QI (2003) s13e18 Episode Script

M-Series VG = Compilation, Part 2

This programme contains some strong language.
Good evening, good evening, good evening, good evening, good evening.
Welcome to QI.
- Now, you mentioned the gluteus maximus.
- Yeah.
The ass muscles there.
This a true thing, right? It is physically impossible for the human buttocks to break an egg.
- LAUGHTER - That is true.
That is absolutely, 100% true and I've tried it and Andthe beautiful thing - You mean put it in the crack, in the cleavage? - As much as you want.
He's not allowed to work in kitchens any more.
Yeah, if you put the egg between the buttocks and it doesn't matter how hard you squeeze, impossible to crack the egg.
Now, here's the thing, I know that to be true.
There might be people watching this who question that, - and I'd like to think all over the country - People are now.
Introducing eggs into the area "Is Noble lying or not?" I mean, if you got somebody laying there, you put an egg there, if somebody else is there to go like that - But then that's not the muscle doing it.
- Ah, OK, yeah.
- That's the point.
- You can't - It's the muscle.
Can you by a twitch, pulling in? - Exactly.
- I'm doing it now.
The problem would be "Oh! That Cadbury's Creme Egg is gone.
" That's probably melting rather than I think the worry is that you do it, the egg could go right up.
- Is that a worry? - You see, that's interesting.
Now, what mania was started by a few myopic Merseysiders? - BUZZER - But weirdly No, keep going Does this buzzer stop Jimmy speaking? Try again.
- I was just going to say - BUZZER APPLAUSE There's some support for it.
I find the buzzers really disconcerting.
It does feel like somebody's about to get murdered.
- BUZZER: - 'Oh, go to bed.
' - LAUGHTER - There's a childish ghost cries.
BUZZER: - 'Mice!' LAUGHTER Myopic Merseysiders.
Myopic's short-sighted, is it? - Yes, short-sighted.
- Partially sighted.
So what M could help you with partial sightedness? - My glasses? - LAUGHTER Yes.
Any particular type of ophthalmic instrument that would help the - Monocle.
- Monocle is the right answer.
There we go.
Very good.
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE Yeah.
I only knew that cos there happens to be a monocle next to me.
It was a bit of a giveaway.
There you are.
Pop them in.
It was a fashion thing that seemed to sweep Liverpool I can't imagine it taking off again, to be honest.
You do look very "George, me old pal.
" Jimmy, you have never looked more like a ventriloquist's doll.
APPLAUSE THEY MOUTH WORDLESSLY He really did look like Lord Charles there.
HE LAUGHS I now feel slightly haunted.
The word meteorology comes from the Greek for things high up and in terms of high up, they used to use frogs for telling weather forecasts.
They built them little ladders and put them in a jar.
They thought if they went up the ladder, it was going to be fine.
If they went down the ladder, it was going to be a bit wet.
You are getting an idea here.
LAUGHTER Did frogs even know what ladders were? - I don't think they had to know what they are.
- Did they just? - Instinct to climb.
- It could've been anything, - it didn't have to be ladders? - It didn't have to be.
"Where's the frog?" "It's halfway up.
" "Well, which way is he looking?" "He's looking down.
" "Just say scattered showers.
Scattered showers.
" - I think you're right.
- "Sunny spells, sunny spells.
"Just do a cloud with a bit of the sun, half of the sun.
" What if it was foggy.
"He's got an escalator, it's foggy.
" Maybe he's just trying to get out the top.
He's trying to escape.
One day, the ladder is right up to the top and the frog has fucked off.
Then what's going to happen? He's left a note, "I have no idea what the weather is going to be.
"I'm out of here.
" There we have it.
- I'll tell you an interesting thing about Queen Victoria.
- Yeah.
When she died, towards the end of her life LAUGHTER - Go on.
- I feel guilty about telling you.
She won't find out.
She was wider than she was tall.
- Really? - So? LAUGHTER APPLAUSE No, tell us more about old She was 59 inches tall and she was 66 inches wide.
