1. A very, very, very good evening
to you, ladies and gentlemen,
Copy !req
2. and welcome to QI,
the BBC's answer to Pop Idol,
otherwise known as Bone Idle.
Copy !req
3. To educate, inform and entertain -
these are my intentions
Copy !req
4. and paving the road to hell with them
tonight are Rich Hall, Clive
Anderson, Phill Jupitus, Alan Davies.
Copy !req
5. The four panellists of the
apocalypse - may the Lord Reith
have mercy on your souls.
Copy !req
6. Let's have a round on buzzers
and bells. Rich! How do you sound?
Copy !req
7. And Clive goes...
Copy !req
8. Phill goes...
Copy !req
9. And Alan goes...
Copy !req
10. Excellent. Right, gentlemen.
Bombs away.
Copy !req
11. Alan, have you heard about
the Mexican kamikaze squadron?
Copy !req
12. Kamikaze? Like that?
Copy !req
13. That's right, only Mexican. I care
not for myself, only my country.
Copy !req
14. Very good indeed. For the emperor...
Copy !req
15. Andale, andale...
Copy !req
16. I just imagine a bloke in a big hat,
riding a donkey into the Alamo.
Copy !req
17. They eat so many refried beans,
they'd fart themselves to death.
Copy !req
18. Then they explode
in front of the enemy.
Copy !req
19. Oddly interesting thought, because
kamikaze is Japanese for divine wind.
Divine wind? Is it?
Copy !req
20. God's guffs?
Copy !req
21. These little Mexican critters...
Copy !req
22. They're not people? Exactly.
Copy !req
23. Not people. .. were deployed by the
US Army in the Second World War
against the Japanese.
Copy !req
24. Not like the dolphins they deployed
in the war against Iraq? They let
them out, and then they pissed off.
Copy !req
25. What they call the Mark 8 MMS -
Marine Mammal System.
Copy !req
26. What are the odds that the Iraqi
navy will be leaning out from a boat
with a flaming hoop, like that?
Copy !req
27. The critter
will be some sort of a desert fox.
Copy !req
28. Pretty close, actually.
Copy !req
29. It has got to be an insect, hasn't
it? Between an insect and a fox.
Copy !req
30. In size or in...? It's kind of...
It is more foxlike than...
Copy !req
31. Scorpion? But it flies.
It is quite foxlike. A bat!
Copy !req
32. A bat, is the answer. A Mexican bat.
Copy !req
33. You're not going to like this... How
do you know it's Mexican without a
sombrero? It's the BREED of the bat.
Copy !req
34. It's a Mexican free-tail bat...
I actually know the answer.
Copy !req
35. Do you? Give it to us, Phill.
The American navy, in their wisdom,
Copy !req
36. saw that these bats would fly up
under the eaves and nest and they
thought, if they see out at sea
Copy !req
37. a Japanese aircraft carrier
or the hangars of the airplanes,
they will nest.
Copy !req
38. And they filled them
with explosives. Right? Yeah?
Copy !req
39. What happened,
where they were sewn up,
the bats would go, "What's that?"
Copy !req
40. And they would start nibbling
at themselves
and explode in an untoward fashion.
Copy !req
41. You're very close, Phill. It's not
actually the navy and it's not boats.
It's worse than that...
Copy !req
42. I'm very close, in that I'm nowhere
near it. No, in aeroplanes,
Copy !req
43. hundreds of these bats,
with these little waistcoats,
with napalm in them and a detonator.
Copy !req
44. The idea was to drop them over
Japanese towns, round about dawn,
so that, when the light came,
Copy !req
45. to escape the light, they'd go into
the eaves and rafters of houses
Copy !req
46. and then would detonate causing these
whole towns to burn because most
Japanese towns were made of wood.
Copy !req
47. You have to set the napalm off
so they'd have to follow them out.
Copy !req
48. There was some sort of ignition
device incorporated...
A little book of matches?
Copy !req
49. There is a poetic justice, however.
Copy !req
50. As a friend of our furry creatures,
you will be pleased to know
that poetic justice prevailed.
Copy !req
51. Before they ever used these bats
against the Japanese, they were
testing and the wind changed
Copy !req
52. and the bats that had been dropped on
the target were blown back to the HQ
of the American army and blew it up.
