1. Well!
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2. Good evening, good evening,
good evening, good evening,
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3. good evening, good evening,
good evening, good evening.
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4. And welcome to QI, where tonight
the crowd is baying, the adrenalin's
pumping
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5. and we're ready for fight or flight.
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6. In the red corner, we have
Sean "Fists Of Fury" Lock
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7. and "Gentleman" Johnny Vegas!
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8. And... in the blue corner,
Pam "Float Like A Bee" Ayres
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9. and Alan "Sting Like A Butterfly"
Davies!
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10. Fabulous.
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11. So on your flights of fancy tonight,
you may want to buzz somebody,
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12. so fire away. Pam goes...
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13. Oh, wow. It's like a machine-gun.
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14. Do you know, I think it actually
IS a machine-gun. I think it
is a machine-gun.
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15. Johnny goes...
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16. Oh, with full body swerve.
I think I should lean.
He's all over me!
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17. And Sean goes...
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18. Pumping. And Alan goes...
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19. Oh, dear.
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20. And so we plummet straight into our
first topic, which is freefall
parachuting.
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21. We've got some film for you.
Pay close attention.
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22. So what happens next?
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23. That's the question.
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24. He's about to pull the ripcord
and what will happen?
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25. That area around my groin,
it went a sort of a yellow colour.
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26. Alan, I can understand doing
one exciting thing at a time,
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27. but why do freefalling
AND sodomy at the same time?
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28. Why not just do one
and THEN the other?
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29. It was such a reasonable price.
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30. Was it literally all-in?
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31. But in fact, what is the thing that
happens after the ripcord is pulled?
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32. I did a parachute jump. I know.
You did a static one, didn't you?
I did a static-line one.
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33. I just want to put this in,
so you know I'm a
woman of some substance.
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34. I did one on my own, where the
bloke hits you on the shoulder
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35. and says, "Go!" And as you go, the
string becomes taut and pulls off
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36. the bag and the parachute opens.
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37. That's very much... This is what
you hope happens. And did it? Yes.
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38. I believe... It was a great relief.
I believe that you, as it happens,
obviously, like Alan, felt some...
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39. erotic feelings towards your
instructor. Is that correct? I did.
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40. I took a shine to the instructor.
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41. I think that's why I jumped
out the aircraft, really,
cos I wanted to impress him.
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42. I often do that. If I like a
woman, I jump out of the window.
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43. Just to show them that I really care.
"Are you impressed?"
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44. I dig chicks in flats!
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45. No, what of course we wanted you to
say, which you're not stupid enough
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46. to say, but I have to confess, this
is really because I as a child was
convinced...
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47. Every time I'd seen... You shoot
upwards? Yeah. That when you open the
parachute, the guy goes upwards.
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48. And of course, I subsequently
learned that it's because
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49. the cameraman who's showing it is
still in freefall, so relative
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50. to him, it looks
as if you're going up.
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51. Look, we can see. There he goes!
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52. It looks so much as if
you're just shooting upwards. Yeah.
It's the most lovely feeling
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53. when the canopy opens, because you
can see everything
and you've got your toggles
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54. and you can gently steer... Also,
you know you're
not going to die. Yeah.
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55. That was THE moment for me.
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56. The euphoria when it opens.
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57. How high up were you?
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58. I was 12,000ft.
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59. 12,000? Mm. That's pretty high.
I mean, that's, what...?
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60. 45 seconds of freefall.
Two and a half miles.
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61. Want to know what the world
record is? Can you guess what
the world record is?
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62. Well, someone went nearly to space,
didn't they, and jumped out?
Almost, yes.
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63. Which is in fact was
32,000 metres, which is something...
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64. 18 miles up...?
Something like that.
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65. Don't you freeze or your eardrums go
or something? Well, I can imagine
if you had flappy cuffs,
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66. it would be very noisy
on the way down. He actually
went... he went as far...
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67. Who was it, Adam Ant, did this jump?
He went as a fop.
