The Unbelievable Truth - 17x06 Spies, Fire, Norfolk, The Beatles
Episode Date: February 18, 202217x06 7 November 2016 John Finnemore, Jeremy Hardy, Lucy Porter, Frankie Boyle Spies, Fire, Norfolk, The Beatles...
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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 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. Time to introduce the panellists, and you
won't find four funnier comedians, so let's just make the best of it. Please welcome Jeremy Hardy, Lucy Porter, John Finnemore and Frankie Boyle.
The rules are as follows.
Each panellist will present a short lecture
that should be entirely false, save for five
hidden truths which their opponent should try
to identify. Points are scored by
truths that go unnoticed, while other panellists
can win points if they spot a truth,
or lose points if they mistake a lie for
a truth. First up is John Finnemore.
John, your subject is spies,
persons employed by governments or other organisations
to secretly obtain information on an enemy or competitor.
Off you go, John. Fingers on buzzers, the rest of you.
By international agreement, if you ask a spy if they are a spy,
they can lie about it twice,
but if you ask them three times, they have to tell you.
Because otherwise we'd never get anywhere.
At Cambridge, David Mitchell once believed he was approached to spy for MI5.
In fact, it turned out there was a misunderstanding,
but he nonetheless accepted the post and for many years enjoyed a lucrative sideline,
noting down the sale prices at IKEA and reporting them back to his handler at MFI.
Jeremy. I think the first bit's true.
I think you were
approached by security services to spy for
this country. I was not.
Yeah, but how do we know
that you were?
If you were, you wouldn't tell us outright, would you?
I would.
Not if you were a proper spy, you would.
You would kill me with your watch.
No, I really wasn't. It never happened.
OK.
No, I wasn't. No.
In ancient Assyria, identical twins were used as spies.
I was!
I knew it!
No, no, sadly, sadly, I wasn't.
In ancient Assyria, identical twins were used as spies,
the idea being that if one went into the enemy camp,
the one still in ancient Assyria would be able to report on what they were seeing.
Thus, the ancient Assyrians basically invented the walkie-talkie,
only without the part where it actually worked. This kind of tactical thinking is just one of the reasons we are today all speaking ancient Assyrian. The very best spies, of course,
are animals. In 2007, police in Iran detained 14 squirrels suspected of spying. In 2013,
Egyptian authorities detained a stork on suspicion of espionage,
and in 2015, the Swiss sent a giant panda to the electric chair.
Wasn't even to do with spying, they just didn't like it.
For seven years, from 1946, the American embassy in Moscow was bugged with a listening device in
the shape of a large carved wooden seal of the United States, given to the ambassador as a token of friendship by Soviet schoolchildren and proudly hung by him
in his study. The author Ian Fleming always insisted that James Bond is not actually a spy.
I admit it's a bit of a technical distinction, but what James Bond actually is, is a vet.
Jeremy, he may have said he's not a spy no he didn't
he just said he was a spy
how often did he say it though
be fair Jeremy
you'd be surprised if I knew how many times
Ian Fleming had said that James Bond is a spy
but he was just a spy
Jeremy
James Bond is a spy
that's what James Bond wants you to think.
He's not a very good spy.
Everybody knows who he is.
Exactly.
I mean, he isn't a very good spy.
He causes a lot of explosions.
And his catchphrase is saying his real name.
Yeah.
Twice.
But they sort of know his name before he even tells them.
So he just walks in and they go, oh, Bond.
Sometimes he does lie about his job, though.
Sometimes he says, I'm James Bond, I'm here for international exports,
or he pretends to be a businessman.
But you'd think that the supervillains would go,
but that's a bit of a coincidence.
That's the same name as that spy
who was in that film
recently blew up a base in a
volcano. It was in all the papers.
There is a theory that makes sense of it, although
you could say that, so James Bond just
goes and kills a bunch of people every time.
So that's just the name that
British Secret Service gives to the
biggest psycho that they employ.
They give him the title James Bond.
So the villain's sitting there and he sees all his henchmen have been killed
and this guy walks in and goes,
Ah, James Bond, I presume.
You're this year's nutcase.
It's essentially a term of abuse for someone
that really, really needs to go into the psychological unit.
Similarly, we're now on our seventh Michael Gove.
to the psychological unit.
Similarly, we're now on our seventh Michael Gove.
Well, anyway, I insist that he was in fact a vet, James Bond.
I think people have probably been confusing him with James Herriot,
who was, of course, a spy.
Lucy.
James Herriot was a spy.
