1. Good evening, good evening,
good evening. Welcome to QI.
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2. Tonight we're all fingers and
thumbs, faces and feet and other
physical features beginning with F.
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3. And to help us, we have four
familiar fizzogs. We have Jo Brand.
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4. Dara O'Briain.
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5. Phill Jupitus.
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6. And Alan Davies.
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7. So it's f-f-fingers at the ready,
please, let's face the music
and buzz.
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8. Phill goes:
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9. Dara goes:
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10. Jo goes:
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11. And Alan goes:
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12. Now, Alan, do you enjoy fargling?
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13. Am I fargling now?
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14. No, I hope you are about to, though.
Is it a foreign word
for saying amusing things?
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15. It's an American word that's
sometimes used for a game that
involves your hands and fingers.
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16. Oh, rock, paper, scissors.
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17. Yes, paper, scissors, stone,
or rock, paper, scissors.
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18. Does anyone know, incidentally,
what is the best opening move
of paper, scissors, stone?
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19. If you say, "You go first."
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20. Very good, very good.
Is it having a real rock.
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21. That might work.
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22. I bet people do stone first.
Is stone the most common?
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23. Interestingly, people think stone
is the most common sometimes,
so they, supposedly...
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24. Do they go paper
so you go scissors...
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25. According to the New Scientist
the best tactic is to play scissors
because many people know that rock
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26. is a common opening
so they play paper.
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27. And they think you'll do rock.
Now everybody knows that,
everyone will start with scissors.
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28. Always making sure you play it
with a Saudi shoplifter.
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29. They could only do rock,
couldn't they?
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30. Yes, exactly,
avoid playing it with Abu Hamza
because then you...
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31. Abu Hamza can only do question mark.
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32. Rock, paper, quizzical expression.
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33. He can do question mark, corkscrew
and a thing for digging stones
out of horses' hooves.
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34. He's not a Swiss Army cleric.
Surely he is!
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35. OK, now,
from fingers to facial features.
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36. We are going to try a scientific
experiment now. So, you all have
a pencil in front of you, I hope.
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37. I would like Phill and Dara to put
the pencil between your teeth.
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38. That's it, thank you,
tight between your teeth. OK.
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39. Would you rather we had
a ball gag, Stephen?
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40. It all started innocently enough
with pencils, they woke up
in Dortmund four days later.
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41. And could you put your pencils in,
holding them only with your lips,
not your teeth.
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42. This reminds me of my husband.
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43. Oh, please!
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44. No, he's got a pencil like that.
Oh, has he?
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45. You may not remove them until
I say so, that's quite important.
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46. My question is this - on the face of
it, which is funnier, quack or moo?
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47. Quack. Quack, quack.
Can I take it out now?
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48. No, you can't take it now, until
I say. Because its got a K in it.
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49. Yes, is the right answer.
You know this, you're
professional comedians, most of you.
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50. Is this not a bad move
in a spoken-word comedy show?
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51. I am choosing my words
very carefully here.
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52. You've essentially disabled
the four contestants.
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53. Could somebody
please call social services?
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54. Any idea why a K is funny?
It is related to the pencils,
in a strange sort of way.
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55. Because of the shape of your face.
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56. Is the right answer. To say a K you
have to smile. It's a smiling face.
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57. Absolutely. And people think
you're going to be funny.
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58. They did an experiment with people
putting pencils in their mouth,
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59. in the way you have,
which makes you smile.
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60. It's not making me smile.
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61. You can take your pencils
out of your mouth.
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62. No. I like it! I'm keeping it in
for the rest of the show!
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63. Mr Put A Pencil In Your Mouth!
Let's see how the rest
of the series goes!
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64. Very well.
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65. You've made your bed now, Fry!
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66. According to psychologists,
words containing the letter K
are the funniest
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67. because they force you to smile.
It's called facial feedback.
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68. What else can you tell us about a
duck's quack? Do you know anything
interesting about a duck's quack?
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69. It has no echo.
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70. Ohhh!
