QI (2003) s12e07 Episode Script

Lethal

Good evening, good evening, good evening, good evening, and welcome to QI, where tonight we're on lethal form.
Let's meet the death-defying Sandi Toksvig.
APPLAUSE The death-denying Jason Manford.
APPLAUSE The death-dealing Bill Bailey.
APPLAUSE And the drop-dead-gorgeous, Alan Davies.
APPLAUSE At least one out of a hundred has to be complimentary.
That was very kind.
Now, slay me with your buzzers.
Sandi goes MACHINE GUN FIRE Jason goes HEAVY GUNFIRE - Wow! - Wow! - Bill goes EXPLOSION And Alan goes CHILD'S VOICE: Bang, bang, you're dead! Very good.
So, before we start, I have to remind you we have in this series a Spend A Penny round, because CASH REGISTER Exactly.
Because L stands for lavatory, one of the answers will involve lavatories in one form or another.
All things lavatorial.
So, if you do spot a lavatory lurking anywhere, play your joker and if you're right, I'll give you some points.
What could be fairer than that? Now, I'm going to hand out some bags, can you take one - and give one to Jason, Sandi, there.
- Thank you.
And you've got yours, I think, already, haven't you? Now, you should have a bottle with a cork in it, and I want you, using the bag and the bottle, to get the cork out of the bottle.
You can't break the bottle, obviously.
Are these These are the ones we use when we go dog walking.
Yes, they are, they're pooper scooper ones, exactly.
- Are they? - Yeah.
But they haven't been used, I promise you.
No, obviously.
I was going to use the penny.
Ooh.
I say, Sandi's looking promising.
That's definitely the right idea, is to blow down the bag, but I think we need a little bit more down the bottle.
Or as much of it as you can get.
You might use your pen to push, as long as you don't tear the bag.
Oh, this is exciting.
I don't know what I'm doing.
No.
Oi, that's my catchphrase.
- Can't have anybody rob my phrase.
- I'm just copying what Sandi's doing.
Oh, Sandi, Sandi, yeah.
Line it up, if you can line it up, it's going to go, I think.
- If you can, it's so close.
Oh! - Oh! - Look, we'll show you.
One of our researchers, Zara, she managed to do it and we shot her doing it, so have a look.
- You shot her? - You shot her! Watch, there she goes.
If you succeed, we will have to shoot you.
There, there she goes.
She's just blown up it.
A little bit.
There it goes.
There.
Well done, Zara.
APPLAUSE Oh, wait a minute.
- Oh, oh, nearly.
- Oh, nearly.
You didn't blow enough to provide enough suction, that's the key.
You have to get the bag Don't panic, Mr Mainwaring, blow in the bag.
Blow in the bag, we used to blow in the bag.
We'll soon get it out, Mr Mainwaring.
We'll blow in the bag.
Don't worry, Mr Mainwaring.
I think Stephen, it's there - You've got it, have you? - This is brilliant.
- Don't panic, we'll blow in the bag sir! - See if you can pull.
I don't know what I'm doing.
Oh, yeah.
We don't want to stretch the I think it's there.
You've got it.
Yes! Oh, well done.
Brilliant.
Now No, you haven't got the pressure there.
OK, pop them away.
That's very much one way to do it.
No, it can't be done.
But what's really interesting about this is how will this save possibly millions of lives, this trick? It's not to do with the stent thing, is it? When they blow up a little balloon into your No, it's not, it's People getting corks trapped.
That's not going to save that many lives.
- It might save a lot of distress.
- Yes, that's what I mean.
To people who want the cork out of a bottle, but it's not really Is it the inside of the penis, can we just clear that up? - Oh! - No, it isn't.
- Is it up the bum hole? - No! - In the ear? - In the ear hole? - People sticking corks in their ear.
- No.
This Is it a common condition? It is, in the third world especially, a very common condition and one that causes millions of deaths a year.
