Kitsch QI XL


Kitsch

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APPLAUSE

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Goo-oo-oo-ood evening, good evening, good evening, good evening,

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good evening, good evening, good evening,

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and welcome to the Quite Interesting world of Kitsch,

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where tonight everything is in the worst possible taste.

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Let's meet those '70s icons,

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the girl off the Athena tennis poster, Sue Perkins.

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APPLAUSE

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And complete with medallion and chest wig, it's Reginald D Hunter.

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APPLAUSE

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Our man on the water bed in black satin pyjamas, Jimmy Carr.

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That is a troubling image.

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And not really giving a flying duck, Alan Davies.

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Thank you very much.

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CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

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Now, if you want to avail yourself of my avocado bathroom en-suite

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with all the trimmings, all you have to do is call.

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-Sue goes...

-DING-DONG!

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-Reginald goes...

-THEME FROM "THE STING"

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-Jimmy goes...

-CAR HOOTER

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-Brilliant.

-And Alan goes...

-QUACK QUACK

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There we are.

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So, here's a load of old tat that includes

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everything but the kitsch sink.

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Have a look.

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A flowery chair.

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A cute balloon.

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A Tiffany lamp

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and a donkey cigarette dispenser.

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Now, which is kitsch?

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See, I don't know where kitsch becomes tacky,

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there's a sort of hinterland, isn't there?

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Hmm. We're going, unusually for QI, by dictionary definition.

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It's a quality, something that a kitsch thing must have

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-in order to be kitsch.

-Ubiquity?

-No.

-Popular?

-Ordinary?

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Ordinary. Worthless.

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-Yes.

-Worthless.

-It would be that chair, wouldn't it?

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Well, the Tiffany lamps, I saw a Tiffany lamp in a store,

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in the Kings Road, and I thought, "Oh, it's kind of

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"a kitschy kind of thing, but it's all right."

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And it was like 80 grand or something ludicrous.

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-Oh, yes.

-So you bought it.

-They sold a very...

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-So I bought three.

-Yes, quite.

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There was one from the 1890s that was sold for 2.8 million.

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They are far from worthless, the originals.

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But as you know, there are many imitations, which would,

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I suppose, count as kitsch, because essentially

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it's a stained-glass Art Nouveau lamp, with a bronze fitting.

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2.8 million and then you can just very easily knock it over,

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-can't you?

-That would be...

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Just come in pissed and you'd knock it over.

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But that's true of Ming china, I suppose, as well.

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So what about the balloon animal, is that...?

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Is that not the one, that's not a balloon animal, is it?

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That is... What's the guy called?

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-The American artist.

-The Pop Art guy.

-Yes.

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The guy who makes...who was dating La Cicciolina, Jeff Koons, is it?

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Jeff Koons is the right answer,

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and his work goes for a huge amount of money, vast.

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I mean, one of his pieces went for 38 million.

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-It really did look like a dog.

-STEPHEN LAUGHS

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Yes, he does balloon animals. That is a balloon animal, as you can see.

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Also, he has three Michael Jackson and Bubbles porcelain figures,

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which sold for 5.6 million,

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and he just does stuff that is kitsch in every sense,

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-but the worthless sense.

-But wasn't Warhol doing the same thing

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with, you know, pictures of Elvis and Marilyn?

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Yes, they're not really so much kitsch, as kind of... I don't know.

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-They raise the everyday to...

-Yeah, re-appropriation of everyday culture.

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Exactly right. Kitsch somehow implies something more ornamental,

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more "tchotchke", as they would say in Yiddish.

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It's no use just using another word I don't know!

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-LAUGHTER That's not helping anyone!

-No!

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"It's a bit more tchotchke!" "Oh, right, now I get ya!"

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"It IS a bit more tchotchke, now you say it!"

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Well, we'll have one more from our little conveyor belt

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and that's a chintz armchair.

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Chintz has become somewhat unfashionable,

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but when it first arrived from - do you know where it first came from?

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Bournemouth.

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-LAUGHTER

-Originally... I think it comes from John Lewis.

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Let's move a little bit away.

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-China.

-India is the answer.

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-Oh.

-It arrived as early as the 1680s in Europe,

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and was so successful and so remarkably popular

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that, in the court of Versailles, Louis declared

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that it should be illegal everywhere, except in his court,

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because it was ruining the French textile industry.

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And the same happened in Britain in 1720 - all chintz was banned

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because our own weavers were going out of business,

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because it was considered such a luxury item.

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I'm just getting a lot of retinal feedback from it. It's...

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Yes, the word chintzy is not a compliment these days.

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Here's a really... I'll be so impressed, I'll give you 50 points

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-if you can tell me something really unusual...

-OK.

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..about the word chintz it shares with

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-only two other words in the English language, as far as I know.

-Oh, OK!

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-Is it to do with the Scrabble score?

-No!

-Is it...?

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-It'll be something to do with the Z.

-Not exactly.

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They're all six letter words.

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Almost, chintz and biopsy.

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Do all the letters of the alphabet appear in those words in order?

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Not ALL the letters of the alphabet, no!

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LAUGHTER I mean, I'm not...

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-I'm not up on spelling!

-The letters are in order.

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-The letters are in alphabetical order!

-Well, I kind of got that!

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You kind of did, yes, you said ALL the letters of the alphabet!

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-LAUGHTER

-All 26!

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All right, knock off a few of them!

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-I got 20 more...

-But it's amazing how rare that is -

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biopsy, almost and chintz are in alphabetical order.

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Um, if you know of any more, please DON'T write in.

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LAUGHTER

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You try and you think of a couple of words, you know, you think, er...

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Horse? No.

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LAUGHTER

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-Dog? No.

-It does rather come off to...

-SUE: Almond? No.

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JIMMY: Do you know what the issue with that is?

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-And then, you give up!

-Yes!

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Basically, you could say to anyone, "Oh, yeah, armadillo as well

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"is the other one." People never bother working these things out.

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If you say it's an anagram, people never sit down and do it.

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No, but I just have, and that isn't.

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SUE: Yeah, that isn't right. LAUGHTER

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It's got an A in the middle!

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All right.

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LAUGHTER

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-The A was the only give away there!

-It really was a bit of a giveaway

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So there's a chintz chair. And finally we had on our conveyor belt,

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this lovely object here.

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-Oh, my God, you're so lucky!

-Oh, I want that!

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You put...yeah, out comes a cigarette.

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-Wouldn't want to smoke it, though.

-It poos a cigarette.

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I think, instead of going,

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"Oh, we're going to get rid of all cigarette advertising,"

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-I think they should say they all come out of donkeys' arses.

-Yes.

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This would be kitsch, because it's worthless.

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Well, it's £6.

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And it's pretty kitsch, to be honest, isn't it?

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I like it. I'll buy it for a fiver.

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-It's yours.

-Oh, you are a darling.

-There, yours to cut out and keep.

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-Hello!

-Isn't anything coming out there?

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Get off! He's just prolapsed.

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You've prolapsed my donkey!

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-Did you just finger her ass?

