First broadcast 5th October 2011.
Rhod Gilbert
Greg Davies
Lloyd Langford
Jo Whiley
Russell Kane
John Prescott
Edith Bowman
Kevin Smith
Rhod Gilbert
Greg Davies
Lloyd Langford
Jo Whiley
Russell Kane
John Prescott
Edith Bowman
Kevin Smith
Category
📺
TVTranscript
00:00Tonight on Ask Rod Gilbert, our special guests are Don't Hang the DJ, it's Edith Bowman.
00:29And with the best hair in comedy, Russell Cain.
00:36They're here every week, it's Greg Davies.
00:41And Lloyd Langford.
00:46Ladies and gentlemen, Ask Rod Gilbert.
00:56Hello, hello, hello, welcome, yes, my name is Rod Gilbert and tonight my job is to find the answers to the questions that keep us all awake at night.
01:03Questions like, why do so many people give their toilet a nautical theme?
01:08Anchors on the shower curtains, shells on the cistern, blue everything, what makes you think fish want to be immortalised in your transparent toilet seat?
01:16How would you like to spend the rest of eternity staring up someone else's bottom?
01:21I know there's water in the bathroom and water in the sea but it's a pretty tenuous link, there's a bed in the bedroom, you haven't given it a hotel theme.
01:28Why not get a trowel suppressor and a mini kettle, paint everything purple and hire Lenny Henry to bounce up and down wearing matching pyjamas?
01:35If you're trying to turn your toilet into a beach, why not go the whole hog and get a lifeguard in there, some rusty cans on the floor and a family from Birmingham arguing behind a windbreak in the corner.
01:44Stop this nonsense before there's more shells in our loos than there are in our beaches or one day, trust me, you'll hold a shell up to your ear and think,
01:50I can't hear the sea but someone's going to need some air freshener and a two bed semi in Leicester.
02:00In a world full of uncertainty we need someone with credibility to help us find the answers to our questions.
02:05So as always we begin by asking, who is tonight's authenticator?
02:09As a lad he was an amateur boxer.
02:13He later became a politician where he fought privatisation of the railways.
02:19He took a tough stance in negotiations to combat climate change.
02:25Tonight he'll need all the wit and character he shows as a peer in the House of Lords.
02:35All rise for tonight's authenticator, John Prescott.
02:43John, thanks for coming on the show.
02:53I'll tell you later whether I enjoyed it.
02:57You once said, I've always felt very proud of Wales and being Welsh. I was born in Wales, I went to school in Wales, my mother was Welsh, I'm Welsh.
03:03It's my place of birth, my country, I'm Welsh.
03:07What was going on there?
03:11There was a referendum by BBC for Wales about who do you think you are, I think it was called.
03:15It seemed to me you had a pretty clear idea.
03:19They were surprised to find I was Welsh and I said it was a Scottish colleague of mine from Stirling
03:23who said, took me over the bridge, he said, this is where the English got beat.
03:27I said, I don't care a damn I'm Welsh.
03:31How are you going to help us tonight?
03:35Well my job is providing you and the panel with information you need to answer tonight's questions, just like I used to do for Tony Blair.
03:41Thank you John, that is wonderful.
03:45And when I think we finally have an answer I will do this.
03:49Hello panel.
03:53Just to say on air how much I am enjoying your jacket tonight.
03:57I think it's very nice.
04:01If you were in shawty-wawty.
04:05Can we have the thunderball result now?
04:09That Matthew Broderick was in fact the voice of the older Simba in the Lion King.
04:13Why are you going ooh?
04:17I was just surprised, I had no idea.
04:21Why are you surprised?
04:25It's not that I've lost sleep over it.
04:29You know it's a cartoon don't you?
04:33I know it's a cartoon, I'm just surprised that Edith didn't realise it was somebody else doing the voice.
04:37You don't have to have thought something else.
04:41You can be surprised by something in isolation.
04:45Like your jacket.
04:49I think it's really nice.
04:53We'll get some brothel creepers and go to Brighton.
04:57Fair enough, I like your attempt to look slim.
05:01I think I have lost a bit of weight.
05:05I didn't expect that did you?
05:09No I didn't expect there to be human flesh under there.
05:13What have you learned this week?
05:17I went on Twitter and my Twitter was jammed with a lookalike.
