• 2 months ago
First broadcast 1st January 2013.

Charlie Brooker Presenter

Al Campbell Barry Shitpeas
Diane Morgan Philomena Cunk
Doug Stanhope Self

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TV
Transcript
00:00No New Year would be complete without it. Now on BBC Two, some strong language and adult
00:16humour as Charlie Brooker looks back.
00:30Hello, I'm Charlie Brooker and you're watching 2012 Wipe, a television programme in which
00:46we take a look back at the year 2012 AD. It was a year in which many things happened.
00:51A year in which Londoners finally strung up their mayor, a bunch of pussies desecrated
00:56a Moscow church, stunning TV footage proved dogs have evolved the ability to do Jeremy
01:01Clarkson's job with less casual racism, and Mr Andrew Lansley found himself only the first
01:07of this year's silver-haired hate figures with access to Britain's hospitals in this
01:10confrontational Sky News footage.
01:13Yes, it was a year so laden with incident, I hardly know where to begin. January, actually
01:19yeah, I'm going to start with January.
01:22As January dawned, our planet and all the poor sods stuck to it were exhausted. 2011
01:27had been a show-off, full of riots, revolutions and disasters. By the end of it, we all looked
01:32and felt like we'd been repeatedly kicked in the time tits by a gigantic dog-shit clock.
01:37What we needed was a little respite from the misery. What we got was this.
01:42Many people still missing after a huge cruise liner sinks in the Mediterranean.
01:46Yes, the cruise ship Costa Concordia suffered a grisly sea smash that left it looking like
01:51someone had driven the Chrysler building into a pond, and made people who try to avoid
01:55flying wonder what a holiday hiding under the stairs might be like.
01:58Now, Entertainment Tonight.
02:00Sparkly bum-brained showbiz US news show Entertainment Tonight took the unusual decision to cover
02:05this disaster, apparently because it struck them as precisely the kind of totally fictional
02:10scenario that only ever happens in films.
02:13It is a real-life Titanic tragedy still unfolding off the coast of Italy tonight.
02:19The real-life Titanic.
02:20Why did their dream vacations end up a real-life nightmare like director James Cameron's Titanic?
02:27Yes, seemingly unaware that a real-life Titanic had already sunk 100 years ago in real life,
02:32the hard-hitting fact-finders set about unearthing other similarities between the disaster and
02:37the 90s blockbuster movie, thereby qualifying as perhaps the world's thickest vultures.
02:42So was Celine Dion's My Heart Will Go On playing on board when the Costa Concordia crashed into
02:48the rocks?
02:49Well, I guess we'll never know.
02:50And that's the real tragedy.
02:52Interesting fact here, the water that the passengers of the Costa Concordia had to enter
02:56was about 57 degrees.
02:58The water for the stars of Titanic wasn't much warmer, a frigid 60 degrees.
03:02Hmm.
03:03Almost makes you wonder who suffered more.
03:05Meanwhile, upbeat concert footage from the States as suave, sexy Pakistani bombing president
03:10Barack Obama prepared to spend a year campaigning for re-election, but first shared a mic with
03:14Mick Jagger and B.B. King.
03:16Come on, baby, don't you want to go?
03:20Yeah!
03:21Yeah!
03:22Mm-hmm.
03:23Mm-hmm.
03:24Name of place, sweet home Chicago.
03:29Just like a rock star, Obama often reduces women to a quivering, screaming mess, usually
03:33in the aftermath of one of his drone strikes.
03:35Meanwhile, as you could see from CNN's thrilling debate coverage, the Republican challengers
03:39didn't look quite so rock and roll as President Coolio.
03:42Rapidly rising in credibility was God-fearing, Seinfeld-faced thief Rick Santorum, a man
03:48so pious even the Pope thinks he needs to pull the Bible out of his ass for a minute.
03:52Santorum's campaign was anti-abortion, anti-gay marriage, anti-quated, but mainly anti-Obama,
03:57as the news expertly depicted.
03:59He found a way to attack Obama on everything.
04:02President Obama once said he wants everybody in America to go to college.
04:07What a snob.
04:09But while Santorum prayed for victory, Newt Gingrich, played by Grandma from the Tweety
04:13Pie cartoons, was all over the news, unleashing a barrage of astonishing attack ads against
04:17his main rival, square-jawed visual cliché Mitt Romney.
04:21Massachusetts moderate Mitt Romney, he'll say anything to win, anything.
04:26And just like John Kerry, laissez les bons temps rouler, he speaks French too.
04:32Bonjour, je m'appelle Mitt Romney.
04:35Speaking of the French, they had what you might call a good February in what Mitt Romney
04:39might call un bon février, the Frenchman.
04:42There was this really good film called The Artist, except it wasn't about an artist,
04:47but an actor who was black and white.
04:49And all his friends were black and white, and he lived in a black and white house, and
04:52ate black and white food.
04:53There were these informative subtitle things, right, but they hadn't put them on properly,
04:58so the actors would go like...
05:02For ages.
05:03But the words came up afterwards, so the old film probably took twice as long as it should
05:08have.
05:09It was the worst mistake in a film since they hired that sort of stuttery guy to play the
05:13king last year.
05:15The dog in it, the dog was really good as an actor, like at least as good as Keanu Reeves.
05:23It was such a good actor, he could star in a film like a romantic comedy with Jennifer
05:27Aniston, with all love scenes in it.
05:30They wouldn't even have to pay him, you know, you could just probably give him a tennis
05:35ball to chew on and he'd be fine with that.
05:38That's what they'd do with Hugh Jackman.
05:40The artists swept the board at the Oscars, which was also notable for other brilliant
05:44performances.
05:45For instance, in this penetrating live interview on Sky, actor Nick Nolte excelled in the role
05:50of most confused individuals.
05:51Now that you're here all dressed up, are you a bit itty-bitty excited?
05:55Well, you know, if I knew what you said, I could probably answer you.
05:59So I'll say yes, yes, yes, and no.
06:03True or false, you own a pet crow?
06:07What did I do?
06:08As March shimmied into view, the BBC tried to end the talent show wars for good, with
06:13a new kind of singing contest, one where trivial things like looks or basic entertainment value
06:18simply didn't matter.
06:20Dropped Nagasaki-style into the Saturday night schedules, The Voice was genuinely revolutionary,
06:26by which I mean it had revolving chairs in it.
06:28The nation's hopeful desperoids screeched at the backs of estuary foghorn Jesse Jay,
06:33fluffy roast chicken Tom Jones, butthead-shaped wannabono Danny O'Donoghue, and the photo
06:38Tom Jones takes to his tanning salon, Will.I.Am.
06:41You know, Will.I.Am was so ubiquitous this year, I started calling him Will.U.Leave.
06:46As a sing-along blind man's bluff, it was nearly fun.
06:48Look, Tom can hear something.
06:50Is it singing?
06:51His spidey sense is tingling.
06:52Where on earth is it coming from?
06:54But the moment the chairs spun around, all novelty and tension disappeared.
06:57If you ask me, they should have thrown in some more interesting format points, like
07:01in the brilliant Aussie version, where Seal had to masturbate to orgasm before contestants
07:05hit the high note.
07:06Don't you remember?
07:10Omni-shambles.
07:11That was a word that cropped up a lot in 2012.
07:13Not as often as the word the did, yes, but to be honest, I'm getting sick of your incessant
07:18pedantry.
07:19Faced with a tanker driver's strike that hadn't been announced, France's Maud told the public
07:23to top up their jerrycans, and having googled the word jerrycan, they began panic buying,
07:27as the news gleefully recounted.
07:30Although some hope to avoid the panic by putting off their panic till later.
07:34But I'm trying not to panic buy, because, you know, it takes a quality of time, just
07:38panic buying.
