1. This programme contains some strong language.
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2. Goooooood evening!
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3. Good evening, good evening, good evening, good evening, good evening
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4. and welcome to QI,
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5. where tonight we're on parade for all things military.
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6. Here to do battle are the flag-waving Jimmy Carr.
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7. The sabre-rattling Sheila Hancock.
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8. The war-mongering Jeremy Clarkson.
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9. And the ambulance-driving Alan Davies.
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10. And now their buzzers are suitably belligerent.
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11. Jimmy goes...
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12. Theme from The Great Escape
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13. Sheila goes...
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14. Theme from 633 Squadron
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15. Jeremy goes...
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16. Ride Of The Valkyries by Wagner
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17. And Alan goes...
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18. March! March! March! March!
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19. March! March! March!
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20. Nice!
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21. What was unusual about Britain's war with Finland in 1941?
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22. Jeremy?
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23. Well, not a shot was fired.
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24. Oooh...
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25. No, it was the only time, I think,
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26. that two democracies have ever gone to war with one another.
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27. KLAXON
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28. - That's a hell of an alarm.
- Yeah.
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29. - Does it know what we're thinking?
- Yes, definitely.
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30. How did you know that?
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31. Welcome to my world!
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32. 11 years ago, Jeremy Clarkson, you said, on this very programme...
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33. That that was true!
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34. That the 1941 Anglo-Finnish War was the only one
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35. fought between two democracies.
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36. Yeah. Well, have we declared war since the show started on France?
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37. No, there had been others before.
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38. A viewer named Otto Lowe has written to us...
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39. - Otto? He'd know!
- ..to point out that we were wrong.
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40. So we're retro-actively taking points from you today.
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41. You had a slightly bad start to the year, but now it's got terrible!
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42. - I'm really sorry.
- It is 11 years ago I mentioned it!
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43. There was the fourth Anglo-Dutch War of 1780 to 1784.
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44. - The Football War of 1969...
- What was that?
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45. .. between El Salvador and Honduras.
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46. - Football War?
- The Football War.
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47. Had Honduras kicked a football into their...?
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48. It only lasted ten hours, it must be said.
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49. Was there a half time?
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50. Well, I'll go back to my original answer, then,
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51. which was not a shot was fired.
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52. I'm afraid that's not true, either.
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53. 13 people were killed in the Anglo-Finnish War.
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54. The British attacked a port called Petsamo on 30th July, 1941.
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55. I still think it's the only proper war fought between two democracies.
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56. Oh, give in, Jeremy, give in.
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57. If you'd gone home after the programme and looked it up,
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58. then you'd have known.
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59. I did look it up before I mentioned it 11 years ago!
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60. Well, Wikipedia has got more accurate since then. But, erm...
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61. The fact is, despite its reputation, the Anglo-Finnish War of 1941
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62. is not the only time two democracies have fought each other.
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63. Now, if I can be serious for a moment.
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64. More than 100 million people were killed
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65. in wars during the 20th century
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66. and the total number of people ever killed by wars
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67. could be as many as one billion.
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68. Einstein described war as "a cloak that covers acts of murder."
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69. And Antoine de Saint-Exupery called it "a disease, like typhus."
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70. With all that in mind, here is my question to you.
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71. Why did Hitler have such a silly moustache?
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72. Thank God for that! I thought I was on the wrong show for a minute.
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73. It all got very serious.
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74. I'm sure you'd agree with my description of war, Sheila?
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75. I would, absolutely.
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76. this is a difficult show for me to be on because I'm a Quaker pacifist.
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77. So I'm not an ideal person on the thing.
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78. Were you born a Quaker?
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79. No, I wasn't. I was "a Quaker by convincement," as they call it.
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80. - Is that what it's called?
- Yeah. Yeah.
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81. Because my family, the Fry family were very early Quakers.
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82. - Of course they were, yeah.
- It's a very admirable thing.
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83. - And the pacifism is taken very seriously, isn't it?
- Yes.
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84. Well, it's a lovely thing until Hitler comes along
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85. and then it's not much use.
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86. Well, if we'd have done something about it before Hitler came along,
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87. - then maybe we would have...
- Shaved his moustache off!
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88. And I think the reason he had that moustache
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89. is he was probably a fan of Oliver Hardy.
