QI (2003) s11e10 Episode Script
Keeps
Goooooood evening, good evening, good evening, good evening, good evening, good evening, good evening, good evening and welcome to QI, where tonight we are playing for Keeps.
Keeping his eye on the ball, Jason Manford.
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE Keeping her ear to the ground, Sarah Millican.
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE Keeping his nose to the grindstone, Bill Bailey.
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE And keeping his pecker up, in spite of everything, Alan Davies.
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE And I'll be keeping the peace, everything on track and the score.
So, jeepers creepers, let's hear your peepers.
Jason goes Keep on movin'.
Sarah goes Keep on runnin' Keep on hidin'.
Bill goes Keep on rockin' Keep on rockin'.
Nice.
Nice.
And Alan goes We'll keep a welcome in the hillsides Nice.
The voice of your forefathers there, the ancestors, isn't it, "keeping a welcome in the hillside," isn-at? So, before we start Were they Pakistanis? Stop it, stop it.
Stop it right now.
I'm going to lay down the law.
Like Teacher's first day at school - he's strict, just so that people are afraid of him.
Yes.
Authority has got to be laid down.
I'm not going to have Right.
Yes.
How's that going? Oh, Sir's trying to get all 'umpty Yes.
.
.
before we start.
WELSH ACCENT: Mocking my Welsh accent.
That wasn't even Northern Europe.
SOUTH AFRICAN ACCENT: It was from Cape Town.
A welcome to the valleys in Cardiff.
It was my acc-ccent.
You stop halfway through, isn't it? "Isn't it?" Yes.
You've gone all street now.
"I stop halfway through, innit? Yeah, it's like that.
" Right, OK.
All right.
"Stephen Fry, yeah.
QI, that's it.
" Anyway, an easy K series question to start us going.
I still think in pounds and ounces, but what unit does modern science use to measure weight? Kilograms? ALARM BLARES GROANING Oh, come on! There you go.
First word! First word! Kilograms, no.
What does "kilogram" weigh? What does it measure, I meant to say? What does the kilogram measure? Weight.
Weight.
No.
Water.
Kilograms.
It measures water.
Water.
No.
Grams.
Rucksacks.
No? There are a thousand grams in a kilogram, but what is it actually measuring? What? In my case, a crying lady.
LAUGHTER What quantity - what aspect of a thing or an object does it measure? Hatred.
Hatred and vileness.
Bile.
Bile.
Sarcasm.
I don't know.
No.
Perversion.
No.
Mass.
Valium.
Mass! It's mass.
How many points does he get for that? A few.
Oh, right.
Yeah.
You, I'm afraid, get taken away a few.
I don't mind.
You're in minus already.
But you can get your points back if you can tell me what weight is measured in.
So this is the time I shouldn't say kilograms again? Yeah, it doesn't begin with K.
OK.
No.
No.
Anyone in the audience? What? AUDIENCE MEMBERS: Newtons.
They're good.
Our audience is better than the average, let's be honest.
Newtons is the answer.
Newtons.
I was going to say that! You were going to say it? Say it now, edit.
Say it now.
Keep on rockin'.
Newtons.
CHEERING By the time you said it, they're "old-tons", I'm afraid.
Oh, yeah, I see what you did there.
No, the weight is the force resulting from gravity of mass, and that is how it acts on the earth, is as weight.
And, of course, it varies according to the amount of gravity.
That's right.
Which is why it's not a constant.
Which is why It varies.
If you're in a lift, even, you weigh slightly less.
It sounds weird, but it's slightly less when you're dropping, and slightly more when you're going up.
If you stood on scales, if you were using them for weight On the scales in my bathroom, when the batteries start going, because it's only got three digits, it saysit starts the word "error", so it says "E-R-R".
But then when you get on it, it just goes, "err".
"Eeerrrrr!" It's like them not really wanting to tell you.
How much do I weigh? "Err, well" I don't have bathroom scales, I've just got kitchen scales.
Well, you could try the But I have measured bits of me on them.
Let me guess which bits.
Really? The left one's heavier.
Is it? By how much? Some newtons.
Very good.
Very good.
The kilogram is the only metric measure that still relies on a physical object, which is called the international prototype kilogram.
And where do you think it's kept? Is it kept in the National Physics Laboratory? The National Physical Laboratory.
No, it isn't.
The Queen.
The Queen has it? There is a replica of it in the National Physical Laboratory.
Here is Geneva.
Everything's in Geneva.
There you go.
Do we have Ian Robinson from the National Physical Laboratory? He's raising his hand.
Hello.
This belongs to you, yes? IAN: It belongs to NPL, yes.
And this is a replica of the original IPK, yeah? It's the same size, but it weighs 400g, rather than a kilogram.
Weighs or has mass of? Its mass is 400g.
Don't make me a liar.
And this is what's inside the case.
It's so incredibly susceptible to either adding weight to it or taking weight away - the acidity of the fingers, the addition of dust - the original is Well, where did the metric system originate? POSH ACCENT: Builth Wells.
I don't know, France.
France.
You do know, you see? Of course, of course, yes.
Of course you know.
It's actually outside Paris - near Sevres, where porcelain comes from.
Yes.
It's made out of platinum iridium.
And they're worried that it's put on the weight of a small grain of sand over the period since it was first made, in 1879.
So they're going to change they're going to change - next year, possibly, or 2014 - to using Planck's universal quantum constant instead of the physical one.
Thank God for that.
Phew! Then they won't have to worry about bits of dust.
What a worry as well, yeah.
Yeah, what a worry.
What a worry.
Thank you, Ian Robinson and the National Physical Laboratory.
Yeah, thank you very much.
Thank you for your time.
Is there different parts of the world, though, you could go and weigh more or less? If you went to areas of great Yes, on the equator, you America.
We'd all weigh less there, wouldn't we? That's a comparative scale.
Yeah.
And light - how much does light weigh? And does sound weigh more than light? You've got a bit of sound there and a bit of light, you wouldn'tdo that? No.
That's a bit suggestive, really, isn't it? Can you get in the bed before you put the light out? Ah, that's true, isn't it? Yeah.
Yes.
Turn the light switch off and then get into bed before it went dark.
Difficult, but it can be done.
It can, yeah.
Didn't Muhammad Ali say that? Didn't he? He said he was so fast, he could get into bed before the light went off.
Yeah, and someone said, "Just get a bedside light.
" Yeah, exactly.
Or just one of those ones.
Do it at the same time.
Oh, one of those.
Then you can clap when you're in bed, and who doesn't like that? Ah, yes, but that's very interesting, then, because then the sound You've just turned the camera off.
What's that? You've just turned the camera off.