07:39Then a row broke out over VAT on hot pastries, prompting MPs to turn the news into one big
07:44pie-eating contest, starting when humanoid David Cameron claimed to regularly ingest
07:49pleb grub.
07:50I love a hot pasty.
07:51I think the last one I bought was from the West Cornwall Pasty Company.
07:55Oh, is it just me, or is this anecdote really sexy?
07:59I seem to remember I was in Leeds station.
08:02Keep talking, Cameron.
08:04And the choice was whether to have one of their small ones or their large ones.
08:09Then in even more powerfully erotic scenes, Ed's millaband and balls shambled into a Gregg's
08:13to prove how much they love the taste of hot mashed pig.
08:17Can we get eight sausage rolls?
08:20Eight?
08:21Eight sausage rolls?
08:22Eight?
08:23Check out the high roller.
08:24What a lifestyle.
08:25I mean, Ed Millaband lives like P. Diddy, doesn't he?
08:26We're in Redditch here to meet some people, and we popped in to buy some sausage rolls.
08:31There was this book, Fifty Shades of Grey, which was clever because it was for normal
08:35people and perverts, like how Harry Potter's for kids and adults.
08:39It was quite violent.
08:40It should have been called Seven Shades of Shit, really.
08:43The woman who wrote it was on Newsnight, and Paul Mason listed some of his favourite bits.
08:49And that was quite a turn on, actually, Paul Mason saying all that.
08:54Fisting, anal intercourse, genital clamps, whipping.
08:59I rewound it and watched it again.
09:01Fisting, anal intercourse, genital clamps, whipping.
09:07And one more time after that.
09:09Fisting, anal intercourse, genital clamps, whipping.
09:15No one actually wants more, come to think of it.
09:18Fisting, anal intercourse, genital clamps, whipping.
09:23I'm trying to set it as a ringtone.
09:26This March, humankind was saved forever, as an inspiring charity video got everyone
09:31online talking about Joseph Kony, a profoundly horrible African warlord with an army of child
09:36soldiers.
09:37It was a slick, heavily graphically stylised video in which a charismatic, idealistic filmmaker
09:44named Jason Russell evangelised about how the best way to stop Joseph Kony was to make
09:49him famous so politicians would be forced to pay attention and stop him.
09:53And how were they going to stop him?
09:56We'll get back to you on that one.
09:57Retweeted by celebrities, the video went big, becoming the most viewed YouTube clip since
10:01Two Cat Bin Lady's One Cup, 70 million views in just five days, a comparison the news was
10:06mightily impressed by.
10:07For comparison, it took singing sensation Susan Boyle seven days to reach that mark
10:12and the old Spice Guy five months.
10:15If only they'd kidnapped children.
10:17Meanwhile, critics said the film was so crudely oversimplified it may as well have claimed
10:21Joseph Kony was literally whittling children into bullets and firing them at defenceless
10:25unicorns.
10:26Furthermore, some voices worried that the charity responsible, Invisible Children, seemed
10:32to be spending lots of the money it raised making glitzy videos that raised awareness
10:36of what, exactly?
10:38These glossy videos were all over the internet, videos that posed questions.
10:42Questions like, why did they make this slick high school musical number that doesn't really
10:46have much to do with Uganda but apparently lots to do with their dance fantasies?
10:56And what the leaping great joinkers was the deal with the odd-sounding Fourth Estate spin-off
11:00youth camp event they'd organised, promoted via an unsettling, some might say creepy set
11:05of videos, apparently promising some kind of global revolution?
11:19Sadly, before these questions could be answered, Invisible Children co-founder Jason Russell
11:24starred in a more upsetting follow-up viral video that was analysed in depressing detail
11:28by gossip-mongers.
11:29Jason hit the streets of San Diego naked, cursing, smacking the pavement and screaming
11:36about the devil.
11:37And tragically for Joseph Kony, he was soon knocked off the top of the viral pop charts
11:41and there's no chance of him getting back up there, at least until he teaches his child
11:44army how to dance gangnam style.
11:47Technology, and as Google Chrome decides to promote itself with the unsettling tale
11:57of a stalky ex-boyfriend who's compiled an exhaustive dossier on his estranged girlfriend
12:01in a desperate bid to impress her, Nokia unveil a snazzy smartphone apparently equipped with
12:06incredible twat-dazzling technology.
12:07Why do you love your Lumia?
12:09My Lumia improves my life.
12:11One of the great features is that people have LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp, messaging.
12:15I can have a tile for every part of my life.
12:18Yeah, I've got a tile for every part of my f***ing bathroom, you don't hear me crowing
12:22about it.
12:23You can completely make it your own.
12:24It is your own.
12:25It's fast.
12:26Literally just flip through apps.
12:27Send a tweet really, really quickly.
12:29Hear back from Lord McAlpine even quicker.
12:31Can I take a photo?
12:32Smile.
12:33Amazing.
12:34I'll say.
12:35Diet, and Mel B's here with some convincing and moving personal testimony.
12:45Now, I know how hard it is to get started, but this is what I did.
12:49Hi, I'm Mel B, and help, I need to lose 15 kilos.
12:52What, you didn't use a phone?
12:54I feel lighter, like when I walk now, it's not so bombada bombada, it's more doink doink
13:00doink doink doink.
13:01You want to get that looked at.
13:02Losing weight does not have to be scary, come join me, call Jenny, now.
13:07No.
13:08Coffee, and a high street coffee chain attempts to hammer this surreal sing-along trauma into
13:17potential customers' minds like a tent peg into a watermelon full of coffee beans.
13:22You know, I was so weirded out by this, I thought I'd sue them for emotional distress,
13:30so I contacted my barista.
13:33My barista.
13:34Barista.
13:35Oh, f*** off.
13:37I was made for loving you, baby, you were made for loving me.
13:43You know what this reminds me of?
13:44It reminds me of that horrible scene in the grisly Roman epic Caligula, where they bury
13:48Christians up to their necks in the stadium, then send in this nightmarish head-chopping
13:52machine.
13:57April featured one of the nation's favourite sporting events, the Grand National, an event
14:01that does for horses what a horse-killing machine also does for horses.
14:06But never mind what I think about it, what might a drunker, more American cynic make
14:09of the Grand National?
14:10Someone like scrofulous drinkist Doug Stanhope.
14:19I'm Doug Stanhope, and that's why I drink.
14:22The Grand National is the sickest, most perverted thing, where they take as many horses as will
14:28fit on the track, and they cram them all into this line, and then they go, how many
14:32horses will this track hold?
14:35We'll add five more.
14:37F*** them.
14:38And they fire them off, and it's not just enough to run around in a circle.
14:42They gotta put obstacles.
14:44You put up fences and barriers and embankments with a moat.
14:47It's like Gallipoli.
14:48It's like World War I, where they're expecting a Turkish gunner on the other side, mowing
14:52them down.
14:53And these horses collide in this giant demolition derby equine massacre, and they do triple
15:00lindy forward somersaults with jockeys flying off in the air, and they die.
15:06They die on the track, and no one gives a shit.
15:08And then the horses have to go around again and see their dead friend that they're trying
15:12to set up a big concession stand around, so they can kill it right on the track.
15:16They don't even pause it right.
15:17Just kill him right there.
15:18Put up a little curtain, like Angela's changing her nightie.
15:22And all the announcers sound like Tinker Tailor's Soldier Spy, where everyone talks
15:26like this.
15:27They go over the chair, and the leader jumped in well and always, right as a faller at the
15:31chair.
15:32Well, we've lost another one.
15:33Oh, that one fell.
15:34Oh, that one stepped out.
15:36That one's going to go smoke a fag, I believe.
15:39No, he's dying!
15:40He's mutilated!
15:41Human interest and ITV's deceptively racy agenda-setting behemoth this morning meets
15:46a man weighed down with a heavy burden.
