1. Ho, ho, ho! Ho, ho, ho, ho!
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2. Ho ho ho ho ho!
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3. God rest, ye merry ladies
and gentlemen and welcome to QI.
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4. Dust off the snow, take off
your hats, scarves and trousers
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5. as we gather round the flickering
flames of fact and fallacy
to examine fire and freezing.
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6. Helping me to stoke the embers and
rummage excitedly in my stockings,
we have four festive fellows.
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7. It's a baptism of fire for Dom Joly!
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8. And crackling and sparkling
on all cylinders, Clive Anderson!
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9. Come home to a real fire -
buy a cottage in Wales
in the company of Rob Brydon!
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10. And hiding under the bedclothes
playing with matches, Alan Davies!
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11. Let it snow, let it snow
and let us know what you know,
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12. but before the party games begin,
jingle your bells. Dom goes...
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13. Clive goes...
♪ Burn, baby, burn
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14. Rob goes...
♪ I am the god of hellfire!
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15. There's a fiery theme.
And Alan goes...
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16. 'Alan, you're a bloody disgrace!
You're fired!'
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17. You're fired! Oh, no!
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18. How disappointing.
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19. So...
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20. Now...
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21. Here's one way to use fire -
Indian smoke signals.
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22. Can you tell me what they're saying?
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23. It's not going to turn out to be
a myth and they never used them? No.
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24. You might have expected that,
but it's quite genuine.
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25. It's considered probably the first
language of North America.
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26. I don't see the subtleties of it
from just... a bit of smoke.
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27. All you need is a bit of smoke
and then not smoke. Do you see?
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28. If you left it alone, you'd get
a column of smoke. They do puffs,
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29. by having animals skins, not
blankets - one used to think that -
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30. that you take away
and they can create immensely
complicated... even V shapes,
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31. using the blankets.
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32. Is this what they do at the Vatican
with the Pope?
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33. It's similar!
It's a more simple language.
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34. Very simple.
It's white or black, right.
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35. They used to add wet straw
to make it black.
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36. Black is what -
for an African Pope?
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37. They have to tell the populace
assembled in St Peter's Square.
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38. Since they've banned smoking,
people hang out the window for a fag
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39. and it causes lots of problems.
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40. Catholic priests hanging out
for a fag? It seems so unlikely.
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41. If we run the film on,
it's two puffs that they give here.
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42. That's how-how.
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43. And two puffs means... all is well,
apparently. Everything's OK.
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44. Looks more like a question mark.
It does. Do they do grammar or...?
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45. They could have got a light aircraft
that can write in the sky.
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46. Just a simple purchase.
Like that?
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47. See? They're ahead of you.
They got good, didn't they?
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48. The one before...
Can we go back to it? Yes, we can.
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49. You say it means, "All's well."
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50. That could so easily be the
aftermath of this Indian's home
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51. going up in flames.
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52. They'd look over the hill and go,
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53. "Do you think that's our place?"
"No, it says all's well."
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54. And just carry on. It is confusing.
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55. We did it with signal bonfires
across the country. Absolutely!
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56. It might be, "Oh! There's
an invasion!" or,
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57. "The Great Fire of London
is happening! Bring water!"
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58. If you accidentally set light
to your beacon, that's a disaster!
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59. Is that before or after email?
It's close.
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60. Yeah. They were spamming, though.
You had endless screeds.
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61. "Do you want a bigger cock?"
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62. Is that how you get a bigger cock?
Slapping it around?
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63. With me, it would have
the opposite effect.
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64. I think you'll find
it works for a while.
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65. Oh, heavens. Indian smoke signals
varied from time to time and place,
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66. but one puff generally meant,
"Hello!"
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67. Now we can take our hats off
as I ask another question.
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68. We've provided you with a more
sophisticated signalling device,
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69. and a little booklet about each.
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70. Dom, why don't you try flirting with
Rob, based on this?
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71. Cos what they've got in front of
them is...
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72. ..a little booklet...
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73. They have a little booklet
describing the language of fans.
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74. What are you saying, Dom?
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75. I'll tell you what he's saying.
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76. He's saying,
"I am having a fit.
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77. "The tablets are in my top pocket."
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78. No, he's saying... Oh, my God!
"I love another." Yes. Oh, my!
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79. And he's looking at Alan.
Not that chap next to you!
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80. It's a very complex thing.