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68. He achieved...
I'm a dandy highwayman!
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69. Well, he achieved
a speed of 614mph...
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70. Gosh! which is pretty scary,
but he said it was gorgeous.
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71. He said it was as if he'd remained
stationary and the balloon had shot
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72. upwards, so it was rather to
that effect. Now, why did "Shorty"
Longbottom have a pink Spitfire?
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73. Who...? Ooh, Pam. It was puffed.
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74. It was...? Say again. Puffed!
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75. Puffed? It was PUFFED-OUT, yes.
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76. Oh, I see. It was exhausted
from its exertions. Oh, I see!
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77. Thank God for that!
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78. I was worried for a moment
that we'd strayed into territory
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79. that just wasn't quite right,
somehow. No.
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80. Actually, it was a pretty new one
and it was a very light one.
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81. It was a very special one.
Did he take hen-dos out on a weekend?
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82. You know, when the war slowed down?
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83. It got dull. Some lass
with an L-plate on,
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84. did he get her in the back
and take her around town?
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85. What were the female members
of the RAF? What were they called?
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86. Wrens. WAAFs. WAAFs.
And how would you know that?
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87. Because I was one. Oh! We seem
to be in your territory again.
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88. Yeah, I joined
the Women's Royal Air Force
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89. and I went to Singapore and Germany
and I had a very nice time.
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90. Excellent.
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91. It's very good to know. You should
do recruiting. You should!
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92. "I had a lovely time."
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93. I've always been looking for
the recruiting sergeant with a
bread knife, as a matter of fact,
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94. because he said to me,
"What do you like doing?",
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95. and I said, "Drawing," and
he put me in a drawing office,
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96. which was all maths
and technical drawing and that,
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97. and I couldn't do it.
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98. What a bad man!
Yes, he was a bad man.
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99. Evil. Evil.
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100. They did that to me at school,
they said, "What do you want to do?"
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101. I said, "Maths."
They put me in a maths class!
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102. No! Can you believe that?
That's not good enough.
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103. When I was obviously built
for dancing.
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104. It was outrageous.
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105. Was your drawing anything
to do with aerial photographs?
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106. That sort of thing, yes.
Well, then, this answer...
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107. I can give you a little bit
of inside info, here. Go on.
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108. If you are studying
aerial photography
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109. and you see a photograph
which contains a cricket pitch,
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110. and you happen to know
the focal length of the camera,
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111. you can calculate the scale.
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112. I thought you were going to say,
"Calculate the score" then.
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113. Because you know a cricket pitch
is 22 yards, therefore... Yes.
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114. But presumably, when the Spitfire's
flying over Germany,
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115. the Germans are the kind of
utter swine who won't play cricket.
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116. So it was tricky if you didn't have
a cricket pitch on the photograph.
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117. But suppose in the early days
of the war,
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118. you wanted to send an aeroplane over
to take photographs...
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119. Is it some sort of disguise?
Camouflage?
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120. Camouflage is the right answer.
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121. Pink skies, or pink... Yeah.
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122. Actually, first they made it blue,
and that stood out. And there it is.
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123. "Shorty" Longbottom's pink Spitfire.
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124. If it did get spotted
when it was taking pictures,
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125. wouldn't the other planes
just naturally flirt with it?
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126. You'd think this would be the big...
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127. The pilots would abandon
their dog-fighting skills
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128. and just go, "Hello!"
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129. It came back from
the Dambusters thing pregnant.
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130. Well, it certainly shows...
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131. You've got to love your country
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132. to be prepared to go up
in one of those,
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133. but when it's a cloudy day, the sky
has a sort of pink tinge to it.
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134. A pink, pearly tone, doesn't it?
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135. Yes. Or alternatively, if you
want to camouflage your aircraft,
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136. you could paint it as a ship.
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137. Yes.
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138. And it was at that point that Ayres
was asked to leave the round.
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139. Yes.
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140. Exactly.
