1. Hello and welcome to QI -
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2. the quiz that asks,
if ignorance is bliss
why aren't there more happy people?
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3. Joining me are four people who do
not know the meaning of "ignorance",
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4. Alan Davies, Linda Smith,
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5. Sean Lock and Clive Anderson.
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6. The rules are
as simple as my underwear -
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7. out of generosity, I give the panel
points for being interesting.
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8. None of us will be wiser
but will go home cheerful.
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9. There are no wrong answers, only
boring ones, which attract this...
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10. The panel can draw attention
to themselves. Clive goes...
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11. Sean goes...
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12. Is that it? Linda goes...
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13. And Alan goes...
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14. 'Ello?
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15. And I go,
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16. Gozo's the second largest town
in Malta... and that sort of stuff!
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17. So the first question. Alan,
an elephant walks into a bar.
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18. What do you offer it to drink?
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19. An ACTUAL elephant? Imagine. It's
not a euphemism for something else?
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20. No, no! One of those,
as in behind you.
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21. A pachyderm.
Should a pachyderm go into a bar...
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22. Yes, it's... They don't drink.
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23. What don't they drink? Anything.
They get all their moisture
from the grass,
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24. which is the only reason
that you never see them in the pub!
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25. They don't get enough moisture,
because they've got wrinkly skin.
Because they don't drink.
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26. THE shots of them round water holes,
they're just acting, putting it on?
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27. No, they squirt it on each other.
Uggh!
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28. Perhaps it is
some kind of euphemism, then!
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29. When we say, "Do you drink?
Is he a drinker?"
we mean usually... Alcohol.
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30. They DO drink alcohol.
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31. They eat fruit, it ferments,
and they get drunk.
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32. You've got five points.
That's the answer?
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33. It is. But you shouldn't
offer them alcohol,
because elephants get stroppy.
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34. They can smell ethanol, fermenting
in fruits, from ten miles away.
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35. And the effect is catastrophic.
So you can offer them any drink?
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36. But they become uncoordinated,
aggressive...
Do they take it down the trunk?
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37. After a few drinks
they'll take it anywhere!
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38. But I think I have seen an elephant
with a bottle of beer,
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39. taking it and tipping it back.
So fruit-based, like alco-pops?
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40. A Breezer not a Guinness? Do you
think they see pink human beings?
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41. Yes.
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42. Humans are pink! You're right.
They see blue ones!
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43. They have miniature,
frozen humans in their drink.
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44. You shouldn't offer them alcohol.
200 people a year
die from elephant rampages...
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45. When they're drunk? Many of them.
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46. Do they drink to forget?
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47. Very good. Excellent.
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48. Now a question from the National
Curriculum - grade 4, section 14,
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49. English Language, Literature
and Ring-roads.
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50. Clive, describe either James Bond's
Bradford or his vespa.
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51. Is James Bond's Bradford a bit like
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52. James Hewitt's Yorkshire
or Thomas Hardy's Wessex?
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53. Is it just rebranding?
James Herriot rather than Hewitt!
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54. I sensed I got it wrong there but
I couldn't... Put your finger on it.
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55. Is it an item of clothing,
or a briefcase or shoes?
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56. That's closer than... Anything
I said! the city in Yorkshire.
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57. Is it...? What is he famous for?
Martinis. Yes!
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58. Ian Fleming worked in the Naval
Intelligence in the war. He did.
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59. Is that interesting enough
for a point? It's well known, dear!
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60. Did I call you "dear" then? Yes.
Sorry.
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61. Don't know how that happened.
I do apologise.
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62. It is the official name for a
martini that is shaken not stirred.
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63. Most martinis are stirred,
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64. but when shaken it's a Bradford.
There's specific names.
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65. With two olives on a stick it's a
Franklin, after Franklin Roosevelt.
A cocktail onion on a stick is a...
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66. A cocktail onion on a stick!
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67. Obviously it's called something!
The Gibson. Because the Bradford
contains three measures of Gordon's,
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68. one measure of a vermouth
called kina lillet -
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69. although I'm sure it must be
pronounced "lee-a".
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70. Put a Lil-let in there and
you wouldn't have any drink left!
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71. If someone offered me a drink called
a Bradford I'd assume it was a vodka
and a rasher of streaky bacon!
