Episode 7 Room 101 - Extra Storage


Episode 7

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APPLAUSE AND CHEERING

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Hello, I'm Frank Skinner, and welcome to Room 101,

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the show where three guests compete to condemn their deepest dislikes

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to the dreaded room. Let's meet this week's guests.

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Joining me tonight are style guru, Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen,

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actor Charles Dance and comedian Andi Osho.

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CHEERING

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So, are you the sort of people who struggle to think of things

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that you don't like or did it just flow out of you?

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I had a lot. Once you start, you can't stop.

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-You're a kind of a repeat offender?

-Well, there's just so much stuff!

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See, the worst thing is, it will get worse as you get older as well.

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When you get to my age, you know, the list gets infinite, practically.

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It becomes like a kind of Dead Sea Scroll of hate and bitterness.

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-SOME LAUGHTER

-Wait till you get to MY age!

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LAUGHTER

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Right, then. Let's have our first category.

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People. OK.

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So, what kind of people wind up Andi Osho?

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People who make up the rules in Monopoly.

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LAUGHTER

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It's a big problem. It's a growing problem, Frank.

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-Is it?

-Yes, because, right, here's the thing, right.

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Monopoly is like a really big deal in our house.

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We play every year, like, er, Boxing Day

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and Christmas Day we play.

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We've got trophies. We've got trophies.

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-We've got ENGRAVED trophies, mind you.

-Wow.

-Yeah.

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So, like, you know, we play by the rules, but some people just...

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they think they can just make them up.

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Like there's one that people do where, like, your taxes,

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like, that you're supposed to pay as you go round the board or whatever,

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they say, "Oh, no, don't put them into the bank.

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"Put them on free parking,

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"so the next person that lands on free parking gets the money."

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That's the sort of thinking that got Greece up poo-poo Creek, innit?

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But surely making up your own rules,

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as we found out in recent years, is what high finance is all about.

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Yeah, and that's why we're, like, having so many problems.

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Like chess, the rules are just the rules.

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Like you can't play chess with someone

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and then suddenly they put their pawn on top of the rook

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and give him a gun and they can shoot all your pieces.

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"Oh, no, these are the new rules of chess."

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I always think, if everybody in the room agrees, then it's fine.

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-Yeah, but that's the problem. It's when...

-I've used that line before.

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But that's the problem is if you haven't agreed the rules beforehand.

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Yeah, but, you know, the trouble is,

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when you're playing a game with someone and they get the book out.

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It's like a girlfriend, like, if the cooker breaks, she says,

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"Why don't you look at the manual?"

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No, I'll work it out!

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-LAUGHTER

-If you all agree, I think it's fine.

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I think it's fair enough if you all agree on the rules,

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but the problem is when two households come together

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to play Monopoly and they've got different rules.

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-We're getting there.

-We've got some rules

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that I don't think are strictly in the Monopoly rule book.

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Do they involve taking off clothes?

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-It's with my family, Laurence.

-Oh, OK.

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We've got some famous people playing Monopoly pictures,

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which I find interesting. It's such a cool game. Look at this.

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Here's George Harrison...

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who's been playing it so long, his hip has sunk into the floor.

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And here's my favourite, Queen playing Monopoly.

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And, look, Brian May has brought his brother!

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LAUGHTER

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-So, it's a cool game, isn't it?

-It's a very cool game.

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Do you guys play it?

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When I was an art student, we, erm, we used to play Monopoly

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on Sunday afternoons in this flat that rather resembled

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the set of the Young Ones, actually, it was DISGUSTING, in Leicester.

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And our landlord lived in the basement of the house,

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and we used to invite him up to play on Sunday afternoons,

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and he used to hang onto his Monopoly money when he was...

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in lieu of the rent that we owed him!

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Have you heard of Monopoly Empire?

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-No, what's that?

-This is Monopoly Empire.

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And, apparently, it's a response to people wanting a quicker game,

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that Monopoly's too slow,

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and I'll give you a quote from Jonathan Berkowitz,

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the vice-president of marketing at Hasbro, and he says...

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"Parents and children tell us

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"they want a quick in-out frictionless gaming experience."

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-Ooh!

-CHARLES AND ANDI LAUGH

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They've taken the capitalism an extra mile. Just get a load of this.

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The pieces... You don't get the dog and the top hat.

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You get the large McDonald's fries.

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LAUGHTER

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Why is only one company allowed to make Monopoly?

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That's what worries me about Monopoly in general.

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Is the capitalist kind of...

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Yeah, whereas people who make up their own rules suggest

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that, in the midst of it all, there's still some individuality.

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Yeah.

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OK. Let's see what Laurence doesn't like about people.

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Gosh, look at that.