Could you do two? Could you do two now? Thank you.
Oh, sorry.
We use the same system.
We didn't expect anybody to clap.
What just happened? You turned the camera off by clapping.
Just the whole universe, just"nyoooom".
Yeah.
Nyooom! Yeah, you're back again now.
That's it.
Don't clap, though.
Wwwwwhat would happen? If? No, I was just saying It was rhetorical.
Oh, I see.
I was just saying What would happen? There's a question.
"What would happen, Stephen? Discuss.
" Yes.
"Let's see whose house it is.
" ".
.
it is.
" Now, we were talking about bits and bytes.
What is a kilobyte, in fact? How many bytes in a kilobyte? I just like to be different.
MAN IN AUDIENCE: 1,024.
ALARM BLARES Oh, the audience gets a big penalty.
GUFFAWS Unfortunately Unfortunately, our team In your face! .
.
our team isn't intelligent enough to know the wrong answer.
You thought it was 2 to the 10, which is a 1,024.
But actually, according to the International Electrotechnical Commission, it is now 1,000, as you said, is the right answer.
It's 1,000 bytes, and the So I beat all those people, then? You did, by sheer fluke.
But didn't you say "10, 100, 1,000"? You just Yeah, yeah, but I started with a 1,000.
You did cover quite a lot of bases.
You did start with 1,000.
Yeah.
There is a new word for 1,024, which is a "kibibyte", which is rather pathetic.
Oh, come on.
I know.
They're just being silly now, aren't they? But it's IEC standard 6027-2.
There you go.
I'm sorry about that.
It's not my fault.
No, I'm not blaming you, Stephen, it's just I know.
Now then - finders keepers, losers weepers, right? That's the rules.
Yes, it is.
Yes? ALARM BLARES Oh, what?! What? Hey, you tricked me! You could have said no.
You That'sthat's a dirty trick, Fry! You've done this program long enough to know that dirty tricks are us.
Stephen, I didn't think that even you would stoop Stoop.
.
.
so low.
Well, I did.
How dare you? It doesn't work in law.
If you find lost property and don't make reasonable steps to discover the person to whom it belongs, then that's the crime of theft by finding.
So justhow does this apply to? If you're in the supermarket, right, and you put some fresh herbs in, and you're walking round, "da da-da," all oblivious, thinking no-one's going to mess with your head.
And then before you get to the checkout, someone's nicked the herbs out of your trolley and you go back and then there's none left.
That's a dirty trick, isn't it? It is a dirty trick.
Did this happen today? That's just immoral bad citizenship.
But it's not technically theft, though.
No, that's not theft.
It's bad citizenship.
They weren't yours until you'd paid for them.
No.
They were morally mine.
If they took them after you'd paid They were morally yours.
I'd agree with you.
How urgent were the herbs? Well, they're Look, there was a chilli con carne that was ruined because of that.
Garnish at least.
If you decked that lady, I don't blame you.
Yes, I imagine, yeah If you smashed her round the gizzard.
Yeah, smacked her round the head with a tin of tomatoes.
"Don't do it again!" She's learnt her lesson.
Yeah, that's right.
So, I mean, if you Technically, with that rule, is if someone's done their full shop and then right at the end, they've just wandered off for a tin of something, you could go, "Right, I'll have that lot, then.
" That's brilliant.
That would be so immoral.
You've sort of stolen their time there.
So you just follow somebody round the shop who looks like they might like what you like, and then This is a wholly different question.
I never asked this.
Bill raised it.
It's got nothing to do with the question.
It's a very important point.
It's an interesting ethical issue.
I'm applying the ancient law to the modern-day context.
If you find something on the bus, or on the street Yeah, or if, for example, you're a dry cleaner and you find a £20 note in a pair of trousers that's taken in, you don't think, "Oh, I can keep that.
" That definitely is theft because you know whose trousers they are.
Exactly.
But, like, on the bus or something Also, if you found a lottery ticket on the floor and it was a winning number and you cashed it in and it wasn't yours, you would be committing a crime.
You wouldn't care, though.
Yes, you would - it'd be taken away from you.
Because you'd be a millionaire.
You wouldn't be paid.
You wouldn't get the money.
You'd go to court.
You wouldn't.
How, though? How would they know? Because of the number and the time it was bought and the shop it was bought from.
CCTV.
Oh, shit! So, yeah.
In 2009, a Wilshire couple got an 11-month suspended sentence for doing exactly that - they cashed a winning lottery ticket.
I used to work in a cinema and anything that was found on the floor in the screens, sort of depending on what it was So if it was an umbrella, it would go in lost property.
If it was a pound coin, it would just the guy, whoever would just Conveniently disappear.
Exactly, yeah.
But there was one time that a pair of used pants were found.
And they didn't really They sort of took them out on a stick and they didn't really know what to do with them.
And then two weeks later, they got a letter from a man saying, "I was in the 11:20 showing of Titanic "in Screen 6 on the 23rd of February "and I appear to have left my pants.
"Could you return them to me in the Jiffy bag provided?" Oh, my God! Oh, I don't know.
I don't think I'd have put them in a Jiffy.
If they were used pants, they would have gone in one of those things they put nuclear waste in, you know? I think you're right.
A lead-lined casket.
Ugh.
Well, it is true that if you haven't made reasonable attempts to find something, well, we know that it's morally wrong It behoves you to do the right thing.
Yeah.
We hope you will.
But if property is deliberately abandoned, you can keep it.
Now, let's have a round of Keep Still Or Scarper? I'm going to show you some dangerous animals and I want you to tell me what you should do - stand your ground or skedaddle for the hills? All right? OK.
So, let's start with the first animal.
Here it is.
It's a snake.
With a snake, should you keep still or scarper? Keep on rockin'.
Bill? Keep still.
Why? Becauseyou're so terrified of the snake.
The snake will not attack a moving object.
In which case, so you should move.
What? You said, "It will not attack a moving object".
I mean it will attack.
Right.
It will attack a moving object.
It actually forgets you're there if you stand still.
Yeah.
It will just ignore you.
I get that a lot.
It's like being married.
Does it depend on how fast you run? Because if you can run - outrun it They can strike very quickly, and if you're close to it, just the act of turning to run would Like that.
Oh, right, OK.
If it felt threatened.
The best thing to do is stand stock-still and then nothing will happen.
You'd feel a fool if you stood still and it bit you anyway, wouldn't you? You would.
Your mobile went off or something.
That's true.
Don't have your mobile on vibrate.
That would be the worst They have a marvellous sense of vibration.
OK, our next ones.
Let's have a look at this little trio harmonising.
Aww.
"Aww," you say.
