1. Good evening, good evening,
good evening, good evening,
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2. good evening, good evening, good
evening, good evening and welcome
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3. to QI, where tonight we'll be one
massive, marvellous, molten mess.
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4. And here's the mix...
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5. the massive Noel Fielding...
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6. .. the marvellous Eddie Kadi...
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7. .. the molten Sarah Millican...
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8. .. and who will clean up
this mess? Alan Davies.
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9. And let's hear your
"messy" buzzers.
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10. Noel goes...
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11. Hmm. Eddie goes...
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12. Sarah goes...
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13. And Alan goes...
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14. Do you know what that was?
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15. April 2010.
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16. What's our theme?
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17. Mess.
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18. Lionel?
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19. Lionel Messi.
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20. Messi... scoring how many
times against Arsenal?
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21. Oh, four. Four times.
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22. Yes.
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23. I'm afraid so.
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24. There you are.
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25. Anyway, what's... the meaning
of this mess of M words?
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26. Just choose one as it passes by.
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27. Oh, mumbudget is how much
your mum's got in her purse.
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28. So, is that literally the
budget that your mum has?
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29. Cos when I was growing up,
I'd ask my mum for £10
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30. and she'll always be like, "I
don't have £10, here's £1."
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31. Right?
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32. If I asked her for £1,
she'll give me 20 pence,
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33. so I asked her for a million...
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34. Just to get it up.
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35. Just to, yes, just to get it up.
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36. And she slapped me.
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37. Mumbudget is like keeping mum,
it's to be silent about something.
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38. You put the word budget after,
like, there's a word fussbudget,
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39. for example, which is
someone who's very fussy.
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40. "Oh, don't be such a fussbudget"
was a Regency sort of word.
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41. Monarsenous.
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42. Yeah, a single, er... crack.
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43. Oh!
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44. Mammock, the mixture of a
mammoth and a hammock.
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45. It's a bra, it's a bra.
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46. A useful one to sleep in.
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47. - It's where... - A mammock? - It's where I hang my mammaries.
- Oh, your mammary hammock, yes. A mammock.
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48. - A maness is a woman.
- Yes.
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49. - Is a mormal...? - Is it? - Yes... - Is it? - But what's
surprising... - Is it? - Yeah. - You got one right!
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50. - I got one right, yeah. I'm
going! - Is it actually? - Yes.
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51. You might think that it was a
recent word for a woman, a maness,
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52. but actually it's 16th century.
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53. Tudor, 1500s, maness.
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54. - A man and a maness.
- Yeah, a man...
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55. Mazology, the study of mazes.
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56. Oh, no!
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57. The study of mazes.
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58. Oh, you must be so stupid
to get one of those go off!
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59. - It's actually the study of mammals.
- Oh!
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60. - Mammals in zoology.
- That live in mazes.
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61. Mazology, yeah.
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62. Mogi, mogi...
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63. Is a mutton-monger like
a Welsh person? No!
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64. I'll get into trouble for that.
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65. It could be a man with extreme sexual
appetites can be called a mutton-monger.
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66. - Oh, really?
- So, a Welshman then.
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67. I pulled it back, did you
see? I pulled it back.
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68. Is a mournival like a
really good funeral?
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69. Woo!
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70. And what other words
have we come across?
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71. A mugwump is when you put
your biscuit in your tea
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72. and half of it falls
to the bottom.
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73. Oh, that would be so
useful as a word.
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74. What about munge, is that
a man with a vagina?
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75. No, it's...
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76. Munge is actually a verb, and
it's something mothers do,
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77. but I don't know anybody else would
do it, unless they were weird.
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78. - I munge, you munge, we munge, they munge.
- We munge, that's how verbs work.
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79. They munge!
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80. You've conjugated the verb
"to munge" very nicely.
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81. I have.
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82. - Mothers... - I
munge daily. - Yeah.
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83. - I am munge... - I will have munged,
would be future perfect. - Yes.
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84. I could have munged.
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85. - Could have munged, I might have munged, I may well have munged.
- Yes.
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86. I cannot remember
if I munged or not.
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87. - Munge is to wipe someone else's nose.
- Wow.
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88. - I did not munge.
- You didn't munge.
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89. I munge about every
15 minutes at home.
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90. Mesopygion... mesopygion
is interesting,
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91. because you almost
mentioned that.
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92. - A mesopygion.
- Mesopygion.
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93. Mesopygion.