No, Lucy, James Herriot was a... Was a vet.
He was a vet and author
who wrote a series of books about himself being a vet.
Which is just what a spy would have done.
John le Carré's series of bestsellers
about the British Secret Service
are collectively titled The Circus Suite,
and he drew his inspiration from his time working in a circus.
It was his job to wash the elephants,
and one day, as he was moodily soaping a tusk,
he happened to see a trapeze artist arguing with a lion tamer
and at once thought to himself,
I should write a series of books about the British Secret Service.
Here are three of the outlandish ways
the CIA tried to kill or undermine Fidel Castro,
of which the middle one is true.
They put hair remover into his shoes so that his famous beard would fall out.
They put pressure on the Dominican Republic to award him an exploding medal.
They painted a photorealistic image of a tunnel onto a cliff face
and poured a line of Acme Fidel Castro seed leading up to it,
hoping he would knock himself out and they would finally be able to eat him.
Lucy.
John said the middle one was true, so I'm going to believe him
and I think the middle one was true
and the Dominican Republic were meant to give him an exploding medal.
Well, this is an interesting moment, because if that's true...
It's two truths.
..then both... It's two truths, you get two points.
It's not happening, is it? It's not happening. No, no.
Jeremy.
I know there was something about hair remover and his moustache.
They did do something with hair remover.
They did. That's absolutely true.
It was a failed attempt by the CIA to undermine Castro's popularity.
They put hair remover in his shoes.
Was it his hairy hobbit feet that kept the people behind him?
It's more of a prank.
I think they obviously thought that, you know,
his brand was so much associated with the beard
that if he lost the beard, he'd lose the support of the populace.
Rather that he was alive, but you could see his chin,
than he was dead.
That's how useful his chin would be to the American cause.
As we know, the technology of making a false beard
didn't reach Cuba until the 1980s.
So that's the end of John's lecture.
And at the end of that round,
John has smuggled four truths past the rest of the panel.
And the truths are that in 2007,
police in Iran detained 14 squirrels suspected of spying.
Iranian intelligence operatives apprehended the 14 spy squirrels
when they found them hanging around a nuclear enrichment plant.
They claimed the rodents were serving as spies for Western powers,
determined to undermine the Islamic Republic.
The officials said they succeeded in apprehending the suspects,
quote, before they were able to take any action.
The second truth is that in 2013,
Egyptian authorities detained a stork on suspicion of espionage.
Authorities mistook the stalk's migration tag for spying equipment.
And the third one is that for seven years from 1946,
the American embassy in Moscow was bugged with a listening device
in the shape of a large carved wooden seal of the United States
given to the ambassador as a token of friendship by Soviet schoolchildren
and proudly hung
by him in his study. Proudly
hung on the wall of the big secrets room.
The device was created by Leon
Theremin, inventor of the electronic
musical instrument that bears his name.
And the reason they didn't spot it is
because they naturally, they did check it for
bugs, and it had no electronic moving
parts at all, because the inventor had made it so the whole thing resonated
when activated with some radio pulse,
and it would start to resonate and pick up what was being said
without having to have any moving parts in it at all.
So it's not so much that the ambassadors were gullible
as that theremin was a genius.
I think that's brilliant.
And the fourth truth is that John le Carré worked in a circus
and it was his job to wash the elephants.
After running away at 16 and enrolling at Burn University,
le Carré washed elephants for the Swiss National Circus
in order to support himself.
And that means, John, you've scored four points.
In his seven James Bond films,
every scene that shows Roger Moore running
was performed by a body double,
as Moore felt he looked awkward when running.
When running?
Did he never see himself act?
Next up is Jeremy Hardy.
During an appearance on Just A Minute,
Jeremy was once criticised by fellow panellist Clement Freud
for impropriety.
How times change.
Jeremy, your subject is fire, the exothermic oxidation of a combustible substance which typically gives out heat, smoke and flames.
Off you go, Jeremy.
Fire is one of the four elements of the apocalypse, along with earth, wind, war, pestilence, lust,
happy, sneezy, flopsy, mopsy, dozy, beaky, mick and titch.
The first barbecue was lit by the warrior chieftain
Conan the Suburbian,
played in the film by Trevor Eve,
best known for his role as transgender stripper
Eddie G-String in the drama series
The Detective with No Particular Characteristics.
The TV series London's
Burning told the story of the singer
Julie London, who tragically set
fire to herself smoking in bed.
The Fire Brigade
are one of our less important emergency
services, ranking below the Cats
Protection League and the Friends of the
National Portrait Gallery.
