Have I Got a Bit More News for You (2007) s47e06 Episode Script

David Mitchell, Andy Hamilton, Susan Calman

I was going to say, "Good luck, David.
" Then I thought, "No.
That sounds like a slightly dodgy African president.
" LAUGHTER "Goodluck David.
" APPLAUSE Good evening.
Welcome to Have I Got News For You.
I'm David Mitchell.
In the news this week Enjoying his new-found freedom on a US road trip, Prince Harry suddenly senses Cressida Bonas may not be over him.
As BBC Look North West move into smaller premises, they deny that their decision to place the news studio in a lift was a mistake.
In a statement, the panel said it welcomed the apology, but said some of the financial costs could have been avoided.
And as the BBC is criticised for giving Nigel Farage too much air time, it devises a new strategy to ensure balance.
I think you guys are doing a very good job to try and trivialise and demonise everything we do.
The fact, is we're fighting a national election campaign here on the issue On Ian's team tonight is a comedy writer and performer whose full name is Andrew Neil Hamilton, but if you're hoping for a combination of Andrew Neil and Neil Hamilton, then what sort of person are you? Please welcome Andy Hamilton.
APPLAUSE And with Paul tonight is an award-winning comedian who says she makes no apology for being pessimistic and negative.
And anyway, even if she did, it would be utterly pointless.
Please welcome Susan Calman.
APPLAUSE I must get rid of that pen.
Just looking at my shirt.
Look.
It's a white shirt.
And we start with the bigger stories of the week.
Paul and Susan, take a look at this.
Ah, yes, it's very windy at the calendar factory.
That's Ed Miliband.
Ed Miliband with Johann Lamont, just strolling the streets of Scotland.
Ah, is that what he's doing? In his perfectly natural manner, yes.
Very relaxed.
Very casual.
Ah, yes This still works, does it? Politicians holding babies? Erm Oh.
There was a pre-baby - an egg hitting Nigel Farage in the chops.
And there's a very happy man looking forward to the current election coming up in Europe.
Loneliest man in the world.
It's a year till the General Election.
Yes.
Now the excitement can really begin.
This is when Ed Miliband, we've thought that he was a useless man, but like a caged panther, he will now pounce.
Only if they let him out of the cage, which seems unlikely.
The metaphorical cage of his own presentational failures.
Yes, this is the grim realisation that there's still a whole year until the next General Election, even though there's a sort of methadone election that no-one really cares about sooner than that.
Oh I did not mean by "methadone election" the Scottish independence vote, by the way.
I have no idea I was just wondering if It's quite early, but let's start now, David, shall we? No, I was saying I was merely saying that a European Election is like the methadone to the full smack of a General Election.
The reason they're starting electioneering is because there's no business in the House of Commons.
The coalition's got nothing left to do.
It's not as though there are any problems in the country.
There are no bills, they couldn't think what to put in the Queen's speech, so they thought, "Let's go out electioneering.
" So that's what you've got - babies, eggs, Miliband.
But what has he been doing in terms of presentation? What's he been up to? Oh He said that he was more intellectually self-confident than Cameron, which is, I mean In my experience, self-confident people tend not to go around saying how self-confident they are.
And they don't usually say "I think", afterwards.
Er Saying that you're cleverer than David Cameron is not setting the bar very high.
Cameron got a better degree than he did.
But in politics.
That's like embroidery, isn't it? LAUGHTER Come on! It's not a proper subject, you know.
So what was your subject? Well, I don't see how that's any of your business.
Dave got a first and Ed didn't, but who wouldn't be particularly impressed by that? The other Miliband? The answer is actually Boris Johnson, who was once asked this question by Jeremy Paxman.
Is it true that you've always felt yourself slightly intellectually inferior? Inferior? Inferior.
No.
No.
To whom? To David Cameron, your leader.
Well, that's a new one.
No, I haven't, but on the other hand, I can see where this is leading.
This goes back to the days, of course, when he got a first and you didn't.
Ah, yes.
Does that still rankle a bit? Well, it would if it wasn't that his first was in PPE.
Which is an inferior subject to your own? Look, I mean, you know, this is This is playground stuff, Jeremy.
