Location, Location, Location QI XL


Location, Location, Location

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CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

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Goooood...evening!

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Good evening, good evening, good evening, good evening,

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and welcome to QI,

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where tonight, we'll be looking at the three L's.

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That's Location, Location and Location.

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And on the road to L

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are the fiendish Aisling Bea...

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CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

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..the diabolical Jason Manford...

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CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

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..the Mephistophelian Johnny Vegas...

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CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

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..and that infernal Alan Davies.

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CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

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They all have satanic horns.

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Aisling goes...

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-BIKE HORN TOOTS

-Oh!

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-Excuse me.

-Jason goes...

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-SCAR HORN HONKS

-Classic.

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Johnny goes...

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TRUCK HORN BLASTS

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And Alan has a tail.

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CHILD: "Are we nearly there yet?"

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Ah!

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Now, for your convenience, we have a lavatory on site.

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GAMESHOW-STYLE JINGLE PLAYS

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TOILET FLUSHES

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This being the L series, there is a very good chance

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that there will be one question

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to which the answer will be lavatorial.

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-Are you all right, darling?

-That's harder than I thought it was.

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Did you hit yourself with a penny?

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And if that is the case,

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you can play your Spend A Penny card.

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And if you are right, you will get extra points,

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such is the nature of that particular joker.

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Now, here's a question about a very special location.

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What would you find at the exact centre

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of the observable universe?

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You?

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LAUGHTER

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Well, oddly enough...possibly.

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-Norfolk.

-Norfolk! Yes.

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There isn't a centre of the universe, really,

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so isn't the centre of the universe just the person who's looking...out?

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Because it must be the same...

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You are so absolutely right, it hurts.

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-..in any direction? Yeah.

-That's brilliant.

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APPLAUSE

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Never ends, never ends.

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I know a thing, I know a thing because our esteemed creator,

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John Lloyd, in his rather good Edinburgh Festival show,

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told us that, of all the billions of galaxies that there are,

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there are only a certain number observable from Earth.

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Do you know what it is? Do you know what it is?

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Do you know? Four.

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-Four what, observable from Earth?

-Other galaxies.

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-Other than our own.

-And, well...

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I remember, at school, them doing something with a balloon.

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-Yes.

-The teacher, and he put loads of dots on a balloon

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and...he sort of said it was, like,

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the closest to explaining the universe as he could do.

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That's absolutely right.

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Although there has been an absolute statement

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of where the centre of the universe is,

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which is that it's at the meeting of Bank Street and Sixth Street

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in the town of Wallace, Idaho.

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There it is - the centre of the universe.

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-Is that the Mayor of Idaho, though? Has he said that?

-Yeah.

-Well...

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They're not doing well for tourism and gone,

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-"Why don't we say the centre of the universe is here?"

-You're right.

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He said it because there was no particular scientific evidence

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to say it wasn't the centre of the universe.

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-So they decided...

-"We'll have it!"

-We could say that of anywhere.

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Americans like to stake a claim, they're land-grabbers.

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-It's in their...

-Yeah.

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..in their DNA, so to be,

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not that we weren't, in our colonial era, of course.

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Isn't the sun the centre of the universe?

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STEPHEN LAUGHS

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Well... Sorry, I don't know why I laughed like that.

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What a way to build my confidence for the rest of the show(!)

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-That was the most...

-I thought that was a serious question, too,

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we both look to you and you looked at us

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like the peasants of the land,

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going, "Will we ever be free of this tyranny?

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"Ha-ha-ha! Never, never, never."

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"I'd like to go in the toilet,

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"but doesn't the Wickey Hole witch live there?

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"Oh, ha-ha-ha!"

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Well, I'm sorry that it sounded quite so patronising.

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The centre of the universe

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is apparently Bank Street and Sixth Street in Wallace, Idaho.

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-Or...

-The sun.

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THEY CHUCKLE HAUGHTILY

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APPLAUSE

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You beasts, you beasts. You unutterable beasts.

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At the exact centre of the observable universe,

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you'll find the unbearable likeness of Johnny Vegas,

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or whoever happens to be observing it.

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Now, if Johnny and Jason got naked, covered their legs...

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LAUGHTER

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-Wow!

-It's pretty good, isn't it?

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APPLAUSE

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-Wow.

-I know.

-I mean, I can't unsee that now...

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I can't wait after the show to open wedding gifts together.

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Be still, the beating hearts of the nation.

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If they got naked, covered their legs in lard

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and put their hands on each other's shoulders,

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what could we expect to happen next?

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I would guess...

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OFCOM would get involved.

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-Something COM. Yeah.

-Yeah.

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I'd obviously be the...

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-The bitch?

-..female in the relationship.

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-You know, I'm the one who needs rescuing.

-The bottom. Yeah.

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ALAN: Why are their legs in lard? Are they going to slither about?

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Legs are important in this particular pursuit.

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It's a red wine that we are about to trample the grapes for

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that you can also fry with.

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I like the idea of that - Lancashire wine...

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-Yeah, it's the first kind of sipping lard.

-Yes, that's right.

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So you can have a glass and do your chips in it also.

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-Available in every Yates' Wine Lodge. Ooh.

-Yeah.

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There'd be a rush, like at Christmas,

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when Jamie Oliver said to use goose fat,

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but this time, they'd be using comedians'...dripping.

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You'd go, "Do you know what? These potatoes taste a bit funny."

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Twice-fried Johnny dripping.

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-NORTHERN ACCENT:

-Now, we're in t'north and, um...

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Forgive me for my accent, I do my best.

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We're in t'north and...

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Sound like you've swallowed your tongue.

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It's a pursuit in the north west.

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JOHNNY: It's not shin-kicking?

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-Yes, it is shin-kicking.

