First broadcast 1st November 2010.
Rhod Gilbert
Greg Davies
Lloyd Langford
Jo Whiley
Louise Minchin
Arlene Phillips
Jack Whitehall
Jermaine Jackson
Kelly Holmes
Rhod Gilbert
Greg Davies
Lloyd Langford
Jo Whiley
Louise Minchin
Arlene Phillips
Jack Whitehall
Jermaine Jackson
Kelly Holmes
Category
📺
TVTranscript
00:00Tonight on Ask Rod Gilbert, our special guests are, she's not here to judge, it's Arlene
00:29Phillips, and five-star stand-up Jack Whitehall. They're here every week. You can answer the
00:37unanswerable. It's Greg Davies, and it's Rod's flatmate Lloyd. Ladies and gentlemen, Ask
00:45Rod Gilbert. Hello, welcome, yes, my name is Rod Gilbert and tonight my job is to find
00:56answers to the questions that keep us all awake at night. Some questions go to the heart
01:00of who we are as human beings, such as, when I go and buy a newspaper, why does the person
01:05on the till try and flog me a massive family bar of chocolate for a pound? It's happening
01:11more and more. A newspaper? That'll be 70 pence, sir. Do you want this massive bar of
01:15chocolate for a pound? No, I don't. Who are you? Some kind of recession hit Willy Wonka?
01:20You lost the chocolate factory in the downturn, got a job in a newsagent, now you're trying
01:24to get a shot of as much of the liquidated stock as possible? You don't get this happening
01:28in other places, do you? Other people don't try and shift irrelevant stuff onto you for
01:31no reason. Do you take this woman to be your wife? You do? Brilliant, how about a George
01:35Foreman grill for 20 quid? Nurse, pass me the scalpel. Certainly, doctor, before I do,
01:40can I interest you in this set of T-file non-stick pans? Stop offering us irrelevant rubbish
01:46or we'll start doing it back to you. Next time you're buying a paper and someone asks
01:49you if you want a massive bar of chocolate for a pound, say no thanks. Why? Do you want
01:53a dead seagull? No? How about a naked picture of my auntie? Do you want that? Do you? How
01:58about a nice bowl of shreddies? Do you want a nice bowl of shreddies? Is it? What about
02:02a panini sticker of David Ginola? No? You don't want that? Well, that is a shame. It
02:06looks like the chocolate deal is off, so give me my ruddy newspaper and I'll be on my way.
02:18On with the show. In a world full of nonsense and piffle, we need someone with credibility
02:22to help find the answers to our questions. So, as always, we begin by asking, who is
02:26tonight's authenticator? Breaking news. Our reporters say she's bilingual, a degree in
02:32Spanish from St Andrew's University. She's appeared on Spooks, appearing as herself.
02:37She's done a lot of charity work. She completed a leg of the Around the World in 80 days for
02:41children in need. And, of course, she reads the news. Yes, breaking news, I can confirm
02:45tonight's authenticator is Louise Minchin.
03:00Hello. Hello, God.
03:05Hello, Louise. Hello, hello. Thank you for coming on the show. Are you well? Pleasure, yes,
03:09very well indeed. How are you? I'm very well, thank you. Good. I said there that you read
03:12the news, but you do loads of stuff on TV. Yes, I do lots of things like Real Rescues,
03:16Missing Live, The One Show sometimes. You had a bit of a thingy with Will Smith as well,
03:20didn't you? Didn't you get a bit close to him? That wasn't my fault. So what happened...
03:24I didn't say it was your fault. For some reason, it can only happen on The One Show, so for
03:29some reason we were trying out blueberries and my co-presenter Matt said he didn't really
03:33like them and Will Smith said it's because you haven't been giving them properly. So
03:37he threw a blueberry into Matt's mouth, but it didn't hit Matt's mouth, it hit his nose
03:43and the blueberry fell somewhere that possibly it shouldn't have done. You can imagine.
