• 3 months ago
First broadcast 6th July 2007.

Jimmy Carr

Sean Lock
Jason Manford
John Pohlhammer

Trisha Goddard
Greg Rusedski
Alun Cochrane
Glenn Wool

Category

📺
TV
Transcript
00:00♪♪
00:10♪♪
00:19Tonight on 8 Out of 10 Packs,
00:22new ball hits Greg Rzeczki,
00:25Rock of the North, Alan Cochran,
00:29their team captain, Sean Locke,
00:32and facing them tonight, daytime dame,
00:35Trisha Goddard,
00:38comedy canoeer, Glenn Walls,
00:41and their team captain, Jason Manford.
00:45Now, welcome your host, Jimmy Carr.
00:51-♪♪
00:55Hello, and welcome to 8 Out of 10 Counts,
00:57a show about opinion polls, surveys, and statistics.
01:00Did you know, for example,
01:01sleeping through the alarm is the number one reason
01:03for being late for work?
01:05It's particularly bad if you're a fireman.
01:09British people are at least one inch taller
01:10than they were 20 years ago.
01:12That's because 20 years ago, we were all children.
01:18And 97% of all dangerous driving offenses
01:20are committed by men,
01:22which means 3% are committed by bloody women drivers.
01:26Let's get started.
01:28-♪♪
01:35What are you talking about?
01:36That's the name of our first round.
01:38We've teamed up with a leading polling organization,
01:40and they've asked the British nation
01:41what stories they've been discussing this week.
01:42It's our panelist's job to guess the British public's
01:44top five most popular talking points.
01:46Jason, Trisha, and Glenn,
01:48what have the nation been talking about this week?
01:50-♪♪ Is it Diana?
01:52The big concert that happened on Sunday, which was rubbish,
01:56but strangely addictive, that you just couldn't turn off.
01:59It was a real car crash telly.
02:01Um, it was, uh...
02:03-♪♪ Ohhhh
02:05Come on. Come on.
02:08They're making their own jokes now.
02:10There's no... That was never meant.
02:11The favorite bit was Mark Owen from Take That
02:13coming on stage and going,
02:14♪♪ Happy birthday, Diana
02:16Going, well, it's not probably one of our happiest,
02:19I'll be honest with you all.
02:20There are those things where Canadians get accused
02:24Britain of being quite bland and boring, and you managed to wrestle the title quite spectacularly
02:31by putting on that pile of shit.
02:34Was it P. Diddy, or whatever he's called now?
02:39Philip.
02:40Philip.
02:41It stands for Philip.
02:42Philip Diddy.
02:43Philip Diddy.
02:44That's what other people call him.
02:45At one point he said, make some noise if you miss Diana, right, and everyone cheered.
02:53I said, that's not the noise they should make.
02:55The noise they should have made was like pining, like a dog, like, oh, oh, oh, oh.
02:59Scratching the back of their chairs, like that.
03:02I missed the entire concert, because I went to the pub with a hundred Diana lookalikes
03:07that haven't worked for ten years.
03:09I just thought they needed cheered up.
03:12I gutted those girls.
03:15Tell me who you look like.
03:17Oh, here we go.
03:18You look like Shaggy in Scooby-Doo.
03:20Yeah.
03:22Couldn't say I look like a fat Michael Owen.
03:24So, at least yours is a bit of a, yours is a cartoon.
03:27I know, yeah, laugh it up.
03:28I live with this face.
03:30I like the way Harry gave a shout out to his troop in Iraq.
03:35Sorry I couldn't be there, boys.
03:38I wanted to, but been booking ballerinas.
03:43I saw the concert, and I would have rather gone to Iraq.
03:48They should have got Cilla Black and just flew in a big copter at the end and gone,
03:51Harry, you wanted to be there.
03:53You can be.
03:55Bye.
03:57Did you go, Greg?
03:58No, I missed it, but I managed to see Macker and Becker look like two leather-clad men
04:02introducing the acts.