15:48Well, in just a moment, we'll meet Jonah Falcon, the man who has what is thought to be the
15:52world's largest penis.
15:54Actually, they just reused that caption from the last time they had Piers Morgan on.
15:58Because they couldn't broadcast Jonah's penis, Philip Schofield had a handy cardboard model
16:02showing just how mammoth it was.
16:04So this is the sort of thing that we're talking about.
16:07Of course, on the back of that, he's written the names of some suspected massive penises
16:11he found on the internet.
16:12Without using a ruler, I go from here to the crook of my elbow.
16:16Shortly after that, Schofield booked him as one of the rounds on the cube.
16:20Alternative TV network and former Big Brother bulletin board Channel 4 turned 30 this year.
16:26But that didn't stop it experimenting with drugs.
16:28Drugs Live, the ecstasy trial, includes scenes of drug taking.
16:31You don't say.
16:33The informative Drugs Live was the sort of show Channel 4 used to make when it started
16:3730 years ago.
16:38But unfortunately, this was made in 2012, sometime after the extensive ecstasy-taking
16:42experiment the British public's been getting on with for the past 25 years.
16:47Its big draw was a man on drugs live in the studio.
16:50Anything could happen.
16:51Would he skull burst?
16:52Would he start speaking in tongues?
16:54Would he say, I'm fine, yeah, I'm feeling good?
16:57It's fine, aren't you?
16:58I'm fine.
16:59Yeah, I'm feeling good.
17:00Mm.
17:01Still, this is the first time they've ever let someone on drugs live on Channel 4, apart
17:04from maybe every single episode of The Word.
17:07Sticking with law-breaking, Gordon Behind Bars was another new Channel 4 format disguised
17:12as an old Alan Partridge format.
17:13The idea was to rehabilitate a group of criminal offenders by sticking them in a boiling hot
17:17room with an angry Scotsman and a range of sharp objects.
17:20What could possibly go wrong?
17:23The show itself provided a thoughtful look at just what happens when the men's society
17:26has failed to shout at each other in a kitchen.
17:29Most TV presenters would shit their own hips out being surrounded by potentially violent
17:33criminals, but not Gordon.
17:34No, he knows all about violence.
17:36Why only the other day in his kitchen, an egg was beaten and a fish got battered.
17:42Also, five waiters were murdered.
17:44Sticking with crime, in another snazzy Channel 4 format, Gok Wan attempted to smuggle 15
17:49kilos of Class A shit onto primetime television in the baffling dating show, Luggage.
17:55I mean, Baggage.
17:56After an opening dance so horrid your mind won't let you recall it after seeing this
18:00footage, the idea behind Luggage, I mean, Baggage, became clear.
18:04A human being with genitals has to choose a potential mate from three other human beings
18:08with genitals.
18:09Except, rather than basing their decision on an assessment of their positive traits,
18:13they instead decided who to discard on the basis of their negative traits, or emotional
18:18luggage.
18:19Baggage.
18:20Emotional Luggage.
18:21Baggage.
18:22Fortunately, the Luggage, by which I mean Baggage, in question was fairly innocuous.
18:26Although, of course, in future they'll have to tearfully confess to wannabe partners that
18:29they once, many years ago and in a moment of madness, appeared on Luggage.
18:34Baggage.
18:35F**k.
18:36Hello and welcome live to Haute LGB.
18:38Finally, all of Channel 4's format experimentation came to a head in the bold Haute LGB, which
18:43was a bit like every reality show ever made, only somehow less so.
18:47It featured all the recently tried and tested format stars.
18:50Dr. Christian from Drugs Live, Gordon Ramsay from Cooking in Prison, and Gok Wan from Luggage.
18:56Baggage.
18:57F**k.
18:58Alongside that lot were Kirstie off Kirstie and Thingy as the concierge for no reason,
19:02and Thingy off Kirstie and Thingy playing the maitre d' for no reason.
19:05I'm very conscious that it's Gordon's name above the door in the restaurant.
19:08And if it's rubbish, then it's his name that will be affected, rather than mine.
19:14What is your name?
19:15Their task was to teach impressionable unemployed youths how to run a hotel pointlessly and
19:19on television for ages, while providing as little entertainment as possible.
19:23Would they pull it off?
19:24Yes.
19:25Haute LGB can be the biggest shithole in London, if we don't get this right.
19:29Come on, don't be negative.
19:30Could be the biggest shithole in the world.
19:34Jimmy Carr, right, was on this satire thing for Guardian readers who think they're better
19:38than everyone else.
19:39So, he did this thing where he dressed up all sexy, like, really sexy, and said Barclays
19:44didn't pay enough tax.
19:46Why don't you apply for the Barclays 1% tax scam?
19:49But then this year, it turned out that he hadn't paid much tax, which is the most satirical
19:55thing ever.
19:56He apologised, right, but there was a period before he did when literally no one knew what
20:01to think about it, until David Cameron turned up on the news to say it was wrong.
20:06That is not fair.
20:07That is not right.
20:09What was really sad was you could tell from the coverage that Cameron was obviously really
20:14annoyed with all the offshore tax loophole stuff, but there's nothing he can do about
20:18it.
20:19He's literally powerless to stop it.
20:222012 was her royal queenliness the second's diamond jubilee, which meant the first half
20:26of the year was set aside for ruddy-cheeked forelock tugging.
20:30For years, we the people had used her majesty as a kind of industrial digger for planting
20:34trees, and now it was time to say thank you by standing around waving flags like delighted
20:39peasants.
20:40As Sky News made clear, the Jubilee weekend itself was an event you'd want to tune in
20:44and remember forever.
20:45For one bank holiday weekend, the whole country will come together.
20:49We'll be all over London, bringing you the very best coverage, whatever the weather.
20:54Oh, whatever the weather.
20:56Wonder what the weather will be like.
20:57Well, fortunately, the BBC has some of the finest weathermen in the world, and Prince
21:01Charles.
21:02Well, it's an unsettled picture as we head towards the end of the week.
21:06This afternoon it'll be cold, wet, and windy.
21:09Oh, right.
21:10Well, I'm sure it won't ruin the celebrations.
21:13Those celebrations promised to be an uplifting spectacle, starting with a glorious river
21:17pageant which we were told would resemble an oldie-worldie painting with all boats and
21:20stuff in it.
21:21And in the event, as we'd been promised, what we witnessed really was like something from
21:25the history books.
21:27Specifically, the Great Flood.
21:28Yes, because as this armada sailed down the river, the coverage showed the Thames got
21:32so excited it jumped into the sky and then fell down again, all over everyone.
21:36Still, if you squinted between the raindrops, you could see it was wonderfully varied.
21:41There were boats, more boats, a boat there with a massive bell on it, another boat with
21:47a massive bell on it, basically lots of boats.
21:50It was hammering down so hard it was often difficult to see what was happening, but despite
21:54everything looking like a grim emergency evacuation, the media tried putting a brave
21:58face on things.
21:59My teeth are chattering a little bit, my hands are cold, my feet are cold.
22:03It is spitting a little bit, Eamon, but you know what?
22:06Everybody's getting in the party mood.
22:11Whatever the weather, eh, Kay?
22:14This year, one of mankind's worst fears was realised as a formidable new viral threat
22:18emerged in Asia.
22:21This harrowing footage depicts the first recorded victim, a South Korean entertainer known only
22:26as Psy, as he succumbed to the contagion's trademark spasms.
22:30Victims of Gangnam Style exhibited several distinctive convulsions, crossed wrists, upper
22:35arm seizures, a compulsion to trot like a horse, and a dramatic series of side-to-side
22:39leg contractions which left the victim looking like a confused drunk desperately trying to
22:43shake a turd down their trouser leg.
