1. This programme contains some strong language.
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2. Good evening!
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3. Good evening, good evening, good evening, good evening,
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4. and welcome to QI, for the middle show of the M series.
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5. Which is in the middle of the alphabet.
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6. Where our theme is, well, not so much middle as muddle, to be honest.
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7. But we have the magnificent Aisling Bea.
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8. The mighty Danny Bhoy.
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9. The magnetic Jimmy Carr.
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10. And the miscellaneous Alan Davies.
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11. And their buzzers are merrily multifarious.
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12. Aisling goes...
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13. Danny goes...
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14. Jimmy goes...
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15. It's like the soundtrack of a horror film.
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16. And Alan goes...
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17. - Will you go to bed?
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18. - Was that a gunshot?
- I don't know.
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19. The bit at the end, yes.
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20. Well, the best place to start, I always think, is in the middle.
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21. How do you know when a chimpanzee is having a midlife crisis?
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22. Does it get a Chinese tattoo?
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23. - Just on the back of his neck there.
- A motorbike.
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24. A motorbike?
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25. CLAXON SOUNDS
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26. Where does the phrase midlife crisis come from?
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27. How long has it been in the language, do you think?
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28. Do you think the Victorians used it? Do you think...
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29. - I bet it's more recent. I bet it's like a '50s...
- Yeah.
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30. Cos it was about buying sports cars and doing those kind of crazy...
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31. divorcing your wife and going out with someone of 22.
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32. It was actually 1965
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33. that a psychologist decided on this midlife crisis.
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34. He thought that only geniuses got a midlife crisis.
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35. He used the phrase,
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36. but he said it was something that happened to geniuses.
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37. - But we...
- It's not only us. It's not only us.
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38. Is it, Alan? You get them too.
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39. - Yeah.
- Yeah. LAUGHTER
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40. The awkward thing about midlife crises,
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41. I've had some friends that have gone through them recently
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42. and they've left their partners, gone out with much younger women
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43. and they've bought sports cars, and the most difficult thing
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44. is pretending to my other half that,
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45. "Aw! That's terrible. Isn't it sad?"
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46. "Aw, ah. God, he's had a disaster there.
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47. "Yeah. No, apparently she used to be a dancer. Yeah."
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48. Yeah. LAUGHTER
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49. He's not... But is he happy?
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50. Aw.
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51. Yes.
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52. He can't stop smiling.
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53. He showed me some photos on his phone, it looks amazing.
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54. Well, it turns out that chimpanzees, when they're young, they're high
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55. and when they get to middle age, they kind of go down
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56. and then up again, which is supposedly what a midlife crisis is.
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57. Does it only affect the men, or does it affect the women chimps as well?
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58. It seems to be a male thing, doesn't it? And I think...
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59. Yeah. I hear that, sister monkeys.
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60. Are those guys laughing at the ginger ones?
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61. Well, the tests were done on the ginger ones,
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62. or orang-utans, as some people prefer to call them...
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63. - The ginger ones, yes.
- .. and on the chimpanzees.
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64. Now, what mania was started by a few myopic Merseysiders?
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65. - Yeah?
- No, keep going.
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66. Does this buzzer stop Jimmy speaking? Try again.
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67. Say something.
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68. There's some support for it.
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69. I find the buzzers really disconcerting.
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70. It does feel like someone's about to get murdered in the show.
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71. - "Oh, go to bed!"
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72. Those childish ghost cries.
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73. It's usually The Beatles.
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74. - Hmm.
- Isn't it?
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75. Yeah, it's usually The Beatles.
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76. - The Beatles is what you're saying.
- It's usually The Beatles.
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77. He's saying The Beatles.
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78. Very good.
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79. No, is the answer.
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80. - Oh.
- It was a mania, but not Beatlemania on Merseyside.
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81. - Myopic Merseyside.
- It involves something to do with M.
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82. - Myopic is short-sighted, is it?
- Yes.
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83. - Partially-sighted.
- So, what M could help you
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84. with partial-sightedness?
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85. - My glasses.
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86. Yes.
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87. Any particular type of ophthalmic instrument
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88. - that would help, that began with M?
- Monocle.
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89. Monocle is the right answer. There we go, very good.
