1. WHISTLING
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2. Well...
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3. good evening, good evening, good evening,
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4. good evening, good evening, and welcome to QI,
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5. which tonight is a melange of M places.
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6. Joining me on my metropolitan meander are,
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7. the M-inent Sue Perkins!
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8. The M-powered Sami Shah!
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9. The M-phatic David Mitchell!
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10. WHISTLING
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11. And... the frankly M-barrassing Alan Davies.
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12. Their buzzers
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13. celebrate some of the most magnificent Ms on the map.
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14. Sue goes...
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15. Sami goes...
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16. David goes...
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17. Yeah, the Bee Gees. And Alan goes...
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18. Oh, don't you like that?
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19. Don't you like that? Oh, try again. Oh...
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20. You see.
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21. So, which of the following M-places is made up?
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22. There they are.
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23. Messak Settafet.
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24. Er, The Mountains of Kong.
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25. Meedhupparuraa...
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26. Merv.
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27. I'm going to say Meedhupparuraa, only because...
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28. it has 'made up', literally, in its name.
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29. ALARM
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30. Failure! There's a logic there
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31. and you're new to QI and I'd like to be merciful,
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32. but I'm not going to be. All right, fair enough.
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33. But in a sense, all names are made-up, aren't they?
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34. Welcome
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35. to the logically ruthless world of David Mitchell!
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36. Not that you sound like that, I'm sorry.
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37. But no, of course you're right, they are. Yeah. You're right.
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38. But which one is not existing? But we have...
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39. The Mountains of Kong sounds like it's from fiction. Kong.
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40. That sounds totally made up. Mountains of Kong?
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41. You're right. You're right. Though...
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42. it was made up in a way that was utterly convincing for 100 years.
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43. It's not like something from Flash Gordon, or something?
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44. No, it's earlier than that. It was a cartographer
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45. who was a highly respected figure... Mm.
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46. .. who was just imagining them.
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47. It was a chain of mountains all the way across Africa,
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48. below the Sahara
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49. and before what you might call 'darkest Africa',
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50. sub-Saharan Africa, as we'd now say.
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51. And this, right up to 1895, this was in atlases.
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52. He was called James Rennell
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53. and he was a very respected figure.
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54. And he... Until someone... Until he made it up.
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55. Until someone went skiing in the Mountains of Kong.
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56. Well, the effect of it was that nobody... Should be here somewhere.
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57. The effect of it was that nobody dreamt
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58. or thought of passing this barrier and going through
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59. to the rest of Africa. Yeah.
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60. They had obviously navigated the coast,
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61. there was the slave routes, which were all the way further down,
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62. but everyone thought from the north you couldn't get through.
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63. Did he, what did he do, spill something on the map and..?
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64. That's quite possible!
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65. Oh, bollocks, I've just... I'll call it the Mountains of...
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66. LAUGHTER .. Kong.
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67. But who, who gets to name, who gets the honour of naming a thing?
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68. If you chance upon it, can you call it..? Yeah.
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69. Kong Mountains, or Jimmy Hill, or...
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70. Maybe, in the case David Livingstone, you'd call it Lake Victoria,
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71. after your dear queen and all that sort of thing.
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72. Difficult to name it after yourself, isn't it? It is.
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73. You have to name it after someone and so,
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74. the thing to do, as an explorer, would be to get there
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75. and then ask your assistant explorer if they can think of a name.
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76. You know, while reminding them how they got that job. Yes.
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77. But Meedhupparuraa exists in the Maldives.
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78. That's an island in the Raa Atoll.
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79. Well, it won't exist for long, then. LAUGHTER
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80. Because it's very low. Yes, yes, absolutely, yes. Very low.
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81. A couple more coal-fired power stations
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82. and it'll be Meedhupparuraa again. LAUGHTER
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83. What about Messak Settafet?
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84. Fine tennis player. LAUGHTER
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85. Is it in Egypt?
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86. In the Sahara. It's in the Sahara,
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87. and it is known as containing more tools than any other place on earth.
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88. Apart from "insert city." Apart from Made In Chelsea.
