- 37 minutes ago
First broadcast 24th September 2010.
Stephen Fry
Alan Davies
Bill Bailey
Gyles Brandreth
Sue Perkins
Stephen Fry
Alan Davies
Bill Bailey
Gyles Brandreth
Sue Perkins
Category
📺
TVTranscript
00:00Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, and welcome to the
00:07QI anatomy lesson, where we're discussing heads, hands, hips, hearts, and indeed any other part of the body, beginning with
00:15H.
00:15And joining me with scalpels at the ready are four prime specimens of the human body. So give a big
00:21hand for Sue Perkins. And a hearty cheer for Bill Bailey. And a hip, hip, hip replacement hooray for Giles
00:36Brandreth.
00:37Hip, hip, hip, hooray!
00:39Way, very good. And a hair-raising scream for Alan Davis.
00:46Wow. Wow.
00:48How do I stop dead?
00:49Whoa, that was good.
00:50And now, thanks to the handiwork of my audio elves, your buzzers should be ready. And Sue goes...
00:58I don't know. I think it was a round of applause. And Bill goes...
01:02Hip, hip, hooray!
01:03And Giles goes...
01:05Hip, hip, hooray!
01:07And Alan goes...
01:08Ah!
01:09Oh, we recorded cleverly the audience.
01:12It's really level. Yeah.
01:13Wow.
01:14So, let's start with H.
01:16It's already one of the weirdest shows I've ever been.
01:19We try and do our best.
01:21This sounds like a pensioner sitting on a bag of Rice Krispies.
01:28You're right.
01:31It's certainly not someone under 65 sitting on a bag of Rice Krispies, is it?
01:35No, no.
01:35You've got somebody putting their fingers in the socket. Do it again.
01:38Do it again.
01:40Slow way to go, but nice.
01:42Yeah.
01:42Oh, look.
01:43Easy, Tiger.
01:44Easy.
01:45Careful.
01:46Special delay, remember?
01:48Well, let's start with H for hands. What can you tell about someone from their palms?
01:55Oh, how long they're going to live, whether they're going to get married, how many children they're going to have?
01:58Can you...
02:01Can you...
02:02Hey!
02:03Please start with it.
02:05I just, I just joined in.
02:06Maybe we'll halve the forfeit between you.
02:09Oh, I can't believe I get a forfeit.
02:10But no, empirically, and obviously it's never been proved that any such thing could ever be demonstrated by looking at
02:16your palms.
02:16But there are things you can tell them.
02:18Forgive me.
02:19Yes.
02:19It's never been proved.
02:21Yeah.
02:21But there are people who feel they've done it.
02:23Well, yeah.
02:23Feeling you've done something is not quite the same as empirical scientific...
02:27Thank God you're out of government.
02:35They sweat, that's all they do.
02:37Well, they are...
02:38To varying degrees.
02:39But they have ridges.
02:40We'll ignore the lines of palmistry for the moment.
02:42But there is such a thing as palm diagnosis.
02:44There is a way of finding out predispositions towards rather important and life-threatening...
02:49Oh, good God.
02:49...and happiness-threatening illnesses.
02:51Who...
02:51Oh.
02:52Well, so you'd spell...
02:53Well, actually, we'll spell something.
02:55You're going to...
02:56Alphabetic.
02:57I don't know.
02:57I don't know.
02:57I don't know.
02:57I don't know.
02:58I don't know.
02:58I don't know.
02:58Did you see this?
02:59Where does this happen?
03:00Did they swell up?
03:00Did they go red?
03:00The ridges of the palms.
03:02The ridges?
03:02Who was responsible for discovering fingerprints?
03:05No.
03:06He was a very famous scientist called Francis Galton, whose name was rather ruined by the
03:11fact that he believed in eugenics, which was rather discredited.
03:14That's always a shame.
03:14It is a bit, yes.
03:15But he also noted the ridges and the walls on the palm.
03:19And then 30 years later, in the 1920s, it was discovered that those with Down syndrome
03:23have completely different palms from anyone else.
03:26And then, by the 1960s, at least 20 conditions were shown to present themselves on the palms.
03:32We've had gullible well.
03:33We just like this, Giles and I like that.
03:34Yeah.
03:35Heal us!
03:36You can also...
03:36Cook us whole again!
03:38They're also indications...
03:39Ship us!
03:41We work for food!
03:43Yeah.
03:43But going back, if I may, to the palmistry, all I will say is this, that you dismiss palmistry,
03:49but there were people, a hundred years ago, perhaps the wisest people of the time, who consulted palmists.
03:54Indeed they were, including, of course, our mutual hero.
03:56Our mutual friend, Oscar Wilde, but Mark Twain did.
03:59Mark Twain, yeah.
04:00Queen Victoria, I think, did.
04:01Edward VII did.
04:02Gladstone.
04:03And they...
04:04Who was the palmist they consulted?
04:06They consulted a man, Oscar Wilde said they consulted a man, called Kiro.
04:10Based on...
04:11That was Kiro from...
04:11Kiro from the Greek meaning hand.
04:13But his real name was...
04:14His real name was William Warner.
04:16You're right, there he is.
04:17He was Irish.
04:18And...
04:18He was Irish, and his great-great-grandson's brother married Elizabeth Taylor, Senator Warner.
04:24But that's just incidental.
04:25That's good to know.
04:26Yeah.
04:26He also called himself Count von Hamon.
04:29But no, that's a really good answer on William Warner, and that's superb to hear.
04:32Splendid answers all round.
04:33Thank you very much.
04:34The fact is palmistry won't tell you your future, but it can tell you your past, in the form of
04:39genetic markers that were set down while you were in the womb.
04:43Somebody playing with me.
04:48Are you all right?
04:50It sort of looks funnier than what you're doing.
04:52There is a piece of wire.
04:59I've been goosed by the palm of a skeleton.
05:01I've been sitting there for ten minutes thinking, where shall I do it?
05:03Where shall I do it?
05:05All right, thank you.
05:06They're talking about palms.
05:07It should be now.
05:08It should be now.
05:09Hey!
05:10Oh!
05:13Do you see?
05:15It had to end.
05:17Oh, dear.
05:18Oh, dear.
05:19It just ended.
05:24Keith, Keith, man.
05:25My head's come off.
05:28Oh, my heavens.
05:29Wow.
05:29I'll do it.
05:30Carry on, carry on.
05:31Yeah.