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90. Yeah.
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91. I only knew that cos there happens to be a monocle next to me.
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92. It was a bit of a giveaway.
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93. There you are, pop 'em in.
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94. It was a fashion thing that seemed to sweep Liverpool.
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95. I can imagine it taking off again, to be honest.
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96. - You do look great.
- You look very good.
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97. - Ah, Jimmy!
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98. - Oh, my goodness.
- My old pal.
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99. What are you laughing at?
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100. Jimmy, you've never looked more like a ventriloquist's doll in your life.
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101. So, Jimmy...
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102. Oh, my! You really did look like Lord Charles there.
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103. I now feel slightly haunted.
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104. Wow! Thank you for putting your hand there, by the way.
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105. It was really... special.
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106. Your hair is all up.
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107. They won't fit because monocles had to be made to fit,
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108. which is why they were expensive.
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109. And because they were expensive,
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110. they were associated with the upper classes.
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111. And even when you wear them,
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112. it's very hard not to look rather kind of like that, isn't it?
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113. At what point in history did someone just go,
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114. make that mental leap between,
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115. "I've got it here and I've got a little bridge here.
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116. "I could maybe just put another one..."
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117. Well, it's funny you should say that.
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118. Which came first, the monocle or the spectacles?
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119. I'm going to say the spectacles.
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120. Yes. The spectacles, by hundreds of years.
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121. - What?
- When do you think the monocle came in?
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122. 1974.
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123. No. They came in, in the 1800s and they were instantly a success,
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124. but they were expensive.
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125. And we associate them with, I suppose...
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126. - Oh, there I am.
- Yeah. There you are, yeah.
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127. I had all three of those.
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128. - They knocked that up pretty quickly.
- Yeah.
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129. But something gave them a rather bad image
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130. - in the 20th century.
- Californian vegetables.
- Nazis.
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131. Nazis, and in fact... LAUGHTER
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132. Californian vegetables.
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133. Buy Californian vegetables.
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134. - By Jove, they're awfully good.
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135. - Yeah, they were associated with...
- You do become instantly posh.
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136. .. aristocrats, German soldiers and generals.
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137. Ludendorff wore one, Krebs, various of those figures there did.
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138. Ja.
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139. Advance.
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140. - They really did never stop...
- No squinting.
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141. - .. trying to look more evil, did they?
- No, they didn't.
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142. Well, what could we add to this?
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143. I've got the, you know, the skull and crossbones,
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144. I've got the weird look, I've got the steely eyes.
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145. - They're a very good fit.
- I know, I'll put one spectacle lens
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146. over here.
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147. - What about a monocle?
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148. Zat would make us more evil. A tiny moustache.
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149. Anyway, now for a medical question.
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150. What malady could you ameliorate by standing in the middle of Wales?
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151. - Yes?
- Er, Moby Dick.
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152. Ha!
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153. - Stand in the middle of whales.
- Moby Dick!
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154. Ah.
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155. Oh, very good. Very good. APPLAUSE
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156. - Very good.
- Whales or Wales the country, though?
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157. Well, you see, this is the thing.
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158. Not whale, the giant mammal.
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159. You kind of deserve a little point for your Moby Dick.
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160. - Oh, do I?
- Because I am actually talking...
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161. If you stood in the middle of a blue whale.
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162. I know you're obsessed, but it doesn't have to be blue.
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163. Yeah, but let's say it's blue.
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164. All right, blue. All right blue.
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165. Because you know you can stand in one of those.
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166. - You can?
- They're huge.
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167. Yeah.
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168. They are quite big, aren't they?
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169. Of course, they're not the biggest life form on earth, as you know.
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170. Hell no!
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171. Sorry, are we doing a 'best of' show?
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172. In some ways, it's the 'worst of'.
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173. You two have had this conversation like a million times.
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174. What's the question again, Stephen?
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175. Yeah, what sort of amelioration for what sort of malady
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176. could you expect, if you stood...
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177. A cream, an ointment? Some... a balm.
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178. No. No, this is... the act of standing,
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179. it's not something that's just taken from a whale.
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180. This is an example. This is in 1896 or thereabouts.
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181. - This is an Australian...
- Is that a dead whale?
