QI (D series)
QI Series D | |
---|---|
No. of episodes | 13 |
Release | |
Original network | BBC |
Original release | 29 September – 15 December 2006 |
Season chronology |
This is a list of episodes of QI, the BBC comedy panel game television show hosted by Stephen Fry.
The first series started on 11 September 2003. Although not mentioned at the time, all of the questions (with the exception of the final "general ignorance" round) were on subjects beginning with "a" (such as "arthropods", "Alans" and "astronomy"). The following six series continued the theme: the second series' subjects all began with "b", and so on.
The dates in the lists are those of the BBC Two broadcasts. The episodes were also broadcast on BBC Four, generally a week earlier (as soon as one episode finished on BBC Two, the next was shown on BBC Four). Aside from Alan Davies and not adding clip shows, there are six guests that have appeared in ten or more episodes (out of 61), they are Jo Brand (18), Rich Hall (16), Phill Jupitus (16), Bill Bailey (15), Sean Lock (14) and Clive Anderson (10). Excluding the Pilot there have been a total of 51 different guest panellists in the four series to date. The fifth series began to air on BBC Two on 21 September 2007.
D Series (2006)
Series D was the first in QI's history where each and every edition had a specific theme and official title attached to it from the start. The majority of episodes also contained at least one QI debutant. Ronni Ancona, Vic Reeves and Liza Tarbuck made their first appearances while Rory Bremner, Julian Clary, Graeme Garden, Jessica Hynes, Roger McGough, Neil Mullarkey, Andy Parsons, Jonathan Ross and Johnny Vaughan all made what have so far been their only appearances (as of the series H recordings).
This series contained a few other notable firsts. One was the first victory of an episode by "the audience", while another was the first recording (broadcast episode 10) where Alan Davies was not present. This was also the first season longer than the original regular length of 12 episodes.
Episode 1 "Danger"
- Broadcast dates
- 29 September 2006 (BBC Two)
- Panellists
- Alan Davies (-19 points)
- Jo Brand (Winner with 7 points) 11th appearance
- Jimmy Carr (0 points) 4th appearance
- Sean Lock (4 points) 9th appearance
- Buzzers
- Sean — A lion roaring
- Jimmy — A train whistling
- Jo — "Vehicle reversing, vehicle reversing"
- Alan — A mosquito
- Topics
- Odds of very unusual accidents:
- 1 in 48 million — Being burned alive whilst you sleep.
- 1 in 30 million — Being murdered.
- 1 in 120 million — Choking to death.
- 1 in 20 billion — Death by tea cosy.
- 1 in 257,000 — Dying today.
- According to the United Nations, you are three times as likely to die at work than you are at war.
- Tangent: Sean was once arrested for knocking a security guard's hat off.
- Lumberjacks have the most dangerous jobs in America.
- The most dangerous job in the world is said to be an Alaskan crab fisherman.
- The most dangerous military stratagem was organised by King Goujian of Yue in 496 BC. Convicted criminals were in the front line of his army and were forced to cut off their own heads.
- Tangent: If you cut off the legs of a duck, it can still swim.
- Tangent: A story from the French Revolution says that two decapitated heads were put in the same basket, and one head bit the other so hard that they could not be separated.
- The most dangerous sport in the world is flying kites in Pakistan (the most dangerous country in the world) during Basant. You have to sever kite strings filled with glass and metal shards. It can only be played for 15 days of the year.
- Tangent: The biggest kite in the world weighs nearly a tonne, measures 40 feet (12 m) by 36 feet (11 m), has to be flown by 50 people, and has 200 strings.
- The most dangerous manager was Harry Colcord, manager of tightrope walker Charles Blondin.
- The first person to go over Niagara Falls in a barrel was Annie Edson Taylor.
- Tangent: The 3rd person to go down Niagara Falls was a British man called Charles Stephens. He tied his legs to an anvil as he went down. All that was found of him was a severed arm inside the barrel, which had a tattoo which read, "Forget me not, Annie".
- Tangent: A pirate ship filled with animals was sent over Niagara Falls, only two geese lived. Two bears crawled out, and were shot.
- The most dangerous sporting activity for women is cheerleading.
- Tangent: George W. Bush is the most famous cheerleader in America.
- Bungee jumping is a British invention.
- Tangent: You can get a detached retina from bungee jumping. You can also get detached breast tissue if you bungee jump naked.
- Tangent: The Darwin Awards.
- General Ignorance
- Poor air quality causes deep vein thrombosis on aeroplanes. (Forfeit: Sitting Down For Too Long)
- You should get 4-7 hours of sleep every night.
- Seismologists use the Moment magnitude scale (MMS) to measure the size of earthquakes. (Forfeit: The Richter Scale)
- The most dangerous earthquake in America since European settlement was in either New Madrid, Missouri (1811–1812) or Prince William Sound, Alaska (1964). (Forfeit: San Francisco 1906)
- Tangent: 3,000 white people died in the San Francisco quake, the Chinese dead weren't counted.
- Tangent: People during the 1906 earthquake in San Francisco decided to set fire to their houses, because they were insured against fire, but not against earthquakes.
- Tangent: Policemen were told to shoot 3 men who were trapped at the top of the Windsor Hotel. It was watched by 5,000 people. Someone else asked to be killed in a fire and the police took his name and address and shot him in the head.
Episode 2 "Discoveries"
- Broadcast dates
- 29 September 2006 (BBC Four)
- 6 October 2006 (BBC Two)
- Panellists
- Alan Davies (0 points)
- Clive Anderson (-7 points) 7th appearance
- Vic Reeves (Winner with 16 points) 1st appearance
- Arthur Smith (-23 points) 3rd appearance
- Buzzers
- Clive — "Man Your Battle Stations!"
- Arthur — A foghorn
- Vic — The Blue Peter theme
- Alan — A ship's cat
- Theme
- Each contestant has an unusual patent that has been registered at the United States Patent and Trademark Office and they had to work out what it was.
- Alan: Santa Claus Detector.
- Clive: Brassiere Having Integrated Inflatable Bladders For The Holding Of Comestible Liquids
- Arthur: Three-Tiered Comb-Over To Conceal Partial Baldness
- Vic: Fresh-Air Breathing Device & Method (Toilet Snorkel)
- Topics
- It rains the most on Saturdays, because of industrial activities over the week cause a seven day dust cycle.
