Episode 2 Room 101 - Extra Storage


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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.

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They'll have to argue their case well

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because in each round only one item can be chosen -

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the final decision is mine.

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Let's meet this week's guests.

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Joining me tonight are... The Thick Of It, Joanna Scanlan.

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The SHTICK OF IT, Noel Fielding.

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And, "give us a kick of it," Ian Wright.

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CHEERING

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Anyway, as they used to say on 'Allo 'Allo!...

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good moaning. BELL DINGS

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So what's Noel's choice?

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Spiders.

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SUBDUED CHEERING

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Ooh, that's...

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CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

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-It was like they had a debate first.

-I know!

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-"Shall we applaud?"

-Whole gamut of emotions.

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Yeah. So why? Why spiders?

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Well, oh, God! I mean, they're dickheads, basically.

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LAUGHTER

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I hate... I mean, I don't... All spiders are bad but

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I recently went to Australia, and...

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that was a whole other ballgame.

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-Mm.

-I mean, I'm frightened of spiders here,

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but in Australia, they are massive.

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I mean, literally, one picked me up at the airport.

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-LAUGHTER

-In a taxi.

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It's still on your head. LAUGHTER

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APPLAUSE

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Quite good when we got to the hotel, though,

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cos he picked up all my bags...

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But I mean, they're properly dangerous in Australia as well, so...

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Yeah, well, they can kill you. You know like here, in England,

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the thing is, in England, you do the sort of postcard/cup technique.

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-You know, you try and trap...

-IAN:

-Mm-hm.

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In Australia, there was one in... This is a true story.

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Me and my brother were sharing a hotel, doing a Boosh tour,

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and there was... A huntsman, it's called. And...

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it literally was this big, right, on the wall,

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so we couldn't even get it in a mug.

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We had to... I had to go to the kitchen and get a mixing bowl, yeah,

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and we had to use an album...

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IAN LAUGHS

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I used Abbey Road, right? This is a true story.

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And cos mixing bowls, they're see-through,

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they're sort of magnifying.

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So, it was THAT big anyway, and when I put the mixing bowl,

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its head was bigger than mine.

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-Wow.

-I could see its cheekbones, it was awful.

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And so I slid the album underneath it and took it outside,

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and I put it out, and it didn't even just go in the bushes,

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it walked down the sidewalk like a man.

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Like a man would, it just went off...

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across the zebra crossing...

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Must have got the idea from Abbey Road.

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LAUGHTER

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APPLAUSE

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So bad.

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-The huntsman spider.

-I know.

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Does it herald its arrival with a bugle call?

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Bwwuh-rooo!

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I am not very good with the... the cup and the...

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I always think beermat, the glass and the beermat.

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Or, you know, the coaster thing.

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If it's a really big spider,

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I don't really want it in the same postcode as me.

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-I've got a spider catcher.

-Oh, yeah?

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Yeah.

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It's really long, plastic, thin, and it's got a bulb on the end...

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And you...you go near the spider, you just press the bulb

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and a vacuum sucks the spider up

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-and then you can go outside and release.

-Wow.

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-A spider in Australia would snatch that off you.

-Yeah.

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LAUGHTER

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"What else you got?"

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Just to prove that, um, Noel's not exaggerating,

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we have a man actually catching a spider in Australia.

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-It is a bit scary.

-Oh...

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Can you see Daddy and the spider?

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-CHILD:

-'Yeah, I can.'

-OK.

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That's the one!

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'Daddy, careful.'

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Decided to get a bigger container because of...the size of this one.

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I'll have to move really quick.

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-NOEL:

-Oh...

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-Aah!

-CHILD SCREAMS

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Oh!

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-That's what I'm talking about.

-I know.

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-They do nothing and then right at the last minute... Whoo!

-Yes.

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Do you want to hear the worst story I've ever heard in Australia?

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Cos in Australia when you say you're scared of spiders, they go,

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"Oh, what's wrong with you?" And then they tell you a story

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that confirms all of your worst fears.

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And they're winding you up, but it kills you.

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Like... I'd just be going and they go, "Yeah, mate of mine,

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"was in bed... Absolutely...

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"leant, while he was asleep, on an black widow egg sac..."

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A black widow egg sac...

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-I mean, just those words...

-Yeah.

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..are making me almost faint, and 100 little babies came out and

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stung all of his face.

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And he had to have antibiotics for, like, four years.

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LAUGHTER

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Never wore a hot again...

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LAUGHTER

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In my own garden, which is in north London, I was bitten...

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-By a spider?

-..by a spider. I was just pottering about in the garden,

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doing a bit, you know...

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-They don't like that.

-Yeah, um...

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They don't. It was, like, "This is my manor," from the spider.

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So it bit me, and this is an actual photo of...

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-Wow.

-It's the one on the right, that's...

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You see, it graffitied me as well...

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LAUGHTER

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No, I had to draw that so they could mark the spread of the infection.

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So, you know, Spider-Man got bitten by a spider

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and he developed, you know, sensory powers and super strength.

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I just got swelling.

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You didn't feel it? You didn't feel it go in, the puncture?

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Erm...no, I-I was in the garden and I just...

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I'll be honest, I had my Crocs on...

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LAUGHTER

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And er... I know, I know what you're thinking, I deserved it,

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but nevertheless...

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Wow, so it was a fashion spider?

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LAUGHTER

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So, I'll show you some pictures of spiders which I think might...

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I'm trying to win you over with these pictures.

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-Oh...

-First of all, this is what I would call the Pussy Riot spider.