"Aww"?! They can tear you to pieces! Three of a wolf pack, a wild wolf.
When they've finished their song.
So should you keep still? Should you keep still or scarper? Keep on movin'.
Yes, Jason? I'm going to say scarper.
I'm afraid not, no.
No, they are "coursing predators".
They actually tear and eat things on the run.
So that's how they like to eat.
You should just shout, throw stones, pebbles, whatever, and then back slowly away and you'll be fine.
Shout at What? YELLS GIBBERISH Like that.
Throw things at them.
They're not used I'm terrified.
They're not used to that behaviour.
I'm glad I asked.
And they're wolves - they just back away going, "He's mental!" So what do you do with a monkey? Keep still or scarper? Ah, that's nice, isn't it? Well, just reason with it.
How many heads has it got? Sign language.
Keep still.
Yes, but not dead-still.
There's a particular open-mouthed, open-lipped Like dancing? No.
.
.
thing that you do.
You bare your teeth.
A round mouth, bare your teeth.
Round.
Keep shaking around like that.
That's it, that's it.
Raise your eyebrows.
By the time I've done it, he's killed me.
And raise your eyebrows.
That's it.
Show your teeth.
Raise your eyebrows.
What does that mean? IMITATES MONKEY CHATTER Back off! That's good.
Back off! You have monkeys, don't you? Yes, we have golden-handed tamarinds.
Oh, lovely.
You just have them round your house? Do they live in the house easily? They live in the house, yeah.
We don't let them out.
Are they house-trained? Yes, of course.
That's amazing.
Yeah.
I think Jane Goodall discovered when you try and house-train a chimpanzee, their intelligence is of a different order, and it's kind of smart but stupid.
And she had these chimpanzees and when one pooed on the floor of this little wooden bungalow that she had in Africa, what she'd do is, she would make it confront its own poo, spank it on the bottom and throw it out of the window.
And This is ground floor, yeah? It's ground I said "bungalow", yes.
So she did that twice and then the third time she saw one poo, slap its own bottom and jump out of the window.
Which is completely logical.
That's amazing.
That's brilliant.
Thinking it had been really good, and you kind of go That not dissimilar to My daughter's nearly four, right, and Save her embarrassment for future shows.
She'll be fine.
I won't tell you which one.
I've got twins.
Oh, fine.
And she's There's a point where they're slapping each other and fighting and you go, "Right, get on the naughty step.
" And there's a point where she's so annoyed, that she will just slap her sister, you know, in the face or whatever, and then go and get on the naughty step herself and sit there with a face saying, "It was worth it.
" Yeah.
That's very good.
Very good.
Excellent.
Cows? Why would you need to? Well, you say that, but more than 50 a year, injuries caused by cows.
Really? 50 idiots.
Particularly calving mothers.
They can get more aggressive than bulls.
Fair enough, because they've We're afraid of bulls, but actually cows areyeah.
But, presumably, if you're putting your arms up a cow's nunny to pull a calf out, she's allowed to kick you in the face.
Oh, there'll be a bit of that.
I don't think we're talking about that.
No, we're talking about Ramblers.
Yeah, ramblers, and what happens is, particularly dogs tease them, the cow then gets aggressive with the dog and chases the dog and the dog, of course, yelps back to its owner.
And then the cow will butt the owner.
They crowd you, don't they? And then if you fall down, you get trampled.
Yeah.
So get the hell out.
So you need to scarper.
You do need to scarper, is the answer, yeah.
So, how do you get an ant to keep still? Keep on hidin'.
Sarah? Stop the music.
And then Like that.
That's very good.
Do you know, by any chance, who was the first person accurately to portray small insects? Most famously the flea, which is a very recognisable image, which is the cover of his book Micrographia.
He was a remarkable scientist, town planner, he has a law named after him of tension and springs.
He was a contemporary of Newton and Christopher Wren.
He was responsible for much of the town planning after the Fire of London.
And he used a microscope to see animals, including this little flea.
And an ant! And there it is.
He was an amazing artist, as you can see.
And he describes precisely how he got the ant to keep still.
He said, "I gave it a gill of brandy, "which after a while knocked him down dead-drunk.
" "He struggled" Wonderful phrase this.
".
.
for a pretty while very much.
" Sounds like he was drinking it himself there.
"For a pretty while very much till at last" SLURRED: One for you, one for me.
Yeah.
"Till at last, certain bubbles issuing out of its mouth, "it ceased to move and remained moveless for a good while.
" "Remained moveless"? "Moveless", yeah.
Well, it was in 1665, the book came out, Micrographia.
Well done.
A gill, by the way, is a quarter of a pint.
Wow.
They can hold their booze, can't they, ants? Yeah, they can.
Cooee! Eight times their body weight.
What was this man's name? Do you remember? Audience? "Do you remember?"! IAN: Robert Hooke.
Well, yeah, Ian Robinson shouted out.
Ian Robinson is a physicist.
That's cheating.
But, yes, Robert Hooke.
And he suffered, as many did, although he was one of the greatest geniuses who ever lived Isaac Newton was a really thoroughly ghastly man, and he particularly hated Hooke and had him erased from history, because anybody who wasn't Newton was just not good enough.
And all the portraits of him, he got rid of, because he was so powerful, Newton, because he was such a genius and so recognised around the world.
And an artist named Rita Greer has set herself the task of creating more portraits of Hooke than there are of Newton, to redress the balance.
Really? And here's one.
It's based on meticulously researched likenesses of him.
There are now 20 in the world, as opposed to 16 of Newton.
So Hooke has won, though, obviously, Newton was a truly great man.
So Newton did this, did he? He was a bit of a wrong'n? I'm afraid he was.
A terrible egomaniac.
Total egomaniac.
Gravity, see, it goes to your head.
Yeah.
Gravity goes to your head! He looks like he's had a few gills of whisky there, doesn't he? He does a bit, doesn't he? He's a littlebleugh.
He doesn't look as if he's had much sun.
SLURRED: "Look, there's two little ants metting in a pub.
" "Hello!" "Would you like a brandy?" "Arghhhh.
" "I love you.
" "No, I love YOU.
" Well, there you go.
How hard is it to be a nude model? LAUGHTER Don't you remember that, Alan? I do not remember that.
Oh, that was a good night.
It's the woman second from the left who seems to be, uh, most enjoying the view.
The one with the orange scarf.
Was it cold? Were you being? She's going to need a bigger pad than that, I tell you.
They're all just drawing sections of you, aren't they? "I'll do the helmet.
" "Yeah.
Oh, you're all right there, yeah.
" Were you being funny there, or? That's not really him.
Oh, it's not real? Oh! No, we cleverly made it up.