05:21Apparently there had been a celebrity come dine with me on and I'm an absolute ringer for Fatima Whitbread.
05:25What more crushing lookalike can you get than you look like a javelin thrower from the 80s?
05:29Who's female?
05:33Have we got a picture of Fatima Whitbread?
05:37It's a smile, it's a smile.
05:47So, let's find out who wants to know what tonight.
05:51Who have we got?
05:55Barbara Windsor, are you a fan of Barbara Windsor?
05:59Fair enough.
06:03Are you a fan of Gaddafi?
06:07Let's see what Gaddafi wants to know.
06:11Well, Colonel, I have but I didn't realise it was you.
06:15I just thought they'd left Lionel Richie's waxwork too close to the radio.
06:19Ashley Cole.
06:23Hi Rod.
06:27The full question here, the full question is, hi Rod, can you clear up something for me?
06:31Am I going out with Cheryl or not? I haven't seen a newspaper recently and I've sort of lost track.
06:35It's a bit urgent because she's coming round later so I need to know
06:39whether to have sex with her or try and start an argument.
06:43Ah, here we go. The World Asks.
06:47It's our first round, The World Asks. Let's see who wants to know what.
06:51We have a Californian winemaker. What does he want to know?
06:55Hi Rod. You know, most great relationships start over a good glass of wine.
06:59So tell me this, is it possible to make someone fall in love with you?
07:07Is it possible to make someone fall in love with you?
07:11John, can you see what you can find out?
07:15Can you make someone fall in love with you? Do you reckon you can?
07:19Well, I'm from Essex so all you need is a sandboker and get in the van and the job's done.
07:23The closest I ever came to it was a friend of mine lent me his baby.
07:27I was out having a coffee with him.
07:31Whoa, whoa, whoa. A friend of yours lent you his baby?
07:35I was out having a coffee with a friend.
07:39You said, can I borrow your baby?
07:43He went into a shop and I looked after the baby for a little bit.
07:47I just thought I'd try a little experiment when I was walking around on my own.
07:51I said, don't worry, mummy's in heaven.
07:55I'm not joking.
07:59Women were throwing themselves at me.
08:03I had women almost getting run over crossing the road to get to me. It was awesome.
08:07What, so having the baby made you more attractive to women?
08:11Absolutely awesome. When I started breastfeeding it, that ruined it.
08:15John, have you got any information that might help us?
08:19A study by the Wales Institute showed women pictures of the same man sitting in two cars.
08:23A £70,000 silver Bentley and a battered Ford Fiesta.
08:27The women aged between 21-40 picked the man sitting in the Bentley
08:31ahead of the same man in the battered Ford.
08:35No surprise whatsoever that women are shallow.
08:39Lloyd, don't you think women are materialistic and shallow?
08:43Yeah, I can't drive those.
08:47That incidentally makes trips to the safari park really scary.
08:51Is there anybody in the audience,
08:55this is going to be very difficult, is there any woman
08:59that doesn't fancy Lloyd or Greg?
09:03Let's get that lady there to stand up. You, madam, yes.
09:07You do not fancy Greg or Lloyd? No.
09:11Are you absolutely sure?
09:15Very much.
09:19We're going to see if we can make them more attractive to you by putting them in a number of different vehicles.
09:23Good luck.
09:31Let's see who we've got.
09:35Greg in a sports car. Do you not find him more attractive there? No.
09:39Not even a little bit? No.
09:43Is he any more attractive to you in there?
09:47No. Still not? Let's see the next one.
09:51How does that one make you feel?
09:55Not even a uniform would help that.
09:59Right, let's see the next one.
10:07Maybe if he was in the back.
10:11It does seem to us very difficult to make Greg and Lloyd look more attractive.
10:15Thank you very much. What's your name, madam? Laura.
10:19Laura, ladies and gentlemen.
10:23John, any more facts for us?
10:27Well, we've talked about love, it's all about pain.
10:31Some interesting bit of research on that. Love can hurt.
10:35Stanford University researchers gave 15 students mild doses of pain
10:39when they took a photo of their partner or a photo of someone
10:43they deemed to be equally attractive.
10:47They found that viewing the picture of their beloved reduced their perception of pain.
10:51So if you inflict pain on somebody while they're looking at something they love,
10:55it shouldn't hurt as much? No, it doesn't hurt as much.
