1. This programme
contains strong language
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2. Gooooood evening, good evening,
good evening, good evening,
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3. good evening, good evening,
good evening, good evening,
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4. good evening, good evening
and welcome to QI,
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5. where tonight we are musing
on the medieval and the macabre.
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6. Joining me in the Dark Ages are
king of the castle, David Mitchell.
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7. Queen of the May, Julia Zemiro.
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8. Lord of the Manor, Matt Lucas.
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9. And a "knight" on the tiles,
Alan Davies.
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10. And their buzzers are all very much
connected with middle age.
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11. David goes...
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12. Julia goes...
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13. It's the Middle Ages,
all right. Matt goes...
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14. And Alan goes...
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15. 'Dear sir, why, oh, why, oh, why
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16. 'must we always have endless
monks chanting on the BBC?'
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17. Which of these did
they not have in the Middle Ages?
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18. Sweet, no... Shush!
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19. Iron maiden. Well...
They didn't have Iron...
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20. Well, no, I'm not...
Yeah, I'm aware there is a group.
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21. The most medieval thing seems that
thing with the spikes that you
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22. put someone in, that'll be the thing
they didn't actually have then.
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23. You are absolutely right.
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24. The iron maiden, as you say,
that sort of sarcophagus with spikes,
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25. they weren't even thought of
or imagined until 1793.
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26. I was going to say, I thought they
were invented by Paul Daniels
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27. or somebody.
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28. Spanish Inquisition, must be
the Spanish Inquisition.
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29. Well, they weren't used
in the Spanish Inquisition,
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30. because they weren't invented
till 1793, which was...
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31. After. My favourite
one from the Spanish Inquisition was
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32. they put a pole up your anus and
they'd do it in such a way that
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33. it avoids all of your vital organs
and comes out by your shoulder
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34. and then just leave you
there for people to look at.
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35. I like the first part of that.
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36. It's an actual pole,
it's not a Polish gentleman,
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37. it's an actual pole.
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38. Oh. Less keen then, less keen.
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39. I thought an iron maiden
was a chastity belt? No.
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40. I'd like it to be though. They call
that a chastity belt, actually. Yes.
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41. So they didn't ever exist?
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42. Well, in 1793, an archaeologist
by the name of Johann Siebenkees,
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43. gave an account of one
which was a hoax.
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44. And then 100 years or so later,
a guy called Matthaus Pfau,
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45. had one installed in Kyburg,
his Swiss castle,
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46. as a visitor attraction.
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47. It became the prototype for all
the other iron maidens
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48. that were used in museums,
and indeed in movies.
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49. So they hadn't really been
used as a method of torture?
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50. No, that's what I mean, exactly.
They were just a hoax, essentially.
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51. "Here's one for you.
Here's one for you!"
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52. What a weird hoax.
It is, isn't it?
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53. But if we go back to my little
manuscript word cloud,
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54. maybe other ones didn't
exist in medieval times.
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55. Well, there wasn't much
cardboard about.
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56. So if there were greeting cards,
they wouldn't have been...
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57. Not big readers either,
not many people could read.
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58. Or write. Exactly, but in fact there
were single sheet wood cuts
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59. found from the mid-15th century,
with pictures on them,
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60. wishing the recipient
a very good year, even.
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61. It seems a rather modern idea.
"Sorry you've been unwell."
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62. But those banderols, those little
kind of bubbles, were very popular
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63. and they'd say things, probably not
"sorry you've been unwell,"
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64. but things like "a very good year,"
so they did exist.
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65. What else might have existed
or did exist in that era?
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66. Sweet and sour sauce, definitely.
Yeah.
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67. What they called sour sweet,
in fact, Egurdouce,
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68. and they used vinegar and sugar,
cinnamon, orange, onions,
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69. whatever they could
get their hands on, currants.
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70. Didn't they use onions to
sweeten things?
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71. Yeah, well, onions do contain more
sugar than sugar beets,
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72. as long as you cook them, hence
the caramelised, you know, thing.