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90. Ah, well, it's certainly true that they were popular in the '20s
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91. and increasingly in the '30s among...
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92. - Well, Charlie Chaplin, of course, is best known.
- Exactly.
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93. But, supposedly, Hitler changed from
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94. what was a relatively bushy moustache...
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95. You may have seen a famous photograph of him as a gefreiter,
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96. a corporal in the First World War - there he is on the left.
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97. But there are a couple of stories. No-one's quite sure which is true.
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98. There was a fellow who served with him, Alexander Moritz Frey,
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99. great uncle Alexander,
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100. he was in the same regiment in the First World War as Hitler
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101. and he said that Hitler trimmed it into the familiar toothbrush
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102. in order to fit into the gas mask properly.
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103. Frey's account is controversial, apparently.
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104. He went on to become a satirist and fantasy novelist,
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105. starting a family tradition.
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106. And so...
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107. But here's a point about Hitler. He's judged very harshly by history,
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108. but he did kill Hitler.
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109. That's... I can't take that away from you, Jimmy.
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110. - Credit when credit is due.
- That's true.
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111. Some historians believe that Hitler only adopted the 'tache in 1919.
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112. And his sister-in-law, who lived in Liverpool...
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113. What, she had one as well?
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114. She may have done. Do you know what her name was?
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115. - Muriel.
- Almost, as it were.
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116. Scouse Adolf.
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117. - Bridget Hitler.
- Bridget Hitler...?
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118. Yeah, that was her name. Bridget Hitler.
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119. - Bridget Hitler?
- Is that true?
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120. Yes. She was married to Alois Junior, who was Hitler's half brother.
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121. And they had a son, William Patrick Hitler.
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122. Billy Hitler!
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123. William Patrick Hitler went to America
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124. and won a Purple Heart in the Navy.
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125. Changed his name, I presume.
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126. Eventually, to Stuart-Houston, I think.
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127. And he claimed he wanted to forget anything to do with his uncle,
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128. but he named his first son Alexander Adolf Stuart-Houston.
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129. Are there still, in the American phone book...
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130. I know there's a weird fact,
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131. it's quite interesting, might work on this show,
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132. where there's still, I think, nine people called Adolf Hitler...
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133. - Really?
- .. that were obviously born before he came to...
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134. Oh, watch it, because in 11 years they're going to ask you a question.
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135. - Oh, Jesus!
- You'll be, "Arrgh!"
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136. You're simmering about that, aren't you?
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137. I'm not a sore loser, but...
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138. Yeah.
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139. Anyway, yes, Bridget in her memoirs said that he came to visit Liverpool
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140. and that she told him that he should trim the ends of his moustache
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141. to make it less bushy.
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142. But as she put it, "As in most things, he went too far."
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143. That's put him in his place.
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144. Hey, take it easy, Bridget.
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145. Yeah, I know!
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146. Yeah, and speaking of things going a little bit too far,
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147. here's a question on mutinies.
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148. Everybody remembers the mutiny on the Bounty,
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149. but give me the name and rank
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150. of the man who was overthrown and cast adrift in an open boat?
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151. - Christian.
- Fletcher Christian. Wasn't he the one that...?
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152. KLAXON
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153. Is this just the BBC still getting at me?
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154. You were about to correct Sheila, weren't you?
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155. I was about to say, no, Fletcher Christian was the one who...
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156. The mutineer.
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157. .. did the mutinying, but Captain...
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158. Was he a captain or was he called Bligh?
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159. KLAXON
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160. He was called Bligh. He was called William Bligh.
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161. But he was a lieutenant commander.
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162. I thought it was Marlon Brando.
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163. KLAXON
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164. Oops, what happened there?
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165. Yeah, he was a commanding lieutenant on the Bounty
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166. and there was a mutiny and they cast him adrift in an open boat.
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167. And they gave him just a sextant and a pocket watch
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168. and, miraculously, he made it all the way to Timor.
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169. It was a remarkable feat.
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170. But Bligh seems to have had problems commanding people,
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171. because he was made governor of New South Wales
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172. quite a few years after the mutiny and they mutinied.
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173. There was a military putsch to kick him out.
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174. - He obviously had the knack.
- He had a bit of a knack.
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175. - So this guy had a knack of upsetting people he worked with.
- Yeah.
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176. All right...
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177. Which of these was originally used for military purposes?
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178. - The bumper car.