-Yes.

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I literally did.

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APPLAUSE

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Well, you're not to.

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Yeah. I'm putting that away from your roaming anal fingers.

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-Excellent. So, now...

-ALAN: Er, so...

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-QUACK QUACK

-Yeah?

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Fry's in alphabetical order.

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LAUGHTER

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APPLAUSE AND CHEERING

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The important thing is... There are lots of words in alphabetical order!

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-The important thing - it has to be six letters.

-SUE: So is ant!

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That's what's so hard about it.

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So, let's look at some things that may or may not be kitsch,

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like the fluffy dice.

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I like the way we can go from like heavy, you know,

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obscure depthful meaning words to donkeys' ass-holes in the same...

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That's what we like to think of as the QI difference.

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-Uh-huh. Range.

-Fluffy dice. Is there a word for that?

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-Tacky is the word I would probably use. Is that wrong of me?

-Yeah.

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But they're used ironically now, aren't they?

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That's what's so interesting.

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When they first came out, it would have been a tacky thing to have

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in your Cortina in the late '70s, and now it's an ironic thing.

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Ditto those things behind me that are also on the screen, lava lamps.

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-Yeah.

-And those...

-I've got a lava lamp.

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-Have you?

-Yeah.

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Excellent. And the word one tends to use of that is?

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Arsehole?

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LAUGHTER

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-Hippy.

-I was going to suggest retro.

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Oh, sorry.

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-QUACK QUACK Retro.

-Yeah.

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-So, have you got any of these, Reg?

-Any of...no.

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In fact, I can say safely that I've never had any of those things.

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Not one? No gnomes in your garden?

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-No, man!

-Are they kitsch, or just...?

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-They're again, postmodern ironic now, aren't they?

-Yes, they are.

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Gnomes seem to suggests something,

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and I don't know what they suggest, but I know for years

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when people see gnomes, they go, "Oh, you've got a gnome."

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you're like, "What does that mean?"

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"Oh, man, ha-ha-ha!" And you don't know what that means.

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Do Americans have gnomes in their gardens?

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-I mean the fake ones, right?

-Yes. Yeah, obviously.

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-SUE:

-We've all got a real one.

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I don't know whether,

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because sometimes you see them and you don't know if it's like

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-an Irish offshoot of something, or...

-Yes.

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On the end there, that doll with the, er...

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Do you know what that is?

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Well, my aunt had one and it was supposed to obscure the fact

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that you are a person who owns toilet paper?

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That's it, explained, well done. It is indeed.

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-You're not that type of person.

-No, I don't.

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I don't have a bottom and I don't push things out of it every day

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and therefore I would have no need

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for any sort of paper to wipe that residue.

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The donkey shit pusher would have been horrified.

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So kitsch is really in the eye of the beholder.

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Now, why should you worry about a man in fluffy slippers?

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I think I wouldn't have any problem with his fluffy slippers,

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-it's more the dressing gown I would have issues with.

-Yeah.

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It's supposed to be a giraffe dressing gown.

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-I don't want to know where the neck is.

-Well...

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As ever, we've given you a picture that is completely inappropriate.

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And if I told you the slippers in question were made of human blood,

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-the blood of a young man's arm...

-I'm worried now!

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..and of emu feathers?

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-There's no way to know that off a first glance! No way?

-No.

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-So now, where do emus live?

-ALAN:

-Australia.

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-Yeah, he just took the words out of your mouth.

-Well, he did.

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Certain indigenous Australian peoples...

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-Aborigines, I'm going to say?

-Yeah, in their belief systems,

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if someone committed a crime,

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then they had a figure called a kurdaitcha,

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who wore these slippers and, in order to wear the slippers,

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which is quite tricky, he had to dislocate his small toes.

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That was part of the thing -

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the little hole for the small toe to poke out of, um,

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and he would find the perpetrator of this crime,

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whatever it might be, and he would point a bone at him

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and the perpetrator of the crime would freeze and then die,

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presumably through psychosomatic or a sort of, you know, just because

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he was so terrified that the taboo was real that he did die.

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You would've thought, if someone is coming after you to kill you,

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-with toes dislocated, you could get away.

-Yes!

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-Well...

-There's one great advantage they're giving you.

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Couldn't they just have made wider slippers?

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I mean, so that you could fit all of the toes in without having

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-to dislocate and then stick the weird gnarly one at you.

-I agree,

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the dislocation is an odd part of it, but when you think about it,

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in order for us to pass judgment on people,

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we have to put something made of horsehair on our head.

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I mean, we have our own tribal ways of dealing with injustice.

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-Are those boomerangs there in their hands?

-Um...

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They're probably kylies, yes.

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-Do you know the boomerang joke?

-Go on, then.

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It'll come back to you.

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Ow!

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LAUGHTER

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I walked into that one!

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-Oh, dear!

-It sounds a little bit like, you know,

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bringing someone in for questioning and then to, like, intimidate them,

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you start torturing yourself in front of them, like, "Ah!

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"How do you like that? Now, tell me where your momma at! Ah!"

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That would freak someone out, you're right!

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-But I don't know if they'd tell you the truth.

-"I'd rather not talk!"

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What was that one we had where you put your shoes on back to front

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and then...people can't find you?

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LAUGHTER

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The invisibility shoes or the shoes where...?

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-You turned them around.

-Well, that would sort of work.

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-And then, you walk along and...

-People walk the opposite direction?

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-JIMMY: Difficult to put on backwards.

-Quite difficult.

-Lose some toes!

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-Special shoes!

-There's another kind of special shoe - the cow shoe.

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-Who do you think might use the cow shoe?

-A cow.

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-Well...

-LAUGHTER

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They already have cow's feet, they don't need to pretend to be cows.

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I want to be a cow! Or a horse!

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No! Humans wore them, but they gave out cow footprints.

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SUE: Oh, like...? JIMMY: Rustlers.

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Well, actually, rustlers probably did use them as well.

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-It was during Prohibition.

-Right. Bootleggers?

-Yeah, bootleggers.

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So they could move their cases of stuff across the desert...

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-A cow field?

-..looking as if... Yeah, a cow field, exactly!

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So, sort of, they would think cows have gone from one bar to another!

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LAUGHTER

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"That cow looks like it was pissed and only had two legs!"

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"It went downstairs to the club, it came up again!

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"It got in the taxi!"

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"This cow stood against the fence and then there's a big puddle of..."

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While on the subject of rustlers,

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there was a rustler called George "Big Nose" Parrot,

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who was a cattle rustler, and he was hanged,

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-and a Dr John...

-ALAN SQUAWKS

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LAUGHTER

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And he was skinned.

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-Was he?

-Oh, that's unnecessary!

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And Dr John Osborne made a pair of shoes out of his skin.

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-And he became Governor of Wyoming...

-Of course he did.

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-..for Democratic...

-No-one would challenge him. He's a nutter!

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He wore those shoes at his inaugural ball.

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-You sound made up about him!

-He's a charmer!

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At what stage did that become unacceptable, then?

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It was as late as 1893. I think it would've been unacceptable...