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73. They're a bit onion-y, though,
as well.
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74. They can be sweet,
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75. but you wouldn't want too many
puddings being that onion-y.
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76. No, do you know, it's true,
they're not that sweet, because
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77. if you ever go to the freezer
and you go for a Mini Milk
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78. and you've left a bag of onion rings
next to the Mini Milks
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79. in the freezer,
the Mini Milks don't taste right.
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80. What an insight!
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81. The Mini Milks
taste a bit onion-y. Yeah.
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82. What is a Mini Milk?
What is a Mini Milk?
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83. Do you mean one of those sweets that
looks like a tiny bottle of milk? No.
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84. No, it's ice cream on a stick,
basically.
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85. It's basically what,
when you want a Magnum
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86. and your mum won't buy you a Magnum,
you get a Mini Milk.
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87. And you keep those with onion rings
in the freezer?
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88. Well, no, I didn't,
I have separate shelves.
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89. You've got to keep sweet and...
Put me on camera!
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90. You've got to keep sweet and
savouries separate in freezers,
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91. guys, come on!
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92. No, Mini Milks are nice.
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93. They're like, I don't know,
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94. if you can't get a Sparkle,
get a Mini Milk, I don't know.
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95. What's a Sparkle? Oh, dear.
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96. What's your ice cream of choice?
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97. I used to like Mivvies
when I was a boy.
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98. Well... That's the point!
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99. OK. Now I'm an adult! Right.
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100. I eat olives and I eat cheese. Right.
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101. This has all gone very weird!
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102. You started it with the whole
pork belly thing. Right.
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103. I want to live
in the Middle Ages now,
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104. because they seem to have
grown-up food, at least.
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105. Question, Mr Fry. Question from
the floor, Mr Fry. Yeah?
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106. What is a prefab?
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107. Oh, don't you have those in
Australia? I don't know, tell me.
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108. It means a sort of modular building
that is made outside the site...
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109. Brought to site... and then
brought to it and assembled.
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110. It's associated
with low-cost housing.
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111. The Duchess of Cambridge
grew up in one. Did she? Did she?
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112. No.
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113. She grew up on an estate.
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114. I just like the fact that people
think she was common as muck!
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115. William the Conqueror had prefabs,
didn't he? Did he?
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116. Didn't they bring prefab castles
over, with the Norman...
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117. Not the Normandy landings,
the other way round.
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118. The Hastings landing. Yeah.
They brought loads of...
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119. Yeah, cos all the plug sockets
are different here
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120. and they wanted their own wiring.
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121. There's certainly the example of
prefab housing that we have
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122. is the Vikings, in fact, who,
when they invaded Orkney,
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123. found there was virtually nowhere
to live and so they came back with
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124. supplies on longboats
of prefab little houses.
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125. And that's presumably where Vikings
got the idea of flat-pack furniture.
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126. That leaves us, I think, with
official commemorative merchandise.
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127. Would that be if
you went to sort of...
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128. They used to be very keen on seeing
a rotting old bit of a saint.
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129. Very much so.
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130. If you were medieval, there was
one saint who was more or less
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131. contemporary, who was a martyr.
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132. They would stop off at this cathedral
where he was murdered, famously.
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133. Who would that be? Thomas Becket.
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134. Thomas Becket, exactly.
Points! Points!
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135. Points, solid points.
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136. In the 12th century Thomas Becket
was killed by Henry I I
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137. and they immediately tried to
sell his blood
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138. and that ran out rather quickly,
so they diluted it.
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139. But also they sold little swords,
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140. little simulacra of the swords
that had stabbed him
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141. and you could buy one of those.
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142. And it was official, you know.
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143. It was, as it were,
stamped with Canterbury.
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144. They've still got a shop in the
cathedral. Well, exactly. Yeah.
