs are
eaten generally
Copy !req
571. - around South America
- They're just a snack.
Copy !req
572. quite commonly.
Copy !req
573. One another.
Copy !req
574. One another is right,
Copy !req
575. but a particular type
of person was chosen.
Copy !req
576. Elderly people.
Copy !req
577. And a particular type of—
Copy !req
578. - Elderly women?
- Elderly ladies.
Copy !req
579. Elderly women is the answer.
Copy !req
580. The elderly women
ran for the hills
Copy !req
581. when there was any
kind of famine on
Copy !req
582. - because they were the ones.
- "Mm-mmm.
Copy !req
583. "That's some good old lady.
Copy !req
584. "I've got the GILF cookbook."
Copy !req
585. That's just awful,
Phillip Jupitus.
Copy !req
586. But the reason being
that they're—
Copy !req
587. Their arms are so tender.
Copy !req
588. Well they explained to
the crew of the Beagle
Copy !req
589. that the reason was,
I'm afraid to say,
Copy !req
590. that the old women were
the least useful members
Copy !req
591. of the tribe.
Copy !req
592. Because old men and children
and others could otter hunt,
Copy !req
593. but the elderly women
couldn't hunt for otters.
Copy !req
594. What about the knitting?
Copy !req
595. I'm sorry?
Copy !req
596. What about the knitting
and the crochet?
Copy !req
597. Well, exactly,
I know, exactly.
Copy !req
598. And who's gonna teach you rummy?
Copy !req
599. That's a very good point.
Copy !req
600. Yes.
Copy !req
601. They can make dumplings.
Copy !req
602. All these things only
old ladies can do.
Copy !req
603. How does their society
evolve with nobody to say,
Copy !req
604. "Oh, I know.
Copy !req
605. "Oh, I know."
Copy !req
606. Anyway, now to a place where
they had jackal-headed gods,
Copy !req
607. where would I be?
Copy !req
608. Egypt.
Copy !req
609. Ah.
Copy !req
610. You didn't quite say
that, did you?
Copy !req
611. Sorry, I didn't phrase
that correct.
Copy !req
612. What, Egypt, you mean?
Copy !req
613. Oh, thank you.
Copy !req
614. That's very kind of you.
Copy !req
615. Not Egypt, in fact.
Copy !req
616. Those had been known as
jackal-headed god,
Copy !req
617. that particular god, extra
points if you know that.
Copy !req
618. Anubis.
Copy !req
619. Well done, Anubis is
the right answer.
Copy !req
620. Anubis who was, do you know
what duty of Anubis was?
Copy !req
621. Something to do with death,
Copy !req
622. didn't he guide you into
the spirit world.
Copy !req
623. That's brilliant, another
five points I think there.
Copy !req
624. There's a rather wonderful
technical name for a god
Copy !req
625. that guides you into the
underworld, like Mercury
Copy !req
626. who guided you as far
as the River Styx,
Copy !req
627. and that's a psychopomp.
Copy !req
628. - That's a good word.
- A psychopomp.
Copy !req
629. A psychopomp.
Copy !req
630. Sounds like something you'd
find in a medical examination,
Copy !req
631. doesn't it?
Copy !req
632. "I'm sorry Mrs Wilson,
you've got psychopomps."
Copy !req
633. It may be benign,
Copy !req
634. - it may be malignant.
- Yes, gonna have to operate.
Copy !req
635. A malignant psychopomp
you wouldn't want.
Copy !req
636. But in fact, what has
been discovered,
Copy !req
637. you won't find this on
Egyptological websites
Copy !req
638. where they will continue
to call Anubis
Copy !req
639. and other Egyptian deities
jackal-headed,
Copy !req
640. but the animals that existed
at the time of ancient Egypt
Copy !req
641. were, we now know from
DNA, wolves, not jackals.
Copy !req
642. So, it seems from a
zoological point of view,
Copy !req
643. if not from an
Egyptological point of view,
Copy !req
644. they are in fact wolf-headed,
not jackal-headed.
Copy !req
645. You heard it here first.
Copy !req
646. Very recent discovery.
Copy !req
647. So, that's exciting, isn't it?
Copy !req
648. Well, there you are.
Copy !req
649. Which travel organization
includes a mandatory fee
Copy !req
650. for the repatriation
of your corpse?