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94. It sounds like you're doing
yourself down, oh me-so-pygion
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95. Oh, mesopygion. Er...
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96. Pyg, P-Y-G is buttocks in Greek,
as in styrop, styropigus,
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97. and beautiful fat
buttocks, styropigus.
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98. - And mesopygius is the crack between the buttocks.
- Eso what?
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99. It's your anal fissure,
your anal fissure.
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100. - That's what I call sexy times.
- Did I say anal fisher? I'm an anal fisher.
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101. A fissure. A fissure, I mean.
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102. Yeah.
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103. Not an anal fisher?
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104. What else were we?
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105. No, no, no. An anal angler.
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106. Oh, dear.
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107. - So, if you've got like an itch, you could be a mesopygion.
- Yeah, that's right, yeah you could.
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108. - It's amazing. - Oh, it's all running
down my mesopygion. - Yeah...
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109. Yup, there it is.
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110. - There's got to be a word for these things, hasn't there?
It's good that it exists.
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111. If you want to know what
the rest mean, go to...
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112. It's a real site.
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113. There's one last thing I'd like
to mention from the list, though.
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114. Mytacism, which we haven't commented on,
it's an excessive use of the letter M.
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115. Ah-h-h.
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116. So, let's let the mytacism roll.
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117. Name a politician with
raw animal magnetism.
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118. Oh... wow...
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119. Ed Miliband.
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120. No, but seriously.
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121. It's actually a
politician long dead.
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122. Animal magnetism, where did
that phrase come from?
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123. It's not actually an
obvious or natural phrase.
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124. It seems so to us, cos we use it all
the time, but why animal magnetism?
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125. There's something charismatic
about them physically,
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126. - the way they move or look or do things.
- Hmm.
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127. It's not what they
say, it's their aroma.
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128. Is it the way...
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129. Yeah, free spirit.
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130. Yeah, is it the way like a
gorilla can sometimes be sexy,
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131. but you're not
allowed to say that?
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132. It's not banned in zoos to go,
"I'd do that one, wouldn't you?"
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133. - Where are we, is it American politicians?
- No, we're back in the 19th century.
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134. - 19th century.
- 19th century, and...
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135. - It'll be either Gladstone or Disraeli. - A
German Austrian figure called Franz... - Franz.
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136. .. who achieved huge public recognition
for what he claimed to do,
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137. which involved using the
magnetic fluids of people
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138. to make them do things
they didn't want to do.
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139. And he coined the phrase
animal magnetism,
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140. meaning a very basic, primal,
human, magnetic quality.
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141. And his name was Franz M... M...
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142. Magnet.
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143. Mugwump.
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144. M...
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145. It's a word that means
it's absolutely hypnotic
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146. and amazing, I'm m...
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147. Mesmerising.
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148. Yes, and so his name was?
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149. Bobby Mesmeriser.
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150. I've already given you
Frank... Franz, haven't I?
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151. Franz Mesmer.
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152. Franz Mesmer was his name.
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153. - And he was the first great public figure to hypnotise.
- Oh-h-h.
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154. To use hypnosis.
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155. Even the name's
quite mesmerising.
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156. It is, the name...
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157. "I am Bobby the Mesmeriser."
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158. - Yeah. Forget the Bobby.
- Frank, Franz. - Yeah.
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159. - I like Bobby.
- You prefer Bobby, OK.
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160. - Yeah, cos you don't see it coming, do you?
- No, you don't.
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161. - "Oh, like, Bobby, yeah, he's harmless." - Bobby
Mesmer. - where are the fluids, the bodily fluids?
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162. - The magnetic fluids? - Yeah. - It's nonsense,
but that's what he claimed existed. - Oh.
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163. He used what we would call
basic hypnotic techniques,
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164. but he claimed that he was
exploiting these magnetic fluids,
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165. which don't exist
in the human body,
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166. in order to sort of pull out the
things that he could make people do.
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167. - It's called Rohypnol now.
- Yes, I'm afraid it is!
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168. But plenty of people believed
in what he did and said -
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169. Coleridge, Marie Antoinette, Edgar Allan Poe,
Mozart, Dickens, Conan Doyle, a lot of them.
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170. Dickens liked to try and
practise on a friend of his,
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171. Madame de la Rue, and he once,
on a train, with his wife,
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172. was practising hypnotising on
Madame de la Rue, and he wrote
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173. that he "heard the sound of his
wife's muff falling to the ground."
