1. Good evening, good evening,
good evening. Good evening.
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2. Welcome to a QI
Children In Need Special.
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3. Are you sitting comfortably?
Yes!
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4. Excellent news. Then I shall begin.
Joining me in my fairytale cottage
are, in the littlest chair,
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5. lovely little
Pudsey "Baby Bear" Bear.
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6. And, in the medium-sized chair,
Ronni "Mummy Bear" Ancona!
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7. And, in the big chair,
David "Daddy Bear" Mitchell!
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8. And Alan "Who's been sleeping
in my porridge?" Davies.
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9. Now our theme tonight,
appropriately enough, is families.
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10. We all have them. I must get on!
I've got plenty to do here.
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11. I've got a programme to do...
Oh, my goodness.
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12. If I could ask you
to vacate the chair, please?
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13. I've left a large gap
in the studio down the road.
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14. Terry Wogan! Oh...
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15. Well, well, well, well, well.
Oh, shucks.
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16. Fabulous to have you from BBC One.
Oh, for goodness' sake.
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17. I've come to this poor little place
just to make my contribution
to a humble little programme.
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18. Meanwhile, you continue
to make a contribution.
Keep that money rolling in.
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19. You all have buzzers. Ronni goes...
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20. David goes...
♪ Daddy, Daddy Cool
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21. Terry goes...
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22. That was lovely. And Alan goes...
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23. Everyone started clapping along!
The people want knees ups!
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24. They don't want information-based
panel shows. Just a knees up.
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25. This crowd looks to me
like they could do a Mexican Wave!
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26. Oh, no, no!
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27. Let's start with family wisdom.
I want some old wives' tales.
Do you know any?
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28. Tell me some dubious tales.
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29. My granny had a tale or two. I
remember, "Love flies out the window
when poverty walks in the door."
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30. And the other one was, "It doesn't
matter whether you are rich or poor,
as long as you have money."
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31. Cheese gives you bad dreams. Yes.
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32. My granny had so many it's a blur.
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33. "The higher cows build their nests,
the redder a shepherd's face will be
if he likes butter,
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34. "unless the wind changes direction,
in which case he'll turn blind
unless he puts vinegar on it."
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35. Yes, so many involve catching a cold
and going blind.
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36. Yes. W... makes you blind.
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37. But I have contact lenses,
so I can see fine. Contact lenses
are the w... charter.
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38. Is there much to see?
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39. No, to be honest.
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40. What about, "A crow follows
a busy squirrel"? Eating your crusts?
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41. It puts hairs on your chest.
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42. That's what my granny told
me and my two brothers.
Why would she tell ME that?
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43. The fact she was the Wolf Woman
of Wick may be to do with it!
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44. Now here's a burning contemporary
issue and a constant niggle.
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45. What have artists and composers
ever done for Children In Need?
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46. Lots! Lots? Tchaikovsky and Prokofiev
did a sponsored skip
across the Volga.
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47. Dressed as Tweedledee and Tweedledum.
Manet sat in a bath of snails.
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48. Rachmaninov ate 48 pies
in 68 hours while playing
his Second Piano Concerto.
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49. Need I go on?
It's a damn good start.
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50. In some ways, the original Children
In Need for London was the creation
of an extraordinary institution
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51. in the 18th century.
Do you know what I mean?
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52. There was a foundling hospital. Yes.
There was a man called Thomas Coram,
a great benefactor of the age.
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53. This was an age
in which 75% of all children died
before the age of five in London.
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54. 90% of all children
who were born in workhouses
died before they were five.
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55. So Coram, a successful merchant,
badgered people and two of the
most influential people who helped
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56. were Hogarth,
the great artist of the day,
and Handel, the composer.
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57. They did extraordinary work for it.
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58. It was hugely successful
and there were so many children
they had to have a lottery.
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59. If a white ball came out,
the child went in,
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60. red was a waiting list, a black one,
"Sorry, we can't take your child."
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61. In 1756, the government said they
would guarantee it for every child.