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89. You may say, "Oh, a lot of tools. Well, that's not very interesting."
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90. But 75 artefacts per square metre,
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91. it's almost 200 million per square mile.
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92. It's a staggering amount of man-made objects. These things like hand axes?
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93. Over 100,00 years or so.
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94. Local sandstone was ideal. Messak Settafet,
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95. is that Saharan language, whatever it is, for Homebase, or...?
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96. It was the right kind of rock. Clay Tools R Us.
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97. They'd bought a lot of flint
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98. the day before the strimmer was invented. Yeah.
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99. the rock extracted from Africa by humans to make tools
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100. over the last million years would be enough to build
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101. It's still in Africa, it's just now loose. No, most of it's in museums.
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102. and in a big heap in Messak Settafet.
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103. Probably the Mountains of Kong WERE there.
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104. They were just... They just made tools out of them. Yeah.
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105. Very good indeed.
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106. So, Merv. Where's Merv? Where was Merv? Where is Merv?
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107. Where could Merv be? Usually fielding on the boundary.
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108. So you're talking about... Merv Hughes.
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109. Merv Hughes, Merv the Swerve. Yeah.
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110. No, it's not that. It genuinely was a place.
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111. Where's Merv? I don't know. Well, it was a city.
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112. Merv was on the legendary Silk Road.
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113. OK. The great trading route. Oh, all right. Yeah.
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114. So China and India. You mean in China and India and Pakistan.
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115. Exactly. Through your... Yeah, it's in my neck of the woods, if you will. Yeah, exactly.
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116. Good old Merv, we used to go there for chai and beverages.
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117. There's a guy there who makes an amazing naan.
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118. Is it like Knutsford, like a services?
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119. Naan, lovely, but surely chai is disgusting.
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120. Chai is tea! Oh, chai's lovely. It's hot, sweet milky.
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121. It's always sweet... It's only your fault we have that! LAUGHTER
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122. Have you ever asked... There was no chai before the British came.
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123. "..I'll have some chai, please, but without sugar."
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124. Why would you ask without sugar?
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125. That's genuinely an insult which is, yeah, it's punishable. Uh-oh. LAUGHTER
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126. I'd rather not get type 2 diabetes.
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127. Stephen, he's only been here ten minutes and you've insulted him.
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128. If you can't commit to type 2 diabetes, then you shouldn't have chai in the first place.
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129. LAUGHTER I've learnt that, painfully. Fair enough.
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130. Let's get back to Merv.
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131. It was arguably the largest city in the world,
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132. had a population of 200,000 people.
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133. This is, we're going back from 1150s to 1200, that sort of thing.
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134. A bit quieter now, though, by the look of it. Well, yes.
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135. Just a man and a donkey. Ever since they built the railway! Yep.
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136. Since they built the freeway. He's sitting there like, "They'll come back soon."
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137. That's what happened when they built the bypass.
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138. The bottom fell out of the market for green stuff.
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139. In 1221, they surrendered to the Mongols, which was a big mistake.
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140. Didn't everyone surrender to the Mongols around then?
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141. I would. I don't think surrendering was the right word, though.
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142. They didn't have a choice in the matter as such. Not really,
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143. and the result was they were all massacred, every one of them killed.
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144. Disaster. Yeah. Except for that person. The Mongols didn't understand the basics, did they?
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145. Yeah, the Mongols were not kind or polite. Yeah, bad Mongols!
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146. We might come to them later, who knows?
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147. The Mountains of Kong aren't real, but Meedhupparuraa is.
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148. Can you give me your best Mummerset accent?
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149. "Mummerset."
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150. THEY MUMBLE
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151. You're hoping for an, "ooh-aar."
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152. Yes, that's correct. That's right. It's not difficult. Oh. Yeah.
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153. Another go. So that's like a generic mumbling. Yeah.
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154. It's not even West Country, is it, Mummerset?
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155. It's sort of like a default kind of... it can be east and west or anywhere. That's right, yes.
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156. You replace an S with a Z, like "zider," all that sort of thing.
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157. F with a V - Vry, Stephen Vry.
