QI (2003–…): Season 16, Episode 13 - Episode #16.13 - full transcript

Good evening, welcome to QI.

Pull up a pew and assemble your
amazeballs because tonight's

show is absolutely phenomenal.

Our guests tonight are the puzzling
Cariad Lloyd...

..the perplexing Paul Sinha...♪

..the preternatural
Josh Widdicombe...

..and the Pope Lick Monster,
Alan Davies.

So, can anybody tell me anything
about the Pope Lick Monster?

Well, I deny everything,
for a start.

And the Pope started it. No, no...

It is part man, part goat, part
sheep, and it supposedly lived...



And part Catholic?

Part Catholic, it supposedly lived
beneath a railway bridge

over Pope Lick Creek in Louisville,
Kentucky. Oh.

It lures people to their death
by hypnosis.

Come with me, yes, I have cake,
come this way.

Is that how you get your ladies?

It could work.

Our guests' buzzers are a peculiar
panoply of the paranormal.

Cariad goes...

It's a show about phenomena.

Yeah, things are going to get weird.

Paul goes...

Josh goes...

And Alan goes....



♪ Scooby-doo-bee-doo, where are you,
we've got some work to do, now... ♪

Actually frightened me.

First of all, we're going to probe
your psyches.

What do you see here?

That's my mum that didn't love me.

They're always about the mother.

Yeah, that's my dad that didn't love
me, and that one's Alan Davies.

That third one was a bit of loo role
I flushed away this morning.

That really did not take long,
did it?

So, what are these called?

Rorschach tests.

They're Rorschach tests,
named after Hermann Rorschach,

or just ink blots,
you could just call them,

and he published his first ink blots
in 1921... Whoa! Wow!

Why did no-one talk about how hot
Rorschach is? I'm sorry...

That is one of those ones on
the X Factor, he's not good enough

on his own, but they'll
put him in a group.

He's so hot, I'm sorry. Yeah, he is
a very good-looking fellow. Gosh.

He was a Swiss psychiatrist
and psychoanalyst... Sure...

..and he was looking for a way
in which you could diagnose

schizophrenics, but, in fact,
do we think the ink blots worked?

No, isn't that the thing, they
proved that they didn't really...?

They didn't do what they were
looking for,

which was a substantive test to
see...analysing different illnesses,

so on, but it did allow people
sometimes to tap

into the unconscious, so, sometimes
it makes people talk

about things that they wouldn't
ordinarily talk about.

As a GP, it's quite useful to get
rid of a patient that you wanted

to get rid of. If they just come in
for a cough or a cold,

"Does this remind you
of your dead mother?"

Is that how you get them out?
Exactly.

I would have thought it might make
you stay a bit longer, I'd be like,

"Oh, Dr Sinha's ready to chat,
let's go!"

If Dr Sinha looked anything like
Rorschach, then you'd be...

Yeah, then I would be, and I'd have
to get out.

The fact is that we do have
a tendency to look at images

and try and make them into
something, it is something

called pareidolia, and it's
the human tendency to see

images where maybe they don't exist.

We want it to make some kind of
sense.

What he was looking for was a way to
look for depression or anxiety

it disorders, violent criminal
tendencies,

and that absolutely does not work
for, but it works occasionally

to unlock things that people
can't articulate,

that they do want to try
and talk about.

Does anybody know where the word
"shrink" comes from,

which we sometimes use,
in terms of psychiatrist?

Is it about shrinking your brain?

Well, it's from a...there's a sort
of pseudoscience

called phrenology... Yeah... Ooh...

And phrenologists used to claim
that the shape of the skull

indicated the personality,
and they could help you shrink

the undesirable qualities,
is what they were looking for.

Let's have a look at the first
three ink blots that we had up,

and let's see what everybody makes
of them. Number one,

what do you see? It looks a bit
like a train line,

that's what I'm thinking.
A train line? Like train tracks.

Well, where they've entered the
toilets, I don't know what that...

What I can actually see there...
Yes?

Oh, God, I hope...imagine if I found
out I'm a murderer

through this, it's going to be
really disappointing.

Imagine you found out? You'd have
to have killed someone to...

Genuinely what I can see... Yep?
..is I think it looks like a cat,

in that you've got those
two whiskers, and then it looks

like a bit of a cat's face below it.
Right.

And then the rest of it
doesn't look like a cat.

It could be a cat if it's roadkill.

Yeah, Josh, yeah, that's murderer,
if you see a cat.

It's called murderer. Yeah.

Well, it is known as the sex card.

It has the most reported sexual
answers. Oh, dear.

But also lots of people see it
as an animal skin or a rug,

that's extremely common.

