- 7 hours ago
Category
📺
TVTranscript
00:00Music
00:09Music
00:14Music
00:24Good evening and welcome to QI where tonight I've come armed with questions all about weaponry and for our panel we're bringing out the big guns. Exploding onto the scene, it's Lou Sanders.
00:50Here to slay it's Roisin Conaty.
00:54A bit of a blunt instrument, it's Nish Kumar.
01:03And always a loose cannon, it's Alan Davis.
01:12Right, let's hear their killer buzzers. Lou goes.
01:17Roisin goes.
01:20Nish goes.
01:22Alan goes.
01:25Alan goes.
01:26That's nice.
01:33Well it is dangerous with him.
01:38Right, time to open up the armoury for question one. I want you to look under your desks, you've each got an objet. I want to know how you would use it to win a war. So let's start with you Lou. How would you use honey to win a war?
01:56Well I might say, do you want to swap this honey? For a little bit of peace.
02:05I actually gave my neighbour a jar of honey to say sorry and they still hate me.
02:12What did you, what had you done then?
02:14I, well I, well I, that doesn't matter as much.
02:20I, erm, I stole their, erm, beehive.
02:23It's used to defeat Roman troops. It's a particular kind of honey.
02:33Manuka.
02:35I just like how you say that. You're looking so attractive today.
02:37Something about you. I don't know. I'm on the turn.
02:42There was a Greek geographer called Strabo. I mean he was also a historian.
02:48And he wrote about General Pompey who attacked the kingdom of Pontus in the Pontiac Mountains.
02:54So it's Turkey these days.
02:56So this is a genuine story.
02:57So Pompey attacked the kingdom of Pontus in the Pontiac Mountains and they left behind vast amounts of honey.
03:02Now the bees had fed on rhododendron which contains a hallucinogenic poison called graenotoxin.
03:09So the honey was two things. It was highly hallucinogenic and a laxative.
03:14Oh.
03:16Sign me up.
03:18So as you're crapping yourself, you're thinking, oh, what's coming out of me?
03:23Yeah. Yeah.
03:25You can still, actually, weirdly, you can buy this honey. It's called mad honey.
03:28I'm writing it down. You sure you want to write it down? Mad honey.
03:30It's mostly for people who need it for their libido. Just saying if that's...
03:34Ah! Too tiny.
03:45You can still buy it in Turkey and certain places.
03:48Wait, the honey that makes you poop yourself is good for sex.
03:51Well, the trick is to not take very much.
03:53And if you take a little bit, it gives you a buzz.
03:55If you take a lot, you shit yourself and fall over.
03:57LAUGHTER
03:59It's like...
04:00It's too high of almost anything you eat.
04:02Yeah, that's it.
04:04Did the bees sting the people and then they got the shits or did...
04:07What happened?
04:09LAUGHTER
04:12You're the girl at the back of the class that we hope is good at netball because...
04:16LAUGHTER
04:17LAUGHTER
04:18That was very good.
04:19Very good.
04:20APPLAUSE
04:22So, they made honey...
04:24Yes.
04:25The bees had partaken of a hallucinogenic which therefore went into the honey.
04:29Oh, OK, right, OK. I get it now.
04:30Does that make sense?
04:32Did they do this deliberately?
04:34Yes.
04:35The act of chemical warfare?
04:36It is biological warfare.
04:37Biological warfare, yeah.
04:38Biological warfare is horrible.
04:40But, I mean, obviously it's not ideal to lose a war, but if you did it in a kind of blizzard of sexual arousal and poop...
04:47LAUGHTER
04:49I don't know, Nish, I don't know.
04:52It's just another Friday night for you.
04:55LAUGHTER
04:57That's your podcast.
04:59LAUGHTER
05:00Sexual arousal and poop.
05:02LAUGHTER
05:03Boners and the brown stuff.
05:05LAUGHTER
05:06Tell me, Nish, what you're holding. How might you win a war with it?
05:08I seem to be holding a shovel.
05:11What would you do with it?
05:12I guess, like, disguise myself.
05:15I'd be like, oh, hello, I'm a humble gardener.
05:17Ba-ba-dum-ba-dum.
05:18No threat pose.
05:19And then BAM!
05:20Shoot through the hole.
05:22Well, you are entirely correct.
05:23LAUGHTER
05:33So, the actual thing was a little bit larger than the one we've given you.