22:46Soon Gangnam Style was spreading across the region at a bewildering pace as chilling recordings
22:50of the agonised contortions of its victims made devastatingly clear.
22:54It swept through the Thai Navy and infected thousands of prisoners in the Philippines.
22:59Like your mum has.
23:01But the outbreak was largely contained until patient zero was inexplicably allowed out
23:05of quarantine to infect regions worldwide.
23:08It's the name that is on everyone's lips.
23:10Lord McAlpine?
23:11It's Psy!
23:12Oh, well.
23:13Yes, as this effervescent X Factor moment firmly demonstrated, few were immune to the condition,
23:18not even former Spice Girls.
23:26In upsetting scenes broadcast live on US TV, Britney Spears also succumbed while Simon
23:30Cowell looked on powerless to do anything but laugh.
23:33Madonna also fell prey, offering inspiring proof that even 97-year-olds can do the Gangnam
23:39Style.
23:40Sky News caught the chilling moment the condition reached the UN and Ban Ki-moon himself succumbed,
23:44hailing Gangnam Style as a potential harbinger of world peace, saying,
23:48In this era of instability and intolerance, we need to promote better understanding through
23:51the power of music.
23:53Although shortly after he said that, it turned out Psy hadn't always been peace-minded, and
23:57the news could scarcely hide its disappointment.
23:59It has now come out that in his younger days, Psy engaged in some vitriolic anti-Americanism.
24:07Psy performed at a protest concert, singing along to another band song called Dear American,
24:12including these lyrics.
24:14Kill those bleeping Yankees who've been torturing Iraqi captives.
24:18Kill their daughters, mothers, daughters-in-law, and fathers.
24:21Hmm.
24:22Still, look on the bright side, he'll presumably kill them Gangnam Style.
24:27In July, if you glanced at ITV's schedule, you could be forgiven for shouting Jesus Christ!
24:33Because he was on.
24:34He was.
24:35In what can only be proof of a burgeoning God complex, Andrew Lloyd Webber and ITV teamed
24:40up to find a whole new son of God in The Amazing Superstar.
24:43Who will have what it takes to play the most iconic role of all time?
24:49I know I could be Jesus.
24:50It just feels right.
24:51It turns out lots of men reckon they might be Jesus, either because they think they look
24:55like him, although of course, as we all know, Jesus actually looks like this.
24:59Or because they sound like him, especially when they deliver traditional Christian raps.
25:03Here we are today, auditioning for Jesus, I am gonna win, so you best of all believe
25:08this.
25:10But before they could don the crown of thorns, they had to go on trial, just like Christ,
25:14except with Melanie Cee and Jason Donovan, instead of Pontius Pilate and a load of Romans
25:19with spears.
25:20I mean, it's like you're on a building site, really.
25:22Jesus wouldn't be doing this on stage, and, you know, sort of, do you know what I mean?
25:29Yeah.
25:30Yeah, because pockets weren't invented back then.
25:32After having their spiritual metal tested with, I shit you not, A Last Supper.
25:37This is your last supper.
25:39See?
25:40They were also tested on their ability to come to earth on a Yamaha, do a skid, kill
25:44a kid and knacker their balls on a dustbin lid, before turning up in the Cavernous Live
25:48studio to perform some traditional hymns, like this.
26:07Let me be!
26:11Oh, man!
26:14Wow, I'd say you nailed it, but I suppose it's best not to mention nails to Christ.
26:18Time for a break, but don't go anywhere, because we need your help to find our Jesus.
26:23We'll see you soon.
26:29Smells and Chanel No. 5 unveil a stunning ad in which Brad Pitt turns shit dialogue
26:34into brown dust.
26:35It's not a journey.
26:36Every journey ends, but we go on.
26:40The world turns, and we turn with it.
26:42Turn on this.
26:43Plans disappear.
26:45Like scripts should.
26:46Dreams take over.
26:48Like another actor should.
26:49But wherever I go, there you are.
26:54My luck, my fate, my fortune.
26:59He's deep for a prick.
27:00So much of 2012 has been so miserable so far, we were conditioned to expect the inevitable
27:06crapness of everything, and the Olympics were clearly going to be nothing but bad news.
27:11For one thing, we couldn't afford it.
27:13The country didn't have a pot to piss in, apart from Plymouth.
27:16The weather.
27:17Yeah, the weather was going to be awful as well.
27:19It had rained consistently throughout the summer.
27:21The country was being waterboarded, basically.
27:24There was moss growing on the inside of clouds.
27:26The ticketing system didn't work.
27:28London's transport network was completely knackered.
27:31Absolutely tossed over.
27:32People, they haven't got a clue what they're doing.
27:34And security.
27:35Yes, security was all a bollocks.
27:37They had to call the army in, and they immediately went mental and started positioning surface-to-air missiles on anything over chest height.
27:44When the flame made its way to the stadium, it might as well be lighting a bomb fuse.
27:48That flame was already touring the country, where it was being carried by many goodwill ambassadors and one bad will.i.am.
27:55Yes, it's dick you is again, texting and moonwalking while carrying the thing.
27:59You know, I'm not sure quite why I find him so irritating, but I think I've narrowed it down to this little bit in his hair.
28:05Lots of different cheery celebrities carried the torch.
28:08This showbiz knight struck a familiar pose on the site of the 1908 Olympics, which he'd attended as an old man.
28:15An Olympics fever was being accompanied by plenty of gaudy advertising, as you could see from the coverage.
28:21Which gave rise to another complaint about the games, that they were clearly going to be nothing but a depressing logo-strewn corporate egg-and-spoon contest.
28:29The nation's ad breaks creaked with one patronising faux-inspirational propaganda movie after another,
28:35with legendary Olympians and Paralympians pimping goods and occasionally farting out corporate insignia willy-nilly,
28:41as apparently random products and services jostled desperately to associate themselves with that wholesome Olympic glow.
28:47Given all this, the Olympics were clearly going to be ghastly.
28:50And as the opening ceremony loomed, smartasses everywhere tried to work out what the emoticon for sneering was.
28:56Of course, in the event, Danny Boyle's opening show was a heartwarming spectacle that made everyone in the country intensely patriotic.
29:03The coverage of the opening ceremony was amazing. It wasn't just the most spectacular broadcast ever.
29:08It was educational, because it taught you all about British history.
29:12Like, how we started out as primitive Morris dancers and cricket people, all living in this field.
29:18And then Abraham Lincoln turned up and started shouting at everyone.
29:21And, like, chimneys grew out of the ground, rising up like big sort of penises made out of bricks.
29:27And it showed you how the Victorians invented Gangnam Style, and how we got invaded by the people from the Quality Street tin.
29:33And how the Mafia turned up to help us, but they were black.
29:36And then this volcano went off, and we hit the lava with hammers, until it flew into the air and turned into the Olympics.
29:42And I didn't know any of that actually happened, but it had all actually happened.
29:47The next morning, it was as if we cautiously realised that maybe, since we hadn't totally balled the ceremony up,
29:53maybe the rest of the games would be okay, too.
29:55Usually, I find watching any sport less interesting than watching, say, cardboard exist.
30:00But for some reason, I couldn't stop watching the Olympics.
30:04I think it's because I'm a nerd, and it reminded me of video games.
30:07Thanks to the video game-style cutscene the BBC displayed whenever its coverage booted up,
30:12and the electric colour tones, and crisp, overlaid graphics showing who was in which lane,
30:17and the high-score table, and the Tron-style fencing tournaments,
30:20and the velodrome coverage, which looked like Battle of the Planets on wheels,
30:23and the occasional weightlifting competitor who looked like an ender-level boss who might suddenly lob a boulder at you or something.
30:29And, of course, thanks to the new Olympic tradition of doing signature gestures, like Usain Bolt's Thingamajig, or the Mobot.
