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00:30Well, howdy partner, welcome to QI for some high-falutin', rootin', tootin', sharpshootin' in our Wild West special. Yee-haw! Let's meet our lawless varmints.
00:44What in tarnation? It's Eshan Akbar.
00:50Wanted, dead or alive? It's Alex Brooker.
00:56Sheldon Jehoshaphat, it's Joe Brand.
01:00And yippee-ki-yay, Mother Superior, it's Alan Davis.
01:10Their buzzers are from our own rodeo radio. Eshan goes...
01:15Oh, nice.
01:24Alex goes...
01:26This is great.
01:33Are you just getting overexcited?
01:35I need that chair for other people.
01:37Joe goes...
01:42How I am.
01:50And Alan goes...
01:51Three wheels on my way.
01:55And I'm still rolling along.
01:57Right, let's mosey on down to question one.
02:03Stop me when you know what I'm talking about.
02:06Okay, they used whips,
02:08they wore leather chaps,
02:09big boots,
02:10even bigger hats,
02:11used lassoos,
02:12invented the rodeo,
02:14were mostly boys
02:15who herded cows
02:17in the 18th century.
02:20Two wheels on my wagon.
02:22Cowboys.
02:32It's not cowboys.
02:33No, it's not cowboys.
02:35Cowgirls.
02:42Cow-thems.
02:43LAUGHTER
02:44So most of the things that we associate with the all-American cowboy
02:56originate from the Mexican vaquero.
02:58A cattle hand,
02:59so vaca meaning cow.
03:00It comes from Spain,
03:01starts in about the 15th century,
03:03well established by the 17th century.
03:05So the cowboy that we think of,
03:07which is honestly mostly from the movies,
03:09comes to the US in the 19th century
03:11when they begin to get these big cattle ranching regions.
03:15Now, you've all got some bits and pieces to put on,
03:17some little bit of dressing up today.
03:20Yeah.
03:20OK.
03:21Oh, yes.
03:22There we go.
03:23Yeah.
03:24Now we're talking the good stuff.
03:26Oh, they're spurs, Sandy, they're spurs.
03:28Yes, yes.
03:29They're very sharp.
03:30Have I meant to put that on?
03:33LAUGHTER
03:33I'm going to say, Joe,
03:36if you just wear that,
03:36you will definitely win.
03:37I'm just...
03:38LAUGHTER
03:39What kind of hat are you wearing, Alex?
03:41What is it called?
03:43It's not a trick question.
03:44Cowboy hat.
03:45LAUGHTER
03:45You look like a sort of...
03:47No, a mad mystic woman who's going to...
03:50LAUGHTER
03:51What were the hats called?
03:53Anybody...
03:54Ten-gallon hat.
03:55Ten-gallon hat.
03:56Do you think it had ten gallons in it?
03:58Yes.
03:59No.
04:00It actually came from the vaqueros' sombrero,
04:03and it really didn't become popular until the 1920s,
04:06which is, like, way after the Wild West.
04:08Most cowboys wore bowler hats.
04:11They were called them derby hats.
04:12And, of course, they didn't hold ten gallons.
04:14Maybe it came from the Spanish tan-galan,
04:17meaning so gallant.
04:18Probably, it's just an exaggeration.
04:20So, we had a go at making a hat
04:21that could actually hold ten gallons.
04:24LAUGHTER
04:25Now, this...
04:26Whoa!
04:27LAUGHTER
04:28It looks like you're about to go on a hen-do and drink out of that.
04:39LAUGHTER
04:41I'm on if you are.
04:41Yeah.
04:42Weirdly, this is actually only five gallons.
04:44Do you want to try it on?
04:45If it had been ten gallons, it would have been as tall as me.
04:48So, tiny, then?
04:49LAUGHTER
04:50Oh, that's fantastic.
04:52You could have a funnel off a steamship.
04:54LAUGHTER
04:59The other thing they had, of course, is they had whips and lassoos,
05:01but they had this thing, when they were lassoing,
05:04you had to be incredibly careful,
05:05because the rope was very, very strong,
05:08and you could get your thumb trapped in the rope,
05:11if you didn't throw it properly,
05:13and it would come clean off.
05:14Oh!
05:15I don't know why I'm looking at you.
05:16LAUGHTER
05:17APPLAUSE
05:18I tell you what, I'd have made a shit cowboy.