- Tangent: Babylonians first developed the seven day week.
- The link between gelignite (invented by Alfred Nobel), saccharin, and the rings of Uranus is that they were all serendipitous discoveries. Caffeine, Silly Putty, Viagra, the Post-it note, penicillin, and the Americas were also serendipitous discoveries.
- Charles Darwin suffered from Chagas disease. Millions of South Americans also suffer from it. It was discovered by Carlos Chagas and is the only disease entirely described by one single researcher. (Forfeit: I Did)
- Darwin couldn't describe brown owls because he thought they were indescribable as a food. He was seen as a poor student who couldn't spell. He was a member of the Glutton society of Cambridge and ate animals such as the Brown Owl. (Forfeit: Girl Guides)
- Tangent: Many zoologists participate in a Phylum Feast on Darwin's birthday (12 February) where they eat as many different species as possible.
- Tangent: Disgusting foods: you drink the blood of the cobra when eating its beating heart (a delicacy in China); this lead Alan to talk about eating ear wax.
- William Dampier was the first Englishman to set foot in Australia and invented the "wind over current" map. His A New Voyage Around the World was carried around by sailors for 100 years. He influenced the books Robinson Crusoe and Gulliver's Travels. He also introduced the words serrated, nor'wester, sea-breezes, caress, rambling, sea-lion, kumquat and excursion into the English language.
- Jules Leotard's clothing invention, which he called the "maillot", was renamed after him when he died. He also invented the Flying Trapeze.
- Kangaroos do not pass wind, possibly because of various forms of bacteria in their stomach.
- General Ignorance
- Queen Victoria wore a bustle that played the music of God Save the Queen to mask the sound of her flatulence. (Forfeit: We Are Not Amused)
- The "twit twoo" is created by two Brown owls, the female goes "twit" and the male "twoo". (Forfeit: (One) Brown Owl)
- Fernville Lord Digby was the name of the most famous Dulux dog.
- Tangent: Old English Sheepdogs are now referred to as "Dulux dogs". They have done more to popularise the dog, rather than the paint.
Episode 3 "Dogs"
- Broadcast dates
- 6 October 2006 (BBC Four)
- 13 October 2006 (BBC Two)
- Panellists
- Alan Davies (-36 points)
- Jeremy Clarkson (-13 points) 4th appearance
- Neil Mullarkey (Winner with -5 points) 1st and only appearance
- Liza Tarbuck (-8 points) 1st appearance
- Buzzers
- Neil, Liza & Jeremy — Dogs barking.
- Alan — A dog barking the tune to (How Much Is) That Doggie in the Window?
- Topics
- Dogs are much more varied than cats, and more varied than any other species.
- When mating, dogs start in the Doggy position, then they turn so their backsides face each other, with the penis locked inside the vagina. The panel tried to demonstrate their answers using toy dogs. Alan was given a Scottie in tartan and a large Old English Sheepdog.
- Tangent: Jeremy owns a labradoodle, the same kind of dog as Graham Norton. There is a type of dog called a Yorkiepoo, a cross between a Yorkshire terrier and a poodle.
- The most interesting thing dogs can smell is cancer. (Forfeits: Bottoms, Bollocks)
- Dogs from Liverpool and Scotland have different accents.
- The only kind of dog that lays eggs is a dogfish.
- Tangent: Sharks do not have to keep on moving in order to stay alive, though they do need water flowing through their gills.
- Tangent: The largest egg in the world was laid by a whale shark.
- Tangent: The German for "Dog" is "Hund" as in the English word "Hound." No-one knows where the word "Dog" comes from. "Dogger" is said to come from a Dutch word meaning "A type of ship."
- Fisher comes before German Bight in the Shipping Forecast. (Forfeit: German Bark)
- Tangent: The area before Fisher is Dogger. Viking is always the first to be read out. Alan used to call the shipping forecast the "Chicken forecast" because that is what it sounded like when he was a kid.
- Puffin Island and Bird Island in the Seychelles are islands named after birds. (Forfeit: Canary Islands)
- The Canary Islands are named after dogs, and canaries are named after the island.
- Tangent: There is a sport called Canary Wrestling, similar to sumo.
- On the island of La Gomera, people communicate by whistling in Spanish known as Silbo Gomero language.
- Tangent: La Palma has a volcano on it, which could cause a tsunami that could wipe out the Eastern American seaboard if it erupted.
- There is a martial art called Dog Kung Fu, mainly practised by women, and invented by a Chinese nun. It is so called because you fight on all-fours.
- The Hurricane won the Battle of Britain. (Forfeit: Spitfire)
- Tangent: The first two planes shot down by Spitfires in World War II were Hurricanes.
- Dogfights first started in World War I, but when they first fought, they had no guns, so they threw bricks at each other.
- Tangent: Jeremy's favourite VC winner is Ferdinand West, a pilot from World War I. World War I pilots often had diarrhoea because bearings were lubricated with castor oil.
- General Ignorance
- Gorillas sleep in nests. They make a new nest every day, even if there is nothing wrong with it. The scientific name for Gorilla is Gorilla gorilla. This is known as a tautonym. The same is true of Bison and Iguana.
- The scientific name for a rat is Rattus rattus.
- The scientific name for a Golden Oriole is Oriolus oriolus.
- The scientific name for a Whooper Swan is Cygnus cygnus.
- The scientific name for a Manx Shearwater is Puffinus puffinus. The puffin's scientific name is Fratercula arctica. (Forfeit: Puffin)
- Tangent: A Manx Shearwater in Cokeland Island, Northern Ireland was tagged as an adult (at least 5 years old) in July 1953 and was re-captured in July 2003, making it at least 55 years old, making it the oldest bird in the world.
Episode 4 "Dictionaries"
- Broadcast dates
- 13 October 2006 (BBC Four)
- 20 October 2006 (BBC Two)
- Panellists
- Alan Davies (-7 points)
- Ronni Ancona (Winner with 13 points) 1st appearance
- Rory Bremner (-7 points) 1st and only appearance
- Phill Jupitus (-7 points) 8th appearance
- Buzzers
- Ronni — A note in the key of A
- Rory — A note in the key of B
- Phill — A note in the key of C
- Alan — A man going "Do-di-do-di-do".
- Topics
- Dictionary writers like to start at the letter "M". (Forfeit: A)
- A 3 volume book about Didcot contains The Long Years of Obscurity as its first volume.