03:51Louise, how are you going to help us tonight? Well, Rod, just like I tell everybody what's
03:55in the news, I'm here tonight to provide facts and information which can hopefully get us
03:59closer to the answers to the questions tonight. Wonderful, thank you. And when I think we
04:03have an answer, I will do this. Arlene, welcome to the show. What have you been asked this
04:11week? Well, bizarrely, what I've been asked this week is, on my Twitter, to say happy
04:17birthday to someone's auntie. This is the problem with Twitter, isn't it? I want to
04:23know, is everyone on Twitter asked this question as frequently as I am? Are you on Twitter,
04:29Louise? No. Are you on Twitter, Greg? No. Are you on Twitter, Jack? Mm-mm. But you get
04:35propositioned a lot on Twitter, don't you? Yes, I do. What have you learnt this week,
04:41Jack? When I was on the train station, waiting for my train, this guy comes up to me and
04:45goes, you're the guy from Blue Peter, aren't you? And I was like, no, no, no, I'm not the
04:49guy from Blue Peter. He was like, no, no, you're definitely the guy from Blue Peter.
04:52I was like, I think I'd know if I was the guy from Blue Peter. It's not the kind of
04:55thing you stumble into by accident. And before you know it, you're hosting Blue Peter. But
04:59he was so persistent. I looked up, my train was four minutes away. I was like, I can't
05:02be bothered to have this argument. So I was like, yes, I'm the host of Blue Peter. And
05:06then for four minutes, I stood on this platform, answering all these questions about Blue Peter.
05:09And he was upset. He was like, so what's the garden like? And I was like, oh, it looks
05:13a lot bigger on television than it is in real life. And then someone else walks past and
05:17goes, oh, you're Jack Wildhoff from Up The Week. And then it was just complete silence
05:22because I felt really awkward because I'd lied about being on Blue Peter. And he was
05:25like, why did you lie to me? I was like, you made me lie. I didn't want to pretend to be
05:29on Blue Peter. And then I went off to get my train. And before I went, he was like,
05:32but is the garden actually bigger? I don't know.
05:36So on with the show. Let's find out who wants to know what. Who have we got tonight?
05:41Oh, it's Wayne Rooney. Let's have a look.
05:47Let's hear him what he's got to say before we laugh.
05:50Rod, do you think I was right to go to Dubai without any sunscreen?
05:57It's hard to say, isn't it? Time will tell, I suppose, Wayne. Who else have we got here?
06:03Ah, Cheryl Coe. Shall we have a question from Cheryl? Why not?
06:07Cheryl says, Rod, do you think my new wax work is realistic?
06:12Well, Cheryl, I do think it's very realistic. I genuinely cannot tell the difference.
06:17And I was at the unveiling and I chatted you both for at least an hour afterwards.
06:23Who's next? Let's have a look. Oh, Jermaine Jackson. Are you a fan of the Jacksons?
06:29I was a huge Michael Jackson fan. Right, let's find out what Jermaine wants to know.
06:34Hi, Rod. We Jacksons are known for our dangerous dance moves. But my question to you is, Rod,
06:39which body part is the most dangerous?
06:44Louise, can you see what you can find out? What part of the body is the most dangerous?
06:49Well, if I said to you, right, there's a duel, you're going to be in a duel,
06:52and here I have a wonderful collection of body parts in, like, a foam case, you know,
06:56like, you normally choose your pistols from it, and you had a collection of body parts you could choose from,
07:00what would you choose? A box of body parts? What kind of duel is this?
07:05That isn't what Jermaine Jackson is asking you. He's not saying which is the most dangerous body part to hit someone with.
07:11Say you're fighting Lloyd. Lloyd, pick your weapon. What would you choose, Lloyd, from a box of weapons?
07:16I would choose the small intestine.
07:21Funnily enough, I think I'm out of them, Lloyd. Why do you want the small intestine?
07:26Because it's 25 foot long. I could use it as, like, a slimy lasso.
07:32Ah, now you're thinking. Greg, what would you go for?
07:36I have to select a body part from your serial killer casket.
07:41I'd probably put a rib cage round my head.
07:45That's a very defensive stance. That's very negative.
07:48No, they're very flexible as well, because my entire head would be protected,
07:51and if he, Lloyd, attacked me with his slimy lasso, I would pull two of the ribs out,
07:55I'd throw them as knives into Lloyd's head, then I'd pull an extra rib out, throw it on the floor,
08:00and I'd get off with her. It'd be brilliant.
08:07What would you have from my slightly macabre box of weird body parts?