30:36Yes, the presence of the cameras prompted many athletes to perform a fancy starting move before their event,
30:41a bit like the pre-fight animation for a character from the video game Tekken.
30:45The cameras captured many pre-bout player animations.
30:48There was the rearing tiger, the sinister squint, the burst hemorrhoid,
30:53the who-the-bloody-hell-are-you looking at, and the I'm-gonna-rip-my-nipples-off-and-throw-them-at-the-crowd.
30:58In fact, the only one missing was Gangnam Style.
31:00As well as looking like a game, it was a game we were good at.
31:04The blanket coverage presented us with a wealth of fresh-faced, clean-living British youngsters
31:08apparently fixated on being the very best they could be. Bastards.
31:12People started talking about what inspiring role models the Olympics were providing for a whole generation for once.
31:18I mean, compare them to the sort of gaudy role models our youth are usually presented with,
31:22like the nihilistic, boozy attention addicts on MTV's raucous, sex-intriguing reality shows Geordie Shore and The Valleys.
31:29Tisha's gone crazy. She keeps pulling up my skirt and flashing my foof.
31:36I'm not having that, so I shove an ice cube in her knickers.
31:40And another one up her arsehole.
31:42At last, thanks to the Olympics, our young folk were being represented by genuine achievers.
31:47They weren't dedicating their lives to pointless nonsense.
31:50They were doing real things, like jumping over a bar into some sand,
31:54or throwing a disc or a stick really well once every four years.
32:00Athletics provided many high points in the already euphoric coverage,
32:04such as the moment Mo Farah pulled off a spectacular win in the 10,000 metres,
32:08after which a nation held its breath, hoping you wouldn't roll into the phlegm freshly flobbed onto the track by a fellow athlete.
32:14All our fears had been unfounded. The weather was great, the systems worked,
32:18and it didn't feel like a big corporate shindig because it was all on the ad-free BBC.
32:22In fact, the only thing being advertised was Britain.
32:25These schedules heaved with emotive, triumphant, romantic, slow-motion montages
32:30which managed to somehow mythologise the Games before they were even quite over.
32:35Patriotism was now at a peak. There was nothing the UK couldn't do.
32:39We were invincible, we were unstoppable, we were superior.
32:43F*** off Frenchmen, f*** off German, f*** off American.
32:46We could do World War II all over again in our sleep if we wanted.
32:49We were the best nation on Earth. Anything we put our mind to, we could achieve.
33:00Then we had the Paralympics, which also defied expectations
33:03by being about 10,000 times better than many were expecting.
33:07In fact, if anything, they were better than the Olympics
33:10because half these sports hadn't received anything like this much jubilant coverage before,
33:14and the athletes were truly inspiring.
33:16The Paralympics changed the way we looked at disability forever.
33:19For instance, now, when I see someone in a wheelchair, I think, bloody show-off.
33:24Almost every single aspect of the coverage was brilliantly life-affirming.
33:28For instance, here we see a man who lost both his charisma and respect
33:31in a tragic voting accident, triumphing in the 500 decibel boom.
33:35Chancellor of the Exchequer.
33:37They hate me. They really hate me.
33:41If you thought you'd seen a lot of the Royals throughout 2012,
33:43what with the Queen popping up every five seconds like a mushroom in a Mario game,
33:47you hadn't seen half as much of them as you were about to.
33:51First, Prince Harry, who'd been having a pretty good year,
33:54showcasing his stunning ability to blend into almost any surroundings,
33:57was photographed nude in a Vegas hotel room.
33:59Channel 4 News were so delighted they took Harry's bum on a walkabout tour
34:03where it could greet its subjects.
34:05That's what he's been up to.
34:06Is that really him?
34:07That's really him.
34:08What do you think of that?
34:10Well, it was going a bit too far.
34:11Ask her if she thinks he's wiped properly.
34:13Others were less amused, notably the Palace and the Sun newspaper,
34:17which considered this a terrible throwback to a more primitive age,
34:20before the internet let us see any bum we wanted.
34:23And the news dutifully recorded its front page blow for press freedom.
34:27For us, this is about the freedom of the press.
34:30This is about our readers getting involved in the discussion
34:34with the man who is third in line to the throne.
34:36It's as simple as that.
34:38Yes, and that discussion goes,
34:40Can I see your bum?
34:41No.
34:43But a few weeks after this brave attempt to let their readers see a bum,
34:46press commitment to free speech was tested by another story involving royalty.
34:50Or rather, royal T&A.
34:52Because the Duchess of Cambridge,
34:54seen here exiting the I'm a Celebrity jungle with Ben Fogel,
34:57was also snapped in a state of undress
34:59as the news sadly and soberly informed its viewers.
35:01This report does contain flash photography.
35:03Hmm, Ben it does.
35:04The Kate snaps were so disgraceful,
35:06that the British media turned its censorship filters up to maximum blur
35:09to prevent the merest hint of regal flesh exposure.
35:12I actually thought I'd developed glaucoma.
35:14Ben and the Duchess,
35:16who are currently appearing on the Solomon Islands version of Big Brother,
35:18were absolutely livid.
35:20But some people couldn't understand the upset.
35:22People like this bog-eyed French paparazzo.
35:24For me it's so stupid.
35:26Because she's a young lady.
35:28She's nice. She's not fat.
35:30She's beautiful.
35:32So you have to show them.
35:33Yes, that is the law in France.
35:35Are you going to show the pictures on your programme?
35:38Of course not.
35:40So it's a kind of hypocrisy.
35:42He's right, you know.
35:44We've got no problem showing French tits.
35:46I mean, here's a big French tit.
35:48Throughout the year, print journalism got it in the neck on TV,
35:51and Sky News often heaved with surreal reports about newspaper folk.
35:55Scotland Yard's confirmed that it loaned
35:57the former News International chief executive, Rebecca Brooks, a police horse.
36:01Sounds outrageous, although it was a retired horse.
36:03And let me tell you, if you'd seen the photos of that poor, exhausted-looking mare
36:07with its straggly mane and haunted eyes,
36:09you'd think, that poor thing, she deserves a ride on a horse.
36:12The fact that I met horses living with Rebecca Brooks for two years,
36:16it just strikes me as very unusual
36:18and reflects a relationship that was unhealthy.
36:21And pretty uncomfortable, I thought.
36:24But Brooks wasn't the only former Sun editor on the receiving end.
36:27In the wake of the Hillsborough scandal,
36:29beloved national treasure and front-page lie printer Kelvin McKenzie
36:32was subjected to disgraceful yet hilarious harassment by a Channel 4 news crew.
36:37Don't assault me. Don't assault me.
36:40I didn't realise Kelvin McKenzie had a doorstep.
36:42I thought he entered the world each morning
36:44by slithering through a haunted mirror into our realm.
36:47But things were about to get even worse for the press
36:49when Lord Justice Leveson published his report,
36:52which threatened the future of print journalism
36:55simply by using up all the f***ing paper on earth.
36:58There was this thing, right, called the Lesbian Inquiry,
37:01sort of like a talk show hosted by this Brian Lesbian bloke.
37:04It was like if Chatty Man was on in the afternoon,
37:07except it wasn't like Chatty Man
37:09because even though it had all these celebrity guests,
37:11their anecdotes were sort of unhappy.
37:13I was relentlessly pursued by about 10 to 15 men.
37:17You could tell the audience were depressed because they didn't laugh much.
37:21And instead of a big musical number from, like, Adele at the end,
37:24they brought out this report.
37:26There's no way it's coming back for a second series.
37:28It didn't really work as a format.
37:30This Chris Jeffries bloke was in loads of reports carping on,
37:34saying he'd been mistreated by the press and everything.
37:37And you're like, mate, you're on telly.
