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00:00Welcome to Hole in the Ring.
00:10Let's meet this week's new contestant.
00:13Hello, I'm Sally, and I'm a publisher's assistant from Warwick.
00:16Sally?
00:19Let's play Hole in the Ring.
00:21And your time starts now.
00:23Matt, in which city, in what city was Mozart born?
00:26Salzburg.
00:27Correct.
00:27Julia, on the Periodics table, what element is denoted by the Schrimmel FE?
00:31Sorry, could you repeat the question?
00:33On the Periodic table, which element is denoted by the Schrimmel FE?
00:36Iron.
00:37No, iron.
00:37John, who won an Oscar for his performance in the 2002 film The Pianist?
00:42The what?
00:43The Pianist.
00:44Do you mean The Pianist?
00:48Pianist.
00:49Adrian Brody.
00:50You're out of time.
00:52You're out of time.
00:53So, team, at the end of that round,
00:56you scored a pathetic, a gay, one point.
01:00Which is shit.
01:02So, you idiots.
01:04So, team, who's the git amongst the pigeons?
01:08Who's three bob short of a ten queer note?
01:12Who's the turd in the hamper?
01:14Who's thick?
01:16It's time to decide who's the hole in the ring.
01:20who's in the middle?
01:24Wow, swimming with a great white shark.
01:47How does that work?
01:49Well, get in the cage.
01:51A cage goes down in the water, and you swim with a great white shark.
01:55It's the authentic experience.
01:56How do we know we'll find a great white shark?
01:59Because there's one in the cage.
02:00Yeah, I'm in the cage, and the shark's in the cage.
02:05The same cage.
02:06Well, they're not native to the UK, mate.
02:09If I let the shark out of the cage, who's to say what it'll do?
02:13Right.
02:14So, I go in the cage, does it mind being in the cage?
02:18Too right it does.
02:20It hates being in the cage.
02:22Trashing around the cage, desperate to get out of the cage, destroying anything else in
02:26the cage.
02:27Stop it, Owen!
02:28So, do you want to get in the cage?
02:29Only 50 quid.
02:30So, do you want to get in the cage?
02:33Only 50 quid.
02:35So, do you want to get in the cage?
02:37Uh...
02:38Yeah, all right.
02:40Yeah, all right.
02:41Really?
02:42Yeah.
02:43I mean, it's all fine, isn't it?
02:44It's all proper.
02:45You've got a sign.
02:46It's all fine.
02:47Yeah.
02:48It's all fine.
02:49You in the cage, the shark in the cage.
02:50It's all fine.
02:51You basically just want to keep out of its way.
02:54It's all fine.
02:55Is it a big cage?
02:57Uh...
02:58Yeah.
02:59Yeah.
03:00Yeah, yeah.
03:01It is quite a big cage.
03:02Yeah.
03:03But then it is a very big shark.
03:04Well, can you hire me some gear?
03:07I can sell you some gear.
03:09I can't hire it to you and I'll tell you for a while, it might get damaged.
03:13What by?
03:14Um...
03:15Shark attack.
03:17Yeah, that kind of thing.
03:20I mean, the shark's not going to attack me.
03:22Really?
03:23Oh, that's good.
03:24What?
03:25Well, I imagined it would.
03:26That massive angry shark cooped up in the cage.
03:29Someone else gets in the cage.
03:31I thought it might lash out.
03:33But no, no, you're probably right.
03:34It's probably a lot more scared of you than you are of it.
03:39Poor thing.
03:42Right, well, you know where everything is.
03:44Once you get down there, it'll all be pretty straightforward.
03:47I'm just going to pop off for half an hour.
03:49Oh, you're going to stay and watch?
03:51I'd really rather not.
03:54OK.
04:07Oh, and that's a bad miss.
04:10A bit of a first for a quarter-final at the Crucible here.
04:13In that both Lawrence Caswell, and indeed his opponent, Mike Sylvester, are both, with the best will in the world, queer.
04:22Well, Peter, I'm not sure that's quite the PC term.
04:25It is, Ted.
04:26I've checked.
04:27Well, I'm going to call them homos to be on the safe side.
04:31And as Mike Sylvester bends over to break off now, Ted, what do you think will be going through his opponent's mind?
04:37I can't say that, can I?
04:38I mean, you could use, er, ornamental grasses, er, I mean, because they're very good just for sort of softening your heart of landscaping.
