1. Good evening, good evening, good evening, good evening,
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2. good evening, good evening, good evening and welcome to QI,
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3. where, tonight, we'll be taking in a magnificent miscellany
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4. of things beginning with M.
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5. Please welcome the mundivagant Rhod Gilbert.
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6. The marmoraceous Noel Fielding.
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7. A woman of great muliebrity, Cariad Lloyd.
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8. And macerating in the corner, Alan Davies.
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9. On with the buzzers.
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10. They're, frankly, a miscellany of musical mischief.
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11. Cariad goes...
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12. Noel goes... DRUMROLL
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13. Rhod goes... DRUMROLL
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14. God Save The Queen
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15. And Alan goes... DRUMROLL
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16. Now, then, what was the matter
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17. with the Gilbert U-238 Atomic Energy children's chemistry set?
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18. Did it have uranium in it or something?
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19. It sure did.
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20. That's what... Kids glowing green.
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21. That's what U-238 is. Yeah, absolutely.
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22. It contained uranium
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23. and other sources of alpha, beta and gamma radiation,
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24. including good, healthy polonium...
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25. LAUGHTER .. which was in there.
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26. Yeah. And it included a Geiger counter
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27. and instructions on how to mine for uranium and...
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28. Wow.
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29. This is the start of the Iranian weapons programme.
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30. Yes, exactly. "We have the kit."
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31. The packaging said it was completely safe and harmless.
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32. It was sold in 1951, 1952, for $49.50,
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33. which is about?300 now. Whoa.
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34. So, it was pricey. It was.
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35. If you wanted your polonium even then, it'd cost you.
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36. And that's why they stopped making it.
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37. Cos it was too expensive?
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38. Yeah, the margins were not good enough
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39. for them to make much of a profit on it.
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40. As you see, it says along the top,
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41. "Another Gilbert Hall of Science product" and the...
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42. It also says exciting and safe. That's right. Absolutely.
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43. I'm not sure those two things go together.
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44. They don't, do they?
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45. Well, the guy responsible was called Alfred Carlton Gilbert
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46. and he came up with a number of sets for children.
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47. I mean, there was a chemistry set which contained ammonium nitrate,
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48. which is the principle ingredient for fertiliser bombs.
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49. He liked the good stuff, didn't he?
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50. Yeah, he liked, exactly, the good stuff.
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51. Agent Orange. LAUGHTER
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52. The first experiment in that kit
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53. was to make gunpowder. LAUGHTER
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54. He just didn't like children, did he?
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55. His most famous invention
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56. is huge in America.
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57. It's the American equivalent of Meccano,
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58. which is called Erector. Erector set. And there it is.
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59. Are there giggles from our audience because it contains the word erect?
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60. Well, there you are.
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61. They're still all smiling now. "Ooh, love that word."
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62. I just love the idea
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63. that you can make a Ferris wheel out of erections.
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64. It interconnects with any penis. LAUGHTER
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65. Simple docking.
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66. Oh.
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67. Sorry, Stephen. I was doing the Ferris wheel
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68. as if it were attached to my cock.
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69. I'm so sorry. Fair enough. LAUGHTER
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70. I'm lowering the tone again. I accept that.
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71. But it was all part of that time - 1950s -
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72. this incredible worship of the nuclear bomb.
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73. And it even got to the stage where you could get a cereal toy,
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74. which was an atomic bomb ring, celebrating The Lone Ranger series.
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75. There it is. There's the atomic bomb inside a ring
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76. and it contains polonium alpha,
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77. so it gives off brilliant flashes of light
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78. as part of nuclear disintegration.
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79. So that your little boy and your little girl
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80. each have one from the cereal packet and they flash.
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81. But it's weird that this was for The Lone Ranger,
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82. which you may remember was a Western set in the 19th century.
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83. Yeah, it's a cowboy. Yeah.
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84. But somehow, he had the atom bomb in what's a very complicated story.
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85. He had an atomic bomb in his ring?
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86. Yeah. LAUGHTER
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87. Wait. Wait.
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88. That's one of my favourite ever sentences on this show.
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89. And that's when he was running
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90. the Erector amusement park.
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91. "I've got an A-bomb in my ring." LAUGHTER
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92. You sounded like Jeremy Clarkson then.
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93. Jeremy would love an A-bomb in his ring.