- Not the bumper car, in fact.
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179. - The Ferris wheel.
- Not the Ferris wheel.
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180. - The merry-go-round.
- That thing that goes round, for sea sickness.
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181. Well, there we are, we've all gone for something different.
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182. That's rather pleasing.
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183. And the only one that's correct is the merry-go-round.
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184. Which was originally used for that purpose of war training.
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185. You would sit on the horse and a servant would have a ring
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186. and you'd have a lance and you would go round and round
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187. and you'd try and get your lance through the ring
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188. to practise your accuracy.
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189. I mean, that's surely bullshit. No?
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190. No. A merry-go-round was invented to...
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191. - That can't be right.
- A carousel, it was called a carosello and...
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192. So the original was sort of like a tennis ball machine.
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193. Yeah, kind of, yeah.
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194. Call Of Duty is better, isn't it, really.
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195. But while we're on the subject of fairgrounds,
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196. there had been a particular problem in the Boer War,
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197. where they'd noticed that the British were not very good
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198. at aiming and firing rifles.
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199. So they passed special laws.
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200. - One of the basics, really, isn't it?
- Yeah.
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201. They passed special laws
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202. that allowed fairgrounds to have rifle ranges,
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203. so you could fire rifles, live ammunition.
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204. - Sorry, there's live ammunition in the fairground?
- Yes.
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205. - Have you never gone to one of those?
- But it's always like a little cap.
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206. - Tin pellet.
- Yeah, a pellet.
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207. I mean, mostly, you get the pellets, but what is allowed, in law,
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208. even to this day, is live actual ammunition, proper ammunition.
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209. - In a fairground?
- Yeah.
- Really? Gosh.
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210. Wow...
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211. - Really?
- Yeah, really.
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212. What, a 7.62 mm...
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213. Up to.23.
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214. - It is frowned upon if you bring your own gun.
- I was going to say.
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215. I just I want to make it absolutely clear for Jeremy.
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216. If I turned up with my AK, I'd get all those balloons.
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217. But a.22 would work. So you could have that.
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218. It would be quite good to turn up at a fairground with an AK-47
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219. and go, "I think I'll be taking that bear home."
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220. Someone needs a cuddle.
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221. Have you ever fired an AK-47?
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222. Er, not in anger, Jeremy.
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223. No, somebody put it onto automatic
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224. and quite literally stood me in front of a barn door
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225. and I missed it.
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226. - Is that...?
- As we all would.
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227. It just flies around like a mad thing.
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228. Of course, the man that did that isn't here to tell the story.
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229. Very unfortunate incident.
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230. It never breaks down and it never hits anything.
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231. - And what, it just flies...
- It just does that.
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232. And then rushes about in your hands. Terribly dangerous.
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233. Well, that explains all of the series of the A-Team.
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234. So it is actually realistic, the idea that, you know,
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235. no-one got shot, ever.
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236. Nobody could possibly get shot with an AK,
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237. not unless you weren't aiming at them.
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238. If I aimed at you, most of the audience would be history.
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239. Well, that's you. Not everybody.
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240. I mean, if they knew how to handle it.
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241. No, it's pretty much everybody.
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242. Unless you're a burly Russian shot putt enthusiast,
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243. then you could probably hold onto it. But I couldn't.
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244. - I fired a machinegun in Vietnam.
- Really, did you?
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245. Did you hit anything?
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246. I hit the end of the field.
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247. A field's reasonable.
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248. But they'd got all these old weapons from the American war
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249. and you go up and you buy bullets.
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250. - "How many bullets do you want?"
- Oh, my goodness.
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251. I think I bought ten bullets.
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252. And they put it in and then you squeeze the trigger
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253. and they've gone, like that.
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254. You think, "Oh, I wish I had more."
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255. That's the evil of guns, isn't it? It triggers something.
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256. Sheila, you're a Quaker pacifist. Have you got any good gun stories?
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257. I'm not allowed!
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258. Oh, dear...!
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259. It would be so good, though, if you went,
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260. "Yeah, has anyone ever had a go on a bazooka?"
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261. That's what we were told, that you could bazooka cows and things,
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262. but I didn't get the chance to do that.
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263. - You're a vegetarian!
- We had a...
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264. You see, this is what guns do, isn't it?
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265. Vegetarian of the Year.
