1. Hello! Good evening,
good evening, good evening.
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2. And welcome to QI, where tonight
we are victims of fashion
and prey to every passing fad.
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3. Sashaying up the catwalk this
evening are the daringly see-through
Clive Anderson!
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4. The beautifully cut Rich Hall!
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5. The topless and strapless
Reginald D Hunter!
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6. And an old pair of corduroys
we found in the potting shed -
Alan Davies!
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7. Of course, fashion is - ha-ha! -
something that goes in one year
and out the other. Ha!
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8. Our buzzers tonight are about as
fashionable as a sabre-toothed tiger
wearing flares. Clive goes...
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9. Rich goes...
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10. I can't complain!
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11. And Alan goes...
♪ He looks a proper nana
in his great big hobnail boots
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12. Your challenge tonight, gentlemen,
is to start a trend,
as it's fashion week on QI.
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13. After six years' struggle, this show
has never managed to instigate
any kind of a catchphrase.
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14. We think it's time we changed that,
so you have in front of you
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15. a list of 19th-century catchphrases,
as it is QI. You can use
one of those, if you like.
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16. They are genuine 19th-century
catchphrases. Has your mother sold
her mangle? Say that again.
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17. Has your mother sold her mangle?
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18. That was a genuine catchphrase.
Who are you? Ah!
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19. That's your catchphrase. It is.
This was one of the biggest.
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20. I thought it would be a nice easy
catchphrase. "Who are you?"
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21. Has your mother sold her mangle?
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22. It was used on all circumstances.
If you caught someone picking your
pocket, you'd go, "Who are you?"
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23. Let's turn to our American friends.
Are catchphrases a big thing there?
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24. My grandfather used to say, "You're
dumber than a bag of wet mice."
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25. Very good. It was funny
the first time I heard it,
but not my whole life.
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26. I don't see anything on the list,
but I have one.
Do what you do best.
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27. I was back home recently
and I visited my cousin. He's got
4 or 5 kids, that we know of.
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28. And we were watching TV and a woman
was talking about the right to have
children without a man,
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29. they don't need men around.
Just sire a child and leave.
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30. I looked at him and said,
"Get to DC and do what you do best."
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31. Excellent. So we've got,
"Do what you do best",
"Dumber than a bag of wet mice"...
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32. Has your mother sold her mangle?
I'm losing enthusiasm for it.
And...?
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33. Who are you? If you can work these
intelligently, charmingly
and brilliantly into the show,
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34. I will be awarding bonuses.
You're asking for it. Let's start.
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35. What was
the most disastrous haircut ever?
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36. Some examples for you there.
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37. I've got two answers.
One is my last haircut. No?
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38. Or Samson's haircut. That's
a very good answer, actually.
That's me! Yes!
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39. You've just noticed.
You must remember posing for these.
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40. I remember the one in the middle.
The other two I have no memory of.
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41. I know for a fact
that in 1928 the New England
Tool and Dye Manufacturing Company
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42. was looking for a new screw that
wouldn't slip out of the notch
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43. and a man named Phillips worked
for them, who had one of the most
disastrous haircuts ever.
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44. It was parted in four sections.
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45. That would be a disaster
that went good.
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46. There are many candidates, but do
you know anything about Louis VII?
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47. There he is on the left.
13th century.
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48. His queen became queen
of a more famous king to us.
Aquitaine.
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49. She was Eleanor of Aquitaine.
The point is that Louis VII
was very religious
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50. and the monks got to him
and he cut that hair off
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51. and she was furious at him. So cross
that eventually she divorced him.
There were other things, too,
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52. but the hair is mentioned...
He also cut his cock off.
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53. Maybe! His mother may have...
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54. Has your mother sold her mangle?
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55. Maybe it happened! "I divorce you!"
But the consequences were enormous.
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56. She was incredibly rich, she took
her kingdoms with her, married Henry
II and they began the 100 Years War.
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57. So it's the haircut
that began a 100 Years War.