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LAUGHTER

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I would say that's a relatively bad example, luckily enough.

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But it's Hawaiian shirts. More specifically,

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people that WEAR Hawaiian shirts.

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It is the sort of person that feels that wearing a Hawaiian shirt

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denotes that they can step outside responsibility, you know?

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It's, "I'm on holiday the whole time. I don't need to bother.

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"I'm going to wear something that is retina-punishingly colourful."

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So it's the sort of, er...

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the lack of decorum that a Hawaiian shirt breeds in people.

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Let's have a look at an example of a celebrity in a Hawaiian shirt.

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-There you go.

-Well, there we are.

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They're like a holiday with sleeves.

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Is it the floral, garish...

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No, no, no, because I can see where you're going with that one. Oh, no.

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In fact, I'd say they weren't floral enough, Frank.

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-I'll show you floral, if you want.

-OK, go on, show me floral.

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-There we are, see?

-APPLAUSE

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See, the great thing about the Hawaiian shirt,

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when I was in Hawaii, wearing one,

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you can use them like those plastic meals in Japanese restaurants.

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-If you can't speak Japanese, you point at the meal?

-Yeah.

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So, you can stop a cab, point at a girl in a grass skirt,

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a tree and a ukulele, and he'll just take you to the right place.

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It's absolutely perfect. Are you familiar with this?

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-No.

-This is a greeting in Hawaii.

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At the end of Elvis: Aloha in Hawaii, he does that to the crowd,

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and it means friendship, compassion, understanding and solidarity.

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-Just from that?

-Isn't that incredible?

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And the British version?

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Nice one.

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I think it's not people who don't have style that wear them.

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It's people who've rejected style.

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-Well, that's where we...

-And all its works.

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That's where we fall to pieces.

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You are the most stylish man I've ever met.

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-I bet you're a cuff links man, aren't you?

-I am.

-That's even worse!

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I find those impossible to do!

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Oh, no, I like cuff links. I think they, um...

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They can say so much about you. In fact, I've got

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a whole series of cuff links that denote my particular mood.

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Some of them are actually really quite erotic.

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LAUGHTER

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Can you put cuff links on on your own?

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In the films, there's always somebody else, "Let me do that for you."

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What do you think this is? Downton Abbey?

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-I can get dressed on my own. I just choose not to.

-Gotcha.

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OK. You argue well.

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So, what person doesn't Charles Dance like?

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AUDIENCE BOOS APPLAUSE

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-This is the Chancellor of the Exchequer.

-Yes.

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Mr George Osborne.

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And, if Room 101 was bigger, I'd like him

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and all his friends in the current government to go into it as well.

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CHEERING

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-Are you including the Liberal Democrats in this?

-Might as well.

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I mean, if we put him in Room 101, there'll still be someone in there

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-he knows who'll get him a good table.

-Yes, absolutely. Yes.

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Do you know, there's a Facebook page,

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which is the George Osborne Appreciation Society?

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-Oh, really?

-Yeah, let's have a look at that.

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LAUGHTER

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One like.

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-He was on the Andrew Marr Show.

-Oh, yeah.

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And, er, Keane were on.

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-Are you familiar with the band, Keane?

-Yeah.

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Well, I think it's a very interesting example, this,

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of politicians on television.

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Keane are playing. It's the end of the show.

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Keane are playing, and the guests are still in their seats.

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So, keep an eye on George.

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There's Keane.

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Now, this is the politician when he doesn't know he's on camera.

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"What on earth...?"

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And then, eventually, he realises that he IS on camera.

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LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

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Get on down, eh? Oh.

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You sort of feel sorry for him in his hopelessness in that case,

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-don't you?

-No, I don't feel at ALL sorry for him.

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To be fair, I think the thing is, you know, surely,

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there's never going to be a Chancellor that you'll like.

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I mean, that's...the job is always to be the panto villain.

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He's basically King Banker, isn't he?

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That's a euphemism.

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Cockney rhyming slang, I think, actually, Charles.

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But you particularly don't like this one?

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I really can't dislike this man more than I do.

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In his defence, erm...

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LAUGHTER

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He doesn't seem to really appeal to the young people either.

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LAUGHTER

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Can we say anything in his defence? What do you think?

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I can't, I'm afraid, no.

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Um, well, I heard that he changed his name from Gideon to George

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when he was 13, as a little act of rebellion,

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which should make him pretty down with the kids.

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Although, I think, if you're rebelling,

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then George is not like a rebellious name.

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He could have been called anything.

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We could've had the Speaker of the House introducing him.

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"Order. Order. We are now about to hear

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"from the Right Honourable Buzz Lightyear."

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-But he didn't use that. He chose George.

-Yeah.

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-Can I say my son is called Buzz.

-Is he?