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Did he wait until the man was dead and then he, like, capitalised

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and said, "I will seize the skin,"

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or he killed the man and then he started raking the man's skin off

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-and, like, "I got what I wanted, that's why I caused your death"?

-No!

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-He was hanged first.

-Hanged first, then he went, "Nobody want this?"

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-Yeah, quite!

-LAUGHTER

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"It's only going to waste otherwise!"

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He was standing there barefoot looking at this man...

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LAUGHTER

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Not pleasant, I grant you,

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but life was cheap in those days, in the West!

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So, stop me now when you know what I'm talking about.

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Originally made out of shower curtains,

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could be used as wallpaper, works as a burglar alarm,

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prevents sweaty toilet syndrome,

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covered Farrah Fawcett when she modelled for Playboy.

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Good for stress relief and wraps things up so they don't break.

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-Nylon. Lino.

-What was the toilet syndrome?

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Don't worry about that, that's quite hard to guess.

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-Rubber?

-It wraps things up and...

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Plastic, cellophane? Clingfilm.

0:15:140:15:16

-Bubble wrap.

-Bubble wrap! Yes.

0:15:160:15:18

I'll tell you a few things about bubble wrap.

0:15:200:15:22

It was invented in... Guess what year it was invented.

0:15:220:15:25

-1947.

-It was 1957, in 1957 by Alfred Fielding and Marc Chavannes,

0:15:250:15:31

who put two shower curtains together hoping to find some use for it,

0:15:310:15:35

-and it wasn't until they...

-What?!

-That's how they invented it?!

0:15:350:15:39

That's a crazy shot in the dark, isn't it?

0:15:390:15:42

I'm just going to put a couple of pencils together

0:15:420:15:44

and see if we come up with anything.

0:15:440:15:47

-Does this... What?

-They were clearly covering the bed.

0:15:470:15:50

-Yeah.

-To protect the mattress.

-Oh, now! They thought it...

0:15:500:15:53

And as they lay there, they heard, "Pop-pop-pop!"

0:15:530:15:56

"Was that you?" "No, it wasn't me." We might be onto something here.

0:15:560:16:00

Must be the shower curtain.

0:16:000:16:01

They thought it could be sold as wallpaper, it didn't work.

0:16:010:16:04

Nor did greenhouse insulation, which they also used it for.

0:16:040:16:07

And it wasn't until 1960, three years later,

0:16:070:16:09

they hit on the idea of wrapping up components for IBM.

0:16:090:16:12

And since then, the Sealed Air Corporation now makes enough

0:16:120:16:15

every year to encircle the world ten times.

0:16:150:16:17

That's pretty impressive, isn't it?

0:16:170:16:19

That's good if we ever have to send the world anywhere.

0:16:190:16:22

But unfortunately you'd send it Royal Mail

0:16:220:16:24

and it would get lost, so...

0:16:240:16:26

The thing about that is, where does it all go, then?

0:16:260:16:29

Because it just goes in the bin, doesn't it, bubble wrap?

0:16:290:16:33

-Once you've popped it.

-Or you sit in front of the telly relieving yourself.

0:16:330:16:37

LAUGHTER

0:16:370:16:40

You know what I mean.

0:16:410:16:44

Yes. But let's get back to the bubble wrap.

0:16:440:16:48

If you put it in the bin, where does it all go?

0:16:500:16:52

It goes in that sort of whirlpool, between...in Hawaii.

0:16:520:16:55

-Oh, the great Pacific gyre.

-Yeah.

-The size of Texas.

0:16:550:16:58

That vast eddy which is just full of bin liners.

0:16:580:17:01

The sweaty toilet thing, you stick it inside of a cistern,

0:17:010:17:04

because in hot tropical countries,

0:17:040:17:07

the toilet cistern sweats and it apparently cures that.

0:17:070:17:10

Now, I've got this little test for you. Here we are.

0:17:100:17:14

And with any luck, the audience might have some bubble wrap too.

0:17:140:17:17

They're waving their bubble wrap. Thank you, audience.

0:17:170:17:20

Do not pop it. This is a really important exercise.

0:17:200:17:23

-What do you mean don't pop it?

-Don't pop it, do not... No!

0:17:230:17:26

-No! No! This is really important.

-Why?

-OK.

-No problem.

-Why not though?

0:17:260:17:31

This is a test of your worthiness. Don't pop it yet.

0:17:310:17:33

One of mine's already popped, I didn't do it.

0:17:330:17:35

That's all right, as long as you didn't,

0:17:350:17:37

because in 2013, a group of Yale psychologists,

0:17:370:17:40

they found another use for bubble wrap,

0:17:400:17:42

which was to measure aggression, all right?

0:17:420:17:45

They showed pictures of "cute" animals, all right?

0:17:450:17:49

-Ooh!

-Oh, now, now, wait, wait, wait.

0:17:490:17:52

-Oh, the two little chicks!

-Ooh!

-Stop it.

0:17:520:17:55

People were told to pop bubble wrap as they watched.

0:17:550:17:58

They thought that it was a test for their motor activity and memory.

0:17:580:18:01

But in fact it was a test for what's called "cute aggression".

0:18:010:18:05

If you see something very cute, you start popping more and more.

0:18:050:18:08

Not because they wanted to hurt the animals, but because they were

0:18:080:18:11

frustrated at not being able to touch them and cuddle them.

0:18:110:18:14

And this is called cute aggression.

0:18:140:18:16

It's when you kind of go, "Oooh!" like that.

0:18:160:18:19

So, audience, hold your bubble wrap,

0:18:190:18:21

we're going to show you some very cute animals and it's all up to you.

0:18:210:18:25

Let's start with the cuteness.

0:18:250:18:27

-Oh, dear!

-That's not... come on, that's not that cute.

0:18:270:18:32

-Oh, it is.

-He looks sort of dead.

0:18:320:18:34

He's not that cute, yeah, I think he's been shot.

0:18:340:18:38

-Oh! That's horrible.

-He does look like he's been shot.

0:18:380:18:41

Oh, the blue-eyed one!

0:18:410:18:43

No, not that cute, not worth a pop.

0:18:430:18:45

THEY ALL POP BUBBLES

0:18:480:18:50

-You did it!

-Definitely.

0:18:500:18:52

Yeah, that's getting quite a few pops.

0:18:520:18:54

-Look at his little eye.

-No, I'm not gone yet.

0:18:540:18:57

I want a dog and then I'm going to pop my load.

0:18:570:19:00

That's the first time I've heard that phrase since last night.

0:19:000:19:03

-Oh, there...

-Oh!

0:19:050:19:06

-That's pretty cute.

-That was the last one.

0:19:060:19:09

Not cute, ginger.

0:19:090:19:10

All right. You can put away your bubble wrap now.

0:19:140:19:16

That kitten is basically saying,

0:19:160:19:18

"Help me, they're about to close the lid on this box."

0:19:180:19:21

-He's probably the Schrodinger's cat.

-Yeah, he is.

0:19:210:19:24

-He's about to do the experiment.