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158. Right, so for example, "I haven't seen Alan since Friday,"
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159. becomes, "Oi ain't zeen that Alan since Vroiday."
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160. Why is it called Mummerset?
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161. Mummerset. What is a mummer? What are mummers? Oh, a theatrical player. A theatrical clown.
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162. Mummers are... Like a clown or something. Actors.
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163. Players. Actors.
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164. And it's a word given to the generic West Country accent
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165. that - most West Country people would say - bad actors
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166. give to a clown, a fool... On BBC radio.
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167. ..a rustic, any kind of figure like that, in a drama or a film. Pirates.
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168. They say, "Ooh-aar, you can't come here."
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169. Pirates are bit West Country, aren't they? Yeah.
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170. "Aar. Aaaar."
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171. But I gather, Sami, there is a generic Indian accent?
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172. Well, OK, there is a generic Indian accent -
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173. "Talking like this and everything's OK."
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174. But I realised recently, cos I was doing a Pakistani character
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175. in one of my stand-up shows, where I was talking about my relative,
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176. and I put on a generic Indian accent, and I was like,
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177. "Am I being racist towards myself at this point?" LAUGHTER
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178. "How are you doing?" And I think, but I don't talk like that.
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179. So I don't know why I did that to myself. That is fascinating. Yeah. LAUGHTER
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180. Yeah, on the subject of accents and so on,
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181. who was the first BBC newsreader
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182. to have what you might call a regional accent? Do you know this?
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183. Uh... It was a Yorkshire accent, as it goes.
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184. I don't know. I'm trying to remember one. So from Yorkshire?
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185. It was during the Second World War.
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186. And the idea was, people thought - the BBC and the government thought
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187. that a local accent would be harder for a German impostor to put on. LAUGHTER
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188. Because the newsreaders had to say their name.
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189. So they'd say, "This is the six o'clock news read by Alvar Lidell," or whatever.
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190. "Read by Wolfgang... Oh, oh!"
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191. Exactly. Got you! Got you! Ha, ha!
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192. And it was, "This is the six o'clock news
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193. "read by Wilfred Pickles."
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194. Oh, Pickles. Yeah, Wilfred Pickles.
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195. Unfortunately the public reported that while they may believe that it was Wilfred Pickles,
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196. what they didn't believe was a word he said.
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197. "Because he didn't speak like this."
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198. "This was a lot of fuss about nothing."
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199. "So we are winning the war in the Atlantic."No, that's rubbish."
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200. That's how it went. So actors, yeah, have this...
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201. You're an actor as well as a comedian.
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202. I did one stage play a while back, yeah.
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203. I believe it was Romeo And Juliet? Yes. And naturally you played...
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204. I played Juliet, actually.
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205. No, it was... The point of the play was to create awareness
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206. about homosexuality and about AIDS awareness in Pakistan.
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207. So we did the play and the goal was I would play Juliet
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208. and we'd have a man playing Romeo as well.
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209. But we did one night and then we got told not to do any more.
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210. When you say told not to do any more, is that a euphemism for...
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211. It's not a, "No, please don't do any more."
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212. It's not like that at all, no. No. It's a, "Please don't do any more."
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213. Well, I mean, they don't ever have to point it, because it's, um...
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214. Because they've got a massive sword. Yeah, it's implied. LAUGHTER
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215. I don't want to make hasty judgements about Pakistan, I've never been, but you've got the Taliban. Hello?
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216. Yeah, but other than them it's nice. LAUGHTER
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217. I mean, how do you go back? Yeah, but Stephen, the naans, the naans!
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218. The naans are amazing.
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219. Well, Mummerset - exactly, it's mummers,
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220. actors and their generic West Country accent.
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221. Now, while we're in the West Country,
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222. the highest point in Cornwall is called Brown Willy.
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223. But can you name an M-word for the part of the body
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224. that Brown Willy is named after?
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225. Hello. I say!
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226. Massive man tool. Massive man tool. Massive man tool.
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227. Is it the middle? Midriff, you mean? Is it the pectorals?
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228. Mid... midr... No, just the middle. The middle, general middle.
