QI (2003–…): Season 9, Episode 4 - Indecision - full transcript

APPLAUSE

Good...evening!

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

and welcome to an absolutely
choice edition of QI,

which is all about indecision.

All in a dither tonight
are A, Jimmy Carr...

CHEERING

..B, Rich Hall...
CHEERING

..C, Phill Jupitus
CHEERING

..or D, none of the above,
Alan Davies.

CHEERING



Your buzzers are designed
to help you make up your mind.

- Jimmy goes...
- WOMAN: "Turn right. Turn right."

- Phill goes...
- WOMAN: "Turn left. Turn left."

- Rich goes...
- WOMAN: "Turn round. Turn round."

- And Alan goes...
- MAN: "Excuse me, sir.
Is this your vehicle? Are you sure?

"Would you blow into this bag,
please, sir?"

And don't forget your
"nobody knows" jokers.

Have you got them there?

FANFARE
"Nobody knows."

There is a question, to which
the answer is "nobody knows".

If you can flag it up,
you get extra points.

Now, why was this tosser
thrown out of The Magic Circle?

"Tosser" is a technical term
in this particular -

Was he using real magic?



That's not the reason,
but it's a damn good thought.

- What gets you thrown out
of The Magic Circle?
- Giving away the secrets.

Yes. This guy, John Lenahan,
was thrown out of The Magic Circle

for giving away
a particular - a very famous -

you just have to buy a book
and you know how to do it.

He said if he'd been a murderer,
he'd have be out of prison by now,

but he's out of The Magic Circle
for life because he appeared on
Des Lynam's "How Do They Do That?"

- and revealed... - Oh, Lynam!

..one of the classic card scams

that is used on street corners
to make money.

- Oh! Find the Lady. - Or as they call it
in America, Three-card Monte.

- Exactly. - Because Find the Lady...

I prefer Three-card Monte because
Find the Lady - I had a really bad
experience in Thailand once.

Did you feel a bit of a dick?!
LAUGHTER

Oh, I'm sorry!

APPLAUSE

And they've always got
the guy that comes up and goes,

"Oh, this looks pretty good,
everyone. I might have a go at this."

You're right. They have shills -
the guys who say...

They put the money down
and are paid out, you know.

- We've given you some money. Have
you got it there? - OK. - I have some to
pay you, in case you get it right.

Here you are. Watch the screen.
All you have to do is find the lady.

Watch and then... There we go.

- There she is. - Oh, OK.
- Keep your eyes on her.

OK, which is she?

- Left. - You're saying the left?
- Yes. - Middle. - Middle?!

- Audience? - ALL: Left.
- It's obviously the left.

Here you are.
Course it's on the left.

You just follow it
with your eyes.

Let's have another go. This time,
we'll do it for money
now you've got the idea.

Keep your eyes on the lady.

- There she is. - OK.

- OK. Where's she gone? - Right, OK,
you three put that on a card each,

and I will stick this in
a lady's knickers in the audience.

That's a whole other game!
That's a whole other lady to find.

There's a lady put her hand up
over there.

She put her hand up what?
LAUGHTER

That's the trouble with this game.
You always want to see it
a second time.

- Place your bets. - I'm going left.
- Left. OK.

I'm going left.

- Right. - Right. - Left.

Three lefts and a right.

Audience, how many think left?

Oh, most of you.

How many think middle?

Only very few. How many think right?
Actually, the majority think right.

OK, let's show.

- It is indeed the left!
- Two in a row! Come on!

- That's brilliant. - That's it,
I'm getting my real money out.
I'm on a roll!

That's the time to quit!

I ought to explain
when talking about John Lenahan,

when I called him a tosser,
that is the name for the guy
who does that trick.

It's called tossing. You can win
a lot of money by tossing.

- Argh! - What the...?

LAUGHTER

I think somebody thought it was
real money. Anyway... Interesting.

- OK. - What the hell was that?
- We'll find out, maybe or maybe not.

- OK, so - - I'm not in on that,
I just want you to know!

LAUGHTER

Anyway, John Lenahan was expelled
from The Magic Circle

for exposing the secret
of Find the Lady on TV.

The real secret is,
even if you choose correctly,

someone is likely
to run off with the money,

because that's the way they work.

Now for something beginning with "I"
you wouldn't choose in 100 years.

Who expected the
Spanish Inquisition?

Was it... Er... Was it...

No.
LAUGHTER

According to Monty Python, nobody
expects the Spanish Inquisition.

But, in fact,
they couldn't be more wrong.

Was it the Ku Klux Klan?
Because those two fellas...

Yeah, it's true.
They did wear similar...

PHILL: I thought that was
the Pet Shop Boys.

LAUGHTER

That's one of their best videos,
actually. It's very moody.

The fact is, the Spanish Inquisition
always gave you 30 days' notice.