08:11For me, there is no option. It's the voice box, and it yells,
08:15Kill him!
08:21Of course!
08:23They may say sticks and stones can break my bones, but words can never harm me.
08:28Let me tell you, words can do a great deal of harm.
08:32They do also say sticks and stones may break my bones,
08:34but a big slimy intestine lasso will also help.
08:39Have we got any information that might lead us any closer to an answer?
08:42You mentioned voices, didn't you?
08:44Squeaky voice comedian Joe Pasquale holds the world record
08:47for the most martial arts throws in one minute.
08:50No, he doesn't!
08:51In April 2009, he performed 29 martial arts throws in 60 seconds.
08:56A courtier, yeah, and Floella Benjamin's a ninja.
09:01You haven't thought of the head yet in this equation.
09:03Nobody's mentioned the head. The head's quite a powerful tool.
09:06Your head's always reminded me of one of those things,
09:08you know, those big brass balls they have more boats round?
09:11Aw!
09:13Your head is disproportionately...
09:15What's the average weight of a normal human head, please?
09:17Well, now you mention it, the average weight of the human head is five kilos.
09:22Right, let's weigh Greg's head.
09:24Oh, you just happen to have some scales here, do you?
09:27Arlene, would you mind doing the honours?
09:29Can you weigh Greg's head for me?
09:31Because a normal human head is five kilos.
09:34Right, let's have a look.
09:36A normal human head is five...
09:38Wait, let's first off, let's try and...
09:40What's your guess? Five kilos is the normal human head.
09:43Let's play guess the weight of the troll's head and you catch...
09:50Right, guess the weight, you win a prize.
09:53So, Lloyd, what's your guess, please, for Greg's troll's head?
09:576.5 kilograms.
09:596.5 kilograms for the fish.
10:01Jack Whitesall?
10:02I'm going to go for six kilograms.
10:06Six kilograms, conservative estimate. Arlene?
10:086.2 and a half.
10:106.2 and a half. And Louise?
10:12I wanted six.
10:13Yeah, for Louise, you mentioned six kilos.
10:15I'm going to go 14 kilos.
10:19Greg, would you pop your bulbous skull into the scales, please?
10:22I certainly will, but I would point out that your head,
10:25there is no differentiation between your head and your neck.
10:28You're essentially a tube.
10:32Get your body off the chair. Come on, Greg, get it...
10:34Get your head in there properly.
10:36Get this out of the way.
10:38All right!
10:40Get your head in there.
10:42Get your head face down.
10:46Get my other leg, please.
10:49Ron, I've got his arse in my face!
10:52Can you get his bum out of my face, Ron?
10:54No! Stop it!
10:56Oh, Arlene!
10:58Oh!
10:59Six.
11:01And take your head out of the scales.
11:03What is it?
11:05Six kilos is the maximum on you, and it was on there comfortably.
11:09So it's at least six kilos.
11:11Let's try Jack's head.
11:13Yeah, let's try Jack's head.
11:15Let's try Jack's head.
11:17For comparison, let's just pop a normal head in the scale.
11:20Do you want to just take me there?
11:22Well, we're here, though.
11:24That's it, this is the way to do it.
11:26Arlene, can you...?
11:34Oh, it's the same weight!
11:41It's the same weight.
11:43It's heavier.
11:48Just to put Greg's massive, bulbous, thick head in context,
11:53if it was at least six kilograms,
11:56can you put that in context for us?
11:58What would that be the same weight as?
12:00Is it about the size of a bison or something like that?
12:03A bison. Possibly.
12:05Your head is the same weight as a bison.
12:09That's not a fact.
12:12That's not a fact.
12:14A cow's head is 11 kilograms.
12:16So he's about half the size of a cow's head.
12:21Which is quite big.
12:23That is the most flattering thing I've ever heard said about you.
12:26Anyway, closest to the thing was...
12:28I'm going to go with Arlene Phillips.
12:30I'm with 6.25, we'll go with that.
12:32Arlene, you win a fish.
12:34APPLAUSE
12:39Louise, do you have anything else for us
12:41that might take us closer to an answer
12:43on what's the most dangerous body part?
12:45I've got someone who can help us. It's Dr Quintin Fogg.
12:48He's a lecturer in anatomy and he's on the line for you.
