1. Oh, hello, hello, hello, hello!
Copy !req
2. Welcome to QI,
Copy !req
3. the show where four people are
held in a queue until one of them
becomes interesting. Clive Anderson.
Copy !req
4. Phil Kay, Johnny Sessions,
Copy !req
5. and Alan Davies.
Copy !req
6. Ah. Now.
Copy !req
7. First, a special project, members
of the team - to draw a wig-wam.
Copy !req
8. This is series B, do it in the
style of artists beginning with B.
Copy !req
9. Clive, in the style of Botticelli,
Phil in the style of William Blake,
Copy !req
10. John, in the style of Brach. OK.
Copy !req
11. Alan, I don't need to tell you,
you'll be Bosch.
Copy !req
12. So that's your task.
Copy !req
13. Hieronymus Bosch.
Painted scenes of hell.
Copy !req
14. Any old wig-wam'll do.
Copy !req
15. Really? Yeah. Thank God!
Copy !req
16. I didn't know what I was gonna do!
Copy !req
17. If you need to be excused,
attract my attention.
Clive does it like this.
Copy !req
18. Phil does it like this.
Copy !req
19. Johnny does it like this.
Copy !req
20. "Oh, I know, sir! Please, please,
sir, I know!"
Copy !req
21. Alan does it like this.
Copy !req
22. Oh, I'm glad that you went
before you came.
Copy !req
23. Now, you know me. I'm one of those
jolly-jump-up-meet-me-in-the-
corner-and-tickle-my-fancy types.
Copy !req
24. So what am I?
Copy !req
25. "Sir, sir, I know, sir!"
Copy !req
26. You're the sacked lyricist for
Lindisfarne. Those were the original
lyrics for Meet Me On The Corner.
Copy !req
27. The hit of 1972. Does sound like it.
Copy !req
28. You're a hoarder of many hyphens.
I am a hoarder of many hyphens.
Copy !req
29. You've almost got them all.
I'm also a love idol.
Copy !req
30. Right. Are these fishing flies?
Copy !req
31. They're not. I'm also
a meet-me-in-the-buttery.
Copy !req
32. Or kiss-me-in-the-buttery.
Are they types of flowers?
Copy !req
33. They are all one type of flower,
also known as pink-of-my-john!
Copy !req
34. I'm not making it up! Carnations.
Tulips. No. Johnny might get it -
there's a Shakespearean reference.
Copy !req
35. "The flower that men
do call love in idleness." Yes.
Copy !req
36. It's in Romeo And Juliet - no?
Copy !req
37. No, The Dream. Come back, you've
floated up in a balloon above us!
Copy !req
38. All right. So, it's a flower called
kiss-me-in-the-buttery,
Copy !req
39. jump-up-jack, tickle-my-fancy,
love-in-idleness, pink-my-john.
Copy !req
40. And Dale Winton. So what am I?
I am a... Forget-me-not.
Copy !req
41. Pansy. Pansy! Pansy!
I am a wild pansy.
Copy !req
42. There are more folk names
for the wild pansy than for
any other flower.
Copy !req
43. The word pansy comes from the
French pensee, a thought, or idea.
Copy !req
44. They're supposed to be good for the
memory. Eating them? Yes, indeed.
Copy !req
45. A refreshing tea which is good for
the skin and clearing phlegm.
Copy !req
46. Yet Pascal's book Pansees didn't
sell well, did it? No, it didn't.
Copy !req
47. One person in the audience knows
Pascal! "Sir, sir, I know, sir!"
Copy !req
48. Yes, there were 200 names at the
last count for the wild pansy.
That was a question about botany.
Copy !req
49. Your next question is
what is bottomry?
Copy !req
50. It's the opposite of topiary.
Topiary is that thing...
Copy !req
51. where you take... Very good!
..you take a...
Copy !req
52. You'll know, Stephen, you
take a tree or a bush or whatever,
Copy !req
53. and you shape it into a beautiful
shape, an animal or something.
Copy !req
54. Bottomry's where you see a tree,
think it looks like a horse, then
cut it back to like a wild tree.