- Wow.
- Bless her.
- Really? - But wide or? - Well, in circumference.
- Yeah, I was going to say.
- Sorry, not wide.
Couldn't have possibly been LAUGHTER No, sorry.
No, circumference.
Yeah.
- I don't mean width.
- Here she comes! All the way round was 66 inches.
- "We're going to have to knock through.
" - Yeah.
Can't get through any of the doors.
And that's how the Victoria line starts - LAUGHTER - She needs a pew of her own.
The Albert Hall was just a cast of her body.
This is her bust size I'm talking about.
66.
- 66 bust? - Wow.
- Yeah.
- Crikey.
- Good lord.
- She was very short.
- Ooh, yeah, some loving there.
Alaska's state motto is "North to the Future".
Don't know what that means, but it's There it is.
They all have mottos, these states, and my favourite one is Kentucky.
Kentucky's known, really, for two things.
It's called - Fried chicken.
- Well, yeah, apart from that.
It's called the Bluegrass State, but it's bourbon and the Kentucky Derby, the race.
And somebody came up with a two-word phrase for Kentucky which encapsulates both those things, which I think is rather brilliant.
Pissed horses.
LAUGHTER That would do it.
No, it's Unbridled Spirit.
- Ah! - Isn't that clever? - Very good.
- Genuinely clever.
- Yeah.
No, that's great.
That absolutely shits on North to the Future.
It does, doesn't it? It's got to be said.
Because if there's one place you do not want to head north from, it's Alaska cos there's fuck all of the world there.
You want to go south.
- You want to see stuff - South to the Future.
- Yeah.
North to the Future, maybe you'd say from Argentina.
- Yes.
- Alaska, South North in Denial of the Rest of Humanity.
- Head into the Snow and Die.
- North to the Massive Tundra.
- Yeah.
Wishful thinking, exactly.
But, in terms of anagrams This isn't an anagram, it's actually a limerick composed by someone, - which I invite you to recite to me.
- Oh.
- Oh.
See if you can.
- Eh? - Yes.
- Oh.
- That's a shock, isn't it? - Yes.
- And you can do it.
- Can you? - Yes, you can.
- It is a limerick.
- OK.
OK.
You have to ask yourself what these numbers are, in fact.
- They have some other - A dozen and 12 dozen - Ah! But 144 is also called a? A gross.
So, a dozen, a gross, a score plus three times the square root of four.
SUSAN LAUGHS HYSTERICALLY Divided by seven.
You're all right.
You're doing well.
That's five - Calm down.
Do I have to slap you? - Yes.
LAUGHTER The episode of QI where Stephen just slapped me.
- So, say it again as a limerick.
You can do it now.
- Yes, yes.
- Go on.
- Go on, then, Susan.
- SUSAN LAUGHS HYSTERICALLY - A dozen - A dozen - A dozen, a gross A dozen, a gross and a score - ALL: - Plus three times the square root of four.
Divided by seven plus five times 11 equals nine squared Plus not a bit more.
- There you are.
- Yeah! - Well done.
APPLAUSE Now, who would like to see some milky magic? Cos I want to show you LAUGHTER Stranger danger! APPLAUSE I wish I hadn't put it like that.
If a man says this to you in a park, say no.
- IN A MENACING VOICE: - Would you like to see my milky magic? You know what I meant.
Would you like to see my milky magic? OK.
I've got some Mm, yeah.
Mm, lovely milky things.
LAUGHTER Stop saying it! Well, now, because Here we are.
Now, this is just a thing about milk - - there's never enough, you always want more.
- Yeah.
- But LAUGHTER - Bear with me.
- Milky magic! Here we havehere we have some milk.
Now, what I'd like you to do is just transfer it along the way from smaller to larger glasses, as you can see.
And, well, this'll fill it about halfway up, maybe.
Just checking the size, really.
Let's just see how much - Oh, well, that fills it up completely.
- Oh, that's weird.
That's all right, that's good, because we've got more than we started out with.