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229. The middle of a person.
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230. Can I just say about that man, he's spend so much time on his torso,
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231. and yet that hair. Yeah.
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232. And I say that with this, but you know.
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233. The Brown in Brown Willy actually comes from... A bit of the body beginning with M...
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234. The mind. Ooooh. Oh, yeah.
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235. Aaah. Is that body or is it...? Oh, I say. Well, that's interesting. See what I did there?
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236. It comes from... An internal organ beginning with M?
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237. The old Cornish word Bronn is the Brown bit. OK.
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238. And that means breast. Breast? Breast.
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239. Breast.
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240. Mammary glands.
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241. Yeah, exactly. Does it make you feel more comforted to say it repeatedly?
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242. Mammaries, exactly. Breast, breast!
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243. So yeah, and Willy was originally Wennili, meaning swallow.
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244. I mean the animal. The bird. Right, sure.
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245. There are lots of places in the UK named after mammaries.
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246. Can you name one?
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247. Um... Boob Town. Boob Town!
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248. No, can you name a real one?
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249. Oh, sorry. Great Tit-chfield.
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250. The Mountains of Boob.
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251. The Mountains of Boob. Well...
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252. Press your buzzer.
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253. Manchester? Yes!
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254. Oh. It was Mam-chester originally.
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255. Mam as in mammary. Yes.
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256. And it's got "chest" in it as well. Yeah!
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257. It's an incredibly rudely named place.
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258. Full breasts, the mammaries and the chest. Yeah.
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259. And there's Nippleton, as well, isn't there? Yeah.
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260. It's from the Celtic Mam.
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261. And you've got Mam Tor in Derbyshire.
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262. Jugsford.
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263. Racksbury.
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264. Melonford.
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265. Great Titty. Bazookaville.
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266. And what about Titty Hill in West Sussex? What about it?
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267. It exists, but it's not named after breasts. No, of course.
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268. What's it named after? The other tits. Sir Malcolm Titty.
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269. It's so silly, it's funny.
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270. His assistant named it when they both discovered it.
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271. "What do you think we should call this?"Er..."
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272. "I think we should name it after you, Titty."Titty Hill."
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273. LAUGHTER "You found it, Titty."
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274. "Well, we're not going to name it after you, Big Dick."
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275. Silly Carry On lines. Oh, dear.
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276. It's actually named after, I think you were struggling to say that, what it was named after.
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277. Oh, the birds? The birds, the tits. The blue tits. Blue tits.
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278. Or the great tits. Blue tits, great tits, yeah. Birds. LAUGHTER
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279. Brown Willy is the highest point of Bodmin Moor. Of anyone's life.
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280. Anyway, how mad can a mango make a man go?
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281. Do you see what I did? There's a mango.
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282. This is a story you either know or you don't, but it is actually
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283. genuinely a fascinating story, and rather horrifically repellent, too.
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284. So where a mango made a man go mad?
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285. It made a whole nation go mad, actually, this. Is there something toxic about a mango?
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286. Not toxic. It made them go mad in a fever of worship.
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287. Oh, so they fetishised the mango?
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288. They fetishised the man who gave them the mango.
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289. They made a god of a mango-bringing man? Virtually, yes. Right.
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290. Absolutely right. Was it Del Monte, the man from Del Monte?
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291. That would have been relatively sane, in a strange sort of way.
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292. To worship the man from Del Monte? This was the largest nation on earth in the 1960s. 1968, to be precise.
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293. China. China. China. So who ruled China in 1968?
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294. Mao Zedong. Mao Zedong. The hero of the people.
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295. He received a crate of mangos from...
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296. The man from Del Monte! The man from Del Monte.
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297. The man responsible was the Pakistani Foreign Minister. There we go.
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298. Do you know this story? Oh! Yeah, because the Pakistani mango is,
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299. no matter what the Indians say, the best in the world. Yes.
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300. And the fact that I haven't had a Pakistani mango in three years now
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301. is just a point of misery for me. You really miss them?
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302. Oh, my God, they're amazing. They really are.
