1. Good evening, good evening, good
evening, good evening and welcome.
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2. Welcome one and welcome all once
again to Never Mind The Buzzcocks.
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3. I'm Natasha Kaplinsky
and I'm not wearing any pants.
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4. No, no, I fooled you. Actually,
I'm Stephen, really, and this
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5. is QI, though I'm not wearing pants.
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6. Tonight, we are playing
footloose and fancy free with the
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7. facts as we filter the fabrications
of fakes, frauds and fakirs.
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8. Let's meet our four
finagling fraudsters.
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9. We have World Heavyweight
boxing champion, Sean Lock.
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10. We have the President
of Mauritius, Jimmy Carr!
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11. His identical twin sister,
Marcus Brigstocke.
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12. And the late Hugh
Montgomery-Massingberd.
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13. Right. Now, you might like
to reveal who you really are,
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14. but, before I sell you all - thank
you, you can bring that down.
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15. Thank you very much.
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16. Before I sell you all a pup,
let's hear your suspicious noises.
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17. Sean goes...
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18. Jimmy goes...
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19. Marcus goes...
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20. And Alan goes...
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21. Which brings me to my first
sleight of hand. Could you tell me
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22. all what your buzzer noises
are? Jimmy first.
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23. What's that noise?
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24. A camera, like a like.
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25. No, actually...
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26. That's a phone. Is it not...
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27. is it not a... a bird that
can mimic sounds and it learned
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28. how to do the camera shutter.
So what sort of bird would that be?
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29. A Kodak bird.
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30. It's not that. It's from Australia.
Oh, the kookaburra. No.
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31. Sheila. No. The audience knows,
say again loudly?
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32. Lyre bird!
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33. Lyre, they're
all shouting lyre at you!
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34. You've robbed my point.
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35. You get one, the audience gets five.
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36. In fact, they're a specific
breed of lyre bird called
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37. the superb lyre bird.
It can mimic anything?
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38. Almost anything. I'd make it woof.
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39. How funny would that be
if you had a bird that woofed?
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40. I'd get it to do limericks.
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41. It does dogs. I'd probably
get it to do Bill Oddie.
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42. Surely that should be a
bearded tit if it was any bird.
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43. You're thinking of Rory McGrath.
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44. True! Yours was a superb lyre.
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45. Marcus, let's hear yours.
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46. It could easily be a builder,
couldn't it? Seeing a lady go past,
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47. but it sounds like a car alarm.
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48. Oh. Thank you for joining in. I
just wanted to see that happen.
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49. Lyre bird!
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50. Yes! He's right!
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51. And here it is making that noise.
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52. It's lyre, incidentally -
L-Y-R-E, not...
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53. I knew that. Would I have
got a point if I'd said that?
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54. No. Because it's tail is said to
resemble the shape of a Greek lyre,
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55. the plucking instrument, a lyre.
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56. And let's hear your
buzzer, Sean, if we may?
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57. It's a lyre bird.
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58. I don't know what it's mimicking.
It's doing a saw, isn't it?
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59. It's mimicking logging. Chainsaw.
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60. It is indeed doing a chainsaw.
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61. Is it a lyre bird?
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62. It's a lyre bird. You seem
to have got the hang of this.
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63. That's very annoying. So Alan...
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64. That's a lyre bird. Nooo!
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65. No. No. Oh, dear. No.
Even as I said it, I knew it wasn't.
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66. Even as it was coming out of my
mouth, story of my bloody life.
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67. That was a telephone. Yeah?
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68. Couldn't you tell?
No, I thought it was...
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69. Ironically, Alan, the big siren that
went off there - it was a lyre bird.
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70. I can't see that bird surviving
for much longer - if it's doing
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71. impressions of the chainsaw
that's coming towards it.
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72. But how does it benefit it,
in the wild -
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73. being able to mimic
the noises of other things?
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74. It does a lot of kids
parties and a lot of...
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75. They're not really words, though,
are they? When birds say words,
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76. they're not words. They're noises.
No, to our ears, they are.
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77. Cos people want to learn
to talk to animals.
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78. People say,
I'd like to talk to animals.
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79. It would actually be quite dull,
talking to animals.
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80. "What did you do?"Got up, had some
food." Grunt and squawk.
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81. Didn't get killed,
turned out all right.