12:51Dr Quintin Fogg. Hi, how are you doing?
12:53Hello. Are you a doctor of...? What is your expertise?
12:56I'm a scientist trained in anatomy, so I'm an anatomist.
12:59OK. So, top three.
13:01Is this at number three? Is this in any particular order?
13:04Yeah, this is third from the top.
13:06The number three is an index finger.
13:08An index finger. What, really?
13:10The most dangerous body part? Surely not.
13:12It can poke in an eye, a nose, in a mouth,
13:15any other place you care to think of.
13:17Yeah. Yeah.
13:19And there's also a sharp nail on the end.
13:21Oh, what was that about a nail on the end?
13:23There's a nail on the end, so it can cut the soft tissue very easily.
13:26So it comes with a little bit of an extra bang in that
13:29it's got a little bit of dirt or bacteria underneath.
13:32What's at number two, Dr Fogg?
13:34Stomach acid, or the stomach, is a really dangerous thing
13:37if you can harness the power of the acid which the stomach secretes.
13:41Ah, like an alien. Like an alien, yes.
13:44So what would you do, then, to use it as a weapon?
13:47You'd have to be quite sadistic and cut it open and fling it at someone.
13:54So flinging a fairly hydrochloric stomach at somebody intact.
13:58And what, dare I ask, is number one and the most dangerous body part?
14:02Well, number one's a little bit more obvious,
14:04and that's the top of your head, or top of your forehead.
14:07It's really dangerous for your opponent
14:10because it's reasonably thick bone,
14:12but it's also got a really tight tendon
14:14stretched over the surface of it, which makes it incredibly strong.
14:17Is that why exclusively Scottish people use it as a weapon?
14:20It may well be, yes.
14:22Thank you very much. I will consider that as an answer,
14:24and thank you for your time.
14:26Yeah, no problem. Cheers, mate.
14:27Cheers, mate. Bye-bye. Bye.
14:33So, Jermaine Jackson, you asked which part of the body is the most dangerous,
14:37and the answer is the top of your forehead.
14:40Unless you're Mel Gibson, in which case it's definitely
14:42the big racist drunken hole in the front of your face.
14:50Who's next? Let's have a look.
14:53Of course, friend of the show, Kim Yong-il.
14:56Every week we have a question from Kim Yong-il.
14:59Rod, Alan Sugar has asked me to go on Celebrity Apprentice,
15:02but he wanted to know if I was any good in the bedroom.
15:06I'll level with you, Rod.
15:07I'm a dog's leg short of a casserole in the sack these days.
15:12Kim, I appreciate your honesty, but I think they said boardroom.
15:16Who else have we got?
15:19Dame Kelly Holmes.
15:21Hi, Rod. The fastest man in the world is Usain Bolt.
15:25So my question to you is,
15:27who would win a race between Usain or a bear?
15:34Louise, you see what you can find out. What do we think?
15:36Usain Bolt versus a bear. Harleen, what do you reckon?
15:39I could only imagine a bear lumbering, not speeding.
15:44And Usain Bolt is a man so fast on his feet that he...
15:50You feel like you haven't seen him as he went by.
15:52That is fast.
15:54Basically, I'm thinking that if you get chased by certain bears,
15:58you're supposed to run in a zigzag motion,
16:01and if Usain Bolt did that,
16:03he would leave his lane and be instantly disqualified.
16:15I'll tell you another little fact about bears
16:17that you might be interested in,
16:19which is they show that they are naturally quite good at martial arts.
16:25Which is the one with the stick? Is it kendo or taekwondo?
16:28Kendo. I'm trained in that one.
16:30Are you trained in that? Sort of.
16:33I've done it. I've done it once when I was...
16:37Do you only have to do something once
16:39in order to claim you're trained in it? Yeah, basically.
16:42I've done loads of stuff. I'm going to make a list.
16:45Have you ever seen a bear doing kendo?
16:47Doing fairly... Being pretty good with a stick?
16:49Yeah, that's what happens on the first lesson.
16:51They bring in a bear and ask you to be...
16:53People always laugh at my things, it is true.
16:55Louise, can you see... Have we got one?
16:58Yes, we've got a picture of a bear who could possibly
17:01give Usain a bit of trouble.
