1. Good evening, good evening, good evening and welcome to QI.
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2. Tonight were making a meal of it with a muster of master chefs.
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3. On tonight's mouthwatering menu, mincing his words, Phill Jupitus.
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4. Mixing her metaphors, Cariad Lloyd.
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5. Marinating in his own juices, Dermot O'Leary.
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6. And with a soggy bottom, Alan Davies.
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7. So let's hear their buzzers. Cariad goes...
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8. Phill goes...
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9. Dermot goes...
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10. And Alan goes.
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11. So, what's missing from this menu?
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12. Three tortoises.
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13. Can you imagine the anal retentives looking at that picture at home?
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14. I just want to say "hare."
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15. Welcome to our world, Cariad.
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16. The tortoises and the hare, not, sadly.
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17. - 69 tortoises.
- 69 tortoises,
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18. and the bitch ain't one.
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19. - That's what we were thinking of.
- Is that a song?
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20. I believe it's popular in the hit parade right now.
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21. You've had that on Radio 2, I'm sure.
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22. What do we know about tortoises?
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23. They are old.
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24. There is one that just died that was around in George III's time.
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25. - There was.
- How would you know if it was dead?
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26. It belonged to Clive of India. Sorry?
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27. You'd have to wait a few months to be sure it's dead.
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28. Don't bury it, for God's sake.
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29. Why do you think they have such enormous shells?
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30. They've got big TVs.
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31. Lot of stuff.
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32. That's the thing about getting old, you look around and you think,
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33. my God, look how much shit I've got.
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34. If you're an agoraphobic tortoise.
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35. - Terrifying.
- It's better than being a claustrophobic tortoise.
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36. To return to our question, these tortoises
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37. are evidence of the first ever human feast.
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38. The first-ever menu.
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39. Rather than just eating. A real feast.
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40. There were 71 tortoises consumed at this feast,
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41. it would seem from archaeological evidence.
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42. So Alan said there were three tortoises missing from that list.
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43. In fact, there were two missing, because it should have been 71
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44. instead of 69, so you're going to have to have a point for that.
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45. Why not?
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46. I'm plus one so I'm not going to speak again.
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47. There was a female shaman's body discovered next to all
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48. these shells and it seems there was a giant feast.
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49. It was 12,000 years ago.
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50. Seems just unfair, really.
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51. You're basically born with a wok on your back.
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52. The original microwave meal.
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53. The tortoise.
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54. Just pierce the top.
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55. It was 12,000 years ago, guys! I wasn't there!
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56. Too soon!
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57. If it's anything like a micro meal, you stab it lots of times.
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58. Never sure how many they mean when they say.
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59. Have you got a set number you do?
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60. The idea of you at the microwave!
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61. I had to do TV dramas where you...
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62. "I was playing a rough type!"
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63. My microwave annoys me, I used to have one that just went ping,
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64. that was fine. Ping - it's finished. Come and get it, don't get it,
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65. whatever, we're just letting you know.
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66. Now we've got one that goes, beep, beep, beep, beep...
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67. As your food slowly reverses out of the kitchen.
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68. I'm at the other end going, "I know! In a minute!
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69. "Sorry, the microwave is pissing me off."
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70. If we leave the fridge open, it goes, beep, beep, beep, beep!
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71. The washing machine is going, "I'm finished! Beep, beep, beep!"
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72. Oh, Jesus. It must be like living with Kraftwerk.
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73. Get them all synced up right.
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74. These weren't microwaved, were they, Stephen?
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75. These were not microwaved.
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76. They were roasted in their shells.
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77. - Alive, probably?
- Yeah. Heroes in a half shell. Very sad.
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78. Very sad.
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79. Leonardo, Donatello...
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80. Is that Splinter at the bottom?
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81. So why wouldn't you want to share a meal with these men?
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82. They'd kill you.
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83. Looks like it. As you can see they've got napkins.
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84. That doesn't mean they won't kill you!
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85. Share a meal with this lot, bad idea.
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86. - Cannibals?
- Lethal foods.
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87. They eat people!
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88. They were paid in meals,
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89. three meals a day was their reward for eating... poison,
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90. or at least eating additives that could be considered dangerous.
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91. It was the first move on the part of the US Department of Agriculture
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92. to codify the possibility of additives being something
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93. that you could regulate, so they got these volunteers
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94. who swiftly gained the nickname "The Poison Club."
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95. They ate some extraordinary things.
