1. Well, hello, hello, hello, hello,
hello, hello, hello, hello.
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2. Welcome to another glamour-filled
QI night of a thousand stars.
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3. Spread-eagled on my casting couch...
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4. Josie Lawrence!
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5. The stunning Johnny Sessions!
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6. The gorgeous, pouting, Rich Hall!
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7. And Alan Davies.
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8. Well, let's see you
toy with your globes, girls.
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9. Will anyone ring my bell? Rich?
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10. Johnny?
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11. Josie?
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12. And Alan?
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13. "Well, hello. Ding-dong."
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14. Well, there we are. Fair enough.
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15. And so to question one.
What eat clothes?
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16. I don't know,
I just wanted to do that.
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17. What eats clothes?
Moths eat clothes. Moths? Yes.
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18. Oh, no, they don't.
They make holes in them,
don't they? Not moths, their larva.
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19. The little caterpillars do,
not the moths. You see?
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20. Larva!
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21. So by the time you see a moth,
it's too late.
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22. You rarely do. They're only a
quarter of an inch long, the moths.
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23. There are fewer due to synthetic
materials and dry-cleaning.
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24. Dry-cleaning's as good
as a mothball. Really?
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25. That camphor-naphthalene smell.
I've never smelt one.
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26. It's like a dead body.
If I have a mothball in each hand,
what have I got? Two mothballs.
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27. A rather excited moth.
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28. I thought you were literally
asking. It's all right!
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29. I've never smelt a dead body either.
I've never seen one.
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30. They say once you've smelt death,
it never gets out of your nostrils.
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31. I tell you something
quite interesting... Yeah.
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32. Leopards eat rotting flesh.
They don't mind it.
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33. Cheetahs will only eat fresh.
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34. Really? They eat when
they've killed, there and then,
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35. and they eat quickly, otherwise
a lion'll have it off them.
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36. A leopard'll drag something up
a tree and leave it there for days,
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37. even if it's green and maggoty.
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38. There's a new theory about
Tyrannosaurus rex being a scavenger,
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39. not attacking big,
hairy-arsed monsters,
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40. but waiting till they were dead
and rotten, and then eating them.
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41. In Jurassic Park 2, a Tyrannosaurus
rex eats a man sitting on the loo.
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42. Do you think
that's inaccurate, then?
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43. But he's an accountant.
He's an accountant!
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44. Well, there you are. Moths
don't eat clothes, their larva do.
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45. Next question. Why butterflies?
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46. That's a short question.
Isn't it! Two words!
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47. Do you mean,
"Why are they called that?"
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48. No, why do they exist?
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49. Why ARE they? Yeah.
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50. It's evil to put a food in front
of any bug, to name it a butterfly.
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51. I ate butterflies when I was a kid.
I thought they had butter in them.
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52. And honeybees. There are
two theories as to why...
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53. And a hamster.
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54. You know, you're four years old,
you don't know better.
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55. And we were poor.
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56. There are two theories as to why
they're called butterflies.
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57. One is from the Dutch
for excretes butter.
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58. There was a theory that
they shat butter, early on.
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59. The other is from the Anglo-Saxon.
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60. The most common English butterflies
when they invaded were yellow -
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61. butter-coloured.
The reason they exist -
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62. they're a late addition
to the family of creatures.
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63. When did they start?
They were around when I was a kid.
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64. For 100 million years before they
evolved, moths had been around.
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65. It's believed butterflies
were an evolution from moths.
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66. Moths have one big disadvantage.
What is it?
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67. Most obviously?
They go round in the night. Yes.
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68. They get eaten a lot.
Butterflies go round in the day.
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69. And the moths are being eaten
a lot by bats. By bats. And so...
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70. the idea was the butterfly...
That's a bat. Yes.
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71. There's a bat. It's seen a moth.
Yes. Well, not seen, but heard.
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72. It has heard a moth or sensed
a moth. Sensed a moth, exactly.
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73. The precision of their
echolocation is remarkable.
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74. Put cotton wool in their ears
and they're useless.