They said...
LAUGHTER

They said, "We're coming
to inquisite you," or whatever verb
they would use.

"Is that Mr Rabinowitz?
It's the Inquisition here.

"How are you? Good.

"We're going to come round and pull
your balls out through your mouth."

"We're in the area.

"But only for the next 30 days.
Take advantage."

- They gave you 30 days?
- They're like the TV licence van!

They gave you 30 days to prepare
and prove that you weren't
a heretic.

You had to wait around the house
all day.

- "They'll be there between eight
and five." - Or get a priest! Exactly!

Or say, "Torture my neighbour.
I won't be in.

"He'll take my torture for me."

No, it is a surprising thing,
perhaps. But when was it instituted?

It went on for 350 years.

- Give me a century. - 1483.

- I can tell you - - Bloody hell, that's
close! Did you say 1483? - Yeah.

Is that a guess?

LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

I'm right!

It was 1478. But five years...
That's very close.

They called and said, "We're coming
around in five years," so in '78...

LAUGHTER

You're right. The Spanish
took it upon themselves
to have their own inquisition.

There was a Papal Inquisition,
but they wanted their own.

It was an anti-Semitic
piece of legislation.

They doubted that Jews who had
to convert to stay in Spain,

they doubted that
they actually really meant it.

- It was under these
rulers of Spain at that time,
Ferdinand and Isabella. - Wow!

- Yeah. - She's a dog.
LAUGHTER

She wouldn't mind you saying that.
She would take it on the chin.
LAUGHTER

I went to a Museum of Torture
in Spain.

- Did you? - And I thought -

I didn't know anything about it -
but I imagined

that the Spanish Inquisition
was an awful few years.

- Yeah. It was. - But it went on
for 350 years. - You're right.

- And they had lots and lots of
implements of torture that really...
- Oh, it was grotesque.

I mean, you can't make it up.
But the one that really sticks
in my mind is the one where

you would be impaled through
your anus on a very large pole

that would go up your inside,

- but miss all your vital organs,
and then come out at your shoulder.
- Oh, God...

So it wouldn't kill you
and you'd just be there for days.

Usually, it'd be something public,
so you'd be an example.

Did you know they put hanging people
from cages full of spikes

from a pole
at the entrance to towns?

The Catholic Church,
you won't be surprised to know,

- still has the Inquisition. - What?!
- It's changed its name.
In 1908, it changed to

the Sacred Congregation
of the Holy Office.

In 1965, the Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith,

and the leader under
Pope John Paul II was...

- Who was in charge of it? - Ratzinger.
- It was indeed. Our current Pope.

He was in charge
of the Spanish Inquisition, was he?

- Not the Spanish. - They're very good
at changing their name.

People talk about the Roman Empire
falling. I don't think they fell,
they became a church,

- continued on regardless. - Basically.

Now then, given the choice,

what would be the next best thing
to having a Nobel Prize-winner
in our audience tonight?

Dennis Leary had a joke
about the Peace Prize.

He said,
"I'd kill for one of those."
LAUGHTER

That's very good.
There is a sort of seriocomic
version of the Nobel Peace Prize.

- Oh, it's the Ig Nobel Awards. - Yes!

The prize is given to people
who usually are genuine scientists

who have conducted research, some
of which is just a little bit weird.

We have on our left a woman
who invented an emergency bra

that can be torn apart
and turned into a gas mask.

Two gas masks, obviously!

On the right is the inventor of
the Ig Nobel Prize, Marc Abrahams.

I'm proud to say that in our
audience, we have a winner
of the Ig Nobel Prize,

Professor Chris McManus!
Are you there? There he is!

Whaa-hey!
APPLAUSE

Now...
APPLAUSE

Professor McManus,
they called you in the Press
the "Oddball Professor".

Perhaps you'd like to tell us the
reason you won the Ig Nobel Prize.

I got the prize in 2002

- for some work that was done half
a lifetime earlier in 1976. - Yes?

And the paper was published
in the most prestigious
of science journals, Nature,

and it was called "Scrotal Asymmetry
In Man and In Ancient Sculpture".

LAUGHTER
So, your work was looking at how
male testicles were asymmetrical?

- Precisely. - I've got an issue.
Maybe you could help

because you're an expert.

Perhaps I should examine you
afterwards. It's probably easier.

I think I can explain. One of mine
is bigger than the other two.

Very good. You are actually speaking
with purpose, aren't you?

- A higher percentage of men
have one ball lower than the other.
Tell us which that is. - That's right.

Most people have the right one
is higher and the left one is lower.

- Right.
- And that's the normal way round.

- Wait a minute. - Which is fine.
Yeah, hang on... Oh, whoa...

LAUGHTER
For the joker...!

I've got two on the left.

