Monster Mash QI


Monster Mash

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Transcript


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This programme contains strong language

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CHEERS AND APPLAUSE

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Goo-oo-oo-ood evening.

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Good evening, good evening, good evening, and welcome to QI,

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where tonight we're doing the Monster Mash.

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Let's meet the nameless horrors that lurk in our monstrous shadows.

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The malformed Josh Widdicombe...

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CHEERS AND APPLAUSE

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..the mutated Phill Jupitus...

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CHEERS AND APPLAUSE

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..the misbegotten Sara Pascoe...

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CHEERS AND APPLAUSE

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..and the complete monstrosity, Alan Davies.

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CHEERS AND APPLAUSE

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IN MENACING VOICE: Now, let's hear your scary noises.

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Sarah goes...

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WOMAN SCREAMS

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Josh goes...

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MONSTER GROWLS

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Phill goes...

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WOLF HOWLS

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And Alan goes... CHICKEN CLUCKS

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LAUGHTER

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Too terrible to contemplate.

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Let's start with a monster mix-and-match.

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Here are some cards you'll find under your desk.

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-The fronts and the backs.

-Oh!

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And we want you to see if you can make

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some kind of monster - and name it if you can.

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-Oh, right.

-Name it?

-Mm.

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-OK.

-You've got bottoms, Alan...

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-I'm a classic bottom.

-I'm a classic top.

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..and Josh has got tops.

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-What have you got there?

-Alan Davies has got gorgeous legs.

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-LAUGHTER

-Hey...

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What you've created there is a human.

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-I'd say it's borderline, Stephen.

-Too terrible to contemplate.

-Yeah.

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-Here we go, here we go, all right...

-OK, OK.

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-You don't know what I've put, then we'll look in a minute.

-OK.

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-Ooh.

-OK.

-There we go.

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Ah, a lionfish.

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Now, that's interesting, cos the lionfish does exist.

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Unlike the merlion that we have created...

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Ah, the merlion is a very good...

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..which would sing on the rocks by the coast of Africa

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and lure deer to their deaths.

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Well, Alan, there you've got an ant...

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An ant cow.

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Yeah, we've got the...

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Basically, what you got there is

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an ungulate that will ruin a picnic.

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Well, we can go through some of these.

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-Certainly a lionfish exists.

-OK.

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There's a bounty on them, if you catch them in the Caribbean.

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They destroy the habitat - they're so successful.

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There's almost nothing that can get them, and they can eat everything.

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-Try making one to order. See if you can make a Minotaur.

-OK.

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-Minotaur...

-Oh, Minotaur...

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-So, it's...

-Bull's head.

-Bull's head's on there.

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-Chap's bottom, isn't it? A Minotaur.

-Yeah.

-Rather than a lion?

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There we go.

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No-one's quite sure whether it should have...

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the human top with a bull's bottom, but...

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-We've made a Minotaur.

-Oh, yeah. He looks really muscly.

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That's not as scary as I thought it was going to be.

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-I'm going to say pop your cards away.

-Oh.

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I've just made a mermaid, Stephen.

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You've done a lovely mermaid - well done.

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That's definitely one that was available.

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There are all kinds of things available -

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the myrmecoleon, which is also known as a formicaleon.

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-This is a lion head and an ant body.

-What?!

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In medieval bestiaries, they were very sure that that existed.

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They held it to be bigger than an ant.

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Basically, it lived in a little pit and pulled in things.

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-How big was it?

-A bit like a large ant.

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-Oh, like a large ant.

-Yeah.

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Mermaids and mermen, obviously, are the human body with a fish tail.

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People think, you know, sailors fall in love with mermaids

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and how can they consummate their relationship? You know...

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-Fertilise the eggs, Stephen.

-Exactly, it's very simple.

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She lays her eggs on a rock or something

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and you fertilise them - what's the problem with that?

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The sailor has to sail back to his waters where he was spawned

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and take the mermaid with him.

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So, he has to go back to, I don't know, Dorking...

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Yes, that it might be.

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..find a pond, pop his new fishwife in there.

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-LAUGHING:

-Fishwife!

-She lays her eggs

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and then he has to be arrested for indecent public exposure

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at a boating pond.

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And one that you get points for because it does exist

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is the merlion.

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Yeah, which you came up with - a merlion -

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-which is the lion head and a fish tail.

-Yeah.

-Really?

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Yeah, the national symbol of Singapore.

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-Is it?

-Oh...thank you, Singapore.

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Yeah. Gives you those points.