-I'm not going to exist in a minute.

0:19:240:19:27

You may like to know that the last Monday in January is

0:19:270:19:29

Bubble Wrap Awareness Day.

0:19:290:19:31

-Oh, good.

-It's the appreciation of bubble wrap day.

0:19:310:19:34

-That's in my diary.

-I'm sure they have a website.

-Yeah.

-They must do.

0:19:340:19:37

And Rhett Allain of Wired magazine calculated that you need

0:19:370:19:41

to wrap yourself in 39 layers of bubble wrap

0:19:410:19:45

in order to survive falling out of a sixth floor window.

0:19:450:19:49

Oh, please, don't try that at home!

0:19:490:19:52

-So...

-Because you don't have a six-storey house?

0:19:550:19:57

-It may be that.

-So if you wrapped yourself in bubble wrap six times,

0:19:570:20:02

-you could jump out of a building and you'd be...

-No, 39 times.

0:20:020:20:04

-36. 39.

-39.

-Oh, thank God we clarified!

-Yeah.

0:20:040:20:08

-So you're going to go up to the sixth storey of your house...

-Yeah.

0:20:080:20:13

I'm going up to the 39th storey and wrapping myself six times.

0:20:130:20:17

-Which by my calculations, I should be fine.

-Oh, dear!

0:20:170:20:21

Just out of interest, do you know what a group of kittens is called?

0:20:210:20:24

There is a group name for kittens.

0:20:240:20:26

-A puke.

-No, no, no...

0:20:260:20:28

-Is it a "sack of"?

-No, it also begins...

0:20:280:20:31

AUDIENCE GROANS

0:20:310:20:32

SMATTERING OF APPLAUSE

0:20:320:20:35

You are bad!

0:20:350:20:37

No, a group of kittens is actually called a kindle, oddly enough.

0:20:370:20:40

-Really?

-Yeah!

-A kindle of kittens.

0:20:400:20:42

-SOME PEOPLE: Aw!

-Aw!

0:20:420:20:43

-Just for kittens, is it for cats?

-Just for kittens.

0:20:430:20:46

Anyway, so... here are tonight's specials.

0:20:460:20:49

There we are.

0:20:500:20:51

See if you can read that. They're on the board, as well.

0:20:510:20:54

Plats du jour. Sea kittens.

0:20:540:20:56

-Sea kittens.

-Sea kittens is a madey-uppy phrase,

0:20:560:20:59

by people who don't want us to eat fish.

0:20:590:21:02

Oh, so they try to make us go into a bubble wrap mode,

0:21:020:21:05

by calling it sea kitten instead of cod.

0:21:050:21:07

So that would be a group of people who are very against anything

0:21:070:21:10

to do with any kind of aggression or beastliness to animals.

0:21:100:21:13

-Vegans.

-Which would be vegetarians.

0:21:130:21:15

No, an actual specific organisation.

0:21:150:21:17

-PETA?

-PETA, or...

-PETA is the right answer.

0:21:170:21:19

The People's... Oh, what is it?

0:21:190:21:21

Something for Ethical Treatment of Animals.

0:21:210:21:23

Something for Ethical Treatment of Animals.

0:21:230:21:26

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. I assume.

0:21:260:21:29

Not Porpoises for the Ethical Treatment of Animals

0:21:290:21:32

Not Pig-Eaters for the Ethical Treatment of Animals

0:21:320:21:34

And so they thought that if they called all fish sea kittens,

0:21:340:21:38

people would say, "I wouldn't want to put a hook in a sea kitten."

0:21:380:21:42

-So that was the idea.

-A lake puppy.

0:21:420:21:43

I think, if anything, it would make me want to try kittens.

0:21:430:21:46

It's obviously not worked, though, in that case, have they?

0:21:460:21:49

And we've also got Nymphs of Dawn.

0:21:490:21:51

-Nymphs of the Golden Dawn.

-I know one thing there.

0:21:510:21:53

-Yes, go on?

-I've certainly had the Nymphs of the Golden Dawn.

0:21:530:21:56

-Which are Nymphs of the Golden Dawn?

-Which are they?

-Yes.

0:21:560:21:59

Are they oysters?

0:21:590:22:00

-They're not oysters, no.

-Then I was mis-sold!

0:22:000:22:03

They were first served for the Prince of Wales...

0:22:030:22:06

-Sounds like a strip club.

-..in 1908.

0:22:060:22:09

They were served for the Prince of Wales in 1908,

0:22:090:22:12

who would have been the future George V.

0:22:120:22:14

They were actually a creation of one of the great chefs,

0:22:140:22:18

-or THE great chef, really, of the 19th...

-Auguste Escoffier.

0:22:180:22:21

Very well said.

0:22:210:22:23

And he persuaded the British to eat this dish, specifically

0:22:230:22:26

the Prince of Wales, by calling it Cuisses de Nymphes de l'Aurore!

0:22:260:22:32

Thighs of the nymphs of dawn.

0:22:320:22:34

-Frogs' legs.

-Yeah.

-Frogs' legs is the right answer.

0:22:340:22:37

And there's a picture of frogs' legs.

0:22:370:22:39

And they are now a standard dish, which people eat very happily.

0:22:390:22:42

Tastes like chicken, as everything does that you're a bit scared of.

0:22:420:22:45

And it's, um...

0:22:450:22:47

-I'd say that rooster's testicles DON'T taste like chicken.

-No?

0:22:470:22:50

-I've had them.

-Have you?

-I've had rooster's testicles.

0:22:500:22:53

One of these things you do, isn't it, with Giles Coren?

0:22:530:22:55

-You force yourself to eat testicles?

-Oh, I didn't force myself.

0:22:550:22:58

-And his testicles?

-Um... His testicles taste like chicken.

0:22:580:23:01

-Oh, right, OK, never mind!

-LAUGHTER

0:23:010:23:03

We've got a couple left. Mendip Wallfish.

0:23:030:23:06

Is that what PETA calls kittens, so we wouldn't harm them?

0:23:060:23:10

No, where are the Mendips?

0:23:100:23:12

Is it between your bum and your testicles?

0:23:120:23:14

LAUGHTER

0:23:140:23:16

Mendips, men dip.

0:23:180:23:20

Are they sort of Gloucester area?

0:23:200:23:22

-A bit further south, yes, Somerset.

-Somerset.

0:23:220:23:24

Like the Quantocks. The Mendip Hills.

0:23:240:23:26

-I know where my Quantocks are.

-Yes, they all sound rude,

0:23:260:23:28

don't they, like the Trossachs?

0:23:280:23:30

But this was served in the Miners' Arms in Priddy in Somerset.

0:23:300:23:33

And they served it as Mendip Wallfish because,

0:23:330:23:36

like frogs' legs, it's one of those things

0:23:360:23:38

-that British people tend to go yuck!

-Snails.

-Snails?

0:23:380:23:40

Snails is the right answer. Somerset snails.

0:23:400:23:43

And unlike the French way of serving them, which is with...?

0:23:430:23:46

-Garlic.

-Butter?