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LAUGHTER

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AUDIENCE: Aww.

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-Yes, "aww", exactly.

-Wow.

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Lovely. This one, the Boycie from Only Fools And Horses spider.

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LAUGHTER

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These are real things, we haven't...

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We haven't dabbled with these, these are genuine creatures.

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That looks like an early Pringles logo.

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LAUGHTER

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They should hire those spiders to advertise Pringles.

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And this one proves that nothing is frightening when it's

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wearing knitwear.

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AUDIENCE: Aww.

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-You see, that was an "ah" for a spider.

-That's cute.

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That's not cool.

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Can you find any admiration for 'em?

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Cos they are, they're remarkable creatures, aren't they?

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No. You know the old Robert the Bruce story?

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Robert the Bruce saw the spider and it swung...

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-Yeah.

-..and it kept climbing and... if at first -

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do you know the Robert the Bruce...?

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-SOME AUDIENCE MEMBERS:

-Yeah.

-Oh, yeah.

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No, they... Let me bring it down for the crowd.

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You know Incy Wincy Spider?

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LAUGHTER

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Well, the rain comes down and washes Incy out,

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and when the sun comes out he climbs back up.

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They don't give up.

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It's this idea that they keep fighting. It's like, sort of...

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-Like Gary Barlow.

-Yeah.

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LAUGHTER

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-How do you feel about Spider-Man, are you all right with him?

-Yeah.

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I feel all right around Spider-Man, yeah.

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We've got some pictures of people fancy-dressing as Spider-Man,

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which I like.

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LAUGHTER

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-That's not good enough, in my opinion.

-No.

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-SPIDER-BLOKE, that is.

-Yeah.

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What about... What about this guy?

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-AUDIENCE:

-Oh!

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Wow.

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Now, I think if he walked round the perimeter of a football pitch,

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the fans would chant, "Who ate all the FLIES?"

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LAUGHTER

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APPLAUSE

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Now, let's see what Ian's choice is.

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The film Grease.

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CHEERING AND BOOING

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FRANK LAUGHS

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-I hate that bloody film.

-MAN:

-Whoo!

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When I was younger, it was... it was all cool

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and John Travolta, who done Night Fever and all that,

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he was a great dancer and it was fine

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cos, you know, when you're growing up, it looked pretty cool.

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They had the cars and everything.

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But as you get older, I've got daughters now, I just...

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I was watching it the other day and I thought,

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"I don't like Grease now."

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Um... You know, you've got the girls - really decent.

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Olivia Newton-John - gorgeous, beautiful, nice gear,

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nice clothes she's wearing and everything.

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She wanted to get the guy, so in the end,

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she had to dress up in that tight leather, high-heel wearing,

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-red lipstick, smoking, biker chick, to get the bloke.

-Mm.

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And I thought to myself, "I don't want my girls to see Grease."

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-WOMAN:

-Whoo!

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APPLAUSE Wow.

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So...

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..TELL ME MORE.

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LAUGHTER

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APPLAUSE

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I think it's cos I'm getting older about stuff, like.

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I used to quite like...

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I used to quite fancy... There's a girl who was...

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She thought she was pregnant all the way through the film!

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-Yeah.

-Rizzo, weren't it?

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-Yeah, Rizzo.

-What's that about?

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Oh, come on.

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I've got to tell you, you're going to have to go some to get this in.

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I love it. I love it, love it, love it.

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Have you got girls?

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I've got a son and I...

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That's what... No, the question was, "Have you got girls?"

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LAUGHTER

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No, but I had that experience you had... I had that with

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the Beano, I got a Beano annual and I thought, "Oh, I'll let him

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read the Beano. And I'm reading it and the kids in it are...

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-They're just naughty.

-Yeah.

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LAUGHTER

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-Dennis the Menace actually is...

-A very naughty boy.

-..a menace.

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-Yeah.

-I was close to putting Peppa Pig in.

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LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

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It was Peppa Pig or Grease, but I think Grease gives me...

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I can get the message out even better with Grease,

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about your daughters.

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But like, Peppa Pig... I remember... I was watching Peppa Pig

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and my little girl started to say, "Huh, silly Daddy!"

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LAUGHTER

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Started saying, "Yuck."

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And George just cries all the time.

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-It's a nightmare.

-I'll tell you my problem with Peppa Pig, Ian...

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There's a kid in it called Edmond the Elephant.

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And he's very bright, he's the cleverest kid in it.

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And every time he says something intelligent and interesting,

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the voiceover says, "Edmond is a bit of a clever clogs."

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-And I thought, "What, are you celebrating ignorance?"

-Exactly.

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-This is a bright kid, you should be pleased with that.

-Yeah.

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-Peppa Pig could have gone in.

-Anyway...

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you must like...

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Summer... Summer Nights, do you like that?

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Well, to be honest, when I was younger, I got into the songs, man.

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-Yeah.

-Of course you did, you know what I mean?

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LAUGHTER Yeah, yeah. Come on!

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-"Summer lovin'" and all that.

-Oh, that bit where it goes...

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# Summer dreams Ripped at the seams... #

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And-and John Travolta suddenly goes, "Oh."

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I love that!

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And then he goes...

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# Those summer... #

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-And suddenly they become the Bee Gees...

-Yeah.

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..and go...

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-# Ni-i-i-i-ights

-Ni-i-i-i-ights. #

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Yeah! NOEL LAUGHS

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You must... You must like Greased Lightning.

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The song was great, but, like... there's too much other stuff

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that's going on that I don't like with the film.