- Tangent: Alan was once performing at a concert with Phil Collins, who was singing a song called "Where's My Hat?" and he was wearing a hat throughout. (However, the song is actually called 'Wear My Hat', a song from Collins' 1996 Dance into the Light album.)
- Tangent: Didcot Power Station was the third worst eyesore in the UK according to a poll by "Country Life". Number one was Wind farms.
- Tangent: Didcot has the second oldest yew tree in the country. It's 1,600 years old.
- The Bubi people of Bioko, Equatorial Guinea cannot talk in the dark, as their language is mostly gesture. They cannot see what they are saying.
- Tangent: Ronni's impression of Mary Kingsley.
- Tangent: Diana Mosley and her liking of Adolf Hitler.
- Prince Charles owns Dartmoor Prison, because he is the occupier of the Duchy of Cornwall.
- Tangent: Stephen's time in prison.
- Tangent: If a clergyman is knighted, the Queen doesn't use a sword.
- Tangent: The last public degradation in Britain happened in 1621 to Sir Francis Mitchell.
- A raindrop is spherical. (Forfeit: Pear-Shaped)
- The world's biggest drip is a stalactite in the Gruta Rei do Mato, Brazil.
- The world's biggest crashing bore is a tidal bore in China on the Qiantang River.
- The biggest thing in the Solar System that can float in water, with the exception of the Sun is Saturn.
- General Ignorance
- There are less than a three-quarters of plants than we first thought.
- There were several different countries fighting in the Battle of Culloden. There were more Scots fighting against Bonnie Prince Charlie than were fighting for him.
- Tangent: Scottish schools omit everything about the History of England, with the exception of the Battle of Bannockburn.
- Tangent: The English soldiers were called "Tommy lobsters". The Battle of Culloden was the first battle to use bayonets.
Episode 5 "Death" (Halloween Special)
- Broadcast dates
- 20 October 2006 (BBC Four)
- 27 October 2006 (BBC Two)
- Panellists
- Alan Davies (-15 points)
- Clive Anderson (-24 points) 8th appearance
- Sean Lock (-8 points) 10th appearance
- Andy Parsons (Technical Winner with 0 points) 1st and only appearance
- The Audience (Winner with 2 points) First victory
(Despite the audience being announced as the winner, Alan Davies was announced as having come third, suggesting that the audience's victory was in fact unofficial. In this case, Parsons was the winner and thus the fourth debuting contest in succession to win.)
- Buzzers
- Clive — The Twilight Zone theme
- Sean — Creaking door and evil laugh
- Andy — Psycho shower-scene-esque instrumental
- Alan — Monty Python's Always Look on the Bright Side of Life
- Theme
- The chairman and all the panellists are dressed in black.
- There is a coffin in the centre of the set, replacing the "i" inside the "Qi" magnifying glass.
- The forfeits on the wallscreens are coloured green as opposed to the normal white.
- Topics
- The bubonic plague was caused by marmots.
- British doctors treat depression more than any other illness - 3.1 million people every year. (Forfeits: Cancer, Flu)
- Tangent: A man with manic depression took apart his car during the manic phase, labelling every part, then got his depressive mood swing and lost all interest, just throwing all the parts around and ruining the project.
- Tangent: Exercise and swimming with dolphins is proven to help with people who have depression.
- The saddest song ever is "Gloomy Sunday" sung by Billie Holiday, also known as the "Hungarian Suicide Song". The song was originally written by Rezső Seress, who broke up with his girlfriend. After the song became popular, they got together briefly but then she committed suicide by poisoning herself and left only a two-word suicide note that said simply "Gloomy Sunday".
- Tangent: People committing suicide by throwing themselves off Beachy Head.
- Killer Mushroom Roulette: The panel have to pick out which of four types of mushroom is safe to eat, out of the Death Cap, Peppery Milk Cap, the Destroying angel and the Trumpet Of Death. The Trumpet Of Death is safe. Out of the 3,500 mushrooms in Britain, 100 are poisonous, only 15 are fatal, and the last death-by-mushroom is too long ago to care. Update: While correct at the time of broadcast, a recent death-by-mushroom in Britain occurred in 2008. A woman in her 20s died on the Isle of Wight after eating Death Cap mushrooms.
- The Nazis used Trumpets of Jericho. They were the Junkers Ju 87, otherwise known as the Stukas. According to archaeologists, Jericho had no city walls. (Forfeit: Destroying City Walls)
- Tangent: Stephen's dislike of the United States Army, mainly generals wearing sunglasses.
- Tangent: Alan tells how a general once tried to get through to young troops by quoting MC Hammer.
- Extremophiles are the only things that lives in the Dead Sea. The Dead Sea is the lowest place on Earth. People can't turn around in the Dead Sea if they are the wrong way round and could drown.
- Tangent: Out of the 250 drownings in the UK each year, one-third are intentional.
- Lemmings do not commit suicide by jumping off cliffs. The myth was first noted in a children's encyclopedia in 1908. (Forfeit: Myth Invented by Disney)
- General Ignorance
- There is no curse of Tutankhamun. (Forfeit: Death To All Who Enter Here)
- Only five people died in the Great Fire of London. The then-Lord Mayor of London, Thomas Bloodworth went back to bed on the first night of the fire, because he claimed "a woman could piss it out".
- Tangent: The original Great Fire of London in 1212 killed more than 3,000 people.
- Ring a Ring O'Roses dates to 1881 in North America. (Forfeit: The Plague)
- Tangent: Not saying "Bless you", when you sneeze.
- Edward de Bono (who invented lateral thinking) suggested using marmite to solve the Middle-East conflict, as it boosts zinc levels.
Episode 6 "Drinks"
- Broadcast dates
- 27 October 2006 (BBC Four)
- 3 November 2006 (BBC Two)
- Panellists
- Alan Davies (Winner with 10 points!) 2nd win
- Jimmy Carr (2 points) 5th appearance
- Phill Jupitus (-15 points) 9th appearance
- John Sessions (-3 points) 7th appearance
- Buzzers
- John, Jimmy & Phill — Various bells
- Alan — Does not work. After Alan presses it to no effect seven times, Air on the G String plays, but not from the buzzer, which has not lit up (a reference to the famous long-running ad campaign for Hamlet Cigars)
- Theme
- The show is based around an old-time Pub theme, with various of the questions and decorations referencing classic British pub culture, games, etc.