I assumed Bless you.
.
.
that you would be funny naked.
I'm sorry, Alan.
You assumed he'd be funny naked? Well, that's what I can see.
I'm sorry.
Yes.
You say what you see.
Yeah.
But there is actually a Register of Artists' Models - "RAM" - that looks after the interests of models, and it thinks the idea that life modelling is a breeze is completely wrong.
To keep still for a long while is very, very hard.
You get pins and needles and cramp.
Yeah.
Pins and needles, cramp.
You have to do one thing at a time.
You start with short poses called "gestures" - bold action-oriented poses - which are used as a warm-up.
You go two minutes, then five minutes and then eventually 30-plus.
There's more work for women than men.
The classes prefer them and there are more of them in the market, it appears.
And in 1998, a man called George Bond took Northampton College to an industrial tribunal, claiming that he was not being employed on the basis of his gender and that it was sexual discrimination.
In fact, they were able to demonstrate that it was personal, and the reason was he couldn't hold a pose, he fidgeted, went to the loo too often, had a background in erotic films, which troubled the A-level students, particularly one 16-year-old at whom he winked when she was drawing.
What with? What did he wink with? They claimed he was Oh, don't say that! "What did he wink with?!" GROANING AND LAUGHTER My little eye.
Having said that, he explained to them that he didn't have glasses so he was squinting, but he did also improvise a pose which involved sticking his bottom into the air, which was described by some students as giving "an unfortunate view".
So They didn't want him.
They didn't want him there.
They didn't want to draw him.
They just didn't want George there.
Get out, George.
So he lost the case.
But there are contentious issues described by the Register of Artists' Models, and the contentious issues include raids on studios by amusing non-art students who just want to see a nudey person.
Ah, yes.
Which is very silly.
A warning against passing window cleaners.
And their policy is to suspend any member - that's an odd way of phrasing it - who gets an erection during a sitting.
When I say "Suspend any member" "Suspend a member".
I mean Right, OK, yeah.
From a great height.
You'd suspend yourself, wouldn't you? .
.
are forced out of the Register.
You'd have to say, "All right, I'll get my coat.
" Right, yeah.
And then just hang it over the Is that like being struck off, then, is it? Yes.
Basically, it is, yeah.
You can't ever be a nude model if you can't control yourself.
You can't ever be.
Absolutely.
Well, there you are, that's RAM.
Now a question about keeping quiet.
SOFTLY: How quiet is the quietest place in the world? Well quiet.
Well quiet.
Is it? There's an anechoic chamber somewhere in America.
Yes, there is.
There's one in Britain too.
And there's one here? Yeah.
Which is It's completely devoid of all sound.
And it sort of absorbs sound when you go in it.
That's right.
It's at the University of Salford, and it is minus 12.
4 decibels.
As you can see there, it's got all these sort of wedges and things to stop any kind of echoing.
Actually there's a hemi-anechoic chamber, with a reverberation chamber as well, in the National Physical Laboratory, and I went there and I recorded myself popping a balloon, first in the reverberation chamber and then in the hemi-anechoic chamber, which is slightly less than a full anechoic, but it's still pretty bloody amaze-oid.
Did I just say "amaze-oid"? How tragic.
You really did.
Oh, God, I'm sad.
Hang on.
ECHOING RECORDING OF STEPHEN: 'I am in the reverberation chamber.
' 'It's extraordinary.
' 'Wow!' 'Arrgh! I'm going to burst the balloon now.
' EXTENDED ECHOING POP So remember that.
Right.
That's the balloon.
That's the reverberation chamber.
OK, it's still going.
'Gee, that was fantastic!' LAUGHTER 'Just an ordinary ickle balloon!' You were off your face in there, weren't you? ECHOLESS RECORDING: 'And now I am in a hemi-anechoic chamber.
' 'Here we go.
Three, two, one.
' SHARP POP Isn't that incredible? 'It's a dead flat sound.
How exciting is that?' There we are.
That's it.
That is amazing.
Thank you.
Thank you to the National Physical Laboratory.
So, who has the world's biggest mouth? Blue whale.
Oh! SIREN BLARES It wouldn't be QI, would it, Alan? Oh, the strange thing is, you're so close.
The blue whale's the biggest animal on earth that's ever been.
The second-biggest has the biggest mouth, oddly enough.
Another whale? A different sort of whale? It's another whale, yes.
It's usually found in the Arctic.
Oh, right.
Under the ice pack.
It's a hugely slow animal, beautiful.
One was found recently that had an 1870s harpoon in it.
It was still alive.
They live a very long time.
Good gosh.
Huge things.
They've got a lovely smile on their face that is curved, bit like a bow.
So they're known as? Bowhead whales.
Aren't they marvellous? Beautiful.
The idea of killing them is just But they have the most blubber of any whale.
That's probably why he's not so happy.
Yeah.
The bowhead has a unique organ in its mouth.
There's really nothing quite like it.
The only thing you could say is like it, frankly Those are its baleen plates - the sort of hairy feathery bits that it sieves food with.
Wow.
But the bit underneath it isn't a tongue, it's actually more like a penis.
And I know that sounds silly, but it's Sounds great.
Well, yes I was supposed to just think that, sorry.
It's fine.
It is a sort of material.
I mean, a fleshy material that engorges .
.
it engorges with blood and becomes absolutely huge with blood.
Erect.
And erect, in its mouth.
Yes.
And it cools it, because it takes all the blood right up and it pushes it out and gets the water over it.
So when it overheats, all this water goes .
.
and all its blood is in its sort of mouth cock, if you can call it that.
We SHALL call it that.
The way of cooling the mouth.
SARAH CACKLES The way of cooling its brain.
It's the corpus cavernosum maxillaris, is its proper name.
"Mouth cock".
But it's a tissue "Mouth cock.
" It opens the mouth, the Arctic water flows in.
Mouth organ.
Cools the organ.
Yeah.
"Mouth organ"! That's much better.
There you go.
And that cools its brain.
So it's a kind of 12-foot-long penis in its mouth.
it's like a lamppost in length.
I don't think he's a member of the RAM society.
No, I don't think he is.
So it's like its own thermostat, then, really.
So it's Yes.
Yeah.
Absolutely, a cooling system.
Oh, OK.
So, anyway, there's your bowhead whale.
Now, that brings us to the business of the scores.
Oh, I say, damn, it's close.
In first place, with minus 7, it's Bill Bailey! CHEERING AND APPLAUSE And second-equal, with minus 9, it's Jason and Sarah.
Oh, wow! Fourth place, with minus 10, is the audience! Yes! But our runaway loser, with minus 27, is Alan Davies.
Good work.