-Ah!

-You knew about shin-kicking.

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-I did, my uncle was one.

-Wahey!

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APPLAUSE

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Very good. There you are. I don't know if he left -

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-did he bequeath you his pair of clogs?

-He was... You know what,

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by the time I knew him, he was blind and spoke, like,

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pretty much nonsense in the corner.

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But he was a phenomenal shin-kicker.

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He was a very tough man and that was his pastime, shin-kicking.

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-Is that a blade?

-Yes, it is.

-Wow.

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You take it in turns

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to kick each other in the shins as hard as you can.

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And it's the first person to, to burst into...

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Do you know what they cry if they give up? It's rather wonderful.

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-You'd think it'd be, "I give in." Or, "Oh, stop it, no."

-"Stop it."

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"Go on with your bother!" No...

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-It's...

-"Stop kicking me shin, you..."

-It's not that.

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They shout, "Sufficient!"

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LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

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That's the cry.

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Oddly enough, that's my climax call.

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"Sufficient!"

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Very good.

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It's... Now, I'd like to stress,

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there's no domestic violence involved.

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-No, no.

-It's just that, we're not greedy in our nature up north.

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I have to confess, I've never heard the phrase "climax call" before.

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So it took a bit of time for me to understand what you were saying.

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-Forgive me for that.

-I think it's actually from bird watching.

-Is it?

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Did they rip the skin off each other's legs and stuff?

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-Oh, yeah.

-Oh, God!

-One of the reasons for larding the shins

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was in order to encourage a glancing blow,

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rather than a really vicious one.

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But the skill was obviously to move your legs

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so that it was a glancing blow.

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Is it if you put your hands on the shoulders, you know

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the way you can't hit someone if you put them at arm's length

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-and do they try to not get kicked?

-I think it means you're in

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a stable position, so you're not escaping completely.

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But you can move your legs.

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I don't know how short the legs are of people you know but standing there

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you've still got a fair bit of range, haven't you?

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You've been doing it with Ewoks.

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The more I get to know you, the more I think men are mad.

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-I'm afraid you're right.

-They're always up to something ridiculous.

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Kicking each other on the lardy shins - you're like...

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Shin-kicking is probably what it was called on an everyday basis.

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In the 19th century there was a special word for it,

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which was "purring" or "purrin".

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"Purrin" or "porrin" or "parrin". They seem to be all used.

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Parrin, purrin - "parring", maybe, because you were parrying away.

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Nobody quite knows, but anyway.

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It was a popular pastime. A lot of betting on it.

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Yeah. And there are shin-kickers to this day

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in the oldest Olympics Games since the Greek ones,

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which we've covered before, which are in the Cotswolds.

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You can see...

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Do they have a Channel 4 programme called Shin-Kickers' Wives?

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Where they're like, "Oh, my God,

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"he's making so much money kicking shins. I love him.

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"I don't like his personality, but it's just the money."

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-Is he called the stickler?

-He's the stickler,

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he's the umpire or referee.

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-"A stickler for detail", is that where that comes from?

-Exactly.

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-I like that.

-You can probably see that he's got straw coming out

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of the bottom of his trousers and that's what they used.

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They pad their shins.

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They're not like tough northerners, they pad their shins.

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Cos this is in the Cotswolds.

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-"Get a bit of lard on that, you soft lad."

-That's it.

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Next thing you know, they'll be bringing in Crocs.

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It'll be going on for nine days, your shin-kicking.

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-That castle looks really old.

-I'm not sure it's a real castle.

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Don't spoil it!

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You have to spoil everything.

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Get a wind up and that's going over, isn't it?

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People are bouncing around going,

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"Are you sure this is a real castle?" "Yes."

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My gran used to say "sufficient" when she'd eaten enough.

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-Oh, "ample sufficiency"?

-Yeah.

-That's the phrase.

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You can say ample... or I've had sufficient.

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JOHNNY: Or your grandad was kicking her under the table.

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And she didn't want to let on.

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She'd just put her knife down, "Sufficient."

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Sitting there weeping once you'd gone home.

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We should have done it when we had the Olympics.

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You know you're allowed to include a couple of games

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and people are going, "Put darts in."

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Like, stuff we were good at. "Put snooker in."

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Should have gone, "Put shin-kicking in."

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-Just some poor Brazilian going, "What?"

-"Take that, Germany!"

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I just can't bear the thought of all the other countries beating us at it.

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"We invented this!" Yeah, exactly.

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"Oh, that's enough of Johnny Foreigner doing this.

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"Should've kept this quiet!"

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The Shin-Kicker's Association of Britain are known as SKAB,

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-you'll be pleased to know.

-Are they?

-Perhaps appropriately.

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And Johnny's uncle was one, which is jolly, we never knew that.

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-Really impressive.

-Genuinely.

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Shin-kicking was a popular sport in Lancashire pubs for 150 years.

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Now, here's a pub in Lancashire.

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My question is how did Spanking Roger woo the ladies?

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-I know that pub.

-Do you know it?

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-Yeah, I do.

-Where is it?

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It's in like, I think it's in Kersal or Salford area.

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-It's Manchester area, quite right.

-When I went to university -

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I know, I did -

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I lived in a place called Castle Irwell,

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which was a dog track before we...

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-Destroyed it.

-It became a student village. Yes.

-Right.

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But every year, there was a race down the hill naked.

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-And they would run down.

-Yes.

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All the blokes would. I didn't, obviously, I didn't...

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I'm a grower, not a shower.

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And this pub was part...

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I think the guy, Spanking Roger...

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That's how he got his wife - there was something to do with his wife,

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where he was naked and she had a little look,

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he was quite well-endowed and thought, "I'll have him."