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75. They bounce off the wall
like Canadian softballs.
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76. In the 18th century, a scientist
put cotton wool in the ears of bats
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77. and saw that they... He posited
the idea they had this extra sense.
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78. Then it was pooh-poohed and for
150 years it wasn't reconsidered.
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79. We now know he was right.
They send out signals
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80. that bounce back like sonar,
only much more effective.
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81. That's why they bump into you. Right.
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82. People get scared
but they'd never bump into you.
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83. David Attenborough once did a
piece to camera about bats saying,
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84. "One thing's never true.
You never get them in your hair.
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85. "They have such accuracy..."
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86. Bang!
Bats immediately flew in his hair!
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87. Can I tell you something
about David cos he is my god?
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88. They were doing a column in a paper,
Who Would You Most Like To Be Like?
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89. So I said, "David Attenborough.
I love his career, his wisdom,
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90. "I love his sense of adventure."
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91. A couple of weeks later it came out
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92. and it was Who Would You Most
Like To LOOK like?
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93. So there's a lovely picture
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94. of me next to David and Toyah Wilcox
next to Audrey Hepburn.
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95. Aw!
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96. To go from David
to Richard Attenborough,
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97. who was directing
Ben Kingsley in Gandhi.
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98. There were possibly two million
extras during Gandhi's funeral.
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99. The first assistant, David Tomlin,
was told by Sir Dickie Attenborough
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100. to instruct the crowd
as to how they may react.
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101. He said to David Tomlin, "I want
you to convey to them, David,
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102. "that Gandhi's died and it's
an EXTRAORDINARY event, darling.
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103. "The most extraordinary event
in the history of India, darling!
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104. "Gandhi has gone -
their god, their hero, was gone."
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105. So David Tomlin turned to the crowd
and said, "Right! Listen up!
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106. "Gandhi's dead
and you're all BEEP sad!"
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107. Excellent!
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108. Very good.
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109. I don't have an anecdote but I have
a joke. Go on! We're open to jokes.
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110. Two vampire bats in a cave, flying
around and, um... you know, they like
blood, haven't had any in a while.
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111. One goes out on a recon,
comes back covered in blood.
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112. The other bat's beside himself.
"Wow! What happened?"
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113. The bat flaps to this village.
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114. "See that village over there?" Yeah.
"See that steeple?"
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115. "I didn't."
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116. So moths devised strategies
to beat the bat and some have
evolved to hear echolocation,
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117. which humans can't hear
as it's very high.
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118. Other ones decided to live during
the day and became butterflies.
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119. Now, moths are all right at night.
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120. They like being in the dark,
living in clothes in cupboards...
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121. Yes. So what is this thing they
have about candles...? Isn't it mad?
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122. I agree with you. The light
in the porch. They're MAD for that!
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123. You're a nocturnal animal attracted
to light. Get up! Have lots of it!
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124. Another question. Compared to bats,
do owls ring any bells?
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125. Josie's ringing the bell. Yes.
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126. It's what we were talking about.
It's sonar.
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127. Absolutely right.
Why not have a point? Thank you.
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128. When they first experimented
with how bats
could see so well in the dark,
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129. they put owls and bats in a very
dark room with bells hung from ropes
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130. and if there was slightly low light,
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131. the owls could see
to avoid the ropes
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132. but if it was pitch black,
they'd fly into them
because they couldn't see them.
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133. Bats just flew
and didn't ring any bells.
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134. So that's how it was first seen
that bats could manoeuver
in the dark.
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135. So the flatter an owl's face, the
bigger a bell it's run into. Yes!
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136. That's why they're called owls.
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137. I have an Aga. Yes,
I shouldn't show off, but I do.
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138. It kept going out and I got the Aga
person to look at it...
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139. Down the shops? No!
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140. It kept... Imagine you're out
at the shops and you see your Aga.
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141. Why?
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142. You rush over and it disappears
and you keep losing it.
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143. So the Aga man
kept saying it was fine
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144. and it kept going out.
Eventually, he stayed overnight.
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145. This wasn't a come-on.