05:29LAUGHTER
05:30They'd be like, he still ain't learnt with the rope,
05:32he took the thumb, he took the other two buggers, huh?
05:35LAUGHTER
05:36It was called rodeo thumb.
05:37Rodeo thumb?
05:38I know, you wouldn't think it'd be that strong, would you, the rope?
05:41I love him.
05:42I know, absolutely.
05:43What is one of the things in the movies, though,
05:45about the way in which cowboys are pretty much always depicted?
05:49They're always having a row, wouldn't they?
05:50Yes.
05:51They're always there, in the pub.
05:53There were some football fans.
05:55Yeah.
05:56So, almost always depicted as white men,
05:58but it wasn't true.
05:59About a third of cowhands were indigenous Mexicans,
06:02or mixed-raced mestizos,
06:04and about a quarter were black.
06:06There was a guy called Nate Love.
06:08He was known as Deadwood Dick.
06:10LAUGHTER
06:12He became a cowboy after he was freed from slavery,
06:19and he has an amazing autobiography.
06:21It's the only complete story of a black cowboy.
06:24He's amazing.
06:25He drank with Billy the Kid, he got shot 14 times.
06:27He once lassoed a train.
06:30Wow!
06:31Yeah.
06:32He'd just met his future wife,
06:33and he was absolutely drunk on love, I imagine, and whiskey.
06:36Yeah.
06:37And he was dragged into a ditch,
06:38and he wrote in his autobiography,
06:40and a live engine is by long odds worse than roping wild buffalo.
06:43But my love was as strong as ever,
06:45and I thank my lucky star,
06:47she did not see me,
06:48as they dragged me out of the ditch.
06:50LAUGHTER
06:51Wow.
06:52The thing is,
06:53you've survived being shot 14 times.
06:55Yeah.
06:56You backed yourself lassoing a train,
06:57wouldn't you?
06:58Yeah, exactly.
06:59You were actually 50 Cent at that point.
07:00LAUGHTER
07:02A valid 50 Cent reference to a QI audience.
07:05Yeah, yeah, yeah.
07:06You would love that.
07:07A big crossover.
07:08The QI audience and the 50 Cent.
07:0950 Cent.
07:10LAUGHTER
07:11OK, here's another question.
07:12Where did the famous gunfight
07:14between the Clanton gang and Wyatt Earp's gang
07:17take place?
07:18Well, I wanted to make a noise,
07:20so I'm going to say the OK Corral.
07:23CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
07:26So we're looking here, Ike Clanton on the left,
07:32a wrong'un,
07:33and Wyatt Earp,
07:34who, at that time of the photograph,
07:36was a marshal in Dodge City in Kansas.
07:39So we've got the bad guys against the law guys,
07:41and we talk about the OK Corral,
07:43but where did it actually take place?
07:45Croydon.
07:46LAUGHTER
07:48The OK Corral was near Tombstone, wasn't it?
07:50Yeah.
07:51It actually took place in an empty lot
07:53next to a photo studio,
07:55and it should be called
07:56The Gunfight Outside Fly's Photographic Studio.
07:59LAUGHTER
08:02In fact, that picture that we showed
08:04of Clanton in Tombstone
08:06was almost certainly taken
08:07at Fly's Photographic Studio.
08:09So the gunfight did take place 1881
08:11in Tombstone, Arizona,
08:12but when the newspapers wrote about it,
08:14the first thing they wrote was,
08:15there was a fight on Fremont Street,
08:17and that lasted for about 50 years,
08:19and then Wyatt Earp published his biography in 1931,
08:23and that's when it became the fight at the OK Corral.
08:26So it is remembered as a shootout
08:28between a group of lawmen
08:29and a gang of outlaws,
08:30although lots of the lawmen
08:32were a bit dodgy themselves.
08:34Here's the thing about it,
08:35there were 30 shots fired in the 30-second fight.
08:38How many people do you think died?
08:40They were only six feet apart, these people.
08:42All of them?
08:43No, three of them.
08:44No, three.
08:45They must have been really shit shots.
08:46Oh, God.
08:48Six feet apart,
08:4930 shots,
08:5030 seconds,
08:51three dead people.
08:52Doesn't seem like a very good...
08:53Who was shooting Brooker?
08:54LAUGHTER
08:58Brooker, roll!
08:59We're back there!
09:00We're back there!
09:01I'd have been in 30 seconds,
09:03I'd have still been trying to get it out of the holster.
09:05Get this out for me, mate, would you?