And that's childbirth fatalities, because of breach births, and being stuck and so on.
And it took an Argentinian mechanic, who saw a video clip of the trick.
His name was Jorge Odon, and he thought, what would be really good His name was Corkay? No, Jorge.
He was called Jorge.
George in Spanish.
I like that idea, his name was Corky.
Corky Odon.
And he thought that would work on babies.
- Already a sucker is used.
- Yes, but I just want to be clear.
So, you're having trouble giving birth, and a mechanic comes along - with a plastic bag Yeah.
- Yeah.
Pushes it in and then goes, "I'm just going to blow.
" That's pretty much Don't worry, I've seen a video.
It'll be fine.
- That's exactly - Seen it on YouTube.
And the obstetrician he showed it to thought that he was on some hidden camera show and that it was a trick and that he was going to be made an idiot of.
But he realised that it was a fantastic idea.
Because before then they, do you know the device that is used to try and pull babies out? - Oh, the forceps.
- Well, the forceps is the really old one, but the more common one now is the one on the right.
It's a sort of a sucker thing.
It is a sucker, but it has a particular name.
AUDIENCE SHOUT SUGGESTIONS Ventouse.
What's the other one being shouted? - Kiwi.
- You call it a kiwi? Yeah.
We're student midwives.
- Oh, really, well, then we bow to your superior knowledge.
- Yes.
Midwifery is a good thing.
Midwifery, it sounds a bit like a sort of not very noxious fart, doesn't it? Sort of mid whiffery.
Jolly.
It Can I just say, Stephen, you were, up until then, being so sensitive.
Yeah.
Your job sounds like a fart! Odon's method inserts a plastic bag, just as you said, into the birth canal, under the baby's chin.
Air is then pumped in, inflating the bag gently around the baby's head.
There's no danger of suffocation.
Why is that? Because they're not breathing yet.
Because babies don't breathe in the womb, exactly.
The baby is then safely pulled out without the damage of bleeding forceps.
And we can see that.
- Not in real life.
- All right, yes.
Phew.
There you go, and that's the suction power is on a little calibrated thing, you see.
Then you, again, take it away and it's exactly the same principle.
FROM AUDIENCE: It's inconceivable! Thank you.
I hope Thank you.
Out, out! I think you've rather misunderstood the role of audience intervention here.
But the way that the device goes around the baby's head, very, very similar to the way the chameleon gets its prey.
- Its prey, yes.
- You know? Because the tongue is actually, sort of, it subsumes the prey and goes round it and then Perhaps you could train a chameleon.
To give birth.
Just hold one up to the appropriate area.
That's a brilliant idea.
I feel sorry for this woman who's already said no to the engineer and then Bill Bailey turns up, "What about the chameleon?" - Well - She might not be able to see the chameleon if he's been hanging around for a while.
That's true, yes.
That would take the stress out of it, it just looks like your arm.
That's true, yeah.
Oh, what's this? Oh, it's just, it's just a patterned shirt.
Yeah, it's fine.
And then it runs up a tree with it.
Yeah.
That is a disadvantage.
Then it gets raised as a chameleon.
- It's not a bad thing.
- Yeah.
A car mechanic, there, from Argentina will save millions of lives with the cork in the bottle trick.
Suggest some lethal uses for a laptop? Oh, some lethal - Smart bombs, guiding smart bombs.
- Yeah.
- Drones.
Hitting people over the head.
AS KEIFER SUTHERLAND: Damn it, Chloe! - Yeah.
- Yeah.
That was like he was in the room.
Thank you.
I just happen to have been working with him, that's all.
Oh, please.
Is he nice? Please tell me he's nice.
He's an incredibly nice guy.
He really is, everyone adores him on the set.
Keefa, this is.
- Keefa? - Keefa, yeah.
- Keefa.
- Keefa.
- Keefa, you know.
- Oh, Keefa.
Oh, yes.