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182. A drunken Australian found a dead whale on the beach...
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183. Just say Australian, you don't need to beleaguer.
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184. - I knew you'd say that.
- Is that him there?
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185. Yeah, that's him. .. and decided to walk into the whale.
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186. That looks like something from Embarrassing Bodies, doesn't it?
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187. It does a bit.
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188. - I've put on a little bit of weight.
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189. - I've fallen into a bloody whale.
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190. I thought a blowhole meant something else.
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191. I feel like a bloody fool now.
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192. I'll look for a malady and ameliorate it.
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193. Just the kind of language you'd use.
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194. But no, he got out of the whale...
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195. He got out, he stank.
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196. .. and was amazed to discover...
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197. He could walk.
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198. - That his...
- He was sober.
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199. .. his rheumatism had disappeared.
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200. We'd never have got that. We could have been here about a week.
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201. I know. That's why I helped you out.
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202. - Thank you so much.
- So it cures rheumatism?
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203. - Well...
- But I mean, you can't get them at the chemist, can you?
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204. No, you can't. It started a fad, though. People...
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205. - Would go and stand in the middle of dead whales?
- Yeah.
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206. And whalers would leave a hole,
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207. a little, sort of, area for people who would pay
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208. and go and stand inside.
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209. And the decaying blubber would act as a kind of poultice.
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210. - Is there any kind of...?
- I want to go now.
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211. - No.
- Total...
- No evidence that it works at all.
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212. But it was just one of those fads that they had in those days.
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213. - What a fun fad.
- A fun fad.
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214. - These days we've got...
- Imagine if the monocle people went
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215. and they were standing there like, "Oh, I'm all for a fad now.
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216. "Here I am with my monocle, sat in a whale.
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217. "I'll do anything."
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218. Well, yeah, that's it really.
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219. Australians with rheumatism had a whale of a time.
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220. What would you find in a medieval manhole?
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221. Do they keep their favourite things in it?
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222. Do they bury them in case of marauding pillagers?
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223. We're actually in the Germanic regions here.
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224. Obviously, there was no Germany in medieval times, but...
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225. Is it access to drains?
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226. Ah, no. It's a legal issue. It's a rather bizarre one.
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227. If a man wanted to take another man to court,
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228. in Germany and in England, they used trial by battle.
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229. In England, if a man wanted to take a woman to court,
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230. he couldn't use trial by battle.
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231. But in Germany, you could,
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232. but you had to dig a hole and be inside a hole
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233. and tie one arm behind your back...
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234. - Oh, yeah.
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235. - No way!
- .. and then you could fight.
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236. - Yeah.
- Yeah.
- I feel like on this panel show,
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237. I should be stood up like this and all of you should be down there,
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238. - and I'm slashing around me jokes.
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239. Erm... The man would be given three clubs
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240. with which he could, you know, try and hit the woman.
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241. And the woman would have rocks and a slingshot.
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242. - Now...
- Did this actually happen, or...?
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243. - Yes. Oh gosh, yes.
- Really?
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244. That should be surely be the other way on.
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245. He should have the slingshot and the rocks,
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246. if he's just stuck in a hole.
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247. - Yeah, I know. It's strange.
- She can stand back quite a way
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248. - and just fire at him.
- With stones.
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249. Imagine then I suppose you can get right down in your hole, can't you.
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250. Yeah. And just go round like that, with a club.
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251. If the man touched the side of his hole...
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252. Oh, that's... LAUGHTER
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253. You know what I mean.
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254. If he touched the side of the hole, he forfeited one of his clubs.
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255. - Right.
- And then he only had two clubs left.
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256. But, it's important to remember,
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257. whoever lost the battle would be put to death.
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258. So this is quite a serious thing.
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259. They've already sort of dug the grave, so it's all right.
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260. - Yes, that's true.
- It's not as bad.
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261. - Pop them in there, fill it in, we're done.
- Yeah.
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262. - That's extraordinary.
- Isn't it?
- Yeah.
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263. - Yeah.
- Anyway...
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264. That's what I love about this show,
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265. that sometimes we can all just go, "Yeah, fine."
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266. - Indeed.
- Perfectly lovely.
- That's quite interesting, yeah.
