1. Well, good evening. Good evening,
good evening, good evening,
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2. and that's the fewest times
I've ever said good evening,
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3. and welcome to QI,
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4. where tonight we'll be journeying
to jestinations beginning with J.
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5. And joining me are the
jet-skiing Sandi Toksvig...
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6. .. the jet-setting Susan Calman...
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7. .. the jet-engined Bill Bailey...
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8. .. and, still being probed by
Gatwick security, Alan Davies.
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9. Now let's hear your buzzers.
And Sandi goes...
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10. Susan goes...
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11. Bill goes...
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12. And Alan goes...
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13. Try that again.
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14. No, it's never going to work, is it?
Flooded it. Yeah, absolutely.
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15. Well, let's have an easy one
to start with.
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16. Strictly speaking, where does the
phrase Chariots Of Fire come from?
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17. It's a film. It's a film.
Where did it originate?
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18. It's something to do with this.
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19. Where does the phrase originate?
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20. It's a quotation.
It's a quotation.
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21. From what? Shakespeare,
must be Shakespeare. No.
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22. Oh, the Chariots Of Fire.
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23. Wordsworth, Jerusalem, the hymn
Jerusalem.
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24. You fell finally into our trap.
Finally! It took a while.
Sorry, it's the first question.
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25. It was slightly embarrassing
how long it took you to get
the wrong answer.
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26. Yes, I did start by saying
"strictly speaking".
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27. Strictly speaking it comes from a
poem by William Blake, called...?
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28. Chariots Of Fire. No.
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29. I'm ashamed of you.
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30. You must know the first line of...
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31. I must, but I can't
be arsed to tell you.
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32. Well, you're not English,
that's fair. Fair.
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33. And... And did...
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34. Those feet
in ancient times. Thank you!
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35. Finally we got there.
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36. Oh, I know that! Yes!
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37. That's the name of the poem
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38. from which the line
"chariots of fire" comes. Oh.
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39. The tune is called Jerusalem.
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40. And it's referred,
mistakenly as a hymn.
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41. Thank you for starting in my key.
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42. Come on!
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43. Bring... oh, clouds unfold.
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44. Yes, really what I'm after is,
what does it mean? And whose feet?
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45. Jesus, surely. Right. So what is the
story of Jesus coming to England?
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46. Is there a film about it? Yes.
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47. Not to my knowledge.
And then they all...
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48. Well, then, I'm in trouble.
I am, as they say, out of...
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49. This is what people say now when
they don't know the answer, they
say, "I'm out of my comfort zone."
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50. You have been the equivalent of
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51. sitting on spikes for the
last ten years, Alan. Yeah!
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52. I have yet to discover
your comfort zone.
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53. OK, listen, there is a legend
that Jesus came to England. Yes.
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54. And he was said to have
gone to a particular place.
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55. Was it Glastonbury?
The audience know. Ah, thank you.
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56. Glastonbury.
Glastonbury. Glastonbury Tor.
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57. And he went with his uncle.
What was his uncle's name?
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58. Bob. Uncle Bob Christ?
Bob's your uncle.
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59. Yeah, they were a bit more...
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60. Surely they were more informal
in those times, surely. Bob Christ.
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61. His uncle's name was the same
as his father's name. Joseph.
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62. Joseph. And he was
named after a place.
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63. Is it like working with
very slow children, Stephen?
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64. Arimathea. Thank you!
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65. Say it again so the camera can
get it, clearly. Right. Oh, OK.
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66. This is a new thing we're
doing. Hang on a second.
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67. Hey, hang on!
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68. You had your chance.
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69. I was just composing my face.
Joseph of Arimathea.
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70. No, I said it! I said it!
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71. Joseph of Arimathea.
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72. I'm going to throw cold water
over you both in a minute.
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73. Joseph of Arimathea.
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74. Joseph of Arimathea!
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75. It was the first-ever
Glastonbury Festival, if you will.
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76. It was that Jesus supposedly came
with his uncle, Joseph of Arimathea,
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77. who is mentioned in the Gospels,
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78. although, it has to be said,
Arimathea is only mentioned once,
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79. and that is in relation to
the place Joseph came from.
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80. No-one knows where it is, where it
was, where it could have been.
Anyway...
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81. It could have been a
falafel tent. Nobody knows.