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62. And that sort of worked pretty well,
but what is phenomenal
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63. is that we have lived, and our
parents and grandparents probably,
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64. in an age when such a thing
is inconceivable, but we are
a minority of the human race.
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65. Most lived with unspeakable
suffering, especially for children.
And there still is, all over. Yes.
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66. That's why Children In Need comes in.
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67. We raised, what was it,
£35 million last year.
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68. We'd need to raise £150 million
to make a real difference to the
suffering that goes on. Hear, hear.
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69. Thank you very much.
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70. So the artist Hogarth and the
composer Handel helped to establish
the Foundling Hospital.
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71. Now which of these ladies is more
likely to bite off a baby's head?
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72. I think it's Ann Widdecombe
because she's a Catholic.
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73. Terry? I'm not saying Catholics are
more likely to bite off babies'
heads, but that was once said.
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74. Originally, of course, Margaret
Thatcher was known as Milk Snatcher,
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75. taking the pinta out of innocent
babies' mouths, but I think it was
Ann Widdecombe, who was misquoted.
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76. Somebody said, "Are you hungry?"
And she's a good trencherwoman
and she said,
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77. "Hungry? I'd eat a baby's arse
through a wickerwork chair."
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78. And that...
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79. That is how it grew up
from arse to head.
An easy enough mistake to make.
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80. So easy.
What's the wickerwork chair?
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81. Not only would I eat a baby's arse,
but under awkward circumstances.
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82. With chopsticks
through a wickerwork chair.
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83. Shows how little you know
of roughage, lad.
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84. He's a stranger to the lavatory,
I fear.
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85. The reason these two women...
I think I know. Yes? Tell.
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86. I think it's jelly babies.
My dear! You're so completely right!
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87. Women who have had children
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88. will basically take a jelly baby
and check it for nappy rash
and cradle cap
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89. and attempt to get it into
a good school before eating it.
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90. Women who haven't had children can
enjoy the benefits of jelly babies
knowing they can give them back
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91. when they've had enough.
Ronni, it IS about jelly babies,
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92. but the odd thing about the research
is that it's mothers who have had
children who bite off the heads
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93. and women who don't
who don't.
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94. So lots of points for knowing
it was about jelly babies.
It's an extraordinary mentality
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95. that inquires which part of the jelly
baby you bite off first! I know!
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96. A lot of universities are short of
funding so they have to investigate
stupid things. Come on, boys.
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97. I'll have a black one if I may.
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98. There you are. I get a whole bowl.
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99. Three million of these
are eaten every week, you know.
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100. What's the powdery substance?
Cocaine.
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101. It's starch to get the jelly
out of the mould.
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102. Back to family relationships.
Ronni, what do new-born babies
like best? As a mother of one,
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103. I'd like to say crying. Crying.
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104. The thing about babies crying
is you just think,
"What have you got to cry about?
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105. "You have no financial problems,
relationship problems,
you're not haunted by past mistakes."
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106. We should be crying on an hourly
basis! You don't even have to
get out of bed to go for a poo!
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107. Lie back... Yeah.
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108. "Make the most of it.
What is your problem?
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109. "These will be the happiest days of
your life." Maybe they're stressed
about all that's ahead of them.
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110. Maybe they can pick up on the stress
of all the adults.
"This is a nightmare. It's OK now,
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111. "but this is going to get worse.
One day they'll say I'm not allowed
to shit in my bed any more.
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112. "They'll dress it up as growing up
or something, but it's the first
stage of a long surrender!"
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113. Never stop soiling yourself!
It'll be much better for you.
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114. "If you had an ounce of
self-respect, you'd soil yourself!"
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115. Someone told me that 90% of the
attention you garner in your life
you receive under the age of three.
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116. There's a thought, isn't it?
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117. Not for us on television! Surely
not us! No, that could be right.
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118. A lot of mothers have been led to
believe that it's incredibly
important to have a bonding process.
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119. But babies don't bond particularly
in the very first days.
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120. They respond, apparently, as much
to the cries of a rhesus monkey
as to the noise of their mother.