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71. Commonly held misapprehension,
unfortunately.
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72. A man from Salford University
actually put a duck
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73. in a reverberation chamber
in order to find out if this is true
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74. because it is so prevalent a myth
but they do have an echo,
they do echo.
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75. Ducks echo.
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76. I'm going to take one
to Canterbury Cathedral.
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77. I'm just going to get
a big old duck and poke it.
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78. Just try it out myself.
Why should we believe the things
you say on this quiz?
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79. "A man took one to a chamber
and tested it."
No, let's test ourselves.
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80. I approve of your empirical zeal.
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81. Now, back to faces, what's
the ideal way to kiss a Frenchman?
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82. A French man? I don't...
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83. With their consent?
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84. Very well put!
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85. What a nice young man.
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86. I really mean just as a
greeting in the way French and
European people do. How many?
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87. Oh, yes, two in Paris, three in rural
France and in very rural France
it can be kiss, kiss, kiss, kiss.
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88. Very good, I will give you
your points there. I have it as
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89. two in central and southern France
and four in the northern country
parts, Brittany and Normandy.
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90. I found an intermediate place
where they like three.
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91. Three's true in Belgium and Holland.
Yes, you're absolutely right.
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92. And now
the snogging forecast for France.
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93. Brittany one, some saliva.
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94. Paris two, occasional tongue.
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95. Outlying areas four, some pregnancy.
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96. And five is Corsica, I suppose.
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97. Surely they don't kiss
each other five times in...
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98. Really have little to do
in Corsica, do they.
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99. Can you tell me what sort of person
kisses five times? Cors-I-can.
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100. I think you might have to go now.
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101. At least they know what it is,
I don't know what it is here.
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102. If you're unsure whether to
do one cheek or two,
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103. best way to deal with it
is to cup their genitals
while you're doing it.
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104. They won't mind how many kisses,
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105. they won't even be thinking
about it. Cup their genitals.
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106. Cup them lightly. Uttering the
words, "Carry your bag, sir?"
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107. In 1819 a German travel guide to
London said the kiss of friendship
between men is strictly avoided
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108. in Britain, as inclining towards
the sin
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109. regarded in England
as more abominable than any other.
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110. Blimey. Queue-barging, presumably.
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111. That or sodomy.
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112. They're the top two, aren't they?
Yeah, really.
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113. Particularly if there's a queue
for sodomy.
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114. Cut in, don't cut in
on the buggery line. Excuse me.
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115. Now, what does a thorny devil do
with his feet?
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116. Do any of you know
what a thorny devil might be?
Thorny devil, is it a lizard?
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117. It is a lizard, well done.
Is it that one that goes on
alternate feet, to stop the heat?
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118. It's not alone,
as a lizard, in doing that.
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119. In fact, we may even have footage
of very attractive animals
doing that very thing.
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120. Sorry, I sort of coughed and sneezed
and wet myself all at the same time.
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121. That's what that noise was.
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122. I think the fiver is mine.
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123. Can I just ask?
Because I don't know this.
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124. Is there a facility for men
to wet themselves when they cough?
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125. Does that ever happen to blokes?
Facility? Like a place you'd go?
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126. Do men wet themselves when
they cough, when they get old?
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127. No... Shit themselves?
Sometimes we...
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128. .. we do poo a little bit
when we cough. I just wondered.
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129. Sometimes you wet yourself if you
dream about going to the toilet.
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130. Dreaming about going to
the toilet you've got to try
and wake up really quickly.
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131. I don't think it was the dream
that did it, to be honest.
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132. I think he wanted to go to the toilet
and the dream just kind of
worked itself around it.
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133. I think your body decided to go,
"I'm getting rid of this"
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134. and your dream kind of went
"Let's weave it into the narrative."
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135. I was once on a boat
with Elvis Presley.
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136. Oh, this is within a dream,
oh, thank heavens for that.
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137. And I was chatting to Elvis Presley
and I said,
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138. "Excuse me I've got to go to
the toilet," and I wet the bed.