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141. The whole of Germany
turned into that bloke
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142. from the Laurel And Hardy films.
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143. Throwing booze away.
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144. Exactly.
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145. Stephen, I must point out,
I can't hear anything you say!
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146. I'm just...
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147. You're welcome to stay like that,
or take it off.
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148. If the show's going well,
let me keep talking.
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149. Well, there we are.
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150. Reconnaissance Spitfires were
painted pink to match the clouds.
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151. Now, who gives a flying fff-fish?
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152. There they are. Gosh! Aren't they
amazing? Lovely, aren't they?
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153. Beautiful animals. I was told that
flying fish only ever fly alone.
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154. That sounds like a code, Alan.
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155. "Flying fish only fly alone."
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156. I've seen them. They fly in shoals.
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157. I was on scuba-diving trip and
I met a German and he was adamant.
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158. "Zey only fly alone!"
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159. They would fly on their own,
wouldn't they?
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160. What you mean is they don't fly in
a formation like the Red Devils.
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161. They don't leap out
and pass one another, like that.
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162. No, they don't do that.
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163. Do you know what the French
for a flying fish is?
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164. Poisson... d'aeroplane?
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165. Actually, it's slightly more creepy
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166. for those of us
of a certain generation.
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167. It's Exocet.
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168. Oh, gosh. And what do you know
of the Exocet?
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169. It's a missile.
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170. It was a missile, yes. It was used
against us in the Falklands War.
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171. So do they fly or glide?
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172. Neither.
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173. I've seen them
and they fly for...
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174. Sorry, Johnny,
I'm so excited I must say this.
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175. They fly for ages.
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176. When I saw them,
my first flying fish,
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177. I couldn't believe they were really
fish, because they flew for so long,
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178. and they weave and they sort of
duck and dive, like that.
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179. I thought, "They cannot be fish",
because they flew for so long.
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180. They flew for minutes
and minutes and minutes,
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181. and then suddenly they all go plonk,
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182. and they're gone,
so you know they were really fish.
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183. I don't know what you were eating
or drinking on that occasion,
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184. but I have it here
on pretty solid authority
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185. that 30 seconds is a long time for
them to stay in the air in one go.
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186. Which is a long glide, 30 seconds.
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187. It appears that they glide,
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188. but even if they move
these pectoral fins
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189. that have become their wings,
even slightly,
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190. that would count as flying
but it seems they are fixed.
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191. Who's going to tell Pam that
she probably witnessed a duck?
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192. It wasn't a duck. I heard
what he said. It wasn't a duck.
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193. It was not a duck at all.
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194. No? Is that what he said?
He did. He may have done.
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195. And my sister breeds ducks,
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196. so I know the difference
between a duck and a flying fish.
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197. It just looks to me like you keep
telling me to eff off.
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198. You - duck - duck - fish.
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199. I didn't realise you'd noticed.
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200. That kind of language, Pam.
I'm glad my ears are cut off.
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201. The people who most love them
are the people of Tao,
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202. an island off Taiwan,
where it's their staple diet.
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203. Do they taste nice, then?
Well, I...
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204. Hard to catch, I'd have thought.
Exactly.
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205. Do you use a 12-bore or a net?
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206. Or one in each hand.
That's what I do.
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207. No, you'd just make
a little landing strip.
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208. Put some lights on it, you know,
some tea candles.
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209. Then wave them in!
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210. Stand there with a stick,
waiting for them to go...
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211. Bring it in?
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212. Oh, they've all got grand ideas
of being jumbo jets.
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213. Here's a supplementary question,
however.
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214. What's the opposite
of a flying fish?
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215. Tunnelling flamingo.
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216. Is it going to be some
sort of bottom-dwelling...
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217. What do fish do, usually? Is it
a sinking bat? Fish usually swim.
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218. What usually flies?
Birds. Birds. Birds.
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219. A swimming bird. A swimming bird.
Come on, that's a point.
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220. There's loads of them.