37:39I wouldn't have even heard of you if it wasn't for the papers.
37:42And you wouldn't have even sorted your air out
37:45if they hadn't pointed out how weird it was.
37:47You know, show some gratitude.
37:49September, always a big month for movies.
37:52And, well, look, you know what it's like when you've read a book
37:55and you really like one of the characters in it
37:57and then someone makes a film of it and they just ruin it.
38:00Well, that.
38:03Spreading across the Arab world,
38:05violent protests over the American film that mocks Islam.
38:08Yes, tempers flared when a shoddy trail
38:11for a deliberately provocative anti-Islam propaganda flick
38:14called The Innocence of Muslims was posted on the internet.
38:16As you could see from the blanket coverage,
38:18it got everything the studios usually want from a movie.
38:21Strong word of mouth, huge crowds,
38:23queues around the block and a lot of heat generated.
38:25And if you think they're pissed off,
38:27you should see what they're saying about it on Rotten Tomatoes.
38:30Usually, Hollywood movies worship the Prophet.
38:32I mean, Prophet's all they care about.
38:34But then this wasn't a Hollywood movie
38:36but an Islamophobic trash fest made by an imbecile called Sam Basile,
38:40seen here turning the news into an impromptu tribute
38:43to the elephant man when he was arrested.
38:45Like many movies, by the end, there wasn't a dry eye in the house.
38:48Or a house. Or an eye.
38:50It was the most hostile reception for any film this year.
38:52Except Prometheus.
38:54Now, call me reactionary, but personally, in the post-Saville environment,
38:58I don't think we should encourage our young folk
39:00to lionise flamboyantly dressed weirdos who claim to be doing good work.
39:04But Hollywood begs to differ.
39:06The Dark Knight Rises is a superhero film
39:09for people who'd like to think they're watching The Seventh Seal,
39:12even though what they're actually watching is a children's film
39:14about a children's character who dresses up as a bat
39:17and hits people in the face.
39:19Calling Batman the Dark Knight makes him sound more sophisticated than he is.
39:23It's a bit like calling Papa Smurf the Blue Patriarch.
39:26The story is a sulky blancmange in which le cavalier noir
39:30goes up against thunderous tough guy Bane,
39:32an angry bollock with a sort of child-safety seatbelt mechanism
39:35glued to his face.
39:36Thing is, because Bane's every line is delivered through his alternate mask,
39:39you have to squint with your ears to understand what he's saying.
39:44What?
39:45Like shipwrecked men turning to sea water.
39:48Huh?
39:49I broke you.
39:50What?
39:51Here to end the boring time you've all been living on.
39:53We're so sick of the nautical piece.
39:56And despite all the pretentious stylings,
39:58the plot actually makes less sense than Thomas and the Magic Railway.
40:01For one thing, Batman gets turned into bad Batman fairly early on,
40:05and he spends ages lying around going,
40:07ow, ow, instead of being f***ing Batman,
40:10which is what you paid to see.
40:12The Dark Knight Rises isn't bad,
40:14but behind all the noir sheen,
40:15it's no more intellectually nourishing than the 1966 Batman movie,
40:19which was camp and loopy and fun,
40:21and never once mistook itself for Ingmar Bergman's
40:24From the Life of the Marionettes.
40:29Some days you just can't get rid of a bomb.
40:31Actually, that's almost identical to the end of Dark Knight Rises.
40:35The conservative chief whip Andrew Mitchell is under pressure tonight
40:39after reportedly swearing at a police officer in Downing Street
40:42and calling him a pleb.
40:44Yes, in a hotly disputed event that did for the Tory image
40:47what seawater did for the Fukushima nuclear plant,
40:50Mitchell was accused of voluntication at the site of the gates
40:52Margaret Thatcher erected to keep plebs out.
40:55Since at first the media didn't have a recording of the event itself,
40:58Channel 4 News was forced to reconstruct it like an Ealing comedy
41:01with dialogue lifted from Fifty Shades of Grey.
41:03Open this gate. I'm the chief whip.
41:06I'm telling you I'm the chief whip and I'm coming through these gates.
41:09This guy's almost as good as Brad Pitt in that Chanel ad.
41:12You're f***ing plebs.
41:16Morons.
41:17Soon Mitchell drove up to the TV cameras in a plebby little car
41:20to deny saying pleb but apologised for general disrespect.
41:23Mind you, this wasn't enough for some police
41:25who by now were proudly reclaiming the word pleb
41:27while campaigning against frontline cuts.
41:29Tough job when you're apparently not sure how a letterbox works.
41:32Still, never mind what the cops think, what do plebs make of it?
41:35How would you like to be called a pleb?
41:37Well, I'd probably just brush it off. I could be called a lot worse.
41:40Thanks, pleb.
41:41Eventually Mitchell resigned, thereby himself becoming a pleb
41:44who knew his place on the other side of the f***ing gate, moron.
41:48Except shortly after we done did this piece,
41:50Channel 4 News unveiled shocking CCTV footage
41:52disputing the police version of events
41:54and indicating a lack of plebs in Plebgate,
41:56making this whole mess a pleb-less Plebgate gate.
41:59Thanks to the Olympics, millions of young people now dreamed of receiving a medal.
42:03It was just the same when I was a kid,
42:05except back then the medals we coveted were being handed out
42:08by a sort of blonde-haired, wind-blasted skeleton beast.
42:12Jimmy Savile!
42:14For decades, Jimmy Savile was a TV legend,
42:17a garish and eccentric frontman of almost unparalleled weirdness.
42:21Good evening, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Top of the Pops.
42:24Looking at Savile's shows from the archive is an unsettling experience now
42:28because of everything that's happened since.
42:30It feels a bit like sifting through evidence.
42:32Take his signature show, Jim'll Fix It,
42:34in which he ostensibly made children's dreams come true.
42:37It was the format that was the real star here.
42:39As a host, Savile didn't really display much charisma,
42:42more a kind of disconnected eeriness.
42:44That was always my memory of Jim'll Fix It,
42:47that it was like a funfair run by an off-putting scarecrow
42:50whose mere on-screen presence now lends the show a deeply uncomfortable air.
42:54Now, you won't believe this. This is quite true.
42:56It says here,
42:57It says here,
43:11Well, of course, ten, like, no question, you see.
43:15So, six years ago, I replied,
43:17Hi, she'll have to wait a bit cos the regulations are she's got to be 16.
43:22Tell her to hurry. Love, JS.
43:25Now, I thought that that got me off the hook.
43:27By the late 90s, Savile's TV career was effectively over
43:31and he'd become a weird, marginalised figure,
43:33famously profiled by Louis Theroux in a surprisingly revealing documentary.
43:37Are you basically saying that,
43:39so tabloids don't, you know, pursue this whole,
43:44is he, isn't he a paedophile line, basically?
43:46Yes, yes, yes.
43:48How do they know whether I am or not?
43:50How does anybody know whether I am?
43:52Nobody knows whether I am or not. I know I'm not.
43:55When Savile died and his gold casket was driven through Leeds,
43:58thousands lined the streets ostensibly to say goodbye
44:00but possibly just to check he was definitely dead.
44:03And then this year it turned out he might not have been as innocent
44:06as almost no-one thought he was.
44:08A television documentary will this week claim
44:10that the late broadcaster Sir Jimmy Savile
44:12sexually abused schoolgirls in the 1970s.
44:15Always the quiet ones, isn't it?
44:17Rumours about Savile had circulated for decades.
44:20Now, roughly a year after his death,
44:22ITV broadcast a documentary that would sink his reputation for good.
44:26It contained plenty of upsetting and powerful testimony
44:29from alleged victims of Savile,
44:31as well as inherently creepy reconstructions
44:33of allegations almost too grim for the human mind to cope with.