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-The hippocampus.

-Hippopotamus.

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Thank you for replying with another animal.

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LAUGHTER You're doing very well.

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Hip-po replacement.

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But...hippocampus is...

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The hipster campus is, it's...

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-runs coffee bars in Shoreditch...

-LAUGHTER

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..in a very effeminate way.

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Well, as you probably know,

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it's part of the brain, the hippocampus,

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but why is it called the hippocampus?

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-The shape of it.

-Is...?

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It's the shape of a seahorse.

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But a hippocampus, as a mythical beast,

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-had a horse front and a fish tail.

-Oh...

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And so did that they think before they found the seahorse

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or they thought they were two separate seahorses?

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No, there are seahorses in the Mediterranean, so I suppose...

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Let's find out sometime - not now.

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LAUGHTER

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That is surely the opposite of what this show is about.

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I panicked, all right? I just panicked.

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People love seahorses because

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it's the male who gestates the babies, isn't it, with seahorses?

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Which is always so lovely.

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I've dived amongst them and I was just shocked by how small they are.

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You must have...

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-They are tiny. Well, I've seen them in the London Aquariums.

-Oh, right.

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They have a very long thin tank that they go up and down -

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it's quite sweet.

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I assume that's what they want to do,

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-otherwise it feels a bit unfair.

-Would be cruel.

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They have to just go up and down.

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-They're very horse-like as well in the way they feed...

-They race.

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..they browse in the weeds.

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They browse in the weeds, looking...

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They have little stalls and they all get in.

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LAUGHTER At the races.

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There's always one that doesn't want to go and they have to take him off.

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So, no matter what monster you imagine,

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you can be pretty sure that someone else made it first.

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Here's a monster that someone made earlier,

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but what is it and what's it made from?

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-Oh....

-Oh, my gosh.

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-Is it carved?

-Mm...

-Is it made from bone?

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It's a type of mermaid that was very popular in the 19th century.

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-It's called a Fiji mermaid.

-Ooh...

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People would come from miles to see it.

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It was shown off at carnivals,

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and it was made from fish and household bits and pieces.

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For a long time, people thought it was made by

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the addition of a monkey's head with a fish.

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And this particular one was acquired by the Wellcome Collection in 1919,

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and then later by the fabulous Horniman Museum.

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-Do you know the Horniman Museum?

-Yeah, I live near there.

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-Do you?

-It's in Forest Hill. It's brilliant, yeah.

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It is an incredible place.

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A genuine museum of curiosities of the most fascinating kind.

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-I've been there too - it's great.

-It is good. It's a fine place.

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You just saying that cos I said I've been there?

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-LAUGHTER

-I go every week.

-Largely, yeah.

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Cos when you said you went to the aquarium, I didn't jump on it.

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Like, "Oh, yeah, I've been."

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I let you have your time in the sun.

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"Time in the sun."

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-SARA GASPS

-Oh, wow!

-There we go.

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Now, look. You see, now...

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-There he is.

-So, were they supposed to be scary creatures?

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It is quite scary.

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You can picture it scampering in your bedroom or something.

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They were a lot sexier once they added the hair and the shell bras.

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Exactly. But you'll be pleased to know that

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this is a result of the CT scans,

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which were made by the Horniman Museum for us,

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and Dr James Moffatt of St George's University in London

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translated the CT scan data into

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-this 3-D printing of the original.

-Wow!

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-So, this is a 3-D printing. Isn't it good?

-Yeah!

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Yeah, we like that.

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APPLAUSE

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And you can see how detailed it is.

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Even the little holes and flaws in the fish tail.

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Have you been to St George's Hospital?

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It's really excellent.

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LAUGHTER Now...

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I'm not going to play this game.

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Ergh! Ergh!

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I genuinely jumped.

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LAUGHTER

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You've seen them on Dartmoor, haven't you, Widdicombe?

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-What are your monsters called?

-We've got... On Dartmoor?

-Yeah.

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We've got the Hairy Hand. Are you aware of the Hairy Hand?

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-Which is a...

-No.

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-PHILL:

-You get it when you're about 15.

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LAUGHTER

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The Hairy Hand is a disembodied hand that would appear from nowhere

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-if you were driving along the B3021...

-Pissed.

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..and it would steer you off the road.

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-But there's...

-"Officer!"

-"Officer!"

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IN WEST COUNTRY ACCENT: 'And it smelt of cider, didn't it?

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'It dropped it's pint on me, and then it drove me off the road.'