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146. Cos he would come during the day,
light it, in the morning it was out
and he couldn't work it out.
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147. What it turned out was it was an owl
who'd roost on the top of the flue
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148. cos it liked the warm air up it
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149. and it would cover over it
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150. and it would block it out.
So a safety device,
if you block the chicken...
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151. Chicken!
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152. If you block the CHIMNEY of an Aga
it goes out. That's my owl story.
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153. Wasn't worth telling.
I'm pissed, never mind.
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154. So there we are. Ringing the bells.
Next question.
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155. What is batology?
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156. Batology. There's the word.
What is it?
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157. It is NOT the study of bats.
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158. Correct. You've saved yourself
a big forfeit. Well done.
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159. There you are!
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160. Could you give us a clue or is that
not allowed? It's fruit.
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161. Batology is the study
of a particular fruit.
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162. A fruit which has two names in
English beginning with b. Banana.
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163. It's native to Britain.
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164. And you can either
call it a b... or a b...
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165. Apple... Anyone in the audience?
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166. Blackberry!
Bramble or blackberry. Blackberry!
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167. It's the study of blackberries.
Very good! You may say,
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168. it's not worth studying but there
are 1,000 different species. No!
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169. The study of bats is actually...
chiropterology.
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170. Alan, there's a plot here, mate,
in Jonathan Creek. Oh, yeah?
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171. An old lady comes in, picking
blackberries, someone's stabbed
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172. and you go, "She might be
a batologist. Just a thought."
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173. So, now, what is batophobia?
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174. A fear of blackberries.
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175. Oh, dear. I'm sorry.
You ought to be right.
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176. But surely nobody's ever had a fear
of blackberries. Exactly!
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177. So it isn't. Batophobia's a fear
of being close to tall buildings.
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178. Panic attacks, irregular heartbeat,
sweating, nausea,
and an overall feeling of dread.
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179. I've got it!
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180. Other phobias like that are
bathophobia - the fear of depth,
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181. Alan.
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182. The fear of profundity of any kind.
No.
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183. What is battology?
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184. Battology, spelt like this.
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185. The study of batteries. No.
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186. Nice thought. It is!
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187. There's no other word in English
with batt at the beginning. Battle?
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188. Battle is the other one.
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189. Battered's another one.
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190. Batten. It reminds me... Batten
down the hatches is another one.
Apart from those three.
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191. It reminds me of the story
that sugar is the only word
that begins su, and pronounced sh.
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192. And someone called out,
"Are you sure?"
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193. Battology means pointlessly
repeating the same thing over again.
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194. God! Battology means pointlessly
repeating the same thing over again.
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195. People do that, don't they? I've
got a friend who repeats himself.
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196. His name's Dave
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197. and we call him Dave-ja-vu!
Oh, good! Very good!
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198. Is Dave aware he does it?
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199. Yeah, cos people have said to him,
"You say everything twice.
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200. "That's why we call you Dave-ja-vu."
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201. "I say everything twice.
I say everything twice, like!
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202. "They call me Dave-ja-vu.
They call me Dave-ja-vu."
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203. We're moving on to births.
But first, Swedish girls.
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204. What happened to every
eight-year-old Swedish girl in 1994?
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205. Young, Rich? From what I understand,
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206. there were no eight-year-old girls
in 1994.
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207. Because, in 1986, every child
born in Sweden was a boy.
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208. Just purely by...
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209. the pure law of averages.
It's a genealogical freak!
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210. No, let me give you the answer.
They had their ninth birthday.
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211. If we believe
the official statistics,
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212. there were exactly 112,521
eight-year-old girls in Sweden
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213. on the 1st of January 1994
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214. and exactly the same number
of nine-year-olds
on the 1st of January 1995.
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215. This is unique in statistics.
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216. None died, none emigrated, the same
number survived a whole year.
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217. In Britain in 1994,
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218. there were an astonishing range
of accidents reported by the, um...
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219. Trade And Industry's Consumer
Safety Unit's Home Accidents
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220. Surveillance System Report.
