QI (2003) s13e13 Episode Script

Monster Mash

This programme contains strong language CHEERS AND APPLAUSE Goo-oo-oo-ood evening.
Good evening, good evening, good evening, and welcome to QI, where tonight we're doing the Monster Mash.
Let's meet the nameless horrors that lurk in our monstrous shadows.
The malformed Josh Widdicombe CHEERS AND APPLAUSE .
.
the mutated Phill Jupitus CHEERS AND APPLAUSE .
.
the misbegotten Sara Pascoe CHEERS AND APPLAUSE .
.
and the complete monstrosity, Alan Davies.
CHEERS AND APPLAUSE IN MENACING VOICE: Now, let's hear your scary noises.
Sarah goes WOMAN SCREAMS Josh goes MONSTER GROWLS Phill goes WOLF HOWLS And Alan goes CHICKEN CLUCKS LAUGHTER Too terrible to contemplate.
Let's start with a monster mix-and-match.
Here are some cards you'll find under your desk.
- The fronts and the backs.
- Oh! And we want you to see if you can make some kind of monster - and name it if you can.
- Oh, right.
- Name it? Mm.
OK.
You've got bottoms, Alan - I'm a classic bottom.
- I'm a classic top.
.
.
and Josh has got tops.
- What have you got there? - Alan Davies has got gorgeous legs.
- LAUGHTER - Hey What you've created there is a human.
- I'd say it's borderline, Stephen.
- Too terrible to contemplate.
- Yeah.
- Here we go, here we go, all right - OK, OK.
- You don't know what I've put, then we'll look in a minute.
- OK.
- Ooh.
- OK.
- There we go.
Ah, a lionfish.
Now, that's interesting, cos the lionfish does exist.
Unlike the merlion that we have created Ah, the merlion is a very good .
.
which would sing on the rocks by the coast of Africa and lure deer to their deaths.
Well, Alan, there you've got an ant An ant cow.
Yeah, we've got the Basically, what you got there is an ungulate that will ruin a picnic.
Well, we can go through some of these.
- Certainly a lionfish exists.
- OK.
There's a bounty on them, if you catch them in the Caribbean.
They destroy the habitat - they're so successful.
There's almost nothing that can get them, and they can eat everything.
- Try making one to order.
See if you can make a Minotaur.
- OK.
- Minotaur - Oh, Minotaur - So, it's - Bull's head.
- Bull's head's on there.
- Chap's bottom, isn't it? A Minotaur.
- Yeah.
Rather than a lion? There we go.
No-one's quite sure whether it should have the human top with a bull's bottom, but - We've made a Minotaur.
- Oh, yeah.
He looks really muscly.
That's not as scary as I thought it was going to be.
- I'm going to say pop your cards away.
- Oh.
I've just made a mermaid, Stephen.
You've done a lovely mermaid - well done.
That's definitely one that was available.
There are all kinds of things available - the myrmecoleon, which is also known as a formicaleon.
- This is a lion head and an ant body.
- What?! In medieval bestiaries, they were very sure that that existed.
They held it to be bigger than an ant.
Basically, it lived in a little pit and pulled in things.
- How big was it? - A bit like a large ant.
- Oh, like a large ant.
- Yeah.
Mermaids and mermen, obviously, are the human body with a fish tail.
People think, you know, sailors fall in love with mermaids and how can they consummate their relationship? You know - Fertilise the eggs, Stephen.
- Exactly, it's very simple.
She lays her eggs on a rock or something and you fertilise them - what's the problem with that? The sailor has to sail back to his waters where he was spawned and take the mermaid with him.
So, he has to go back to, I don't know, Dorking Yes, that it might be.
.
.
find a pond, pop his new fishwife in there.
- LAUGHING: Fishwife! - She lays her eggs and then he has to be arrested for indecent public exposure at a boating pond.
And one that you get points for because it does exist is the merlion.
Yeah, which you came up with - a merlion - - which is the lion head and a fish tail.
- Yeah.
- Really? Yeah, the national symbol of Singapore.
- Is it? - Ohthank you, Singapore.
Yeah.
Gives you those points.
- The hippocampus.
- Hippopotamus.
Thank you for replying with another animal.
LAUGHTER You're doing very well.
Hip-po replacement.
Buthippocampus is The hipster campus is, it's - runs coffee bars in Shoreditch - LAUGHTER .