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One of the people that claimed

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he'd been steered off the road by the Hairy Hand,

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he described it as invisible.

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LAUGHTER

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Oh, bless him for trying.

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There's the old curse about the Monkey Wishing Hand,

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-which it seems is where that's coming from.

-Oh, yeah.

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What's that? What's that?

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It's a dead one of those.

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LAUGHTER

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What's that? What's that? What's that? What's that?

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It's a herd of those.

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I've got loads of them.

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APPLAUSE

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So, Jenny. Do you know about Jenny Haniver?

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No. Jenny Agutter.

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Jenny Agutter you know about? That's good.

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Let me add another Jenny to your list of Jennys.

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Let's see some pictures of Jenny Haniver.

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-Was she on the front of a boat?

-Whoa.

-Oh!

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Lord, that's Doctor Who.

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There's a box of props from Doctor Who.

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It does look like it, doesn't it?

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It's the Ku Klux Klams.

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LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

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Can you guess what they are?

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-You burn one cross...

-Fish.

-They're fish.

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-They are flatfish.

-They're skates. Skate.

-Oh, skate.

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Rays or skates would be carved in these shapes -

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it was known as Jenny Hanivers.

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Mostly sailors from Antwerp who seemed to do this -

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it was their specialist art.

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Other sailors did scrimshaw, you know,

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and they did Jenny Haniver.

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Very odd, but they exist,

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and you can see that they exist, because they're there in a box.

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LAUGHTER

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Discarded, unwanted.

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The ones in the middle that look like they're wearing glasses

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are the best ones, I think.

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If they started singing, you'd shit yourself.

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LAUGHTER

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# Doo-doo doo-doo dum... #

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HE SCREAMS

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Now, what kind of animal does this skull belong to?

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-Toothy.

-Well...

-He's very toothy.

-..looks dinosaur-y to me.

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Well, you can certainly tell that it's not herbivore,

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it's not vegetarian, can't you?

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-Is it...a killer rabbit?

-Sabre-toothed tiger?

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-It's a killer rabbit.

-Is it a sabre-toothed tiger?

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No, it's a bit smaller than that.

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Is it a tiny mouse?

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LAUGHTER It's a little bit bigger than that.

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-Is it a mole?

-It's a mole!

-A mole! Is it?

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It's a mole. Well done.

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APPLAUSE Well done.

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Oh!

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This species, not surprisingly, is called the star-nosed mole, and...

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It looks like that guy from Futurama, doesn't it?

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-It does. Zoidberg.

-Zoidberg.

-Yeah.

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IMITATES ZOIDBERG: Well, when you look like Zoidberg...

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LAUGHTER

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It's a wonderful mole.

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They live underground, and we don't really have much to do with them,

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but they're equipped with special powers.

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For example, they can smell in stereo,

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so they can tell when something is coming, from which direction.

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So, very useful in a lift, wouldn't they?

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They'd be able to say, "It was you. It was you.

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"Don't like - it was you."

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And they have toxins with which they paralyse

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and stun the worms that they eat.

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Why would they want to do that if they've got the worm anyway?

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-So they can eat it later.

-So they can eat it later.

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-So they find it and go...

-They have larders.

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-.."Tasty, but lunchtime."

-Exactly. Deferred pleasure.

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-But pop it in their larder.

-Eurgh...

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-But they're...

-That's amazing.

-Christ!

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Yeah, they need a lot of sustenance because they do a lot of work.

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They do extraordinary tunnelling.

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They can dig 150 feet of new tunnels a day.

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Now, given their size and weight,

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that is equivalent of a human moving four tonnes -

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about 1,000 shovel loads - every 20 minutes.

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-So why didn't we get them to do the Channel Tunnel?

-Every 20 minutes.

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-LAUGHTER

-It would've been amazing - and cute.

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Yeah, about 400 of them - Crossrail, done in a fortnight.

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-LAUGHTER

-We're missing something, huh.

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APPLAUSE

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Anyway, now, name all the members of the Monstrous Regiment of Women.

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Beryl.

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-Linda.

-Jean.

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-Shirley.

-Angry Sue.

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-LAUGHTER

-She's the leader.

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Have you heard of the Monstrous Regiment of Women?

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-The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstrous...

-Oh!

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-John Knox.

-Yes, John Knox. I knew you would've...

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The First Blast of the Trumpet Against

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-the Monstrous Regiment of Women.

-Monstrous Regiment of Women.

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So, I've read that, and it's bad that I couldn't remember

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the Monstrous Regiment of Women.