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121. All that hard work for bugger all!
Get a rhesus monkey in.
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122. They get used to your smell
after a few weeks
and they do like you.
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123. That child's clearly not going to
bond with its parents!
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124. You're crawling towards the age
where you can again soil yourself
with impunity. What do you mean,
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125. crawl towards it?
Oh, no! I just...
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126. Oh, no!
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127. I'm lucky I have the incontinence
pants. Yeah, I'm so pleased.
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128. Is there a Tena Gentleman?
Or only a Tena Lady?
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129. Why is it in those ads...
What is it about laughter
that makes women wet themselves?
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130. You have the ads,
they're jollying about, and then...
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131. Ah. It is odd. I like it
when babies soil themselves.
My nephew, when he did it,
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132. he put his hands on the high chair
like that.
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133. They get great concentration
on their face.
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134. While mothers may form
an immediate bond with their baby,
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135. babies respond equally well
to the call of rhesus monkeys.
Now what am I describing here?
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136. Sustain followed by ululation,
followed by sustain,
but at a higher frequency,
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137. followed by ululation, followed by
sustain at the starting frequency.
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138. The Arctic Monkeys.
Very good.
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139. Not Handel's Water Music, is it?
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140. No, it's a sound associated with
the jungle. It's Morse code for,
"I'm stuck in the jungle. Save me."
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141. No, think films.
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142. Oh, I know what it is!
It's the noise Tarzan makes.
Yes! Let's hear the real one.
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143. Oh, Johnny Weissmuller.
I could have opened my mouth
and you could dub that on later.
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144. The thing that's noticeable about
that is it's the same forwards and
backwards. Here it is backwards.
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145. A kind of simian palindrome. Done
by an MGM sound technician with,
Weissmuller claimed, his voice.
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146. That was his yodel. When you hear it
now, as distinct from your memory
of it, it's a lot more...
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147. .. savage and difficult, isn't it?
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148. It's obviously no human voice,
rather an ape man.
Yeah, exactly.
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149. One raised by apes. What's the most
famous line from a Tarzan film?
That one. "Me Tarzan, you Jane."
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150. Except, of course,
it never happened. What?
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151. Why do these films always forget
to put their most famous lines in?
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152. No "Play it again, Sam,"
no "You dirty rat!" An odd thing.
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153. Now we all know about the good work
done by Children In Need and,
of course, Terry's morning show,
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154. but how has the Eurovision Song
Contest made Europe a better place?
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155. How? Because it has,
as you can see the dove,
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156. it has brought together
the nations of Europe. Has it arse!
It's divided east from west!
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157. I mean...
It has brought together
the nations of Europe
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158. on wings of song!
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159. Whether they like it or not!
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160. You only have to listen
to my commentary to realise
how much I believe that!
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161. Absolutely.
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162. One of the few I remember incredibly
well because the winners were one of
the most famous pop groups... ABBA!
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163. It was ABBA. In the year... 1974.
1974, Brighton.
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164. Exactly. With the song... Waterloo.
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165. But there happened to be a song
that Portugal provided that year.
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166. They came second from bottom, only
three points. Called Paddington.
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167. But it was one of the most important
Eurovision songs ever written, for
an extraordinary political reason.
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168. Are you saying that was the signal
for the Portuguese revolution?
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169. Yes! I am! It was called E Depois
de Adeus, After The Goodbye,
sung by Paulo de Carvalho.
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170. I think you've got the year wrong.
It was the following year
when it was being held in Sweden,
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171. after ABBA had won, that there was
the Portuguese revolution
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172. and they came out with guns
with carnations in the barrels. Yes,
called the Carnation Revolution.
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173. We yield to you,
but that song was used.
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174. A man called Salazar, or his party,
had run Portugal for years.
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175. He didn't style his regime a fascist
one, but he had three days
of mourning when Hitler died,
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176. so you can call him right wing.
Not Franco, but... Pretty close.
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177. Bizarrely, he had a stroke
and after it he was relieved
of command and a man called Caetano
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178. became Prime Minister, but
they never told Salazar. He went to
the grave thinking he still ran it.
