1. Hello and welcome to QI,
the show which give thoughts wings,
flies in the face of convention
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2. and goes coo
in the chimney of knowledge.
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3. Roosting alongside me
are Rich Hall, Phil Kay,
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4. Jo Brand and Alan Davies.
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5. First let me introduce the QI
Spot The Nostril Competition.
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6. Your task tonight is
to draw a picture of a kiwi,
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7. a bird that some say is a missing
link between mammals and birds,
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8. paying attention to its nostrils.
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9. I will reward the best effort
with a nest egg... You're staring
at me. You do know what a kiwi is?
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10. Yeah, I've seen one in New Zealand.
They're nocturnal.
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11. You have to go in a kiwi zoo. They
have them in virtually every town.
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12. It'll be someone's living room and
you'll go in and there'll be a dark
room and a little glass thing. Aw!
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13. National bird. It is.
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14. Never see it, can't fly. Rubbish!
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15. But your task, if you choose
to accept it, Jim, is to draw one.
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16. Alan. Alan. Sorry. What's
the national bird of England?
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17. I'll tell you what it is for women.
Thrush.
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18. Do you know what it is for men?
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19. Uh... Cock.
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20. Sorted.
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21. Cock and thrush. Yes. Good name
for a pub. Good name for a pub.
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22. There are pubs called The Cock Inn.
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23. It's one of the jokes in Carry On
where Charles Hawtrey is playing
a detective following Sid James.
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24. Carry On Loving, I think it is.
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25. And he says, "Went for lunch
to The Cock Inn. Had drinks with
two other women. Left Cock Inn."
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26. That implies you've got a left cock
and a right cock.
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27. So, cock, thrush, kiwi!
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28. I've got to draw all three?
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29. No, just draw me a kiwi, paying
special attention to the nostrils.
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30. Imagine if your nostrils
were just above your anus.
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31. It would be unpleasant.
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32. Good. We want to know
how you sound, so, Jo, sing to me.
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33. Rich?
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34. Phil?
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35. Ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh!
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36. Ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh!
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37. That is extraordinary.
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38. Hang on. Phil did not know
that was the sound.
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39. Let's make sure we weren't
all having hallucinations.
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40. Rise and shine, good morning!
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41. And Alan goes...?
♪ Fruity, fruity, fruity!
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42. There! Didn't guess that one,
did you? No.
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43. A voice in my ear has told me
that the national bird of England
is the European robin.
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44. So let's head south for the winter.
Alan, what's the difference
between an ostrich and a lion?
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45. Why the stars? Is that a clue? It's
a clue to this rather weird story.
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46. An ostrich is a flightless bird
with a long neck, runs about 40mph,
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47. lays big eggs and is edible,
quite a delicacy, farmed.
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48. Yes. Lion, king of the jungle, big
cat, kill you with a single blow.
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49. There are many differences.
Is there any particular one
you're thinking of?
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50. One of the most famous African
explorers was the Scotsman...
David Livingstone. Thank you, Phil.
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51. He wrote, "I can distinguish
between them with certainty,
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52. "only by knowing that the ostrich
roars by day, the lion by night."
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53. He described the idea that lions
have an impressive roar
as mere majestic twaddle
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54. and said they sounded identical
to ostriches.
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55. Let's demonstrate that.
This is a lion.
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56. Jeez!
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57. This is the sound of an ostrich.
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58. Yes, Phil? David Livingstone worked
in the mines. His ears were damaged.
He couldn't be blamed.
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59. Stanley was lucky when he said,
"Dr Livingstone, I presume,"
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60. he wasn't mistaken for a leopard
and shot.
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61. If Siegfried and Roy had worked
with ostriches, not big cats,
they'd still be working today.
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62. Johnny Cash was attacked by
an ostrich. Did you know that? No.
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63. Very ferociously.
Never quite recovered.
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64. I saw one kick someone in
the goolies on telly the other day.
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65. Really caught him a treat! Can we
get points for being interesting?
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66. Yeah. In some countries,
linoleum is a form of currency.
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67. That's interesting, but is it true?
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68. You said it was interesting, right?
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69. We have a question for you, Rich.
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70. Explain how to French-kiss
a woodpecker.
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71. You would have to seduce it.