Copy !req
55. It's not fun. "Sir, I know, sir!"
Copy !req
56. There's another argument for it,
Copy !req
57. it's a website in Tokyo
Copy !req
58. for Japanese men crazy
about Virginia Bottomley.
Copy !req
59. Bottomry!
Copy !req
60. Would it help if I say it's
the same thing as bottomage?
Copy !req
61. Yes, I know what it is.
Was it France or somewhere?
Copy !req
62. The droit du seigneur where the
local lord could have his evil way
Copy !req
63. with any girl or milkmaid in the
village.
Copy !req
64. If you were a minor lord of some
sort, you had the right of bottomry,
Copy !req
65. where you could just slap them
on the bottom.
Copy !req
66. No more than that,
Copy !req
67. and in a nice way, if that exists,
which I deplore, it's forbodden
these days.
Copy !req
68. Forbodden? Forbottom!
Copy !req
69. It's to do with bottom being
a ship, in this case. A ship?
It's like a mortgage.
Copy !req
70. You raise money to go on a trade
voyage. They call ship's bottoms.
Copy !req
71. Yes, ships are called bottoms in
the marine world.
Copy !req
72. There's a line in Henry V
from the chorus,
Copy !req
73. before they go to France, where
Shakespeare describes them drawing
their bottoms through water,
Copy !req
74. referring to the ships, not the
soldiers.
Copy !req
75. Excellent. Next question then.
Copy !req
76. So, what did Buffalo Bill do
to buffalos?
Copy !req
77. "Sir, sir! I know sir!"
Copy !req
78. I don't know the answer, but
what I do know...
Copy !req
79. ..is that my grandmother was born in
1875.
Copy !req
80. And she saw Buffalo Bill...
Down the shops? Well, no...
Copy !req
81. She might have, without knowing it.
She saw his Wild West Show?
She did.
Copy !req
82. At the Calvin Hall in 1892.
Copy !req
83. The sound of an arrow! Hope this is
right, cos I can see a trap.
Copy !req
84. Yes. Because the American buffalo
isn't strictly a buffalo,
it's a bison.
Copy !req
85. Absolutely! So he did nothing to
buffalo. Spot on! He should've
been called Bison Bill.
Copy !req
86. They're not even related to the
two kinds of buffalo that exist.
Copy !req
87. But at a philosophical level,
which you like...
Copy !req
88. Yes. .. if they are called buffalo,
Copy !req
89. it's like the Bayeux Tapestry
isn't really a tapestry.
Copy !req
90. But it's the only tapestry, or
embroidery, we've ever heard of,
Copy !req
91. and they say it isn't one. And these
are the only buffalo we come
across...
Copy !req
92. Apart from water buffalo in Asia.
Or in Africa. Yes, in Africa.
Copy !req
93. My wigwam is BEEP huge.
Copy !req
94. I was in the city of Buffalo when
I heard of Elvis's death.
Copy !req
95. It should've been the city of Bison.
Copy !req
96. There's a buffalo and a bison.
That's a buffalo on the right.
Copy !req
97. Look how low its ears are!
They're well below the eyes.
Copy !req
98. Right by the nose. It likes to
keep its ears close to the ground.
Copy !req
99. Its ears are there.
Copy !req
100. Why's the one on the right wearing
an advocate's wig?
Copy !req
101. But he killed loads of them.
He killed an astonishing number.
Copy !req
102. In 18 months, he killed
4,280 bison.
Copy !req
103. Why? He used to work for
the Pony Express as a boy.
Copy !req
104. And there's a rather good advert
they used to put out. Arcal wrote
for that.
Copy !req
105. Hey! This is the ad -
Copy !req
106. "Wanted - young skinny,
wiry fellows, not over 18.
Copy !req
107. "Must be expert riders willing to
risk death daily." You wrote that.
Copy !req
108. It goes on -
"orphans preferred!
Copy !req
109. "Wages $25 a week."
Copy !req
110. But it only lasted 19 months,
the Pony Express,
Copy !req
111. because of the railways.
Copy !req
112. And the Kansas-Pacific needed food
for its workers. Mmmm.
Copy !req
113. So they employed Buffalo Bill
to kill bison, or buffalo,
Copy !req
114. to feed the construction workers.