04:53Well, that's a good idea.
04:54Isn't it, Martin?
04:55Hmm?
04:56Oh, yeah, yeah, very clever.
04:57Yeah.
04:58Well, we've got some nice pampers grasses, er, if you can get it down, er, of course it's nice.
05:02Hey!
05:03Hey!
05:04I think this one's going down.
05:05Whoa!
05:06What a nice one!
05:07Mmm!
05:08Mmm!
05:09Good!
05:10Good!
05:11Strong!
05:12Mmm!
05:13Mmm!
05:14Mmm!
05:15Mmm!
05:16Mmm!
05:17Mmm!
05:18Mmm!
05:19Mmm!
05:20Mmm!
05:21Mmm!
05:22Mmm!
05:23Mmm!
05:24Mmm!
05:25Mmm!
05:26Mmm!
05:27Mmm!
05:28Mmm!
05:29Mmm!
05:30Mmm!
05:31Mmm!
05:32Mmm!
05:33Mmm!
05:34I, Utapu, you...
05:39Uh...
05:40Martin, I'm...
05:41I'm Martin.
05:42Martin!
05:43Martin, Martin!
05:44Martin!
05:45Martin!
05:46You.
05:47Yes.
05:48Martin.
05:49You.
05:50Us now.
05:51No, no, no.
05:52I can't live here.
05:53I..
05:54I..
05:55I've got a job and a girlfriend!
05:56Ha!
05:57Many brides here.
05:58You, Martin,
05:59You live here, take your shoes.
06:01What? No, no. I'm not going to stay here just because you've got my shoes.
06:06Ha! Then how you cross Great Gravel Pathway.
06:20Martin, choose stay.
06:24You learn our ways. Take pride.
06:26In three moons, you not like, we return shoes.
06:38So, John. Yeah.
06:41So, you're a zoologist.
06:44Yes.
06:45Do they have much call for getting questions wrong?
06:50What?
06:51When you're, with the zoologist, when you're doing, at the zoologist, do they have much call for being bad in quizzes?
07:00I'm ever so sorry. I don't really know what you mean.
07:03Yeah, well, you're the, maybe you should be in a zoo, you prick.
07:09Right.
07:11Anyway, you are the hole in the ring. Goodbye.
07:13That's all for today. Until tomorrow's hole in the ring. Goodbye.
07:28Good morning, John.
07:35Morning, Hugh.
07:38And how are you and your excellent corner shop this fine morning?
07:42Good. Good. Thanks, Hugh.
07:46Good. Right.
07:48There you go.
07:49Loaf of wholemeal, telegraph, and an apple.
07:53Right, Hugh.
07:53Well, though, just thinking, John.
07:57Oh, yes, goodness, I'm thirsty.
08:00I, I, I really am.
08:02I've, I've, I've got a tremendous thirst on, all of a sudden.
08:07Oh.
08:07Yes, I, I feel like I should grab something to drink right away.
08:12Do, do you recommend anything?
08:14Well, we have lots of different drinks, as you know, Hugh.
08:16Yes, yes, yes, you do.
08:18But I, I'm so thirsty, I, I feel like grabbing something right at hand.
08:23There's something from this chiller here.
08:25Yes, here, here we go.
08:26Er, Export Jürgenbrau.
08:29Yes, well, maybe I'll try one of these.
08:31Yes, maybe you will.
08:34Oh, initially, yes.
08:35No, no, I know it.
08:36This is, this is an alcoholic lager beer, isn't it, John?
08:41Ten percent.
08:42Blimey.
08:43That's quite a lot, isn't it, John?
08:45Yes, Hugh.
08:46It's the most alcohol per milliliter at the lowest cost in this corner shop.
08:52Is it really?
08:54How fascinating.
08:56Well, it, it's the continental way, isn't it?
08:59In, in Spain, they, they wouldn't dream of starting the day without a, a couple of cans and maybe a, a vodka.
09:07Probably.
09:07So, how, how much is that?
09:12Two pounds seventy, Hugh.
09:13Oh, er, well, now, now, now I look, I, I, I don't think I can actually afford the, the, the bread, the, the paper, an apple and this drink.
09:25Not quite, Hugh.
09:26Oh, well, well, so, so maybe I'll put all three of these items back and maybe get, er, two cans of this lager beer that you recommend.
09:40Just in case one doesn't completely rid me of my perishing thirst.