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174. Why are we laughing?
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175. I think mine sometimes comes loose,
but it's never hit the deck.
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176. Oh, dear. We might come back to
muffs, I hope not, but we might.
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177. What happened is, he hypnotised his
wife into a trance by accident.
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178. - And he heard a sound...
- He heard the sound of her muff hitting the ground,
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179. and he turned round and saw that she had been the
one who'd been hypnotised, not Madame de la Rue.
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180. So, his wife was... she just came in
with a cup of tea, and, bang, gone.
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181. Yes, exactly.
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182. But the politician whom Coleridge
characterised as having animal magnetism,
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183. which was an insult,
was Pitt the Younger.
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184. - He thought Pitt the Younger exhibited these traits of animal magnetism.
- Wow.
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185. In other words, that he somehow
used some sort of force, or some
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186. sort of power over people, in order
to persuade them to his cause.
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187. Yeah, and there were royal commissions
to investigate it, especially in France,
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188. Louis XVI set one up.
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189. It was the first placebo-controlled
trial in history.
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190. They ruled that it had
no basis in fact,
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191. but nonetheless people
continued to believe it. Yeah.
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192. Pitt the Younger possessed raw animal
magnetism, at least according to Coleridge.
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193. Now, what's the most inappropriate thing
beginning with M that the Pope has kissed?
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194. Yes, Sarah Millican?
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195. My breasts.
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196. Well, this has come as a shock to
me, tell the story, where were you?
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197. That's it, he just,
he sort of fell.
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198. He fell on your breasts?
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199. I was in, like, W
H Smiths and...
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200. He'd come in to bless
some Bibles or something
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201. and he just tripped on, cos the
carpet was... and... and I had
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202. - a low-cut top and I don't wear one for QI, because it feels disrespectful.
- Yes.
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203. But I normally have them
out and he just landed,
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204. - and cos his natural inclination is to kiss things, he just kissed them.
- Wow!
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205. What was his reaction?
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206. Did he like it?
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207. He was pleased.
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208. - Did he, did he go, "Mmmm"?
- No, he was too polite for that,
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209. but I could see a little
glint in his eye.
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210. Anyway, a merkin,
what's a merkin?
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211. - It's a pubic wig.
- A pubic wig. - Yes.
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212. Could a Pope kiss a pubic
wig? Is it likely?
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213. If he was drunk enough.
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214. - On communion wine.
- Had he tripped in a different way.
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215. Well, we're going back
to the 17th century.
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216. - And it was a rather...
- If it was a tall lady.
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217. I think you're going
to like this man.
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218. There's an English... English
highwayman called Captain Dick Dudley.
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219. Dicky Dudley.
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220. Dick Dudley. I think you're going to
like Dick Dudley. He was hiding in Rome
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221. and while he was hiding from
the law enforcement officers,
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222. he bought a dead
prostitute's pubic wig,
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223. a merkin, from an anatomist.
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224. "He dried it well and combed it
out," that's in inverted commas
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225. cos it's a quotation, "and
sold it to the Pope."
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226. - There they are, there's a selection of them.
- Wow!
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227. I like the one on
the bottom right.
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228. - That's excellent.
- Yes, nice curls.
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229. Yeah. That's had a
perm, that one.
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230. - So, this was Ann Summers back
in the day. - Yeah. - Kind of.
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231. My goodness.
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232. He sold it to the Pope, it
could have been Clement X or
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233. Innocent XI, as a piece
of St Peter's beard.
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234. And...
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235. Oh, well done, him!
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236. Popes like relics. He's a great
man, I like Dick Dudley.
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237. Pope Gullible IV.
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238. Yeah! Exactly!
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239. "A beard, you say? Hmm."
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240. "St Peter's!"
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241. Exactly, Alan, the Pope put it on
his mouth, kissed it multiple times
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242. and appeared to be thrilled
with his purchase.
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243. Dick was paid 100 ducats and
he immediately skedaddled it
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244. out of Rome before anybody caught up
with him, called his muff... bluff!
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245. Wow.
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246. But they've existed in Britain as pubic
wigs since the 14th century, at least.
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247. And were especially useful for women
who'd lost their pubic hair due to...?
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248. - Disease. - Waxing? - Yes,
syphilis. Through what?
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249. - Waxing.
- Waxing. No!
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250. That picture looks like the
sun if it forgot to shave.
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251. Yes, it does rather, doesn't it?