How has it been suggested that Boris might shake off his posh image? I can think of a few ideas, but I don't think they're legal.
It's been suggested that he might stand as an MP in the north.
Oh, in The North? The North.
The less, according to whoever suggested this, the less posh part of Britain.
That's what they're implying.
I think Boris arriving to stand as an MP in "the north" would go down tremendously.
Like Glasgow.
They'd welcome him with open arms.
Glasgow would welcome him with open arms And then he would disappear.
You're quite right.
Ed Miliband said in an interview this week That's the kind of "actually" that usually follows "I can do a Rubik's cube in less than a minute, actually.
" And how did David Cameron's office respond to that assertion? Mortar fire? Mortar fire? I thought that was like a noun.
"They sent in the mortifier.
" "This is worse than you expected it to be.
" I don't know.
How did they react? Cameron's office said: Oh.
Got burnt.
Very droll.
For this interview, according to the Mail And LAUGHTER Do you know? That's like a photograph you'd see on Grindr.
Please would you like to inform the court what "Grindr" is, exactly? It's for gentlemen to find other gentlemen in your area.
That looks like he's saying, "There's a space here for you.
" There's a photo that could be improved by the presence of a kestrel.
Undoubtedly.
Maybe Maybe there was a kestrel, and they painted it out.
Maybe "You know what? The kestrel's too much.
" People would keep looking at the kestrel.
There was probably a row of birds of prey all along All along that arm.
All wearing little a T-shirt - "Don't vote UKIP.
" What does Ed say keeps his ambition in check? The ghost of his brother.
His wife, Justine.
Oh.
Yes.
He says That's very romantic.
"Darling, you're such a good corrective.
" He calls her Tipp-Ex in bed.
He's released a Party Political Broadcast.
Have you seen that? Hmm.
It's a spoof of a 1950s film.
That's going to get the young peopleout there in droves.
I did watch the Labour one and it ended with another motto with no verb in about hardworking people.
It just makes no sense at all.
It's like Yoda's written that.
AS YODA: "Hardworking Britain better off.
" What about people like me? Do bone-idle people not get represented after thenext election? We're quite an important demographic.
If Labour brought out a poster that said, "Vote Labour.
We won't expect too much of you.
" If they set the bar as low as possible, then I'm never disappointed, and they're never disappointed in me as a voter.
"Settle for Labour.
" They're not New Labour any more - I hadn't noticed that.
They're going to rebrand.
Yeah.
Labour.
Labour Classic.
They couldn't call themselves New Labour when Blair left.
It's like when Mike Nolan left Bucks Fizz.
They couldn't call themselves Bucks Fizz any more.
Labour could go with Bucks Fizz.
Champagne socialists, but slightly diluted with orange juice.
And the Lib Dems.
What are they? I think they're going to sit this election out.
It's probably They've got a note from their mother.
I think they'll play the sympathy vote to a certain extent, just have Nick Clegg topless holding a puppy just looking into the camera like that SUSAN MOUTHS According to The Sunday Times, what has David Cameron decided to do? Resign.
No.
Go on holiday.
No, this is about the TV debate.
He's going to debate with Nigel Farage.
He's going for the toughest one first.
That's right.
Cameron is going to take on Farage.
According to The Sunday Times, Cameron wants the TV debates to be in So, that's Cameron-Miliband, Clegg-Miliband-Cameron, and Farage-Cameron-Clegg-Miliband with Yaya Toure behind the strikers.
Thank you for laughing, I don't know what that meant.
And does anyone want to see a television debate in Jordan? Oh, yes.
Yes, please.
Well, let's have a look.
MEN SHOUT OVER EACH OTHER IN OWN LANGUAGE That's what you want to see on Question Time.
I was just wondering how well this set would stand up to that kind of anger.
Well, we got the replacement for Paxman.
I loved the way they ended up holding it like a giant tray.
Yeah.
The giant bit from a box of tissues, at the top.
Maybe they're arguing about the furniture.
"I'm telling you, this is cheap tat.
" And what has the Daily Mail columnist, and wife of Michael Gove, Sarah Vine, suggested Cameron should do as a way of winning the next election? Listen to his wife.