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72. You have to get it interested in
you, put a toothpick in your mouth.
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73. Say nice things to it.
"Oh, that's nice plumage!"
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74. Then you give it a date rape drug.
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75. Should all else fail! Yes.
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76. Does French-kissing mean
kissing people with tongues?
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77. Yes. Sorry.
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78. Are you seeing anyone
at the moment?
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79. Yes, with tongues.
I thought that was very attractive.
Why would anyone want to...?
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80. Woodpecker tongues
are amazing things. Let's see one.
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81. There you go. Oh! One of
the strangest things in nature.
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82. It extends to two-thirds
of its body length, it's covered
in sticky saliva, vicious barbs
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83. and has an ear at the end of it.
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84. So it can listen to its prey.
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85. It uses the beak
for pecking at bark.
An ear at the end of its tongue?
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86. A thing that detects sound.
Can you say that again?
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87. Absolutely. Pardon?
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88. To fit it into its mouth,
it has to wrap it round its brain.
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89. Woodpeckers are very popular
on creationist websites.
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90. They argue that this is
such an extraordinary creature
designed so fit for its purpose
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91. that it couldn't have evolved.
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92. Sometimes up to 15 or 16 times
a second it beats the wood
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93. to make a hole
and generates immense forces.
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94. 250 times more forces than an
astronaut endures. It's 1,000 Gs.
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95. It has amazing muscles around its
brain to stop it from shattering.
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96. I think this drawing looks like -
when you go to Ikea and they give
you instructions...
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97. Insert tongue A into groove B...
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98. If the pecker's got wood,
why go for tongue, you may argue!
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99. But it is
a pretty astonishing animal.
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100. Could we have an offshoot of this
programme called Quite Unnecessary?
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101. Can I be on that? Absolutely.
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102. I just can't quite see
how different it would be.
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103. Phil, does your bird like
chocolate? My bird? Yeah.
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104. My bird likes chocolate, yes.
It's very popular.
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105. - Have you got a bird then?
- I don't know.
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106. A parrot would like chocolate.
Their hooked beak's great
for getting right into the toffee.
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107. A pelican doesn't like chocolate.
It prefers toffee.
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108. Owls quite like chocolate
behind them. Then they can rotate
and show off.
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109. If you give a crow a Malteser,
it's like, "No way!"
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110. You can't give animals chocolate
because it makes them depressed.
That's right.
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111. You have to buy special chocolate
for dogs
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112. which you can give to the kids
and tell them it's dusty and old.
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113. Christmas chocolate
that's gone white and dusty.
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114. I've eaten dog chocolate.
It's like a phrase.
"Oh, I've eaten dog chocolate!"
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115. It's part of folklore. My bird don't
like chocolates! You're quite right.
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116. How many points does he get for
that? He'll get some points maybe.
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117. How good is their sense of taste,
birds?
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118. Absolutely minimal. "It's a seed,
I don't care, get it in."
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119. They only have 20 or 30 taste buds.
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120. I thought it was less than that.
Did you?
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121. I thought it was 15 to 18.
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122. And humans have how many,
would you say? 25,000.
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123. It's about 9,000 or 10,000.
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124. Pretty close. But new ones grow
every five days. Five days?
They last about five days.
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125. Chocolate would be toxic,
it would kill them.
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126. Kill them? It's poisonous to us,
but the lethal dose is high.
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127. Would a whole tin of Quality Street
kill you? 22 pounds is
the lethal dose for a human.
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128. That's nothing. Nothing!
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129. 22 pounds? A little Smartie would
kill a small songbird, for example.
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130. You sick...
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131. A friend of mine had a hamster
and it wasn't very well,
so her dad gave it brandy.
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132. Guess what happened next?
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133. Severe alcohol poisoning.
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134. Terminal alcohol poisoning?
Oh, absolutely.
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135. Oh, dear! "Is he better?"
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136. "Go to bed. You'll see in
the morning. Get down the shops!"
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137. When I was a teenager,
someone I know gave their dog LSD.
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138. Oh, my Lord!
They went to Glastonbury.
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139. I went into a friend's house and on
the landing they had this football.
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140. In a merry mood I kicked it through
the open window. I converted it.