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There are good influences.

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I think the whole Greased Lightning sequence sent loads of young boys

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off to join Kwik Fit.

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LAUGHTER

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-Shall we watch Greased Lightning?

-Let's watch it.

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-Yeah, yeah.

-Let's watch a bit cos it's pretty good.

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Why, it could be Greased Lightning? Greased Lightning!

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# We'll get some overhead lifters and four barrel quads, oh, yeah

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# Keep talking, whoa, keep talking

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# Fuel injection cut-offs Chrome-plated rods, oh, yeah

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# We'll get her ready I'll kill to get her ready

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# With a four-speed on the floor They'll be waiting at the door

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# You know that ain't no shit We'll be getting lots of tit

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-# In Greased Lightning

-Go, go, go, go-go-go-go-go-go-go-go

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# Go Greased Lightning You're burning up the quarter mile

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# Greased Lightning Go, Greased Lightning... #

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JOANNA LAUGHS

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CHEERING

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HE CLEARS THROAT

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Wow.

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Oh, you know what? I love a bit of GARAGE.

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LAUGHTER

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Do you think the Grease Lightning sequence would be as good

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-if there was no music?

-No.

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-Yeah.

-Do you think it would be as good?

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Cos I think it's John Travolta's dancing.

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I think, without the music, his dancing would hold it.

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Well, let's-let's find out...

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NO MUSIC

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# For Greased Lightning... #

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Go, go, go, go...

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LAUGHTER

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Huh!

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LAUGHTER

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APPLAUSE

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It's actually... It's actually...rubbish

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without the music. Rubbish! That's so...

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-I'd love to see a film like that now.

-Really?

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Something like... I'd like to watch West Side Story like that.

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Also, that car at the end takes off and goes into space.

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-How's that happening?

-Yeah, that's a... That's a strange bit.

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-That was the director gone mad, wasn't it?

-Yeah.

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You know what the theory is about that?

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You know when he said they were messing around

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and she almost drowned?

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-You know that, in the song, at the beginning?

-Oh, yeah.

-Yeah.

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That she DID drown...and during the bit where she was los...

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h-had no oxygen, she imagined the whole Grease thing,

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and at the end she goes to heaven in a car.

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STILTED LAUGHTER

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Goodnight.

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No, it's a... No, that is a theory.

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-You might have ruined Grease for me.

-Oh, don't say that.

-Good.

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I think... LAUGHTER

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NOEL LAUGHS

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Could you argue, Ian, that a young person watching that

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learns a lot about teenage love and stuff like that?

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But what I'm saying is it's the way that it transpires

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and how it ends up them being together.

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I mean, she's not pregnant in the end, Rizzo.

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She's not, but they're having sex at school!

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They all look about 37, to be fair.

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There's a thing now, this...

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You might not believe this, but there's a song in Grease

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which I have never been able to sing without crying.

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-Right, OK.

-And that is...

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-I know it.

-Can you guess which one it is?

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-Hopelessly Devoted?

-It is.

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I was just singing it at home the other day, and I just...

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I just lost it.

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I was telling the production team about this, and they said,

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-"Try singing it on the show".

-Mm.

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And I don't know if it'll work here, obviously, cos I...

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-But shall I give it a go?

-Yeah.

-AUDIENCE:

-Yes!

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Sing it from the heart, Frank, that's... Sing it from the heart.

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# Guess mine is not the first heart broken

0:15:300:15:35

# My eyes are not the first to cry

0:15:350:15:39

# I'm not the first to know there's just no getting over you

0:15:390:15:45

# But baby can't you see there's nothing else for me to do?

0:15:470:15:53

# I'm hopelessly devoted to you

0:15:530:15:56

# But now there's nowhere to hide

0:15:580:16:01

# Since you pushed my love aside I'm out of my head

0:16:010:16:05

# Hopelessly devoted to you... #

0:16:050:16:09

You're crying, man.

0:16:090:16:10

# Hopelessly devoted to you... #

0:16:100:16:13

Your eyes are welling... Oh, my God!

0:16:130:16:14

I can't do any more. It's too much.

0:16:140:16:16

CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

0:16:160:16:18

Oh, well done!

0:16:210:16:22

-I'm going to have to do that thing now that women do.

-Yeah.

0:16:250:16:28

OK, so what's Joanna's choice?

0:16:300:16:32

I don't even have to say it, bad toast etiquette.

0:16:380:16:41

APPLAUSE

0:16:410:16:44

I have a thing which is that if...

0:16:440:16:46

If you put your knife into the butter...

0:16:460:16:49

and then you put the butter on the toast...

0:16:490:16:53

..you spread it with that same knife,

0:16:540:16:56

then you go back to the butter...

0:16:560:16:58

-possibly even go into the jam...

-Oh.

0:16:580:17:01

..the peanut butter or the Marmite,

0:17:010:17:04

then put that back in the butter, you're going to have crumbs -

0:17:040:17:08

jam, Marmite and peanut butter - or whatever else, in the butter.

0:17:080:17:12

-Yeah.

-You're supposed to have a side plate and you put your toast on it.

0:17:120:17:16

Then you have your knife, which is for the butter,

0:17:160:17:18

the butter knife, which is only for butter, and then a spoon

0:17:180:17:22

or something else to get it onto your plate, the jam and the stuff.

0:17:220:17:26

Put the butter on, then take the butter from the plate

0:17:260:17:28

onto the toast and back again.

0:17:280:17:30

Wow.

0:17:300:17:31

APPLAUSE

0:17:310:17:32

-I'm with you.