It's a disgusting-sounding thing called the Samantha smell test.
She said that Cameron should put all policies in front of Samantha Cameron because she's had such great judgment.
But if she had such great judgment, would she be Mrs Cameron? It's absolutely right.
"Any policy must pass the" Isn't that when Samantha goes HE SNIFFS ".
.
Is that Rebekah Brooks' perfume?" Yes, this is the news that, with a year to go until the General Election, Ed Miliband has struck an early blow against David Cameron by announcing Well, if there's one thing all the polls tell us, it's that the British public love a smug prick.
According to The Times Well, what she actually says is, "Stop pestering me, Ed.
"I don't know how I'm going to vote yet.
" One of the proposed TV debates will include the three main party leaders, plus UKIP leader Nigel Farage and: Partly because the Greens actually have one MP, but mainly because of a BBC ruling that you have to have a woman on the panel.
Ian and Andy It's a satire of the male-dominated political system, Susan.
Clearly.
Ian and Andy, take a look at this.
Ooh.
They're sciencing.
Yeah, look.
ANDY LAUGHS EVILLY Liquid danger.
Oh, that's the Chancellor.
Yeah.
He's going to take a very close look.
"Ooh, signs of growth.
" Oh, there's Pfizer! A p-fabulous company.
Oh.
Gosh, he looks sad, doesn't he? "My name is Vince Cable "and I'm here to share my feelings with the group.
" It's the takeover, proposed, of AstraZeneca by Pfizer.
They're an American company and it's quite an alarming prospect because they have a history of asset-stripping.
They asked the chief of Pfizer whether there was any danger of Pfizer just selling everything off once they'd bought it, and he said, "We will conserve that optionality.
" Which is American for yes.
Sounds like Ed Miliband's pillow talk.
MPs won't want to get on the wrong side of Pfizer, because Pfizer make Viagra.
And they've got lots of young researchers to keep happy, so Are you suggesting they get Viagra free? If we keep saying Viagra enough times, we get a box-load.
Yeah.
Does it comes in boxes? I don't know.
Yeah, Pfizer's main interest is buying the company so that they can pretend they're based here for low tax purposes.
You know, they'll put up a plaque above McDonald's somewhere in North London saying, "The Headquarters of Pfizer," and then pay no tax because it's a British company.
I mean, it's a real scam and Cable said, "Oh, we shouldn't be a tax haven, we should be a centre of knowledge.
"But there's nothing I can do about it, I'm Business Secretary.
" Miliband accused Cameron of being a cheerleader for Pfizer.
Give us a P.
You don't say the P.
Forget the P, they're taking it.
The House of Commons' Business, Innovation and Skills Committee has begun an inquiry into the potential takeover.
What powers do they have to intervene? None.
That's correct.
Meanwhile, why is the Government's new "Crystal Ball Unit" causing concern? Have they fired Madame Arcati? This is a genuine unit, it was set up a year ago, employing four full-time officials.
It's actually called Set up to look into the future and identify future threats, risks and opportunities for the UK.
What's it spotted so far? Er, nothing.
Nothing is what it has spotted.
Absolutely nothing.
That's just utter bollocks.
They've got people sitting in a room going, "I wonder what's going to happen in the future.
" It may as well be Russell Grant.
Jesus, come on! That's like me getting pissed and just going, "Right, "this is what's going to happen, everybody.
"The world's going to be run by cats.
" Except, the difference is, Susan, they have not even been bothered to get pissed and say, "The world's going to be run by cats.
" How do you get on this committee? Four people? Who are they? I think they're just sitting there, counting their blessings.
Yes.
"I wonder how long this will last.
" And going, "I have no idea.
" In other technology news, what has the Ministry of Defence decided to buy 48 of? Is it guns? Double our armed forces! Make it up to a round 100.
No.
That would be bloody loads.
We can't afford 48 battleships.
Tanks? Got to be tanks.
No, in between a battleship and a tank.
Bicycles? No, that's less than a tank.
Is it white flags? Can you mime it? Are these the fighter planes? Yes, the F-35 Strike Fighter stealth jets.