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179. He was signing things, but he was
of no importance whatsoever.
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180. That's nice!
It's such a lovely way of doing it.
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181. That could be a fantastic scheme
for so many dictators.
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182. They don't get out much. All you
need is the noise of some crowds
playing on a tape outside,
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183. big office, things to sign. I hope
when I go mad someone pretends
I'm in charge of a large country
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184. and gives me things to sign,
rather than sedates me
and sticks me at a window.
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185. How long do you have to have lived
in a country to represent them
with a song?
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186. You don't. Precisely.
Celine Dion represented...
Switzerland.
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187. And she's Canadian.
It's a competition
between songwriters, isn't it?
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188. An Australian called Johnny Logan
won twice for Ireland. His father
was an Irish tenor. Was he?
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189. Patrick O'Hagan.
♪ He used to sing in a very high
voice like that all the time
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190. How totally distressing!
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191. The one thing we rule in,
of course, is language at least.
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192. 20 and a half, if you count
some songs that are bilingual, of
the 55 winners have been in English.
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193. The French were furious that their
singer sang in English. I love it.
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194. It used to be the lingua franca
and it isn't any more.
The world is Anglophone.
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195. It's disgusting. They give us such
a hard time and use our language!
They should be taxed!
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196. An English tax - I love it!
They should be taxed.
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197. In fact, it's a very good source
of revenue for us, potentially.
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198. All these countries...
Look at America, Australia. They're
all such glorious nationalists.
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199. Make up your own bloody language,
if you want to borrow ours!
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200. The 1974 Portuguese entry, E Depois
de Adeus, was used as a signal
to start the military coup
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201. that overthrew the 42-year-old
dictatorship of Antonio Salazar...
in 1974!
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202. So one of the... Five!
Ignore him.
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203. So to one of the few grim regimes
without a general involved,
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204. to a beastly experience
with one in the iron grip
of general ignorance!
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205. Can you name the family
in Swiss Family Robinson? Robinson.
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206. No, there is no family
called Robinson in it.
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207. No. Swiss Family Robinson
is a book by a man called Wyss,
a Swiss man.
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208. Is it a reference
to Robinson Crusoe?
It is. They are Swiss Robinsons.
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209. They don't actually have a surname.
They're Ma and Pa and Ernst...
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210. But there have been films
where they are called Robinson.
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211. Are they even Swiss?
Well, they are Swiss.
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212. a family undergoing
a Robinson Crusoe experience.
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213. That got changed in 1818
to The Swiss Family Robinson.
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214. A third of all the film and TV
adaptations call them Robinson.
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215. They need a better title altogether.
It's like a shortening of the pitch.
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216. Swiss family, like Robinson Crusoe.
The two most entertaining things
we could think of -
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217. Robinson Crusoe and a Swiss family.
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218. This is dynamite! As long as
we can come up with a good title.
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219. Now what do you call a boomerang
that won't come back? A kylie!
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220. A stick!
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221. Ah, yes. A kylie is
exactly what it is called. Yeah.
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222. People say, "Are they called kylies
after Kylie Minogue?"
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223. But Kylie was a fairly common girl's
name in Australia before Kylie
Minogue and is named after that.
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224. I thought they used them to throw
at things, but they throw them
behind birds
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225. and it drives them towards them.
Towards nets. Absolutely right.
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226. Birds are spooked by this thing,
they think it's a hawk.
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227. But don't try to catch it
or it'll take your hand off.
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228. A boomerang that won't come back is
a kylie. Most Aboriginal tribes have
returning and non-returning sticks.
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229. Who knows where the word kangaroo
comes from? I do.
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230. When Captain Cook first went
to the Antipodes, nobody had much
idea what the natives were saying.
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231. One of the chaps who worked
for Captain Cook said,
"What is that animal called?"
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232. And the Aborigine said,
"Kangaroo."
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233. And it was only several years later
when they learnt the language
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234. that they found that kangaroo means,
"I don't know."
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235. Oh, not true!