There are loads of them,
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221. but which birds are particularly
astonishing? Chocolate biscuit.
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222. Cormorants. Chocolate biscuit!
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223. Chocolate biscuit.
P-P-Pick up a-a-a-a... A stork.
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224. No, it is indeed a penguin
and they have their wings,
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225. which are of course now
perfect flippers for swimming,
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226. but the fact is, to a scientist,
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227. swimming and flying
are absolutely no different.
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228. It's the same muscles,
the same principles at work,
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229. it's just the medium of one is water
and the other is air.
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230. As far as the penguin's concerned,
it's doing what all birds do.
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231. It's just doing it in the water.
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232. It looks magnificent but
what's the point of developing that,
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233. if no other birds can see it?
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234. It... Why would it want
other birds to see it?
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235. You're going, "It's magnificent."
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236. He's swimming round going,
"Look at this! Look what I've done!"
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237. All the other birds are going,
"Look at that BEEP!"
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238. We're the only creatures, Johnny,
that like to show off, I think.
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239. I don't think animals like
to show off, do they?
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240. Apart from peacocks, and quite a few
others, come to think of it now.
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241. In fact, all of them. And the ones
with the spines and the horns.
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242. So, from flying fish
to the fishing fly. Ho ho.
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243. Why do women make
the best fishermen?
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244. They're all descended from mermaids.
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245. It's a very sweet thought.
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246. I don't know that that's true.
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247. I can imagine you
whispering that into a girl's ear.
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248. And in 1654, they negotiated a deal
with the octopus witch
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249. to let them also have
their voices back.
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250. I need to write this down!
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251. If I can teach my kids this.
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252. This is... 16...
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253. It was a massive summit. Was it?
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254. You might be right, Johnny.
I'm not sure. I'll check.
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255. It was like Rivers Of Blood speech,
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256. because a lot of the mackerel
were told to BLEEP in shoals.
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257. Right. I see that now. OK. OK.
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258. I think I actually know this.
Yes? Go on.
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259. Tell, tell. I did know a bloke,
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260. he used to get his wife to give him
a discarded pubic hair,
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261. because there was a chemical in it
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262. and he used to hair-rig
his boilies fishing for carp,
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263. because they think it gives off...
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264. You're absolutely right.
This is what people think.
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265. You're right.
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266. We called him a pervert for years.
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267. You're right that
this is what people think.
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268. As it happens,
it is completely untrue.
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269. Someone wrote a letter
to The Field in which he said
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270. he'd had huge success
using his wife's pubic hairs,
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271. and a whole generation
of fishermen copied this.
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272. There was a belief that pheromones,
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273. which are probably the chemicals
you were after,
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274. pheromones that women give off...
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275. But there are a number
of problems with this,
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276. there is absolutely no evidence
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277. that humans give off pheromones
of any kind. So why are women...
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278. The fact is, the British record
for the largest fish caught
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279. on these islands is held by women.
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280. There was a 64lb salmon caught
by a Miss Georgina Ballantyne.
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281. The fact is, she was
a very experienced angler.
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282. Why does she think it's a saxophone?
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283. She does.
"We'll be in a relationship."
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284. "Oh, dear God, throw me back!"
In fact...
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285. And there was a 66lb catfish
caught at Oundle
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286. by another woman, Bev Street.
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287. The point is, if men
had caught these enormous fish,
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288. no-one would be groping around
for reasons
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289. as to why men were good fishermen.
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290. The fact that women hold the record
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291. has everyone suddenly going, "There
must be some explanation for that.
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292. "It can't be because
they're good at fishing.
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293. "It must be because
they give off a chemical!"
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294. Bizarre theory.
Well, there you have it, anyway.
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295. Fantastic.
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296. Now, when lions fight bears,
which one wins?
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297. Yes, Johnny?
Which one's had the Stella?
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298. Let's leave your sponsor out of it
if we can, Johnny.
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299. Is the answer that they never meet,
they're on different continents?
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300. They wouldn't naturally meet
but as it happens, they have met.