So, it's thanks from Sarah, Jason, Bill, Alan and me.
You all keep in touch now, you hear? Goodbye.
Keeping his eye on the ball, Jason Manford.
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE Keeping her ear to the ground, Sarah Millican.
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE Keeping his nose to the grindstone, Bill Bailey.
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE And keeping his pecker up, in spite of everything, Alan Davies.
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE And I'll be keeping the peace, everything on track and the score.
So, jeepers creepers, let's hear your peepers.
Jason goes Keep on movin'.
Sarah goes Keep on runnin' Keep on hidin'.
Bill goes Keep on rockin' Keep on rockin'.
Nice.
Nice.
And Alan goes We'll keep a welcome in the hillsides Nice.
The voice of your forefathers there, the ancestors, isn't it, "keeping a welcome in the hillside," isn-at? So, before we start Were they Pakistanis? Stop it, stop it.
Stop it right now.
I'm going to lay down the law.
Like Teacher's first day at school - he's strict, just so that people are afraid of him.
Yes.
Authority has got to be laid down.
I'm not going to have Right.
Yes.
How's that going? Oh, Sir's trying to get all 'umpty Yes.
.
.
before we start.
WELSH ACCENT: Mocking my Welsh accent.
That wasn't even Northern Europe.
SOUTH AFRICAN ACCENT: It was from Cape Town.
A welcome to the valleys in Cardiff.
It was my acc-ccent.
You stop halfway through, isn't it? "Isn't it?" Yes.
You've gone all street now.
"I stop halfway through, innit? Yeah, it's like that.
" Right, OK.
All right.
"Stephen Fry, yeah.
QI, that's it.
" Anyway, an easy K series question to start us going.
I still think in pounds and ounces, but what unit does modern science use to measure weight? Kilograms? ALARM BLARES GROANING Oh, come on! There you go.
First word! First word! Kilograms, no.
What does "kilogram" weigh? What does it measure, I meant to say? What does the kilogram measure? Weight.
Weight.
No.
Water.
Kilograms.
It measures water.
Water.
No.
Grams.
Rucksacks.
No? There are a thousand grams in a kilogram, but what is it actually measuring? What? In my case, a crying lady.
LAUGHTER What quantity - what aspect of a thing or an object does it measure? Hatred.
Hatred and vileness.
Bile.
Bile.
Sarcasm.
I don't know.
No.
Perversion.
No.
Mass.
Valium.
Mass! It's mass.
How many points does he get for that? A few.
Oh, right.
Yeah.
You, I'm afraid, get taken away a few.
I don't mind.
You're in minus already.
But you can get your points back if you can tell me what weight is measured in.
So this is the time I shouldn't say kilograms again? Yeah, it doesn't begin with K.
OK.
No.
No.
Anyone in the audience? What? AUDIENCE MEMBERS: Newtons.
They're good.
Our audience is better than the average, let's be honest.
Newtons is the answer.
Newtons.
I was going to say that! You were going to say it? Say it now, edit.
Say it now.
Keep on rockin'.
Newtons.
CHEERING By the time you said it, they're "old-tons", I'm afraid.
Oh, yeah, I see what you did there.
No, the weight is the force resulting from gravity of mass, and that is how it acts on the earth, is as weight.
And, of course, it varies according to the amount of gravity.
That's right.
Which is why it's not a constant.
Which is why It varies.
If you're in a lift, even, you weigh slightly less.
It sounds weird, but it's slightly less when you're dropping, and slightly more when you're going up.
If you stood on scales, if you were using them for weight On the scales in my bathroom, when the batteries start going, because it's only got three digits, it saysit starts the word "error", so it says "E-R-R".
But then when you get on it, it just goes, "err".
"Eeerrrrr!" It's like them not really wanting to tell you.
How much do I weigh? "Err, well" I don't have bathroom scales, I've just got kitchen scales.
Well, you could try the But I have measured bits of me on them.
Let me guess which bits.
Really? The left one's heavier.
Is it? By how much? Some newtons.
Very good.
Very good.
The kilogram is the only metric measure that still relies on a physical object, which is called the international prototype kilogram.
And where do you think it's kept? Is it kept in the National Physics Laboratory? The National Physical Laboratory.
No, it isn't.
The Queen.
The Queen has it? There is a replica of it in the National Physical Laboratory.
Here is Geneva.
Everything's in Geneva.
There you go.
Do we have Ian Robinson from the National Physical Laboratory? He's raising his hand.
Hello.
This belongs to you, yes? IAN: It belongs to NPL, yes.
And this is a replica of the original IPK, yeah? It's the same size, but it weighs 400g, rather than a kilogram.
Weighs or has mass of? Its mass is 400g.
Don't make me a liar.
And this is what's inside the case.
It's so incredibly susceptible to either adding weight to it or taking weight away - the acidity of the fingers, the addition of dust - the original is Well, where did the metric system originate? POSH ACCENT: Builth Wells.
I don't know, France.
France.
You do know, you see? Of course, of course, yes.
Of course you know.
It's actually outside Paris - near Sevres, where porcelain comes from.
Yes.
It's made out of platinum iridium.
And they're worried that it's put on the weight of a small grain of sand over the period since it was first made, in 1879.
So they're going to change they're going to change - next year, possibly, or 2014 - to using Planck's universal quantum constant instead of the physical one.
Thank God for that.
Phew! Then they won't have to worry about bits of dust.
What a worry as well, yeah.
Yeah, what a worry.
What a worry.
Thank you, Ian Robinson and the National Physical Laboratory.
Yeah, thank you very much.
Thank you for your time.
Is there different parts of the world, though, you could go and weigh more or less? If you went to areas of great Yes, on the equator, you America.
We'd all weigh less there, wouldn't we? That's a comparative scale.
Yeah.
And light - how much does light weigh? And does sound weigh more than light? You've got a bit of sound there and a bit of light, you wouldn'tdo that? No.
That's a bit suggestive, really, isn't it? Can you get in the bed before you put the light out? Ah, that's true, isn't it? Yeah.
Yes.
Turn the light switch off and then get into bed before it went dark.
Difficult, but it can be done.
It can, yeah.
Didn't Muhammad Ali say that? Didn't he? He said he was so fast, he could get into bed before the light went off.
Yeah, and someone said, "Just get a bedside light.
" Yeah, exactly.
Or just one of those ones.
Do it at the same time.
Oh, one of those.
Then you can clap when you're in bed, and who doesn't like that? Ah, yes, but that's very interesting, then, because then the sound You've just turned the camera off.
What's that? You've just turned the camera off.
Could you do two? Could you do two now? Thank you.
Oh, sorry.
We use the same system.
We didn't expect anybody to clap.
