1. Well, goooooood...
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2. evening, good evening, good evening,
good evening, good evening.
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3. And to a greater or lesser extent,
good evening, and welcome to QI,
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4. where tonight we'll be delving
into the seedy world of journalism.
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5. Before we start sexing up the facts,
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6. let's look at who's going to be
on my press-gang.
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7. Hold the front page,
it's Shappi Khorsandi!
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8. Drop the dead donkey,
it's Ross Noble.
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9. Another world exclusive -
Johnny Vegas!
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10. And, personally responsible
for eating Freddie Starr's hamster,
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11. Alan Davies.
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12. Now, before we press on,
let's hear their buzzers.
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13. Shappi goes...
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14. That's newsy. Ross goes...
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15. Quite newsy, too. Johnny goes...
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16. And Alan goes...
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17. Very pleasing.
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18. That's great!
So you've actually given...?
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19. It's A Knockout, yeah.
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20. You've given us
the It's A Knockout theme?
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21. So at any point we can play that
and just wrestle around in that.
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22. I could go "HA-HA-HA-HA!"
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23. Then every time I press mine,
something terrible will happen.
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24. Yes, well, yes...
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25. I can't press my buzzer at all,
in case there's a tsunami.
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26. A volcano has killed
the population of Sunderland.
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27. Anyway, let's start.
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28. What kind of person lived here?
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29. Yes, already the tragic tones.
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30. Initially, you think a very angry
person that's quite small. Yes.
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31. Small-minded, or just small?
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32. It did genuinely exist,
this Daily Mail model village.
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33. This was after the First World War,
when housing was in short supply
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34. and we were trying to build
a land fit for heroes...
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35. And it was made entirely
of Daily Mail papier mache, was it?
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36. Well, the Daily Mail was never
shy about trying to draw
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37. attention to itself with publicity
stunts of all kinds -
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38. athletic stunts,
firsts in aviation, and so on.
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39. It was the Daily Mail
that sponsored Amy Johnson
to fly to Australia, for example.
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40. And they decided that they would
lead the world,
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41. and they thought they would
contribute to a model village.
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42. I can see that, like if they go,
"Let's have an air race,
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43. "let's try and cross the Atlantic,"
they're all quite...
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44. ..like that. But then,
model village... But then...
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45. You know, it's the sort of thing
where, like, Richard Branson said,
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46. "I'm going to send a rocket to the
moon and I'm going to take people,"
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47. and they go,
"Wow, Branson's amazing!"
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48. And when we get here, I'm going
to build a model village!
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49. Well, I suppose you have
to go back to after 1919,
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50. all those people wiped out
by Spanish flu, before that
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51. all the people wiped out
by the First World War,
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52. and the Daily Mail thought
we needed a new, modern Britain
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53. with new, modern cities,
and so they devised this village
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54. which they thought was going
to be absolutely marvellous.
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55. But the plans were a little
overambitious,
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56. and they were overtaken by the...
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57. Guardian village.
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58. The company who owned
the land around
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59. and who named this new town
Welwyn Garden City.
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60. Oooh. Ah.
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61. There it was, the Daily Mail model
village at Welwyn Garden City, 1922.
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62. It's a good job it wasn't
the Sunday Sport model village,
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63. because it would be
the "Well-In Garden City!"
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64. Phwoarr!
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65. Check out the fronts
of those houses!
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66. Total frontage!
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67. And there is always
the back alley, too!
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68. That was a rubbish model village,
it's clearly full-size.
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69. Yeah, don't forget "model"
has two meanings -
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70. there's "model" in the sense of
a paragon, a model of its kind.
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71. That's what they meant by it.
It's got three meanings, hasn't it?
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72. Because "model village" everyone
just walks around like that.
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73. The high street is called
"The Catwalk", yeah.
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74. Everyone's just in their pants.
That's true!
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75. I have to say,
I weep when I think of my childhood
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76. and the amount of time
we spent around a model village...
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77. Oh, Bekonscot?
.. and what kids have today.
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78. Yeah. They've got so much,
and my mum and dad were going,
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79. "Look at that, it's Big Ben
but this big,"
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80. and we'd go, "Wow."
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81. Your dad didn't drink.