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301. It's been organised.
A very sick human...
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302. It's been organised?
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303. In a car-park?
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304. Kind of in a car park,
in California, I'm afraid.
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305. It was during the Gold Rush.
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306. I'd back a lion.
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307. You'd go with the lion, would you?
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308. Oh, no. I'm afraid
it is the bear every time.
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309. Really? The skull
of the lion is thin
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310. and although it's muscular,
it has no real bone-strength
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311. in the way that a bear does,
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312. and a bear can just crush
the skull of a lion like that.
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313. The lion never gets a chance
to get in there
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314. and do its thing on the neck,
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315. and the bear would win every time.
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316. It was during the Gold Rush,
the Californians,
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317. to entertain the prospectors
and the miners,
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318. started with bears
against various other animals.
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319. Against a bull, for example.
Yuck. How horrible.
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320. It's so cruel and unpleasant.
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321. People got bored with the bear
winning, so they shipped in lions
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322. and the lions put on a brave show
to start with,
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323. and everyone thought they would win,
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324. and they roared in there
but the bear was just too... Dnnn!
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325. Every time... Poor old lion.
.. Crushed its skull.
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326. My dad was a boxer. Was he? Yeah.
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327. Mine was an Irish setter.
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328. Was he?
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329. Sorry.
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330. Was he really?
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331. Very superstitious man, he was.
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332. He had this horseshoe that
he took everywhere with him.
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333. Yes?
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334. And he kept it in the boxing glove?
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335. You must have known my dad!
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336. That would backfire, though.
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337. That would break your hand,
wouldn't it? You feel it would.
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338. Let's come to a question
almost on that very subject,
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339. because it's interesting.
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340. Name something that's easier to do
when you're wearing boxing gloves.
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341. Frisk a porcupine!
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342. Very good!
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343. Give up masturbating!
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344. Yes, I suppose.
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345. Yes, but I suppose
what I was coming to
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346. was what's so bizarre
about boxing gloves, in a way,
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347. is that what it really makes it
easier to do is to kill someone.
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348. Yeah. It's a lot easier to kill
people wearing boxing gloves
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349. than it was ever
in the bare-knuckle days. Why?
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350. In those days
almost no-one ever died.
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351. There were two recorded instances
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352. in 150 years
of bare-knuckle prize-fighting.
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353. I like the shorts!
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354. They're pretty splendid,
aren't they?
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355. You can't hit someone as hard,
can you? Repeatedly.
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356. The thing is, if you try
and hit someone on the jaw,
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357. you break your own fist,
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358. so in the old days
people punched against the chest
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359. and the stomach and the arms
and everything else,
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360. but they avoided the chin -
they would hurt themselves.
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361. As soon as you put gloves on,
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362. they were battering each other
in the face... I see.
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363. I mean, four people a year die in
America alone from boxing injuries.
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364. It's a very dangerous sport indeed.
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365. But in the bare-knuckle days, which
had no time limits to their rounds,
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366. people would survive and walk away.
In the words of the British boxer
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367. and former world middleweight
champion Alan Minter,
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368. "Sure, there have been injuries
and deaths in boxing,
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369. "but none of them serious."
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370. Now, what kind of birds used to
go out with Viking sailors?
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371. Turkeys. Chickens.
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372. No. Geese.
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373. Swans. Birds we didn't have here
till they arrived.
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374. They helped them find their way...
Yes. .. Through the fog.
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375. Not through the fog, no.
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376. It was to discover new lands,
which the Vikings liked to do.
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377. What would be the purpose of it?
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378. How useful would a bird be?
It's really cunning, this.
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379. Is it one that would go up high and
see further than you could see? Yes.
A talking bird!
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380. Either that, or imagine a bird
that couldn't land on the water,
couldn't swim...
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381. So when it saw land, it would head
towards land and you'd follow it.
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382. But if there was no land?
It would drown? No, get back
in the ship. Oh, right.