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It seems like it's kind of the main part.

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-Do you...?

-It seems like...

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Actually, what it is is a slight change in the language,

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and monstrous doesn't mean monstrous as we would say it -

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-it means unnatural.

-Mm.

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And regiment doesn't mean

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the whole load of them marching on, these women -

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-it means regime.

-Right.

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And he was a Protestant,

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and he was angry at the fact

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there were two Catholic women on the thrones...

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-Oh, of course.

-..of England.

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-Who might they have been?

-Mary...

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Which Mary? They were both called Mary.

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-The Two Marys...

-The Two Marys.

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-LAUGHTER Exactly.

-..being right.

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This has now turned into a story from the Bunty - The Two Marys.

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-There was our Mary, Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary - Mary Tudor.

-Yeah.

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The one who burned the Protestants.

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And in Scotland, it wasn't Mary Queen of Scots,

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it was her regent, who was Mary of Guise.

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-Cheery bunch.

-Yeah, a cheery bunch.

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-I feel like that's the same Mary in different outfits.

-Yeah.

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You know when they do, like, those style challenges on This Morning

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-and it's before and after?

-It is, isn't it?

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"She used to just wear monochrome, but look at her now!"

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LAUGHTER

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So, Knox, who was a very keen Protestant,

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didn't like these women on the throne.

0:14:390:14:41

He was angry about it and wrote this thing.

0:14:410:14:43

But on the subject of Mary Queen of Scots,

0:14:430:14:45

do remember who her husband was, by any chance?

0:14:450:14:49

Darnley, his name was, her husband.

0:14:490:14:51

He was murdered. He was actually blown up.

0:14:510:14:54

This is a very extraordinary story.

0:14:540:14:56

One of the presumed architects of the explosion

0:14:560:14:58

was a fellow called Archibald Douglas -

0:14:580:15:00

a pair of his shoes were found at the scene of the crime.

0:15:000:15:02

ALAN GIGGLES

0:15:020:15:05

"Where's your shoes, Archibald?"

0:15:050:15:06

-LAUGHTER

-"Oh!"

0:15:060:15:09

You've always got to take your shoes off before dynamite -

0:15:090:15:12

-that's what I say.

-He got away with it.

0:15:120:15:13

But he later gave an account of Mary's reaction.

0:15:130:15:16

-So, this is Mary, her husband has been blown up.

-Mm-hm.

0:15:160:15:19

"She sent for a number of light ladies and women

0:15:190:15:23

"to come to Holyrood House

0:15:230:15:25

"and participate stark naked in a ball."

0:15:250:15:30

"Then they had cut off their pubic hair

0:15:300:15:33

"and had put it in puddings to be eaten by the male guests,

0:15:330:15:38

"who were sick."

0:15:380:15:39

LAUGHTER

0:15:390:15:41

Is that what you do when your husband's blown up?

0:15:410:15:43

Was she just trying to, you know, like,

0:15:430:15:45

trying to get back to normal life?

0:15:450:15:47

LAUGHTER

0:15:470:15:49

-"Let's just carry on as we were."

-That's right.

0:15:490:15:51

"Get your pubes and put them in that pie.

0:15:510:15:54

"That's what he would have wanted." LAUGHTER

0:15:540:15:57

Actually, I think this might be quite clever.

0:15:570:15:59

Probably, if your partner is killed in a horrific way,

0:15:590:16:01

all anyone is ever going to talk to you about is,

0:16:010:16:03

"Aw, what happened to your husband?"

0:16:030:16:05

But now, no - "Why did you have that pube party?"

0:16:050:16:08

What? Why? Are you joking?

0:16:090:16:12

You know, it's all the detail we have.

0:16:120:16:14

"Two things, Mary - number one, condolences. Number two..."

0:16:140:16:17

It's all the detail we have, sadly,

0:16:170:16:18

but the actual person who took the rap for the murder,

0:16:180:16:21

he was hanged, drawn and quartered

0:16:210:16:22

on the basis that he was the one who discovered the scene,

0:16:220:16:25

which seems a bit unfair.

0:16:250:16:26

His name was William Blackadder.

0:16:260:16:28

Oh...

0:16:280:16:30

HE IMPERSONATES GENERAL MELCHETT: It's true.

0:16:300:16:32

LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

0:16:320:16:34

Oh, stop it. Don't.

0:16:340:16:35

There you are.

0:16:380:16:39

The Monstrous Regiment of Women was just a couple of Marys.