That's just in polite company.
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58. You say, "I didn't like what he did
with his hair so I left."
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59. You can't say,
"The king keeps farting in bed."
"I just don't like his haircut!"
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60. What is interesting
about this poor king is
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61. he definitely wouldn't have had
sexual relations with Eleanor's
mother because he was very abstinent
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62. and he became ill. The courtiers
suggested it was because he hadn't
had sex. He had the queen sent for
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63. and they said, "No, she's too far
away. If you don't have sex
immediately, you will die."
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64. Genuinely being told
he had to have sex or die,
he said he would rather die chaste.
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65. That leads you to believe he had
a bad sexual experience as a child.
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66. Yes... Most men would rather not
face death than have sex.
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67. So something happened when he was
a kid, maybe a teenager,
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68. maybe his wee-wee got caught
in the zipper
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69. or the mangle or... Hey!
Yes, the mangle.
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70. Or he said, "I'm not ready for this.
Just let me lick your elbow."
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71. And the woman said,
"Do what you do best." And...
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72. Very good.
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73. The Simpsons make a reference
to the 100 Years War.
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74. Do you know what they call it? No.
Operation Speedy Resolution.
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75. Anyway, we've all had bad hair days,
but that one takes some beating.
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76. Louis VII's haircut seems to have
been a bit of a faux pas.
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77. Many faux pas are just
Freudian slits... slips!
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78. But what outrageous item of clothing
got the Duke of Wellington
thrown out of the club?
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79. Yes? I'm going to suggest
he wore his Wellington boots...
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80. I was about to say
how fantastic a career he had.
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81. Not only was he a great general,
winning one of the most important
battle of all time,
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82. plus he was Prime Minister and he had
Wellington boots named after him.
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83. He showed up at this situation
that was supposed to be all formal,
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84. but he came in and he said,
"Look at this wonderful dish I made
with beef." It was inappropriate
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85. to introduce your cooking
at a social occasion like that.
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86. His wife tried to say, "Don't do it.
Invite some people back.
We can eat, have a smoke
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87. "and it'll all be good." But he was
like, "No, this is good food!"
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88. And people were like, "We're
just drinking here. He's a general.
He should know better."
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89. This is what I believe happened.
You reminded us of another thing.
Not just the boots and the battle,
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90. but the beef in pastry. Putting
pastry pointlessly around beef.
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91. Actually, this happens to be
just about my favourite club.
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92. If I could get in a time machine and
go anywhere, this is a place I'd go.
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93. Almack's. It was THE club that
determined if you were in society,
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94. run by these fierce women.
It didn't matter who you were.
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95. If you didn't get a voucher
from them, you couldn't enter.
Something Wellington turned up in?
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96. What must a properly-attired
gentleman in the evening wear?
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97. A hat! What would he have down here?
Hot pants.
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98. Close! In as much as...
Britches! Knee britches.
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99. Knee britches. And Wellington
wore... Trousers! Trousers.
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100. A ra-ra skirt. He wore trousers.
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101. So he said, "I won the Peninsula War!
I can come in any trousers I like!"
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102. Or did they make him roll them up?
That's my catchphrase -
I can come in any trousers I like!
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103. Sorry. I do apologise.
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104. I sure enjoyed that long, winding
story so we could get to that.
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105. The trouser was considered shocking
and not to be worn in smart society.
Breeches of etiquette.
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106. Exactly!
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107. That's good. I bet when they told
him he looked at them and went,
"Pants to you!"
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108. The Duke of Wellington was thrown
out of a club for wearing trousers.
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109. What's the best way of dealing with
a wartime shortage of trousering?
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110. Wow.
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111. That's just a serving suggestion.
They'd run out of trousers?
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112. In the war there was a shortage of
material. How did they deal with it?
Put them in trenches!
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113. Try to use less cloth in each
trouser. Yes. One-legged trousers.
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114. In Scotland you'd wear kilts.
Or take them off dead guys -
I mean the enemy.