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82. Jesus was effectively
the first act, then.
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83. He was the first act
ever to appear at Glasto.
He was the first on at Glastonbury.
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84. Was he a juggler?
Did he have bongos?
Was he doing the diablo thing?
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85. He did holistic balancing.
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86. Three rooms of banging scripture.
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87. All right, OK.
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88. So there was a myth that Jesus
and Joseph of Arimathea came...
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89. Supposedly, Joseph of
Arimathea was after tin,
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90. and he came with Jesus, went to
Glastonbury Tor and there's a tree.
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91. Tree, isn't there,
the Glastonbury tree. Did Mary come?
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92. Supposedly, it was planted...
Sorry? Mary, the mother.
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93. I just wondered if Mum came as well.
I don't think she did.
Boys' weekend.
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94. We don't know. Boys' weekend!
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95. But I will give you 20 points each
if you can mention the two other
places the myth says they went to.
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96. Glastonbury is one,
but they were said to have
gone to two other places.
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97. Wait! I know this. Torquay? No.
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98. Because there's a group called
the Aetherius Society,
and they believe...
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99. Oh, they're your
neighbours, aren't they?
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100. They're my neighbours in Devon,
and they believe that Christ
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101. appeared to them on the top of
this hill,
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102. and the founder of the Aetherius
Society said he was doing the
washing up in his flat,
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103. and he heard a voice say,
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104. "You have been chosen as the
planetary representative of Earth."
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105. So, immediately, he went, "Oh,
right. I'd better do that, then."
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106. So he left the drying up? He left
the drying up to someone else.
And the putting away?
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107. Can I just ask how much
Bill knows about washing up?
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108. Cos you do it like you're typing.
You did that for washing up.
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109. It's just a little,
gentle caress of each thing.
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110. And then that to get
rid of the plates.
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111. He eats his dinner off
old keyboards. Yeah.
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112. That's my life.
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113. Anyway, the places were, in fact,
Penzance was one. Oh!
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114. And the other was Falmouth.
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115. Oh, I see.
And I'm sure he had a lovely time.
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116. A pasty, did he have a pasty?
He would have had a pasty.
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117. Now, why might my
pockets smell of fish?
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118. They've done that thing
where they take my body
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119. and put it on the head of someone
who looks a bit like me. Ah, yes.
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120. I hate when they do that.
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121. God, that's like a dream I had
last night! This is so weird.
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122. It's not like a dream
I've ever had.
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123. But I mean, obviously,
if you're a fisherman...
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124. But if you were a person
of high rank in society,
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125. a particular society,
your pockets might smell of fish.
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126. Oh. The Fishmongers' Society.
Well, no.
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127. That's what I mean.
Aside from the obvious professional
reasons why you might smell of fish.
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128. Oh, right. It's a society in which
it was considered polite not to eat,
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129. but to pocket the fish at a banquet.
Is it Japanese, cos...? Yes!
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130. Cos fish, fish, they love fish.
Japanese is exactly right.
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131. Medieval Japanese society,
at weddings and banquets
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132. and other such things, it was right
to drink the drink you were given,
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133. but that you should take the fish,
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134. bring it up to your mouth and then
tuck it away into your pocket.
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135. I know it seems very odd. What?
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136. It's just a social...
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137. I've done that with
sausage rolls for the dogs later.
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138. We've all done it with
certain things, I agree.
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139. But it is an interesting thing,
and they still have a
tradition in Japan,
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140. when a baby is 100 days old,
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141. is to take food, sea bream
and beans and soya and rice,
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142. and wave it in front of the baby's
face, but not let the baby eat it.
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143. Wait a minute. So there's people
dangling fish in front of babies?
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144. This is... Right, OK.
What, on a fishing line?
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145. No, no! From the food cupboard
or the fridge,
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146. which in Japan would be filled with
all kinds of different fish,
as you can imagine.
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147. I see, I see. Sashimi.
Sashimi and sushi and all
kinds of other such things.
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148. In fact, while on the subject of
sashimi... Weird, weirdos.
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149. What is the difference between sushi
and sashimi? Sashimi is raw fish.
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150. And sushi is rice and seaweed
and that kind of thing.
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151. Yes, it's rolled in rice.