Copy !req
53. I don't find it poetic! Do you not
find it poetic? I'm American!
Copy !req
54. As I understand it, the kamikaze
pilots, they only gave them enough
fuel to go one way, right? Yes.
Copy !req
55. They do that with all planes,
though.
Copy !req
56. Technically...
Copy !req
57. Technically,
all aeroplanes are kamikaze planes.
Copy !req
58. Unless you buy a return ticket.
Copy !req
59. This is why I think that
planes should run on AA batteries.
Copy !req
60. You want to go to London
from New York,
you have to buy 200 AA batteries.
Copy !req
61. You only bring enough batteries to
get you there. And you can always
get them at the airport. Yeah.
Copy !req
62. Then if you run out over the ocean,
someone has got a Walkman
you can get batteries from.
Copy !req
63. What if, under the plane, the bit of
ribbon that you pull the batteries
out with...? Where's that gone?
Copy !req
64. You have to get the end of a Biro...
Copy !req
65. You're hanging underneath a 747,
35,035 feet... trying to dig out
32 AA batteries with a Biro.
Copy !req
66. None of this is as mad
as a bat with a napalm waistcoat.
Copy !req
67. One minute they're trying to get
little bats with little napalm,
Copy !req
68. and then, OK, that didn't work,
an atomic bomb, then,
blow up two cities...
Copy !req
69. That brings me to my next question.
Rich, which comedian went
and dropped an atomic bomb on Japan?
Copy !req
70. That would mean, basically,
which comedian bombed in Japan?
Copy !req
71. That would have been me!
Did you bomb in Japan?
Copy !req
72. I bombed so horribly in Japan...
In front of an English-speaking
audience? No, Japanese speaking.
Copy !req
73. I tried to put my finger
on what went wrong.
That had a lot to do with it.
Copy !req
74. A comedian member of what you might
call a troupe of comedians.
One of the Stooges?
Copy !req
75. No... Why, you knucklehead!
You dropped that
atomic bomb on Japan!
Copy !req
76. What d'you wanna do that for? Why,
I oughtta...! They'd never have won
the war if those blokes had a plane!
Copy !req
77. He contributed materially
to the technology behind,
Copy !req
78. very specifically,
the dropping of the bomb.
Copy !req
79. Everyone else was working
on the nuclear explosion.
Copy !req
80. He invented little doors that
went... There is a particular clamp
Copy !req
81. that held the bomb to the aeroplane.
The Crazy Gang! The best known
of them all, the Marx Brothers.
Copy !req
82. Harpo. That one there?
The one with the ring round him.
Copy !req
83. What is his name? Karl. No.
Copy !req
84. You've got Harpo and Groucho, and on
the right-hand side there's Chico.
Copy !req
85. Zeppo. Zeppo is the right answer.
Copy !req
86. He joined after Gummo -
also known as Who-o? -
Copy !req
87. left the stage act.
He was in five of the films,
the last one being Duck Soup.
Copy !req
88. He set up a company
that specialised in engineering
and design. Called Blammo!
Copy !req
89. It should have been!
He came up with the clamp that held
the bomb. As well as a wristwatch
Copy !req
90. that detected your pulse and gave an
alarm when you had a heart attack.
Copy !req
91. Groucho said he was a lousy actor
and couldn't wait to get out of the
Marx Brothers. But he also added
Copy !req
92. that he was, off-screen, the funniest
and wittiest of the Marx Brothers.
Copy !req
93. Harpo could actually talk in real
life. No! You've shattered all my...
I read his autobiography.
Copy !req
94. He spent the first 15 years
of his life nicking stuff. He was
really proud of it. They all did.
Copy !req
95. They were gangsters in New York.
The Three Stooges were flying planes
and they're the gangs of New York?
Copy !req
96. We're gonna kill you
if you don't give me the money.
Copy !req
97. Harpo had a long career
as an after-dinner speaker
Copy !req
98. because he just stood up and said,
"Unaccustomed as I am..."
Copy !req
99. A lot of the early gangs in
New York were Jewish -
Dutch Schultz, Mayer Lansky...
Copy !req
100. I think the Scorsese oeuvre would be
a lot nicer if people had horns -
beep-beep - and a funny hat.