- There's nothing on the right at all!
- Right! But...

the surprising thing is,
that in Ancient and indeed
Renaissance sculpture,

- you found...
- If you look at Michelangelo's David
or any of these great sculptures,

the right one is higher and the
left one is lower AND it's bigger.

- Yes. - Which makes sense,
if you think about it.

LAUGHTER

Why does that makes sense?

- You'd expect the heavier one
to go lower. - Yes, right. Oh, I see.

- But it's against...
- The trouble is, it ain't that way.

- When you get home later, you'll
find that... - Oh, no need, man!

..the higher one
is also the bigger one.

So the Greeks got it wrong.
That was where it got interesting.

That's odd, because they had bodies.
Is it because they used mirrors
and their own equipment,

and got it the wrong way round,
or was there some other reason?

Their real problem is
that they had a theory,

- and there's nothing more dangerous
than a theory that's wrong. - Yes.

They didn't know what the testicles
were for. It seems strange,
but they hadn't quite worked it out.

JIMMY: Mine are purely decorative.
LAUGHTER

- What was the Greek theory?
- Aristotle had this charming theory

that little boys have tiny testicles
and very high voices.

But as you get bigger
and you go into puberty,
the testicles get bigger,

- they pull down and they tension the
body and the voice gets deeper. - Oh!

So they thought they were weights
to tension the male body.

LAUGHTER
JIMMY: And is that not the case?

Which is why Barry White
never did a marathon.

So for that,
you won the Ig Nobel Prize and is
that something you are proud of?

It's something I can't deny.
Put it that way.

- Um... - It doesn't go to stupid people
but goes to genuine scientists. - Yes.

At the end of the Nobel Prizes,
Marc Abrahams always sends
his consolations

to those who haven't won it and
particularly to those who have.

- I also believe you are expected to
make an acceptance speech. - I did.

It's a tradition of the speech to be
interrupted by a young girl

who shouts, "Please stop it,
I'm bored!" Is that correct?

Yes. Marc has the problem
that the Oscars and all the other
award ceremonies have

that everybody talks too long
and thanks everybody.

He came up with this device called
Little Miss Sweetie Poo - who's
a charming eight-year-old girl.

After 60 seconds she walks across
stage and says, "Please stop,
I'm bored.

- "Please stop, I'm bored. Please
stop, I'm bored." - A brilliant idea.

You had your own daughters
do that job I believe.

At the show in London... I have
identical twin daughters so we had
both of them doing

- "Please stop, I'm bored." "Please
stop, I'm bored." - Is not one of them
slightly bigger than the other?

LAUGHTER

Maybe a little shorter?

- Touche. - Oh, that's brilliant.

Well, Professor McManus,
thank you very much indeed.

Congratulations.

- That is quite interesting. - That
is quite interesting, isn't it?

Anyway, the next best thing
to winning a Nobel Prize
is winning an Ig Nobel Prize.

First they make you laugh
and then they make you think.

Here's a tricky decision.
Which is more mammaly?
A mouse or a hippopotamus?

- More mammaly? - More mammaly? - Right.

So is this which one has got breasts?

No.

Cos a mammal is...

It's about the way we decide.
Indecision is our theme today.

If you give people tests
about categories,

and you show them certain kinds of
items that fit a category. Say
you're doing the fruit category

and you show them
an apple and a pear,
they think they're both fruit.

But show them a fig and a raisin
and they'll take a bit longer.

Show them a pumpkin and an olive
and they'll take a lot longer. Ooh,
are they fruits or are they...?

- The same with mammals. - Yeah.
- People instantly say that
a mouse is a mammal.

A hippotamus? Oh, it's wet and
slimy... Oh, of course it's a
mammal. It just takes a bit longer.

I think if I was to stage
an all-mouse production
of West Side Story...

STEPHEN CHUCKLES

HUMS THEME

LAUGHTER

The way this is set up there, it
does sort of look like the hippo
is sneaking up on the mouse.

It does, doesn't it?

Could we Photoshop a Rizla
in that mouse?

LAUGHTER

Shall I be really nerdy and say
that really you shouldn't say Rizla?
Do you know what you should day?

HIGH-PITCHED: What should you say,
Stephen?

Well, it's French and riz
is the French for rice...

- Yeah. - ..and the company
that makes it is Lacroix.

And you may notice when you see a
Rizla packet that sometimes you
might have torn the top part off...

- Why, Stephen? - ..for some reason.
For some reason might need

- a spare piece of cardboard... - Yeah,
just to jot... - Yeah, exactly.

Just to jot down something. An email
address. Exactly. But you'll notice

it says "Riz la" - Rizla, we think -
and then there's a big cross.

And the company's Lacroix
which is "the cross".

It's "rice the cross". It's
rice paper made by "the cross" -

Lacroix. Lacroix
is the name of the company.

Stephen, when I get to Glastonbury
I'm going to be talking about that
for nine hours.