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303. If you try and eat a mango, usually they've been over-chilled
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304. What should you do? Should you just simply bury your head in it?
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305. There's no dignity. Right, so you...
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306. Those are the choices you make in life.
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307. Well, obviously, then, the Pakistani Foreign Minister in 1968 thought
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308. he was doing a really smart thing by giving such a beautiful fruit,
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309. a crate of them to the leader of the most populous nation on earth,
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310. Mao Zedong, and he instantly re-gifted those mangos.
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311. This is where it gets weird. Awkward. Yeah. He gave them to
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312. the factory workers' peace-keeping squads, who called themselves
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313. The Worker Peasant Mao Zedong Thought Propaganda Teams.
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314. Catchy. LAUGHTER
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315. What's the big deal? He didn't like them, re-gifted them.
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316. and individual fruits were sent to factories,
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317. where they were put on altars - so yes, you were right, worshipped -
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318. preserved in formaldehyde, sealed in wax,
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319. and in one case, boiled in a huge pot of water,
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320. and one teaspoon went to each worker, of the water.
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321. So they didn't eat the mango? No. It gets weirder.
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322. Lots of Ms here. Sacrilege! It is!
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323. Despite all this, most people in China, of course,
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324. had never seen a mango. There was only one crate
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325. to go round a billion people.
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326. and looked just like a sweet potato
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327. was arrested as a counter-revolutionary...
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328. As he should have been.
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329. .. put on - wait for it - put on trial, found guilty,
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330. Sorry, sorry. Now, come on!
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331. I'm just saying! Sorry.
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332. Now, who gets best use out of a man engine?
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333. A woman.
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334. Can't believe that hasn't gone off!
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335. "You do, Stephen."
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336. Isn't that sick? I said,
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337. "No, no-one's going to say that!" And you didn't.
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338. Yeah, we've moved beyond. Yeah, exactly.
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339. Anyway, what do you get out of a man engine? Is it invented by a Mr Man?
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340. Not a Mr Man, not like... Mr Men. LAUGHTER
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341. Mr Brilliant Inventor. Mr Inventor.
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342. No, it's nothing to do with that.
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343. What was the first engine? Steam engines. Steam.
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344. There was the Newcomen engine. The Newcomen engine, where was that?
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345. Where were those mines? Cornwall. Cornwall? Cornwall. Tin mines.
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346. Tin mines. Trevithick, his engine, and Newcomen, as you rightly say.
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347. So, you've got to get men down the mines to hammer away and get the tin.
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348. And there, you can see, there's a ladder that goes a certain way down,
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349. but if you dig down, dig down, dig down, dig down, and then you've got a real problem.
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350. The men have got to get all the way down to the bottom, all the way up to the top, and they'll be knackered.
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351. You're not getting good productivity out of them. So you need... A lift!
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352. Yeah, but there's no technology for a lift. Oh, shit! You need a man engine!
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353. So all you have is a wheel that goes round, like that. Oh, yeah.
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354. That's what you have. It's very cunning, look at that.
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355. Watch the men there going up. That's like two weird ski lifts.
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356. I bet there were never accidents doing that. LAUGHTER
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357. Well, given how many there are in coal mines...
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358. It's beautifully elegant, isn't it?
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359. And is that when they invented the computer game as well?
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360. Well, that's to give you an impression of how it works.
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361. It's actually rather elegant. As you can see, the flywheel or whatever you call it,
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362. the wheel which converts into this downward and upward motion.
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363. And obviously if you reverse, it'll get the men down.
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364. I could watch that for days.
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365. Yeah. I've actually gone into a hypnotic trance now, have you?
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366. As you can see, this one is simply run by water, it's not even a steam engine.
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367. And then they get on a conveyor belt at the top.
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368. Yes, you're right.
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369. It can't be, they hadn't invented that. It must be an ice rink.
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370. These days, mines are... "Argh!"
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371. "Argh! Argh!"
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372. The Lemmings game.
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373. Now, what are the three manly games?
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374. Rugger, surely.
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375. KLAXON
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376. Not rugby. Spin the bottle? Boxing.