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139. Didn't he wear nappies?
In his final unhappy days
I believe he wore diapers.
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140. Oh, you wouldn't be that unhappy
in a nappy, would you?
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141. I would, actually. There was always
the moment when he was on stage
where you could tell,
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142. where he went # We'll have
a have a... BL-OOOH! Christmas...
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143. I don't know the answer.
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144. All I do know as you age, you tend
to wear pale trousers less and less
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145. so you don't reveal
the dot of shame.
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146. Anyway, it's an antipodean,
rather beautiful... Hello!
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147. Isn't he wonderful?
These do something unique?
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148. Yes, they can take in water in any
part of their body. From their
feet if they stand in a puddle.
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149. But what's impressive
is that the water doesn't
just get absorbed through the skin,
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150. it goes through grooves
and capillaries.
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151. It's drawn up all the way
to the corners of their mouth
and into the mouth.
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152. They actually drink water
from anywhere and every part of
their body has this system.
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153. They just put their hand in a pint.
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154. A thorny devil is an Australian
lizard that can drink through its
feet and any other part of its body.
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155. Now, how could I tell that Alan is
a criminal just by looking at him?
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156. A merry criminal, right.
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157. Is it the shifty eyes, pointy nose
and general sort of little pug face?
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158. Interesting.
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159. A totally unfair reading, surely.
I've never seen you happier.
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160. The happiest I've ever seen you.
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161. I bet that's been building up
for 20 years.
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162. I'm going to let this one out
on telly.
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163. One day I'm really going to tell him
what I think of him. When will that
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164. opportunity arise?
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165. Is this phrenology?
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166. In fact I have a phrenological
bust... Everyone has one.
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167. Everyone has one of these.
This is a copy of the original.
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168. In the Melbourne jail they've got
casts of Ned Kelly
and all the murderers.
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169. Absolutely. In the 19th century
not only phrenology but
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170. of the face, physiognomy, the art
of reading character through the
face, was taken terribly serious.
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171. Is it his ears, something
to do with his ears? Nose.
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172. The father of physiognomy was,
of course, one of Alan's
best friends, Aristotle.
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173. According to what he said about your
face and character, your curly hair
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174. signifies someone
who is dull of apprehension,
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175. soon angry and given
to lying and mischief.
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176. And you thought Jo was bad. Yeah.
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177. The distance between your eyebrows,
as worked out by the QI elves, is
that you are hard-hearted, envious,
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178. close and cunning, addicted
to cruelty more than love.
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179. Dara. Yes.
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180. He who has a large full forehead
and a little round withal, destitute
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181. of hair, or at least it has
little on it, is bold, malicious,
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182. high spirited, full of choler, apt
to transgress beyond bounds, and yet
of good wit and very apprehensive.
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183. You threw me a little bun there,
at the end, didn't you?
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184. You are a scum bag, scum bag,
scum bag, couple of gags,
scum bag, scum bag,
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185. Exactly, basically. Whereas Phill.
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186. He whose hair grows thick on his
temples and his brow, is by nature
simple, vain, luxurious, lustful,
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187. credulous, clownish in his speech
and conversation, and double chin
shows a peaceable disposition.
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188. Think on.
Vain, credulous, a great supplanter
and secret in all your actions.
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189. And not to mention peckish.
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190. Jo, one whose hair is of reddish
complexion is for the most part,
if not always... But it's hair dye.
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191. Proud, deceitful, detracting
venerous and full of envy. Venerous?
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192. Yes. As in venereal. Sort of.
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193. Diseased.
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194. Yes. To do with... Uh uh.
Uh uh.
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195. Anyway, there we are,
that's one of the serious answers,
phrenology is the other.
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196. This is Lorenzo Fowler's head,
it covers all these
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197. supposed emotional and various other
cognitive things and you're supposed
to feel the bumps on people.
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198. Now, largely, if indeed
not wholly discredited.
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199. Duncan, remember Duncan in Macbeth?
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200. Tell me do. There's no art to find
the mind's construction in the face.