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96. October 1902 to July 1903, they experimented with eating borax.
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97. Their Christmas menu was applesauce, borax, soup, borax,
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98. turkey, borax, borax, carrots, green beans,
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99. sweet potatoes, white potatoes, turnips, borax,
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100. chipped beef, cream gravy, cranberry sauce, celery, pickles,
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101. rice pudding, milk, bread and butter, tea, coffee, little borax."
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102. They were well fed.
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103. "I don't like borax!"
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104. "You're having it! I've told you, it's Christmas,
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105. "everyone's having borax! Your dad likes it."
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106. "And now Andy Williams with A Very Borax Christmas."
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107. Can you name something that we use borax for today?
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108. Is it an element?
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109. - Cleaning.
- Washing powder.
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110. Cleaning, as a detergent, but it's used as a fire retardant
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111. and an antifungal compound.
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112. Quite useful to have in your system then, really?
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113. Resistant to poison and flames.
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114. That's true!
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115. No record of any of them actually dying but they were weighed
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116. and their blood pressure was taken and their pulse and everything else.
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117. Until 1912 when they introduced LD50 testing
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118. and then it all went tits up.
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119. And in 1906, Congress passed a couple of acts,
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120. the Meat Inspection Act and the Pure Food And Drug Act,
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121. which was to help with food, for the first time, that was the point.
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122. There you are, never accept a dinner invitation from The Poison Squad.
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123. Who likes to feast on a breakfast menu of horse manure,
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124. rancid pickled mudfish, Thai Boy shrimp and Big Cock shrimp paste?
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125. Vietnamese? This is items...
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126. I got sent some Big Cock paste.
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127. An Amazon order went terribly wrong in your house.
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128. It exists, Big Cock shrimp paste and Thai Boy shrimp paste, both exist.
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129. I'm married to a Norwegian,
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130. and they eat a dish all over Norway called lutefisk,
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131. which is a jellified fish, and it's cod, really,
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132. but they bury it and dry it out,
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133. and then they served this for me, my in-laws.
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134. Those bastards!
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135. They saw you coming, mate! They saw you coming.
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136. My mother-in-law made me a fish pie, it was delicious.
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137. So I ate this thing and I did what we always do
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138. when you don't like something and you're round someone's house.
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139. "OH, GOD!"
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140. "WHAT IS THIS?"
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141. I just ate it really quickly,
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142. at which point my mother-in-law went,
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143. "This is fantastic, you must have some more."
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144. And I finished and I thought, I've got to be honest with them,
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145. and I said," I'm really sorry but I really don't like it."
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146. They went, "We hate it, we're only serving it because you're here."
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147. That's Norwegian...
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148. It may be the case that that's what this particular feaster
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149. on these foods also thinks,
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150. but it seems unlikely because it's not human.
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151. I was going to say, is it an animal?
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152. - It is a living creature. Very beautiful.
- Flamingo.
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153. Not a flamingo, it's one you'd find in Britain
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154. and in fact it's in Britain that it's offered this food.
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155. Regularly, once a year as a sort of tribute to its beauty.
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156. Prince Philip.
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157. Has it got four legs?
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158. Six. Six legs.
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159. Is it an ant?
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160. It's not an ant but it is definitely an insect.
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161. - Is it a bee?
- No, but it's a flying insect.
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162. Is it a fly?
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163. It has the word "fly" in its family name.
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164. - Dragonfly.
- A butterfly.
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165. A species of butterfly.
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166. A very beautiful butterfly.
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167. It's a Purple Emperor.
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168. A cock-hungry Purple Emperor.
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169. - Yes.
- "Settled on my bell-end."
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170. - Please!
- "At four o'clock in the morning."
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171. "I was out in the garden the other day and I was admiring a cock-hungry Purple Emperor
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172. "on my red-hot poker."
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173. "There was paste everywhere."
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174. "The poor bugger couldn't take off."
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175. Now, calm down.
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176. Anyway, they live in the trees high up,
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177. so how do they know they have a taste for all this?
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178. Well, they've been observed midsummer coming down from their usual
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179. feeding areas high in the trees and going for cowpats
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180. and that sort of thing, and other rotting and horrible things,
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181. and so - because they are so admired and particularly in Northamptonshire,
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182. a little picnic is spread out for them in midsummer
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183. including rancid pickled mudfish, fox guts, stinking Big Cock shrimp paste,
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184. and Thai Boy shrimp paste, and they seem to like this,
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185. possibly because of its sodium content.