-Yeah.

0:17:320:17:34

-Yeah, I'm with you.

-Yeah, yeah.

0:17:340:17:36

-I like that, yeah.

-Yeah.

0:17:360:17:37

I must admit, I quite like to see a bit of jam in the butter.

0:17:370:17:41

No.

0:17:410:17:43

Looks like a beautiful sunset.

0:17:430:17:45

-No.

-No?

0:17:450:17:46

I don't believe you. I think you're...

0:17:460:17:48

It is a disgusting sight.

0:17:510:17:53

-I don't think it is.

-Yeah, it is weird.

0:17:530:17:54

Crumbs particularly.

0:17:540:17:56

I know they're microscopic but there's something really,

0:17:560:17:59

for me, very visceral about it, seeing them there.

0:17:590:18:01

When I put the... Because I do it, that's why I'm being a bit quiet.

0:18:010:18:04

-Oh.

-I put the...

0:18:040:18:06

-Here we go.

-I don't do the Marmite. I do the jam.

0:18:060:18:08

But what I do, when I do go back into the butter

0:18:080:18:10

after I've been in the jam, I try to go back to where I've left jam

0:18:100:18:14

and take that out of the butter.

0:18:140:18:16

-Yeah.

-Yeah.

0:18:160:18:18

So I'm trying to...

0:18:180:18:19

I'm trying to clean up.

0:18:200:18:22

I'm trying to clean up after myself.

0:18:220:18:24

Anywhere where there's bits of jam, I take that bit of butter.

0:18:240:18:29

You'd be amazing at a murder scene.

0:18:290:18:31

Columbo comes in.

0:18:320:18:34

"Hey, who's taken the butter?"

0:18:340:18:37

The thing is that when you're doing that,

0:18:370:18:39

aren't you leaving new crumbs and new jam from your last trip?

0:18:390:18:43

I'm going back. I can't get all of it.

0:18:430:18:45

It's a never-ending process, though. You start to think you're...

0:18:450:18:48

You're trying to make it better but make it a little bit worse.

0:18:480:18:51

Sometimes you're just burying the crumbs. You're not taking them out.

0:18:510:18:54

So they're under the surface.

0:18:540:18:55

Oh!

0:18:550:18:58

My dad, he used to put butter on his hair.

0:18:580:19:00

He'd be in the mirror, ready to go out.

0:19:030:19:05

He'd just reach into the butter.

0:19:050:19:06

And he'd double... Sometimes he'd go back.

0:19:080:19:11

There was hair and dandruff and everything.

0:19:110:19:13

Oh!

0:19:130:19:14

-Oh! Oh!

-Yeah.

-That's the limit.

0:19:140:19:17

I mean..

0:19:170:19:18

That's double dipping at its worst.

0:19:180:19:21

-I tell you what I sometimes use...

-Oh, here we go.

0:19:210:19:23

..which definitely helps on this front.

0:19:230:19:26

And that is... I have this knife.

0:19:260:19:28

-Wow.

-So with this knife, I...

0:19:320:19:35

You know, I put the butter on and...

0:19:350:19:39

Haven't got quite enough. Oh, I can't go back with...

0:19:410:19:44

-I'm already in trouble.

-Exactly.

0:19:440:19:46

So now I'm going to go to the jam.

0:19:470:19:49

Yeah.

0:19:510:19:52

LAUGHTER

0:19:530:19:55

-Wow.

-All absolutely fine.

0:19:570:19:59

APPLAUSE

0:19:590:20:01

-That's a cool knife.

-Yeah.

0:20:010:20:02

You also get jam in the... You get jam in the butter, you get butter in the jam.

0:20:020:20:06

It's a two-way street, Joanna.

0:20:060:20:08

It's not a matter of whether you mind.

0:20:080:20:10

It's about consideration for others, isn't it?

0:20:100:20:13

Yes, but I don't get that from my partner.

0:20:130:20:16

My partner insists that all the butter in our house

0:20:160:20:19

is kept in the fridge.

0:20:190:20:21

So it's like...

0:20:210:20:23

It's kind of like cheese when it comes out.

0:20:230:20:26

-It's so hard.

-I know.

0:20:260:20:28

-So I'm trying to do the...

-Yeah.

-Yeah.

0:20:280:20:30

-Can't get in.

-So I tell you what I...

0:20:300:20:32

It breaks the bread. It breaks the toast. That's a nightmare.

0:20:320:20:35

-Yeah.

-That's awful.

-God, that's a nightmare.

0:20:350:20:37

-I've thrown bread away because it's broken like that.

-Me too.

-Yeah.

0:20:370:20:41

I've moved house because of that.

0:20:410:20:43

This is what I end up eating, is this.

0:20:440:20:46

-That's a Battenberg.

-It looks like a children's drawing of a house.

0:20:480:20:51

It's clear that there's a problem, isn't there?

0:20:530:20:55

Because they're trying to invent things that would help sort out

0:20:550:20:58

this massive issue. So it's just...

0:20:580:21:01

What's the solution? Technology hasn't got us there yet.

0:21:010:21:04

I wonder if you could get the jam out of the butter

0:21:040:21:07

with your otherwise unused spider catcher.

0:21:070:21:09

LAUGHTER

0:21:090:21:11

It is, it's a difficult problem,

0:21:130:21:15

and I can tell here people feel your pain.

0:21:150:21:18

OK, so we come to the end of that round

0:21:180:21:20

and I have to make my decision.