0:16:390:16:42

Which is nastier -

0:16:420:16:43

a foetid parachute or a hairy nuts disco?

0:16:430:16:48

-OK...

-I'll tell you who doesn't like a hairy nuts disco - Mary.

0:16:480:16:51

LAUGHTER Exactly. It's so true.

0:16:510:16:55

Presumably, she has that sort of in bowls...

0:16:550:16:58

You can have hairy nuts as a sort of amuse-bouche.

0:16:590:17:02

Basically, that would be a party

0:17:020:17:03

with people just walking around, going...

0:17:030:17:05

HE WRETCHES

0:17:050:17:07

HE CONTINUES TO WRETCH

0:17:100:17:12

Making a pubic nuisance.

0:17:120:17:14

They are cocktails.

0:17:150:17:17

-Are these cocktails?

-They're not cocktails.

0:17:170:17:19

They look exactly as if they would be cocktails.

0:17:190:17:21

Foetid parachute might be a slight clue

0:17:210:17:23

in as much as the shape of a parachute might be.

0:17:230:17:26

-Oh!

-Oh, jellyfish!

-Jellyfish!

0:17:260:17:28

-Not jellyfish - that's the one thing it could've been.

-Mushrooms!

0:17:280:17:31

The other one is mushrooms. Yeah, these are fungi or fun-gee.

0:17:310:17:34

Extraordinary names for new species that occur all the time,

0:17:340:17:38

and there are some incredible names.

0:17:380:17:39

Pink disco - that's normal and nice.

0:17:390:17:42

Greasy bracket. All right?

0:17:420:17:44

Punched him in the greasy bracket. I don't know.

0:17:440:17:47

Powdery piggyback.

0:17:470:17:49

IN A MENACING VOICE: Shall we play powdery piggyback?

0:17:490:17:51

White brain, jelly ear, Verdigris Navel,

0:17:510:17:55

LAUGHING: fragrant funnel...

0:17:550:17:57

I'm sorry. I'm sorry. LAUGHTER

0:17:570:18:00

Cinnamon jellybaby, witches' butter, slimy earth tongue.

0:18:000:18:04

Alan Rickman's fridge gunk.

0:18:040:18:05

Let's just start making up mushroom names.

0:18:050:18:08

These are also all bands that have had a John Peel session as well.

0:18:080:18:12

Hot lips, twisted deceiver...

0:18:120:18:14

Barbara Cartland's shoe tree.

0:18:140:18:16

..bog cannon, gassy night...

0:18:160:18:20

-I've had one of them.

-..and the hairy nuts disco.

0:18:200:18:22

There you are.

0:18:220:18:23

So, how often are they finding new fungi?

0:18:230:18:25

Amazingly, amazingly. Let me tell you a remarkable story.

0:18:250:18:28

This is in September 2014 - not very long ago.

0:18:280:18:31

A couple of mycologists -

0:18:310:18:32

as they call fungus experts - from Kew Gardens

0:18:320:18:35

analysed the DNA of a supermarket packet of porcini mushrooms.

0:18:350:18:40

They found three species unknown to science.

0:18:400:18:44

LAUGHTER Perfectly edible.

0:18:440:18:47

Was there any horse in it?

0:18:470:18:49

The scientists named them in Latin

0:18:520:18:53

white beef liver, delicious cattle liver fungus and edible.

0:18:530:18:57

Wow.

0:18:570:18:59

Do you know, the worst thing is throughout that I was thinking,

0:18:590:19:01

"I wonder who's been to Kew Gardens more - Sarah or Alan?"

0:19:010:19:04

So, in terms of fungi as a whole, 1,200 new species are added a year.

0:19:060:19:11

-Wow.

-1,200 a year?

-It's amazing, isn't it?

0:19:110:19:13

-They may account for up to 25% of the Earth's biomass.

-Wow.

0:19:130:19:18

-So are they really adaptive? Is that's what's happening?

-Very.

0:19:180:19:20

-And they can be aggressive - that's why we've...

-Like moles!

0:19:200:19:23

-We should get them in a fight.

-Yes!

0:19:230:19:25

-Mushrooms versus moles!

-LAUGHTER

0:19:250:19:28

They can be very aggressive.

0:19:280:19:29

Although they don't exactly move,

0:19:290:19:31

they do spread themselves huge distances underground.

0:19:310:19:33

I still think I could beat one in a fight.

0:19:330:19:35

-Some would beat you in a fight if you tried to eat them.

-Yes...

0:19:370:19:40

which is how I fight.