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115. No, the first thing was
they banned... Pleats? Turn ups.
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116. Turn ups? That saves about an inch!
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117. Out of a million,
that's a lot.
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118. If a tailor sold someone extra long
trousers, longer than they needed,
knowingly really,
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119. the tailor would go to prison.
What about older gentlemen who
pull their trousers right up here?
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120. Yes, they do! Up to the nipples.
Now first of all,
what's going on there?
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121. Why don't they stop somewhere
on the way?
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122. No pleasure in life left
except to give themselves a wedgie.
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123. Why don't they pull the trousers
right up to under their eyes?
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124. Then they would save on shirtings.
And they could have
a really long fly, like that.
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125. You must have an enormous fly,
about two feet long.
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126. By the time you've undone it, you've
forgotten why. You get there... Oh!
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127. "Nurse!
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128. Also, boys under 12 couldn't have
long trousers. It had to be shorts.
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129. Women couldn't wear stockings,
so what did they do? Draw a seam.
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130. On the back of their leg.
They felt bare legs
made them look available. What?
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131. I don't know if boys in the shorts
thought the same.
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132. They stained their legs to make them
look tanned, with gravy browning,
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133. then they'd draw a line down the
back to look like a seam on nylons.
It seems crazy, but...
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134. Why didn't soldiers
draw pictures of trousers on them?
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135. Exactly!
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136. I'm in pinstripes.
All kinds of things.
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137. Anyway, during World War Two
it became acceptable
for women to wear trousers,
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138. but boys wore shorts.
All very good form, no doubt,
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139. but here is the most interesting
form I have played with.
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140. This item here is
a very extraordinary item.
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141. It's the only mono-monostatic item
in the world.
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142. It's self righting. Whichever way
you put it, it will always
right itself, like this.
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143. What about Weebles?
Yeah, it's like a Weeble.
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144. There's a glass one here,
to show that it's not weighted
in any way.
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145. More extraordinary than it looks.
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146. When you get the hang of it,
it always ends up like this.
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147. Be careful with it.
It's so, well...
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148. We're very honoured
because we actually...
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149. We actually have... Have you
dropped it? You haven't.
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150. Have you put it under your hat?
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151. Lift your hat. You're cunning!
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152. I thought it was that Kingdom there
for a minute.
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153. You were way ahead of me.
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154. Oy!
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155. We have Gabor Domokos,
the inventor, here with us. Gabor?
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156. Good evening. Good to see you. He's
from Hungary. He and his colleague,
Peter Varkonyi, invented this.
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157. Can you explain what it is?
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158. Well, this is like a Weeble
without the weight.
It IS like a Weeble!
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159. You get a point.
It's just the shape. Yeah.
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160. But you have to get it right.
The tolerance of the shape is
about 1/100th of a millimetre.
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161. If these edges here
were 1/100th of a millimetre out,
it wouldn't right itself?
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162. It wouldn't. You could keep it
in one position? Correct.
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163. Gabor, have you thought
of making salt and pepper shakers?
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164. That's a brilliant idea, Gabor.
Then you might make some money
off of it. Yeah! Dragons' Den!
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165. Come on!
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166. Actually, you are mathematicians,
yeah? Engineers. Engineers.
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167. And how did you come to build it?
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168. What gave you the idea?
First it was a question for a
mathematician. We thought about it.
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169. Then we thought we should build it.
But after we built it
we realised it's already there.
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170. In what way is it already there?
Well, some turtles seem
to have similar shapes.
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171. So evolution got there first.
A couple of million years earlier.
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172. So do you feel
like you've wasted your life?
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173. You so have not!
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174. Gabor, thank you for coming
all the way to explain it.
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175. It's called... a Gomboc.
Or a "Goom-book". Does it have
practical applications?
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176. I don't think it does. That's what's
so beautiful. Isn't the Rubik's Cube
Hungarian? Yes. And the Biro.
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177. Laszlo Biro. Absolutely.