- There is a drinks rack behind Stephen Fry, including a keg of Watney's Red Barrel, and a Dartboard taking up the centre of the main background.
- Every panellist has a drink — Alan Davies has a martini, the other three have pints of lager.
- Topics
- A House sparrow knocked over 23,000 dominoes in Holland. After they tried to capture the sparrow, a man shot it and was fined €200. The sparrow was stuffed and shown at a display during 2006. (See Domino Day 2005 sparrow.)
- Tangent: John's problem with birds in his house.
- You are not allowed to drink whilst playing darts. It was caused by a sketch from Not the Nine O'Clock News which featured darts players drinking heavily, and it ruined the view of the game, so drinking was banned. You are also not allowed to wear a hat, unless you are a Sikh.
- Tangent: Darts commentator Sid Waddell's odd quotes.
- The connection between Oscar Wilde, Ernest Hemingway, Picasso, Van Gogh, Toulouse-Lautrec, Degas, Manet, Strindberg, Baudelaire, Rimbaud, Verlaine and Kylie Minogue is Absinthe.
- Tangent: Absinthe was banned in Belgium in 1905, Switzerland in 1912 and France in 1915 due to wormwood being poisonous. It was re-legalised in 1926 after they removed the wormwood. It has never been banned in Britain because it was never popular.
- The Great Binge (1870–1914) is a period in history given by social historians, due to Absinthe in Europe and other dangerous drugs such as heroin being commercially available. Heroin is a brand name.
- The Vomit Comet is used to train astronauts.
- The Great Stink occurred in 1858 when Parliament was trying to be held, but the smell of faeces was so bad they had to stop. (Forfeit: He Who Smelt It, Dealt It)
- Tangent: The great-great-grandson of Joseph Bazalgette, who created London's sewage system after "The Great Stink", now runs Endemol.
- Burnley miners' club drinks more Bénédictine than any other single outlet in the world.
- DORA banned invisible ink and binoculars. It also brought in the Licensing laws and British Summer Time.
- Tangent: During World War II, Veronica Lake was forced to get her hair cut. She previously had her hair combed over one eye, and many women copied this style. However, the women then worked in munitions factories, and their hair got caught in the machinery.
- General Ignorance
- A vomitorium is a passage situated below or behind a tier of seats in an amphitheatre, through which the crowds could "spew out" at the end of a show.
- The single largest man-made structure on the planet is the Fresh Kills Landfill in Staten Island. (Forfeit: The Great Wall of China)
- You should not drink seawater if you are dehydrated. (Forfeit: Alcohol)
- Alcohol does not kill brain cells.
- Tangent: Beer goggles.
Episode 7 "Differences"
- Broadcast dates
- 3 November 2006 (BBC Four)
- 10 November 2006 (BBC Two)
- Panellists
- Alan Davies (-144 points)
- Jo Brand (-16 points) 12th appearance
- Julian Clary (-8 points) 1st and only appearance
- Dara Ó Briain (Winner with 3 points) 3rd appearance
- Buzzers
- Dara — Jazzy bass guitar riff
- Julian — Jazzy cymbal rhythm
- Jo — Single electric guitar chord
- Alan — Jazzy piano bit (first buzz only - then Chopsticks)
- Topics
- The main difference between men and women is the chromosomes. Women have two X chromosomes, but men have one X and one Y chromosome.
- Tangent: Women have twice as many pain receptors on their skin as men.
- Alcohol has a greater effect on men. In the long run, women are more likely to have alcohol-related brain and liver damage. (Forfeit: Women)
- Tangent: On Alan's 30th birthday, he was so drunk, he forgot that people had been distributing sparklers throughout the house. Photographs showed he was even holding one.
- Women get colder quicker, in order to keep the vital organs warm.
- Tangent: The average height of an eskimo is 5' 4". The average life expectancy of an eskimo is 39 years old.
- Tangent: The entire eskimo population would fit into the Los Angeles International Airport car park, if you put 5 eskimos in a car.
- Tangent: Inuit throat singing, and Alan's impression of Andy Kershaw.
- You cannot describe the difference between left and right.
- Tangent: 1 in 10,000 have their organs the wrong way round. The condition is known as Situs inversus.
- Deaf people applaud by waving their hands in the air. There is a misconception that they clap louder or harder.
- Tangent: Alan does the British Sign Language for "bullshit" and "drunkenness".
- The similarity between herring and teenage boys is that they both communicate by farting.
- Tangent: Julian farting in front of the Queen backstage at the Royal Variety Performance and shitting himself.
- The only difference between brown eggs and white eggs is the colour.
- You would use cogs or Meccano to make a difference engine. It was only completed in 1991 and worked perfectly. Charles Babbage (who invented the machine) deliberately put some mistakes in the plan, so if anyone stole it, it wouldn't work.
- Tangent: He also complained to Alfred Tennyson about a poem he wrote.
- The difference between ping pong and table tennis is that "ping pong" is a brand name.
- General Ignorance
- Eskimos have 32 words for demonstrative pronouns. (Forfeits: Ice, Snow)
- The Moon smells of gunpowder. (Forfeit: Cheese)
- Twelve people have walked on the Moon.
- Gandhi's first name was Mohandas Karamchand. (Forfeit: Randy)
- Tangent: W. C. Fields once wrote a film under the pseudonym "Mahatma Kane Jeeves".
- Tangent: Mahatma means "great soul" in Sanskrit.
- Note: Alan Davies answered "Randy", and as a result was docked 150 points. The final scores were then revealed almost immediately afterwards, and Alan was on -144 points, a record lowest score in the show's history. However, without the 150 point penalty from the earlier question, Alan would have won with 6 points!
Episode 8 "Descendants" (Children in Need Special)
- Broadcast dates
- 10 November 2006 (BBC Four)
- 17 November 2006/18 November 2006 (BBC Two)
- Panellists
- Alan Davies (-29,000,000 points)
- Rich Hall (2,000,000 points) 13th appearance
- Phill Jupitus (1,000,000 points) 10th appearance
- Jonathan Ross (winner with 3,000,000 points) 1st and only appearance
(All scores in this game were multiplied by 1,000,000 as a generosity gesture from Stephen Fry, on account of it being for Children In Need. Therefore, the actual scores were -29, 2, 1 and 3.)
- Buzzers
- Phill — Little Britain's Vicky Pollard; 'No, but yeah, but no, but yeah, but no, but yeah!'
