1. Good evening. Good evening.
Good evening. Good evening.
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2. Good evening and
God rest ye, merry gentleviewers.
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3. Tonight's QI is going to the Dickens
with E for Empire.
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4. In the Old Curiosity Shop, we have
Great Expectations of Jo Brand...
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5. .. Our Mutual Friend, Sean Lock...
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6. .. that witty Chuzzle Martin,
Bill Bailey...
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7. .. and getting his knickers in
one "Oliver" Twist, Alan Davies.
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8. It's nearly Christmas.
Let's hear some Carols. Bill goes...
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9. Lovely. Jo goes...
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10. Sean goes...
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11. And Alan goes...
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12. Just not trying, are you?
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13. So, keep your eyes and ears peeled
for an elephant in the room.
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14. If you see one, you're looking at
one big Christmas bonus.
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15. So to our first question. What did
Queen Victoria think of Mr Bean?
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16. We are not amused.
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17. Oh!
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18. Oh! Ho! Straight in!
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19. Albert would have liked it because
the Germans are mad for Bean. True.
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20. I was on Lufthansa flight
and everyone was laughing
with headphones.
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21. They were all watching Bean.
They love it!
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22. There's a certain efficiency.
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23. Does something and falls over.
Very amusing.
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24. "He was walking in a straight line!
He walked into the door!"
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25. "Zis is what happens
when you break ze rules!"
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26. "Sometimes I stay up very late!"
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27. Can I take this off?
Of course you can.
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28. Is it uncomfortable?
Ah! It's Sean Lock!
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29. I suspect it's not THAT Mr Bean.
Is there another Mr Bean? John Bean.
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30. One of three people who tried
to do something to Queen Victoria
in the fourth year of her reign.
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31. Take her roughly
behind the bike shed?
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32. No, or indeed invent the bicycle
and then invent the shed.
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33. Sell her tea towels door-to-door.
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34. No! Kiss her on the mouth.
Quite the other! Well...
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35. Is that how you phrase it? "Quite
the other, if you don't mind!"
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36. You can get anything
if you're the Queen. "You there!
Kiss me on the..."
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37. These were unfriendly acts.
He didn't turn down her advances
with knockers like these?
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38. Three times in 1842... Tried to
murder her. ..to assassinate her.
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39. Mr Bean had a gun and he filled it
with wads of tobacco.
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40. Which didn't do much harm.
Was he trying to give her cancer?
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41. I like the idea of Mr Bean trying to
assassinate someone by clumsiness.
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42. Making a cup of tea and the house
collapses, the palace falls down.
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43. Everywhere he goes
is a tornado of disaster. Mayhem.
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44. I went to a remote Australian
sheep station and the bloke went,
"Ever watch Mr Bean?
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45. "That bloke's a bloody idiot!"
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46. That's fabulous. "Yeah, he wouldn't
last five minutes in the bush!"
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47. Well, clearly not.
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48. They're all rather
these Carry On names. There was one
foiled by a PC Trounce.
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49. Hence the name. Maybe.
He invented the trounce.
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50. "I trounce your assassination
attempt with my trouncing stick."
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51. One assassin, called John Francis,
was described by Prince Albert
as "a thorough scamp".
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52. A thorough scamp? Someone tried to
assassinate his wife? "You scamp!"
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53. "Thorough scamp!" Oh, yeah. Tough.
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54. Seven years was the maximum for
trying to assassinate the Queen.
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55. The line "we are not amused"
was reported in The Notebooks
Of A Spinster Lady in 1919.
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56. She had a childish sense of humour
and was amused by lots of things.
Little crowns! She liked them.
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57. Queen Victoria took a dim view
of John Bean who tried to
assassinate her early in her reign.
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58. What was Queen Victoria's...
Victoria's secret?
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59. Victoria's deadly secret?
She was a man.
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60. No. Did she keep snooker balls
in a sock?
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61. "What happened to him?"Nothing!"
A wonderful idea.
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62. Was she just poisonous?
She killed someone? Well...