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152. And the particular thing about
sashimi is not just that it's
raw fish, but that it's...?
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153. It's sliced.
It's sliced at an angle.
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154. Those huge knife skills are
incredibly important in
Japanese cuisine.
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155. This particularly used to be
true in the medieval period.
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156. And in carp, for example,
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157. there were at least 47 different
ways of cutting carp,
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158. which represented different
aspects of human life or activity.
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159. For example, there was
"departing for battle carp".
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160. So soldiers would have
carp carved in a certain way
before they went to battle.
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161. If they weren't told
they were going to battle,
the carp was the giveaway.
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162. Yeah, exactly.
There was "celebratory carp".
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163. There was "taking a bride carp".
Ooh!
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164. "Flower viewing carp".
No! Really?
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165. "Warning carp".
Look out, carp!
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166. "Moon viewing carp".
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167. So it was a very important part,
obviously, of Japanese life,
the way they prepared fish.
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168. It's a wonderful art, obviously,
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169. and it's a very popular cuisine
now around the world.
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170. I have an amusing joke that
I always say when I'm in
a Japanese restaurant -
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171. bring me a various selection
of things to drink, waiter,
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172. and don't get all sake.
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173. Oh, you see! Hey!
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174. But what actually is sake?
What is sake?
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175. Rice...? Rice wine. Rice wine,
you said, Alan? Yes, rice wine?
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176. Alan came in first with rice wine.
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177. He said it! Yeah.
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178. It is not rice wine. Oh. No.
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179. The actual word sake simply
means alcoholic drink.
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180. But the sake we think of as sake
is in fact a kind of beer.
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181. The word they use for the drink
we call sake is "Nihonshu",
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182. which means Japanese liquor.
Nihon, as in Nippon.
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183. Anyway, originally,
people would just chew rice
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184. and spit into a large container,
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185. and the enzymes from the spittle
would cause the breakdown
of starch into sugars,
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186. which would cause the fermentation,
which would make the sake.
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187. So it is actually a
strong beer, not a wine.
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188. A wine is a fruit-based drink,
usually grape, obviously.
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189. What other kinds of particularly
Japanese things can you do to
food to make it Japanese?
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190. You can put it in tempura. Tempura.
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191. Funny you should say that
cos tempura was actually
introduced to Japan,
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192. and I will give you ten points
if you can tell me which nation
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193. taught the Japanese to batter
things, which is essentially
what tempura is.
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194. Scottish.
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195. You'd think, wouldn't you?
You would think.
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196. Surely there's a
ginger-haired man somewhere,
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197. in one of those
medieval scrolls, just going...
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198. "Do you want to deep-fry that?"
Yeah. "That would be magic,
it really would."
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199. "Have we got any eggs?"
Oddly enough not, no.
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200. It was the Portuguese.
Portuguese! The Portuguese.
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201. Also, the name vindaloo is
originally from Portuguese
origin, from Goa.
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202. Is it? I thought that was a
French...
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203. Vin de loo - toilet water.
Goa, as you know, was...
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204. But there you go.
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205. Anyway, so lots of interesting
things about Japanese food.
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206. Now, I'm having a senior moment.
The famous volcano near Java?
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207. Krakatoa. Krakatoa.
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208. What's the name of the movie?
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209. Krakatoa... Erupts?
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210. Krakatoa East of Java.
East of Java, yes.
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211. And oddly enough, it's actually
west of Java. West of Java, yes.
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212. It is an odd thing,
but it was one of the first
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213. big Cinerama kind of movies,
called Krakatoa East of Java.
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214. It was just a bizarre lie,
because Krakatoa is west of Java.
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215. So some producer must have thought,
"I don't like the sound
of West of Java."
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216. "It's not going to sell. What can
we do? We can take it north.
North, south?
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217. "East! East, it's going
to be fantastic."
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218. So, within ten years, tell me
when this great, huge explosion...?
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219. 1883. 1883.
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220. Erm, 1882.
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221. Right.
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222. Ladies and gentlemen,
viewers at home,
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223. brace yourselves. Oh, hello.
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224. The explosion, the great enormous,
gigantic eruption of Krakatoa
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225. was in 1883.
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226. I thank you.
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227. I saw a documentary about it.
May I just say...
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228. There was a documentary about it
on the BBC and they re-enacted it.
