1. Hello, hello, hello, hello,
and welcome to QI,
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2. for another handful of
pickled herrings from the groaning
smorgasbord of knowledge.
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3. Joining me tonight in the bistro
of bewilderment are Rich Hall...
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4. Fred MacAulay...
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5. Jo Brand...
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6. and Alan Davies.
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7. Well, let's tuck in, shall we? Rich?
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8. Fred?
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9. Jo?
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10. And Alan?
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11. B is for bottle, Burgundy, barbecue
and as Alan has shown us - burp -
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12. and the start of the day as well,
which is biography,
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13. so this question -
who first discovered
that the world was round?
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14. It's flat, innit?
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15. Is it going to be a trick question?
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16. You're cagey from the first.
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17. Right from the off.
Right from the off, you're cagey.
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18. Any thoughts? Copernicus.
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19. Not Copernicus. Galileo.
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20. Nor Galileo. Someone with
a telescope worked it out.
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21. It would be useful for working out
the moon was round, but not that
useful for looking at the Earth.
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22. Was it Len Murray?
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23. Are you talking about the General
Secretary of the TUC? Yeah, I am.
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24. Not him? No, it wasn't.
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25. He discovered the potato was round.
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26. Was it somebody with a boat?
It wasn't, no.
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27. We're talking about something,
perhaps, or something
that isn't human. Birds.
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28. Not a bird even.
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29. They fly all over the... Fish!
Nor a fish.
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30. Good, though. Whales.
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31. Dolphins, sharks. Not sea animals
at all. On land? Land.
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32. Bees. A panda.
Bees is the right answer.
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33. Bees can reckon on the position
of the sun even at night.
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34. Even whilst eating pollen,
they can keep an eye on it.
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35. Termite mounds go round
in a spiral like that
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36. because as the termite
spilled them in the day,
they stay out of the sun,
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37. so as the sun goes round,
they go round like that.
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38. Quite interesting.
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39. It is quite interesting. It is, but
it's not about bees, though, is it?
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40. Bees have the most developed
magnetic sense of any animal,
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41. and if you put a strong magnet
next to a honeycomb,
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42. it completely changes the shape
into something that's never seen
in nature -
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43. a cylindrical-shaped honeycomb.
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44. Yeah, but you would be stung to
death if you did that. That's true.
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45. You could wear one of those
amusing costumes.
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46. Can I ask Alan, on a cloudy day,
do the termites really just...?
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47. They really motor upwards!
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48. They probably do.
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49. You see the termite mound
go swirly and then whoop!
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50. Bees are very interesting animals,
or at least QUITE interesting.
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51. Most bees - what happens
when they sting you?
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52. They die. No, they don't.
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53. Yes, they do. Only the honeybee.
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54. They've got one sting.
Wasps have more than one sting.
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55. Only one species of bee...
You're not allowed to kill bees.
You can kill wasps.
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56. Only one type of bee, which is the
honeybee, leaves its sting behind
and dies.
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57. All the other species of bee,
and there are many,
can sting you repeatedly.
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58. Several species of wasp die
when they sting.
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59. If you get stung by an animal that
dies, it's likely to be a wasp.
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60. If a bee has stung me
inside my house, it's likely to die.
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61. Exactly!
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62. I'm not surprised.
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63. Honey - Eddie Izzard once observed
it was very odd
that bees make honey.
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64. Earwigs, he said,
don't make chutney.
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65. It takes 12 bees an entire lifetime
to make enough honey
to fill a teaspoon,
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66. so the lifetime of 12 bees.
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67. Go into a supermarket, see all
those jars, think how many bees
have been working away.
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68. If it's 125ml jar,
it'll take 300 bees.
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69. Fantastic! What a loss
to the accountancy profession!
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70. Those are hexagons.
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71. They ARE hexagons -
little, six-sided bee cells.
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72. Brilliant! But why...!
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73. But why do they make
hexagonal shapes?
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74. The hexagonal form uses the minimum
amount of wax for the maximum amount
of storage.
