1. Hello! Hello, hello, hello, hello,
and welcome to Q.I.
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2. We trawl
the trackless ocean of knowledge,
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3. only to find
that everything smells fishy.
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4. On the seafront of understanding,
three winkle-pickers
and a cockle-warmer. Bill Bailey,
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5. Jimmy Carr,
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6. Jo Brand and Alan Davies.
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7. This evening's Q.I. brainteaser
is on the little podia beside you -
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8. year five Q.I. module,
and the theme is letters.
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9. Letters. Show the boys and girls.
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10. Right. There. Throughout the show,
you'll have the time, we hope,
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11. to make up some interesting phrases
from your letters.
Just work on them as we go?
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12. That's right. To keep you occupied.
When do we show them - just when
we've got one good? If you like.
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13. Or towards the end. All right.
I've got one too, and I'll show you
something I came up with earlier.
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14. I'm trying to make "vagina". See?
"Q.I. is a..."
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15. Came from my arrangement
of the letters, you see.
It's a play on the initials.
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16. Jo's done "quim". Have you?
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17. You put the Q.I. in quim.
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18. Very good. That's the first time
my quim's got a smattering.
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19. Look at that! "Vagina doom".
Oh, Lord!
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20. It might get in the way of the game,
but do ask a question. I will do.
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21. Fox!
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22. I think we get the idea.
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23. You must be a blast by the fridge.
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24. First, we ought to do an equipment
test. Jo, how do you go?
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25. Woop-woop-woop! Ne-ow!
Very good.
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26. Jimmy goes...? HONK!
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27. Bill goes...? HO-O-O-OT!
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28. Alan goes...?
Ahoy! Hello, sailor.
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29. Well, we're gonna... Hang on.
Who was that?
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30. Ahoy! Hello, sailor.
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31. Anyway. Let's start firmly
on dry ground. Question 1.
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32. Would anyone like some koala soup?
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33. HONK! Jimmy. Presumably
a hungry koala. Of course.
It would be a hungry baby koala,
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34. because koalas are the only animals
to make what is called a soup,
or pap.
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35. What, in a bowl? They make it
in the bowl of their body,
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36. and it comes out of their... Arse.
Bottom. Yes, their arse.
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37. Do I get a point for that? You get
a point for knowing "arse", yes.
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38. They make soup with their arse?
They make a soup
for their young with their arse.
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39. That's careless parenting, isn't it?
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40. Why haven't they had that on the Bush
Tucker trial in I'm A Celebrity...?
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41. A very good question.
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42. They'd bring a koala out
and hold it over you...
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43. "Koala soup, sir?"
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44. It brings a horrible new meaning to
"Waiter, there's a hair in my soup."
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45. There's a koala there! Behind you!
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46. They're not koala bears.
They're not bears. Well done.
They're marsupials.
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47. What are they most closely related
to? Fish. Kangaroos. A wombat.
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48. Wombat. Although wombats don't
have soup, they have cubical faeces.
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49. Do they? Little dice. Cubicular?
Cubical. He can't get the leaf down.
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50. Look, he's been chewing it
for ten minutes. Well, no...
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51. Isn't that because he's eating the
leaves of the eucalyptus tree? He is.
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52. It acts as a powerful hallucinogen
on the koala,
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53. so a lot of the time, they're just
saying, "Heh-heh. Whoo-ooah!
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54. "What did I come up here for?"
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55. Is that how they got the idea...?
Well, it's an analgesic,
rather than a hallucinogen.
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56. They're left numb.
I always get those two mixed up.
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57. Painkiller. Painkiller.
It's poisonous. Well...
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58. They have an incredibly long
intestine, about a mile long,
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59. to digest all that poison that would
kill a human. Yes. It's interesting.
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60. That's what we're here for,
to be quite interesting. You think?
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61. They can tell, which scientists
can't, the age of a eucalyptus leaf.
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62. It has to be between a year
and 18 months. If it's any younger,
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63. it has no value whatsoever to them.
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64. They sleep for 20 to 22 hours a day.
I'll give you two points for that.
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65. Absolutely right.
I won a night out with a koala.
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66. Did you? We were out all night.
Went to a restaurant and a club.
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67. Soup of the day?
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68. What do they drink?