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82. Got out of bed, shat right next
to the bed, got back into it.
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83. Oh. It's the sort of thing
they do. Yes - disgusting.
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84. Anyway, moving on, the first three
were, of course, the work of the
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85. finest fibber of the forest, the
superb lyre bird, which can imitate
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86. just about any sound it hears.
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87. So, now, what was unusual
about the pig-faced lady?
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88. She had eight tits.
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89. She wasn't really a lady,
she was a pig.
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90. You know, if that's her, that
is a pig. No, no. There was a
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91. very famous, in fact there were a
number of famous pig-faced ladies
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92. in the 19th century.
They'd be a curiosity in a tent.
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93. That's it - say that again, so the
ladies and gentlemen at home can
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94. hear you. A curiosity
in a tent. Exactly.
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95. My favourite sort of curiosity.
A tented curiosity.
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96. It was a big draw in the 19th
century for people to go
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97. pay to see the pig-faced lady.
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98. The thing I think about those
freak shows is, rather than pay
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99. to go in the tent, why don't
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100. you just wait til they finish
work and go down the shops?
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101. You don't get all the build up.
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102. If they're just down the shop,
you don't get someone saying,
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103. "Prepare for the wonderful..."
Oh, she's just buying biscuits.
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104. It's not the same thing. Was it
a bearded lady that they shaved?
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105. No, but it was a shaved...? Pig.
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106. No. Monkey. She was a...
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107. Not a monkey. Monkeys would have to
be huge. It'd have to be a gorilla.
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108. Horse? All right, a gorilla. Horse!
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109. Cat! A cow.
Not a cow. A pig. No, a pig
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110. would be too small to be convincing
as a woman. Well, pigs are massive.
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111. You're thinking about
little pigs in cartoons.
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112. They're not going to
stand up and look human.
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113. You put a dress on most things,
they can pull it off.
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114. I look like one, I put a dress on.
I think I've heard of this. Yeah?
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115. Is it a bear? Yes, thank you!
It's a bear. They shaved a bear.
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116. They would get a bear drunk,
shave the bear's face.
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117. Get a bear drunk and shave it?
They've got the show backwards!
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118. That's what you want to see.
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119. Don't care about the pig-faced
woman, I wanna see a man trying to
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120. shave a bear. A drunken bear.
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121. Have another drink, I'm not going to
do anything to you. That's insane!
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122. And then they
stick his arm in a beehive.
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123. When they got them drunk, was this
like paralytic so it would then pass
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124. out and they'd shave it, or drunk
enough to persuade it that this...
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125. Drunk enough for it not
to wipe your face of with...
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126. with one swipe of its paw. With
its claw, right. Hot towel, sir?
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127. "Rrrrrrarr."
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128. "Oh, go on then, ha ha.
Go on then, whatever, go on."
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129. "Go for your life, go on."
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130. Here's a quite
interesting thing. Yeah.
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131. Water softens beard bristle up
better than shaving foam. Does it?
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132. Yeah. Shaving foam is a con.
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133. I think there's a current advert
on for some skin preparation for
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134. men that goes on about
how your skin can get stronger.
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135. Obviously they don't want to market
moisturiser to men, so they call it
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136. face protector. Yes. Like it's
stopping bullets hitting it.
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137. It's not to do with making me
all soft and lovely,
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138. it's actually bang and bash it.
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139. People are throwing kettles at me.
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140. They have bearded ladies, you've
mentioned - long tradition of those.
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141. There was one rather sweet story
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142. of a bearded lady who fell in
love with a contortionist in...
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143. This sounds like an old joke.
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144. It does sound like it.
But it wasn't. He wouldn't marry
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145. her because he couldn't really face
the idea every morning of staring at
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146. a bearded woman, but also, if she
shaved, they couldn't get married
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147. cos they wouldn't have enough
income because hers came from
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148. the fact that she was a very
successful bearded lady and...
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149. So he shaved the bear
and married that?
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150. No. Someone else suggested that she
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151. shave and cover herself in
tattoos and she became the
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152. first tattooed lady and they married
and lived very happily ever after.
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153. Rather touching. But
if he was a contortionist,
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154. they could've had sex and he
could've been in a different room.
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155. Indeed, the nature of exactly that.
Samuel Gumpertz was considered
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156. the King of the freak show
people at Coney Island.