Copy !req
101. "Hey, Jonny, what you gonna-ga do?
Copy !req
102. "You think I'm funny, how? I'm gonna
play this BLEEP harp over here!
Copy !req
103. "I amuse you?" Beep-beep!
Copy !req
104. Fantastic. Now, Phill, one for you,
I think. What goes woof, woof, boom?
Copy !req
105. A suicide corgi.
Copy !req
106. The next Norwegian entry
for the Eurovision Song Contest?
Copy !req
107. Terrier-ist!
Copy !req
108. Excellent. Joy upon joy.
Very, very good.
Copy !req
109. He must have some points for that.
Excellent.
Copy !req
110. We know how grotesque the Americans
can be - sending bats into combat.
Copy !req
111. And now the Russian flag,
you see, is waving behind you.
A dog with a bomb on it?
Copy !req
112. Dogs with bombs tied to them... Aw!
I know. What Man is capable of.
Copy !req
113. Too grotesque.
The story is horrible.
Copy !req
114. They trained them by making them
very, very hungry... Throw a stick at
a tank and it just goes... Woof!
Copy !req
115. Why not just throw a bomb at the
tank, instead of making a dog go...?
Copy !req
116. Because they are armour-plated. They
would keep the dogs very hungry
and then put food under a tank...
Copy !req
117. Why don't they just put a bomb
there? They're putting the food
there, he could put a bomb there.
Copy !req
118. No, they're training them.
Copy !req
119. So they become used
to looking under tanks for food.
Copy !req
120. Whose job was it
to change gear on that dog?
Copy !req
121. That is the trigger for the bomb.
When he gets under the tank.
Copy !req
122. I bet you all eat sheep, don't you,
on a Sunday?
Copy !req
123. Don't worry. That one didn't
blow up. He lives on a farm now.
He lives on a farm now.
Copy !req
124. His back's broken.
Copy !req
125. I have to tell you that there was,
again, poetic justice.
Copy !req
126. The dogs just turned round in the
battle and saw the Russian tanks,
Copy !req
127. which they recognised as having food
under them, so they went and blew
up their own tanks!
Copy !req
128. So the Russians started to shoot all
the dogs. They didn't shoot that one!
He lives on a farm,
Copy !req
129. they really love him
and stroke him a lot!
Copy !req
130. On to our next picture question.
Why is this picture a double first?
Copy !req
131. They're going to use the penguin
to blow up the Scotsman?
Copy !req
132. It's a brilliant plan!
Copy !req
133. First time the pipes were played
in Antarctica. Yes.
Copy !req
134. Probably the first time a penguin
was subjected to any kind of music.
The penguin went like that!
Copy !req
135. Is this the first-ever Edinburgh
Festival? Would that it were.
Copy !req
136. Would that it were, Stephen, would
that it were. Would that it were!
Copy !req
137. Oh, shush.
Copy !req
138. Here's one for mother.
Copy !req
139. Did you know that 50% of pipers...
Copy !req
140. I don't mean news-pipers,
I mean bagpipers.
Copy !req
141. .. suffer from repetitive strain
injury and are hard of hearing?
Copy !req
142. That is poetic justice!
Exactly! Very good. Excellent.
Copy !req
143. It is the first postcard
ever to be sent from Antarctica.
Copy !req
144. Obviously, you don't bring
a lot of stuff to Antarctica.
Copy !req
145. This guy had to drag his bag...
What if they had hit a crevasse?
Too much weight, because of them.
Copy !req
146. You never know, it might have saved
his life. It might have just caught
in the crack and he'd swing from it.
Copy !req
147. That did come out oddly,
but you know what I mean.
Copy !req
148. Now, what is the common name
of the species Ursus arctos?
Copy !req
149. It's the polar bear.
Polar bear, did you say?
Copy !req
150. A polar bear trap. It was indeed
a bear pit, a bear trap. No, no.
Copy !req
151. There are two common names.
One if you are American...
Copy !req
152. What's "ursus" mean?
"Ursus" is the Latin for bear.
And "arctos" is the Greek for bear.
Copy !req
153. So it's a bear-bear?
It's a bear-bear.
Copy !req
154. What's a hair-bear in Latin?
Copy !req
155. We shall have to find out. They
were great, the Hair Bear Bunch.