What did your koala drink? Becks.
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69. Oh, they did.
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70. In Darug language,
"koala" means "no water".
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71. The main thing to remember about
koala bears is they're not bears.
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72. So that leads us to...
Where do bears do their business
in the winter?
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73. Ahoy. In the woods.
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74. In the woods, did you say?
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75. I'm afraid it is.
That's minus 20 points, Alan Davies.
20? For BLEEP's sake.
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76. HONK! Jimmy. Is it the Cayman
Islands, for tax purposes? No.
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77. No. The fact is,
for the seven months of the year
that they're hibernating,
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78. bears do not either urinate
or defecate. They must be
busting to go when they get up.
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79. They have a very clever device.
Firstly they recycle the urea
as protein in the body,
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80. so they don't need to pee, and their
body makes a thing called a tappen,
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81. which is composed of faeces
and hair and different things,
and it's a sort of butt plug
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82. that seals up their anus. Are they
available in the shops yet?
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83. She-bears give birth when they're
hibernating. When they're asleep?
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84. Well, they sort of wake up, rather
briefly, to give birth... Jesus.
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85. .. and apparently they forget about
it afterwards and go back to sleep.
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86. They can give birth to up to four
cubs, from four different fathers.
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87. Sounds like the royal family.
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88. Do they live on an estate,
by any chance? Do they...?
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89. Did you just say
"Do they live on an estate?" Well...
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90. What you're saying
is white-trash bears? Yeah.
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91. They sound a little bit white trash.
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92. Now. Bear in your bathroom,
what shouldn't you squeeze?
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93. Toothpaste. Yes! It will
make it crazy with desire.
Crazy with desire.
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94. Lust. Well, a sort of lust
for the toothpaste. You'd be safer
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95. carrying a freshly-butchered
elk leg, in terms of...
There was a recent...
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96. In the bathroom?
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97. Marks & Spencers?
Six butchered elks' legs?
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98. Bears go crazy for toothpaste.
They trashed a tourist camp in
the Arctic, polar bears, recently.
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99. Toothpaste does something to dogs
as well, gets them going.
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100. Absolutely right.
So even though they are relations...
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101. There are dog toothpastes,
but they're flavoured in odd ways.
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102. Peanut butter, beef,
things like that. Trouser leg.
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103. So there you are.
Don't use toothpaste near a bear.
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104. What has huge teeth
and only one facial expression?
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105. Janet Street-Porter.
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106. Oh dear, oh dear.
We've got that written up somewhere.
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107. I took a fall, but it was worth it.
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108. No, it's an animal.
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109. Huge teeth and one facial
expression? A shark!
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110. That's just had quite a bad stroke.
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111. All down one side, so it swims
in a circle like that.
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112. Or a Botox-ed panther.
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113. That would qualify.
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114. What about a beaver? Beavers
have big teeth, and they
don't vary their face much.
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115. This has the biggest teeth
of any mammal. It's a bear.
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116. It was thought to be a member
of the raccoon family, but it's not.
It's a member of the bear family.
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117. It's a giant panda!
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118. And the giant panda's teeth are so
enormous, it constricts its face
which is as stiff as a board.
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119. You can see one there. It was only
1996 it was discovered to be a bear.
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120. It was a cat in a bear suit?
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121. This is where science goes very odd,
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122. because it was designated
a carnivore,
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123. although everybody knows...
It doesn't eat meat.
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124. Most living pandas are actually
vegetarian by choice. Yes.
They should be eating meat.
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125. Bamboo, as we know. Bamboo shoots.
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126. And they have to do that
for 12 hours a day, cos it's
so lacking in nutritive quality.
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127. So they're the only bears that don't
hibernate. Cos they can't afford it,
calorifically.
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128. Why are they so cute? They are cute,
aren't they? Adorable.
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129. Aesthetically, what's going on
there? Is it...? Look at the eyes -
they're piss-holes in the snow.
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130. They certainly are. Have they
ever been successfully bred
with other bears?
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131. Why are they so un-libidinous?
I don't know. Do you want to know
about their penises?
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132. Er... are they those barbed ones that
lock in and don't come out again?
They point backwards.
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133. Into themselves? Ejaculating up...
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134. "Oh, sorry, love."