Eight people in the UK, in '94,
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221. were injured by placemats.
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222. 13 sustained cruet injuries.
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223. Five were wounded by dustpans.
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224. Eight suffered as a result
of a bread-bin accident.
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225. Five were hurt by sieves.
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226. 14 fell foul of a serving trolley.
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227. 17 were treated for injuries
caused by a draught excluder.
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228. 476 people
were injured while on the lavatory.
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229. There you are.
Underwear hurt 11 people.
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230. How many of those people were drunk?
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231. Well, exactly.
That's a very good point.
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232. Or were sexually experimentative,
as it were?
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233. A good few. "Doctor, I was just
sitting in the nude and this cruet
happened to get stuck and..."
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234. That's why in the hospital
they use acronyms for, you know,
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235. like GOMER - get out
of my emergency room. Really?
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236. Or SARA - sexual activity related
accident - SARA.
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237. There's an acronym they have
in my part of the world,
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238. which doctors put on patient notes.
NFN - Normal For Norfolk!
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239. On the positive side, in 1994,
tea-cosy damage
was down from three in '93 to nil.
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240. So we cleared up the menace
of tea-cosy damage.
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241. Who knows? Who knows? People don't
use them often, do they? No.
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242. Because they're so dangerous!
Lethal. Lethal!
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243. Now, what was the biggest
tourist attraction in Canada
between 1934 and 1943?
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244. Ah! Beaten to the buzzer
by Leslie Davies!
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245. Niagara Falls. Oh, dear!
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246. Dear, oh, dear, oh, dear! Oh!
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247. No, no. No, no.
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248. Canada's a relatively young country
and I'm not sure how much there was.
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249. Was it finished by the '30s?
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250. As it were, I think, more or less.
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251. Alberta's only about 80 years old.
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252. I know! I know it!
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253. Yes? It's a really sad story,
actually. Yes.
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254. Didn't they have... sextuplets
or octuplets? Quints, in fact.
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255. Quintuplets. Quintuplets. Right.
Everyone came to see them.
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256. There they are. They were taken
from their parents and lived in a
house over the road. Exactly right.
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257. The Dionnes, they were known as.
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258. They were five girls born from a
single egg to a rather poor family.
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259. The father started talking about
exhibiting them. They were famous.
Before fertility treatment,
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260. it was rarer to have these births.
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261. So the government took over
and put them in a hospital
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262. and slowly the hospital started to
admit people and became the single
biggest attraction in Canada.
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263. After nine years the parents
got their girls back.
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264. But, at the age of 18, they left.
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265. Two are still alive and in '98
Mike Harris, the Prime Minister,
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266. travelled to apologise to the two
remaining ones and gave them
$4 million as compensation.
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267. $4 million Canadian!
Canadian dollars! Yes!
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268. Your US dollars
aren't worth singing about.
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269. Throw 'em a bone!
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270. Alan, question for you.
Name all the events
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271. at the first recorded Olympic Games
in 776 BC.
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272. Discus.
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273. Javelin.
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274. No, no. Try harder. Hammer?
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275. Oh, dear, oh, dear, oh, dear!
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276. No, no. I think that way
madness lies. Running.
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277. Running is the answer. One race.
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278. Just one race.
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279. If you get the distance,
I'll be astonished! 200 metres.
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280. Damn close!
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281. It's very unfair. I think
you've taken enough forfeits
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282. because there was just one event
and it was 192 metres...
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283. which is the modern equivalent
of the length of a stadium.
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284. That was the only race in the first
Olympic Games. That was the Games?
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285. The first recorded one.
They later developed
to include discus and javelin
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286. and all the things
you mentioned.
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287. The first recorded one was just...
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288. When's the first recorded one?
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289. Now, um... the next question
is a subsidiary to this one. What
was the naked chef doing there?
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290. Yes. Is that a response
to the buttocks or...?
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291. Yeah. A fine pair. Phwoar!
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292. Naked cooking for the athletes. No.
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293. Not quite.
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294. Preparing meals for the judges?
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295. Selling food to the audience?