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186. No-one is quite sure but it's a weird thing
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187. if you find yourself midsummer in Northamptonshire, follow the smell.
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188. Lots of those beautiful animals.
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189. - In a forest, they lay this out, did you say?
- In a clearing.
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190. You could get into real trouble
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191. if you go looking for a dodgy smell in a forest.
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192. If you go looking for the smell of sodium and shrimp paste,
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193. you might walk into something other than a butterfly celebration.
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194. Especially in Northamptonshire.
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195. What are you implying, especially in Northamptonshire?
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196. Just suggesting.
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197. That they indulge in butterfly dogging, is that what you're saying?
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198. Maybe.
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199. Anyway, a beautiful animal, the Purple Emperor butterfly.
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200. Likes to start its today with rancid pickled mudfish,
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201. Thai Boy shrimp paste and Big Cock shrimp paste.
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202. Mmm.
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203. What are you, 12?
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204. When will the phrase "Big Cock shrimp paste" not be funny?
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205. Never.
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206. All right, name two things you can get from a kangaroo's nipple.
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207. - I bet they don't lactate.
- Oh, they do.
- Is it a trick?
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208. They do lactate and that's what's so interesting.
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209. Castlemaine XXXX out of one, Foster's out of the other.
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210. They have little babies that are born almost foetuses.
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211. Like little maggots, they're tiny little wriggly things, called joeys.
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212. And then they have to crawl to the pouch.
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213. And the nipples are in the pouch.
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214. But there might be a much older brother or sister in there.
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215. They can do something with their eggs, can't they?
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216. If they're nursing one joey, they can hold off the egg...
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217. Quite the reverse, they can have two joeys who are
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218. completely different ages and have different needs.
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219. - Yeah.
- That's the thing. There they are.
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220. The nipples know whether it is a young joey who needs
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221. a kind of semi-skimmed milk,
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222. which is not so very rich and strong and thick, and there's the older joey
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223. at another nipple, or even the same nipple later on,
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224. and it will know that it's an older joey and give it a much thicker...
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225. And that's a rather magical trick.
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226. It's because of the power of the suction. The young ones don't suck so hard,
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227. whereas when they really have a go, which the older ones do, they get...
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228. How do the scientists find these things out?
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229. What are they doing?
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230. - "I'm just popping off down to the kangaroo enclosure for a bit of a suck."
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231. "That's rich, that's definitely rich."
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232. "I'm going to suck quite powerfully."
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233. "I'm taking my younger brother. My younger brother is going to suck a little bit less."
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234. If you saw a kangaroo with a tiny, tiny joey and a big joey
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235. both still suckling,
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236. you would wonder if they needed the same sort of proteinous drink.
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237. It wouldn't have crossed my mind, Stephen, to be honest.
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238. I saw one once and they're quite fun.
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239. There was a little joey and the tourists came round
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240. in this wildlife park, and it got a little bit spooked
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241. so it bounded across to its mother and just leapt in, headfirst.
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242. They do that.
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243. The mother went "Oof," like this,
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244. and then it was stuck in the sack.
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245. And you see the legs...
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246. She was going, "Oh, for God's sake!" Then his head came out.
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247. You think the legs are going to burst through.
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248. How are they holding that?
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249. A bin liner couldn't hold them.
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250. Stronger than a bin liner.
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251. That's the miracle of kangaroo suckling.
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252. I'm sorry, this is the only show where I hear sentences like that.
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253. "That's the miracle of kangaroo suckling. Next."
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254. I'm going to give you another little teaser.
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255. When human mothers give suck to their infants,
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256. they are feeding two species.
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257. Right?
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258. - The baby is one of them.
- Yes. One is a human child.
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259. - Bacteria?
- Very specifically, it is a bacteria,
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260. you may say it's feeding the baby and then of course the bacteria,
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261. but this is not feeding the baby, it is only feeding the bacteria.
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262. In human breast milk, there are oligosaccharides
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263. and these are indigestible to human babies,
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264. but they are adored by the bacteria in the baby's tummy,
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265. so they bypass the baby's system to go to the stomach to feed the healthy bacteria.
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266. - That's great.
- Isn't that pleasing?
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267. - It's rather nice.
- Mothers, always giving.
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268. Always. "Who else needs feeding? The bacteria, fine! I'll do it!"
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269. Perfect parasite.
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270. "Why didn't you tell me he was coming for dinner?"