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266. The other thing that I learned about was that they used cattle...
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267. Erm...
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268. Oh, no, that was a stand-up routine I did. That's not true.
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269. I think you're beginning to blur the lines.
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270. It comes to something when I'm struggling to remember a fact
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271. and it's something I made up myself.
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272. Anyway, one important skill for a soldier is map reading.
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273. But why are maps so difficult to fold?
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274. Well, because now they're on your phone, so you've got to break it.
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275. Well, we've got some ones that aren't on a phone.
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276. My father was a navigator in rallying and he could...
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277. Oh, was he?
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278. He could fold one in the passenger seat of a Mini Cooper
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279. - in the dark at night.
- Did he pass that skill on?
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280. - This is torture, you know?
- So whenever I go to fold up a map...
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281. - Genuinely, this is my idea of hell.
- Of hell, yeah.
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282. It is hell.
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283. That's right, because there are... severe problems.
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284. So there they are.
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285. I mean, I'll tell you, probably the best idea
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286. - is not to unfold it in the first place, Stephen.
- Yeah.
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287. Hey, well done!
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288. That's impressive!
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289. That is 12 seconds.
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290. It's like anything with maps, my father was a navigator.
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291. And I know what all the symbols mean.
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292. Sheila, we've missed our turn!
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293. Concentrate!
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294. Right, I'll race you.
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295. Oh, oh, we'll cheat...
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296. You're sort of doing what I do there, I think.
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297. Oh, Sheila!
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298. My car is just full of those.
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299. Pyongyang. Pyongyang.
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300. - Haven't you got a satnav?
- Where would we be without satnav?
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301. Hey...! "Where would we be?"
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302. Elstree. Probably at those studios, I don't know.
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303. Come on, everyone, make an effort.
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304. The fact is, most maps have got nine folds one way and two the other,
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305. which means that there are 2,048 different ways of folding them.
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306. - Two to the power of 11.
- Really?
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307. A man called Miura, who was an aeronautical designer,
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308. was doing solar panel foldings
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309. and he came up with this way of doing it...
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310. And all you have to do is that and it folds.
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311. You just push the corners together.
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312. And it doesn't matter what you...
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313. - And what's more...
- It wouldn't work.
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314. - Sorry?
- It wouldn't work if you gave it to me.
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315. - Stephen, could you...
- Well, I'll give you one.
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316. The one that you've got there, is that a map of Mars?
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317. You've got one there.
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318. And you just take the top-right and bottom-left corners,
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319. - or any other way.
- That way?
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320. It's so folded, it just does it by itself.
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321. - Take the corners and push them together.
- Oh, my God!
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322. That's it! Jeremy, you've done it!
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323. - But this man is the greatest genius who ever lived.
- Isn't he? I know!
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324. - It's fantastic.
- Who is he?
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325. He's called Miura, he's a...
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326. Good God!
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327. Of course, what you don't realise, he was trying to make a crane.
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328. Koryo Miura his name is, and they are very handy.
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329. I would have been so fucking pleased if I'd invented that.
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330. Well, there are other things you can do with folding.
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331. I've got some tissues here. And if we...
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332. - Oh, what are we doing now?
- Oh, origami!
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333. You're each... If I can give you each a tissue.
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334. All right, so I'll pass...
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335. OK.
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336. There we are. Pass it down. Oops...!
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337. - What are we doing with the tissue?
- And I'll have one here.
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338. OK, so what are we up to?
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339. - What you're trying to do is scrunch it up...
- Oh, yeah, OK.
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340. - ..like this in your hands.
- Yeah.
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341. - And you scrunch it up. And then...
- Stick it right up your bum!
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342. No!
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343. You try and think of an animal...
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344. Like, I'm thinking of an animal.
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345. I'm thinking of a sort of swan or something like that.
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346. - I've really scrunched mine up.
- I'm thinking of a swan.
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347. - Like that, can you see my swan?
- Do I have to think of a swan?
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348. There you are...
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349. There we are.
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350. Tiger. I've got tiger.
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351. - I've got absolutely nothing at all.
- Oh, well.
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352. I thought of a badger, but it got run over.
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353. Excellent! Well done, all.
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354. Now, what's the worst thing you can find in a Morrison Sandwich?
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355. Well, Morrison was Food Minister during the war.
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356. - Ah, you've got straight to it.