Copy !req
156. You can join in at some level,
I find.
Copy !req
157. There's a grizzly!
There is a grizzly bear, yes.
Copy !req
158. Ursus arctos. Or the brown bear.
Copy !req
159. The Arctic, and therefore the
Antarctic, is named after the bear,
not the other way around.
Copy !req
160. It was the region of the bear.
Ursa Major, the Great Bear, the
constellation is over the north.
Copy !req
161. So, if the Arctic is named after
the bear, the Antarctic is named
after the ant and the bear. Yes.
Copy !req
162. The Adventures Of Ant And Bear.
Like Ant and Dec. Only easier
to tell apart, obviously.
Copy !req
163. And easier to tolerate.
Copy !req
164. They won't come on the show
now you've said that. Bother.
Copy !req
165. Bother, bother, bother.
How am I going to live with myself?
Copy !req
166. They're good, write them a letter...
They could be walking up and down
under here as we speak.
Copy !req
167. Ant is always on the left,
always on the left.
Copy !req
168. Reading from left to right.
Ant and Dec. Ant and Dec.
Copy !req
169. It's weird. Even when you go around
them and go from behind, they
still... Not sure how it works.
Copy !req
170. They always follow you around the
room. It's like the moon going with
you up the M1. Ant and Dec always.
Copy !req
171. No, the polar bear is actually
Ursus maritimus, as if you cared.
Copy !req
172. How do polar bears disguise
themselves? Like that.
Copy !req
173. They stand in front of anything
white. That's probably the right
answer. Do they dress up?
Copy !req
174. No, there is apparently
a misconception that they cover
their nose with their left paw,
Copy !req
175. thinking that it disguises itself,
like our model,
our demonstrator is showing us now.
Copy !req
176. Where's Alan? Where's Alan gone?
Copy !req
177. Are you sure they're not just
checking if they've got bad breath?
Copy !req
178. I don't understand, if you're
a 12ft, 800lb bear, why you have
to disguise yourself at all.
Copy !req
179. Bear tax.
Copy !req
180. Bear tax.
Copy !req
181. No bears here. Haven't seen any.
Copy !req
182. Or they stand like that...
and put three bits of coal there
and a carrot in their mouth.
Copy !req
183. This brings us neatly to our general
ignorance round in which we ask
Alan, is this a rhetorical question?
Copy !req
184. No.
Copy !req
185. Quite right.
Copy !req
186. So...
Copy !req
187. I've got a headache! What's the
point of rhetorical questions?
Copy !req
188. So fingers on buzzers.
How many states are there in the
United States of America? Alan?
Copy !req
189. 50.
Copy !req
190. Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear.
It's 46, technically,
because four of them are not states.
Copy !req
191. There they are. That's Kentucky,
Pennsylvania, Virginia,
Massachusetts. They're commonwealths.
Copy !req
192. They're commonwealths, exactly.
Copy !req
193. What that constitutionally means...
Is their governance any different?
Copy !req
194. They have governors and the same way
of conducting their business. It's
all in straight lines. Isn't God odd?
Copy !req
195. What are the odds against that...?
There's only one state that
hasn't got a straight line.
Copy !req
196. I should imagine that would be
Hawaii. It is. Well done. I knew...
Copy !req
197. No, just a guess.
Gosh, how interesting.
Copy !req
198. Now, staying with America,
in the whole of the Second World War,
Copy !req
199. only six Americans were killed
by enemy action on US soil.
Copy !req
200. All of them at a church picnic.
Copy !req
201. The cause of death
was a Japanese fugo.
Copy !req
202. My question is, what is a fugo?
He's the seventh Marx brother.
Copy !req
203. We were hoping you might say it's a
poisonous fish, because there is one
called the fugu. But it's not that.
Copy !req
204. Fugo is a paper balloon. There were
atomic bombs in one direction and,
Copy !req
205. "Let loose the paper balloons!"
Copy !req
206. They sent thousands of them
over the Pacific...
Copy !req
207. With a bomb hanging off it?
With bombs on them, yeah.
Copy !req
208. But the odds against them landing on
a city in the mainland United States
were drastically against...