09:07I'll hold it, you pull the trigger, mate.
09:09LAUGHTER
09:13Now, here's some Wild West legends.
09:14Can you tell me how they got their nicknames?
09:17So, this is Wild Bill Hickok.
09:20Oh, is that how you say it?
09:21What did you think it was?
09:22Wild Bill Hickok.
09:24Yes.
09:25Oh.
09:26I mean, depends if he's wearing the chaps.
09:28LAUGHTER
09:30Hickok sounds out of condition.
09:32Yeah, it does.
09:33LAUGHTER
09:34Guilty!
09:35LAUGHTER
09:38My little brother, when he was about six,
09:41he thought he was called Wild Bill Hickok.
09:44LAUGHTER
09:46So, his real name was James Butler Hickok.
09:48We're not sure, but it's possibly to do with a bit of teasing.
09:51So, some people said that he had a long nose
09:54and quite protruding lips, and he looked a bit like a duck.
09:57LAUGHTER
09:58Duck Bill?
09:59Yes.
10:00His nickname was Duck Bill,
10:02and he decided he didn't like Duck Bill,
10:04but he would be OK if it was Wild Bill.
10:06Has he not realised he's got, like, the wrong hat on for a cowboy?
10:10LAUGHTER
10:11I'm Cossack.
10:12Wild Bill Cossack.
10:13LAUGHTER
10:14Shut up, Dirt Bill!
10:15Fuck you, man!
10:16I ain't Duck Bill!
10:17I'm Cossack!
10:18LAUGHTER
10:19LAUGHTER
10:20I'm starting a thing called Wikipedia,
10:23and you is going to be Dirt Bill!
10:25LAUGHTER
10:26LAUGHTER
10:29He did have a really boring brother called Lorenzo,
10:31who used to be known as Tame Bill.
10:33Tame Bill.
10:34LAUGHTER
10:35But it did kind of predict what was going to happen
10:37while Bill was shot in the back while playing cards
10:39when he was just 39.
10:41And old Lorenzo Tame Bill lived into his 80s.
10:43I'm just saying it.
10:44The next one is called Big Nose Kate.
10:47Oh.
10:48LAUGHTER
10:49Which one do you think is Big Nose Kate?
10:51LAUGHTER
10:52Definitely normal noses so far.
10:54I know, right?
10:55It's like you've got to go to VAR on this.
10:57LAUGHTER
10:58Is it referring to another part of their analysis?
11:03LAUGHTER
11:04So, which one do you think?
11:06One is her sister Wilma, and one is Big Nose Kate.
11:09Kate's on the left.
11:10Kate is on the left, yes.
11:12I mean, some people say it's cos she used to stick her nose
11:14in other people's business.
11:16She was the long-term companion of Doc Holliday.
11:19She was with him at the gunfight at the OK Corral,
11:22or the photographic studio, watching from a nearby window.
11:26I'd do that.
11:27Would you?
11:28Just watch.
11:29I'd go to the window if I heard a gunfight.
11:31Yeah.
11:32She worked as a sporting woman.
11:33Anybody?
11:34Is that like a...
11:35Is that a prostitute?
11:36It is a prostitute, yes.
11:37Yes, she is.
11:38Is that like a brass?
11:40LAUGHTER
11:41What a team we are.
11:45Getting out on a BBC poster.
11:48LAUGHTER
11:50For BBC.
11:51For everyone.
11:52For...
11:53LAUGHTER
11:54There are other ones.
11:55Richard Rattlesnake Dick Barter.
11:56Oh!
11:57What?
11:58Rattlesnake...
11:59Rattlesnake Dick.
12:00Rattlesnake Dick.
12:01Rattlesnake Dick.
12:02What a nickname that is.
12:03That is good.
12:04At the urinal.
12:05I can hear him.
12:06LAUGHTER
12:07Rattlesnake Dick Barter.
12:08Oh!
12:09What?
12:10Rattlesnake...
12:11Rattlesnake Dick.
12:12Rattlesnake Dick.
12:13Rattlesnake Dick.
12:14What a nickname that is.
12:15That is good.
12:16LAUGHTER
12:17At the urinal.
12:18I can hear him.
12:19LAUGHTER
12:20APPLAUSE
12:22Rattlesnake Dick.
12:23I reckon Richard's going to the toilet again, isn't he?
12:26LAUGHTER
12:29God, Richard, do it again!
