1. Hello and welcome to the
Christmas shopping coke-trip
and office lunch edition of QI,
Copy !req
2. which, as tradition dictates,
takes place in mid-November.
Copy !req
3. Here's the people who'll be sick on
the pavement later - Phill Jupitus,
Copy !req
4. John Sessions, Sean Lock,
Copy !req
5. and Alan Davies.
Copy !req
6. The rules of Christmas are - we'll
be disappointed by what we get,
Copy !req
7. there'll be the usual long,
rambling argument,
one of us will sulk about losing,
Copy !req
8. and it'll all go on too long.
Copy !req
9. You've been given a strange present
by a mad aunt. Phill's goes...
Copy !req
10. John's goes...
Copy !req
11. Sean's goes...
Copy !req
12. Alan goes...
Copy !req
13. .. And I go to the lavatory
having eaten too many figs.
Copy !req
14. What would you do with a bag of
Gripples at Christmas?
Copy !req
15. You'd be the most popular person
at an S&M party.
Copy !req
16. Because a Gripple... it grips...
Copy !req
17. The Gripples have arrived!
Copy !req
18. It sounds a bit Northern.
Copy !req
19. It sounds like pork scratchings.
Originally you weren't supposed
to eat them.
Copy !req
20. You got a bag of them at Christmas
and it was like a pig Meccano set.
Copy !req
21. All the pork scratchings together,
Copy !req
22. and you'd have a whole pig. Add
water and it starts running about.
Copy !req
23. If I say Gripple,
Copy !req
24. I'd have to put "R" with a circle
round it, which would mean what?
Copy !req
25. A circle round your "R"?
Oh, dear. Oh, dear.
Copy !req
26. Why?
Copy !req
27. What's a circle with an "R" in it?
Registered trademark, dear!
Copy !req
28. Oh... I heard the word before at
an Evangelical ventriloquist act -
Copy !req
29. "And Jesus healed the Gripples."
Copy !req
30. It's the only time I've heard it.
Copy !req
31. At Christmas time you'd use it in
one of London's main thoroughfares.
Copy !req
32. What happens in London at Christmas?
Lights.
Copy !req
33. Lights in Regent's Street
use Gripples.
Copy !req
34. Like a bulldog clip. Yes - it's a
gripping device. A gripping device?
Copy !req
35. Yes - the longest fence
in the world uses Gripples. Does it?
Copy !req
36. An extra two points if you can
tell me the longest fence.
The great fence of China.
Copy !req
37. To keep people off the Great Wall.
Copy !req
38. Australia! Australia is right,
I'll give you two.
Copy !req
39. The great Dingo Fence -
5,000km long.
Copy !req
40. Gripples are small wire clips
made in Sheffield,
Copy !req
41. and are used to string up Blackpool
Illuminations, suspend Brazilian
coffee beans off the ground to dry
Copy !req
42. and to hold together
the world's longest fence.
Copy !req
43. Now, at the end of the programme
I'll be judging the QI Christmas
colouring competition.
Copy !req
44. I want you all to draw
a Christmas tree.
Copy !req
45. Now, a puppy is for life,
not just for Christmas as we know.
Copy !req
46. Apart from dogs, what was
the first domesticated animal
Copy !req
47. that you could have found
as a human being
nestled around your Christmas fire?
Copy !req
48. Johnny...
In the early days of Christmas,
Copy !req
49. turkeys would be brought into the
house and gathered around the tree
Copy !req
50. and stroked cos of
their lovely soft feathers.
Copy !req
51. Then suddenly they were ripped open
and an apple shoved up their arse.
Copy !req
52. It can be fun though.
Copy !req
53. I missed the question
cos I was sniffing the pens.
Could you repeat it?
Copy !req
54. Yes - which was the second species
of animals that humans domesticated?
Copy !req
55. Cat!
Copy !req
56. No. Prove it!
Copy !req
57. You'll have to take my word for it.
Hens? Nope. Cows. No...