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63. Indirectly. There was something
about her that was not infectious...
Was she an alien?
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64. She was a carrier... Haemophilia?
She was a carrier of haemophilia.
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65. And so infected every single
royal house in Europe.
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66. Most have had haemophiliac deaths.
Her own son, Prince Leopold,
died of haemophilia.
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67. Women can carry it
but can't be haemophiliac,
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68. except where the mother is a carrier
and the father IS a haemophiliac.
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69. Usually, it's the men in the family.
Yeah. We like that.
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70. My favourite illness.
Number one - haemophilia. Oh!
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71. It's a defective X chromosome,
in fact, that causes it.
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72. Her daughter
Alice Princess of Saxe-Coburg
had a daughter Alexandra,
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73. the Tsarina of Russia.
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74. Many believe it precipitated
the Russian Revolution the fact that
her son Alexei was a haemophiliac.
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75. That's what got Rasputin involved
in the royal family, which enraged
so many that revolution gathered.
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76. If she had not been haemophiliac...
WAS he the lover
of the Russian Queen? Oh! Ra, ra!
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77. Russia's greatest love machine,
I seem to remember.
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78. That's where I learnt my history.
In many years, when we come to
the letter R, we'll cover Rasputin.
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79. His death was even more
extraordinary.
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80. They poisoned him, shot him, drowned
him in the lake and he wouldn't die.
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81. Still singing that bloody song!
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82. And then eventually, the red light
in his eye flickered and went out.
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83. Exactly!
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84. What's Bill doing?
I can't move my head.
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85. You got your own private
sideboard show. Very honoured.
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86. This collar's starting to hurt
my ears. I'll have sore under-ears.
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87. Your ears are very big. They're
shown off to their full majesty.
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88. You're going bald.
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89. Really, children! I was trying
to pay him a compliment.
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90. "You've got big ears!" You have.
I know I've got big ears!
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91. You look like a pork butcher
from the 1950s.
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92. Now, children.
We must be of Christmas spirit.
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93. She started it. Remember the date
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94. One of the theories put forward
is the oddity of the fact
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95. that there had been no haemophilia
in the Hanover family, her family.
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96. So, either one of her parents
had a one-in-50,000 gene mutation.
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97. Or she was the illegitimate daughter
of a haemophiliac.
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98. I'm looking forward
to next week's Heat magazine!
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99. Oh, yeah! Absolutely!
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100. They're going to go crazy with
that little titbit, aren't they?
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101. Queen Victoria was responsible
for all the royal families of Europe
carrying the gene for haemophilia.
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102. At last, in the E series,
we come to a question that you've
all been waiting for, on erotica!
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103. What kind of behaviour was forbidden
in the secret museum of pornography?
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104. Flash photography.
Was it fisting?
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105. Three innocent little words
that somehow... Your majesty!
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106. Queen Victoria just said,
"Was it fisting?" The Queen would
like to know was it fisting?
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107. What I know of myself,
Queen Victoria was well up for it.
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108. She was! She had 28 children.
She had a lot of children.
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109. As a young girl, she was full
of fun, loved dancing and music.
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110. She wrote saucy letters sometimes.
Well, not saucy. She showed
she had a twinkle in her eye.
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111. Who's Frank Lampard looking at
through that keyhole?
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112. Is that how you view the Museum
of Pornography? Tiny tiny museum!
Fits into a keyhole.
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113. As we go through... the keyhole!
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114. He can't do many, but they're good!
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115. The Museum of Pornography.
Something's forbidden...
No school trips!
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116. It was opened in Naples.
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117. You can't have your packed lunch
near the dildos, kids.
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118. To do with Catholicism or the Mafia.
Not that.
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119. What were they discovering
in the early part of
the 19th century? Pompei.
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120. Almost everything they discovered
about Pompeii was pornographic.
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121. The first thing was
a statue of Pan shagging a goat
festooned with... Filth!
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122. .. filthy graffiti. Absolute filth.
"Eric has the biggest knob
in Pompeii."