Well, you could have mimed that, couldn't you? No, you can't see them, they're stealth.
How do we know we've bought them, then? Some guy indicates an empty hangar.
"Yes, that will be lovely.
"How many of them? 28? Here we are.
"I can't find the keys.
" It's not Vince Cable again, is it? Is it Vince Cable? The thing is, you say that about them, but despite having cost ã1.
3bn to develop, do you know what the problem with this stealth jet is? It doesn't work.
You CAN see it.
Well, according to the It's very clumsy, it makes a lot of noise.
According to The Mail on Sunday Its invisibility rating is categorised as .
.
or VLO for short, although that can now be shortened even further to just O.
This is Pfizer's hostile takeover of AstraZeneca.
That will come as news to George Bush, because AstraZeneca was top of his list of countries to invade before he left office.
According to the Daily Mail, the drug company merger would Or as Pfizer put it, in very small print, "May cause side effects.
" Here's another for you.
AUDIENCE GASP This is the World Championship last week, and he missed a very easy pink there, which would have made it 12 frames each.
This is the shocking news that Ronnie "The Rocket" O'Sullivan missed an absolute sitter on the pink and threw away the World Snooker Championship.
Very unlike Ronnie to miss a shot like that.
It was the sort of shot an eight-year-old could have potted, and here she is, doing it.
That's exactly the same height as I am next to a snooker table.
Yes, that was eight-year-old Jodie McNie.
Why is that ironic in the light of some remarks this week? Well, because an eight-year-old girl was good enough to get a pot that a boring, middle-aged bloke missed.
I don't know if he's boring or middle-aged, I'm just projecting my prejudices onto the sport.
Would you prefer it if it was played on horseback? I don't want to be rude about Jodie McNie, but we don't have any evidence that that was her first go.
Ah.
I'm not saying it wasn't, I'm just saying it may not have been.
You're calling an eight-year-old girl a liar and a cheat on television.
That's what you're saying.
Wow.
The irony is that only a few days ago, Steve "Interesting" Davis said that even though the competition is open to women, a woman would never win the World Snooker Championship.
What Steve said was: And how did the outraged women of the snooker world react? You're looking at me like I'm their representative.
This is very much like David Cameron's Cabinet at this precise moment in time.
I feel very much at home.
Let's close a hospital.
Well, the world number one female snooker player, Maria Catalano, said: You know, she's not a biologist, she's a snooker player.
The new snooker world champion, Mark Selby, is of course known to everyone as the Jester from Leicester.
The Jester from Leicester.
On which remarkable sociocultural phenomenon did this victory put the cherry on the cakeon the tin lid of the top of on it? Is there a question in the middle of all that? Leicester.
As we speak, the winners of the snooker, the rugby union premiership, the First Division football championship, the X Factor, the Great British Bake Off and the Great British Sewing Bee all come from Leicester.
Fantastic.
Good old Leicester.
Leicester, Leicester You'll notice that most snooker players have a nickname.
Jester from Leicester, Rocket Ronnie, Hurricane Higgins, Steve "Interesting" Davis.
Shall we have a bit of fun and play Guess The Snooker Nickname? Yes, please.
So, easy one to start with.
Nigel Bond.
Peter Ebdon? Peter Ebdon.
Oh, the Professor! I'll give you a clue.
It's a variation on the Terminator theme.
Robot Man! The Robot.
Exterminator.
You're close.
It's the Ebdonator.
Oh! The Ebdonator.
Matthew Couch.
The Couchernator.
Yep! No! No, no, no.
No, I don't want that to be true.
And finally, Anthony Hamilton.
I'll give you a clue - it's not to do with Terminator.
But he is from Nottingham.
The Sheriff.
I'm going to tell you.
The Sheriff of Pottingham.
Oh! I think they must have just thought of that and then told him to take up snooker.
This is the news that Ronnie O'Sullivan didn't win the World Snooker Championships.
After losing the final in Sheffield, Ronnie O'Sullivan said: Which is a remarkable thing to say about Sheffield.
And so to Round Two - The Picture Spin Quiz.
Fingers on buzzers, teams.
BUZZER Yes, Ian and Andy? Are you not allowed to cheat in exams any more? This was a sign that was put up in an examination hall.