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82. My dad would go to a model village,
drink and go, "I'm King Kong!"
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83. And just start smashing stuff!
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84. Oh, how we'd laugh!
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85. You know why I can't go
to model villages?
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86. Cos when you walk around,
because of the painted faces,
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87. they all look like people
who've been trapped by witchcraft.
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88. They do, don't they?
"Help, get me out of here!
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89. "I'm not really queuing
for a newspaper."
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90. And I come home, shrouded in guilt,
and drink.
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91. I don't know enough about
the dark arts to make them
all fully-sized again.
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92. Then you could save them.
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93. Tell me about the Daily Mail,
who founded the Daily Mail?
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94. Lord Beaverbrook. Satan.
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95. Not Lord Beaverbrook, that's
The Express - Satan is closer.
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96. Was it just a load
of beavers in a brook?
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97. No, it's a family that still exists
and still controls the group.
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98. Is it the Patak family?
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99. No, it's not the Pataks.
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100. That would be great!
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101. That would be pleasing.
If we find out the spice dynasty...
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102. It was founded in 1896
by Alfred Harmsworth,
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103. who later became Lord Northcliffe.
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104. So, Alfred Harmsworth
was a great showman
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105. and he had a brilliant gift
for making Daily Mail readers
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106. think they kind of owned The Mail,
so he was always having competitions
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107. asking them how The Mail
could be improved, for example.
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108. There were people who wrote
in and said,
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109. "You should perforate
your articles so we could
tear them out, like stamps,"
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110. which is an interesting idea.
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111. Are you sure that wasn't
for toilet paper?
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112. Someone else suggested each page
should be perfumed differently,
so it smelt different.
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113. What if you confused the chip paper
with the toilet paper?
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114. Madness would ensue.
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115. But before he was a press baron,
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116. he actually wrote a rather
QI-style book,
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117. which had
the marvellous title of
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118. "Answers To Correspondents
On Every Subject Under The Sun."
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119. The first edition contained articles
with headlines,
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120. "What The Queen Eats",
"How To Cure Freckles",
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121. and "Why Jews Don't Ride Bicycles."
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122. And those three answers
covered everything?
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123. That wasn't the sum
of the questions. Oh, right.
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124. But part of the showman in him
was that he guaranteed that,
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125. if you died with a copy of that book
on you, your estate would get £200.
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126. He was a real showman.
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127. Now, listen to this obituary,
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128. and let me know what kind
of person is being described.
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129. "He was a tireless raconteur,
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130. "who gave colourful
accounts of his exploits,
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131. "but did not suffer fools gladly.
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132. "An uncompromisingly
direct ladies' man,
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133. "he was affable and hospitable
at every hour,
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134. "but he did not uphold the highest
ethical standards of the City."
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135. Sounds like a bit of a wrong 'un.
Yes.
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136. Because they're all things
that you kind of...
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137. I've got a problem
with that expression,
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138. "Didn't suffer fools gladly."
You've put your finger on it.
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139. Who does?
Who does suffer fools gladly?
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140. Who goes, "I want to spend
the weekend with a fool?"
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141. You have, you're on my team.
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142. You've put your finger on it,
Shappi.
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143. The point is, all those phrases
are what used to be obituary codes,
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144. and basically you had
to translate it.
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145. "A tireless raconteur"
means a crashing bore.
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146. Is it Nick Clegg?
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147. It's not one individual,
it's just these different things.
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148. "Affable and hospitable
at every hour",
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149. or simply convivial - a drunk.
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150. Basically, a terrible drunk.
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151. "Uncompromisingly direct
ladies' man" -
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152. a serial groper.
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153. You'd also get, "Devoted much
of his time to the Boys' Brigade
and the Boy Scouts."
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154. That also tells you a lot
about such figures.
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155. "Gave colourful accounts
of his exploits." Liar.
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156. Liar, exactly.
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157. "Did not uphold the highest
ethical standards of the City."
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158. Thief. Yeah, fraudster, basically.
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159. And "Did not suffer fools gladly."
Intolerant!
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160. A total shit, exactly.
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161. A howling shit.
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162. And these were the codes,
and you read the obituaries
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163. and you kind of understood
what was being said about them.
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164. But can you name anyone who's
actually read his own,
premature obituary?