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201. So, even then Shakespeare
knew it was nonsense.
If only Shakespeare had said
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202. something about the duck's echo...
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203. He could have saved
everybody a lot of time.
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204. It could have saved
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205. one trip to the chamber.
Take yon young duck into
the Cathedral and make it sound off.
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206. She quack couldn't.
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207. Dost every quack come
back from brother Walloff.
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208. She quacketh not. That would be doth.
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209. Doth not dost. It does annoy me
when they get that wrong.
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210. Dost you, dost he,
no, dost thou, it's not difficult.
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211. Now, how would you describe
the famous Thatcher effect?
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212. Yes, you get the country
to bend over
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213. and you give it one
until its eyes water.
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214. It was great, actually,
when she became Lady Thatcher
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215. because then she sounded like
a device for removing pubic hair.
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216. Couldn't take her
seriously after that. It's true.
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217. Absolutely, the Brazilian
Lady Thatcher. Trim those straggly
pubic hairs with the Lady Thatcher.
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218. We need a Margaret Thatcher.
Here is the Thatcher effect.
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219. Do you know what it is?
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220. I know if it's the right way up
she's too frightening
so we have to put her that way.
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221. The eyes look the same upside
down as they do the right way up.
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222. No, they only look sympathetic.
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223. Interesting point. No, what it
is, is our ability to read faces.
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224. Some people in the audience
or at home may have noticed
on one of those pictures
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225. two of the major features of
the face are actually inverted
in her upside down picture.
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226. So, if we were to turn
them round now you'd see
what you were looking at was that.
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227. Burn the witch!
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228. This was Peter Thompson of the
University of York, he discovered
that when it's the right side up
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229. we'd instantly see which items
are upside down but when it's then
turned upside down itself...
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230. I'm racking my brains to think of any
kind of application, short of you are
in the middle of a soixante neuf,
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231. and you turn and go,
oh, God, you're hideous.
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232. You looked fine when we started.
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233. This is ridiculous.
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234. The application is hard
to say but as you know
these things sometimes emerge
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235. and here, for example, is Alan.
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236. Turn it upside down, please, now.
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237. You never would have guessed, would
you? That's astounding, isn't it?
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238. That's a face you don't want
to see after a 69, isn't it?
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239. It's a real real worry. Um...
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240. Facial recognition is indeed
a natural human instinct.
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241. We see faces everywhere,
in cloud formations and so on.
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242. Here are some little examples.
Perhaps you can tell me what
you think the faces are.
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243. They are always, by the way,
Jesus or Mary. That's right.
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244. The middle one is the Virgin
Mary in a piece of toast.
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245. Most people see Marlene Dietrich
in the middle one.
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246. If you look closely I think it
does look like Marlene. On the left.
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247. The moon. It's actually Mars.
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248. And people will say, yes,
the Madonna and on the right...
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249. Jesus.
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250. You can only say Jesus like that
when you say the Baby before,
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251. Baby Jesus.
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252. Baby Jesus.
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253. But the Thatcher effect
makes it difficult
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254. for one to detect inverted
features in an upside down face.
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255. Now let's put our best
foot forward into the
final furlong of general ignorance.
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256. So, be careful not to put
your foot in it, put your
fingers on the mushroomoids.
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257. And, what can you tell about
a man from the size of his feet?
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258. The size of his shoes.
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259. Oddly enough, not. That's not just
because we thought people would say
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260. that, it's generally not true, most
people wear the wrong size shoes.
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261. I know it sounds bizarre but
apparently that's true because
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262. they are unaware of how their feet
change... . Size of his cock.
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263. I'm sure that is true
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264. because I have size 13 feet
but it isn't,
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265. apparently, true in all cases.
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266. Apparently, the size
of your hands is
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267. in proportion to your feet size,
though there are many other views.
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268. One is that your foot size is the
same from the point of your elbow
to your arm, it's exactly that.
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269. So why do people think that your
cock's to do with your foot size?
It was a rumour started by clowns.
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270. You know what they say,
big shoes, big penis.