LAUGHTER

- See, it's not there. Right.
- Look! Look! - The cross. The cross.

No, where the cross WAS.

I tore that bit off.

I'd love a fajita.

LAUGHTER

Anyway I can see I'm boring you.

- Um, here I am... - Not until we get
an eight-year-old girl

running in front of you telling you
who you are.

I want the twins!

One way to tell if something's
a mammal is the check
whether it has nipples

which reminds me of
a piece of I for Irishness.

What do you call an Irishman
with no nipples?

- Um, that's Richard Harris of course.
- In A Man Called Horse.
A great movie, isn't it?

- I've seen worse. - It seemed extreme
at first but now there's guys in
Camden Town that have that done.

Yes, it's true.

- That'd be an Edinburgh show now,
wouldn't it? Part of the festival.
- Done things ten times worse

- than that for writing
MacArthur Park. - Oh, yes -
the cake left out in the rain.

The cake in the rain. Who cares?

If my nan left a cake out in the rain
it would've absorbed all the rain -
she made a very dry cake.

LAUGHTER

He didn't actually write, to be fair
to Richard Harris - it was written
by Jimmy Webb - but he did sing it.

I think he is guilty of that. This
isn't about Richard Harris, this is
about Irishmen with no nipples.

It seems bizarre but there is a real
historical point of interest here.

- What could an Irishman never be if
he had no nipples? - Symmetric.

We came back to...

What?! Symmetric?!

Going back in the past in Ireland,
it's a very peculiar thing

but part of your way of showing
loyalty to your sovereign -
if you were an Irish subject

in the ancient days
of the Irish kings -

was you had to suck their nipples.

RIPPLE OF LAUGHTER
Right.

So... And you may say,
"OK, but what kind of person
doesn't have nipples?"

There would be fights, contests
and people would apply, as it were,
to be King of Ireland.

And if they were found not suitable,
they would have their nipples
cut off,

- which meant they could never be King
of Ireland. - Sorry? They did it like
Britain's Got Talent?!

- Yes. - This is how
Britain's Got Talent should tweak it
so that it's the same.

It would be quite something.

But there is Old Croghan Man,
one of the peat bog discoveries

He was so well preserved that when
he was discovered, it wasn't
archaeologists, or museums,

or anthropologists they contacted -
it was the police.

It was between 300-odd to 100-odd BC
that this person had died...

- The chances of... - He was so well
preserved...

- You would describe it as a cold case.
- You would. - No chance of getting
a conviction.

People said, "Oh, my god! Here's
this recently killed body." He was
found with nipples cut off.

He appears to have been someone
who was deprived ritually
of his attribute of kingship

- before being killed. So there you
are. - Wow. - That seems to be the case.

There are extra points
if you can tell me
the national colour of Ireland.

- Well this feels like a trap!
- It does indeed!

- That's the flag but that's not
necessarily an indication of what
the national colour is. - Blue.

- Blue is the right answer!
- Yes! - Get in!

Very good!

Well done, yes.
APPLAUSE

The fact is it's changed now that
everybody thinks it's green.

And everyone paints themselves green
in Chicago and New York

for Saint Patrick's Day.
But Saint Patrick's colour
was blue - Saint Patrick's blue.

The coat of arms of Ireland
is a shield of a harp against
a ground of Saint Patrick's blue.

And the Irish Guards are distinct
because of the blue
in their bearskins.

So blue was always the colour of
Ireland until really in 1798,

when they had
one of their many rebellions.

And then green became
a symbol of Irish nationalism
and sort of took over from blue.

Sucking a king's nipples
was a gesture of submission
in ancient Ireland.

If you lost yours
you couldn't be king.

You've got a big decision coming up
in 40 minutes, imagine, OK?

What's the best thing you can do now
to ensure that you make
the right choice?

Just make the decision now.
STEPHEN CHUCKLES

No, it's coming up. You may not know
what it is, like Dwight here.

Get into a rage. You make the right
choices when angry.

Very well remembered from a previous
edition. One of them is anger.

Apparently you make
better decisions when you're angry.
I'm giving you a clue.

- You're giving me a clue?
- Have some water. - Yes.

Lots and lots of water.

- Drink lots of water...
- So that in 40 minutes...

You'll be in the loo and you
won't have to make the decision.

Bizarrely, no.

You'd be popping to go to the loo
and that's when we make
our best decisions.

- When we need a wee? - Shut up! - Yes.
- Shut up!

It's true, girlfriend!

APPLAUSE
Shut up!

Absolutely.

The last decision I made when busting
for a piss, was to pull over and have
a piss at the side of a road.

Not that that's the best decision
I ever made but it happened.

If you're given a SERIOUS decision
to make, it seems...that,
for some reason,

- it somehow allows you to make
clearer decisions. - Do you know why
I think it is?