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You're right. This naked running was on Kersal Moor.

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Kersal Moor, which has now become Castle Irwell,

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which is now a student village.

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Exactly. We've got a picture as it used to be, which is beautiful.

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It was much more of a shit-hole when I was there.

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Now it's just vomit and empty Pringles tubes.

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But he...that guy, Spanking Roger,

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even though it sounds like he was a bit of an idiot,

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he ended up being a big guy in the army.

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Like...I think he defended Gibraltar or something like that.

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Absolutely right. He was the great hero of Gibraltar.

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-This is brilliant. He's on fire!

-APPLAUSE

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It's like watching Slumdog Millionaire

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or something like that, going, "How did you know that one?"

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We have rather... It is your manor, isn't it?

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That's where I grew up, round the corner from there.

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And he was a fascinating character, Spanking Roger, as he was known.

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He was from Scotland, actually, in the Scots Dragoons.

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And he came down, 6'4" high and of ample endowment, it seems,

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because he did do the naked run.

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That's it, precisely.

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That's why he was called Spanking Roger.

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He could only do it in the summer

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when the slapping didn't hurt him quite so much.

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-But he did catch the eye...

-Or the lard.

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..catch the eye of a 65-year-old widow, whom he married.

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-With his...

-Literally?

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Yeah - caught her in the eye.

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"My eye! My eye!"

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Her name was Minshull, Barbara Minshull.

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That's right - Minshull Courts in Manchester

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and Minshull Street is where... where her family are from.

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-She was a rich family, yeah.

-Yeah. I think she died...

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This is back in the 1760s when they married.

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The next day, he was immediately betraying her,

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spending all her money. He spent it on, essentially,

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he would have bare-knuckle fights.

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If anybody beat him, they were, sort of, free,

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but if he beat them, he dragooned them, as it were.

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Is that why he's called Spanking Roger?

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Yeah. I mean, he's called Spanking Roger...

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He spanked 'em, then you had to be in his army.

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That's exactly the reason.

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He's got a hell of camel foot for someone who's well-endowed.

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He has a bit. I think the artist was modest.

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-Yeah.

-Eating his shorts.

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And life was extraordinary, because he, as you rightly say,

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was the hero of Gibraltar, with this dragooned army there.

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It was the longest siege in British military history,

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held out for four years and kept the Rock,

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as we still have at time of going to press, unless the Spanish

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have had something to do with it. His wife died, he got into

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terrible debt, came back impoverished.

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Found another woman whom he married, she was Scottish.

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And he died a very rich man indeed. So he had a pretty splendid life.

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A spanking life, in fact.

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Why do they say "spanking" for "good", in England?

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-"Spanking good time" and...

-It's a very good point, isn't it?

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The great, much lamented Christopher Hitchens once said,

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"There is no surname in English that cannot be improved

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"by having the word Spanker put in front of it."

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Spanker Manford.

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Spanker Vegas.

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-Spanker Bea. Spanker Bea is terrific, isn't it?

-Yeah.

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-It would be hard to spank a bee.

-There's the queen bee.

-Yeah.

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There's worker bees and then there's the spanker bees.

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Spanker bee.

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"I bumped into old Spanker Davies at the club the other day."

0:15:370:15:40

LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

0:15:400:15:42

Well, Spanking Roger didn't spank ladies -

0:15:480:15:50

he spanked the French and the Spanish.

0:15:500:15:53

Roger was a strapping 6'4" with a Scottish accent,

0:15:530:15:57

but what's short, talks gibberish

0:15:570:15:59

and is much sought after in Merseyside?

0:15:590:16:01

-Kevin Keegan.

-Johnny's uncle.

0:16:010:16:04

-Is it a Diddy Man?

-It's not the Diddy Men, though, oddly enough,

0:16:040:16:07

you could barely be closer. In Liverpool, there was this -

0:16:070:16:11

there it is in case you wanted to know what Merseyside looked like -

0:16:110:16:14

ferry across the Mersey.

0:16:140:16:16

What's the largest, best-known ethnic minority in Liverpool,

0:16:160:16:21

-would you say?

-Irish, I'd say.

-The Irish, of course.

-Yes.

0:16:210:16:24

Because the Liverpool accent is very like the Dublin accent.

0:16:240:16:27

-They're quite close to each other.

-DUBLIN ACCENT:

-People talk like that.

0:16:270:16:30

-LIVERPOOL ACCENT:

-All of a sudden, they're from Liverpool.

0:16:300:16:33

-So if you go backwards you'll end up...

-Ken Doherty. That's right.

0:16:330:16:36

-Exactly.

-Irish, yes.

-So you've got Diddy Men

0:16:360:16:39

and you've got Ireland.

0:16:390:16:41

Are you saying short, talking gibberish are Irish people?

0:16:410:16:44

No. But you've got Diddy Men, who are little people,

0:16:440:16:48

little people created by Ken Dodd.

0:16:480:16:50

-And you've got the Irish. So it's not Diddy Men.

-Leprechauns.

0:16:500:16:53

Leprechauns! Thank you very much, Johnny Vaughan...

0:16:530:16:56

-Johnny Vaughan?!

-Johnny Vaughan?

0:16:560:16:58

APPLAUSE DROWNS SPEECH

0:16:580:17:01

Well, it was a particular event in 1964.

0:17:030:17:07

It was thousands of Liverpudlian children

0:17:070:17:11

streamed into the parks to look for leprechauns,

0:17:110:17:14

because there was a rumour some had been seen,

0:17:140:17:16

or one had been seen, or something,

0:17:160:17:18

and they tore up plants and they ravaged the entire park system,

0:17:180:17:22

for 11 or 12 days in July '64.

0:17:220:17:26

And then it just stopped, as suddenly as it had begun.

