1. GOOD evening, good evening, good evening, good evening,
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2. good evening, good evening and welcome to QI,
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3. where this week I shall be messing with your minds.
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4. Joining me on the psychiatrist's couch,
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5. we have the open-minded Sarah Millican.
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6. The sharp-minded Josh Widdicombe.
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7. The broad-minded Tommy Tiernan.
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8. And...
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9. Oh, never mind, it's Alan Davies.
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10. So, let's be mindful of their buzzers.
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11. Sarah goes...
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12. You Were Always On My Mind by Elvis Presley
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13. Josh goes...
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14. I've Got My Mind Set On You by George Harrison
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15. Tommy goes...
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16. Making Your Mind Up by Bucks Fizz
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17. And Alan goes...
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18. - 'Mind the gap. Mind the gap.'
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19. Good.
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20. So, it's time to get down to minding our own business.
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21. Alan, we've been working together now for 13 years,
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22. playing together, I like to think of it.
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23. - But of course.
- Quite wrongly.
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24. And we get on like a, like a mouse on fire.
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25. Was it love at first sight?
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26. Oh, yeah, absolutely, Stephen.
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27. Oh!
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28. That's such a shame.
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29. No. No, it wasn't.
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30. Well, it's about the mind and another capacity of the mind,
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31. one of its most important capacities, that begins with M.
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32. - Memory.
- Memory is right, yeah. Absolutely.
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33. Can we really remember things?
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34. 13 years ago, emotional states,
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35. do we remember them accurately?
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36. Things like falling in love at first sight.
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37. But isn't there a difference between fact and truth?
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38. - That's good...
- Keep going, we like this.
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39. This could really help me on this show, you know.
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40. So, I would remember stuff from my childhood that my father says
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41. didn't happen, but there's truth in the memory.
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42. - Yes.
- I have a memory, he would suggest that it never happened,
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43. of him holding me by the ankles over the side of a ship.
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44. And he says he...
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45. So, he thinks that's a false memory syndrome event.
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46. He questions it, but I know that the feeling of being held by the ankles
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47. over the side of a ship by my father speaks a truth of my childhood.
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48. - Right.
- That the facts may not support.
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49. - It doesn't mean...
- Is your dad...?
- It's very profound and correct.
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50. So there's truth in the feeling of the memory,
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51. so the feeling is nothing to do with facts.
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52. You wouldn't fail a lie detector test
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53. if you explained that memory to a polygraph.
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54. - Much to my father's chagrin.
- Right.
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55. I think I've got the opposite,
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56. cos I think my first memory is something that I've been told
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57. so many times happened, that I don't think I do remember it.
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58. - I did...
- Yes, so that's the opposite of what happened to Tommy.
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59. - You've had yours reinforced by your family.
- Yeah.
- Yeah.
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60. Does that make you worry that you might be a robot?
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61. And like they've just been,
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62. all these memories have just been uploaded.
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63. Well, we're all a bit like that.
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64. Certainly in terms of falling in love at first sight, there was
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65. a survey of 10,000 people in long-term relationships
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66. and half of the men in that survey
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67. said they fell in love at first sight.
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68. A quarter of the women said they fell in love at first sight.
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69. So a lot of men were fooling themselves.
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70. No, what that is though, I think that's just the law of averages,
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71. because say like you're a single man, I think when I've been single,
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72. I fall in love with women 20 to 30 times a day.
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73. - I think...
- So, the law of averages,
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74. eventually the one I get together with,
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75. she'll be one of the 400,000 I fell in love with.
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76. There is a sense in which many people would say
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77. that despite this view of women's sentimental literature
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78. and the rest of it, men are far more sentimental than women.
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79. Women are practical and less sentimental
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80. - and they probably have a clearer...
- Because women...
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81. - There, see.
- Why has he got it facing away from him though?
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82. That's so rude!
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83. On the other side of it though, it's a picture of Stephen.
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84. Bound to be.
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85. Oh, dear.
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86. He's looking at the back of your head.
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87. Yeah, maybe that's what it is.
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88. That's rather, you see there he's all dreamy-eyed
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89. - and maybe you're clear-eyed.
- Well, women are more practical
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90. because they've got more shit to get done.
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91. - Yeah. Yeah.
- That's what it is.
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92. Do you know that story about the journalist who interviewed
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93. a busy sort of woman and said they were doing this
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94. survey about who makes the important decisions in your household.