44:37And the bad news for human mind owners
44:39was that over the following weeks,
44:41you were going to hear a lot more about it.
44:43The accompanying stories grew even more appalling.
44:46There were even allegations he'd had sex with corpses.
44:49Tuning into the news became like riding an endless looping ghost train
44:52with this creepy cadaverous monster
44:54perpetually leering toward you through the gloom,
44:56the news ticker scrolling in front of him like police incident tape.
45:00Actually, I'm pretty sure Savile only had any kind of TV career at all
45:03because back in the 70s, TVs were tiny
45:06and people kept them on the other side of the room.
45:08So he was physically horrible,
45:10but he was only about the size of a jacket potato,
45:13and he was way over there, so it didn't really bother you.
45:15Whereas today, our TVs are the size of a Harrods shop window,
45:19so seeing them on the news IMAX size,
45:21you're suddenly struck by just how grotesque he was.
45:23Every time his image popped up,
45:25it was like having a spider crawl across your brain.
45:28But the man himself was dead, so there was no prospect of a trial,
45:32apart from the inevitable dramatised one
45:34that Channel 4 will probably do next autumn season.
45:36So instead, the hunt was on for someone or something to blame.
45:40One immediate suspect was the time period of many of the allegations itself,
45:44the 1970s, a decade of brown air, awful furnishings,
45:48nihilistically bad hair, industrial action,
45:51dead pig carcasses all spinning around
45:54and tear-and-piss-streaked concrete.
45:56And almost as a reaction to the grimness of that,
45:5970s culture was spangly and brash.
46:02Much of that culture looks outrageously alien to modern eyes.
46:05Young women were blithely lobbed in
46:07to zhuzh up almost any form of entertainment.
46:09Leering at them was always hilarious,
46:11and their age often seemed completely immaterial.
46:14Some of the things you see are quite an education.
46:19Just look at that shower. Blimey, they're big for their age.
46:23And what about the culture within the BBC in the 70s?
46:26Was the corporation hiding something?
46:28And what about today?
46:29Today had it shunted a Newsnight-Saville investigation of its own aside
46:32to make room for a lukewarm Christmas tribute
46:34with all the entertainment value of a blocked hose.
46:37Many thought it had.
46:39Faced with the heinous allegations,
46:41the BBC immediately launched a far-reaching, comprehensive fuck-up.
46:45First, new DG George Entwistle tried to wow reporters
46:48with his fancy bartending skills.
46:51It's like watching Tom Cruise in Cocktail.
46:53Then, in a masochistic move,
46:55BBC One ran a panorama investigating Newsnight,
46:58while simultaneously on BBC Two,
47:00Newsnight was commenting on Panorama's investigation into itself.
47:04As you watch this, Panorama on BBC One
47:07is broadcasting interviews with members of the Newsnight team.
47:10And if you press the red button now,
47:12Newsround investigates Watchdog while Watchdog asks,
47:15was there a country file ring at the BBC?
47:18While the BBC agonised, the press had the perfect story.
47:21It had everything.
47:22Paedophilia, the BBC, a whiff of incompetence or corruption,
47:25Britain's most notorious serial killer
47:27and a dead celebrity who couldn't sue.
47:29There were also Savile's astonishing links to the establishment,
47:32to the Prime Minister, to the NHS, to the Royal Family.
47:36It was all just the right breeding ground for conspiracy theories
47:39which quickly flooded the internet.
47:41Meanwhile, a rudderless Newsnight suffered a nervous breakdown
47:44and, in a classic example of BBC oversteer,
47:47ran a report which didn't seem to have been fact-checked thoroughly.
47:50A report which wrongly claimed a senior political figure was a child abuser.
47:55Soon, the names of supposed suspects were being gleefully circulated online
47:59and Twitter turned into a depressing guessing game
48:02which proved to be the final death blow for an already beleaguered DG.
48:06And the whole affair reached a strange new low
48:08in an uncomfortable edition of This Morning.
48:10David Cameron was on This Morning and you could see he was tense
48:14because he was being interviewed by Philip Schofield.
48:16And you never know what Schofield's going to do because he's a maverick.
48:20He might suddenly ask who your favourite X Factor judge is or something.
48:23Just bring it on you like a grand inquisitor.
48:25Philip Schofield had gone on the internet and he'd found the names of these people
48:30and because Philip Schofield's a good bloke, you know, he didn't just walk away,
48:34you know, turn a blind eye.
48:36He wrote the names down and he spends like, you know, a whole three minutes doing this,
48:41you know, really puts his back into it.
48:43And then later, David Cameron's on This Morning being all like,
48:46oh, you know, I'm the Prime Minister
48:48and doing his serious face and his hand gestures he learned in Prime Minister school.
48:53And Philip Schofield, right, goes like, bang, here's a list of pedos.
48:58Fucking sorted out.
49:00I have those names there. Those are the names on a piece of paper.
49:03You know the names on that piece of paper.
49:05Will you be speaking to those people?
49:07But instead of thanking him, Cameron goes all pissy about it,
49:10going like, ooh, ooh, that's dangerous.
49:13I think, Philip, this is really important, right, because there is a danger
49:17if we're not careful, that this can turn into a sort of witch hunt.
49:22There's no point in a witch hunt against pedos
49:25because pedos are harder to spot than witches, so a witch hunt isn't enough.
49:30We used to have like trials in a court when someone was a pedophile, right,
49:34but that cost loads of money and sometimes it didn't work
49:37because you'd find out they weren't one after all.
49:40But now, because we've got computers, we can decide, you know,
49:44who's a pedo or who looks like a pedo and then work out, you know,
49:49what they've done and make up all the proper facts and everything
49:53and then find out where they live and tweet the coordinates
49:57and get together and go around and kill them with our bare hands,
50:00right, in their own homes.
50:02I mean, that hasn't actually happened yet, but it will.
50:06And it'll probably happen next year and it'll be brilliant.
50:112012 was a bumper year for elections,
50:13with more crossing box action than ten tic-tac-toe tournaments
50:16glued together in an awkward metaphor.
50:19The French traded Nicolas Sarkozy for Francois Hollande,
50:22the Egyptians traded Mubarak for the Muslim Brotherhood,
50:25while Russian voters had a thorny choice
50:27between action man Vladimir Putin and action man Vladimir Putin.
50:30Some found the choice so thrilling they voted again and again,
50:33like this man expertly captured feeding ballot papers into a box over and over again,
50:38like a human photocopier.
50:40This was exactly the sort of thing that led some cynics
50:43to claim the election might be rigged.
50:45Hence sporadic outbreaks of nudey protest
50:47and the presence of a team of foreign observers,
50:49headed by a Dutch politician who immediately rendered the news fantastic
50:52thanks to his completely brilliant name.
50:54The government's control of the whole electoral process
50:57rendered the vote unfair, according to Dutch observer Tiny Cox.
51:02The Russian presidential election showed a clear winner.
51:05It can't be much fun being Tiny Cox on election night.
51:08Everyone awaiting the result, constantly asking,
51:10is it in yet?
51:12When the victor was announced, there was a massive swing from Putin to more Putin,
51:15and the man himself was so delighted he pissed his face.
51:18Meanwhile, in Greece, ominous coverage highlighted a growing taste for fascism,
51:22courtesy of Golden Dawn, a far-right party with a logo
51:25that looked like a cheap swastika knock-off made in Crete.
51:27ITN sent a slightly anxious-looking James Mates in to meet a spokesman
51:31who was sitting in a cut-price fascist lair
51:33looking like a bit of bad Gary Newman fan art.
51:36Still, if Mates was nervous, he needn't have worried.
51:38Golden Dawn members only hit people on camera if they're women,
51:41as this shocking incident on live Greek TV demonstrated.
51:45But these events were mere bum garnish compared to the US election,
51:49which was altogether more exciting, because it was like a movie.