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145. The Middle Ages, in fact, featured
lots of very useful inventions,
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146. but tell me, what has been called,
"The wickedest, silliest,
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147. "most insane and most disastrous
book in world literature"?
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148. The Liar, by Stephen Fry.
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149. Ah! It probably is.
Mein Kampf.
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150. That would be a very sensible guess.
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151. And, in the interests of balance,
The Da Vinci Code also. Yes!
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152. These self-help books,
the books that say
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153. if you just change the way
you think, you'll be fine.
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154. I mean, you know, everyone's got
a mood board for something.
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155. A mood board.
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156. Maybe there was a medieval mood
board of some kind, but, yeah.
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157. You're right to mention
the medieval era
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158. because it was
a book of the 15th century.
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159. Foxe's Book Of Martyrs?
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160. No, that was a little later,
but let me give you its title.
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161. Malleus Maleficorum.
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162. Maleficarum, I beg your pardon,
because that's the point.
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163. If you know your Latin,
that means malleus.
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164. If you take the "US" off
and put a "T" from malleus.
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165. Mallet. Mallet. A hammer.
So malleus is hammer.
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166. Timmy Mallet's autobiography?
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167. Sorry, I'm bringing the tone down,
I know. No, you're not.
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168. Is it the, mallific...
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169. Is that like the bad doing hammer
thing, you know?
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170. Well, no, it's the "of the",
that's genitive.
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171. Come on, boy!
That's genitive. Come on.
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172. So it's the hammer
OF the bad-doing people,
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173. but the arum, not orum,
tells you it's bad...
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174. Doing women. Yes!
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175. Bad doing women and their hammer.
No, the hammer of.
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176. Yeah, yeah, no, exactly.
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177. I want to beat them down.
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178. The Crazy Witches Of Eastwick.
Witches!
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179. Oh, witches! You said it!
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180. We're supposed to hammer them?
Hammer of the witches, that means.
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181. So they don't own the hammer? No!
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182. We own the hammer... No.
.. and we hammer away at them?
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183. I am more confused than
when I talked about Mini Milk.
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184. We had a Latin parsing essay in which
the malleus maleficarum
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185. turned out to mean
"the hammer of witches."
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186. Right.
The way to beat witches.
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187. And this was a text book about how
to destroy and find witches.
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188. Now, it was strange
cos it was mid-15th century
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189. and in the mid-15th century
the Church banned belief in witches.
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190. So this wasn't a time of witch
burnings or anything of the nature.
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191. But the very nature of the success
of the book meant that
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192. a slow movement grew in which
witches should be found and burned
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193. and tortured and so on.
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194. This book was therefore called
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195. the silliest, most wicked book
ever written
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196. because it made appalling
claims about women that,
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197. for example, that they dispossessed
men of their penises.
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198. As if!
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199. They would take their penises,
put them on a tray
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200. and the penises would wander around
of their own volition, eating...
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201. Well, yes.
.. eating oats and corn.
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202. No, not corn, not maize corn.
With a simple pecking motion?
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203. Or like with a suction?
How would they do it?
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204. Do you know the theory about
the witch's broomstick,
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205. about how it might have developed?
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206. Yeah, they put it up your anus
and it reaches your shoulder...
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207. It's funny you should say that,
Matt Lucas,
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208. because, yes, they put them
up their anus. What?
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209. Now, you may say, why would a woman
stick a broomstick up her botty?
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210. I'm so glad we're having this
conversation.
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211. But anyway, the point is, there is
a substance that has been accused,
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212. if you like, throughout history of
being behind a lot of episodes
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213. of mass hysteria
and hallucination and so on,
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214. and the substance is called ergot.
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215. Have you heard of ergot?
No, where can you get it?
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216. You can get it if you live near
a field of rye. Oh, OK.
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217. Where rye grows, it is
a fungus that grows on rye
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218. and its spores can be breathed in
and it is not unlike lysergic acid,
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219. which is the "L" of LSD
and it causes weird trips.
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220. Now, with any drug, there
are different ways of ingesting it.