05:33They actually look a little bit like the cheeky girls.
05:38They do.
05:40Yes.
05:41Answer me another question.
05:43Marcel Proust.
05:44A la recherche du temps perdu.
05:46Very good.
05:47Now, why did Marcel Proust have such a limp handshake?
05:51There he is.
05:52There's Marcel.
05:53He hasn't slept for about five years, hasn't he?
05:56I feel bad saying this, but he was a known homosexual.
06:00He was well gay.
06:00Now, I don't...
06:01He was well gay.
06:03But I don't want to say that he had the limp handshake because he was gay.
06:05It's like saying he loved to buy scatter cushions and just throw them around the gap of the weekend.
06:10I mean, it seems a really, you know, reductive thing to say, but I don't know if it's really...
06:14There are types of gay who go around in muscle vests and are very butch.
06:18And there are types of gay, like Marcel, who are rather limp-wristed and who like ornament and design.
06:23He famously wrote only in a cork-lined room.
06:26He was very sensitive and so on.
06:28But...
06:28Well, he was very buoyant.
06:29Buoyant.
06:31He was very buoyant.
06:32He could go to sea at any time.
06:34He could set sail.
06:35He could ride anywhere in the world.
06:37Oceans, anyway.
06:39Yes.
06:40I'm going to offer a thought.
06:41Yeah.
06:41Okay.
06:42Right.
06:42He, being gay, spent a lot of time in North Africa.
06:47Tangiers?
06:47North Africa!
06:49One of the things that I discovered when I spent time in Africa...
06:52Are you coming out?
06:53Is this a coming out story?
06:55What...
06:55Because if it is, death will be the picture, so just watch out.
06:59If I want, tonight could be the night, you're right.
07:01It could be the night.
07:01I know your party's behind you.
07:03Yeah, indeed.
07:09It's fine.
07:11Yes, yes.
07:12I'm going to suggest this.
07:13When I went to Africa, I was quite disconcerted to find that traditionally the African handshake is not simply very
07:20soft, but it lingers.
07:21Shake my hand.
07:22Oh, it's just an excuse.
07:23Again?
07:24No, no.
07:25In Europe, we shake hands like that.
07:28In Europe, we shake hands like that.
07:30I think in Africa, we shake hands like this, and we hold the hand.
07:35I have a lot of experience of this in Africa.
07:37Stop it.
07:37He's a diventer.
07:38He's glued me.
07:39I can't get out.
07:41I don't wish to name drop, but I went to interview Archbishop Desmond Tutu, and he held my hand like
07:47this for a long, long time.
07:49Did he?
07:50And he was saying to his age, who is this again?
07:53I'm thinking that Marcel Proust spent time in North Africa, and rather liked this tradition, and brought it back with
08:00him to Paris.
08:01It's an interesting idea.
08:02I have no evidence that Proust went.
08:04I know that André Gide, André Gide went to North Africa a great deal.
08:07Well, that's what I'm thinking of.
08:08You're thinking of André Gide.
08:13You sweated on my hand for that.
08:17André Gide was out and proud.
08:19He was probably the man who invented the word homosexual, as it were, in his book Corridon.
08:23And he was out.
08:25Marcel was not out.
08:27Marcel was embarrassed and ashamed of being gay.
08:29And indeed, he went to brothels to try and cure himself.
08:32Oh, we all tried that.
08:36You heard it here first, folks.
08:38The North Africans called hands like that, my darling.
08:41It was a sort of double bluff is the only way I can explain it.
08:45He had a friend, a Romanian count, who said to him, look, I can teach you how to do a
08:49more manly handshake.
08:50Then people won't think that you're an invert, as the word was then.
08:54Invert?
08:54An invert, yeah.
08:55As a gayer.
08:56A gayer, yeah.
08:57And Marcel Proust said, no, if I do that, people will think I'm trying to look straight.
09:02Oh.
09:02Whereas if I confidently am all limp.
09:05It's a double bluff.
09:06It's a double bluff.
09:07Good Lord.
09:07Do you know anything about it?
09:08I've been spending too much time just drinking cider.
09:11I should have been reading the novels of Proust.
09:14Yes, I feel I've missed that.
09:15Well, he's a famous, it's famous for people never actually having read him.
09:18Has anybody finished it?
09:19It's enormously long.
09:21Has anybody finished it?
09:22There's a famous scene that opens in Decote du Chet's 1.
09:26The brisket scene.
09:26The brisket scene.
09:28Describe it.
09:28I can't describe it, but it is to do.
09:30Does it involve touching?
09:31It could, it could.
09:32If you want to be the little biscuit.
09:33Don't touch him.
09:34If you want to be the little biscuit, what is the little biscuit?
09:36I don't want to be your little biscuit.
09:38Madeleine.
09:38I don't want to be your Madeleine.
09:39The little Madeleine.
09:40No, I don't want to.
09:41The smell of the Madeleine evokes for him always.
09:44It takes him back to the past.
09:45Yeah, the whole book springs from one moment.
09:47It's an epiphanic moment where he's, the narrator is, has a cup of tea and he dips a biscuit
09:52in his little Madeleine.
09:53You know, the scotch shaped biscuits.
09:54Yes.
09:55He dips it in and as he's just bringing the tea and the biscuit to his lips, he gets the
09:59smell of the tea and the biscuit and the entire world of this seven volume novel comes
10:05into his head.
10:05It evokes a memory.
10:06You know the way smells do.
10:07You get a smell and it takes you.
10:09Wait a minute.
10:09You're trying to say this whole thing is based on a dunking incident.
10:11Yes.
10:12Exactly.
10:13And that is, you will find often people referring to, that was my Madeleine moment, where they
10:18suddenly something triggered a whole series of memories they never knew they had.
10:22But the joy is, you don't need to read the book.
10:25You just need to buy the biscuit.
10:26Done.
10:27Oh, yes.
10:28The whole thing.
10:29It works for him because he, as a child, sat with his aunt.
10:32So we can do it with a hobnob.
10:33It might be a hobnob for you.
10:34It might be the smell of who knows what for you, Bill.
10:38All right.
10:38The inside of a tennis ball or something.
10:40Yeah.
10:41Absolutely.
10:41Inside of a tennis ball.
10:43Inside of a tennis ball.
10:43Oh, it's a very rubbery.
10:45A lovely rubbery smell.
10:46He slits it and just work it.
10:49It's good.
10:49Why don't you?