- What's he talking about? - Anyway, he's always on laptops.
I don't know what you're talking about.
- My favourite one is when he talks about - 24.
- Oh, 24, oh.
When he talks about parabolics.
- Parabolics.
- Where are the parabolics? I'm like, "Are you saying pair of bollocks?" That's what it sounds like.
Parabolics.
Is it still going, then, 24? Yes.
I'm in it, I played the British Prime Minister.
What kind of Prime Minister were you? Were you sage? Well, it was non-specified in terms of party.
Oh.
But were you very sage? Like almost every Prime Minister we've had for the last 20 years.
APPLAUSE Is it really over-the-top London though, is it like, "Chloe, I forgot my Oyster card!" Is it all that? It is all shot in London.
"I'm at Spitting Fields!" "There are engineering works! "I'm on a bus replacement service.
"Follow me on the satellite.
"The driver hasn't got a clue where he's going! "What's the best way from Kensal Rise to Ladbroke Grove? "You can't use the Harrow Road!" APPLAUSE I've forgotten what the question was.
Yes, well, lethal uses for a laptop.
Oh, right, so hitting people over the head.
You could leave it on the rear parcel shelf of a car and you stop too quickly, then, you know.
Yeah.
I know this because I went to one of those speed awareness courses, and there's this ex-copper, and he was trying to scare everyone, and he went, "Yes, this lady, lady driver, had a laptop computer, "a laptop computer on the back Mel Smith was in the room for a second.
It was, yeah, it was.
He talked like that, he went, "Laptop computer, on the back.
" It's very Mel Smith.
"On the back shelf, and she stopped too quickly, "took her head clean off.
"Took her head clean off, like a knife through butter.
" It's always clean off, isn't it? And there was a dear old lady next to me, who'd been caught doing 31 mph in a built-up area.
On a tiny little scooter thing.
Yeah, on a mobility scooter.
- I can't stop! - I can't hold it! - You'll have to go to a workshop.
- Yeah.
And she grabbed my hand, she went, "Oh, my God!" Like that.
But, of course, I can't imagine it.
No, actually, we're in Australia and it's a programme that's written on a computer.
A virus.
It's nothing to do with the Wi-Fi is it? - Do they not - No, no.
It's a specific programme written by a specific person, in order to help someone do something that will end their lives.
- Is it some euthanasia thing? - It's a euthanasia programme, yes.
There's an Australian doctor, called Dr Death, obviously, - as they always are, and he's rigged up this - Death machine.
.
.
injection system to a laptop and you have to answer three questions.
You have to be sane and smart enough to answer the three questions, yes, positively.
- Do you know what they are? - Yes, I have them for you.
- OK.
"One, are you aware that if you go ahead to the last screen "and press the yes button, "you will be given a lethal dose of medications and die?" So, they're not difficult questions.
- No.
- Also, I I thought it was going to be things like, you know - What year was the Battle of Crecy? - Yes.
I'd scroll through a lot of these and just press accept.
That would be my worry.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Terms and conditions, I've read them.
Terms and conditions, terms and conditions.
The second one is, "Are you certain you understand "that if you proceed and press the yes button on the next screen "that you will die?" Wow.
- That's just very clear.
- Yeah.
- Yeah.
- So you press yes again.
- So does it then say, "Are you sure?" - On the third screen Are you sure? Come on now.
In 15 seconds Have you seen the word die? .
.
you will be given a lethal injection.
Press yes to proceed.
- It's that simple.
- That's heavy, man.
- Yeah.
I suppose if you've made the decision, then, you know, it's finding a I found a very odd I didn't know this was a rule, recently, I always get headaches when I'm on tour, so I thought, "Well, I may as well just stock up on paracetamol," because I go through a couple a night.
So, I tried to buy about No, no, no, no, no.
That'll kill you.
Well, yeah, obviously I wasn't going to take them all at once, - but obviously there's a rule.