0:17:260:17:28

It sounds like the Americans coming to Ireland.

0:17:280:17:32

That's what they did, looking for leprechauns. Then it just stopped,

0:17:320:17:35

they took their IT companies with them, they just never came back.

0:17:350:17:39

Can I just say, just to be a little bit of a nit-picker here?

0:17:390:17:41

-Those are garden gnomes.

-Yeah, I know.

0:17:410:17:43

I feel very racially offended.

0:17:430:17:46

-Yes.

-You're a stickler.

0:17:500:17:51

I'll give you points if you tell me how a leprechaun should look?

0:17:510:17:54

-How a leprechaun should look?

-Yeah.

0:17:540:17:56

-He should look...charming in the eye.

-Right.

0:17:560:17:59

He should have a sort of a jaunty gait about him.

0:17:590:18:03

-Right.

-And then a green hat and green outfit

0:18:030:18:05

and you can only find one at the end of a rainbow.

0:18:050:18:07

-Should he be bearded?

-Should he be bearded?

0:18:070:18:09

If he's not bearded, it is just a child wearing an outfit,

0:18:090:18:14

welcoming you to Ireland.

0:18:140:18:15

-It's got a big red bushy beard...

-A red beard.

0:18:150:18:17

-Because I've got one.

-Have you? Hmm.

0:18:170:18:19

-A big red bushy beard?

-You've got a leprechaun?

0:18:190:18:21

You can get them at Dublin Airport.

0:18:210:18:23

-A leprechaun?

-If you press them on the tummy, they go,

0:18:230:18:25

# When Irish eyes are smiling... #

0:18:250:18:28

It's one of the spookiest, scariest things.

0:18:280:18:30

My kids love it, but me and the wife are terrified.

0:18:300:18:32

Like a Chippy Doll? If anyone presses it...

0:18:320:18:34

# When Irish eyes are smiling... #

0:18:340:18:36

-Oh, horrible!

-Yes.

-You keep throwing it out the window

0:18:360:18:38

and then it keeps on coming back in.

0:18:380:18:40

-I think it's supposed to be cute, but it's actually like a horror film.

-Oh.

0:18:420:18:46

"Look at my lucky charms, ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha..."

0:18:460:18:48

-Oh, don't, oh!

-And it's got sort of an old man's voice in the distance.

0:18:480:18:53

I'll bring it in.

0:18:530:18:54

My kids have got a bear and it's got a red heart on it,

0:18:540:18:57

and you press it and it glows.

0:18:570:18:59

And every so often you'll just hear it sort of, it'll go, "I love you."

0:18:590:19:02

-And all, you know.

-Oh!

-"I can see you," or whatever.

0:19:020:19:05

The worst one is, "I see you." And I remember one night...

0:19:050:19:09

Oh, do you...? No!

0:19:090:19:11

I went to the toilet and in the middle of the night,

0:19:110:19:14

half asleep, and the batteries were going on it.

0:19:140:19:16

I was sort of...all of a sudden, I just heard...

0:19:160:19:18

-DISTORTED VOICE:

-"I see you..."

0:19:180:19:20

-That's very disturbing.

-Absolutely terrifying.

0:19:240:19:26

I wouldn't recover from that.

0:19:260:19:27

-Well, interesting.

-"I can see you..."

0:19:270:19:29

Who am I to tell you that you've got it slightly wrong

0:19:290:19:32

-in what leprechauns look like, because...

-All right, Stephen.

0:19:320:19:35

No, I'm, I'm going by...

0:19:350:19:37

Look down upon me and tell me what we did wrong this time.

0:19:370:19:39

I'm going on early information, rather than late, you know,

0:19:390:19:43

20th century information.

0:19:430:19:45

There are inventions which come from the 20th century,

0:19:450:19:48

which include the fact that they wear green clothes and tall hats.

0:19:480:19:51

And they have ginger beards.

0:19:510:19:52

According to fairy legends and traditions

0:19:520:19:55

of the south of Ireland from 1825, proper leprechauns -

0:19:550:19:58

if there is such a thing - are all...

0:19:580:20:00

They have a trade - shoemakers. They're all shoemakers.

0:20:000:20:04

And they are exclusively what?

0:20:040:20:06

-ALAN: White.

-Yes. They are.

0:20:060:20:10

They're exclusively white.

0:20:140:20:16

-And?

-Old.

-Male?

0:20:160:20:19

-Male.

-Male, oh.

-Is the right idea. And there's the shamrock, of course.

0:20:190:20:23

There's a rule that an Irish person told me -

0:20:230:20:25

"Never go into an Irish pub in America or London

0:20:250:20:28

"that has a neon shamrock, because it'll be crap."

0:20:280:20:30

-Is that right?

-Yeah. I mean, it would be a bit dodgy.

-Yeah.

0:20:300:20:33

-Any American sort of Irish pub.

-Yeah.

0:20:330:20:35

-AMERICAN ACCENT:

-"Come on in to be sure

0:20:350:20:37

"and you'll have a right old great craic of a time."

0:20:370:20:40

That must be very annoying.

0:20:420:20:44

Yeah. But this particular chase happened, as I say, in '64,

0:20:440:20:48

but in 1982, a man called Brian, which is a good Irish name,

0:20:480:20:51

told the Liverpool Echo that he had been working in the park

0:20:510:20:54

when some children saw him and mocked him for his height,

0:20:540:20:57

or rather lack of it.

0:20:570:20:58

And so, joining in the sport, he spoke in sort of...

0:20:580:21:02

"Ah-de-da-de-da-de-da!" Sort of Irish gibberish.

0:21:020:21:05

I know, I'm sorry, I'm doing what he did.