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94. A cowboy with an A-bomb in his ring.
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95. So, he's got an A-bomb in his ring and then decades later,
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96. James Bond comes along and all his watch does
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97. is fire a dart into a mouse or something, isn't it?
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98. It gives you a dead leg. I've basically got
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99. The Lone Ranger's costume on tonight. You have!
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100. Have you got an A-bomb in your ring?
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101. I have, yeah.
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102. At the end of the show, I'll let that off and...
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103. But this is rather...
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104. Like a small firework display.
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105. We'll all gather round to see the lights.
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106. This is not like, "Oh, we found this obscure present
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107. "in some cereal packs for a four-month period."
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108. Over a million of these were made. Really? God.
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109. It was a big promotion.
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110. There was a boy as late as the '90s - '94 -
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111. who tried to construct a nuclear reactor
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112. in his mother's shed in his garden in Michigan.
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113. He was the Nuclear Boy Scout.
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114. There are his badges, including, top left,
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115. he's holding up the nuclear badge.
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116. I didn't know Scouts had one, but they seem to. Wow.
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117. He can't even fix a blind.
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118. They called him the Radioactive Boy Scout
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119. and when I said he was trying to construct a nuclear reactor,
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120. I mean it. He was trying to construct a nuclear reactor.
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121. His safety included wearing a lead poncho.
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122. Where do you find a lead poncho?
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123. Noel's got one. Noel's got one.
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124. Yes, you have one. Yes! You must have a lead poncho.
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125. You're the only person who would have a lead poncho.
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126. He's not going to make a nuclear...
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127. He's got an arrow to show which way up his top goes on.
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128. There is that.
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129. And he threw away his clothes after each session
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130. that he was in his mother's shed.
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131. He was in the middle of purifying thorium
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132. when he was rumbled by the authorities. Wow.
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133. And his shed was found to be 1,000 times more radioactive
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134. than background radiation and was buried in the desert.
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135. It was!
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136. How did they take his shed to the desert?
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137. That's amazing. Must have been a chopper. Yeah.
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138. "We're going to have to take the birdbath as well. This is..."
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139. "This washing line - that's right out, mate."
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140. "And the trellis. The trellis has got to go."
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141. "Dad's barbecue - gone, mate. Gone." LAUGHTER
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142. So, if you want to really light up your children's faces,
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143. you could get them a radioactive chemistry lab.
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144. Which place, beginning with M, holds the world's deadest parties?
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145. Milton Keynes.
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146. Milton Keynes? Oh, dear.
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147. Michael Gove's underpants. LAUGHTER
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148. Maidstone. KLAXON
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149. Oh! How amazing.
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150. You got Maidstone. Thank you for that.
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151. Well, no, it's an island - one of the largest islands on Earth.
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152. Oh, erm... Madagascar. Madagascar. Madagascar.
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153. The Malagasy people. The Malgache people.
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154. Yeah, every few years, they dig up their ancestors
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155. and have a party and dance with them over their heads.
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156. Yeah, I know.
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157. Not as weird as a radioactive chemistry kit. No, it isn't.
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158. They dig them up.
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159. They dress them in silk... "Hello, Grandad!"
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160. Dress them in silk scarves. Yeah.
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161. It's what we do in Camden. LAUGHTER
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162. They also spray their ancestors' bodies with perfume,
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163. perhaps understandably... LAUGHTER
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164. .. and they bathe them in sparkling wine.
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165. After the dance, the corpses are placed on the ground like that.
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166. See, there are the corpses in winding sheets and so on.
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167. Oh, too weird. Too weird. Yeah. And the elders tell their children
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168. about the significance of their relatives.
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169. But they also tell the dead ancestors
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170. about the children that have been born since the ancestors died.
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171. So, they have a sort of two-way communication, as it were,
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172. about their families.
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173. They should have booked a bigger hall.
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174. Yeah. Well, yes, it's full and bouncy.
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175. It's amazing. That's amazing.
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176. We don't talk about death enough, just to bring up in a comedy show.
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177. I am NOT getting my grandma out...
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178. LAUGHTER ..in a potato sack.
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179. LAUGHTER I know what you mean.
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180. We hide away from it here. I'm with you, Cariad.
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181. We don't talk about it at all. Other cultures are much more open.