10:51Yeah.
10:51Yeah.
10:52Just bringing it back to my level for a moment.
10:55Yeah.
10:55I know.
10:55Talking tennis balls and why don't you.
10:57It's a highlight of my child.
10:58I may write a seven-volume novel about it.
11:02Now, handshakes.
11:03We said that palms don't reveal personality.
11:05Do handshakes?
11:06I don't like a feeble handshake.
11:08It gives me the creeps.
11:08No, it's not right.
11:09I don't like a sweaty hand.
11:10That's the worst.
11:11I don't like it when there's something left on your hand.
11:13I have to say.
11:13Residue.
11:15I don't like the other hand coming into class by then.
11:18That's the power thing.
11:19The second thing.
11:19Isn't that a power, like a dominance thing?
11:21Is it?
11:22Mean man.
11:22But when you see people holding hands, the dominant figure, if you see them walking down
11:26the street, the dominant figure is the figure with the hand on the outside.
11:29Hold my hand.
11:31Close your eyes and hold my hand.
11:32Not again.
11:33Don't do it.
11:34This is over in a moment.
11:35Just take my hand.
11:36I'm looking away.
11:37All right.
11:38No, you do it.
11:39You've got to take my hand.
11:42You've let me dominate you.
11:44You've let me dominate you.
11:46You chose.
11:47You chose.
11:47You chose.
11:49I just held my hand.
11:49What do you want?
11:50You want to be submissive or dominant?
11:52I mean, with...
11:53Stop stroking the under...
11:54Who does that?
11:58Who does that?
11:59Oh, that's weird.
12:01He did an inverted crab.
12:01You said you liked it.
12:02You said earlier, you said you liked it.
12:03No, that was an inverted crab.
12:04Oh, God.
12:06Oh, God.
12:06They're having a round.
12:09I've now got two soil...
12:10He did do the tickle.
12:11The crazy spider.
12:12He did do the crazy spider.
12:14Well, no, handshakes do tell us a lot, don't they?
12:16I mean, individually, we instinctively respond as we've just shown to handshakes that
12:20repel us.
12:22Well, Paul Flynn, the Labour MP in Wales, actually suggested that people who gave really strong
12:27handshakes should be charged for assault.
12:30He's not a busy man.
12:32No.
12:33So, anyway, Marcel Proust used a limp handshake because he wanted to conceal the fact that
12:37it was gay and an elaborate kind of double bluff.
12:39Now, I want you to imagine you've been transported to the 19th century and the trip has given you
12:43a banging headache.
12:46You want to have a hole drilled in your head to get rid of the pain and the pressure.
12:51Ah.
12:51So, where's the best place to have it?
12:54Erm...
12:54For trepanning?
12:56Germany?
12:58Oh.
12:59Oh.
13:05Is that the way they can now read my mind these days?
13:08Exactly.
13:08It's amazing.
13:09It's the eighth series, I suppose.
13:10It basically is.
13:12Erm, Germany, you said, no, Germany probably not the best place.
13:15In the top.
13:15They trepan in the top.
13:17Literally, where is the best place to go?
13:18You're in the, it's the 19th century.
13:20Oh.
13:20Should it be Europe?
13:20Should it be America?
13:21So.
13:21Harley Street.
13:22Harley Street is a very bad place to go.
13:24Erm, they would go to...
13:26Margate.
13:27France.
13:28France.
13:28In Africa, they trepan.
13:30Africa, probably a better bet than Harley Street.
13:32Yeah.
13:32But it seems that Papua New Guinea would probably be the best place.
13:35Oh.
13:35In, in the 19th century, if you had this, what's it called again, you used the word?
13:38Trepanning.
13:39Trepanning, yeah.
13:40Seventy-eight percent of those who had it done in, in London and the West died.
13:44From blood poisoning?
13:45But in Papua New Guinea, yes, from cross infections.
13:48Why do people keep going?
13:49That's incredible.
13:49Eight out of ten people died.
13:51Yeah.
13:51I'm up for it.
13:51Yeah.
13:52But it wasn't because they had a hole drilled in their head, it was because they got infected.
13:56What was it for, the trepanning?
13:58Well, to relieve pressure supposedly earlier.
14:01It's one of the, it's the original form of surgery, as far as we know from archaeology.
14:04The oldest form that ever, ever there was.
14:07And, er, we know that it was, well, I wouldn't say successful, but we know that it wasn't
14:11a failure.
14:11There's a way of knowing that it didn't kill people, which is?
14:15Some of them survived.
14:16A little bit of tissue grows.
14:17Yeah, you see the skull has completely re-healed, but you see, because, er, people have lived
14:21for years after, afterwards.
14:22They used to put coins in the hole and things like that.
14:24They used to put stuff, you know, cause you, you're left with a big gaping hole.
14:27You do want to seal it, but.
14:29Yeah, you are.
14:29You could put, like, a dispenser and turn your head into a pace machine.
14:35Just press your ear.
14:36Originally, it was, you'd, in older cultures, you'd clamp the victim's head between your
14:41legs, eh, and you'd just get a stone, a sharp piece of obsidian or flint, and he'd scrape
14:48onto the scalp.
14:49And tip, grooves and grooves.
14:50And you can see this, obviously, in Old Skulls and here.
14:52Yeah, he's not, he's not happy about that.
14:54He's not happy about that.
14:55He's not happy.
14:55But, er, Prince Rupert, nephew of Charles the First.
14:59Oh.
14:59Played by Timothy Dalton in the film.
15:01Oh, now I remember.
15:02Yeah, you see.
15:03Er, yeah, he, he had a trepanning, he had terrible headaches, he had trepanning.
15:06But there was Prince Philip of Nassau in the 1590s.
15:09In 1591 alone, he was trepanned 27 times.
15:13His head would look like a teabag, it was so perfect.
15:15Yeah, his head would look like a colander, frankly, wouldn't it?
15:17Yeah.
15:18But, he didn't kill him.
15:19In fact, he went on later to win a, a drinking competition against someone who, who died from
15:25drinking too much, and he carried on drinking.
15:27So that he, the 27 tripans in one year.
15:29The deer was pouring out of his hair.
15:30Yeah.
15:31It's amazing.
15:32Weird hair.
15:32So, the point is, in New Guinea, they used found sharp things to do the whole, and then
15:37pour coconut milk over it, which is sterile.