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95. She said, "Oh, my husband makes all the important decisions, I make all
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96. "the trivial decisions, like what the children should wear and what they
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97. "should eat and how much we should spend on our household budget, and
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98. "where we should go on holiday and what sort of car we should drive.
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99. "But my husband makes all the important decisions, like whether
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100. "there should be a United Nations presence in Bosnia for example."
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101. That sort of sums up basically men fantasising about political things,
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102. where women get on with the real business of life, maybe.
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103. - I don't think I fell in love at first sight.
- You didn't?
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104. I don't think so. I don't think, that makes it sound...
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105. I've never been so hurt in my life.
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106. Yes, well, we'll do an experiment actually with memory
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107. a little later on.
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108. So there we are. I can't remember what kind of point
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109. I was trying to make there.
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110. But fortunately, neither can you.
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111. Now, how much sleep does a paradoxical insomniac get?
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112. TOMMY'S BUZZER
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113. Paradoxical, lots?
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114. Well, yes. He does.
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115. - More than he thinks.
- Yes.
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116. It's like a paradoxical kleptomaniac who leaves things in shops.
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117. What a wonderful thing to be.
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118. Oh, look, he's left a DVD on the teabags again.
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119. Yeah, it's a very rare condition, but essentially your body sleeps
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120. very happily and all the scientific equipment that goes onto the
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121. brain to check that you're sleeping shows that you are sleeping,
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122. but you're awake, and you remember where you are and what's going on.
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123. But you're refreshed.
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124. - Are you doing stuff, like are you driving a bus or something?
- No.
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125. No, absolutely not. No, they're definitely asleep in bed.
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126. So are these people, do they...? Sorry, I don't really understand
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127. and I think you're lying, but anyway.
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128. Are these people the sort of people, do they say,
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129. "I've had a good night's sleep," or, "I haven't slept a wink"?
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130. How do they feel? They feel refreshed?
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131. - They feel refreshed, they feel fine.
- How do they know they haven't slept?
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132. - Cos they've been awake all the time.
- They've slept, haven't they?
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133. In their mind, they've been awake all the time.
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134. Is this when you have to be awake at ten to five,
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135. and miraculously you are awake at ten to five.
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136. That's an alarm clock, love.
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137. - No, I have that too, I do definitely.
- Yeah.
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138. - It's extraordinary.
- So is that the same kind of...
- It works very well.
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139. At school when we, if we were going on a, you know,
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140. a little dawn raid, or something like that, you'd, they'd say...
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141. Sorry?
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142. Well, you know, to do a raid on the kitchens and steal jelly
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143. and things, you know. So...
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144. I forgot you grew up in an Enid Blyton novel.
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145. To get your catapult back from the teacher.
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146. You would do this onto the pillow, you would go,
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147. "One, two, three, four,"
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148. like that, and you'd wake up at four in the morning.
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149. - And it always seemed to work.
- No.
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150. - Honestly, I can't remember a time when it didn't.
- That is bullshit!
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151. - No...
- OK.
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152. I totally agree.
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153. It's maybe a false memory I've got, but it's a very clear one.
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154. It all changes when you get an enlarged prostate.
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155. And do you have to hit it four times on the pillow?
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156. This is something that Blyton didn't cover much.
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157. She didn't, did she? Not lashings of enlarged prostates, no.
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158. Oh, dear.
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159. Anyway, how well you sleep is really all in your mind.
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160. Now, how much would you pay for a machine that can print money?
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161. TOMMY'S BUZZER
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162. Nothing, because the person you bought it from wouldn't need cash.
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163. - Oh, clever.
- Very good.
- Clever.
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164. Well, I'm going to put it up for offers, because I've got
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165. a machine which I hope you will see is able to print money.
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166. What I've got is a piece of paper,
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167. which is the right size.
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168. And my printer, which is pretty accurate.
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169. - At least if I print it well.
- Ah, very good.
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170. Well, there it is.
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171. - Oooh.
- There you go.
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172. - Blimey!
- What do you think?
- Eh?
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173. There you are.
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174. So, how much would you pay for that machine?
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175. I'd pay a tenner, because...
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176. And then I'd go out onto the South Bank and make loads of money.
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177. We'll keep that.
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178. We'll keep that, we'll keep that ten and maybe we'll see
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179. if we can make more money later on.
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180. Tell me this, which do you find most convincing, the IKEA Effect,
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181. the Rhyme As Reason Effect
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182. or the Frequency Illusion?
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183. Is the IKEA Effect just arrows on the floor?
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184. Is that what that is?
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185. Just not being able to get out of anywhere ever.