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271. Who would like to see some milky magic because I want to show you...
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272. - Stranger danger!
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273. I wish I hadn't put it like that.
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274. If a man says this to you in a park, say no.
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275. "Would you like to see my milky magic?"
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276. You know what I meant.
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277. "Would you like to see my milky magic?"
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278. OK, I've got some...
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279. lovely milky things.
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280. Stop saying it!
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281. Well, now, because here we are.
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282. This is just the thing about milk, there's never enough,
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283. you always want more.
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284. This is what happens when you get to the clearing in Northamptonshire.
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285. Bear with me.
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286. Here we have some milk, what I'd like to do is just transfer it
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287. along the way, from smaller to larger glasses, as you can see.
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288. This will fill it about halfway up, maybe, just checking the size.
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289. - Well, that fills it up completely.
- That's weird.
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290. That's all right, that's good,
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291. because we've got more than we started off with.
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292. Fast forward, fast forward.
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293. - No!
- Got to have that, haven't you?
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294. That makes sense.
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295. And then see if we can get even more, because what we're doing
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296. is earning ourselves lots and lots of milk.
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297. It's got to be good, surely. There we are.
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298. Can you do this with wine?
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299. Oh, no! You're Jesus!
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300. It's quite pleasing, isn't it?
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301. "That's how we get the European milk mountain."
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302. Somehow you can find much out of little
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303. and that's maybe a lesson in life.
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304. - Redefines the second coming anyway.
- Exactly.
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305. - Oh, what?
- Oh, no.
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306. "And then Stephen took a can of tuna
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307. "and lo, he did share it out amongst the audience."
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308. And that's how much we've now got, out of nowhere.
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309. There we are.
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310. - From milk to meat...
- Whoa, whoa, whoa,
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311. aren't you going to tell us how you did it?
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312. Oh, Alan, you know well enough the milky magician never tells.
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313. Disappointing.
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314. For a meaty question,
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315. why did five Royalist men from Milton fail to eat their own buttocks?
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316. - They were trying to?
- Yes. That's the weird thing.
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317. That's what that man has just suggested in the corner.
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318. "Guys, look. I think we should eat our own buttocks."
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319. And everyone's "No."
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320. That's what happened in a pub.
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321. - Too painful for them?
- Was it a dare, like a bet?
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322. How did I describe...?
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323. See how much they love the king?
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324. Yes, I described them as Royalists
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325. so that must mean they came from the 17th century, civil war time.
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326. Just to stick it to Cromwell. "Up yours, Cromwell."
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327. They were Cavaliers. They wanted to toast the king's health.
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328. And they wanted to show that they were more loyal than
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329. just about anyone else, and to hell with beer, to hell with wine,
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330. we're going to toast him in our own blood,
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331. and the best way to get a bit of blood is to prick your thumb,
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332. but no. Slice off their buttocks.
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333. But why the bum? How does the bum show you're loyal?
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334. The biggest muscle, they thought they'd have some to spare.
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335. The Royal Fat-Arse Regiment, I don't know.
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336. They probably thought that it wouldn't hurt too much
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337. but in fact what happens is they sliced off a bit of butt cheek
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338. and it bled profusely. It was shocking.
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339. "Men, to the delicatessen. On to the slicer with you!"
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340. "To the King! Wow!"
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341. As long as they didn't have any salami.
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342. I think the idea was they sat on a gridiron
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343. and a bit of buttock poked out and they sliced off...
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344. They must have been so pissed when they came up with it.
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345. You'd only even come up with it if you were pissed.
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346. They did that, the blood poured out and everyone got in a panic.
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347. Their wives heard about it and were furious.
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348. "What's he done?"
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349. "I'm feeding two species, I haven't got time to pick him up!"
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350. There was so much loss of blood, the whole thing was a disaster.
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351. - We know about this...
- You think they still talk about it,
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352. like, "Oh, that day. It was such a bad idea.
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353. - "From start to finish."
- Cut to the pub the next day,
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354. "the special today, pork medallions."
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355. During the Civil War,
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356. five men from Milton got rather cavalier with their own buttocks.
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357. Onto the smorgasbord of smugness that we call General Ignorance.
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358. Fingers on buzzers, if you please.
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359. I'm going to say this quite fast so listen carefully.
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360. How much sugar in a sugar-free Tic Tac?
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361. There's no sugar in a sugar-free Tic Tac.
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362. You'd done so well up to this point.
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363. Is it sugar-free doesn't mean there is no sugar, does it?