I think that's probably right.

It's conscious versus unconscious
mind. Your unconscious mind
is the smart bit

- and the answers bubble up. You know
when you're trying to remember
something? - Absolutely.

To not concentrate on that thing,
to distract yourself and sometimes
it bubbles up organically.

- Exactly. - When you focus on it,

when you need a pee, that's all you
can think about - needing a pee.
Suddenly...

- Or the opposite - a crossword clue
pops into your head. - I'm going to
try and nail the General Ignorance.

I think I'm definitely going to do
Celebrity Mastermind now.

- You should! - Just 20 bottles of Evian
before I go on.

HE BARKS WORDS

"Red! Orange! Hitler!

"I've got to go, John!"

"Red, orange, Hitler"? I'm trying
to think what that would be...

What is your specialist subject?!

Painting.

JIMMY: Love it!

Fair enough. Good one. According to
the father of history who was
Herodotus, the Greek historian...

Surely there hadn't been
much history?

- He wrote... - Back then, it was...
I mean, when he's talking about,

it's, "You know, two weeks ago..."

Has he got his hair woven
into his beard?

It does... It does look
all one-piece, doesn't it?

- A bit of hairdressing. - That's the...
But he wrote of the Persians,

"When they wanted to make a
decision, they made a decision drunk

"and then reviewed it when sober.
And if they both tallied,

"they thought it was right. Or,
they made a decision when sober

"and then reviewed it when drunk."
But he said also, as if shocked,

"To vomit or obey natural calls,
in the presence of another,

"is forbidden among them."

It's like,
"Gosh, Persians are really weird,

they don't pee and poo in front
of each other. It says more about
Greeks, which Herodotus was.

But he was surprised by that.
Don't you think it's odd?

Does he mean that they go behind
a tree, whereas the Greeks would
go in front of the tree?

- In front of each other. - The Romans
used to all sit around chatting,
didn't they? - Yes.

I've seen the toilets in Pompeii.
They just used to sit there -
"All right?" - next to each other.

And why not? Well, all kinds
of reasons, actually.

We stare straight ahead.
Straight ahead at the wall.

Whereas, me, I'd go in with a ghetto
blaster, so people can't hear
the noises. Honestly.

That reminds me of one story
about Marilyn Monroe.

When she was engaged
to Arthur Miller, the playwright,
she was very nervous about meeting

his parents, who were Jewish
intellectuals, and they went
to their small house in New York.

"Come in, meet Mum and Dad."
And they were having a dinner and,
at one point, she wanted to get up

and use the loo, and she realised
that it was above the dining room.

To disguise the sound of herself
peeing, she turned the taps on

and then had a pee and then flushed
the loo and turned the taps off.

And the next day, Arthur Miller
called up his father and said,

"So what did you think of Marilyn?"
His father said, "Nice girl -
pisses like a horse."

LAUGHTER

It's perfectly fantastic!

"Wow! What?!"

Now, what big decision did the
driver of the number 78 London bus

have to make in December 1952?

- "Turn right." - Ooh, yes, Jimmy?

- The Coronation is all I know
about '52. - Ah, yes.

- The Queen didn't get the bus,
did she? - No, she didn't!

You might, if you were bus users,
know where the 78 goes.

- It's... - It doesn't go my way.

- Tower Bridge. - Sorry? Where?
- Tower Bridge. - It does!

- He had to jump the bridge.
- Brilliant!

He had to jump the bridge!

APPLAUSE
Whoa!

He was approaching it
and there was some mistake
with the warning sign.

As he was getting on...
Do you know these?

They're called bascules,
for the French for a seesaw.

And as he was approaching
the first one, he was already on it
when he saw they were rising.

He took a split-second decision
and accelerated.

The second one was lower down

and, three foot in the air,
whatever it was, he landed
on the second one.

No-one was injured.
And he won, for his bravery, ?10.

LAUGHTER

And Employee of the Month.

- I'm sure Employee of the Month.
- Maybe Driver of the Week.

It was very brave.
Very brave fellow.

- You'll want to know his name.
- Bob Knievel.

It was a good bus driver's name,
Albert Gunton.

- Berty Gunton. - Of course it was.

He should be proud.
If his family are watching,
I hope you're still proud of him.

What is that thing about
split-second decisions?

- I don't know. He just made the
right one. - He must've needed a wee.

Making a split decision
and coming close to something and...

It's weird when that happens.
There are two odds.

One is, there may be something small
you've seen that you can't remember.

The other is, you wouldn't
be able to tell the story
if you'd got it wrong.

- Everybody is alive, by definition -
- So, all the anecdotes about

"I made a split-second decision
and it went very badly",
they're not here?

- They're not there to be told!
There is that side of it! - Yes...

- Anyway... - Like the conductor
who fell out the back! - Exactly!

