The Unbelievable Truth - 17x01 Mosquitoes, Flags, Roads, North Korea
Episode Date: February 18, 202217x01 3 October 2016 Holly Walsh, Lloyd Langford, Rich Hall, Henning Wehn Mosquitoes, Flags, Roads, North Korea...
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We present The Unbelievable Truth, the panel game built on truth and lies.
In the chair, please welcome David Mitchell.
Hello and welcome to The Unbelievable Truth. Built on truth and lies. In the chair, please welcome David Mitchell.
Hello and welcome to The Unbelievable Truth,
the panel show about incredible truths and barely credible lies.
I'm David Mitchell.
Alan Sugar once said,
nobody can honestly say that they never lie.
Adding, the Amstrad e-mailer is a truly revolutionary piece of equipment.
Well, I'm looking forward to a great evening of top-class entertainment,
but I've got to get this out of the way first,
so please welcome Rich Hall, Lloyd Langford,
Holly Walsh and Henning Vane.
The rules are as follows.
Each panellist will present a short lecture that should be entirely false,
save for five hidden truths which their opponents should try to identify.
Points are scored by truths that go unnoticed,
while other panelists can win points if they spot a truth
or lose points if they mistake a lie for a truth.
First up is Holly Walsh.
Holly, your subject is mosquitoes,
small flying insects that suck the blood of humans and animals,
sometimes transmitting diseases. Off you go, Holly. Fingers on buzzers, the blood of humans and animals Sometimes transmitting diseases
Off you go, Holly
Fingers on buzzers, the rest of you
Mosquitoes are nature's most prolific players
If a mosquito were a bloke
You'd be the kind that'd use a brilliant chat-up line like
Damn, girl, is your father a daddy longlegs?
Cos I can't help but notice your terrific set of pins
And even though you think, well, that's a bit sexist
It did make you laugh
So you let him buy you a white wine or three and you listen to him talk about how close
he is to his 40,000 older sisters. You realise he's actually quite respectful of women and
his eyes with their 16,000 night vision units are actually pretty dreamy. And you end up
getting off with him by the pub bins waiting for your taxi. And in the morning you're left
with nothing but a memory, a hangover and a horrible itch.
Lloyd.
I think the mosquito is sexually adventurous.
I'm not speaking from experience.
No, I don't think the mosquito is particularly sexually adventurous.
And then something about them specifications about them.
Can you think of anything specific about them?
40,000 siblings, then it's like special eyes, like 16,000.
I don't think you can just list everything I've said
and hope that one of them is correct.
No, but I narrow it down to them two is one of them.
Lloyd, Lloyd, which one would you go for?
I think the eyes probably makes more sense.
OK, then, yeah, the eyes, that's true.
You're guessing the eye, what she said about the eyes.
They've got eyes.
They've got...
Henning, are you guessing that mosquitoes, as Holly said,
have 16,000 night vision units?
That's preposterous.
No, OK, let's go for that, yeah.
Going for that, that's not true, you lose a point.
Mosquitoes have two eyes, but they have thousands of lenses,
but not as many as 16,000.
And they use smell more than vision to find something to bite.
That's true, they use their smell.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. You smell more than vision to find something to bite. That's true, they use their smell.
Don't buzz on what I say.
Oh, yeah, it's Holly's turn, isn't it?
I am the arbiter of truth in my whole life,
not just in this game.
Holly.
Contrary to popular belief, mosquitoes do not bite their prey, but give their victims a tiny, sexy love bite.
But it's not all innocent Frenching.
Mosquitoes are filthy bastards.
They love nothing more than urinating on you as they munch.
Rich?
I think a mosquito probably would pee on you while he's biting you.
You're absolutely right. They do.
Boom!
Yeah.
Yes, in fact, most blood-sucking insects urinate while they feed
to avoid filling up on fluid
and to allow them to get more nutrients out of their meal.
It's like when I've drunk too much and I have a tactical vom.
Yes, exactly.
It allows you to get more nutrients, as you call it,
from the vodka.
Interestingly, when female mosquitoes flap their wings,
they create a high C note,
a sound that is extremely attractive to male mosquitoes.
Lloyd.
I think they are musical.
You think they are musical?
They create a high C.
I mean, not that they play instruments, but they have.
They create a...
Yes, the high C fact, that is true.
A broader sense of musicality,
I think that's pure speculation.