15:39Whereas in the 19th century in Britain, they were in hospitals where all kinds of cross-infections
15:43were possible, and er, it was a lot more dangerous for that reason.
15:46But what about, er, do you know about open, er, craniotomies, open, er, open brain surgery,
15:52where someone is conscious?
15:53Why would you want someone to be awake while you're operating?
15:56So you know that they can use their fingers and their senses?
15:58That's right.
15:59So you know you're not, because we still know so little about the brain, that there is every
16:02chance that you're an inch out in where you're operating, and you can ruin a speech centre,
16:07or motion centre, the, er, there's a, a man called Adcock, Eddie Adcock, I think his name was.
16:13He's, he's quite a senior figure in the world of bluegrass music.
16:15He had a, a hand tremor, and they decided to do one of these conscious craniotomies on him,
16:20and we actually have filmed him.
16:21He plays the banjo all the way through the operations, while they're operating on his brain,
16:25to check that they're not interfering with it.
16:27So can we see Mr. Adcock? There he is.
16:29Oh my goodness.
16:30Er, how about now? No problems?
16:33No team? Okay.
16:34Ta ta ta ta ta ta ta ta.
16:42No problem.
16:43Problem. Okay.
16:45That's pretty astonishing, isn't it? Yeah. Excellent.
16:47I saw it in Star Trek. That is mental.
16:49Yeah.
16:50They took Spock's brain clean out.
16:52Yeah.
16:53And replaced it with another one.
16:55Oh yes.
16:55And they did it all.
16:56And he lay on his back, and they put a kind of board over his head, like that.
17:01Oh yes, that's true.
17:01And the man stood behind, going,
17:03The brain's out now, and the new brain's in, and then they took the board up, and his head was
17:08absolutely lying.
17:10But the fact is, Japan is the oldest known form of surgery,
17:14and in the 19th century you're better off having it done in the jungles of Papua New Guinea,
17:17than in the hospitals of London, from holy heads to holy heads.
17:22Now can you tell me where the halo should go on this saint?
17:27Oh.
17:28Can you see that her head is separated from her body?
17:32She's holding it.
17:33It looks like the fellow with the beard's done it by accident.
17:37Do you think he just, he just distinguished it?
17:39Oh God, it's come off!
17:41And the little girl up behind him's going,
17:43I told you, I told you!
17:44She asked, she asked for half a kilo of rock four, and he was clumsy with his cheese cutter.
17:50But it, I'm so sorry.
17:53Does it depend on where we think her soul was?
17:55Well, yeah, it's up to the artist, but it was a really moot point.
17:58Do you put it over?
17:59Was it stop?
17:59Yeah.
18:00Or maybe two?
18:01Could she have two?
18:02That might have been a...
18:02That would have been a diplomatic solution, wouldn't it?
18:05Yeah.
18:05Some artists would do, depicted her with it over the stump, as it were, where her head was,
18:11and others where her head is now, in a sort of ring, an aureole.
18:15There are different names for halos.
18:16Do you know any others?
18:17Nimbus.
18:18Nimbus is a good name.
18:19Glorioli.
18:20Glorioli is one.
18:21Glorioli?
18:22No, Glorioli.
18:22We say Glorioli.
18:24Do we?
18:24It's a shame, because Glorioli is somewhere better, I don't know why.
18:28Glorioli sounds more like a biscuit.
18:30Yes.
18:30Describe the Pope's Glorioli.
18:32Ah.
18:33Ah, now I've seen this as a Catholic, it's something you have to look at.
18:37Yeah.
18:38Some square.
18:38Some do you have square halos, right?
18:41I think Pope Gregory had a square Glorioli.
18:43Oh my goodness.
18:44I wasn't Catholic.
18:45And, yes you're absolutely right, he was the first Pope, Gregory the Great, although many
18:49Greg is obviously, to declare that he should have a Nimbus, he should have a Glorioli.
18:54Glorioli.
18:55Glorioli.
18:55But Glorioli is so much funnier.
18:57Come on.
18:57You're too innocent to know what a Glorioli is.
19:00Oh, I see, that was a rude joke.
19:01Oh.
19:03Sweet.
19:04Sweet boy.
19:05Can you have any shape, Glorioli?
19:06Can you have some square ones?
19:08Yes.
19:09Triangular ones.
19:09Triangular ones, four.
19:11And you've got a triangular Glorioli.
19:12Triangular Glorioli.
19:14Whoa, somebody should have a toge around.
19:16Whoa.
19:16Oh.
19:18Wow.
19:23It's been done, if one's allowed to be a little bit rude, there is a church in Mexico
19:28that people visit to, in order to see the Gloriol of St. Joseph, the father of our Lord,
19:37nominally, where his private part has a little halo above it.
19:42Well, being Jewish, he would have been, had the real halo removed, so I suppose.
19:47The Royal would have come and removed.
19:48The Royal would have taken that halo off.
19:50The Royal would have taken that halo off.
19:50It's known as the Ring of Confidence, is that it?
19:53What?
19:54Extraordinary.
19:55How extraordinary?
19:55Really?
19:56Is that a problem?
19:57It's on his member.
19:59It's on...
19:59Like a sort of angelic Prince Albert.
20:01It's on...
20:04Whatever that may be, possibly.
20:06One would assume that it is a local pre-Christian cult idea.
20:10I mean, for example, in Nigeria, there are parts where it used to be common as a kind
20:14of handshake to touch, in some tribes, to touch the...
20:17Don't do it.
20:18Of the person.
20:20LAUGHTER
20:22I didn't realise that was the possibility, but I'm interested.
20:27So, I'm sure there may well have been some Mayan or Aztec thing in...
20:31I feel I've seen paintings with animals with...
20:34Oh, the oxen in the stall of the Nativity, for example.
20:36That sort of thing.
20:36Or the donkey on which Christ rode into Jerusalem.
20:38Yes.
20:39Donkeys can have them.
20:40Yeah.
20:41Ooh, who's that fellow?
20:42Oh, look.
20:42There we are.
20:43There's another one.
20:44There's a sparkler.
20:44That's Saint Denis, the patron saint of...
20:46There is a sparkler in his head.
20:47There's a sparkler in his head.
20:48He's got a sparkler on his head, as well as a halo on his decapitated head.
20:52Saint Denis, or Saint Denis, is the patron saint of Paris.
20:55Paris, yes.
20:56And indeed headaches.
20:57It's the same fellow going, I've done it again!