0:21:200:21:22

For a start off, I take your point about the lax attitude

0:21:220:21:26

to teenage physical activity in Grease, but as you can see,

0:21:260:21:31

it's a film that's at the very core of my being.

0:21:310:21:33

I didn't realise I was going to get a rendition of the song

0:21:330:21:36

-with you crying and all that.

-No, exactly.

0:21:360:21:39

It just killed me.

0:21:390:21:40

No, that was pretty tough. Don't remind me of that again.

0:21:400:21:43

So I can't possibly put that in.

0:21:430:21:46

With the toast thing, I mean, I feel people's concern about it.

0:21:460:21:50

What I do in my house is I have my own butter,

0:21:500:21:54

so I have crumbs, jam, Marmite...

0:21:540:21:58

-Yeah.

-..some of my dad's hair. It's fine.

0:21:580:22:01

So I think it's as simple as having two sources of butter.

0:22:010:22:05

Spiders, in a way I admire spiders and respect spiders,

0:22:050:22:09

but I also find myself killing them with sheer terror,

0:22:090:22:13

and I don't like the side that they bring out in me.

0:22:130:22:16

So although we're going to be overrun with insects of all kinds,

0:22:160:22:19

I am going to put spiders into Room 101.

0:22:190:22:21

APPLAUSE

0:22:210:22:23

And so to Ian's choice.

0:22:330:22:35

CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

0:22:410:22:43

Honestly, I've had brilliant meals, and afterwards

0:22:460:22:50

they bring the cheeseboard and it just makes me gag.

0:22:500:22:53

It's like, the first guy who...

0:22:530:22:55

He must have been absolutely ravenous,

0:22:550:22:57

starving, to eat cheese that smells like

0:22:570:23:00

some of the cheese that I've smelt when it's come out on the board.

0:23:000:23:04

It's just ridiculous. It's not supposed to be eaten.

0:23:040:23:06

I think one day people are going to say, "You know something?

0:23:060:23:09

"Eating all that stinky cheese, you shouldn't have been eating that."

0:23:090:23:14

It's rotten.

0:23:140:23:16

It's supposed to be a sign of, sort of, a cultured palate,

0:23:160:23:19

isn't it, if you like? Sort of a food connoisseur.

0:23:190:23:22

Can't understand how anyone can get it past this part here,

0:23:220:23:25

the nose here, to go into your mouth.

0:23:250:23:27

-You know, I like Manchego.

-That smells.

0:23:270:23:30

-No, it doesn't smell.

-Oh, yeah. Manchego really...

0:23:300:23:32

Manchego does not smell.

0:23:320:23:33

Oh, I really don't like the smell of Manchego.

0:23:330:23:36

Of all cheeses, I think that does smell nasty.

0:23:360:23:38

No, no, no, man. Not Manchego.

0:23:380:23:40

Manchego is a beautiful-smelling cheese.

0:23:400:23:43

Join us for Cheese Wars.

0:23:430:23:45

LAUGHTER

0:23:450:23:47

I tell you what doesn't smell.

0:23:500:23:53

The Babybel.

0:23:530:23:54

They smell of life, of pure life,

0:23:560:23:59

and then you can make a small shape out of the wax coat.

0:23:590:24:02

-Yeah, that's nice.

-That's a good point.

0:24:020:24:05

I have some...

0:24:050:24:06

This is called... I'm going to have an attempt.

0:24:060:24:09

-..Epoisses.

-Epoisses.

0:24:090:24:11

And this is...

0:24:110:24:13

Yeah, this is like, um...

0:24:140:24:16

like the changing room at school.

0:24:160:24:18

But what I find with this is if you're eating something like...

0:24:200:24:22

I watch quite a lot of zombie movies, and when the zombies appear,

0:24:220:24:26

you just take the lid off

0:24:260:24:28

and it's very, very realistic.

0:24:280:24:30

I've got a bit of a ...

0:24:310:24:33

I'm basically... My dad's French, so my family are French,

0:24:330:24:37

so I'm a bit of a French duke,

0:24:370:24:38

so I have been faced with eating stinky cheese.

0:24:380:24:43

And one cheese that I had to eat, honestly,

0:24:430:24:46

it sent me into the future.

0:24:460:24:47

I was 12 when I tasted it.

0:24:490:24:51

I was 17 when I came to.

0:24:510:24:53

But I love it. I don't know if you've ever been

0:24:540:24:56

into one of those cheese shops where they just sell cheese.

0:24:560:24:59

You do feel like it's quite an exciting...

0:24:590:25:02

The first cheese, I suppose, was Brie,

0:25:020:25:05

which now feels pretty normal, but when I first had Brie

0:25:050:25:08

I really thought I'd reached... Just the feel of it.

0:25:080:25:11

-Yeah.

-That sort of...

-Velvety.

0:25:110:25:13

Oh, I miss Grandma.

0:25:130:25:15

And I like the waxed... This is Gouda, I think.

0:25:180:25:21

-Oh, yeah.

-But look at that. That's a brilliant...

0:25:210:25:24

That can't smell.

0:25:240:25:26

It's just a massive Babybel, a yellow one.

0:25:260:25:28

That's the mother-ship.

0:25:280:25:30

It's a little bit on the rolly side. Luckily...

0:25:300:25:33

Oh!

0:25:340:25:35

CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

0:25:350:25:37

See, they're very handy, the Dairylea triangles.

0:25:390:25:41

I used to like that. When we were younger,

0:25:410:25:43

I liked the way they fit into that little...all the triangles.

0:25:430:25:46

-That's clever, isn't it?