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377. Boxing? Oh... No. KLAXON
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378. David, David, David, David, David...
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379. Is it going to be Tiddlywinks and... Oh!
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380. KLAXON
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381. That is miraculous, I have to say.
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382. Greco-Roman wrestling.
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383. It's a form of wrestling. It's not Greco-Roman -
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384. it's very much of its own country, which begins with our... M?
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385. .. our guest letter, yes, exactly. Mongolian wrestling.
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386. Mongolia is the right answer!
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387. Oh, I'm bouncing back from the tiddlywinks fiasco.
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388. Yeah, the Mongolians have these games in their biggest festival,
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389. which is Naadam.
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390. So, as you can see, it's archery, it's horse racing
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391. and it's wrestling in tight pants.
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392. And that's what the Mongolians do.
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393. Those aren't pants, sorry. Aren't they?
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394. They're underwear. Oh, yeah! We have a linguistic issue here,
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395. you're right. I'm... Oh, sorry.
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396. Oh, so in England are underwear pants?
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397. Yes. Yes. That explains a lot of confusion I have.
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398. It's... What they're really wearing
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399. is some sort of cheerleader's outfit. Yeah.
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400. It's a sort of crop top and tight underpants and boots.
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401. This is confusing for me, cos this is exactly what Mary Berry
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402. is wearing in this season of Bake Off.
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403. And it's... She's got a soggy bottom!
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404. In that outfit, everyone has a soggy bottom. Well, that's true.
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405. Oh, there he is. Yeah. Ooh, hello.
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406. Did the man second back ever have his breasts used
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407. to model a tor in, or a mountain in, Cornwall?
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408. Because it... LAUGHTER
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409. What is it with the clothes and the hats,
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410. what are they doing? Look, this is a culture long established
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411. that murdered all the people of Merv.
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412. Yeah. LAUGHTER
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413. They make fun of their predecessors. Yeah...
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414. When they turned up in Merv, and everyone went...
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415. HE LAUGHS We surrender and your clothes are funny!
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416. In Mongolia, nothing's more manly than wrestling another man
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417. in a pair of tiny underpants.
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418. But now it's time for the earth-shattering round
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419. that we call General Ignorance. Fingers on buzzers, if you please.
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420. In which country was Mozart born?
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421. Ooh. Mm.
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422. The countries were weird then, most of the countries didn't exist yet.
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423. Places like you think it's always been a country, like Germany
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424. and Italy, didn't exist then. No, that's right.
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425. Was it the Mountains of Kong? LAUGHTER
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426. Well, obviously... Was he born in Salzburg?
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427. Yes! Well done. Good points.
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428. And was that like a republic? It was indeed. It was a state.
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429. Yeah, it was a Serbian state.
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430. But Mozart hated it and he moved, as soon as he could, to Vienna.
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431. Called himself German, although there was no such country.
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432. In fact, he died way before there was such a country.
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433. He didn't make Paul McCartney's mistake of, you know...
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434. outliving his cool.
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435. No.
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436. He didn't. Yep. Very, very true.
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437. So, there you are. Yes, Mozart was a Salzburger.
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438. Goethe, as it happens, was a Frankfurter,
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439. Mendelssohn was a Hamburger,
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440. and the Brothers Grimm were Hessian.
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441. Yes, so they all came from different lands. Oh. Mm.
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442. Now... Ooh, this is exciting! I've got some glasses of water for you.
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443. Ooh! Yes, I know. Be very...
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444. HE STRAINS .. very excited.
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445. Oh, there we go. Here are yours, Alan and David.
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446. Now, before... Don't try them.
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447. Don't, for God... whatever you do, drink any yet!
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448. Until you know what you're doing.
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449. Ah, there we are. There's A, B and C. Can you see that?
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450. Well, A has got something in it. Yeah.
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451. There's some weird detritus in it.
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452. Yeah, that's either some very poor washing up...
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453. LAUGHTER .. or that's... Dandruff.
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454. Well, I'll tell you what it is. A is sea water. A is sea water. Oh.
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455. Oh, it'll kill you. I'll tell you what B is.