Copy !req
209. Most of it's kind of wasteland...
Copy !req
210. It's not wasteland.
Copy !req
211. All right, but the chances are that,
if you send a random balloon
into mainland United States,
Copy !req
212. it will hit... Wasteland. It's a
clever weapon though, isn't it?
Copy !req
213. Presumably,
radar wouldn't detect it.
The paper wouldn't show up on radar.
Copy !req
214. No, absolutely. It was made
from a paper called washi... Wah-I!
Or wahi if you prefer. Balloon!
Copy !req
215. Ba-oon! Can't do Japanese.
They did rather cleverly
know about the jet stream
Copy !req
216. which no-one else in the world knew
about, which allowed it to travel
at hundreds of miles an hour.
Copy !req
217. But they were made by schoolgirls who
didn't know what they were making...
Copy !req
218. Birmingham is a wasteland.
Copy !req
219. That's, uh, Alabama, I think,
isn't it?
Copy !req
220. And Birmingham, Alabama.
That's a wasteland. They should team
up with each other. They should.
Copy !req
221. Anyway that's a fugo. But fugu, which
you neatly avoided the trap of...
Copy !req
222. It's a blowfish. That puffer fish
that has a bit in the middle that...
Copy !req
223. Is it about six people
a year die in Japan?
Copy !req
224. Between 30 and 100 suffer from the
poisoning, and half of those die.
So it's anything between...
Copy !req
225. 800 Americans die
in a McDonald's every year.
Copy !req
226. Really? Which one?
It's best to avoid that one.
Copy !req
227. The blowfish McMuffin.
Copy !req
228. This is a fish which has inner parts
which are deadly poison.
They just love the daring of it.
Copy !req
229. Well, that's what I thought
but, actually, there are traces
of the poison always left
Copy !req
230. and if... Get you high? Quite right.
Copy !req
231. It's tetrodotoxin - very poisonous.
You have to be specially trained in
the art of filleting this fish.
Copy !req
232. Restaurants in Japan where you can
eat this fish have little lanterns
hanging outside made of the skin
Copy !req
233. to show it's a trained... Part of the
training is you have to eat the fish
that you've just... Have you had it?
Copy !req
234. I've never been to Japan. You're so
tall, you'd be like Godzilla! They'd
be like, "Aiiee! Stephen Fryo!"
Copy !req
235. Mistah Flye! You'd be rampaging
through downtown Tokyo, "Mahhh..."
Copy !req
236. The museum! Why is it with the
Jap...? It's always a 50/50 ball
Copy !req
237. whether it's an R or an L,
and they always get it wrong.
Copy !req
238. I refuse to generalise
about a race of people.
Copy !req
239. I heard Mike Myers do an American
name - Rory Templeton - and
he called him Ruaridy Tempreton.
Copy !req
240. If you want the Japanese to virtually
commit suicide, just ask them
to say orange tip fritillary.
Copy !req
241. Aiieewa oieewah!
Copy !req
242. For you, Mr Flye, interview is over!
Copy !req
243. You build bridge now!
Copy !req
244. So much for the Geneva Convention.
Copy !req
245. Oh, yes, absolutely correct,
whatever the question was.
Copy !req
246. Fugus, that's right. Fugus.
Copy !req
247. So, when are penguins found
near the magnetic North Pole?
Copy !req
248. When they're wearing
a suit of armour!
Copy !req
249. They are going to be, soon, because
the magnetic north and south
is going to switch any minute.
Copy !req
250. Oh, give the man five points.
Absolutely spot on.
Copy !req
251. The trap was to say that penguins
only live near the South Pole
Copy !req
252. but the fact is, the north
and south flip in magnetic terms.
Copy !req
253. I think penguins might be
my favourite animal. I like
the one on the bottom left.
Copy !req
254. Looks like security!
Copy !req
255. Yes, the actual root of the
question - though penguins are,
in so many ways, more interesting -
Copy !req
256. was that the North Pole becomes
the South Pole and vice versa every
million or so years. Really? Yeah.
Copy !req
257. So any minute now, everyone's fridge
magnets are just going to fall
onto the floor? No...
Copy !req
258. People will start believing
in bloody God again!
Copy !req
259. Compasses will point to the south,
rather than the north. It will be
great for orienteering, won't it?
Copy !req
260. People will get used to it.
No, they won't. North, not south?