-Yeah.

0:25:460:25:48

I tell you what you'd like. Trivial Pursuit.

0:25:480:25:50

LAUGHTER

0:25:500:25:52

My favourite cheese experience - this doesn't happen very often -

0:25:540:25:57

but you know when you get the Swiss cheese, like this?

0:25:570:26:00

This is the sliced Leerdammer cheese.

0:26:000:26:03

And occasionally, on a day when the whole world is in sync,

0:26:030:26:07

my patchy thing that I've done from the really hard...

0:26:070:26:10

..fits absolutely.

0:26:130:26:14

APPLAUSE

0:26:140:26:16

OK. So what's Jo's next choice?

0:26:200:26:24

Ooh.

0:26:280:26:29

Numbers. I can't cope with numbers.

0:26:290:26:33

When I hear a number, my brain goes...

0:26:330:26:37

SHE WHIRS AND FIZZES

0:26:370:26:39

..and I just stop listening, and panic.

0:26:390:26:42

And it can be anything.

0:26:430:26:45

It could be money, or it could be,

0:26:470:26:51

you know, speed.

0:26:510:26:53

It could be anything. It's a problem.

0:26:530:26:54

-I mean, it's clearly a problem.

-Yeah.

-I got...

0:26:540:26:57

For my maths O-level, I got a U.

0:26:570:26:59

I got an unclassified for my maths O-level.

0:26:590:27:03

I mean, I understand the problem that they're setting,

0:27:040:27:07

it's not like I don't understand the problem.

0:27:070:27:09

So if they say, "What is half?"

0:27:090:27:10

I understand what half is. I understand the concept of half.

0:27:100:27:14

It's the number bit that I have a problem with.

0:27:140:27:17

Of course, if I let it through, there'll be no numbers

0:27:170:27:19

in the world, after they've gone into the room.

0:27:190:27:22

I can see there would be some issues, but...

0:27:220:27:24

LAUGHTER

0:27:240:27:25

Couldn't we go back to abacus?

0:27:270:27:28

And, sort of, you know... Like, it's beads.

0:27:280:27:31

It's more on that side than that side, but you don't give it

0:27:310:27:34

one, two, three, four, five...

0:27:340:27:35

I can see a couple of calculators just edging out by the door.

0:27:350:27:38

The thing that always amazes me is when someone texts you to say their

0:27:380:27:41

baby is born, they all have to say, like, "Nine pounds, three ounces."

0:27:410:27:46

They always have to tell you the weight.

0:27:460:27:48

Why do they do that?

0:27:480:27:49

No-one would ever say, "I've got a new girlfriend -

0:27:490:27:52

"Nine stone, two."

0:27:520:27:53

LAUGHTER

0:27:530:27:55

You would never do that. What is that weird obsession?

0:27:590:28:03

-It's true.

-Well, the Americans do a bit, though.

0:28:030:28:05

When they describe people they say, "200 pounds."

0:28:050:28:08

You know, they do throw numbers alongside names.

0:28:080:28:10

-I never know what that means. Do you?

-No.

0:28:100:28:13

"Got to be 400 pounds, that guy." I just think, "Is that a lot?

0:28:130:28:16

"How big is he? Is he a goblin? What's happening?"

0:28:160:28:19

Did you like charts and all that at school,

0:28:190:28:22

when you used to get graphs and things?

0:28:220:28:24

Well, I mean, I preferred a picture to the number.

0:28:240:28:28

Yeah. They sort of appeal to me, pie charts.

0:28:280:28:31

Are you familiar with the Meatloaf song?

0:28:310:28:33

# I would do anything for love

0:28:330:28:37

# But I won't do that. #

0:28:370:28:40

They actually, um...

0:28:420:28:44

They took that song lyric and expressed it as a graph.

0:28:440:28:48

LAUGHTER

0:28:500:28:53

APPLAUSE

0:28:530:28:56

OK, so, what is upsetting Noel Fielding?

0:28:560:29:00

What's the point?

0:29:060:29:08

CHEERING

0:29:080:29:10

I mean, what's the point of hangovers?

0:29:110:29:14

Why?

0:29:140:29:15

If we just drank five bottles of wine, fell asleep,

0:29:150:29:18

woke up the next day, felt fine, what's the problem with that?

0:29:180:29:22

What is this rubbish about?

0:29:220:29:25

I mean, when I was younger, they were fine.

0:29:250:29:27

My liver the next day would give me a little cheeky warning,

0:29:270:29:30

you know, like a Mogwai. It would go, "Bar-bar-r-r-r."

0:29:300:29:34

Now it comes in like Chewbacca, kicks the door down,

0:29:340:29:38

"Br-r-r-r-r-r-r," gets me in a headlock.

0:29:380:29:42

I mean, I literally am out of the game for three days.

0:29:420:29:46

The only time you think you haven't got a hangover, now,

0:29:460:29:49

you're still drunk.

0:29:490:29:51

LAUGHTER

0:29:510:29:52

You go, "I've got away with it! "Oh, I'm absolutely shitfaced!"

0:29:530:29:57

I've gone through the night. That's how drunk I was.

0:29:580:30:01

I don't like that fuzzy feeling.

0:30:020:30:04

I'm not a massive drinker, so it doesn't take much for me to...

0:30:040:30:07

The next day, after having a couple the night before, to really...

0:30:070:30:13

And it stays all day, that fuzzy, horrible feeling.

0:30:130:30:17

"Drink more water."

0:30:170:30:18

-Drink so much water, you know what I mean?