04:04I must have missed that bit while I was being sick in the garden.
04:08He had a leather cap on, didn't he?
04:09Yeah, a leather cap.
04:10I saw a leather cap.
04:11And a Batman belt.
04:12Because he's in Fathers for Justice, but he's not that committed.
04:14Exactly.
04:15I'd like to see the kid again, but, you know, I did just fuck a waitress in a...
04:20It wasn't his, come on.
04:21He denied it in the beginning.
04:22He denied it in the beginning.
04:23When it popped out, there was no denying it.
04:26He didn't even have a DNA test.
04:27He just saw it with ginger ale and went, all right, fair enough.
04:31Was you invited, Tricia?
04:32No.
04:33Jeremy Kyle was there.
04:35That's what I'm saying.
04:36I think he might have got your invite.
04:40I saw Jeremy Kyle in a pub.
04:42Yeah, you always watch, don't you?
04:43I think he's brilliant.
04:44My family are on it.
04:48No, I saw him.
04:49He was in a pub in Manchester, and he was just sat by himself.
04:51But his phone went, and he just went, he picked it up and he went, hello?
04:54What?
04:55Fuck off.
04:56Fuck off.
04:57Fuck off.
04:58Leave that fucking orange juice.
04:59Fuck off.
05:00Like, he was the most rudest person I've ever met in my life.
05:03So I punched him in the face.
05:11Let's have a look and see whether the Diana concert is up there.
05:15Yes, it is.
05:16Third most talked about thing this week.
05:18Apparently, Duran Duran performed at Diana's memorial concert as it's what she would have wanted.
05:22I'm not sure she would have wanted a memorial concert at all.
05:30Sean, Greg, Alan, what else has the nation been talking about?
05:33Wimbledon in the rain.
05:34People are saying it's been the worst Wimbledon ever.
05:36It's been the worst in 25 years.
05:37It's just been on, off, on, off.
05:38So I have to agree.
05:39Are you just saying that because you're not there?
05:41Probably.
05:42A little bit of ego going on there.
05:44The thing I like about tennis is the pun headlines on Wimbledon you get.
05:47So like, if Tim Henman's won a couple of matches, it's Timbledon.
05:51And if it's lots of rain, it's Swimbledon.
05:55If there's lots of arguments, it's Grumbledon.
05:58They're just constantly coming up with any pun that they can work in with Wimbledon.
06:02Like, if it's hot, Wimblehot.
06:07Are you sure you don't work for one of those newspapers?
06:11They're dying for like a nun to walk past.
06:13They go, Wimbledon nun.
06:17I'm a fan of Rafael Nadal because he's got massive arms.
06:20Almost the same as yours, huh?
06:22A bit like mine.
06:23Yeah, check out Alan's guns.
06:24Wow.
06:29But he's huge and it seems weird because you'd think that he'd only have one huge arm
06:35because he's only hitting it with one hand.
06:38Have you got one big arm?
06:39Still got one big arm.
06:40Which one is it?
06:42Don't look down like that.
06:44He's got long arms.
06:51Do you have to do certain things?
06:53Do you have to go, right, I mustn't use that arm for this bit because it's too strong?
06:58Like if you were going to stroke a cat or something.
07:02With your big arm and you go, oh, I've crashed it.
07:08I should have used my weaker stroking arm.
07:15A bit like chicken.
07:16Are you going to say fish for a second?
07:17Don't touch him with that arm.
07:20There was a photo in the paper of some ducklings on one of the courts the other day.
07:24Wimbleduck.
07:28I don't think if you're a little yellow duckling, a little bit risky, that.
07:34Maybe if you're thinking about the game, you could easily just bend down and pick one of them up and twat it.
07:43Okay, let's have a look and see if Wimbledon's up there.
07:46Yes, of course it is.
07:49Yes, Wimbledon's been in the news.
07:51At Wimbledon, Henman has Henman Hill named after him.