17:03There he is, watch this. Oh, years of training.
17:05Look at that. Yeah, deadly.
17:07Oh, come on. It's not bad.
17:09Well, surely this bear's going to do pole vault.
17:12Look at that.
17:18Look at that.
17:25Hello. Hello.
17:27Hello.
17:29What do you say to that?
17:33Could you do that, Jack Whitehall?
17:35After one lesson, be honest, were you as proficient as that bear?
17:38That bear, I can tell, has had a lot of training.
17:41They do that in the wild? That's an expert.
17:43Sadly, he's not had training in martial arts,
17:45but he can play the drum majorette.
17:51I'll put that music to it.
17:53All right, let's play it again, let's play it again.
17:55So what you're saying is that bears can do majorette work,
17:58but not martial arts? Yeah.
18:00OK.
18:02HE HUMS
18:04HE HUMS
18:06HE HUMS
18:08HE HUMS
18:10HE HUMS
18:12APPLAUSE
18:16Can we come back to the question?
18:18This is a race between a man and a bear.
18:20Are we allowed to shave the bear?
18:22No!
18:28No, no, this is a perfectly respectable Sunday family athletics meeting.
18:33Why should you be able to indulge your personal fantasies
18:36before the race?
18:38No, no, it's to do with wind resistance.
18:40Oh, right.
18:42Are you saying vote versus a bear,
18:44and I'm going grizzly bear, normal athletics meeting?
18:47I think a grizzly bear would win. Deal.
18:49Yeah. Go on.
18:51You hear about people getting chased by bears and...
18:53Yeah, you never hear about people getting caught.
18:57Being chased suggests there's a gap between you and the bear.
19:00HE HUMS
19:02Well, I mean, there's got to be a point before you get caught
19:06where you're being chased.
19:08Unless you're just sat...
19:10Unless you're just sat underneath a tree and the bear just jumps out.
19:15Or sleeping in your tent, peacefully, and the bear enters.
19:20I still imagine there'd be...
19:24Oh, I love the... I love the picture you put in.
19:27And I love the camp entrance the bear made there as well.
19:31Here I am.
19:33I shaved for you.
19:36APPLAUSE
19:39Let's get some more information,
19:41or are we any closer to finding an answer, Louise?
19:43The average speed Usain Bolt when he ran the 100 metres
19:46during the final of the 2009 World Championships in Berlin
19:50is 10.44 metres per second,
19:54which is 23.4 miles an hour.
19:57Bears have been known to run at speeds of up to 30 miles an hour
20:00for a quarter of a mile.
20:02Therefore, the bear wins.
20:04I will take that as an answer.
20:06APPLAUSE
20:10So, Jane Carey-Holmes, you asked who would win in a race,
20:13Usain Bolt or a bear, and the answer is the bear would win.
20:16Bears can maintain speeds of up to 30 miles an hour
20:19across a wide variety of terrains.
20:21One was clocked at that speed recently,
20:23running through a forest, crossing a stream
20:25and hurtling down the side of a mountain,
20:27which coincidentally is the same route George Michael took
20:29when he gave me a lift home from the pub the other day.
20:32APPLAUSE
20:36Now, before the show started, I gave our studio audience
20:39the chance to send their questions to me,
20:41so let's look at what you want to know.
20:43Who have we got tonight?
20:45Katrina McGale.
20:47Is it pronounced Katrina McGale?
20:49Where are you, Katrina? I'm here.
20:51Oh, there you are. Hello. Hiya.
20:53And what is your question?
20:55My question is, why do people pay to go up tall buildings
20:58and then pay to look at stuff on the ground through binoculars?
21:02You think you should just stay on the ground in the first place
21:04and just look at stuff down there?
21:06Yeah, just save themselves some money, see, on the ground.
21:08Well, I think it's a perfectly legitimate complaint.
21:10Why do people do...?
21:12Because Katrina doesn't know how fun it can be.
21:14If you're at the top of a tall building and you have binoculars,
21:16there's so much stuff.
21:18You can see the tops of people's heads and the tops of buildings.
21:21I think she's got a... You can sit down if you want now, Katrina.
21:23I think she's got a really good point.
21:25It's exactly what we do. We go all the way up to the top
21:27and then you look down at the bottom.