-Garlic and butter, exactly.

0:23:460:23:48

It's pretty similar, except it's with cider, herbs and seasoning.

0:23:480:23:52

-It's almost like moules.

-It's a bit like moules, yeah!

-Yeah.

0:23:520:23:55

And it's a Mendip Wallfish.

0:23:550:23:57

Rocky Mountain Oysters, I think, are testicles.

0:23:570:24:01

You're absolutely right, bulls' testicles, can be sheep or pigs.

0:24:010:24:04

-They're prairie oysters. Yeah.

-Prairie oysters, yeah.

0:24:040:24:06

Also called prairie oysters.

0:24:060:24:08

There are lots of names for them, some of which are quite amusing.

0:24:080:24:11

-Ball sack.

-How did you get that photo?

0:24:110:24:14

They're pretty good, aren't they? They're called Cowboy Caviar...

0:24:170:24:20

-Oh, God!

-..Montana Tender Groins...

0:24:200:24:24

I had that once.

0:24:240:24:26

..Dusted Nuts, Bull Fries...

0:24:260:24:28

Dusted Nuts is quite on the nose, isn't it?

0:24:280:24:31

Plate of knackers.

0:24:310:24:33

-Bull's bollocks.

-Yeah.

0:24:350:24:36

-Bull fries.

-Cream of bollock soup.

0:24:360:24:40

-Wow!

-They're also called Swinging Beef.

0:24:400:24:43

Which is a good title for them.

0:24:430:24:45

Swinging Beef is what I'm calling my autobiography.

0:24:450:24:48

Or they're sometimes called criadillas or huevos de toro,

0:24:480:24:53

-which is...

-Huevos de toro.

-Huevos de toro is bull's eggs. Yeah.

0:24:530:24:57

What are they called in English?

0:24:570:24:58

-Plums on a plate.

-Very good.

-It's not sweetbreads...

0:24:580:25:02

-Sweetmeat.

-Sweetbread. That's the thymus gland, isn't it?

0:25:020:25:05

-You're very right.

-It's pancreas.

-Spot on.

0:25:050:25:07

The pancreas or the thymus gland is sweetbreads.

0:25:070:25:10

The testicles are sweetmeats. Very good.

0:25:100:25:13

We found our way through those unusual foods.

0:25:130:25:15

Now, I'll put the blackboard away, and it's time to ask you this.

0:25:150:25:19

What is Kaninhoppning?

0:25:190:25:21

Kanin is, I think may be related to the English word "coney".

0:25:210:25:26

-Does that help?

-Rabbit, like a...

-Rabbit.

-OK.

-So rabbit hopping.

0:25:260:25:29

So hopping like a bunny. Bunny hopping.

0:25:290:25:31

Hopping like a bunny, but it's a sport.

0:25:310:25:33

-Rabbit.

-Oh, for sure it is.

-Show jumping.

0:25:330:25:36

Show jumping for rabbits is the right answer.

0:25:360:25:39

-LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

-Sure, sure.

0:25:390:25:41

Ahh!

0:25:430:25:45

-Argh!

-POPPING

0:25:460:25:49

-It's not that big a sport in Britain...

-Cute.

0:25:490:25:51

..but in Denmark and the Scandiwegian countries

0:25:510:25:54

they take it pretty seriously,

0:25:540:25:55

and they have world records and championships and...

0:25:550:25:58

Who's winning? Who's the current world champion?

0:25:580:26:00

Well, I can tell you the world record holder for the long jump

0:26:000:26:04

is Yaboo, who is Danish.

0:26:040:26:06

-Three metres.

-With Flopsy a close second.

0:26:060:26:09

Tosen has the high jump record, at 99.5cm.

0:26:090:26:13

They haven't yet broken the metre, on the high jump.

0:26:130:26:16

But there are nearly a thousand rabbit show jumpers in Sweden alone.

0:26:160:26:20

And the sport is also practised in the UK, Denmark and the US.

0:26:200:26:23

And Lisbeth Jansson has written two books about the sport.

0:26:230:26:27

Do they dope test them afterwards?

0:26:270:26:29

She does say that the sport will allow a rabbit to live

0:26:300:26:33

twice as long, up to 10 or 12 years,

0:26:330:26:36

as compared to the average five years that one in a hutch will live.

0:26:360:26:40

Yeah. It's very important to take care of your rabbit properly,

0:26:400:26:43

you've got to bathe them in hot water with potatoes and onions.

0:26:430:26:47

Oh, now!

0:26:470:26:49

Let's have some footage of some working show jumping.

0:26:490:26:52

-Large footage.

-Here they go.

-Sure, OK.

0:26:520:26:54

Oh, cute. Oh, it's cute!

0:26:540:26:55

Oh, I can't bear it.

0:26:570:26:59

That's a big one. Oh!

0:27:000:27:02

Oh, he's going to refuse. No, he's up.

0:27:020:27:04

-Oh!

-Just shattered now.

0:27:050:27:07

Over he goes!

0:27:080:27:10

-Oh, he's had enough.

-And a final little one. Bravo!

0:27:110:27:13

APPLAUSE

0:27:130:27:16

Well, as you could see, they weren't being led, the human is not allowed

0:27:180:27:22

to get ahead of the rabbit, or that's a forfeit.

0:27:220:27:24

So the rabbit has to lead the human,

0:27:240:27:25

I don't know if you noticed in that footage.

0:27:250:27:27

The human was just behind.

0:27:270:27:29

OK, so, solve this one for me, will you, please?

0:27:290:27:32

-I'm going to give you all muddled-up...

-Oh, doom!

0:27:320:27:36

-Can you do these? Oh, there we go.

-It smacks of bullying at school.

0:27:360:27:39

-Bullying at school?

-Yeah, anyone who couldn't do this got bullied.

0:27:390:27:42

How many combinations do you think there are?

0:27:420:27:44

-I think there's...

-Too many for my small brain.

0:27:440:27:47

-It's actually 40...

-One thousand.

-43.25 quintillion.

0:27:470:27:50

Shall I tell you how we did it in Croydon? We just picked them off.

0:27:500:27:53

-There you go.

-Wa-hey! Jimmy's done it.

0:27:530:27:56

APPLAUSE

0:27:560:27:58

Alan!

0:27:580:27:59

Alan, you're so close. Oh, you almost had it.

0:27:590:28:03

-No, no, I've forgotten...

-You've messed it up.

0:28:030:28:05

-Oh!

-Just start picking them off.

0:28:050:28:07

Do you know what's completely tragic?

0:28:070:28:09

We told Jimmy and Alan how to do it with six moves.

0:28:090:28:13

Jimmy remembered, but Alan, unfortunately...

0:28:130:28:16

Oh, he's done it! Have you? Yay!

0:28:170:28:20

APPLAUSE

0:28:200:28:22

Any luck, Reginald?

0:28:240:28:26

Well, I didn't receive that instruction.

0:28:260:28:28

-You didn't get the benefit...

-You and me, exactly.

0:28:280:28:30

-It was unfair on you two.

-It's fun.