12:31LAUGHTER
12:34You are in the Rattlesnake mine where he kept telling everybody
12:36he was going to make his fortune.
12:38OK, next question.
12:39What use is a square wagon wheel?
12:43It stopped me rolling away.
12:45That is a very good point.
12:47But in this case, wagon is a person's name.
12:49So in 1997 there was a professor called Stan Wagon at Macalester College in Minnesota
12:55And he made a functioning square wheeled
12:59Tricycle, okay, this is not him. This is a man who I don't know in a suit
13:05He's called Stan Wagon the guy who invented is called Stan Wagon JK Rowling name him like what?
13:13So in order for a wheel to work at all the center has to be level right
13:18And so the easiest way is to make a round wheel
13:20But if you make a specific track so you can see he's on a very specific track here
13:24Then the wheels can be any shape pretty much apart from
13:27Triangles really so look at this right. This is rather brilliant bus. It doesn't go anywhere because it's got square wheels
13:34however, if you make a surface like this
13:39Which has got what these humps are called inverted catenaries and
13:44basically look
13:46Along it goes like that. I know so the reason this is interesting
13:51There's an engineer called Gerard Font and he thinks because stones with very similar curves were found in Giza
13:58This method may have been what helped people to roll the blocks into place for the pyramids
14:03So I guess you can see it's kind of pointless, but it's also interesting. Yeah, how did they do that?
14:08But that road there looks like every 20 miles an hour near a school anyway. Yeah, that is so true
14:15Isn't it fascinating? Wouldn't it be great to have a car with square wheels? I just really like it. I really don't think it would
14:20know
14:30It's just me I like a square wagon wheel. That's just the way I roll
14:35I like it. Thank you and I appreciate that right
14:41Let's move on to a question about wondrous wealth in which state was the first American gold rush
14:47Wasn't it like California?
14:49California
15:04We're talking about 1799 the United States is newly formed. Oh, so it's got to be over to the east. Yeah, New York State
15:11New York State
15:16We have another 46 to go so
15:19I'm gonna stop you there. North Carolina was the very first time
15:23So there's a child playing called Conrad Reed and he found a nugget of gold
15:27Described as the size of a shoe and for three years the family used it as a doorstop
15:34So 1799 they find this thing they keep it as a doorstop for three years and then his father thought I wonder what I could get for it
15:40He took it along to silversmith and he got three dollars and fifty cents. It was actually worth three thousand six
15:47I mean this is at the time, right?
15:51They found out that they had been rooked
15:53So they thought oh, let's go look for some more and over the next 20 years. They found a hundred thousand dollars worth of gold
16:00This is a hundred thousand dollars at the time. I mean we're talking millions damn
16:03Yeah, and basically it was just what they could find in the river. There were no actual mineshafts dug until the 1830s
16:09So the geezer who bought it off and didn't go by the way just out of interest where'd you yeah, have you got any?
16:15The california gold rush doesn't come until 1849
16:19What is the most successful method that people used to make their fortune in the california gold rush?
16:26Probably selling things to the gold rushers sell supplies to the prospectors
16:30Absolutely the very first american millionaire was a journalist and also a shopkeeper called sam brannan
16:35And someone came into his store with a lump of gold and instead of looking for gold himself
16:40He bought all of the shovels and pickaxes and so on and went out into the town shouting there's gold in them there hills
16:47And everybody came he bought pans for 20 cents, which he then sold for 15 dollars
16:53There are accounts of single lemons
16:55Selling for a dollar which is about 40 dollars today because people were frightened about getting scurvy a single pair of boots today
17:02In our money two thousand three hundred dollars
17:05And one farmer earned the equivalent of a hundred and sixty thousand dollars in 1849 just selling onions
17:11like disney they get you with the merch didn't they yeah
17:15shop every five meters they know
17:18Now who has been unfairly called a glutton for as long as we can remember is it me
17:31Can i just say you're looking very beautiful fuck off yeah
17:34genuinely true i told a friend of mine that i wanted to go on a weight loss
17:41Kick and she said to me yeah but you're so handsome i've got that that's got nothing to do with it
17:45She was in her own way in a woman's way saying yeah you should
17:51My stepdad keith went on a diet and he's a big old geezer and he just wasn't losing any weight
17:56And my mum went he's trying so hard bless him and he ain't losing any weight