- Herbert.
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357. - He was in charge of sandwiches, was he?
- No. Well...
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358. He was, in fact, in charge of home defence. And he came up...
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359. Making sure no-one got in and took them.
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360. - Home Guard?
- Not the Home Guard, exactly,
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361. But he came up with a home defence idea, which was a type of shelter.
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362. - It was for the more deprived families and they...
- Not the Anderson?
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363. - It was indoors.
- .. they were given free. It was indoors.
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364. Indoors, as opposed to the Anderson shelter, which was outside.
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365. - Exactly right.
- Which I spent my life in.
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366. And a dear friend of mine was in one of those
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367. - and her house took a direct hit and she survived.
- Yes.
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368. One of the things we wanted to say
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369. is that it was actually not, as it might seem,
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370. a rather unsafe contrivance.
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371. - But it actually worked really, really well, it seems.
- Yeah, it did.
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372. But there was one problem. Sometimes, the top bit,
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373. which was solid metal, and the bottom was solid metal,
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374. sometimes, the top bit just crashed down
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375. and the person was caught in what was then called a Morrison sandwich.
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376. - Wow!
- Oh, gosh!
- But it was considered safer.
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377. And it was also quite loved, unlike the Anderson shelter,
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378. which was pretty hated, is that right?
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379. Well, I quite liked it, actually.
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380. You used to sit, be outside and you could watch,
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381. you always had binoculars and you could watch the dog fights going on,
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382. - you know, in the Battle of Britain and...
- God!
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383. And you felt kind of safe down there.
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384. The only thing was that you were frightened
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385. that you'd be trapped in the shelter.
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386. I sleep with my hand over my head,
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387. because there was an escape hatch
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388. at the back of the Anderson shelter with a spanner
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389. that you would use to get out.
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390. And I used to sleep like that on my bunk, and I still do.
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391. I sleep with one hand over the head.
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392. You could probably sleep somewhere else now, Sheila.
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393. This one on the left...
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394. This one on the left, it's actually a weight test.
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395. It's being tested for how much it can take.
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396. And, as you can see, it's a fair amount of weight.
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397. Anyway, yes, Morrison sandwich...
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398. Morrison's sandwiches, as opposed to Morrison sandwiches,
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399. which were people caught there.
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400. There's a Morrison's sandwich, and, of course,
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401. they're delightful, fresh and charming and I wouldn't want
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402. to suggest anything about them that was unpleasant.
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403. - You've never had one in your life, have you?
- Well, no, but...
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404. I know they exist.
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405. So, yes, Morrison sandwiches could be deadly,
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406. but Morrison's sandwiches are, of course, delicious.
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407. What begins with M that you could shoot with one of these?
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408. Those guys are tiny!
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409. A mallard.
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410. A mallard is very good, absolutely. You recognise what that is?
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411. - It's a punt gun.
- It is indeed a punt gun.
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412. - There's a few punters in.
- Yeah...!
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413. You're good on guns, aren't you, Jeremy?
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414. Well, I shot one of those, but I shot a clay pigeon with it.
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415. And proved that a man can actually fly.
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416. So don't tell me you weren't on a punt?
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417. No, I wasn't on a punt and there's a sort of momentum thing goes
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418. and you get it going and then you just can't stop it.
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419. And I was airborne for 20 minutes.
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420. That's one of the reasons they have them on punts is...
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421. - I mean, the boat goes backwards.
- That's the point.
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422. You could fire that in Norfolk
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423. and you would wind up in Stavanger three weeks later
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424. doing 300 miles an hour.
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425. More or less true. But also, more distressingly, perhaps,
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426. if you like waterfowl,
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427. one shot can destroy up to 50 at a time.
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428. - So you could have...
- So is it shot like a shotgun?
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429. Yeah, it's just a huge amount of blast.
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430. I mean, I know you're a vegetablist, which is fine...
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431. What I don't understand about these
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432. is that if you actually hit a duck, it vaporised it.
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433. And apart from licking the lake or the grass...
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434. .. there's no nutritional value from an atomised layer.
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435. You're pretty much right.
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436. Seriously, why do they have such a great, big gun for it?
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437. - Well, it was used in the United States of America, of course...
- Ah!
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438. ..in the early part of the 19th century.
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439. But even the Americans realised
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440. they were going to deplete their waterways just too much.