What just happened? You turned the camera off by clapping.
Just the whole universe, just"nyoooom".
Yeah.
Nyooom! Yeah, you're back again now.
That's it.
Don't clap, though.
Wwwwwhat would happen? If? No, I was just saying It was rhetorical.
Oh, I see.
I was just saying What would happen? There's a question.
"What would happen, Stephen? Discuss.
" Yes.
"Let's see whose house it is.
" ".
.
it is.
" Now, we were talking about bits and bytes.
What is a kilobyte, in fact? How many bytes in a kilobyte? I just like to be different.
MAN IN AUDIENCE: 1,024.
ALARM BLARES Oh, the audience gets a big penalty.
GUFFAWS Unfortunately Unfortunately, our team In your face! .
.
our team isn't intelligent enough to know the wrong answer.
You thought it was 2 to the 10, which is a 1,024.
But actually, according to the International Electrotechnical Commission, it is now 1,000, as you said, is the right answer.
It's 1,000 bytes, and the So I beat all those people, then? You did, by sheer fluke.
But didn't you say "10, 100, 1,000"? You just Yeah, yeah, but I started with a 1,000.
You did cover quite a lot of bases.
You did start with 1,000.
Yeah.
There is a new word for 1,024, which is a "kibibyte", which is rather pathetic.
Oh, come on.
I know.
They're just being silly now, aren't they? But it's IEC standard 6027-2.
There you go.
I'm sorry about that.
It's not my fault.
No, I'm not blaming you, Stephen, it's just I know.
Now then - finders keepers, losers weepers, right? That's the rules.
Yes, it is.
Yes? ALARM BLARES Oh, what?! What? Hey, you tricked me! You could have said no.
You That'sthat's a dirty trick, Fry! You've done this program long enough to know that dirty tricks are us.
Stephen, I didn't think that even you would stoop Stoop.
.
.
so low.
Well, I did.
How dare you? It doesn't work in law.
If you find lost property and don't make reasonable steps to discover the person to whom it belongs, then that's the crime of theft by finding.
So justhow does this apply to? If you're in the supermarket, right, and you put some fresh herbs in, and you're walking round, "da da-da," all oblivious, thinking no-one's going to mess with your head.
And then before you get to the checkout, someone's nicked the herbs out of your trolley and you go back and then there's none left.
That's a dirty trick, isn't it? It is a dirty trick.
Did this happen today? That's just immoral bad citizenship.
But it's not technically theft, though.
No, that's not theft.
It's bad citizenship.
They weren't yours until you'd paid for them.
No.
They were morally mine.
If they took them after you'd paid They were morally yours.
I'd agree with you.
How urgent were the herbs? Well, they're Look, there was a chilli con carne that was ruined because of that.
Garnish at least.
If you decked that lady, I don't blame you.
Yes, I imagine, yeah If you smashed her round the gizzard.
Yeah, smacked her round the head with a tin of tomatoes.
"Don't do it again!" She's learnt her lesson.
Yeah, that's right.
So, I mean, if you Technically, with that rule, is if someone's done their full shop and then right at the end, they've just wandered off for a tin of something, you could go, "Right, I'll have that lot, then.
" That's brilliant.
That would be so immoral.
You've sort of stolen their time there.
So you just follow somebody round the shop who looks like they might like what you like, and then This is a wholly different question.
I never asked this.
Bill raised it.
It's got nothing to do with the question.
It's a very important point.
It's an interesting ethical issue.
I'm applying the ancient law to the modern-day context.
If you find something on the bus, or on the street Yeah, or if, for example, you're a dry cleaner and you find a £20 note in a pair of trousers that's taken in, you don't think, "Oh, I can keep that.
" That definitely is theft because you know whose trousers they are.
Exactly.
But, like, on the bus or something Also, if you found a lottery ticket on the floor and it was a winning number and you cashed it in and it wasn't yours, you would be committing a crime.
You wouldn't care, though.
Yes, you would - it'd be taken away from you.
Because you'd be a millionaire.
You wouldn't be paid.
You wouldn't get the money.
You'd go to court.
You wouldn't.
How, though? How would they know? Because of the number and the time it was bought and the shop it was bought from.
CCTV.
Oh, shit! So, yeah.
In 2009, a Wilshire couple got an 11-month suspended sentence for doing exactly that - they cashed a winning lottery ticket.
I used to work in a cinema and anything that was found on the floor in the screens, sort of depending on what it was So if it was an umbrella, it would go in lost property.
If it was a pound coin, it would just the guy, whoever would just Conveniently disappear.
Exactly, yeah.
But there was one time that a pair of used pants were found.
And they didn't really They sort of took them out on a stick and they didn't really know what to do with them.
And then two weeks later, they got a letter from a man saying, "I was in the 11:20 showing of Titanic "in Screen 6 on the 23rd of February "and I appear to have left my pants.
"Could you return them to me in the Jiffy bag provided?" Oh, my God! Oh, I don't know.
I don't think I'd have put them in a Jiffy.
If they were used pants, they would have gone in one of those things they put nuclear waste in, you know? I think you're right.
A lead-lined casket.
Ugh.
Well, it is true that if you haven't made reasonable attempts to find something, well, we know that it's morally wrong It behoves you to do the right thing.
Yeah.
We hope you will.
But if property is deliberately abandoned, you can keep it.
Now, let's have a round of Keep Still Or Scarper? I'm going to show you some dangerous animals and I want you to tell me what you should do - stand your ground or skedaddle for the hills? All right? OK.
So, let's start with the first animal.
Here it is.
It's a snake.
With a snake, should you keep still or scarper? Keep on rockin'.
Bill? Keep still.
Why? Becauseyou're so terrified of the snake.
The snake will not attack a moving object.
In which case, so you should move.
What? You said, "It will not attack a moving object".
I mean it will attack.
Right.
It will attack a moving object.
It actually forgets you're there if you stand still.
Yeah.
It will just ignore you.
I get that a lot.
It's like being married.
Does it depend on how fast you run? Because if you can run - outrun it They can strike very quickly, and if you're close to it, just the act of turning to run would Like that.
Oh, right, OK.
If it felt threatened.
The best thing to do is stand stock-still and then nothing will happen.
You'd feel a fool if you stood still and it bit you anyway, wouldn't you? You would.
Your mobile went off or something.
That's true.
Don't have your mobile on vibrate.
That would be the worst They have a marvellous sense of vibration.
OK, our next ones.
Let's have a look at this little trio harmonising.
Aww.
"Aww," you say.
"Aww"?! They can tear you to pieces! Three of a wolf pack, a wild wolf.
When they've finished their song.