0:21:050:21:08

Threw sods of earth at them, and they ran away frightened,

0:21:080:21:11

thinking he was a leprechaun.

0:21:110:21:13

Because they'd called him a leprechaun.

0:21:130:21:15

They said, "Oi, you! You're a leprechaun!"

0:21:150:21:17

And he went, "I am that, da-de-da-de-da-de-da..."

0:21:170:21:20

And so they all said, "We saw a leprechaun, we saw..."

0:21:200:21:23

You know. "Saw a real one, saw a real leprechaun, in the park."

0:21:230:21:26

And so all these kids were like, you know, they all invaded it.

0:21:260:21:30

It's like a lost episode of Brookside, this.

0:21:300:21:32

It is, isn't it? Where does it begin?

0:21:320:21:35

But these particular things happen from time to time,

0:21:350:21:38

these mass delusions, or whatever you might call them.

0:21:380:21:40

They're called the children's hunt, when they involve children.

0:21:400:21:43

So in 1964, as Beatlemania swept the world,

0:21:430:21:46

leprechaun mania swept Liverpool.

0:21:460:21:48

Which London attraction cost two arms and two legs to enter?

0:21:480:21:52

Oh, look at that, isn't that gorgeous?

0:21:520:21:54

-Ladybird Book, don't you think?

-Yes, it's got the look of a Ladybird Book.

0:21:540:21:58

It looks like there's been a pigeon accident

0:21:580:22:00

and they're all gathered round the scene to see what happened.

0:22:000:22:03

-Is this picture a clue?

-No, it's not at all.

0:22:030:22:05

It's not to do with art, is it?

0:22:050:22:07

-No, it's not.

-Tower of London.

0:22:070:22:09

The Tower of London is where we need to be.

0:22:090:22:11

Cue picture of Tower of London.

0:22:110:22:13

-Traitors' Gate's all I know.

-There's the Tower of London.

0:22:130:22:16

And we're talking about an attraction within

0:22:160:22:18

the Tower of London that lasted for 600 years.

0:22:180:22:22

Henry I, who was a very early king, had a particular,

0:22:220:22:25

rather exciting luxury that he was very fond of

0:22:250:22:28

that he kept in Woodstock in Oxfordshire.

0:22:280:22:30

And King John, who was late 13th century,

0:22:300:22:35

moved it to the Tower of London where it stayed for 600 years.

0:22:350:22:38

And you had to pay to get in to see it but you could -

0:22:380:22:43

I say two arms and two legs, it's really four legs, to be honest.

0:22:430:22:46

Oh, an animal.

0:22:460:22:48

You could bring in an animal and that would...

0:22:480:22:50

-Four chicken drumsticks. Bucket of KFC.

-No...

0:22:500:22:53

That would get you in free because they would use the animal

0:22:530:22:59

-to satisfy what you were going to see.

-A dragon!

0:22:590:23:02

-A mincer.

-Sort of like a dragon to them.

-A mincer!

0:23:020:23:05

-Lion or a...

-Bears?

0:23:050:23:07

Lion and bear, yes, all those things. A big menagerie...

0:23:070:23:10

-Oh, wow.

-..as zoos were called.

0:23:100:23:12

There's an 18th century, by the look of it, cartoon.

0:23:120:23:15

-That's the last dodo.

-Oh, it does look a bit like it, doesn't it?

0:23:150:23:19

I think it's some hugely complicated satire that we don't really get.

0:23:190:23:23

Anyway, that's a cartoon of the menagerie.

0:23:230:23:25

It lasted all the way till 1830 when it was transported to,

0:23:250:23:30

-or transferred to...?

-London Zoo?

-Regent's Park.

0:23:300:23:32

To Regent's Park, to London Zoo, yes. So, there was the menagerie.

0:23:320:23:35

It was immensely popular all through those years.

0:23:350:23:38

If you were a sheriff in the city of London and around you had to pay

0:23:380:23:42

fourpence a day to help with the feeding of the polar bear.

0:23:420:23:46

They were presumably quite good animal keepers if they managed to

0:23:460:23:49

keep these animals cos they couldn't afford to let them die very quickly.

0:23:490:23:52

I mean, how long it would take in the 15/16th century to get a lion

0:23:520:23:56

to England, it was just inconceivable

0:23:560:23:58

-how long it would take.

-What sort of animals did they have?

0:23:580:24:01

LAUGHTER

0:24:010:24:02

Oh, a cat. Cool(!)

0:24:020:24:05

A cat... If you brought a cat or a dog to feed to the lions,

0:24:050:24:09

or the tigers, they had tigers as well.

0:24:090:24:12

-And they had bears...

-Oh, my!

-..as I say, a polar bear.

0:24:120:24:16

So they had what were considered immensely exotic animals.

0:24:160:24:19

You would feed them and free admission.

0:24:190:24:23

I bet that was used as a punishment for kids.

0:24:230:24:25

"I'll tell you what, you do that again, I'm taking you there

0:24:250:24:29

"and you're getting fed to the bloody lions."

0:24:290:24:31

And you'd walk them right to the door if they were being really bad.

0:24:310:24:35

But what if you had a pet lion?

0:24:350:24:37

And you turned up and you wanted entry?

0:24:370:24:40

And they went, "It's a bit rich for my blood." You know what I mean?

0:24:400:24:43

"Yeah, take the lion. See how far you get."

0:24:430:24:45

There was a rather unfortunate incident in 1830.

0:24:450:24:49

A keeper accidentally allowed two tigers and one lion to be in

0:24:490:24:52

the same enclosure and there was a horrible fight

0:24:520:24:54

that they only managed to end by introducing a sort of red hot prongs

0:24:540:24:58

to the noses of the tigers who eventually stalked off.

0:24:580:25:01

But who do you think won?

