1. Ahoy, ahoy, ahoy, ahoy, ahoy
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2. and ho-ho-ho, me hearties.
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3. Welcome aboard the good ship QI,
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4. where tonight, we're scouring
the oceans of interestingness
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5. in search of flotsam
in a programme that's more or less
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6. a rag-bag of bits and pieces
beginning with F.
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7. And helping me separate the facts
from fiction and the flim from flam
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8. are the effortless Charlie Higson...
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9. .. the effervescent Andy Hamilton...
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10. .. the ineffable Rob Brydon...
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11. .. and the sweet F
in sweet FA, Alan Davies.
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12. But before we slip anchor
and catch the tide matelots,
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13. let me inspect your bell buttons.
So Charlie goes...
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14. Theme from Blue Peter
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15. Andy goes...
Theme from Captain Pugwash
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16. Rob goes...
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17. And Alan goes...
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18. 'What is it, lad?
He followed in the water!'
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19. For your convenience tonight, if
you have anything nautical or nice
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20. to tell me, you can catch my eye
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21. as well as using your buzzer
by waving your international
maritime flag,
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22. which you should have
somewhere under your desks.
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23. There you go. Charlie, yours is R.
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24. R - Romeo in the MCC colours there.
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25. That means... It looks like...
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26. I think it's a kind
of nautical bumper sticker.
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27. It's like,
"My other ship is a destroyer."
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28. Oh! Very good. It actually means
"You can feel your way past me."
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29. That's its meaning there. That's
not a proper nautical term, surely!
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30. It is.
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31. It's, "The way is off my ship,
you may feel your way past me."
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32. Andy, yours is a Z. Z - Zulu.
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33. It actually means,
"I require a tug".
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34. So come and see me in my cabin!
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35. I'll see what I can do.
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36. No, I think I won't be needing that.
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37. And, yours, Rob, there.
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38. It's actually J - Juliet.
And it means, "I'm on fire."
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39. How strangely apt!
So you can come to my cabin as well.
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40. It has a second meaning,
which is, "I'm leaking."
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41. So, Alan, yours is...
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42. Coming up behind?
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43. No. It's D - Delta.
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44. It actually means,
"Keep clear of me,
I'm manoeuvring with difficulty".
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45. Well, mine is U - Uniform. It
means, "You're running into danger."
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46. That's a good one, isn't it?
We did News Quiz, the radio show,
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47. with a signer quite a few times.
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48. You were mentioning
topical characters
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49. and it's amazing how quickly
they come up with, like,
Prince Charles is that.
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50. And we were doing material
about Bill Clinton
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51. and I waited to see
what the signer would do
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52. and he just did his zip.
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53. Oh, wonderful! It was brilliant.
In America,
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54. the American Sign Language
is slightly different.
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55. R is, you just crook your finger
like an R. And so Ronald Reagan
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56. was like that. Two Rs.
That makes sense,
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57. cos a lot of girls
that I've been out with -
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58. my name's Rob, of course -
they've made that sign to me.
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59. I'm sure they haven't.
I can't believe it.
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60. Now, can you guess what these flags
mean and what the letters stand for?
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61. It's O, actually.
It means "overboard".
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62. Oh, right. Not just
to generally express interest
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63. in something another ship has said.
"Oh!"
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64. They say something and you go...
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65. Also, if someone's fallen overboard,
is there really time
to put a flag up and...
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66. There's a bit of a lack of urgency.
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67. Going through the flag box. "God!
I can never find the one I want.
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68. "He's drowned by now! Overboard!"
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69. And the next one is... I think
that's actually N, which means "no".
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70. So that after
the one before is, "Oh, no!"
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71. Absolutely!
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72. "I've spilt something
on these trousers. Oh, no!"
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73. You've got a third one.
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74. That's a pyramid
reflected in a lake.
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75. Oh, it's a rather sweet one.
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76. It's F, actually, and it means
"I'm disabled, communicate with me."
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77. That's a rather patronising view
of the disabled.
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78. That they have to have a flag
to be communicated with.