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186. That, if you can...
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187. Is that prison? Is that prison?
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188. Prison with tea lights.
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189. It may be better understood by saying things like
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190. if you make crab apple jelly, say, or jam, in my case apricot jam,
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191. I made last year, it's just the best apricot jam there ever was.
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192. I knew this, it's a fact.
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193. It's the best apricot jam anyone's ever tasted.
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194. But I'm told that it's part of the IKEA Effect. In other words,
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195. if you've made it yourself from your own ingredients, you just think it's
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196. better than anything else that you can buy in a shop or anything else.
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197. - Is that why people are really smug about their babies?
- Yes.
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198. Basically, they are an IKEA Effect.
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199. Well, let's move on to the second in our list then, which is
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200. the Rhyme As Reason Effect.
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201. What do you think that can be about?
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202. Is that like, no pain no gain?
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203. - Yes.
- Or treat them mean, keep them keen, would be another.
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204. - Yes.
- Oh, like, there's loads of alcohol ones,
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205. isn't there, like if you drink wine you'll be fine, and...
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206. - Oh, yeah, yeah.
- Beer you'll be queer.
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207. Only shots, yeah.
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208. But that did work, didn't it, Stephen?
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209. It did, yeah, yeah. It worked on me.
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210. - Only shots, you'll get the trots, that sort of thing.
- Yeah.
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211. Yeah, all the boozy ones.
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212. - Yeah, isn't there one with grape and grain?
- Yeah.
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213. Never the twain with... No.
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214. - .. with the grape and grain.
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215. They do seem to work, in as much as, if you suggest a kind of rhyming
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216. piece of advice to someone, and to another group of people you put the
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217. same sentiment that doesn't rhyme, they'll believe the rhyming one.
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218. So, for example, they gave "wealth makes health,"
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219. to a group of people, and almost all of them agreed with it.
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220. They then said, "Financial success improves medical outcomes."
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221. Catchy. It's catchy.
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222. And they didn't agree at all, despite it meaning the same thing.
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223. So it shows there is a strange quality that a rhyming phrase has.
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224. It's easier to remember as well,
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225. - so you might want to pass it on to somebody else.
- That's right.
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226. If it rhymes.
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227. And it seems just to have some sort of authority or imprimatur,
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228. that an ordinary phrase doesn't. It's also the Keats heuristic,
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229. because it's beautiful, it must be true.
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230. Beauty is truth and truth beauty, is the idea.
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231. You may remember OJ Simpson's defence lawyer,
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232. Johnnie Cochran, do you remember him?
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233. - Oh, it doesn't fit.
- If the glove doesn't fit...
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234. That's it, yeah.
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235. That seems to be one of the things that got OJ...
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236. That's quite specific as well,
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237. you can't use that, like, every day, can you?
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238. It's not going to come up a lot, that one, is it?
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239. No. It worked on the day though.
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240. The Frequency Illusion, does that mean anything to you?
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241. No.
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242. No reason why it should.
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243. When I used the word heuristic, it may be that you didn't know
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244. the word, but it's quite likely that in a couple of days you might
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245. see it in a magazine or hear someone else using it on the radio or
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246. TV and you go, "That's weird, I only just heard that word
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247. "for the first time two days ago, and now it keeps cropping up everywhere."
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248. - Have you ever had that experience?
- Yeah. I was talking to Richard Osman
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249. about this, cos he was complaining about people saying there's always
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250. - tennis questions on Pointless.
- Oh, yes.
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251. And the moment you think
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252. that there's tennis questions on Pointless,
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253. if you see one, you think,
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254. - "Well, that completely reinforces everything."
- Yes, that's right.
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255. All these things are called a sort of cognitive bias, they push
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256. you into a way of thinking, some different ways of thinking.
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257. So, you can tell the most appalling lie,
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258. if it rhymes or it's featured on QI.
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259. What did the amnesiac say when the doctor asked him his name?
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260. TOMMY'S BUZZER
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261. I don't know the answer to that question.
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262. Oh! CLAXON
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263. No, no, I was telling you that...
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264. - That you didn't know the, very clever.
- Right...
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265. Very clever, give him his points back.
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266. He didn't know the answer to the question.
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267. Did he just say his name,
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268. because it was written on the inside label of his knickers?
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269. That would be the contortionist amnesiac.
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270. Yeah.
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271. There's the guy that they said, "What's your name?" and he
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272. asked for a pen and paper, and he drew a piano and they brought him
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273. a piano and he wouldn't speak to them, but he'd just play the piano.