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229. Well, well remembered! I mean, it's
not an easily, not particularly...
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230. I don't normally remember anything.
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231. It was the loudest sound,
apparently, that has ever existed,
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232. or at least as far as we know,
certainly within human reckoning.
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233. So, four atomic bombs
is sort of the average...
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234. Oh, no, no! It was 13 times
greater than the Hiroshima bomb.
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235. Oh, was it? Wow!
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236. Five cubic miles of rock
was spewed into the air,
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237. and it was heard 3,000 miles away.
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238. You could actually hear
it 3,000 miles away.
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239. Pop. And it... Yes!
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240. That's what it sounded
like in Australia.
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241. It reverberated around the world,
the ripples of it, seven times.
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242. It was a most extraordinary...
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243. Wasn't Krakatoa...
Was that the first global event
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244. that sort of was... the news of
which spread around the world?
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245. Exactly. We can see
behind us, Harper's Weekly.
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246. It was a media event
for the first time. Yeah.
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247. "The island and volcano of Krakatoa
Strait of Sunda, submerged during
the late eruption." Yes.
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248. When eventually a
human party of people
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249. arrived at the site,
they found one living creature.
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250. And I will give you ten points
if you can tell me the species.
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251. Was it a spider
that they found? Yes!
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252. It was a spider. What's going on?
Everybody's brilliant.
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253. Absolutely marvellous.
Everybody's on cracking form here.
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254. You really are doing superbly well.
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255. Was the spider going,
"Ooh, it's hot"?
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256. It was indeed.
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257. It was using two legs at a time.
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258. Anyway... Like this.
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259. Ooh, ah! Ooh, ah! Ooh, ow! Oh, ah!
Ooh, ow! Ooh, ow! Ooh, ow!
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260. So it was doing the washing up!
Yes, it was.
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261. Anyway, moving on.
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262. So, what was the most hurtful thing
Rambo's boyfriend did to him?
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263. Right. I've seen this film. It's a
bootleg, it's very different from...
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264. Rambo's boyfriend?
Well, I'm being very naughty.
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265. Of course, the picture
is being very naughty.
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266. When I say Rambo,
I really mean Rimbaud. Rimbaud!
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267. So when I say Rimbaud,
who do I mean?
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268. You mean, of course, him.
But who is he?
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269. Rimbaud. Somebody French.
He looks off his head on something.
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270. "Somebody French." Arthur? Arthur.
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271. Arthur. Rimbaud. Rimbaud.
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272. Arthur Rimbaud, who was? He was a
great writer, wasn't he? A poet.
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273. He was a great poet, but very rare
inasmuch as... Got that right!
Can't believe it.
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274. We're used to Beethoven and
Mozart, and other musicians,
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275. being extraordinarily
prodigious at an early age.
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276. It's very rare for a poet.
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277. The greatest work that Rimbaud
wrote, and he was a great poet,
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278. was between the ages of 17 and 21.
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279. He was extraordinarily beautiful.
According to a school friend,
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280. "He had eyes of pale blue,
irradiated with dark blue,
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281. "the loveliest eyes I've ever seen.
He was a brilliant student.
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282. "He won a regional
poetry competition,
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283. "in spite of sleeping through
the first three hours of the exam."
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284. Oh, I've done that. At 16,
he ran away from home with no money,
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285. and then between the ages of 17
and 21, just four years,
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286. he had this extraordinary
flowering as poet.
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287. But, in doing so,
he shared his life with someone.
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288. He had a passionate, tumultuous
affair with dot, dot, dot.
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289. Katie Price.
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290. His dates were 1854 to 1891.
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291. So he died at 36, 37.
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292. And he was of a
homosexual persuasion?
A child prodigy, he was gay.
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293. Oh, well, don't know
anything about those people.
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294. And in fact there is a blue plaque
to him in London,
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295. where he shared a
short-ish time with his lover,
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296. who was also a poet, a famous poet.
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297. Oh. Gerard de Nerval. No.
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298. Gerard de Nerval was a
fascinating man. He was.
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299. I very much enjoyed the way
you said that. Je suis le veuf,
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300. l'ancontre. Le tenebreux. And he
also famously had a pet lobster...
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301. He did indeed. .. that he used
to take for walks on a lead.
Vite, vite, monsieur!