Copy !req
261. I don't live in South London, I
don't care what you say. Oh, dear...
Copy !req
262. Do we know why it happens?
What's going on? No.
Copy !req
263. It's a very mysterious process.
Copy !req
264. If the Earth were not magnetic, there
would be no life on it, or at least
no life like us... What a loss.
Copy !req
265. Yes. Because the magnetism
deflects the solar rays...
Copy !req
266. I want you to imagine the penguin is
a malicious and dangerous conqueror
of peoples. And now look at that...
Copy !req
267. They don't have many predators...
Polar bears eat them. They don't
live in the same continent.
Copy !req
268. Don't they? They've never met?
Polar bears in the north.
Copy !req
269. They've never seen one another?
Except in zoos. In my mind,
it's like lions and tigers.
Copy !req
270. In my head, they're all hanging out
together. And they've never met!
Lions - Africa. Tigers - Asia.
Copy !req
271. Imagine if it was like that with
men and women. Here's a thought.
Copy !req
272. Do you think it would be better
if it was harder to conceive,
but easier to give birth?
Copy !req
273. If I was a woman, I would certainly
think that. Who cooked that up?
Copy !req
274. It's all backwards, isn't it? Yes.
Copy !req
275. Mind you, you wouldn't want to gasp
in agony for 36 hours to conceive.
Copy !req
276. It's usually what it sounds like!
Let's move on, then.
Copy !req
277. What is wrong with this picture?
Copy !req
278. No Starship Enterprise.
Copy !req
279. It should be the other way up.
Absolutely right. Have some points.
Copy !req
280. It's upside down, according to our
usual convention of putting north
at the top and south at the bottom...
Copy !req
281. So in 200,000 years' time, this
is going to be completely wrong.
Copy !req
282. At the moment, that's its North Pole
at the top, and its South Pole...
I meant it should be vertical.
Copy !req
283. How very honest you are, Davies. You
can take those points off yourself.
Copy !req
284. Lastly on poles - how are
Boy Scouts connected to poles?
Copy !req
285. Don't look at me like...
Copy !req
286. Part of their uniform. They had a
hat, a neckerchief and a pole that
was used for erecting their tents...
Copy !req
287. Something to do with Poland?
It IS to do with Poland.
Copy !req
288. Name things that are particular about
Boy Scouts. Dib-dib-dib, dob-dob-dob.
Yes. The salute. You got there.
Copy !req
289. Let's have a look at a Polish salute
and a Boy Scout salute together,
shall we?
Copy !req
290. There you are, on your screen now.
Which one is the Pole?
Copy !req
291. Oh, let me think. Let me think.
Copy !req
292. What a weedy, nerdy scout.
It's the Milky Bar Kid.
Copy !req
293. We need hard scouts. I loved
the Boy Scouts. We went to 'Nam.
Copy !req
294. It's said to be an American
invention, the Boy Scout movement,
more than a British.
Copy !req
295. A man called Seaton
founded a movement called
the Woodcraft Indians.
Copy !req
296. Did you go in a helicopter gunship?
Copy !req
297. He had a little waistcoat
with napalm strapped to it.
Copy !req
298. With The Doors playing really
loudly. Now, boys...
Copy !req
299. if you see anybody wearing
black pyjamas, you run towards them
Copy !req
300. and you press that button there.
That's them dead.
Copy !req
301. Ka-boom! You got your Woodcraft,
you got your Killin' Gooks...
Copy !req
302. You got your napalm waistcoat.
Copy !req
303. The Poles were the only army with
that salute, with two fingers,
supposedly after a Polish war hero
Copy !req
304. who had three fingers blown off. Do I
look Polish? You look very Polish.
Copy !req
305. Ooh! Do a Polish polar bear.
Copy !req
306. Fantastic, thank you. Well...
Copy !req
307. on that bombshell, that's it for
another week, I'm sorry to say.
Copy !req
308. And the final scores are poles apart.
Copy !req
309. Phill scored a piping hot 4.
Copy !req
310. Rich barely scraped in ahead of Clive
with 2 and 1 respectively.
Copy !req
311. But Alan bombed with -4.
Copy !req
312. Two fingers to Alan, and to you all.
Copy !req
313. It's do widzenia. Goodnight.
Copy !req