.
in a very effeminate way.
Well, as you probably know, it's part of the brain, the hippocampus, but why is it called the hippocampus? The shape of it.
Is? It's the shape of a seahorse.
But a hippocampus, as a mythical beast, - had a horse front and a fish tail.
- Oh And so did that they think before they found the seahorse or they thought they were two separate seahorses? No, there are seahorses in the Mediterranean, so I suppose Let's find out sometime - not now.
LAUGHTER That is surely the opposite of what this show is about.
I panicked, all right? I just panicked.
People love seahorses because it's the male who gestates the babies, isn't it, with seahorses? Which is always so lovely.
I've dived amongst them and I was just shocked by how small they are.
You must have - They are tiny.
Well, I've seen them in the London Aquariums.
- Oh, right.
They have a very long thin tank that they go up and down - it's quite sweet.
I assume that's what they want to do, - otherwise it feels a bit unfair.
- Would be cruel.
They have to just go up and down.
- They're very horse-like as well in the way they feed - They race.
.
.
they browse in the weeds.
They browse in the weeds, looking They have little stalls and they all get in.
LAUGHTER At the races.
There's always one that doesn't want to go and they have to take him off.
So, no matter what monster you imagine, you can be pretty sure that someone else made it first.
Here's a monster that someone made earlier, but what is it and what's it made from? - Oh.
- Oh, my gosh.
- Is it carved? - Mm - Is it made from bone? It's a type of mermaid that was very popular in the 19th century.
- It's called a Fiji mermaid.
- Ooh People would come from miles to see it.
It was shown off at carnivals, and it was made from fish and household bits and pieces.
For a long time, people thought it was made by the addition of a monkey's head with a fish.
And this particular one was acquired by the Wellcome Collection in 1919, and then later by the fabulous Horniman Museum.
- Do you know the Horniman Museum? - Yeah, I live near there.
- Do you? - It's in Forest Hill.
It's brilliant, yeah.
It is an incredible place.
A genuine museum of curiosities of the most fascinating kind.
- I've been there too - it's great.
- It is good.
It's a fine place.
You just saying that cos I said I've been there? - LAUGHTER - I go every week.
- Largely, yeah.
Cos when you said you went to the aquarium, I didn't jump on it.
Like, "Oh, yeah, I've been.
" I let you have your time in the sun.
"Time in the sun.
" - SARA GASPS - Oh, wow! - There we go.
Now, look.
You see, now - There he is.
- So, were they supposed to be scary creatures? It is quite scary.
You can picture it scampering in your bedroom or something.
They were a lot sexier once they added the hair and the shell bras.
Exactly.
But you'll be pleased to know that this is a result of the CT scans, which were made by the Horniman Museum for us, and Dr James Moffatt of St George's University in London translated the CT scan data into - this 3-D printing of the original.
- Wow! - So, this is a 3-D printing.
Isn't it good? - Yeah! Yeah, we like that.
APPLAUSE And you can see how detailed it is.
Even the little holes and flaws in the fish tail.
Have you been to St George's Hospital? It's really excellent.
LAUGHTER Now I'm not going to play this game.
Ergh! Ergh! I genuinely jumped.
LAUGHTER You've seen them on Dartmoor, haven't you, Widdicombe? - What are your monsters called? - We've got On Dartmoor? - Yeah.
We've got the Hairy Hand.
Are you aware of the Hairy Hand? - Which is a - No.
PHILL: You get it when you're about 15.
LAUGHTER The Hairy Hand is a disembodied hand that would appear from nowhere - if you were driving along the B3021 - Pissed.
.
.
and it would steer you off the road.
- But there's - "Officer!" - "Officer!" IN WEST COUNTRY ACCENT: 'And it smelt of cider, didn't it? 'It dropped it's pint on me, and then it drove me off the road.
' One of the people that claimed he'd been steered off the road by the Hairy Hand, he described it as invisible.
LAUGHTER Oh, bless him for trying.
There's the old curse about the Monkey Wishing Hand, - which it seems is where that's coming from.
- Oh, yeah.
What's that? What's that? It's a dead one of those.
LAUGHTER What's that? What's that? What's that? What's that? It's a herd of those.
I've got loads of them.
APPLAUSE So, Jenny.
Do you know about Jenny Haniver? No.
Jenny Agutter.
