1. Well, hello and welcome to QI,
the quiz show where the answers
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2. are much more interesting
than the questions.
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3. But the questions are completely
impossible. As I don't really expect
anyone to get any of them right,
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4. I shall be awarding points for
being interesting along the way,
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5. regardless of whether
the panel's answers are correct
or even relevant.
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6. So let's meet the panel who want to
commit intellectual suicide tonight.
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7. They are... Danny Baker...
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8. .. John Sessions...
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9. .. Hugh Laurie...
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10. .. and Alan Davies.
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11. Now each of our employees -
I can't really be doing
with the word "guests" -
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12. each of our employees
here tonight has a buzzer
in the time-honoured tradition.
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13. Danny goes...
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14. John goes...
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15. Hugh goes...
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16. Alan goes...
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17. And I go to Belgium
for which I profusely apologise.
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18. We've got a lot to do,
let's get on.
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19. Where better to start than
at the beginning with a round
of questions on Adam and Eve.
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20. Whether or not you believe in them,
they are quite interesting, which is
all we ask on this programme.
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21. As Woody Allen said, "How can I
believe in God, when just last week
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22. "I got my tongue caught in the
roller of an electric typewriter?"
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23. Carrie Snow, the American comedian
said, "If God was a woman,
sperm would taste of chocolate."
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24. Perhaps...
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25. I don't understand it either -
perhaps we should...
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26. How d'you know it doesn't?
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27. Oh, he knows!
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28. Damn!
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29. Erm... Perhaps we should believe
in Adam and Eve...
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30. Geneticists have established
that every woman in the world
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31. shares a single female ancestor
who lived 150,000 years ago.
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32. Scientists do actually call her Eve.
And every man shares
a single male ancestor dubbed Adam.
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33. It's also been established,
however, that Adam was born
80,000 years after Eve.
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34. So the world before him was one
of heavy-to-industrial-strength
lesbianism, one assumes.
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35. First question goes to Alan.
What is the connection between the
Archbishop of Canterbury's left ear
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36. and Adam's bellybutton?
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37. The ear and the bellybutton?
God, just as you said that,
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38. there was a painting came up...
We do this, I'm afraid.
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39. I'm not going to ask the name of the
painting, that would be an insult.
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40. Adam's on the left...
Yes, well done.
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41. That's his bellybutton there...
It would seem.
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42. And the Archbishop of Canterbury's
ear...
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43. The only time when I can ever think
you'd put your ear
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44. to someone's bellybutton would be
to hear if their tummy was rumbling.
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45. Yes. You'd go,
"Your tummy's rumbling,
you're hungry, aren't you?"
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46. True. Is that what it is?
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47. I don't want to astonish you
but I'm afraid it isn't.
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48. Adam had no bellybutton,
being the first man,
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49. and the Archbishop of Canterbury's
got no right ear!
- You're really good!
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50. He IS good! I'm going to give him
three points for that.
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51. The fact is, they're both purely
decorative. Adam of course, cannot
have had a navel cos he was created,
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52. he wasn't born so there wouldn't
have been an umbilical cord.
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53. So the Archbishop of Canterbury's
left ear is purely decorative?
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54. He described it himself,
"It's purely decorative",
because he was born
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55. deaf in the left ear
so it has no function.
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56. If his left ear is purely
decorative... Yes.
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57. ..it's very unimaginative for him
just to have an ear there.
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58. He could have had anything he wanted
there at all.
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59. A doughnut or another organ,
like a hand...
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60. ..a badminton racquet
or a shuttlecock.
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61. A road sign... Gazebo...
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62. ..a little chicklet.
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63. Or rather surreally,
a portrait of Van Gogh.
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64. Yeah, he could have had Van Gogh,
you see? That's brilliant!
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65. He'd have a little Van Gogh there,
as if to say, "D'you see?"
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66. Very good.
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67. Well, we've got something out
of the wreckage. I'm inclined...
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68. Who painted that picture?
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69. 1475 till 1564,
I hate myself for saying that,
but those are his dates.
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70. He's quite correct.
Michelangelo Buonarroti.
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71. We have to give five points
to Johnny Sessions
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72. for knowing the birth and
death dates of Michelangelo.
That's so sad!
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73. We also have to hate him,
incidentally. Yes!
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74. We are very impressed. He does this
at parties. When was Bruckner born?