0:19:400:19:42

LAUGHTER

0:19:420:19:45

Mushrooms are quite small. They used to be huge.

0:19:460:19:48

They used to be the biggest kinds of non-animal there were.

0:19:480:19:52

When trees and plans were just three foot tall,

0:19:520:19:54

they were much, much bigger - and much more phallic.

0:19:540:19:57

-Really?

-Apparently.

0:19:570:19:59

Planet of the Cocks.

0:19:590:20:01

LAUGHTER

0:20:010:20:03

So, now, it's time to descend into the dark

0:20:030:20:05

and fetid nest of nasties that is General Ignorance.

0:20:050:20:09

First, some real sea monsters. Fingers on buzzers.

0:20:090:20:11

Why do great white sharks bite people?

0:20:110:20:14

WOMAN SCREAMS Yes?

0:20:140:20:16

It's to keep themself in the news.

0:20:160:20:17

LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

0:20:170:20:19

That's probably why.

0:20:200:20:22

It's so good and so true.

0:20:230:20:25

Is it cos they think they're something else?

0:20:250:20:27

It's a pretty good answer, yes...

0:20:270:20:30

People say it's because the shadow of a person,

0:20:300:20:32

especially if they're surfing, looks like a seal.

0:20:320:20:35

No, you see, the thing is when... They do eat seals,

0:20:350:20:37

but when they eat seals, it's a frenzy, it's a torpedo -

0:20:370:20:39

they dive in, and there's nothing left.

0:20:390:20:41

But when they attack people, they just take a bite,

0:20:410:20:44

and they usually then go off.

0:20:440:20:46

So it's generally believed that it's a kind of curiosity.

0:20:460:20:48

-"What is this?"

-Oh, God.

0:20:480:20:50

So, it's like at a party with a vol-au-vent?

0:20:500:20:52

Yeah, basically.

0:20:520:20:54

They just think, "I'll just take a little bit off it."

0:20:540:20:56

-Oh, no, no.

-"..and see if I like it, see what it is."

0:20:560:20:59

That's generally believed by...

0:20:590:21:01

Going over to his mates going, "Don't try that - it's horrible."

0:21:010:21:04

"Don't put it back on the tray. Don't put it back on the tray.

0:21:040:21:06

-"Put it over there."

-"You've started it now."

0:21:060:21:08

Curious rather than predatory is the way their behaviour is.

0:21:080:21:12

Wrap it in a napkin, put it in your pocket.

0:21:120:21:14

If you're a human and you lose half your leg,

0:21:140:21:16

-you don't, obviously, think of it like that.

-No, no.

0:21:160:21:19

But the point is if they wanted to kill you,

0:21:190:21:21

they are such ferocious...

0:21:210:21:22

"I hope that's sated your curiosity!"

0:21:220:21:24

So, yeah, sharks like to have a nibble

0:21:260:21:28

before they decide whether or not we're worth munching.

0:21:280:21:31

Who has the biggest face in America?

0:21:310:21:32

-Oh, is it...

-MONSTER ROARS

0:21:360:21:39

..one of Mount Rushmore.

0:21:390:21:40

Ah... Dang nabbit. SIREN RINGS

0:21:400:21:44

No, I said 'one of'.

0:21:450:21:47

-Is it a clock?

-No, it's not a clock.

0:21:470:21:49

-Good, good... Very smart.

-OK.

0:21:490:21:52

-Where's Mount Rushmore?

-Dakota.

-South Dakota is right, yeah.

0:21:520:21:55

And this particular huge face

0:21:550:21:59

which is bigger by far than either of the four Presidents there...

0:21:590:22:03

But you can get a point for naming them.

0:22:030:22:05

-Washington...

-Washington.

-..Lincoln...

0:22:050:22:07

and the other two.

0:22:070:22:09

-McKinley, no? And...

-Jefferson...

-Jefferson and...

0:22:110:22:14

-..and Teddy Roosevelt.

-Oh! Oh!

-Oh!

0:22:140:22:18

Oh, we can all do that at the end, Josh.

0:22:180:22:19

-LAUGHTER

-I knew all of them! Just on the...

0:22:190:22:23

Oh, Horniman Museum!

0:22:230:22:24

I'm not going to lie - I was going to go Obama, so...

0:22:260:22:29

15 miles away from Mount Rushmore is the biggest face in America.

0:22:330:22:36

-15 miles?

-Which is an ongoing work, also sculpting a face.

0:22:360:22:40

Oh, it's the Indian head thing.