Do not betray our secret.
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81. I've got one for you. Ready?
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82. Slow closing.
Oh! "I promise to marry you"!
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83. Thank you. Do you know anything
about the language of fans?
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84. Where it came from? What time?
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85. I'm guessing it was from Belgium.
Belgium? Yeah. Not far off.
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86. I know - it's from Yorkshire!
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87. Can you imagine that? "Ee, I'll..."
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88. What if you're just a bit hot and
you're saying, "Hello! I love you!"?
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89. "Do you swallow?"
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90. Sorry! What was that?
What's got into you?
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91. It's Christmas. It's Christmas.
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92. I've got... The Christmas spirit
is in me. I'm very sorry.
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93. Usually you drag it...
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94. If it nosedives into the carnal,
it'll be my fault tonight.
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95. The thing about the language of fans
is that fans did come over
from China to Europe via Italy,
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96. as much did after Marco Polo, but it
was a late 19th-century invention.
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97. There was a French fan house
called Duvelleroy
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98. and they produced a little booklet
with this language of fans...
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99. French fan house?
Is that a euphemism?
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100. Maison de l'eventail!
Maybe it was, maybe it wasn't!
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101. It took over from the language of
the baguette.
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102. Which was rather more basic.
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103. So there we are, fans.
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104. Obviously every lady had a fan in
those days
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105. in the 18th and 19th century,
but to help the sales of their fans,
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106. they invented this language
of the fan.
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107. What happened to the fireman's pole?
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108. He tiled the fireman's bathroom.
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109. Very good.
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110. Very good. How much time does it
save to go down a pole?
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111. They've got to drive halfway
across town anyway to get there!
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112. That's true. Just walk downstairs.
Why not have a slide like the park?
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113. That would be fun. Or a water slide.
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114. A good way of getting
young firemen in.
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115. Start getting them trained.
Probably a Health and Safety thing.
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116. Oh, Dom!
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117. "Health and Safety gone mad!" The
new political correctness gone mad.
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118. There were stories in newspapers
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119. that essentially make things up
to get us angry in the morning.
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120. They claimed fireman's poles were
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121. being taken out for Health
and Safety.
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122. It's just nonsense.
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123. Most new fire stations are built
on one floor,
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124. but if they build on two floors,
they get their pole.
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125. That's the main reason you become
a fireman!
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126. It's not, "So I might die in a fire!
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127. "I want to go down the pole
and maybe one night
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128. "I'll bring a friend
back and show her the pole..."
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129. Demand an extra floor!
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130. Do you know where the longest pole
in Europe is, fireman's pole?
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131. And how long is it?
48 feet, I would guess.
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132. There's a 40-footer in Birmingham
and it's the biggest in Europe.
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133. That's the limit, is it? There may
be a bigger one in America.
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134. It is quite high. You'd really take
the skin off your hands.
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135. That squeaky noise
makes your teeth go on edge.
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136. Do they talc up? They should do.
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137. Do they teach a technique
of coming down? Just hands?
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138. I think the thighs have to exert
pressure.
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139. There's a hell of a lot
of firefighters in this station!
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140. The driver's going, "I can't go yet.
Got to get them all in."
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141. Meanwhile, a whole family's
burning to death.
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142. Well, apparently, they're still
pulling on their trousers
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143. and running downstairs during that
is more dangerous
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144. than going down a pole
and putting them on.
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145. Every second can save a life.
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146. Why are they always
completely caught out by a fire?
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147. "What? Fire?"Oh, my God!
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148. "Quick! Quick!"
All undressed, lying about.
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149. Were the poles always shiny metal,
or did early versions splinter?
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150. Oh! What a nasty thought!
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151. They must have experimented.
A flammable pole? Don't be absurd!
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152. Stuck with the pole on fire!
And no-one to put it out.
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153. Insurance companies
invented firemen.
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154. Absolutely right. I think you should
get points for that.
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155. The Sun was one of the biggest,
now the Royal Sun Alliance.
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156. You paid insurance to the company
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157. and they would send you a brass
plaque for the wall of your house.
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158. If there was a fire, lots of
different brigades came
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159. and they read the plaque.
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160. If you hadn't paid, they wouldn't
put the fire out,
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161. unless you were next
to someone else who had.
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162. Because the fire
could spread to them.
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163. That's the worst - your house is on
fire and they won't put it out.
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164. Imagine.