07:54Murray has Murray Mound and Greg's got a Baker's opposite the station.
08:00Jason, Tricia, Glenn, what else have the country been talking about this week?
08:03Terrorists driving into Glasgow Airport.
08:06Yeah, the most violent incident in Glasgow that day.
08:09Yeah.
08:12I'm joking, not even close.
08:15What about the luggage handler, the hero?
08:17The luggage handler, he was amazing.
08:18Do you want to see a clip of this fella?
08:19Yeah.
08:20John Smeaton, he's a Glasgow hero.
08:21Have a look at him.
08:22I ran straight down.
08:24Other member of the Republic at the same time have done the exact same thing as me.
08:28We've all ran towards the guy.
08:30We've all tried to get a kick in at him.
08:33Just subdue the guy, get him down.
08:40He kicked him twice, thrown him as hard as he could against a wall, yeah, and then punched him about five times before he realised it wasn't a suitcase.
08:51He's like the Scottish Jack Bauer, that fella, isn't he?
08:54I think they should do the next series of 24 in Scotland.
08:58That would be brilliant.
08:59Beep, beep, beep.
09:01The following takes place between eight and nine.
09:05It took them six months to organise, you think.
09:08And at the end of that, your best plan was to set fire to your car and drive it through the front doors of an airport.
09:14I think the problem is our terrorists are now being trained by Brainiac on Sky One.
09:19They're just watching that and picking up what they can.
09:22There's been, like, three terrorist attempts in a row, and none of them have worked.
09:28And if I was, like, a terrorist that believed in a god that controlled everything, I'd have to start to think, maybe Allah likes Britain.
09:42Let's have a look round here for Tara.
09:43Tara, up there.
09:48Yes, Britain is on terror alert after attacks in London and Glasgow.
09:52There were two doctors on the scene almost immediately.
09:54Unfortunately, one of them was on fire, and the other one was trying to blow himself up.
10:02Sean, what else will the nation be talking about this week?
10:05Obviously, the outrageous abuse of our civil liberties, where we can't smoke in pubs anymore.
10:11It's outrageous. I object to it very, very strongly, mostly because I'm a smoker.
10:17I'm actually very, very hurt and upset by it.
10:19Has giving up smoking affected you in any way, Sean?
10:22No, because I haven't.
10:28You don't smoke, do you, Greg?
10:29No, I don't.
10:31Henman does, though, doesn't he?
10:32There's a rumour going around.
10:34I've heard that Henman smokes, but I think, actually, he doesn't.
10:37He's just doing it in a really desperate bid to be slightly interesting.
10:43I reckon he hates it. He's like...
10:46It's horrible.
10:47Whether he smokes or not, there's no way he smokes like that.
10:51I don't object to the idea of the ban.
10:53What I object to is the fines.
10:55They can ban it, but don't fine us as well.
10:58That's outrageous.
10:59Why?
11:00Just trust me.
11:02I might have the odd one.
11:05They're going to fine me as well.
11:07What I object to is also certain groups have dispensations, don't they?
11:11Care homes.
11:12And also magicians, don't they?
11:14Because they go...
11:19I don't smoke, but I don't drink either, so I don't spend a lot of time in pubs.
11:22What do you do?
11:23I visit whores.
11:31I don't go in pubs, but now all the smokers have come out on the streets,
11:35and now the streets are really smoky, you can't walk anywhere.
11:37I've got to walk into a pub to get a bit of fresh air.
11:39You don't have to wind me up.
11:40But the other thing is you'd find all your whores on the streets.
11:43Actually, that was a joke. I've never visited one.
11:45I like the way you say visited.
11:46Like, I brought some biscuits.
11:49I bought you the Radio Times, you know, you like that.
11:51Very safely.
11:52Stay half an hour, OK?
11:54Well, let's have a look and see whether smoking is in the top five most talked about things this week.
11:59Number one in most talked about thing this week, yeah.
12:02Britain's smoking ban came into force last weekend.
12:05There's a new patch for smokers.