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274. - Do you remember this guy?
- I do.
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275. Yeah, and then it turned out, I think, that he was a con artist.
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276. - Yeah, he was.
- He didn't have amnesia at all.
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277. Because, if you have amnesia, you don't forget your name
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278. and you don't forget your past life.
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279. What you're not capable of doing
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280. is remembering new things that happen to you.
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281. - That's the point.
- You've just ruined loads of films.
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282. I know, you're absolutely right.
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283. It's films in particular that relish this idea that you
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284. might have a trauma and you lose all memory of who you are
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285. and you become a fresh, new, empty person.
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286. And very often as well a second clump on the head
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287. will bring your memory back.
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288. And all this is utterly unknown to medical science.
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289. - It's completely made-up.
- A very rudimentary psychiatric hospital in
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290. the west of Ireland would use that as a technique.
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291. LAUGHTER A clump on the back of the head.
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292. If it was a thump on the head that got you sick,
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293. it'll be a thump on the head that'll make you better.
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294. Yeah, we're back in Memory Lane and now it's time for our memory test.
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295. All right, I want the audience and you four,
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296. if you'd be kind enough, to listen to and remember these words.
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297. Bed. Rest. Awake.
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298. Tired. Dream. Wake.
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299. Snooze. Blanket. Doze.
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300. Slumber.
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301. Snore. Nap.
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302. Peace. Yawn.
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303. Drowsy.
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304. All right?
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305. Remember those words, if you'd be so kind.
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306. Good. Well, I think we've earned ourselves
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307. - another money-making moment, yes? Go on.
- Excellent.
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308. Because I've got another machine. Well, it's not a machine
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309. in this case, it's just an ordinary blotter and a piece of paper.
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310. This is a, see, there you are.
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311. It's all pretty straightforward.
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312. The blotter is to blot out all the excess ink as we try
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313. and print out this, we try and print it out, there we go.
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314. Oh, let's have a go. Oh.
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315. There you are. More money for us.
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316. Isn't that pleasing?
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317. Are you going to show us how they work later on?
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318. - Of course!
- Good.
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319. Before I kill you.
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320. - I don't mind. I don't mind. No.
- Oh, you don't mind, good, no.
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321. - It's just...
- If you do any...
- What a way to go,
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322. that's a trade-off I'll take.
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323. Now for some multiple choice, listen carefully. True or false?
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324. True or false questions are more likely to be true than false.
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325. - I'm going to...
- I need an answer.
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326. JOSH'S BUZZER
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327. Oh, I love George Harrison.
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328. I'm going to go... true.
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329. - Is the right answer.
- Oh!
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330. Very good. Yeah.
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331. 50/50 ball, as they say.
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332. And you did well, that's right. Yeah, it's...
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333. But there isn't a vault or a bank where all the true or false
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334. questions in the world were ever asked
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335. and somebody decides to count which are more true or more false.
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336. That's like saying, when you're given directions, is the first
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337. direction more often likely to be turn left or turn right?
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338. Depends where you're going.
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339. - Left.
- Yes.
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340. But you can analyse a huge bank of questions, which is what was done.
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341. American exam questions, in this instance.
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342. And they found that it was 56% of them the answer was true,
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343. - and 44% the answer was false.
- Right.
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344. And it seems the reason is that the examiners, of course,
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345. have to think of the questions all the time, and it's a lot
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346. easier to think of a true question than it is to think of a false one.
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347. When I did my GCSEs, they said as a tip,
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348. if you're doing a multiple choice, A, B, C, D,
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349. and you don't know the answer, go B or C, because the lazy examiners
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350. are more likely to put the answer in the middle than on the edge.
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351. Would have been better if they just taught us the answers.
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352. - Yes, I was going to say.
- Just important to...
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353. Don't worry about learning about science, just go C.
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354. All right, I'll give you another chance then, OK.
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355. If question one is true in an exam, what is question two likely to be?
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356. True.
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357. Oh! CLAXON
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358. No, true, false, true, false is more prevalent.
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359. Oh, that's so boring though.
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360. It's not absolutely guaranteed, of course,
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361. but the chance the next answer will be different
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362. from the present one is 63% though, so it's quite a high amount.
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363. So if question two the answer was true,
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364. question three, 63% that it will be false.
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365. The way therefore to optimise your scores, if you're doing a true
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366. or false, is to answer all the ones you know the answer to, obviously.
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367. Then the ones next to them, put the opposite.