- Jonathan — Catherine Tate as Lauren Cooper; 'Am I bovvered?'
- Rich — The Flower Pot Men saying 'Flobadobadobadob!'
- Alan — A clip of Clangers speech (which resurfaces in one of the questions later)
- Theme
- The show initially began with Pudsey Bear, the Children in Need mascot, in the place of Alan Davies, but Pudsey was replaced after all the panellists had demonstrated their buzzers.
- Each panellist has a Pudsey bear in front of them, however Rich Hall's Pudsey does not have one eye covered. This is because Rich Hall, being American and not aware of Pudsey's trademark, removed the eyepatch and bound his Pudsey's hands behind its back using the eyepatch before the recording of the episode began.
- Topics
- Babies don't have kneecaps, because they're made of cartilage. Babies also have 94 more bones than adults, mainly because most of the bones in the major areas, such as the skull, haven't fused yet.
- The area of the body that has the most bones is the foot, with 52 bones.
- The paradoxical frog grunts like a pig and has offspring three times its own size.
- Tangent: Winston Churchill famously said "A dog looks up to you, a cat looks down on you, but a pig looks you in the eye and treats you as an equal".
- Barbie could have been US President, is a trained scientist and has larger breasts than you might imagine. Her maiden name is "Roberts" (the inventor was called Barbara Millicent Roberts), has over a billion pairs of shoes and is only 11 inches tall. (Forfeit: Margaret Thatcher)
- Tangent: If Barbie was a 5' 6", her feet would be a size 3 and her breasts would be 39 inches (990 mm) and she'd fall flat on herself, she also wouldn't have the necessary 17-22% body fat to menstruate.
- Tangent: Barbie first got a navel in the year 2000.
- Tangent: Barbie's first words spoken in 1992 were, "We will ever have enough clothes, I love shopping, math is tough."
- A Spider-Man comic was the inspiration for electronic tagging.
- Wonder Woman was the inspiration for the lie detector.
- Tangent: William Moulton Marston and his polyamorous relationship with the co-creator of Wonder Woman.
- A radio episode of Superman in which he fights the Ku Klux Klan caused the KKK recruitment rate to fall to zero within a few weeks of it being aired.
- Tangent: Children invented earmuffs, the calculator, the trampoline and the Flag of Alaska.
- Roald Dahl helped to invent the Wade-Dahl-Till valve.
- The Oompa-Loompas were originally black, because they came from Africa. (Forfeit: Orange)
- Tangent: Alan mentions a Sherlock Holmes film, in which people were being murdered around a circus. An hour into the film, Holmes said to Dr Watson, "Pygmies".
- Tangent: Jonathan's experience in France, when he saw a tiny elephant doing performance tricks and at the end of show, it was unzipped and a small dog was inside it.
- An episode of Clangers called "Chicken" featured a scene when the voice actor says (through a swanee whistle) "Oh sod it, the bloody thing's stuck again".
- Tangent: Oliver Postgate (the creator of Clangers) and his other creations including Noggin The Nog, Pogles' Wood and Bagpuss. He and Peter Firmin created each episode in a barn and they each took a month to make.
- Tangent: The highest amount of viewers the Clangers got was 10 million, when they appeared on an episode of Doctor Who called The Sea Devils.
- Bill and Ben speak "Oddle Poddle". (Forfeit: Flobbadob — that means flowerpot in "Oddle Poddle")
- Tangent: Stephen reads out a letter from the son of Peter Hawkins, correcting an earlier mistake made on QI saying the language was Flobbadob (See QI Series "B", Episode 10).
- General Ignorance
- The most listened tune in the world is the Gran Vals (Nokia tune) by the Spanish composer Francisco Tárrega. (Forfeit: Crazy Frog)
- Tangent: The Nokia company produces 6½ mobile phones a second.
- Ferns are poisonous, carcinogenic, the second oldest plant after moss and pollinate by flinging their seeds.
- Tangent: Stephen's complete misunderstandings of Geordie slang.
- Terry Wogan is descended from the Welsh. (Forfeit: Ireland)
- Tangent: Wogan holds the record for the longest televised putt with a 33 yarder at Gleneagles.
- 0% of money donated to Children in Need goes towards administration costs.
- Tangent: The first Children in Need in 1980 raised £1 million.
Episode 9 "Doves"
- Broadcast dates
- 17 November 2006 (BBC Four)
- 24 November 2006 (BBC Two)
- Panellists
- Alan Davies (Winner with 54 points!) 3rd win
- Andy Hamilton (-8 points) 3rd appearance
- David Mitchell (-9 points) 2nd appearance
- John Sessions (-4 points) 8th appearance
- Buzzers
- David — Boos
- Andy — "Resign! Resign!"
- John — "Off, Off, Off!, Off, Off Off!"
- Alan — Charles Jolly's The Laughing Policeman
- Topics
- The pigeon is the bravest species of animal, having won more Dickin medals than any other. The medal was organised by Maria Dickin in 1943 to honour animals in war. Out of the 60 occasions, it has been awarded to a pigeon 32 times.
- Tangent: It was once awarded to a cat that was aboard HMS Amethyst during the Yangtze incident in 1949, when it ate all the rats aboard.
- A kamikaze pigeon unit was set up to use pigeons in missiles. The pigeon was trained to peck at a ship. In the missile, if the ship was slightly to one side, the pigeon would peck on a glass target and it would relay a signal moving the missile and it would continuously peck as the ship got bigger and bigger. Every time it pecked correctly, the pigeon would be showered with grain. It wasn't used in combat. See Project Pigeon.
- Tangent: The extinction of the Passenger Pigeon.
- Tangent: Giacomo Puccini enjoyed hunting snipe from his window while writing operas. He could kill fifty snipe in one shot with his handbuilt gun.
- Tangent: Pablo Picasso was a pigeon fancier and his father was a painter of pigeons and never painted again when he saw how good his son was. He collected Fan tail pigeons and he named his daughter "Paloma", which is the Spanish for pigeon or dove.
- The most influential piece of modern art (according to the Turner Prize committee) was Marcel Duchamp's Fountain.
- Tangent: The Fountain is signed "R. Mutt". The R stood for "Richard", which is French slang for "Moneybags".[citation needed]
- Tangent: One person was fined $6,500 for urinating in it. It's valued at $3.6million.