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72. Or a pork pie
on a knitting needle.
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73. Is there an official place
for this name? Why's a rusty nail
a rusty nail?
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74. And all the Collins family
have drinks named after them?
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75. The first Bloody Mary was in St
Regis Hotel in New York and was
actually called a Red Snapper.
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76. A fish!
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77. They called a Virgin Mary
a "bloody shame", which is rather
good. That's very good.
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78. I'll have a Bloody Shame.
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79. Cocktails started in prohibition
because gin was so gut-rotting
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80. that all kinds of additions
were made to it.
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81. Bond insisted on a shot of vodka.
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82. It's normally six of gin
to one of vermouth.
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83. He added vodka,
which makes it not a martini.
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84. And Bond gave his a name, a vespa.
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85. There's a good phrase
in one of the books,
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86. "To Bond, the best drink of the day
was the drink he had in his head
before the first drink of the day."
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87. I don't really like James Bond.
He's cruel! He's a cruel man.
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88. If I met him
I'd think he was a prat!
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89. Blah, blah, blah...
I'm undoing your zip with my magnet!
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90. You should read the books. I don't
have time. I haven't read yours yet.
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91. Nobody's done that! Read Fleming
first. They're awfully good.
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92. A chapter in Casino Royale begins,
"Bond lit his 80th cigarette
of the day."
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93. How can you dislike a man...?
It's full of interesting stuff.
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94. Bond has this strange idea
that homosexuals can't whistle!
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95. In From Russia With Love... Because
they've got cock in their mouth!
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96. I want you to go
and stand in the corner.
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97. You just put your lips together
and blow!
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98. I've had a blow-job... He needs to
say the word "Wimbledon".
.. which is a cocktail.
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99. You get it in a shooter glass.
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100. It's got something like Drambuie
or Baileys... How sophisticated
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101. Just a hint.
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102. It's got whipped cream out of a can
on top of it.
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103. Sounds lovely You get it
put on the counter and you're not
allowed to use your hands...
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104. Someone's groaning! "Ohhh, God!"
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105. You put your hands behind your back
and go...
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106. I've never been to Essex!
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107. Enough of alcohol,
I'm ready for athletics.
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108. Sean, in 1913 the World Long Jump
Champion was an Englishman
who could leap backwards
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109. from the floor onto a mantelpiece
without losing his balance.
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110. What position was he offered after
World War I?
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111. Playing cricket?
He was an extraordinary sportsman.
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112. He could leap backwards?
From a stationary position
onto a mantelpiece.
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113. He was described as "the most
talented Englishman ever born."
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114. He was captain of England
and Surrey in cricket.
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115. He played in an FA Cup final. He
had the world long jump record.
Is this your relative? It's CB Fry.
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116. Really? How did he discover
he could do that? In phases.
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117. How do you find out you can do that?
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118. You're standing in front
of the fireplace and go...
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119. Was it at a boring party?
Lord Delfont turned for a canape
and, "Whoah, I'm outta here!"
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120. A rattlesnake on the floor.
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121. Somebody wanted a cocktail
and said, "I fancy a blow-job,"
and he went...
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122. He was a Fry - he'd welcome that!
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123. Just putting himself in a better
position. What was his name?
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124. Charles Burgess Fry.
What was the question?
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125. What position was he offered after
World War I? Chest of drawers?
Was the mantelpiece with ornaments?
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126. Say someone had
a big tank of tropical fish...
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127. Competitive mantelpiece leaping -
you clear it.
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128. Everything.
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129. Maybe he was on the mantelpiece,
fell off and thought, "I must get
back up before anyone notices."
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130. He fell on the sofa,
bounced back up...
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131. "Did you just jump backwards onto
the mantelpiece?"Oh, yeah, yeah."
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132. It's a very old English pursuit,
jumping backwards. There's a famous
canal jumper, Jack Derby.
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133. He could leap 32ft across a canal
from a jump. There's a statue of him.
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134. The way he did it -
he had two weights.
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135. He'd swing them...
Like the bouncing bomb?
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136. They'd take him across, like that,
to the other side.
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137. He was Jack Derby
and he died in the '30s.
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138. He died in the canal!
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139. The statue's at the bottom to
commemorate him! He had the world
jumping backwards record - 13ft.
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140. There you are, it means something.
