1. Hello and welcome to QI.
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2. We hope to prove Oscar Wilde's
theory, there are only two kinds
of interesting people,
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3. those who know everything
and those who know nothing. Tonight,
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4. we have four kinds of people, only
one of whom fits either category.
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5. Alan Davies, Bill Bailey,
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6. Linda Smith and Richard E Grant.
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7. The rules are straightforward.
I am omnipotent, omniscient
and have a low boredom threshold.
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8. You're interesting,
or there'll be trouble. You can
at least make an interesting noise.
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9. Richard goes:
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10. Linda goes:
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11. Bill goes:
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12. Alan goes:
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13. And I go - let's go!
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14. Fingers on buzzers
for art and entertainment.
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15. Why don't pigeons
like going to the movies?
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16. Yes, Bill?
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17. Well, I dunno. Pigeons don't go
to the movies... cos not much
is made with them in mind.
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18. Cos they're much more into
German Expressionism.
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19. What's the lifespan of a pigeon?
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20. Humph! You've got me there.
Nine, ten years?
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21. A fair old time. They can only see
a U film. That's true. Very true.
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22. But... birds don't fly at night,
do they?
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23. They do in some cities. Owls do.
Yes.
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24. They don't go to the cinema. They
spend all their time looking behind.
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25. So they can only go in the day. Yes.
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26. To a U film. It's narrowing it down.
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27. Richard?
They're allergic to popcorn.
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28. Open-air cinemas where I grew up,
pigeons exploded from eating it.
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29. It's becoming increasingly hard
to verify. It is hard to verify.
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30. You grew up in Swaziland?
Yeah. Pigeon country
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31. Are there pigeons there? A lot!
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32. That's so convincing! It's not true,
but I like it.
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33. What happens
if a pigeon looks at a film?
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34. Eyes on the side of the head.
Like that! No.
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35. No.
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36. They'd perch on the back of a chair
and can't see straight ahead, so
he'd keep looking from side to side.
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37. No. Pigeons have extraordinarily
good eyes. Do they? Yes.
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38. Homing pigeons. They can see their
home from across the Channel.
They can see landmarks from high up.
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39. Look! There's my house. No.
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40. Landmarks they see well. Like birds
of prey. Their eyesight's
ten times better than ours...
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41. Do they prefer to see it on DVD
with extra interviews? How does
film work? How does film work?
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42. Lots of pictures going quickly.
Quickly to us!
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43. But to them it's going slowly.
It's a slide show.
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44. It's a slow slide show. We see
24, 25 frames a second as movement.
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45. They'd need, it has been calculated,
and maybe even demonstrated,
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46. 250 frames a second. Ten times more,
for it to be a coherent image.
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47. So they'd be bored stiff.
They watch The Matrix thinking,
"When is something gonna happen?"
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48. Exactly! Merchant Ivory film,
what's going on?
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49. Who is funding research
into what pigeons like?
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50. Lines of pigeons
in the pictures all yawning!
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51. Pigeons saved lives as carriers
right up to the Second World War.
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52. So we reward them with a cinema?
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53. We're rewarding ourselves
by researching all kinds of
pigeon-related data.
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54. When the Pathe News chicken appears,
do they go "Bah!"?
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55. For example, I could tell you
it cost £105,000 last year
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56. to clean up the pigeon crap
from Trafalgar Square. St Mark's.
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57. That's St Mark's Square,
I think you're right.
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58. How have pigeons
got that sort of money?
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59. When you drive why does the pigeon
not jump out of the way
till the last minute?
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60. It's a fun game. It's proof of how
it sees the world slower than us.
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61. To them it's got acres of time.
And what noise do they make?
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62. O-cooh! Bet you can, you're good at
noises. Coo-oo! Crr-crr! Who's that?
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63. Crr-crr! Oh! Five points!
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64. Five! Very good.
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65. What was that? He got five points
for doing a pigeon noise!
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66. Miaow!
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67. Woof-woof! Arf-arf!
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68. Nothing like a pigeon at all!