20:59Yes, it is!
21:00That seems to be...
21:02It's come clean off!
21:03I told you!
21:04That's the second time this week!
21:06I'm so clumsy!
21:08I can't.
21:08This keeps happening.
21:09I'm just swinging the thing around, not thinking...
21:13He's a clumsy barber, isn't he?
21:15I'll just give a little trick...
21:16Oh, no, oh, sorry.
21:18That's why I've got such a long beard, I don't trust myself to do that.
21:21And there's a member of the Chippendales just looking on.
21:23Yes, exactly.
21:24Which is always nice.
21:25Lovely.
21:26Yeah.
21:26Lovely display.
21:27What's not to like?
21:29Yeah.
21:30So...
21:30Good.
21:31Excellent.
21:31When a saint has his head chopped off, his main worry seems to be knowing where to put his halo.
21:36Now, how would you know if you had a shrunken head?
21:38Ah.
21:39Oh.
21:40I'm going to give you...
21:42I'm going to give you some.
21:43Oh, is it real?
21:44Oh, yeah.
21:45Is it real?
21:46Oh, yeah.
21:47Well, that's my question.
21:48How can you tell whether you have an authentic shrunken head?
21:50You need trouble.
21:51Oh, I see.
21:52Or it's...
21:52How can you tell that you actually have a shrunken head yourself?
21:55Does it come with a certificate?
21:55Oh, that would be easy.
21:57Oh, there.
21:57There we are.
21:58Exactly.
21:58Oh.
21:59Is one of these real?
22:01Well, what do you know about shrunken?
22:03Well...
22:03Where would you get one?
22:04There are some real ones.
22:05Ecuador.
22:06Well, I would say...
22:07Ecuador is exactly right.
22:08This is brilliant.
22:09You're on fire.
22:11That is impressive.
22:12Do you know the name of the tribe or people?
22:15No.
22:15No.
22:15Schwa people.
22:16Schwa.
22:17Schwa people who are a clan.
22:18Yeah.
22:19Of the shrunken heads.
22:20In exactly the area.
22:22The shrunken heads.
22:23Exactly the area.
22:24Oh, look, you put this in the back of your car.
22:26Yay!
22:28So you think this is an early nodding dog?
22:30Yes.
22:31That feels that horse hair or something to me.
22:33Yeah, no, it doesn't feel...
22:35They're still doing it?
22:36Well, no, not officially.
22:38It's against it all.
22:39But in every Ripley's Believe It or Not museum, there's at least one.
22:43It's 29 by our count.
22:45But...
22:45Oh, that's lovely.
22:47How would...
22:47Give me...
22:50Give me a recipe.
22:52How would you do it?
22:53Well, how would you actually...
22:54How would you shrink ahead?
22:56Put it in the washing machine at a very high heat.
22:59Wow!
23:01So, I mean, that is...
23:02It's a normal human hair, but it's...
23:03Well, you've got to take the skull out.
23:04...reduced to the size.
23:04Those are real size.
23:06You'd have to take all the skin off some, wouldn't you?
23:08You take all the skin off in one go, right?
23:10Including the hair.
23:11You throw away the skull and the eyes into a river, if you're right.
23:15So you've got the skin, all right.
23:16You've got the whole skin.
23:18Then you turn it inside out.
23:20Yeah.
23:20Obviously.
23:21And you scrape it.
23:22Nice.
23:22Oh no, it's not.
23:23I didn't invent this.
23:25Yeah.
23:26Then you get it back the right way again, keeping all the features as perfect as you can.
23:29Skinning a rabbit.
23:30Yeah.
23:30Then you bind the lips together.
23:32You sew them together and sew the eyelids.
23:35Yeah.
23:35Yeah.
23:36Right.
23:37Then you pop in hot stones and sand.
23:41Right.
23:42Right.
23:42To give it shade.
23:43I'm making note of this.
23:44To heat it up.
23:45Yeah.
23:45Then you simmer it.
23:47How long do you simmer it for?
23:48Boiling water.
23:50Gas mark too, my darling.
23:51Bay leaf?
23:51Yeah.
23:52Bay leaf.
23:52Always.
23:53You never go wrong now.
23:55And then you kipper it.
23:56You smoke it, essentially.
23:58And voila.
23:59To what purpose?
24:00Well, they're a pretty ferocious group of people, these schwa, and they're the ones who
24:04are famous for...
24:05Oh!
24:05For the man with the molten lava.
24:07Are these the...
24:07Is this the cruel...
24:09The cruelest people in the history of the world.
24:11Well, they're certainly...
24:11I remember the teacher who taught us this.
24:13He was pretty vicious himself.
24:14Right.
24:15And there was a Spanish general who tried to tame these schwa tribes.
24:20And they had the last laugh.
24:22They took him.
24:23They pulled open his mouth.
24:24They poured molten gold down his gullet until his bowels burst.
24:31That's exactly right.
24:32And it sounds like a good repayment for his greed for gold.
24:34Well, that's why they used gold.
24:36Indeed.
24:37And they're also the tribe famous for dipping darts in curare.
24:42Ah.
24:43Beloved of detective writers.
24:45So that's the one that gets your nervous...
24:47Your central nervous system.
24:48Absolutely.
24:48They've got lovely bobble hats.
24:50They're lovely.
24:50It's a good look.
24:52Yours are not human.
24:53They are goat or alpaca.
24:55And these are available in Ecuador as tourist knick-knacks.
24:58Oh, I see.
24:59So that's a goat's face.
25:00Well, at least goat's skin.
25:02And you can usually tell one that's done by either someone imitating the tribesmen is
25:06that the lips are too neatly sewn up.
25:08In the originals, they're really pretty basic.
25:10Yeah.
25:10And is it to preserve relatives or...?
25:14It's a kind of gleeful, joyous, gloating...
25:17I own you.
25:18I've reduced you.
25:18To take the spirit out.
25:19But it's not a compliment.
25:20It's not a...
25:21Oh, no, it isn't.
25:21Gran has gone.
25:22Let's keep it at the end of the bed.
25:23Oh, no, no.
25:24What do you really think about Uncle Bill, Grandpa?
25:26Oh, I've hated him!
25:27Oh, I've always hated him!
25:29If you hand them back, I've got another little experiment for you to do.
25:32Oh, thank you so much.
25:33I've got something else to give you here.
25:35All we want you to do here, I'm going to hand these blank two-pound coins.