LAUGHTER

- The one thing we can say -
- As he falls into the Thames,

"Gunton...!"

One thing we can say
with confidence, Boris,

is that that wouldn't have happened
with a bendy bus.

The brilliant thing
with the bendy bus,

it would go between the two things,
and the bridge could play
the accordion!

That's true!
It never occurred to me!

If one or other of these identical
twins committed a burglary

and you had eye-witness reports,
DNA and fingerprints,

how could you get a conviction?

- "Turn left." - Waterboarding.

- I may have to refine that.
- "Turn right."

It's even simpler.
It's twins. It's the evil one.

It's, a, we have to be legal,
so waterboarding is out.

- But they are identical -
monozygotic twins - in other words,
their DNA is... - What have we got?

- We've got DNA. - Fingerprints.
Eye-witness reports.

- Are fingerprints the same in..?
- No, that's the point. Fingerprints
are very, very, very simliar

and you have to be a heck
of an expert to be able
to detect the difference,

- but in a court, you can demonstrate
the difference. - Is this real or did
you forget to tape CSI?

It's a real question. There have
been, indeed very recently,
here's a case, just January 2009.

6.8m-worth of jewellery was stolen
from the Kaufhaus des Westens,

one of the great department stores
of the world, one of my favourites,
in Berlin.

- And they stole...
- As it was German, nobody cared.

Well, 6.8m-worth,
a lot of insurance.

A pair of twins
named Abbas and Hassam Omurat
were amongst the three suspects

and walked free, despite their being
DNA evidence of their presence
at the scene. Or one presence.

"From the evidence we have,
we can deduce that at least
one of the brothers took part

"in the crime, but it has not been
possible to determine which one."

You can't imprison both,
just because one of them did it.
That's the point.

- What happens with conjoined twins?
- That has happened, as well. In the
case of the original Siamise twins,

one of them was rather
a drunkard and commited an offence,

but couldn't go to prison because
it would mean imprisoning the other,
so they got away scot-free.

Now, identity parades.
Fascinating things.

As you know, you are a suspect
and the police are supposed to get
people who look vaguely like you,

wear the same clothes,
and an eyewitness says
"number three" or whatever.

- Nowadays, they use something
called VIPER. - Viper?

Video Identification Parade
Electronic Recording.

Because as recently as 1997,
South Yorkshire Police had a suspect

who was six foot three,
16 stone and black.

They couldn't find anyone
of that description,

so they got a make-up artist
to black-up a group of white men,

but not including their hands.
GROANING

Unsurprisingly, the eyewitness
chose the genuinely black person.

These days,
they have all kinds of ID parades,

but the old type
is not regarded as reliable.

There are reasons for that,
and we might be able to demonstrate
what those reasons are.

Earlier in the show, you may
remember a rascal ran across the set

and stole some money from my hand.

- You all saw it happen.
- You apprehended him! - Can you pick
the culprit from this line-up?

We've apprehended him
and we've got some others

to see if you can find out
who it is.

Here they are.
One, two, three and four.

Was it number one,
stealing our money?

Was it number two, stealing our
hearts? Or is that just me? Er...

Was it number three...
LAUGHTER

Was it number three,
stealing himself for a spanking?

Or was it number four,
stealing a format idea
from Never Mind The Buzzcocks?

LAUGHTER

Steady!

Very good control
from our ID parade.

So I'll ask each one of you
to give me a number.

You all saw the moment,
or at least very briefly,
which is how crimes are committed.

- Phill, one, two, three or four?
- Er...

This isn't fair. Phill's had much
more experience in this game.
He's built a career on this game.

He knows which one is in The Kooks.

I think...

If you could just stick
a bass player in there for me!

- It was fleeting, wasn't it? - It was.
- Two.

- Number two. - I'm going one.
- Two and one.

- Two. - Two?
- It's number one. - Number one.
We're split between two and one.

Those in the audience who think
it's one, raise your hand.

That's quite a fair number.

- Who thinks it's number two?
- You probably had a better view.
- That's quite a lot.

Number three?

A few of you. And number four?
Again, a few of you.

- Would the real thief
please step forward? - Wait a minute!

There you are!
Number two. Well done.

Well done. Very good.
Very good, indeed.

Thank you all for our line-up,
including the three innocents.

APPLAUSE

- Can I just...? - Yeah?

I got that wrong. I said number one
and it was actually number two,
but when I saw number one,

I instantly thought,
"That guy has done something
very, very bad."

I think, in a couple
of months' time, the news will land

that he's done a terrible thing
and I'll be proven tight.

That, unfortunately,
is, kind of, the way people go.
"Ooh, I don't like his face".