0:25:010:25:03

-Two against one...

-Yeah, and it's tigers.

-The lion king.

0:25:030:25:06

No, the lion king didn't win, I'm afraid.

0:25:060:25:08

Simba licked his wounds and died a few days later.

0:25:080:25:11

Very sad. Very sad.

0:25:110:25:12

But anyway, it was an amazing place.

0:25:120:25:14

Imagine an imaginary menagerie

0:25:140:25:16

managed by an imaginary menagerie manager.

0:25:160:25:18

LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

0:25:180:25:21

So, there we are.

0:25:270:25:29

Now, what would you do in 12th century London if you saw this man?

0:25:290:25:34

It is a ghost.

0:25:370:25:39

Oh, you're spending a penny, are you?

0:25:420:25:44

-I'm going to spend my penny, yes.

-Jason's spending his penny.

0:25:440:25:47

TOILET FLUSHES

0:25:470:25:49

Must be.

0:25:490:25:50

You're absolutely right! Absolutely right.

0:25:500:25:53

Toilet, toilets.

0:25:530:25:54

APPLAUSE

0:25:540:25:57

You'd be like... You'd put that round you.

0:25:570:26:00

-That's right. Do you want to try it out?

-Go on, then.

0:26:000:26:03

Is that man an old-fashioned Portaloo?

0:26:030:26:05

This is... This is Steve,

0:26:050:26:07

one of our most gifted intellectuals.

0:26:070:26:09

Intellectual elves.

0:26:090:26:11

LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

0:26:110:26:14

Can you pass me the newspaper? Pass the newspaper!

0:26:190:26:23

And I believe there's an extra farthing for a happy ending,

0:26:230:26:26

but the...

0:26:260:26:28

-Have you had sufficient?

-Sufficient.

0:26:280:26:31

Sufficient! In the 12th century, there were those who were a little

0:26:310:26:35

bit too, you know, a little bit pernickety

0:26:350:26:38

and didn't want to be seen taking a poo in the street, as many did.

0:26:380:26:40

And so these gentlemen would come around with their big capes

0:26:400:26:43

and allow you a little bit of privacy.

0:26:430:26:45

Did people used to just poo in the street?

0:26:450:26:48

-Otherwise they would poo in the street.

-Would they?

-Yeah.

0:26:480:26:50

-Times have changed, haven't they, Stephen?

-They have, absolutely.

0:26:500:26:54

Though there's a lot of peeing in the street, late at night.

0:26:540:26:57

-Yeah.

-A huge amount.

-Yeah, and I'll admit to that. But, you know...

0:26:570:27:01

Quite. Needs must.

0:27:010:27:03

May I thank our senior elf,

0:27:030:27:05

who has done something well beneath his huge dignity?

0:27:050:27:09

Steve Colwen, ladies and gentlemen - thank you.

0:27:090:27:11

APPLAUSE

0:27:110:27:14

Marvellous service.

0:27:190:27:20

We do know the name of one of these - Thomas Butcher.

0:27:200:27:23

He's in the records. He was fined for overcharging.

0:27:230:27:26

-Oh, really?

-Yeah.

-What, afterwards? Like, he had a look in and went,

0:27:260:27:29

-"I think you can give me a fiver."

-Possibly! Oh, dear.

0:27:290:27:34

Did he have anyone standing beside him,

0:27:340:27:36

selling deodorant and lollipops?

0:27:360:27:39

Toilet roll, really, that's what you want.

0:27:390:27:42

There's an animal that sort of also does that similar draping effect.

0:27:420:27:48

-Do you know what it is?

-Yeah, it's a bird with its feathers.

0:27:480:27:52

-I can't... Is it a nights...?

-It's a black heron.

0:27:520:27:54

-And why would it do that?

-To protect its eggs.

0:27:540:27:58

There it is. There's it doing it, black heron.

0:27:580:28:01

Is it to trick its prey into thinking it's night-time

0:28:010:28:04

-so it comes out?

-It actually creates a shadow

0:28:040:28:06

and fish are very drawn to cooler water in certain climates,

0:28:060:28:09

so the fish see what they think will be cooler water cos there may

0:28:090:28:12

be a tree overhanging or something like that, and it gobbles them up.

0:28:120:28:15

-So it's a lure. It's a wonderful, clever lure.

-It's amazing to watch.

0:28:150:28:18

We did a show for BBC called Walk On The Wild Side, which you did...

0:28:180:28:22

Yes, I remember doing the voices for various animals.

0:28:220:28:25

And it does it in quite an odd motion, it's quite fast.

0:28:250:28:30

Cos we did a thing and it just went

0:28:300:28:32

"night-time, day time. Night-time, day time."

0:28:320:28:34

-That's so sweet!

-That was our fun little sketch.

0:28:340:28:37

I do it with men in nightclubs. I go...

0:28:370:28:39

It's you!

0:28:420:28:45

It is me!

0:28:450:28:47

There you go. Horror. Medieval lavatory attendants provided

0:28:470:28:50

personal privacy and a bucket.

0:28:500:28:53

Now it's time to get our kit off

0:28:530:28:55

and frolic in the sub-zero temperatures of General Ignorance.

0:28:550:28:58

So fingers on buzzers if you would.

0:28:580:28:59

What's black and white and doesn't live in the Arctic?

0:28:590:29:03

-BIKE HORN TOOTS

-Penguins.

0:29:030:29:05

Oh, what a shame!

0:29:050:29:07

KLAXON BLARES

0:29:070:29:09

Well, you know, the fact is they're not indigenous to the Arctic,

0:29:090:29:13

the North Pole. And you're right, they don't naturally occur there.

0:29:130:29:17

But man has taken them there, as pets on boats.