- They don't know that.
You're only allowed to buy, I just thought to myself, that's saving no-one, is it? No-one's got to that point and gone, "Oh, can I not? "all right, I'll stay alive then, thank you very much.
" I go into a newsagents and order a bottle of vodka and they give me a quarter one now.
Because they've heard things about me.
Although, there was a moment when the woman embarrassed me in front of a queue of people, where she said, "I can't sell you that many paracetamol.
" And I went, "Oh, why? Why is that?" And she said, "It's in case you kill yourself.
" She said those words to me.
And I, this was my panic, I went, "What? But there's a load of freezer stuff in there!" Like that was my actual fair point.
Like, that was the logic, you know? Look in my trolley there, there's some long-life milk, why am I going? Why would I go? Do you think I'm mad? Do you think I'd waste that? There's some Findus crispy pancakes I'm looking forward to! Yeah, there's a Solero in there, I've got so much to live for! That's very good.
Anyway, yes, this happy little fellow is about to kill himself.
How? Do you recognise that? - Is it a field mouse? - He's about to kill himself? He is, by doing something which nature impels him to do, which is a suicidal thing to do.
Fling himself off a cliff.
- ALARM BELL - Oh, dear, oh, dear.
Throwing himself off a cliff, I don't know what I thought.
Well, why not.
We'll get that one out of the way.
You thought it might be a lemming - and, anyway lemmings don't, of course, but - No, they don't.
It's not a lemming, it is in fact not a rodent.
- Is it not? - No.
- Is it a squirrel? - Is it a marsupial? - Squirrel? It is a marsupial, yes, it's a bit of a convergent how do you do, there.
It's a marsupial, and it's called an antechinus.
Antechinus? Well, what are the natural things? It's either going to eat something or it's going to drink something.
What do animals live to do? They live to eat in order to? - Procreate.
- To survive long enough to procreate, to pass on their genes.
So, is it some naughty sex thing that happens? It's about to have sex, and that is, for it, suicide.
They go on an extraordinary shagging spree.
I mean it is quite, quite unbelievable.
I have to give you the details, because they're pretty amazing.
It's semelparous, which means it only does it once.
And it's about 12 hours on the job, with one female, before moving on to the next.
It doesn't eat or sleep, it just keeps going in a testosterone-driven frenzy.
Well, never mind about him, that poor female! Well, that's, and then the next one, and the next one.
To get the necessary energy, the males' bodies strip themselves of all their vital proteins and suppress their immune systems.
By the end of the fortnight, they are physiologically exhausted, bald, gangrenous, ravaged by stress and infection and keel over and die.
Wow! Russell Brand, take note! LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE - It's pretty grim.
- Wow.
That sounds like Henry VIII at the end of his life, doesn't it? It does, somewhat.
It is, it is.
Does this happen only once, then? Yes, semelparous, once in Latin, semel is once.
So, they're dead before the children arrive? Very much so.
And that some people think may be the reason Just to get out of child care.
They can't bear the thought of it.
- Or if you give it a better gloss, it's in order to - Food.
To leave more food for their children.
So, it's 12 hours and then another 12 hours.
- Yeah, yeah.
And this lasts for a fortnight, apparently.
Yeah.
- Wow! That's a two week mating season.
Yeah.
There's somebody in the audience remembering her Spanish holiday over there.
Ooh! Magaluf, 1982.
Oh.
Oh, that was a party.
Now, if you had to fight a duel, which weapon would you want your opponent to choose? A - Hot-air balloon? Would that please you? B - A billiard ball? C - A sword? Or D - A sausage? - Sausages are fairly non-lethal.
- You would say sausage.
I would think you could get terrible food poisoning from a sausage.
Well, we do have history on our side, so we can tell a story about the sausage.
There was a scientist, a very eminent scientist, who was rather liberal in his ways, who lived in Prussia, and who was the great leader of Prussia, who basically unified Germany and was the, what we would call a Prime Minister, but he was the minister president of Prussia.