The origin of the expression fight fire with fire
is the fact that the fire service use petrol bombs to tackle house fires.
Other things they use are foam that's put on cardboard plates
and thrown at fires, and a special substance known as water,
but which is different from normal water
because they add something to make it wetter,
probably the scripts of Richard Curtis films.
Lucy.
Is there extra wet water?
Oh.
Yeah.
There is indeed.
Yay!
Yes.
Firefighters add a foaming agent to normal water
to make it wetter or reduce its surface tension.
This wetter water can penetrate deeper into burning materials
so that fires can be extinguished more rapidly and using less water.
It's widely believed that the fire hydrant
was invented by Lord Fire Hydrant at the Battle of Cardigan Sandwich.
But actually, we don't know who invented it
because the patent records were burnt in a fire.
Frankie.
Is that true?
Yes, it's bloody true.
Yes, it is true, yes.
All US patents were lost in 1836
when the patent office in Washington burnt to the ground.
The post or pillar-type hydrant is generally attributed
to Frederick
Graff Senior, who was granted a patent around 1801, though any evidence of his patent was lost
in the fire. If you put the batteries back in the ceiling thing that screeches to alert you to the
fact that you've made some toast, an angel loses its wings. The first fire alarm was made using
butter, which when it melted caused metal plates to touch each other,
completing a circuit.
John?
That sounds possible.
It is possible.
That's absolutely true.
In 1902, George Darby, an electrical engineer from Birmingham,
patented a fire alarm comprising a pat of butter
sandwiched between two metal plates.
If the temperature rose to a dangerous level,
the butter would melt and the plates would slide together, completing a circuit and triggering an
alarm. The invention fell out of favour when cholesterol-conscious householders tried low-fat
substitutes, called things like Utterly Horrible and Bugger Me, It's Marge.
Most people think that when Lord Sir Amstrad Sweetener says,
you're fired, to contestants on The Apprentice,
the person is taken away and baked in a kiln.
Although that is true, the origin of the use of the word in that way
lies in the west of England, where traditionally unpopular people
were driven from the community by burning their houses down.
Frankie.
Did they burn people out?
Yes, they did. I've got an honest face, haven't I?
Yeah, they burned people
out. That's absolutely right.
A man would be tied up in his house,
which would then be set on fire. If he
escaped, he was allowed to go free, but
had to leave the area.
He was allowed to go free, but had to leave the area.
How likely is he to
want to hang around?
The Johnny Cash song, Ring of Fire Fire has given Royce a little amusement
and few comments about Indian food.
However, an ad agency did once seek permission
to use it in a commercial for haemorrhoid cream,
but Cash told them where they could stick their suggestion.
Lucy?
I think they did ask and I think he did say no.
They did ask. That's absolutely right.
Although he didn't say no. I think he did say no. They did ask. That's absolutely right. Although he didn't say no.
I think he was dead. His
children said no.
And that's the end of Jeremy's lecture.
And yes, Jeremy,
you must have an honest face
because I'm afraid you've managed to smuggle
no truths past the rest of the
panel, which means you've scored no points.
Johnny Cash's estate once refused permission
for his hit Ring of Fire
to be used in a commercial for haemorrhoid cream.
Elton John, meanwhile, has not yet replied
to the request from Viagra to use I'm Still Standing.
Next up is Lucy Porter.
Lucy, your subject is Norfolk,
a county on the east coast of England.
Off you go, Lucy.
As everybody knows, the people of Norfolk are very small and have webbed feet.
In fact, this rumour was started in 1955 when a visiting chef ran into a rare local frog
and noticed that it croaked with a Norfolk accent.
The chef assumed it was a very small, web-footed local man
until the frog explained he wasn't a man but a frog,
pointing at his shapely frog's legs.
As soon as the chef saw the frog's legs,
he had a sudden, brilliant culinary idea.
And that's the story of how Norfolk became the first place to produce fish fingers.
Norfolk is a land of firsts.
The world's first typewriter was built in Norfolk.
Norfolk was the first place in the UK to get postcodes
and Norfolk was also the first place that someone received
a piece of hate mail written on a typewriter.
Jeremy, let's just say the postcodes is true.
You're right, the postcode is true.
The first postcodes were introduced after the Second World War
and were trialled first in Norwich in 1959.
As opposed to putting fluoride in water, you know.
Was that a bad idea?
Depends whether you want to be brushing your teeth
while you're just trying to drink water.
It's like hiding floss in spaghetti, isn't it?
Lucy.