18:00And then one day he said he was going out to get the papers and when i look back on the cc tv on the door
18:06I saw him around the side of the house smashing fish and chips
18:10It's the sort of thing where i could have gone up to him privately gone
18:12Hey mate look i know you've been smashing the fish and chips inside
18:16Not me i wait until everyone was in the house
18:21My mum my in-laws and i got the ipad out and i went here's the evidence
18:25I don't know which is weirder him doing that are you watching it
18:33So are you doing that a zempic thing then
18:36No i consider it i'm just trying to go
18:39Just trying to be in a calorie deficit really and um it's not working so
18:45Oh you poor thing it's very boring doing calorie oh that's why i've stopped
18:49Okay we are talking about the wild life of the wild west anybody think if it's a w
18:57Particular creature in the wild west a warthog no
19:02I don't think of a single movie where a cowboy goes oh my lord it's a warthog
19:11We've got very different versions of the lion king
19:16So not a wallaby then no no no
19:20The wolverine was well how would we get how that isn't it magnificent do you not think
19:26It's range reached down the american west as far as california's sierra nevada i thought it was hugh jackman
19:33Yes i did i
19:35I think it's been to a dentist in turkey as well
19:43Don't you think it looks weird when people's teeth are that perfect yes it looks so weird
19:48That's why mine are all yellow with bits of green stuff in them
19:51Yeah
19:52It's nice to keep a bit of salad for later
19:56So these are most closely related to martins which is a weasel-like carnivore they were called gulo gulo their
20:03Latin name meaning glutton glutton but it's a mistranslation so the old norwegian for a wolverine was
20:11Which means mountain cat it was translated into german as a rather similar sounding of vielfras which means eats a lot
20:18Oh
20:20It's not fair one nickname sticks i know right
20:25There are stories that it eats so much it forces its feces out of its body to make more space
20:32We've all been there boxing day
20:36Well then after eight hang on i've got to go to the loo
20:42Does anybody eat after eights at any other time other than boxing day just after lunch
20:45I have some on my coffee table so i have it pretty much every night
20:48How's that net deficit
20:55Every time you meet someone who says oh i'm trying to lose weight and then the next sentence yeah i always have after eight
21:04The whole thing just one
21:05No one has one after eight it's the single most moorish thing in the world i've got really good self-control actually
21:11Well i can't think why there's a problem
21:19So they are amazing creatures they're really adapted to snowy mountainous conditions
21:23But what is incredible about them so when they step onto the snow
21:27Their paws spread out to twice the original size so it's like having built-in snowshoes
21:32And each paw has got five extremely sharp claws so they can climb a sheer cliff or an icefall or whatever
21:38They have an extraordinary keen sense of smell so they can smell prey 20 feet under the snow
21:44Why might that be a good thing because that's where prey hides
21:50It's where prey hibernates
21:52Oh how annoying
21:53Yeah they never even see it coming and they also use snow a bit like refrigerators for keeping food fresh
21:59They have special teeth these are not from turkey these are their own teeth
22:02Special teeth at the back of the jaws which are rotated 90 degrees to the rest so that they can crunch frozen food
22:09That's something you could get that darling and then
22:13What is happening
22:14You have to defrost
22:17Yeah just go straight in iceland
22:22I'm not like i want nice food i'm not i'm not that desperate
22:26Well that's good
22:30Okay time for general ignorance fingers on buzzers please which us state inspired the writers of the hit song take me home country roads
22:40West virginia
22:44I mean it's like i open a trap door isn't it
22:51So anybody remember who sang it john denver john denver colorado then no kentucky let's do some states
23:01Nope south dakota
23:04We've run out of dakotas now
23:06So it was written by bill danoff and taffy nivert and they've got the
23:14Mississippi
23:15Michigan
23:16Texas
23:17Oregon
23:18Ohio
23:19Nevada
23:20Georgia
23:22Washington
23:23Argonne
23:23Begins with m
23:24Michigan
23:25Missouri
23:26Mississippi
23:27Mississippi
23:27Massachusetts
23:28Massachusetts
23:30Mumbai
23:35Maryland
23:35Oh
23:37Where the cookies come from
23:42Do you only have one
23:43Yeah
23:49Hello
23:50You're not right
23:51You've got one
23:52One maritone cookie
23:53One half break
23:55A maple tart
23:56One custard cream
23:57One black
23:58One black
24:00One vicarb biscuit
24:02Nice. A breakaway. A penguin. All lined up.
24:07God, now Alan's going to be naming biscuits all night.
24:11A big wafer. A jammy dodger.