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69. Pigeons go in other birds' nests.
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70. Like cuckoos? Is it cuckoos?
I think it may be.
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71. As in "a cuckoo in the nest."
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72. But I tell you what is interesting,
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73. what else is interesting about them?
They can suck. Yes.
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74. The only bird that can suck.
Is that how they raised £105,000?
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75. Pigeons can suck. All other birds...
Don't use straws? No.
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76. They scoop up with the lower part
of their beak and tip back.
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77. Exactly right.
I have parrots, you see. I know.
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78. But it's clearing up. Thank you.
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79. Pigeons can suck, but why would you
invite one to a picnic?
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80. To suck stuff for you?
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81. Go ahead, Richard. You don't think
of taking toothpicks on a picnic.
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82. So if you've got spinach stuck
in your teeth,
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83. if you grab a pigeon,
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84. and shove it to your face and "SSS"
like that, it sucks it out for you.
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85. I think it could be very useful.
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86. The real answer's
even more disgusting.
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87. Repellent. It's not
the front end of a pigeon.
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88. I think it's a practice that has
died out, but it was common up
until a couple of hundred years ago.
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89. What are the dangers on a picnic?
Wasps. Bees.
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90. Or worse? Ants. Ee-ooh.
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91. Bad company.
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92. Snakes? Adders.
It was believed
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93. that a pigeon's arse
would suck out the poison.
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94. So you get bitten, then you get a
pigeon. How do you tell it to suck?
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95. You wait for the pigeon to die,
apparently.
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96. Then you use another pigeon and
another. When the final one
survives, the poison's all gone.
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97. Can an adder's bite be that bad? No.
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98. That's the weird thing.
It'd have to be bad, wouldn't it.
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99. 1977 a girl died. That's the last
one. More people die from peanuts
than have died from adders.
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100. They're lethal, they are.
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101. Who discovered that a pigeon's arse
can suck poison?
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102. It goes back to Pliny the Elder.
Not him again!
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103. Everything he says is rubbish.
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104. Pliny the Elder had his own version.
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105. He simply tore open a live swallow
and apply it.
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106. Try this for size. Which living
creature has the largest brain
compared to its body size?
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107. Bill.
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108. Wasp?
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109. No. But not a bad guess.
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110. Not a wasp? A human? Oh, no!
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111. Oh, dear, oh, dear. Oh, dear.
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112. No, not a human. I'm afraid you
lose ten for that. Not a human.
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113. I haven't got ten! No.
A flea? Not a flea.
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114. Ant? Ah-ooh-ee!
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115. Ant! Right!
Is that how you award points now?
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116. How big is it, then? About...
The ant's brain, I mean.
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117. 6% of its body. The smallest brain
is an ostrich? They have tiny ones.
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118. You grew up with ostriches. You
were adopted by ostriches. I was!
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119. Can you make an ostrich noise? Yes,
but not for you! Make it for Linda.
I'd love to make it for Linda.
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120. If we applied the same percentage
to humans, our heads would be
three times larger than they are.
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121. We'd all look like William Hague.
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122. They reckon about 40,000 ants,
the size of an average colony,
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123. has the same amount of neurons
and brain cells as one human being.
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124. I had an ants' nest in my flat once.
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125. Did you? What did you do?
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126. I was fairly stupid because I saw
an ant and the next day I saw
an ant and thought, "There he is."
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127. The same one!
Did you give him a name?
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128. Then one day I moved the telephone
table and there were loads of them
there and they all went, "Argh!"
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129. Hoovered them, hoovered the lot.
No? Mm. They'd survive the Hoover.
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130. Well... Were you sucking them up
with a pigeon's arse? I would
have done if I'd thought of it.
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131. I'll give you the point if you can
tell me to the nearest hundred
how many species of ants there are.
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132. 100.
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133. 2,500.
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134. 8,000 is the answer.
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135. How good are they at life-saving?
What uses can you put an ant to
to save a human life?
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136. A synaptic connection lost in your
brain - stretch an ant across it.