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75. 1824, died 1896. You see?
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76. It's right, isn't that wonderful?
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77. Mahler. 1860, born July 7th
in Kaliste in Austria,
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78. died 1911,
in Kaliste in Austria.
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79. It's a sickness!
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80. It's a horrible sickness!
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81. I met a man the other day who said
he was a naval doctor. I didn't know
they specialised that much.
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82. According to Rita Mae Brown, if
Michelangelo had been heterosexual,
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83. the Sistine Chapel
would have been painted basic white
and with a roller.
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84. Erm...
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85. Danny, your question now.
After the Flood, God gave Noah
the right to do what to sheep,
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86. a right which he denied to Adam.
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87. Well, what do we know about Adam? We
know there was the forbidden fruit,
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88. it wasn't the forbidden sheep,
I know that much
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89. about Sunday school.
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90. To keep them, to mate, to farm
them... Well, he could not eat them.
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91. As simple as that! Really?
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92. That doesn't make any sense
because Adam,
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93. there would have been
a lot of sheep, but Noah's
down to the last two sheep...
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94. and God said, "S'all right,
if you fancy... a kebab...
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95. "have one on me", and Noah said,
"I'm not gonna eat the sheep,
God, you're out of your mind!"
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96. Eat them is the right answer
cos according to the Bible,
Adam and Eve were vegetarians
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97. told by God to eat
fruit and vegetables only.
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98. Some theological authorities
believe the forbidden fruit -
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99. not specifically named in
the Bible - was in fact a banana.
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100. It was only after the great Flood
when God made a new covenant
with Noah and said,
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101. "Every living thing that moves,
will be yours to eat."
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102. Somehow we got from there
to Bernard Matthews'
Golden Turkey Drummers.
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103. Here's one anyone can answer,
fingers on buzzers.
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104. Of whom was it said,
"Working with her was like
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105. "being hit over the head
with a Valentine card"?
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106. Ann Widdecombe.
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107. No! It's not her.
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108. In fact it was Christopher Plummer
on the subject of Julie Andrews.
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109. And this brings us
to a round about Andrews.
People called Andrew or Andrews.
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110. John, the painter Caravaggio... Yes!
.. was once arrested for throwing
artichokes at a waiter.
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111. Art historian Andrew Graham-Dixon
discovered something about
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112. Caravaggio's outrageous behaviour
on the tennis court. What was it?
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113. Caravaggio died in 1610...
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114. I think it was 1610,
and he committed murder
but Andrew's programme -
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115. not that we should talk
about other programmes,
that's far too incestuous...
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116. Well, that's what
the question is about!
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117. Sorting out why Caravaggio died
prematurely, possibly murdered
by those avenging him
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118. for the death of, Tomasino,
I think was the artist
he had a fight with...
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119. Yes. For those of you
who didn't watch it.
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120. That's good! Stay with us!
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121. And, erm... I'll give you five
points but... anybody else?
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122. What Caravaggio did
on a tennis court?
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123. He said,
"Enough with the square balls,
why don't we use my rounded one?"
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124. I'll have to tell you.
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125. He was beaten by a British player,
that's why they still talk about it
300 years later! Excellent!
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126. For almost 400 years, historians
have believed Caravaggio was
exclusively homosexual,
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127. and believed he murdered
a man called Ranuccio Tomassoni,
in a squabble over a tennis match.
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128. But it's another thought,
thanks to the pioneering work
of Andrew Graham-Dixon,
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129. that Tomassoni's death
was an accident
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130. and Caravaggio was only trying
to cut off his testicles,
not kill him.
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131. There you are. Yes.
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132. Over a tennis...? It was, yes!
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133. New balls, please!
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134. It's minus ten points.
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135. I don't even know who he is!
Oh, thank God you said that!
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136. See, to my mind,
that's not interesting enough!
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137. I was hanging in there!
Caravaggio's very interesting.
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138. He's perhaps one of the greatest...
I know about castration though!
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139. And it's to do with this...
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140. When they castrate a sheep,
they do it
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141. without breaking the skin
of the scrotum. Yes! Done it!
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142. I've done it! He has!
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143. And the testicles just fall
into the ball sack and then
they do the grape/sultana thing,
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144. become little shrivelly...
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145. You use an elastic band, don't you?
A little tiny...
I've got one on at the moment!