Copy !req
651. The AA, Thomas Cook.
Copy !req
652. No, this is a very
particular event that you can
Copy !req
653. subscribe to, and they
sort out your travel
Copy !req
654. and your participation
in this event,
Copy !req
655. but included in it is a
fee for the repatriation
Copy !req
656. of your corpse.
Copy !req
657. It's not expected you'll die
Copy !req
658. but there's a chance
that you might.
Copy !req
659. It's not running the
bulls at Pamplona, is it?
Copy !req
660. No, it's not the bulls
of Pamplona.
Copy !req
661. It's not one of these
iron man races, is it?
Copy !req
662. It's that sort of a thing,
Copy !req
663. it's an incredibly
difficult marathon.
Copy !req
664. It's called the Marathon
des Sables,
Copy !req
665. which your French will
tell you means?
Copy !req
666. Marathon of the Sable.
Copy !req
667. These little black,
furry creatures in yes,
Copy !req
668. sand is sables in French.
Copy !req
669. Oh sables, sorry.
Copy !req
670. It's the Marathon of the Sands,
Copy !req
671. and it's an extraordinarily
enduring and grueling event
Copy !req
672. in which you have to
carry your own food,
Copy !req
673. although there are water stops,
Copy !req
674. and it's a six day, each
day you run a whole marathon
Copy !req
675. in the Sahara Desert.
Copy !req
676. People are very
weird, aren't they?
Copy !req
677. I have a friend who does
it, she's done it twice.
Copy !req
678. She's absolutely extraordinary.
Copy !req
679. Did she have to back because
she'd forgotten something?
Copy !req
680. Two separate years.
Copy !req
681. Oh, they better not tell
Izzard about it.
Copy !req
682. "Really?
Copy !req
683. "Ah, okay.
Copy !req
684. "How many, how many,
how many do they do?
Copy !req
685. "Okay."
Copy !req
686. That's uncanny,
isn't it?
Copy !req
687. "I'm gonna do 120 desert
marathons a week for a year.
Copy !req
688. "Yeah, true story."
Copy !req
689. Very good Eddie, I have to say.
Copy !req
690. I'm going to the pub
every night for 27 years.
Copy !req
691. In a tribute to Nelson Mandela.
Copy !req
692. Consider the case
of Mauro Prosperi
Copy !req
693. who is a very experienced
runner,
Copy !req
694. an Italian policeman in fact,
Copy !req
695. who in 1994 was doing
the Marathon des Sables
Copy !req
696. and there was a sandstorm.
Copy !req
697. And he disobeyed the
official instructions
Copy !req
698. which are if you're in a
sandstorm you hunker down
Copy !req
699. and wait till it passes.
Copy !req
700. I guess he wanted to
win or something
Copy !req
701. so he carried on running
and he got lost.
Copy !req
702. And this is a bad thing
in the Sahara
Copy !req
703. as I'm sure you can imagine.
Copy !req
704. By the second day he was
drinking his urine, naturally.
Copy !req
705. On the third he found
an abandoned shrine,
Copy !req
706. managed to kill a couple of
bats whose blood he drank.
Copy !req
707. He then decided to kill
himself with a penknife
Copy !req
708. but he was so dehydrated
that the blood wouldn't flow.
Copy !req
709. He was rather surprised to
wake up the next morning
Copy !req
710. and so he ran for the next five
days drinking urine and dew,
Copy !req
711. and eating the occasional
lizard that he'd found
Copy !req
712. and managed to kill on the way.
Copy !req
713. After nine days he encountered
some nomads
Copy !req
714. who got him back to safety.
Copy !req
715. He'd lost three stone
Copy !req
716. and was 130 miles off
course in Algeria.
Copy !req
717. And then he did it again
for six years.
Copy !req
718. He went back and did it again.
Copy !req
719. Amazing, I mean, bizarre,
but there you go.
Copy !req
720. Sheesh.
Copy !req
721. No one gives the nomads
much credit in that story.
Copy !req
722. No, I know.
Copy !req
723. Well he was out there
for nine days.
Copy !req
724. Oh, my whole life.
Copy !req
725. Exactly.
Copy !req
726. He walked for six days,
oh, get over yourself.