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267. Still on the medieval match-ups,
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268. what brilliant new strategy was employed by the England team
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269. in the European Championships of 1176?
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270. Did they just do what they always do -
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271. get a really easy qualifying group?
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272. And Scotland got, you know,
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273. - the Holy Roman Empire.
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274. The Knights Templar and Spain.
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275. And England... England get Lindisfarne.
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276. This is medieval again,
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277. and it's early medieval, I suppose you might say.
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278. It's not football though, is it? It must be another...
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279. - No, it's not football.
- Jousting?
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280. Jousting came later.
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281. - What happened in early medieval...
- They need more space for that.
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282. .. was that.
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283. I know, they do, don't they? It's rather crowded.
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284. They're not getting enough of a run-up.
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285. Yeah. Before jousting, the two with lances, you know,
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286. riding towards each other,
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287. there was something, which was a French word
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288. that we still use to mean a kind of fray.
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289. - It begins with M.
- Menagerie.
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290. Not a menagerie. LAUGHTER
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291. Menage a trois.
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292. A European menage a trois.
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293. - Melee.
- Yes! A melee is what it was.
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294. Well done.
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295. The original cast of Avatar in a melee.
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296. And we're looking at the 12th century,
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297. - and the great king then was...
- Henry II.
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298. - Followed by his son, Richard I, the Lionheart.
- Oh, right.
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299. And they liked this melee when Richard wasn't out at the Crusades.
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300. - I like it.
- And...
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301. "I do. It pleaseth me."
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302. And they saw this very good trick and they copied it.
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303. And that is, you tell them you're not going to fight today.
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304. You know, "I won't do the melee today."
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305. And they go, "Oh, OK."
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306. And then they exhaust each other. And then you come with your lot saying,
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307. "I think I will actually."
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308. And they're all completely tired, and you win.
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309. What do you mean they exhaust each other?
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310. Well, because they're running backwards and forwards at each other,
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311. - running and running.
- This is how I do a menage a trois.
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312. I let them go for a while and then I come in late.
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313. They stole the idea off Philip of Flanders
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314. and it seemed to work pretty well.
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315. The sport is called melee and it's similar to jousting?
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316. Well, the reason jousting then took on,
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317. as you can see from the picture, this involves a lot all at once,
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318. whereas jousting is cheaper.
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319. - Ah, I see.
- It's simply that.
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320. It was so much cheaper to have that.
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321. And you've got champions at the jousting
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322. who appeal to the ladies.
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323. You know, the handkerchiefs and the favours
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324. and the rather extraordinary elaborate form of romance.
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325. It's kind of funny that that would appeal to ladies.
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326. It's kind of like the version now for men for The Only Way Is Essex.
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327. - That you don't actually know what someone looks like...
- Yes!
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328. .. because they've got so much fancy stuff and extensions on.
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329. You're like, "Oh, he's gorgeous. Look at him!
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330. "I really like the look of him."
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331. Then he takes off his thing at the end
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332. and you're like, "Oh, God!
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333. "Maybe I don't like him."
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334. Going round in a miniskirt with a massive pole in your hand.
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335. - Yeah.
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336. The chicks go wild.
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337. Well, the first rule of knight club was to cheat.
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338. Now, for a question about moral turpitude.
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339. What morally questionable activity will you finally be able to do
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340. on the streets of Knutsford in 2015?
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341. - Is the clue in the picture, Stephen?
- Sort of, yeah.
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342. Does it involve nuts?
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343. No. Sadly not.
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344. Does it involve bunting?
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345. Nor bunting. And look lower down.
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346. What is there particularly noticeable?
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347. - Terrible shoes.
- Oh. Look at them, oh.
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348. - Very bad shoes.
- Yeah.
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349. - The road.
- Pavement's...
- Parking. Double yellow lines.
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350. The pavement.
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351. - What about the pavement?
- It's small, very narrow.
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352. It's a very narrow pavement. Thank you, Danny.
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353. - It is a narrow pavement.
- You can't have that.
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354. There's a reason for the narrow pavement.
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355. - Because...
- Those two people are massive.
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356. In the olden days...
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357. - Yeah?
- A certain class of person virtually ruled the roost in Britain
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358. - and that was an aristocrat.