10:59Oh, I can feel an experiment coming on, John, can you?
11:03Don't look like that, Greg. Greg, it might not even be you I choose to do the experiment on.
11:07Let's just get on with it, whatever it is, let's get on with it.
11:11All right, Russell, can you, unless you can think of a more interesting way to give Greg pain,
11:17can you give Greg a little pinch under the arm there?
11:21Oh, that's awful. That is awful.
11:25Now let's show you a picture of something that you love while we inflict the pain and see if it doesn't hurt.
11:29Picture of your parents, Greg.
11:33It makes no difference whatsoever. Edith, could you administer a double nipple tweak, please?
11:37Oh, with pleasure.
11:41Oh, I don't know. I don't know if I should take my shirt off.
11:45Double? Double. Properly tweak them, Edith.
11:49Yay!
11:53Let's see the same double nipple tweak, but showing you a picture of something you love.
11:57A lovely fatty burger and chips. Keep looking at the picture that you love, Greg.
12:01I did see my little legs.
12:05Greg, you love the burger more than your parents.
12:09Let's go to John for an answer.
12:13Well, we've got an answer from Professor Margaret Clark, a psychology professor from Yale University in the United States,
12:17who says, I quote,
12:21No, it isn't possible to make someone fall in love with you.
12:25There are things you can do to make yourself more lovable.
12:29You can set certain goals and support them.
12:33Or you can make yourself physically attractive and display your wealth as a means of heightening sexual attraction.
12:37It always takes two.
12:41Thank you very much. I will take that as an answer.
12:45So, Malibu winemaker,
12:49you wanted to know if it's possible to make someone fall in love with you, and the answer is no.
12:53I'm going to award that round to Greg for going through all of that pain so bravely.
12:57Thank you.
13:01Let's see who else has a question for us.
13:05Let's have a look. Kylie Minogue.
13:09Oh, well, this will be exciting.
13:13Hi, Rod. Chris Martin here. Fancy joining me and the boys for a massive no-holds-barred afterparty?
13:17Well, Chris, I would love to, but the last time I went to one of your parties,
13:21I didn't get home until nearly 10 p.m.
13:25I'm going to give it a miss this time, if you don't mind.
13:29Oh!
13:33Excuse me.
13:41Were you standing there reverentially, or were you about to leave?
13:45That was the boss. He's the boss.
13:49Who's this? Ken Dodd.
13:53Is this what my therapist meant when he said I should just be myself?
13:57That's what our next round is.
14:01A famous face asks, and let's see who wants to know what.
14:05Oh, it's Kevin Smith, Hollywood film director. What does he want to know?
14:09Hey, Rod. Kevin Smith here. Long-time listener, first-time caller.
14:13Let me share this with you, man. On my new movie, At the End of Every Day,
14:17a long, hard day on the set, I would like to relax with an ice-cold beer.
14:21I would like to relax with an ice-cold glass of milk, believe it or not.
14:25And it got me wondering, man, are we milking the right animals?
14:33Can you see what you can find out for us?
14:35Panel, what do we think? Are we milking the right animals?
14:38We only milk cows and goats, don't we?
14:40Why don't we milk horses? They're big.
14:42You can get horses milk, rats milk, hippos milk, cannon milk, spider milk.
14:46Spider milk!
14:50Can you buy human milk anywhere?
14:53I think you can, yeah. How much do you want?
14:56Any of you have a drug? Any human milk?
14:59Er...
15:01No, I've not been a baby.
15:03No, I haven't, actually. It's meant for babies, it's not meant for us.
15:06Just because you can do something doesn't mean you should.
15:08I could probably get a jar of pickled onions up my backside, but I can't get it up.
15:13I feel an experiment coming on, John.
15:17John, can we have a fact?
15:19Well, it's not just cows that we milk, of course.
15:21In the UK, goats milk, sheeps milk, all well-known too.
15:25In fact, you can milk any mammal that is lactating, including a whale.
15:30But other animals that are milked for human consumption include
15:33horses, water buffalo, camels, reindeer, donkeys and yaks.
15:39John just said that you can milk a whale. I think that's awesome.
15:42Can we just get rid of cows and have one whale?
15:46How do baby whales, then, get on the tea underwater?