21:29I think you have to put a bit of distance between yourself
21:31and something else to really appreciate it, though, don't you?
21:33Yeah, like my ex-girlfriend.
21:43What else have we got?
21:45Er...
21:47Oh, this came in on Twitter from Simon Gowan.
21:49Why do humans have toes?
21:51Any thoughts on that, Louise, before I set you to work?
21:54Well, your feet are pretty important,
21:56so your toes must keep you balanced, mustn't they?
21:58Can you see what you can find out? Yeah.
22:00Why do humans have toes?
22:02Arlene, you're a dancer. Are toes useful in dancing?
22:05Toes are very useful in dancing. Are they?
22:07Yeah, because if you've got your toes, you can go up on,
22:10or your heels you can rock back on, and you can wiggle your toes.
22:13It's not really dancing, is it, that?
22:16The foot is an irritating thing to look at,
22:18cos it looks very like a hand, but it's utterly useless.
22:21I would just as happily have a hoof.
22:24You can't, though.
22:26In the bath. Yeah.
22:28No, all right, toes. I'm talking about the toed element.
22:30That's what you do, you test the water by dipping your toe in it.
22:33No, you just dip the end of your foot in,
22:35it just happens to be toes on the end.
22:37But I don't like that, cos the toe always deceives you,
22:39cos when you're testing a bath and you put it in,
22:41and it feels like, oh, actually, that's not that hot,
22:43and then you do that thing where you lower yourself into the bath,
22:46and when you do lower yourself into the bath,
22:48it's always the ball that just hits it first,
22:50and your toe has lied to you, cos it said that it was quite hot,
22:53and then you got into a bath of lava.
22:55And you started dancing like a bear.
22:57If the toe's deceiving you like that,
22:59imagine how much a hoof is going to deceive you.
23:01If you had hooves, how would you get over a cattle grid?
23:07The same way as I get over a cattle grid now.
23:10Or I would go to the massive inconvenience of my life,
23:13every time I came to a cattle grid, I'd go round it,
23:15go through the little gate.
23:16Go on, what have you got for us?
23:18Well, according to a study, the way in which a person moves their feet
23:22A woman who's impressed by a male admirer will move her feet towards him
23:25if her feet are crossed or tucked under her body.
23:27Oh, God, I'm spoiled for choice.
23:29That means she isn't interested.
23:30Just tuck your feet under there.
23:32Oh, hang on a minute.
23:33Every single woman in the audience is pointing her feet my way.
23:39Interesting.
23:40Do you do things with your feet?
23:42Are you conscious of it?
23:43I am quite conscious of my feet, actually.
23:45Are you?
23:46Yeah.
23:47What, like in a...
23:48Not in a romantic... You know what I mean?
23:50You'd give out messages deliberately with your feet and you'd know...
23:53Especially when you're sitting and doing the news on breakfast,
23:56it's quite important where your feet are.
23:58Is it? Go on.
23:59If you're not facing with your knees towards your co-presenter,
24:03you look like you don't like them.
24:05Yeah, and you can't have your feet up on the desk.
24:07No.
24:08Sort of feet being... Feet and toes and stuff.
24:10You might not agree with that, but what you will agree with
24:13almost certainly is that toenails are utterly pointless.
24:15What is the toenail for?
24:16I guess it's to protect our little sensitive bit underneath it.
24:19That little bit underneath it wouldn't be sensitive unless it had nails.
24:22It's only sensitive because there's nails on top of it.
24:24Yeah, I guess it's a kind of catch-22.
24:26It is!
24:27It's quite a good way to get your girlfriend out of the room
24:30if you're watching, like, TV and enjoying it.
24:32She comes in,
24:33can we watch Gossip Girl? Start eating one of your toenails.
24:36Louise, have you got anything for us?
24:38Why do we have... Why do humans have toes?
24:40Have you got anything for us?
24:41Yes, Professor Robin Crumpton, he's Professor of...
24:43Professor Robin Crumpton?
24:44Yes, of anatomy at the University of Liverpool,
24:47says...
25:02Really? So they're not as useless as I thought?
25:04Not at all.
25:05I'll treat that as an answer.
25:14Thanks, Simon, I think that answers your question.