The world's oldest footprints outside Africa
were also found on a Norfolk beach.
The footprints appear to show someone walking from the beach into the sea
before immediately walking back going,
no, too cold, too cold.
John.
I don't like the look of Lucy's smile, but I'm still going to say it's true.
There's no need to be rude, John.
I'm trying to play a part of the game.
Yeah, I think footprints, oldest footprints in the world outside Africa.
You're right, yes.
I think footprints, oldest footprints in the world outside Africa.
You're right, yes.
The footprints found on a Norfolk beach are between 850 and 950,000 years old
and were discovered on the rapidly eroding beach at Happisburg.
You'd think footprints would just wash away
when the tide came in, wouldn't you, really?
Well, I suppose that's why there's not very many of them.
I would certainly not expect there to be very many footprints that are a million
years old, but the number I would
have expected would be none.
Not three.
It would have to be a very, very unpopular beach,
wouldn't it? Yes.
It's a sign that, you know, really the tourism
in the area isn't working, isn't it?
The footprints are prehistoric.
A sandcastle built by the Romans.
Norfolk will also not be outdone at anything by anyone else in the world.
While China has the Great Wall of China,
Norfolk has the even greater Wall of Great Yarmouth,
which runs the entire length of Great Yarmouth
and is the only man-made structure which is actually visible from Great Yarmouth.
Jeremy.
Does the wall run the whole length of Great Yarmouth?
I don't think so.
I don't think anyone checked because that was so clearly a joke.
It could be a clever joke that conceals a profound truth, like satire.
There's a lot of stuff in the news
about building walls around places at the moment
but I'd like to put a vote in for Great Yarmouth.
And make the Mexicans pay, yeah.
While the Swiss
have the Swiss Army knife, Norfolk has the Norfolk
knife. It took two years to make and includes
three different types of corkscrew, a Delia Smith
muffin tray and a blade for removing stones from Stephen Fry. Norfolk even has its own version
of Las Vegas, a pub with no less than three one-armed bandits in a village called Dis,
referred to by the locals as Dis Vegas. And what happens in Dis Vegas stays in Dis Vegas,
probably because nobody has ever left Dis Vegas. Norwich City is the only football club in the country
to have retained a chant in Chaucerian Old English.
Thought to date back to the 14th century, it goes...
Now yonge men with yow fleet foot is kika,
greet many goalers shooter exceeding kika.
When yow score, the other team will feel more sika.
He'd not the referee, he is a prika.
Thank you, Lucy.
And at the end of that
round, Lucy, you've managed to smuggle three
truths past the rest of the panel,
which are that
a rare local frog in
Norfolk croaks with a Norfolk accent.
The northern pool
frog is England's rarest amphibian and with a Norfolk accent. The northern pool frog is England's rarest amphibian
and has a Norfolk accent.
The frog became extinct in England in the 1990s,
but was reintroduced to Norfolk from Sweden in 2005
after recordings of mating frogs were analysed
and the distinctive Norfolk inflection in their calls was identified.
The frogs were originally thought to have been an import from continental Europe, but researchers found
they were actually native to East Anglia
and hence reintroduced them.
So it was their Norfolk accents that confirmed post-extinction
that they were indigenous and therefore justified
their reintroduction.
The second truth is that Norfolk was the first place
to produce fish fingers.
The first fish fingers
were produced by Birdseye in 1955 at its factory in Great Yarmouth. And the third truth is that
Norfolk has the Norfolk knife. The Norfolk knife went on display at the Great Exhibition of 1851,
contained 75 blades, and it took craftsman William Barnforth two years to make.
And that means, Lucy, you've scored three points.
The fish finger was invented in Norfolk in 1955,
and to give shoppers a proper Norfolk handful
was sold in packs of six.
Norwich was the first place in the UK to have postcodes,
apparently inspired by a regular call of the Norfolk Postman.
E-U-R, one for you.
Next up is Frankie Boyle. As a young man, Frankie trained as a teacher. I know, it doesn't bear
thinking about, does it? Frankie, your subject is The Beatles,
a pop and rock group from Liverpool consisting of George Harrison,
John Lennon, Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr.
Off you go, Frankie.
The Beatles are literally worshipped as gods
in some parts of the developing world, especially Liverpool.
John Lennon claimed he had named the Beatles after a vision in a dream,
saying a man appeared on a flaming pie, saying,
you will be the Beatles with an A.
The entire band nearly lost their lives when,
after opening with the song Help throughout their 1964 tour of Bavaria,
they were later attacked by wolves and completely ignored.
The Beatles...