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221. Intra-nasally, orally...
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222. Or on a broomstick up your arse?
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223. .. intravenously
or in a suppository form. Right.
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224. So one way would be to take it
and to grease up your...
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225. I am not making this up!
Grease up your pole with ergot.
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226. Grease up your pole and scatter it
with bits of ergot and then whoo!
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227. And then you FEEL
like you're flying...
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228. That's basically it.
What does that mean?
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229. How much ergot are those kids
at Hogwarts getting through?
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230. It's not appropriate to encourage
that kind of drug-taking
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231. in the young. It isn't.
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232. And there is another theory that it
was actually intra-vaginal,
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233. rather than intra-anal... Lovely.
..so that it was covered on the broom
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234. and then it went
sort of smoothly up.
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235. I can't see anything
smooth about this at all.
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236. I don't know.
It would be like, OW!
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237. Does another witch apply it to you?
You do that yourself?
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238. You'd be a great gynaecologist
though, Stephen,
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239. cos you're very calm, the way you're
explaining everything.
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240. Let's get more decent here.
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241. How do you get a whole row of seats
to yourself
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242. on a Virgin Airways flight?
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243. Oh, if you're REALLY fat.
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244. That would, yeah, I think they might
be able to get rid of an arm,
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245. but I don't think they'd let you on
if you were any fatter.
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246. No, but like REALLY fat.
Oh, I see what you mean. Die?
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247. Is the right answer.
You'd have to die. Die! Yeah.
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248. You can't make people
sit next to the dead.
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249. That's the truth, isn't it?
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250. Basically, I think that would be
what it was.
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251. And if you're flying, say,
London to New York,
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252. if you're near enough
and someone dies,
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253. you'd turn around and all the other
passengers would go, "Oh, really!
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254. "Could have had some consideration!"
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255. But once you've passed that
point of no return, as they call it,
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256. then there's nothing you can do
about it, except go on to New York.
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257. But what if the plane's full?
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258. Do they keep a row for the dead
just in case?
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259. In which case, if they keep a row
for the dead,
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260. what if two people die? Exactly.
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261. There's always a row at the back and
the crew use it for having a kip.
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262. What it means is, the crew will
then have to be awake... Yes.
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263. .. because of the dead bloke.
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264. That'll piss them off.
Does it happen a lot, though?
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265. Oh, now, this is what's interesting.
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266. British Airways have about
ten deaths a year in flight.
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267. Well, that food is just...
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268. That's for 36 million passengers.
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269. So if you extrapolate out to the
rather amazing 3.5 BILLION passengers
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270. that fly every year, that means there
must be around 1,000 deaths a year.
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271. And different airlines have
different ways of doing it.
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272. Singapore Airlines
have a corpse cupboard.
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273. I don't know why it's funny,
but it is,
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274. so no-one need even know
there's a dead person.
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275. Oh, I'm sorry.
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276. It's all so Fawlty Towers, isn't it?
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277. If I ever die on a plane,
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278. I should like to be
stored in the overhead lockers.
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279. For the rest of time. Yes.
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280. British Airways, however,
you get a good deal if you die,
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281. because you go to First Class.
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282. Yeah. Excellent, at last.
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283. One long-established steward said,
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284. "Many years ago we used to give them
a vodka and tonic, a Daily Mail
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285. "and eye shades
and tell passengers they were fine.
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286. "We don't do that any more."
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287. It's bad enough being dead,
but having to hold a Daily Mail!
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288. Holy crap!
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289. The Daily Mail and other newspapers,
not just the Daily Mail,
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290. when they talk about their
circulation, they are also
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291. including the newspapers
that they give away for free.
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292. So I don't think the airlines,
or any of those kind of institutions
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293. actually PAY for the newspapers.
Oh, really? Yeah.
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294. So the Daily Mail is mainly dead
people on airplanes. Yes.
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295. But the dead are
very, very right wing.
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296. It's true.