25:39Just try and draw the Queen's head as she is on the coin.
25:43The Queen's head on the coin?
25:45Okay.
25:45Is she wearing a crown?
25:46Is she, you know, just an outline?
25:47Which way does she look?
25:50No one knows.
25:51No, no, no.
25:52Don't ask for help!
25:52Don't ask for help!
25:53Don't ask for help!
25:54Alan Davis are going to take points away if you cheat!
25:57How do you think I've got any points?
25:58Ask for help!
26:01Is anyone done?
26:02Yes.
26:03She looks that Lenny Henry of mine, unfortunately.
26:05Well, that's all.
26:07Okay, done.
26:08Okay.
26:09Then Alan's done.
26:10Okay, all of you all hold the mark.
26:12Mine looks like a triceratops.
26:14And let's have a look at yours.
26:15There.
26:16And you're extraordinary.
26:19The point is, you've all, especially Bill, somehow, you've all made the fundamental error
26:25that everybody makes in thinking she faces left.
26:27She faces right.
26:29You've done that.
26:30You say left!
26:31Yeah, because most people think that.
26:33Sorry, it's too late now.
26:3688% of people think the Queen faces left on her coin.
26:3988.
26:40On every coin that ever was stamped since she was Queen, it's always faced the right.
26:46Never, always.
26:47Do they take it in terms?
26:49Yes.
26:49Did her father face the other way?
26:51Yes.
26:51And Prince Charles?
26:52Yes.
26:53Should he be straight on?
26:53He's full on with the ears like that.
26:55The alternate.
26:57They've alternated since Charles II.
26:59But does she not face the other way on the paper money?
27:03No.
27:03On the stamp.
27:04On the stamp.
27:05All right.
27:05That suits one theory.
27:06Whoa!
27:08One theory as to why 88% of people seem to think she faces left is because she does on
27:13the definitive edition of the stamps, which we can see here.
27:16We're all familiar with that image.
27:17But on the other hand, that's true.
27:19In Denmark, Queen Margaret, they also think she faces left.
27:23But on the stamp, she looks out.
27:24And on the coin, she looks to the right.
27:26Wow.
27:26But if you ask a Dane which way she faces on their coins, they will say, as most of us
27:31would, left.
27:32It's something to do probably with right-handedness.
27:34We just picture a profile that way.
27:37It just...
27:37It's really strange.
27:38But it...
27:39Because we handle these things every day.
27:41Hmm.
27:41Unless, Giles, when you have someone to do it for you.
27:44But it is...
27:45It's bizarre that we just don't notice, isn't it?
27:48So that's...
27:49And that's all coins?
27:50All...
27:50All coins with the Queen's head on.
27:51And how long has that been?
27:52Ever since the beginning of time.
27:53She became the throne.
27:54No, no.
27:55It alternates between monarchs.
27:56So her father faced left.
27:58Oh, I see.
28:00And his father, George V, not counting because the abdication was a wrinkle.
28:04But he...
28:05George VI.
28:06So if you could get all the coins of all the monarchs together, alternating monarchs,
28:09and just flick through them, they'd be...
28:12It would.
28:12It would.
28:13It would be like a tennis match.
28:14It would be exhausting.
28:15Yeah.
28:16So, the Queen has always faced to the right on all her British coins in her reign.
28:21And yet, tests have shown that up to 88% of people draw her facing the other way.
28:25Now, what happens if you try and comb a hairy ball?
28:28Ask Bill.
28:30Ask Bill?
28:33Bill, what happens when you try and comb a hairy ball?
28:36Have a hairy ball.
28:38Have a hairy ball.
28:38Let's see.
28:39You have to focus.
28:40There you go.
28:41You have to concentrate and not...
28:42Your hand mustn't slip at any time.
28:45Oh.
28:45You can't do it.
28:47Well, you can sort of, obviously, have a combing action.
28:49Why would you do this?
28:51There you are.
28:51Why are we doing...
28:52Because it's an interesting mathematical topographical...
28:56Look at this.
28:56It's Don King.
28:57Look at that.
28:58Yay!
29:00I just want you to comb it so that it all lies in the same direction perfectly combed.
29:05Oh, I see.
29:05You can't actually...
29:06Keep going round and round.
29:07It keeps going round and round.
29:08You comb a hairy ball.
29:08You can't actually do it.
29:09The point is, there's a mathematical principle.
29:11A trichoglyph is bound to occur, which is like a cowlick, like a crown.
29:16You know when your crown sticks up?
29:17Oh, I see.
29:17When it all goes into one little bit that will stick up like that.
29:19Yeah, like a twirls.
29:21Right.
29:21It's actually like a cyclone.
29:22If it was the earth, it would be a cyclone.
29:25Mine looks like Ann Robinson.
29:27There it is on a man's head.
29:29Yeah.
29:29Oh, I see.
29:30Right, yeah.
29:30So this is a mathematical...
29:32It's a mathematical thing that you can't...
29:33Yeah, on a...
29:34If it was a doughnut or bagel shape, a torus, you could comb it all the way around and facing
29:39the same direction without this twirl.
29:41Right.
29:41But it's because it's a sphere, you have it.
29:43And so, as it were, in theory, every planet, even if it weren't going around, would have
29:46a cyclone in it, which is what that sort of is.
29:48That swirl.
29:48This is why there are no hairy planets.
29:50That's why there are no hairy planets.
29:52It's an impossibility.
29:54Do you have...
29:56Very nice.
29:57Look at that.
29:57Some people have double crowns.
29:58Sometimes, you know, your barber will say, oh, you've got a double crown, sir.
30:01Yeah.
30:02Oh, you've cracked...
30:04Oh, look at that.
30:04Oh, no, Alan.
30:06Let me do some trepanning.
30:08Oh, no.
30:11It's time to do that.
30:14Whoa.
30:16And now, really, to keep thematic, you've got to shrink it.
30:19Yeah.
30:20I've got the recipe if you want it.
30:22Yeah.
30:22She noted it down.
30:23Now, an interesting thing about this cowlick is that on most people...
30:29What do you think?
30:30Clockwise or anticlockwise?
30:31Most men?
30:32Clockwise.
30:32Clockwise, right.
30:33Yeah.
30:35And 88% of men have an anticlockwise one.
30:38But 30% of gay men have an anticlockwise one.
30:41Is that a double bluff?
30:42Proustian style?
30:43No, it's...