In Dances With Wolves, they just
kill buffalo for fun.
Copy !req
115. Native Americans, the Indians, used
to lure them over cliffs to kill
them.
Copy !req
116. They used the hide and meat
so it wasn't just for fun.
Copy !req
117. Did they lure exactly the right
number they needed for the tribe?
No.
Copy !req
118. You have a sentimental view of them
as if we're all nasty humans,
Copy !req
119. but Native Americans are all
peace-loving philosophers.
Copy !req
120. We were drunk and badly behaved.
Copy !req
121. They'd never lure a pregnant
one over.
Copy !req
122. The way they lured them was
to cause them to stampede,
Copy !req
123. and once they're stampeding, they
all go.
Copy !req
124. No, when they had enough,
they'd go up and go, "Stop!"
Copy !req
125. It's that moment of, "When's the
stampede over?" You're stampeding,
and then you're not.
Copy !req
126. When you hit the ground at the end
of the cliff, then you know.
Copy !req
127. Stampede over. If you're at the
front, you've got to keep
stampeding,
Copy !req
128. because everyone behind's
stampeding.
Copy !req
129. If you stop, BOOM! Straight over.
Copy !req
130. Let me help out the hippy party,
because these buffalo, or bison,
Copy !req
131. live quite happily with the American
Indians killing a few of them.
Copy !req
132. Then they replaced them with cows.
Copy !req
133. And cows have caused a dust-bowl in
that part of America.
Copy !req
134. Yes. And now they decided the only
thing that can really live there are
bison.
Copy !req
135. So they're reintroducing them. And
crossing them with cattle, in fact.
Copy !req
136. What they get up to
in their private lives...
Copy !req
137. From 60 million bison
in the 17th century,
Copy !req
138. there were just a few hundred in
the 19th century. There are now
about 50,000.
Copy !req
139. I'll read out the next question.
Copy !req
140. Buffalo Bill's famous Wild West
show included
Copy !req
141. a famous Native American chief,
Copy !req
142. Sitting Bull, Sitting Buffalo Bull,
Copy !req
143. who, of course, defeated Custer
at the Battle of Little Bighorn.
Copy !req
144. What was his real name?
Copy !req
145. Bison. No? It worked
for the last question.
Copy !req
146. Well they're always named after
the first thing the squaw sees...
Copy !req
147. Two dogs BEEP-ing. That's the joke.
Copy !req
148. I was going to let the audience
think that for themselves.
Copy !req
149. Buffalo Bill had to kill thousands
of buffalo or bison
Copy !req
150. to get the nickname Buffalo
to go with the rather dull Bill.
Copy !req
151. But Sitting Bull just had to sit
around a lot.
Copy !req
152. And talk rubbish. Hang on,
bulls don't sit. Do they?
Copy !req
153. Ferdinand did. Ferdinand?
Ferdinand the bull. Oh yes.
Copy !req
154. He'd sit under a cork tree smelling
the flowers. And there was a bee.
Copy !req
155. He got stung by a bee. What?
Copy !req
156. It's a book. One you happen not
to have read. Doesn't make us mad!
Copy !req
157. Because the bee stung him,
he ran round like crazy,
Copy !req
158. so they thought he was a flying bull.
It's a children's classic.
Copy !req
159. Very beautiful. What's it called?
Ferdinand the bull. Oh.
Copy !req
160. Ferdinand forgets to take his drugs
test and is disqualified from the
bullfight.
Copy !req
161. Don't bulls sit down when
it's going to rain. Yes, supposedly.
Copy !req
162. So do cows. Why, so they have
a dry patch?
Copy !req
163. If you like. Well...
Copy !req
164. Standing Cow, he was called.
Actually, it was Jumping Badger.
Copy !req
165. That was his given name. He got
his father's name as a teenager.
Copy !req
166. And because he'd done great
exploits and killed buffalo/bison
Copy !req
167. at the age of ten, and took part
in a raiding party on a Crow Indian
settlement
Copy !req
168. and was a great hero, his father
gave him his name.
Copy !req
169. His mother was called
Her Holy Door.
Copy !req
170. Interestingly. They were rubbish
at names in that family!
Copy !req
171. I mean, Sitting Bull's scarcely OK,
but Jumping Badger!