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271. As they come in, oh, baby...
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272. Oh, dear.
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273. What do we measure feet in?
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274. In Britain,
the one, two, three what is that?
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275. We measure them in a little slidey
thing. Yes, but what is the unit?
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276. A fraction of the slidey thing.
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277. It's called a barleycorn,
a third of an inch. Barleycorn.
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278. A barleycorn, each one, so if you're
a size 12 you are a barleycorn
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279. bigger than size 11 or two
barleycorns bigger than a size ten.
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280. Why don't they tell you that
down the shoe shop? They probably
are not aware of that.
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281. If I go into Dolcis tomorrow and go
"Good vendor of shoes,
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282. "how many barleycorns am I this
fine day?" and then I
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283. point my foot at them,
I'm going to get short-changed.
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284. I have size 13 feet as well which is
a plague because most shoe production
goes up to 11, possibly 12.
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285. So every time I go in and say,
"Do you have them in a size 13?"
I get a speech
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286. where they go "You might
find it difficult to find
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287. "shoes in that size". Do you look at
them and go, "Really? Because this is
the first day I've had size 13 feet"?
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288. I got them as a birthday present.
I was size nine
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289. and then I played poker with
the witch and it all went
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290. hideously wrong and now I've got
these things but thank you,
thank you for setting me straight.
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291. Do they not go, "Good sir, you're
a barleycorn too far for this shop,
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292. "I'll wager!
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293. "Onwards to Big Ron's Freak Foot
outlet,
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294. "where the clowns buy their shoes."
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295. "Come in, you're welcome here,
titchy feet!"
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296. Behave yourselves. Now, good, shoes.
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297. How many muscles are there
in your fingers?
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298. One if you play your cards right.
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299. I cannot look at you.
Oh, you dreadful boy.
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300. I'm not going to pay any attention
to you now. I've put the pencil in.
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301. Oh, Lord bless you.
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302. None.
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303. None is the right answer,
thank you. There are no
muscles in your fingers.
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304. Only tendons, the muscles
are in the hand and
forearm that control your fingers.
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305. If you do a sort of spidery thing
and then pull in your middle finger,
do that.
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306. Now, lift your thumb, tap it up.
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307. Tap your little finger,
tap your index finger.
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308. Now tap your ring finger.
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309. You can't move it all.
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310. It has no muscle
but it has a shared tendon
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311. with the middle finger so it can't
even move at all. That hurt there.
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312. Yes, it's weird, isn't it? There you
have a picture of musculature of
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313. the hand and arm and there are
no muscles in the fingers.
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314. And lastly now, which is
easier, smiling or frowning?
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315. Oh, smiling uses
less muscles than frowning.
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316. Oh, dear no, in fact
exactly the opposite is true.
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317. It's the kind of thing people say
in a banal manner to a shopkeeper,
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318. you less muscles to smile...
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319. I'm glad that's not true, because
it's the most annoying thing that
probably anyone's ever said.
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320. Exactly. It costs nothing.
You use 12 muscles
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321. to smile and only 11 to frown
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322. as it happens. How about this?
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323. You look like
that photo of yourself earlier.
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324. I'm using 23 muscles.
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325. It's still 23.
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326. I don't like it when you're thinking
about something, you might be
a bit pensive, you might be lost
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327. and someone you don't know comes up
to you and goes, "Cheer up!"
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328. So, who will be smiling
when the scores are revealed?
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329. Let's have a look at them.
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330. In first place
with -24 it's Phill Jupitus.
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331. In second place
with -26, it's Jo Brand.
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332. In third place
with -28 - Dara O'Briain.
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333. Which means
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334. the scissors crushed by
the stone tonight
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335. with -42 - Alan Davies!
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336. Anyway, it's thanks to Phill, Dara,
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337. Jo and Alan and I leave you
with this face saving story.
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338. Abraham Lincoln was once accused
of being two-faced and he replied,
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339. "If I were two-faced, do you
think I'd be wearing this one?"
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340. Thank you and good night.
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