1. God aften, bon soir, kalispera,
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2. buenas noches, god kveld,
goede avond, dobry den,
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3. buenas tardes,
guten Abend, good evening,
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4. willkommen, welcome
et bienvenu a QI.
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5. Tonight, I'm happy to say EC
regulations have permitted us
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6. to register as a Euro quiz -
accordingly, tonight's panel
is 95.62% European.
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7. From England, David Mitchell.
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8. From Ireland, Dara O'Briain.
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9. And all the way from Lithuania,
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10. Phill Jupitus.
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11. And from a little bit of Wales
that is always North London,
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12. Alan Davies.
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13. Thank you.
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14. I myself have a little Hungarian in
me, but never mind about that now.
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15. So, Englander schweinehunden
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16. David goes...
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17. "La Marseillaise"
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18. Phill goes...
"Ode To Joy"
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19. Dara goes...
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20. ♪ It's a long way
to Tipperary
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21. That was the Red Army choir singing
that. And Alan goes...
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22. Here we go,
here we go, here we go, here we go!
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23. England!
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24. Stylish
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25. Let's not forget
our elephant dans la chambre bonus.
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26. Spot the elephant
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27. for an "extra-zalung gratificaccia",
or as they say in French,
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28. "un bonus."
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29. So that is ten points
in anyone's language.
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30. We have a flag issue.
What's the problem?
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31. David claims not to be English.
I'm far from it. Furthermore,
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32. I'm not Welsh. WHAT?
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33. Well, give him your... your...
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34. We'll come to a proper arrangement.
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35. When I did a programme
about my family tree,
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36. it turned out we're nothing to do
with the Welsh.
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37. Good!
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38. Allora, driving our Eurostar
and off to question one.
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39. We've raised the bar for this one
in recognition
of the presence amongst us
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40. of the noted historian David
Mitchell of Peterhouse, Cambridge.
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41. So David, we'd like you
to name 5,732 provisions
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42. affecting the enclave of Baarle
Hertog in the treaty of Maastricht.
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43. Uh... Your time starts now.
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44. Well, this is an easy one.
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45. Um...
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46. The enclave actually only exists
theoretically,
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47. because it's a sort of sand bank
which was once farmed but was flooded
in the 14th century
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48. and it exists between Denmark and
Germany and the Heligoland Bight.
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49. But it's been an anomaly in
diplomatic law ever since then
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50. because there were arguments about
who owned it theoretically even
though no-one could go there.
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51. So the 5,732 provisions are a
provision for each of the former
states of the Roman empire
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52. before it was dissolved by Napoleon.
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53. That is absolutely wrong.
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54. Ah.
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55. Not one thing that you said was
true. It convinced the audience.
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56. They were ready to applaud you.
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57. Number 706 is "no fat chicks."
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58. Well, firstly do we know
what the treaty of Maastricht was?
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59. It's to do with the European Union,
I think. I cheated a bit.
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60. You were talking about the second...
Uh-h-h-h... .. treaty of Maastricht.
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61. There was a first treaty of
Maastricht. Was it about sand banks?
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62. Not exactly. It was about settling
which parts were Dutch-Belgian
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63. and which parts were Frenchy-Belgian
Belgium.
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64. And it's so complicated in this
particular place, Baarle Hertog,
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65. that there are
5,732 parcels of land.
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66. You walk into a house and one room
is Dutch, one room's Belgian
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67. and there are front doors split in
two - one side is Belgium,
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68. one side is Dutch. And because
the laws are different...
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69. .. closing time in the Netherlands
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70. is earlier than Belgium, so in the
same restaurant, they close half the
tables because it's Dutch
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71. and you have to move
to the Belgium bit.
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72. The Dutch have taken the piss a
little. They have a sex shop right
next to the Belgian town council,
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73. just in the Dutch part.
Those
crazy Dutch guys!
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74. Belgian guys - look at our cock rings
and inflatable ladies!
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75. It is true that Belgium
as we know it
is an entirely artificial country.
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76. Yeah. They were named
after the Belgae which was a tribe.
A lot of those were in Winchester.
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77. Belgae.
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78. I dare say someone just threw
his pipe at the television.