- and that's got to be a thing - Fast forward.
- .
.
with milk.
- We've got - No! - What?! - There we are.
- Oh, that's weird.
- Got to have that, haven't you? - No! - That makes sense.
And then see if we can get even more, because what we're doing is earning ourselves lots and lots of milk - Wow! - Oh, man.
- .
.
which has good to be good, surely.
- There we are.
- Can you do this with wine? LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE - Here we are.
- Oh, no! You're Jesus! - We've got even more.
LAUGHTER That's it.
APPLAUSE There.
Do you like that? After World War II, in America they used surplus parachutes to help repopulate beavers into the wild.
The idea was that they'd shove them in a box.
They first thought, "We'll shove them in a box, they'll fall, "and they'll gnaw their way out of the box.
" This doesn't sound like sexy times to me.
- LAUGHTER - "Shove them in a box.
" They worried they'd eat through the box while they were still in the air.
- Then they chucked them out of a plane? - Yeah.
- To repopulate? - Yeah.
Huge areas of wilderness.
- It's incredibly hard to get them out - Yes, makes total sense.
.
.
give them their own territory.
Couldn't they have driven them there, Stephen? No, they Wilderness, huge areas of wilderness.
They're bigger than countries, they're bigger than England - What, beavers?! - No, the parks.
LAUGHTER - IN AMERICAN ACCENT: - "Bring me some massive beavers.
" - In the parks in which you wish to drop them.
- OK.
And you want to sort of get them disposed evenly around.
- Why have they been dying out? - Oh, gosh - People have been throwing them out of planes.
- Yeah.
"If you don't fall out, you can gnaw your way out of your crate.
" You go, "Oh, thanks a lot.
"Well, this is the middle of fcking nowhere.
"I've got to go all the way back to Ottawa.
" Until another beaver lands on your head at high velocity.
LAUGHTER They had tried moving them into new territories for them by mule, and they just simply got too hot, and they really didn't like it at all.
- They put a beaver on horseback, essentially? - Yeah.
They've got to transport it somehow.
How would you transport? I don't understand why the beavers - I don't understand any of this.
- LAUGHTER So they thought, "OK, there's no way we can drop them into a park "other than from the sky" Or by mule, which you found also incomprehensible.
Is there a man with - or a lady - with a beaver on horseback, - or is it just a beaver on horseback? - Well, no.
LAUGHTER Of course there's a person.
I'm confused! So, is it one beaver per mule? Because, then, we're repopulating the place with mules - as far as I can work out.
- LAUGHTER The beavers didn't want to stay.
The mules have forced the beavers further along.
They're relying on the mule to find its way back.
More complicated than you think, this beaver transportation.
Yeah, it is.
Well, that was harder work than I expected.
Erm LAUGHTER But, on the subject of Mary Queen of Scots, do you 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?" - "Oh!" - LAUGHTER You've always got to take your shoes off before a dynamite - that's what I say.
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 Holyroodhouse "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 "First, let's just carry on as we were.
" "Get your pubes and put them in that pie.
" "It'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.
- Yeah.
- "Why did you have that pube party?" - LAUGHTER - "What? Why was it in?" - 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! AS GENERAL MELCHETT: Meh! It's true.
LAUGHTER APPLAUSE Oh, stop it.
Don't.
Now, show me the symptoms of bicycle face.
- Bicycle face? - Mm-hm.
That's with goggles.
No, these are wheels.
Oh, I see! Sorry.
Of course they're wheels.
What is bicycle face? When you get sucked off by your grifter? LAUGHTER Wow! - Wow! - I better go.
- Yes.
No.
That's the right answer.
That's what I've got written on the card.
That's amazing.
On my card, in this universe, on the other hand, I've got something else.
The Literary Digest in 1895 warned women cyclists - Don't know why I'm looking at you.
- I'm a woman.
That's OK.
You've identified me as a woman.
It's going to get worse, I'm afraid, this thing is.
"Overexertion, the upright position on the wheel "and the unconscious effort to maintain one's balance "produces a wearied and exhausted bicycle face.