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135. Hence the old joke about "Eats,
shoots and leaves," I suppose.
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136. But it's... I don't know whether
that is the reason.
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137. Ingrowing genitals won't help
breeding. No, it won't.
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138. That's obviously it.
That must be such a turn-off.
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139. "Do you fancy...?"No, not really."
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140. "I really don't fancy it at all.
It's my species."
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141. What can you tell me about bamboo?
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142. Hello? You've attracted someone else
on to your side.
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143. In Hong Kong, and probably
elsewhere in south-east Asia,
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144. they use bamboo as scaffolding.
You're quite right.
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145. It's incredibly lightweight,
but extraordinarily strong.
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146. And they use it over huge buildings!
It has a tensile strength
greater than steel.
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147. Over 5,000 uses of bamboo have been
recorded, including desalination,
use as a diesel fuel...
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148. Tarzan uses it for swimming
away from people. Exactly right.
Breathing in water.
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149. As a cane, to give people
a thrashing. Have you been caned
with bamboo? Certainly.
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150. At school, I was caned almost daily.
Two uses of bamboo...
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151. And that was just by yourself.
Never did me any harm!
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152. Are we going through all 5,000 uses?
No, we're not.
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153. It grows incredibly fast - some
species grow up to four foot a day.
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154. You can actually watch it grow.
It was used as a torture
by the Chinese. Four foot a day?
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155. Torture as in they would make
someone sit on it as it grew? Yes.
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156. They'd tie you down over a bamboo
cane and it would grow into you.
But what is bamboo?
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157. It's a plant. What sort? Which
is used for growing runner beans...
What class of plant?
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158. A tree. Tree. Bark. Wood. Grass.
It's a grass.
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159. It is a type of grass. Well done.
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160. Well done. They flower -
some of them flower,
only it takes them 120 years.
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161. Bill used to have a cactus. Yup.
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162. Huge cactus, it was all knobbly,
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163. and it flowered once every 25 years.
Once every 25 years.
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164. He only had it 2 weeks,
and it flowered!
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165. You're a blessed man.
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166. I know. I remember...
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167. We took it... We didn't take it,
we BOUGHT it off an old couple...
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168. Left them laying in the passage.
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169. You swine!
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170. "Quick! Get away!
They're coming round!"
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171. "You bastards!
It's going to flower any minute!
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172. "23 years!"
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173. And speaking of bamboo,
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174. how many Edisons does it take
to change a light bulb?
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175. Woop-woop-woop! Ne-ow!
Yes, Jo?
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176. Very good.
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177. Well, the answer's very peculiar.
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178. He had a belief that in the human
mind there were little people,
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179. 15 to 20... Oh, for God's sake. He
believed that. He did not. He did!
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180. When you die, they move into someone
else. When you were a psychiatric
nurse, if someone came in to you
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181. thinking they had little people in
them, what would you do? Punch them.
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182. Very good. What a loss
to the profession you were.
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183. Edison did use bamboo
as a filament.
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184. In his light bulb.
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185. Tabloids. You know.
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186. Edison believed there were little
people in the Convolutions of Broca
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187. where memory, among other things,
was housed.
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188. This is where 15 little people were.
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189. The 15 tiny little people,
did they have 15 people in them?
That's a very good question,
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190. but I don't think he got that far.
Edison was reckoned to be
one of the great inventors.
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191. There are 1,093 patents filed
to his name. What did he invent?
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192. I'm so ashamed.
I don't know anything he invented.
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193. I thought the light bulb...
No, that's...
.. gave off more heat than light.
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194. The first light bulb was a German
called Walter Goebel.
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195. Does Alan not get a point for that?
For what? More heat than light?
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196. That was a guess, though.
No, it was not a guess!
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197. Hello, sailor!
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198. I learnt that in physics.
What, "Hello, sailor?"
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199. The point about Edison is that
he was like... Typewriter!
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200. He... Phonograph!
The phonograph is, again...
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201. He's credited with inventing it.
But one thing Edison DID invent -
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202. a 100% genuine Edison invention
that we use every day, probably...
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203. Is it nasal hair-clippers?
No, it's not even an object.
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204. It's not an object? No.
So it's a way of being? Sarcasm.