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79. "Fran, he just called me Belgian!"
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80. "Where's my gun?"
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81. But as for enclaves in this way,
that is a sort of country within a
country.
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82. One of the most remarkable ones
was Suite 212 at Claridges.
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83. Was that Norway
during the Second World War?
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84. It was Yugoslavia for a few days.
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85. So there were rows in that room!
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86. Ethnic cleansing in the bathroom.
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87. Yeah, the queen was pregnant,
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88. and she wanted to give birth to the
heir to the throne of Yugoslavia on
Yugoslavian soil,
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89. so the British government said,
"We will allow for a few days Suite
212 to be Yugoslav soil."
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90. Actually, people got some Yugoslav
soil, which they had handy,
and put it under the bed.
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91. Apparently.
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92. Now, when is it cool for a "brother"
to bring a "chick" into a monastery?
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93. Do they sort of have...?
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94. It's like on Christmas Day,
in the days of servants,
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95. the masters used
to serve the servants.
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96. On Christmas Day in a monastery,
all the rules are off,
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97. and it's, you know,
time to shag everyone.
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98. Any idea where that might be,
that monastery?
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99. Do you know in the audience?
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100. Greece. Greece. They know.
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101. Good audience. It's Mount Athos.
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102. Mount Athos, which is described by
many as the holiest place on earth.
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103. It contains 24 large monasteries
and hundreds of small ones.
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104. It's only about 350
square kilometres.
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105. It's like Travelodge have
opened one in Narnia, isn't it?
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106. "Comfortable living, fantasy prices."
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107. It does look a little forbidding,
I grant you.
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108. No females, of any species,
are allowed in Mount Athos.
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109. Obviously they can't stop
wild birds and stray cats,
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110. but no female animals,
no female humans are allowed.
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111. Apparently the Virgin Mary
discovered the place and said,
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112. "No woman should
set foot here after me."
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113. Prince Philip visited it with the
Queen. She had to stay in a boat
500 yards from the shore!
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114. I dare say she was gutted to be
with the jug-eared idiot again!
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115. "Oh God, he's gonna call 'em...
What's he gonna do now?"
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116. "Oh, no!"
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117. Ah-ha!
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118. Well, for a thousand years,
it's been like that.
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119. I mean, it's pretty astonishing.
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120. But... they do let in hens.
Why would they let in hens?
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121. Eggs.
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122. They prefer eggs
to the jizz of the male hen!
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123. You don't know monks very well,
do you?
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124. They much prefer cock, I think
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125. No, it's not actually
to eat the eggs.
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126. To... mock them!
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127. To draw faces on them.
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128. No, it's to use the yolk
for mixing paint for icon painting.
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129. So all their icons smell of egg?
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130. Well, a lot... It's a good thing
for binding paint together.
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131. It's been used for a long time.
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132. So, that's why they make
an exception to their rule...
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133. So if you get trapped in a monastery
and you can't find the fridge,
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134. yummy, yummy icons!
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135. Yes. Absolutely.
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136. Yeah, is it like that wallpaper in
Willy Wonka where the different
colours taste of different things?
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137. "Oh, the snozberries
taste of snozberries!"
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138. "All the Jesuses
taste of breakfast!"
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139. The monastic police
enforce the rules -
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140. of not allowing women in,
for example.
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141. Have they ever had
a meeting about it?
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142. You know, about how
it's a mental rule?
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143. I don't think they have,
because some of them are very...
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144. extreme.
Some of them starve themselves.
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145. In fact, people who make that
equipment
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146. for detecting dying people
in the rubble
after an earthquake or something,
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147. they actually went to Mount Athos
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148. and took samples
of the breath of fasting monks
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149. so they could get a sort of
idea for their machines
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150. of the particular smell
of a starving human.
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151. Very important for the purposes of
this rubble thing, so they have
their uses, these mad monks!
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152. So, no women, no food...
eggy paintings?
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153. Yeah! Sounds like a hoot
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154. Well anyway, which would you rather
have, the German disease, the French
disease, the Polish disease,
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155. the Portuguese disease
or the English disease?
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156. Yes?
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157. I'm guessing they're kind
of the same thing -
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158. it's like sado-masochism or a love
of being tied up and spanked.