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141. I had never heard of these things
that people who have hamsters
have - these little balls.
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142. I had kicked the hamster
right out of the window.
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143. Did it die? No, it survived.
It seemed perfectly cheerful.
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144. Have you seen these balls? Whoo-oo!
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145. I bet it thought,
"That new ball I got for Christmas
is bloody brilliant!"
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146. It's a pity Bill Bailey's not here.
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147. Bill's girlfriend used to take their
dog to work in an old people's home
and it ate entire boxes of Daz.
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148. And it would eat pants as well.
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149. Like a washing machine.
Poo out some white pants?
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150. Pants would come out of its bum.
Were they white? Well, "ish".
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151. You wouldn't pop them straight on.
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152. That's probably true. We had a cat
that could open the fridge.
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153. It would lie on its back with
its paws under the fridge and yank
it open. Really? Then he was in.
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154. He had the turkey halfway to
the cat flap before we found him.
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155. That's like Tom And Jerry.
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156. He was eating it really fast
as we were running towards him.
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157. We went to grab him and he jumped
straight out the cat flap, hissing.
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158. So, what weighs six pounds,
covers 18 square feet
and has to be changed once a month?
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159. Someone's got to do it.
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160. One of my sanitary towels.
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161. Sorry. Jo Brand!
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162. Did you think everyone else
was about to leap in and say that?
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163. I thought Alan might. Is that one
of your sanitary towels up there?
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164. Do you have wallpaper? I have
embroidered ones specially made
by a lady-in-waiting of the Queen.
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165. Um, outdoors or indoors?
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166. A flag? It belongs
to each and every one of us.
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167. Skin. Very good. Skin.
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168. It's the largest organ in the body.
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169. It may be in YOUR body.
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170. I've got a huge cock.
I think we'll forfeit you for that.
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171. That's how predictable that was!
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172. You almost fell
exactly into our trap.
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173. That counts as putting one foot
into it, so minus five to you.
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174. In a square inch of skin,
there are 20 feet of blood vessels.
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175. Just a single square inch of skin.
1,300 nerve cells.
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176. And 100 sweat glands.
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177. Cells of the human body
are constantly being replaced.
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178. We lose 50,000 cells a...?
Second. Yes.
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179. People get through around 900 skins
in a lifetime.
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180. True facts. Here's a question.
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181. Does putting perfumed sachets
in your drawers help conception?
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182. It will help. It'll give
a meadow-like feel to the bedroom
and everyone will be relaxed.
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183. Certainly in that sense and
there's an even more direct sense
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184. which is rather astonishing.
Is it to do with lavender?
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185. It's the lily of the valley.
It helps your sperm count.
Even weirder than that.
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186. Sperm can smell.
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187. Sperm can smell whether you've got
clean underwear on and if you have,
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188. it will come out to play.
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189. Well, they can certainly smell
the smell of lily of the valley.
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190. Someone's sitting in a lab
somewhere with sperm going, "Here's
something." They're all going...
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191. People will be alive because
of that research in a few years.
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192. You have great faith in science.
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193. The thing is, the only people
that smell of lily of the valley
are old ladies, aren't they?
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194. It's a Yardley fragrance. It is.
So if you're an old lady, wahey!
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195. I'm quite looking forward to it.
You'll have the sperm chasing you
down the bookies. Fantastic.
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196. It has been a mystery how sperm
can all go in the same direction,
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197. so fast, and whether or not
the ovum puts out a scent trail.
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198. The closest German scientists at
Ruhr University got to replicating
it is this scent called bourgeonal.
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199. They tried other smells?
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200. Thousands of others. This one makes
them align and race towards them.
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201. They'll use it
in fertility clinics.
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202. Here's a thing. Work this out. Two
brothers have a variety stage act.
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203. One brother punches a member
of the audience on stage
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204. and the other brother is arrested.
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205. Why would that be? Two brothers
are doing a variety act?
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206. They're Siamese twins. Absolutely.
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207. Give the man full maximum points.
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208. Chang and Eng Bunker was their name
and they are why conjoined twins
are called Siamese twins.
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209. They came from Siam and went
to America where they became
an entertainment act.
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210. They lived to the age of 63, each
married one of a pair of sisters
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211. and had 21 children between them.