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205. Yeah, he invented sarcasm.
Right, yeah. Sure!
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206. Oh, yeah. It's actually a word.
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207. A word? Yeah. Er...
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208. Is it zugzwang? No. The Germans
have that, but very good.
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209. You wouldn't use that every day.
Not unless you were a chess player.
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210. I've used it four times today.
You're fine till Thursday, then.
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211. Crikey? No, not crikey.
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212. It's...
Floccinaucinihilipilification?
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213. He didn't invent that word, but
well done for knowing it. It means?
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214. The act of assessing something
as worthless. Correct. Ooh!
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215. Yeah.
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216. The word is a simple word
of greeting.
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217. Hello! That's the word.
He invented hello?
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218. He invented hello. H-E-L-L-O.
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219. The word that existed before
as hullo - H-U-L-L-O -
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220. was never a greeting,
but an expression of surprise.
"Hullo! What have we got here?"
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221. We still use it in that sense. Do
we? "Hullo, what's that?" Don't we?
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222. Yes, when we live our life
like a 1950s detective film!
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223. I often go to my fridge and go,
"Hullo! We're out of milk!
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224. "I say, Mother, where's the milk?"
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225. You beast, you beast,
you utter, utter beast.
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226. Now we've got Jeffrey Dahmer...
What's wrong with me?
..so we're, "Hello!"
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227. It's a little camp, I think. Is it?
Oooh, hello! Hello!
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228. I'd say that was a greeting.
Hello, sailor.
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229. There's surprise as well. Hello!
There's more surprise in that.
He-llo... Can we play the game?
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230. Anyway. Oh, 'ello.
Ahoy, sailor.
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231. Originally, it was the word
"hallo"... 'Allo! All right.
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232. Thank you.
There's a story about hello.
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233. There was a competition
to find out what you say
when you answer the phone.
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234. And people voted on it,
and "hello" came out number one.
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235. And what came second was "ahoy-hoy".
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236. Which, if you watch The Simpsons,
is how Mr Burns answers the phone.
Yes. Absolutely.
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237. What it is, that was Alexander
Graham Bell's favoured method
of answering the phone.
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238. Ahoy-oy. Which I still use.
Do you? Oh, yeah.
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239. Whereas I get mocked for using
"Hullo!"
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240. Not on the phone!
That's perfectly acceptable!
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241. It's a surprise!
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242. "Good Lord!"
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243. Stephen, what was the last thing
that made you go, "Hullo!"?
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244. It was a genital wart. I knew it!
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245. I knew it would be something
to do with genitals. I knew it!
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246. "Hello" happened to be
one of Edison's favourite words.
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247. When he first recorded sound,
he shouted "Halloo!", which
is a cry from the hunting field.
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248. Halloo was the first recorded word,
and he reckoned it sounded
very clear.
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249. He discovered this while testing
Alexander Graham Bell's prototype.
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250. The first written use
of hello with an E is...?
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251. In a letter from Edison in 1887.
And Alexander Graham Bell preferred
"Ahoy-hoy!" In our house,
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252. if you ring me dad,
he answers "What?"
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253. "Yes?" Like that.
Well, of course, the telephone
is a fantastically rude thing.
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254. It's like going, "Speak to me now.
Speak to me now. Speak to me now."
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255. If you banged on someone's desk
and said "I will make a noise
till you speak to me!"
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256. you'd consider it unbelievably rude!
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257. That's what they had before
telephone. "Speak to me now!"
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258. "Speak to me now!" Exactly.
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259. And then you've got,
"Call waiting! Call waiting!"
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260. Exactly.
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261. So there we are. Edison's really
useful invention - the word "hello".
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262. Now, how do you know...? I don't
know, it's like occupational therapy
in an old people's home, really.
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263. Just extraordinary!
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264. What have you got here?
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265. "Put Smarties tubes on cats legs -
make them walk like a robot."
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266. Brilliant!
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267. That is absolutely wonderful.
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268. Used all his letters!
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269. That is unbe-BLEEPing-lievable.
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270. It makes sense! Yes.
It would walk like a robot.
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271. It doesn't make a LOT of sense.
It's an idea.
It's like giving people an idea.
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272. I don't know if you saw, I was
on Countdown. Puts this to shame.