12:06It's a bit of pavement outside the pub.
12:10OK, fingers on buzzers. One more thing to get.
12:11What else have the nations been talking about?
12:13The BBC correspondent, Alan Johnson, who has had a shave.
12:20He's been released. He was kidnapped and he's been let out.
12:23They let him go.
12:24He said that he was in a dark hole, that the food made him ill, and that they were rude.
12:30It just sounds like he was in Butlins for two weeks.
12:34I read the report and it said that they gave him Palestinian food for the first week,
12:37and then after that they gave him cheese and eggs.
12:39You have to respect him, though, because, you know, he's in a foreign country, he complained about the food.
12:44Most British people wouldn't even complain in a restaurant,
12:46let alone when someone's got a Kalashnikov.
12:50It's got a lot of front, doesn't it?
12:51When you're chained to a radiator to go this, it's...
12:54Bit too much basil.
12:57Let's have a look and see if Alan Johnson is up there.
13:00Yes, this is the story that BBC correspondent Alan Johnson has been freed.
13:04Alan Johnson was a little bit disappointed on being released, that he wasn't met by Davina McCall.
13:11At the end of that round, I can tell you that Sean's team have three points, Jason's team have two points.
13:18Our next round is called Pick of the Polls.
13:20Our teams choose a picture and then they have to answer a question based on a related statistic or survey.
13:24Sean, Greg and Alan, you're up.
13:27Sean, Greg and Alan, what picture do you want to go for?
13:30I'm going for Big Daddy.
13:32You're going for Big Daddy.
13:33OK, this picture represents dads and it's a word association question,
13:36so I'm looking for the top word or phrase the public said when we said dads.
13:39Oh, it's pain, isn't it? Unnecessary pain.
13:41Oh, Sean.
13:42Are you a dad, Sean?
13:44Yes, I am, yeah.
13:45You don't sound very happy about it.
13:47Yeah.
13:48Well, um...
13:49Are you on the birth certificate?
13:51Yeah, of course I am.
13:53You know the people Trisha normally meets, don't you?
13:57You've asked that question before, haven't you?
13:59Are you a dad, Alan?
14:00No, I'm going to be, though.
14:02Just as soon as you meet the right woman.
14:05They don't call me Shaggy for nothing.
14:14So this is baby number one?
14:16Yeah.
14:17You're going to get a better name than that, though, sure.
14:19Yeah, yeah.
14:20No, I'm just thinking, cos from now on it's no sex,
14:22no time together, no attention.
14:25Are you offering him a little bit on the side?
14:27From now on you won't be getting any at home.
14:31She won't even know you're gone.
14:34Jeez!
14:36It's a nice offer, but I think I'm out of your league.
14:46Top word or phrase associated with dads.
14:48Hard-working.
14:49Hard-working? You're having a laugh.
14:51Lazy.
14:52Lazy is exactly right, yeah.
14:56Yes, the word most associated with dads is lazy.
14:58A spokesman for lazy dads said,
15:00Oh, in a minute!
15:03Jason, your team, what do you want to go for?
15:05We're going to go with the dart player.
15:07We're going to go for Andy Fordham, the dart player.
15:09This is a nation's favourite question.
15:10What does the British public prefer, darts or Shakespeare?
15:14Do you think he's holding that during a game?
15:16It's dangerous. Makes darts a lot more exciting.
15:19Imagine if it hit one of his arms, he'd just burst.
15:24And sometimes when Andy Fordham lifts his arm like that,
15:27it's so big and greasy it does look like a kebab shop window.
15:33Come on, these are great athletes you're talking about here.
15:35Yeah.
15:36Great athlete?
15:37Well, that's a British tennis player saying that, so...
15:40I think Shakespeare is shit, so...
15:44I don't mind a couple of the, you know,
15:46the Romeo and Juliet type things not bad,
15:48but he's rubbish at comedy, isn't he? He's not funny.
15:50Well, he was back then.