So, let's have a look at number two,
Cariad?

I can see two girls
looking at each other.

Well, it is sometimes referred to
as the mother card,

women and children are often seen
in that lot.

I think it looks like two people.

It's two rabbits yelling at each
other. Yeah.

Number three, common responses
to this blot,

what does anybody else think?

It's surely the rear view of two
gorillas high-fiving each other.

Oh, yeah!

This might come back badly
on my psychology,

but can anyone else see, like,
a screaming rabbit?

No, but I can hear one.

The Silence of the Rabbits,
the unsuccessful working title.

Apparently this card can also induce
a variety of sexual responses.

Oh, there you go.
As I said, can anyone else...?

A silently screaming rabbit.

The Rorschach test has long been
used as a personality test,

but I don't know
what people see in it.

Where's the weirdest place to feel
another person?

Loughborough?
Yeah! Loughborough's good.

I was going to say Salford,
I don't know why!

Bognor Regis.

Is it on your body?
Does it begin with a P?

Is it perineum? Oh!

No, but I like your workings.

I love that you didn't wait for the
answer to any of those questions.

We really saw the thought process,
the whole way through.

From a doctor's point of view,
it's probably the middle

of your gut, because that would
suggest that you've gone too far.

Oh...

One way or the other, you've gone
too far. That's very unpleasant.

Can you go in both ends? Like, you
know when you're building a...

Oh, like when they met
at the Channel Tunnel halfway?

When you... Exactly!

And when you're on the beach and
you're building a sand castle

and you put a tunnel in.

Where would you meet in the body
if you did that?

That's a curious question.

If two people met, hand-in-hand,
in the middle of me...

Yeah?

..would I definitely have to die?

Or could I survive that?

I don't know, but your GP would
definitely be struck off.

OK, so, the weirdest place to feel
another person,

for example, would be on
Mount Everest or on an expedition.

It's something called Third Man
Syndrome and it is the sensation

of the presence of an extra,
unseen person.

So, the weirdest place you might
feel another person

is when there's actually
nobody there.

It happens in extreme situations,
the most vivid

are experienced by adventurers.

In 1933, there was a solo attempt to
climb Everest by a British

explorer called Frank Smythe,
and he got within 1,000ft

of the top and he had
the strongest sensation

that somebody was with him, so
strong that he broke off a piece of,

I don't know, Kendal Mint Cake,
whatever it was, and he handed it,

or tried to hand it,
to this other person.

Probably the bloke
holding the camera.

But Ernest Shackleton reported
exactly the same sensation

in his book, South.
That's really weird.

He says, "During that long and
racking march of 36 hours"

"over the unnamed mountains
and glaciers of South Georgia,"

"it seemed to me often that we were
four and not three."

So, there was a sensation of there
being somebody else along.

And I don't know if you know
TS Eliot's poem The Wasteland,

it's in there, it's inspired
by Shackleton's experience.

That's Gandalf. Shaft!

It did feel a bit karaoke,
that, didn't it?

Yeah, yeah. TS Eliot karaoke.
I want to do it.

♪ Who is the third
who walks always beside you

♪ Only you and I together

♪ But when I look ahead

♪ Up the white ro-o-oad

♪ There is always another

♪ Walking beside you! ♪

So, why do you think it might be?

Why? Because of ghosts.

Oh, there's a bloke on Everest who
just keeps turning up.

No, it's possibly a coping mechanism
of the brain to provide comfort.

Or ghosts.

Or it's ghosts.

But the electrical stimulation of
the temporoparietal junctions

of the brain, so,
the sort of bits back here,

these parts of the brain,

they're hugely important in how we
interpret all the stuff

that comes into our senses.

Why might you,
bearing all of that in mind,

why might you be
more likely to see God

wearing one of these? Ooh.

Do you want to have a look? Yes.

Now, can I just say that we made
this, this is not a real one.

I can see Dennis Bergkamp.

Why might you be more likely to see
God wearing one of those?

Well, because it's not a very good
crash helmet

so you could easily die?

Is it stimulating
a bit of your brain?

Yeah, a minor electrical
stimulation, no more than the,

sort of, electrics in a hairdryer,
or in a phone set, or something.

Is it on? Yes.

This is it. This is heaven.
It's exactly like it was down there.

I think this one needs a battery,
nothing's happening at all.

No, it's called a God Helmet,
it was invented by Stanley Koren,

a technologist at Laurentian
University in Canada,

and a neuroscientist called
Michael Persinger,

and it interferes
with the brain's function,

so, it was used in experiments,
and to see if it creates the sense

of a religious experience,
and some people said that they felt,

when they had it on, they were
in the presence of God.