0:22:400:22:42

Yes, it's the head of a Lakota Sioux Indian chief

0:22:420:22:45

who was a hero to his people.

0:22:450:22:47

It's being done by one person who's been doing it for about 20 years.

0:22:470:22:50

Ancient Polish guy - I've met him. He's extraordinary, yeah.

0:22:500:22:52

-It's going to be much, much bigger than them, isn't it?

-Yes.

0:22:520:22:55

87 feet high, is the face.

0:22:550:22:57

And do you know the name of the Indian brave?

0:22:570:23:00

He won, for his people, the battle,

0:23:000:23:02

of which was only a battle - they lost the war...

0:23:020:23:04

-Sitting Bull.

-Sitting Bull.

-Crazy Horse.

0:23:040:23:07

-Steve.

-# Ow! #

-"Steve!"

0:23:070:23:09

Crazy Horse.

0:23:090:23:11

-There it is - there's the face.

-Oh, he's beautiful.

0:23:110:23:13

He beat Custer in the Battle of Little Bighorn.

0:23:130:23:16

Yeah, but they never found Roobarb.

0:23:160:23:18

LAUGHTER

0:23:180:23:20

Lordy, lord.

0:23:220:23:23

HE SINGS ROOBARB THEME MUSIC

0:23:230:23:27

But if you go sideways on, he's on his horse.

0:23:270:23:29

-IMITATES CUSTARD:

-Look out, there's a big Indian after you.

0:23:290:23:32

-So, there's one guy who's done this?

-Yeah.

-Amazing.

0:23:320:23:35

-And he's still doing it.

-That's why it's taking so long.

0:23:350:23:38

When did he start?

0:23:380:23:39

Do you have to buy the mountain

0:23:390:23:40

first, or do you just do it on somebody else's?

0:23:400:23:42

Cos I'd be pretty angry if that was in my garden.

0:23:420:23:44

You know, the really impressive thing is

0:23:440:23:47

that he's done it with sandpaper.

0:23:470:23:49

Is he going to get to the end

0:23:490:23:51

and then they're going to realise he has got planning permission?

0:23:510:23:55

"Put it all back, my friend."

0:23:550:23:56

"You have to rebuild the original mountain as it was.

0:23:560:23:58

-LAUGHTER

-"We want it all back."

0:23:580:24:01

-There you can see how it should look.

-Oh, wow.

0:24:020:24:05

That's the real thing in the background.

0:24:050:24:08

It's a noble endeavour,

0:24:080:24:09

but, goodness me, it's taking him a long time.

0:24:090:24:11

I don't know if he's using dynamite,

0:24:110:24:13

cos that's what they used in Mount Rushmore.

0:24:130:24:15

They used dynamite to four inches worth of accuracy.

0:24:150:24:18

-Really?

-You know, all the little features -

0:24:180:24:20

the nose and everything else. Unbelievable.

0:24:200:24:22

It was going to be Lewis and Clark, the explorers,

0:24:220:24:25

you know, who opened up the West,

0:24:250:24:26

and it was going to be Chief Red Cloud and Buffalo Bill,

0:24:260:24:29

but then they decided it should be presidents

0:24:290:24:32

just to get on the right side of politics, I suppose.

0:24:320:24:34

There's Buffalo Bill. Obviously, Lewis and Clark on the right.

0:24:340:24:37

And you know what you do after a good dynamite?

0:24:370:24:40

Pube party.

0:24:400:24:41

LAUGHTER

0:24:410:24:44

That must have been the biggest pube party of all time.

0:24:440:24:46

It was massive.

0:24:460:24:48

Anyway, name the largest single man-made structure on the planet.

0:24:480:24:53

-Oh... Oh, yeah.

-Not falling for that one.

0:24:530:24:56

No way. No way!

0:24:560:24:58

Is it going to be a 50-mile long tunnel or a bridge

0:24:580:25:01

or something like that?

0:25:010:25:03

What we've got out of the way, cos it's hanging here like a worry,

0:25:030:25:06

is it's not the Great Wall of China.

0:25:060:25:08

-Oh, OK.

-Yeah.

-Try a continent where it might be.

0:25:080:25:11

-Europe.

-OK.

-Europe is not where it is.

0:25:110:25:13

-Asia.

-Australia.

-Nor Asia, nor Australia.

0:25:130:25:15

-North America.

-Nor North America.

0:25:150:25:17

-South America.

-Nor South America.

0:25:170:25:18

-Antarctica.

-Antarctica.

-Nor Antarctica.

-Arctic.