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159. It's just fetishes.
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160. The English VICE is flagellation,
to the French, isn't it?
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161. The English disease? I think it's
all clap, isn't it?
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162. Pox. Certainly, syphilis, yes.
Absolutely right.
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163. Syphilis, according to which nation
you are, it's your enemy's disease.
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164. The French call it the English
disease, the English call it the
French disease...
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165. The Dutch call it the Portuguese
disease.
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166. The DUTCH? Yes.
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167. What have they got against...?
Where do they meet?
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168. Navigational wars
in the 17th century.
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169. They were at war for years -
over spices.
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170. Oh, spices!
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171. Explains it all. Nutmeg.
They fought battles over nutmeg.
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172. There's the Dutch king
in front of his cupboard -
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173. "Where's my cardamom?"
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174. "Those syphilis-riddled bastards
have pinched our cardamom!"
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175. The very idea that a pox-ridden
Portuguese bloke was thinking,
"I need some cumin!"
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176. They valued the spices so much
that they swapped Manhattan
for the Spice Islands in Indonesia.
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177. Yeah. That's how we got Manhattan.
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178. True. It was New Amsterdam.
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179. They used nutmeg to preserve meat.
That's why it was so valuable.
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180. You could sail halfway round the
world, so long as you had nutmeg.
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181. I think Alan should have points.
Points!
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182. Top work.
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183. One of the odd things about syphilis
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184. is it appears
to have arrived in Europe
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185. around the time America was
discovered,
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186. so many people
thought it came FROM America.
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187. But it was first among German troops
when they were besieging Naples,
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188. so it was called
the German disease,
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189. the Neapolitan disease,
because that was a kingdom then.
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190. What did they use to cure it until
the turn of the 19th / 20th century?
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191. Petrol.
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192. It's almost as weird.
A poison - they used mercury.
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193. Mercury.
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194. At Oscar Wilde's trial, it actually
came up against him
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195. that when he laughed, he put his
hand up in front of his mouth -
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196. it was considered effeminate.
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197. But it's probably because he had
syphilis and he'd taken mercury,
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198. which makes the teeth green
and transparent,
so he was covering his bad teeth,
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199. but it was counted against him.
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200. They used to say,
"From Venus to Mercury..."
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201. Didn't Edward VII take a lot of
mercury? I think he might have done.
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202. I thought that was for constipation.
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203. Yeah, all kinds of things. A very
sort of literal way of treating it.
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204. "Drink an incredibly heavy liquid.
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205. "Force the poo down."
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206. The alternative would be, stand on
your hands and have a load of helium.
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207. That is a much better image.
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208. Just need some foot-men with nets -
"Catch the turds!"
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209. "Don't let it get on the tapestries!"
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210. What a sick mind you have,
David Mitchell.
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211. Then someone comes in and says,
"What's the matter?"
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212. "Constipation!"
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213. "Look!"
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214. Do you know the later cure?
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215. It actually won its deviser
a Nobel Prize in 1927, for medicine.
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216. It was a weird cure - it was
to give them another disease.
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217. Yeah, the other disease was malaria.
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218. Bizarre - you give people malaria
and it cures them of syphilis.
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219. The bacteria can't survive,
literally, the heat of the body
when it's got a malarial fever.
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220. Strange. Anyway, there you are.
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221. At this point in our Euro-quiz,
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222. regulations require us to have
a "Call My Euro-Bluff" round.
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223. So, let's play Call My Euro-Bluff.
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224. Theme from "Call My Bluff"
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225. Ah! Good evening and welcome.
No, hush, tish and pibble.
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226. Um, so...
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227. Um, it's... Who should start...
We'll start with David.
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228. David, give us some Euro-regulation.
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229. OK, "It's illegal to sell bananas
if they're too curvy."
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230. What do we think?
Anyone got a theory?
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231. I think that's true. It's quite
a well-known Euro-regulation.
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232. It's utter arse
of the highest order.
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233. You're saying a bluff, are you?
What do you feel?
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234. I seem to recall this is
something the Daily Mail would go,
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235. "How dare they say our bananas can't
be bendy? Bendy bananas made this
country what it is."