Jenny Agutter you know about? That's good.
Let me add another Jenny to your list of Jennys.
Let's see some pictures of Jenny Haniver.
- Was she on the front of a boat? - Whoa.
- Oh! Lord, that's Doctor Who.
There's a box of props from Doctor Who.
It does look like it, doesn't it? It's the Ku Klux Klams.
LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE Can you guess what they are? - You burn one cross - Fish.
- They're fish.
- They are flatfish.
- They're skates.
Skate.
Oh, skate.
Rays or skates would be carved in these shapes - it was known as Jenny Hanivers.
Mostly sailors from Antwerp who seemed to do this - it was their specialist art.
Other sailors did scrimshaw, you know, and they did Jenny Haniver.
Very odd, but they exist, and you can see that they exist, because they're there in a box.
LAUGHTER Discarded, unwanted.
The ones in the middle that look like they're wearing glasses are the best ones, I think.
If they started singing, you'd shit yourself.
LAUGHTER Doo-doo doo-doo dum HE SCREAMS Now, what kind of animal does this skull belong to? - Toothy.
- Well - He's very toothy.
- .
.
looks dinosaur-y to me.
Well, you can certainly tell that it's not herbivore, it's not vegetarian, can't you? - Is ita killer rabbit? - Sabre-toothed tiger? - It's a killer rabbit.
- Is it a sabre-toothed tiger? No, it's a bit smaller than that.
Is it a tiny mouse? LAUGHTER It's a little bit bigger than that.
- Is it a mole? - It's a mole! A mole! Is it? It's a mole.
Well done.
APPLAUSE Well done.
Oh! This species, not surprisingly, is called the star-nosed mole, and It looks like that guy from Futurama, doesn't it? - It does.
Zoidberg.
- Zoidberg.
- Yeah.
IMITATES ZOIDBERG: Well, when you look like Zoidberg LAUGHTER It's a wonderful mole.
They live underground, and we don't really have much to do with them, but they're equipped with special powers.
For example, they can smell in stereo, so they can tell when something is coming, from which direction.
So, very useful in a lift, wouldn't they? They'd be able to say, "It was you.
It was you.
"Don't like - it was you.
" And they have toxins with which they paralyse and stun the worms that they eat.
Why would they want to do that if they've got the worm anyway? So they can eat it later.
So they can eat it later.
So they find it and go They have larders.
.
.
"Tasty, but lunchtime.
" Exactly.
Deferred pleasure.
- But pop it in their larder.
- Eurgh - But they're - That's amazing.
- Christ! Yeah, they need a lot of sustenance because they do a lot of work.
They do extraordinary tunnelling.
They can dig 150 feet of new tunnels a day.
Now, given their size and weight, that is equivalent of a human moving four tonnes - about 1,000 shovel loads - every 20 minutes.
So why didn't we get them to do the Channel Tunnel? Every 20 minutes.
- LAUGHTER - It would've been amazing - and cute.
Yeah, about 400 of them - Crossrail, done in a fortnight.
- LAUGHTER - We're missing something, huh.
APPLAUSE Anyway, now, name all the members of the Monstrous Regiment of Women.
Beryl.
- Linda.
- Jean.
- Shirley.
- Angry Sue.
- LAUGHTER - She's the leader.
Have you heard of the Monstrous Regiment of Women? - The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstrous - Oh! John Knox.
Yes, John Knox.
I knew you would've The First Blast of the Trumpet Against - the Monstrous Regiment of Women.
- Monstrous Regiment of Women.
So, I've read that, and it's bad that I couldn't remember the Monstrous Regiment of Women.
It seems like it's kind of the main part.
- Do you? - It seems like Actually, what it is is a slight change in the language, and monstrous doesn't mean monstrous as we would say it - - it means unnatural.
- Mm.
And regiment doesn't mean the whole load of them marching on, these women - - it means regime.
- Right.
And he was a Protestant, and he was angry at the fact there were two Catholic women on the thrones Oh, of course.
.
.
of England.
- Who might they have been? - Mary Which Mary? They were both called Mary.
The Two Marys The Two Marys.
- LAUGHTER Exactly.
- .
.
being right.
This has now turned into a story from the Bunty - The Two Marys.
- There was our Mary, Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary - Mary Tudor.
- Yeah.
The one who burned the Protestants.