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182. I don't. I'm a Goth. I'm all over it.
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183. LAUGHTER I sleep in a coffin.
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184. No, you're right, we do.
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185. We don't like to talk about it, but they celebrate it.
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186. They do. It's rather wonderful.
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187. Do they drink at the party? You must have to. I think so.
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188. Do they sometimes get home and think, "Oh, shit!
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189. "I've left Grandma somewhere."
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190. On the bus!
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191. Supposedly, they do it because they've had a dream
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192. in which an ancestor's visited them
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193. and told them they're cold in their grave
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194. and that they want to come up.
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195. This ceremony, it's called a Famadihana
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196. and the whole taboo and folklore system of Madagascar is called fady
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197. and it's very strong.
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198. It's much stronger than it is in many other countries
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199. and despite all the pressures on Madagascar,
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200. as they are on all countries. It seems a bit grim,
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201. but I think it's fine. Quite nice, I think. I like it.
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202. Two things they're known for - that and square guitars.
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203. Yes. Yeah, it does.
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204. Now for a serious medical malady.
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205. Show me the symptoms of bicycle face.
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206. Bicycle face? Mm-hm. LAUGHTER
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207. That's with goggles. No, these are wheels. Oh, they're...
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208. Oh, I see. Sorry. Of course they're wheels!
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209. Is bicycle...? What is bicycle face?
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210. When you get sucked off by your Grifter?
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211. Wow!
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212. Sorry. I'd better go.
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213. No, that's the right answer!
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214. That's what I've got written on the card.
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215. That's amazing!
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216. On my card, in this universe, on the other hand...
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217. LAUGHTER ..I've got something else.
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218. The Literary Digest, in 1895, warned women cyclists...
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219. I don't know why I'm looking at you. I'm a woman. You are. That's OK.
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220. You've identified me as a woman.
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221. It's going to get worse, I'm afraid. OK. This thing is.
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222. "Over-exertion, the upright position on the wheel
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223. "and the unconscious effort to maintain one's balance
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224. "produces a wearied and exhausted bicycle face.
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225. "The main symptoms..." No-one will marry you! Yes.
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226. "The main symptoms are a hard, clenched jaw and bulging eyes..."
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227. I wasn't sure where you were going to stop at. Yeah, quite.
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228. "..as well as being flushed or pale."
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229. Either of those. I... Yeah.
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230. And, "Wearing a haggard, anxious expression."
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231. That's just the fear of patriarchy. LAUGHTER
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232. "I'm under so much pressure." Well, there was a worry.
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233. Some doctors said that,
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234. "Cycling would irritate the pelvic organs
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235. "and stimulate women to disturbing lusts."
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236. If you can't get it at home,
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237. you get it on a bike, right, ladies? Yeah.
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238. Get your stimulated pelvic organs.
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239. Well, there's a downside, according to a French expert...
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240. Of course. .. who said, "It would ruin the female organs
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241. "of matrimonial necessity."
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242. Now, Cariad, tell me, your organs of matrimonial necessity...
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243. Excuse me? What are you asking me?
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244. I'm just hoping that they haven't been ruined by bicycling.
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245. "Hello, Wembley! We're the Female Organs Of Natural Necessity."
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246. It's funny cos the clitoris... HE INHALES SHARPLY
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247. La-la-la, la-la-la. Shall we draw a picture?
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248. She said it! She said it!
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249. She said it! SHE IMITATES ALARM
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250. I've drawn a rainbow, everyone.
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251. It's all right. LAUGHTER
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252. Where's Sue Perkins when you need her?
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253. The clitoris is actually a very large organ...
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254. Shush, Cariad! LAUGHTER
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255. And it's just literally the tip of an iceberg.
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256. When you say, "LITERALLY the tip of an iceberg..."?
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257. Yeah. I knew I was looking for it in the wrong place.
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258. There was an artist in New York... In the Arctic Ocean.
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259. Yeah. An artist in New York.
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260. She made like, this, obviously not to scale, clitoris
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261. and she got women to ride on it, but it literally... it's huge.
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262. It's, like, there's this bit
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263. and then there's these two other huge bits that are in the body.
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264. I was looking behind you. Yeah.
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265. Behind just here.
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266. Wow. It's giant. It's way bigger... But you have two, don't you?