0:25:180:25:21

-Africa.

-Africa! Thank you.

0:25:210:25:24

-Hey!

-Bloody hell, I'm glad...

0:25:240:25:26

LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

0:25:260:25:28

I really, really hope Ban Ki-moon isn't watching this.

0:25:300:25:33

"Africa! Africa!"

0:25:330:25:36

-So, is it Egyptian? Is it North...?

-It's Nigeria, in fact.

-Oh.

0:25:360:25:40

It's the Great Earthworks of Benin.

0:25:400:25:42

The Great Earthworks of Benin!

0:25:420:25:44

LAUGHTER

0:25:440:25:47

It's also called the Walls of Benin.

0:25:470:25:49

-The Walls, of course, Benin!

-Defensive earthworks...

0:25:490:25:51

The Earthen Walls of Benin in...

0:25:510:25:53

..dug by the Edo people.

0:25:530:25:56

-10,000 miles in length.

-Miles of it. 10,000 miles...

-10,000 miles?

0:25:560:25:59

..of defensive earthworks by the Edos.

0:25:590:26:01

-10,000 miles in length.

-How could I forget(?!)

0:26:010:26:04

-Four times longer than the Great Wall of China.

-OK.

0:26:060:26:08

Puny little wall.

0:26:080:26:09

Consumed 100 times more material than the Great Pyramid of Cheops.

0:26:090:26:12

Took 700 years and an estimated 150 million hours of digging.

0:26:120:26:17

Severely damaged by... HE CLEARS THROAT

0:26:170:26:20

..the British...when we sacked and burned Benin in 1897.

0:26:200:26:25

Aren't the British brilliant?

0:26:250:26:26

"Yes. Well, they just wouldn't do as they were told.

0:26:260:26:29

LAUGHTER

0:26:290:26:31

"There's only so much gentle persuasion we've got time for.

0:26:310:26:35

"Sack and burn them. Fuck the earthworks."

0:26:350:26:37

More or less exactly what happened.

0:26:390:26:42

And then we twisted the knife by not remembering Africa existed.

0:26:420:26:45

LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

0:26:450:26:48

-What did they build it for?

-Defences.

0:26:480:26:50

-Keep out the British, I'd imagine.

-Keep out the British!

0:26:500:26:53

Didn't work very well, unfortunately.

0:26:530:26:55

"Here come the white folks. Dig, dig!"

0:26:550:26:58

Of course, you could argue that

0:26:580:26:59

the Eurasian road network is a bigger thing,

0:26:590:27:02

cos it covers Portugal all the way to Siberia.

0:27:020:27:06

-You can drive across the whole lot.

-It's all connected by road.

0:27:060:27:09

-You know...

-So, who do we take this up with?

0:27:090:27:11

The Guinness Book Of Records? Or do we go to Nigeria?

0:27:110:27:15

They'll go, "I think in fact we got something bigger, actually."

0:27:150:27:18

And further twist the knife again.

0:27:180:27:19

The monstrous Walls of Benin were the biggest thing ever built

0:27:200:27:23

until we monstrously knocked them down.

0:27:230:27:25

All of which brings us to the monstrous scores.

0:27:250:27:28

It's remarkable. PHILL AND SARA LAUGH

0:27:290:27:31

I'm going to start...

0:27:310:27:33

You've all done, may I say, remarkably well.

0:27:330:27:36

In last place,

0:27:380:27:39

with a score that sometimes could be a winning score,

0:27:390:27:41

of minus seven is Josh Widdicombe.

0:27:410:27:43

CHEERS AND APPLAUSE

0:27:430:27:46

In third place, with minus two...

0:27:470:27:51

Ooh! It's Sara Pascoe.

0:27:510:27:54

CHEERS AND APPLAUSE

0:27:540:27:57

No! Tell me it ain't so!

0:27:590:28:03

In second place, with plus five, Alan Davies!

0:28:030:28:06

CHEERS AND APPLAUSE

0:28:060:28:09

How close it was,

0:28:110:28:12

because the winner by a whisker on six points is Phill Jupitus.

0:28:120:28:17

CHEERS AND APPLAUSE I don't understand it.

0:28:170:28:20

That's all from Sara, Phill, Josh, Alan and me,

0:28:250:28:28

and I leave you with these words from Andre Breton.

0:28:280:28:33

"The man who can't visualise a horse galloping on a tomato

0:28:330:28:37

"is an idiot."

0:28:370:28:38

Thank you.

0:28:380:28:40

CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

0:28:400:28:43

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