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368. And then all the rest that are left over put true.
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369. And then you've got your best chance of a good score.
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370. - Oh, that's, I like it.
- Yeah.
- Or just revise more.
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371. Or just revise more.
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372. Yeah, you are everything that is wrong with British education.
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373. So, pay attention now, it's time for another magical money-making moment.
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374. Oh.
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375. Yes. I've got a proper, proper printing press here.
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376. It's very, it's a rather exciting one,
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377. and as you can see, it's got all the bells and whistles.
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378. And it's even got a little calibration here.
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379. I'm going to, let's, can you see it's on ten, I'm going
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380. to move it up to 20. Because I've got a 20-sized one here.
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381. This may, I hope this works.
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382. It takes a long time to fill it with ink,
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383. so if it doesn't work, I'm not going to do it twice.
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384. Oh, yes, that works. Oh, good, there you are.
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385. - Oh, wow.
- There you are. APPLAUSE
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386. Oh, there we go.
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387. Stephen, hold on, one of the options is 100.
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388. I just want to see what one of them looks like.
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389. OK. OK.
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390. Oh, oh, there we go.
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391. And, oh... Oh, it's a 50. It should be 100.
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392. Oh, it is 100. There you are!
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393. That's good.
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394. There we are.
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395. So, yeah, we've made a, made a proper amount of money today.
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396. Just shows, with a little application
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397. and a little skill, you can make money pretty easily.
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398. - That's amazing.
- Yes.
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399. But I feel guilty about it, so I'll probably give it away,
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400. to a bookmaker.
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401. Now, how would you swear like a pre-pubescent supercomputer?
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402. Bum, bum, wee.
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403. - Bum, bum, wee.
- And poo.
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404. - Pretty close.
- They're the main, they're the main ones?
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405. The big three.
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406. It's a supercomputer, we've called it pre-pubescent
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407. because it's about 11 years old now. And...
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408. And it swears?
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409. Well, it's called Watson
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410. and it is one of the smartest supercomputers around.
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411. It was first trained to win at the American quiz game Jeopardy,
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412. which you may have seen if you've ever been in the United States,
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413. it's on every single day.
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414. They give an answer and you say the question.
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415. Exactly. So this actor played Jonathan Creek.
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416. The answer is, on Jeopardy, Who is Alan Davies?
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417. - Yes.
- It's been going for 40 years or something on American TV.
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418. Does the supercomputer do proper swearing or swearing like
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419. What they did was, they fed it an online dictionary
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420. and I think you can guess which one it was, if it was swearing.
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421. Urban Dictionary.
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422. - Urban Dictionary, yes, which is a rather naughty dictionary.
- It is.
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423. It has bad M words.
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424. I don't know what, I really, what's motorboat?
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425. Am I, am I the only...?
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426. Oh, OK. I've got this one,
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427. - I've got this one!
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428. I'm not going to do it, it's where you
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429. put your head in between there and then do that...
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430. Oh, yes, that's right. "Brrr." It's rather sweet, that, isn't it?
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431. - Rather sweet?
- Well...
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432. Well, I don't know.
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433. Nicer than minger, or muffin top? Milkshake.
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434. Where's your man cave?
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435. That's not... Oh, no, is that, have I got a man... No?
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436. - No. Is that what...?
- Is it like a den where you...
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437. Oh.
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438. That sounded like you'd suddenly got a catchphrase,
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439. where's your man cave?
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440. It's Sarah 'Where's Your Man Cave' Millican.
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441. It's Sarah Millican, Where's Your Man Cave!
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442. - Sarah, you definitely have one man cave, the question is,
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443. do you have two?
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444. Ah, yes.
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445. No?
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446. - Was that the right answer?
- I don't know.
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447. I'm still recovering from motorboat.
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448. So, that's Urban Dictionary and it was popped into Watson,
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449. this IBM computer and unfortunately, he learnt too much from it
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450. and so when they were testing it, before it went on Jeopardy,
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451. it was just saying bullshit to every question that you posed
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452. to it, like a stroppy pre-pubescent, basically.
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453. It's now...
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454. The question he asked was never, "Where's your man cave?"
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455. No, it never was.
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456. We just gave you some M's just because it's the M series,
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457. but there are plenty of others.
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458. Are they all like new words, because milkshake's been around
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459. for a long time, but has it got a new meaning that I need to learn?
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460. - Yeah.
- You're young.
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461. - Um, well...
- What is it?
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462. Well, Kelis sung, "My milkshake brings all the boys to the yard,"
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463. - didn't she?