CB Fry, to bring it back...
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141. Did he not feel, once he'd done the
mantelpiece thing and everyone was,
"Wow, that's fantastic!"
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142. After that were they, "Oh, he's
doing the mantelpiece thing again"?
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143. It was just a party piece thing
he did three or four times.
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144. He headed the class list at Oxford,
he had the long jump record,
played in an FA Cup final,
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145. captained England,
spoke five languages and...
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146. what was the extraordinary position
he was offered?
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147. He's a member of the Fry family.
That is extraordinary. He was
offered quizmaster on a panel game.
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148. He was... Was it a governmental
thing? THE most governmental
thing that existed after WWI.
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149. League of Nations.
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150. He was the head? No. Refereed the
play-off for the League of Nations?
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151. President of the League?
More important. King.
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152. King of the League of Nations? Of
one of the nations in the League.
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153. Albania. He was offered the throne
of Albania. Yes. We got there.
He said, "I don't want
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154. "the throne,
just give me the mantelpiece."
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155. I wish I'd never mentioned the
bloody mantelpiece now! It's just
one of the things he could do.
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156. He did it once or twice.
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157. His great friend was
Prince Ranji Singhji.
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158. Together they dominated
the cricketing world.
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159. The Prince was an officer
in the League of Nations.
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160. He brought Fry along
as a speech writer
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161. and they met the Albanian
delegation, which was unhappy
because the king had run away.
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162. They offered Fry the throne and he
accepted. His friend Hiliare Belloc,
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163. the poet, said, "Don't take it. All
you need is a cellar of wine and
the society of those who love you."
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164. So he turned it down.
Raging alcoholic.
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165. He was talking "bellocs"!
What a great thing to be.
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166. The next king
had a short tenure and fled.
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167. One thing that might have
attracted the Albanians to Fry
was his moustache.
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168. The Albanian language
has an extraordinary richness
of vocabulary for facial hair.
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169. There are 27 words
to describe the shape of moustaches
and 30 for eyebrows.
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170. "Vetullan" is someone with
very bushy eyebrows.
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171. "Vetulor" means
slightly arched eyebrow.
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172. "Vetulosh" is
someone with thick eyebrows.
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173. Linda, what is "vetuluche"?
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174. Well, I don't know...
you say they've got 30 words.
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175. For the types of eyebrow.
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176. We've got more. They've got
one word for "very bushy eyebrow",
we've got three words.
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177. Yes
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178. Good thinking. I like that.
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179. I'm unimpressed with that.
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180. Are they short of conversation?
Probably. It's a pretty poor place.
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181. The Albanian police always get
their man. That Identikit picture
would be pretty accurate!
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182. They use the magnet man
with iron filings.
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183. An eyebrow that meets in the middle.
There should be a word for that.
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184. Josephus, the Jewish historian...
Yes. .. reckoned that Jesus
had a mono-brow.
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185. I thought there was
something shifty about him.
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186. Where did he get that? There is no
description of Jesus in the Bible.
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187. Too good to be true. Exactly.
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188. Vetuluche is the Albanian for
a goat, a special kind of goat -
one with brown eyebrows.
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189. Ohhh. They're obsessed!
They are.
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190. With goats like that, you'd imagine
they'd be very happy people.
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191. Why do goats need eyebrows?
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192. To express surprise! Quizzical.
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193. What's that for? That bit there.
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194. No idea.
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195. The filtrum. Why is it a groove?
Like a little guttering.
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196. Nothing actually comes out
of there, it runs either side.
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197. It goes either side.
It's stupid, that is.
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198. Albania is the poorest country
in Europe, with over 60% of its
population living in rural areas.
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199. Animals and facial hair
are all they have.
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200. Albania may be the only language
in Europe where the word for
male sheep - dash -
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201. is the same word for an attractive,
young man.
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202. What is the difference between
a pink fairy and a green fairy?
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203. La fee verte. Ring any bells?
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204. Absinthe.
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205. Well done. Two points.
Absolutely right.
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206. The pink fairy is an armadillo.
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207. What sort of animal, do you think -
I'll give five points for this -
is an armadillo?
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208. An ant-eater.
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209. But a reptile or...? Reptile. The
same as a badger. A mammal. Right.
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210. It's the only mammal, apart from
mankind, that can get leprosy.