15:49How does the milk come out and they...
15:51Doesn't it just come out into a pool and then the baby whales just have to chase after it underwater?
15:55Why don't you do that when you're human?
15:57Why don't we just, like, kind of squeeze this out and the baby just...
16:01I can't brag and I like it.
16:03It's just running along the ground.
16:06Breastfeeding in public would be a lot more fun if it did, actually.
16:10I've got a little treating store for you guys.
16:12If each of you reach under the table, you will find somewhere under there
16:16a little bottle of unidentified milk.
16:19I can tell you now that none of them are cows.
16:21Oh, I'm going to be sick. I know I'm going to be sick.
16:24Are you going to give us what the animals are or not?
16:26I am going to give you what the animals are after you've drunk it and had a guess.
16:31Eat it. Ladies first.
16:32OK, I'll eat it.
16:34And you have to finish it.
16:37It might be something nice.
16:39Give me a wrap.
16:44Shut up!
16:45Deep breath, quick swig.
16:47Yes.
16:50It's definitely not cow's milk.
16:53What do you think?
16:54I don't know, what are the options?
16:56All the animals in the world?
16:59Actually, probably not.
17:00I'm going to go with goat's milk.
17:02Goat's, jot that down.
17:03Craig, number two, please.
17:10I'm going to say dolphin's milk.
17:14Russell, I've got number three, Russell.
17:16Down in one.
17:17Edith, that tells us more about you than it does about Russell.
17:31Oh, my God, I don't know what it is.
17:33Oh, do you know what else?
17:36Oh, my God.
17:39That was...
17:42That's like...
17:43That's just like licking earth or something.
17:46What is your guess, Russell?
17:47I'm going to go with human.
17:48All right, go human.
17:49Lloyd, if you'd try bottle number four, please.
17:54It tastes flowery.
17:56What do you mean, floral?
17:58No, like flour and bacon.
18:00I think that's horse milk.
18:05You know the horses.
18:07Always bacon.
18:10I think it's horse milk.
18:14I mean, I'm not going to say it tastes flowery,
18:16so it was from a baker.
18:21It has to be an animal, and I guess horse.
18:24Let's reveal what we've got.
18:26What did, Edith, you thought it was?
18:29Goat.
18:30Goat.
18:31What was it?
18:32Camel.
18:33Did you get camel?
18:34Where did we get camel milk?
18:35I'll give you three guesses.
18:41Greg, you thought it was...
18:43Dolphin.
18:44Dolphin.
18:45It was...
18:46Yak.
18:47Russell, you thought it was...
18:48I thought it was human milk.
18:49You thought it was human.
18:50It was...
18:51Donkey.
18:55Lloyd, you were fairly sure yours was horse.
18:57Am I right?
18:58Because of the flour.
18:59Because of the flour.
19:01Well, you should have taken that flour more seriously.
19:03What usually uses flour of the animal kingdom?
19:06Who's most likely to bake?
19:08It is...
19:09You.
19:21Lloyd, you're going to wish you hadn't confidently taken a second swig there,
19:24because those weren't the breasts.
19:28The only breasts that were used for this experiment were...
19:31I.
19:54Jon, can we have a look back?
19:57Well, nobody's mentioned pigs.
19:59We don't milk pigs, as they're actually very difficult to milk.
20:03Why?
20:04Not only do they have 14 teats,
20:06but they get agitated when their teats are touched
20:11and have to be restrained.
20:13But that would be a good thing for milking, wouldn't it?
20:1514 teats? Surely.
20:16Why do humans only have two teats?
20:19Because they've only got two breasts.
20:21Yeah, but...
20:25They've only got two nipples, because generally,
20:27women have one baby, then another baby, so that's that covered.
20:31And then by the time the third baby comes along,
20:33the first baby would be 18 months old
20:35and so wouldn't need breastfeeding anymore.
20:37Yeah, but surely it would be better if we had more than two nipples, Jon.
20:40Cows have got, like, how many? Five?
20:43No, it's probably six.
20:44It's probably an even number, isn't it?
20:46Eight.
20:47Has a cow got eight?
20:48Yeah.
20:49Why?
20:50Yeah.
20:51See, so why has a human only got two?
20:52You only milk six.
20:53You hang on to the other two.
20:58There's lots of weird things about cows.