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165. Has anyone ever read their own
obituary while being alive?
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166. I wouldn't be surprised if there's
someone who was presumed dead
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167. during the war or something
and then came back.
Might have been found, yes.
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168. There are two stories, one was that
Alfred Nobel read his own obituary
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169. and was described as being
"a merchant of death"
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170. because he invented... Dynamite.
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171. Dynamite, yes, exactly.
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172. And he was so horrified,
and he wasn't dead,
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173. that he instituted the Nobel Prizes
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174. in order to try and
reclaim his name.
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175. That is not, in fact, a true story,
it's a myth.
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176. The other one is Marcus Garvey,
the Jamaican black nationalist,
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177. apparently died as a result
of reading his obituary.
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178. He had a stroke when he read the
Chicago Defender newspaper,
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179. which printed his obituary
describing him as
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180. "broke, alone and unpopular."
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181. Awww.
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182. Terribly sad. That's
like Googling yourself.
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183. Mine would just say,
"It's safe to come out now."
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184. "He's gone, honest."
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185. "Friends who knew him said,
'Yes, he really was like that.'"
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186. The other day,
I was driving through Islington,
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187. and there was a hearse
slowing everything down,
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188. and I did say to my wife,
"If it's my funeral,
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189. "tell the bloke driving the hearse
to step on it, I would not..."
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190. Vroom!
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191. Instead of having a coffin, as well,
just have the body
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192. so that as you're going round the
corners you're slamming against...
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193. Get some chickens...
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194. Get some chickens in a cage
and some boxes to drive through,
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195. just make it look like...
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196. Like an A Team finale.
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197. What music do you want your
coffin to go...?
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198. When your coffin disappears?
The Sweeney theme.
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199. That would be a good one.
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200. The end music
when it's really slow.
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201. When the foot
presses on the accelerator.
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202. I'd quite like the music
from 'Allo, 'Allo
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203. with "You have been watching..."
and my body like that.
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204. When my dad died,
he was a big fan of sailing,
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205. so we gave him a Viking send off.
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206. We put his ashes in a boat
and tried to set fire to it.
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207. But, cos it was in the North Sea,
it wouldn't light...
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208. ..so what we did was, we were trying
to fill the boat full of his ashes,
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209. and we were going, "Do you tip
the ashes straight into the boat,
or do you put them in bags?"
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210. And my mum,
who's ever practical, went,
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211. "I've got some sandwich bags,
I'll get some sandwich bags."
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212. So we went out to sea, then off he
went and shot off into the distance.
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213. Was it a remote-controlled boat?
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214. It was, yeah! Like a proper
big yacht. You're joking!
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215. No, seriously.
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216. You sent your dad off
with four double-As? We did!
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217. Keep going till
the batteries run out!
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218. Going around in circles!
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219. You're there with an air rifle,
like that.
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220. And the people from the miniature
village were going, "Help that man!"
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221. "Someone, help him!"
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222. A little lifeboat comes out.
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223. Did you not argue over who used
the remote control?
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224. That wouldn't work in our family.
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225. "Give it here,
you're doing it wrong!"
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226. "He was my dad, too! Give us a go!"
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227. The word "dignity"
is not the first...
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228. This is the thing, that's
exactly what he would have wanted,
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229. and I've said the same thing - like
Hunter S Thompson, when he died,
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230. he was put in a cannon and fired off
across the valley he used to own,
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231. and what I'd quite like to do
is be put in pepper spray,
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232. and then people that I don't like
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233. I'm going to get my wife to go
"Fffft!" like that.
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234. Face full of Noble!
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235. Oh, my God, how did we get here?
I can't even remember.
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236. The fact is, no matter how many
character flaws you have,
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237. you can be sure they'll be
euphemistically dealt with
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238. in your obituary.
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239. Journalists are not above a bit
of muck-raking, of course,
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240. but can you describe the most
expensive piece of shit
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241. to come out of a British bank?
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242. Is it some sort of fossilised,
dinosodic poo in the...?
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243. How extraordinary
you are, Ross Noble.
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244. For 20 minutes you've been
gibbering like an idiot...
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245. .. suddenly you've come up
with a brilliant answer.
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246. You're absolutely right.