09:46Yes, yes, that is the usual solution.
09:49Do you know what? I'm so thirsty, I, I think I might just crack this open and, and drink it here on the step of your shop.
09:58Of course, Hugh.
09:59And why don't you lie down on the pavement afterwards if you're feeling a little bit sleepy?
10:03What an excellent idea.
10:05See you tomorrow, Hugh.
10:06See you tomorrow, Hugh.
10:09Oh, and that's a bad miss.
10:11Viewers in the north may be experiencing some sound interference.
10:22For which we apologise.
10:24What about viewers in the south?
10:26We haven't got any viewers in the south, have we?
10:31Yes, well, it's not the highest standard of play this afternoon, but it is respectable.
10:35Yes, it is perfectly respectable, and these are two perfectly respectable young men.
10:42They were born a certain way, presumably, or perhaps they were given dollies as children.
10:48Who knows how this happens?
10:49But now they've just got to get on with it.
10:53Well, they do say to you these days, Ted, that if you do find yourself of the queer or bent way of thinking,
10:59then the best thing to do is just come right out and say it, and don't, whatever you do, spend 42 years living a lie.
11:08Those years weren't wasted for you, Peter.
11:10You won the UK Championship twice.
11:13I know.
11:14But what I didn't realise is these guys, these gay guys, they won't just come up and do it to you if you don't want them to.
11:24As I know, many in the sport fear they will.
11:29In jokes, Ted, in the film Deliverance, but not in the Crucible Bar.
11:45William, have you been sleeping with Alice again?
11:47Hmm?
11:49Have you been sleeping with Alice again?
11:51Er, yes, I think so. Sorry.
11:53How many times do I have to tell you I don't like it when you sleep with other women?
11:57Well, I'm sorry. We were at a conference. I wanted to have some sex. You went around.
12:02Yes, well, you've always got a good excuse, but still.
12:05Still what? She's very pretty, and I never thought you'd find out.
12:09Well, I don't care. I don't like it.
12:13Oh, come on. Be reasonable, darling. You've met Alice. She's taller than you. She's got bigger breasts.
12:20I was hardly going to turn down the chance to sleep with her.
12:23It's not as if you're losing out on anything. I'm going to carry on sleeping with you, too.
12:29Yes, OK, fine.
12:31Good.
12:32Oh, I meant to ask you the other day, can we start a family?
12:35Er, no, better not.
12:37Why not?
12:39Well, I don't like children. I never want to have any, and if I did, it wouldn't be with you.
12:44But I want to have a baby.
12:46Well, you know. Sorry.
12:49Oh, did I tell you that I have a secret gambling problem?
12:53Oh, for heaven's sake, Rachel, what's the matter with you? Are you trying to pick a fight with me or something?
12:58No.
12:58Yes, you are. You've been niggling away at me ever since you came in. Did you sleep with Alice? Can we have a baby? I'm a secret gambler? Blah, blah, blah.
13:08I'm just talking.
13:10I know what this is really about.
13:12It's not about anything.
13:13This is still about the fridge door, isn't it?
13:15It's got nothing to do with the fridge door.
13:18Good, because we have to move on.
13:20Your whole quiche I had to throw away, you bastard.
13:24So, it is about the fridge door.
13:27And milk. So much milk.
13:30Look, I've said I'm sorry. I'm so sorry.
13:34I think I care if you're sorry. I'll never see that quiche again.
13:39It's just, I know I had a moment of madness. I left the fridge open. I know you can never forget, but try to forgive.
13:50Well, I'm sorry I had these outbursts, but I am trying.
13:54I understand.
13:54Give me a kiss.
13:59All better?
14:01All better, yes.
14:03Oh, and about Alice, you did use a condom, didn't you?
14:07Oh!
14:09Silly boy!
14:09Good evening, and welcome to Small Talk.
14:18I'm Raymond Terrific, and in a format experiment that I was not in favour of, tonight we'll be discussing some tiny matters of no real consequence.
14:25Joining me in the studio, instead of the usual boffins, are some of the most superficial and idiotic people in the public eye.
14:31Anita, you've got your pubes out in Big Brother. Your question, how do you like to relax?
14:36Well, I'm a very spiritual person, as anyone who knows me would tell you, and I just like to chill out in the bath with some oils and some candles, and just get a little bit of head space, yeah?