And in Scotland, it wasn't Mary Queen of Scots, it was her regent, who was Mary of Guise.
- Cheery bunch.
- Yeah, a cheery bunch.
- I feel like that's the same Mary in different outfits.
- Yeah.
You know when they do, like, those style challenges on This Morning - and it's before and after? - It is, isn't it? "She used to just wear monochrome, but look at her now!" LAUGHTER So, Knox, who was a very keen Protestant, didn't like these women on the throne.
He was angry about it and wrote this thing.
But on the subject of Mary Queen of Scots, do remember who her husband was, by any chance? Darnley, his name was, her husband.
He was murdered.
He was actually blown up.
This is a very extraordinary story.
One of the presumed architects of the explosion was a fellow called Archibald Douglas - a pair of his shoes were found at the scene of the crime.
ALAN GIGGLES "Where's your shoes, Archibald?" - LAUGHTER - "Oh!" You've always got to take your shoes off before dynamite - - that's what I say.
- He got away with it.
But he later gave an account of Mary's reaction.
- So, this is Mary, her husband has been blown up.
- Mm-hm.
"She sent for a number of light ladies and women "to come to Holyrood House "and participate stark naked in a ball.
" "Then they had cut off their pubic hair "and had put it in puddings to be eaten by the male guests, "who were sick.
" LAUGHTER Is that what you do when your husband's blown up? Was she just trying to, you know, like, trying to get back to normal life? LAUGHTER - "Let's just carry on as we were.
" - That's right.
"Get your pubes and put them in that pie.
"That's what he would have wanted.
" LAUGHTER Actually, I think this might be quite clever.
Probably, if your partner is killed in a horrific way, all anyone is ever going to talk to you about is, "Aw, what happened to your husband?" But now, no - "Why did you have that pube party?" What? Why? Are you joking? You know, it's all the detail we have.
"Two things, Mary - number one, condolences.
Number two" It's all the detail we have, sadly, but the actual person who took the rap for the murder, he was hanged, drawn and quartered on the basis that he was the one who discovered the scene, which seems a bit unfair.
His name was William Blackadder.
Oh HE IMPERSONATES GENERAL MELCHETT: It's true.
LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE Oh, stop it.
Don't.
There you are.
The Monstrous Regiment of Women was just a couple of Marys.
Which is nastier - a foetid parachute or a hairy nuts disco? - OK - I'll tell you who doesn't like a hairy nuts disco - Mary.
LAUGHTER Exactly.
It's so true.
Presumably, she has that sort of in bowls You can have hairy nuts as a sort of amuse-bouche.
Basically, that would be a party with people just walking around, going HE WRETCHES HE CONTINUES TO WRETCH Making a pubic nuisance.
They are cocktails.
- Are these cocktails? - They're not cocktails.
They look exactly as if they would be cocktails.
Foetid parachute might be a slight clue in as much as the shape of a parachute might be.
- Oh! - Oh, jellyfish! - Jellyfish! - Not jellyfish - that's the one thing it could've been.
- Mushrooms! The other one is mushrooms.
Yeah, these are fungi or fun-gee.
Extraordinary names for new species that occur all the time, and there are some incredible names.
Pink disco - that's normal and nice.
Greasy bracket.
All right? Punched him in the greasy bracket.
I don't know.
Powdery piggyback.
IN A MENACING VOICE: Shall we play powdery piggyback? White brain, jelly ear, Verdigris Navel, LAUGHING: fragrant funnel I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
LAUGHTER Cinnamon jellybaby, witches' butter, slimy earth tongue.
Alan Rickman's fridge gunk.
Let's just start making up mushroom names.
These are also all bands that have had a John Peel session as well.
Hot lips, twisted deceiver Barbara Cartland's shoe tree.
.
.
bog cannon, gassy night - I've had one of them.
- .
.
and the hairy nuts disco.
There you are.
So, how often are they finding new fungi? Amazingly, amazingly.
Let me tell you a remarkable story.
This is in September 2014 - not very long ago.
A couple of mycologists - as they call fungus experts - from Kew Gardens analysed the DNA of a supermarket packet of porcini mushrooms.
They found three species unknown to science.
LAUGHTER Perfectly edible.
Was there any horse in it? The scientists named them in Latin white beef liver, delicious cattle liver fungus and edible.
Wow.