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212. It's hard to imagine. You try to
conjure a scene of how it worked.
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213. How many cocks did they have?
They had one each.
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214. They were not joined at the cock
which would be unfortunate.
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215. They got on incredibly well,
though on that boat journey
from Siam, they had a fight.
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216. One of them wanted a cold bath and
the other didn't and the crew and
captain had to... Separate them?
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217. That's it. Throw a bucket
of cold water over them, I suppose!
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218. The one on the left looks really
serious. He was the straight man.
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219. One of them took to drink
and the other didn't.
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220. Imagine that, your twin pissed.
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221. "Come on, I'm getting you home!"
"I love you!"
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222. Chang, not unnaturally
as the drinker, died first
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223. and Eng woke up to find his brother
dead and gave a howl of despair.
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224. They ran to fetch a doctor to try
and separate him from his dead twin
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225. and he had coiled himself
round his twin and died
within an hour of this.
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226. The post-mortem revealed that it
was what was then called a broken
heart. It was a nervous shock.
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227. A lot of comedy teams have broken
up and they've done very well solo.
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228. Thank you for that tender remark.
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229. I'm feeling much better about
deformity, now we've talked it
through. Absolutely.
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230. They had a genuine dignity.
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231. There we are. What happened was
that Chang, the brother who landed
the punch and became an alcoholic,
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232. was guilty of assault, but the
judge decided he couldn't jail the
other one and set them both free.
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233. Some advantage in being conjoined
twins. Licence to whack people!
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234. On to our own version of
this barbaric ritual called QI -
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235. the general ignorance round. What
is the loudest thing in the ocean?
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236. The blue whale.
Blue whale? Oh, dear!
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237. The blue whale is nothing like as
loud as this. You can hear it for
10,000 miles. Another whale can.
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238. It's not, in amplitude,
the loudest thing.
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239. Yes? Is it not the sea itself?
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240. Ahh! No.
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241. Crabs? Not quite crabs.
A lot smaller. Lobsters?
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242. Is it some sort of vibrating thing?
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243. What Alan is doing
is exactly right.
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244. What I'm doing is exactly right.
Imagine a trillion things
with little claws doing this.
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245. Crayfish? Lobsters? Smaller.
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246. Shrimps? Yes. They're the loudest
thing? It's quiet down there!
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247. It's called a shrimp layer
and there are trillions of them.
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248. They do this at the same time
and the claws don't make the noise.
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249. It's the bubble of air popping
that is created by this thing that
comes out at 30 feet per second.
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250. It pops and it keeps people awake
if they come inland near the coast.
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251. Trillions of them. Really vast.
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252. They can white out a submarine's
sonar and deafen the operators.
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253. Subs below the layer hear
nothing above it and subs above it
hear nothing below it.
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254. The shrimps are floating
in the water? Yes.
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255. So what's more likely? Being killed
by lightning or by an asteroid?
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256. Lightning.
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257. Oh, dear!
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258. No-one's ever been killed by an
asteroid. That's rubbish. Prove it.
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259. Oddly enough, it's rather unfair,
in the UK you're more likely
to be struck by an asteroid,
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260. but in America being struck
by lightning is more likely.
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261. Research into NEOs,
Near Earth Objects,
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262. estimates that a large one strikes
us once every million years with
the likely death toll of a billion.
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263. That's never happened! The chances
of dying are one in six million.
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264. It'll happen soon. It won't!
The asteroid just needs
to be two kilometres wide.
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265. We've seen craters
with ones wider than that.
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266. It's due at any moment.
Where would you like it to land?
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267. Wherever it lands,
it's gonna destroy everybody.
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268. Yorkshire. Yorkshire!
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269. They'd just be delighted
it didn't land in Lancashire.
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270. "Aye, it come to Yorkshire!"
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271. Most people are struck by lightning
on golf courses. That's true.
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272. My aunt got struck by lightning.
You have an ant? Oh, your aunt!
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273. I'm so sorry. Yeah.
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274. I do apologise.
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275. I was imagining this little...
That too. She had a pet ant.
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276. My aunt... had a little pet ant.
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277. She got struck
between the first and second holes.
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278. Oh, very good!
Something in her stance.
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279. Now, where do camels come from?