14:44That was awful. Right, press on. Tony, you were a professional footballer before having to go to prison for racism. You now run your own nightclub. Your question, what's your favourite flavour of crisp?
14:56Er, probably prawn cocktail.
14:58I hate this. Anita, what is objectively the best crisp?
15:03Oh, that is a tough one.
15:04Sorry, I'm going to have to stop you there. I'm being told that that talk is actually marginally too big.
15:09Zach Chancery, you are a hairdresser who first came to the public's attention for having a name a bit like a font. Your question, how's your day been?
15:19Super.
15:21Well, that's all from Small Talk. For next year's children in need, hopefully they'll just get me to sit in a bath of pot noodle or cut my cock off or something.
15:28In the meantime, sorry and goodnight. We don't!
15:32Martin, what is kiss?
15:58Bon Tempi Lake?
16:16Martin, what is handjob?
16:19Look, boiled sweets.
16:29Pensioners must be close.
16:31You learn much, Martin.
16:34Utapu, what is wrong?
16:37You look sad, my friend.
16:40What is this place?
16:42I haven't seen it before.
16:44Covered retail area.
16:45Great sadness for Utapu's people.
16:48Every year, more and more space devoted to non-garden products.
16:52They're bastards.
16:53This all wants perennials.
16:55Now, home and giftware section.
16:57Soon, father's land disappear due to retail diversification.
17:02There must be something we can do.
17:04Hmm.
17:05Must make sacrifice to the idols.
17:10Take him to the shed of destinies.
17:12If you are wisteria, they'll have the eye.
17:15If you are wisteria, they'll have the eye.
17:17Bring me in all wisteria, they'll have the eye.
17:23Cough, cough, cough.
17:25Bring me in all wisteria, they'll have the eye.
17:29Bring me in all wisteria, they'll have the eye.
17:35Bring me in all wisteria, they'll have the eye.
17:37Bring me in all wisteria, they'll have the eye.
17:37Bring me in all wisteria, they'll have the eye.
17:40Bring me in all wisteria, they'll have the eye.
17:41Bring me in all wisteria, they'll have the eye.
17:43Bring me in all wisteria, they'll have the eye.
17:45Primula Wisteria Leylandiae!
17:52Primula Wisteria Leylandiae!
17:55Primula Wisteria Leylandiae!
17:58Primula Wisteria Leylandiae!
18:01Primula Wisteria Leylandiae!
18:04Where's Itapu?
18:06Where's Bon Tempi?
18:08Oh, Martin, you've been like this for three days.
18:10There is no Itapu or Bon Tempi.
18:12It might be food poisoning.
18:14Did you have anything to eat at the garden centre cafe?
18:17It's awful.
18:18It's not food poisoning.
18:20I was there. It was real.
18:22No, Martin, you're just very ill.
18:24Then explain this.
18:33Happy birthday, dear David.
18:36Happy birthday to you.
18:40Sweet!
18:42Happy birthday, David.
18:43Oh, cheers.
18:44I've got you a card.
18:45Oh, thanks.
18:46Don't open it now.
18:47Oh, why not?
18:48Just don't open it now.
18:49Is that a rude message or something?
18:50Just don't open it.
18:51Well, I'm definitely going to open it now.
18:53Don't.
18:54Always opening it.
18:55To David, happy birthday from Robert.
18:58Yeah!
18:59Is that the best you could do?
19:01Yeah!
19:02Happy birthday from Robert.
19:04Um.
19:05Why didn't you want me to open it?
19:06Well...
19:07Because you were ashamed.
19:08Because you didn't want to have to face me.
19:10That's about it, yeah.
19:11Because your message could have been written by someone who's never met me but has seen my birth certificate.
19:16So I just find it difficult thinking up stuff to put.
19:18What?
19:19Are you supposed to be a writer?
19:20No.
19:21It's just that normally we sort of do stuff together.
19:23Oh, right.
19:24So you expected me to help?
19:25Well, no.
19:26No.
19:27I mean, would you?
19:28Oh, yeah.
19:29Yeah, Rob.
19:30Absolutely.
19:31Just jazz it up a bit.
19:32Jazz up your sentiments on the occasion of my birthday.
19:34I've been really grateful.
19:35Right.
19:36Yeah, okay.
19:37Well, um, how about to David, my best friend in all the world?
19:40Ooh, I don't know about that.
19:41Right.
19:42How about David, my long-standing colleague who's okay?