- Bismarck.
- Von Bismarck, exactly.
And this German pathologist, who was called Rudolf Virchow, so opposed the mighty armaments programme that Bismarck had started, that he enraged Bismarck who challenged him to a duel.
So, because he got to choose, this doctor, who was the first man to isolate the pathogen behind pork that had gone off, which is called Trichinella spiralis, said, "OK, the weapons will be sausages.
" One of which would be poisonous, toxic, as you say, with this agent, this pathogen, so he challenged him to a breakfast, essentially, and Bismarck didn't like the idea, and so called the whole thing off, which the challenger has the right to do.
So, it's a sausage roulette? Yeah.
Yeah, basically, sausage roulette.
Yeah.
But with only two.
And so, you had a 50/50 chance of dying, so that's a pretty dangerous duel, a sausage duel.
So, moving from the sausage to the balloon.
Monsieur Grandpre and Monsieur de Pique.
We're going to get quite French, because you know what they're like.
In 1808, there was a dispute between these two over the affections of a young woman.
They took to the skies in separate hot air balloons, each armed with a Blunderbuss.
De Pique shot first and missed.
He had the first shot and he missed.
It is a moment, isn't it? Grandpre then fired at de Pique's balloon and punctured it, - sending him and his second down to their deaths.
- Wow.
a balloon, pretty damned dangerous.
There's only one example of a billiard ball duel that we've been able to discover and that took place between a Monsieur Lenfant and a Monsieur Melfant.
They fell out over a game of billiards.
Not surprisingly, and so they used what was to hand, billiard balls.
Presumably it was carom if they were French.
And they decided to resolve their difference by pelting each other one after the other with billiard balls.
They drew straws to see who would throw first.
And Melfant won and he warned his opponent he would kill him with a one single strike and he did.
Straight between the eyes, dead.
- Wow.
Wow.
- Bloody hell.
- God.
- Yeah.
That's, so that's And he probably went, "I was joking!" Yeah, exactly.
"I didn't think I'd actually hit you.
" - Why didn't they use the cue? Surely, that would have been a - Yeah.
So, of all the weapons we've described, probably the safest is the sword, because in duelling, all you have to do is get the, draw first blood, as the phrase is.
So, you literally have to pink someone, just give them a little scratch and it's called off by the second, "Oh, you got him.
" So, there we are, duelling.
Now, why was a pint of best in 19th-century Norfolk just what the doctor ordered? Oh.
Has it got something medicinal in it? It sure has.
Poppies.
Heroin.
Not heroin, heroin wasn't discovered "A pint of your heroin beer, please.
" Not heroin, but opium.
It's no wonder Norfolk has kept to itself.
Heroin needs a little bit more chemical skill than they were able to show in Fenland.
- Bit more Breaking Bad.
- Yes, basically.
And they had been having this stuff for ages and ages and ages, and then, in the 19th-century, laudanum became very popular.
Laudanum is a tincture of a small amount of opium with alcohol.
Queen Victoria loved it, and they loved it in the Fens.
And they had it with beer, so they'd have poppy stuff in their beer.
There was a period called 'the Great Binge', and it was really from, sort of, 1880s to the outbreak of the First World War, and the banning of absinthe in France.
- What a time to be alive.
- Yes.
And, as I say, Queen Victoria was addicted to laudanum, she'd have laudanum every night.
To be wealthy and idle in the Great Binge.
Yes.
It was something.
You're talking about Wetherspoons right now, aren't you? Yeah.
In Fenland they drank a lot of beer with their own poppies in it.
Basically, Norfolk and Lincolnshire consumed - over five and a half tons a year.
- Wow.
Which was, basically, more than the whole country put together.
- Wow.
- Good God.
- Yeah.
Do you think it hindered the development of the region? It might have done.