" - "No-one will marry you!" - Yes! LAUGHTER "The main symptoms are a hard, clenched jaw and bulging eyes" Wasn't sure where you were going to stop at after "hard, clenched" there.
".
.
as well as being flushed or pale.
" - Either of those.
- Right.
- Yeah.
And, "Wearing a haggard, anxious expression.
" That's just the fear of patriarchy - that's what that is.
"I'm under so much pressure.
" Some doctors said that, "Cycling would irritate the pelvic organs "and stimulate women to disturbing lusts.
" LAUGHTER If you can't get it at home, you get it on a bike, right, ladies? Get your stimulated pelvic organs, right? - Well, there's a downside, according to a French expert - Of course.
.
.
who said, "It would ruin the female organs "of matrimonial necessity.
" LAUGHTER Now, Cariad, tell me, your organs of matrimonial necessity - Excuse me? What are you asking me? - I'm just hoping that "Hello, Wembley, we're the Female Organs of Natural Necessity.
" - It's funny, cos the clitoris - STEPHEN GASPS LAUGHTER - I'm just going to draw a picture.
- La-la-la-la She said it! She said it! She said it! SHE IMITATES ALARM I've drawn a rainbow, everyone - it's all right.
LAUGHTER Where's Sue Perkins when you need her? The clitoris is actually a very large organ Shush, Cariad! .
.
andit's just literally the tip of an iceberg.
When you say, "LITERALLY the tip of an iceberg"? I knew I was looking for it in the wrong place.
LAUGHTER - There was an artist in New York - In the Arctic Ocean.
Yeah, an artist in New York? .
.
and she made, like, this, obviously not to scale, clitoris, and she got women to ride on it.
But it literallyit's huge.
It's like there's this bit and then there's these two other huge bits that are in the body - I was looking behind you.
- Yeah.
- LAUGHTER - Behind me just here.
- Wow.
- It's way bigger.
But you have two, don't you? It's one under each arm? LAUGHTER Have Ihave I got this wrong? - Alan, help me out.
- It's OK.
I didn't bring mine with me today.
So to say it damages the marital organs, is, again So, how much more of it is there, then, going? Oh, my God.
Guys, do we have to, like? Is this the bit where I tell you aboutexplain it to you? A woman, at some point in your life, should've explained this to you, but perhaps I've never seen such fear in all your faces! LAUGHTER APPLAUSE A man called Miura, who's an aeronautical designer, was doing solar panel foldings and he came up with this way of doing it.
And youall you have to do is that, and it folds.
You just push the corners together.
- And it doesn't matter what - I bet What's more, it doesn't get, it doesn't get Sorry? It wouldn't work if you gave it to me.
- Stephen, did you? - Well, I'll give you one.
The one that you've got there, is that a map of Mars? LAUGHTER You've got one there.
And you just take the top right and bottom left corners or any other way.
- Is that, that way? - It's so folded, it just does it by itself.
Take the corners and push them together.
JEREMY GASPS That's it! Jeremy, you did it.
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE - But this man is the greatest genius who ever lived.
- Isn't he? I know.
It's fantastic.
- Who is he? - He's called Miura.
He's a LAUGHTER God.
Of course, what you don't realise, he was trying to make a crane.
LAUGHTER Koryo Miura, his name is, and they are very handy.
I would've been so fucking pleased - if I'd invented that.
- LAUGHTER Well, there are other things you can do with folding.
I've got some tissues here, and - Oh, what are we doing now? - Oh, origami.
I'm going to give you each a tissue, right? - So, I'll pass - OK.
There we are.
Pass down.
Oops.
- What are we doing with the tissue? - What are we doing? - I'll have one here.
- OK.
So, what are we up to? What you're trying to do is scrunch it up - Oh, yeah.
OK.
- .
.
like this in your hands.
You scrunch it up.
- And then - You stick it right up your bum.
- No.
LAUGHTER You don't You try and think of an animal.