05:36It was called the Macadam Shield Shovel, and it was the brainchild of Ina Macadam.
05:40She was the secretary to the Canadian Minister of Defence, 1914, and she suggested to her boss, Sir Sam Hughes,
05:46to patent this invention, and he named it after her.
05:48So, basically, a thick steel spade, right, that was designed for both digging trenches and deflecting bullets.
05:55So, the idea is you're digging away a thing, somebody fires at you, you can spike the whole thing in the ground,
06:00and then fire, exactly as you suggested, fire at the enemy through the hole.
06:05During World War I, they sent 25,000 of these out to the Canadian troops in Europe, and they were useless.
06:11Yes.
06:12Yes.
06:13Completely useless.
06:14If you've got a hole in a spade, you cannot dig with it.
06:18Oh, no.
06:20You just did one of those little keyhole covers, comes down over it, clip into place.
06:25If only you'd been there.
06:26Bony.
06:28Unfortunately, the metal that they used wouldn't even stop small calibre ammunition.
06:32So, didn't stop bullets, wasn't any good for digging.
06:35I'm just thrilled that I've maintained my proud 100% record of only getting questions right on QI by total accident.
06:44Anyway, they sent them out at the beginning of the war, 1917,
06:4788% of them had been scrapped for metal, and poor Ina McAdam, who came up with it, said,
06:51she was very embarrassed by the whole thing, and wished it had never happened.
06:55Right, Conkers, come on.
06:57Conkers.
06:58Yes.
06:59Who wants one?
07:00Oh, don't throw.
07:01OK.
07:02Mm-hmm.
07:03Alan, World War I.
07:08World War I, Conkers, any thoughts about why it might have been useful?
07:13Poison.
07:14They're poisonous.
07:15Poisonous.
07:16Put them in the suit.
07:17Is it something about boners and pooping?
07:20It's going to be really hard to get you back from there, isn't it?
07:23LAUGHTER
07:26So, it can be used to make acetone, which is a key ingredient in gunpowder.
07:30So, before 1917, they used fermented grain, they used potatoes,
07:34but then they wanted to have all that stuff for food, so they thought,
07:36let's use the Conkers.
07:38And they got British children to collect Conkers,
07:41and they were paid seven and six per hundred weight,
07:44which is 50 kilos of Conkers, right?
07:47It's about more than 6,000 Conkers.
07:49And they collected 3,000 tonnes of Conkers.
07:54And what do you think happened?
07:56I don't know.
07:57I got a feeling something went horribly wrong.
07:59Yes.
08:00They hadn't worked out all the transport.
08:01Lots and lots of them went rotten at railway stations.
08:03And then, when they did get them into the factories,
08:05the chemists couldn't work out how to extract the acetone.
08:09So, did the kids have to give the money back?
08:11No, the kids kept the money and they kept it going
08:13because it was good for morale.
08:15Now, what have you got, Rasheen?
08:17I've got myself a rat.
08:19OK.
08:20What do you reckon?
08:21How would you use that to win a war?
08:23Well, I reckon it was love rats.
08:24I think they just got a bunch of hot men or women or whoever
08:28into an area and just sort of got the soldiers absolutely horned up.
08:33OK.
08:34So, it is the use of an actual rat.
08:36Diseases.
08:37Yeah, plague.
08:38Terrible diseases.
08:39I mean, that is a thought.
08:40It's another kind of biological weapon.
08:42No, the idea was, in 1941, the British military intelligence officers
08:46filled rodents with explosives.
08:48Rat attack!
08:49Yes.
08:50They made rat bombs.
08:51Oh, my God.
08:53Yeah, they made rat bombs.
08:54The rat is dead.
08:55Can I just say?
08:56The rat is dead.
08:57The rat's not like, oh, what is that?
09:01I'm going to get a ticket.
09:03I'm going to get a ticket.
09:04Jesus Christ.
09:06You're ticking as well.
09:07You're ticking as well.
09:08I'm going to get a ticket.
09:09They're not rationing out the Vaseline.
09:11It's driving me mad.
09:12The chicken's driving me mad.
09:13Anyway, the plan was to leave them near factory boiler rooms in Germany.
09:23And here was the theory.
09:24Somebody in Germany would see a dead rat and they think, oh, we can't have that there.
09:28And they would throw it straight into the furnace.