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146. The Prince A-A-Albert!
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147. Oh, Prince Albert,
now there's a story! Really?
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148. Really? He and Victoria,
they had masses of sex,
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149. nine children and they probably...
Maybe 100 times a night
for years and years and years.
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150. Till he died.
Stopped after he died. But, erm...
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151. Is that why the Albert Memorial,
has a great, big, tall...?
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152. I did a charity show
in the heyday of the Spice Girls
and there was a line-up afterwards
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153. with the Prince of Wales...
I was there! Were you?
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154. And d'you remember they asked him
whether or nor Prince Albert
actually did wear a Prince Albert?
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155. No! And the Prince said,
"Well, I have no idea
what a Prince Albert is."
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156. So I had to explain to him that it
was an item... Did you tell him?
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157. I didn't say it was a cock-ring,
I said...
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158. Well, what words DID you use?
A piece of jewellery
worn in an intimate area.
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159. "Oh, a cock-ring!"
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160. Let's tear ourselves back to
Caravaggio and Tomassoni if we can.
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161. The two men were rivals for
the favours of Fillide Melandroni,
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162. a beautiful female prostitute
for whom Tomassoni acted as pimp.
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163. Caravaggio had been commissioned to
paint her for an Italian nobleman.
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164. For an extra five points,
can you connect this...
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165. I will pass it round
if you need to handle or smell it...
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166. Fennel. .. with Italian homosexuals.
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167. Oh!
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168. Are there any Italian homosexuals
in the room?
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169. My dressing room number is 315.
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170. Is it fennel? It IS fennel.
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171. I'll tell you that, yes.
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172. Erm... Is it the street slang
for homosexual?
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173. Correct! Wow!
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174. Ten points.
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175. Look at that! You get...
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176. Yeah.
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177. What is it, though?
Cos there's a certain word...
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178. Finocchio, fennel in Italian.
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179. Like Pinocchio but with an F.
That's quite interesting!
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180. Yeah, it is! Good!
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181. Now to Hugh, still with Andrews,
according to Andrew Marshall's
recent book about Burma,
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182. a Burmese may well sidle up to you
and murmur...
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183. "Excuse me, sir,
but I see that your department store
is open even on weekends."
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184. What does he mean by that?
What's the game?
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185. Well, it's either too much
Len Deighton,
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186. and it means the microfilm
is under the seat, or...
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187. It's your flies are open
or something?
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188. Ten points, your flies are undone
is exactly what it means!
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189. Very good!
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190. Appropriately enough, this book on
Burma is called The Trouser People.
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191. To give you a foretaste, it quotes
the diary of Sir George Scott,
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192. the man who introduced football
to Burma in the 19th C.
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193. "Stepped on something soft
and wobbly. Struck a match.
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194. "Found it was a dead Chinaman."
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195. Those very much were the days,
weren't they?
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196. You wonder why the British are hated
around the globe.
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197. "Be upstairs, ready, my angel",
of course, was Burma. B-U-R-M-A.
Alan Bennett's...
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198. And Notlob as well.
Knickers off ready when I come home.
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199. That's Norwich.
Norwich! That's right!
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200. Oh, yes, Notlob's the other one,
isn't it? Oh, it doesn't matter,
that's Bolton!
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201. It's Norwich! The man...
is clinically insane.
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202. So, interestingly, while
double-checking this information
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203. about etiquette and Burma
on the internet,
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204. we came up with
the extraordinary information
that it's considered polite
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205. to express joy by eating snow,
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206. and to send unwanted guests away
by biting their leg,
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207. and normal behaviour
to wipe your mouth on the sofa.
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208. This is absolutely true,
the researchers were writing
this down with great excitement,
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209. only to discover in the end
that Burma turned out to be
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210. the name of a poodle belonging
to the author of the website.
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211. Now this third round
is about actors.
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212. After weeks of being pointedly
ignored on tour by Sir John Gielgud,
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213. Clive Morton, the actor,
plucked up the courage to knock
on his dressing room door.
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214. Gielgud opened it...
"Thank God it's you," he said,
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215. "for one dreadful moment
I thought it was going to be
that ghastly bore, Clive Morton."
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216. Now, why...? Hugh, yes.
Why does the actor Edward Woodward
have 4 D's in his name?
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217. Well...
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218. What are you doing? I'm sorry!