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297. All right, now, Matt, what's dense,
slimy, lives at the bottom of the sea
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298. and is called...?
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299. David Walliams!
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300. He's a very strong swimmer, isn't
he? He's a very strong swimmer.
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301. Oh, dear.
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302. Matt, what's dense, slimy,
lives at the bottom of the sea
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303. and is called Matt?
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304. David Walliams. Yeah!
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305. And called Matt?
Is it just a mat?
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306. No. Well, yes.
Well, yes, of some... It's a mat.
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307. Yeah, so I am clever.
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308. Is it some kind of sea vegetable?
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309. It's sea life, sea matter,
that's cohered.
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310. How big would it be, a mat?
Algae. Huge, huge.
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311. Yeah. Hundreds of thousands
of square miles.
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312. Certainly the biggest we know of
is about the size of Greece.
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313. There you are, you see?
Wow, see. You ARE clever.
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314. It's not in Greece or near Greece.
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315. It's off the coast of Peru
and Chile.
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316. Ugh, look at David Walliams
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317. Stop it!
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318. No, don't stop, carry on.
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319. It's microbial, it's
a whole load of microbes,
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320. so many of them that they can create
this matter that's thick and...
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321. It's mat matter.
Mat matter, exactly.
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322. Don't say anything bad about them,
because we owe the photosynthesis
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323. and the oxygen-rich nature
of our own atmosphere to these.
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324. We couldn't live without them.
They're very important.
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325. I've been served that
in a motorway service station.
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326. They eat hydrogen
and they breathe nitrates
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327. and they live in streams and lakes,
as well as the ocean.
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328. They're very, very, very exciting.
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329. Here, I know you like wonderful
information, the total weight of
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330. microbes in the ocean is equivalent
to 240 BI LLION African elephants.
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331. The good thing about that is that
really helps me visualise that.
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332. That's very, very helpful.
Let me help you more then.
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333. 35 elephants made of microbes
for everyone on the planet.
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334. So each of us have got 35 elephants
made of microbes surrounding us now.
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335. We're rich!
35, that's a lot of elephants.
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336. The time has come to rule out
lifting all that in one go.
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337. You're right.
You learn a lot on this show.
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338. I never knew that the ocean was made
up of 35,000 billion elephants.
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339. I've really been educated.
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340. No wonder elephants are endangered,
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341. when you think of the number
who've been drowned
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342. to create a mat
for the bottom of the sea.
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343. That's probably why the trunks...
They were trying to evolve snorkels.
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344. Oh, dear.
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345. I can see that I've not really
explained myself very well.
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346. And now for something
slightly mucky.
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347. Alan, have you ever
had your dirt-hole burgled
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348. without your knowledge?
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349. Do you know what,
I'm not going to answer that.
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350. Fair enough.
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351. I'm actually writing to
Points Of View now, at this point.
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352. It's a question to do with the
macabre side of human life - muck.
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353. Oh, is this something like,
in some contexts,
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354. excrement has a value? Yes.
Like people want it for...
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355. Where there's muck... Yes, they need
it for fertiliser or whatever,
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356. and so, people would sell their...
You know, their shit, and so,
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357. obviously,
other people would steal it.
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358. Which gave it a value.
And if something has a value,
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359. there will always be some who
wish to steal it.
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360. Is this in medieval times, or now?
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361. No, it's not medieval,
it's 18th and 19th centuries. Right.
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362. I think the question is flawed.
How so?
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363. Because if I'd have had my dirt-hole
burgled without my knowledge,
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364. I wouldn't know about it, would I?
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365. Touche! You're absolutely right.
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366. So, I don't know. Is it?
Is the right answer.
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367. Possibly. Possibly, yeah.
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368. So, people kept their rubbish
in holes that could be collected.
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369. It was a bin collection.
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370. The dustmen and the dustcart
were often collecting dust, as well,
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371. because it was simply dirt
that people had swept up
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372. and poured into a little hole
or into a bucket in a hole -
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373. the dirt hole. Because everything
was recycled, even family pets,
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374. when they died, had a value.