09:30Oh.
09:31And then, even though it was only a small amount of explosive, it would be enough to cause a massive blast.
09:37Do you think it worked?
09:38Yes.
09:39Rat attack.
09:40Somebody said, no, I'm going to go with them.
09:41It sort of worked because the Nazis intercepted the first batch and they thought that the allies must be doing this all the time.
09:51And they'd hidden loads.
09:52So they wasted loads of time looking for rat bombs.
09:55And in fact, deactivating rat bombs was studied in German military school.
09:59Wow.
10:00Wow.
10:01Wow.
10:02Wow.
10:03It sort of worked.
10:04Yeah.
10:05Kind of.
10:06Right.
10:07What was the favourite weapon of the hammer of the Scots?
10:10Oh.
10:11Exactly.
10:12Oh.
10:13Yeah.
10:14Yeah.
10:15No.
10:16That's just a Scottish person.
10:17Is it the power of words?
10:19And they are powerful.
10:21They are powerful.
10:24Was it a hammer?
10:26Yeah.
10:27Yeah.
10:28So, the hammer of the Scots was King Edward I of England.
10:33Because he was trying to assert sovereignty over Scotland.
10:39There he is, trying to do it.
10:40Over Scotland there he is trying to do it that you know for he and his troops were laying siege to Stirling Castle in Scotland
10:45And the castle was heavily fortified and they thought we're never gonna make this happen
10:48So he got 50 carpenters. I don't know how he did this. Can I just say he's away from home, right?
10:53I can't get one near my house
10:5650 carpenters to build the world's biggest
11:00Trebuchet does anybody know what a cat gets a catapult. It is a kind of catapult, right?
11:04Um, so this is very exciting because I have a small one here
11:08That's cool. So it's a type of catapult that uses a massive counterweight to launch
11:13Projectile so we just thought to be give it a go here. Now. I've got some little sweets
11:18No
11:20Nish
11:29It was absolutely you really
11:31The one that they built Edward called it the war wolf. It was phenomenal was 90 meters tall
11:46It had 30 wagons of materials in it. It took 90 meters. It took three months to build
11:52It was just amazing now the fact is he's building it out there right for ages in plain view of all the besieging habitants
11:59And they were running out of food anyway, so they went out when they saw they're building this thing away
12:02It's okay
12:03No white flag totally give in but now that Edward had built it. He really wanted to try it
12:10So he just pelted the castle anyway and they launched Greek fire
12:14Which is a kind of the napalm of the day? It's petrol and resin and stuff and by the time the attack was finished
12:20Any 30 people were alive in the castle was kind of wait, so they surrendered and he still was like I'm gonna napalm you
12:26Yeah, he built a special platform nearby so that the ladies of the court could watch the destruction of the girls
12:33Yeah, what was his relationship with his mother like?
12:35These weapons have existed for centuries. I mean probably invented in China
12:421521 the conquistador and then putters he was seeking treasure and he used one in the battle to attack the Aztec Empire
12:49So the Spanish running low on gunpowder and they think what shall we do?
12:53Let's make a triple shake we haven't got enough gunpowder to attack the Aztecs. They wanted their gold
12:57Didn't have any engineers, but they did have a soldier who'd once seen one
13:01So he dropped some plans and when it finally came to being looked he's the massive rock right the rock went straight up and came straight
13:17Less successful right let's move on to that old perennial the war of the sexes what kind of butts?
13:24Attracted to Victorian women who were ready to wed big butts and I cannot lie
13:31Oh
13:39Any other thoughts? Water butts?
13:41Ifs and butts
13:42Ifs and butts
13:43Yes
13:43And the butts is a common name for an archery field
13:46Oh
13:47That's what they're actually called going down the butts
13:49Oh
13:50So here's the thing unlike most outdoor activities archery was considered a reasonable and acceptable sport for women
13:57So this was a place where men and women could meet in the beginning as early as 1780. There were women's only clubs
14:03I like this they've all the Amazon archers of England and they met in Kent and they used to have archery competitions and then they would have
14:09You know soirees suppers balls and that kind of thing. I love this
14:121845 there's a book called the ladies companion by Jane Loudon and she put archery in as one of only five acceptable outdoor activities for women alongside boating sketching skating and the garden swing
14:28Oh
14:30It's acceptable when I go down the park with a bow and arrow people look at me funny
14:36Princess Victoria later Queen Victoria she took it up in 1834 and of course then it became enormously popular and then it dies out as croquet and tennis come in
14:44So 1870s you get those two games
14:46So here's the thing with archery anybody who wrote about it stressed the beauty of the women who were doing it the trim shaft launched from the hand of some fair
14:54Toxophyllite faultless in face and figure
14:58Go back go back
14:59Toxophyllite
15:00Yes
15:01So toxon Greek for bow
15:03Oh yes of course
15:04Philos for lover
15:05Toxophyllite
15:06The lover of the bow
15:07The lover of a bow
15:08Do you like that Toxophyllite?