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79. I was going to speak to him but
the little fella didn't have a flag,
so I didn't bother.
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80. They only wave a flag if they
want you to talk to them. Oh, Lord!
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81. Is there a flag we can use
to say, "Does he take sugar?"
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82. Right, while we're all at sea,
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83. what's the difference
between flotsam and jetsam?
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84. One floats and one sinks. No.
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85. One is spelt with a J.
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86. There are four kinds of wreckage.
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87. Flotsam is something
that's fallen off a ship
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88. because it's got wrecked or something
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89. and jetsam has actually been thrown
off by someone. Yes, correct.
Jetsam has been jettisoned.
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90. Did you really work that out?
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91. From "jeter",
the French for "throw."
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92. Well, yes. Some of us paid attention
at school, Alan.
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93. Not that one again. That seems
to be the root of all my problems.
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94. Just wasn't interested.
I can also tell you
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95. that lagan is
what's on the bottom of the sea.
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96. You're right
and there's only one more.
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97. There's a fourth one?
There is a fourth one.
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98. Lagan is cargo that is lying
at the bottom of the ocean,
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99. sometimes marked by a buoy,
which can be reclaimed.
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100. But there's another one which
lies at the bottom of the ocean
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101. which no one has any hope of
reclaiming and that's derelict.
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102. So they're the four classes
of wreckage,
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103. according to the 1995 Act
which covers these things.
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104. Now, from flotsam to fan clubs.
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105. You'll remember that
famous double act, Batman and Robin.
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106. What did the Boy Wonder
use to sign his autographs?
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107. Well, that Boy Wonder,
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108. from the television series,
was played by Burt Ward.
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109. Ironically, he was Bruce Wayne's
young ward, Dick, wasn't he?
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110. Dick Grayson. And he went on
to a career in pornography.
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111. So I'm wondering therefore,
if this is a novelty question
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112. and if he signed it with his...
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113. He used to see a young lady
and say, "Quick, to the Bat Pole."
Wa-hey!
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114. He wrote an autobiography called
something like A Life In Tights
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115. and it was basically just sex.
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116. Sex on every page. Very good.
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117. He wrote an autobiography called
Boy Wonder - My Life In Tights.
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118. And he revealed in that
that he did send autographs
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119. to thousands of women,
using what he called "bat sperm"
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120. to sign his name.
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121. Was it actually bat sperm?
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122. Which is another degree
of awfulness, isn't it?
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123. A fiendish plan.
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124. Hundreds of bats. Come on!
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125. He called it the ultimate autograph.
And apparently, Batman watched.
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126. According to his book.
Which part of the proceedings?
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127. "Can I watch, Burt?"
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128. "Sure, Adam!"
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129. How many times would you want
to watch something like that?
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130. I can see a certain kind
of morbid fascination. Can you?
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131. Well, yes.
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132. I'm just getting a message.
I rather misunderstood
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133. about Burt and his bat sperm.
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134. It turns out
he didn't actually write
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135. his name in the sperm. It was
his euphemism for shagging them.
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136. He gave them the ultimate autograph
by shagging them.
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137. I prefer the original explanation.
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138. So someone comes up
to him in the street and says,
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139. "Could I have your autograph?"
and before you know it,
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140. "Whoa! Hang on!"
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141. "Would you mind
if Alan Davies watched?"
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142. So that's what
Adam West was watching.
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143. He was watching him having sex?
That goes on a lot in show business.
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144. To the average man in the street,
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145. the idea of watching another person
having sex is a bit odd,
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146. but within
the world of show business,
present company excluded,
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147. you do hear stories of that sort
of thing going on, don't you?
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148. Dad's Army were famous for it.
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149. Stop it! Stop it!
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150. How dare you! "We're doomed!"
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151. They don't like it up 'em!
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152. Oh, dear. Dear me.
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153. Can my sister Dolly watch?
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154. In 1968, they cancelled Batman and
he found it hard to get work again,
sadly. So his life...
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155. I think how that should read is,
"He then found work getting hard."
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156. You're a very bad man.
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157. I'd just like to say,
I've got his autograph.
