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First broadcast 31st January 2015.

More of the best bits from Series L.

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00:02Good evening, good evening, good evening, good evening, good evening, good evening, good evening, welcome to QI, the panel show
00:06where fortune favours the brains. Let's start with a lark. We like to do larks on the L series. I'm
00:12going to show you how your senses can deceive. What you've got here is a perfectly obvious real hand, your
00:20right hand, and a perfectly obvious fake hand, and you've each got a brush.
00:24So all I want you to do is brush each hand sort of simultaneously. And what you should feel, Adam
00:30and Sarah, excruciating pain, is that, yeah, part into the hand, it's a little bit raw. Sarah, scream! We'll come
00:40to that. We'll have just a gentle rubbing. Eventually, this hand will fall off. Eventually, you will feel in the
00:48rubber hand the same sensation you feel in your real hand, which seems extraordinary.
00:53Yeah. But you will. And let me know when you do. Okay. It may not have happened yet.
00:59You have to keep going. I'm sorry. You have to keep going. I'm doing it. I'm keeping going. I'm keeping
01:05going. I'm now starting to feel that this is my hand. That's it. That's what happens. Having trouble discussing. Are
01:10you not, Sarah? No. You're not feeling anything. Keep going, Alan. Oh, oh, oh, that's nice. Yeah. So you can
01:15feel that in the rubber hand? Lower. Yeah, definitely. Lower. Hey, you play your cards right. Am I going to
01:19have the ending with this? You're not feeling anything, Sarah? No. It feels very much like my hand, like a
01:23set of rubber.
01:23Oh, now it does feel like your hand. No, no, not that hand. My hand feels like my hand. Oh,
01:26that would do, yes. My hand has never felt more like it belongs to me.
01:30You're going faster. I think that will help. Okay. Okay, I got it. I got it. It's okay. I got
01:36it. I got it. Faster is better.
01:38So you can. Right. Help me now. It's my hand. It's my hand. It really does feel like it. It's
01:47my hand now. It's bizarre, isn't it? It's genuinely bizarre.
01:51And now you can get out the other brush. What? What?
01:56What's happening? No! No! No! No! That's amazing, isn't it? It is amazing because I didn't believe it was going
02:04to happen. No, you didn't believe it. That's what's so good is you really didn't believe it.
02:08We have borrowed some objects from the world-famous British Optical Association Museum. And you each have, and I'm going
02:17to start with Phil, you have an optical object and I'd like you to tell me what you think it
02:21might be.
02:23Oh, right. Well, it's got a lovely leather surround. Yes. Right, so why would you want to see things this
02:31red?
02:32Yeah. Is that literally rose-tinted glasses? Are you feeling...
02:37Ah, the 80s! The Spartans! The Guardian with a decent head of front!
02:45Oh, Gloria! His crosswords were easy then!
02:49As you can see, they look like flying goggles. Yeah, yeah, they do.
02:51And that's what they are, but they're not for flying. Then they're not flying goggles.
02:55Well, they are for... Don't be picky, he doesn't like that.
02:59They are for pilots. They're for night pilots. It's so they can acclimatise their eyes for darkness.
03:05I would say that, rather, they make everyone you bump into look like a Dutch prostitute.
03:12There is an element of that. Dance for me, Stephen! Dance for me!
03:16OK.
03:20You made me...
03:23All right.
03:25You are a unique individual, if you don't understand.
03:31Why can't I dance without people laughing? I don't understand!
03:34Enjoy! You're like...
03:35I missed that lesson that everybody else went to at school where they were taught how to dance at a
03:39discotheque.
03:43What did lucky old Edward VII use this for?
03:46What did he say?
03:47I say lucky. I mean, it's extraordinary.
03:50Oh, God!
03:51What did he say?
03:52No, quite wrong. He didn't poo on yellow silk.
03:55No, no!
03:57You thought it lifted up?
03:58It was sexual.
03:59It was sexual, of some kind of sex.
04:00It was sexual, yeah.
04:01It's sexual. I'm...
04:03I'm not going to say it on television, frankly. I'll just be in trouble.
04:06Well, no, you weren't.
04:06I mean, it's...
04:07Well, I will a bit.
04:08Yeah.
04:09For what I've got in mind, if I'm...
04:17Anyway, Alan, what have you got that's optical?
04:20It looks like a lot of pair of glasses.
04:22I don't know how it is.