-Doesn't work.

0:30:180:30:21

Your belly is gushing. Your belly is like, "Blumf, blumf."

0:30:210:30:24

I'm a recovering alcoholic. I'll be upfront about it.

0:30:240:30:27

I used to wet the bed anyway,

0:30:270:30:28

without drinking three pints of water before I went to bed.

0:30:280:30:33

What am I, just trying to take the colour down a couple of shades?

0:30:330:30:37

LAUGHTER

0:30:370:30:39

At least you're upfront about it.

0:30:410:30:42

I remember a mate saying... We went out, we had, honestly,

0:30:420:30:46

we had about 12 pints of cider, we got absolutely, completely

0:30:460:30:49

out of it.

0:30:490:30:50

I felt terrible the next day and I saw him at lunchtime.

0:30:500:30:53

I said, "How are you feeling?" He said, "Oh, I feel terrible.

0:30:530:30:57

"I'm going to stop having that cup

0:30:570:30:58

"of tea last thing before I go to bed."

0:30:580:31:01

LAUGHTER

0:31:010:31:02

And he meant it, he meant it!

0:31:020:31:04

The trouble is, whenever I talk to people about drinking anecdotes,

0:31:060:31:10

it all starts off all funny

0:31:100:31:12

and then I tell some of my stories, and people just go, "Oh."

0:31:120:31:16

Like, you'll particularly like this one.

0:31:170:31:20

This sort of sums up the show for you.

0:31:200:31:22

I once went on a massive bender for about five days

0:31:220:31:26

and I was lying in bed one morning, and I could see spiders crawling

0:31:260:31:30

about on the ceiling, which were caused by the alcohol in my brain.

0:31:300:31:37

They weren't really there.

0:31:370:31:39

See, you don't get banter like this on Would I Lie To You?

0:31:390:31:43

As you get older they become bleaker and bleaker, the hangovers.

0:31:450:31:48

Longer. Like, three-day hangovers.

0:31:480:31:51

That's a holiday, isn't it?

0:31:510:31:54

That's a weekend break.

0:31:540:31:57

People say to me now, they say, if I tell them I haven't drunk...

0:31:580:32:01

I haven't had a drink since September 24th 1986.

0:32:010:32:04

Woo! Nice one, man.

0:32:040:32:06

APPLAUSE

0:32:060:32:08

And people say to me, "Oh, well, you know,

0:32:080:32:10

"at least you can remember what you did last night."

0:32:100:32:13

And I say, "Yeah, nothing."

0:32:130:32:14

LAUGHTER

0:32:140:32:16

So have you come up with a cure for a hangover?

0:32:190:32:22

Not really.

0:32:220:32:24

I think what happens is you fight it and fight it and eventually you

0:32:240:32:27

just have to think, "Oh, I'll just lie here and watch Police Academy 5.

0:32:270:32:31

"I won't try and move my arms or legs.

0:32:320:32:36

"Hopefully someone will put a pizza in my face at some point."

0:32:360:32:39

I think the only cure is to just not drink as much.

0:32:410:32:43

Yes, I think that's true.

0:32:430:32:45

I guess if you didn't have them, then you'd just drink all the time,

0:32:450:32:48

-and it would be ridiculous.

-Yes.

0:32:480:32:49

You kind of have to have the high and low, don't you?

0:32:490:32:51

The yin and the yang.

0:32:510:32:53

I think you've just talked me out of putting them into Room 101.

0:32:530:32:55

Oh, no.

0:32:550:32:57

Well, the truth is, if hangovers didn't exist,

0:32:570:33:00

if I put them into Room 101, I'd probably start drinking again

0:33:000:33:03

tomorrow and I'd end up on waste ground with 15 carrier bags,

0:33:030:33:07

shouting, "I used to be on television."

0:33:070:33:10

LAUGHTER

0:33:100:33:11

Stinky cheese. I, um...

0:33:110:33:15

I think it's all right.

0:33:150:33:17

What you need to do is use your senses individually.

0:33:170:33:20

Close down the nose and go for the taste.

0:33:200:33:23

If you get it as far as the mouth, it actually tastes all right.

0:33:230:33:25

And also, I don't have many things that make me feel sophisticated,

0:33:250:33:29

Ian, so don't take this away from me, please.

0:33:290:33:31

I don't have a gold tooth.

0:33:310:33:33

LAUGHTER

0:33:330:33:35

Numbers. I know it's going to be a bit weird

0:33:350:33:37

if I take all the numbers out of the world,

0:33:370:33:39

but I have struggled with numbers a lot in my life, and we all have.

0:33:390:33:43

-Yeah.

-And it is a real problem.

0:33:430:33:46

I wish there'd be some way that we could make it a language thing.

0:33:460:33:49

So I am going to put numbers into Room - what used to be called - 101.

0:33:490:33:54

APPLAUSE

0:33:540:33:56

Right, we've just got time for a bonus choice, so let's see

0:34:040:34:07

what Ian has gone for.

0:34:070:34:09

APPLAUSE

0:34:160:34:18

I tell you what happened - my wedding ring...

0:34:180:34:20

When I...when I have a bath and that in the morning...

0:34:200:34:23

All that sort of stuff, I wash... I take my ring off...

0:34:230:34:27

Lost it. Lost my ring for, I'd say,

0:34:270:34:30

two months...

0:34:300:34:32

I asked my little girl, "Lola, where's my ring?

0:34:320:34:34

"Have you seen it?" She said, "No, Roxanne had it last."