Copy !req
58. He's on a list again. Gerbils,
hamsters, budgies... Sheep!
Copy !req
59. Sheep come in all colours.
Less common.
Copy !req
60. Rudolph! Reindeer. Oh, well done
Copy !req
61. Out of the air! When he said
"Rudolph" it reminded me...
Copy !req
62. of a red-nosed reindeer.
Copy !req
63. I must be more guarded
with my tongue!
Copy !req
64. I was just scared. That's why
you shouldn't be a teacher.
Copy !req
65. Right. One question...
reindeers were pets?
Copy !req
66. They were domesticated...
Copy !req
67. Did they have a big wheel in
the lounge for the reindeer to...?
Copy !req
68. A reindeer flap in the back door.
Copy !req
69. A massive water bottle
on the side of the house.
Copy !req
70. Tony Hancock once saw
a reindeer head on a wall
Copy !req
71. and says, "He must've been shifting
when he hit the other side of that!"
Copy !req
72. I'll give someone two points
for another name for reindeer.
Copy !req
73. A snow horse.
Copy !req
74. I call them snow horses
all the time. No...
Copy !req
75. A buck. In North America. Moose.
No. Elk. No.
Copy !req
76. Caribou! Thank you.
Copy !req
77. Wait! There we are.
Copy !req
78. About 14,000 years ago
hunter-gatherers, on what is
now the Russian-Mongolian border,
Copy !req
79. lured caribou
from their migratory groups...
Copy !req
80. "Pssst! Caribou! Pssst! Caribou!"
Copy !req
81. Ever been to Mongolia?
I'm being a caribou now... "Me?"
Copy !req
82. That's how they lured them away.
Copy !req
83. Very nice. Excellent.
Copy !req
84. And they were, to those early
tribes, a walking corner shop,
Copy !req
85. offering meat, milk,
fur for clothing, friendship...
Copy !req
86. Today there are about three million
domesticated reindeer.
Copy !req
87. Most are in Lapland,
and the Lapps, who herd them,
prefer to call themselves the Saami
Copy !req
88. even though it means "the plebs"
in ancient Swedish.
Copy !req
89. Why would a male reindeer
fancy Rudolph?
Copy !req
90. The female genital organs
will be round and bright red,
Copy !req
91. much like Rudolph's nose.
Copy !req
92. That's why the male's attracted -
he thinks it's female genitalia.
Copy !req
93. Ooh... quite an intelligent
answer. It's not true but it's good.
Copy !req
94. Why would a male reindeer...
Copy !req
95. Rudolph was a girl.
Copy !req
96. Yes - it's the right answer. Wow!
Copy !req
97. We know this because
in representations
of Rudolph at Christmas Eve
Copy !req
98. he has antlers,
and only female reindeer
have antlers at Christmas time.
Copy !req
99. The male reindeer shed their
antlers at the beginning of winter.
Copy !req
100. So they must all be female,
or possibly eunuchs. Castrated
male reindeer keep their antlers.
Copy !req
101. Also you'd see the silhouette of
their bollocks as it passed the moon.
Copy !req
102. They really do have
great big ball sacks.
Copy !req
103. They're enormous! Yes.
They swing about.
Copy !req
104. I've been behind a caribou...
Copy !req
105. ..in the Rocky Mountains. And you
noticed its plums? They swing about.
Copy !req
106. Like a bag full of Gripples.
Copy !req
107. The only other ball sack
I've seen that was comparable
Copy !req
108. was on a red kangaroo. Really?
Copy !req
109. It was laying in the sun... Are you
a SIZEmologist? You brought it up.
Copy !req
110. It was laying in the sun
scratching its nads.
Copy !req
111. At Christmas he got
an I-Spy Nackers Of The World.
Copy !req
112. Tick the box.
Copy !req
113. "Oh, I've seen the park keepers."
Copy !req
114. "That's quite a rare one."