Copy !req
172. "Why, Dad?"It was a film
character popular with your mother."
Copy !req
173. Now who made pots and pots from
Bill and Ben?
Copy !req
174. "Sir! Sir! I know, sir!"
Copy !req
175. Um... I think it was someone like...
Weeeeeeeeeed!
Copy !req
176. Flobadob-a-dob-a-dob. You do Bill and
Ben now! Flobadob. Yeah!
Copy !req
177. Isn't it someone like Greg Dyke
or Michael Grade?
Copy !req
178. Well, in fact, do you know?
I don't,
Copy !req
179. but Greg did the rat thing.
Roland Rat. He did indeed.
Copy !req
180. So that's a good guess.
Copy !req
181. The BBC have made £2 million
Copy !req
182. from the video sales of Bill And
Ben, and they paid the creator,
Copy !req
183. Hilda Wright, the magnificent sum
of three guineas.
Copy !req
184. No! For the whole thing, which is
three original radio stories.
Copy !req
185. She named Bill and Ben
after her own brothers.
Copy !req
186. I thought you were going
to say breasts then!
Copy !req
187. The poor woman's suffered enough!
Breasts do go flobadob, I suppose.
Copy !req
188. And when they were naughty,
their mother would say,
Copy !req
189. "Was it Bill or was it Ben?", the
catch phrase of the programme.
Copy !req
190. Was it? And their little sister,
Phyllis, was Weed.
Copy !req
191. The voice of Bill and Ben,
in a language called Flobadob,
Copy !req
192. was by a man called Peter Hawkins
who went on to great fame
Copy !req
193. as both a dalek and a cyberman.
In 1999,
Copy !req
194. he was a producer on a programme
called The Lifestyle - Group Sex
In The Suburbs.
Copy !req
195. That's where I remember him from
then!
Copy !req
196. Where did this language come from?
Copy !req
197. It was their nickname for the sound
a fart made in the bath.
It was a flobadob.
Copy !req
198. Now, what does Billy the Kid
have in common with Ben Hur?
Copy !req
199. Capital B.
Copy !req
200. They have ME. I've been to where
Billy the Kid was shot and
I've seen Ben Hur.
Copy !req
201. Ben Hur's in the Scottish Highlands,
isn't it?
Copy !req
202. The Hollywood Range. Ben Affleck's
nearby. Glen Close too.
Copy !req
203. Glenn Close! Do you know
who wrote Ben Hur?
Copy !req
204. Gore Vidal claims to.
He wrote the screenplay.
Copy !req
205. Who wrote the novel?
When was it written?
Copy !req
206. It was written in 1880,
or published then. In America? Yes.
Copy !req
207. Someone thought, "I'm going to write
a book about Roman chariot racing."
Copy !req
208. Well, what should he have written
about? Oh! He's written about
something not very close to you!
Copy !req
209. You wanker! BEEP-ing Shakespeare
writing about Romans.
Copy !req
210. It's not only about chariot racing,
there's other stuff in it.
Copy !req
211. Yes! It's about Christianity,
loyalty,
Copy !req
212. betrayal, friendship,
lots of things. Anyway...
Copy !req
213. The phrase, "What are you really
angry about?" springs to mind.
Copy !req
214. It was actually Lew Wallace
who wrote the novel.
Copy !req
215. And he was Governor of New Mexico.
Copy !req
216. The connection with Billy the Kid
is he also wrote his death warrant.
Copy !req
217. So while he was Governor, he was
able to write a bestselling...
Copy !req
218. "It was a warm morning in Rome..."
Copy !req
219. What's all that?
"Sir, sir! I know, sir!"
Copy !req
220. One more interesting thing, to me,
involves a hideous name-drop.
Copy !req
221. I was at the Sundance Film Festival
and was fortunate to have supper
with Robert Redford. And...
Copy !req
222. Yes?
Copy !req
223. The luvvie alarm is a special
forfeit for Johnny. But carry on.
Copy !req
224. So I told my close and personal
friend... Do you call him Bob?
He prefers Bobbity.