- Oh, the bastards.
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359. Yes. Absolutely shocking people.
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360. And you had to throw yourself into the gutter if one approached you.
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361. Well, sometimes they had strong, stern and absurd moral views.
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362. - And...
- Oh, so they weren't allowed to walk...
- Well, yes.
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363. - If you imagine...
- .. side by side?
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364. "I'm not having the working classes
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365. "next to each other in the street.
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366. "cos it can only lead to touching."
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367. I know you think you're doing a voice, but that is how you talk.
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368. There's no difference.
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369. Like a hair's breadth.
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370. You are a beast.
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371. Voicing the inner workings of the mind.
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372. So, you weren't allowed to walk hand-in-hand with a lady?
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373. You could just walk behind her?
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374. - Basically, yeah.
- I'm happy with that.
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375. Well, the Lady Jane Stanley,
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376. who was the daughter of the 11th Earl of Derby,
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377. - and she laid down this strict code of...
- Single-file pavement...
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378. - Single-file pavements.
- ..in case they touched one another.
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379. - Yes. She died unmarried, as you might expect.
- Yeah!
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380. She wrote her own epitaph, apparently, which is,
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381. "A maid I lived and a maid I died. I never was asked and never denied."
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382. I think that's not bad, considering she was dead.
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383. Yes, quite.
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384. Fair enough.
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385. But perhaps the most famous prude of his era was a little later,
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386. in the 1870s - a fellow called Anthony Comstock.
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387. Comstock, was from New York
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388. and founded a league against lewdness of any kind.
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389. He saw it everywhere. He hated it.
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390. He'd been in the civil war, didn't like the swearing, apparently.
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391. - Yeah, that's the worst thing about war.
- Yes, I know.
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392. Especially that civil war, you know? I mean...
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393. They've blown my fucking leg off!
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394. Now, now. Language.
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395. "I'm going to fucking kill you."
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396. "Please, could you just kill me? Thank you."
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397. But the particular tragedy that struck him in 1873,
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398. after the war,
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399. was a friend of his - who was addicted to pornography - died,
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400. supposedly having masturbated himself to death.
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401. There's a lesson in there, Jimmy.
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402. I'm happy to report, Stephen, that cannot happen.
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403. You're just not trying hard enough, boy.
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404. I thought you looked pale, Jimmy.
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405. Comstock believed that anyway.
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406. Yes, he founded the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice
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407. and for nine years in its height, from the '70s to early '80s,
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408. the society was responsible for 700 arrests, 333 prison sentences.
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409. So, almost a 50% success rate on its arrests.
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410. And fines totalling 65,000, which was a heck of a lot then.
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411. The seizure of roughly 65,000 articles as well.
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412. Articles for immoral use of rubber, etc.
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413. As late as 1927 they were still going
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414. and they managed, reprehensibly,
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415. to shut down Mae West's Broadway play, Sex,
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416. and had her imprisoned for ten days.
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417. Really?
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418. There was the Comstock Law, which made it a federal offence
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419. to send obscene matter - for example, contraceptives - through the post.
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420. It was finally overturned in '36 in the wonderfully named case of
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421. United States versus One Package of Japanese Pessaries.
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422. The US was always going to win that one.
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423. It was, wasn't it? I think so.
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424. I've never had... I've never had, in 14 years,
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425. people eating sweets in the front row.
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426. What the hell?
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427. And I can't think about anything else.
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428. Thanks, Jimmy.
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429. You can have them back at the end of the lesson.
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430. I feel really bad for those people,
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431. because, obviously, you're just sat there watching an episode of QI,
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432. and then suddenly the telly gets up...
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433. .. and nicks your sweets.
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434. I didn't press the red button, what's going on?
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435. Anyway, what did the French do with marmosets
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436. that normal people did with cheese?
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437. - I have no memory of that whatsoever.
- That's Alan!
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438. Oh, we all remember our student days.
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439. Forget the marmoset.
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440. - Right, forget the marmoset.
- I say normal people do with cheese?
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441. - What do we do with cheese?
- I put it on bread or crackers.
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442. Put it in the back of the fridge for six months, then chuck it out.
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443. Think laterally.