Do you know, the worst thing is throughout that I was thinking, "I wonder who's been to Kew Gardens more - Sarah or Alan?" So, in terms of fungi as a whole, - Wow.
- 1,200 a year? It's amazing, isn't it? - They may account for up to 25% of the Earth's biomass.
- Wow.
So are they really adaptive? Is that's what's happening? Very.
- And they can be aggressive - that's why we've - Like moles! We should get them in a fight.
Yes! Mushrooms versus moles! LAUGHTER They can be very aggressive.
Although they don't exactly move, they do spread themselves huge distances underground.
I still think I could beat one in a fight.
- Some would beat you in a fight if you tried to eat them.
- Yes which is how I fight.
LAUGHTER Mushrooms are quite small.
They used to be huge.
They used to be the biggest kinds of non-animal there were.
When trees and plans were just three foot tall, they were much, much bigger - and much more phallic.
- Really? - Apparently.
Planet of the Cocks.
LAUGHTER So, now, it's time to descend into the dark and fetid nest of nasties that is General Ignorance.
First, some real sea monsters.
Fingers on buzzers.
Why do great white sharks bite people? WOMAN SCREAMS Yes? It's to keep themself in the news.
LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE That's probably why.
It's so good and so true.
Is it cos they think they're something else? It's a pretty good answer, yes People say it's because the shadow of a person, especially if they're surfing, looks like a seal.
No, you see, the thing is when They do eat seals, but when they eat seals, it's a frenzy, it's a torpedo - they dive in, and there's nothing left.
But when they attack people, they just take a bite, and they usually then go off.
So it's generally believed that it's a kind of curiosity.
- "What is this?" - Oh, God.
So, it's like at a party with a vol-au-vent? Yeah, basically.
They just think, "I'll just take a little bit off it.
" - Oh, no, no.
- ".
.
and see if I like it, see what it is.
" That's generally believed by Going over to his mates going, "Don't try that - it's horrible.
" "Don't put it back on the tray.
Don't put it back on the tray.
- "Put it over there.
" - "You've started it now.
" Curious rather than predatory is the way their behaviour is.
Wrap it in a napkin, put it in your pocket.
If you're a human and you lose half your leg, - you don't, obviously, think of it like that.
- No, no.
But the point is if they wanted to kill you, they are such ferocious "I hope that's sated your curiosity!" So, yeah, sharks like to have a nibble before they decide whether or not we're worth munching.
Who has the biggest face in America? - Oh, is it - MONSTER ROARS .
.
one of Mount Rushmore.
Ah Dang nabbit.
SIREN RINGS No, I said 'one of'.
- Is it a clock? - No, it's not a clock.
- Good, good Very smart.
- OK.
- Where's Mount Rushmore? - Dakota.
- South Dakota is right, yeah.
And this particular huge face which is bigger by far than either of the four Presidents there But you can get a point for naming them.
- Washington - Washington.
- .
.
Lincoln and the other two.
- McKinley, no? And - Jefferson - Jefferson and - .
.
and Teddy Roosevelt.
- Oh! Oh! - Oh! Oh, we can all do that at the end, Josh.
- LAUGHTER - I knew all of them! Just on the Oh, Horniman Museum! I'm not going to lie - I was going to go Obama, so is the biggest face in America.
also sculpting a face.
Oh, it's the Indian head thing.
Yes, it's the head of a Lakota Sioux Indian chief who was a hero to his people.
It's being done by one person who's been doing it for about 20 years.
Ancient Polish guy - I've met him.
He's extraordinary, yeah.
- It's going to be much, much bigger than them, isn't it? - Yes.
And do you know the name of the Indian brave? He won, for his people, the battle, of which was only a battle - they lost the war - Sitting Bull.
- Sitting Bull.
- Crazy Horse.
- Steve.
- # Ow! # - "Steve!" Crazy Horse.
- There it is - there's the face.
- Oh, he's beautiful.
He beat Custer in the Battle of Little Bighorn.
Yeah, but they never found Roobarb.
LAUGHTER Lordy, lord.
HE SINGS ROOBARB THEME MUSIC But if you go sideways on, he's on his horse.
IMITATES CUSTARD: Look out, there's a big Indian after you.
- So, there's one guy who's done this? - Yeah.
Amazing.
- And he's still doing it.
- That's why it's taking so long.
When did he start? Do you have to buy the mountain first, or do you just do it on somebody else's? Cos I'd be pretty angry if that was in my garden.