19:46You see why I've been having the problem?
19:47Yeah.
19:48I mean, what do you feel?
19:50I feel the need to do the decent thing so as to avert your moods.
19:54You're being very honest.
19:56Okay.
19:57Well, how about David?
19:58On your birthday, I noticed that everyone got you a cake.
20:01Oh, is that why there's cake?
20:03And even Sally from The Office got you a DVD.
20:06So I popped a WH Smith to spend 1.29 of the petty cash on a card with a golf joke on it.
20:12Yeah.
20:13Because I know you like cricket.
20:15Hmm?
20:16So...
20:17Golf!
20:18Yes.
20:19Okay.
20:20So, um...
20:21There's lots of love.
20:23Well...
20:24Um...
20:25Best wish...
20:26Um...
20:27Yours sincerely...
20:29Rob.
20:31Brackets, Robert Webb.
20:32Robert Webb.
20:43Guten Abend und willkommen zu Numberwang!
20:48Mit mir heute sind Juli, der ist ein Hamburger und Simon, der ist ein Frankfurter.
20:53Juli, wie geht's?
20:54Nein.
20:55Simon?
20:56Ja?
20:57Round 1.
20:58Lass uns Numberwang spielen!
21:02Simon geht zuerst.
21:032.
21:04Das ist Numberwang!
21:058.
21:06Das ist Numberwang!
21:0723.
21:08Das ist Numberwang!
21:09Round 2!
21:10Numberhosen!
21:11Kommen Sie her, Simon und Juli!
21:12Und Juli?
21:13Ah, sehr gut!
21:14Juli, Sie haben 12, 30 und 8, aber Simon, Sie haben 2.389.411!
21:25Ah, danke, danke!
21:27Als wir fangen das letzte Round an, Juli hat 17 und Simon hat ein bisschen mehr mit 16,974.
21:36Also, lass uns Wangen umspielen!
21:39Rotiere das Brett!
21:40Is it safe?
21:41Is it safe?
21:42Is it safe?
21:43Is it safe?
21:44Juli, Simon, jetzt ist die Zeit, Wangenum zu spielen!
21:59Bevor wir anfangen, darf ich Ihnen beider sagen, good luck!
22:04Oh, thanks very much!
22:05Ach, das habe ich gewusst!
22:07Nimm Sie weg!
22:08Juli, Sie sind gewangenung!
22:10Aber Simon, Sie sind heutiger Wangenung!
22:21Also, das ist alles für Numberwang heute!
22:24Morgen kommen wir wieder, aber bis dann!
22:26Bleiben Numberwang!
22:28Bleiben Numberwang!
22:29Das ist immerhin, Sie sind.
22:36Sie haben 4,5-Joh Renison.
22:37cool.
22:38Suggestétat macht den Wangenung, Sie sind.
22:40Dann werden die Wangenung, Sie sind.
22:42Wangen um 4,5-Joh Renison.
22:43Entsatz macht den Wangen, Sie sind.
22:44Und wird die Wangenung, Sie sind.
22:46Sie sind.
22:47Ich bin 12,5-Joh Renison.
22:49Entsatz, Sie sind.
22:502002, your finest hour, Chas.
22:54The year of putting in some blue bristles to tell them when they need to buy a new one.
22:58For the first time, people are actually taking orders from their toothbrush.
23:03Sales up by 26%.
23:06Guys, it's 2006.
23:10I have one question for you.
23:12What's next?
23:15Erm...
23:16Chas.
23:16No.
23:18Come on, guys. This is serious.
23:20People are out there right now buying toothbrushes that we didn't make.
23:24I think we have to realise we may have run out of things we can tell them they need on their toothbrush.
23:30I think we could get them to brush their tongues.
23:38I admire your reach, Gus, but no.
23:41They're not going to brush their tongues.
23:43I think they will.
23:44I think that if we tell them to brush their tongues, they'll brush their tongues.
23:50Is there any health benefit to brushing your tongue?
23:52I have no idea.
23:54Well, show me your tongue.
23:56Oh, yeah.
23:57You see?
23:58Dirty.
23:59He's got a dirty tongue.
24:00Has he?
24:00No, of course he hasn't.
24:02But you thought he might have.
24:03And when it's not me saying it, but a Scottish brunette in rectangular glasses and a lab coat...
24:08Oh, my God, I think you might have something.
24:11They might actually brush their tongues.
24:14Of course they will.