-Yeah.

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-LAUGHTER I don't know what to say.

-It's fine.

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OK, so we come to the end of that round. I have to now...

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I have to carefully weigh your arguments

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and decide who defended their case the best

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and think it through and try and be fair.

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So, I'm going to put George Osborne into Room 101.

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CHEERING

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Thank you.

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Let's have our next category.

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OK, it's the Wildcard round, so now there are no restrictions.

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You can just pick anything at all that you don't like.

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So, what is Laurence's wildcard?

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Wow.

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The pasty. The pasty is something

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that I really do feel quite strongly about.

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Why the pasty?

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Because pasties, I think, not only look rather ugly,

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they have the capacity to fill a train carriage

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with the most unpleasant miasma

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of kind of post-teen, cross-country run gym,

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which is just so revolting.

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Could I just say, I was brought up in the West Country,

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and the pasty is very dear to my heart,

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and you obviously have never had a really, really good pasty.

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You've been among some very strange people.

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I'm not... I'm not...you know, I'm not down on, er, you know,

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on sort of good, straightforward, salt of the earth food.

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I think pork pies are absolutely wonderful.

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Actually, I have to say, I rather like a doner kebab.

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But the pasty is like eating a middle-aged lady's handbag.

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It's just a source of completely abstract,

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gristly objects, that defy any kind of proper explanation.

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I don't want to say you're being a bit snobby,

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but you're being a bit snobby.

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I think the thing that really does it for me about the pasty, though,

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is the fact that it is so favoured by street eaters,

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which I've never understood. People that feel that they've got to...

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They can't, you know, walk down a street without eating something.

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I've street ate. I bought a pasty from a well-known bakers.

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-ANDI GIGGLES

-Hmm?

-And, um...

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I ate it and you get a lot of crumbs with a pasty.

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And it was lovely. At the end of it,

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-I was suddenly covered in pigeons.

-Yes.

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I felt at one with nature.

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You know those pictures of St Francis of Assisi that you see?

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Showing that he's completely, he loved the animals,

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like this kind of classic shot.

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-Turns out - just finished a pasty.

-There we are.

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LAUGHTER

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What about this? This is one for the romantics.

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-It's the double pasty.

-Oh, God.

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And what you do is that you... I eat it from this angle,

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and then my loved one eats it from that side.

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What, over your shoulder?

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-No, she...she's... Imagine we're having a slow dance.

-OK.

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I'm eating the pasty from here, and she's eating it from that side.

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Oh, that would be like that scene from Lady and the Tramp!

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It would be lovely!

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I recycle the crusts in all sorts of ways.

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For example...

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LAUGHTER

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Waste not want not. I think they're lovely,

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-and I'm not just saying that to take the other side of the argument.

-Mm.

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It's one of my favourite foods, because it's healthy.

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It's got vegetables, but then it's in the fun housing of a pie.

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Yeah.

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To be fair, I think the vegetables are incredibly well disguised.

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-But that's how I like my vegetables.

-As is everything in them.

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-I like my vegetables incognito.

-Do you?

-I do.

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-Can I just say, I'm a big fan of your lovely products.

-Oh.

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I was looking at your pastry forks.

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You could eat a pasty with one of these, could you not?

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-I suggest you do.

-Can you imagine getting one of these out

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-on the high street and eating a pasty?

-I don't need to imagine it!

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Isn't that lovely?

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That's Laurence in the middle there.

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LAUGHTER

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OK, then. What's Andi's wildcard?

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Yes.

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OK.

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LAUGHTER Pebble beaches.

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I love pebble beaches. What is it?

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You can't do ANY of the stuff that you do at a sand beach.

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Have you ever tried burying someone at a pebble beach?

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It is NOT the same. You can't build a castle.

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-Can I just offer exhibit A?

-Yeah, go on.

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LAUGHTER

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-Whoa!

-Eh?

-That guy has too much time on his hands.

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You can't lie on a pebble beach.

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It's like being punched in the back by the Earth.

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A pebble beach is NOT a beach.

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I go to Brighton quite a lot. There's a pebble beach.

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-That's not a beach!

-It is! Of course it is!

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People eat ice cream on it. Can you get this?

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And this is official.

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The Crown Estate, that is basically the Royal Family,

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are the majority landholders of the sea bed.

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I don't know how far out they own it, but, yet, officially,

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I should get the permission of the Royal Family

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to take a pebble home from Brighton.

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So, does that mean, like, if, when people have a wee in the sea

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that they're weeing, like, on the Queen's land?

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Worse than that, they're relieving themselves on the Queen's bed.

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LAUGHTER

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Right, what he said.

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Yeah. You can do loads of stuff that you can't do on a sand beach.

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You can't take a romantic walk on it.