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302. Monsieur Clicky.
Stay with it! Stay with it!
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303. Alors!
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304. Stay with it, because it's ...
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305. Non!
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306. J'ai fatigue. Non! Allez vite.
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307. L'eau, s'il vous plait. L'eau! Non.
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308. Non, pas de l'eau.
Non. Le artichoke.
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309. I never thought
I'd see the day when
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310. Bill Bailey force-fed Gerard de
Nerval's lobster with an artichoke,
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311. and yet the day came.
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312. Anyway, let's just return
to this other poet,
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313. who was the lover of
the young Verlaine.
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314. Oh, sorry... Verlaine!
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315. Did I ever give that away! No.
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316. Now, there,
on the left is Verlaine,
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317. the one who looks slightly
like John Malkovich. Oh.
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318. In the middle is the boy wonder.
Rimbaud.
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319. Rimbaud, and on the right is...
Erm, I can't remember his name.
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320. That's Robert de Niro, isn't it?
It is Robert de Niro, yes.
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321. It is a bit, isn't it, on the right.
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322. It's Robert de Niro,
that's who it is.
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323. It's like a 19th century ad
for a hairdressers, of all the
different styles you can have.
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324. Is that the same person in that
picture as it was in the one before?
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325. It is. Jeez. Air-brushing. I know.
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326. But they went to live in
Camden for a short while
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327. and there is a blue plaque
in Camden that says,
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328. "Arthur Rimbaud and Paul Verlaine,
poet and lovers, lived here."
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329. It was the first blue plaque ever
to celebrate a gay couple,
which is rather sweet.
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330. Anyway, that's the story of these
two. We thought you'd like to
know about it, but why...
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331. Yes, quite interesting.
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332. The question was how
did the lover hurt Rimbaud?
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333. Shut his fingers in the door. Yeah.
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334. Worse than that, he had a
tumultuous... Oh, it does nip.
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335. .. passionate, jealous rage and shot
him in the wrist. In the wrist? Yes.
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336. Whilst he was masturbating.
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337. I'm going to move on, because
you're just simply misbehaving.
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338. Yeah, move on. Yeah.
It's for the best. Anyway.
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339. I am so out of my comfort zone.
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340. It's all good information
that is well worth knowing.
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341. Arthur Rimbaud was shot in
the arm by Paul Verlaine.
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342. Now, on to one of the delicacies
of Jamaican cuisine,
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343. I think we all know
how to make cock soup,
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344. but how would you
make mannish water?
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345. Sorry, I don't know
how to make cock soup.
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346. I don't like cock soup.
I don't know what... Cock-a-leekie.
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347. Oh, right! Oh, OK.
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348. Cock-a-leekie.
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349. It's good, chicken soup.
Oh, I see. Is that what it is?
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350. A cock is a chicken.
Cock is a chicken, yeah.
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351. What can you have
been thinking?
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352. I don't know, I thought it
was some terrible euphemism.
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353. What, a euphemism for pheasant?
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354. I don't... Yes!
Yes, that's it, pheasant.
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355. Well, cock soup is chicken
soup. Cock-a-leekie.
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356. Cock-a-leekie soup. You've
had cock-a-leekie in Scotland.
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357. I've had cock-a-leekie. Yes,
you've had a leaky cock. Hey, hey!
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358. No, shush and because...
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359. No, listen, now. Mannish water...
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360. It's like Frankie Howerd
was in the room.
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361. No, no.
No, don't. Oh, no. Stop it.
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362. Shush! No. Don't. No.
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363. Missus! No.
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364. Big belly laughs from all men with
big bellies and we'll have little
titters from... No!
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365. All right. Don't you
remember that one? Oh!
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366. Stop it! Mannish water...
Come on, we're in Jamaica.
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367. Mannish water. Yeah.
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368. Is it some kind of a soupage of some
kind? Yes. It's a soupage.
Mannish water.
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369. It's Jamaican, is the point.
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370. Right, so Jamaican food is
what you're looking for? Yeah.
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371. Coconuts, plantains.
It's mannish, though.
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372. The point is they want to
be male, so eat male animals.
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373. Oh, OK, so it's a...
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374. And what food is common in...
Rice and peas. Yes.
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375. Rice and peas, flying fish.
Anything else?