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158. My word,
you should be very, very proud!
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159. Anyway, according to his
autobiography, that's what he did.
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160. Anyway, where would you
find the world's biggest flasher?
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161. Is it going to be about a
lighthouse? Well, oddly enough,
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162. one of the answers
is about something
that is called a lighthouse
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163. but isn't a lighthouse.
The other one is the
biggest flasher in nature.
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164. Right, is it the Statue of Liberty?
Is that a lighthouse? No!
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165. There's not a light
at the top of the Statue of Liberty?
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166. Like a lot of tall structures,
it has to have a flashing light
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167. on top for aircraft.
Don't look so contemptuous, Rob!
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168. Well, Big Ben. Is that a lighthouse?
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169. She's got a torch.
There's a light up there, yeah.
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170. I mean, I've got a light on my
top floor but it's not a lighthouse.
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171. Is it Big Ben, then?
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172. You're leading
the poor boy astray, no.
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173. There's an organic one. There's
an animal that is probably the...
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174. Electric eel?
But you're in the right ballpark.
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175. Those fish that they have in Finding
Nemo. It dangles a light in front.
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176. It's certainly a fish that
uses what is known as...
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177. Phosphorescence. They call it
bioluminescence, yes.
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178. Glow-worms and fireflies,
but under the water,
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179. 90% of marine creatures
give off light.
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180. Is it a squid? It is a squid.
It's a seven-foot squid.
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181. It's called the Dana squid.
It's an amazing creature.
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182. There it is. The day nurse squid?
No, not day nurse.
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183. Dana octopus squid.
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184. Which you can take
without being drowsy.
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185. It's the non-drowsy formulation
of the North Pacific
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186. Dana octopus squid
and it's really bright.
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187. It dazzles and disorients
its prey with its light.
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188. Does it need to do that
if it's seven-foot long?
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189. It's just an added weapon
in its arsenal.
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190. It's pretty impressive, isn't it?
Where is it?
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191. You're all to behave.
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192. "Bios", meaning living,
and "lumin" is Latin for light.
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193. So it's bioluminescent.
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194. There are all kinds of jellyfish
and things that wander round.
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195. Very beautiful.
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196. You're a diver.
You've probably seen some.
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197. At night, all the ugly fish
come out. Of course.
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198. It's really interesting.
You don't need to be pretty.
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199. You go to the Red Sea
and in the day,
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200. the fish are beautiful,
colourful fish
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201. and then at night, they're all
bug-eyed and they limp around.
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202. Most of them are poisonous
and they've got spines on
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203. and you're not allowed
to touch them.
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204. They all kind of look at
you like that. "I'm a night fish!"
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205. And then you shine a light
and them and they go, "No!
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206. "Don't look at me!
Don't look at me!"
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207. That's the answer to the
greatest flasher amongst the animals
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208. is that North Pacific Dana
octopus fish. But in nature also,
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209. and it's an extraordinary effect
that takes place in Venezuela...
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210. For 10 hours a night,
up to 280 times an hour
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211. for 180 days of the year,
the mouth of the Catatumbo river
in Venezuela...
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212. What's so extraordinary about
this phenomenon, is that it is
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213. the greatest source of ozone,
we think, on earth.
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214. It actually helps mend
the ozone layer.
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215. It gives off an enormous
amount of ozone,
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216. all this electrical storm activity.
Is it a tourist attraction?
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217. People do go to see it.
The kind of thing where you book
for two weeks, there'd be nothing.
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218. "Should have been here last week.
Oh!"
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219. 180 days a year is
almost exactly half of the year.
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220. So the chances are good.
I think I might go there.
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221. It looks well worth it.
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222. I'll report back. I'll go now.
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223. Let us press on now to feasts.
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224. How did the Borgia Pope Alexander VI
celebrate the feast
of the chestnuts?
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225. There is Alessandro VI.
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226. He had someone stuffed
with chestnuts. Oh, that's horrible.
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227. No, this is a pope
we're talking about.
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228. His Holiness the Pope actually
had prostitutes, naked prostitutes.