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441. So, by 1860, it was banned. You couldn't use it any more.
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442. - And then they use hand grenades now.
- Yes. They do, yeah.
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443. I got picked up, this is another gun story, and I apologise, Sheila,
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444. but I got picked up by a man once at an airport in Phoenix
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445. and he was a big noise in the NRA and we had very little in common.
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446. And he drove along in complete silence
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447. and he just turned to me after about ten minutes and went,
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448. "What is your personal preference of firearm?"
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449. As a small talk. That was small talk.
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450. - "I don't really have one, mate."
- And you said punt gun.
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451. "Punt gun, mate."
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452. Yeah, I should have done.
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453. I tried that earlier with Sheila. We didn't really hit it off.
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454. I almost want to go to a rifle range with you
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455. to see you with one of these guns.
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456. You're obviously hopeless at it.
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457. The punt gun was used to massacre mallards, Muscovy ducks,
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458. mergansers and other mother-duckers.
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459. From ducks to Drakes.
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460. What was the name of the fleet of ships
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461. that got its arse kicked in 1589 during the Anglo-Spanish War?
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462. The Spanish Armada.
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463. KLAXON
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464. - Oh, taking one for the team now.
- Well, I knew that would come.
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465. - Yeah. That was 1588, the Spanish Armada.
- Oh.
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466. - Is this the next year?
- The next year.
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467. - They came back and had another go?
- No, this is what's so interesting.
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468. This is the English Armada.
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469. What's interesting is we just don't teach this in schools,
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470. but it's a far worse defeat on the English.
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471. Was this Cadiz?
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472. No, Cadiz was singeing the King of Spain's beard, as it was called.
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473. - It was a success.
- Cadiz is pronounced Cardiff, by the way.
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474. Cadiz. Cadiz.
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475. But if you say Cardiff,
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476. you're much closer to the way the Spanish say it.
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477. - As I've found out.
- Oh, really?
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478. Just say Cardiff and they go, "Oh, si, si. That way."
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479. You walked to it?
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480. If you say Cadiz, they go, "Que?"
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481. But, anyway, it's nothing to do with Cadiz.
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482. Was it the one where we went and did too long?
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483. No, what's interesting about this is that the English had a plan.
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484. Having seen off the Spanish Armada,
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485. Drake, filled with confidence,
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486. thought they would really defeat Philip II of Spain
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487. and we would really finish the job.
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488. Instead of which, we lost 40 ships and it was an utter disaster.
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489. But they don't teach it in English schools.
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490. The Spanish Armada that is taught a lot and we celebrate
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491. was not really that much of a triumph, to be honest.
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492. We didn't sink their ships in the great battle.
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493. The fire ships that Drake invented to send into them
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494. didn't destroy any Spanish shipping.
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495. So it was just not really that great a triumph.
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496. It was the wind that beat them, not really Drake.
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497. But where... What... I've forgotten what the question was about 1589?
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498. What was the name of the fleet of ships that got its arse kicked?
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499. Oh, it's the name of the fleet of ships. I don't know.
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500. - It was the English Armada.
- Oh, was it? Yeah.
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501. - Yeah, well, I don't want to learn about that.
- No!
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502. Anyway, the year after the Spanish Armada,
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503. an English Armada was soundly beaten by Spain.
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504. But we don't really like to talk about it.
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505. That was something that people are generally ignorant about.
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506. And here are some more.
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507. Fingers on buzzers, if you please.
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508. I'll give you 100 points if you can name one of the countries
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509. where either the first or last shots of the First World War were fired.
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510. - Well...
- It's worth it, for 100 points.
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511. - France.
- KLAXON
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512. Germany, England...
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513. It's where that guy, the king, the man was shot in the carrier.
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514. - .. Austria, Turkey.
- Where was that?
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515. Well, that first shot in Sarajevo was not the shot of the war.
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516. It's what caused the war later.
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517. Oh, you mean soldiers shooting.
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518. Once the war was underway,
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519. - the first shot that was actually fired in it...
- Romania.
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520. - The Isle of Man.
- Denmark.
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521. - Jersey.
- No. I'll tell you.
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522. It was Togoland.
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523. That was the next thing I was going to say.
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524. It was a German colony. And on the 4th August, 1914,
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525. the British Empire declared war on Germany
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526. and three days later it attacked Togoland,
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527. Germany's small, but strategic colony there.