Won the race?
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296. Yes! Quite right!
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297. The winner was a cook.
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298. His name was Coroebus of Elis
and he was a cook. And,
like all contestants, was naked.
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299. They ran in the nude.
All in the nude. How wonderful!
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300. Even the trainers!
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301. I'd like to have seen
the triple jump!
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302. What about the pole vault?
Oh, don't! He, um...
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303. Coroebus won by a short head!
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304. No! After his final spurt!
NO! Shut up!
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305. Now, why is a marathon
26 miles and 385 yards long?
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306. I feel a trap coming.
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307. There's an utterly preposterous
myth
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308. that it is the distance run
from the Battle of Marathon...
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309. back to Athens.
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310. The myth is that it was a man
called Phidippides,
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311. who actually conducted the run...
to convey news of the battle. Yes.
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312. In fact, it was the Battle
Of Snickers, not Marathon. Yes.
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313. No, that's right.
There is a fairly well-known story
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314. that a man called Phidippides
ran from Marathon, where there'd
been a battle with the Persians.
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315. According to Herodotus he was born
six years after the battle.
In his account,
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316. Phidippides ran
from Marathon to Sparta,
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317. which is about 145 miles. No way!
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318. Yeah. 145 miles? Yeah.
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319. And then he ran back cos
the Spartans were having a holy day.
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320. He died.
He didn't, according to Herodotus.
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321. There's no record of him dying.
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322. It was 500 years later, in Plutarch
and others, that this myth grew up.
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323. But the reason why the marathon
is 26 miles 385 yards
is the British Royal Family.
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324. Is it the distance from,
um... Windsor to St James?
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325. Not Windsor to St James
but the right lines. In 1908,
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326. the Olympic Games were in London
and the marathon started
outside Windsor Castle
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327. and half the Royal Family sat there
going, "Well done. What fun."
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328. And the finish was at
the newly-built White City Stadium
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329. and it was exactly
26 miles 385 yards.
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330. For every race afterwards
that was the length.
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331. Now we pay our visit to the exam
hall where candidates write
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332. with the wrong end of the pencil.
The School Of General Ignorance.
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333. Fingers on buzzers,
turn your papers, and let's begin.
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334. Where were the first
modern Olympics held?
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335. Still on Olympics. Yes?
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336. 1896 was the first year
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337. and I believe it was Athens.
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338. No. It's not correct. No?
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339. Was it in Greece though?
No, not in Greece.
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340. I'm sorry about that.
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341. London? No, right country. Damn!
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342. If you got it, I'd be surprised.
If I said "AE Housman" you might.
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343. Salisbury? No. Shropshire.
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344. Shropshire is right. Much Wenlock,
as in on Wenlock Edge.
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345. The town of Much Wenlock,
from 1850, held Olympic Games.
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346. A man called Dr WP Brookes.
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347. 1896 was the first Olympics.
So people suggest.
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348. Baron de Coubertin, who was the
supposed founder of the modern
Olympic movement, wrote of Brookes,
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349. "Much Wenlock is a town in
Shropshire, on the border of Wales,
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350. "and if the modern games Greece
has not been able to revive..."
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351. He wrote this in 1890. ".. still
survive today it is due not
to a Greek but to WP Brookes.
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352. "It is he who inaugurated them
40 years ago.
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353. "It is he, now 82 years of age...
who continues to organise
and inspire them."
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354. So Coubertin came to Wenlock Edge
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355. and being a Baron, having influence
and connections, was able to do
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356. what Brookes was not able to do,
get the rest of the world.
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357. But King George I of Greece
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358. sent a silver medal to be a prize
at the Wenlock Olympics.
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359. So, for 46 years before the first
Athens Olympiad as it's counted,
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360. there were Olympics recognised by
the man who fathered the movement.
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361. Let's hear it for WP Brookes.
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362. But he died just a year before
the Athens Olympics. 2012, Hackney!
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363. Could be, couldn't it?
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364. - I live in Hackney.
- Shit hole!
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365. Kayaking down the Lea River.