My grandfather was a Hungarian Jew.
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178. He said, "A Hungarian is the only
man who could follow you into a
revolving door and come out first."
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179. So it's the Gomboc. The world's
first mono-monostatic shape.
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180. It isn't weighted in any way,
but it will always turn itself up
the right way.
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181. I'm not a great follower
of fashion... Oh, Stephen!
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182. Something of an old fossil,
as it happens, but...
what would you say if I told you
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183. that this was the first fossil
ever identified?
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184. Ah, well. Is it?
I'd say, "Is it?"
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185. Thank you for not saying,
"Bollocks!"
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186. It does look like a handsome pair
of human plums, but it isn't.
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187. Robert Plot, first keeper
of the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford,
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188. he recognised it to be a thigh bone,
but it's huge.
You can't quite tell its scale.
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189. He assumed it was the thigh bone
of a Roman elephant or giant humans.
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190. But he also recognised its shape
and called it scrotum humanum
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191. because that's what it looks like,
to be honest.
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192. But it turned out to be
a megalosaur. There's a real one.
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193. Shame they're not still about.
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194. It is, isn't it? Up and down the M1.
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195. It's very hard to get a grip
on how old life on Earth is,
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196. but if life on Earth began
on January 1st and we are now
the end of the year,
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197. when did the dinosaurs appear?
Hang on... Tuesday.
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198. No! Dinosaurs were
200 million years ago.
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199. About... mid-November. Not bad.
A little later - December 5th.
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200. That's not bad.
So do we come at five to midnight
on December 31st or something?
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201. A few minutes before midnight.
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202. They became extinct
on December 24th, Christmas Eve.
Aww! December 5th to 24th.
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203. If they became extinct
on December 24th... Yeah.
.. the human race has about six days
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204. before the clocks go back
or something? Here's a year.
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205. And that year represents
the totality of time of life
on Earth. That's the beginning.
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206. And this is now.
Assuming that time is linear.
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207. Thank you!
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208. So... let's suppose
that it's a long pair of trousers,
time.
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209. Man appeared at the top
of the fly... Open your trousers
and a dinosaur comes out.
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210. That's sort of what happens,
isn't it? Oddly enough, saurus was
Ancient Greek slang for penis.
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211. Saurus means lizard.
Your lizard. Your knob.
Just thought you'd like to know.
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212. Why thesaurus, then? Is that Latin?
That's a different word.
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213. It means a treasure house,
a repository. In this case of words.
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214. You might refer to your backside
as a thesaurus.
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215. I'd like to think my bottom is
a treasure house, yes. Thank you.
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216. Right. Em...
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217. "My bottom is a treasure house,"
is a really good catchphrase.
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218. I'll be billed as Stephen
"My bottom is a treasure house" Fry.
I think I can go with that.
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219. And so we arrive, fashionable late,
at the bring a bottle staircase
party of General Ignorance.
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220. Fingers on buzzers, please.
What rhymes with month?
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221. Dunth. This word is probably not
known to you. It's Sikhism...
Sikhism does not rhyme with month!
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222. I'm taking you into the world of
Sikhism. What the Koran is to the
Islamic faith, this is to the Sikhs.
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223. It's their text, and it's called
the Granth. Oh! There, you see?
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224. I did every bloody letter
except Gunth! We should know that.
It's not that obscure. No.
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225. So loads of Sikhs watching
this programme will be screaming...
"Gunth! Gunth! You idiots!"
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226. No, it's Granth. Granth.
There are words that supposedly
don't have rhymes, like month.
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227. There you are. The holy text
of Sikhism is the Guru Granth Sahib.
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228. Which city has
the most Michelin stars?
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229. Paris.
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230. Oh, sorry!
That doesn't count cos I said Paris
before I hit the bell.
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231. I get a free guess.
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232. Hey, I'm black. Oh!
Don't you try that!
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233. I know for a fact it ain't London.
New York?
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234. Wait a minute...
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235. Canada? London?