25:16That's nearly all the questions we've had sent in this week,
25:18but Arlene, you are here, our special guest.
25:20Do you have a question for us this week?
25:25Rod, would life be better with or without gravity?
25:31I'm definitely going to go without.
25:33Are you a fan of gravity, Louise?
25:35I'd happily get rid of it.
25:36Would you?
25:37Yeah.
25:38I think we'd find it a bit difficult without it, wouldn't we?
25:41I mean, I wouldn't be able to be looking at this computer.
25:43Of course you would.
25:44Would I?
25:45You'd be up there doing it.
25:49Gravity wouldn't make any difference to you, Greg.
25:51I think even without gravity that you'd still be on the ground.
25:55I'm so fat.
25:57No, I genuinely think that if there was no gravity on the Earth,
26:01the Earth would be solely populated by you and elephants.
26:08What would you do, Greg?
26:09What would you do when it's just you and elephants roaming the Earth?
26:12I would dress as a giant mouse and become their ruler.
26:18Everything to do with wildlife would be better without gravity.
26:20You go to a zoo, for example, and you spend half an hour...
26:23I spend half my life looking for marmots.
26:25You spend half your life looking for marmots?
26:29You know what I mean?
26:30In zoos, you spend an awful lot of time thinking,
26:32is he in there? I can't see. Was that him?
26:34If you went to a zoo, no gravity, they'd all just be, there he is.
26:37They'd all be out in the open. You could see them all.
26:39I would be quite surprised if I was floated through the air
26:42and then, from behind, I got mauled by a tiger.
26:46You'd have to keep your wits about.
26:47If you went to a zoo, anyway,
26:48they'd probably give you, like, a taser on the way in with your map.
26:51Have you got any information for us
26:53about whether life might be better or worse without gravity, Louise?
26:55Well, Russell Brand is going to be sent into space.
26:57Not by NASA.
26:58Katy Perry has reportedly brought to him a $200,000 trip
27:02on the Virgin Galactic spacecraft for his 35th birthday.
27:05Do you know what? Lloyd's girlfriend got him for his birthday.
27:08It wasn't a... No, it wasn't a £200,000 trip into space.
27:11It was a banana holder.
27:14A plastic banana holder.
27:16No, it's a banana protector.
27:18It's not a banana... It's not a banana protector.
27:21Have you ever heard of a banana protector, Louise?
27:23That's what he had for his birthday.
27:25I'm not an imbecile. I can hold a banana.
27:27Why are you protecting?
27:29What? But you're not man enough to protect it.
27:33APPLAUSE
27:35What are you worried about?
27:37What? Why?
27:39Why do you need a banana... What are you worried about?
27:41Are you going to get mugged by a monkey on the way home?
27:43What are you worried about?
27:45Anyway, it looks exactly like a banana.
27:47If you were going to get mugged by a monkey,
27:49he's going to spot you more easily cos you've got a massive thing
27:51that looks like a banana with a banana inside.
27:53I'm not trying to protect myself from a monkey.
27:55Well, why else would you protect a banana?
27:57You use it because if you're putting a banana in a bag
28:00or a rucksack or something,
28:02it's a very soft fruit that gets easily bruised,
28:05and so in order to stop it getting black and mashed up,
28:08you put it in a banana protector,
28:10then when you get to your destination,
28:12open the banana protector and the banana is perfectly fine.
28:17It doesn't even fit most bananas. I've tried.
28:19Mate, it fits 98% of bananas.
28:23That's what it says.
28:24And I'll tell you now, the other 2% can go take a running jump.
28:29Jack, better or worse without gravity? Final thoughts.
28:32I think it is better with gravity.
28:34Lloyd, what do you think?
28:35You don't tamper with a classic.
28:39I think it's going with, Greg.
28:41Of course with.
28:43Why?
28:44Where's your sense of fun?
28:46Where's your spirit of joie de vivre?
28:48I think floating through life could be everyone's dream.
28:52And you know what, if we could just try it for a little while,
28:55maybe we'll all fall in love with it.
28:57Oh, my.
28:58Oh, it's lovely.
29:00Leave the children out here
29:04Let them lead the way
29:07Louise, what do you think? Better or worse without gravity?
29:10What are you going to go for? What do you personally prefer?