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383. It would go, "There's nowhere
for me to go but the ship." It had
to be a non-migratory bird,
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384. one that doesn't usually
fly over the water,
that can't land in the water.
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385. You'd let it fly.
It goes up to about 5,000ft
and you can still see it.
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386. If there's land, it will shoot off
to the land, so you follow it
in that direction.
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387. If there's no land
and you're still right in
the middle of the ocean, it would
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388. come back down again and
you'd carry on sailing. Yes?
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389. Is it a budgie? It's not a budgie.
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390. What a pity.
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391. It's actually a... Noah uses it.
Is it a gander?
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392. It's not a gander. Is it a dove?
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393. No. Before the dove, if you
remember, in the Bible, he used...
Punters, help us.
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394. Raven. Very good.
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395. I was going to say that.
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396. I was going to say that
at the start.
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397. Ah! There it is, there's the raven.
Yes, a raven. Can't land on water.
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398. So the religious maniac in
the audience got it right.
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399. No, I'm only joking. It was indeed.
Of course, Noah used that first.
Isn't that a cunning thing to do?
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400. There was a particular Viking,
and his name was Flopsi...
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401. Is he the one with the pink ship?
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402. No, I got his name a bit wrong.
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403. Did he have very long ears?
There was a group of them.
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404. Floki is to this day apparently...
Vilgerdarson, he is known to this
day as Raven-Floki
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405. because he discovered,
at least for the Vikings,
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406. he discovered Iceland that way,
by sending a raven.
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407. Now in which direction do rockets...
What if the ravens...
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408. Sorry. What if the ravens are sat in
a studio now, making their own show,
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409. going, "And it was the first raven
that ingeniously used humans..."
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410. I like the way your mind works.
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411. "..to transport us..."
You know what I mean?
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412. Johnny, they wouldn't say that.
They wouldn't say that. They'd go,
"Kaa! Kaa!"
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413. Think these things through!
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414. I believe they would say...
There's nothing worse than a
half-baked idea.
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415. Oh, don't bully the poor thing.
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416. Right, in which direction
do rockets accelerate best?
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417. Yes?
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418. Down. No.
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419. I just felt like doing that.
Oh, fair enough.
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420. Do they leave the ground quicker
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421. than they return to the ground?
Is that the thing?
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422. No, it's where do they get
their maximum acceleration?
In which position?
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423. Horizontal.
Horizontal is the right answer.
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424. Although they have to leave
quickly like that,
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425. they tip and the moment their
weight is not over the thruster,
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426. they generate lift
and they're like planes, almost.
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427. And most of their work is done
horizontally, not vertically.
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428. But you know when there was
the Greenham Common protest about
cruise missiles? I remember that.
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429. And one of the things they used
to say was, "Oh, these missiles,
they're shaped like penises.
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430. "They're about man's aggression."
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431. And you're thinking, "They're
shaped like that because that's
the most aerodynamic shape."
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432. They wouldn't be very successful
if they were shaped like vaginas,
would they?
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433. And they just came...
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434. And then just a big...
On your head.
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435. They wouldn't work, would they?
It's got nothing to do with...
It's science.
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436. No. Like a big...
Like a big sort of... sort of,
you know, a big mushroom?
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437. Like a big squashy mushroom,
landing on top of you, like that.
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438. Anyway. And now to the point where,
as your flight instructor, I propel
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439. you towards the yawning void of
general ignorance, so fingers on
your firing buttons, if you please.
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440. Which of the armed services refers
to the left and right sides of
an aeroplane as port and starboard?
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441. Yes? That would be
the Navy, wouldn't it?
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442. Oh, it's not the Navy, in fact.
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443. For very good reasons. The RAF?
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444. The RAF do and the Army does, and
all the others, but not the Fleet
Air Arm or the Navy,
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445. because they have aeroplanes
on boats sometimes,
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446. at different angles, and they have
to keep port and starboard as being
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447. according to the axis of the boat.