Copy !req
225. Bobbity Bedford.
Copy !req
226. As I towelled him down after
our game of shuttlecocks,
Copy !req
227. I mentioned to him that the Sundance
Kid, don't know if you know this,
Copy !req
228. was Welsh. Or his family was.
Copy !req
229. Boyo, this town ain't
big enough for the both of us.
Copy !req
230. He's right stuck up,
that Billy. He'll come to no good.
Copy !req
231. From Bills, to buildings.
Copy !req
232. What happens to your thoughts when
you go upstairs?
Copy !req
233. Gravitationally, the pressure
changes so your blood varies in
its circulatory aspect
Copy !req
234. so your brain becomes less fuelled
by the blood so you become less
clever.
Copy !req
235. Hence air hostesses - "Tea? Coffee?
Coffee? Tea?"
Copy !req
236. Very good answer indeed!
Deep physics.
Copy !req
237. Deep? Deep, really sort of
theoretical physics.
Copy !req
238. Your thoughts float upwards, they
get sucked downwards, they go up.
Copy !req
239. You start thinking about physics,
you get clever.
Copy !req
240. The answer is they run faster,
your metabolism's faster,
Copy !req
241. because time is slower,
the weaker the gravity.
Copy !req
242. And what is the best floor
of a building out of which to throw
Copy !req
243. a cat?
Copy !req
244. Blimey, that's impressive!
A lovely mahogany.
Copy !req
245. A mahogany floor!
Copy !req
246. The best storey of a building?
Copy !req
247. It's only a guess,
Copy !req
248. but I reckon it must be about the
fifth floor,
Copy !req
249. because, assuming you want to harm
the cat, which I object to,
Copy !req
250. if you want to kill it, it would
survive falling from the first floor
as they're springy animals.
Copy !req
251. And if you go too far, I'm guessing
they form a parachute and float
down.
Copy !req
252. So the fifth floor would be about
right. They'd still hurtle, but
without the parachute effect.
Copy !req
253. Absolutely right, except
we don't want to harm them.
Copy !req
254. Oh, very high then. The seventh.
Anything higher than the seventh.
Copy !req
255. They experimented by studying,
not by throwing cats out windows.
Copy !req
256. They studied 132 cases of cats
falling out windows
Copy !req
257. in New York in a veterinary centre.
Copy !req
258. - They studied 132 cases of cats falling or being pushed from windows..
- Pushed
Copy !req
259. .. and the injury rate went up,
the average was... Tick!
Copy !req
260. .. from about the fifth floor. The
higher up towards the fifth floor,
the more injuries,
Copy !req
261. but at seven and beyond,
there were fewer.
Copy !req
262. Because they can reach terminal
velocity, 60 miles per hour,
from any floor,
Copy !req
263. from an aeroplane, cats have
survived. And like a squirrel,
Copy !req
264. they spread themselves out
and parachute down.
Copy !req
265. From the sixth floor, they haven't
got time to reach terminal speed,
Copy !req
266. and to get the position right.
Copy !req
267. Exactly. Have they done this
with other animals?
Copy !req
268. Have they tried hamsters, dogs,
pythons?
Copy !req
269. Cows! I'd like to see that!
Copy !req
270. I fear somehow that cows...
Mooooo!
Copy !req
271. There's a man in Shropshire who
catapults cows. Splat!
Copy !req
272. He flies them through the air.
Copy !req
273. Hundreds of yards. Doesn't it harm
them? Dead cows.
Copy !req
274. Meat, you mean. I would urge
people at home not to try it with
your cat.
Copy !req
275. Not because it isn't scientific,
but because of the mad letters
I get from BEEP-ing cat people.
Copy !req
276. Do not throw your cat off of
anything, a wall or whatever.
Copy !req
277. Just let them be.
Copy !req
278. Or at least not from lower
than the seventh floor.
Copy !req
279. That's the idea.
So, general ignorance.
Copy !req
280. What is the commonest material in
the world?
Copy !req
281. Jim Davidson's.
Copy !req
282. Very good indeed!
Copy !req
283. I don't know the real answer.
You can't better that one!
Copy !req
284. I mean substance. Oxygen.
Copy !req
285. What did I say? Damn!
Copy !req
286. Substance, material, matter or
stuff. Water?