I have to say,
I am impressed by the audience,
because, as you probably all know,

we've all heard of tests in which
this kind of thing happens
if you're doing forensics

- or criminology this happens
in lectures and so on.
- I was sitting in a cafe

and I saw some kids stealing
a scooter with some bolt-cutters

and they sped off with it and a few
minutes later the police arrived
and I went over the road

and I said,
"I saw the kids who did this."

And the copper said, "What colour
was the scooter, sir?"

I said, "It was gold,
metallic gold."

- And the owner was there
and he went, "It was silver." - So
suddenly you weren't very trusted?

No, and about ten minutes later,
the kids came past

and I followed them round the corner
onto Highbury Fields -
keeping my distance -

and then phoned the police station,
"It's here. I've followed them.
They're walking along."

- No-one came. - That's because
you were doing a silly voice.

LAUGHTER

Do it in your own voice next time.

It isn't entirely useless
having an ID parade.

- You did very well. - I got it right!
- You got it right.

- You know how I got it right? - How?
- I wet my pants.

That's it! Exactly!
LAUGHTER

You're learning! All right.

It is more difficult than we think,
or realise, to pick a suspect
from a parade,

although half our panel
did very well.

And now to the moment when I'm
afraid you have no choice at all.
Fingers on buzzers, please.

Remember, we haven't had
our "nobody knows" question.

Who was the first person
to go round the world in 80 days?

"Turn right." Michael Palin.

KLAXON WAILS

- Really? - Yes!

I meant a real person.
I'm not counting fictional.

- In fiction, of course...
- Phileas Fogg. - Yes. - A blue whale.

The "first person"
was very much in the question.

But it's interesting
I said "person". It was a woman.

Amy Johnson?
WOMAN SHOUTS FROM AUDIENCE

Shout that again, in the audience.

- Nellie Bly!
- Well done, audience member!

- Nellie Bly is the right answer!
- Nellie Bly? - Yes.

APPLAUSE DROWNS OUT SPEECH

Very impressed indeed.

Nellie Bly is someone
we all should've heard of.

She was possibly the world's
first investigative journalist.

She was a remarkably bold,
brave and adventurous woman.

She worked for The World, which
was Joseph Pulitzer's newspaper.

In 1890, after the astonishing
success of Jules Verne's
Around The World In Eighty Days,

Joseph Pulitzer decided that he
would try and get someone genuinely
to go round the world in 80 days.

He awarded the role to one of his
journalists and Nellie Bly said,

"If you don't give me the task,
I will go to another newspaper."

And so valued was she, he said,
"You've got the job."

And she did it in 72 days,
which is pretty damned impressive.

In those days, before aeroplanes,
obviously,

getting from one place, all the way
round the globe, to another

in that amount of time
was a heck of an achievement.

- It took a long time to get from
Scotland to London in those days.
- Quite!

Can you remember in the book the
forms of travel Phileas Fogg used?

- There were some trains, weren't
there? - Trains. - Hot air balloons.

- Not hot air balloons!
- There's a balloon on the screen!
- Because of the film.

In the Michael Todd film
with David Niven,

one always thinks of the balloon,
but he doesn't use a balloon.

Anyway, she did it in 72 days,
six hours and 11 minutes
from New York to New York.

She should be remembered
for campaigns against bad landlords,

injustice,
injustice to women in prisons

and, most amazingly,
she managed to smuggle herself
into an insane asylum

and wrote an extraordinary report
about the unbelievable cruelty
dealt to the mentally ill.

It sounds like she managed to talk
her way out of an insane asylum...

- Good point! - ..with a story about
being an investigative journalist.
That is genius.

In both cases, impressive.

How can you tell which of these
chicks is male and which is female?

This must be... This must be...

I'm afraid not!
KLAXON WAILS

No.

Had you said that in the 1920s, the
answer would've been "nobody knows".

But in 1929,
the Japanese astonished the world

by revealing that they'd
found a way to sex chicks.

In other words,
to determine their gender.

It sounds... It sounds so wrong,
doesn't it?

- "I know how to sex a chick!"
- JIMMY: I can do that!

It seems impossible
with the naked eye to do it

because you have to wait
till they're six weeks old.

And in the egg-laying industry,
that's a heck of a waste,

because the male chicks
are of no use whatsoever to them.

Gassed on the first day.
Enjoy your eggs!

That's why... Good point!

In 1927, at the World Poultry
Congress in Ottawa,

- this was announced... - The what?!
- The World Poultry Congress.

That's a lot of chickens.

"Will the representative of Albania
make himself known?"

"Albanian chicken!"
CLUCKING

It's one of the biggest businesses
in the world.

The most popular bird we eat,
then we eat their eggs.

And so there are
World Poultry Congresses!

We've all done corporate gigs.
I imagine I did 20 minutes
at the end.

I once did Phillips
Small Appliances. Sounds mad.

- That poor boy! - It was a long time...
LAUGHTER

- It was a long time ago...
- Leave his appliances alone!