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137. Very close, Bill.
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138. In ancient India, say you were
performing an ancient Indian
appendectomy or some such operation,
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139. what do you do the sew
the skin together?
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140. You take a soldier ant, pinch
the skin together and it bites.
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141. You cut its head off and it stays
in the right position as a stitch.
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142. The ant is a stitch.
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143. You have rows of ants as stitches.
They used them to great effect.
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144. Yeah, and then you reach up
to the top shelf... Ping!
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145. There's some of the kinds of ants
you use. They wanna watch
those peanuts. They're lethal.
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146. They could have
"antaphylactic" shock!
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147. Now!
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148. In Thailand, they use red ants
for something still today.
What might they do?
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149. Chutney.
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150. I'm thinking of interventionist
medical processes.
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151. Pour some red ants into an open
wound and they secrete an acid
which is antiseptic and painkilling.
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152. What about...?
On the other hand, Savlon.
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153. There are parts of Thailand, and we
must do something about it urgently,
where you can't get Savlon.
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154. Ants are cheaper and more available.
They could carry the Savlon...
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155. Very good.
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156. What do a greasy butcher,
a hog's snout and Gene Pitney
have in common?
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157. They can all hit top C naturally.
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158. Well... Because of the grease.
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159. Only experienced butchers have this.
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160. The grease that accrues
down their larynx and oesophagus
coats the vocal cords.
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161. So, the butchers, if they need to,
can hit a top C.
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162. If you've ever tried to kill a pig,
top C is what it hits naturally
and Gene has just always done it.
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163. Sadly not. None of it's true.
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164. With pigs you can have...
This is true.
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165. You can actually have pigs' organs,
pigs' valves, put into your heart.
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166. If you've got a dodgy heart valve,
they can put the valve from a pig...
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167. What are the chances of a young pig
getting killed in a bike accident
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168. and then carrying a donor card...
There's got to be millions
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169. A "donor kebab" card.
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170. No, I want you to think,
and there's no way you can get this
I suppose, unless you know.
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171. They're all types of apple. What
is a greasy butcher? It's an apple.
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172. A greasy butcher is
a sweet red eating apple. Ah.
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173. If an apple drops to the ground
and seeds and fruits itself,
the apples that grow from the tree
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174. are nothing like the parent,
like humans.
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175. In order to have types of apple you
have to graft from the same tree.
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176. It won't keep
the same species at all.
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177. In the jungle, if your torch
runs out of batteries,
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178. you can use apple peel and two heads
of soldier ants as electrodes.
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179. There's enough electricity within
the apple to run a battery for hours.
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180. You'd be hard-pushed
to find an apple tree in a jungle.
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181. That's true.
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182. What's the common factor between
apples and a game played
with headless goats? There is one.
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183. Bobbing for apples and bobbing
for... oooh, eurgh!
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184. Bobbing for headless goats.
It would help if you knew
where apples came from. Trees.
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185. Which country?
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186. Kent. Kent!
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187. There is a part of the world where
the first apple trees still exist.
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188. There's this one country...
The Garden of Eden. Well...
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189. There's no evidence it was an apple.
It never says "apple" in Genesis.
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190. It says, "The fruit of the tree
whereof I said thou shouldst
not eat." I haven't read it.
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191. It's hilarious.
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192. The first recorded game, as we know
it, that takes place on horseback
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193. involves a headless goat
instead of a ball.
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194. There were goals
and it was a marked pitch...
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195. China.
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196. It's one of those countries you've
heard of and couldn't draw on a map.
Tajikistan.
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197. Uzbekistan. Ooh!
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198. Kazakhstan. Right!
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199. Well done. Well done.
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200. I'll give you eight for that so
it takes you out of the minus zone.
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201. I now have zero. I missed the point.
They used headless goats...
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202. They have... ..to hit apples?
What do apples have in common with
a game involving headless goats?
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203. They both originated in Kazakhstan.
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204. From apples to something as American
as apple pie - dodgy presidents.
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205. Richard E Grant, this is for you.