15:51Was he, yeah? They all went,
15:52Yeah, all right, Willie, very funny, that.
15:55But do you think in 200 years people will find you funny?
15:58I don't think that many people find us funny now.
16:02When I was at university, we spent six weeks...
16:05Did you go to university?
16:06I did go to university, yeah.
16:07What did you study?
16:08I studied...
16:09Northern Studies.
16:10Northern Studies, yeah.
16:11Media and performance, I did.
16:12Wheel tapping.
16:13Salford...
16:16Which university was it?
16:17It was Salford University.
16:18Did it used to be a polytechnic, or a garage?
16:20It's...
16:23I did a bit of drama there, and we studied Shakespeare,
16:26and it was hard in that sort of area of Manchester,
16:28it's quite rough, you know, and there was a lot of, like,
16:30is this a dagger I see before me?
16:32Yeah, give me your trainers.
16:33You know, it was hard to get through.
16:35I can't imagine you acting, though.
16:37You can't imagine me what?
16:38I can't imagine you acting.
16:40Oh, God, I can't...
16:43APPLAUSE
16:48What do the nation prefer, Shakespeare or dance?
16:50I think people prefer Shakespeare.
16:52OK.
16:53I think dance.
16:54I can tell you, dance won.
16:5551% of the population prefers dance.
17:00Is that a dagger I see before me?
17:02No, it's a dart.
17:04So, at the end of that round, it's three points for Sean,
17:06Alan and Greg, and four points for Jason, Tricia and Glenn.
17:09APPLAUSE
17:13After the break, when we'll be finding out
17:15what your greatest regret is.
17:26Welcome back to 8 Out Of 10 Caps.
17:28The next round is Believe It Or Not.
17:30In this round, I give the panellists a simple statement.
17:32All they have to do is decide whether they think it's true or false.
17:34Let's have a look at a clip to illustrate your statistic.
17:36Because car boot sellers are deemed to be private individuals
17:39and not traders, there's no protection for the buyer.
17:42We secretly filmed our purchases at the next car boot...
17:4515 quid.
17:46..and took along electrical expert Tony Cuthbert.
17:49Tony, would you say this was lethal?
17:51Yes.
17:52We've had it looked at by an expert as potentially lethal.
17:55It's very badly worn.
17:57That's right.
17:58That's potentially lethal.
17:59Turn that off because I'll smash it in bits.
18:01Why would you smash it in bits?
18:03Second!
18:04Oi!
18:05This is lethal.
18:06This is lethal.
18:07There's no anchor for the wire, it can be pulled out.
18:09I know!
18:10Why do you think it's called second hand?
18:12You have a responsibility to the public, don't you?
18:15No, I don't have a responsibility to anybody.
18:17You don't have a responsibility to anybody.
18:19Only to myself.
18:20So it's up to the person to check out whether this is dangerous or not.
18:23Well, I would have thought so.
18:24That's not what happens in the shops, you know.
18:26I don't know.
18:27I'm not a shop.
18:28This is second hand rubbish.
18:34He's just selling stuff at a car boot sale.
18:36Leave him alone.
18:37Completely with him the whole way through it.
18:39Totally with him, yeah.
18:40The other thing is, the bloke goes,
18:41It's potentially lethal, this drill.
18:43So are all drills.
18:46There is a question.
18:4734% of Brits would prefer a trip to a car boot sale than a theme park.
18:51Do you think that's true or false?
18:52True.
18:54False.
18:55There we go. Let's crack on.
18:58The reason people like car boots is because they can haggle the price and stuff.
19:01You can't do that in a theme park.
19:02It's £5 to get on the ride.
19:04I'll give you £3.
19:05Alright, you're not allowed to use the belt.
19:08Whenever I see a ferris wheel, I do think the Millennium Wheel is clearly the best one.
19:12It's so slow, though.
19:13Well, if you scream louder, it goes faster.
19:16Did you not realise that was the system?
19:18No.
19:19Pull on the pikey, they go mental with it.