15:09I do
15:10Maybe I change my name Sandy Toxophyllite
15:11I like
15:12I like a thin shaft
15:13Yes
15:14Trim shaft
15:16Well it all looks very nice but the fact is if you really did archery you can see from the skeletons of medieval and Renaissance archers
15:23Too much can cause serious deformities so you have to imagine these long bows six foot long taller than most archers it required
15:3090 kilograms of force to pull the thing back modern bow only needs about 20 kilograms
15:35So it's the difference between the force of saying carrying a I don't know larger gentleman and a six-year-old girl
15:40So it's about 14 stone
15:43What do you what do you weigh nish? What do you weigh?
15:45I mean I'm kind of between weights at the moment
15:50So it's like lifting you
15:52Quite an interesting way to do weights or a six-year-old girl
15:55Like what are we doing?
15:57Who's writing this down?
15:59Fire and children
16:01How much ham would you like about a six-year-old girl?
16:05But the thing about professional archers they would start training at a really young age and they would draw back their bows cut repeatedly so of course the muscles get very strong but the bones all
16:14get thicker and denser to compensate and the spines start to twist and then eventually the drawing arm becomes higher than the one holding the bow
16:21Which you're doing this all the time the muscle contracting
16:24Like my phone arm
16:25Yeah, you like your phone arm
16:26Have you been to the Mary Rose Museum in Portsmouth which is just fantastic
16:30Anyway, they have a skeleton from an archer from 1545 and you can see how his spine is all twisted and he's got one arm that is much lower than the other
16:38Lower than the other and that is from that continuous repetitive thing of having to deploy all of that longbows famously used in which British battle?
16:47It's Hastings
16:49Another one?
16:51Agincourt
16:52Agincourt
16:53Yes
16:54That's not British
16:55It's in France
16:56Okay
16:57I was going to say Igincourt
16:58Agincourt
16:59Agincourt
17:00I've only got one right for the first time since 2005
17:03I'm going to give you five points for correcting me because you're right, you're absolutely right
17:10It was an English battle taking place somewhere else
17:13Yes
17:14In France
17:15In France
17:16Do you think that the longbows made them win or what else do you think might have made them win?
17:22Did they dip the longbows in boner honey?
17:26They almost lost because
17:31They were watching telly
17:32No, they had an epidemic
17:33They were very good
17:34Oh, they had the shits
17:35They had the shits
17:36They had an epidemic of dysentery
17:37It's the other area
17:38Goodness me, boners and the brown stuff is a podcast that has legs
17:45So they've all got dysentery and they're all going like this crazy
17:50And all they did
17:51Is that the noise that you make when you go
17:56I'm just about to go in the loo
17:57Is there anyone in there?
17:58Oh
17:59So rather than give up when they had this terrible affliction of dysentery
18:11They cut off their soiled britches and underwear and went into battle without
18:16They just ran into battle
18:18Mmm
18:19Just with
18:20Yeah
18:21Why is that not a film?
18:22Yeah
18:23If there was a whole army running towards you just fully Winnie the Pooh-ing it
18:29Like
18:30Literally
18:35Oh my god
18:36It would be unbelievable
18:37Just a bunch of people like the French going
18:39Is that?
18:42Did they throw their pants at the enemy or not?
18:45No darling
18:46That's a waste of weaponry
18:47That's a waste of weaponry
18:48You just sort of sling it
18:50What were they thinking?
18:51Oh, I know
18:52They needed both hands for the
18:53Yeah
18:54So wait did they just cut a hole at the back?
18:56Apparently they cut them off with a knife
18:57And they were just
18:58Like your shovel
18:59When back in the game
19:01They went into battle without basically their underwear and the
19:05Yeah
19:06Anyway
19:07What is the best weapon to ward off a wasp?