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75. Honeybees have evolved a complex
language to tell each other
where the best nectar is,
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76. using the sun as a reference point.
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77. Amazingly, they can also do this
on overcast days and at night,
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78. by calculating the position of the
sun on the other side of the world.
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79. They can store information...
Has it occurred to you that
they may not be using the sun?
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80. What do you mean? Whoever has
worked that out is wrong.
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81. Even when you can't see it or it's
on the other side of the world,
they still use it.
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82. The bees are thinking,
"No, we don't.
We just remember where we live."
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83. Why is it so remarkable
that they know where they live?
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84. Because they have only 950,000
neurons as opposed to our 10 billion
neurons in our brains.
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85. They only have one thing
to remember - where they live.
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86. They've got a lot more to remember!
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87. How come I've got 10 billion and
sometimes I forget where I live?
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88. Exactly. Which brings us
to our next question,
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89. which is - why do bees buzz?
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90. Because they can.
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91. They buzz so that when they're
trapped in the living room,
you know to open the window.
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92. It's a thought.
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93. Is it to, um... to sound industrious?
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94. It could be.
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95. You have to look at bees
as aerospace workers.
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96. Right.
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97. And, er... stay with me. Yeah.
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98. I will. It's all right.
I'm still there.
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99. When you're flying,
you want to make a lot of noise,
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100. because a quiet aircraft is...
.. crashing.
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101. I think it's their knees knocking
that makes the buzzing.
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102. They hate flying.
Terrified of flying.
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103. What is it that makes the noise?
The wings.
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104. No, no, it isn't, I'm afraid.
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105. Not the wings, then?
No, it won't be the wings.
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106. Er, testicles?
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107. Their little tiny mouths.
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108. Buzz-zz-zz-zz!
Well, it is sort of little mouths.
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109. It's through what they breathe -
they're called spiracles
and they have them down their sides.
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110. All buzzing insects, bluebottles,
it's not the wings.
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111. Less that 1% of the buzz
comes from their wings.
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112. Bees breathe through 14 holes
along the sides of their bodies.
They're called spiracles.
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113. Each one has a valve
to limit the flow of air.
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114. They can tune it,
rather like a trumpeter,
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115. sort of using his lips,
what's that called - embouchure?
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116. And in the same way that one
human lung on a trumpet can fill
a vast hall with a great sound,
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117. more than it can
with its own vocal chords,
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118. so a bee can make
this extraordinary noise
just by controlling its breathing.
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119. Isn't science marvellous?
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120. Are humans the only species
that make unnecessary noise?
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121. That's an interesting idea.
No, dogs. Woof! Woof! Woof! Woof!
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122. Do you think any animals just sit
around and hum or just...? Whistle!
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123. Thwwrrp!
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124. Or talk inanely.
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125. Alan?
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126. That's why there are no panel shows
in the animal kingdom.
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127. As to other animals,
also beginning with B,
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128. "Can barnacles grow wings?"
is the question.
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129. I do know one thing about barnacles.
I'm afraid it's rude, but... Go on.
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130. Relatively speaking,
they have the biggest penis
of any existing creature,
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131. which is five times the length
of their shell. Seven times
is the length I've got down here.
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132. You're exaggerating,
like men always do.
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133. Typical barnacle!
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134. Up until recently, it was thought
that barnacles were the embryos
of the barnacle goose.
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135. What fool thought that?
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136. It is a bit silly sounding.
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137. There's a barnacle goose -
named "hibernacula" in Latin,
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138. and that got shortened to
"bernicla", which became barnacle.
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139. These geese breed in the Arctic
and so no-one had ever seen them
mate or lay eggs.
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140. When they arrived in the summer,
there'd be driftwood coming in from
the sea covered in barnacles,
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141. and people made the weird assumption
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142. that the barnacles must be
the baby barnacle geese.
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143. Barnacles growing on ships increase
the inefficiency by huge amounts...
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144. Barnacles growing on chips?
Ships, dear, ships!
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145. That really worried you. It would.
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146. How long does a chip need
for a barnacle to form?