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It HURTS walking across pebbles.

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But you're not wearing the right footwear.

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What, like boots or something, like steel-cap boots?

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I'll show you what I wear when I'm in Brighton, on the pebble beach.

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People don't even know I'm wearing shoes.

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LAUGHTER

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See, it's got a hard bottom.

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Those are brilliant.

0:18:040:18:07

Yeah, it's lovely. I'm sitting out like this on the beach.

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So, you have to basically look like a hobbit to survive on pebble beaches?

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Well, that's one way. I'm not saying it's the only way.

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I tell you what, one example, I'll say, where you win,

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is the egg timer.

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LAUGHTER

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All right, you've got that. You might win on the egg timer thing.

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The only good thing you can do at a pebble beach

0:18:330:18:37

is you can skim stones,

0:18:370:18:39

which is people just trying to throw the stones back in the water

0:18:390:18:42

-and trying to find sand.

-Do you skim?

0:18:420:18:45

-I taught myself to skim.

-Taught yourself?

0:18:450:18:48

-Yeah.

-Not many people go on a course!

0:18:480:18:50

LAUGHTER

0:18:500:18:52

Yeah, I had a skimming tutor who used to come with me.

0:18:530:18:57

Do you know what people do as well to make them sound nicer?

0:18:570:19:00

-They call them shingle beaches.

-Yes.

-Which is horrible. It's a disease!

0:19:000:19:03

LAUGHTER Innit? It's like,

0:19:030:19:06

"Ooh, look, the Polio Promenade!" "Ooh, look, the Chlamydia Cliffs!"

0:19:060:19:09

LAUGHTER

0:19:090:19:11

You can't call something after a disease.

0:19:110:19:13

Here's someone who likes sand even more than you do.

0:19:130:19:16

Let me read you this information here.

0:19:160:19:19

"Kelly Marie-Pierce got pregnant,

0:19:190:19:22

"was watching her mother-in-law, changing sand in her parrot's cage,

0:19:220:19:26

"and she said, 'I kept getting this weird taste in my mouth.

0:19:260:19:28

"'I knew I was craving something but I couldn't put my finger on it,

0:19:280:19:31

"'and when I saw her change the parrot's cage,

0:19:310:19:34

"'I thought, "I could just eat that." 'Sand!

0:19:340:19:37

"'I was getting through bowls and bowls of sand a day.

0:19:370:19:39

"'I wasn't eating anything else but sand and sponges.'"

0:19:390:19:43

Here's a picture of Kelly Marie-Pierce.

0:19:430:19:47

When she said sponges, I thought she meant natural sponges from the sea.

0:19:470:19:50

No, she meant scouring pads.

0:19:500:19:53

That's what happens to people who like sand,

0:19:530:19:55

whereas you're not going to tuck into that, are you?

0:19:550:19:59

LAUGHTER

0:20:040:20:06

Oh, it's actually all right.

0:20:060:20:08

-Is it all right? Well, maybe I take it all back, then.

-It's chocolate.

0:20:080:20:11

If there's any children watching at home,

0:20:130:20:16

not ALL pebbles contain chocolate.

0:20:160:20:19

You have to just keep trying them.

0:20:210:20:24

No, don't.

0:20:240:20:26

OK. What's Charles's wildcard?

0:20:290:20:33

MUTED LAUGHTER

0:20:370:20:40

National Health doctors' receptionists.

0:20:400:20:43

-APPLAUSE

-Thank you.

0:20:430:20:46

Oh!

0:20:460:20:47

-Maybe not all of them, but most of them.

-No.

0:20:490:20:51

And they seem to assume that they are the gatekeepers

0:20:510:20:55

of the National Health Service.

0:20:550:20:58

A lot of them have this infuriating habit,

0:20:580:21:00

if you call and you want an appointment with your doctor,

0:21:000:21:03

which, of course you can't get when you need it, you know,

0:21:030:21:06

there's an appointment on Tuesday and you're ringing on Wednesday,

0:21:060:21:09

and you think, "Well, I might not be ill on Tuesday," you know.

0:21:090:21:12

And then they say, "What is it about?"

0:21:120:21:15

You think, "Well, it's none of your bloody business!

0:21:150:21:18

"I'll tell the doctor what it's about."

0:21:180:21:20

I mean, to be fair to them...

0:21:200:21:22

-Yes.

-..I think that they probably need to tell the doctor in advance

0:21:220:21:27

what he's going to be treating you for so that he can Google it.

0:21:270:21:33

LAUGHTER

0:21:330:21:34

I mean, I feel a bit sorry for them.

0:21:400:21:41

They must deal with some awkward customers.

0:21:410:21:44

-Not you, Charles, obviously.

-No.