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247. The only way you could be righter
is if you could give me
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248. a technical name
for fossilised shit.
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249. Is there going to be faeces
in the thing? Well, yes,
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250. you can call it palaeontofaeces,
or you can call it coprolite.
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251. "Copra" is shit in Latin.
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252. Coprolite sounds like
a chocolate bar.
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253. It does, rather, doesn't it?
Not a very nice one.
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254. But it was a Lloyds Bank
in York, of all places,
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255. and they found this
period poo in 1972.
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256. It was 23 centimetres long,
five centimetres wide, a human poo.
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257. It was a Viking poo.
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258. Did they find this within the bank,
or was it...?
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259. I'm taking it was a staff day out.
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260. To be honest, it just looks
like an old Wotsit to me. It does,
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261. but when you examine it more closely
you will see it is a poo,
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262. and you can actually even
determine what was eaten,
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263. and that is cereal bran, so they
were quite healthy and regular,
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264. and hence the...
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265. I wouldn't say it's the most normal
looking stool I've ever seen...
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266. So you're telling me
that every time I go to the loo
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267. I am flushing away millions?
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268. In future I'm going to go to my bank
and have a shit there.
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269. And I'm going to tag it
so that my family in future...
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270. You're going to walk in and say,
"I'm just going to make a deposit."
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271. Oh, dear, oh, dear.
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272. The poo's discoverer,
Andrew "Bones" Jones,
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273. said, "this is the most..."
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274. ".. the most exciting piece of
excrement I've ever seen.
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275. "In its own way, it's as valuable
as the Crown Jewels."
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276. There was another exciting
coprolite that was discovered.
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277. It was a T Rex turd that was found
in Saskatchewan in 1998,
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278. and that was 17 inches long
and six inches thick.
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279. And that was reckoned to be a bit
of it knocked off,
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280. that the actual turd would have
been even bigger.
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281. How did they know?
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282. Was there a dead T Rex next to it
that had pooed itself to death?
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283. It was found reaching for
the toilet roll with its tiny claws.
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284. Coprolites are not everybody's
cup of tea,
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285. collecting fossilised turds...
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286. People like poo, though.
They do, don't they?
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287. They do like poo,
they like drawing with poo.
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288. I went to someone's house and they
had this elephant poo painting.
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289. But when communication breaks down,
it does make a bold statement.
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290. When you write something on the
wall, like, "Call me a taxi..."
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291. they do do it, honestly.
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292. You know like one of them parties
when you've had enough?
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293. You write on the wall
with your own faeces,
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294. people start listening to you!
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295. You've just got to do one
big enough to go,
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296. "I was not fond
of the cheesecake..."
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297. ".. and considering you're out of
vodka and I'm low on turd,
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298. "I would like to go home now."
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299. The odd thing is when the forensic
scientists come in and find out
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300. that it was Johnny Vegas's poo, but
it was Lorraine Kelly's handwriting.
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301. Yeah, the diction was perfect,
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302. and even the sweetcorn was
used for little commas.
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303. Awww!
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304. Oh, now! Now, there's the line!
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305. We've found the line.
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306. You've crossed a boundary.
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307. Are you finding you're not selling
as much Tupperware at these parties?
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308. I don't mean to keep it in
that area, but I will.
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309. My wife once had, you know
those bath bomb things? Yes.
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310. Yeah, the fizzy ones.
Yeah, "lass grenades" I call them.
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311. You chuck them in the bath
and they fizz up
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312. and fill the bath with glitter,
and I didn't realise,
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313. went in the bath, and quite a lot
of glitter had gone in my...
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314. in my bum, and I didn't realise,
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315. and I did a poo, and I looked
into the toilet,
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316. and it was sparkling, right...
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317. I, honestly, for a minute I thought
I had a magic arse.
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318. I honestly did. Yeah.
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319. That was lovely.
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320. That's a beautiful story.
Anyway, moving on.
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321. Now, some people will do
anything for fame.
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322. But what did The Famous Five
have lashings of?
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323. Ginger beer.
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324. No!
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325. Someone had to say it.
I read all of those books.
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326. I'm gutted that I don't know.
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327. It's funny, cos in the books
there is only one foodstuff that is
referred to
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328. in all the Famous Five books,
of which they had lashings.