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236. Balls.
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237. You think it's balls.
Would you like to reveal?
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238. Balls. It's a "bleuf"!
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239. It's just you just have to say how
big they are, which is fair enough.
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240. Otherwise, people would sell tiny,
pea-size bananas.
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241. The clincher is the current EU
standards are identical to the
pre-existing British ones
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242. and the United Nations ones
and the OECD ones.
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243. Nothing has changed,
except the ability of the press
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244. to make things up and scare us that
our bananas will be straightened.
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245. So! It's become rather
political and exciting!
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246. Um... Er, Dara!
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247. What is yours?
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248. This is true.
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249. "Trawlermen will soon be required
to wear hair-nets while fishing."
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250. Is this cos they're handling food?
Exactly. The point is to keep it
clean right from the very start.
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251. Convincing stuff. What do we feel?
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252. It makes practical sense as well,
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253. because the hair-net
could catch small fish,
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254. like whitebait or scampi, that might
get in the hair of the fisherman,
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255. and at the end of the day,
that's dinner.
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256. They're used to handling nets.
What are your thoughts?
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257. They wear hard-hats at Smithfield
Market and they never had to.
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258. They're always making people
put things on their heads.
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259. Good point!
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260. I like that. Good.
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261. Good. What do you feel, Phill? Yes.
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262. You think it's true as well.
Most people think it's true.
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263. Come, demonstrate, tell us,
put us out of our misery.
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264. It's a "Bleuf" as well!
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265. It's not true,
and I quote Richard Littlejohn,
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266. "Oh, what a circus. The safety Nazis
have forced fishermen to wear hair
nets. You couldn't make it up."
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267. Well actually...
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268. oddly enough, Richard,
you could and you did!
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269. It wasn't even as if... Littlejohn
didn't make that up. No, he didn't.
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270. It was made up by British
journalists in a bar in Brussels
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271. who tried to see,
"Will people fall for this?"
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272. And the British press fell for it,
completely.
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273. They know that people love their
little five minutes of snorting
anger over the breakfast.
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274. "Bloody... Why...? So...!"
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275. "It's ridiculous.
You don't take an active interest
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276. "in how your country's run for just
45 years and look what happens!"
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277. Very good indeed.
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278. Absolutely right.
So we've had two bluffs. Phill.
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279. I should do that, shouldn't I? Aha!
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280. Would that it were,
Stephen, would that it were.
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281. Ah... "From January 1st 2008,
circus tightrope walkers
will be required to wear hard hats.
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282. "Because of EEC regulations about
safety in the workplace,
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283. "anybody, if their feet are more
than four feet off the ground,
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284. "has to wear a hard hat."
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285. I would believe that during
a performance, not,
but during training, yes, bizarrely.
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286. That sounds convincing.
What do you think, Alan?
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287. I don't think... If you fell off
a tightrope, wouldn't it fall off?
It'd be hopeless!
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288. Without a chin strap,
it's an added hazard, isn't it?
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289. Probably, it could fall on
top of someone.
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290. That might hurt!
So what are you saying? Bluff, true?
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291. Bleuf!
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292. Bleuf. Er, I'm saying it's a bluff.
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293. Reveal yourself, would you?
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294. Oh! It's also a bluff!
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295. It is only true in the building
and construction industry that
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296. you have to wear a hard hat at work.
It's where things come down on you
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297. rather than you going down
on something else. Exactly.
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298. As it were.
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299. "While we're there, put a hat on
when you're going down there!"
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300. It was reported in The Times,
The Daily Telegraph
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301. and, surprisingly, The Daily Mail,
which is usually
much more wise and thoughtful,
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302. er, that circus tightrope walkers
will have to wear hard hats
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303. during their act. Mr Archer,
the circus general manager added,
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304. "This is just another
loony law from Brussels
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305. "and we are the only country stupid
enough to pay any attention."
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306. No, Mr Archer, the only country
stupid enough to believe it.
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307. It's bizarre. Alan, have you
got one? Yes, I have.
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308. I have got one.
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309. He's even got a prop. These you may
think are sausages. I do. Bangers.