Copy !req
287. It's perovskite. Oh, yeah
Copy !req
288. Darn it! That was on
the tip of my tongue!
Copy !req
289. Named after Count Lev Perovski,
a mineralogist.
Copy !req
290. It's a compound of magnesium,
silicone and oxygen, it's what the
earth's mantle is made from.
Copy !req
291. He thought he'd be famous by giving
his name to the most common stuff,
but no-one's heard of him!
Copy !req
292. No! He's got such a good name
for a scientist,
Copy !req
293. and probably had a wonderful accent.
Copy !req
294. Like the man who used to go...
"Tyrannosaurus rex!"
Copy !req
295. Like Heinz Wolf?
Yes, exactly like him!
Copy !req
296. There is always
an elegant solution
Copy !req
297. with eggheads and a little bow tie.
Copy !req
298. Now, what happened to Pompeii
in 63 AD?
Copy !req
299. His eyes narrow.
Copy !req
300. I've been to Vesuvius.
Have you? What happened to Pompeii?
Copy !req
301. I'm trying to remember,
is there a time-limit?
Copy !req
302. I can't remember if that's when
it got covered in lava.
Copy !req
303. It was an earthquake they had
before. Quite right.
Copy !req
304. It was destroyed by an earthquake,
Copy !req
305. they'd just started to rebuild it
when... I bet the air was blue
when that happened!
Copy !req
306. I just-a finished!
I cannot believe it!
Copy !req
307. Is all finished now!
Copy !req
308. The air was black! All the tiles,
I just put them up!
Copy !req
309. One of the things preserved was
almost every household had pots
of plaster, to re-plaster.
Copy !req
310. Artexing the insides. Indeed.
Copy !req
311. There's a bit you can walk across
which has a sulphur crust
Copy !req
312. about that thick, and there are
places where it's fallen through.
Copy !req
313. Is this a type of pizza?
Copy !req
314. And it goes blup! Blup!
And there are fences round it.
Copy !req
315. And you go across in your school
party, and they say,
Copy !req
316. "Go in pairs not in big clusters
or you might fall through."
Copy !req
317. And they say to school parties from
Essex, "Don't jump up and down!"
Copy !req
318. What a mistake!
Oh dear, oh dear!
Copy !req
319. Have they never heard of reverse
psychology? What did you say
that for?
Copy !req
320. So there's the kids at the back.
Copy !req
321. To certain death. Oh, Lord!
Copy !req
322. And it's going to go again, isn't
it? It's really, massively overdue.
Copy !req
323. Imagine being an estate agent
trying to sell a house as lava
comes towards you.
Copy !req
324. Imagine how good you'd have to be.
Copy !req
325. Here's the keys, thanks! It's not
central heating, it's exterior
heating.
Copy !req
326. Didn't the Phoenician civilisation
end the same way?
Copy !req
327. It's a volcano, we're phoeni-shed!
Copy !req
328. How did Roman emperors order
the death of a gladiator?
Copy !req
329. It was a trap, not thumbs down.
Copy !req
330. They put their thumbs up.
Copy !req
331. Take him out and kill him!
Copy !req
332. Hey, gladiator!
Copy !req
333. It is over for you!
We joke is it up or down, but
that's life or death to a gladiator!
Copy !req
334. Exactly. Films like...
Copy !req
335. Why do they do that
in the films then?
Copy !req
336. Because we have this up and down
idea... So if we do that, it means,
"Death to you!"
Copy !req
337. So what was the saving symbol?
Did they have one?
Copy !req
338. It was called pollux compressus,
where you put the thumb,
Copy !req
339. the pollux, in that way.
Copy !req
340. As opposed to pollux infestus,
that one.
Copy !req
341. You can draw a mouth and eyes on too.
Copy !req
342. That's still the rudest thing
you can do in Sicily. Is it?
Copy !req
343. Which is why hitchhikers are killed.
Copy !req
344. Seriously! They do that
by the road, people just go...
Copy !req
345. Russell Crowe's going for the knob
there, isn't he!
Copy !req
346. He's going to bite it off.
Copy !req
347. What he's holding is his gladius,
Copy !req
348. which is why they're called
gladiators, because of the sword.