0:21:440:21:47

I imagine you turning up and saying, "Fetch me an apothecary."

0:21:470:21:51

LAUGHTER

0:21:510:21:54

They are gatekeepers.

0:21:540:21:55

I mean, that's what they are.

0:21:550:21:57

They're there to make sure that, um, you know,

0:21:570:21:59

the wrong person doesn't get in to see the doctors.

0:21:590:22:02

One stopped me seeing the doctor because I had trainers on.

0:22:020:22:05

-That's fair.

-And nothing else?

0:22:070:22:09

No, I did have something on.

0:22:090:22:11

Also, correct me if I'm wrong, is one of the reasons

0:22:110:22:15

you don't want to tell them what's wrong,

0:22:150:22:17

is because you're Charles Dance

0:22:170:22:19

and you don't want them gossiping about what it is?

0:22:190:22:21

No.

0:22:210:22:23

Charles Dance sounds like a fake name anyway, so...

0:22:230:22:25

No, not that it's not a nice name, but it does sound like

0:22:250:22:28

the sort of name you'd give at an STD clinic or something. "Oh, my name?

0:22:280:22:31

"Oh, Charles...Dance!"

0:22:310:22:34

It's funny you should say that,

0:22:340:22:36

because that is the name I always give at STD clinics.

0:22:360:22:39

Charles's reputation is in tatters thanks to me.

0:22:390:22:42

You always have to have a medical before you do a TV series

0:22:430:22:48

or a film, to make sure you're OK to get through it.

0:22:480:22:51

I had one recently and the man said,

0:22:510:22:54

"Can you drop your trousers and pants, please?"

0:22:540:22:56

And he sort of wedged his hand,

0:22:560:23:00

wedged it, like...

0:23:000:23:02

you know like when you're trying to get one more book on the bookcase?

0:23:040:23:08

Wedged his hand like that.

0:23:090:23:13

I don't know what he was testing.

0:23:130:23:16

He didn't ask me to cough.

0:23:160:23:17

He just...stood like that, and he looked at me

0:23:170:23:20

and I looked at him, and there was a terrible silence.

0:23:200:23:22

I had a sense that the real doctor was in a cupboard, going...

0:23:250:23:29

LAUGHTER

0:23:290:23:34

So, we come to the end of that round.

0:23:360:23:38

You all argued very well.

0:23:380:23:41

The thing is, Andi, I've got such a romantic attachment

0:23:410:23:44

-to pebble beaches, and I don't like sand very much.

-Not beaches.

0:23:440:23:48

I was with TE Lawrence in Arabia during that skirmish,

0:23:480:23:52

and it stuck with me. Um...

0:23:520:23:56

and pasties I really like as well.

0:23:560:23:58

I'm afraid, because I spend so much time on pebble beaches

0:23:580:24:02

eating pasties, I'm going to have to put NHS receptionists into Room 101.

0:24:020:24:07

GASPS Controversial!

0:24:070:24:09

CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

0:24:090:24:12

Next category, please.

0:24:170:24:19

Ah, now this is the audience choice, in which the people speak.

0:24:230:24:27

And I believe we have...

0:24:270:24:30

Carol Hall in the audience.

0:24:300:24:32

Where are you, Carol? There you are.

0:24:320:24:34

-Hello.

-Hello.

0:24:340:24:36

So, Carol, what would you like to try and put into Room 101?

0:24:360:24:39

People who stick their tongues out

0:24:390:24:41

when they're having their photograph taken.

0:24:410:24:44

-Good one.

-You speak to people and they say, "I had a great night!

0:24:440:24:48

"Here are the photos." You look at the photos

0:24:480:24:51

and they're all sticking out their tongues.

0:24:510:24:53

You can't get a decent photo.

0:24:530:24:55

Do you have an explanation for this phenomenon?

0:24:550:24:58

I don't know whether it's a nervous reaction.

0:24:580:25:02

-It's an unfortunate nervous reaction, isn't it?

-Yeah.

0:25:020:25:05

-I can't explain it. I don't do it myself.

-Yes.

0:25:050:25:09

Well, that would be very hypocritical if you did.

0:25:100:25:13

When people do that...

0:25:140:25:15

..I like that. That's a classic.

0:25:160:25:19

I'm OK. Are you all right with that one?

0:25:200:25:22

I think that's different. That's OK.

0:25:220:25:24

You know the one where they go...

0:25:240:25:25

That, to me, is saying, comedy is more important than beauty

0:25:270:25:31

and I respect that.

0:25:310:25:34

Let's have a look at a celebrity doing this.

0:25:340:25:37

That's Miley Cyrus, of course.

0:25:390:25:42

It looks like she developed that while doing joined-up handwriting.