30:44It's literally combing it around.
30:45You can't control it.
30:46It's not...
30:46You don't...
30:46It goes one way or it goes the other from birth.
30:49There's no...
30:50You can't...
30:50You can't force it the other way.
30:52And so...
30:52It's almost as if it's a physiological proof, at least of a certain percentage.
30:56Nature as a sign.
30:57So you and your Conservative Party will go,
30:59Oh, no.
31:00We mustn't have lessons in being gay or it'll turn everybody gay.
31:03It's all there in the hand.
31:04But this is why most of my friends have got double crowns.
31:07Because they're Tommy Two-ways.
31:11It explains everything.
31:13Tommy Two-ways.
31:17So, um, the comb-over we covered.
31:19What is that extraordinary about the comb-over?
31:21Oh, look, those are lovely.
31:23Historically, in America, it was patented.
31:27Patent number 4,022,227.
31:30For how to disguise baldness by combing over your hair.
31:33So if anybody, if Robert Robinson...
31:35Yeah.
31:35You are in breach of someone else, you will be sued.
31:38Wow.
31:39Oh, my God.
31:41Wow.
31:41Oh, my God.
31:44Oh.
31:46Yeah.
31:48Oh, yeah.
31:49That is some sexy stuff there.
31:50Can I say, butch and gay.
31:53I'm a Tommy Two-ways.
31:55I can go this way, and I can...
31:58Actually, I can get it to go all the way around.
32:00Oh, you're a Thelma Three-Ways.
32:01I'm a Thelma.
32:04Well...
32:05Oh, you've done it all now.
32:06Oh, that's nice.
32:06Over the year is lovely.
32:07How's that?
32:08Delicate.
32:08Now you can see...
32:14Oh.
32:16There, there, there.
32:17There's constituent for Stonway.
32:22Oh, heavens above.
32:23I'm a Tory of Peter.
32:26And...
32:27Oh.
32:28Oh.
32:28Oh.
32:29Oh.
32:29Oh.
32:30Oh.
32:31Oh.
32:32Oh.
32:32Oh.
32:33Oh.
32:33Oh.
32:33Oh.
32:36Oh.
32:36Oh.
32:37Outmail demon!
32:38Outmail demon!
32:42Fabulous.
32:42That's a terrible curse!
32:46Well, hang the box.
32:49Hang them back.
32:49Oh.
32:49Hang them back.
32:51You are in trouble.
32:52I'm always in trouble.
32:53Yes, you are.
32:54All my life.
32:55Now, what can you tell me about the Chinese hula hoopla?
32:58I know that they do massive demonstrations of it, with thousands of people doing it.
33:03With them!
33:03Ribbons of various kinds and so on, but there was a particular time.
33:05Yeah, what is so famous about the hula hoop in in our culture in
33:101958 1958 tell us about 1958. I got my Davy Crockett hat right and 1958
33:17I got my first hula hoop and that was the year of the the year of the hula hoop and
33:21you should have seen me
33:22I was called dizzy hips Giles. Oh good God
33:26Doing it. Oh, yeah, but the all thing is extraordinary because it was a one-year thing. It was a
33:31huge craze
33:32I mean, you know, we've all remember various toy crazes perhaps and game crazes when when we were younger, but
33:39This one was the mother
33:43Sorry, no this one was the mother of them all
33:47And it the extraordinary thing about it was it disappeared as fast as it came and it was a disaster
33:52My uncle put money into it because it was so big and lost it all
33:57It's a hula hoop the greatest craze in the history of the world was actually
34:02Failed to make any money everyone on the planet owned one and still they lost well particularly the other company
34:07whammo who made them
34:09Maybe the name they have millions. No, it still exists. They were a successful company
34:12That was the one year
34:14They made a loss because despite the fact that millions and millions and millions of people bought a hula hoop
34:19there
34:19They're there
34:21It ended so quickly that stockpiled expecting it to last till Christmas. That is my mother completely ended. There you
34:26are
34:26I suppose because the thing is they're not they don't really wear out do they you know
34:29No, that's true. Once you get one. You don't want another one. But what does wear out is the fun
34:33clearly. And your hips. Yeah
34:35Yeah. Which will degenerate over time. They should have made them out of something else. Something sort of biodegradable made
34:39them out of you know
34:40Cheese or something. Cheese. Cheese, brilliant.
34:42But in China they had a similar fad in in the early 90s millions and millions people yeah, and
34:48Then there was a hysteria because there were three people went to hospital with twisted intestines
34:54They obviously tried to eat them
34:57Thing was lost in translation. The Chinese state media said we should stop hula hooping because of the but actually
35:03you're quite right
35:03It was certainly nothing to do with hula hooping even old dizzy. It was Giles. Do you never twisted your
35:09intestines?
35:09I didn't I have to say it's quite difficult to hula hoop and it's boring. It's not it's nice
35:14But actually you can do it also in your arms. We add three hula hoop. That's a skipping rope. Oh
35:18is it?
35:19You're right here. Well, here we go. Here we go now cut live to the civil party
35:25This is the home of the hula. This is Hawaii. The dance itself called a hula. Yeah, she knows what
35:30she's doing doesn't she?
35:31Yeah, who is a whole celebratory thing you have it? Yeah, who's that guy's having brain surgery playing the guitar?
35:37I do love the band. They're great. Aren't they?
35:40They're thinking this is the best gig ever
35:44Join this band. I've never stopped smiling. Can you suggest a theory as to why the hula was so big
35:50in 58 the hula hoop?
35:52Post-war optimism
35:53Mm-hmm end of rationing or rationing in mid 50s. There's a thought maybe it was the Elvis
35:58Elvis the pelvis. Elvis the pelvis. It made you kind of do things with your hips. Gyrating. It was a
36:02gyrating. And there was the whole Hawaiian thing through him. And the Hawaiian thing that he liked.
36:06Yeah, it was there was he was not allowed to be filmed below the waist or something. Was that was
36:10that true?
36:11On television. Yeah, on the Ed Sullivan show. He was too sexy for the 50s. He was simply too sexy.
36:15Giles has the same thing. He's not actually allowed to display.
36:18Dizzy hips for Andrews. Can't break him out. Can't bust him out on TV. He's actually hula ring right now.
36:23Yeah.
36:24All right, that's actually. Which brings us to the unappealing nether regions of our show. The place that we call
36:31General Ignorance. So hands on horns if you'd be so kind. What should you do with your head if you
36:36have a nosebleed?