04:23Three...
04:24Put them on and describe what you see.
04:31You won't be surprised to hear that my vision is somewhat obscure.
04:34Yes.
04:37Look at the audience.
04:38They make...
04:38And what do I...
04:39What can you see?
04:40What can you see?
04:41They're kind of like binoculars where you can really see...
04:43Can you see me doing anything?
04:44No.
04:46You're not working, Alan.
04:49Dance.
04:49Dance.
04:52Oh!
04:56And...
04:56They meant to be for peripheral vision, then.
04:58They were designed for drivers...
05:00Who had...
05:03Who had bad eyesight.
05:05And it was to improve their peripheral vision.
05:09But it...
05:10It clearly doesn't work.
05:12I mean, it had no chance of driving in need.
05:14It was like that all the time.
05:22I found a very odd...
05:23I didn't know this was a rule recently.
05:26I always get headaches when I want to talk.
05:27So I thought, well, I may as well just stock up on paracetamol.
05:30Because I go for a couple of nights.
05:31So I try to buy...
05:32Oh, yeah.
05:32About 48 packets of paracetamol.
05:34No, no, no, no, no.
05:35There they are.
05:36There they are.
05:37And...
05:37Well, yeah, I just...
05:38Well, obviously I wasn't going to take them all at once.
05:39But obviously there's a rule.
05:40They didn't know that.
05:41You're only allowed to...
05:42But I just thought to myself...
05:44That's saving no one, is it?
05:45No one's got to that point and gone, oh, can I not?
05:47Oh, I'll stay alive then.
05:48Thank you very much.
05:49I go to a news agent and order a bottle of vodka and they give me a quarter one now.
05:53It's...
05:54Bad things about me.
05:56Although there was a...
05:57There was a moment when the woman embarrassed me in front of a queue of people.
06:00Where she said, I can't sell you that many paracetamol.
06:03And I went, oh, why?
06:04Why is that?
06:04She said, it's in case you kill yourself.
06:06She said those words to me.
06:07And I...
06:08This is my panic.
06:08I went, what?
06:09But...
06:10But there's a load of freezer stuff in there.
06:12Like, that was my absolute...
06:16What?
06:17Yeah.
06:18That was the logic, you know.
06:21If you try there, there's some long life milk.
06:23Why am I going?
06:23Why am I going?
06:24Can they come back?
06:25Can they go waste that?
06:26What?
06:28It's so...
06:29Like Finder's crispy pancakes.
06:31Yeah.
06:32There's an arrow in there.
06:33I've got so much to live for.
06:38Next up is Josh.
06:39What have you got?
06:40They're very fashionable, aren't they?
06:42If I were to tell you that these arts, despite their modern look, they're actually way over
06:47a hundred years old.
06:48They're mid-19th century.
06:50From the open carriage days of railways onwards, because of steam, smuts, so on, people got
06:55really stung in the eyes.
06:57I'm sorry, who's speaking now?
06:58Railway expected.
07:02That makes no sense.
07:05And yet it's funny.
07:07I think I can tell what they do better, Josh, if you dance for me.
07:18Now, what's this?
07:19What's this?
07:19What's this?
07:20What's this?
07:20Pass it down.
07:20Just all you've got to do is have a taste.
07:22It's, I promise you, not poison, despite being green.
07:25It's not wasabi, is it?
07:27Wasabi, isn't it?
07:27Wasabi!
07:30You would be served this if you were to go out around London and go to most Japanese
07:35restaurants, and I would have a taste.
07:38I mean, whoa!
07:39I can't.
07:39Do you find it too hot?
07:40Yeah, I can't even.
07:41My mother thinks tomato and basil soup is too spicy.
07:44Jesus.
07:44Oh!
07:45That's too spicy for me.
07:46What's in that, Aisling?
07:47Salt.
07:47That is as close to a salad as you can get without it being a subbie.
07:51I nearly took a bit of a mouthful of that, you know.
07:54I can't take chilli, but I can take the mustard.
07:56What's in?
07:57Because you said it wasn't.
07:58You said it was not wasabi.
07:59It's not wasabi.
08:00It's not wasabi.
08:01It's not wasabi.
08:02I'll tell you what it is.
08:05I'll tell you what it is.
08:05I'll tell you what it is.
08:05I'll tell you what it is.
08:07I'll tell you what it is.
08:08Jackass, it's QI.
08:12What you're eating there is horseradish.