Won't happen in my house!
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147. The way they glue themselves
to things is very, very tough
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148. and scientists are looking at it
as a kind of dental cement -
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149. better than Polygrip or these things
that they advertise round about
Countdown for some reason.
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150. They advertise these strange things
that keep teeth together and ways
of lowering yourself into a bath.
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151. You know when WH Auden got older,
the poet...? Oh, yeah, yeah.
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152. All right, yes.
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153. When he was old, he had
an incredibly lined face...
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154. Jowly. Really craggy lines, like
Chief Joseph, one of those really
kind of...
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155. And David Hockney... Painter.
Yes, well done.
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156. One of his first commissions
as a young artist was to do a series
of drawings of WH Auden,
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157. and Hockney just took one look
at Auden and said,
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158. "Blimey, if that's his face,
what can his scrotum look like?"
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159. How did Nelson keep
his men's spirits up after he died?
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160. Did he allow Hardy to use him
as a ventriloquist dummy?
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161. No, it wasn't that.
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162. I think the men would be inspired
by the way
he sort of slowly dismantled
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163. instead of dying all at once.
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164. I mean, there was an arm, then
there was an eye, then there was,
like, a testicle, right?
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165. Goodness! Dropping parts
like a Volkswagen.
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166. The thing is, most sailors when
they died were thrown overboard,
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167. burial at sea, and he asked
not to be buried at sea,
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168. and he was going to be taken back
from Trafalgar, which is off
the Spanish coast,
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169. to Britain, so what were they
going to do with his body
to make sure it didn't rot?
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170. Put it in beer.
Well, not beer, but brandy.
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171. He was pickled
in a barrel of brandy.
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172. And they were allowed to drink it.
Supposedly, using tubes of macaroni,
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173. they would have a go.
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174. By the time it got to Portsmouth,
there was no brandy left,
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175. only an unfortunate-looking Nelson,
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176. and to this day in the navy they use
this phrase "tapping the Admiral"
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177. for having a surreptitious slug
of anything alcoholic.
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178. You can just picture them
with the macaroni straw going,
"Gulp! Oh, God!"
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179. I think that's the other one out.
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180. Have we got another patch?
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181. In fact, like all these good
stories, supposedly it isn't true.
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182. Why are male anglers so pathetic?
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183. Jo Brand.
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184. Because they like fishing.
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185. Well, yes. ..Rich?
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186. Because they spend £2,000
on equipment
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187. when you can go to the market
and buy the same thing for £1.89.
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188. There's a good book in this country,
Fly-Fishing by JR Hartley.
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189. Absolutely. The classic.
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190. Why are they pathetic, though?
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191. What we don't mean is
human male anglers.
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192. There's another type of angler
that isn't human. Oh. Angler fish.
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193. Male angler fish truly are pathetic.
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194. You can eat them, can't you,
angler fish? I'm sure I've had one.
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195. There are shallow angler fish and
there are very, very deep ones.
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196. I wouldn't go calling that
"pathetic". That's the female. Oh,
right. The female is impressive.
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197. The male has a sad life. It must be
the feeblest man in nature.
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198. Six times smaller than the female.
Ah-h!
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199. When they find a mate, they latch on
with their teeth and start to
disappear.
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200. Scales, bones, blood vessels
all merge into those of the female.
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201. After a week, all that's left are
two tiny little testes,
which leak sperm.
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202. That sounds very much
like my marriage.
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203. Your husband has entirely been
subsumed into you. He's six times
smaller than I am.
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204. There's some of these female angler
fish going around with eight
testicles hanging off them.
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205. It's like an Essex disco.
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206. That was Wayne!
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207. That thing coming from its head
like that
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208. is why it's called an angler fish.
It's its little rod, as it were.
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209. It's bioluminescent. It lights up.
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210. Attracting other innocent
edible fish.
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211. That's what they thought,
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212. but now they think it's a way of
attracting the male towards it,
which gets absorbed.
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213. That brings us on -
bioluminescence - to what comes
from Glasgow and glows in the dark?