Copy !req
115. I always misunderstood
those Spot The Ball competitions.
Copy !req
116. That's enough reindeer. Why, Alan...
Me?in days of yore
Copy !req
117. did the people of rural Yorkshire
gather near their beehives
late on Christmas Eve?
Copy !req
118. It's probably some kind of
money saving...
Copy !req
119. Well done for for alienating the
largest county in England. They
won't be alienated. They're proud.
Copy !req
120. You've got
no common bloody sense, that's why!
Copy !req
121. You're in trouble now.
I don't care.
Copy !req
122. I hate those Bernard Ingham types
who go on about common sense.
Copy !req
123. It drives me BLEEP nuts!
Copy !req
124. Sorry.
Copy !req
125. I agree.
Listen to the Queen's speech.
Copy !req
126. I like that, that's very good, Sean.
Copy !req
127. They gather round in a huddle
around the hives
Copy !req
128. and listen to the mmmmmm and go,
Copy !req
129. ".. Two, three...
♪ Kum by ya, my Lord,
kum by ya... # "
Copy !req
130. You're just about right.
You're having a laugh!
Copy !req
131. Not exactly but just about -
they listen for the humming.
Copy !req
132. They believed the bees would start
humming to mark Christ's birth
at midnight on Christmas Eve.
Copy !req
133. Honey, as you know from Yeats' poems
is often associated with semen.
Copy !req
134. I just thought I'd throw that in.
Copy !req
135. Because they take it onto their
boats when they're sailing. Yes.
Copy !req
136. Good. Erm...
Copy !req
137. They would have a dale in
Yorkshire where the bees would hum
Copy !req
138. and even the bees, according
to the Yorkshireman who claimed
they hummed at midnight,
Copy !req
139. even after 1752, when the calendar
changed and 12 days disappeared,
Copy !req
140. the bees saw the change from the
Julian to the Gregorian calendar
and still buzzed on Christmas Eve.
Copy !req
141. Your brother's killed your kestrel,
go and warm up me bees.
Copy !req
142. The Romans called York "Eboracum"
which I thought was
a misunderstanding of locals
Copy !req
143. saying, "Eee, where I come..."
Copy !req
144. Anyway, why might you have thought
twice about accepting a mince pie
Copy !req
145. if it was made in 1657.
Copy !req
146. Yes, Phill. Cos that's three
minutes before tea time and it'd
spoil your appetite. Very good.
Copy !req
147. The year of our Lord, 1657.
Copy !req
148. Let's look at the date - 1657 is a
year before the death of Cromwell...
Copy !req
149. Very good. Erm... who was
a huge hater of poofs.
Copy !req
150. So if you were to put your hand,
even it wasn't in
a Cecil Beaton kind of way,
Copy !req
151. near a mince pie, it might be enough
to indicate you were a lover of
the lavender passageway.
Copy !req
152. Yes... Which led to the euphemism
"slinging the mince pie
up the lavender passageway".
Copy !req
153. "Brandy butter?"
Copy !req
154. Remember Oliver Cromwell was
running the country. He banned them.
Copy !req
155. Yes, he did. No mince pies for
anyone. No, but for a particular
reason. It wasn't sexual. Phill?
Copy !req
156. Cromwell, commonwealth... made his
own money and they were big coins,
Copy !req
157. big, big coins, massive.
Copy !req
158. One of them in a pie, oesophagus...
Aaaaaargh!
Copy !req
159. Mince pies were served to symbolise
something that Cromwell opposed.
Copy !req
160. Catholicism!
Five points to that man there.
Copy !req
161. Catholics used them as discreet
ways of displaying their membership
Copy !req
162. of the mother of churches. Who's he?
Copy !req
163. He's some species of cardinal,
by the look of it.
Copy !req
164. So they're not Siamese twins
that have just been separated?
Copy !req
165. What made him do that?
That's a blessing. Is it?