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267. It's one under each arm, yes?
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268. Have I got this wrong?
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269. Alan, help me out. It's OK.
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270. I didn't bring mine with me today. LAUGHTER
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271. So, to say it damages the vital organs is...
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272. So, how much more of it is there, then? Going...?
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273. Oh, my God. Guys, do we have to, like...?
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274. Is this the bit where I tell you about... explain it to you?
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275. A woman at some point in your life
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276. should have explained this to you, but perhaps...
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277. I've never seen such fear in all your faces.
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278. Do you think people will believe it if I say that my penis
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279. is only the tip of the iceberg? LAUGHTER
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280. There's a lot more under the surface
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281. you haven't seen. LAUGHTER
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282. There's a huge nerve ending
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283. coming out right out of the top of my head.
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284. Anyway, bicycle face was a medical condition
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285. that would apparently only affect lady cyclists.
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286. Now, how would this bird make an offer you couldn't refuse?
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287. Oh, yeah, that bird. He does your tax returns.
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288. It's called a brown-headed cowbird, rather unimaginatively.
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289. It's got a brown head and it's on a cow.
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290. I just don't want to know how it got the brown head.
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291. I don't want to think about how it got the brown head.
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292. Oh, stop it! LAUGHTER
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293. "That's as far as I can go!"All right, stop there."
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294. "Now flap. Now flap your wings!"I can't!"
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295. You haven't seen the cow's legs. They're blue.
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296. And we have to forget the cow in this instance,
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297. other than the fact that it's in its name.
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298. It is a parasitic bird, in a sense. A brood parasite.
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299. Do you know what a brood parasite might be?
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300. What's a brood? A family of parasites.
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301. If you're broody. You want to have more parasites.
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302. You want to have... LAUGHTER
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303. The type of parasite it is is a brood parasite.
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304. That's to say it's parasitic in the way
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305. that it occupies a host's birthing place. Womb.
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306. Not womb in this case cos they don't have wombs, do they, birds?
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307. Oh, I thought it was in the cow. Oh, no, no. It's the bird.
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308. It's the bird that's the parasite. Oh, OK. It's a brood parasite.
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309. It lays its eggs in someone else's nest.
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310. I'd love if it was the cow that was the parasite!
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311. Living off the bird.
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312. That would be such a flaw for a parasite -
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313. to have to wait for the bird to land on you.
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314. Running around getting underneath birds.
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315. Painting an H on your own back.
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316. Well, that's... Put a nest on your back.
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317. With a vacant sign.
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318. Yeah, it's a brood parasite, it lays its egg like that.
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319. As does, more famously, our...? Cuckoo. Cuckoo. Cuckoo, yes.
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320. Cuckoo's the Great British brood parasite.
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321. That nest wasn't on the back of that cow, was it?
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322. No. I did say, "Forget the cow,"
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323. but I knew that wasn't going to be a helpful remark.
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324. I couldn't forget the cow, Stephen. Yeah, well...
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325. It's a question of why did the birds put up with it?
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326. Why does the one that lays the blue eggs in this instance,
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327. allow that to happen?
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328. Why doesn't he just get rid of the egg?
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329. Is it...? The answer is it does... once.
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330. If it tries it, a bird that's laid that egg will come back
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331. and absolutely destroy the nest and everything in it.
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332. And the mother bird learns this and next time it builds...
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333. laboriously builds a new nest, laboriously lays her own eggs...
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334. Next time a brown-headed cow bird comes along to lay their egg
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335. they go, "Yeah, you can have it, I'll look after it, it's no problem."
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336. It's basically a protection racket. They're gangster birds. Oh, my God.
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337. Hence the phrase, "Make you an offer you can't refuse." Ohh.
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338. But it works.
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339. So which one... was it the one with the blue eggs or the other one?
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340. The blue eggs is like the nice guy who runs the Italian delicatessen
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341. for his family all these years. Exactly, that's it.
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342. And then the other egg is the guy who comes round going,
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343. "You're going to look after my egg, otherwise I'll come round..."
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344. Or "You'll find a job for my boy, you'll find him a job." Yeah.
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345. "You see this egg? You know what I'm going to do to this egg
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346. "if you don't look after the other egg?
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347. And then he sma... and then he throws it out.