It said, "No cheating", you know? Just telling people, "Don't cheat in the exam.
" But the formulae written on the hand is actually genuine stuff, and so they were able to look at the poster and answer some of the mathematical questions based on what was written on the poster.
Is that right? That is absolutely right.
Yes, this is the news that Plymouth University has had to take down anti-cheating posters, as they were helping students to cheat.
In other mistake news, why have Google been suffering from rogue anuses? Oh, yes! Yes! Yes, this is "Yes! Yes!" Ya-ya-ya-ya-ya.
There's a computer programme which misreads old print, so "arms" comes out as "anus".
So, "Farewell to anus" "I draped my anus across her shoulder in a comforting manner" This is what's happening.
This is what's happening.
It sounds as if I'm making it up, but I'm not, am I, David? You're not making it up.
The scanning technology they use to turn books into e-books can't differentiate between "arms" and "anus" in certain typefaces.
Here's a quote from John Mackay Wilson's Tales Of The Borders From Georgina Bragg's Matisse On The Loose And in The Complete Works Of Washington Irving, there's a reference to Are there any other words that Google Books' scanning technology has confused? Yeah, it can't do "tax".
Yes, it reads "tax" as "free".
No, it's "burn" and "bum" that get muddled up, as well.
As in a patent for a carrier for an integrated circuit that talks of God.
Scotland, what happens? It's Bums Night? Where they all join anuses and sing Auld Lang Syne? It's not just Google who forget to check that words are right.
Has anyone seen any mistakes on the BBC recently? No, not one.
Here's one, for a start.
And here's another one And here's another one And, finally, this one may not be a mistake, this may just be honest captioning.
"Nobody cares.
" This is Plymouth University's "No Cheating" poster which helped students to cheat.
The poster features formulae used to calculate infinitesimally small probabilities - for instance, the probability of getting a job with a degree from Plymouth University.
Also in the news, is new digitising software which can't tell the difference between "arms" and "anus".
Neither can Nigel Evans after a few pints.
AUDIENCE OOHS Arm-wrestling match? Fingers on buzzers, teams.
BUZZER Yes? Salmon have been sold as Scottish salmon which aren't.
They've been passing off Is it Norwegian? You're absolutely right.
It's both Norwegian salmon and Chilean salmon.
Which I've never heard of.
But they've been passed off as Scottish salmon, it is alleged.
Is there an essential difference between these salmons that we would tell? Yes.
What is that? The Scottish salmon are from Scotland and the other ones are not.
I see.
After independence, will the salmon returning to its spawning ground need a passport if the river is the wrong side of the border? Do you get those waterproof bags to put If you go, like, swimming, like hardcore swimming, likeeh That you get these waterproof bags, so your wallet's inside, so all the salmon would have to have like a backpack And given that they've got fins, it might slip off because they haven't got any shoulders, so you'd have to make shoulders for fish, so So that's what's going to happen if Scotland's independent.
You're going to blow the national budget on loads of backpacks for salmon.
The salmon don't just swim in Scotland, do they? They swim across the world, don't they? They do, yes.
ANDY: So lots of countries could claim them? SUSAN: Yes, but they can't claim they're Scottish.
I don't think many salmon one year swim up a river in Scotland to spawn and then say, "Next year, how about Chile?" No, but They might do if they want to get rid of the backpacks.
How have the Chilean salmon been passed off as Scottish? Put them in kilts.
Put in packets marked "Produce of Scotland".
Bang on.
The St James Smokehouse, based in Dumfries and Galloway, are alleged to have been writing "Scottish" on packets of cheap, imported Chilean or Norwegian salmon, claiming it's the more expensive Scottish variety.
They'll make a film about that one day.
It sounds like an intense corporate intrigue, a man buying Chilean salmon and selling it as Scottish.
Get Danny Dyer in the lead, you've got a winner.
Can he swim? No, but he can do a great Scottish accent, Danny Dyer.
If you just push a little bit, off a cliff.
He'd get adopted by Scottish salmon and then he has to blend in.
MOCK CHILEAN ACCENT: "It's not good for me.
"I'd never understand.