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157. He had a 1911 show that included
Ursa the Bear Girl, Bonita...
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158. Was she just a naked lady?
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159. No, no. The bare girl
is misleading. B-E-A-R.
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160. A lot of people paid their money
and went, "Oh, this is rubbish."
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161. She looks like a bear.
If anything, I'm turned off.
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162. There was Bonita - I don't know why
this is funny, the Irish Fat Midget.
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163. You don't know why that's funny?
Yeah, I was going to say that.
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164. Lionel the Dog-Faced Boy and Sharif
Affendal, the human salamander.
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165. Salamanders can go in fire,
can't they? That's the legend.
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166. So he would stand in the fire?
Presumably that's what happened.
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167. How long can a salamander
go in fire? Till it's cooked.
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168. Well, there you have it, anyway.
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169. The pig-faced lady was
neither pig-faced nor lady.
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170. She was in fact a drunken bear
with a shaven head.
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171. Now, what was Count
Victor Lustig's dastardly scheme
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172. for Guy de Maupassant's
favourite restaurant in Paris?
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173. Did he put a creepy black and white
cardboard cut out of himself
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174. in the middle of the place?
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175. Guy de Maupassant - 19th century
French writer - like many French
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176. writers, a surprising number of
French writers and artists, in the
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177. 19th century, objected to something
new to Paris in 1889. Eiffel Tower.
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178. The Eiffel Tower.
They absolutely loathed it.
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179. They hated it. Guy de
Maupassant loathed it so much
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180. that his favourite restaurant was?
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181. The "Eiffel Tower Is Crap" bistro.
No - it was in the Eiffel Tower.
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182. Oh, so he didn't have to look at it.
So, exactly, the one place in Paris
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183. where he couldn't see the Eiffel
Tower was inside the Eiffel Tower.
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184. Could he not just ask for, perhaps,
a chair facing the other way?
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185. He was a French writer trying to
make a point and therefore a git.
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186. That's only half the story.
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187. What did Count Victor Lustig
do to the Eiffel Tower?
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188. He sold it to someone.
Oh, Alan, you're on fire tonight!
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189. I'm on fire, I'm a salamander!
On fire! You are a salamander.
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190. He did indeed sell it.
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191. Congratulations. A million points.
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192. I'm on fire.
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193. That's quite a good
salamander, actually.
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194. Do they do that foot thing?
They probably do.
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195. Cooling foot, cooling foot.
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196. A salamander is amongst us.
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197. So he sold the Eiffel Tower?
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198. To a gullible tourist?
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199. Well, actually, in this case, it was
scrap metal dealers. He claimed that
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200. he had the single right given
to him by the Ministry of Posts
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201. and Telegraphy to the sale, and that
he could personally decide who would
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202. get the scrap metal rights and he
told this to two scrap metal dealers
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203. and they realised that as
he was a French official,
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204. he could be bribed, so they paid him
a large bribe for the rights to it.
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205. He told them it was to be pulled
down and he had the rights to it.
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206. It was never permanent. They put
it up for a couple of years.
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207. Yes, so it was a convincing...
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208. It's like that big wheel on the South
Bank. Meant to be up for two years -
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209. they kept it. Fairground people,
New Labour, when they came in.
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210. They went, "We need the Millennium
Dome and a big ferris wheel.
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211. Come on, if you want to go faster,
you've got to scream louder.
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212. There's loads of pregnant teenagers
knocking on Number Ten, going,
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213. "Where are you, you've moved on?".
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214. There was a great former actor
from Glasgow called Arthur Furguson.
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215. He sold Nelson's Column,
lions included, to an American
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216. tourist for £6000, and on a trip to
Paris, he managed to sell the Eiffel
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217. Tower as well, also for scrap
to another gullible American.
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218. I love these people.
He then moved to the US.
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219. Do you think they try lots of people
and eventually someone buys it?
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220. He sold the White House
to an American. Just brilliant.
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221. Sell me, sell me!
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222. He then tried to sell the
Statue of Liberty to an Australian
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223. and that's where it fell down.
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224. "Oh, come on, mate."
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225. He didn't even have the keys.
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226. "How am I going to get it home?"
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227. "Where's the guarantee?"