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123. Underneath,
"It's not as big as my brother's."
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124. It was clearly a sexually vibrant
place! It's not as crude in Latin!
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125. Doesn't make you go, "Oh, grow up!"
Someone's written "wank"!
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126. "Wankasitum!" Oh!
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127. So they got all the sexy stuff, and
put it into a Museum of Pornography.
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128. Look at some of the most lovely
buttocks ever committed to marble.
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129. The Venus Kallipygos,
the Venus with the beautiful bottom.
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130. That is a very nice arse.
I'm no expert on the female anatomy.
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131. She's looking round, "You are gonna
put a load of clothes round there
when you're finished?"
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132. Has she come out of a toilet
and not noticed her skirt's caught
in her ear?
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133. According to Dr David Holmes,
a psychology lecturer at Manchester
Metropolitan University,
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134. there is a formula to describe
the beauty of a bottom.
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135. S + C x ...
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136. That mean "nice arse,
shame about your face"?
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137. Looks as if it could!
S stands for overall shape.
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138. C is circularity. B is bounciness.
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139. F is firmness. T is skin texture.
V is the ratio from hip to waist.
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140. He sounds like a right old perv.
He does a bit.
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141. "I've been noticing your bottom
and I've done some sums!
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142. "I'm glad to say..."
You've helped me crack the formula!
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143. "Mathematically,
it's absolutely perfect."
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144. That's bottoms for you.
What you weren't allowed to do,
you haven't told me.
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145. Become aroused. Arousal
was included. Say anything. Laugh.
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146. If you laughed, you were ejected.
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147. You were to take a scholarly
appreciation of this as antiquity.
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148. If you laughed or became aroused...
No laughing!
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149. And the big stiff
cock is not funny! Not funny!
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150. You smiling? You're gonna laugh now?
No!
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151. Anyway...
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152. It was bricked up in the late 19th
century, the pornography museum.
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153. It's still there in Naples,
but you have to get a special permit
and can only go in with a guide.
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154. The secret museum contained all
the smutty stuff from Pompeii that
you weren't allowed to laugh at.
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155. So, why was it easier
to put your boots on in the dark
between 1600 and 1800?
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156. People's eyes were better with
the dark, cos there weren't electric
lights. They were like owls!
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157. We were a lot shorter
with massive eyes!
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158. It was easier to put your boots on
in 1600 than it was in 1400.
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159. Why is that? Zips.
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160. No! Was there a big drop
in boot thieves around 1600?
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161. They were luminous!
They weren't luminous!
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162. Were they both the same? Well done,
Jo Brand. That's exactly it.
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163. No lefts or rights for 200 years. It
didn't matter which you picked up.
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164. Before that, you had lefts
and rights, and then after that.
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165. What prompted this sudden...? Heels.
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166. They couldn't make heeled boots
in a left and right shape.
It was too difficult.
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167. You could shove on whichever boot
came first and it wouldn't matter.
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168. Did it extend to the whole...
the whole life, left and right?
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169. They just abandoned the whole notion
of left and right?
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170. For 200 years, "Where is it?"
"Up there. I don't know!"
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171. We have an expert from the
Northampton Museum and Art Gallery.
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172. Rebecca Shawcross, the shoe heritage
officer, gave us this information.
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173. An officer of shoe heritage?
Does she get to carry a gun?
I hope so. I would imagine.
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174. I'm sure she would. Keswick
Pencil Museum. That's pretty good.
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175. Two Bs and two Hs
and everything in between. Exactly.
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176. And there's places you can draw.
It's brilliant!
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177. In Reykjavik,
there's a penis museum. There is.
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178. I'm not making it up.
Whose penises do they have?
I've not visited it.
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179. Perhaps a blue whale's penis. Yeah.
It's different species.
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180. I wonder if Bjork's got anything
to do with it.
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181. She does the audio commentary.
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182. "A pee-ooo... Ssh!"
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183. "Bubbleybubbleybaboo!"
What the hell? See a penis?
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184. She goes, "Wha wha wha wha!"