The Beatles were first drawn to the sitar
as its larger size made it ideal
for smuggling drugs.
They imported over 2,000 sitars
into the UK, but were too high
to collect any of them from the airport.
John? Did they, over thears into the UK, but were too high to collect any of them from the airport. John?
Did they, over the course of their career,
import however many thousand sitars it was?
2,000? No.
Oh. No, they didn't.
Frankie?
Lennon and McCartney's drug experiments continued
until they found the exact dose of LSD
that made them think that their wives were talented.
LAUGHTER of LSD that made them think that their wives were talented.
LAUGHTER APPLAUSE
APPLAUSE
Indeed, the band
only grew long hair and beards as a way
of trying to shake off Yoko Ono.
Almost one in
five Beatles songs mentions the weather,
but only one in 30 is about love.
John? Do
one in five Beatles songs mention the weather? They do. Almost one in five Beatles songs mention the weather?
They do. Almost one in five.
Out of the 309 songs by the Beatles,
48 or 16% reference the weather.
Frankie.
Lennon's murder was wrongly mourned as a tragedy
because he actually exceeded the average life expectancy
of a liver puddling in the 1980s.
The BBC banned I Am The Walrus,
not for its anti-establishment tone,
but because it contains the word knickers.
A 1967 She's Leaving Home angered the American far-right,
who decided it was a cryptic advertisement for abortion.
Another American far-right group took out a contract
on the life of Paul McCartney when they misunderstood a lyric
and thought he was backing the ussr jeremy i'll go with the abortion one that's absolutely right
paul mccartney wrote the song about a girl who leaves a note for her parents as she steals away
in the early hours and meets quote a man from the motor trade some took the man from the motor trade
to be a euphemism for an abortionist,
but McCartney said he just meant a typical sleazy character.
The contract on McCartney's life was only cancelled
when the American far-right later welcomed the title of the White Album.
When the fans became too much,
the band would go out wearing a false nose and glasses,
or in Ringo's case, false glasses.
When asked why the band hired Ringo,
John said it was because they felt their good looks would be accentuated
by standing beside someone who looked like a novelty jug
that had been made in a secure unit pottery class.
In 1996, Ringo appeared
in a Japanese advertisement for grated
apple juice, which coincidentally
is what his name means in Japanese.
John?
I'm always falling for these. Does his name
mean grated apple juice
in Japanese? It does.
Yes.
Yes. Ringo means apple
in Japanese and Ringo Star
sounds like the Japanese phrase
Ringo Sutar, meaning
grated apple.
Paul McCartney has claimed that the intention
behind much of his solo work was to
power his home with environmentally friendly
green electricity generated
by John spinning in his grave.
Paul's age-related hearing loss has affected his work,
as he can no longer hear friends whispering,
Time to stop now, Paul.
Come on, it's getting embarrassing now.
Come on, Paul. getting embarrassing now. Come on, Paul.
Thank you, Frankie.
And at the end of that round, Frankie,
you've managed to smuggle two truths past the rest of the panel,
which are that John Lennon claimed he'd named the Beatles after a vision in a dream,
saying a man appeared, quote, on a flaming pie,
saying, you will be Beatles with an A.
John Lennon claimed in a promotional interview for Capitol Records
that he'd had the vision at the age of 12.
However, the explanation he offered Hunter Davis
for his authorised biography of the band seems more plausible.
I was sitting at home one day just thinking about
what a good name the Crickets would be for an English group.
The idea of Beatles came into my head.
I decided to spell it B-A-T-L-E-S
to make it look like beat music, just as a joke.
So of those two explanations,
certainly one of them seems more likely.
The second one is essentially, I thought of the name The Beatles.
And the second truth is that the BBC banned I Am The Walrus
not for its anti-establishment tone,
but because it contains the word knickers.
And that means, Frankie, you've scored two points.
The early Beatles concerts were said to smell heavily of urine
due to overexcited girls.
And for different reasons, you'll find a similar smell today
at Cliff Richard concerts.
Which brings us to the final scores. In fourth place, with minus four points, we have Jeremy Hardy.
In third place, with two points, it's Lucy Porter.
In second place, with four points, it's Frankie Porter. In second place with four points,
it's Frankie Boyle.
And in first place with an unassailable six points,
it's this week's winner, John Finnemore.
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 John Finnamore,
Lucy Porter, Jeremy Hardy and Frankie Boyle.
The chairman's script was written by Dan Gaster and Colin Swash
and the producer was John Naismith.
It was a random production of BBC Radio 4.