Copy !req
166. Waiting for someone to throw the pie.
Copy !req
167. He's at the other end
of the lavender passageway.
Copy !req
168. Mince pie, please.
Copy !req
169. They were hated papist symbols.
It was derived from the pastry
Copy !req
170. sweetmeats given by the people
of Rome to the priests
in the Vatican on Christmas Eve.
Copy !req
171. The English versions were often
topped with graven images
Copy !req
172. and baked in the shape of a crib
and a little pastry baby Jesus.
Copy !req
173. In the mountains of Nuremberg...
Germany! Well done
Copy !req
174. Where they have the rally?
That's right, sadly discontinued.
Copy !req
175. .. There's a village there whose
name means "eavesdropper" in German.
Copy !req
176. What did this village
provide for over 100 Christmases?
Copy !req
177. War criminals.
Copy !req
178. Oh, dear.
Copy !req
179. The old tradition
of roasting a war criminal.
Copy !req
180. Glass of sherry, cheers.
Copy !req
181. Compliments of the season.
Copy !req
182. I was away all night.
Copy !req
183. Anybody got a...
Copy !req
184. Having a barbie. You're having
a Klaus. Yeah, a Klaus.
Copy !req
185. Come round, we got a Klaus on the go.
Copy !req
186. Santa Klaus. So... Um...
Copy !req
187. Instantly one thinks of Wager's
last operas, Die Meistersingers.
Copy !req
188. Yes. Would they possibly
have provided the world with, um...
Copy !req
189. the leading song meister,
the liebermeister in the opera?
Copy !req
190. No, no, no, it wasn't. No, no.
Copy !req
191. You said what everybody else was
thinking but in fact...
Copy !req
192. Walnut whips? No. Christmas time
for 100 years, this village
devoted itself to...
Copy !req
193. Brazil nuts? the manufacture
of an object. You can't manufacture
Brazil nuts in a German town!
Copy !req
194. Come on! Baubles, tinsel...
Baubles is the right answer.
Copy !req
195. The only place
that made baubles? Yes.
Copy !req
196. Between 1840 and the end of WWII,
a single German village - Lauscha -
Copy !req
197. and lauscher is German
for eavesdropper,
supplied the globe with them.
Copy !req
198. Local glass makers had the idea
that glass balls are cute on a tree.
Copy !req
199. It became the village's principle
exports with almost every house
converted into a small factory.
Copy !req
200. At its peak, 95% of Christmas tree
balls in America came from Lauscha.
Copy !req
201. Do you think Hitler's tree
only had one ball hanging on it?
Copy !req
202. They like it. They like it.
Copy !req
203. What Christmas tradition
did American insurance companies
try to ban in 1908?
Copy !req
204. I was given this thought earlier,
I've got this actually.
Copy !req
205. They banned the placing of dimes
in Christmas puddings because too
many people were choking on them.
Copy !req
206. No. An intelligent answer, oddly
nothing to do with Wagner but...
Copy !req
207. It's not right.
Copy !req
208. Did you know, the first ever
life insurance policy
was taken out in about 1863.
Copy !req
209. A man called, was it Stanley
Gibbons? No, he was the stamp guy.
Copy !req
210. He's called Gibbons, he insured
his life for £383 for a year.
Copy !req
211. He died four weeks
short of the year.
Copy !req
212. His family turned up to claim
the first policy and the 16
underwriters all got together
Copy !req
213. and they decided the only way to
avoid paying this HUGE sum of money,
Copy !req
214. was to define a year
on their own terms.
Copy !req
215. They decided a year
was 12 times four weeks,
Copy !req
216. that's a month approximately.
Copy !req
217. So they said by strictly defining a
year, he'd lived for the full term.
Copy !req
218. They've changed now, haven't they?
Yes.
Copy !req
219. They love to pay out, "To hell with
the small print, here's your money."
Copy !req
220. I've an image of a black and white
Christmas film, with live candles.