0:29:170:29:20

Because they're cute and they were left there and they sort of got on

0:29:200:29:23

and made a living pretty happily amongst the fish there...

0:29:230:29:26

Despite being eaten by a polar bear.

0:29:260:29:28

Well, that was a surprise, when they met the polar bear, presumably.

0:29:280:29:31

Ahhh!

0:29:310:29:34

"What is that?!"

0:29:340:29:36

"Why are you so dressed up and where are you off to?"

0:29:360:29:40

Despite what they say, there are some penguins in the Arctic.

0:29:400:29:44

Which part of the world does the idea

0:29:440:29:47

of eating frogs' legs come from?

0:29:470:29:48

-CAR HORN TOOTS

-Go on, Jason.

0:29:480:29:50

-France.

-Oh! Bless you. Very sweet of you.

0:29:500:29:54

-Yeah, it's all right.

-Is it England?

0:29:540:29:56

Yes! Bless my soul!

0:29:570:30:00

So far as we can tell, this is absolutely right.

0:30:050:30:08

There is evidence of the early Neolithic British

0:30:080:30:11

eating frogs' legs in our most iconic memorial.

0:30:110:30:15

There it is. Stone - look at it - Henge.

0:30:150:30:17

-Henge.

-Yeah, exactly.

0:30:170:30:19

What could be hengier or stonier? How many years ago?

0:30:190:30:22

-I'll give you a thousand either way, when we discovered...

-4,000.

-4,000.

0:30:220:30:26

It's about 9,000 years ago,

0:30:260:30:28

that's to say, between 7,000 and 6,000 BC.

0:30:280:30:31

There is evidence, not just of eating... Well, there's toads,

0:30:310:30:34

but also, we've got three-course meal evidence.

0:30:340:30:38

Frogs with hazelnuts, followed by a fish course,

0:30:380:30:41

-followed by blackberries. That's not bad, is it?

-Sounds nice.

0:30:410:30:44

That would see you through nicely, very healthy. Very healthy.

0:30:440:30:47

To the nearest...thousand tonnes,

0:30:470:30:50

how many tonnes of frogs' legs do the French get through a year?

0:30:500:30:54

500,000 tonnes.

0:30:540:30:55

500,000 tonnes? Half a million tonnes.

0:30:550:30:58

It's between 3,000 and 4,000 tonnes. It's still a fair quantity.

0:31:020:31:07

-Yeah.

-I thought they had massive frogs.

0:31:070:31:09

-It would be peculiar.

-The size of a man.

0:31:090:31:13

Now, what's this? What's this? What's this? Pass it down.

0:31:130:31:15

Just tell me what it is, have a taste.

0:31:150:31:17

It's, I promise you, not poison, despite being green.

0:31:170:31:20

-It's not wasabi, is it?

-Not wasabi, is it?

0:31:200:31:22

Wasabi, there we go!

0:31:220:31:25

You would be served this if you were to go out around London

0:31:250:31:28

and go to most Japanese restaurants,

0:31:280:31:31

and we can have a taste and it's...woo!

0:31:310:31:34

-Pretty hot.

-I can't.

-Do you find it too hot?

-Yeah, I can't even...

0:31:340:31:37

My mother thinks tomato and basil soup is too spicy.

0:31:370:31:40

"Oh, that's too spicy for me. What's in that?" Salt.

0:31:400:31:43

That is as close to wasabi as you could get without it being wasabi.

0:31:430:31:47

I nearly took a mouthful of that, you know, it's not a joke.

0:31:470:31:50

-I can't take chilli, but I can take as much mustard...

-I put a load in

0:31:500:31:54

cos you said it wasn't... ALAN: You said it's not wasabi!

0:31:540:31:56

-It's not wasabi.

-Well, it's...

0:31:560:31:59

I'll tell you what it is.

0:31:590:32:01

I'll tell you what it is.

0:32:010:32:03

It's killed a man over there.

0:32:030:32:04

This is not Jackass, it's QI!

0:32:040:32:06

What you're eating there is horseradish.

0:32:090:32:11

-Horseradish.

-Now you may say wasabi is Japanese horseradish,

0:32:110:32:14

but the wasabi you get sold in British restaurants

0:32:140:32:17

is almost always ordinary British horseradish dyed green.

0:32:170:32:21

-No!

-Yes.

0:32:210:32:22

Because real wasabi, although it's related to horseradish,

0:32:220:32:25

takes two years to mature and it's very expensive to transport.

0:32:250:32:29

So it's much easier to use the British stuff,

0:32:290:32:31

which grows on railway sidings and is cheap as chips,

0:32:310:32:34

to use that instead.

0:32:340:32:35

You know what, Stephen? That would have been lovely

0:32:350:32:38

just if you'd explained it and used some bloody pictures!

0:32:380:32:42

-I'm sorry.

-Rather than give us some and go, "Put that in your mouth!"

0:32:420:32:46

-I'm so sorry.

-I swear to God -

0:32:460:32:49

I mean, I can hear things like a dog does!

0:32:490:32:51

It's done things in me head!

0:32:530:32:55

I've been waiting all my life to become a superhero

0:32:550:32:58

and all you had to do was give me a bloody spoonful of that!

0:32:580:33:02

-Yeah. It's opened...

-I'm seeing through walls!

0:33:020:33:04

It's opened your Eustachian tube and your sinuses.

0:33:090:33:12

Oh, yeah, yeah, cancel my car, I'm flying home.

0:33:120:33:14

Oh, bless you. Now shove your little dishes away, if you can.

0:33:190:33:24

-You might want to keep them.

-That's enough superpowers for one day.

0:33:240:33:28

I'm going to demonstrate something called the Leidenfrost effect,

0:33:280:33:31

named after a certain Dr Leidenfrost.