What ghastly blot on his reputation
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206. did your namesake Ulysses S Grant
share with John Prescott?
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207. Er... they both had a condition
called "erectus permanentus".
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208. No, it's serious.
It is absolutely true.
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209. From the age of five,
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210. it's been at full woody mast
the whole way through.
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211. It's why John had to travel
that one mile in a Jaguar.
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212. Ulysses had the same thing
in a carriage trip from a small
18th-century mile to Washington.
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213. You've mentioned John Prescott's
Jaguar and you've mentioned
Ulysses S Grant in a wooden cart.
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214. Stick with that. Expunge woody
masts from your mind for the moment.
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215. Run with the idea of vehicles.
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216. Parking offences...
Speeding! Speeding.
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217. "Two-Jags Prescott" was banned
from driving for 21 days in 2001
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218. after he admitted going
more than 100mph on the M1.
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219. In previous years, he got nine
points on his licence for speeding.
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220. The best reason he came up with
was he didn't want his constituents
to catch cold waiting for him.
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221. "Three-buggy Grant" received
a speeding ticket while driving
his horse and buggy in 1869.
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222. He had to persuade the officer
in charge he was guilty and
he was fined £20. Was it a camera?
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223. You know, a bloke with a big black
hood over him going, "Hold it!"
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224. Watch the birdie!
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225. No, it was a sketch artist.
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226. They also both won
extraordinary prizes.
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227. Ulysses S Grant, as a boy, won a
prize for taming a pony in a circus.
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228. But the prize that Prescott won,
very odd. 1951, in Brighton,
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229. the Prescott family won
second prize... Knobbly knees?
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230. The Most Typical Family In Britain!
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231. They came second?
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232. It should've been first, as
the winning family was related to
the competition organiser.
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233. There's corruption, but
not on the part of John Prescott.
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234. Time to grapple with the unknown,
unknowable and the never known.
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235. What? Yes. Stuff that
no-one's ever known? Yes.
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236. We're gonna be asked about that?
We call the round General Ignorance.
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237. Which is the largest living thing
on earth?
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238. It is the blue whale.
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239. Sorry, Alan. Minus ten points.
It's not the blue whale.
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240. The largest LIVING thing on earth.
Um... It's a tree.
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241. It'll be a tree - like the redwood.
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242. Giant redwood, ladies and
gentlemen, not the sequoia-sequoia.
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243. Largest living thing on earth?
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244. France.
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245. Oh, dear me.
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246. My friend Marty's uncle Roy.
A mammoth. No.
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247. It's a honey mushroom.
The largest recorded specimen is...
Bigger than a redwood?
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248. The largest specimen is in the
Malheur National Forest in Oregon,
it covers 2,200 acres.
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249. One mushroom? It's between 2,000
to 8,000 years old.
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250. It was thought to grow in separate
clusters, but it is one organism
connected under the soil.
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251. Who was the first man to claim
that the earth goes round the sun?
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252. Copernicus?
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253. Not, not, not Copernicus.
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254. Galileo. Nor Galileo.
Galileo. Galileo.
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255. No, he will not do the fandango.
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256. I won't do it right.
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257. No. Sophocles. Archimedes.
Not Archimedes.
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258. Ogg the Clever.
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259. His name was Adistarcus of Samos.
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260. He runs a restaurant. He was
born in 310 BC. He's still alive?
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261. All 1,800 years
before Nicolaus Copernicus.
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262. Adistarcus suggested the Earth and
the planets travel around the sun,
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263. he calculated the size and distance
of the earth, moon and sun,
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264. and worked out that heavens
were not a celestial sphere,
but a universe of infinite size.
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265. Which African animal kills more
human beings than any other?
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266. Hippopotamus.
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267. Is the right answer. Well done!
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268. Though of course,
man kills more than any other,
but we were discounting man.
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269. There he is, the hippo.
Did you encounter many? I did,
and they're vegetarian too.
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270. They might chop you in half, and
then leave you. They're very fast.
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271. And on land. Doesn't the tsetse
fly kill more people?