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214. Is it Sir Alex Ferguson's nose?
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215. Is it the River Clyde?
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216. It's not the River Clyde neither.
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217. We're talking about food.
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218. Luminous food? Yes, luminous food.
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219. It's an idea that comes from
creatures like the angler fish.
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220. Is it a deep-fried Mars bar
with a torch attached to it?
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221. A deep-fried torch? Well, you're in
the right area with "deep-fried".
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222. What I believe you call "carry-oots"
are the food to go.
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223. What is the most popular food
in Britain these days?
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224. Chicken tikka masala.
Chicken tikka masala, which was
invented in Glasgow. There is one.
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225. That's a particularly fine example
of one!
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226. That might be a used one.
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227. One that's been through the system,
I've a horrible feeling.
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228. Morag, get me a bed of rice!
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229. The children shall eat.
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230. There is a company called "Biolume",
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231. which is planning to have food,
including curry,
that glows in the dark,
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232. using extracts of marine creatures
that glow.
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233. They want to make beer, in
particular, that glows in the dark,
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234. children's fizzy drinks
that glow in the dark... Why?
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235. Chicken tikka masala does not exist
in India.
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236. The story of it goes
that there was a restaurant
called the Gay Lord in 1966.
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237. It was the first place to serve
a proper chicken tandoori...
In Glasgow or London? In London.
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238. Mortimer Street in London.
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239. The story goes somebody
came into a restaurant in Glasgow
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240. where they were serving
this new tandoori chicken
and asked for gravy to go on it
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241. and the chef improvised with
tomato soup and cream and spices,
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242. and up grew this strange creature
that is chicken tikka masala.
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243. It has no definition. It can be hot,
it can be mild. It can be brown,
it can be orange, it can be grey,
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244. but, according to Robin Cook,
is the British national dish.
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245. I had curry once on the Isle of Man
where I was doing a gig.
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246. It was served with a cup of tea
and some bread and butter.
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247. I think that was fantastic,
don't you?
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248. Can I just mention
that since we've been disparaging
about the Scottish diet,
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249. that we don't eat chips every night.
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250. Sometimes we have some chips and
leave them aside till the morning,
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251. and we have them cold the next day
and that's a "salad".
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252. Deep-fried pizza and Mars bars.
It's a myth. It's a myth.
It's not a myth.
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253. The Mars bars happened once.
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254. He dropped his Mars bar.
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255. "Oh, I'm not wasting that!"
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256. He scorched his hand
getting the wrapper off.
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257. Fantastic.
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258. You do have the worst teeth and the
worst hearts in Europe, you Scots.
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259. Your teeth are fine.
They're all right, yeah.
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260. I've started a company in Scotland...
Using barnacle cement.
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261. Well, they're OK, but the cement
comes off when the penis comes out.
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262. Blueugh!
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263. We run bus trips to Eastern Europe
to show Scottish people worse teeth.
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264. Well, while we're in the balti belt,
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265. where is it possible
to live on a diet of smut
without the neighbours complaining?
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266. In the green room at Channel 5.
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267. A diet of smut is the clue.
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268. It is Norwegian food or something?
Not Norwegian.
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269. It's called smut
because it's a sooty black thing
in its most primitive form.
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270. Caviar. No, really sooty and smutty.
A piece of coal.
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271. No, but a living thing.
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272. Fungi. Fungus, exactly.
It's a fungus. Why did the mushroom
go to the party?
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273. No, no! I've no idea. Why did the
mushroom go to the party, Alan?
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274. Because he was a fun guy!
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275. Lovely. Lovely.
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276. What's wrong with that joke? That's
a joke for, like, an imbecile.
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277. Someone not quite seven years old.
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278. What's brown and sticky? Oh, God.
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279. I don't know. Yeah, I...
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280. A stick. Oh, yeah.
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281. I'm worried by the audience
reaction.
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282. What do you call a boomerang
that won't come back?
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283. A stick. A stick.
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284. More jokes where
the punch line's a stick? Loads.