20:59What is it with the rain?
21:00Do they stand up when it's going to rain?
21:02No, lie down on the ground.
21:03They lie down when it's going to rain.
21:05Is that true, though?
21:06They lie down when it's going to rain.
21:07It's to keep the grass dry.
21:10It's not.
21:11It is not. Wait a minute.
21:12I can't pass without comment.
21:14This isn't sheep and stuff.
21:15If it's going to rain, they all get under a tree in shelter, right?
21:17That makes sense.
21:18But cows just lie down.
21:19They're still going to get wet, aren't they?
21:20It's to protect the grass.
21:22It is not to protect the grass.
21:23They don't think, oh, the rain's coming.
21:25We'd better keep the grass dry because they don't like eating wet grass.
21:27It's not like when you're a kid hiding your sweets from other kids.
21:31Right, you...
21:33Moo.
21:34See, you eat chips, right?
21:39And cows eat grass.
21:40If you were out eating chips outside and it started raining,
21:43you'd cover them over, wouldn't you?
21:45They eat the grass and think,
21:46oh, I don't want my dinner to get wet, so I'll cover it over.
21:49I do know the answer.
21:51To that?
21:52Yeah, it's because air pressure makes a cow feel sick,
21:55so it sits down to be lower to the ground and it stops eating.
21:58Well, there's a massive difference in air pressure.
22:03I've got an interesting fact.
22:04It's not on here.
22:05We're at Kyoto doing the climate change.
22:07The Australians refused to sign the Kyoto Charter,
22:11largely because they said that the cows and the sheep were always flatulent
22:16and it was causing carbon.
22:17True.
22:18There was so much CO2 in the air from these animals eating grass
22:21that they couldn't sign the international agreement.
22:23Really?
22:24Yeah.
22:25That's why all those Australians go around with a hat on, corks on,
22:28because when they see one, they take the cork off and try and stop it.
22:40We should get an expert on this one.
22:42Let's get an expert.
22:43We can phone an expert.
22:44OK.
22:45Definitive answer.
22:46I've got someone you can talk to.
22:48He's Dr Peter Rowlinson
22:49and he's from the School of Agriculture, Food and Rural Development
22:53at Newcastle University.
22:55Hello, Dr Rowlinson.
22:57Good day to you.
22:58Good day to you.
22:59Welcome to the show.
23:00Thank you very much indeed.
23:01We're talking about milking other animals and milking cows.
23:04Can you ask a few questions that have come up
23:06during the course of this conversation for us?
23:08Ask away.
23:09OK.
23:10Why do humans only have two nipples?
23:12There's a very good correlation
23:14between the number of young and the number of breasts.
23:17So as one of your panellists said,
23:19humans normally will have one, sometimes two babies,
23:23therefore two breasts are sufficient.
23:26What about then the cow?
23:28They don't have six or seven births, do they?
23:31No, that's very good, Lord Prescott.
23:34Thank you very much.
23:35Excellent point.
23:37The answer probably goes back to the old ancestors of the cow,
23:43which were very much smaller and probably had two or three young.
23:48So they're a kind of evolutionary hangover?
23:51Yeah.
23:52Why do cows lie down when it's going to rain?
23:54Is it, as Lloyd thinks, to keep their grass dry?
23:57We're honestly not sure.
23:59Part of it is to keep the grass dry.
24:03Get off!
24:05APPLAUSE
24:07No, it's not.
24:09No, it's not.
24:12Dr Rowlinson, how do you prove that?
24:14They do seem able to anticipate weather,
24:18and part of that is thought to be due to pressure changes.
24:22LAUGHTER
24:24APPLAUSE
24:29Dr Rowlinson, just to come back to our question,
24:31are we milking the right animals?
24:33So are we, and why aren't we milking other things?
24:35Can you just sum that up to us nice and pithily, please?
24:38The pithy answer is yes, we are milking the right animals.
24:4290% of the milk consumed by humans is from cows,
24:47and it's really just a question of size,
24:50they're large, they're convenient,
24:53they've been domesticated, they're docile.
24:56Cow is the optimal species.
24:59Thank you very much, Dr Rowlinson.
25:01Thanks for being with us. I will take that as an answer.
25:03APPLAUSE
25:06So, Kevin Smith, the answer is yes, we are milking the right animals.