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228. Well, in case we think this is
something that's gone away, only
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229. this year, 2008, ladies and
gentlemen as we go, two businessmen,
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230. called Terry Collins and Marcel
Boekhoorn, were conned out of
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231. £1 million by an unemployed lorry
driver named Tony Lee who claimed to
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232. be acting for the real owners
in the sale of the Ritz Hotel
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233. and they paid £1 million for a
sort of down payment on the Ritz.
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234. A million. Now, you are
the detective for these
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235. questions coming up.
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236. We all think we can spot a con, but
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237. tell me how you would have
dealt with these situations.
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238. You become suspicious of three buxom
young women who are coming out of
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239. the telephone exchange carrying
heavy suitcases and jangling.
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240. Where is the jangling coming from?
Is it coming from A,
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241. the telephone exchange,
B, the suitcases or C, their bosoms?
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242. D, my trousers.
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243. Right, and we're in Miami
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244. in 1950 and this was a very
well-known scandal at the time.
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245. These women were responsible for
the money that got collected
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246. from the phone boxes
and their job was to
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247. put the money into these counting
machines and they worked out that
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248. as long as they stole the money
before it went into the counting
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249. machines, the phone company had no
idea of how much money there was.
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250. So they would take money and...
Put it in their bras.
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251. And then put it in the counting
machine. Once it's in the machine,
it's accounted for, but
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252. over a number of years, no-one
knows how much they got away with,
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253. maybe hundreds of thousands
of dollars, in their breasts,
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254. and eventually they got found out.
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255. There we have a picture.
It looks like she's gone
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256. to a really bad strip club.
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257. People have only got change,
"There you go, love."
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258. It might be cold, sorry about that.
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259. The headline on the day that this
happened was "Justice, as elastic
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260. as the items in which they carried
their loot, snapped back today, on
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261. "members of
Miami's Brassiere Brigade."
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262. Is that a headline? That was
a headline. It was a huge story.
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263. If you were The Sun, you'd go,
"Money in their tits!"
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264. I'm afraid it would be
exactly that. "Titty cash".
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265. "Tit bag grab slag".
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266. And then there'd be a girl
on Page Three and it would say,
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267. "Zoe is very disappointed
by the Brassiere Brigade.
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268. "She thinks it's wrong to steal."
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269. You do seem to know
their ways very well, Alan.
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270. Saddam Hussein has been found in
a hole, that was one of them.
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271. That was my favourite one.
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272. "Stefanie is delighted that
Saddam Hussein has been captured."
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273. Then you'd say, "When I found
out he'd been captured...
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274. "..I took a moment to celebrate."
I'm ashamed of you.
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275. It's not real. It's your
imagination, I'm just doing that.
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276. That will not answer.
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277. I wish I could do that.
I can, oddly enough.
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278. Did you ever celebrate with them?
My nipples are going in the wrong
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279. direction, they're dropping
an inch a year. It's terrible.
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280. However I have... Can you get
a pencil underneath them?
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281. I can get Colin
Montgomery underneath them.
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282. He must have been livid about that.
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283. In 1950, the Brassiere Brigade
defrauded the
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284. Southern Bell telephone company line
by hiding the takings in their bras.
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285. Now, what's the trick
behind sword swallowing?
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286. Wipe it first.
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287. Yeah.
Stop when you reach the handle.
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288. Never use a scimitar.
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289. Doesn't it just... fold up? No, no.
There are people who believe...
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290. Euuuuhhhh!
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291. There are people who insist it is
a fake somehow but it is genuine.
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292. I wonder if it ever comes out and
it's got a bit of meat on the end?
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293. Yeah. I think the actual secret
of doing it is to do it really
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294. quick and if it gets caught
on anything, just jab it.
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295. What do you think the most common
complaint is when they see doctors?
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296. I imagine it's gastric.
It's a sore throat. Is it?
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297. Pretty obviously, but they genuinely
do suffer from sore throats and they
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298. pop it down and there's a limit.
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299. 61cm. Any longer than 61cm,
you could gravely injure yourself,
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300. but anything less than
40cm and you are not
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301. recognised as a sword swallower by
the Association of Sword Swallowers.
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302. What if you're short?
I mean, surely height...
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303. You'd think, but unfortunately
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304. the Society of Sword Swallowers
had laid down 40cm.
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305. Cos if you're a midget, you've
got to stab yourself in the ass.