Copy !req
349. Was it only the Romans
who had that -
Copy !req
350. men killing each other for sport?
Copy !req
351. Interesting, I've never heard of it
in Chinese culture. The Greeks
didn't.
Copy !req
352. No, they had naked wrestling
instead which was much more popular.
Copy !req
353. What was the organisation the
Americans fought in Vietnam called?
Copy !req
354. The Vietcong. The gooks.
Copy !req
355. I want the proper name.
Copy !req
356. Alan, even I know when you
know the answer, don't give it.
Copy !req
357. It's what they hope we'll say.
Copy !req
358. Gooks and Charlie and Vietcong are
all names made up by Americans.
Copy !req
359. Vietcong was made up by the CIA.
Copy !req
360. The Vietnamese Popular Army?
People's Front? Known as...
Copy !req
361. PLO? PLF? Tooting Popular Front?
Copy !req
362. The name of their great hero.
Ho Chi Min? The Viet Min.
Copy !req
363. Viet Min! Ah!
Copy !req
364. Wonder if you know this. The
Americans gave huge sums of money
Copy !req
365. to the Viet Min, because at one
point, they were on the same side.
Copy !req
366. That's just ridiculous!
Copy !req
367. Then, having armed them to the
teeth,
Copy !req
368. and then, huge historical surprise,
the French surrender.
Copy !req
369. To Ho Chi Min in 1954.
Copy !req
370. The end of their rule in Indochina.
Copy !req
371. And then the Americans fought them
with the weapons they gave them
ten years before.
Copy !req
372. Is Vietcong supposed to be
a term of abuse, like King Kong?
Copy !req
373. Yes, the CIA thought it sounded
more menacing and ugly,
Copy !req
374. and associated with communism,
Copy !req
375. as it was Vietcong. Viet Min's not
so great.
Copy !req
376. Hello, you want slippy-slippy?
Copy !req
377. I'm sorry, I'm a missionary.
Copy !req
378. Is there a nationality we haven't
cruelly abused today?
Copy !req
379. Lampooned! It seems not.
Copy !req
380. Was King Kong his real name,
or was it King Min?
Copy !req
381. Oddly enough, the Danish for King
is Kong, so the film's called
Kong King.
Copy !req
382. OK, it's time
to hold up your work, please.
Copy !req
383. Look at my buffalo!
It's a good buffalo. And wig-wam.
Copy !req
384. That's the tongue.
Copy !req
385. There's Johnny's cubist wig-wam.
Copy !req
386. Woooooh!
Copy !req
387. I think I misunderstood,
Copy !req
388. I've got Wham! wigs, this is
George Michael and Andrew Ridgely,
Copy !req
389. and they're wearing wigs.
What's wrong with that?
Copy !req
390. Very good indeed!
Copy !req
391. This is William Blake's God as
a white man with a holster on,
Copy !req
392. and a tiny wigwam, here's a red
Indian, here's a blue one,
Copy !req
393. there's a beige one. And there's
thunder and stuff.
Copy !req
394. Very apocalyptic.
I'm sorry no-one did a wig-wam.
Copy !req
395. There's my wig-wam. I did!
That's not a wig-wam. A tepee.
Copy !req
396. A tepee, you've done tepees.
Copy !req
397. What's the difference?
I can show you in a picture.
Copy !req
398. That's a wig-wam. Very different.
It's a haystack!
Copy !req
399. That's not very polite to
the eastern Native Americans
Copy !req
400. as that's where they live. The
plains Indians lived in the old
buffalo hide.
Copy !req
401. The tepees? Exactly.
So what are the scores?
Copy !req
402. Goodness, we have a clear winner.
We'll go from first to last.
Copy !req
403. Clive, runaway winner with
1 point! Fantastic!
Copy !req
404. One? Phil's second
Copy !req
405. with zero.
Copy !req
406. Johnny's third with minus 10.
Copy !req
407. And at the back, with minus 26,
is Alan Davies.
Copy !req
408. That's it from QI this week.
Copy !req
409. So from Clobalob, Philalob, Jobalob
and Alan Daviesalobalob,
Copy !req
410. and from little meeeeee,
good night.
Copy !req