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348. Eventually, cos it's evolution, they'll start spraying
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349. their own blue egg that brown colour. Yes.
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350. "Hey, someone's already done me. Leave it."
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351. You're right, that's quite likely, isn't it?
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352. Why haven't they evolved just to lay enough eggs so there's no gap?
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353. Oh, yeah.
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354. That's what I'd do.
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355. Good point. You'd think they would, wouldn't you?
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356. Stop leaving a gap!
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357. Anyway, that's brown-headed cowbirds.
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358. Now, what starts with M and nearly destroyed the world
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359. 470 million years ago?
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360. Magneto.
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361. You try... I can feel us being led by this image...
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362. Yes. ..in a direction.
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363. You're right, I'm going to warn you, I'm in a good mood,
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364. do not say meteor or meteorite, or meteoroid.
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365. Don't say either of those. It looks like the logo for MasterChef.
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366. Which is branding a pterodactyl. But...
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367. A m-earthquake. A m-earthquake.
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368. That's what we hope happens here every week.
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369. Is it mitochondria? Is it something, like, bacterial...
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370. Well, it's a life form, you're absolutely right.
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371. It's a life form that destroyed all other life forms,
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372. virtually, on earth.
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373. It was the Ordovician-Silurian extinction event.
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374. But it begins with M, this particular life form. Mouse.
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375. It got rid of all the oxygen... Sorry? Mouse.
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376. It wasn't a mouse. You've got the right consonants.
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377. Consonants. All right. M... m... m...
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378. ..m... M and a S.
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379. M and a S. It's wonderful how he's coming on, isn't it?
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380. It's moss. Moss! Moss! Yes, moss is the answer.
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381. How boring. Wow. Yeah, hard to believe. Moss.
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382. It was like a phage, it ate away at rocks...
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383. Right. .. even altering them chemically.
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384. Hey, Cariad, there's an iceberg like your clitoris.
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385. You're learning!
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386. I mean this, Alan, you can get more...
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387. If you've just joined the show...
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388. I can usually predict almost everything
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389. that's going to be said on this show,
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390. but "There's an iceberg like your clitoris" is a new one for me.
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391. That's exactly what I was talking about.
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392. Don't just work with what you see.
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393. You've got to work with more underneath it.
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394. Not moss on it, is there? Yes, mate.
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395. Keep the moss on, what's wrong with you?
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396. You don't want to look like a child.
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397. Wear your moss and be proud, ladies.
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398. Interestingly, you only get moss on the north side of a lady.
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399. That seems fair. Oh, Lord.
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400. It depends how long she's been at the bus stop.
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401. There's types of moss that destroy other types of moss,
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402. but it takes like sort of, you know, hundreds of years.
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403. Yeah. But if you were to watch it,
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404. you would see what is essentially a horrible war...
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405. There's moss that destroys itself, like Kate Moss.
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406. But...
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407. Now...
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408. Yeah.
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409. Well, this moss used to eat the rocks and it would create
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410. a chemical reaction with phosphorus, reacted with CO2,
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411. sucked it from the atmosphere.
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412. So it was a whole series of these reactions.
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413. And that used up almost all the oxygen,
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414. destroying life forms everywhere.
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415. It took about 35 million years for this process to work
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416. and it was 470 million years ago.
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417. We should keep an eye on moss now, in case it ever... We should, yeah.
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418. .. gets an idea again to take over.
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419. I've always had my suspicions about moss.
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420. Have you?
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421. Bitchin' about lichen.
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422. Now, from moss to moths.
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423. Why would you want to blow up a moth's penis?
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424. Really the question should be why wouldn't you?
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425. You've run out of balloons at a kids' children's party.
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426. Blow it up like destroy it, or... Inflate it.
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427. Inflate it, yeah. ..like, with a foot pump?
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428. Using... Flotation device.
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429. It takes a certain kind of person to invent something
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430. to increase the size of a moth's penis...
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431. It does. It certainly does. It really does.
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432. It takes an Australian.
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433. And it takes a device that they've invented called...
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434. "Get your lips round that, fella." Yeah.
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435. And it's called...
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436. "We're going to have to float downstream or we'll die."
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437. And it's called the phalloblaster.
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438. Now, the phalloblaster is what pumps up the penis of a moth...
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439. Come here little fella,
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440. I'm just going to increase the size of your penis.