- The dik-dik is able to hide, unlike the dodo, which is probably one of the reasons why the dodo is now extinct.
- Tangent: The dodo is related to the pigeon. It was forgotten until 1860, when it appeared Alice in Wonderland.
- According to Moby-Dick, a sperm whale's penis can be turned into an apron.
- Swift Nick Nevison rode from London to York in 15 hours. He managed to evade the law by playing in a bowls match against the Lord Mayor of York, who bet him in a match and since he won and used the mayor as his alibi. (Forfeit: Dick Turpin)
- Tangent: Nevison never harmed anyone as a highwayman.
- Tangent: Dick Turpin, his brother-in-law and how his post master taught him to read.
- Tangent: Timothy Spall's film about Pierrepoint, which revealed that Pierrepoint took 7 seconds from leaving his cell to hanging a prisoner.
- Tangent: The life expectancy in some parts of America is lower than on Death Row.
- General Ignorance
- The crime Burke and Hare were convicted of was murder. (Forfeit: Body-snatching)
- Tangent: Medical students rarely get to dissect a human in their studies any more.
- An underground fluffer cleans hair off the tracks in the London Underground.
- Tangent: Fluffers in the porn industry aren't used any more, because of Viagra.
- E pluribus unum is the motto of Benfica.
- Tangent: There is a statue of the Mozambique-born Eusebio (their most famous player) outside Benfica's stadium.
- Tangent: Laurence Llewellyn Bowen incorrectly answered the £1 Million on Who Wants to Be A Millionaire, the right answer being E pluribus unum, however this was found the be incorrect and he was asked back to answer a different £1 Million question
- E pluribus unum was originally used in a recipe for salad dressing. (See Moretum)[1].
- This was a bonus question for 50 points was supposed to subsequently asked, only for Fry to accidentally provide the answer before asking the question. Alan Davies then answered the question regardless, and earned the 50 point bonus. As it turned out, he would still have won without the bonus had nobody else answered the question correctly. In his words: 'That was supposed to be the answer to the bonus question and I fucked it up completely!'
Episode 10 "Divination"
Alan Davies was absent for the recording of this episode, as it clashed with his favourite football team, Arsenal, playing in that year's UEFA Champions League Final - the biggest game in their history. Close-up shots of him in his chair at the start were taken during the recording of episode 8 (to match with Phill Jupitus being seated on his right). The customary opening long shot of the whole panel was accomplished with a lookalike taking his seat.
The final edit then showed him dematerialising after pressing his buzzer, which supposedly teleported him to the football match (accompanied by the TARDIS sound). His other brief contributions - which earned him forfeits, ensuring that he still lost - were also pre-recorded and played in the studio as a voiceover.
- Broadcast dates
- 24 November 2006 (BBC Four)
- 1 December 2006 (BBC Two)
- Panellists
- Alan Davies (-70 points)
- Graeme Garden (Winner with 7 points) 1st and only appearance
- Phill Jupitus (6 points) 11th appearance
- Johnny Vaughan (-19 points) 1st and only appearance
- Buzzers
- Johnny — The Twilight Zone theme
- Graeme — The medium in Poltergeist: "Is there anybody there? Do you know?"
- Phill — The 'magic' noise from Bewitched
- Alan — Doctor Who theme
- Theme
- Each of the panellists were told to predict their scores using a form of divination.
- Johnny - Coscinomancy - Using a sieve and seeing the remnants of what sieved in the sieve
- Graeme - Tyromancy - Using cheese, or in this case — Mini Babybels
- Phill - Tasseomancy - Using tea
- Alan - Pygomancy - Using a plastic arse
- Whoever managed to accurately predict their own score at the end would be rewarded with 666 bonus points. No-one managed to do so accurately with their own scores, but Vaughan correctly guessed Garden's score. The 666 points were not given because it had to be their own score they predicted.
- There is also a Doctor Who theme in this episode. For instance, when Alan Davies disappears, the dematerialisation noise of the TARDIS is heard, and when he calls in for the answer, the Doctor Who theme music is used as his "buzzer".
- Topics
- Fry interprets the panel members' dreams, and comes to the conclusion they are all gay.
- Tangent: Margaritomancy is divination using pearls and spatulamancy is divination using sheep's shoulder blades, ornithomancy is reading the flight patterns of birds and hippomancy is using the behaviour of a horse for divination purposes.
- Tangent: Horses are as intelligent as tropical fish, in terms of brain power.
- Clever Hans the horse was able to count and work out square roots and could read someone's body language.
- Tangent: Derren Brown's trick when you have an empty seat on a train.
- Tangent: The word "donkey" first came into the English language in the late 18th century, but it was pronounced as if it was a rhyme for monkey. Before then it was just the word "ass".
- Tangent: When you breed a male horse and a female donkey, it is called a hinny.
- Tangent: Donkey milk cannot be used to make cheese. Babies in India are all fed on donkey milk. Cleopatra bathed in asses milk and Nero's wife Poppaea Sabina had 300 donkeys milked for her bath.
- A demonym is your people name.
- The Chinese language for "American" is "Lovely country person" in English. The Englishman is called a, "Hero country person" and a Frenchman is a "Law country person".
- Robert Johnson and his death at the crossroads, by having strychnine poisoning in his whisky.
- Deeper Blue (the first computer to beat a chess grandmaster) is now working for United Airlines as a reservations clerk.
- Tangent: Garry Kasparov accused IBM of cheating, after he planted a trap which he claimed that could only avoided by thinking creatively.
- Tangent: Stephen's experience of watching a match between Kasparov and Nigel Short in London.
- General Ignorance
- The Number of the Beast is 616. (Forfeit: 666)
- Tangent: A bus company in Moscow changed one of its routes from 666 to 616. The A666 is found in Lancashire between Pendlebury to Langho
- Tangent: The numbers on a roulette wheel add up to 666.
- Tangent: The fear of the number 666 is Hexakosioihexekontahexaphobia. The fear of the number 616 is Hexakosioidekahexaphobia.
- Thomas Midgeley, inventor of leaded petrol and CFCs has done more damage to the environment than any other person in history. (Forfeits: George Bush, Stalin, Genghis Khan, Mao Zedong, Margaret Beckett)
- Tangent: Midgeley died aged 55. At the age of 51, he contracted polio and invented himself a harness to get himself out of bed, but one morning it swung around and in the ensuing struggle he strangled himself to death.