What are you doing?
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219. It was a spasm... He can't do that!
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220. Forget I'm here!
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221. It's quite interesting...
Good, it's what we're here for.
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222. kiwi fruit uses more than
its own weight in aviation fuel
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223. to get from
New Zealand to Europe.
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224. Very good.
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225. Five points. Wonderful.
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226. Another five points.
It sounds mad but is of course true.
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227. And regarding the Edward Woodward...
Yes. .. that's how you spell it!
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228. Let Hugh have a go!
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229. No, really, that's fine
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230. I was gonna say exactly that,
it's got that many Ds in it
cos that's his name.
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231. If you took the Ds out,
it would be a different name!
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232. Ewa Woowa! Exactly!
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233. It'd be Ewa Woo-woo!
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234. It's a sort of structural device,
like a joist,
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235. which stops his name collapsing
into the sort of spongy mass
of Ewar Woo-woo.
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236. On Edward Woodward
and John Gielgud...
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237. John Gielgud, when he first heard
the name Edward Woodward, said,
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238. "Interesting name,
sounds like a fart in the bath."
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239. Edward Woodward. It does.
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240. Yeah. Very good.
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241. But that means you get your points,
Hugh, naturally.
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242. Now, let's go back to
our actors' round. Which actor said,
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243. "One of my chief regrets in my years
in the theatre is that I couldn't
sit in the audience and watch me"?
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244. Oh, God, any of 'em!
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245. Well, hold on, I think actors
do bloody difficult jobs!
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246. And you know, it's quite easy
to sit there and...
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247. Fall asleep!
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248. What do you think?
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249. John Gielgud, I reckon.
No, it's not, actually.
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250. There's a very good story, though,
about Peter O'Toole,
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251. who was once getting drunk
in his Celtic hell-raiser days
in a pub in London,
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252. and it was throwing-out time
at lunchtime and he said,
"Let's go and see a play",
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253. and at one point
O'Toole nudged his friend and said,
"This is brilliant.
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254. "This is the bit where I come on.
Oh, bollocks!"
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255. But in fact...
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256. Erm... He wasn't, is the answer.
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257. It wasn't any of those,
it was another great -
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258. THE great Hamlet of his age,
if you're American -
John Barrymore.
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259. Oh. Barrymore also famously said,
"Love is the delightful interval
between meeting a beautiful girl
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260. "and discovering
that she looks like a haddock."
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261. Bearing in mind we want to be
in the bar BEFORE half ten,
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262. fingers on the buzzers
and identify the following.
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263. "They puff out their hair like
a cat, raise one front foot and then
hop menacingly from side to side,
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264. "roaring with all the fury
of a clogged drain."
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265. Yes.
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266. It's either... cats...
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267. .. or clogged drains.
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268. One or the other.
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269. It's actually anteaters. Oh!
Anteaters.
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270. Part of the elaborate play sequences
of young giant anteaters,
in fact, which is known as
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271. bluff charging. Oh. And
we're going to have a few questions
about anteaters. Mm.
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272. I'm going to start with you, Alan.
Oh!
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273. What would you do with a pencil
and a lesser anteater?
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274. Hours of fun!
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275. I'd probably try and make it
pick it up with its nose.
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276. And then if it really got
a good grip on it, I'd encourage it
to do a sketch or a note...
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277. I'd say, "Anything that's on
your mind, get it down now."
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278. It could go for 35 miles which is
how long an average graphite pencil
will, if you just go like that,
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279. all the way till there's nothing
left. Quite extraordinary!
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280. Five points!
He knows how many miles
a graphite pencil will write.
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281. Normal HB pencil, 35 miles.
However with an anteater...
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282. I can't get out of my head
the notion of inserting the pencil
somewhere in the anteater.
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283. Then there being a release
of hundreds of ants.
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284. Well, I tell you what it is.
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285. Anteaters have
enormously long tongues,
but tiny little mouths,
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286. which are about
the diameter of a pencil.
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287. Its tongue is around 16 inches...
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288. I nearly had me face off then
trying to do that!
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289. No, this way, actually.
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290. That's right. Not that way.
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291. I knew a landlord of a pub once,
he used to say to any female
customer that he liked the look of,
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292. "I've got a nine-inch tongue and
I can breathe through me ears."
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293. Wow!
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294. What a charmer!