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185. Gift shop would be good.
For 200 years...
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186. For 200 years only, really,
left boots were exactly the same
as right boots.
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187. Now, what are these? What are they?
Mm? Oh, these are... Daleks?
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188. Wait a minute!
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189. Ah ha ha. You've got the elephant.
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190. Bloody hell! I said elephant
and didn't wave my elephant!
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191. As it's Christmas,
we'll be kind to Tiny Tim.
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192. Is that just after
the elephant was frightened?
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193. Jumped out of his boots! Why have
they got shoes for an elephant?
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194. In captivity, especially elephants
that work, can get terrible
abrasions on the soft underpart.
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195. They have soft areas... I've never
seen an elephant with shoes on.
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196. Would you like to? I would like to,
if one came in...
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197. Jo, how can you turn that down?
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198. Would they be difficult to put on,
would the elephant...?
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199. They would have been much easier
to put on between 1400 and 1600.
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200. VG! They were tailor-made.
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201. Each one was made specifically for
each foot of a particular elephant.
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202. Joy to the world! Tis the season
to deck the halls with general
ignorance, so fingers on buzzers.
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203. Why did Victorians put covers
on the legs of pianos?
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204. They thought they were too rude.
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205. Almost the words we had in mind.
Exactly.
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206. In case they warped.
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207. Kind of that.
To protect them is the answer.
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208. This idea that they were prudish
about furniture legs is nonsense.
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209. What's quite interesting is that
Victorians laughed at Americans.
They thought Americans were prudes.
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210. That they covered piano legs
out of modesty.
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211. Americans were founded
by the puritans. They changed words
like "titbit" to "tidbit".
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212. "Bottom" to "fanny",
strangely enough.
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213. The point is that Victorians
never covered piano legs, but just
to protect them, if they did.
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214. Why did the Victorians legislate
against male homosexuality
but not against lesbian...? Oh!
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215. That's, er...
Thank you and we can...
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216. Moving on. Why...? Oh, dear!
Why didn't they legislate against
lesbianism?
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217. I, Queen Victoria,
didn't believe that women got up to
such scurrilous activities.
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218. Hmmmm!
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219. You're really going right for them,
aren't you? Happy Christmas to me!
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220. There's no truth in that Queen
Victoria had them cut any reference
to lesbianism as it didn't exist.
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221. Even if she'd questioned the law,
she would have sparked a revolution.
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222. She had no power to have
any influence on any legislation.
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223. Do you know the name of the law?
It was in 1885.
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224. It was called
the Labouchere Amendment.
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225. The first case of anyone being
sentenced under it was Oscar Wilde
who got two years' hard labour.
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226. The judge said, "You have been
the centre of a circle of corruption
of young men...
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227. "This is the worst case I have ever
tried. It is my duty to sentence you
to two years at hard labour,
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228. "in my opinion nothing like enough."
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229. "The worst case I've ever tried."
A week earlier,
he'd tried a case of child murder.
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230. The attitude they had. Would you say
he was a closet? He may have been!
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231. Of course, the Wilde case
precipitated an immense change in
British cultural life in may ways.
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232. Soldiers, like your good self,
walked arm-in-arm in Hyde Park
for 100 years.
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233. Arm-in-arm or arms linked,
as they do in the Continent still.
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234. As soon as the Wilde case came up,
men stood never touching each other,
a whole different way of behaving.
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235. Cos a bloke used to nick my medals!
I used to have hundreds of medals!
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236. So, it was all... I've got that one.
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237. That was from a Quality Street tin.
Legislation against lesbianism
seems never to have been considered.
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238. Victoria would have had no power
to block it, had it been.
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239. There is that rare thing
we're enjoying, a Christmas show
that hardly mentions Christmas.
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240. I want to know what Winterval is...
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241. Political correctness gone mad!
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242. I don't believe it!
I do not believe it! Jo Brand!
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243. Is there a special law?
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244. If you get every one of these
they're completely null and void?
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245. No, it's this typically
British thing.