36:42You have to answer. I'm doing it. You should do that with your head. Well, pressing your lip. Pressing, you
36:49know, pressing the bit about the nose. No, no.
36:51Because the nose. No. Because the nose, actually not worry. A nosebleed won't harm you.
36:59Okay. You might stain your clothes. You might stain your clothes. But a nosebleed is all right. I mean, you
37:04could lie back.
37:05No. No. No. No. No. No. No.
37:13The point is, most people think you should tilt back.
37:16No, I remember this.
37:17Because, you know, and of course you can get it into lungs if it goes down the wrong path.
37:21And worse than that, this is why I should have remembered this, you lie back, it goes into, but you
37:25could also, you know, have a nosebleed through your eyes.
37:27Oh!
37:28It is possible to have a nosebleed that comes out of these bits.
37:31An eyebleed?
37:32Eyebleed.
37:33Oh, I love an eyebleed.
37:34It's a sort of misdirected nosebleed, wrong to call it an eyebleed.
37:37Because it's coming out from the nose part of it.
37:39Just tilt your head forward from now on.
37:41So the point is, forward's not bad.
37:43Always forward's not bad.
37:44Well, if it lasts for longer than 20 minutes, it is very much recommended to seek medical advice.
37:50And if you've caused it from anything other than the most common causes, which would be...
37:53A bouncy castle.
37:54A bouncy castle?
37:56A classic, yeah.
37:58Inevitable.
37:59Another one is being punched in the face.
38:02Right.
38:02That's one, yeah.
38:03That can bring it up.
38:05Look, there you are.
38:06That would do it.
38:06That would do it.
38:07Can you name them?
38:08I think it's Larry Holmes and...
38:10Spinks, is it?
38:11And the other one.
38:11Ray Mercer.
38:13Merciless Ray Mercer, that is.
38:14Oh, yeah.
38:14Then there are various others.
38:16Blowing your nose too hard.
38:17Picking your nose.
38:18Picking your nose.
38:19Picking your nose.
38:19Picking your nose.
38:19Poking it.
38:20Yeah.
38:20You shouldn't tilt your head back if you have a nose bead.
38:22It can be dangerous.
38:23Tilt your head forwards and pinch your nose, just like that.
38:25Simple as that.
38:26And then eventually, after about 12 minutes or so, it'll clot naturally.
38:29What might happen if you swallow your tongue, Herr Miver?
38:32Yeah.
38:35Nothing.
38:36I don't believe you can swallow your tongue.
38:38Is the right answer.
38:40Absolutely.
38:44That sort of busy-bodied person who comes forward and says lots of hot sweet tea when someone's
38:48fainted or had a seizure and they say, oh, you know, do this and pull the tongue down because
38:52they might swallow it.
38:52It's just nonsense.
38:53You can't swallow your tongue.
38:54It can't be done.
38:55But what do they mean, then, when they say that?
38:56But it might obstruct an airway.
38:58Possibly.
38:59It's very rare.
39:00If you have a bash and you bite it or something, it smells awful.
39:01Oh, you can bite your tongue, yeah.
39:02But you can't swallow it.
39:03You can't.
39:04I mean, there was literally this idea that you could, as it were, it goes backwards and
39:06down your throat and causes you to choke.
39:09That just cannot happen.
39:10And finally, why shouldn't you crack your knuckles?
39:14Oh.
39:15Is there a lasting damage?
39:16Dammit, can you do lasting damage?
39:19Bone.
39:19Oh.
39:20Oh, you just did it.
39:21Oh, no.
39:23Problems.
39:24There's a, there's a, but I think it's an old wives' tale that actually, if you do
39:28that, it causes arthritis.
39:30Because there was a, there was a famous doctor, called Dr Unger, who believed that it did.
39:35And for 50 years, this doctor, every day, cracked the knuckles on his left hand and didn't
39:41on his right.
39:41Well, but the story is that his mother, when he was very young, he cracked the knuckles on
39:46both hands.
39:46And his mother said, you do that, honey, you'll get arthritis.
39:49And, and he thought, well, being, being of a scientific turn of mind already as a child,
39:54he thought, I will, um, yeah, he thought, I will, I will test this by only doing it on
40:00the, on the fingers of my left hand.
40:01I ain't getting no arthritis and I'll show you how.
40:03Exactly.
40:04So he did it on his left hand only.
40:06And, and for 60 years, he, he cracked, and, and, and then he had various tests and there
40:11was no suggestion of arthritis on, on the left hand more than the right.
40:15So you can crack your knuckles.
40:16And he apparently shouted up, you were wrong mother, you were wrong.
40:22Oh.
40:22Well, there we are.
40:22That is indeed the answer.
40:24You can't get arthritis from cracking your knuckles.
40:26At worst, you could end up with a limp handshake.
40:28And goodness knows what impression that'll give people.
40:31Which handily brings us to the heart of the matter.
40:34The scores.
40:35Oh.
40:36Oh.
40:36And the winner who really used his head.
40:40They're two heads.
40:40Because, ladies and gentlemen, we have a tie for first place.
40:45On minus eight, it's Giles and Sue.
40:49Come on.
40:50Go on.
40:51Come on.
40:53Come on.
40:54Come on.
40:54Come on.
40:54Come on.
40:54Come on.
40:54Come on.
40:54Come on.
40:54Come on.
40:58Oh, but missing out on a hair's breadth with minus 12, Bill Bailey.
41:04Hey.
41:05Come on.
41:08Come on.
41:10Come on.
41:10Come on.
41:11On minus 25, Alan Davies.
41:22So, all that's left for me is to thank Sue Giles, Bill, and, of course, Alan.
41:27And I leave you with this.
41:28It's an anatomy lesson.
41:30In order to accustom medical students to the business of getting used to dead human flesh,
41:38an anatomy professor basically said to the class, look, you've got to get used to doing
41:42this.
41:43I would need one of you students to come forward your first year.
41:45He stood in by the body and said, you've got to do what I do.
41:47And he put his finger up the rectum of this dead body, like that, and then just sucked it.
41:54He said, I know, I know, I know, but you've got to learn how to be a doctor.
41:57So, this medical student puts his finger up like that, went like that.
42:01He said, the other thing about being a doctor is you must be observant.
42:04I put my middle finger up the rectum, I've sucked my image.
42:08Thank you and goodbye.
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