Yeah, they... They eat the dog.
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329. Treacle.
They don't eat the dog, no.
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330. Asbestos.
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331. They had lashings of asbestos.
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332. Before they realised just how
dangerous it was in powdered form.
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333. The dog in The Famous Five
was Asbestos? No, not the dog.
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334. Sorry, I thought the dog was
Asbestos. They just packed lots of
asbestos
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335. for its fire-retardant qualities.
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336. Asbestos is a very good name for
a dog. It's good, isn't it?
Asbestos!
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337. As-bes-tos!
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338. The reason...
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339. My uncle had a dog named after
Charlie Mingus, the jazz musician.
Yeah.
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340. Mingus. Problem was, is that
he's got the same accent as me.
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341. He'd be in the Park, and he just
be shouting, "Mingus! Mingus!"
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342. And the... The local girls thought
that he was... Yeah, talking to
them.
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343. "Mingus!"Piss off!"
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344. "Mingus!"
"Who are you calling mingers?"
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345. And it led to all sorts of problems.
I'm sure it did.
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346. Why do we think of the lashings
of ginger beer?
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347. Because of
The Comic Strip Presents...
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348. Because The Comic Strip Presents...,
their first film was The Comic Strip
Presents Five Go Mad In Dorset...
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349. It's very funny. .. and they kept
going on about having
lashings of ginger beer.
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350. But in the actual books,
there is no reference to
lashings of ginger beer.
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351. But in one of the books,
Five Go Down To The Sea,
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352. they did arrive at a Cornish farm
and immediately settled down to
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353. a high tea of lettuce, tomatoes,
onions, radishes,
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354. mustard and cress, carrot grated up
and lashings of hard-boiled eggs.
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355. Eggs! I was going to say eggs!
You were going to say that!
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356. They always go in to farmhouses
and get free eggs.
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357. The only lashings Enid Blyton
gave The Famous Five were
lashings of hard-boiled eggs.
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358. They never had lashings of ginger
beer. That's a terrible picnic.
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359. Who has onions at a picnic?
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360. It's very hard to lash an egg.
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361. Unless you're in some sort of S&M
thing with Humpty Dumpty.
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362. That's why they couldn't put him
back together again.
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363. I'll give you 10 points
if you can give me, within three,
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364. the number of books that
Enid Blyton wrote a year.
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365. 42. You were damn close. You were
just out of range, I'm afraid.
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366. She actually wrote 37 books a year.
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367. And, talking of busy women, let's
move on to another question here.
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368. Why have we never heard of
Harriet Quimby?
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369. You've heard of Fred Quimby who
produced the... Tom and Jerry.
Tom and Jerry.
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370. And Mayor Quimby in The Simpsons,
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371. but Harriet was the first American
woman to become a licensed pilot,
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372. and the first woman to fly
the English Channel.
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373. But unfortunately, it just so
happened her record-breaking flight
didn't make the news
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374. because she completed it the day
after the Titanic sank.
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375. So, it just was a damp squib,
to say the least.
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376. She was famous in her day.
She was one of the very first
screenwriters at the very
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377. beginning of Hollywood.
She wrote seven scenarios for the
father of cinema, DW Griffith.
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378. She died aged 37
at an aviation meet, sadly crashing.
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379. But it was an impressive
and a short and brilliant life.
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380. Who was the first man to fly
the Channel, do you remember?
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381. Oh, we all know him! We all know
the MEN that fly the channel.
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382. A mean, I don't...
Well, he was the first person.
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383. Louis Bleriot. It was one of
the great achievements.
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384. He flew from England to France,
but the French authorities,
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385. when he landed, didn't have a form,
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386. and so they signed him in
as having landed
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387. on a yacht called Monoplane, because
that's the best they could do.
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388. It was a huge feat at the time, and
it was a £1,000 prize offered by...?
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389. The Daily Mail? Of course,
the Daily Mail. Well done. Exactly.
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390. But you know what, Harriet did that
backwards and in heels.
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391. Exactly. Very good.
Good point. Thank you.
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392. I'm sure it was harder for her.
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393. But it can be...
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394. It can be very difficult
to die at the wrong time.
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395. Can you think of people who died
unfortunately on the same day
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396. as somebody even better known
than themselves?