Yes, a female mosquito's
buzz is a high C note which is
highly attractive to male mosquitoes
who'll swarm around in the hope of mating
with her. When a power station in Canada
that emitted the same note began
malfunctioning, it was discovered to have been
gummed up by tens of thousands of mosquitoes,
all males apparently sexually attracted to the hum of the generator. Rich. I actually heard that
program, so yes, I'm going to say that's absolutely true. It is absolutely true. It's cited by
Professor Andrew Spielman, one of the world's foremost experts on the mosquito, in his book
entitled Mosquito. When it comes to picking whom to suck on,
mosquitoes basically have the taste of a carry-on
casting director. They predominantly
go for blondes, 18 to 25
year olds, and ladies with double D tits
or bigger. Lloyd.
Do they favour the blonde?
They do favour the blonde.
Yeah, that's absolutely right.
According again to Professor Andrew Spielman, author of Mosquito,
blondes and redheads may be more attractive to mozzies
because they stand out in a crowd.
Yeah, but that's all pure speculation, isn't it?
Because, I mean, it's just that Professor is saying that's what happened,
but we've only got him as a source, don't we?
It's not that we can ask the mosquitoes.
I'm wondering what the future for science is. I mean, no, we can't ask the mosquitoes.
I mean, that would be interesting, wouldn't it?
I mean, this man, he's given his life to studying the mosquito. Maybe he's making it all up.
Maybe it's...
David, this is exactly how Brexit happened.
David, this is exactly how Brexit happened.
Mosquitoes prefer people with high levels of sex hormones,
which is why they usually strike at the most romantic times,
such as sunset or when you're skinny-dipping in a waterfall.
Lloyd, do they usually strike at sunset?
Yeah, I believe that.
That's not one of the truths that Holly was given.
Just ask a professor.
The professor isn't here.
We've got all we have. There's a bit of an oversight, isn't there?
Well, all we do is debating mosquitoes
and there is one person in the whole universe
and you didn't think of inviting the man.
He's published a book, a well-known book, called Mosquito,
so we know everything.
We don't need him anymore.
What Holly was saying about the high level of sex hormones
attracting mosquitoes is not true,
but it is true that they tend to feed most at dawn or dusk,
so striking at the most romantic time, such
as sunset, is an inadvertent truth,
and you can get an extra point, Lloyd.
Well, we get half a point each.
Don't, don't, don't, why?
That's very kind of you.
I'm trying to foster relations
with Europe.
I'm telling you, you'll give him half a point,
you won't get it back.
All right, half a point each it is.
Tom Jones is so high in sex hormones
that what most people think is his hairy chest
is actually a constant swarm of mozzies.
Thank you, Holly.
At the end of that round, Holly, you've managed to smuggle one truth past the rest of the panel,
which is that, contrary to popular belief, mosquitoes do not actually bite their prey.
Not technically, at least.
They pierce the skin with their proboscis to get at the blood just beneath it.
And that means, Holly, you've scored one point.
OK, we turn now to Lloyd Langford.
According to the Daily Mirror,
Lloyd's comedy contains just the right level of Welshness.
I'm guessing that's...
I'm guessing that's a tang of authenticity,
but without being drenched in saliva when you're talking to him.
Lloyd, your subject is flags,
decorated pieces of cloth often used as national or institutional emblems
for signalling or for decoration during public festivities.
Off you go, Lloyd.
A flag is a thing someone puts in their garden as a handy indicator
that you should never talk to them about immigration.
you should never talk to them about immigration.
The first ever flag, the Japanese flag,
was accidentally created when the designer suffered a nosebleed as he was about to begin work.
During the years 1814 to 1830 and 1939 to 1945,
the French national flag was plain white
and often rapidly waved by hand...
LAUGHTER
..rather than affixed to the traditional flagpole.
So central are towels to the culture of Belarus
that they even appear on the country's flag,
unless the flag is
flown at a beach resort, in which case the towels are replaced by German ones very early in the
morning. It is not a dragon on the Welsh flag, but rather a sunburnt lizard with glandular problems.
For nearly a hundred years, the flag of the tropical Turks and Caicos Islands in the West
Indies mistakenly featured a killer whale, a Turkish man, a penguin and an igloo. Holly.
Oh, is there something in that?
Is there something in that?
One of those things was a mistake.
The things on the Turks and Caicos Islands flag?
Yeah.
A killer whale, a Turkish man, a penguin and an igloo.
Yeah, one of them is wrong.
Which one?
Igloo.
Correct.
Yes!
Yes.
Between 1889 and 1968,
the flag of the Turks and Caicos mistakenly featured an igloo.