You'd be unlucky, I think, to put
that on and get the wrong sort

of religious experience. Yes.

Yeah, what would be the wrong one?
When you wake-up circumcised or...

I'll tell you what, if that happens,
you've put it on the wrong end.

This guy here,
this is the neuroscientist,

Michael Persinger, his theory
is that religious

and mystical experiences are
actually caused by

disruptions of the brain,
so, it's actually some kind of

electrical thing that's happening.

Now, that may be that actually
what we can do is we can

artificially produce
exactly the same thing,

but that there are real religious
and mystical experiences,

the truth is we don't know.

The thing is with this,
is this a snapshot,

like a freeze-frame? Yeah.

In other words, could this person
be plummeting at a terrific rate?

These wings don't work!

Catch me!

And then really
about to hit the ground.

I thought I saw a third angel!

Now, then, what's the most
terrifying thing about

Anne Robinson?

Where do you start?

Do you know what it is?
She's behind you.

You've got Third Anne Syndrome.

It's her wink.

You find that terrifying?

There's no need to wink in society,
unless you're telling someone

you don't believe what
you're actually saying. Right.

So, at the end of The Weakest Link,
when Anne Robinson says,

"Join us again tomorrow
for The Weakest Link." And winks,

what she's actually saying is,

"I hope you die in
the next 24 hours."

Is it that she's sitting in fire
and not burning?

Yes, I'm going to give you a clue.

So, it is quite cold here
in the studio,

in fact, I think this studio is
possibly haunted, so there is...

I genuinely jumped!

You've let your gender down.

I know. Josh jumped, too!

You didn't see Josh.

He jumped as well!
Old big head jumped as well.

I genuinely...

As it fell, I thought,
"What are the chances of...?"

"Oh, wait a minute."

So, one of the most famous
poltergeist cases

was the Stockwell poltergeist
of 1772.

So, there was a Mrs Golding of
Stockwell, and she was terrorised

by a presence that smashed crockery
and moved furniture.

One of my favourite books of all
time, this is not my copy

because I'd never be able
to carry it around,

is the Memoirs Of Extraordinary Popular
Delusions And The Madness Of Crowds

by Charles Mackay.
If you haven't read it,

I really recommend this
wonderful Victorian book.

It's not one for the Tube, though,
is it?

Sandi, that looks like your bed.

Sorry.

I...

And I am a small person, but...

I don't think you should tell
people that you know that.

"Mrs Golding, an elderly lady who
resided alone with her servant,"

"Anne Robinson..."

Oh.

"..was sorely surprised
on the evening of Twelfth-Day,"

"1772."

250 years old!

Her surgery is amazing.

She looks really good.

That she can wink at all...

If you asked me to guess and put a
ballpark on it...

She looks great.

"She was sorely surprised to observe a most
extraordinary commotion among her crockery."

"Cups and saucers rattled
down the chimney,"

"pots and pans were whirled
downstairs, and every room"

"in the house was, in a short time,
strewed with fragments."

It turns out that all of this only
happened when her servant was there,

and her servant was called
Anne Robinson.

And she had tied horse hairs
and wires to objects in order

to scare her employer.

And it says, "Anne, it appears,
was anxious to have a clear house"

"to carry on an intrigue with her
lover and resorted to this trick"

"to effect her purpose."

Of course, there are lots of
instances where people

are just mucking about,
like Anne Robinson was.

1804, Hammersmith was terrorised
by a ghost impersonator,

but the huge publicity meant
the culprit came forward.

A man called John Graham, who was
an elderly shoemaker,

and he had been pretending
to be a ghost by using a white sheet

to frighten his apprentice.

Classic!

I mean, that is route one
pretending to be a ghost.

Why do we wear a bed sheet?

What is the reason for it?

Why is that a thing that we all
think,

"Ooh, yes, that's to do
with ghosts?" I don't know.

I'll tell you why. Yeah?

♪ Scooby-doo-bee-doo... ♪

It probably dates back to
the 16th century.

So, people couldn't afford coffins,
so all that used

to happen, they'd be wrapped in...
In a shroud.

..a winding sheet, yeah,
a linen winding sheet,

knotted at the head and foot,
and placed in the grave,

so, we have a notion that it's...

Coming back from the shrouds. Yeah.

18th-century London was terrorised
by Anne Robinson.

Well, that was such
a fantastic question,

let's see what
the audience think of it.

Yes!

That was wonderful.

So, my next question,
who invented that wave?

Ah.

I've seen the show before,
it's not Mexico. It's not.

I think it was popularised, I might
be wrong, in the Mexico '86

World Cup and that's what...