08:14Now, you may say wasabi is Japanese horseradish, but the wasabi you get sold in British
08:18restaurants is almost always ordinary British horseradish dyed green.
08:23No.
08:24Yes, because real wasabi, although it's related to horseradish, takes two years to mature
08:29and it's very expensive to transport, so it's much easier to use the British stuff,
08:33which grows on railway sidings and is cheap as chips, to use that instead.
08:37You know what, Stephen?
08:38That would have been lovely just if you'd explained it and used some bloody pictures.
08:45Rather than give us some and go, put that in your mouth.
08:48I'm so sorry.
08:50I can hear things like a dog, just.
08:56There's dumb things in me.
08:57This might have been way at home.
08:58I had to become a superhero and all you had to do was give me a bloody spoonful of that.
09:03It's opened.
09:03I can't see it through walls.
09:10It's opened your eustachian tube and your sciences.
09:13It comes from my car.
09:13I'm flying home.
09:35I'm flying home.
09:41I'm flying home.
09:44She
09:49Your wish to escape from my prison camp before we have done a little embroidery, no?
10:00It's more sort of to Kenzie, and isn't it like mrs. Gamp the elderly person
10:06I say so let me see your penis
10:14My Monica likes office more
10:19And now in honor of Victoria QI does only connect
10:28Grace program on television after the key. Yes, does that bring any bells with you?
10:32So could you choose please an Egyptian hieroglyph? Oh my goodness. I've never had the tells it is before obviously
10:37Yeah, yeah, I have Horus. I have Horus. It is you have to find the connection between
10:44these five things first
10:47John F. Kennedy profiles in courage lots of points of course if you get it from one
10:51All right, anybody else is allowed to buzz of course if they think they know and the second one
10:56Schumann theme and variations in e-flat
10:58Hmm
10:59Hmm
10:59Whoa
11:04Patronizing Jack
11:05You can all piss off
11:07What's it got to do with the eye of Horus?
11:09No, that's that's you choose
11:11Have you never watched only connect?
11:15Not a whole one, no
11:16Not a whole one
11:18All you have to do is find what's in common but only connect literally
11:21I think the F stands for his middle name
11:29I don't know about Schumann but if I if I was on a team already connect I'd I'd ask them
11:34is it like the second thing they wrote?
11:36Oh, that's very good
11:37So we're less of the third one because I don't think you get it from two John Prescott Presa
11:44Schumann's nickname is theme and variation
11:46Was that one of the sugar babes lineups?
11:51So I think we'd better have a look at the fourth one fewer points, but this might help
11:55Alcoholics Anonymous and the 12 steps
11:58The last one will give it to you so the last one is only for one point
12:01Okay, hold on now
12:03You can see why I never got to the end of it
12:05No, you've seen the last one and I think
12:08All right, struggle with the buzzer
12:10Are you all high ghostwaters?
12:11Yes
12:11Yes
12:13Yes
12:14Yes
12:17Well done
12:40You've made a happy man feel very old
12:47Christmas trees in America obviously
12:48I have a year-round Christmas tree actually
12:51Well you have a house that is just
12:52It's year-round also
12:54It is bizarre
12:55It is the most bizarre
12:56Extraordinary house
12:57My house is a hundred years old
13:00And in America that's like prehistoric
13:02Wow
13:03So, but Betty Davis lived there
13:05And Robert Armstrong who was in King Kong
13:09And your mother lives there, Debbie Reynolds
13:10We're neighbors now
13:11Yeah, she lives in your garage, let's be honest
13:13I use American pronunciation
13:15Yes
13:17Debbie Reynolds was in Singing in the Rain
13:19She was
13:21She was
13:23Did she never tell you that?
13:25She doesn't come up, no
13:27No
13:28How old was she?
13:29How old was she thinking about it?
13:30She was 19 years old
13:31She was 19 years old
13:31You better stop thinking about it
13:32She was 19 in that film?
13:34Yeah
13:34Yeah, what were you doing when you were 19?
13:36Nothing, that's right
13:37Yes
13:38She says that Gene Kelly rehearsed until her feet bled
13:41Yes, and she also said that Gene Kelly, um, French kissed her and she vomited
13:49During or after?
13:51So romantic
13:51Now, is that part of the film?