0:28:300:28:32

-It is fun, isn't it?

-It just brought back a lot of bad school memories.

0:28:320:28:35

As I say, it is a staggering number.

0:28:350:28:37

It is more possible combinations

0:28:370:28:40

-than light travels inches in a century.

-God!

0:28:400:28:43

There's the number up on the screen,

0:28:430:28:45

it is such a huge number. it's inconceivably vast.

0:28:450:28:48

But you can make it impossible, do you know how to do that?

0:28:480:28:51

Take the stickers off?

0:28:510:28:52

Yeah, you sort of replace the stickers one with the other,

0:28:520:28:54

so that it's actually never doable, which would drive people insane.

0:28:540:28:58

-But there are these.

-The other way you can make it impossible

0:28:580:29:01

is to break someone's fingers.

0:29:010:29:02

-Yeah, really nice.

-They'll come and shove a bone in your face.

0:29:020:29:05

There's the 4 x 4, and you can imagine

0:29:050:29:07

the combinations are even more gigantic.

0:29:070:29:09

It's probably 8 or 9, I imagine.

0:29:090:29:11

In 2010, which is quite a long time after the Rubik Cube became popular,

0:29:110:29:14

science and computing finally came up with the minimum

0:29:140:29:18

number of moves from any combination that it takes to solve the cube.

0:29:180:29:21

Can you imagine how many that might be?

0:29:210:29:24

-I bet it's 12.

-19.

-Six.

-It's 20.

0:29:240:29:26

It's called God's number and it's just extraordinary.

0:29:260:29:30

You say you were obsessed when you were a child.

0:29:300:29:33

-Under pressure, can we see if you can do it now?

-Oh, gosh!

0:29:330:29:35

-Come on, under pressure.

-I can do the first two rows, but that's it.

0:29:350:29:38

-That's pretty messed up.

-Oh, God!

-OK, come on.

0:29:380:29:41

-Look, look...

-You're on the clock.

0:29:410:29:42

We've got a lot of time ahead of us,

0:29:420:29:44

I've got to decide which colours... All right, so that's going to be...

0:29:440:29:47

We need a backing track for this really. This needs...

0:29:470:29:50

Let's get green and...

0:29:500:29:52

-SUE HUMS A TUNE

-Oh, stop it!

0:29:520:29:54

Um... Oh, stop, stop!

0:29:540:29:57

-CONTINUES HUMMING

-You are being so unkind.

0:29:570:30:01

And you're out of time and I've had a birthday.

0:30:010:30:04

Stop it. Blue goes there.

0:30:040:30:06

-We could do one of those fade out, fade in...

-Yellow goes there.

0:30:060:30:09

Let's get some beers. Can we get some beers?

0:30:090:30:11

-Yeah, some time later, yeah, yeah.

-Stop it.

0:30:110:30:14

Right, so I've got all the middle ones here.

0:30:140:30:17

Now we do the corners.

0:30:170:30:18

Might kick back, go to the bar, come back in a couple of hours.

0:30:180:30:21

That's it, so I've got those four there and those two middle ones.

0:30:210:30:25

You should be able to do it within 20 moves, Stephen.

0:30:250:30:27

Yeah, I know that!

0:30:270:30:29

-But I can't.

-It's God's number, you know.

0:30:290:30:32

Yeah, don't be mean to me.

0:30:320:30:34

-It takes an atheist a lot longer.

-Yeah.

0:30:340:30:37

Anyway, there's the first layer. Yeah. Thank you.

0:30:390:30:43

-APPLAUSE

-That's pretty impressive.

0:30:430:30:45

It gets quicker after that. Anyway, so there's your Rubik's Cube.

0:30:450:30:49

Now, what did the American army do with 100,000 of these?

0:30:490:30:54

Whoa, excuse me. There we go. Pass that on. That is yours there.

0:30:550:30:59

-Oh, my God! Are these the originals?

-That is fantastic.

0:30:590:31:02

-Can you see what is inside them?

-Oh, wow!

-I was looking the wrong way.

0:31:020:31:06

There are too many layers of glass separating me and this image.

0:31:060:31:10

-What are you seeing, Jimmy?

-Hard-core pornography.

0:31:100:31:12

-And you?

-I've got a target and a plane.

-You've got planes.

0:31:140:31:18

-And you have got, Reginald? Hello?

-I think I've seen the future!

0:31:180:31:21

-You have seen the future?

-LAUGHTER

0:31:210:31:24

-What is happening in the future, Reg?

-We are all on a plane.

0:31:240:31:28

-It is an assassin's cross hairs.

-These are American...

0:31:290:31:31

-Do you know what these devices are called?

-Viewmaster.

0:31:310:31:34

-Viewmaster.

-It is written on it.

-Oh...

0:31:340:31:36

LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

0:31:360:31:38

Why do I bother?

0:31:380:31:40

-It is also written up there.

-They are made in Portland, Oregon.

0:31:400:31:46

Yes, indeed. And they are a rather wonderful device.

0:31:460:31:49

Invented in the 1930s. You have a disc like this.

0:31:490:31:52

You can pull it out, pop it in, and you press a lever

0:31:520:31:56

and you get a 3-D picture.

0:31:560:31:58

And what you have got are the army versions that were used

0:31:580:32:01

to help members of gunnery crews and various other things

0:32:010:32:06

to recognise the outlines and shapes

0:32:060:32:08

of either friendly or enemy aircraft.

0:32:080:32:11

-And that is what you will see.

-Thomas the Tank Engine, I have got.

0:32:110:32:14

We have given Alan Thomas the Tank Engine.

0:32:140:32:15

We thought he would be confused by the aeroplanes.

0:32:150:32:18

LAUGHTER

0:32:180:32:19

So what does your card say when you pull it out, Alan? What does it say?

0:32:190:32:22

Percy found himself under the coal chute.

0:32:220:32:24

"I don't like getting dirty."

0:32:240:32:26

LAUGHTER

0:32:260:32:28

-Filth.

-Ours say Hell Driver, Dauntless, Vengeance, Texan...

0:32:280:32:34

it gives all the details of the planes in the photograph.

0:32:340:32:37

-I'd like to see that.

-Yes, they are rather good. Have a swap.

0:32:370:32:41

Sorry, so you had ones for goodies and ones for baddies, then?

0:32:410:32:43

Oh, the Thomas is beautiful!

0:32:430:32:45

LAUGHTER

0:32:450:32:47

-It is 3-D!

-I've got the original Nolan sisters here, I'm happy.

0:32:470:32:51

-Whose side was Thomas on in the Second World War?

-I can't remember.

0:32:510:32:55

I think you look a little bit like a Doctor Who baddie.

0:32:550:32:57

Anyway, they did have a serious purpose.

0:32:570:33:00

-In fact, they handed out how many?

-12.

-100,000.

0:33:000:33:03

So that was in the war and then they went, "Well, afterwards,

0:33:030:33:07

"what shall we do with them?"

0:33:070:33:08

which is often the way with military things.

0:33:080:33:10

Whenever there is a war, you always get something out of it.