0:25:420:25:46

That's not so bad that one, it's quite subtle. But look at this one.

0:25:500:25:54

-I don't think Miley's drinking enough water.

-No.

-No.

0:25:550:25:58

It doesn't look like she's sticking her tongue out.

0:25:580:26:01

It looks like it's just falling out.

0:26:010:26:03

Yeah, it looks like a Weetabix.

0:26:030:26:05

This, I think, is my favourite celebrity tongue-out picture.

0:26:080:26:11

GROANING

0:26:110:26:12

-How beautiful(!)

-Whatever happened to Ulrika Jonsson?

0:26:120:26:16

Really let herself go.

0:26:190:26:21

I think that's a very interesting point. You know what?

0:26:220:26:26

I'm going to put people who stick their tongues out in photos

0:26:260:26:29

into Room 101. Well done.

0:26:290:26:30

Well done, you.

0:26:300:26:32

OK, next category, please.

0:26:360:26:38

Modern life. So, what doesn't Andi like about modern life?

0:26:430:26:48

Hmm...

0:26:480:26:50

Internet dating.

0:26:530:26:54

Well, you'd be glad to get a handsome young fellow like that,

0:26:540:26:57

-wouldn't you?

-If only that was what you got.

0:26:570:27:00

APPLAUSE

0:27:000:27:02

-If only.

-Oh, God, there's the applause of experience, there!

0:27:020:27:06

This is what you get.

0:27:060:27:07

LAUGHTER

0:27:080:27:11

You want to download THAT, but that's what ends up in your inbox.

0:27:110:27:15

I see. Have you dabbled in online dating?

0:27:170:27:21

I have dabbled, Frank, in the past.

0:27:210:27:23

The thing with it is, is, like, some of the things

0:27:230:27:26

that people write on their profiles, like you have to wade through

0:27:260:27:29

a lot of rubbish to get to the actual truth of what people mean.

0:27:290:27:32

Like, they write, "I love nights in, but I also love nights out."

0:27:320:27:35

Like, that's just what people do.

0:27:350:27:37

You know, "I love breathing in, but I also love breathing out."

0:27:370:27:40

Whoa, crazy!

0:27:400:27:42

A friend, who worked in Birmingham, he worked at a dating place,

0:27:420:27:48

and he said the most commonly ticked box was,

0:27:480:27:52

"What kind of person do you want?"

0:27:520:27:54

"Must not live more than five miles from my house."

0:27:540:27:57

-"Will NOT travel."

-Yeah.

0:27:570:27:59

I mean that is...that's like, "Yes, she is my soul mate,

0:27:590:28:02

"but I'm not getting two buses".

0:28:020:28:04

You can waste a lot of time on, you know, dating the normal way,

0:28:060:28:10

-can't you?

-Well, I mean I like the idea

0:28:100:28:13

-of just randomly meeting somebody.

-What you need is jury service.

0:28:130:28:18

Oh, you don't mean... You don't mean the person on trial?

0:28:200:28:23

-No.

-Oh, right. You mean, like, the other 11...

0:28:250:28:27

I meant my fellow jurors.

0:28:270:28:29

Oh, those guys.

0:28:290:28:31

Because if you started the relationship

0:28:310:28:33

you might be very tempted to say they're not guilty.

0:28:330:28:36

But what if they look like THIS guy?

0:28:360:28:38

I didn't realise that's how touchscreens worked.

0:28:380:28:41

I like the idea that someone who's, say if they're, really into cats

0:28:430:28:49

can go on the "people who like cats" dating website

0:28:490:28:53

and find a kindred spirit.

0:28:530:28:55

You're right, they do get specific, like in terms of types of websites.

0:28:550:29:00

So they've got like JDate, which is like this site for meeting...

0:29:000:29:04

for Jewish people specifically to meet.

0:29:040:29:06

They've got UniformDating

0:29:060:29:09

for "if you like people in uniforms",

0:29:090:29:11

or just fancy people who wear uniforms.

0:29:110:29:13

So that's just like anyone, then(?)

0:29:130:29:15

-Yes.

-But also with that one,

0:29:150:29:16

it really depends on the uniform, doesn't it?

0:29:160:29:19

-Cos like...

-Well, it does on the Jewish site.

0:29:190:29:21

There are some uniforms that would be a total no go.

0:29:260:29:29

Maybe what doesn't help is that the dating websites,

0:29:310:29:34

the questions that they ask don't really help you to really get...

0:29:340:29:37

because they're, like, really generic, like, you know,

0:29:370:29:40

"What books do you like? What films do you like?"

0:29:400:29:42

If they start to get specific, then you might, you know,

0:29:420:29:44

get to know someone how you would want to get to know them

0:29:440:29:47

-if you met them, like, in the flesh world.