Copy !req
221. Five points, quite right.
Copy !req
222. Chicago Hospital burned down in
1885, the whole hospital, because
of a candle on a Christmas tree.
Copy !req
223. Three separate Father Christmases
died, this isn't funny...
Copy !req
224. by picking presents up
from under the tree
and their beards catching fire.
Copy !req
225. Here's a Christmas to remember.
You're that kid,
Santa bends down, comes up, "Argh!"
Copy !req
226. When Paris was under siege in 1870
from the Prussians,
the food ran out.
Copy !req
227. What Christmas dinner was
improvised by Voisins, the
fashionable Parisian restaurant?
Copy !req
228. Ratatouille.
Copy !req
229. Well, there you are.
Oddly enough you're right again.
Copy !req
230. Ratatouille. They raided
the zoos and sewers
Copy !req
231. and prepared things
like consomme of elephant,
Copy !req
232. braised kangaroo, antelope pate,
polecat garnished with rats!
Copy !req
233. In China, during famines they
improvise. There's a famous
Chinese dish called Three Squeak.
Copy !req
234. They get a pregnant rat,
wait for it to have its babies.
Copy !req
235. It's called Three Squeak
because it squeaks three times.
Copy !req
236. Once when you pick it up, eek! Once
when you dip it in chilli sauce, eek!
And once when you bite into it, eek!
Copy !req
237. Three Squeak. Two points
for fascinating information.
Copy !req
238. If you time it right,
you can do the Birdie Song.
Copy !req
239. Excellent.
Copy !req
240. Can I tell you my joke? Please do.
Copy !req
241. Sir John Gielgud was directing an
actor in the West End. The actor was
pausing a lot, as young actors do.
Copy !req
242. Gielgud said, "Stop. No, you must
never pause. I paused many years ago
Copy !req
243. "and in the silence I heard
a voice in the third row go,
Copy !req
244. 'Oooh, hideous beast, you've
just come all over my umbrella!'"
Copy !req
245. That's very odd.
That's fantastic.
Copy !req
246. Time to bang our heads against
the brick wall of understanding
in the quick-fire round.
Copy !req
247. Which is the odd one out -
Paris, London, Poland or Banana?
Copy !req
248. Phil. Poland and banana because
"Down And Out In Poland and Banana"
would be a terrible book.
Copy !req
249. Yes? It's got something to do with
Help The Aged. They've got branches
in Paris, London, Polandbanana...
Copy !req
250. Hitler never invaded
or planted a banana.
Copy !req
251. That's true.
None of them is the odd one out.
Copy !req
252. Do you know why?
Copy !req
253. What kind of hellish quiz is this?
Copy !req
254. Fair point. "What one's the odd one
out? None of them! Hah-hah!"
Copy !req
255. Hah-hah! Is that me? That's you.
Oh, bugger you!
Copy !req
256. I don't sound like that. Baa-baa.
Copy !req
257. What else is called Christmas?
Islands. Ha!
Copy !req
258. Where the bananas grow. No. Or
don't grow. No. Where the Pope grows.
Copy !req
259. They're in the Christmas Islands.
There's a place called London,
Paris, Poland and Banana.
Copy !req
260. It's the largest atoll in the
Pacific and has the fastest growing
population in the world, 7.7%.
Copy !req
261. What is the youngest age
that a child can have
Copy !req
262. a pint of mulled wine
or a double brandy in
a restaurant beer garden in the UK.
Copy !req
263. 18. Oh, dear. No, no.
Copy !req
264. 12, if you met them on the internet.
Copy !req
265. Oh, dear, dear.
Copy !req
266. You can't have double brandy
in a pub unless you're 18.
Copy !req
267. Five years old. What?
Five years old.
Copy !req
268. It's only illegal for children
between five and 18 to consume
alcoholic drinks in the bar.
Copy !req
269. A place defined by the law as
chiefly or exclusively for the sole
consumption of alcoholic drinks.