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211. Armadillos give birth to four
identical, same-sex baby armadillos
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212. all from the same egg,
which is unique.
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213. The male armadillo has a penis
two-thirds the length of its body.
You're joking!
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214. That's the normal proportion!
Is it?
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215. Lucky girl.
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216. What alteration to the human
anatomy did Benjamin Franklin think
would increase human happiness?
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217. To do with health? Not really. Like
smoke-proof lungs, or something?
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218. It's as mad as that. Self-cleaning
arsehole. Almost - so close!
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219. What...? Farts? Farts.
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220. No farting? No, he thought...
More farting?
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221. A small exhaust pipe to run up
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222. and to, like a diesel lorry,
have a little cap on.
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223. Parp! Parp! Paaarp!
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224. No.
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225. Steam-powered trousers.
Yes, why not?
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226. He looks like he's smelt a fart!
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227. Somebody's done it in front of him.
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228. He thought the world would be
better if we could discharge wind...
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229. Without smelling. If he could
find a drug... No need for that!
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230. to be perfumed. A visual aid.
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231. Geri Halliwell's
not looking so thin!
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232. Lorks!
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233. He believed it would do more good
than the works of Descartes,
Aristotle and Newton put together.
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234. Franklin was extraordinary -
scientist, inventor of bi-focals
and the fire brigade.
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235. He helped Washington and Jefferson
prepare the American Constitution
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236. but they refused to let him draft
it in case he put jokes in!
Fart jokes?
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237. Perfumed fart jokes.
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238. And if any of you find any weapons
of mass destruction under your seats
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239. if you could send them
to the Government,
because they've looked everywhere!
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240. They'll be the last place
they look!
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241. We have sent a probe to Mars.
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242. I'm like that with scissors.
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243. Mind you the difference is
I have been stock-piling scissors
for the last 20 years.
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244. What was the first processed food
produced by HJ Heinz in 1869?
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245. Ketchup.
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246. Oh!
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247. Oh, finally! Finally.
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248. God dammit. Ketchup is not the
right answer. We predicted that.
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249. Baked beans.
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250. Oh! Alan, Alan, Alan!
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251. Oh, dear. That's minus,
at least, 20.
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252. Mayonnaise.
You're safe on that one.
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253. Mini chicken Kiev. No. Pickle.
No, it's a hot one.
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254. Horseradish.
Horseradish is the right answer.
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255. As far as I know,
there never were... When they had
that slogan "57 varieties"
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256. there were more than 57. They used
it because it's a good number.
Absolutely right, Clive.
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257. They now have more than 6,000,
so they claim.
They just like the number 57.
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258. They're obsessed with it. Their
phone number is 5757. Their
address is PO Box 57 Pittsburgh.
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259. They've milked that idea. Who
was the first customer in Britain,
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260. I mean retailer, who... Fortnum
and Mason. The right answer.
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261. He sold them in glass jars so
customers saw it was free from
fillers like wood fibre or turnip.
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262. Heinz tomato ketchup
followed in 1875.
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263. In 1895 he perfected the baked bean
which to this day only four members
of the Heinz family know the recipe.
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264. Now we're in sniffing distance of
the end, as Franklin might've said,
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265. fingers on the buzzers for
general ignorance.
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266. How long do fingernails and hair
grow after you're dead?
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267. Two foot.
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268. No.
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269. I'm just fascinated to know
that hair grows after you die.
I'm looking forward to that!
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270. It's... discussed in Rosencrantz
and Guildenstern Are Dead.
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271. I think it's for two hours.
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272. It doesn't. Neither fingernails or
hair, which are the same substance.
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273. It's a myth.
The skin merely tightens.
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274. What do bananas grow on?
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275. Well they grow up like that
and they grow on banana trees...
They're not really trees.
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276. Take it back. 15 for that.
They are a herb,
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277. distinguished by not having a woody
stem and by dying after seeding.
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278. They walk. I'm sorry.
Banana plants walk.
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279. Nurse, he's out of bed again!
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280. They do. They walk.
I've been to Colombia,
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281. and I went to a banana plantation...
Well, if you go to Colombia
these things will happen.
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282. I was admiring this banana. I said,
"Hold on a minute," to this guy,
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283. "Why is there this big patch to
the left?" He said, "The plants walk
and they need a lot of room."