19:10They don't like a vacuum cleaner
19:12Oh
19:13Okay
19:14Because they just
19:15They're there
19:16And then
19:17They're gone
19:18They
19:20Always have one at a picnic
19:22Yeah
19:23Oh there's a wasp on
19:24There's a f***ing anymore
19:25It's not fun when you change the bag
19:29LAUGHTER
19:30It's nearer Nish's area this?
19:35This is
19:36My ass
19:37Yeah?
19:38People put distracting things near to a picnic don't they?
19:42You mean like maybe like
19:43Yeah
19:44A jar of something sticky that they go to
19:45Yeah
19:46Like a jar of poo?
19:47Is correct
19:48LAUGHTER
19:49APPLAUSE
19:50That's the same way you get rid of men in the morning
19:57Good morning
19:58LAUGHTER
20:07You're brewing a jar?
20:09See ya
20:13Leave it in between ya
20:14Morning
20:16I'm not going to work actually
20:18LAUGHTER
20:19I've known Lou but I think about 15 years and for some reason that is the first time I've seen you actually shock yourself with something you've said
20:28So we're talking about animals so there is a fantastic creature called the silver spotted skipper caterpillar look at that it's a beautiful thing
20:35So it is preyed on by parasitic wasps who are attracted by the smell of the caterpillars frass which is a wonderful word and it is the technical name for insect poo
20:46Oh
20:47What they do these caterpillars they forcibly eject their frass from their backside using an anal comb
20:54So it's a fine toothed pincer it comes down it pinches the anus and it sends the frass flying out like a diddlywink
21:06And because the wasp are attracted to the smell of the frass this diverts them away from the actual caterpillar because it goes oh where the hell was that and it follows the tiddlywink
21:13And they can send their poo 38 times their body length away so it's the equivalent Alan if you like of a human launching their poo across the width of a football field
21:23Talking language I understand
21:27This was discovered by a biologist called Martha Weiss she's now professor she discovered it in 2003 so she'd collected a load of these skipper caterpillars and she's got them in a box and she suddenly hears this bing
21:40Bing bing bing and it was the sound of them squirting out this well pinching out this frass and she went on to discover 17 different families of moths and butterflies have this
21:51Similarly exploding anus
21:53I know
21:55Listen I'm just saying we're always looking for new olympic sports
22:01I say we just have a bunch of athletes bent over flying out then they measure it like the javelin throw and then there'll be inevitable allegations he's doping I saw him with the special honey
22:13So grasshoppers sometimes kick their frass away when they've done their business and they use their back leg to propel the poo ten times their body length so I'm gonna do this again for you
22:27It's equivalent of a human scoring a goal from the penalty spot with their poo. Okay, that's the that's the distance. Okay. Do you want to see that?
22:35Do you want to see that? Do you want to see? Yeah? Yeah, let's have a look. There's up in the top right corner
22:41You can see it creating thing and it's got it's getting its leg ready. Whoa. Here we go. Um, and it's gonna go. Yeah, there we go
22:50And we can see it again in slow motion. What's that? VAR. There we go. Oh my god
22:53Yeah, is that fantastic? On the volley as well
22:56I know
22:58I thought I assumed that it would drop it. Yeah, and then take it like a penalty gig
23:06And now it's all aboard the blunderbuss as we marshal ourselves for a round of general ignorance fingers on buzzers, please
23:12This is easy. What chemical is added to all our tap water?
23:18Fluoride
23:20Oh
23:25Is that not true? Have I made that up? It's not true. You haven't made it up. It's not true. Chlorine
23:29Chlorine is added to absolutely all of our water to keep it safe. Tribina
23:36I'd definitely be less dehydrated if that was in the water
23:40So anybody who lives well certainly within 50 kilometres of this studio has never had fluoride added to their tap water
23:45It's only about 9% of the UK population that has it artificially added
23:50So I think we've got a map you can see parts of West Midlands and Berkshire and North Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire
23:55What are they down to deserve it? Well, the thing is it's good stuff
23:58It stops cavities and strengthens the tooth enamel and there is a plan to increase the amount of fluoride across the country
24:06Basically one part fluoride to a million parts water
24:08The best thing you can do if you're in an area without adding fluoride is what?