The artist who designed it had mistaken an igloo-shaped pile of salt
on an earlier version of the flag
for a dwelling and drew a door on it.
Salt is an important export of the islands.
And that's the trouble when you
outsource design work, isn't it?
Tenny.
The fact about the Japanese flag,
then that's the first flag ever.
That's true.
That's a long time ago in Lloyd's lecture.
I mean, not as long ago as you think the Japanese flag was invented,
but that's buzzing with a lot of context,
which is, I think, a technical term in porn.
I don't know what it would mean.
Buzzing with a lot of context.
Yeah, I've said that before. I think you must Buzzing with a lot of context. Yeah, I don't know. I said that before I thought about it.
I think you must have the most fascinating search history of all.
Nope.
Anything physical that that means I want to look at.
But, Henning, I'm not going to charge you a point for this
because it was so long ago,
because I wouldn't have given you one,
so I won't charge you one.
Giving you one is another technical term.
But it is not true that the Japanese flag was the first flag.
The flag of Koala Lumpur features a fat koala.
The flag of the Quebec municipality of Bay James
appears to show a swimming owl
firing three bolts of lightning from its crotch.
Holly.
I just want that to be true so much.
It is true.
Yeah.
It's worth googling.
It does look weird.
Canadian gymnast and acrobat, the unflappable chapable,
Dominic Lacasse, can hold himself horizontally on a bar
as a human flank for 39 seconds.
Though Oliver Reed was often found horizontally on a bar
for much longer than this,
he failed to pass any subsequent drug tests.
Holly.
I believe, maybe he wasn't called the unflappable chapable or whatever,
but I think that sounds about right. Yes, he wasn't called the unflappable clappable or whatever, but I think that sounds about right.
Yes, he wasn't called the unflappable chappable.
You're right, but he was called Dominic Lacasse,
and it's absolutely right, he could hold himself on a bar
as a human flag for 39 seconds.
And that's the end of Lloyd's lecture.
And at the end of that round, Lloyd, you've managed to smuggle two truths past the rest of the panel,
which are that during the years 1814 to 1830, though not the years 1939 to 1945,
the French national flag was plain white.
However, that white flag wouldn't have been confused with the white flag of temporary truce or surrender, as this was not officially adopted until the Hague Convention of 1899. oedd yn blan-wyd. Ond byddai'r flag bwyd yn cael ei amgylchu â'r flag bwyd o trws oedd wedi'i ddynnu, oherwydd doedd hynny ddim wedi cael ei gyflwyno yn awr hyd at
y Cyfnod Hague 1899. Felly, mae unrhyw un yn ei chael yn ddiddorol ei fod yn cael flag bwyd yn ddiddorol iawn.
A'r gwirionedd ail yw bod ymdriniaethau'r cymdeithas yn ddifrifol i'r diwylliant o Belerwys,
ac mae'n ymddangos ar y flag y dynion. Mae'r ffadrn ar y flag Belerwys yn culture of Belarus that they even appear on the country's flag. The pattern on the Belarus flag
is from a towel called a rushnik, which is used for all sorts of ceremonies, including funerals.
And that means, Lloyd, you've scored two points.
Next up is Rich Hall. Rich, your subject is roads.
Roads.
Roads. Not the island, but long, narrow stretches
of smoothed or paved surface
for the passage of vehicles,
people and animals.
Off you go, Rich.
Highways in the western USA
are based on the migratory
roots of bison.
The city of Billings, Montana
was founded at the bottom
of a cliff
where thousands of buffalo
accidentally fell to their deaths.
On many perfectly straight
north-south roads in North Dakota and Montana, a stop sign will suddenly appear in the middle
of nowhere, and the driver will have to make a sharp turn right, travel about 20 yards,
and then make a sharp turn left. This is to make up for the curvature of the earth.
Seems to me it's quite an American-centric
lecture so far.
Well, there are a little bit.
I've only once been to Miami Airport,
and that's my only first-hand experience
of the United States, so I'm completely on my
depths. Henning, not everyone is
as rigorous as you are not to bring any
of their cultural background with them onto
the show.
Rich.
I'll have you executed for that night.
In America, we only drive on the right-hand side of the road
because before cars, the driver of a carriage or a wagon
would sit on the left side of the wagon,
so his stronger
right arm was free to lash
the horses. And in this position
he could only see oncoming traffic
to his left.
Holly. That probably is why
people drive on the right. Because before
cars, the driver of a carriage or wagon
would sit on the left-hand side and... Yes.
Because they obstructed view. That's absolutely
right. Well done.