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306. How do you not just gag immediately?
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307. That's the point, there's
a trick - not a trick,
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308. but the secret is you have to learn
to overcome your gag reflex, first.
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309. That's hard. That's why I
can't wear contact lenses, because
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310. I gag when I touch my eye.
Well, you're putting them in wrong.
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311. Put them in the front.
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312. You know if you pull a
pekingese's tail, its eyes pop out.
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313. That's the rest of my week sorted,
I'm buying a pekingese.
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314. I line them up.
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315. It's like that, I touch my eye
and I actually go...
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316. Really? It's a 4,000-year-old art,
it seems - sword swallowing.
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317. It's not a trick at all, it's
a real skill. That's the point.
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318. And so we reach the toast of conmen,
fraudsters and swindlers everywhere,
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319. general ignorance.
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320. What's New London Bridge
doing in Arizona?
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321. Yay?
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322. It was bought as a
tourist attraction
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323. and it's the third most popular
tourist attraction in America.
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324. And it acts as a dry way
of getting across some water.
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325. That sounds pretty good to me.
Nothing's gone off.
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326. No. Sometimes the obvious
answer is the truth.
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327. Is it true they thought
they were buying Tower Bridge?
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328. No, that was the one. It was a man
called McCulloch of McCulloch's Oil
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329. who bought it and he bought it
after much negotiation and
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330. indeed there are photographs of him
looking round it and working out how
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331. to transport it so he knew perfectly
well what bridge he was buying.
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332. It was called New London Bridge
because the Old London Bridge had
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333. been crossing the Thames
at that point for how long?
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334. Million years.
300 years or something?
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335. Since the time of the dinosaurs.
They built it.
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336. 600 years. It was big enough for
a blue whale to go under.
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337. It held good for 600 years and was
covered in shops and buildings.
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338. It was much quicker to get a ferry
across than to try and walk across
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339. the bridge. It was so filled
with entertainment and shops,
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340. ragamuffin pubs. I want
a bridge like that again.
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341. I know. I wish it
was still like that.
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342. Anyway, Robert McCulloch.
He took New London Bridge to
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343. Arizona to promote his new
settlement at Lake Havasu,
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344. where it's been a huge success.
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345. Contrary to the myth, he never
thought he was buying Tower Bridge.
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346. A lot of what we eat seems
to be faked these days.
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347. If I send you down to the shops for
some butter and they don't have any,
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348. what can you get me instead?
Some beer, get you some beer.
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349. Yes, you could,
but instead of beer...
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350. Margarine? People get margarine?
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351. You can't palm me off with
margarine, I was about to say, but
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352. that sounds rather rude.
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353. You can... No, you can't.
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354. You literally cannot buy
margarine in England any more.
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355. Can you get it on the internet?
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356. Possibly, but not from Britain.
Yeah. There's dodgy...
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357. dodgy margarine sites.
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358. The UK Spreads Association
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359. used to be called the
Margarine and Spreads Association.
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360. "We would like to make it clear,"
their spokesman told a startled QI
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361. researcher, "we would like to make
it clear there are no brands of
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362. "margarine on sale
in Britain today".
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363. Is it because margarine contains...
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364. Did they just change the name?
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365. Because it contains 80 to 90% fat.
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366. Its natural colour, margarine, is?
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367. Blue.
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368. White, in fact and
in America, the dairy industry
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369. was so horrified by it in the
19th century when it was invented
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370. that they had various laws insisting
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371. that it not be coloured yellow
to look like butter, so it stayed
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372. white, or in some states where the
dairy industry was very powerful,
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373. like New Hampshire,
they insisted it be coloured red.
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374. So it really put people
off spreading it on their toast.
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375. Now, how many commandments
are there? Oh. Yes?
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376. Are we talking about
the commandments that God
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377. dictated to Moses on Mount Sinai?
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378. Yeah. Literally, none.
Never happened.
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379. I'll go along with that!
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380. How many... how many are there
in the Bible? Oh, yeah...
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381. Well, now, you see, I've buzzed
but I fear if I said ten...
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382. I think the Catholic church
have just added some new ones.
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383. No, I'm talking about the original.
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384. The original ones. Nine. Eight.
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385. There used to be that story, where
the angel is sent down and he goes
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386. to the French and says,
"I've got some commandments,"
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387. and the French say, "Give
me an example." He said, "Thou
shalt not commit adultery."