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246. I guarantee, if you're reading
a newspaper today, there will be
some tiresome old fart
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247. who'll have written,
"For political correctness reasons,
there are no decorations in offices.
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248. "Calling it Winterval so as
not to offend minority religions."
It's absolute bollocks.
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249. 90% of all offices are decorated.
There are more parties every year.
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250. Winterval was simply a commercial
campaign... What was that?
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251. Something just ran across there
really fast.
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252. I think it was a velociraptor.
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253. It was nothing to do with
political correctness.
Birmingham City Council?
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254. My brother was on the phone going,
"Bloody Birmingham City Council!
Winterval. PC gone mad!" Nonsense!
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255. It was a campaign
for local businesses.
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256. It was just a thing.
From November to January...
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257. You're upset by that. It's running
all the way round the building.
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258. Then just going across...
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259. He'll be back in a minute.
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260. Oh, dear! Let's just wait for him!
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261. Could be ages.
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262. I don't want to look at that one
in case I miss it.
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263. He's not coming!
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264. What innocent... Went all the way
out on the South Bank...
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265. There'll be people watching going,
"Christmas isn't
what it used to be."
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266. Used to have Morecambe and Wise,
Angela Rippon tap dancing.
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267. Now we're watching a strange animal!
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268. Ah, it's the little things in life.
It is.
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269. Despite what you're going to read in
your newspapers from boring old...
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270. It's your fault
for reading the Daily Mail!
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271. Contrary to stories carried every
year, Winterval is not a PC attack
on Christmas by Birmingham,
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272. simply a promotional campaign that
they ran for one year 11 years ago.
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273. Lastly, not so much a question
as a piece of practical advice.
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274. What's the best way to stop children
peeking at presents
before Christmas Day?
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275. Yes, Jo Brand?
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276. Don't get 'em any!
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277. You do what I do.
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278. Buy all your presents on
Christmas Eve from a petrol station.
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279. You ARE the spirit of Christmas!
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280. Everyone's face when you open
the barbecue fuel! Lovely.
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281. Ooh, special! Haribo!
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282. Lovely. Blind them. Blind them?
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283. That would certainly...
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284. A little extreme perhaps.
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285. Bury them in the garden?
This is a story from last year.
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286. In Rock Hill, South Carolina,
a mother convinced police
to arrest her 12-year-old son,
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287. after he unwrapped a present early,
the police came to the house.
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288. He was arrested. "That's it!
I'm callin' the police!" Exactly!
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289. Was it a gun he'd unwrapped? We may
understand more about the family.
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290. It was a 12-year-old.
The mother was 27.
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291. Which means she must have been 15.
14 in conception.
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292. It was a Nintendo GameBoy Advance.
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293. His great-grandmother, only 63,
told him not to open this particular
popular hand-held game console.
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294. How old was the boy's wife?
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295. Go and help his wife.
She was in labour!
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296. "He wanted it. He just took it,"
said the great-grandmother.
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297. He was released the same day,
but apparently he showed no remorse.
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298. I'd love to have been round there,
Christmas dinner! What a happy day!
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299. "You forgot the cranberry.
I'm dialling 911!"
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300. "You bitch! Why...!" Boom!
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301. Oh, dear. Well, my goodness.
That seems to be it.
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302. Speaking of remorse and not showing
it, it's time for the scores,
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303. which tonight should be
in old money.
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304. In last place,
it can come as no surprise...
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305. .. minus 33 farthings. Jo Brand!
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306. And... in third place
with minus eight pennies, Sean Lock.
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307. In second place, with eight bob,
Bill Bailey!
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308. Do my eyes deceive me, ladies and
gentlemen? It can only be Christmas.
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309. Our winner, with a grand sum
of ten guineas, Alan Davies!
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310. With a wind of change blowing about
our ears, it's time to pull down the
flag for the last time this series.
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311. Good night from Mr Bailey, Master
Lock, Miss Brand, my rascal Davies,
my humble and obedient self
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312. and from the show
on which the sun never sets.
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313. A very happy Christmas from me
and good night.
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