It was known as "stuff" or "best" and, basically, it did destroy Got any stuff? Yes.
In the 19th-century, being an opium addict was normal for Norfolk.
Nowadays, we're told that even sugar is a deadly poison.
But, are sugar-free sweets good for you? Oh, they give you the runs.
Honestly, if you are at all stuffed-up, two sugar-free sweets, you'll be singing.
I don't know why.
Well, I ought to warn you that - you have missed your Spend A Penny chance, that was it.
- Oh.
Because it's all about going - Well, it's too late now.
- Oh, yes, of course.
- Never mind.
It's lycasin, which can have a mildly or moderately laxative effect.
That's if you take a few of them.
On the Amazon page where they sell sugar-free Haribo Gummy Bears, it clearly warns, "May cause stomach discomfort "and/or a laxative effect.
" The same page has over 250 comments.
"Stomach discomfort turns out to be a massive understatement!" Oh, yes.
"Gastrointestinal Armageddon.
" "Calamitous flatulence.
" "Trumpets calling the demons back from hell.
" GUNSHOTS That's the noise, exactly.
- I'm just adding some noises to the story.
- Yeah.
"Guttural pronouncement so loud, "it threatened to drown out my own voice.
" And "flammable liquid Napalm extruding.
" Those are some of the milder comments.
I've never known anything like it.
I got some butterscotch sweets, and I honestly had two and I thought it was a good way to help me lose weight, and it did.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
And now for the lethal concoction of toxic misapprehension and venomous disinformation that we call General Ignorance.
So, fingers on buzzers, if you please.
Name a non-venomous snake.
- EXPLOSION - Yes? The grass snake.
- ALARM BELL - Oh! - What? We thought you might say that.
- Well, clearly.
- Yeah.
Somebody's very quick on the typing, otherwise.
Are they all venomous but just not very? Yes.
All snakes are venomous.
A recent discovery by a man you know you can trust because of his name, he's called Professor Brian Fry, of the University No, he isn't.
AUSTRALIAN ACCENT: University of Queensland.
And in 2013, he showed that even snakes that kill by constriction have venom in them and it's been re-purposed to create a sort of lubricant to help swallow the huge things that constrictors swallow.
But, it still contains small quantities of venom.
Fry comments "Fry comments," I find that very odd, saying that.
Their toxins are the equivalent of a kiwi's wing or the sightless eyes of a blind cavefish.
Defunct remnants of a functional past.
And he showed that the world's largest lizard, which is? - Komodo dragon.
- Komodo.
The Komodo dragon, yes, kills its prey with venom, which we all thought beforehand that it was killed with sort of bacteria, that it just basically bit it and it had such disgusting slobber that the thing caught infections.
- Yeah, but they actually envenomate.
- It seems so, yeah.
The small fangs at the rear of a grass snake's mouth do actually spit out at you and they'll hiss and they'll strike, and you will get a small itchy infection.
- Envenomation, as you say.
- Right.
So, there you are.
That's weird and surprising, there are no non-venomous snakes.
They all have venom glands.
Now, Alan, would you take a bullet for me? Yes, Stephen, of course.
Aw, thank you.
Very good.
ALARMS BELLS Wow! Oh, what? - Sorry, no.
No, I wouldn't.
- No, no.
No, you wouldn't, because you couldn't.
I mean, that's to say, in the standard way it's done, the "No-o-o-o!" The diving in front of someone, you can't take a bullet for someone.
Well, you'd have to anticipate, I presume.
You'd have to anticipate in such an incredible way.
- Accidental, you know, act of - Accidental, it would.
Because, of course, a bullet goes at 1,000 feet per second.
That's from a hand gun.
So, the notion that the Secret Service are going to throw themselves in front of the President is just silly? Well, it has happened.
It happened in the case of John Hinckley who had a pop at Ronald Reagan in 1981.
- No-o-o! - That's it, exactly.
It has to This is how I would do it.
I wouldn't use my head.