0:33:100:33:12

Like the bazooka.

0:33:120:33:14

The bazooka obviously has a use in everyday life as well.

0:33:140:33:17

For cooking chicken.

0:33:170:33:18

-LAUGHTER

-And for playing Greek music.

0:33:180:33:20

Is it true...? I went on holiday to Vietnam and I fired a machine gun.

0:33:200:33:26

You could pay money for bullets and fire them.

0:33:260:33:28

-They have got old guns from the war.

-Really?

0:33:280:33:31

Someone told me that if you...

0:33:310:33:33

They have a bazooka and you can fire it at a cow.

0:33:330:33:38

LAUGHTER DROWNS SPEECH

0:33:380:33:39

-I have heard that.

-You have heard that?

-There's a very...

0:33:390:33:42

Is it a myth?

0:33:420:33:44

There is certainly an eccentric man who has a large estate

0:33:440:33:47

in Shropshire and he has an old-fashioned Roman ballista,

0:33:470:33:51

one of those catapult things.

0:33:510:33:54

And what he does for fun is catapult cows through the air.

0:33:540:33:58

-LAUGHTER

-Dead cows. He doesn't do it with live cows.

0:33:580:34:01

-Not at the end of it, anyway.

-No! They do go a huge distance.

0:34:010:34:06

And there is something highly comical about seeing a cow

0:34:060:34:10

just sailing through the air, going hundreds of yards through the air.

0:34:100:34:14

-And there is a butcher underneath.

-It's a bit of a mess.

0:34:140:34:17

And all the other cows are going,

0:34:170:34:19

"If we just wrap ourselves in bubble wrap 39 times, it won't happen."

0:34:190:34:23

"We'll be fine." Exactly.

0:34:230:34:24

Six million discs they used,

0:34:240:34:26

the American army, to hand out to their 100,000 people.

0:34:260:34:29

So that was a military thing before it was a toy?

0:34:290:34:31

No, it was a toy first but the American Army

0:34:310:34:34

and Navy saw the value in it...

0:34:340:34:36

Sounds like another defence contract to me.

0:34:360:34:40

Yes. Sorry?

0:34:400:34:41

The internet was originally a military...

0:34:410:34:43

And sat nav, as well, that was a military thing.

0:34:430:34:45

Deal Or No Deal, that was a military thing.

0:34:450:34:47

LAUGHTER

0:34:470:34:49

-It still is.

-Absolutely right, yes.

0:34:490:34:51

Now, I'd like to take a picture as a memento of this lovely evening.

0:34:510:34:55

-LAUGHTER

-Oh, they're in love.

0:34:580:35:01

What, what...?

0:35:010:35:03

Reg, it was a fantastic weekend we spent. What?

0:35:030:35:06

-That mohair look is working for you.

-Yeah, it really is.

0:35:060:35:09

-That softer knit. Sexy.

-Reggie takes Jimmy to Georgia.

0:35:090:35:12

That's so disturbing, in so many ways.

0:35:120:35:14

Oh, there you are. Oh, don't you look lovely!

0:35:150:35:18

-Yeah.

-There we are. Now, what's the quickest way to develop it?

0:35:210:35:24

-What should I do to develop it?

-Shake it, shake it, baby.

0:35:240:35:26

-HOOTER

-Oh!

-Oh, Sue!

0:35:260:35:30

Oh, no, I'm a buffoon.

0:35:300:35:32

The quickest way to develop it is to take it to Boots, the chemist.

0:35:320:35:35

No, it isn't. That would take a lot longer.

0:35:350:35:37

It's quicker to do an oil painting.

0:35:370:35:39

It does take a bit of time. Let's have you two, as well.

0:35:390:35:42

Smile. Aaah. That's so cute.

0:35:420:35:45

Now, what they used to do, the old pros, when they took

0:35:480:35:51

photographs with proper film, they used to do a little Polaroid first.

0:35:510:35:55

Oh, yeah, always do a Polaroid first.

0:35:550:35:57

-They used to put it under their arms.

-Their arse cheeks usually.

0:35:570:36:00

I'm sorry? Arse cheeks?! Fair enough.

0:36:000:36:03

We had different photographers.

0:36:030:36:05

I think Polaroids, it's sort of a slippery slope, though,

0:36:060:36:09

-because photography used to be...

-Between your arse cheeks, go on.

0:36:090:36:12

It used to be you went on holiday, took photos, then you got back.

0:36:120:36:15

Don't shake it.

0:36:150:36:16

You went to the chemist, put them in, and it took a week.

0:36:160:36:18

LAUGHTER

0:36:180:36:22

I want to see that shot.

0:36:240:36:25

I didn't realise you were pulling that face, Reg.

0:36:270:36:29

-I didn't realise you was pulling your face.

-Nothing.

0:36:310:36:34

What I'm saying is, you used to get photos from a holiday,

0:36:340:36:36

the last two shots were of the dog, because you hadn't taken enough,

0:36:360:36:39

then you'd go to the chemist, then you'd remember the holiday.

0:36:390:36:42

-Now we reminisce instantly and it's ruined it.

-It's true.

0:36:420:36:45

You go, "Oh, look at us, we were so young four minutes ago."

0:36:450:36:49

And you go to one of those rock gigs, where people perform,

0:36:490:36:53

and everybody watches them through their cameras,

0:36:530:36:55

-instead of watching the real people.

-I like that.

0:36:550:36:57

When I do a stand-up show, someone will be taping it on their phone.

0:36:570:37:01

As if like, "Now is not a good time for me."

0:37:010:37:03

I'm going to take this and enjoy it later on in this supreme quality.

0:37:030:37:07

-They just can't enjoy the moment.

-It's so bizarre.

0:37:070:37:09

You used to get your pictures back

0:37:090:37:11

-and they'd have a sticker on sometimes, wouldn't they?

-Yes.

0:37:110:37:13

Saying, "This picture is shit."

0:37:130:37:15

-Those old disc cameras.

-Or this picture has been sent to the police.

0:37:180:37:21

A copy of it.

0:37:210:37:23

Well, can you tell me who invented the Polaroid photograph?

0:37:230:37:26

-Do you remember his name?

-Mr Roid.

0:37:260:37:28

-He had a brother named Haemor.

-Very good.

0:37:280:37:31

Was it Eastman or Kodak or...?

0:37:340:37:36

It wasn't Eastman or Kodak, no.

0:37:360:37:37

"Fuji!"

0:37:370:37:39

No, it wasn't Fuji.

0:37:390:37:41

Land, his name was Land, was his name.

0:37:410:37:44

And he made polarised sunglasses

0:37:440:37:46

and that's why he called it Polaroid.

0:37:460:37:48

-There he is, Mr Land.

-"I feel the need!"

0:37:480:37:50

I feel the need for speed. Indeed.

0:37:500:37:52

-Oh, you can ride my tail any time.

-Yeah.

-Yeah.

0:37:520:37:55

And then the Polaroid camera was launched in 1948.