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285. What's orange
and sounds like a parrot?
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286. A carrot.
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287. What's red and silly?
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288. A blood clot.
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289. Oh, don't look at me like that,
you BLEEP! pig-eyed sack of shit.
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290. Don't you do that.
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291. You spoiled it.
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292. What's red and sits in the corner?
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293. A naughty strawberry.
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294. Very good.
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295. What's green and sings?
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296. Elvis Parsley.
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297. Now the smuts.
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298. The smut fungus - ustilago maydis -
or something similar,
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299. is found in Mexico, in particular,
where it is prized as a food.
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300. Why did the mushroom
go to the party?
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301. He was a fun guy!
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302. How do you think the word "smut"
was used to allude to pornography?
Because it's dirty.
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303. Where does "slut" come from?
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304. Essex!
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305. There is a particular smut
which is edible, the corn smut,
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306. and it's been known to the Aztecs
for centuries as "huitlacoche".
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307. There it is. A picture
of an engaging young corn smut,
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308. which has grown a sort of berry,
which is the bit you eat.
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309. Try the Magisterial Illustrated
Genera Of Smut Fungi by
Calman Wanke - it's a helluva book.
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310. So with that rather obscure
piece of information,
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311. let's plunge yet deeper
into general ignorance.
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312. Fingers on buzzers, please.
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313. What contains the most caffeine -
a cup of tea or a cup of coffee?
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314. Alan. Tea.
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315. Oh-h!
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316. Oh-h!
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317. In fact about three times more
caffeine in a cup of coffee
than tea.
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318. Why did someone tell me
it was tea, then?
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319. Well, because, weight for weight,
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320. a pound of tea leaves
contains more caffeine
than a pound of coffee beans,
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321. but in a cup of same, we get much
more, as we know from drinking it.
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322. Yeah. People always say,
"There's more caffeine in tea."
There's no buzz.
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323. But there is actually more caffeine
in tea. Weight for weight,
but not in a cup of tea.
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324. Not in a cup of tea.
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325. There is more caffeine in tea,
though. Not in a cup of tea,
which is the question.
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326. Not in a cup of tea. Not in a cup
of tea, which is what you drink.
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327. You don't tend to just eat tea,
just like that, huge quantities.
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328. You have a cup of tea...
I wouldn't even dream of it.
Exactly. Quite right.
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329. What's the only ball game
invented entirely in the USA?
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330. Ball game? Yeah.
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331. They haven't invented
any ball games.
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332. We invented all ball games
here in England.
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333. Baseball?
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334. No, as Alan rightly knows,
that was an English invention.
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335. No, the English invented that.
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336. It's mentioned by Jane Austen
in Northanger Abbey.
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337. Rounders. Rounders neither,
I'm afraid.
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338. Netball. Netball? Yes, I'll give
you netball. Basketball.
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339. You're right, Rich. Fantastic.
Well done.
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340. Basketball and netball were invented
by the same person. Dr James
Naismith, University of Kansas.
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341. He was teaching at Springfield,
Massachusetts.
You get lots of points.
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342. He was in fact a Canadian. Yeah.
But he invented it IN the USA.
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343. Lacrosse is also a ball game,
but it wasn't invented
in the United States of America.
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344. Basketball, invented in...
Weird thing about it,
he used an old peach basket.
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345. For 21 years, they played the game
without putting a hole
in the bottom of the peach basket,
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346. so someone had to get a stepladder
every time there was a basket
and take it out.
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347. You can't play basketball
with a peach.
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348. A peach basket they used.
A basket for peaches.
A peach wouldn't bounce.
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349. No, that's right.
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350. As a short-arse, I think there
should be different divisions
for basketball,
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351. different height divisions, cos
obviously if you're 7'4", you've got
an advantage over someone like me.
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352. You don't put little boxers
like Prince Naseem Hamad
in against Mike Tyson.
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353. I'd like to see that!
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354. I think there should be several
baskets you can aim for.
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355. A really high basket for 10 points,
a lower basket,
and then one on the floor.