25:10I'm going to award that round to Lloyd
25:12for drinking Greg's mother's breast milk.
25:16Next, it is time for my quick-fire round,
25:19The Audience Asks.
25:21I'm going to try and get through as many questions as I can
25:23before we hear this noise.
25:25Will the honourable members shut up?
25:27LAUGHTER
25:31We won't bother with the answer button, there is no time for that,
25:34it's a quick-fire round, so I will just use this bell.
25:37BELL RINGS
25:39So, who is first in our quick-fire round?
25:41We have Matthew Payne. What's your question, Matthew?
25:43What is the point in trying to get to Mars?
25:46LAUGHTER
25:48Well, since we're in Glasgow, probably the deep fryer time.
25:51APPLAUSE
25:55David Hill, where are you, David? Hello, what's your question, sir?
25:57If Pinocchio told you... Oh, God.
25:59..that his nose...
26:01Pinocchio doesn't exist, David, let's start with that.
26:03Right. If he told you his nose was about to grow, what would happen?
26:07Well, it depends if he's lying,
26:10because Pinocchio didn't always lie.
26:12What he's saying is, if he states,
26:14my nose is about to grow, and it isn't,
26:16that is itself a lie, and his nose would automatically grow,
26:19so he's created a philosophical circle, is what he's saying.
26:22He has created a philosophical circle.
26:24Ask him the question. If Pinocchio says, my nose is...
26:27My nose is about to grow, what would happen?
26:29What would happen?
26:31Sometimes it would grow, sometimes it wouldn't,
26:33depending on whether Pinocchio's lying or not.
26:35No, no. No, it would always...
26:37It would always have to grow if he was lying.
26:40No, it wouldn't.
26:41There's supposed to be a quick-fire round.
26:43You can't go raising philosophical circles that baffle the panel.
26:46That was deep.
26:48It's not deep. Pinocchio, he can't always have lied.
26:51He can't always have lied. He's not real.
26:53But every time he lies...
26:55Every time he lies, his nose grows.
26:57So if Pinocchio says, no, my nose is not about to grow...
27:00It would have to... If it didn't grow,
27:02he would then be lying and it would grow.
27:08Order, order. You.
27:11Who's next? Kirstie Wallace.
27:13There you are. Hello, Kirstie. Hiya.
27:15Why does my one-year-old always sneeze
27:17when his mouth is filled with Weetabix?
27:21Is he allergic to Weetabix?
27:23Has he got a wheat allergy?
27:25I think it's just annoying me. It's all over me.
27:28So why do you keep shoving Weetabix in his mouth?
27:31Have you tried putting some milk with it?
27:34I've got some here.
27:38Stop feeding it to him, Kirstie.
27:40I don't know, but stop feeding it to your kid if he's allergic to it.
27:43James Fraser. Where are you, James?
27:45James. Hello, James. Hi, Rod.
27:47I would like to know why, when people talk spiral staircases,
27:50they always have to motion with their hands.
27:52When people talk about spiral staircases?
27:55How often do people talk about spiral staircases in your life?
27:58Not too often.
28:00But when they do, they always go like this.
28:02I know why. They do that because they're downstairs.
28:05Maybe it's that.
28:09People usually talk about downstairs.
28:11Well, the Honourable Members, shut up.
28:14That time is up.
28:16I'm going to award that round to Lloyd for his spiral staircase.
28:20APPLAUSE
28:24We've got through nearly all the questions for this week,
28:27but there's time for one more.
28:29It is our special guest asks round.
28:32And Edith, I believe you have a question.
28:35I do. I'm allergic to all animals.
28:38And I'm a massive techno geek as well.
28:41So I want to ask, will robots ever be man's best friend?
28:45John, can you see what you can find out?
28:47Will robots ever be man's best friend?
28:49What do our panel think?
28:51If you could get a robot to do one thing to improve your life,
28:54what would you do?
28:55Just monitor traffic wardens around my car.
28:57I just seem to attract them.
28:59When you say you just seem to attract them,
29:01do you mean I just seem to park illegally?
29:03And I think they're the nearest we've got to robots.
29:07Traffic wardens.
29:12I've started writing.
29:15What would you get a robot to do if you had one?
29:17Well, it's a terrible thing I'm going to say now,
29:19but wouldn't it be great if you're feeling really knackered,
29:21I could just put a robot stand-up out on stage.