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441. Shouldn't hurt.
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442. Did we... did we answer the why...
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443. Why would we? Yeah, why? Why?
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444. I love the idea that they blow up the penis,
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445. then let it go and it goes... HE MIMES DEFLATING BALLOON
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446. Well, what it is...
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447. And the moths go, "Woo-hoo-hoo-hoo!"
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448. There are a lot of species of insect that are impossible to determine,
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449. the actual species, except by an inspection of the genitalia.
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450. Right. Oh, really? Yeah.
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451. Oh, some doctor said, "It's the only way I could find out
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452. "if it was a man, so I blew it and now I know."
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453. They used to use...
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454. "Because otherwise I wasn't sure. Leave me alone, Mary..."
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455. I thought moths were just butterflies from the '70s.
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456. Ah-ha.
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457. So forward, the phalloblaster.
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458. It uses a stream of pressurised alcohol
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459. to fill and inflate the insect's penis.
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460. And if anyone knows about pressurised alcohol, it's an Australian.
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461. I don't think that's a...
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462. "Can we have two streams of pressurised alcohol, please?"
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463. That's not a scientific experiment, that's an Australian stag do.
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464. It basically is.
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465. When the alcohol evaporates, you see, it hardens the tissue
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466. and then you're left with one much larger, hardened organ that...
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467. This is the sort of thing you should put in a kit for a teenage boy.
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468. Yeah.
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469. How do they do this? Because, the thing is...
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470. Have we come on to the why yet, as well?
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471. Do they hold the moth and then do it?
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472. Because, you know, when you hold moths, the gold stuff
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473. comes off their wings and they can't fly any more
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474. and they have to walk home.
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475. It explains why they're always trying to get to the moon, no?
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476. Bloody hell. I'd be out of here, as well.
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477. They've been told there's spare penises up there...
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478. I've had enough of this, I'm off.
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479. When you said "I'm off," it sounded like "I... moth."
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480. Like I... Like a very thoughtful moth.
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481. Yeah. I moth. I moth. Do take thee, other moth.
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482. I thought he was just talking Welsh. I-moth. I-moth.
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483. I-moth. Well, it's cowin' lush, either way. So um...
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484. See, I speak Welsh.
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485. Now, this man invented toilet vinegar.
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486. What other bright ideas did he have?
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487. Waterproof fish and chips?
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488. The triple beard. Yes.
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489. Is it Thomas Edison? It's not Thomas Edison.
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490. With the light bulb. No... Bright idea, you see.
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491. You're right, very clever, that was brilliant. Smarter than we've been.
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492. Is it Jack Torch, inventor of the torch? No.
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493. Is toilet vinegar something to do with cleaning?
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494. It's toilet vinegar in the sense of toilet water.
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495. It's supposed to be... Oh, yeah.
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496. But, in fact, it would work for cleaning.
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497. But if I told you his name, you might guess what he invented
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498. which is in a related field.
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499. His name was Rimmel.
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500. Oh, did he invent... Oh, make-up.
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501. Particular kind? The lipstick? Lipstick.
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502. Not the lipstick, no. The blusher?
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503. Not the blusher. Mascara.
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504. Yes. Oh. Absolutely right, mascara. Yes.
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505. Why weren't things going off then?
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506. If I'd said things, it would all have gone off.
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507. Finally you've worked out the pattern...
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508. If you start guessing things, it goes off!
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509. That's how it works.
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510. It's just that fair. Just cos she's a girl!
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511. Oh, now! Now then.
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512. Ahh, she's a girl who knew the right answer.
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513. Ahh, I can't believe it.
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514. There's an urban myth that mascara contains...?
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515. Have you ever heard of this? Dogs.
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516. It is made of dogs. The French don't care.
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517. You know what they're like. They're cruel.
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518. Some people think it's made of bat guano. Bat droppings.
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519. Oh, my goodness. Bat gua... It's because it has guanine in it
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520. and guanine is made from fish scales.
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521. Robin, take that and make some mascara.
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522. He looks like...
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523. Please.
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524. Be proud of yourself.
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525. Is bat guano poisonous? Batman shit.
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526. He was very much a perfume-y sort of person.
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527. In plays in the Victorian era, as the curtain went up,
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528. there would be a waft of perfume for each scene, different perfume,
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529. and he would be credited in the programme - "Perfume by Rimmel."