You know, a white cat - sixpence,
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375. a multicoloured cat - fourpence.
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376. In those days, the "flying
dustmen", as they were called,
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377. the people who came to collect it,
they would pay to get it,
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378. rather than you paying rates
to have it removed.
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379. There was hardware and software.
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380. The software would be things
like a dead cat.
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381. And the hardware
is broken crockery, oyster shells
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382. and things like that,
which road-builders could use.
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383. Anyway, one last medieval question.
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384. How many uses can you think
of for a monk's earwax?
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385. Oh, it's endless. Candles.
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386. Yeah, candles will be a...
Polishing wood.
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387. They might have done. That sounds
like a euphemism. But um...
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388. I meant it... Not much
else to do in a monastery, is there?
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389. Well, I know. I know.
Polishing their own wood.
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390. What have monks handed down to us?
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391. Mostly? Bibles. Bibles and
manuscripts, illustrated...
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392. Spend their lifetime
writing them out, copying them out.
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393. Inscriptorial.
Doing lines, basically. Yes.
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394. There's a picture of a happy monk
doing his illuminations.
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395. And that side of it,
the paint-y side of it is,
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396. they used a substance called glair,
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397. and it tended to get bubbled.
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398. But they found, if they added
earwax into it,
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399. they could get a really smooth,
beautiful lustre and sheen
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400. to the illustrations
that they were doing,
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401. which have lasted us
down the centuries.
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402. How do you think of that though,
to go, "Hmm, I'll paint with that"?
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403. A thing you might try at home
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404. is that you could take
a pint of foaming beer
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405. and then pop a little earwax
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406. into the head of your foaming
tankard,
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407. and the bubbles should collapse.
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408. That's... If you're watching TV,
don't listen to this man.
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409. I think you're right.
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410. It would be better if it was the
other way round,
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411. that you had a sort of flat liquid
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412. and then you put a bit of earwax
in, and it went fizzy. Yeah.
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413. Chuck some sodium in your beer,
that should work.
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414. Which orifice does sodium
come out of? Well, there is that!
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415. They left other little
things for us, little minusculae,
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416. little hands that pointed to certain
sections of the text in the Bible.
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417. I don't know if you can see
one on the left?
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418. If you've read the Name Of The Rose,
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419. they left clues everywhere
about all sorts.
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420. Yeah, and octopuses, you can
see an octopus at the top.
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421. They liked octopuses.
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422. Is that a person with a huge
sort of trumpet up his bottom?
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423. It's something odd, isn't it?
Yeah, it is. Yeah.
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424. I don't know what they're doing
there. They're praising the Lord.
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425. And above, they'd often have
knights fighting snails.
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426. It's so boring in those monasteries.
Exactly.
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427. That the old fart trumpet
was the favourite.
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428. I was going to say on a Sunday,
but perhaps not. No.
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429. Well, they used to leave...
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430. Dinner!
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431. They used to leave little remarks
like, "Oh, God, it's cold in here"
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432. or, "I'm so bored"... Around the
Bible... just like anybody would.
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433. Just like school kids on a desk.
Exactly like that.
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434. So, why are they fighting snails in
the picture? No-one's quite sure.
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435. But it's a common feature,
knights versus snails.
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436. They seem to like it.
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437. Some people may think it was a
symbol of the struggle of the poor
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438. against the aristocracy.
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439. I think people shouldn't watch
this show any more.
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440. It's giving them ideas. Yeah.
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441. Do you think they had loads
of snails
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442. in these cold, damp monasteries?
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443. There were snails everywhere
and they were hoping...
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444. That could be it!a gallant
knight would come
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445. and help them deal with
the snail infestation problem.
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446. Possibly, possibly...
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447. Which means it's time now...
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448. ..to place various intimate
parts of you
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449. into the thumbscrew
of General Ignorance.