Copy !req
270. Pub restaurants and gardens
don't count, provided the child
has the drink bought by an adult.
Copy !req
271. How does the child
get the round in then?
That's the beauty of being a child.
Copy !req
272. That's how the practice died out.
Copy !req
273. Drink, drink, drink, not you...
drink, drink, not you either.
Copy !req
274. Where does Santa Claus come from?
Copy !req
275. From Saint Nicholas.
Copy !req
276. Saint Nicholas. Yes what place?
The Bohemia, Czechoslovakia. No?
Not quite.
Copy !req
277. Any thoughts? Russia.
Um... he's an Aborigine. No.
Copy !req
278. Woking? No. Lapland. Bavaria.
Copy !req
279. Oh dear, oh dear.
Copy !req
280. And I saw "North Pole" on there...
Copy !req
281. Turkey. Yes. Bingo.
Copy !req
282. That is the old Saint Nicholas.
Ha-apy Christ-mas.
Copy !req
283. Vine leaves! Sinta Klaas,
as they call him in the Netherlands.
Copy !req
284. Sinta Klaas Ist Anch Kommt
is a little song...
Copy !req
285. I'll give you points if you tell me
where precisely our modern view
of Father Christmas comes from.
Copy !req
286. Does it derive from
the Gemuetlichkeit culture
Copy !req
287. that Prince Albert brought
to Britain in the 1840s?
Copy !req
288. Again you're chiming with the
thought that fills the room, but no!
Copy !req
289. The Gemuetlichkeit culture
is not an issue here.
Copy !req
290. I must take you to the year 1822.
Copy !req
291. When Schubert wrote
the unfinished symphony.
Copy !req
292. A poem was written which gave us
for the first time ever recorded,
Copy !req
293. the idea of the white beard, red
coat, the stockings, the chimney.
Copy !req
294. Americans quote it every Christmas.
Copy !req
295. 'Twas The Night Before Christmas.
Copy !req
296. Clement Clarke Moore was professor
of Hebrew. The poem was called
A Visit From St Nicholas.
Copy !req
297. Off his face on laudanum. "A big
fat man with a beard and red coat...
Copy !req
298. "Ha-ha-ha-ha, this is fantastic!
Copy !req
299. "He's got a sack full of Gripples!
Copy !req
300. "Presents, presents."
Copy !req
301. It's almost goodbye but not before
the QI Christmas
colouring competition.
Copy !req
302. Gentlemen, can I have your trees?
Copy !req
303. Johnny's is brilliant, that's
minimalist. It's a long way away.
Copy !req
304. I'm particularly impressed,
I have to say, with Sean.
Copy !req
305. Alan, surprisingly, has fallen into
the trap into which we all fall -
Copy !req
306. which is supposing
that the branches go down!
Copy !req
307. We'll ask Jamie to come on
with a Christmas tree.
Copy !req
308. That's a beauty, isn't it!
Copy !req
309. You'd think he'd find a better one
in the middle of winter.
Copy !req
310. The point is the branches go up.
Was I holding it like that?
Was I holding it like that? No.
Copy !req
311. We have to agree the runaway winner
from Johnny Sessions, look at that.
Copy !req
312. It's time for the final scores.
Copy !req
313. I'm afraid in last place, Alan...
Hmm? it's Alan, minus six.
Copy !req
314. I'm so sorry.
Copy !req
315. In third place,
Phill Jupitus with five.
Copy !req
316. In second place with seven,
it's Sean Lock!
Copy !req
317. But four times better than that,
our impressive runaway winner
with 28 points, John Sessions!
Copy !req
318. I'll leave you with this seasonal
inquiry made last Christmas
by an elderly American couple
Copy !req
319. in the tourist office
at Stratford-upon-Avon.
Copy !req
320. "The map is great but could you
show us the quickest route
to Shakespeare's manger?"
Copy !req
321. Merry Christmas, everyone.
Copy !req