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364. It does, but within certain limits according to the Food and Drug Administration.
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365. One calorie.
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366. A little bit.
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367. It's pretty much all sugar, but they are so small,
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368. the law says that if it's only half a gram of sugar it doesn't count
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369. as sugar, it doesn't count as anything.
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370. According to their own website, Tic Tac "registered trademark" mints
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371. do contain sugar as listed in the ingredients statement.
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372. However, since the amount of sugar per serving -
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373. one mint is a serving -
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374. is less than half a gram,
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375. FDA labelling requirements permit the nutrition facts to state
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376. that there are zero grams of sugar per serving.
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377. And they wonder why people get killed with hammers.
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378. You're weird.
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379. What kind of bird does the Goliath bird-eating spider consume?
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380. Oh, God! Whoa! That should have had a warning.
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381. Whoa! That is fucking horrible.
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382. It's still there. Still there. Still there.
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383. There's a still image of one.
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384. - It's not moving any more.
- Eyes on me.
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385. - Eyes on me, eyes on me.
- It's all right, Phill. It's OK.
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386. That was naughty.
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387. What?
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388. - What a pathetic reaction.
- I'd be the same if not for all the therapy.
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389. It's not moving, so that's OK.
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390. They are very big and they are called Goliath bird-eating spiders.
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391. It's never eaten a bird in its life?
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392. That one may not have done because it's very rare for them to eat birds.
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393. It just so happens the person who discovered it happened upon
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394. one eating a hummingbird.
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395. That's like in your family when you do something once.
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396. "Cariad always get sick on holiday." You're like, "It was one time!"
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397. Oh, Poland-invading Adolf! "Once, I invade Poland!"
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398. They live in South America and they are a form of tarantula.
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399. They will eat insects
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400. - and very small...
- Oh, God!
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401. Somebody help her!
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402. Somebody help her, it's on her face and she doesn't know!
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403. Despite its name,
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404. the Goliath bird-eating spider usually just eats worms.
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405. - Alan.
- Hello.
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406. Let's bring this to a beautiful conclusion.
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407. - Cariad has been bitten by a snake.
- What's happening to me?
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408. This is not I'm A Celebrity!
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409. What should you do?
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410. Suck her.
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411. In every sense, no.
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412. You can't afford it, love!
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413. Even when you've been bitten by a cobra, you're going
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414. - to haggle prices.
- Oh, yeah.
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415. You'd soon drop your prices once you've tried it.
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416. Do you tourniquet it?
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417. Not even a tourniquet.
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418. Guys, I'm dying! I've been bitten by a snake!
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419. The spider's coming!
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420. Stay still so it doesn't go round your blood. Is that in there?
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421. If you're not near a car, but drive her to a hospital.
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422. - Take the snake if you can.
- Exactly, or a photograph of it.
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423. I didn't say selfie!
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424. Sort of implicit in the question that Cariad and I were alone somewhere.
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425. Not on the M4 or something.
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426. I had to take drastic actions, despite her constant demands for money.
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427. Why am I on the M4 with you? What happened to me beforehand?
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428. You're going to Reading! Come on!
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429. The answer is if you do go somewhere where you think there may be
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430. venomous snakes, find out where the nearest hospital is
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431. that has antivenom, because that's really the best thing you can have.
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432. But in Britain it's going to be fine. An adder is not going to kill.
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433. I would still offer to suck you, Cariad.
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434. It's the right thing to do.
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435. If your friend has been bitten by a snake, all you need is car keys.
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436. Any other course of action sucks.
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437. Which brings us to the end of our feast of questions
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438. and so all that's left for me to do is to let you know
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439. how the scores are doing.
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440. They are doing rather wonderfully.
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441. In first place with a magnificent plus four,
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442. wearing plus-fours,
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443. is Phill Jupitus!
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444. And with a very stunning score of nothing,
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445. wearing nothing - oh, that doesn't work -
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446. zero, Cariad!
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447. Third-place, Dermot O'Leary with -10!
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448. And a very respectable, for Alan, -16!
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449. So it's thank you from Cariad, Phill, Dermot, Alan and me,
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450. and I leave you with this mealtime story
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451. about rissoles.
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452. Man goes into a restaurant and looks at the menu
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453. and says to the waiter, "I'll have some pissoles, please."
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454. And the waiter says, "No, sir, that's an R."
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455. He says, "Oh, I'll have some R-soles then." Thank you.
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