19:22Patricia, the wheel, it's supposed to be a delightful journey with a view across London.
19:27It's usually foggy or raining, so you can't see anything.
19:29Oh, no, go when it's sunny.
19:34Are you writing any of this down, Patricia?
19:38Have you ever been to Alton Towers?
19:39They've done well, they've started to run out of names of big roller coasters.
19:44So the previous few have been like Nemesis, Oblivion, and then one at the moment is called Rita.
19:53I don't like those teacups.
19:54I actually got beaten up in one once.
19:57You got beaten up in a teacup?
19:59I was doing this teacup ride, and someone punched me in the mouth.
20:04You suffered the gayest ever assault?
20:07I was in the teacup, officer, and this brute hit me.
20:12I was just spinning gently, I was having a wonderful time.
20:15You got punched.
20:16It's a mistaken identity.
20:17Why?
20:18They thought I was someone else.
20:26Okay, so true or false, 34% of Brits would prefer a trip to a car boot sale than a theme park.
20:30True or false, Sean?
20:31True.
20:32True.
20:33Both going for true.
20:34I can tell you the answer is true.
20:3634% of Brits would prefer a car boot sale to a theme park.
20:43So at the end of that round, I can tell you it's four points to Sean's team and five points to Jason's team.
20:48And the winner is, is the name of our final round.
20:51Okay, first one, most dangerous sport.
20:54Is it any sport that's played in the vicinity of Alby City?
21:00Greg, is tennis dangerous?
21:01No.
21:02Well, you hit it really hard, don't you?
21:04Yeah, but you've got to remember, the ball's soft, so it's not going to hurt you too badly.
21:06Not that soft, it's not like a sponge ball and plastic rackets like at school.
21:10What about doubles, though?
21:11Have you ever hit somebody on the back of the head when playing doubles?
21:14Yeah, I did that once.
21:16Who was it?
21:17It was Henman, wasn't it? It was Henman.
21:19You hate Henman.
21:21Go on.
21:22Is it five-a-side archery?
21:26The ones that do my head in are the old people, you know, when you see them on local news, and it's like,
21:30oh, now we're going to cut to Ernest, he's 89 today, and he's about to do his first skydive.
21:36Fuck off, Ernest.
21:38You're 89, sit in a chair and wait to die.
21:42That's what you're for.
21:46It's kind of a posh sport.
21:48Polo.
21:49Rugby?
21:50Rugby is exactly right.
21:54Yes, I can tell you the most dangerous sport is rugby.
21:57Rugby was invented at public school when some boys were playing football and thought, this isn't gay enough.
22:03Brit's biggest regret?
22:05Shaving all her hair off.
22:14Was it not letting Harry go to Iraq?
22:17Winning the football thing.
22:19World Cup.
22:21World Cup, we did win it. We haven't stopped going on about it.
22:23Remember when you were about 15, we won it.
22:27Oh, my God.
22:29Was it the repeal of the Corn Laws?
22:321832.
22:33That was stupid, that was crazy.
22:35Because they were good, those Corn Laws.
22:361847, nice call.
22:40Was it 1847? Surely it was 32.
22:42That was the reform act.
22:48What do you think it's going to be like to sleep with a girl?
22:57Brit's biggest regret?
22:59Trisha.
23:08I'll give you a clue, it involves your partner.
23:10When he murdered them and buried them.
23:13Not getting enough sex.
23:14That's the right answer.
23:19Well, that sound tells me it's the end of the round and the end of the show, which means the final scores are...
23:23Sean, Alan and Greg have four points, Jason, Trisha and Glenn have seven points.
23:27They're the winners tonight.
23:33Well, thanks to all our panellists, our wonderful studio audience and to all of you for watching at home.
23:36That's it from us. Good night.
23:42If you want to get more from 8 Out Of 10 Cats, download the podcast now at channel4radio.com.
23:48Next, Laura gives her views on her ex-housemates.
23:51She's coming out.