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444. Not the substance, not the food even.
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445. What else is there?
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446. - Cheese.
- Oh, not... not on some sort of, no...
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447. - No, don't.
- Oh, Jimmy.
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448. Not the substance.
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449. Not any substance at all.
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450. - Say "cheese". We say "cheese".
- That's it! Thank you, Danny.
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451. Thank you. APPLAUSE
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452. Very good.
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453. So do the French say "marmoset?"
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454. - They do.
- They say "marmoset"?
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455. Well, they used to. I put it in the past tense.
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456. That makes me go, "Oh, no wonder." Cos that makes you go like this...
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457. and that's what old French people look like in photos, "Allo. Allo."
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458. We have a Frenchman in the audience.
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459. We have Vincent, who's come all the way from la belle France,
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460. - from la Republique.
- Bonjour.
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461. Let's just listen to him shouting marmoset in French.
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462. Ouistiti.
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463. Ouistiti. Brilliant, thank you.
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464. And the point is, we smile when we say the...
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465. - Which titty?
- Which titty?
- Which titty?
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466. - Ouistiti.
- This titty...
- Which titty?
- .. or this titty?
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467. - Which titty?
- This titty or this titty?
- Ouistiti...
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468. - Which titty?
- Which titty will make you smile?
- Which titty?
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469. It does make you smile, just saying "which titty?"
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470. If you stretch your face to say "ti-ti".
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471. - Titty.
- Titty.
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472. - As you do to say cheese.
- Little titty, big titty.
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473. Exactly.
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474. And other languages, of course, have other words, or used to.
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475. I don't think it... But people Blue Steel now, don't they?
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476. - They Blue Steel it. They don't...
- Well, there is that, unfortunately.
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477. But do you know of any other country's words?
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478. - Yes, the Danish...
- Yes?
- Yeah, what? Yeah?
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479. They say "orange".
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480. Well, they don't say the word orange, do they?
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481. Well, I don't know what it is, but I remember someone...
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482. It's the Danish for orange. Do we have Danes in the audience?
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483. - There's one.
- Oh.
- You're Danish?
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484. It sounds like apple, doesn't it? Say, if you could...
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485. - Appelsin.
- Yeah, there we go.
- Appelsin?
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486. A pussy?
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487. - Appelsin.
- Where titty, a pussy?
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488. - Which titty? A pussy.
- A pussy.
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489. - This is... Europe is filth!
- Europe is filthy.
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490. And in various other languages, we have Serbian,
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491. - I don't suppose anyone. Well...
- I don't think they smile in Serbia.
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492. Do we have any Slavs in the audience?
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493. No, we don't.
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494. "Little bird" in Serbian is ptica.
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495. Tee-chee-tsa.
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496. - Tee-chee-tsa.
- It might be the same in Russian, I don't know.
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497. - Iticheetza!
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498. Iticheetza! Iticheetza!
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499. Iticheetza!
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500. Honestly. Korean you might get, cos it's their favourite thing.
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501. - Eating dogs.
- Kimchi.
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502. - Kimchi.
- Nuclear.
- Kimchi, yeah.
- Kimchi.
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503. They love their kimchi.
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504. Argentina and some other Latin countries
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505. is actually an English word they say. Or Scottish.
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506. A Gaelic word, I should say. 'Usquebaugh' means whisky.
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507. - Usquebaugh?
- Yeah, whisky.
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508. - Or water of life, isn't it?
- Usquebaugh.
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509. Ah, usquebaugh is the same in Irish, in Gaelic as well.
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510. Except you put an 'e' in it when you make it English.
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511. No, we don't put an 'e' in it, because that's really...
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512. They did for one 48-hour period, yeah.
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513. Bulgarian is... We don't have any Bulgars in the audience, I'm sure?
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514. - There's one!
- Weh!
- A Bulgar!
- You're joking, really?
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515. Is that what you say, a Bulgar?
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516. You don't say you're a Bulgar? Bulgarian?
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517. - I am Bulgarian.
- And what would you say if...?
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518. - We say "zele". Yes!
- Zele. Which means?
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519. - Cabbage.
- Cabbage, yes.
- Cabbage.
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520. Good God, very good.
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521. The sad thing is that they've tended to die out.