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252. - Or Mick Hucknall.
- Hipster sun.
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253. You have to get up early
to catch the sun unshaven.
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254. Anyway, when in Rome, don't kiss
St Peter's beard, you don't
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255. know where it's been.
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256. What did Marie Antoinette
keep in her muff?
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257. Cake.
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258. Oh!
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259. - We were there before you, Eddie, I'm sorry.
- Welcome.
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260. Yeah, welcome to our
world, exactly.
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261. I told you we'd return to muffs and here we have
with a vengeance. What did people keep in muffs?
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262. What did women keep in muffs?
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263. There was a particular thing,
a fashionable accessory.
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264. Mirror.
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265. - A living, moving accessory.
- Ooh.
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266. A hamster?
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267. Maybe that just WAS the muff.
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268. Well, you know what Chinese people
kept in their large sleeves?
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269. A crocodile.
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270. A wild guess and I wish
it were correct, it's...
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271. - A duck.
- Not a duck.
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272. - That's what Pekingese dogs were bred for.
- A dog.
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273. - Yeah, so dogs. - In
their sleeves? - Yeah.
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274. But the muffs, which were
sometimes known as snuffkins,
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275. in England, were worn by both
men and women, not just women.
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276. - King Louis XIV had muffs made of tiger, panther, otter and beaver skins.
- Wow.
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277. In his diary, Samuel
Pepys reported that,
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278. "This day I did first wear a muff,
being my wife's last year's muff."
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279. All right... The Marquis de Sade,
who was imprisoned in the Bastille,
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280. of course, had letters smuggled in by
his wife, which she kept in her muff.
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281. Now, come on. If I say
muff enough, it's...
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282. Can you just control
yourselves?
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283. YOU don't... you, how...
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284. Well, I haven't said anything about
the vagina for four minutes!
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285. There's a marvellous woman
called Celestine Galli-Marie,
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286. who was the first
woman to play Carmen.
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287. - She always kept a marmoset in her muff.
- Of course she did.
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288. Yeah. So, there you are.
There's a lot of...
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289. - Where else are you going to put it?
- Yeah, exactly, there's fun to be had from muffs.
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290. Muffs were once used to
store dogs. Muff said.
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291. Now, for a question
about meteorology.
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292. Why did the inventor of the weather
forecast think that dinosaurs had died out?
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293. Maybe he loved dinosaurs,
right? He loved them so much
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294. - he wished he could actually let them know before the weather changed and killed them off.
- Yeah.
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295. And he started going, "Do you know what?
I'm going to resist this happening again,
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296. "I'm creating the weather forecast, just in
case dinosaurs come back and they need it."
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297. Here's a man who had...
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298. .. an extraordinary
and brilliant idea,
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299. and he had an
incredibly stupid idea.
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300. But the world believed
his stupid idea,
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301. but laughed derisively
at his good idea.
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302. His name was FitzRoy and he
invented the weather forecast
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303. and said he could forecast the weather, given,
you know, enough knowledge of the variables.
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304. And people laughed him to scorn.
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305. But then he said, "I know
why dinosaurs died out.
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306. "Because they were too big
to fit onto Noah's Ark."
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307. And people said, "That's a
brilliant point, you're right."
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308. And that's true. He was genuinely
respected for thinking that.
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309. - And that is rubbish because that ark was huge, wasn't it?
- Yeah, that's right.
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310. It's because Tyrannosaurus
Rex's arms were so small,
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311. they couldn't get the
umbrella over their head.
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312. And he...
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313. I'm sure Noah would have
factored that in, wouldn't he?
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314. Noah would have had a whole... dinosaur
section, it's absurd.
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315. You seem to be buying into
this whole Noah's Ark idea.
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316. - Was there a weather forecast?
- The dinosaurs said, "No, no, we'll stay, I'm sure it'll be fine."
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317. - They're just really positive. - They were
deluded. - They were very sort of optimistic.
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318. And when the flood came they thought, "Oh, shit,
actually it's much worse than we thought."
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319. I've just got the image now of a
weather... cave weatherman doing the weather...
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320. - I don't know why we had a cave weatherman.
- .. on a cave, and then all the dinosaurs sort of gathering
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321. round to see the pollen count.
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322. FitzRoy, does the name mean anything
to you, in terms of natural history?
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323. A bastard.
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324. He was perhaps best known for being
the guy in charge of the Beagle.
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325. - He was a friend of Darwin's.