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295. Now...
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296. That's the longest sustained laugh
I've ever heard in me life.
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297. It never went very high
but it just went on and on...
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298. A bit like the graphite pencil
of laughs.
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299. The 35-mile laugh.
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300. John, your question. Would you like
to be hugged by a giant anteater?
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301. Erm, probably not.
I would probably be eviscerated.
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302. Quite right.
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303. The anteaters, in order to claw open
the termite hill -
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304. I'm sorry, I'm getting very dull,
David Attenborough does it
so much better -
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305. but they have curly fingers
like that and they pull it apart.
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306. Once it is pulled apart
like a rather interesting pie
then they can get the tongue in,
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307. as Alan's friend in the pub
was talking about so sweetly...
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308. And... I think I've answered
the question. Absolutely right, yes.
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309. A hug from a giant anteater
is fatal to humans,
partly because of the fact
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310. that they are
also known as ant bears
because their hug is so fatal.
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311. They'd squash you! A squashing hug!
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312. Yeah, they break your ribs and...
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313. Have they been known
to attack humans?
Exit pursued by an anteater...
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314. In their defence...
They come up to you and go,
"John!" and then go, "Oh, no!
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315. "I didn't mean any harm!
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316. "I didn't mean any harm!
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317. "I don't know my own strength!"
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318. Hugh, how big is a dwarf anteater?
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319. Roughly? You can use your hands.
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320. Metric or imperial?
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321. A dwarf anteater is exactly the
same length as a dwarf-ant eater.
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322. Ah! Both species are 62ft.
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323. Actually, they're about the size
of a squirrel.
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324. Right, a 62ft squirrel...
About that sort of size.
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325. Well, they are similar to squirrels
because they spend a lot of time
in trees,
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326. and in South America, stewed
dwarf anteater is a popular dish.
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327. Fried or grilled baby squirrels
are popular in the US.
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328. But as someone pointed out
in a letter to the Telegraph,
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329. these fried or grilled squirrels
should contain a warning,
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330. "May contain nuts".
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331. Which I thought was lovely!
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332. Now there's just time for a quick
last round which is an assortment
called General Ignorance.
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333. Fingers on the buzzers, please,
for this quickfire round,
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334. ten points for a right answer,
minus ten for anything
I have written down here.
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335. Right. All righty. So.
Which country has the world's
highest suicide rate?
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336. Yes. Woof?
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337. It's always Sweden, isn't it?
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338. You always do Sweden, it's
one of those urban mythy things.
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339. It's not Sweden.
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340. Another one I read somewhere
is that a ship's captain
cannot marry people.
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341. Yes, I've heard that.
Never been true.
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342. Invented by screenwriters
or something.
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343. And lemmings don't jump over cliffs!
Herded together for a Disney film.
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344. Disney rounded up all these lemmings
and drove Landrovers at them...
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345. And that footage of them
going over the cliffs...
They don't do that!
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346. Five for being interesting
about lemmings. This man
is just a runaway interest.
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347. The suicide answer... I think -
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348. I don't know why - but did
somebody say Indonesia to me once?
They didn't,
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349. not currently as far as we know,
is it the correct answer either.
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350. It's actually... England.
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351. Not England, no. Spain?
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352. No! This could be rather
a long evening, couldn't it?
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353. It's actually Lithuania.
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354. Ah. Oh!
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355. 52 suicides
per 100,000 head of population,
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356. more than 13 times higher than
the United States, which has 4.1
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357. per 100,000, and six-and-a-half
times that of Britain, with eight.
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358. Nobody has any idea
why this should be.
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359. Is it because the capital
is so difficult to spell
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360. and to say and it's one of
those words that really doesn't...?
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361. Which is Vilnius, isn't it?
It's not that hard! It's tricky!
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362. I've an idea for a book.
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363. Can the audience please say Vilnius?
One two, three... Vilnius!
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364. I'm sorry, I was just looking
for an answer, I was desperate!
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365. Very good that you knew
the answer was Vilnius!
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366. Do you think
it would be interesting...?
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367. .. if you got all
of the suicide notes...
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368. .. and published them as a book?
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369. It might find out what the hell's
going on in Vilnius!
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370. "It's the food!"
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371. They're all sick of the food here!
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372. Clearly, again and again,
in the references...
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373. Erm... Your favourite painter coming
up now, Alan, in this question.