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273. Look, I can't even imagine
how you managed to do that!
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274. I'm sure you can't. I'll try that.
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275. It does work, actually. It's
a lovely way to spend an afternoon.
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276. If you get them going down
the stairs, it's especially good.
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277. It would make a very good splint
for a broken cat's leg.
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278. Sometimes it's how they break
their legs. You just leave it on.
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279. Hullo! That cat's broken its leg!
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280. I say! Mother, do you have
any empty Smarties tubes?
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281. What's with the Biro in the mouth?
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282. He's given up smoking,
but he needs a substitute!
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283. One of my proudest facts
is that I am possibly the last ever
Pipe Smoker Of The Year.
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284. New government rules have made it
unlikely there will be another one.
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285. I saw an interesting article - you
were in it - in The Chap magazine.
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286. You were talking about pipe smokers,
and the fact that actually,
the act of having a pipe
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287. does bestow trustworthiness.
Out of two builders, you'd choose
the one with the pipe, cos...
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288. Is it sort of classier?
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289. Absolutely right. Brilliant.
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290. You've jotted the lines
in a little tableau.
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291. Thank you. Wonderful.
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292. Now, our weekly report
from the frontiers of knowledge,
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293. which those who ought to
know better call General Ignorance.
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294. Name a dinosaur beginning with B.
Ahoy.
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295. Brontosaurus.
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296. Brontosaurus. ..is a dinosaur.
No, it isn't.
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297. WAS a dinosaur. Never was.
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298. It was a misnomer.
There's never been a category
of dinosaur called brontosaurus.
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299. Where does brontosaurus come from,
then? It's a complicated story.
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300. There was a skeleton which was once
labelled with the name brontosaurus,
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301. but it turns out to have been
a mis-identified apatosaurus.
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302. The mistake arose because
the apatosaurus's body was mixed up
with the skull of a camarasaurus.
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303. They just got a load of bones
in a crate...? A bit like this.
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304. That had been named first.
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305. "Tiberius can look mad." Very good.
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306. Oh, hello! Er, pterodactyl.
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307. A bterodactyl? A bTyrannosaurus
Rex! I've got one here.
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308. That's a brontosaurus! No!
A brachiosaurus! A brachiosaurus.
Five points for you.
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309. Have you brought all your toys in?
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310. It belongs to young Luke Fletcher,
the son of one of our researchers.
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311. We thank him for lending it.
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312. Thank you, Luke. Isn't Barney...?
Very good! Two points.
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313. Very good indeed. Barney
the purple dinosaur on the play-mat.
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314. You could have had barosaurus,
barapasaurus,
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315. bagaceratops, obviously... We didn't
want to go for the obvious ones.
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316. becklespinax, byronosaurus,
and my personal favourite,
which is bambiraptor.
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317. Aww! Bambi-raptor!
A savage baby deer? Yes!
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318. Right. Fingers, again,
on your mushroomoids.
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319. How long can a chicken live
without its head?
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320. Ahoy! HONK! HO-O-O-OT! Alan.
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321. Er... 15 to 30 seconds.
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322. No. Does it have private
medical cover? Woop-woop-woop!
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323. As long as it takes it
to cross the road.
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324. I know how long it takes a live
chicken to become a Pret a Manger
sandwich. Do you know that?
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325. No. Do tell. 55 minutes. Good Lord!
That's fresh.
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326. It's fresh. It is.
Don't you mean "Hello!"?
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327. It's not always "Hello!". They
run around for half an hour. No.
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328. You'll be amazed. 48 hours?
A week or two? No, much longer.
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329. Seven years. Two years.
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330. Two years? Two years. Two years?
No, no, it's famous!
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331. I give you Mike, the headless
chicken, from... Mike? Where
are you?the town of Fruita
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332. in Colorado. He was
in Time magazine, Life magazine...
A really big six-foot chicken,
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333. who looked a bit like a bloke? No.
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334. His head was chopped off, but enough
jugular vein and brainstem remained
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335. Wait a second...! Honestly.
Check it out.
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336. I'm going to check that out. Do.
He was fed with an eye-dropper.
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337. Why don't they just cook him?
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338. He lived a happy and famous life!
When Col Sanders was after him...