- Oh.
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326. But despite being a friend of Darwin's,
he didn't believe anything Darwin said.
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327. In fact, he was outraged by Darwin's Theory of
Evolution, because Darwin didn't take into account...
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328. "Oh, Charles, for God's sake, they just
didn't have enough room on the Ark for them!"
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329. Yeah, exactly.
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330. Basically, that's
what he tried...
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331. "Oh, yadda, yadda,
yadda, Charles!
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332. "I'm telling you, it's going
to rain in the morning."
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333. "Oh, don't be
ridiculous, FitzRoy!"
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334. "You can't possibly know that."
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335. "I'm telling you, it is!"
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336. - Well, it was 20 years... - What
a pair! - They were a pair.
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337. 20 years after the Beagle, he
started his weather forecasting
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338. and actually it did catch on,
despite the initial scepticism.
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339. In fact, even Queen Victoria used
to send word round asking what
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340. sort of crossing she'd get
to the Isle of Wight.
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341. He lived in Norwood and he would send
a message saying, "It'll be windy."
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342. Lived in Norwood!
That's funny to me.
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343. - It is, I know. Only Victorians lived in Norwood.
- Norwood.
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344. Maybe Norwood was quite nice
then, but, Christ, it's a khazi.
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345. His first ever weather
forecast, it was in the Times,
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346. and was four words.
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347. "Moderate, westerly wind, fine."
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348. I thought you were going
say, "Bloody pissing down."
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349. Exactly. Well, there you are.
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350. The word meteorology comes from
the Greek for things high up,
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351. and in terms of high up,
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352. they used to use frogs for
telling the weather forecast.
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353. They built them little ladders
and put them in a jar.
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354. - Of course they did.
- And they thought if they went up the ladder, it was going to be fine.
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355. If they went down the ladder,
it was going to be a bit wet.
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356. Giving you the idea of it. OK.
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357. Did frogs, did frogs even
know what ladders were?
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358. - I don't think they have to know what they are, do they?
- Did they just like...?
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359. They just have to have
the instinct to climb.
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360. - So, it could have been anything, didn't have to be ladders.
- It didn't have to be.
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361. "Where's the frog?"He's halfway up."But
which way is he looking?"He's looking down."
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362. Just say, "Scattered
showers, scattered showers."
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363. - I think you're right.
- "Sunny spells. Sunny spells."
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364. Just do a cloud with a bit
of the sun, half the sun.
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365. What if it was foggy?
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366. "He's gone on an
escalator, it's foggy."
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367. - Maybe he was trying to get out the top. - Yeah.
That's what he's trying to do. - He's trying to escape.
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368. One day, the ladder's right up to the top and the
frog's fucked off, and then what's going to happen?
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369. Left a note, "I've no idea what the weather's
going to be like. I'm out of here."
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370. I'm out of this game.
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371. There we have it.
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372. That's right, the father of
meteorology thought that the
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373. dinosaurs were too
big for Noah's Ark.
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374. Now, I'm going to do
something with my mouth.
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375. What do you think?
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376. Yes or no?
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377. Er, yes.
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378. Yes is right.
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379. - Oh, phew!
- That was yes.
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380. Well done.
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381. In the Swedish town of Umea,
that is yes, to go...
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382. Which you can sort of do in English,
going, "Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah..."
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383. - Oh, that's their way of saying yes?
- Yeah. Yeah, their way of saying yes.
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384. And what's interesting is the
idea that there may or may not be
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385. a universal way of
signalling yes or no.
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386. Darwin was very
interested in the idea,
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387. and he looked all over the world
to the different cultures to see
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388. whether they nodded and
shook for yes and no.
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389. Mostly, it seems, that nodding
for yes and shaking for no.
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390. Shaking for Timotei.
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391. Yeah, indeed, in the middle.
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392. And nodding for dandruff.
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393. But there's a reason,
some people think,
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394. why it may be that there's
a "yes" and a "no".
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395. The babies, if you offer them
food and they don't want it,
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396. - what do they do?
- Yeah, they...
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397. They turn their head
away, they do that.
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398. It's a shaking of the head,
if you like, a kind of...
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399. - I never do that.
- And if they want... No!
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400. If they want food...
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401. Oh, dear!
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402. .. they incline their heads
if they want food. They seem
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403. to incline their heads, generally
speaking, around the world.