- It was a long time ago...
- Which is why I won't have him
in the house any more!

- How do you sex a chicken?
- It's very complex, that's the point.

And it's highly... No, we do know.
It's highly paid.

The discovery lowered the price
of eggs worldwide overnight.

That's how important it was.

The Zen-Nippon Chick Sexing School
was founded.

RAUCOUS LAUGHTER

I know you're laughing,
but it's true! It's true!

You're looking at a graduate.

And they taught their sexers
in such a rigorous way

that only five to ten percent of
applicants received accreditation.

When you passed,
you were paid huge sums of money.

- You are chick master!
- Yes. Hundreds of dollars a day.
It was a really big business.

- It still is! - "Boy..."
"How do you know?" "I know."

"You don't know. You pay."
LAUGHTER

The best in the business can sex
around 1,200 chicks an hour

and there are some talented ones
who can have one in each hand...

"Boy, boy, girl, girl, boy, boy,
boy, girl,

"girl, girl, boy, boy. Boy, girl,
boy, girl. Boyyyy."

The point is...
LAUGHTER

The point is, you go like that,
and pop them in bins.
Girl bin, boy bin.

And you can do 1,200.

- Is it to do with the weight?
- No. They do a slight squeeze...

- "A girl!" - You won't like this.

- They do a slight squeeze...
- And if they go, "Oww!" it's a girl.

And if they go...

- That's naughty! - If they go,
"Steady on, mate..." - It's a boy!

They have a cloaca tract,
which is their reproductive
and excretory tract,

and there is a slight difference
in the ridges and bumps,
the innies and outies.

So you do a slight squeeze.
If it's too big, you throttle them,
or the outie becomes an innie.

It's a real skill.
It's something I vaguely knew about
growing up in Norfolk,

because in Norfolk
there is a community of Vietnamese
turkey sexers, who live...

I know it sounds mad!

I can never watch Platoon again!

You've ruined Apocalypse Now for me.

- I'm sorry about that.
- "What sex is chicken?!

- "You tell me now!" - This is...

JIMMY LAUGHS
I know it sounds bonkers.

They live in tunnels
under the fence!

- Not in the fence, it's in Norfolk,
he said defensively.
- I beg your pardon.

- Tell me they work for Bernard,
please! - Of course!

Bernard Matthews
is the largest employer.

"Mr Matthew, this one bootiful!"
LAUGHTER

APPLAUSE

All right. Chicken sexing
is a fine art these days.

The sun rises roughly in the east,
as we know, and sets in the west.
But what does the moon do?

- What direction does the moon...
- Which moon are we talking about?

KLAXON WAILS

- This show is getting tough. - Whoa!

Wow!

- It goes the other way.
- The opposite direction? - Yes.

Actually... That isn't true, either.
KLAXON WAILS

- No, it's the same. - It's the same.

- "Are you sure?" - The same.
- Correct! Well done!

The moon rises in the east
and sets in the west.

Lastly, how many different species
of mussel can you see here?

- Is this it? - Oh! Oh, oh, oh, oh!
There you go.

- "Nobody knows."
- Jimmy got there first!

- I just found it quicker than Phill.
- It had to be!

- Well done. - It's the last one.

- It's almost impossible to
identify... - Even themselves. - Yes.

- Impossible to do
or impossible to care? - Well...!

Do you think they just go,
"Shall we just boil these and eat
them? Time's a-wasting."

We used to think, by size
and appearance, you could tell.

We now find the genome tells us.
Species we thought were different
we've discovered are the same.

And conversely, species we thought
were the same are different.

So, which nation are secretly
training their citizens to be able
to tell what species of mussel...

- Do the Albanians have mussel ninjas?
- It is almost certainly
the Albanians, you're right.

But the time has finally come
to act decisively
and declare tonight's winner.

It's very exciting. Yes, indeed.

Let's...
Well, let's start at the top.

With a fantastic result,

our winner with a clear
plus-10 points is Phill Jupitus!

APPLAUSE

I don't know how that happened.
I never know how that happens.

In a rather surprising second place,
with four points, it's the audience!

Congratulations!

Very impressive!

That puts Jimmy, who would otherwise
have come second,

in third place with minus one.
APPLAUSE

And in fourth place with minus two,
Rich Hall!

APPLAUSE

But, erm, it still doesn't stop
Alan from coming last, I fear,

with minus 14!
APPLAUSE

END-OF-SHOW JINGLE

So, thanks to Rich, Jimmy,
Phill and Alan.

I leave you with this tale of choice
in Soviet Russia
from comedian Yakov Smirnoff.

"In Russia,
we had only two channels.
Channel One was propaganda.

"Channel Two consisted
of a KGB officer telling you,

"'Turn back at once
to Channel One.'"

Thank you and goodnight.
CHEERING