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450. Fingers on buzzers, please.
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451. Where are most
missionaries positioned?
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452. Matt?
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453. I'm going to guess that most
of them are in Utah,
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454. where the Mormons
tend to kind of congregate,
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455. because they haven't yet been
assigned their places to go to.
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456. Interesting. Interesting answer.
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457. But I'm talking about which
is the country
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458. that receives the most incoming?
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459. Well, I'm not talking about that.
No.
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460. I'm talking about them
before they've gone there.
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461. So, I'm not asking you where
the most missionaries come FROM,
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462. I'm asking where do they...?
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463. I know, but I am still getting
to that point.
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464. This doesn't work by you answering
the question
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465. that I haven't asked. OK.
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466. My guess is China.
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467. Oh, it's a possibility.
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468. Well, it is a possibility,
but it's not a fact.
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469. Is it in Africa? It's not Africa,
no. Is it England? No.
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470. Is it South America?
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471. England is much closer...
South America?
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472. Not South America, not SOUTH
America. Central! North America.
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473. Not Central, North America. North.
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474. United States thereof...
America. Really? Utah.
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475. Well, I think you'll find
Utah is in America!
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476. But I specifically said,
"Where are the most missionaries
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477. "who've come from outside
one country?"
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478. I know,
but I didn't choose to answer that.
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479. All right, I'm going
to give you points,
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480. you deserve them for sheer tenacity.
Thank you.
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481. So, the fact is, we don't quite
know why missionaries...
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482. Some think they just want to go
to a very rich country.
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483. Others think these missionaries
believe America has lapsed into sin.
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484. But anyway, more missionaries
go to the United States
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485. than anywhere else.
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486. Do an impression of someone
in the stocks.
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487. Fuck off, fuck off!
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488. It's like that, isn't it? Yeah.
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489. Points to Mitchell, yes, absolutely
right. That's the pillory.
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490. That's a pillory or
"thews", as they're also known.
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491. But, yeah, putting them... That's
stocks. Stocks are feet, are they?
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492. I'm into public shaming, though.
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493. If you've done something bad, people
can go, "Oh, don't do it again."
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494. And you go, "Oh, that was awful,
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495. "I won't have friends
if I do this again."
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496. And then you go back into society,
I don't think it's so bad.
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497. You're very right. They could be
quite forgiving.
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498. Sometimes, people had flowers thrown
at them if they'd...
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499. Daniel Defoe,
when he was in the stocks,
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500. because he'd offended the Church,
people threw flowers at him.
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501. Those aren't stocks, so...
Those, no, those are...
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502. He wasn't in the stocks, sorry.
He was, he was pilloried,
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503. I think is the safest way.
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504. If people threw horrible
things at you - big heavy things -
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505. actually, you could die.
Yeah, no, absolutely.
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506. And some people took great lengths
to protect themselves as a result.
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507. There was a gentleman here,
Charles Hitchen,
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508. who was convicted of
attempted sodomy,
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509. and he went into the stocks
wearing a suit of armour.
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510. What happened to successful ones?
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511. Ones that actually managed
to bring it off, as it were?
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512. Presumably, you have to pay
a lot for that
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513. when you were in the stocks.
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514. The stocks weren't for your head
and arms, just for your legs.
Copy !req
515. And with that, our mosey through
the medieval macabre
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516. must come to an end.
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517. We have scores.
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518. Mercy, mercy me.
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519. Well, in joint first position,
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520. with minus 6, Matt and Julia!
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521. In third place, with minus 10,
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522. David Mitchell!
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523. But the witch we shall be burning
this evening
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524. is Alan Davies with minus 25!
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525. Ah...
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526. Well, it only remains for me to
thank Matt, David, Julia and Alan.
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527. And the last word on the
Middle Ages comes from Bennett Cerf,
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528. "Middle age is when your
contemporaries are so grey
Copy !req
529. "and wrinkled and bald,
they don't recognise you."
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530. Goodnight.
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