Then think of an animal.
I'm thinking of a swan or something.
- I've really scrunched mine up.
- Think of a swan.
You see? Like that.
Can you see my swan? - Do I have to think of a swan? - There you are.
LAUGHTER APPLAUSE And we've heard the marsh warbler.
The monotonous lark is so-called cos it's monotonous A monotonous lark.
"Come on, we're going on a monotonous lark.
" LAUGHTER We're going on narrow boat holiday in Norfolk.
- Hey! - THAT is a monotonous lark.
I went on one of those.
"Oh, that'll be fun.
" "Yeah, let's go on a narrow boat holiday," and everyone was taking turns doing the engine.
Cut to a couple of hours later, everyone downstairs drinking wine.
Me, upstairs HE IMITATES ENGINE .
.
for three days! Three days! - There - HE IMITATES ENGINE - Oh, golly.
- "Do you want a glass of wine, Bill?" "No, no, I'm fine.
I'm here, I'll be fine.
" - HE IMITATES ENGINE - Worst weekend of my life.
LAUGHTER It begins with M, this particular life form.
- It got rid of all the oxygen - Mouse.
- Sorry? - Mouse.
- It wasn't a mouse.
You've got the right consonants.
Consonants.
All right.
Mmmm M and a S.
M and a S.
It's wonderful how he's coming on, isn't it? LAUGHTER - It's moss.
- Moss! - Moss.
- Moss! - Moss is the answer.
- Oh, how boring.
- Yeah, hard to believe.
Moss.
- It was like a phage.
It ate away at rocks - Right.
Hey, look, Cariad - there's an iceberg like your clitoris.
- LAUGHTER - You're learning! I mean this, Alan, you can get more If you've just joined the show I can usually predict almost everything that's going to be said on this show, but, "There's an iceberg like your clitoris," is a new one.
That's exactly what I was talking about.
Don't just work with what you see.
Now you've got to work with more, underneath it.
- There's not moss on it, is there? - Yes, mate.
Keep the moss on.
What's wrong with you? Don't want to look like a child.
- Wear your moss and be proud, ladies.
- You're right.
Interestingly, you only get moss on the north side of a lady.
LAUGHTER - That seems fair.
- Oh, Lord.
Depends how long she's been at the bus stop.
I went on a bus once.
LAUGHTER APPLAUSE End of anecdote.
It wasn't a bus, it was a coach, and it had a lavatory in the middle of it.
You know, you go down some stairs into the bowels of the thing.
And the driver was a very, very, very large man who could barely get behind the enormous wheel.
And he pulled the bus over, and he prised himself out from behind the wheel and went down the aisle - a bit of a squeeze - went down thestairs, disappeared into this cupboard.
- And we all waited.
- LAUGHTER Then when he came up, he said, "No-one can use the toilet.
It's full.
" LAUGHTER Charming! And then he got behind the wheel and drove off.
Where are most missionaries positioned? LAUGHTER GREGORIAN CHANTING Matt? I'm going to guess that most of them are in Utah, where the Mormons tend to kind of congregate, because they haven't yet been assigned their places to go to.
Interesting, interesting answer, but I'm talking about which is the country that receives the most incoming Well, I'm not talking about that.
No, no.
LAUGHTER I'm talking about them before they've gone.
So, I'm not asking where the most missionaries come from, I'm asking I know, but I am still getting to that point.
This doesn't work by you answering the question that I haven't asked.
OK.
- My guess is China.
- Yeah, it's a possibility.
Well, it's not It is a possibility, but it's not a fact.
- Is it in Africa? - It's not Africa, no.
- Is it England? - No.
England's a much, much closer KLAXON BLARES - South America? - Not South America.
Not SOUTH America.
- Central! - North America? - North! - North America! - America.
United States.
- Really? Well, I think you'll find Utah is in America.
LAUGHTER APPLAUSE - ALL: - Ooh! - Yeah, impressive.
Ooh! Look.
It looks like a happy face that's taken a lot of drugs.