29:12To be honest, you've kind of sold me on without gravity.
29:15Oh, thank you. Yeah.
29:16A bit of floating about.
29:18And particularly when Arlene expresses it like that.
29:20Yeah. Greg? Yes, Rod?
29:22Could you think of a way that we could prove
29:25whether life was better or worse with or without gravity?
29:28Don't ask me that question, Rod,
29:29because I've been giving this a lot of thought before the show.
29:31Have you? Yes, I have.
29:33You can think of a way of proving whether life would be better or worse without gravity, can't you?
29:36Indeed, I can. I've got it right here.
29:38Lloyd, I think you'd better...
29:40Get ready, Lloyd.
29:41I'm just going to make a little alteration to it, though, if you'll forgive me.
29:44I don't want to do it this week.
29:47Unlucky Lloyd.
29:48Oh, no. You're off the hook.
29:50It says Lloyd's Gravity Free Day on there.
29:52Not anymore. Come on. Let's go.
29:59Welcome to Gregor Norrie.
30:05Little Rod Gilbert woke up bright and early.
30:08I wonder what adventures I'll get up to today, he thought.
30:12I might go downtown and start arguments with people
30:15by taking a ridiculously contrary stance on issues of common sense.
30:19That is not what I do!
30:21Little did Rod know, overnight, one of his fantasies had come true.
30:27Gravity had disappeared.
30:29So when he tried to get up...
30:47Get on with it!
30:48Why, I've always maintained that life without gravity would be better.
30:52I think I'll get dressed and go exploring.
30:57Unfortunately, all of Rod's clothes had floated away,
31:01apart from a disgusting pair of pink leggings that he immediately put on.
31:10Let's get him on the right way round, otherwise you'll look foolish.
31:19Oh, maybe you could do a bit of dancing, J-Lo style.
31:23Shut your face, Annie!
31:27Whoa!
31:29Having no gravity is tricky, but I still maintain it's better,
31:33said a stupid Rod.
31:35Time for breakfast. Where are my cornflakes and milk?
31:39Unfortunately, the lack of gravity meant that the corn...
31:45Unfortunately, the lack of gravity meant that the cornflakes
31:48wouldn't stay in the bowl.
31:50Breakfast was a disaster.
31:56APPLAUSE
32:02Fortunately, a big, messy blackcurrant cheesecake was floating by,
32:07and Rod enjoyed a massive bite.
32:16You are...
32:18Oh, dear me.
32:20Fortunately, there was a gigantic chocolate cake
32:24drifting past, which Rod enjoyed heartily.
32:38Oh, come on!
32:40Little Rod was full and exhausted.
32:43He was. So it was time for bed.
32:45It is time for bed.
32:47Sadly, his bed and duvet had floated off,
32:50so he had to spend the rest of his life...
32:53So he had to spend the rest of his life floating in space.
32:57Forever!
32:59The end!
33:05You're in serious trouble, Ransom.
33:14Louise, do you have a final fact that can help us
33:16whether life would be better or worse without gravity?
33:18I think I've got a sneaking suspicion which it is.
33:20I do.
33:21Dr Paul Safin from the School of Physics and Astronomy
33:24at the University of Nottingham said...
33:26Get on with it!
33:27..that gravity on Earth suddenly disappeared,
33:29air, water, plants, animals and all of us would fly off into space.
33:33Basically, life would not be better...
33:35Right, I wouldn't mind.
33:37Somebody press the button.
33:39Just press the button!
33:40It works!
33:42CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
33:49There you have it, Arlene.
33:50You asked, would life be better or worse without gravity?
33:53The answer is, it's definitely worse.
33:55And that's pretty much it for tonight.
33:57So, people of Britain, if you've got a question,
33:59you can tweet the show, but for tonight, it's thanks to Arlene Phillips...
34:02CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
34:04..Zach Whitehall, Greg Davies, flatmate Lloyd,
34:08and tonight's authenticator, Louise Minchin.
34:13I'm Rod Gilbert.
34:14You can ask me literally anything.
34:17Goodnight.
34:18CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
34:27Apprentice boss Lord Alan Sugar is fired up for the Graham Norton Show,
34:31next here on BBC One.
34:38CHEERING AND APPLAUSE