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310. But they're not to be sausages soon,
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311. they'll be called emulsified,
high-fat, offal tubes.
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312. That's what you must have on labels.
Cos that's what they contain.
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313. And there is a sausage firm in
Wales called Dragon Sausages,
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314. and they actually have to
put on the label,
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315. "No dragon included."
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316. What do we feel, team?
If you want a high-fat tube,
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317. I recommend
the District Line between
Bromley-by-Bow and Upminster.
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318. But, I, er... No.
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319. No. No.
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320. Of course, they'll be different names
and even different brands of sausages
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321. will have different names.
No, course not.
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322. Yeah, I think this story has been
around for a long time
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323. and yet sausages are still called
sausages. Exactly.
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324. But is it true or is it false?
It is a bluff!
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325. It is also a bluff, very good.
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326. It is also actually a line from
Yes, Minister. There you are.
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327. Antony Jay and Jonathan Lynn
wrote it.
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328. Well, that's it, ladies and
gentlemen from Euro Bluff.
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329. Oh, 'tis not to say, of course,
that everything that comes
out of Brussels makes sense.
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330. This Manneken Pis is the symbol
of Brussels,
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331. sometimes they dress her up,
or him up, as Elvis
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332. and sometimes IT pees beer.
What's it all about?
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333. I've seen it, it's the most
unimpressive thing,
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334. apart from that mermaid in
Copenhagen, which is also shite.
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335. It's just a tiny... it's like yay big.
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336. I've got a model of it.
It's actually not that scaled down!
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337. In theory this is a working one,
I believe.
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338. That's pretty good, isn't it?
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339. How about that?
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340. We like.
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341. Very nice indeed.
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342. Urgh! You're drinking piss!
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343. If it's good enough for Sarah Miles,
it's good enough for me.
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344. There is a theory... Is it anything
to do with elephants? Oh!
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345. Interesting. No.
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346. But it's good that you're thinking.
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347. One of the theories is that
Brussels was under siege
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348. and the enemy were laying explosives
around the city walls
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349. and a little boy saw this and
peed on the fuses.
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350. Thus saving the city,
so he's memorialised.
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351. I did that once and blew
the electricity in the house.
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352. There's another theory that it was
the two-year-old Duke Godfried
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353. and his troops put him up in a tree
when they were having a battle,
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354. and from there he urinated on the
enemies and they lost the battle.
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355. That was in 1142.
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356. They stuck the crown prince in
a tree? Like the enemies
were just underneath the tree?
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357. Throw a rock at the tree!
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358. How long has that statue been there?
Do you know?
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359. 200 years.
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360. 120 years.
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361. 90 years.
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362. It's a lot older than you might
think, it's 14th century.
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363. Since 1388 there's been
a pissing boy.
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364. That's pretty good, isn't it?
Still works.
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365. They get up there with
a pipe cleaner every Sunday.
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366. It's been stolen seven times.
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367. Seven times?
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368. Seven times. In 1817, one of the
thieves got 20 years hard labour.
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369. 1n 1978, they got let off
with a warning.
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370. No-one ever get 20 years easy work,
do they?
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371. All the labour's hard labour.
Don't say hard labour,
it's just rubbing it in.
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372. We know, it's labour. We're not
saying it's 20 years temping.
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373. Working in a call centre. Yeah.
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374. So nobody knows for sure why
Brussels chooses to identify
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375. with an incontinent five-year-old.
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376. Bonne chance to them, however.
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377. Now, this brings us to the worst
Euro nightmare of all,
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378. the single devalued currency
that we call General Ignorance.
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379. So fingers sur les buzzers,
s'il vous plait.
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380. What is the highest mountain in
Europe?
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381. Yay?
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382. Er, Mont Blanc.
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383. Sorry you said that.
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384. No, it isn't. It isn't.
Yes, it is.
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385. It does begin with an "E" if that's
any help.
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386. Enormo Blanc.
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387. Eiger? Not the Eiger, no.
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388. Etna? Ooh, hello?
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389. Did you say Etna? Yeah. Etna, hey?
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390. It's some island, it's from
the bottom of the sea.
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391. No? That's Etna, isn't it,
or Stromboli.