0:37:550:37:58

Because the company was already called Polaroid,

0:37:580:38:00

he called it a Polaroid camera.

0:38:000:38:02

It used to be Polaroids were always a bit grimy, weren't they?

0:38:020:38:04

-Absolutely.

-If you ever found a box of Polaroids in your parents' room,

0:38:040:38:08

-it was worth leaving those alone.

-Hello!

0:38:080:38:10

That's a mental scarring right there.

0:38:100:38:13

-Oh, years of...

-Hang on, what's that? Oh, no!

0:38:130:38:16

Well, anyway, the point is,

0:38:180:38:19

shaking a Polaroid had no effect on how quickly it developed.

0:38:190:38:22

Now, here is a classic piece of kitsch.

0:38:220:38:24

Why is every fourth monkey like a search engine?

0:38:240:38:28

-Fourth monkey?

-Fourth.

-There are three monkeys...

-Ah...

-See...

0:38:280:38:32

-That is the strange thing.

-See no evil...

-Speak no evil...

0:38:320:38:37

see no evil, hear no evil...

0:38:370:38:39

Google no evil!

0:38:390:38:40

Well, Google is right, but what is Google's motto?

0:38:400:38:44

Feeling Lucky?

0:38:440:38:45

LAUGHTER

0:38:450:38:48

-Come on, you are just looking for points!

-It is true, yes.

0:38:480:38:51

But as a corporation, they have this...

0:38:510:38:53

one that has been mocked many times,

0:38:530:38:55

but it is their sort of mission statement.

0:38:550:38:57

-Is it "don't do evil"?

-Don't do evil is their motto.

-Don't do evil?

0:38:570:39:01

-Their motto is...what?

-That is clutching its knackers!

-I know!

0:39:010:39:05

LAUGHTER

0:39:050:39:07

I think it has just heard about prairie oysters and gone, hang on...

0:39:070:39:10

No, these are Koshin monkeys. We know the three.

0:39:100:39:13

The fourth was considered, when it came to the West, a bit too rude.

0:39:130:39:17

It was "do no evil". And it was expressed by covering its genitals.

0:39:170:39:21

How ironic, though, that the fourth monkey should do no evil and

0:39:210:39:24

hold its knackers when Google is a search engine for the porn industry!

0:39:240:39:28

-I know!

-Probably the most searched for thing on the internet. I gather.

0:39:280:39:32

-It is true, but that was...

-LAUGHTER

0:39:320:39:34

I didn't realise you could get other stuff on it until recently.

0:39:340:39:37

I used to refer to the internet as the pornography.

0:39:370:39:40

"I was on the pornography last night

0:39:400:39:41

"and do you know, you can book train tickets on it as well?"

0:39:410:39:44

It is pornography and cats.

0:39:440:39:46

If you ever find a video of a tabby banging a tortoiseshell,

0:39:460:39:50

the internet will eat itself.

0:39:500:39:52

-LAUGHTER It is like finding out about the 13th apostle.

-Exactly.

0:39:520:39:56

Because the first three are basically "don't grass anyone up".

0:39:560:40:00

And the fourth one is "actually, don't get involved".

0:40:000:40:04

And lastly, to wrap up our kitsch-fest, here's some karaoke.

0:40:040:40:09

What is the world's most dangerous song?

0:40:090:40:13

Is this the song that's playing most often during traffic accidents?

0:40:130:40:16

No, it's not that, this really is a karaoke issue,

0:40:160:40:18

-at least six people in the Philippines...

-My Way.

0:40:180:40:21

-..have been murdered for singing?

-My Way.

-My Way!

0:40:210:40:23

-Exactly.

-Sorry, murdered for singing My Way?

-Yes.

0:40:230:40:26

What, because they didn't do it right? They did it their way!

0:40:260:40:30

They murdered My Way and were murdered as a result.

0:40:310:40:34

So singing, "And now the end is nigh..."

0:40:340:40:37

-Yeah, exactly. "At last I face the final curt..."

-Argh!

0:40:370:40:41

But in Thailand, the song to be wary of is even more dangerous.

0:40:410:40:44

In 2008, a gunman shot dead eight of his neighbours

0:40:440:40:47

after becoming enraged at the noise from karaoke parties,

0:40:470:40:50

at which they sang this American song, by a good old mountain boy.

0:40:500:40:55

From West Virginia, Take Me Home...

0:40:550:40:58

-Oh, John Denver.

-Yes, that's it, Take Me Home, Country Roads

0:40:580:41:02

became the song that killed eight people.

0:41:020:41:04

-And thus they were taken home.

-Thus they were taken home, exactly.

0:41:040:41:07

Most people credit the invention of karaoke to a Japanese fellow

0:41:070:41:10

-called Daisuke Inoue in 1971.

-Oh, he's to blame.

0:41:100:41:13

Well, yes, but he didn't make any money out of it whatsoever.

0:41:130:41:17

But he has patented a cockroach killer which is specifically

0:41:170:41:20

designed to kill cockroaches that live in karaoke machines.

0:41:200:41:24

-Presumably by playing them Peter Andre.

-Yes, presumably.

0:41:260:41:29

Now, this will be very good.

0:41:290:41:31

You will get lots of points if you can guess what the prize was

0:41:310:41:34

in 2010 for the Karaoke World Championships held in Moscow.

0:41:340:41:37

-The prize was one million... something.

-Karaoke machines.

-No.

0:41:370:41:41

-Roubles...?

-Not roubles.

-Prairie...

-Barrels of oil?

-Yeah.

0:41:420:41:46

-Prairie oysters, you were going to say?

-Prairie oysters.

0:41:460:41:49

-Dumplings, is the answer.

-Dumplings?

-One million dumplings.

0:41:490:41:53

-How do you take them home?!

-They like dumplings a lot.

0:41:530:41:55

They do love their dumplings.

0:41:550:41:57

They have got to be pretty moreish before you get to 1,000,000.

0:41:570:42:00

It is a hell of a number, isn't it?

0:42:000:42:01

I suppose you just shared it with everybody.

0:42:010:42:03

Well, you'll be excited to know that we come now to the scores,

0:42:030:42:07

and how fascinating they are.

0:42:070:42:11

In first place, with a towering plus 9, is Jimmy Carr.

0:42:110:42:15

Oh, come on!

0:42:150:42:17

Yes! Finally. I've never won this before, it's brilliant.

0:42:170:42:20

APPLAUSE

0:42:200:42:24

In second place, with a very impressive plus 6,

0:42:240:42:29

is Alan Davies!

0:42:290:42:31

-APPLAUSE AND CHEERING

-Wow!

0:42:310:42:35

In third place, with a highly respectable zero,

0:42:370:42:41

is Reginald D Hunter.

0:42:410:42:43

APPLAUSE

0:42:430:42:46

And I'm afraid sweeping up the dead karaoke cockroaches tonight,

0:42:490:42:52

with minus 8, is Sue Perkins.

0:42:520:42:55

APPLAUSE

0:42:550:42:57

My thanks to Sue, Jimmy, Reginald and Alan, and good night.

0:43:010:43:06

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