That would make me annoyed.
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165. Would they stay to roast
marshmallows or drive straight off?
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166. Or sort of say...
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167. Stand with water pouring out, going,
"No, no, no, no."
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168. "Since we're here, if you paid
for the next time,
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169. "we might as well collect now."
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170. It's not the fire that kills people.
Fire doesn't kill people?
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171. It does, Clive.
Don't tie me up in legalese.
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172. I'm not going to get all heated up,
which is what you want to happen.
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173. He didn't say fire doesn't kill.
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174. He said it's not the fire that kills
them. Your Lordship is right.
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175. I was just exploring a notion that
fire was, in some way, not deadly.
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176. It's not the fire that kills the
people, it's a by-product of fire.
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177. I wonder if any of you know what.
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178. Smoke. Is it flame?
Is it the slinky?
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179. Not the slinky, Stephen.
A wild guess!
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180. Clive, you were right.
Smoke - it's the smoke.
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181. What happens is...
Smoke doesn't burn you,
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182. so I know what you're thinking.
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183. What smoke does, and this is where
it gets interesting, it chokes you.
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184. And if we choke, what can't we do?
Breathe. We can't breathe.
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185. If we can't breathe, Dom?
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186. We die!
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187. Yes.
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188. There's a thing called a flash
point, in which...
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189. I don't know where I
learnt this. Might have been a film,
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190. or from a really terrifying
fire safety talk at primary school.
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191. The one thing I remember about that
is strike a match away from you
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192. or the head will come off and set
light to you,
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193. particularly if you are a granny.
Whoa!
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194. They told us a story about someone's
grandma who burned to death.
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195. Because urine is flammable,
if it stays on the clothing.
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196. This is true!
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197. Urine, if it stays on your clothes
long enough, it becomes flammable.
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198. Grandmothers who aren't well
maintained...
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199. It's true!
Particularly vulnerable to a match.
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200. Or an arsonist. That's a measure
of how mean people are.
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201. They won't even pee on you
if you're on fire.
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202. That's an Australian phrase.
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203. "I wouldn't piss up his arse
if his kidneys were on fire!"
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204. Thank you for all that information
about fire and smoke.
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205. What's the worst thing you can do
if you're a fire eater?
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206. Er, well...
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207. There are vegetarian restaurants
where you can't get meat.
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208. All vegetarian restaurants,
I think, qualify.
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209. Nothing wrong with that sentence
so far! But...
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210. There are vegetarian restaurants
where you can't get meat!
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211. To quote the great John Cleese,
"What's your specialist subject?
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212. "The bleeding obvious!"
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213. OK, you've heard about these
vegetarian restaurants...
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214. I was making
an uncontroversial point
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215. that in vegetarian restaurants
you can't eat meat
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216. because they don't serve it.
I believe that's right.
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217. So there may be restaurants that
don't serve fire,
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218. so if you're a fire eater,
there's no point going.
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219. This is a simple point
I was trying to make!
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220. "I'll have a nice plate of fire,
please." That wouldn't work.
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221. At a Christmas event, if a fire
eater was thinking,
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222. I" haven't shown my family
this skill,"
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223. and there was a urine-soaked granny
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224. who'd been brought out
of the home just for a day,
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225. that would not be the time to say,
"What are you up to now, Bruno?"
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226. Oh, well...
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227. I don't know if you know much
about fire eating.
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228. What you see is what they do.
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229. It really is as bad as it looks.
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230. They mostly have mouths filled
with blisters and ulcers.
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231. Do you eat the fire? Basically,
you shouldn't breathe in.
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232. There is a condition, Fire Eater's
Lung, which is horrific.
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233. Like Farmer's Lung, with no subsidy.
Exactly.
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234. It's fire spitting,
rather than eating.
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235. But they ingest the lighter fluid,
which is toxic.
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236. Wooden false teeth would be a
disaster
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237. because they would catch fire!
That would be awful.
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238. Smoke would then... Smoke, yes.
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239. It wouldn't be the fire, you see.
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240. Perhaps the most important advice
to the fire eater is do not inhale.
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241. Now it's time to retire from the
fire and brave the cold.
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242. What are the advantages and
disadvantages
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243. of a mile-long aircraft carrier
made from ice and sawdust?
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244. Ah!
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245. Radar.
I put it to you that, um...
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246. Move on, move on.