- European witchcraft is known for causing harm to people by sticking pins into dolls known as poppets. (Forfeit: Voodoo)
- A desire line is a name given by planners to paths made by people who wander. People who wander without really thinking are called Meanderthals.
Episode 11 "Denial & Deprivation"
- Broadcast dates
- 1 December 2006 (BBC Four)
- 8 December 2006 (BBC Two)
- Panellists
- Alan Davies (-39 points - this gave him a grand total beyond -1000 for the series)
- Roger McGough (Joint Winner with 1 point) 1st and only appearance
- Vic Reeves (Joint Winner with 1 point) 2nd appearance
- Mark Steel (-6 points) 3rd appearance
- Buzzers
- Roger — Bell (by pulling decorated rope hanging from the ceiling)
- Mark — Ruler twanged off the side of his desk
- Vic — Hand-bell
- Alan — Squeaky soft toy (causing Alvin and the Chipmunks' We Are the Chipmunks to be played)
- Theme
- The show was deprived of the normal set. Instead, Alan Davies and Mark Steel were sitting at school desks, Roger McGough and Vic Reeves had side tables and glasses of whisky and Stephen Fry sat at an auctioneer's stand with a gavel. The lighting director was "fired" so there was a lack of light. Some of the studio was lit by candles. The audience was forced to watch in the street (although only for a humorous pre-filmed segment). The buzzers were hand-cranked.
- The team were each given a tray, containing dental floss, chilli powder, a potato and a green pen. The panellists had to find out how each item had been used in a prison escape.
- Green pen - Steven Russell dyed his shirt green, the same colour shirts as those of the prison doctors, and walked out of the prison.
- Dental floss - Vincenzo Curcio used floss to file down the bars.
- Chilli powder — Five prisoners from Pakistan threw spice powder into the eyes of a warden and ran out of the prison.
- Potato - John Dillinger stole a raw potato, carved it into the shape of a gun, painted it black with boot polish and held up a warden with it.
- Topics
- According to Anna Freud, when children play with their food, they are really playing with their excrement.
- Tangent: Sigmund Freud's fear of the number 62 and his refusal to book into hotels with more than 61 rooms.
- William Banting and the invention of diets. In 1864, he wrote a booklet called "Letter on Corpulence Addressed to the Public", which gave word to the term "to bant", which is dieting.
- Tangent: William Taft and his idea of diets as he was so fat, he couldn't get out of his bath. This then moved to Hollywood. In the 1950s, people used a tapeworm pill, which is when you swallowed a tapeworm egg. Alan's friend had a tapeworm that was 3 feet (0.91 m) long.
- Hoover the talking seal is a seal discovered in Maine in 1971, who was found to have a Bostonian accent. He died in 1985 and appeared on ABC's Good Morning America and had his own obituary in the Boston Globe.
- The Bastille held only seven prisoners. Four of them were forgers and two lunatics (one of whom thought he was Julius Caesar).
- Tangent: The Marquis de Sade's imprisonment in the Bastille, and the loss of his work. He was moved prisons for shouting obscenities at the other people in the prison through a tube.
- Tangent: There are many misconceptions that the Tower of London was a poor place to be kept in, it was a very civilised place to be kept prisoner.
- The Kray twins were imprisoned in the Tower of London due to desertion from National Service.
- Tangent: Ronnie Kray's homosexuality, and the twins' relationship with David Bailey.
- Tangent: David Puttnam used to manage the Kray twins.
- Tangent: A poem about Hoover the talking seal is written by Roger.
- General Ignorance
- The four main religions of India are Hinduism (805 million of them), Islam (134 million of them), Christianity (23 million of them)and Sikhism (19 million of them). (Forfeit: Buddhism)
- No-one milks a yak, because yaks are the male of the species. (Forfeit: Milkman)
- Tangent: Tibet supposedly smells of butter and the buttermilk sculptures of animals.
- Tangent: A female yak is called a nak. A wild yak is around 6' 5", a domesticated yak is around 4' tall.
- Tangent: Yak hair is the longest of any animal. A lot of the wigs found in the BBC store were made of yak and beards for people pretending to be Santa Claus are very likely to be made of yak hair.
- Tangent: A poem about crabs by Roger.
- Tangent: A Crab louse has 6 legs. Crab louses are so named because they latch onto the follicles onto pubes, eyelashes, or even beards.
- George Washington did not cut down cherry trees. It was a myth invented by Parson Weems. Washington's father said "My son, your truth means more to me than 1,000 trees bathed in silver, with apples of gold."
- The panel have to correctly identify a picture of the Yeomen of the Guard. (Forfeit: Beefeaters)
Episode 12 "Domesticity"
- Broadcast dates
- 8 December 2006 (BBC Four)
- 15 December 2006 (BBC Two)
- Panellists
- Alan Davies (-64 points)
- Jo Brand (-18 points) 13th appearance
- Jessica Hynes - at the time still going under her maiden name of Stevenson (Winner with -3 points) 1st and only appearance
- Phill Jupitus (-4 points) 12th appearance
- Buzzers
(Stephen jokes that the buzzer noises see the respective genders "comfortably assigned their tasks".)
- Jo — Vacuum cleaner
- Phill — Food processor
- Jessica — Hairdryer
- Alan — Match of the Day theme
- Topics
- Dry cleaning involves solvents such as perc, so it is not really dry at all.
- Tangent: "Dry cleaning" is a term used by spies to see if they are being followed or not.
- Ray Davis (not the Ray Davies from "The Kinks") used 100,000 gallons of dry- cleaning fluid in 1964, while researching in neutrinos. After finishing his work, the leftover fluid remained in house in Leadville, South Dakota, because it is a hazardous waste.
- Tangent: Neutrinos are mainly invented to make all mathematics in modern physics work. They have no mass and travel through lead which is light year's thick without a trace. Correction: It was discovered in 1998 that neutrinos do have mass, albeit very small.
- Tangent: Davis is the in the Guinness Book of Records as the oldest person ever to win the Nobel Prize, aged 88.
- The first vacuum cleaner was horse drawn, because people couldn't buy a vacuum cleaner, because it was intended as a service.
- Tangent: Jo tries to guess her own quote: "How do you know if it's time to wash the dishes and clean your house? Look inside your pants, if you find a penis in there, it's not time."