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229. He would throw
the chestnuts on the floor
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230. and they would grovel after them,
picking them up.
Oh, because he was a pope.
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231. He wouldn't stuff people
with chestnuts, he was a pope!
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232. I thought it was going
to be something salacious.
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233. Why can't we have
popes like that again now?
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234. They may be like that.
Yeah, maybe they are.
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235. We don't know.
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236. There was one, Formosus, who made
such an enemy of his successor
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237. that - his successor
was Stephen VI as Pope -
he had him dug up and put on trial.
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238. His body was put on trial.
And he spent most of the trial
yelling at the corpse
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239. and someone behind it
had to move the...
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240. "What have you got to say to that?
As I thought, nothing."
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241. When they could get a word in,
someone standing behind it
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242. like a ventriloquist would say
that he denied the charges.
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243. Anyway, he was then condemned...
To death!
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244. His three fingers he used
to do papal blessings with
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245. were cut off his skeleton.
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246. Did the man behind go, "Ow! Ow!"
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247. "Oh! Not my fingers! Argh!"
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248. And he was condemned to be reburied
in a common grave. But then...
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249. "No, not the common grave! No!"
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250. "Put my arm back in the box!"
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251. "Get back in the box!"
"No, get me out the box!"
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252. But Stephen, who had done
this to him, he was deposed,
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253. imprisoned and then strangled.
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254. And then another pope called
John IX brought Formosus back.
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255. His body had been rescued
from the common grave.
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256. He was reburied as a pope again.
So it was all well.
Was he found innocent?
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257. Innocent, exactly.
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258. That's a TV series, probably.
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259. Pope Trial.
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260. It's a long-running West End show.
Pope Idol.
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261. Even as I say that, there's a
Channel 4 executive out there going,
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262. "D'you know what...?"
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263. I can see Ray Winstone as
a corrupt pope. "Oi, you, slag.
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264. "Chestnuts on the floor. Forage!"
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265. Anyway, the Borgia Pope celebrated
the feast of the chestnuts
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266. with an evening of prostitute-racing
in the Vatican.
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267. Now, lastly, once again
to F for Forfeit.
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268. It's general ignorance, so fingers
on those buzzers, if you please.
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269. Name the inventor of rugby football.
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270. 'He followed in the water!'
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271. Er, it was invented at Rugby School
when a boy picked the ball up
and ran with it.
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272. Mmm, yeah...
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273. Except it wasn't, oddly enough.
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274. But I thought you might know
his name. William Webb Ellis.
Oh, thank you!
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275. That was like a Captain Oates
job. You sacrificed yourself.
You threw yourself on the grenade.
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276. The Rugby World Cup is
named after him. The Webb Ellis Cup.
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277. Yes, the odd thing is that
they have this little memorial
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278. saying that with a fine disregard
for the rules of the game as played,
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279. he first picked up the ball
and ran, as if they'd
all been playing football.
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280. But football wasn't codified
till after they're claiming
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281. this rugby game happened.
Rugby is an older game.
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282. There were lots
of ball-handling games like
that, so no-one really believes it.
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283. The story was first told
three years after Webb Ellis died.
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284. And in the original
Football Association rules,
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285. you were allowed to catch the ball.
I believe you were.
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286. Can we see the picture again
that was up before it?
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287. You look at that and you think,
"My God, prison life gets easier..."
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288. I love those
old Victorian team photos.
The lounging about, casually.
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289. Quite often,
there's someone lying down.
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290. When did those team photos stop?
Was it something to do with the war?
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291. Suddenly, it's all in lines.
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292. Rigid lines, hands on knees. But
all the Victorian ones are great.
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293. They're absolutely loungey.
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294. Sometimes, they're just
draped over one another.
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295. When did it change?
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296. You'd think, if anything,
they would have been more rigid.
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297. They would have been more likely to
be nicely in rows and all together
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298. and less so
as the years have gone on.
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299. If you absolutely had to,
which one would you?
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300. Oh, I'm not going to give that away.
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301. Which one would you first?