Yes, horse traffic
travelled on the left in the US
until at some point in the 18th century
when right-handed teamsters driving
large wagons started travelling on the
right in order to better see traffic
coming in the opposite direction.
In the USA, the Acme Manufacturing Company
once tried to sue the makers of the Roadrunner cartoon series
for defamation.
Incidentally, a coyote can run faster than a roadrunner.
A roadrunner will chase after your car instinctively,
but you have to drive at exactly 27 miles per hour
if you want him to keep running alongside.
If you drive any faster, he will give up and wait for the next car.
Holly.
Well, first of all, I thought roadrunners aren't real birds.
And then I thought, maybe they are.
And that's how I got to the next part of my thinking,
which was maybe they could run at 27 miles per hour.
And that's where you fell down.
No, they can only run at about 20 miles an hour,
so that thing about driving at exactly 27 miles an hour is not true.
Lloyd.
I reckon a coyote is faster than a roadrunner, then.
You've had a bit of time to think about that, haven't you, Lloyd?
A very marginal bit of late buzzing.
OK, it's effective, but it spoils it for everyone.
Yes, you can have a point, but I just hope it makes you happy.
Highway 412, also known as the Sunshine Highway
from Destin to Ocala, Florida,
is paved entirely with an aggregate of bottle caps,
seashells, fish bones and shredded flip-flops.
Holly.
I bet it's made of bottle caps.
It isn't.
Oh.
Henning.
I bet the A412 is the Sunshine Highway.
No.
Lloyd.
I bet it is made out of flip-flops.
No, no, it isn't.
This is an extremely profitable passage of play for you, Rich.
Holly.
Shells.
No.
It's like the Somme.
No offence, Henning.
Henning.
I reckon the Highway 412
is made of tarmac.
I expect so
but that wasn't something that Rich said
now isn't it typical, that's the bit he left out
didn't he
hey am I getting points every time
every time
in Britain
when the M6 toll road was constructed
in 2003 it was lined with
2.5 million paperback novels
to make it more absorbent.
Henning.
Now, that was one of them
private public enterprises.
And that's obviously all about
cost-cutting, so I think they chucked
some novels in there. You're right.
They did.
Yes.
Two and a half million
Mills and Boone novels
were pulped by a Welsh recycling firm
and used in the preparation of the top layer of the M6 toll road.
The pulp novels not only help hold the tarmac and asphalt in place,
but also act as a sound absorber.
Well, that's the end of Rich's lecture.
And at the end of that round, Rich,
you've managed to smuggle two truths past the rest of the panel,
which are that highways in the western USA
are based on the migratory routes of bison.
Herds of bison would locate the easier migratory routes,
Native Americans would follow these routes,
and when Europeans settled in America,
they followed suit, constructing roads as they went.
And the second truth is that on many perfectly straight north-south
roads in North Dakota and Montana,
a stop sign will suddenly appear in the middle of nowhere
and the driver will have to make a sharp right
turn, travel about 20 yards, and then
turn left again, and this is to make up
for the curvature of the earth.
And that is because America
is very big.
And that means...
That is mad, isn't it?
That means, Rich, you've scored two points.
Next up is Henning Vane.
Henning has appeared on the show many times
over the last few years,
while anti-European sentiment has grown in Britain.
Coincidence, I'm sure.
Your subject, Henning, is North Korea,
a secretive...
..a secretive communist country
in the northern half of the Korean peninsula,
established in 1948,
which functions as a one-party state
under a totalitarian family dictatorship.
Off you go, Henning.
North Korea is the best topic to discuss
in a show about unbelievable truth.
As anything you make up sounds plausible.
Chairman Kim Jong-un eats three children for breakfast every morning.
And washes them down with half a gallon of diesel.
He has a pet snail called Simon who we met on Grindr.
To reference its culture of mechanised agriculture,
the anthem changed in 1976 to Combine Harvester by the Wurzels.
That year wasn't called 1976 in North Korea.
As their calendar starts today, the Titanic sank in their year one.
Holly.
I don't know what year. Is it 1911?
I think it's 1912.
1912? Could have started in 1912.
It did. The thing that started... That's absolutely true, because the thing that started in 1912
is Kim Il-sung, the former dictator of North Korea.
And a calendar was adopted in 1997
on the third anniversary of the death of Kim Il-sung.
It declared that Kim Il-sung's birth date,
the 15th of April 1912, would be the calendar's first day.
And that's the same day as the Titanic sank.
Nobody in North Korea has a mobile phone.