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392. No, it's not. It's right
on the borders of Europe,
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393. but it's definitely Europe.
Is it somewhere in the Caucasus?
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394. It is in the Caucasus.
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395. Oh, which of the mountain names
of the Caucasus?
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396. Mount Elbrus is the answer.
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397. It's where Prometheus was supposedly
chained for daring to steal
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398. fire from heaven and he had
his liver pecked out every day
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399. by vultures as a punishment.
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400. Ooh! Yes, that's, that's gotta hurt.
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401. You'd wanna get it over with
at the beginning of the day.
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402. 100 people attempt to climb
the summit every day
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403. in the summer season
when it's not too cold.
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404. And about 30 odd die every year.
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405. Do you know that one in eight people
who try to climb Everest die?
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406. Really. That's a high attrition
rate.
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407. Not good, is it?
Not good at all.
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408. You get acute mountain sickness
cos you can't breathe.
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409. So your stomach won't accept food
so you start throwing up.
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410. Apparently there are signs
all the way up saying,
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411. "If you are throwing up and
you have a headache, go back."
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412. But people don't. So when you're
putting your party together
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413. to go up Everest, if there's
seven of you, just get one ready,
someone you don't like.
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414. Preferably with asthma.
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415. "Here you come, wheezy."
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416. In 1997, there was a Land Rover
Defender that drove to the very top
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417. of Mount Everest,
which is a high mountain,
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418. it's 18,510 feet. It's also a very
busy mountain for people climbing it.
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419. All of whom must have been thrilled
to see someone drive past.
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420. But it's nearly 3,000 feet higher
than Mont Blanc.
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421. Now, audience, audience, audience,
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422. what are the first words of
the German national anthem?
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423. No, ladies and gentlemen,
you are wrong. You idiots!
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424. Minus 100, I fear.
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425. Welcome to our pain.
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426. They thought it was "Deutschland,
Deutschland uber alles."
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427. I didn't. No! You know what it is,
don't you?
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428. Nope.
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429. I thought it was that. It hasn't
been for a very long time.
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430. "Deutschland, Deutschland uber
alles" was the first verse,
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431. that was used as the national anthem
under the Nazis.
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432. After the Nazis they decided to
choose only the third verse,
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433. which is the least controversial
verse.
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434. Einigkeit und Recht und Freiheit
Fur das deutsche Vaterland!
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435. Danach lasst uns alle streben
Bruderlich mit Herz und Hand!
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436. I have an erection.
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437. It is hard not to be moved by that,
isn't it? So there we are.
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438. "Unity and justice and freedom
For the German fatherland".
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439. Not "Deustchland, Deutschland
uber alles".
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440. So there we are, that's almost it.
There is one last question.
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441. What is right under your noses and
sounds like a bell?
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442. A smell!
No.
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443. It's been under your noses all
evening. The elephant, the flags?
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444. The joke is, "Dunnng!"
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445. Your notebooks are made of
elephant dung. Ohh.
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446. You see? Ohh.
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447. Recycled elephant dung.
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448. God, it's like the end of The Usual
Suspects, it's been here all along.
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449. Which brings us to the scores!
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450. Soaring like a German eagle
in the lead,
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451. with minus 5, is... Phill Jupitus!
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452. On his heels like a pair of
Russian wolves with minus 7,
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453. it's David Mitchell.
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454. Well, now, this is... this is
very, very tight.
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455. With minus 26, in third place,
Alan Davies!
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456. Ha-ha-ha!
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457. Tottering along in last place
like an Albanian nanny goat,
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458. with only one fewer than Alan,
on minus 27, Dara O'Briain!
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459. But...
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460. ..you'll be pleased to know,
in very last place,
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461. with minus 100, it's the audience!
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462. Well done.
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463. We've come to the end of
our European adventure,
so from Alan it's...
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464. Good night. And from David it's...
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465. Nos da. And from Dara it's...
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466. Oiche. And from Phill it's...
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467. Labanaktis.
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468. And finally from me,
it's jo ejszakat.
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469. And I leave you with this thought
from Jackie Mason.
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470. 80% of married men cheat in America.
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471. The rest cheat in Europe.
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472. Do svidaniya.
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