No, very sensible.
- I'd use my arse.
- Your arse, yeah.
Or my leg.
Yeah.
Yeah, I would use, I would use that.
- I would use Bill.
- Yeah.
A supplementary question, why do people fall over when they've been shot? Because they've just been shot.
ALARM BELLS Aww! No, is the answer.
Shock.
Because they're dead? - A dead person would fall over, obviously.
- Eventually.
Whether they'd been shot in any way Is it not the speed, like, the speed and the impact, no? No, none of those things will knock you over.
ALARM BELLS What? Unbelievable.
"The impact!" What a band.
I banged my head on the fireplace the other day and I fell over.
- That would do it.
- Wait, wait, is this a lavatory question? No, we've already had that one.
- Oh, no, I don't know.
- Because they've seen it done in movies.
- Really? So, in the Wild West, when they had a shoot-out and because they'd never seen a cowboy film, people just carried on standing.
- Most people when they're shot don't know they've been shot.
- Right.
We have it on the authority of the FBI Academy Firearms Training Unit that people generally do fall down when shot, but only when they know they have.
- That's the point.
- Right.
Regardless of bullet, calibre or where they're hit, people who've been shot and don't know it yet, don't fall over.
Unless you were shot and your leg was shot off, and then you would If it was shot off, you would naturally, yeah.
Exactly.
There are circumstances in which you can fall over.
But, books, films and TV have educated us - that we are supposed to fall down, that's why.
- Right.
Now, is it wrong to eat people? Oh! I think it's wrong - An undergraduate philosophy class, this, isn't it? - Yes, isn't it, yeah.
Well, it depends on the circumstances.
It would not have been wrong to eat Hitler, I would argue.
I think it's wrong to eat this one.
- Yeah.
- Unless that's Hitler.
- Yeah.
Ah, well, yeah.
That's a very good ethical point.
Are you saying there are some circumstances where - Well, cannibalism is not illegal in Britain.
- Is it not? Murder is, so to kill someone in order to eat them - is obviously illegal.
- It is frowned upon.
Dealt with by magistrates.
- If I had to lose a liver, I mean, sorry, not a liver - A kidney.
- A kidney, yeah.
- Don't lose your liver.
- How many livers have you got? A liver transplant, maybe.
I might give my old liver to someone and say, "By all means fry it up with some onions if you want to.
" Oh, wow.
Well, you can eat placenta, can't you? - Placenta is commonly fried after, yeah.
- Yes.
- Absolutely.
There's a special fork that, for cannibalism, there's a three pronged fork and I've always thought that if you saw one laid on a table when you'd been invited, it probably - That's the time to move away.
- Yeah.
- So, it's technically not illegal to eat anyone? - No.
And so, if you were to, you know, at a funeral for a just have a little nibble of a toe or something.
Well, you'd definitely need permission.
As with anything.
Why hasn't anyone started, you know, in times of a recession, going, "Do you know what? I hardly walk anyway, so" Absolutely.
"Just have the left one.
" There are people in the recession who hardly walk! That's a bad one, isn't it? That is a really bad recession.
Can't even walk now.
According to the law, eating people, or bits of people, is not wrong.
Which brings me to the grisly business of the final scores, and how interesting they are.
Way out Well, not way out, but slightly last, I'm sorry to say, with minus 19 is Jason Manford.
APPLAUSE Trailing clouds of glory in a very respectable third place, - would you believe it, Alan Davies.
- Thank you very much.
APPLAUSE Second, with minus eight, Bill Bailey.
Minus eight.
APPLAUSE Which can only mean that the winner is our token Dane, with plus six, Sandi Toksvig.
APPLAUSE And with that, it's a big thank you and good night from Sandi, Jason, Bill, Alan and me.
And we leave you with the last words of the poet Richard Savage, who died in 1743.
"I have something to say to you, sir "No, 'tis gone.
" Good night.

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