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302. You're so bad. Your stamina is...
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303. All right, let's move on.
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304. Yes, William Webb Ellis died unaware
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305. of his apocryphal role in sporting
history, although the modern game
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306. certainly does have its roots in the
19th century public school system.
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307. From Rugby to Eton.
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308. What was James Bond's job?
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309. He was a secret agent.
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310. Argh!
Is that what you wanted to hear?
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311. No. In the British Secret Service,
an agent is an informant
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312. to what Bond was,
an intelligence officer.
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313. Do you know how he got
the job, Sean Connery?
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314. He went for the audition
and he walked away
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315. and the producers watched him
out of the window...
And Fleming was present.
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316. I was about to say that.
Ian Fleming was present.
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317. And he walked away and
they said he walked like a panther,
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318. which when you think about it,
would be on all fours
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319. and would make him look like
a ruddy lunatic.
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320. Not the sort of man you want
botching up the schedule
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321. on an expensive film.
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322. "Look at him, he's doing it again.
Sean, please get up!"
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323. "There are no chestnuts
down there, Sean, baby."
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324. He does have a fabulously
lithe walk.
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325. What's the difference between
your walk and your gait?
Is it the same thing?
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326. Not exactly, is it?
The gait is the sort of...
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327. picture, the angle,
it's the signature of your walk.
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328. You can recognise someone
by their gait. Can your gait
be when you're stood still?
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329. I recognise her by her gait.
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330. You know who's got the funniest walk,
I think, it's Liam Gallagher.
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331. He's got that walk that you do,
you know when you're 17
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332. and you're out with your mates
and you do that.
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333. Maybe you don't.
But I remember doing it slightly.
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334. But he still does it
and he's what, about 47 now?
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335. Well, Mick Jagger
still does his strut or
whatever you want to call it.
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336. I imagine that he grew up in a
house with very narrow doorways.
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337. Noel Gallagher's house
was all French windows.
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338. They've had it all knocked through.
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339. But Mick had a lot of those
funny little half-opening doors.
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340. There you are.
You see, the security services...
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341. Still enjoying it. One more.
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342. He's virtually arseless,
isn't he, Mick Jagger?
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343. He has no bottom. It's really odd.
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344. Apparently someone else
who's arseless is Ian McShane.
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345. Is he arseless? Told on quite
good authority by a costume person.
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346. It came up in conversation.
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347. Someone was saying,
"Oh, Deadwood's very good."
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348. And someone said, "No bum."
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349. He must have...
Mechanically, he must have something.
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350. He has got an anus.
I'm sure he's got an anus.
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351. Oh, all right.
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352. No buttocks. It's fascinating. Flat!
That's a nightmare for a dresser.
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353. They have to staple
his trousers to him.
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354. He'd have to have a little dresser
going behind him in all his scenes,
just holding them up.
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355. You could put a little pelmet across
there and just hang them from there.
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356. Arse pelmet.
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357. The security services actually
call their staff "officers".
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358. Agents are informants
who are not members of staff.
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359. Here's an easy one for you.
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360. What's the maximum amount
of times you can fold
a piece of paper in half?
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361. Seven.
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362. And you had an answer, too? Eight.
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363. Would there be a maximum? Yes, have
you never tried it? Strangely not.
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364. Try it. Here's some. Pass
one along to the boy next to you!
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365. Come on, come on! Start folding.
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366. Is it a race? Three...
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367. 24...
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368. I'm struggling on six.
They've got some very exciting ideas
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369. for TV programmes these days.
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370. Paper Folding Live!
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371. I can't do seven, I'm out at six.
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372. That's that particular
piece of paper, the A4 size.
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373. But an extraordinary thing.
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374. An American schoolchild
developed a formula
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375. for determining the folding of paper
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376. and we have that formula for you.
You can examine it.
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377. She was very impressive.
Her name was Britney Gallivan.
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378. What it shows is, if you feed
the various variables into it...
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379. W is width, T is thickness
of paper, I is length of paper.
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380. What you need is length
and thickness
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381. in order to get the right number.