- Yes, because she had like a van that sold milkshakes.
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464. If that's what you want to think she meant, that's what she meant.
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465. My dormitory at school had a milkshake club,
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466. but we won't go into that.
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467. It wasn't all like Enid Blyton, then, was it?
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468. No, no.
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469. Ooooh, where were we?
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470. Oh, yes. Good.
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471. And so we glide from the canyons of our minds into the clueless
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472. depths of General Ignorance.
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473. Fingers on buzzers, if you would.
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474. Do mushrooms prefer to grow in the light or in the dark?
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475. SARAH'S BUZZER
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476. Well, the thing's going to go off if I say in the dark,
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477. so I'm going to say in the light.
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478. - Oh, bugger!
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479. The answer is they don't prefer either.
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480. They grow just as well in dark, half light.
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481. They rarely express a preference. What would you like?
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482. Would you like the light on, or shall I leave it?
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483. Maybe a little bedtime story, be tucked in.
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484. But going by how much they thrive, it clearly doesn't make any
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485. difference, so why is it traditional to grow them in the dark?
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486. Because it's a dirty secret?
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487. Like if you have them in your house,
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488. it's not something you tell everybody.
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489. I've got mushrooms in the back bedroom.
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490. It's simply cheaper. We don't have to turn the light on.
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491. So you just shove them in a cellar or a dark room,
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492. somewhere you've got and they'll grow.
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493. - It's that simple.
- Oh.
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494. Not very exciting, but quite interesting.
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495. Magic mushrooms, double M, they have psychotropic,
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496. or at least hallucinogenic qualities, I believe, don't they?
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497. - Good Lord!
- Is that, we're now seeing that?
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498. That's horrible.
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499. But they have a disadvantage,
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500. which is that you get a terrible tummy ache,
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501. and what did people do in order to obviate this disadvantage?
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502. - I'm afraid...
- They'd make themselves sick, would they?
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503. Well, no, what they did is,
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504. they'd give the mushrooms to the village idiot.
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505. And he'd then have a pee and they'd drink the pee, which had all the...
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506. - No!
- .. had all the psycho-active properties.
- Wow.
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507. Who is the idiot in that scenario?
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508. I don't know. No.
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509. It is very unfortunate.
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510. Are we the only creatures who are affected by eating magic mushrooms?
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511. Like, if a cow went into a field full of magic mushrooms, and ate
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512. them all, will it have some moments of insight
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513. that it would be impossible to share with us,
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514. the whole town would gather round him there.
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515. Moooo!
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516. "I don't get it, I don't get it."
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517. Moo!
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518. - And there was a...
- Are you trying to tell us something?
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519. There was a theory that Jesus Christ...
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520. .. was a magic mushroom.
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521. He actually was a mushroom?
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522. I mightn't have remembered this entirely correctly, but...
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523. Does your dad deny this story?
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524. There's a thing called the Amanita muscaria, which is the,
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525. it's the notion of using mushrooms as a means to transcendence.
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526. - Right.
- And I don't know the rest of the story.
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527. Oh! You heard it here first, ladies and gentlemen.
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528. Yes, mushrooms are grown in the dark to save electricity.
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529. So, with that we stagger dazed and confused into the most
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530. mind-numbing and mind-bending subject of all, the QI scores.
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531. Oh, how interesting they are. My goodness me.
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532. In fourth place, with a very respectable -22,
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533. is Josh Widdicombe.
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534. In third place, with a splendid -18 is Sarah Millican.
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535. He's achieved heights that may require oxygen,
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536. on -6, it's Alan Davies.
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537. - Thank you very much.
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538. What a debut, Tommy Tiernan on 2!
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539. Plus 2!
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540. Thanks to Sarah, Josh, Tommy and Alan.
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541. Oh, I nearly forgot our memory test.
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542. Oh, how ironic. Can we turn the cameras onto the audience?
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543. Let's see by a show of hands which words you remembered me saying.
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544. Who remembered the word bed?
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545. Oh, most of you, that's pretty good.
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546. Snooze?
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547. Pretty good.
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548. Sleep?
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549. Oh, audience.
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550. No, I didn't say sleep,
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551. I said words so closely connected to it that it was easy to force
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552. yourself into the memory of thinking that I did say it.
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553. So you all encountered a sort of false memory planting there.
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554. If you don't believe me,
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555. you'll just have to watch the show all over again, won't you?
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556. So, from me, from all of us, thank you and goodnight.
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