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456. Fresh water, because there's bubbles in it.
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457. It's, er, treated sewage.
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458. All right then. Ooh. LAUGHTER
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459. That's why it's got bubbles in it!
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460. Yeah, are you sure they're bubbles then? And C is ultrapure water.
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461. Right. Can I have C?
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462. Is that... That's your choice?
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463. Oh, no. Hey!
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464. But, to be fair, we don't know whether Sue meant C as in C
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465. or sea as in sea. STEPHEN LAUGHS
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466. Ah, you little devil!
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467. But, yes, the point was to trap you into choosing ultrapure water.
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468. Ultrapure water is too pure. Oh.
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469. The kidneys have a real problem here, because we rely on electrolytes
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470. to power, energize our brains and the heart and other bits of ourselves.
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471. And if your blood is drained of all the particles,
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472. because the pure water is taking them away, through osmosis,
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473. then you will die if you have too much ultrapure water.
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474. I'm going to revise now.
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475. Would that amount of pure water kill you? No, no! That's fine, no.
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476. So what is the best out of those three?
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477. Well, what about sea water, what...?
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478. Well, sea water's got a lot of salt in it.
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479. Yeah, the kidneys try and get the salt out,
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480. and, in order to get the salt out, they have to use water.
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481. So you, actually, the effect of drinking sea water is to dehydrate.
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482. Yeah. Right. So we're left with treated sewage.
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483. Well, it's been treated, I suppose that's... It has been treated, yeah.
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484. But someone told me that water that you drink from a tap in London
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485. has been through nine people before it reaches the glass.
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486. Is that true? Yeah, it's not yet...
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487. No, it's not yet true at all. This is a sort of urban myth, that we all
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488. like to think we're drinking... It's been through cows and sheep as well.
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489. They're talking about it... I'd like to know which nine people
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490. they were, wouldn't you? That is also very important to know. Yeah.
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491. In Windhoek, which is the capital of Namibia... Namibia.
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492. Yeah, exactly. And there, they have a slightly salty water... Points!
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493. .. because 25% of it is treated sewage,
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494. but only 25% percent. But it's perfectly OK.
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495. There's no excuse not do what this is, I believe,
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496. which is probably either Orange Country or LA,
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497. which is that they use treated sewage for golf courses
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498. and for irrigation and things like that.
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499. And the treated sewage is getting popular, actually, around the world,
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500. so that seems a helpful thing.
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501. But you ought to try. Why don't you try... No, thanks!
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502. No, I won't let you try the sewage,
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503. try the ultrapure. Cos it's not going to kill you, one sip,
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504. just see if it is actually noticeably pure. All right.
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505. Hm.
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506. ALAN BURPS
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507. Oh, my kidneys!
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508. It's good. I've messed up on this. You can, yeah.
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509. I would say it does taste like water, but a little bit more boring.
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510. It's brilliant. I don't know whether I'm...
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511. Maybe I'm just imposing that on it.
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512. Yeah, you might be... It's not got that chlorine high note, has it?
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513. It does taste... I don't expect a party in my mouth
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514. with water, but... LAUGHTER
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515. So, drinking pure water can kill you.
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516. You're much better off draining a glass of processed sewage.
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517. Good health to you all.
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518. And all that's left now are the scores.
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519. Oh, my gracious goodness...
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520. Crash! heavenly me.
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521. In last place, I'm afraid...
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522. but she probably knows it,
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523. by the fact that I've used a feminine pronoun...
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524. It's Sue Perkins!
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525. WHISTLING
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526. Fighting manfully into third place,
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527. Alan Davies!
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528. Thank you very much.
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529. In second place, a magnificent debut from Sami Shah!
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530. Which can only mean that our clear winner, with minus four,
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531. is David Mitchell! APPLAUSE AND CHEERING
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532. JINGLE PLAYS
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533. And that's all from Sami, Sue, David, Alan and me.
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534. Goodnight.
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535. The most fearless men in the Home Counties are back...
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536. Are you ready to rumble?
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537. .. with fiercer rivals...
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538. We are now a highly efficient unit of elite detectorists.
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