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374. What was Caravaggio's real name?
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375. It sounds like Italian
for Carphone Warehouse.
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376. It's a buzzer round.
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377. Fabio. Fabio.
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378. You'd think cos he travelled,
cos of killing people...
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379. it'd be Caraviaggio, like a lover
of travel. Very good. Dear travel...
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380. But it's not.
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381. His real name's Michelangelo.
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382. Oh, that IS something. Did
Derek Jarman make a film about him?
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383. He did indeed, called simply,
Caravagg-io.
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384. Interesting enough for a point?
No!
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385. Yes!
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386. Oh! Clearly it is!
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387. We're losing it!
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388. All right...
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389. Caravaggio took the name Caravagg-io
because his father Fermo Merisi
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390. was the steward and chief architect
of the Marquis of Caravag-g-gio.
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391. So...
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392. Who invented the steam engine?
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393. Yes. It wasn't, as a lot of people
think, George Stephenson. Right.
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394. I said who did?
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395. That person would be
a Mr Trevithick. Very good.
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396. Very good.
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397. Richard Trevithick
went into a pub one night
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398. and - this is true -
they built a steam engine and
they got it up to pressure
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399. and they went into a pub,
the whole gang of them,
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400. and they got absolutely slaughtered,
they forgot about the steam engine
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401. and it blew up and it took
about ten houses down. Good lord!
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402. Well, Richard Trevithick was
credited with the modern invention
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403. but the real answer is neither
of those, it was Hero or
Heron of Alexandria in 100AD.
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404. Oh...
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405. It was called the aeolipile,
or windball.
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406. Using the same principle
as jet propulsion,
a metal sphere spun round,
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407. steam-generated at 1,500rpm,
making it the fastest
rotating object in the world.
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408. The ancient Greeks found it
an amusing novelty, nothing more.
But none of them thought
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409. to put it together with the railway
which amazingly had been invented
700 years earlier...
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410. ..by Periander of Corinth...
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411. .. who had a railway.
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412. Yes. But not steam-powered.
Powered by human force. Amazing.
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413. Moving on...
I know something interesting!
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414. Stephenson's Rocket went at 30mph,
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415. and they were sure if you went
at 30mph and over you would suffer
irreparable brain damage,
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416. so they put fences alongside
the tracks so that passers-by
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417. wouldn't have to witness
anyone just losing it...
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418. I suspect... that the person
who came up with that notion
wasn't a medical doctor or anything,
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419. I suspect it was a fence-maker...
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420. It's astonishing what people think
causes illness.
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421. The Romans thought
buggery caused earthquakes. Really?
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422. If it's done right!
If it's done right!
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423. Lastly, what is the name of
the 23rd tallest tree in the world?
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424. Ho, ho!
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425. What, like a Christian name?
Or the type of...
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426. I'd call it Dave
or something like that!
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427. Giant redwood. Well, that is...
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428. That is the species, the sequoia,
the giant redwood. But its name...
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429. The lesser giant redwood.
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430. The 23rd lesser giant redwood.
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431. The answer is...
Oh, you'll kick yourselves!
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432. Again? Well, because it's... themed.
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433. The answer is Adam.
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434. Ohhh!
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435. First round? Remember that far back?
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436. - No!
- No.
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437. It's one of
the 30 named giant sequoias of
the Giant Forest in California
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438. and is named after the first man
so we come full circle,
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439. just in time for the final score.
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440. Ho, ho, ho!
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441. Alan...
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442. I've been really interesting!
You have been SO interesting!
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443. And you've made many new friends
here tonight.
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444. But you've only made
minus five new points. Brilliant!
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445. In third place, with ten, it's John,
and in second place with 11 is Hugh
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446. but our runaway winner,
with 18 QI points is Danny Baker.
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447. Thank you very much indeed.
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448. That about wraps it up for QI.
It only remains for me to thank
Danny, Alan, Hugh and John
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449. and to leave you with
something quite interesting.
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450. And it's this local titbit
from the Independent.
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451. An army bomb unit
was called to investigate
a suspicious-looking package
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452. outside the territorial army unit
in Bristol.
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453. They blew up, with a controlled
explosion, the package,
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454. only to discover
that it was a parcel of leaflets
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455. explaining how to deal
with suspicious packages.
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456. Good night.
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