The country has the largest
concentration of Pokemon, as none of the locals can catch any. It's probably just as well that
nobody has a mobile phone as you can be executed for making an international phone call. Other
things you can be executed for include having screws left over
when you've built a Billy bookcase,
leaving the toilet seat up,
not leaving the toilet seat up,
owning a toilet seat,
not owning a toilet seat,
and for telling lies about the country on the BBC.
So that's that leg of the tour concert.
Lloyd.
I'm going to guess that you can be executed for making an international phone call on
a mobile.
You can.
Yes, well done.
Yes, in 2014, a 49-year-old lighting engineer was executed for making a call outside the
country and his family were incarcerated in a State Security Department facility. In 2014, a 49-year-old lighting engineer was executed for making a call outside the country
and his family were incarcerated in a State Security Department facility.
I thought roaming charges were bad.
That would have been a very wry quip he could have made
just before being executed.
If they make a film of his life and cast Roger Moore,
that would be a sort of...
Anyway, yeah, Henning.
North Korea is keen to embrace foreign cultures,
but the only foreign comedian to have played North Korea's sofa
is Mark Steele, who performed Mark Steele's in town
and worked as a Gravian Collective 56228.
However, the run was cut short as the authorities
found him a little too left-wing and dogmatic. And he should be a good audience to play to
and will no doubt giggle all the way through because cannabis is legal in North Korea.
Sadly, this quickly turns into getting the munchies when there is no munchies to be had.
Holly. There are no munchies when there is no munchies to be had? Holly?
There are no munchies in North Korea.
Well, for a start,
North Korean dictators have a habit of
covertly importing all sorts of
Western goodies, so there would be
in that case. You're defining munchies.
I reckon everyone can smoke weed.
I reckon cannabis is legal in some form.
Yes, well, that is true,
so you can get a point. Thank you.
But you lose a point for the munchies,
so you've only broken even.
Marijuana can be bought freely by the bagful
in shops and markets across North Korea,
and its use is widespread,
even as a substitute for tobacco,
which is expensive and hard to obtain.
Former leader Kim Jong-il became a fan of Umpah music.
He built himself a Munich beer hall at the end of his Pyongyang estate.
Holly.
I can believe that, because they do have Oktoberfest in North Korea.
He didn't build a Munich beer hall at the end of his estate,
and he's not a fan of Umpah music.
Henning.
And has made it a legal requirement that all teachers learn the accordion.
However, his son, Kim Jong-un,
was the only person in the country
who resembled a large-breasted serving frow,
and so he always hated October.
Kim Jong-un wasn't a star his father was at university.
While studying, Kim Jong-il officially wrote no
fewer than 1,500 books.
This sounds less impressive
when you consider he had plenty of spare time
as he was studying film and media
studies, which is a Mickey Mouse
subject.
Or, as the character is known in
North Korea, Mickey Chi-Chi,
the anthropomorphic
vermin.
Lloyd? I hope they call Chi, the anthropomorphic vermin. Lloyd.
I hope they call Mickey Mouse the anthropomorphic
vermin.
No, they don't.
And that's the end of Henning's lecture.
And at the end of that
round, Henning, you've managed to smuggle two
truths past the rest of the panel,
which are that
North Korea has made it a legal requirement that all teachers learn the accordion
It's often referred to as the people's instrument as it's portable enough to carry with you on a day of voluntary hard labor in the fields
And the second truth is that according to official, Kim Jong-il wrote no fewer than 1,500 books in the three years that he was at university,
along with six full operas.
According to his official biography,
all of his operas are, quote,
better than any in the history of music.
They claim he wrote, in three years,
he wrote more than a book a day.
But then he only wrote six operas.
Why only six operas?
Why not 90 operas?
Somebody said, don't say eight operas. That sounds ridiculous.
Do you think Donald Trump is sharing his PR agency?
And that means, Henning, you've scored two points.
North Korea has 28 state-approved haircuts.
Their current leader, Kim Jong-un, prefers number 17,
militant lesbian.
Which brings us to the final scores.
In fourth place, with minus three and a half points,
we have Lloyd Langford.
In third place, with minus one and a half points,
it's Henning Vein.
In second place, with minus one point,
it's Holly Walsh.
And in first place, with an unassailable three points,
it's this week's winner, Rich Hall.
That's about it for this week. Goodbye.
The Unbelievable Truth was devised by John Naismith and Graham Garden
and featured David Mitchell in the chair,
with panellists Lloyd Langford, Holly Walsh, Rich Hall and Eileen Vane. Thank you.