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530. And now it's time for us to leave the maelstrom of miscellany
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531. and move into the murky waters of general ignorance.
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532. Fingers on mushroomoids.
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533. After you die, what's the last bit of your body to stop beating?
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534. The internal section of the clit...
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535. Now, you see... The foot.
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536. It's known as the foot, Alan, in mountaineering circles.
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537. The foothills are the clitoris. Oh, is it the shadow?
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538. Excuse me? LAUGHTER
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539. Officially weird.
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540. Well, just imagine if you were lying in a coffin
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541. and your shadow was going, "Great, what am I going to do now?
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542. LAUGHTER "I could be someone else's shadow."
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543. Do you know about the little pulsing, beating hairs we have in our body?
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544. Oh, in your digestive system?
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545. They're tiny. We have them all over the body.
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546. In the nose, not the nostril hairs, they're big,
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547. but the tiny, tiny little...
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548. Like moss.
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549. Like moss. They're called cilia.
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550. What, the little hairs in your nose? Cilia.
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551. No, not the visible ones. I was going to say, I feel really guilty,
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552. I machined mine out this morning.
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553. They're like little...
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554. Are they the ones that collect mucus?
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555. Microscopic little bulrushes there,
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556. and they beat in waves to pass things backwards and forwards.
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557. You can test if you put saccharin in your nose...
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558. I know it sounds suspicious...
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559. You trying to get us into trouble or...?
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560. "No, Officer, I'm trying something...
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561. "It's a QI thing. You put..."
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562. Pulling up in a lay-by on the A40. "It's saccharin, Officer."
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563. If you put, just dab saccharin on your nostrils, right...
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564. Right.
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565. And wait, don't push it up or sniff it up, or anything like that,
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566. just wait until you can taste it in the back of the throat.
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567. Right. And that's the action of the cilia pulling it up.
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568. Like tiny elves passing to each other.
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569. So, yeah, they studied 100 cadavers, scientists,
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570. and found that not only did the cilia keep moving for up to 20 hours,
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571. but the beat of them slowed down at a consistent pace, regardless
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572. of external factors, like temperature and so on.
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573. That's so sad. It could help forensic investigators though,
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574. work out the time of death. They kept trying to keep...
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575. "Come on, lads. Keep going, he might come back."
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576. Why would they continue doing that?
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577. Cos they weren't ready to let it go...
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578. Let it go, cilia.
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579. They even transport molecules to the retina's light-sensitive cells.
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580. They're very amazing. Quite useful, aren't they?
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581. They help propel sperm and waft eggs through the oviduct.
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582. That's... that's one for you.
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583. I have ovaries.
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584. Just in case anyone who watched the programme didn't know that I had
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585. a clitoris, ovaries and a vulva, we've discussed mine this evening.
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586. Yeah. Thank you. Shall I get my rainbow out? Yes, please.
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587. I've got a Ferris wheel on me cock so don't worry too much.
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588. We're both having a good time. Everyone relax, everyone relax.
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589. Shall I waft my eggs over to your Ferris wheel...
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590. Yeah, oh-ho! Oh-ho!
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591. I would say your matrimonial necessities
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592. have had a damn good airing this evening. Yeah.
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593. They didn't need it, they definitely didn't need it.
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594. Well, that brings me to the matter of the scores
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595. and how fascinating they are.
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596. Actually, really fantastic because way out in the lead
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597. with a magnificent plus eight is Cariad Lloyd.
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598. Ah. LAUGHTER
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599. I win.
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600. In a superb second place, with plus four - Noel Fielding.
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601. And no disgrace to be on minus seven - Rhod Gilbert.
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602. Incredible. I'm happy with that...
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603. And pretty good for him,
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604. minus 29 - Alan Davies.
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605. Thank you.
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606. Well, that's all from Cariad, Rhod, Noel, Alan and me.
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607. And I leave you with this quote about mystery
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608. from Sir Arthur Eddington, the great physicist.
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609. "Something unknown is doing we don't know what." Goodnight.
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610. The knives are sharpened and the heat is on. It can only mean one thing.
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611. I've never, ever seen that!
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612. Britain's best chefs are back in town.
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613. They're here because they want this title. I'm really excited.
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614. Let's see what they can do.
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