0:33:310:33:34

So, allow me to present a tray, which may seem rather mysterious.

0:33:340:33:39

There we go.

0:33:390:33:41

Now, essentially, what the principle is -

0:33:410:33:42

I'll explain it first and then you'll see it -

0:33:420:33:45

is that when you drop some water on a very hot surface,

0:33:450:33:47

it kind of beads into a little ball.

0:33:470:33:50

And goes around, it's often a way you test the heat of a frying pan

0:33:500:33:54

or so on, or if you drop water accidentally onto a hotplate.

0:33:540:33:58

And if you allow this beading to take place on certain surfaces,

0:33:580:34:01

the beading is sort of predictable and rather exciting.

0:34:010:34:04

And you can see a little bit of it on VT,

0:34:040:34:06

in which the bead is going uphill.

0:34:060:34:10

There it's being dropped from a pipette onto a very hot, ridged,

0:34:100:34:13

sort of, saw-toothed surface,

0:34:130:34:15

and you can see the ball itself, that's how it...

0:34:150:34:18

That's how my sperm reacts with a ridged condom.

0:34:180:34:21

You may be wearing it inside out.

0:34:230:34:25

LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

0:34:250:34:28

Why have you got your sperm in a pipette?

0:34:330:34:36

-Sufficient, sufficient.

-All right.

0:34:390:34:43

I have pipettes here, and this is room temperature.

0:34:430:34:47

I'm going to put it on here

0:34:470:34:48

and you can see, as I drop the water,

0:34:480:34:50

that it's just... Nothing much happens.

0:34:500:34:53

But the beads go off and that's starting to boil and frizz.

0:34:530:34:57

And as it gets hotter, you will see the Leidenfrost effect of it.

0:34:570:35:02

Listen - you'd swear the women were watching the Chippendales.

0:35:020:35:05

"Ooh! Aah."

0:35:050:35:07

Where it gets interesting is where these things have been

0:35:070:35:09

left on the heat and so are already incredibly hot.

0:35:090:35:12

And this is a little concave thing, and we drop a bit in

0:35:120:35:15

and it goes round and round and round and round.

0:35:150:35:18

Rather beautifully.

0:35:180:35:20

And now we've got another one with the saw-tooth

0:35:200:35:22

that we saw climbing up, but this is a circular saw tooth

0:35:220:35:25

and it should go round and round as well.

0:35:250:35:27

Whee! Incredible speed, look at that.

0:35:270:35:29

I don't know why young people have to go and, you know,

0:35:290:35:31

play Grand Theft Auto,

0:35:310:35:33

-when they've all this sort of craic to look forward to.

-I know, exactly.

0:35:330:35:36

Isn't it fun?

0:35:360:35:37

And for the grand finale, you can see here,

0:35:370:35:40

next to the hotplate, is...

0:35:400:35:41

We've got ourselves a sort of maze.

0:35:410:35:45

And let's see what happens here.

0:35:450:35:47

Cool! That's just water?

0:35:490:35:51

It has a very predictable path and they go all the way round.

0:35:510:35:54

If they've got enough energy, they'll go round twice.

0:35:540:35:56

There you go. Big fellow.

0:35:560:35:58

That's like chasing me dad round a shopping precinct.

0:35:580:36:02

"Don't abandon me!"

0:36:020:36:03

-That's it, there you go.

-"I will make you proud.

0:36:030:36:06

"Dad? Dad, come back!"

0:36:060:36:10

Hours of harmless fun.

0:36:100:36:11

Now, I asked the very nice scientist from the University of Bath,

0:36:110:36:14

who've lent us this equipment,

0:36:140:36:16

what technical solutions this may offer the world, and he said,

0:36:160:36:20

"Actually, most of the time, the Leidenfrost effect

0:36:200:36:22

"provides technical problems of plumbing and things like that.

0:36:220:36:26

"And it isn't always a desirable effect."

0:36:260:36:28

So if you can think, at home, some useful solution that could be

0:36:280:36:31

used for the Leidenfrost effect we'd be very grateful.

0:36:310:36:33

But thank you, Kei Takashina from the University of Bath

0:36:330:36:36

for the loan of this splendid equipment.

0:36:360:36:39

APPLAUSE

0:36:390:36:42

And that brings us to the sizzling scores.

0:36:420:36:45

Well, my word, we have a...

0:36:450:36:47

Well, I'm not surprised he's won, he's been on fire.

0:36:470:36:49

Despite one klaxon,

0:36:490:36:51

a clear lead from Jason Manford, at plus three.

0:36:510:36:54

Oh, amazing.

0:36:540:36:56

-That's really never happened before.

-Three for all that?

-I know!

0:36:560:36:59

And in second place, that intellectual war horse,

0:36:590:37:03

Johnny Vegas on two!

0:37:030:37:05

APPLAUSE DROWNS SPEECH

0:37:050:37:08

And a magnificent debut for Aisling Bea, on minus seven.

0:37:080:37:11

Come on, Ireland! Come on, Ireland.

0:37:110:37:16

But just pipping them in the L for Loser position

0:37:160:37:19

is Alan Davies with minus 14.

0:37:190:37:22

Thank you very much.

0:37:220:37:24

That's all from Aisling, Johnny, Jason, Alan and me.

0:37:290:37:32

And I leave you with the rather poignant last words

0:37:320:37:35

from Stan Laurel, who, when asked how he felt

0:37:350:37:38

said, "I wish I was skiing."

0:37:380:37:40

"Oh, Mr Laurel, do you ski?" replied the nurse.

0:37:400:37:44

"No," he said, "but I'd rather be skiing than doing what I am doing."

0:37:440:37:48

Good night.

0:37:480:37:49

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