24:16Neither John Denver nor Bill nor Taffy who wrote the song had ever been to West Virginia when they
24:22recorded this song and they chose it because it's got loads of poetic sounding landmarks like the
24:27Blue Ridge Mountains and the Shenandoah River but they're mostly actually in Virginia. I mean
24:31really the song should be called It's About the West of Virginia. There was a brief while they
24:35thought about using Massachusetts to fill in a four syllable gap in the song. You know the
24:39wonderful song Moon River by Johnny Mercer? It's got a great line in it. My Huckleberry Friend. It's
24:44one of the kind of great lyrics of all time and Huckleberry was a placeholder by Johnny
24:49Mercer when he was writing it because he wanted that sound and he thought I'll just put that in
24:54for a moment and then they recorded it and it has now become one of the great lyrics of all time.
24:58I never knew what apple bottom jeans were.
25:02Boots with the flow.
25:04Have you ever heard, do you know that?
25:06No.
25:08I was looking at her.
25:10She got the flow.
25:12Nothing enough.
25:13Should've got low, low, low, low, low.
25:16Do you have one of those buzzers to stop people auditioning?
25:19Sorry?
25:20It's a young people's turn now.
25:24And as soon as some young people turn up we'll let them out.
25:32Right.
25:33Which company was formed in 1850 by Henry Wells and William G Fargo?
25:40Wells Fargo.
25:42They did set up Wells Fargo but not in 1850.
25:50Oh.
25:51Yeah.
25:521852 they set that up.
25:54What did they set up first?
25:56Fargo and Wells.
25:58McDonald's.
25:59Coca-Cola.
26:00It's American Express.
26:01Oh.
26:02Yes.
26:03Along with a man called John Butterworth in 1850 they set up American Express to deliver
26:17goods around the east coast and the Wells Fargo company was created to move goods around
26:23the west.
26:24He was profiting from the gold rush.
26:26American Express.
26:27Extraordinary.
26:28By the end of the Civil War 900 offices in 10 states.
26:31Almost 10,000 miles of railway and express routes.
26:34The largest empire of stagecoaches in the world.
26:37And they made an absolute fortune.
26:40In fact when Fargo died his home was so expensive to maintain they knocked it down.
26:45Whoa.
26:46Yeah.
26:47The largest city in North Dakota is called Fargo.
26:49Also named after him.
26:50But I'm a huge fan of Henry Wells.
26:53Is that him on the right?
26:54On the left.
26:55Henry Wells is on the left.
26:56I like the other one.
26:57Do you?
26:58Oh.
26:59Yeah.
27:00Why is that?
27:01You don't have to get off with them.
27:02It's what they do.
27:03Well I think Joe you will like Henry Wells.
27:06He believed in the education of women and you have to understand how rare this is.
27:10Pfft.
27:11Pfft.
27:12Pfft.
27:13Pfft.
27:14Pfft.
27:15Pfft.
27:16He described the education of women as the dream of his life.
27:19He said it is commonly said that women's mind is not capable of attaining to a higher order of discipline.
27:26Not acknowledging this let me say give her the opportunity.
27:30Yeah.
27:31Fantastic.
27:32APPLAUSE
27:33But when did he say get us a cup of tea love?
27:39I bet he did.
27:40He probably did.
27:41Even today Wells Fargo fourth largest bank in the United States.
27:42It still continues.
27:43All of which brings us to the end of the line.
27:44So let's see who's cut the mustard and who couldn't teach a hen to cluck.
27:47Didn't you just do that last bit in an American accent?
27:48Uh, OK.
27:49All of which brings us to the end of the line.
27:50So let's see who's cut the mustard and who couldn't teach a hen to cluck.
27:54In last place tonight it's got a bit ugly for Ishan with minus 47.
27:59In third place with minus 29, it was pretty bad, Alan.
28:00In second place it's quite good for Jay with minus 27.
28:02And our winner putting the OK in the back.
28:10In the last place tonight it's got a bit ugly for Ishan with minus 47.
28:15In third place with minus 29, it was pretty bad, Alan.
28:21In second place it's quite good for Jay with minus 27.
28:2627
28:31The okay in the okay corral with minus 19. It's Alex
28:44Joe and Alan and I leave you with this not from the Wild West but from May West
28:49I've no time for broads who want to rule the world alone without men who do up the zipper on the back of your dress
28:55Thank you good night
29:25Thank you
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