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448. Otherwise, if the plane's
facing the wrong way, you could get
death and confusion and disaster.
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449. So in the training manuals
for that sea harrier, it says
the left wing and the right wing.
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450. And now,
what's this chap wearing, here?
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451. Please show me, while we're still
in the Navy and the Army.
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452. A busby.
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453. Oh, thank you, Pam.
You were doing so well.
No, he's not wearing a busby.
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454. A bearskin? It is a bearskin, yes.
I was going to say a medal.
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455. It is called a busby though,
isn't it?
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456. It's not called a busby.
We will show you a busby.
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457. There, on the right hand
and the left hand.
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458. Those are busbies. Much shorter.
But what is the bearskin made of?
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459. Bear. Nylon? Wood? Acrylic.
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460. Bear. You're quite right.
Ostensibly, bear hair.
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461. Bear hair. They tried making
bearskins out of acrylics and
nylons and various other things,
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462. but they get bedraggled in the
wet and they stand up with static
electricity and look preposterous.
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463. So, of course, you wouldn't want
to look preposterous on parade.
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464. What would win in a fight
between them two hats?
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465. If you go back to the first
photograph, of the guy
in the bearskin, there.
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466. Do you know, Pam,
because you said your...
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467. Who did you say was in the Guards?
My dad was a Grenadier Guard.
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468. Now, there are five regiments
in the Brigade Of Guards.
Can you tell me which he's in?
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469. There's a way of telling.
I'm afraid I don't know.
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470. My father wouldn't be very pleased
with me. Buttons. Yes.
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471. The Grenadier Guards'
buttons are evenly spaced.
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472. In pairs, like this, it means
he's in the Coldstream Guards.
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473. Oh, I didn't know that.
If they're in threes,
you're in the Scottish Guards.
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474. And there's an Irish Guards.
In fours, it's the Irish Guards,
and fives is the Welsh Guards.
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475. What if you've got a zip?
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476. A zip? Yeah. Or you're like
a stripper, it's just Velcro.
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477. I'm going to change your guard!
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478. I'm going to be trooping my colour!
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479. Oh, dear.
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480. Guards were indeed very...
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481. There were lots of stories about men
doing things with Guardsmen
in the '50s and '60s.
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482. And that story of Churchill
being woken up one morning when
he was PM in the '50s
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483. and he was told, "I'm afraid
there's a bit of a scandal,
Prime Minister.
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484. "One of our backbench MPs was found
with a Guardsman in St James's Park
in the bushes last night
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485. "by the police, and the papers
have got hold of it."
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486. Churchill said, "Last night?"
He said, "Yes."
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487. Churchill said, "It was very cold
last night, wasn't it?"
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488. And the PPA said, "Well, yes,
actually, Prime Minister.
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489. "I believe it was one of the coldest
February nights for 30 years."
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490. Churchill said, "Makes you
proud to be British."
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491. Don't think they'd have
that attitude now.
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492. Anyway, yes, the tall hat worn
by the Foot Guards is a bearskin.
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493. Short one with the flap worn by
the Hussars and the Royal Horse
Artillery, that's a busby.
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494. And now, be very afraid.
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495. Be very, very afraid indeed. Or
invite me to come outside, because
I'm ready to tell you the scores.
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496. Oh, no!
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497. Well, it's really,
really interesting.
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498. In first place, would you believe,
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499. and it's only her first appearance,
it's Pam Ayres!
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500. Oh!
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501. In second place, with plus one,
is Johnny Vegas!
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502. Yeah!
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503. Miles behind, with minus 11,
is Alan Davies, who's not last!
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504. Which means that freefalling at
terminal velocity this evening,
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505. on minus 12, Sean Lock!
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506. So that's all from us this week.
My thanks to Sean, Johnny,
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507. Pam and Alan, and I leave you with
this thought on the subject of fight
or flight from Michael Freedman.
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508. The scientific name for an animal
that doesn't either run from
or fight its enemies is "lunch".
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509. Goodnight.
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