13:54No
13:54That's in the blooper reel at the end
13:55Oh
13:55They did not
13:56Donald O'Connor and my mother were not wild about Gene Kelly
14:00No
14:00Oh, wow
14:01I love this, more of this
14:03It's great
14:03Well, apparently he's not a good kisser
14:05And he didn't have a good sense of humour
14:07But was Donald O'Connor nice?
14:08Was Donald O'Connor a nice chance?
14:10Yes
14:10He was great
14:11I love him
14:12What's, uh, what's Chewbacca like?
14:15No, no, no
14:18No, no, no
14:20No, no, no
14:21No, no, no
14:21No, no, no
14:21No, no, no
14:21No, no, no
14:21No, no, no
14:21No, no, no
14:22No, no, no
14:24No, no, no
14:35I have the most delicate from this museum
14:38It's a fan
14:39It's an...
14:40Aventage
14:41Beautiful fan for fanning yourself, obviously
14:44But has a secret lens in the middle
14:48So I can see what you're doing
14:49So it allows people who apparently are fanning themselves
14:52And not taking any notice of anyone else
14:54To have a very...
14:57I'm not going to lie to you
14:59Yeah?
15:00There is a slight different technique when you start looking at me to when you're fanning this
15:04Mmm
15:06You're right, you're only fanning yourself very slowly there
15:11Ow
15:13I think I'm putting these back on
15:15I think I'm putting these back on
15:18It's so mean
15:18You must get this everywhere you go
15:20You're going to get it everywhere
15:20No, I've gotten used to
15:22To, you know
15:22Take a couple of minutes from the Navi computer to calculate the coordinates
15:26Yes
15:27Exactly
15:27That wasn't even my line
15:29We all started saying those things
15:31You still started to say it
15:31That's right
15:32For the jump into hyperspace
15:33And he goes
15:34Hmm
15:38With Harrison Ford where he said he had a problem with the dialogue generally
15:40He said you can write this stuff but you can't say it
15:42You can type it
15:43You can type it
15:44You can type it
15:45Yeah, no, you cannot say
15:47I've placed a couple
15:49I can't say mine
15:50I placed...
15:51No, no
15:52I can't remember
15:53Come on, come on
15:53What is that speech that I did?
15:56Tell me what we've done
15:58We bought 300 nerds
15:59Look back
16:01Oh, I know
16:02I placed information vital to the survival of the rebellion of the memory system of this R2 unit
16:07My father will know how to retrieve it
16:09That's it
16:10Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh
16:17And then there was the syphilis outbreak in the 16th and 18th centuries
16:21Oh, they're the parties over
16:22Yeah
16:24And goat wet nurses were used there
16:26And unfortunately they were used very unkindly because
16:28What's he up to?
16:30No
16:31No
16:31No, you're a goat
16:31Oh, okay
16:32Fair enough
16:33This better be for the baby
16:37I think that's a different bloke that usually does it according to that goat's face
16:41Hang on a minute, that's not the grip I'm using
16:47That's a bit firm
16:51You know what I find out about
16:52I don't have kids
16:53So maybe women in the audience will know
16:55With that, when you're breastfeeding your child
16:57If you're, say, in a supermarket or something like that
17:00And someone else's baby cries
17:02You leak like a spider sense
17:04Yes
17:05Is it not true?
17:06Any women have had...
17:07Yeah, it is
17:07There's a bloke out there going, yep
17:10Where am I?
17:12You always leave me and hear a baby cry
17:13I don't even know why that's funny
17:21Well, if you have you presumably expressed into a pot and given it to the babysitter
17:25That's what happens, isn't it?
17:26Why would the babysitter want some?
17:31There was an ice cream shop
17:33There was an ice cream shop
17:33Shop grasses
17:34That would have been fine
17:35Haven't you solved anything in the fridge?
17:37There was, for a brief time, an ice cream shop, wasn't there?
17:40Here in London
17:40Which sold...
17:42Breast milk ice cream
17:43You saw a very brief time because it's the worst business plan of all time
17:47You're right
17:48You try it once, I think
17:49Like incest or country dancing
17:54Wish that were my own
17:55You've not been to Daven, Stephen
17:59I come from Norfolk, I got it
18:03Well, we have to get rid of this thing now that you're interactive with your audience
18:06So, actually, as you're broadcasting live, you have a screen in front of you
18:10With a Twitter feed on
18:11Oh, God
18:12Not advisable, ladies and gentlemen
18:13No
18:14It's a very good moral and spiritual discipline
18:17Because everything you say is immediately commented on by some regular...