24:16Did you know that up to 68% of us suffer from dirty tongue?
24:20Over time, microscopic anti-tongenoids build up a gritty, tally surface,
24:25which might very well mean that people laugh at you behind your back and secretly find you repulsive.
24:31You have to market it at men, too, Gus.
24:33Which might very well mean that that's why you're not getting enough sex.
24:38So, what, we'd put something on the back of the toothbrush?
24:41Could do.
24:42Doesn't matter.
24:42I mean, people aren't actually going to brush their tongues.
24:45Trying to brush your tongue makes you wretch.
24:46Everybody knows that.
24:47But when they're buying their toothbrush, they'll forget it.
24:49They'll forget everything except the Scottish brunette telling them that's why they're not getting enough sex.
24:54They will.
24:55They will.
24:57They'll brush their goddamn tongues.
25:00And if we can get them to brush their tongues, we can get them to do anything.
25:06Exactly.
25:08Hence this.
25:10What the hell's that?
25:12Did you know that up to 83% of us hate the shape of our ears?
25:24Oh, and that's a bad miss.
25:35Well, Lawrence Caswell has left a massive opening there for such a potent cumin as Mike Sylvester.
25:42And while we're on the subject of gay sex, I've never discussed on air with you before, Peter,
25:50the reasons behind your own decision to come out as a gay beau and how that's made you feel.
25:57Well, Ted, it's as simple as this.
25:59You get to a certain stage in your life when you realise that your wife's about to go public
26:04and so you think to yourself, I might as well cash in on the exclusive before she does.
26:10That's very moving.
26:12Because, of course, it caused a crisis in my own life.
26:16I was not, for many years, a friend of the gays.
26:19I didn't perhaps understand it as well as I do now.
26:23You were worried about the booth, weren't you, Ted?
26:25If I'm honest, Peter, that was the nub of it.
26:29It's not a big booth, this our booth, but as you pointed out to me over that drink that I finally allowed you to buy me,
26:37if you'd managed to keep your hands off me for 18 years, why on earth would you jump me now?
26:45Particularly when I'd be on me guard.
26:47And we laughed, didn't we, Ted?
26:49We laughed, and I think that was the turning point.
26:52I thought, that man, Peter, has been to three out of my four weddings.
26:58Best man at the last two.
27:00I've been to his wedding, albeit we now know that was a lie.
27:04Anyway, I have, in my own way, loved this man.
27:09That's not a word I'm afraid of.
27:10We talked about what I was afraid of and established that you wouldn't do it to me.
27:17So, so I realise that just because my friend and long-standing professional colleague has announced that he's gay,
27:27this is no time for me to turn me back on him.
27:31Thank you, Ted.
27:34Particularly in the booth.
27:35Grease, was it?
27:40Yeah, roads.
27:41Spectacular.
27:42Good.
27:43And this is me and Jen in front of the Temple of Zeus.
27:45Right.
27:46Sunny.
27:47Yeah, it was brilliant.
27:48And this is us back in our hotel room.
27:50Ooh, that one's a bit saucy, actually.
27:52Oh.
27:53Sorry, thought I deleted that.
27:55Moving swiftly on.
27:56And that one is actually even more, er...
27:58Oh, my God.
27:59Yeah.
28:00And this is us on our deserted beach.
28:03Ooh, dear, oh, dear.
28:04At least you waxed.
28:04Please, no.
28:05And this is us on the ferry going over to...
28:07Ooh, that is actually very fruity.
28:09Please, can we stop?
28:10Oh, sorry, sorry.
28:11The rest are all, er...
28:12Look, this is us in our villa.
28:14Bloody hell.
28:14Oh, you spotted that.
28:16Yeah, we were just having a quick, er...
28:17And this is us by the pool.
28:19Ah!
28:20Whereas that one is actually very naughty.
28:21Oh, look...
28:22Stay where you are.
28:24And this is us in a little taverna that we found.
28:26Hmm?
28:27Not quite listen with mother.
28:28We kept that pepper grinder.
28:29Please, come on.
28:30No!
28:31You've got to face it.
28:33Face it, David.
28:34Look at it.
28:34It's for your own good.
28:35I'm trying to help you.
28:37All right, all right.
28:38Leave me alone.
28:39I'll read the porn mag.
28:42Cover to cover.
28:44Yes.
28:45There'll be a test.
28:59We'll see you next time.
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