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247. No, you've got a good point there.
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248. I was wondering, you see,
if they are undetectable by radar.
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249. I don't think that's true.
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250. This was a genuine plan in Britain
by a man named Pyke,
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251. after whom the substance is made.
"Don't tell him your name, Pike!"
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252. This is Pyke with a Y. And the
substance is known as pykrete.
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253. Stronger than steel. I'm not kidding
you.
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254. Until the temperature goes up!
That's the thing - it doesn't melt.
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255. They tested it for a whole summer
and it didn't melt.
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256. Mountbatten was obsessed
by the idea.
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257. He took a lump of it to see
Churchill, who was in his bath -
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258. he often took meetings there -
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259. and he threw it into his bath
and said, "There, Winston!"
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260. And in his hot bath it didn't melt.
It stayed frozen.
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261. But because it
landed on his nuts...
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262. .. he said, "I'm not going ahead
with that."
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263. The idea was to build aircraft
carriers with guns on them.
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264. It seems absolutely barking,
I agree.
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265. It was only the Normandy landings
that stopped us doing it.
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266. That picture looks like the cover of
a magazine that says,
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267. "If you like ice and you
like aircraft carriers,
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268. "you'll love Iced Aircraft Carrier
Monthly!
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269. "It builds up into
a wonderful collection!"
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270. I do like ice and aircraft carriers
and that's not an aircraft carrier.
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271. That's a destroyer.
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272. Thank you! Very good.
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273. Absolutely right. That's no kind
of aircraft carrier.
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274. And there's no magazine
for those people.
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275. I tell you, it's not the aircraft
carrier that'll kill you,
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276. it's the destroyer.
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277. The 300-foot wide, 2,000-foot-long
mid-Atlantic runways
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278. would have had giant refrigerators
to keep it cool.
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279. Holes in a pykrete ship could
be repaired by using sea water,
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280. and they could immobilise
enemy warships
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281. by spraying them with
super cold water.
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282. Was it the idea of Professor Pat
Pending from Wacky Races?
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283. Anyway, during World War II,
plans really were drawn up
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284. for a huge aircraft carrier made
from pykrete.
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285. Now, as we're in the Christmas
spirit, let's have a sing-song.
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286. What's everybody's favourite bit in
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287. that traditional song
The 12 Days of Christmas?
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288. Lords leaping.
For me it's the gold rings.
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289. What?
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290. How can that be wrong if you're
asking him what his favourite...?
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291. He's leading the witness!
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292. I asked what his favourite bit was
in the traditional English song
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293. and it's not traditional.
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294. It's a recent addition. A man called
Austin wrote that arrangement.
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295. We've just blown the BBC's budget!
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296. It's like Happy Birthday To You.
You have to pay enormous royalties.
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297. The lyrics are not in public domain.
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298. I was told in school that it
was code.
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299. It was supposed to be an aide
memoire to something,
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300. but I don't know what.
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301. There are games like, "In my trunk
I'm going to pack..."
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302. And the first person says, "A pair
of swimming trunks,"
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303. then someone
says, "And a book." A memory thing.
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304. There's a version I play called
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305. "Christopher Biggins has up
his bottom tonight..."
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306. You go, "Christopher Biggins has up
his bottom tonight..."
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307. And you go, "Arnold Schwarzenegger."
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308. And the next name has to start with
the last letter of Schwarzenegger.
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309. Rodney Bewes! Rodney Bewes! Exactly.
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310. Arnold Schwarzenegger,
Rodney Bewes...
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311. Steve Davis, the snooker player!
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312. Brilliant! And you go on
until you can't remember.
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313. Simon Schama! And you usually find
that Christopher... Anthony Andrews!
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314. Christopher is astoundingly
accommodating.
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315. That's the great thing.
It's a fun party game.
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316. Is this why he was
made King of the Jungle?
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317. For this particular skill?
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318. The song The 12 Days of Christmas
is a traditional non-copyright song,
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319. with the exception of "five go-old
rings",
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320. which was added by Frederic Austin
and is owned by Novello & Co.
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321. And with that we lash out of
the frying pan of knowledge
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322. only to descend into
the fearsome inferno
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323. that we call General Ignorance.
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324. What happens when you blow out
the candles on your birthday cake?
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325. You make a wish.
Well, hmm... Ha! Gotcha!
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326. You edge a little closer
to the grave.