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272. Or the mosquito? I think you're
right, mosquitoes have killed more
than anything else - wars even.
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273. One of them's going, "And I bit him
in half, but I'm a vegetarian!"
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274. Oh, I laugh!
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275. If you want to skin a
hippopotamus... It would be livid.
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276. Furious.
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277. If you put that skin on
some scales, how heavy would it be?
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278. 14 stone. No, a ton. A ton of skin?
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279. The skin weighs a ton, it's an inch
and a half thick and bulletproof.
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280. It accounts for 25% of the animal's
weight. It weighs four tons.
Like a bus?
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281. Like a bus or any other four ton
weighing thing. Yes, more or less.
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282. You have to say to him,
you've put on a bit of weight,
but they're really thick skinned.
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283. Have you ever smelled a
hippopotamus's breath? Diabolical.
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284. It's halitosis is part of its
weaponry. It's used as a warning
to keep other animals away.
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285. It's breath is so disgusting.
Oddly, a controller at BBC Two
did the same thing.
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286. Tusks, like the elephant and walrus
are made of ivory.
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287. George Washington
had hippopotamus tusk teeth.
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288. He must've had quite an overbite.
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289. "I've got hippo teeth, you know."
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290. They hang out by slow-moving fresh
water bordered by grass. This is
the same habitat favoured by humans.
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291. Most accidents occur either because
a hippo has whacked its head
on a paddle or something,
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292. gets very cross and overturns
the boat.
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293. Or because people are walking
when most hippos leave the water,
they're trampled on.
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294. It's not a dignified way to die.
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295. Who invented the telephone? I'm not
going to say. I'm not gonna say.
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296. I'm not gonna tell. No thoughts?
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297. Adistarcus.
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298. You're right to be suspicious,
because the answer is not
Alexander Graham Bell.
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299. Who was the first person to do two
baked beans cans and some string?
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300. Valerie Singleton invented the
phone. Valerie Singleton. Probably.
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301. I know Louis De Guerre
who invented photography...
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302. He's a typical bloke, see.
He invented photography,
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303. and a few of days later persuaded a
local barmaid to take her top off.
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304. That's blokes for you. "Photography,
this wonderful... phwoar!"
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305. Who invented the telephone then?
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306. Antonio Meucci. An Italian
scientist invented the telephone,
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307. perfected it by 1871,
couldn't afford the patent, but...
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308. it was being assessed for patent
and fell into the hands of
a young Alexander Graham Bell.
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309. Boo! He grabbed the chance
and patented it in his name.
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310. Meucci took him to court but died
before the judgement, leaving Bell
to claim his place in history.
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311. What do we say to Bell?
BEEP. Boo!
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312. Isn't that wicked?
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313. Isn't that as wicked as you get?
That's wicked.
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314. That's why were saving the energy.
Look at him. He doesn't know
how to use it!
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315. Probably works like this.
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316. "Hello!
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317. "Back in the old country,
I invented the telephone."
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318. This poor man deserves respect.
Interestingly, Bell said...
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319. He said, when asked what the future
of the telephone was, he said,
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320. "One day, there will be a telephone
in every town in America."
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321. What a wanker!
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322. My dad was shown around a computer
once, when he was a young man,
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323. and the guy said -
it was in the west country -
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324. "Right, this computer,
and we predict that in the future
there'll be eight of these."
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325. We could go on like this forever,
but we won't.
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326. Big round of applause for Richard
E Grant with 12 points! Thank you!
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327. I-I-I-In second place, with plus
five points - it's Linda Smith.
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328. In third place...
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329. with minus two points -
Bill Bailey!
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330. But our runaway loser,
with minus 18 is Alan Davies.
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331. That's it for another QI this week.
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332. Thank you to Richard, Linda, Bill
and Alan, and to show the spirit
of Adistarcus is still alive,
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333. here is the crisp description of
a solar eclipse from an Australian
aboriginal astronomer in 2002,
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334. "Kerosene lamp, belong Jesus,
gone bugger up."
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