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404. Is it, do you know, well, you grew
up in Democratic Republic of Congo,
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405. is there a "yes" and
"no" head-shaking thing?
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406. You know, my friend was
in Ethiopia, and she said
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407. she was at a restaurant,
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408. and the guy was asking,
"What foods do you have?"
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409. And he just kept going...
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410. "Do you have any...?"
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411. So she's like, "I think he's
having a panic attack!"
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412. He goes, "No, they've got
everything on the list."
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413. Literally, that was yes, their
way of saying yes was...
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414. But in Africa in general,
including Congo,
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415. we have sound effects
that we use.
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416. You know, your mum, when
she's going, "Ah-ha!",
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417. it means she's agreeing.
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418. When she goes, "Ah-ah!" it
means she doesn't want it.
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419. So, Dad will be like, "Darling, did
you, you know, put the kids to bed?"
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420. And she's like, "Ah-ha."
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421. "So can you put me
to bed?"Ah-ah!"
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422. Very dramatic. And it
literally is that, you see,
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423. you'll see a lot of Africans,
when they're talking, it's like,
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424. "Ah-ah! Ah-ha!"Ehh?"
"Ohh!"Ah-haaa!"
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425. It looks like an argument,
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426. but they're having the most
pleasant conversation!
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427. Indeed. Now, what could
you learn from a meerkat?
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428. Oh.
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429. Oh! How to accessorise?
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430. Well, clearly, very
beautifully clothed.
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431. - Not how to put mascara on.
- No, that's not impressive, is it?
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432. Don't offer a cigarette
to a drawing of a cat?
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433. No!
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434. What are meerkats a type of?
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435. They're a type of meer, or
possibly a type of kat!
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436. - They're actually a sort of mongoose.
- Mongoose. - Oh! - A sort of mongoose.
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437. - Do you know what they do?
- Is a mongoose a goose?
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438. - The men fight...
- What's that one doing?
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439. - What's he doing with his hands?
- He's meering!
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440. Impression of a mongoose!
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441. The males fight so that one becomes
dominant, and then he has his pick
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442. of the females, and he thinks
he's in charge, and he'll usually
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443. drive out the second most dominant
one, and then he'll live on his own.
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444. But the women sneak
out to see him.
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445. Oh, that's very sweet.
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446. And that's how they keep
mixing up the genes, you know?
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447. - Yes, getting a diverse pool.
- The women sneak out.
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448. I saw, there was a whole programme
about it. It's quite funny.
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449. They had quite funny little
footage of the women
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450. kind of sneaking
out of the camp.
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451. But, like, climbing down,
like, knotted sort of...
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452. Yeah, basically, yeah!
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453. And then she met up with Brian
or whatever, and they did it,
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454. they literally did it in a bush!
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455. And then she went back to camp
as if nothing had happened!
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456. No woman would sneak
out for a Brian!
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457. No?
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458. - We're quite choosy.
- Animal magnetism.
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459. Animal magnetism.
That's the one.
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460. The question asked was, "What
do we learn from meerkats?"
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461. - Well, if it's a driving instructor, it'll be driving.
- Yes...
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462. Let's... let's suppose it
isn't a driving instructor.
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463. - Let's suppose they're in the wild, in Africa.
- Is it a danger thing?
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464. We learnt they're one of
the very few animals,
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465. other than human beings,
who teach their young.
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466. - Oh, they have classes.
- Kind of do, yeah.
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467. Ah! Little books and things.
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468. They sacrifice time and effort, with
no apparent gain to self, to teach.
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469. That one's a supply teacher.
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470. He's got that look!
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471. They also gradually make their
lessons harder for their pupil.
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472. One of the things they
have to teach them,
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473. for example, is how to
deal with a scorpion.
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474. So they start by giving them
a scorpion that's dead,
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475. - then a live one with no sting.
- Oh, my God!
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476. And then, finally, as you can
see, there it is watching,
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477. making sure that
it's all going well,
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478. if the scorpion escapes,
it pushes it back in.
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479. And then eventually they give
one a scorpion with a sting,
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480. so that they make sure
their young pup...
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481. The last, the last lesson is, "Don't
get in that square with a scorpion!"
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482. Yeah. But I think it's rather,
it's rather impressive.
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483. If you see a square with a
scorpion in it, go round it.
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484. It is pretty
impressive, isn't it?
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485. - It's amazing!
- And do any of their young die?
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486. I think they're
such good teachers,
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487. - they know exactly what they're
doing. - Really? - Yeah.