So should you keep still? Should you keep still or scarper? Keep on movin'.
Yes, Jason? I'm going to say scarper.
I'm afraid not, no.
No, they are "coursing predators".
They actually tear and eat things on the run.
So that's how they like to eat.
You should just shout, throw stones, pebbles, whatever, and then back slowly away and you'll be fine.
Shout at What? YELLS GIBBERISH Like that.
Throw things at them.
They're not used I'm terrified.
They're not used to that behaviour.
I'm glad I asked.
And they're wolves - they just back away going, "He's mental!" So what do you do with a monkey? Keep still or scarper? Ah, that's nice, isn't it? Well, just reason with it.
How many heads has it got? Sign language.
Keep still.
Yes, but not dead-still.
There's a particular open-mouthed, open-lipped Like dancing? No.
.
.
thing that you do.
You bare your teeth.
A round mouth, bare your teeth.
Round.
Keep shaking around like that.
That's it, that's it.
Raise your eyebrows.
By the time I've done it, he's killed me.
And raise your eyebrows.
That's it.
Show your teeth.
Raise your eyebrows.
What does that mean? IMITATES MONKEY CHATTER Back off! That's good.
Back off! You have monkeys, don't you? Yes, we have golden-handed tamarinds.
Oh, lovely.
You just have them round your house? Do they live in the house easily? They live in the house, yeah.
We don't let them out.
Are they house-trained? Yes, of course.
That's amazing.
Yeah.
I think Jane Goodall discovered when you try and house-train a chimpanzee, their intelligence is of a different order, and it's kind of smart but stupid.
And she had these chimpanzees and when one pooed on the floor of this little wooden bungalow that she had in Africa, what she'd do is, she would make it confront its own poo, spank it on the bottom and throw it out of the window.
And This is ground floor, yeah? It's ground I said "bungalow", yes.
So she did that twice and then the third time she saw one poo, slap its own bottom and jump out of the window.
Which is completely logical.
That's amazing.
That's brilliant.
Thinking it had been really good, and you kind of go That not dissimilar to My daughter's nearly four, right, and Save her embarrassment for future shows.
She'll be fine.
I won't tell you which one.
I've got twins.
Oh, fine.
And she's There's a point where they're slapping each other and fighting and you go, "Right, get on the naughty step.
" And there's a point where she's so annoyed, that she will just slap her sister, you know, in the face or whatever, and then go and get on the naughty step herself and sit there with a face saying, "It was worth it.
" Yeah.
That's very good.
Very good.
Excellent.
Cows? Why would you need to? Well, you say that, but more than 50 a year, injuries caused by cows.
Really? 50 idiots.
Particularly calving mothers.
They can get more aggressive than bulls.
Fair enough, because they've We're afraid of bulls, but actually cows areyeah.
But, presumably, if you're putting your arms up a cow's nunny to pull a calf out, she's allowed to kick you in the face.
Oh, there'll be a bit of that.
I don't think we're talking about that.
No, we're talking about Ramblers.
Yeah, ramblers, and what happens is, particularly dogs tease them, the cow then gets aggressive with the dog and chases the dog and the dog, of course, yelps back to its owner.
And then the cow will butt the owner.
They crowd you, don't they? And then if you fall down, you get trampled.
Yeah.
So get the hell out.
So you need to scarper.
You do need to scarper, is the answer, yeah.
So, how do you get an ant to keep still? Keep on hidin'.
Sarah? Stop the music.
And then Like that.
That's very good.
Do you know, by any chance, who was the first person accurately to portray small insects? Most famously the flea, which is a very recognisable image, which is the cover of his book Micrographia.
He was a remarkable scientist, town planner, he has a law named after him of tension and springs.
He was a contemporary of Newton and Christopher Wren.
He was responsible for much of the town planning after the Fire of London.
And he used a microscope to see animals, including this little flea.
And an ant! And there it is.
He was an amazing artist, as you can see.
And he describes precisely how he got the ant to keep still.
He said, "I gave it a gill of brandy, "which after a while knocked him down dead-drunk.
" "He struggled" Wonderful phrase this.
".
.
for a pretty while very much.
" Sounds like he was drinking it himself there.
"For a pretty while very much till at last" SLURRED: One for you, one for me.
Yeah.
"Till at last, certain bubbles issuing out of its mouth, "it ceased to move and remained moveless for a good while.
" "Remained moveless"? "Moveless", yeah.
Well, it was in 1665, the book came out, Micrographia.
Well done.
A gill, by the way, is a quarter of a pint.
Wow.
They can hold their booze, can't they, ants? Yeah, they can.
Cooee! Eight times their body weight.
What was this man's name? Do you remember? Audience? "Do you remember?"! IAN: Robert Hooke.
Well, yeah, Ian Robinson shouted out.
Ian Robinson is a physicist.
That's cheating.
But, yes, Robert Hooke.
And he suffered, as many did, although he was one of the greatest geniuses who ever lived Isaac Newton was a really thoroughly ghastly man, and he particularly hated Hooke and had him erased from history, because anybody who wasn't Newton was just not good enough.
And all the portraits of him, he got rid of, because he was so powerful, Newton, because he was such a genius and so recognised around the world.
And an artist named Rita Greer has set herself the task of creating more portraits of Hooke than there are of Newton, to redress the balance.
Really? And here's one.
It's based on meticulously researched likenesses of him.
There are now 20 in the world, as opposed to 16 of Newton.
So Hooke has won, though, obviously, Newton was a truly great man.
So Newton did this, did he? He was a bit of a wrong'n? I'm afraid he was.
A terrible egomaniac.
Total egomaniac.
Gravity, see, it goes to your head.
Yeah.
Gravity goes to your head! He looks like he's had a few gills of whisky there, doesn't he? He does a bit, doesn't he? He's a littlebleugh.
He doesn't look as if he's had much sun.
SLURRED: "Look, there's two little ants metting in a pub.
" "Hello!" "Would you like a brandy?" "Arghhhh.
" "I love you.
" "No, I love YOU.
" Well, there you go.
How hard is it to be a nude model? LAUGHTER Don't you remember that, Alan? I do not remember that.
Oh, that was a good night.
It's the woman second from the left who seems to be, uh, most enjoying the view.
The one with the orange scarf.
Was it cold? Were you being? She's going to need a bigger pad than that, I tell you.
They're all just drawing sections of you, aren't they? "I'll do the helmet.
" "Yeah.
Oh, you're all right there, yeah.
" Were you being funny there, or? That's not really him.
Oh, it's not real? Oh! No, we cleverly made it up.
I assumed Bless you.
.
.
that you would be funny naked.
I'm sorry, Alan.