51:52It's your vote, your future, your country, your choice.
51:59As the US election inched nearer,
52:01it was clear Mitt Romney, a sort of Bob Monkhouse action figure
52:04with the personality of a vat return and the voice of a Dignitas tour guide,
52:07was in trouble.
52:09Despite resembling the president in a 1960s Marvel comic,
52:12he had a likability issue.
52:14Many saw him as a heartless corporate millionaire,
52:16partly because the news media repeatedly caught him
52:19sounding like a heartless corporate millionaire.
52:21In a series of astonishing scenes, he blurted statements like,
52:24I'm not concerned about the very poor.
52:26I'm not concerned about the very poor. We have a safety net there.
52:29Said he liked being able to fire people.
52:31I like being able to fire people who provide services to me.
52:34And claimed that corporations are people.
52:36We could raise taxes on people.
52:38That's not the way...
52:40Corporations are people, my friend.
52:42We can raise taxes on... Of course they are.
52:45Everything corporations earn ultimately goes to people.
52:48So, where do you think it goes?
52:52Whose pockets? Whose pockets? People's pockets.
52:55Yeah, and who made those people's pockets?
52:58Corporations. Back at you, Romney.
53:01When Romney wasn't pulling a Montgomery Burns,
53:03he was captured babbling cluelessly,
53:05like his mouth was being operated by Norman Wisdom.
53:08I'm not familiar precisely with exactly what I said,
53:10but I stand by what I said, whatever it was.
53:12In a bid to stoke enthusiasm at the Republican convention,
53:15the party wheeled out the legend that was Clint Eastwood,
53:18who promptly held a mystifying debate with an empty chair.
53:21Presumably he'd been told they were going to CGI Obama in,
53:24in post-production.
53:25What do you want me to tell Romney?
53:28I can't tell him to do that. He can't do that to himself.
53:32Having mistaken a fellow piece of wood
53:34for the most powerful man in the world,
53:36Eastwood then crumbled in the face of the chair's rhetorical skills.
53:39What do you mean, shut up?
53:41Still, at least around now, it seemed things couldn't get any worse
53:44for the Romney campaign, until they inevitably did.
53:47Yes, Romney was caught on a hidden camera
53:49bad-mouthing 47% of the US electorate,
53:52the kind of soaring rhetoric that usually soars your chance of winning in half.
53:55And as the first debate loomed,
53:57the media was already reciting lines from Romney's obituary.
54:00The wheels are coming off the Romney campaign.
54:03But then something odd happened during that first debate.
54:06The slick-assured Obama people thought they knew
54:08was nowhere to be seen having traded personalities with Eastwood's chair.
54:12You know...
54:15Now it was Obama's turn to be pilloried in the media.
54:18Instead of making dramatic points, the president meandered.
54:22Suddenly, all bets were off,
54:24and Romney started creeping up in the national polls.
54:26And then, perilously close to election day,
54:28politics were temporarily blown aside by dramatic disaster movie footage
54:32as Superstorm Sandy smashed into New York.
54:34Oh, my God!
54:36My tree!
54:37It's a disaster. Terrible. Terrible, terrible.
54:41And we're going to be voting.
54:43I don't know how we're going to go out to vote.
54:45New Yorkers, they always brag,
54:47we're the best city in the world, and we're the toughest,
54:50and we're the, I'm from New York, and yeah, you're a badass,
54:53yeah, until you get a little rainfall,
54:55and then you go, oh, I've been 12 days without power.
55:00Somebody get here, help us, please.
55:02It was the opposite of after 9-11.
55:05They made a lot of news about, oh, New Yorkers are getting together,
55:09and for the first time, they're meeting each other,
55:12they're helping each other out, they're sharing their grief.
55:15Well, you should have kept that up and been nice to your neighbor
55:18more than a week after 9-11,
55:20because there's probably 10,000 people within walking distance that have power,
55:24but you've been a prick to them for the last 11 years,
55:27and now they fucking hate you again.
55:29Suck it, Mr Soggy Socks.
55:31Meanwhile, back in election land and away from the TV cameras,
55:34nerdy Moneyball-style stats geeks
55:36had long been calmly predicting a modest win for Obama.
55:39Despite this, come election night itself,
55:41the news wheeled out its most bombastic graphics
55:43and tried to play up the drama of a race it insisted was still too close to call.
55:47This presidential contest could be a squeaker till the end.
55:50Although in the event, the race was called fairly early on,
55:53leading to jubilant scenes amongst Obamarites
55:55and slightly less jubilant scenes from the Romney faithful.
55:58Then Romney himself came out to give a concession speech,
56:01which, incredibly, he managed to deliver
56:03without calling absolutely everyone watching a peasant and an arsehole.
56:06Sky News, meanwhile, seemed more interested in another great American orator,
56:09Mr Dickey Whiz.
56:11It feels good to see all the hard work he paid off.
56:14The thing about Will.i.am is he spent so long on British screens this year,
56:17the American media seemed to just forget who he was.
56:20We're just kind of giving you a little bit of what you see here.
56:25That's Wyclef Jean.
56:27By December, everyone needed cheering up
56:29and Fox News was happy to oblige.
56:31Great Britain might want to start building
56:33a paparazzi-proof delivery room somewhere
56:35because Prince William's wife, Kate, is preggers.
56:38Twinkly, tit-witted showbiz bum-washed slingers
56:41Entertainment Tonight covered the story
56:43with CGI mock-ups showing what the child won't look like
56:46and loads of other old shit.
56:47How much weight will she gain?
56:49And will they have royal twins?
56:51And what this royal psychic knows?
56:53Nothing.
56:54To celebrate Christmas,
56:55Adland highlighted the hilarious subjugation of women.
56:58First, Boots unflinchingly depicted
57:00the problems facing cash-strapped single-parent families.
57:03Let's get you back out there, Mum.
57:04Tragic, really.
57:05They need the income from her walking the streets.
57:07Good luck!
57:09Then, Asda portrayed Mum as little more
57:11than a member of household staff
57:12who doesn't even get to sit on a chair at lunch
57:14and has to squat near the edge
57:15like a dog begging for scraps.
57:17But the winner in the maudlin Christmas ad stakes
57:19was John Lewis, which delivered this heartstring-tugging tale
57:22of a snowman who undertakes an epic journey
57:24to buy a hat and gloves for the snowgirl of his dreams.
57:27Of course, it's worth bearing in mind
57:28that since snowmen can't move of their own accord,
57:30he's had to be built by hand for each stage of this journey,
57:33presumably by children.
57:34So this whole thing is really just despicable propaganda
57:37for child labour.
57:38But these attempts to cheer the population were nothing
57:41compared to the finest Christmas broadcast ever fashioned,
57:44TOWIE Live,
57:45which combined live, unedited conversations
57:47between people who can barely speak...
57:49Anything is right.
57:50I can't believe how much acts are going on.
57:52How much acts are there?
57:54...and on-stage performances from people-shaped things
57:57that definitely can't sing.
57:59I'm a Barbie girl in a Barbie world
58:02Life in plastic is fantastic
58:06...and sometimes, excitingly,
58:08both of those things together at once.
58:11Odd, at the end of the day...
58:13I'm so right, you can't lie to me!
58:16Odd, at the end of the day...
58:28Well, that was 2012, and guess what?
58:30The world didn't end, unless it did
58:32after I recorded this link, obviously,
58:34and if you're a future space archaeologist
58:36watching this using some kind of temporal transponder system,
58:39you've connected directly to my fossilised remains in the future,
58:42in which case, well done, aren't you clever?
58:44I'll see the rest of you again in a few weeks.
58:46Until then, get out!
58:50Also in reflective mood, next on BBC Two,
58:53a collection of the best bits from QI.