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339. He actually... The first thing
to come up on a search engine
for "mike the headless chicken"
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340. is miketheheadlesschicken.org,
and it's Mike the Headless Chicken
For President!
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341. There you are!
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342. He is a cult. There's
a Mike the Headless Chicken song!
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343. "Mike the headless chicken
A legend of the west
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344. "No farmer's axe
Could stop his heart
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345. "A-beating in his breast."
Fingers on buzzers.
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346. Who discovered penicillin? Ahoy!
Woop-woop-woop! HONK!
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347. Fleming. Obviously. Oh, dear.
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348. I mean, he did. No, he didn't.
He did! No, he didn't.
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349. He did! On mouldy bread,
which you rub in your cuts.
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350. No. Woop-woop-woop! Yes?
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351. Was it Bob Fleming,
from the Fast Show?
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352. It wasn't Bob Fleming.
Nor was it Ian Fleming.
Alexander the Great!
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353. Nor was it any Alexander.
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354. I want you to think of young Arab
stableboys rubbing things into
their inner thighs. Mouldy bread!
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355. Lumberjacks, when they cut
their fingers, mouldy bread.
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356. Yep...
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357. Ernest Duchesne was a Frenchman
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358. who like watching Arab stableboys
rub things into their thighs.
How would we have known?
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359. He noticed that what they rubbed
to get rid of saddle sores
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360. was the mould on the side of the
saddle. The nomadic Bedouin have
been doing this for 1,000 years.
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361. They were observed by Duchesne,
who wrote a paper, submitted it
to the Institut Pasteur,
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362. who didn't even acknowledge receipt,
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363. and he died completely uncelebrated.
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364. But then, in 1949,
five years after Alexander Fleming,
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365. he was posthumously
awarded with rediscovering it.
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366. So Fleming only re-rediscovered it.
What did he die of?
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367. Ironically, he died of TB,
which penicillin would have helped.
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368. Ah. Just one of those sad things.
There we are.
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369. Now, here are some pictures for us,
boys and girls.
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370. Four famous brainboxes -
which is the odd one out?
We have, reading left to right,
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371. Arthur Conan Doyle, Niels Bohr -
Nobel prize-winning physicist -
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372. Dmitri Shostakovich, composer,
and another Nobel prize-winner,
Albert Camus, novelist.
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373. Who's the odd one out?
Woop-woop-woop! Yes?
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374. There's only one with glasses on.
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375. Camus is the only one smoking?
No, there's two smoking.
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376. Is he the only one
that played in goal for Algeria?
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377. Right area! Not the only one.
The only one with Algiers...
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378. Did Shostakovich play for...? No.
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379. Forget Algeria. They were
all first-team goalkeepers.
Three of them were.
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380. Conan Doyle believed in fairies.
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381. He also played in goal
for Portsmouth. Did he? Did he?
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382. Yes. He was a proper goalkeeper.
His stance was like that.
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383. Niels Bohr played in
the University of Copenhagen
first team. Presumably...
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384. Albert Camus, as you've said,
was goalkeeper as well, for
University of Algiers, national.
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385. Could that be acknowledged, that
I...? I'm giving you five points.
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386. Shostakovich was a centre-forward.
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387. Banged in 40 a season
with Sparta Moscow. So he did!
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388. He was an official official.
He was a qualified referee.
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389. There he is. Imposed on the body...
He's got tubes, going round...
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390. .. of Pierluigi Collini, I think.
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391. Do you know a Shostakovich tune?
I could give you one of
his goalkeeping moves, but...
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392. Even though he was a referee?
Oh, sorry, yes. That's all right.
Just keep up.
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393. And so to the final whistle!
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394. In-n-n-n... last place...
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395. Any reason for that?
.. with minus 35... Oh, God!
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396. Alan Davies.
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397. Thank you! In third place,
with minus 5, it's Bill Bailey!
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398. In second place, with eight points,
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399. it's Jo Brand!
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400. But thanks to his way
with an anagram, in first place,
with 15 points, Jimmy Carr!
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401. And that's it from Q.I. this week.
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402. To Bill, Jimmy, Jo and Alan,
there's nothing left to say but
the words of the immortal Swedes -
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403. the winner takes it all,
the loser standing small. Goodnight.
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