-Mm.

0:29:470:29:49

Like, um, "What's wrong with you?"

0:29:490:29:51

I'm on there too, so I know that, you know,

0:29:510:29:55

I'm included in that, but I KNOW what's wrong with me.

0:29:550:29:57

They'll find that out when we move in together.

0:29:570:30:00

Well, I looked at... This is advice from a man called Craig Wax...

0:30:020:30:08

Right.

0:30:080:30:09

..the senior vice president at Match.com,

0:30:090:30:12

which is a popular online dating, and he says,

0:30:120:30:15

"Come up with a name that gives an indication

0:30:150:30:18

"of what you're all about." And this is what Craig says.

0:30:180:30:21

"So, for instance, if you like to ski and you like to cook,

0:30:210:30:25

"your username could be Skiing Chef.

0:30:250:30:28

"Right off the bat, you get a sense of what this person is all about."

0:30:280:30:32

Looking back, I don't know

0:30:350:30:37

if I should have gone for Irritable Catholic.

0:30:370:30:39

Right, what doesn't Charles like about modern life?

0:30:440:30:48

Automated reply things, generally, but one in particular.

0:30:540:30:59

Camden Council's automated payment service for parking fines.

0:30:590:31:06

OK.

0:31:070:31:08

You know, somebody has to do it, but this particular voice is, um,

0:31:080:31:15

just the least suitable.

0:31:150:31:17

If you were to listen to it,

0:31:170:31:20

I think you'd appreciate why I would love it to go into Room 101.

0:31:200:31:24

Well, I tell you what, let's listen to it.

0:31:240:31:27

-You do that.

-This is the automated voice at Camden Council

0:31:270:31:30

if you phone up to pay your parking fines.

0:31:300:31:32

PHONE RINGS

0:31:320:31:34

'Welcome to the London Borough of Camden's

0:31:340:31:36

'automated telephone payment service.

0:31:360:31:39

'Enter 1 for a traffic or parking penalty,

0:31:390:31:43

'2 for other fixed penalties,

0:31:430:31:46

'3 for council tax,

0:31:460:31:48

'4 for housing rents,

0:31:480:31:52

'5 for business rates or bib levies.'

0:31:520:31:55

-Yeah...

-'If you want to speak to an operator,

0:31:550:31:57

'then press the star key on your telephone keypad now.'

0:31:570:32:01

-OK...

-'Please enter your...' DROWNED OUT BY LAUGHTER

0:32:010:32:04

'..which follows BU.'

0:32:040:32:06

Whoa. So, I mean, it goes on a bit.

0:32:060:32:10

Yeah. There are no notes, I mean, no intonation at all. It's...

0:32:100:32:14

You're a tough audience though, Charles.

0:32:140:32:16

"Welcome to Camden Council automated parking service.

0:32:160:32:18

"If your account begins with a CU, please..." You think, "What?"

0:32:180:32:22

-How would you do it?

-You know, if you're going to get somebody

0:32:220:32:25

to do a voiceover for something, you know,

0:32:250:32:26

I mean find an out-of-work actor or, you know, Laurence is really...

0:32:260:32:30

Absolutely.

0:32:300:32:33

How often would you be phoning about parking fines,

0:32:330:32:36

-would you say?

-Too much, I'm afraid.

0:32:360:32:39

I've swelled the coffers of Camden Council's parking office.

0:32:390:32:44

Are you a man who just stops where he stops?

0:32:440:32:47

No! I just, you know...

0:32:470:32:49

-I just forget sometimes.

-OK.

0:32:490:32:51

That there's parking laws?

0:32:510:32:53

Do you have any sympathy for me at all?

0:32:540:32:56

Well, it sounds to me like you just drive until you run out of petrol.

0:32:560:33:00

No...

0:33:000:33:01

No, no.

0:33:010:33:03

Do you know the weird thing about that Camden thing,

0:33:030:33:06

is the dude is not from Camden. Like, he's quite Northern, isn't he?

0:33:060:33:09

He sounds quite sort of Coronation Street camp.

0:33:090:33:11

He's like, "Ooh, 'ello, thanks for calling Camden Council."

0:33:110:33:13

Like, if you're calling Camden, you want someone to sound like

0:33:130:33:16

they're from Camden. You want to ring up and have them go,

0:33:160:33:19

"All right, skunk weed, skunk weed, you want to buy some skunk?"

0:33:190:33:22

The most obscure organisations have got these automated...

0:33:240:33:28

I found a magpie injured

0:33:280:33:30

and I phoned the Magpie Protection Society,

0:33:300:33:34

and it said, "Hello. Hello. This is the Magpie Protection Society.

0:33:340:33:37

"Dial one for sorrow, two for joy..."