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522. Not because people do Blue Steel, as you were saying,
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523. but because the Americanisms and British even,
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524. they say "cheese" or "smile".
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525. People go "hmmm" and they just do it.
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526. Isn't it sad? People saying smile, how awful.
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527. No, I didn't...
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528. So, now it's time to run screaming into the disaster zone
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529. that we call General Ignorance.
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530. So, fingers on buzzers if you please.
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531. When is the best time to charge your mobile phone?
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532. At night.
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533. Well, good. Yeah, it might be. Any other thoughts?
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534. Oh, really? I thought that would go off.
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535. Yeah. When it's completely almost run out of battery.
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536. - CLAXON SOUNDS Oh!
- Oh!
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537. If you've got an iPhone, it's every 15 minutes.
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538. It used to be the case with an old phone.
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539. Nokia would go on for weeks.
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540. Yeah! Look at that beauty. Bring 'em back!
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541. That's like one of the most modern,
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542. "Oh, it's not like it was in the old days."
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543. These phones of that generation used what sort of batteries?
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544. - Lithium?
- Lithium.
- No, nickle is the point.
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545. And if you charged it when it was 20% full,
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546. it wouldn't remember the rest of it, as it were,
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547. it was called memory problem.
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548. So, you had to drain them.
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549. You had to use them completely, so that it would charge
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550. the whole battery.
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551. But we use lithium now and that isn't a problem any more.
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552. But here's a great thing about batteries,
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553. and I'm going to demonstrate this to you,
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554. and I think it'll be rather interesting.
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555. We're just talking about ordinary AA batteries here,
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556. whether or not they're charged or...
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557. They have a thumb thing on them now, don't they?
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558. - I would, I would use...
- Well, but they did the thumb thing,
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559. but they've got rid of that, haven't they?
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560. They never quite worked.
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561. It was supposed to shine a... go green or something.
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562. Yeah, yeah, go green and there was like a press thing.
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563. I would attach it to my nipple clamps
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564. and see if it gives me a buzz that I need.
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565. Here are two batteries.
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566. How can you tell which one is flat, as it were,
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567. which one is drained of power
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568. - and which one is still powerful?
- Try it on you.
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569. - Some magnetic thing.
- It's nothing to do with magnetism.
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570. I'm going to slip them through these copper sleeves
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571. so that they're both facing the right direction
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572. and should both fall at the same time.
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573. So you can count me down from three, two, one and drop, all right?
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574. The whole audience can join in.
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575. - Three, two, one, drop!
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576. All right, let's have a look at that.
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577. In theory, an empty battery should bounce more.
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578. - AUDIENCE MURMURS
- Oh!
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579. And that is the case that this is the one which has been drained.
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580. It's to do with the gel inside the batteries.
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581. And when they're drained, it's hardened and so it bounces more.
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582. Should we do an apology now for people breaking their mobile phones?
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583. Presumably someone is at home going, "Is this charged?"
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584. - You could try it with that.
- Seems all right.
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585. There you are, isn't that good?
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586. - Couldn't you just buy new batteries?
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587. I just didn't think of that.
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588. Right. Yes, the best time to charge your phone
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589. is any time you can find a power socket.
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590. All of which brings us charging towards a battery
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591. of very extraordinary scores, which will amaze and astonish you.
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592. Not.
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593. So, in first place, what an extraordinary debut,
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594. Danny Bhoy on ten points. CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
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595. In second place,
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596. half as good, but still brilliant,
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597. five points to Jimmy Carr.
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598. I'm happy with that. I'll take that all day.
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599. - Five?
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600. That's good.
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601. In third place, with -7,
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602. it's Aisling Bea.
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603. - Yeah!
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604. Who does that leave us, I wonder?
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605. Well...
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606. - 44 for Alan Davies! CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
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607. Well, that's all from Aisling, Jimmy, Danny, Alan and me.
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608. And I leave you with these wise words
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609. from Pulitzer Prize winner, Anna Quindlen.
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610. "Life is not so much about beginnings and endings
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611. "as it is about going on and on and on.
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612. "It's about muddling through the middle,"
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613. which I hope we've done this evening.
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614. Goodnight. APPLAUSE
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