18:21With hashtag Saturday Live or hashtag...
18:23Hashtag smugmeister twat vicar
18:25I swear there is someone who does hashtag smugmeister and another one hashtag twat vicar
18:34Oh, that's horrible
18:36Oh, Richard, that's so unfair
18:37And it's my mother
18:38I think...
18:45The final history, what's he called?
18:47Herodotus
18:47Herodotus
18:48Because it must have been a lot easier when he was around
18:49I'm not having a go at him
18:50No, it's a very fair point
18:51But less things have happened back then
18:53Fewer things
18:54Yes
18:54I think we do
18:58Common usage
18:59Common usage
18:59Common usage
19:00It's so like being back at school, it's unbelievable
19:05Apparently you can say less or less if you want to now
19:08Apparently you can just say what you like these days
19:10You can literally say less if you want to
19:12Apparently you're not allowed to scream idiot at people
19:15And they say what was the point in getting an education at all?
19:19I know how to use the apostrophe
19:21Apparently now it doesn't matter
19:25Well, there you are
19:32I want the time it took me to learn that back
19:37You need to be less bothered about this or fewer bothered
19:41You need to be fewer bothered about this by today
19:43Just let it go
19:44Be fewer upset
19:47The new fence is a quantum locking levitation lark
19:50And to help me tonight we have Professor Andrew Boothroyd
19:53Of the physics department of Oxford University
19:55Hello Andrew
19:58So what have we got here?
20:00Andrew?
20:01We've got here a piece of ordinary looking black ceramic
20:04Which when we cool it down to very low temperatures
20:07Acquires a very extraordinary property
20:09Okay
20:09So if you'd just like to cool it down with liquid nitrogen
20:11I shall baste it with liquid nitrogen
20:13Oh, that works
20:16There we are
20:16And we have a second one over here
20:18Alright, I'll cool that as well
20:21This is like the beginning of every pop video in the 80s
20:25Tell me what's particular about this
20:26It loses all its resistance, its electrical resistance
20:28And becomes what's known as a superconductor
20:30Ah, yeah
20:30And the other thing is that it acquires the property that it can bend magnetic field lines
20:35Alright, so let's pick it up and pop it
20:38Whoops
20:41There it goes
20:43Ohhhh
20:44Cool
20:44Yeah, it's pretty good isn't it
20:45Literally
20:47And you can
20:48That makes no effect
20:48Wow
20:48And you can just give it a tip
20:50Oh that's very strange
20:53Yeah
20:53And as it warms up it'll slowly sink
20:56Oh wow
20:57There you go
20:58Is this what you do most days at the Oxford University?
21:02Almost every day
21:03Not a bad old job
21:05Well
21:05This one here
21:06Is very exciting
21:07Erm
21:08And now it's nice and slidey
21:10Oh wow
21:11But erm, look at this
21:15Oh
21:15And what's happening there?
21:16What's making it?
21:17It's the magnetic field isn't it?
21:18It's interrupted by this sort of conductivity
21:20It's not like a normal magnet
21:22Because a normal magnet would repel
21:23When it's up that way
21:24And then it would just fall off
21:25Yeah
21:26So this is both propelling and attracting at the same time
21:28I'll give it one more little go
21:29And then we can try it on
21:31On the track
21:32I thought you were going to say it
21:33And then we can try it on Alan
21:35No
21:37So I down in a bucket of nitrogen
21:40There we go
21:41Pop it there
21:43Oh wow
21:45Fantastic
21:45Round it goes
21:46That's amazing
21:47Isn't it good?
21:48It looks like
21:49Can someone pass the satellite?
21:51And it's got a steam train
21:51It could go the other way
21:52We could put the wrong type of leaf on the track
21:59And is this going to get us to Mars?
22:01That's the main question
22:01Well
22:02What do you think Andrew?
22:02Are there any practical applications we can think of?
22:05Well you could use it as a piece of transport like that
22:07But it's quite expensive because of the cost of cooling the nitrogen
22:09Oh right, so it's not efficient
22:11But if we could find a superconductor that worked at room temperature
22:15Then it would be viable
22:16Right
22:17Are you working on that?
22:18We are yes indeed
22:19Yes ma'am
22:19I trust you
22:20I know that
22:21I'm just playing with this all the time
22:23That's what I am
22:24I know
22:25Isn't it gorgeous?