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388. They said, "I'm
not interested, go away."
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389. He then goes off then to Germans
and says, "I've got these
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390. commandments," and the Germans say,
"What do they say?" and he says,
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391. "Well, for example, thou shall
not kill."I don't think so."
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392. And to the Italians, "Would you
like some commandments?
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393. "Here's one - thou shalt
not steal."Ah, go away."
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394. Then he goes to the Jews with these
commandments. "How much are they?"
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395. "They're free."I'll take ten."
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396. If you look at the Ten
Commandments, thou shalt not kill,
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397. which should be the major one,
it should be at the top.
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398. It comes in about number five.
It's got quite low billing
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399. and it should be in bold, shouldn't
it? The other stuff is just nicking,
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400. staring at other people's wives,
girlfriend, boyfriend.
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401. Well, in the list of those
commandments taken
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402. from the mountain, there
were actually 14 in both
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403. Exodus and Deuteronomy, not ten, but
in Exodus, generally speaking, there
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404. are 613 commandments, including the
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405. really important ones that should
be, as you say, put in bold, like
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406. you shall not suffer a witch to live
or you should never vex a stranger.
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407. Well, this show should be taken off.
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408. Whosoever lies with a beast
shall be surely put to death.
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409. Well, especially when it rolls over.
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410. Exactly. It just
happened by accident.
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411. I didn't know she was a bear.
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412. I thought she was a pig.
No, that doesn't do.
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413. Why do we think there's ten then?
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414. It's referred to as ten in other
books. But, there is list of Ten
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415. Commandments. Yes, but if you go
to Exodus 20, Deuteronomy five, it's
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416. not ten. They're actually divided,
some are divided.
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417. It doesn't mention anything
about smoking, does it? It doesn't.
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418. Where can you smoke now?
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419. It should just say, be good,
if you can't be good, be lucky.
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420. Always wash your brushes
and put your ladders away.
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421. So anyway, in the book of
Exodus chapter 20,
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422. there are 14 commandments.
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423. If you include the rest of
the book, we'd get up to 613.
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424. When I flip this coin that
I have handily perched here,
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425. what are the chances of
it coming up heads? 50:50.
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426. You just keep walking into that lamp
post, Alan, don't you? I'm with Alan,
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427. everything's 50:50. Everything?
Winning the lottery's 50:50.
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428. You either win it or you don't.
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429. Rolling a six, you either roll
a six or you don't. -50. Yeah.
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430. Naturally tossed coins obey the
laws of mechanics and their flight
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431. is determined by their initial
conditions and it's been discovered
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432. that if a human is flipping them, as
opposed to a machine, and you do it
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433. thousands and thousands of times,
rather than exactly 50:50,
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434. it will actually be 51%, the one
that's upwards, in this case, heads.
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435. I bet that if you did it 100 times,
it would never come down 51:49.
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436. Never, are you saying that?
I think most people
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437. would say 100 isn't enough
for 50:50 to establish itself.
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438. It could easily be
50 heads in a row.
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439. This is true, but
what are the chances?
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440. I still can't get my head round the
notion that it's just as likely to
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441. have one, two, three, four,
five, six on the lottery
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442. and I still go,
it just wouldn't happen.
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443. But you know why, you know why?
Because it's a lottery.
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444. I mean, the clue's in
the title. It is, yeah.
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445. And, after all that, I hope you
believe me when I tell you that
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446. that's all we have time for -
our 100% guaranteed authentic
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447. winner this evening, wow, this
is so close, it's very exciting.
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448. With -16 points, it's Sean Locke.
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449. Thank you.
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450. This is a night of firsts -
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451. still as sound as a pound
with -18 is Jimmy Carr.
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452. In third place, far from last
with -21, Alan Davies!
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453. You probably think you know who
is coming last. I will tell you.
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454. In fourth place with -26,
it's Marcus Brigstocke.
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455. Thank you.
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456. So it's goodbye from Jimmy,
Marcus, Sean, Alan and myself.
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457. We hope that this show has been a
warning to you all against choosing
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458. the paths of fraud and fakery.
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459. As Groucho Marx said, "The secret of
life is honesty and fair dealing and
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460. "if you can fake that, you've
got it made." Goodnight.
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