Ah-ah-ah. I...

Too late. The referee's
decision is final.

VAR, I need on that...

What if it wasn't a person at all?

Oh. Is it a country
you're looking for, or...?

No, it is in the world of nature.

The Mexican wave
was invented by giant...

Barley in a field.

That's the name of the album.

No, it was invented
by giant honey bees. Wow.

It is an astonishing thing
to look at.

It's called shimmering and it acts
as a defensive mechanism

to warn off predators.

So, each bee flips their abdomen
upwards in turn, creating a shining

pattern and it confuses and deters
hornets and it forces them to chase

individual flying bees
rather than jumping

in and having, basically,
a bee buffet.

I think it's an incredible thing
to look at.

They're called Apis laboriosa,
they're the world's largest bees,

they're 1.2 inches in length.
Oh, that's big.

And they live on trees and cliffs
in the Himalayas,

and they can make hallucinogenic
honey

out of pollen taken from
rhododendron plants. Wow.

It's collected by teams of
Nepalese men who descend cliffs,

look at that, harnessed to a ladder
by ropes, and a single comb

can contain more than 60,000 bees.

Whoa. It's a beautiful thing.

So, a Mexican wave did not originate
in Mexico but,

as you say, it was really the '86
World Cup that made it popular.

But its actual origins,
we're not really sure.

Possibly in the '70s,
in the United States.

Yeah, I think in America they done
it... Do you think they do it

quite a lot? Yeah, because their
sports go on forever

and they get epically bored. Yeah.

So, they find something to do.

Now, please take a look at some
phenomenal people at the pinnacle

of their field and I want you
to guess the records held

by our prestigious guests.

So, let's start with the woman
on the left,

what do we think? She holds
a world record.

Is there any clue in the picture?

Er, no.

It's nothing to do with cooking
at all. Is it a sport?

It is to do with sport.
Is she a long jumper?

No, it is a little bit more niche.

She holds the women's record
for fastest marathon

in a toilet roll costume.

Four hours and 54 minutes
at the 2017 London Marathon.

The second one is called
Martin Brady and his name, Brady,

holds a clue to his world record.

Do you know what bradycardia is?

I do, has he got the slowest heart
rate?

He has got the slowest heart rate
in the world,

logged at 27 beats per minute.
What?!

Oh, my God, how is he still alive?

So, the average male heart rate's
72 beats per minute.

Let's have a look at our third
record-holder.

Now, here's an astonishing thing.

That is Stephen Wildish

and he beat Mo Farah.

Whoa. And what did he beat
Mo Farah doing?

Most corn consumed. No.

Yes. Sack race.

He held the world record in 2014,
39.91 seconds.

In 2017, Steve Wildish smashed that
in just 26.3 seconds.

What's the distance, sorry? 100m?

It's 100m, yeah.

So, he had tried earlier in the year
but his sack

had been deemed too small.

Do you know what? I say!

In this weather, I've had
the same problem. Yeah.

So, the man who beat Mo Farah
substantially is in our audience.

Please welcome Stephen Wildish.
Oh, lovely.

I mean, how did you know, Steve,

that you're good at doing
a sack race?

I was unbeaten since school, so I
did all the school races and...

Right. Did your mum say, "Ooh,
my boy is very good at sack racing."

Yes, she used to film the sack races
at school.

Are you allowed to put your feet
into the corners of the sack

and, kind of, run along, or do you
have to jump? You have to jump.

You have to jump? Yeah. OK.

Would you mind having a go for us
and showing us your technique?

Yes! But, wait, we have to have
a competitor, so I feel the only

person I know who's been
and reported at the Paralympics

is Josh Widdicombe.

I would like Josh to go. Yes!

Don't let us down, Josh. I won't.

I won... I didn't do the sack race,
I did a race at school called

the Dressing-Up Race. Oh, yeah!

I won two years in a row. Really?

I left primary school undefeated.

I now want to see Mo Farah
doing the Dressing-Up Race,

but there we are.

So, please be careful, both of you.

Darling, you have to hold the sack.

Have you got any tips?

I use one arm out, a bit of balance.

Whoa. OK.

Ready, boys?

Imagine if I win,
how amazing this will be.

If you win, darling, you'll be the
world record holder.

Oh, my giddy aunt.
On your marks... Come on, Josh!

..get set, go!

Thank you, Stephen Wildish.

I'll tell you what, though. Yeah?

About ten metres in, I thought...

I didn't...

I dared to dream.

Yeah, you did.

I saw the headlines.

I thought, "This is it! This is my
moment!" Yeah, world record.

I could see you were keeping
a bit back for the final...

I thought, "Finally,
I've found my thing."