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382. Rob!
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383. That's them! That's the audience!
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384. You are running into danger!
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385. That's just going to be snipped out
and straight on YouTube.
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386. It's going to be a ringtone.
It'll be everything.
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387. "What you need is length
and thickness." Hello?
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388. Damn you all!
And that'll be for text messages.
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389. "Damn you all!" Oh, I've got a text.
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390. You want T to be a low number so,
if I'd finished, thickness low,
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391. length long.
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392. And she demonstrated this
by using a long sheet
of lavatory paper, in fact,
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393. which was very thin
and she managed to fold it 12 times.
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394. And finally, what does it mean
when the Union flag
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395. is flying over Buckingham Palace?
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396. Yes?
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397. I'm going to regret this.
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398. It means the Queen's home,
come and have a cup of tea.
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399. That's what it means. No, it
does not mean the Queen's home.
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400. It means, it means,
the Queen is about to get home...
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401. .. put the electric blanket on.
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402. Don't they fly the Royal Standard
when the Queen is home?
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403. When the Queen is home,
they fly the Royal Standard.
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404. Since 1997, when the Queen is
not home, they fly the Union flag.
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405. It was Princess Diana.
The Queen was in Balmoral,
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406. being played by Helen Mirren
at the time, if you remember.
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407. And what happened was, there
was no flag to fly at half-mast.
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408. You couldn't fly the Royal Standard
at half-mast because
it was against all protocol.
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409. It was such a mess, the whole thing,
that they then decided, all right,
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410. in future, just in case
the sovereign is not at home,
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411. instead of there being
a bare flagpole,
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412. we'll have the Union flag
so that then when someone dies
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413. that the nation decides
it's very fond of, they can
go half-mast with that.
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414. That was a great movie but there
was just one moment in that
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415. than I didn't believe at all.
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416. Which was, she was out
at Sandringham, I think,
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417. or Balmoral, out on the moors
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418. with her Land Rover and a stag...
That was a great scene, that.
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419. Well, it was a great scene,
but she says, "Oh, shoo!"
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420. She's a member of the royal family.
She'd have blown it to bits.
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421. They should have dubbed on
Philip going, "Keep it there!"
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422. "It's talking to Betty. Come on!"
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423. He called her Cabbage in the film,
rather oddly.
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424. Because she smells like cabbage.
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425. Shame on you! Imagine if you looked
round and I just wasn't here now.
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426. Good Lord.
When David Walliams met the Queen
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427. after swimming the Channel,
he took his mum with him
and the Queen came along
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428. and then Prince Philip,
and the Queen said,
"You swam the Channel, didn't you?"
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429. He said, "Yes, ma'am."
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430. "But that's not all you do, is it?"
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431. And he said, "No, I'm in
a comedy show."Oh, very good."
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432. Then off she went.
Then Prince Philip came
and he said to David's mum,
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433. "Are there any more nutters
in your family?"
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434. Good. Anyway, the Queen's
flag sergeant hoists the Union flag
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435. when the Queen is not in
residence at Buckingham Palace.
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436. It's the Royal Standard that
flies when the Queen is at home.
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437. And so,
we've circumnavigated the QI world
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438. and come all the way back to flags.
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439. But let's see who's been flying
high with the wind in their sails
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440. and who's been flagging behind.
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441. Oh, my word.
My goodnessy wordington.
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442. Tonight, our Jolly Roger, with
eight points, is Charlie Higson!
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443. And, well, pretty shipshape
with -8, it's Rob Brydon!
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444. But sailing rather close to the
wind with -15 points, Andy Hamilton!
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445. And finally, walking the plank
with a report card
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446. that's all Fs, Alan with -19!
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447. So all that remains for me is to
thank Andy, Rob, Charlie and Alan
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448. and as we lower the QI flag,
we raise a glass to curiosity,
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449. for as Dorothy Parker once said,
"The cure for boredom is curiosity.
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450. "There is no cure for curiosity."
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451. And as Steven Wright added,
"Curiosity killed the cat,
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452. but for a while, I was a suspect."
Good night.
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