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236. Look behind you there.
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237. I'm so sorry
to let you do that.
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238. We knew that you thought that was
the case. A common fantasy.
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239. The problem is
the story got twisted.
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240. Gangurru is the Guugu Yimidhirr
language for a large black
or grey kangaroo.
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241. 1,400 miles inland,
where Captain Cook's party got,
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242. they asked whether there were
any kangaroos. There were 200
Aboriginal languages at this point.
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243. And they had no idea
what the other language's gangurru
meant at all,
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244. so it got confused,
but I'm afraid it isn't true.
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245. Well, I prefer it. I prefer it.
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246. We started with old wives' tales.
Let's end with that old feast
of family fun - maths homework.
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247. What does this prove?
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248. It's not written
in usual mathematical language.
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249. It's not a message from Al Qaeda?
No, it's not! It's written in
symbolic logic, if that's any help.
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250. Is it about the Portuguese coup
starting in '75? It's not!
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251. Who's the great logician
of the 20th century? Derek Trotter.
Sorry? Derek Trotter.
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252. A campaigner against nuclear
weapons. Bertrand Russell.
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253. There he is.
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254. He wasn't a barrel of laughs, was he?
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255. They say his breath was not good.
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256. It wasn't good? Very bad breath,
but he was a remarkable man.
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257. He wrote Principia Mathematica,
a book determined to reinvent maths.
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258. It seemed that nothing could be
proved or complete in mathematics,
which was a huge shock.
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259. So he had to set out to prove
that mathematics worked.
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260. Very, very good at sudoku.
Oddly enough, he was said to be
not that good at mental arithmetic.
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261. To prove mathematics from
the very beginning, you establish
the first principle of arithmetic.
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262. That proves that 1 + 1 = 2.
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263. It's a bit late, the 20th century,
to prove that.
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264. I'd say. A bit late?
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265. We've got quite a lot riding, by
the 20th century, on 1 + 1 being 2.
A lot of engineering happening,
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266. a complex international economy.
If it doesn't equal 2,
what do we do?
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267. Burn everything!
Anything could fall on our heads,
money - you might as well eat it!
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268. Forget civilisation! There is
a thought that if the sound
foundations of mathematics
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269. were proved to be rocky,
some of the ultimate answers of
the universe may never be answered.
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270. But a splendid effort.
An extraordinary achievement
and you bring up his halitosis!
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271. It comes to something
when you think you achieved that...
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272. Imagine meeting him at a party.
Old stinky Russell?
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273. I met this bloke at a party.
He stank. I asked what he did.
He said he proved 1 + 1 = 2.
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274. I know, but it's a very important
principle to understand
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275. that you can be gossipy
about someone's private hygiene
and think they are a great hero.
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276. The two don't rule each other out.
Similarly, you can have very nice
breath and be an idiot.
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277. Precisely the point.
But Bertie was a great man.
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278. "Bertie" to you! Bertie.
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279. Bertie Russell. So anyway...
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280. Proof that 1 + 1 = 2.
Let's see if our scorers know that.
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281. As our collective grandmothers
almost certainly warned us,
all good things must come to an end.
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282. It's now time to add up the final
scores. My word, my word.
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283. This week's big bag of jelly babies,
as it happens, with plus 5,
goes to Ronni!
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284. Ronni Ancona is our winner.
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285. Thank you very much!
Thank you.
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286. We offer a consolatory sherbet dab
to David Mitchell with plus 3!
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287. And with minus 6 points
in third place, a liquorice bootlace
to Alan Davies! Thank you.
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288. Oh, dear.
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289. I am afraid, boys and girls,
that on the QI naughty step tonight
with minus 9,
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290. Sir Terry Wogan!
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291. Is this because I pointed out
the error in...
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292. 1975?
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293. We wouldn't be so mean or so low.
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294. Children, that's it.
It's good night from Terry, David,
Ronni, Alan and me.
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295. We leave you with some homespun
wisdom from George Burns.
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296. Happiness is having a large, caring,
close-knit family... in another city.
Good night.
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