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356. Did they invent netball as well?
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357. I woman from Louisiana
wrote to Naismith and said...
"We've got quite a girlie version."
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358. One of the stories is she actually
misinterpreted the rules.
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359. He laid out the dimensions
of a basketball court,
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360. giving the various areas, and she
thought the players had to stay
within those given areas.
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361. You can't travel, you can't dribble,
in netball.
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362. Once you've got the ball,
you've got to stand still.
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363. We would nail the basket
to the side of a truck.
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364. Game went on for miles.
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365. Can I just say that the kid with the
purple shirt is really beginning to
annoy me? Will you please sit down?
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366. This is very old footage because
there are... There are white people.
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367. Oddly enough, volleyball was
invented in exactly the same college
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368. in Springfield, Massachusetts,
as netball and basketball.
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369. This guy is number 0. There's no
confidence in him at all, is there?
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370. I think we've seen enough of that.
It's going to drive us all nuts.
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371. What were Nelson's last words?
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372. The last words of someone
who sucked at Nelson's body.
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373. That's my answer.
That's your answer.
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374. "Kismet, Hardy,"
but did he say "Kiss me, Hardy"?
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375. It's not "kismet"
and it's not "kiss me".
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376. "I'll race you to the barrel
of brandy."
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377. "Last one in's a kipper."
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378. Hardy kissed the Admiral twice
apparently. Once on the cheek
and once on the forehead.
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379. Nelson was struggling to remain
conscious. He said, "Thank God
I've done my duty," then he said -
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380. it is rather peculiar - "Drink,
drink, fan, fan, rub, rub."
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381. Those were his last words.
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382. He was thirsty, hot...
That's navy lingo for,
"Give us a quick hand-job."
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383. Those were, according to the
reliable witnesses at the scene,
they were all agreed...
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384. Why do we never hear that at school,
then?
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385. The most famous lines are
"Thank God I've done my duty"
and "Kiss me, Hardy",
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386. but "Drink, drink, fan, fan, rub,
rub..." Their final words are not
to do with how interesting they are,
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387. they're to do with what people
actually said, surely?
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388. Myths build up, I'm afraid.
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389. Did he say "kiss me" or "kismet"?
Kiss me. It's universally agreed.
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390. The kismet idea is rubbish.
Rubbish. Yeah.
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391. he was hot and thirsty, so he had
his steward there to fan him
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392. and feed him lemonade
and water and wine.
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393. The ship's captain, Dr Scott,
massaged his chest to ease the pain.
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394. If you could go in a time machine,
would you go there?
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395. People always say they'd go here,
there and everywhere. I'd go back
and see myself.
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396. That would be fascinating.
So would I.
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397. I had a rolled-up ball of socks,
and a hamper
all the way across the room.
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398. I just went like that.
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399. Hits the wall, bounces off the
ceiling, off this wall, back across
that wall, right into the hamper,
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400. from, like, 40 feet away.
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401. I would go back
and watch that again.
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402. Fantastic.
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403. I hope that when you die, they play
back something from your life.
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404. And no-one saw it.
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405. Stonehenge - the erection of.
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406. I'd go back there. Yes. Well done.
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407. If you'd just waited
a few thousand years.
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408. Go back with a power drill
and a JCB!
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409. Become worshipped as a god.
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410. We've come to the end of the round,
the end of the competition.
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411. My last words are not, "Drink,
drink, fan, fan, rub, rub,"
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412. they're, "Now, the scores."
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413. Rather meagre rations they are too,
I'm sorry to say.
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414. Rich scored a lightly-batted
five points,
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415. which is very good.
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416. Fred is next
with a gently-poached four points.
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417. Jo managed a reheated
minus eight points.
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418. Alan, once again, it's
the kebab van for you, I'm afraid,
with minus nineteen points.
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419. That's all for this week.
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420. I leave you with the thought that
while most of us drink at the
fountain of wisdom, others gargle.
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421. From Rich, Fred, Jo, Alan and me,
it's good night. Good night.
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