Who said London? Alan said that?
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236. I didn't say London! You did! Sorry.
Rich said London.
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237. I didn't say anything.
And frankly you should be glad.
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238. You said London.
I would NEVER say London.
I said definitely not London.
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239. No, I did. I did!
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240. I will believe you.
I will believe you.
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241. Let me tell you why I said that.
I'm not just trying to offend
London. The UK in general.
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242. But I feel that any country that can
produce Marmite started late
in trying to make food taste good.
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243. Um... This from a country
that has spray-on cheese.
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244. You're right. It isn't Britain.
Man, you can't cut me off!
Give me a chance to insult you back.
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245. Marmite tastes like there's a naked
man with hairy legs in your kitchen,
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246. and every now and again
you take a plate with toast and walk
under his butt and go, "OK, Fred!
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247. "Do what you do best!"
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248. Very good.
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249. The place that has the most
Michelin stars... Germany! Holland!
..is Tokyo. Tokyo is the answer.
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250. I should have thought of that.
It went straight to number one.
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251. It was only put in in 2007
and leapt ahead with 150 stars,
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252. which is two more
than London and Paris combined.
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253. If you put spray-on cheese
on top of Marmite, you still got
something that tastes BLEEP.
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254. All I want to say. Take your
favourite food and put Marmite
on it, it's BLEEP.
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255. Moving on swiftly, Tokyo has twice
as many as Paris and three times
as many as New York.
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256. What colour is a nicotine stain?
Yellowy-brown...
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257. Yellowy-brown, eh? Not yellow.
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258. You're going to tell us
that the stain comes from the tar.
Nicotine is green or something.
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259. Nicotine has no... Stain at all.
Colourless. It just kills you
quietly on its own.
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260. Colourless, odourless, invisible,
untraceable. A brilliant poison.
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261. Do you know why it's called
nicotine? "Nick O'Tine. One puff
and your mine!" I remember that!
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262. He was the Irish cigarette devil.
Why is it called nicotine?
It's a French word.
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263. Nicot was the Walter Raleigh
of France. Ah, Nicot. N-I-C-O-T.
I sure didn't know that.
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264. Now you do.
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265. Which dictator definitely
only had one ball?
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266. I'm not going to give my points away
on that.
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267. I know that was made up
about the one we mustn't say.
We want another dictator.
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268. It wasn't Adolf Hitler. Pol Pot.
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269. Stalin.
haven't you got Stalin? Oh, yeah.
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270. Ceausescu? Chairman Mao?
Chairman Mao is the right answer.
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271. He'd only got one ball? Yeah.
He was proud of it.
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272. Monorchism it's called. One orchid.
Only one flower display. Orchid has
the same root as testicle.
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273. Whose testimony...? Another word.
His doctor. Dr Li Zhisui.
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274. In his memoirs, he describes
how Mao had an undescended testicle
and was infertile.
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275. He had venereal disease from
the '50s and, in the '60s, herpes.
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276. He never brushed his teeth.
He rinsed his mouth with tea.
So his teeth were green.
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277. He also slept on a wooden bed
and used a bed pan.
That's just convenient.
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278. Hitler's reputation
for being uniglobular is, em...
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279. It has no justification at all.
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280. And that, ladies and gentlemen,
brings us to the scores.
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281. First, after a fashion,
with a plus score...
four points, Rich Hall!
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282. In second place, with minus five,
only slightly passe -
Clive Anderson!
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283. And doing what he did well
with minus six, Reg D Hunter,
ladies and gentlemen.
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284. And positively paleontological
in his outmodedness,
it is tonight's living fossil,
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285. on minus 35, Alan Davies!
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286. Thank you.
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287. And so it's good night from Rich,
Reg, Clive, Alan and me. We leave
with this thought from Oscar Wilde.
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288. "Fashion is a form of ugliness
so intolerable that we have to
alter it every six months."
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289. My name is Stephen "My bottom is
a treasure house" Fry. Good night.
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