But you hadn't.

Right, moving on, how many crimes
could you commit...

..with one of these?

Lock picking, do you think you could
do lock picking?

No, it was to do with a German
criminal so elusive that the German

police spent two years hunting
what was known as the Phantom

of Heilbronn, also known
as the Woman Without A Face.

So, between 1993 and 2009,
the Phantom of Heilbronn was held

responsible for over 40 crimes, and
her DNA was found continuously

at the crime scene
and they could not work it out.

There was a 300,000 euro bounty
placed on her head

and they did two years of
investigation,

only to find that
this person did not exist.

So, the DNA...

Was it somebody in the forensics
team?

It was the factory
making the cotton buds.

Oh, my God.

So, they used to take DNA samples,
the crime team,

with the little cotton bud,

they had been contaminated
with the DNA of the women

who actually made the cotton buds.
Oh, that's amazing.

The Bild newspaper ran the headline,

"Are the heads of our police
stuffed with cotton wool?"

What I like about them is that,
the people make them,

they explicitly print, "Do not
insert inside the ear canal."

Yeah, you can cause a lot of damage.

Yes, but it's probably the only
product whose main purpose

is precisely the one
they explicitly rule out.

Well, that's not where I put them.

There's some awful DNA on that.

I heard a radio programme,
and this doctor was saying

that people get addicted to putting
them in their ears and even

when someone has had ear damage
and it's affected them

and you get more infections that
way, they'll then go back

to that patient and they'll be like,
"I'm doing it again."

But, am I right, Paul, you're not
supposed to remove ear wax,

it's there for a purpose?
No, it can build up

and cause conductive deafness,

so you've just got to be very
careful with it, that's the point.

And addiction to ear buds can...

Can kill. Well, can kill.

Timpanicide, I believe it's called,

killing somebody by perforating
their eardrum. Yeah, yeah.

I made it up. Oh.

You done it good.

I'm so gullible.

Now, it's time for the point of
no return journey to Hades

that we call general ignorance.

Fingers on buzzers, please.

Please show me your best poker face.

Your best poker face.

Wow, that is...

Cariad looks possessed.

I nearly mooned you there.

None of those, if I may say so,
are any good.

What do you think should be a good
poker face? Some neutrality.

No, so, they have studied all sorts
of poker faces and most effective

thing is a positive expression.

So, if you're smiling
and looking cheerful,

these warmer expressions
will lead your opponent

to make greater mistakes.

Do not date any of these people.
There's a warning.

That's a hell of a Tinder photo,
that. Yeah.

Anyway, there you are.

The best poker face to pull
is a trustworthy smile.

What is the fastest
creature on land?

That man in the sack. The man...

Wait a minute. I'm sorry
I forgot your name.

She... You might have meant me!

Oh, no.

Unbelievable!

I haven't quite finished before
you buzzed in. Sorry.

What is the fastest creature
on land, relative to body length?

OK?

So... Yes.

I'm going to say cheetah.

I just wanted to join in!

Oh. So, yes?

Is it you?

Definitely.

It is a small thing.

It's called a Californian mite,
so it is a tiny, little thing,

it's the size of a sesame seed.

They have been clocked at speeds

of 322 body lengths per second. OK?

Now, that's only about an inch, OK?
But if you imagine your body

and how fast you would need to go,
322 lengths of your own body

per second, it is the fastest
creature on land.

The previous record holder
was the Australian tiger beetle

and that was a paltry
171 body lengths per second.

I was hoping you were going to say

the Australian model
Elle MacPherson.

You said the cheetah, so,
the cheetah is phenomenally fast,

57.8mph, but 16 body lengths
per second.

Whoa, lazy.

Yeah.

So, 300 lengths of its body...

Yeah, in a second. But that's only
an inch, you see?

Yeah. That's an inch, is it, Alan?

So, that brings us to the extremely
familiar phenomenon of the scores.

In first place, with a practically
perfect ten,

it's Alan!

In second place, with -5,

it's Paul!

In penultimate place with -6,

Cariad.

And, bringing up the posterior,
indeed, falling over in his sack,

with -12, it's Josh.

I'd like to thank
Paul, Josh, Cariad and Alan,

and I leave you with this to ponder.

British neuroscientist Adrian Owen
was told of a girl

that was in a coma but was still
aware of her surroundings.

Her mother visited her every day
and played the same Celine Dion

album on repeat for months.

It was, she thought, her daughter's
favourite album.

The girl was one of the few to
recover from this state

and her first words to her mother
on waking were,

"If I ever hear that Celine Dion
album again,"

"I will kill you."

Have a phenomenal night, goodnight.