0:33:370:33:41

Very good.

0:33:410:33:43

You were with me there, weren't you?

0:33:430:33:47

Right, what doesn't Laurence like about the modern world?

0:33:470:33:52

Beige.

0:33:560:33:57

Beige in all its gory,

0:33:590:34:03

in all its understated, delusional blandure,

0:34:030:34:07

and beige is very much attached to this idea

0:34:070:34:11

that you can't go wrong with beige, which is sort of true,

0:34:110:34:14

but then you can't go right with beige, either.

0:34:140:34:16

You can't do sexy with beige. You can't do exciting with beige.

0:34:160:34:19

But let me tell you all now - you cannot trust beige,

0:34:190:34:24

because it is basically just colour,

0:34:240:34:26

but just with the volume turned down.

0:34:260:34:28

We should now be embracing the full rainbow

0:34:280:34:32

that we have at our fingertips.

0:34:320:34:35

Inevitably, we did a survey a couple of years ago,

0:34:350:34:38

which was based on how the colour that you chose to have

0:34:380:34:42

in your bedroom affected your, er, romantic life.

0:34:420:34:45

And guess where beige came?

0:34:450:34:47

Absolutely at the very, very bottom.

0:34:470:34:50

Who's got a beige bedroom?

0:34:500:34:52

No-one is going to admit to it, are you?

0:34:520:34:54

Oh, dear, Frank.

0:34:550:34:57

It doesn't make much difference when you're wearing a gimp mask.

0:34:570:35:00

No, exactly.

0:35:000:35:02

We found a Laurence beige footstool.

0:35:020:35:05

This is Woolworth's online you can get this.

0:35:050:35:08

-Did it actually say beige?

-That is beige.

0:35:080:35:11

Did it say beige? No.

0:35:110:35:14

But you can't make it not beige by calling it something else!

0:35:140:35:17

Listen, you CAN. It is not beige. That is sable.

0:35:170:35:21

Look it up!

0:35:230:35:25

Look at this. This is one of your cushions.

0:35:250:35:27

-That's beige. You've got to call that beige.

-That's not beige!

0:35:270:35:29

That's classic hearing-aid beige.

0:35:290:35:32

I think you'd like this one.

0:35:350:35:37

Ooh, now you're talking.

0:35:370:35:40

What about...? This is...this is beige.

0:35:420:35:44

This is one of your, um, headboards.

0:35:440:35:47

Again, that is sable.

0:35:470:35:50

That is beige!

0:35:500:35:52

Laurence, you have a lot of beige stuff.

0:35:520:35:55

I have a lot of sable stuff.

0:35:550:35:57

I tell you what, if you squint a bit, that looks like

0:35:570:36:00

Darth Vader standing in front of the Taj Mahal.

0:36:000:36:03

One thing that does get quite a lot of stick is beige food.

0:36:060:36:09

You know they say that you should eat a rainbow?

0:36:090:36:12

-Well, this is it.

-I have quite a lot of Smarties.

0:36:120:36:15

-Yeah.

-That is how you judge an unhealthy diet,

0:36:150:36:18

is to say he eats too much beige food.

0:36:180:36:21

-Like pasties.

-Like pasties.

0:36:210:36:23

-They're quite beige.

-I'd say they were sable.

0:36:230:36:26

OK. I'll give you that one!

0:36:260:36:28

APPLAUSE

0:36:280:36:31

I have to say, you all argued very well.

0:36:330:36:36

I don't feel I can put online dating in,

0:36:360:36:38

because I think there's lonely people who are brought together,

0:36:380:36:42

-and it's a place...in the modern world...

-Fine.

0:36:420:36:45

As for Camden Council, I quite like getting an automated voice.

0:36:450:36:50

It makes me feel like I'm living in the 21st century,

0:36:500:36:53

like I'm talking to a crazy robot.

0:36:530:36:55

And then he tells me about my insurance

0:36:550:36:57

and then puts me through to someone in Mumbai.

0:36:570:37:00

That's what I dreamt the 21st century would be like.

0:37:010:37:04

You know, I was pro-beige until you started,

0:37:040:37:08

but you've completely won me over with your crazy style guru ways.

0:37:080:37:13

-Hey!

-So I am going to put beige into Room 101.

0:37:130:37:17

Thank you very much!

0:37:170:37:20

Goodbye! Goodbye!

0:37:200:37:23

And that brings us to the end of the show.

0:37:280:37:31

Well done, Charles, you were tonight's most persuasive guest,

0:37:310:37:34

-so you're this week's winner.

-Bravo, bravo.

0:37:340:37:40

So, thank you very much to Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen,

0:37:420:37:45

to Charles Dance, to Andi Osho, and thank you, good night.

0:37:450:37:49

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