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327. Wasn't it Richard Burton who said,
"When a baby cries its first cry,
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328. "he's crying out knowing..."
Shut up!
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329. You wouldn't know a good impression
if it sat on your face!
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330. "The baby when he cries upon birth
is crying full of the knowledge..."
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331. I can't remember the rest of it!
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332. Anyway... yes, obviously, people
make wishes and things like that,
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333. but why does the flame extinguish?
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334. You blow the flame off the wick
and it's disconnected.
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335. And it goes out.
Like an Indian smoke signal.
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336. There are three things
that keep it alight. Oxygen.
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337. Oxygen is one. Heat. Is the other.
Wick!
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338. And the fuel that it needs
to get going.
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339. You simply remove it from the heat,
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340. but if your wick burned
at a very low temperature,
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341. no matter how much you blew it out,
it wouldn't go out, which explains
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342. those silly trick candles.
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343. Bellows on a fire
are to encourage the flame.
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344. Blowing into a fire is lovely.
You get it...
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345. Ooh, up it comes.
What would Richard Burton say?
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346. "Look at the fire, growing
taller..." Oh, never mind.
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347. Are you from Port Talbot?
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348. The same town as Richard Burton
and Anthony Hopkins.
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349. And Michael Sheen.
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350. My father grew up
in the same street, literally,
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351. as Anthony Hopkins.
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352. In England, we live in houses.
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353. Sorry!
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354. Anyway...
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355. Fire needs three things to work.
Heat, fuel and oxygen.
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356. Oh, dear! Has the fire gone out
between us, darling? Has it?
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357. Oh, no. .. Oh!
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358. What a...! What does this mean?
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359. It involves Christopher Biggins...
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360. Fire needs three things to work -
it needs heat, fuel and oxygen.
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361. When you blow out a candle,
it's a sudden drop in temperature.
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362. From heat, back to cold, you know
how sometimes
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363. it can be too cold to snow?
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364. Is that a question? Yeah.
It can be too cold to snow.
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365. You need some moisture...
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366. Ah, thank you.
You really hate me, don't you?
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367. No, not you. It can't be too cold.
That's really horrible of you!
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368. You led me into that.
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369. He tried to get us first!
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370. I've been on this programme
a few times
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371. and whatever you say at this point,
that's going to happen!
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372. Normally, you're told to talk
on these programmes. On this...
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373. You said it, and in my little head,
I went,
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374. I" wouldn't have thought so,
but..."
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375. I thought,
"Well, I'm going to join in then."
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376. Snow has been recorded at minus 41,
minus 50.
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377. There's only one temperature at
which it is too cold to snow,
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378. but then... Absolute zero.
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379. My favourite temperature is
minus 40.
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380. Because in centigrade and
Fahrenheit, they're the same.
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381. What a thrill
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382. I want to give a couple of points
to Rob
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383. because it is less likely to snow
when there's less moisture
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384. and there's less moisture when
it's very cold,
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385. but it's not ever too cold to snow.
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386. Talk to the face
cos the hand ain't listening.
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387. Oh, dear. Nowhere on Earth can ever
be too cold to snow.
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388. It regularly snows at the poles.
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389. Now the great moment of truth
when our panellists are rewarded
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390. for being good, or possibly not,
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391. this QI Christmas.
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392. And what do we see before us?
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393. Santa's favourite little helper
this year, on 8 points,
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394. is Clive Anderson! Oh!
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395. Very nice.
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396. Ably helped by you.
I think it's a team game.
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397. And, in second place,
deserving of so much support
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398. because he's improving every year,
on minus 6, Alan Davies!
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399. Thank you!
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400. And... third, despite falling
into a few honey traps,
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401. on minus 8, Rob Brydon!
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402. I know, I know.
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403. But I'm sorry to say that the cold
Brussels sprout, with minus 16,
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404. because he's trusting and confiding
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405. and a jolly good fellow,
Dom on minus 16!
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406. So...
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407. .. all that remains is for me to
thank Clive, Rob, Dom and Alan
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408. and relate a Christmas scene
in a galaxy far,
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409. far away
where Darth Vader says to Luke,
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410. "I know what you're getting
for Christmas. Uuurh!"
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411. Or whatever noise he makes!
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412. "I know what you're getting
for Christmas."You can't know!"
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413. "I know!"How can you know?"
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414. "I have felt your presents."
Goodnight.
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