" MOCK GLASWEGIAN: "No, you could be just like us.
" "It's so hard for me.
" "No, listen, we're Scottish salmon! You swim up that river! "You show what it's all aboot!" The St James Smokehouse deny this.
They say they're just selling Scottish salmon.
According to The Herald .
.
as you have to pay for the batter.
Does anyone want to see an extract from a French cookery programme? Mmm! Yes, please! Mais oui.
Unfortunately, no-one noticed the cat.
NARRATOR SPEAKS FRENCH That might be a gong to indicate dinner is served.
Nobody noticed! Yeah, you dubbed that noise on, didn't you? If they didn't notice, you must have dubbed the noise on.
This is the court case over fake Scottish salmon.
The Scottish origins of any fish are all a question of perception.
After all, a salmon from Chile has spent about as much of its life in Scotland as Sean Connery has.
Time now for the Odd One Out Round.
It's one between you this week.
Fingers on buzzers, teams.
Your four are Albert Einstein, Michelangelo's David, Pinocchio and Achilles.
BUZZER Yes? Michelangelo's David, or Da-veed or whatever it is, that's cracking up a bit.
It needs repairing.
It's beginning to sort of, like, disintegrate slightly.
And that's Brad Pitt, isn't it? But it's Achilles, the god.
He obviously had an Achilles heel so that's a sort of weakness.
It's a weakness in the leg.
Pinocchio had weak legs as they were made of wood and Albert Einstein's the odd one out.
I bet that's right.
You're in the right area but that's not the right odd one out.
No, I didn't think it was.
I ran out of thoughts on that one.
There was a study that said Pinocchio could only have told 13 lies and then he'd have fallen over.
It's about them all having a problem with a part of their body.
Albert Einstein, was he very short-sighted? No, it can't be that.
It's not to do with that.
Was it his ankle? Just below his ankle.
Oh, right.
His toes.
His big toes.
Heel.
His foot.
LAUGHTER Einstein's foot.
Albert Einstein's foot.
Yeah.
And Achilles' Heel.
.
.
foot.
Michelangelo's leg, the calf.
Pinocchio's nose.
So the odd one out Pinocchio.
That's right.
Well done.
APPLAUSE They all have a problem with their feet, apart from Pinocchio who, it has just been discovered, has a problem with his head.
Researchers at the University of Leicester have discovered Pinocchio would only have been able to tell 13 lies before his neck snapped under the weight of his nose.
Oh, is that because he's fictional? He's not fictional, he's a real boy.
He is now.
Another study that the same students have done was So Does he? No.
I think Tigger might be bipolar.
Oh, definitely.
When you think about it, Winnie the Pooh is quite sluggish, isn't he? Yeah.
He could have a deficiency, couldn't he? He gets that from the honey, though, the B12.
Isn't that in the honey? Maybe that's why he craves the honey so much.
Of course, yeah.
I won't be able to watch it when I get home now.
According to Homer's Iliad, Achilles was the Greeks' greatest warrior during the Trojan War and was invulnerable, save for his heel.
He was dipped by his mother in the Styx.
Yeah, but why didn't she hold him by the hair, and then you could cut the hair off afterwards? Then somebody said, why didn't she just dip him in, and then she'd have an invulnerable hand, which would be great for baking.
Imagine if you had one hand, and you could just take things straight out of the oven.
You can see what a great actor Brad Pitt is there because, look, he looks like Achilles there and he was that black newsreader earlier.
Fantastic.
He's got real range, hasn't he? And Einstein Yes, Einstein.
Do you know what the thing with him was? He had a slight limp.
He had arches.
Polio.
He had flat and sweaty feet, for which reason he was rejected by the Swiss military.
Pinocchio's creator Geppetto was a lonely old man who longed for a little boy to play with, so he made one out of wood.
I don't know what wood.
Yewtree? Scientists in Florence have warned that Michelangelo's David has weak ankles.
Don't worry, David, no-one's looking at your ankles, they're looking at your tiny cock .
.
is what they used to say to me at school.
LAUGHTER Oh! SUSAN LAUGHS Wasn't it part of the school song? Several tourists who've been to see Michelangelo's David have noticed a large crack.