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376. Goat and... Goat! Yes.
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377. Entails of goat. That's it.
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378. So all the male parts of a goat -
and a male goat is the important
thing - makes mannish water.
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379. It's also called goat's head soup.
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380. Does the phrase goat's head
soup mean anything to you?
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381. Er, yes, that I'm not hungry,
is what it means.
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382. Anything else?
It's an album, isn't it? Thank you.
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383. Goat's Head Soup,
by what's his name?
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384. It's not his name,
their name. Oh, God!
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385. The greatest rock 'n' roll band in
the world, they call themselves.
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386. The Proclaimers.
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387. And you can walk another
100 miles for...
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388. Oh, I love the Proclaimers.
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389. No, I'm very fond of
The Proclaimers, but
The Rolling Stones...
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390. Rolling Stones! Rolling Stones.
In 1973, produced an album
called Goat's Head Soup,
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391. because they recorded
the album on Jamaica.
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392. And do you know why they
recorded the album on Jamaica?
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393. Island Records. Because
they were mad for the soup. No.
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394. Because it was about the only
bloody country on earth where
they weren't banned from.
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395. It was around the time of a lot of
the drugs and all the rest of it,
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396. so they were allowed in Jamaica
and made an album called
Goat's Head Soup,
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397. which is another word
for mannish water.
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398. And its ingredients, should you
wish to make it, are goat's head,
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399. feet and intestines,
served with bananas and spices.
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400. It's supposed to be an aphrodisiac.
It's supposed to man you up,
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401. that's the point.
Hence mannish soup.
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402. There's also cow cod soup,
made of bull's penis,
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403. chilli peppers and bananas,
cooked in white rum.
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404. Which sounds rather nice.
That is nice.
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405. Yeah. I like the sound of that.
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406. I'll pop to Lidl in the morning.
Yeah.
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407. Anyway, that's
mannish water for you.
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408. Now, here are two towns behind me.
They both begin with J.
Why are they blue?
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409. Oh! Now, I know this. Yes?
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410. Well, I know one of them.
Go on, then.
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411. I've got a Smurf collection,
I've had it many years.
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412. When I was younger, I used to
collect Smurfs, it was my hobby.
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413. I've got a Smurf village,
I created when I was younger,
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414. it's still there,
reminds me of the bad times.
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415. And the good times. Right.
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416. Now, and if this is wrong,
I'm going to look like a total twat.
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417. The thing is, you'd look like a twat
even if you're right. Yeah.
Carry on, yeah.
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418. No, because knowing this is
so deeply sad. Yeah, carry on.
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419. OK, so I love Smurfs and
everything about Smurfs
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420. and Smurfettes and everything else.
Yeah.
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421. When they did the premiere
of the Smurf film,
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422. they painted a town somewhere -
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423. I think it was Spain, near
Marbella, or something like that -
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424. blue, for the premiere of the film.
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425. And then afterwards they said,
"We'll paint it back,"
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426. and the residents had had
such a lot of tourism,
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427. and they dubbed the mayor
Papa Smurf,
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428. which he was delighted about!
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429. But they had a referendum to see if
they wanted to keep their town blue,
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430. because they thought
it was quite cool.
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431. And, cos that's Smurf,
because it was Smurf town,
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432. which sounds amazing,
cos I love the Smurfs.
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433. You are 100% correct!
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434. I like it. It's that one
on the right. Come on!
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435. The only thing that
would add 20 points was
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436. if you knew the name.
20 points? Oh!
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437. Will you not destroy the set?
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438. Yes, you've broken it.
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439. Just tell me the name of the town.
Juarez, was it Juarez? No.
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440. No, that's in Mexico.
We're talking about Spain.
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441. Jojoba. Jerez.
No, that's... Jerez.
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442. That's... Jomin? Juan.
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443. All right, it begins with
"J". I'll give you that.
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444. Is it Jipswich?
Is it Jerusalem?
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445. It's not Jerusalem.
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446. Ji... Jiby.
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447. No, it's called Juzcar. Oh!
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448. The next thing
I was going to say.
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449. Juzcar, spelt J-U-Z-C-A-R,
Juzcar, with an accent on the U.
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450. Was the other town Jaipur?
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451. Yes! Well done. A point!
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452. No, no. No. Sorry. Whoa!