Copy !req
727. Doing that when I was three.
Copy !req
728. Drinking your own piss?
Copy !req
729. Luxury.
Copy !req
730. But his description of
it is really a very good
Copy !req
731. ode to life, isn't it?
Copy !req
732. He said, "I didn't
panic, I just despaired."
Copy !req
733. Anyway, what did Napoleon
say to Josephine
Copy !req
734. on his way back from a journey?
Copy !req
735. Oh, I sense a trap.
Copy !req
736. The only thing I know
about Napoleon to Josephine
Copy !req
737. - was he said.
- Yeah?
Copy !req
738. What was it?
Copy !req
739. Rob, what was it?
Copy !req
740. Phill.
Copy !req
741. Cal.
Copy !req
742. I'm gonna do it.
Copy !req
743. "I'm coming back, don't wash."
Copy !req
744. Oh.
Copy !req
745. That is one of the two
things that people know
Copy !req
746. that Napoleon said.
Copy !req
747. "I should be home
soon, don't wash."
Copy !req
748. 'Cause he liked them dirty.
Copy !req
749. There is no evidence
of that whatsoever.
Copy !req
750. The earliest place this
quotation can be sourced is
1981.
Copy !req
751. I only know the other one.
Copy !req
752. The other one, which
might be what?
Copy !req
753. It's the one, Rob,
what's?
Copy !req
754. Phill, you know it.
Copy !req
755. Cal, what, it's, really.
Copy !req
756. I'm still stuck on
the no washing.
Copy !req
757. "Pas ce soir, Josephine."
Copy !req
758. Ah, got away with it.
Copy !req
759. Josephine on the right there,
Copy !req
760. she's got the same black
eyes that all the people
Copy !req
761. in my pictures have
got on my computer
Copy !req
762. when I try and get
rid of the red eye.
Copy !req
763. And they end up with
massive black dots.
Copy !req
764. They look like some
sort of zombie.
Copy !req
765. Anyway, sorry you fell
into our trap,
Copy !req
766. but now you managed
to avoid the trap
Copy !req
767. of "Not tonight, Josephine"
which is the other thing
Copy !req
768. - he was suppose to have said.
- That's the one.
Copy !req
769. That's the one I know.
Copy !req
770. That appears in a play
WG Wills played
Copy !req
771. called "The Royal Divorce"
which didn't come out
Copy !req
772. until 1891, some 70 years
after the death of the emperor.
Copy !req
773. "An army marches
on its stomach."
Copy !req
774. Yes, well, indeed, yes.
Copy !req
775. Did he say that?
Copy !req
776. Unlikely he said
that to Josephine
Copy !req
777. but he might have done.
Copy !req
778. I think he made it more
of a sort of point
Copy !req
779. about the logistics.
Copy !req
780. Maybe he discussed all
sorts of battle stuff.
Copy !req
781. He might have done.
Copy !req
782. He said, "I'd prefer a lucky
general to a skilled one"
Copy !req
783. he said, as well.
Copy !req
784. So we don't really know
anything particular
Copy !req
785. that Josephine and Napoleon
might have said to each other.
Copy !req
786. But we do know one thing,
Copy !req
787. "Journeys end in
lovers' meeting."
Copy !req
788. That's Shakespeare.
Copy !req
789. In fourth place we have,
Copy !req
790. I'm sorry to say but he did fall
Copy !req
791. into some of our honey
traps rather cumbrously,
Copy !req
792. Phill Jupitus with minus 16.
Copy !req
793. And,
Copy !req
794. our little kiwi fruit is
third with minus eight.
Copy !req
795. Cal Wilson.
Copy !req
796. But hold the front page,
second with minus three,
Copy !req
797. Rob Brydon.
Copy !req
798. With an astonishing plus four,
Alan Davies is the winner!
Copy !req
799. Wow!
Copy !req
800. So, that's all from Rob,
Phill, Cal and Alan and me.
Copy !req
801. The last word on journeys comes
from Erma Bombeck, she said,
Copy !req
802. "Seize the moment, remember
all those women on the Titanic
Copy !req
803. "who waved away the
dessert cart."
Copy !req
804. Have a safe trip, goodnight.
Copy !req