24:12Brush your teeth. Yes, and while you're brushing your teeth. Don't spit. Don't spit it out. It's the answer. Is that true?
24:18Yeah
24:19Now what shape is a proper all butter French croissant?
24:26Are they completely straight is the right answer?
24:29So what we've got here is two different kinds so the ones that are this shape are made with margarine
24:45And they are the cheaper ones and these straight ones are the ones that are made with butter
24:49And it is not uncommon in French families for the parents to have these and give these to the kids
24:55Because they're cheaper
24:56Quick question. Are we going to get to
24:58Yes, would you like it?
24:59Yes, would you like it
25:02Investigation
25:03Very straight
25:04That's fine
25:05Are they vegan?
25:06Are they vegan?
25:07Yeah
25:08This thing's gonna come be any straighter if they were trying
25:11Actors, comedians, free food it is unbelievable
25:15The thing about me Sandy is I'm a man of science
25:18So if something is straight, I've got to see if it's straight by putting it in my mouth.
25:22OK.
25:23And you like straight things in a straight world.
25:26What about straight men? Where are our rights?
25:30Oh, yes, historically, you've really suffered.
25:41Right, how many noses do you have?
25:46One, but it's a big one.
25:48Not one, no. I actually know this, Sandy.
25:53Go.
25:54I think that we have, like, two noses.
25:59Yes, that is correct.
26:01Why aren't you happy for me?
26:10So what we call our nose is actually two organs that are working independently,
26:14a bit like our left and our right eyes, our left and our right ears,
26:17each nostril has its own nasal cavity.
26:20They don't connect to the other.
26:21They don't even smell the same either.
26:24So we process the information from each nose at slightly different speeds.
26:28They stimulate different sides of the brain.
26:30The airflow is always stronger on one side than it is on the other.
26:33They switch every sort of three to six hours, something like that.
26:36And it's controlled by erectile tissue.
26:41Wait.
26:42Sandy, what do you mean?
26:43It's tissue in the linings that swell with blood, basically.
26:47And that is how we control where the breathing is happening.
26:50So we've got boners in our nose?
26:52LAUGHTER
26:53Now, you know, right, from Roisin that you've got two noses.
26:58How many organs do you think you have in total?
27:03Twelve.
27:04BELL RINGS
27:05BELL RINGS
27:06BELL RINGS
27:09Nobody say any more numbers.
27:11LAUGHTER
27:14The answer is it depends how you count them.
27:16So we know, for example, that the skin is an organ,
27:19but it consists of three parts.
27:21The dermis, the epidermis and the subcutaneous.
27:23Is that three organs or is that one organ?
27:26So you have at least 79, depending obviously on your sex,
27:30one or two more.
27:32But if you counted every single...
27:34LAUGHTER
27:37And you'll never find the second one.
27:40Yours has two nostrils out.
27:42LAUGHTER
27:45If you counted every bone, every muscle,
27:47I mean, almost a thousand.
27:49No.
27:50Some of this stuff is made up.
27:52LAUGHTER
27:54Which brings us to the most controversial count of all,
27:57which is the scores.
27:58Bombing in last place with minus 27.
28:01It's Nish.
28:02CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
28:04CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
28:07Julius, after the fortune of minus 26.
28:10It's Lou.
28:11CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
28:12Going out of the blaze of glory with minus three.
28:14It's Alan.
28:15CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
28:16And catapulting herself into first place.
28:17Our winner tonight, with two whole points,
28:19is Roisin!
28:20CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
28:22CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
28:23And catapulting herself into first place.
28:25Our winner tonight, with two whole points...
28:28LAUGHTER
28:29..is Roisin!
28:30CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
28:31So, it's a very big thank you to Roisin, Nish, Lou and Alan.
28:44And I leave you with this from Evelyn Waugh
28:47when asked how he'd found his first battle.
28:50Like German opera, too long and too loud.
28:53Thank you and goodnight.
28:54APPLAUSE
28:55Thank you and goodnight.
28:56APPLAUSE
28:57APPLAUSE
28:58CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
28:59APPLAUSE
29:00AND APPLAUSE
Recommended
29:31
|
Up next
29:16
49:45
1:23:26
50:58
42:31
47:29
54:26
29:09
47:29
42:33
16:30
58:36
46:55
41:31
41:31
42:35
43:12
41:29
1:24:00
43:37
1:10:48
44:26
Be the first to comment