29:23What's that all about? Easy, Jed. What's that all about?
29:26And then you could just laser hecklers. Shut up!
29:31Lloyd, are you a techno geeky?
29:34I'm the opposite of that.
29:36My phone is really old and it's full to capacity,
29:39so every time I make a new friend, I have to lose an old one.
29:43So your phone's got four spaces on it?
29:47You want to watch Lloyd's typing,
29:49it's one of the funniest things you'll ever see.
29:51Lloyd, I would just point out, can only type with one finger.
29:54Show us. Literally, like this. This is Lloyd typing.
29:56Yeah, that, that is it.
29:58I just think, why don't you just go like this?
30:03If he wants to save something, I have to come in and press control
30:05while he plays that.
30:07OK, John, have you got any more information for us?
30:09Yeah, some robots are multi-purpose,
30:11but some are built for the single purpose, like this one.
30:16MUSIC PLAYS
30:34That is Humpbot.
30:36That clip restores my faith in the internet.
30:39Greg, can you think of a way of testing whether man,
30:42or robots might be man's best friend?
30:45Well, yes, do you know what, Rod? I think I probably can.
30:50Let's go to the lab.
30:57Welcome to the lab.
30:59Lloyd just asked me if robots would ever be man's best friend
31:02around the house, and we're about to find out.
31:04Lloyd, what sort of domestic tasks do you envisage you'd need help with?
31:09Well, see, Greg, you'd made a spaghetti bolognese,
31:12and me, with my butterfingers, accidentally just...
31:15Oh, no, Lloyd! That is awful.
31:18The spaghetti bolognese has gone everywhere.
31:20Let's bring in the Rodbot 3000.
31:29What am I going to clean it up with?
31:31Your food disposal? With your hoover face. Get on with it.
31:35Hurry up, Rodbot!
31:38While Rodbot's getting on with that,
31:40what envisage you might have around the house, Lloyd?
31:42Well, see, I poured you a lovely glass of wine.
31:45Keep eating, Rodbot. We need it all cleaned up.
31:48Oh, no, look what's happened.
31:50I'll try sprinkling an awful lot of salt on top of the wine stain.
31:54It's not working. We're going to have to use Rodbot.
32:02I envisage another problem.
32:04Edith Beaumont, she was going to come around in about a minute's time
32:07because she really needed to use the toilet.
32:09Hold on a minute. There's no way Edith Beaumont can use our toilet.
32:12It's been blocked for over 70 years.
32:15It's not to me, Lloyd. Rodbot comes with a special attachment.
32:22Rodbot's got his cleaning attachment on. I'll just switch...
32:25There we are.
32:31Rodbot!
32:40Oh!
32:43You've got more talent than Rodbot has. I wanted to demonstrate to you, Lloyd.
32:46No, there's not.
32:48You'd better get ready to scarper. This is quite drastic, this one.
32:51It's the Humpbot button.
32:53Rodbot!
33:00Come back!
33:02I can't get round the desk.
33:06John, push the answer button, for God's sake!
33:09Yes, the answer is...
33:11Dr Reeve Simons from the Robotic Institute
33:14at the Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh says,
33:18yes, robots will ultimately achieve the level of intelligence
33:23and sociability that could make people want to be friends with them.
33:28Yes!
33:35I'm giving that round to Lord Prescott.
33:38He's the only one who hasn't done anything to me.
33:41That's pretty much it for tonight.
33:43So, people of Britain, if you've got a question,
33:46you can tweet hashtag ArtRod on Twitter.
33:50But for tonight, it's nice to heat his moment.
33:53Let's hear it for him.
33:55Ben Davies and Lloyd Langford.
33:58And, of course, our authenticator, Lord John Prescott.
34:03I'm Lord Prescott.
34:05You can ask me literally anything.
34:18Greg Davis must have a good agent.
34:20He's on another panel on Friday night.
34:22Would I lie to you at 9.30?
34:24Next on BBC One, Bruce Willis and Billy Bob Thornton
34:27are partners in crime in Bandits.
34:32That's pretty much it for tonight.
34:34So, people of...
34:36What was that?
34:44We just need to take this hat off.
34:46We can't hear him.
34:48Oh, well.
34:50Don't...