You know, the really impressive thing is that he's done it with sandpaper.
Is he going to get to the end and then they're going to realise he has got planning permission? "Put it all back, my friend.
" "You have to rebuild the original mountain as it was.
- LAUGHTER - "We want it all back.
" - There you can see how it should look.
- Oh, wow.
That's the real thing in the background.
It's a noble endeavour, but, goodness me, it's taking him a long time.
I don't know if he's using dynamite, cos that's what they used in Mount Rushmore.
They used dynamite to four inches worth of accuracy.
- Really? - You know, all the little features - the nose and everything else.
Unbelievable.
It was going to be Lewis and Clark, the explorers, you know, who opened up the West, and it was going to be Chief Red Cloud and Buffalo Bill, but then they decided it should be presidents just to get on the right side of politics, I suppose.
There's Buffalo Bill.
Obviously, Lewis and Clark on the right.
And you know what you do after a good dynamite? Pube party.
LAUGHTER That must have been the biggest pube party of all time.
It was massive.
Anyway, name the largest single man-made structure on the planet.
- Oh Oh, yeah.
- Not falling for that one.
No way.
No way! Is it going to be a 50-mile long tunnel or a bridge or something like that? What we've got out of the way, cos it's hanging here like a worry, is it's not the Great Wall of China.
- Oh, OK.
- Yeah.
Try a continent where it might be.
- Europe.
- OK.
- Europe is not where it is.
- Asia.
- Australia.
- Nor Asia, nor Australia.
- North America.
- Nor North America.
South America.
Nor South America.
- Antarctica.
- Antarctica.
- Nor Antarctica.
- Arctic.
Africa.
Africa! Thank you.
- Hey! - Bloody hell, I'm glad LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE I really, really hope Ban Ki-moon isn't watching this.
"Africa! Africa!" - So, is it Egyptian? Is it North? - It's Nigeria, in fact.
- Oh.
It's the Great Earthworks of Benin.
The Great Earthworks of Benin! LAUGHTER It's also called the Walls of Benin.
- The Walls, of course, Benin! - Defensive earthworks The Earthen Walls of Benin in .
.
dug by the Edo people.
- 10,000 miles in length.
- Miles of it.
.
.
of defensive earthworks by the Edos.
- 10,000 miles in length.
- How could I forget(?!) - Four times longer than the Great Wall of China.
- OK.
Puny little wall.
Consumed 100 times more material than the Great Pyramid of Cheops.
Took 700 years and an estimated Severely damaged by HE CLEARS THROAT .
.
the Britishwhen we sacked and burned Benin in 1897.
Aren't the British brilliant? "Yes.
Well, they just wouldn't do as they were told.
LAUGHTER "There's only so much gentle persuasion we've got time for.
"Sack and burn them.
Fuck the earthworks.
" More or less exactly what happened.
And then we twisted the knife by not remembering Africa existed.
LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE What did they build it for? Defences.
- Keep out the British, I'd imagine.
- Keep out the British! Didn't work very well, unfortunately.
"Here come the white folks.
Dig, dig!" Of course, you could argue that the Eurasian road network is a bigger thing, cos it covers Portugal all the way to Siberia.
- You can drive across the whole lot.
- It's all connected by road.
- You know - So, who do we take this up with? The Guinness Book Of Records? Or do we go to Nigeria? They'll go, "I think in fact we got something bigger, actually.
" And further twist the knife again.
The monstrous Walls of Benin were the biggest thing ever built until we monstrously knocked them down.
All of which brings us to the monstrous scores.
It's remarkable.
PHILL AND SARA LAUGH I'm going to start You've all done, may I say, remarkably well.
In last place, with a score that sometimes could be a winning score, of minus seven is Josh Widdicombe.
CHEERS AND APPLAUSE In third place, with minus two Ooh! It's Sara Pascoe.
CHEERS AND APPLAUSE No! Tell me it ain't so! In second place, with plus five, Alan Davies! CHEERS AND APPLAUSE How close it was, because the winner by a whisker on six points is Phill Jupitus.
CHEERS AND APPLAUSE I don't understand it.
That's all from Sara, Phill, Josh, Alan and me, and I leave you with these words from Andre Breton.
"The man who can't visualise a horse galloping on a tomato "is an idiot.
" Thank you.
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
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