You can develop film in the Lea River
but you can't kayak.
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366. Now, here's a question.
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367. Why was King Charles XIV of Sweden
ashamed of his tattoo?
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368. It's Dudley Moore, isn't it?
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369. Charles XIV of Sweden?
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370. Bernadotte, one of Napoleon's
generals, went to become
king of Sweden. He did.
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371. And the tattoo... Charles XIV,
was that Bernadotte?
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372. It was. And he had a tattoo.
"I love Napoleon" on his arse. No!
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373. No? He wasn't appointed by Napoleon.
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374. He was appointed by Charles XIII.
Napoleon thought it a joke.
Bernadotte had been a Jacobin
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375. and had a tattoo "Death to kings"
as a young man.
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376. Then he was adopted by the old king
of Sweden, became Charles XIV,
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377. and was incredibly successful
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378. and completely backed away
from France, had an alliance
with England and Russia. Yes.
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379. He invaded Norway and became
king of Norway and the Bernadottes
still rule Sweden.
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380. Still the kings, this revolutionary.
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381. Very confusing cos Napoleon
had Irish generals,
he had a Scottish general. Yes.
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382. Because you came from somewhere, you
might not fight for them. Indeed.
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383. Here's a question.
Which Scandinavian king might
you have in your mobile phone?
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384. Gustavus Adolphus?
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385. No. King Nokia!
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386. No.
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387. Though... King Ericsson!
No, you're... King...
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388. Motorola!
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389. In it, not a make of. King Sim! No.
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390. There was a King Harald
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391. who had a nickname. Bluetooth!
Thank you! Bluetooth is the answer!
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392. Harald Bluetooth. I hurt my neck
I was so excited.
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393. He united Finland, Sweden and
Norway and when Ericsson and Nokia
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394. were thinking of a unified approach
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395. to wireless connection
between mobile phones,
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396. they called it Bluetooth
in his honour. Oh, really?
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397. Cos of him? Actually named
after him? Yes. Last question.
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398. What do St Bernards carry
in barrels around their necks?
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399. Brandy.
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400. No, never have. Armagnac!
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401. It's a myth.
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402. Armagnac is a brandy, in fact.
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403. They never use casks in rescue work.
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404. Brandy would kill someone with
hypothermia. Yes. It's for tourists.
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405. It's cos of a painting in 1831.
That's not it, incidentally!
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406. It's a very good likeness.
It's tourism.
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407. The dog painted in 1831 was called
Barry and had rescued 40 people,
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408. something of a hero.
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409. Unfortunately, he was killed by
the 41st who thought he was a wolf.
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410. Oh, that's terrible!
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411. In his honour, the handsomest...
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412. the handsomest St Bernard...
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413. That's horrible! is always called
Barry at the St Bernard Hospice.
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414. So why was Barry painted
with a barrel?
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415. Occasionally they'd carry milk
but certainly not brandy.
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416. Was St Bernard a patron saint
of skiers who need some brandy?
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417. Well, it's a pass, isn't it?
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418. It's a pass between
Italy and Switzerland.
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419. I tell you what is a really good
patron saint, and it works,
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420. St Anthony,
the patron saint of lost things.
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421. If you lose something, say, "Please,
St Anthony, help me find this."
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422. In about half an hour to an hour
you'll find... Ahem!
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423. Um... Stephen!
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424. No, I'm sorry. No!
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425. Something tells me
it is so much arse!
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426. Anyway! That's it. Time for the
bittersweet business of the scores.
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427. I will have to go, I fear,
in order of first to last.
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428. Um... and tied in first place
are Josie and Rich
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429. with four points! How about that?
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430. In third place,
despite some magnificent knowledge,
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431. he did plunge into our traps a few
times, with -14, John Sessions!
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432. But, um...
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433. But limping somewhat
a few laps behind,
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434. with, I think,
a record-breaking -72,
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435. is Alan Davies. Thank you.
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436. That's all from Rich, John,
Josie, Alan and myself.
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437. I leave you with this
quite interesting thought...
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438. Good night.
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