But only when they wandered round the back.
I knew that was coming.
Time now for the missing words round, which features this week as its guest publication, Chimney Journal.
I must warn you, there's some really filthy stuff inside.
And we start with Is it "deny all charges"? It is simply We knew that.
This is from an advert for chimney pots which are available in Feel free to Google.
Next ANDY: String theory is Hull's answer to questions about the fundamental nature of the universe.
No? SUSAN: Hull is Hull's answer to Leicester.
Yes, exactly.
Chim Chimney Is Hull's answer to song.
It's not a chimney one.
Reaching for the scraps of popular culture that have somehow entered your brain, Ian? Yes.
That one went straight in.
It was when I first learned about cockneys.
"It was a wonderful, wonderful documentary I saw from the 1960s.
" The answer is: This is a newly discovered, prehistoric landmass which once lay off the coast of Hull.
The area north-west of Hull was abandoned 8000 years ago after a tsunami.
A desolate and uninhabitable wasteland Hull is nevertheless currently the UK City of Culture.
I thought Doggerland would be a dodgy theme park.
The car park's very popular.
Next: Is it housing opportunities? Just sit there in their homes, not allowing any other mice on the ladder.
Squeaking and hoarding cheese.
Jobs? Opportunities.
Youth? ANDY: It is youth, something like youth.
Old mice take youth from young mice.
It's not youth.
Blood? Vampire mice.
The answer is blood, correct.
It's actually a very important story, because they've done this experiment and they discovered that if they injected the blood from young mice into old mice, then their cognitive functions improved and they became mentally much younger.
They stopped launching into rambling anecdotes about how cheese used to be nicer and cats used to be faster.
But, but It's going to have huge ramifications, because it might be a treatment in the future to reverse old age.
It does raise that nightmare scenario of rich elderly people farming teenagers.
It would solve youth unemployment.
ANDY: Yeah.
You don't have to get a job, just sit there and bleed.
Yeah.
It's a reality TV show.
It's the logical conclusion of what we've been doing to young people as well, isn't it? We've made it so that they can't afford anywhere to live, and we've made them pay through the nose for their education, and now we are going to take their blood.
Next: Sat nav.
Eamonn Holmes.
ANDY: Is it Radio 5? It's Radio 5.
That is correct.
That's brilliant.
No, it's not.
I just read the paper.
LAUGHTER I must try that.
Electromagnetic noise from AM broadcast signals could be disrupting the migratory flight path of birds.
This may sound like a flimsy excuse to ban Nicky Campbell's but right now it's the best we've got.
Next Sweep your chimney once a year.
SUSAN: If you want to burn solid fuel, do it, no-one's stopping you.
Try old copies of the Daily Telegraph.
This would take a lot of specialist chimney knowledge, actually.
The answer is Is it about lining the chimney? I don't even know.
I don't really know the meaning of the words I'm about to read out.
A Carlisle Blow Down is a type of chimney pot featured in Chimney Journal.
The article begins: ".
.
Oh, my God, look out! You've just driven into a bus stop!" Next: ANDY: Will not be allowed treatment on the NHS.
Will not be tolerated in UKIP.
Between you, you've got it, really.
It's Oh, yes.
And finally Not attracting enough women.
It's not just knobs, is it? SUSAN: Have lots of knobs.
ANDY: They're all criminal offences.
The answer is A waste of time for eunuchs? No, sorry, go on.
This is the knob-throwing contest and food festival in Cattistock.
According to BBC News Online What a sad day it is when the BBC gets a cheap laugh out of saying the word knob.
SOME LAUGHTER Oh, dear, I was hoping for another one.
So, the final scores are, Ian and Andy have ten points and Susan and Paul have nine points.
APPLAUSE On which note, we say thank you to our panellists, Ian Hislop and Andy Hamilton, Paul Merton and Susan Calman, and I leave you with news that, in Bracknell, one disgruntled office worker is strangely reluctant to discuss his problem.
The inventors congratulate themselves as they unveil the world's first animatronic football presenter.
And after an arduous royal visit to Australia, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge say goodbye to Nicholas Witchell.
Good night.

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