I misheard you.
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453. It's Jodhpur.
Jodhpur is the answer.
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454. I still said it before Sandi,
I still said Jodhpur before Sandi!
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455. You did, you said the wrong thing.
No, no! I said Jodhpur,
I still said Jodhpur.
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456. You're quite right, it's Jodhpur.
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457. So we're going to go back
to a picture of Jodhpur.
Why is Jodhpur blue?
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458. It's to do with the caste
system. Yes. It's to do with indigo,
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459. indigo being the colour
of the Brahmin and...
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460. The Brahmin, which
is the highest caste.
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461. It was to distinguish their houses
and everybody thought it a good
idea.
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462. There is also a pink city.
Can you name a pink city?
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463. Jaipur. Yes!
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464. There you go.
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465. And there it is. There we are.
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466. Now, d'you know the
capital of Alaska?
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467. Yes, you just said it.
Exactly. Thank you.
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468. Very good!
Juneau is the capital of Alaska.
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469. J-U-N-E-A-U. Ah, Juneau.
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470. But there's something
unique about it.
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471. It rains all the bloody time,
I know that. Well, it's
not accessible by road.
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472. You can only get there by air or
water. There is no road to Juneau.
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473. Sarah Palin can get there by
walking on the water. Well, yes.
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474. Can you tell me the biggest joke
ever to come out of Alaska?
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475. Sarah Palin, who can walk on...
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476. Ohhh! Dear, oh, dear, oh,
dear, oh, dear, oh, dear.
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477. We're not forfeiting you that,
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478. it was so obvious that we weren't
even going to forfeit it.
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479. Isn't she lovely?
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480. If I had forfeited, I would have
refudiated. We would have
refudiated.
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481. Anyway, the point is, there is
actually a famous practical joke,
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482. an April fool's joke
that came out of Alaska.
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483. It took a lot of preparation
and was rather extraordinary.
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484. Here's a photo that
might give you a hint.
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485. I mean, it's not going to be easy,
but what's in the background there?
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486. This is a volcano-based
practical joke. Yes.
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487. And it's one that I read about
and it very much impressed me
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488. because if you do a
practical joke which is, you know,
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489. clingfilm over the toilet,
something simple...
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490. But the person who did
this practical joke...
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491. It's a good one. It doesn't
work for women necessarily,
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492. cos we tend to notice when we
sit down that there's something,
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493. but for men, I tell you,
it's a hoot.
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494. There was a volcano,
and a gentleman,
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495. and I can't remember his name,
I apologise. Don't you worry.
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496. Decided to try and make it
seem as if it was erupting,
so took loads of tyres...
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497. You are class. .. and set fire to
it and then everyone came out
of their houses and went,
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498. "The volcano's erupting!"
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499. Yes. Cos it was so good.
You're absolutely right.
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500. He waited three years until
there was a clear April 1st.
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501. He took kerosene and
smoke bombs and tyres,
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502. and he dropped them down
the crater and set fire to it.
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503. But, in 50-foot letters,
he did say, "April Fool"
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504. and he warned the federal authority.
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505. He called them up, but he forgot
to call the coastguard,
who did panic a bit.
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506. But it was, fortunately,
all taken in the right spirit.
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507. And his name was Porky Bickar.
Porky. Porky?
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508. Porky - that was his nickname.
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509. He was American, so he was
called Porky. Porky Bickar.
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510. And that is, aside from Sarah Palin,
the greatest joke ever to
come out of Alaska.
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511. It is a good one.
I mean, it is a good one.
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512. I have to say I am very
impressed again with your knowledge.
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513. And that's the end of
tonight's questions.
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514. Let's see how our journey
has panned out.
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515. Well, it's astonishing! Her
first-ever appearance, on plus 15,
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516. a clear winner - Susan Calman.
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517. And only four inches behind on 11 -
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518. Sandi Toksvig.
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519. Impressively, the digitally endowed,
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520. still in the black,
plus four - Bill Bailey.
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521. I'm delighted.
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522. Well, perhaps the best we can say
is, bless him, he did try.
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523. Minus 11 - Alan Davies.
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524. That's all from Sandi,
Susan, Bill, Alan and me.
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525. Thank you, goodnight and be
wonderful to each other. Bye-bye.
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