0:34:340:34:37

-Roxanne's two and a half.

-Hm.

-So then you go and...

0:34:370:34:40

You actually... Because you're so desperate to find it,

0:34:400:34:42

you actually ask, "Roxanne, where's Daddy's ring?"

0:34:420:34:45

And she'll start walking you around the house,

0:34:450:34:47

and then you try to go where... She'll take you to her play stuff...

0:34:470:34:50

And in the end - couldn't find my ring for two months -

0:34:500:34:53

ended up finding it in a pair of her jeans, in her front pocket.

0:34:530:34:56

What does a two-year-old need pockets in their jeans for?

0:34:560:34:59

Drug smuggling?

0:34:590:35:01

LAUGHTER

0:35:010:35:03

Yeah, they come in very handy at Customs.

0:35:030:35:05

LAUGHTER

0:35:050:35:07

I'm standing up now for clothes designers...

0:35:070:35:10

If you don't put pockets on kids' clothes,

0:35:100:35:12

then they just end up looking like communists.

0:35:120:35:15

LAUGHTER

0:35:150:35:17

Or like they're in prison.

0:35:180:35:20

I don't know, I've got a three-year-old,

0:35:210:35:23

and he's got a pocket and then inside the pocket

0:35:230:35:26

there's an even smaller pocket.

0:35:260:35:29

And in there I found, I'd say, about 70% of a ladybird.

0:35:290:35:34

LAUGHTER

0:35:340:35:36

-He'd put there for safety.

-Exactly.

0:35:370:35:40

So, really what they've done there, they've actually aided your son

0:35:400:35:43

-to kill an insect.

-You're right.

0:35:430:35:45

LAUGHTER

0:35:450:35:47

-I think when I get home, I'm going to have to make a citizen's arrest.

-Absolutely.

0:35:480:35:52

LAUGHTER

0:35:520:35:53

Kids don't put their hands in their pockets...

0:35:530:35:56

Two-year-olds and three-year-olds, they don't put their

0:35:560:35:59

hands in their pockets. What are they putting their hands...?

0:35:590:36:01

Some of them, they can't even fit their hand in...

0:36:010:36:04

Their little hand can't even fit into the little pocket.

0:36:040:36:07

So, what is the point of having a little pocket that's even small...

0:36:070:36:10

Too small for their little hand to go in?

0:36:100:36:13

It's just absolutely ridiculous. You know what I do now?

0:36:130:36:17

All of her jeans... I look at them... Cos all the jeans have got

0:36:170:36:20

pockets, I actually try to put my hands in the pockets, just to see...

0:36:200:36:23

Bloody stupid. Put my finger in, can't get my hand in.

0:36:230:36:26

I thought you were going to say you sewed them all up,

0:36:260:36:29

like some kind of pocket Nazi!

0:36:290:36:30

LAUGHTER

0:36:300:36:32

Brrr. Brrr.

0:36:320:36:34

Good idea, Noel, to be honest.

0:36:340:36:37

Maybe they're for teeth?

0:36:370:36:39

No, that's the pillow. That's the pillow, isn't it?

0:36:390:36:42

No, because kids' teeth are like roulette chips, they can

0:36:420:36:45

cash them in at any time.

0:36:450:36:47

LAUGHTER

0:36:470:36:48

Just put in there for safekeeping, if you've got a bit of a short week under the pillow.

0:36:480:36:53

You can't turn this round for me.

0:36:530:36:55

Simply because there is no reason for a two, three-year-old

0:36:550:36:58

to have pockets in any of their clothes.

0:36:580:37:01

-At what age do pockets become...?

-I would go seven, eight...

0:37:010:37:06

-Seven or eight?

-21.

0:37:060:37:07

LAUGHTER

0:37:070:37:09

I've got pockets and my jeans are so tight I can't get anything in there.

0:37:090:37:12

-A nightmare.

-Can you even get your hands in your pockets?

0:37:120:37:16

Not even a Rizla.

0:37:160:37:18

LAUGHTER

0:37:180:37:20

What about you, Jo, do you have a view on this?

0:37:210:37:25

I would just... I think with kids' clothing in general,

0:37:250:37:28

there is this idea that everything has to look incredibly cute.

0:37:280:37:31

-And sweet.

-Mm.

-And impractical, actually, a lot of it is

0:37:310:37:35

intended to be impractical.

0:37:350:37:37

They want to be like us.

0:37:370:37:39

What, at two? They're not going to say, "Hang on a minute,

0:37:390:37:42

"I haven't got any pockets. I want to look like..."

0:37:420:37:44

LAUGHTER

0:37:440:37:45

"Excuse me, someone, I want to be grown-up,

0:37:450:37:48

-"why haven't I got pockets?"

-This is...

-"Pockets to put nothing in."

0:37:480:37:51

This is bullshit, "I've got a greenfly and a button, where's that going to go?"

0:37:510:37:56

LAUGHTER

0:37:560:37:58

Just the originality behind pockets and children...

0:38:020:38:05

LAUGHTER

0:38:050:38:07

I am going to put pockets in children's clothes into Room 101.

0:38:070:38:10

CHEERING

0:38:100:38:12

And that brings us to the end of the show.

0:38:210:38:23

Well done, Noel, you were the most persuasive guest,

0:38:230:38:26

so you are this week's winner.

0:38:260:38:27

APPLAUSE

0:38:270:38:29

Thanks very much, Noel Fielding, Ian Wright and Joanna Scanlan,

0:38:310:38:34

and thank you. Goodnight.

0:38:340:38:36

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