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280. Phil? Over there.
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281. Usually out of the shimmering,
miragey horizon.
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282. True. You may be pointing
in the right direction.
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283. Where do they originate from?
Africa. Africa did you say? Yes.
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284. No. Europe.
Europe did you say? Yes.
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285. Not Europe, no,
but that wasn't a forfeit one.
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286. Asia? Asia?
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287. You're desperate for those points.
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288. Is it Australia?
No, it's not Australia.
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289. America. You got some points back!
Really? No!
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290. They did. Cigarettes maybe.
Like horses and dogs.
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291. Like horses and dogs, camels grew
up in the grasslands of America
20 million years ago. Rubbish!
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292. Fair enough, fair enough.
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293. The land masses
would have been adjoin-ed.
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294. The Bering Strait was land then,
yes. In those days they were
more like giraffes or gazelles.
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295. The camel is the only mammal
apart from humans that will smoke
a cigarette and enjoy it.
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296. What about beagles? The camel
handlers give them a puff.
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297. Beagles hate it.
And they inhale and exhale smoke.
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298. I totally made that up.
That's rubbish.
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299. But it was quite a good one
and it got you going. It did.
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300. They became extinct in North
America during the last Ice Age and
haven't been back, except in zoos.
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301. So, next question.
Why are flamingoes pink?
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302. It's what they eat.
Which is? Shrimps.
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303. You really didn't know that,
did you?
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304. You were shocked.
What are the chances of that?
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305. They eat something that affects
their pigmentation. They do.
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306. It's blue-green algae.
They stand on one leg.
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307. If they lifted the other one,
they'd fall down. They change them,
otherwise their leg would rot.
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308. Is that right? I made that up
as well, but I'm doing quite well.
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309. Twice I made you go,
"Is that right?"
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310. As well as green chlorophyll, the
algae has blue and red pigments,
so its bloom is often red,
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311. violet, brown, yellow, even orange.
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312. So from one silly bill to another,
artists, we need to see your kiwis.
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313. So we'll start at this end.
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314. This is a sequential drawing of
the nostril, there in situ and here
sneezing, so as early movie footage,
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315. it's "atchoo"!
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316. I've drawn the assembly
instructions for a kiwi.
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317. Like you find at Ikea.
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318. And this is where you screw on
the beak, in "C".
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319. With a Phillips screw.
That's the completed project.
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320. OK, very good. Jo?
I just sort of did colouring in.
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321. Oh, that's a beautiful bird!
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322. Have you got the nostrils
at the end of this crest? I have.
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323. We discovered in an earlier round
that birds have no taste.
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324. This bird?
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325. No! It's very charming.
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326. Alan, let's have a look at yours.
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327. I've done him...
That's him with his shades on.
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328. Even though it's night. Yeah.
Well, it wouldn't matter.
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329. And his nostrils are on the end
of his beak for sniffing.
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330. Whether through some random act
or whether through brilliance,
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331. you've got it spot-on, the nostrils
are at the end of the beak.
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332. Officially, you measure a bird's
bill from the tip to the nostril.
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333. Why would you want to do that?
Well, quite!
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334. So, officially, the kiwi has
the shortest bill of all birds.
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335. Its nostrils frequently get clogged
up, but they're very good sneezers.
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336. So let's count our chickens!
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337. In first place, with a proud
three points, it's Rich.
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338. And in second place with one point,
it's Phil.
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339. In third place with minus eight,
it's Jo.
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340. What did I get minus for?
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341. But a proud and flourishing last
with minus 40, it's Alan!
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342. Let me leave you
with an extraordinary bird tale.
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343. Tibbles, the lighthouse keeper's
cat, arrived on Stephen's Island
in New Zealand last century.
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344. Soon piles of small bird corpses
began piling up by the back door.
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345. The puzzled lighthouse keeper
sent off some samples
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346. and learned that Tibbles
had discovered a new species -
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347. the only flightless perching bird
in the world ever recorded.
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348. But by the time the news arrived,
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349. Tibbles had killed
every last example
of the Stephen's Island wren.
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350. It's the only case
of a single individual wiping out
every member of a whole species.
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351. On that note, from Jo, Rich,
Phil, Alan, myself, goodnight.
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