- "The first practical dishwasher was invented to wash dishes more..." "safely". The inventor of this dishwasher was called Josephine Cochrane. She invented the idea, because her porcelain kept being chipped by her servants and herself. It cost $250 to make, which was a lot in the 1880s, but it could clean and dry 200 dishes in 2 minutes and it won 1st prize at the 1893 World's Fair in Chicago. (Forfeits: Quickly, Cleanly)
- Tangent: Cochrane's grandfather was John Fitch, who invented the steamboat.
- Tangent: The 1893 World's Fair also had the first Ferris wheel on display, made by the inventor George Ferris.
- Tangent: In Britain, the odds of being killed at home are the same as being killed in a car crash. In 2003, a woman in Scotland was killed in a freak dishwasher accident, when she slipped on the floor and was impaled on a knife that was sticking out of the dishwasher. Stephen cut his palm doing that once.
- The second greatest cause of death for women up to the year 1800 was cooking. Childbirth was the greatest cause. (Forfeit: Domestic Violence)
- To create the impression that the house has been cleaned when you have not, spray furniture polish behind the radiator.
- Silk and spaghetti can both stick to brick walls.
- Rhubarb and brown sauce can be used to clean copper and silver.
- Tangent: Phill mocks Stephen for his mention of copper kettles and later mentions Stephen's Twinings adverts.
- Using your own saliva is the cheapest way of removing blood stains from your clothes.
- The bottom door hinge is placed higher because of the effect of foreshortening.
- Tangent: Door hinges were originally made of wood.
- Tangent: Stephen and Hugh Laurie's plasterers were Charlie Higson and Paul Whitehouse. Phill then does his impressions of Hugh & Stephen.
- General Ignorance
- Pea soup and baked bean juice are drinks made from beans. (Forfeit: Coffee)
- Tangent: Stephen's story about a man called "Heinz", who was discovered wanking in a can of baked beans, while at school.
- "Have you ever slid down a banister?" - No, because people slide down the balustrade. (Forfeit: Yes)
- William Wordsworth could not smell. He suffered from Anosmia. (Forfeit: Daffodils) (This question was worth 200 points to everyone, but instead Alan said the forfeit answer, daffodils)
Episode 13 "December" (Christmas Special)
- Broadcast dates
- 15 December 2006 (BBC Four)
- 22 December and 27 December 2006 (BBC Two)
- Panellists
- Alan Davies (-53 points)
- Jo Brand (-17 points) 14th appearance
- Rich Hall (-9 points) 14th appearance
- Dara Ó Briain (Winner with 2 points) 4th appearance
- Buzzers
- Jo — Ding Dong Merrily on High
- Dara — Sleigh Bells Jingling
- Rich — Jingle Bells
- Alan — Ring-a-Ding-Ding!
- Theme
- All the questions in General Ignorance are themed on saints.
- Topics
- Tangent: More than £20 billion is spent in the United Kingdom during Christmas. 1/3 of books, clothes and toys are sold in the last 8 weeks of the year. 150 million Christmas cards are sent. 7.5 million Christmas trees are decorated. Enough wrapping paper is bought to gift-wrap Guernsey.
- Christmas is celebrated on 25 December because it is the birthday of the Roman god Mithras, who bears similarities with Jesus Christ. (Forfeit: Jesus's Birthday — His birthday is unknown, but Islam claims it was during the Summer and Jehovah's Witnesses claims the date is 1 October)
- The Queen, after Christmas lunch, watches herself giving the Royal Christmas Message on television. (Forfeit: Goes For A Walk)
- Tangent: What the Royals do on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. Stephen is booed because he gets his Christmas tree from the Sandringham Estate, as does the Queen.
- Photocopiers suffer the most at office Christmas parties, due to people photocopying their buttocks and inserting things into the machine.
- Tangent: There is a 25% increase in emergency call-outs in the 2 weeks up to Christmas.
- Tangent: Things found inside photocopiers include sleeping cats, a snake, a kitchen knife, a sausage roll, a condom, stockings, a vibrator and a cheque for £6,000.
- Champagne was invented by the English in the Champagne region of France. There was a 19th century myth that Dom Pérignon accidentally made the champagne fizzy and said, "Come quickly, I am drinking the stars!", which is false. In the 16th century, the British took the flat wine from the region and added sugar and molasses to make it fizzy. (Forfeit: The French)
- Tangent: Jo tells about making ginger beer and vodka, and Dara tells the correct way to serve a pint of Guinness, which he learned when he was a barman.
- In Catalonia, there is a figure in the Nativity scene called a Caganer, which squats and defecates, normally in the corner. People who have been the Caganer include George W. Bush and David Beckham. They have a Christmas log, which translated means "Shit log". There is also a popular phrase, which translated means, "Eat well, shit hard!".
- Turkeys in Norfolk were given little leather boots for Christmas, when they were driven from Norfolk to London, and later to the New World.
- Tangent: In English, turkeys are so called because the first merchants to sell them were from Turkey. Nearly all the other country|countries refer to them as Indian. In Choctaw language, they're referred to as "Fukit".
- General Ignorance
- Saints from Ireland include Saint Conleth, Saint Brigid of Kildare and Saint Kevin of Glendalough (Forfeit: St Patrick)
- Tangent: Saint Brigid's great miracles include laying down a cape and owning whatever land was covered by it. She could also turn used bath water into beer.
- Tangent: Alan thinks he looks similar to Saint Bartholomew, but later Stephen thinks he looks like Saint Sebastian.
- The pointing fingers on The Creation of Adam were painted by an unknown Papal restorer, after the original fingers fell off. (Forfeit: Michelangelo)
- Tangent: Alan has a picture of "The Creation of Adam" on his mobile phone, even though he was told you weren't allowed to take any pictures.
- A man called Father Christmas died in Dedham, Essex on 30 May 1564. Christmas is a popular surname in Essex. The first recorded person with the surname "Christmas" was a "Roger Christmas", in the year 1200. 1,000 people in the UK phone book have the surname "Christmas", mainly in Essex, Surrey, Cambridgeshire, London & Sussex. (Forfeit: He's Not Dead)
- Tangent: Jo recalls phoning a person called "Mr. Bastard". Stephen then tells of people who irritate Jesus College, Cambridge by ringing them up on Christmas Day and singing "Happy Birthday to You."
Notes
- Wolf, Ian: QI: Series D, published on the British Comedy Guide. Accessed on 2009-02-25.