You assumed he'd be funny naked? Well, that's what I can see.
I'm sorry.
Yes.
You say what you see.
Yeah.
But there is actually a Register of Artists' Models - "RAM" - that looks after the interests of models, and it thinks the idea that life modelling is a breeze is completely wrong.
To keep still for a long while is very, very hard.
You get pins and needles and cramp.
Yeah.
Pins and needles, cramp.
You have to do one thing at a time.
You start with short poses called "gestures" - bold action-oriented poses - which are used as a warm-up.
You go two minutes, then five minutes and then eventually 30-plus.
There's more work for women than men.
The classes prefer them and there are more of them in the market, it appears.
And in 1998, a man called George Bond took Northampton College to an industrial tribunal, claiming that he was not being employed on the basis of his gender and that it was sexual discrimination.
In fact, they were able to demonstrate that it was personal, and the reason was he couldn't hold a pose, he fidgeted, went to the loo too often, had a background in erotic films, which troubled the A-level students, particularly one 16-year-old at whom he winked when she was drawing.
What with? What did he wink with? They claimed he was Oh, don't say that! "What did he wink with?!" GROANING AND LAUGHTER My little eye.
Having said that, he explained to them that he didn't have glasses so he was squinting, but he did also improvise a pose which involved sticking his bottom into the air, which was described by some students as giving "an unfortunate view".
So They didn't want him.
They didn't want him there.
They didn't want to draw him.
They just didn't want George there.
Get out, George.
So he lost the case.
But there are contentious issues described by the Register of Artists' Models, and the contentious issues include raids on studios by amusing non-art students who just want to see a nudey person.
Ah, yes.
Which is very silly.
A warning against passing window cleaners.
And their policy is to suspend any member - that's an odd way of phrasing it - who gets an erection during a sitting.
When I say "Suspend any member" "Suspend a member".
I mean Right, OK, yeah.
From a great height.
You'd suspend yourself, wouldn't you? .
.
are forced out of the Register.
You'd have to say, "All right, I'll get my coat.
" Right, yeah.
And then just hang it over the Is that like being struck off, then, is it? Yes.
Basically, it is, yeah.
You can't ever be a nude model if you can't control yourself.
You can't ever be.
Absolutely.
Well, there you are, that's RAM.
Now a question about keeping quiet.
SOFTLY: How quiet is the quietest place in the world? Well quiet.
Well quiet.
Is it? There's an anechoic chamber somewhere in America.
Yes, there is.
There's one in Britain too.
And there's one here? Yeah.
Which is It's completely devoid of all sound.
And it sort of absorbs sound when you go in it.
That's right.
It's at the University of Salford, and it is minus 12.
4 decibels.
As you can see there, it's got all these sort of wedges and things to stop any kind of echoing.
Actually there's a hemi-anechoic chamber, with a reverberation chamber as well, in the National Physical Laboratory, and I went there and I recorded myself popping a balloon, first in the reverberation chamber and then in the hemi-anechoic chamber, which is slightly less than a full anechoic, but it's still pretty bloody amaze-oid.
Did I just say "amaze-oid"? How tragic.
You really did.
Oh, God, I'm sad.
Hang on.
ECHOING RECORDING OF STEPHEN: 'I am in the reverberation chamber.
' 'It's extraordinary.
' 'Wow!' 'Arrgh! I'm going to burst the balloon now.
' EXTENDED ECHOING POP So remember that.
Right.
That's the balloon.
That's the reverberation chamber.
OK, it's still going.
'Gee, that was fantastic!' LAUGHTER 'Just an ordinary ickle balloon!' You were off your face in there, weren't you? ECHOLESS RECORDING: 'And now I am in a hemi-anechoic chamber.
' 'Here we go.
Three, two, one.
' SHARP POP Isn't that incredible? 'It's a dead flat sound.
How exciting is that?' There we are.
That's it.
That is amazing.
Thank you.
Thank you to the National Physical Laboratory.
So, who has the world's biggest mouth? Blue whale.
Oh! SIREN BLARES It wouldn't be QI, would it, Alan? Oh, the strange thing is, you're so close.
The blue whale's the biggest animal on earth that's ever been.
The second-biggest has the biggest mouth, oddly enough.
Another whale? A different sort of whale? It's another whale, yes.
It's usually found in the Arctic.
Oh, right.
Under the ice pack.
It's a hugely slow animal, beautiful.
One was found recently that had an 1870s harpoon in it.
It was still alive.
They live a very long time.
Good gosh.
Huge things.
They've got a lovely smile on their face that is curved, bit like a bow.
So they're known as? Bowhead whales.
Aren't they marvellous? Beautiful.
The idea of killing them is just But they have the most blubber of any whale.
That's probably why he's not so happy.
Yeah.
The bowhead has a unique organ in its mouth.
There's really nothing quite like it.
The only thing you could say is like it, frankly Those are its baleen plates - the sort of hairy feathery bits that it sieves food with.
Wow.
But the bit underneath it isn't a tongue, it's actually more like a penis.
And I know that sounds silly, but it's Sounds great.
Well, yes I was supposed to just think that, sorry.
It's fine.
It is a sort of material.
I mean, a fleshy material that engorges .
.
it engorges with blood and becomes absolutely huge with blood.
Erect.
And erect, in its mouth.
Yes.
And it cools it, because it takes all the blood right up and it pushes it out and gets the water over it.
So when it overheats, all this water goes .
.
and all its blood is in its sort of mouth cock, if you can call it that.
We SHALL call it that.
The way of cooling the mouth.
SARAH CACKLES The way of cooling its brain.
It's the corpus cavernosum maxillaris, is its proper name.
"Mouth cock".
But it's a tissue "Mouth cock.
" It opens the mouth, the Arctic water flows in.
Mouth organ.
Cools the organ.
Yeah.
"Mouth organ"! That's much better.
There you go.
And that cools its brain.
So it's a kind of 12-foot-long penis in its mouth.
it's like a lamppost in length.
I don't think he's a member of the RAM society.
No, I don't think he is.
So it's like its own thermostat, then, really.
So it's Yes.
Yeah.
Absolutely, a cooling system.
Oh, OK.
So, anyway, there's your bowhead whale.
Now, that brings us to the business of the scores.
Oh, I say, damn, it's close.
In first place, with minus 7, it's Bill Bailey! CHEERING AND APPLAUSE And second-equal, with minus 9, it's Jason and Sarah.
Oh, wow! Fourth place, with minus 10, is the audience! Yes! But our runaway loser, with minus 27, is Alan Davies.
Good work.
So, it's thanks from Sarah, Jason, Bill, Alan and me.
You all keep in touch now, you hear? Goodbye.