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284. You need lots of room
because they walk.
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285. They make the fields larger.
You leave a strip
because they move across.
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286. I shall...
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287. You know Betty and Keppel
when they walk...?
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288. The banana plant is a herb because
the stem doesn't have woody tissue.
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289. The banana fruit is technically
a berry, or a juicy ovary
containing seeds.
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290. Stop it! Oh!
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291. Giggling in the back row!
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292. The voice in my ear tells me you're
right, Sean, they walk - up to
40cms in a lifetime. Yes!
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293. What sort of mother gives birth
to a baby lili or a baby titi?
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294. Maybe it should be li-li and ti-ti.
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295. Obviously, armadillos. No.
There'd be four names!
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296. Er... Pandas. Not pandas, no.
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297. Dogs, cats, horses, cows, sheep...
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298. Mice, rats, gerbils.
Bluebirds. Not bluebirds,
neither. If I say li-li and ti-ti,
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299. it's because it's something to do
with li and ti. What animals...?
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300. Lions and tigers.
If a lion mates with a tiger,
you get a... Scandal.
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301. A liger. A sergeant
because they have three stripes.
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302. A liger mates with a lion,
produces a li-li, and a tigon mates
with a tiger and produces a ti-ti.
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303. They don't encounter each other
in the wild, of course,
but they've bred in captivity.
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304. I thought it was a club
they went to!
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305. A cross between a female lion
and a male tiger is called a tigon,
which is an even rarer animal.
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306. Teflon is a non-stick pan.
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307. Developed by? Someone in Iceland.
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308. Dupont.
But not for the space programme.
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309. They... If a lion mates
with a lorry tyre...
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310. it comes out as a lilo!
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311. Very good.
That wasn't worth waiting for!
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312. Who coined the phrase
"survival of the fittest",
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313. and what was his greatest discovery?
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314. I'm going to avoid saying...
It must have been Wallace,
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315. who sent stuff to Darwin. No.
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316. Kevin Keegan?
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317. And that stuff
that keeps your perm tight.
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318. Alan uses it. Darwin. I'm sorry?
Darwin.
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319. Oh, Alan! Why do you do it to us,
to yourself, to anybody?
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320. It's not Darwin. I'd worked out the
logic... It's not that obvious.
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321. It was Herbert Spencer
and his greatest achievement
was the paperclip.
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322. He was sitting twiddling another
paperclip and came up with that.
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323. He was an engineer, philosopher
and psychologist.
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324. He coined the phrase
"survival of the fittest"
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325. and Darwin adapted it later.
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326. Norwegians will tell you proudly,
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327. that the paperclip is a Norwegian
invention - Johann Vaaler in 1899.
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328. Spencer patented his design
for paperclips in the 1860s,
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329. but his supplier went bankrupt, he
was ill and never followed it up.
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330. His patent application was clipped
together. "What's your invention?"
"See top left corner."
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331. "There's nothing there."
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332. Today more than 11 billion
paperclips are sold annually,
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333. but out of every 100,000 sold
only 1 in 5 are used
to hold papers together.
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334. Others are used as poker chips,
safety pins. Toothpicks.
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335. Have you ever bought a paper clip?
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336. No, I've never bought a paperclip.
They don't sell them in ones.
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337. I'll have one paperclip.
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338. I have a hundredth of a penny here!
There you go.
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339. Would you like it wrapped?
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340. On that merry note, we must pause,
hold hands and contemplate
the final scores.
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341. In last place, I fear,
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342. with -30 points...
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343. Errr...
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344. I'm so sorry.
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345. If I got -10 for three of those,
that means I didn't get a point
all night. No, I'm sorry.
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346. You must put your belly on the
ground, as they say in Albania.
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347. In third place is Sean with 25.
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348. In second place - Linda with 30.
Not bad.
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349. Our runaway winner, with 37 points,
is Clive Anderson. Thank you.
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350. So as we bid a tearful farewell
to Clive, Sean, Linda and Alan,
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351. a reminder of why the battle
for interestingness matters.
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352. A market research team was asked
to find a name for the merger
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353. of a university
and a college in Bradford.
They took three months to suggest -
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354. University of Bradford,
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355. The University of Bradford,
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356. or Bradford University.
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357. Their fee was £20,000. Good night.
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