LAUGHTER - It does a bit, doesn't it? - Yeah.
But what is it, Stephen? Well, I just want to know who first wrote the theorem that this model demonstrates? - Pythagoras.
- Pythagoras.
KLAXON BLARES Oh! My grandfather, who was from Hungary, always pronounced it Peeta-goras.
LAUGHTER IN HUNGARIAN ACCENT: "At school, doing the mathematics, "are you studying Peeta-goras?" LAUGHTER And I thought this man, Peter Goras.
Who is Peter? - No, it wasn't Peter Goras who first proved it.
- Ah.
What is it, the theorem that needs to be discussed here? A squared equals B squared plus C squared.
- Yeah.
It's the - The sum of the twothe squared The sum of the two squares is equal to the sum on the hypotenuse.
- You can see that.
- That big one should go into the other two.
So, you can see here, the yellow, that's the triangle.
These are its two sides.
And these are the squares of the two sides.
They are literally geometrically expressed as squares rather than just mathematically as if that was, say, X, it's just not X squared, but it's literally the square there.
Then there's Y squared and it's supposedly equal to Z squared, which is the longest side, the hypotenuse.
Cos here's the right angle.
Here.
These are not right angles, obviously.
Andthere's that How can we show they're equal? Well, there are all kinds of ways, but here's one way.
- Drumroll, please.
- Oh, yes.
THEY TAP ON DESKS All right, let's go.
- ALL: - Ooh! Oh, that's very clever.
There it goes.
Pouring into the first square.
- Wow.
- Expensive.
- Is it going to fill it up? - Oh! Well, it definitely equals X squared.
- Yes! Does it equal Y squared as well? I need to go to the toilet.
LAUGHTER There's a Y squared.
It's filling up.
It's filling up, it's filling up.
It's full.
And there it is.
APPLAUSE There it is.
Isn't that satisfactory? Highly satisfactory.
Now time for a short interval.
Who wants an ice cream? - There we are.
- Me, me, me, me.
Pick me.
Yeah, go on.
Take a couple.
We've got some leftover, of course.
- Wow.
- There you go.
- Johnny? - Oh, yes, please.
Thank you, my love.
I've got chocolate.
I don't really like chocolate.
I've got raisin.
I don't like raisin.
- Do you want to swap? - Yes.
No, I'd like vanilla, please.
- Oh.
LAUGHTER - Just swap.
- You can have another flavour.
- Yes! - I've got strawberry.
- That'll do me.
- All right.
- Oh, you've already had a bit! - Yes! LAUGHTER How else would I know I didn't like it? Well, do what I did - just sniff it and lick it.
Don't do that! - People who sniff - Don't take a lump out.
You must have very warm hands cos this is already melted.
I'm having a hot flush! - LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE - It's one of my superpowers! - Mine's turned into a slushy! - Yes! You're going to a dinner party and they've forgotten to get the ice cream out of the freezer - - I just hold it against my neck - LAUGHTER and it's spoon-soft in seconds.
- While there's barely any - THEY BOTH SHOUT OVER EACH OTHER LAUGHTER - Right - I don't want to do this in front of Stephen - No.
.
.
but the next time, we're having ice cream.
Just LAUGHTER Don't have her on my team.
Do you have any HRT-flavoured ice cream? - No, this is delicious.
Thank you very much.
- Good.
This is what I think life would be like in a nursing home.
LAUGHTER APPLAUSE Anyway - What flavour have you got?! - Bingo! - So what was the biggest nuisance in the Victorian theatre? - I like peas! - I've got a fly in mine.
- What was the biggest nuisance - in the Victorian theatre? - I've got to tell this.
- What was the biggest nuisance in the Victorian theatre? - I've got to What was the biggest nuisance in the Victorian theatre? - LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE - Please HE SHOUTS: What was the biggest nuisance in the Victorian theatre?! LAUGHTER CHEERING AND APPLAUSE Yes? Any thoughts? Ice cream? APPLAUSE
Previous EpisodeNext Episode