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488. They don't give them a live
one, even without a sting,
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489. - until they're sure they can cope.
- So they're ready.
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490. - And you would start on, like, a least favourite bairn, wouldn't you?
- Yes!
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491. While you were
learning how to teach.
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492. "Hang on, he's boring, let's
do him first. He's lazy."
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493. And you'd keep your
good bairn for the end.
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494. Are you saying there's no bad
students, only bad teachers?
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495. I imagine that. "You
are ready." G-doong!
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496. "Oh, you weren't ready, shit!"
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497. Brian!
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498. "I said a scorpion with
no tail! Oh, God!"
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499. And so to the fearful mess that
we call General Ignorance.
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500. Fingers on buzzers, please. How
can I tell the age of this tree?
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501. Chop it down.
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502. - Yeah, count the rings.
- Oh!
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503. - Oh! Is that not right?
- Well, not really, no.
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504. It's a sort of rough guide, but it
doesn't really tell you the age.
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505. Well, it's still a rough guide.
Maybe that's all I'm after!
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506. It's not all...
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507. Maybe I don't care about accuracy,
Stephen! Maybe I've got shit to do!
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508. Did the question say...?
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509. I'm afraid the answer
is extremely annoying.
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510. There are some years when
it doesn't put down rings
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511. and other years when it puts
down two, even three rings.
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512. So it's very hard
to tell precisely.
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513. - Wow. As it's getting older, it starts lying.
- Yeah.
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514. Not putting a ring down.
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515. "Yeah, I'm doing
it, I'm doing it.
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516. "This ran out years
ago, mate. 32 again!"
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517. Dendrochronologists give
a very annoying answer.
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518. They say the most reliable way
to tell the age of a tree
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519. - is to find out when it was planted.
- Yeah
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520. - Oh, shut up!
- I know, it's not my answer, it's their answer.
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521. - Passport!
- Yeah!
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522. Now, what colour is the moon?
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523. Black.
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524. OK! Well...
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525. The dark side of the moon.
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526. - I'll accept black, because it's...
- The dark side of the moon.
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527. Well, the sides are
all the same colour.
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528. - I know.
- It's a nice thought, the dark side of the moon.
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529. - But actually, all the moon is very, very dark grey.
- Yes.
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530. Basically, kind of
charcoal. Almost black.
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531. Not a light grey, not
a silvery colour.
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532. I mean, of course
we get light...
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533. No. It's weird, because you
can't get grey cheese.
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534. Right. I hadn't thought
of that. Yeah.
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535. It's quite bright, but not
as bright as the Earth.
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536. A full Earth seen from the
moon is a lot brighter
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537. than a full moon
seen from the Earth.
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538. That's because people
leave their lights on.
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539. That's probably the
reason, yeah, yeah.
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540. So the moon is very dark grey.
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541. But what colour is the sun?
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542. I've heard it's... green.
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543. - Not bad.
- Tartan, green?
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544. Oh, you were doing so
well, Noel. Tartan!
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545. Well, on the Farrow and
Ball colour chart...
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546. Yes?
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547. ..it's mushroom.
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548. Well, it is actually a kind of
turquoise, so green is not bad.
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549. - It's bluey-green.
- Turquoise?
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550. - It emits photons of all the colours.
- Like a blue flame.
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551. But slightly more blue-green
photons than any other,
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552. so it is, yeah, a
slightly blue/green tint.
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553. Wow. That is not fair.
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554. The moon and the sun are
just playing with us.
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555. Well, yes!
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556. It would actually look white from
space, more or less totally white.
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557. - Right.
- As it does at noon,
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558. if you were to look at
it from the ground.
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559. - Like a star.
- But don't, obviously.
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560. Yeah, the sun is white
with a hint of turquoise.
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561. And all that's left now is the
rather messy business of the scores.
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562. In last place, with minus 15
is Sarah Millican, I'm afraid!
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563. In third place, with a jolly
minus 14, is Noel Fielding!
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564. With a highly impressive minus
4, in second place, Eddie Kadi.
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565. It can only mean one
astonishing thing.
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566. In first place, with
minus 1, Alan Davies.
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567. Well!
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568. That's this mess cleaned up.
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569. So we thank Eddie, Noel,
Sarah, Alan and me.
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570. In the words of that prolific
writer, Anne Onymous,
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571. "Chaos, panic and disorder. My
work here is done." Goodnight.
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