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397. Oh, I know!
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398. Mother Teresa. Who died the same day
as...? Diana. The Princess of Wales.
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399. Precisely, so she was not only below
the fold, she was over the page.
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400. I only realised couple of months ago
Mother Teresa was dead. Yes, yes.
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401. 22nd of November 1963. Who died
then? Kennedy. Right, so, JFK.
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402. That was obviously huge news,
the American president dying.
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403. As it happens,
two very distinguished authors
died on the same day.
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404. Both British, as it happens.
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405. CS Lewis and Aldous Huxley both
died on the same day as Kennedy,
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406. so both got rather tiny-winy
little obituaries.
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407. So, moving on.
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408. What kind of hat did they wear
in the Wild West? 10 gallon hat.
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409. Ten gallon hat?
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410. Five gallon hat?
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411. No, no. Of course, cos now it's
litres, isn't it? 45 litre?
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412. No litres or gallons. Was it
a Stetson? Can I have Stetson?
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413. It wasn't Stetson, no.
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414. The most popular hat by far...
A cap, a flat cap. No.
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415. It was the, it was the...
Say it. A bowler hat.
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416. Yes, a bowler hat is
the right answer.
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417. Far and away. There we are.
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418. We think of the bowler hat
as the British businessman,
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419. but in fact it was THE preferred hat
in the West.
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420. That's a pretty wild bunch, there.
Butch Cassidy, seated front right.
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421. Sundance Kid, Harry Longabaugh,
of course, front left.
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422. In fact, their pride in having
their photographs taken with those
hats was their undoing,
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423. because the Pinkerton agency
reproduced the photographs
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424. and gave it to their agents, who
tracked them down and killed them.
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425. It was hat makers Thomas and William
Bowler who created the hat,
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426. but they weren't known as bowler
hats in America, nor are they to
this day. What do they call them?
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427. Derbies.
Derbies, yes.
"Darbies" or "derbies", yeah.
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428. Bowlers basically were much more
common in the Wild West
than Stetsons.
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429. Who fancies a shoot-out with
a real, live vortex canon?
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430. I've given you one each. You've
got a box. See that box there?
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431. It's simply a box, all right?
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432. Now, the hole is where
the vortex emerges,
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433. so if you lean it so that the hole
is pointing at the target,
all right?
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434. And basically, what you've got to do
is smack the side of the box.
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435. All right? After three, two, one...
Smack!
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436. Very good. There you are! Wow!
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437. But what we can...
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438. Yes. What we can do,
before you destroy the box...
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439. Before you destroy the box,
you can do something even more
exciting,
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440. and that is fill it with smoke,
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441. and it will demonstrate what,
in fact, was happening with the air.
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442. You should all have smoke machines.
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443. That's it, fill it with smoke.
Fill it with smoke. And now...
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444. Look! Look at that!
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445. Just a gentle tap. That is a vortex,
those beautiful smoke rings.
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446. A lovely one there.
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447. I've got...
I've got an enormous cannon here.
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448. I'm going to fill mine with...
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449. I'll see if I can get mine
across the... Across the room here.
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450. You can even chase
each other!
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451. Here we go.
I've got it the wrong way round.
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452. We'll let the smoke drift a little.
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453. Would anyone like a big dustbin?
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454. It's simply pressure of air
creating this wonderful vortex.
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455. No, it's not, it's magic.
Nice one, Alan!
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456. Hey, with this kind of magic
we could make the tiny people
big again.
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457. Basically, ladies and gentlemen,
that's it.
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458. Hours of fun can be had
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459. playing with your own home-made
vortex canon. Quick! More smoke!
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460. And I suppose it must be time
now for me to give the scores.
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461. And how interesting they are.
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462. In first place,
with minus 5, is Ross Noble.
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463. Second equal with minus 6,
Alan Davies and Johnny Vegas.
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464. And a slightly unhappy Shappi
with minus 17.
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465. Those lovely smoke rings.
Lovely smoke rings.
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466. So, that's all from Shappi,
Johnny, Ross, Alan and me.
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467. And I will leave you with
this from Abraham Lincoln.
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468. "The trouble with quotes taken
from the Internet is that you can
never know if they are genuine."
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469. Thank you and goodnight.
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