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528. And Regimental Sergeant Major Alhaji Grunshi
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529. was the first to shoot back when the German-led police force
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530. shot the approaching British forces, colonial forces.
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531. - He was obviously better at it than Jeremy.
- Yeah!
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532. - So he became...
- Did he actually hit anything?
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533. He didn't necessarily hit anybody,
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534. but he became the first member of the British Army to fire a shot in the war.
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535. Because I'd be the perfect armed guard for a Quaker meeting.
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536. You would! You would!
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537. I'm loving everything that you're so bad with guns.
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538. - You missed again.
- Yes, I have.
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539. But the war also ended in Africa, in fact.
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540. The last actual battle took place
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541. on a golf course in Northern Rhodesia, which is now called Zambia.
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542. They stopped fighting eventually,
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543. but German troops fought on for ages
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544. in what is now Tanzania, Tanganyika as it was.
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545. And they surrendered on November 25th, 1918.
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546. If you shoot someone on a golf course,
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547. is it considered polite to shout "Fore!"?
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548. - You'd think it would be the least you could do.
- Probably.
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549. So, yes, 14 days after the armistice was the last shot of the war
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550. that anybody can find, which was in Tanganyika.
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551. So, yeah, the first shots of World War I were fired in Togo,
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552. the last in Tanganyika.
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553. And, finally, our last question.
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554. What happened to the last of the Mohicans?
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555. He had a haircut.
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556. - Wild West show?
- Well, what is a Mohican?
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557. - A hairstyle.
- Well, aside from a hairstyle, yes.
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558. Well, it's an Indian. Native American tribe, is it?
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559. - Oh, no, wait...
- You said what?
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560. Have I... I've gone and trodden on one of those landmines.
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561. Because you can't say Indian, can you?
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562. What do I say, Native American?
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563. No, actually you can say Indian.
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564. I found, doing a documentary all over the reservations...
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565. - I can say it?
- .. they called each other Indians.
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566. I nearly got fired for that once.
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567. Things go around, don't they?
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568. The American Indian Movement is the premier political body
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569. fighting for the rights of American Indians
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570. and they call themselves the American Indian Movement, AIM.
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571. It's a whole new world since I left.
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572. There are two sets of Native Americans, American Indians,
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573. that have been known as Mohicans.
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574. They're the Mohegans, who live in Connecticut
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575. and run the Casino of the Sky.
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576. Yeah, the Mohegan Sun Casino, I've been there.
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577. - It's called Mohegans, is it?
- Mohegan, yeah.
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578. And then the Mahicans or Ma-he-cans,
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579. also provide a gambling service for you
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580. at the North Star Mohican Resort in Wisconsin,
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581. known as "the Midwest's Friendliest Casino".
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582. Yeah.
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583. The guy on the right there is rubbish.
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584. He is.
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585. The worst Native American ever.
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586. - It doesn't work, does it?
- Not joining in, is he?
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587. He's going, "No-one told me we were supposed to dress as Indians!"
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588. "I look ridiculous!"
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589. So, we haven't seen the last of the Mohicans.
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590. They're still coining it in their casinos.
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591. Ker-ching, ker-ching, chin-go ker-chook-chook-chook, ching ching.
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592. As Neville Chamberlain said,
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593. "In war, no matter which side may call itself the victor,
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594. "there are no winners, all are losers."
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595. And so it is with QI.
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596. But let's see who is the least losing of them all.
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597. Lord, oh, bless my blimey...
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598. Well, I have to say, it's a fantastic score
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599. for a first-time performance.
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600. Wow! Look at that!
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601. Quaking away at minus 2 is Sheila Hancock!
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602. In second place, with minus 8, it's Jimmy Carr.
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603. - Minus 8 is good, that's great.
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604. In third place, going great guns, it's Jeremy.
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605. Minus 13. APPLAUSE
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606. Which means... How did you do that?
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607. And only just last is...
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608. Alan on minus 14.
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609. That's all from Sheila, Jimmy, Jeremy, Alan and me.
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610. And I leave you with this deep thought
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611. of American humorist Jack Handy.
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612. "I can picture in my mind a world without war,
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613. "a world without hate
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614. "and I can picture us attacking that world,
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615. "because they'd never expect it."
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616. Goodnight.
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