22:26So you'd think it would almost be like a maglev train
22:28You know one of those
22:28What it would be like
22:30There we go again
22:30Oh my god
22:31I love that
22:31And this of course can go on here as well
22:33That's my favourite one
22:35That actually
22:36Boing
22:39Unfortunately this one is less insulated and it will probably get
22:42Oh
22:43It's doing pretty well
22:45Oh my god that's coming for me
22:48Cool
22:49Oh
22:50Oh there you go
22:51That would be like the best Christmas present in the world
22:53Yeah
22:54So you need
22:55What is the magnet made of?
22:56It's rather exciting names
22:57Boron and
22:58The magnet is made of neodymium, iron and boron
23:00And that's what the track is
23:01Neodymium
23:01Neodymium and iron and boron
23:03Wonderful
23:03Very good elements
23:04It's made of gadolinium, barium, copper and oxygen
23:07But you can just use sticky bag plastic
23:10In a fairly liquid bottle
23:14What's the six million dollar man?
23:16When Steve Austin
23:17Yes
23:18It costs a lot more now
23:19Six million
23:19Oh
23:20Steve Austin got a bionic eye
23:22Lee Majors
23:23Yes
23:23And all they gave him really was a zoom facility
23:26Yes
23:27Exactly
23:27So you could see things further away
23:29Yeah
23:29That was pretty feeble
23:31Because we were giving him about eight extra cones
23:33You could run it
23:34That's true
23:34And he would have seen so much
23:36But how could they have shown that to us?
23:37X-rays
23:38Now we have the Instagram eye
23:39And you can make it all sepia and older
23:42Yeah
23:42But in our eyes we still only have three cones to watch him seeing something
23:46So it would still look...
23:48Extremely good point
23:48He would have needed a side kick to say
23:51But what can you see?
23:52Oh yeah
23:52I can see ultraviolet light
23:54Which is where the villainous have revealed how it is
23:57Let me run over there fast
23:59And also, while we're on the subject of the bionic man
24:01He had one leg
24:03Yes
24:03That was really good
24:04And yet they showed him running at 70
24:06When the reality was
24:08He would have been hopping at 70
24:10Because the other leg would have just been destroyed
24:12By the speed at which biomechanically he would have been unable to cope
24:16Yes
24:17It would have ruined my childhood
24:18They would have been better off if they had taken off both legs
24:21Yeah
24:21Giving him two bionic legs
24:23Giving him wheels
24:23And the sex would have been amazing
24:29Bionic sex
24:30Well there was the bionic woman, Lindsay Wagner, and she had ears
24:33Oh yeah, she could hear anything
24:34Lee Majors, Lindsay Wagner
24:35You can't...
24:36Well before anybody in the audience was born
24:37Fictional people
24:38Yes, they were totally mediapy
24:40Yes, good
24:40Yeah, and like...
24:42Before your time as well
24:42Oh God, we feel so old, don't we?
24:44Yeah, but it was great
24:45In Mars, yeah
24:46It was perfect
24:47We could go to university for free
24:58I've got some liquid lard
24:59I've got some liquid here
25:00In the form of our very own QI water, as you can see
25:04And what I'm going to do is pour some...
25:06I'm going to not use the sport
25:07Oh God, I can't open it
25:08I'm going to use the sporty bit
25:09There we go
25:11That's as much exercise as you get, is it?
25:14Oh!
25:15So what we do is we flatten this card on it
25:19And we turn it upside down
25:21And I want you to try and do this if you can
25:23And...
25:23Oh God, please work, please work, please work
25:25Please work, please work
25:26There
25:27Holds up
25:31So you should...
25:32You should be able to try that
25:36Terrific
25:37Terrific fun
25:38Yeah
25:39This could not possibly...
25:40No, no, try it
25:41I've got one and on
25:44You've just...
25:45You've just turned...
25:46Yay!
25:59Yay!
26:03Yay!
26:04And do you know...
26:05There's something really extraordinary about this
26:07Watch
26:08This should work
26:09Oh, leave it out
26:12Shut up
26:14Shut the puns off
26:18You're actually made of magic
26:21You're like that, is it?
26:22Let's have a look
26:22Oh!
26:23Oh!
26:24Oh!
26:26Oh!
26:28Oh!
26:30Oh!
26:33Hang on a second
26:34Oh!
26:35Oh!
26:35Oh!
26:35Oh!
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