• 6 minutes ago
First broadcast 9th January 2014.

Charlie Brooker

Al Campbell Barry Shitpeas
Diane Morgan Philomena Cunk
Doug Stanhope
Brian Limond
Stuart Clark

Category

📺
TV
Transcript
00:00Hello, I'm Charlie Booker and you're watching Weekly Wiper, a programme all about things
00:24that are happening.
00:26Things like this.
00:27Britain angers Neptune, god of the sea.
00:30Turns out Britannia might not rule the waves after all.
00:33Snazzily directed detective show Sherlock returned.
00:36Some viewers were left confused as to why Sherlock didn't die at the end of the previous
00:40series.
00:41The simple answer is he was recommissioned.
00:44Meanwhile a freak polar vortex in America has created some astonishing images.
00:48Critics are praising this charming Broadway production of The Snowman.
00:53But we start with Britain.
00:54Britain's brilliant, isn't it?
00:55It's got everything.
00:56It's got Paddington Bear and Stonehenge and regular bin collections, but all of this hangs
01:01in the balance thanks to immigration, which is out of control.
01:04These days everywhere you look there's a Polsky Sclep selling weird foreign food like eggs.
01:09What the hell is an egg?
01:10Well, no more.
01:11Britain is full and we need to keep an eye on anyone new who wants to come here, which
01:15is why it's helpful that for over a year the news has kept us informed of the imminent
01:19threat of inbound Romanians and Bulgarians set to flood the country once EU restrictions
01:23were lifted on New Year's Day.
01:26But who exactly are these people?
01:28First, Bulgarians.
01:29Bulgarians, as a series of eye-opening reports made devilishly clear, live in a kind of medieval
01:34realm twinned with Game of Thrones, consisting entirely of horses and carts and people lugging
01:40giant sacks around like they're in a live recreation of a Bruegel painting.
01:44The world isn't entirely backward.
01:45I mean, they do have, say, cars, but only shit ones.
01:49In fact, as Channel 4's footage made clear, Bulgaria is a kind of open-air shit car museum
01:53where the only form of entertainment is driving over the nation's one speed bump.
01:57Romania, meanwhile, is apparently also a medieval Game of Thrones Bruegel painting squalor pot,
02:03according to this news footage, apparently beamed live from the year 1386.
02:08The news certainly painted a graphic picture of deprivation and hot horse-on-cart action.
02:12I mean, look at this bleak existence.
02:14No utilities, squalid conditions, people lugging sacks around everywhere, and the only way
02:19to get about is on horseback.
02:21They'd be better off in Britain.
02:22Little wonder a tidal wave of immigrants was being predicted by some, and it didn't seem
02:26they were going to be welcomed with open arms.
02:28It's hard to shake the suspicion that much of the hostility towards immigrants who haven't
02:31even migrated yet might have something to do with the kind of level-headed, non-judgmental
02:35and factually watertight reporting surrounding the issue.
02:38Some of the language about floods and swarms is reminiscent of dehumanizing anti-Semitic
02:42Nazi propaganda likening Jews to rats.
02:45They are cunning, cowardly, and cruel, and usually appear in massive hordes.
02:51And when not being compared with vermin, they're routinely painted as scroungers or criminals.
02:55Many Romanians were unimpressed with the coverage and tried to redress the balance.
02:59Sky News found an articulate Romanian barrister who pointed out Romanians have been allowed
03:03to work here since 2007, and apparently aren't all thieves.
03:07I know lots of doctors, nurses, scientists, lawyers like myself.
03:14We have integrated in this wonderful country, and we have been contributing.
03:18Yeah, whatever.
03:19Come on, turn your pockets out.
03:21Even statistics showing immigrants contribute more than they take don't help, because as
03:24the news demonstrated, statistics don't really mean much to most people.
03:28If you read the statistics, most of the Romanians who are here have got jobs, are doing well.
03:34Living it, here, the statistics can't be right.
03:38And when people aren't doubting statistics, they just make them up on their own.
03:42The majority are here to claim their benefits, aren't they?
03:44You think the majority are here to claim benefits?
03:47Yeah, the majority, yeah, definitely.
03:48So you want to see a clam down?
03:50It should be time.
03:51Given the nature of the news coverage, you'd think the Romanians would be rubbing their
03:54hands together, looking at the clock and booking their tickets.
03:57But weirdly, as some of the reporters pointed out, they just knock that into us.
04:01Having spoken to people here, it's clear that contrary to popular myth, Romanians have no
04:06wish to go to the UK to live on benefits.
04:08Yeah, I know.
04:09I read about it in the paper.
04:11They can't wait to come here and steal from us.
04:13Just listen to them.
04:14I would never leave my country, this woman says.
04:16For what?
04:18Give me back my wallet.
04:20What would be the point of leaving Romania just for social benefits?
04:23Yeah, whatever.
04:24Have you got a receipt for those kids?
04:26I make my money here.
04:27I have my family here and my friends here.
04:29I feel at home here.
04:30I would never go.
04:31You lying thief.
04:34Even their own officials denied they wanted to come here.
04:36I can see at least one factor that makes the UK far less attractive, and that's certainly
04:43the weather.
04:44How dare you?
04:45What's wrong with our weather?
04:48More disruption and misery after powerful gales and heavy rainfall hit the UK for the
04:53second time this week.
04:54Yes, in an apparent bid to scare off the great Eastern European invasion scheduled for New
04:58Year's Day when the floodgates would open, Britain's weather spent much of Christmas
05:02demonstrating what it would look like if there were no floodgates at all.
05:04Suddenly, there was an intense sense of déjà vu about some of the coverage.
05:08I mean, look at this bleak existence.
05:10No utilities, squalid conditions, people lugging sacks around everywhere, and the only way
05:14to get about is on horseback.
05:16They'd be better off in Romania.
05:18As New Year's Day arrived, the press pulled out all the stops to welcome the expected
05:22horde of newcomers, while in a last-ditch attempt to put off anyone attempting to enter
05:26the country, the government stationed MP and publicity tag nut Keith Vaz at Luton Airport.
05:31In fact, as Sky News clearly proved, when the much-anticipated plane load of Romanians
05:35arrived, it turned out most of them already worked here.
05:37But the news did find at least one new Romanian, this guy, Victor, who'd come to get a job
05:42washing cars while wearing a green hat.
05:45I don't come to rob your country, I come to work and you open the border.
05:50Hope you've paid for that hat.
05:51Ironically, while Victor the one-man horde flooded Britain and bravely withstood a coffee
05:56with Keith Vaz, there were more British newcomers working in Romania as reporters than new Romanians
06:01in Britain.
06:02Anyway, now the country is ruined.
06:04I miss the traditional British way of life, you know, before we had the Bulgarians and
06:08the Romanians and the Polish and the Russians and the Australians and the Kurdish and the
06:12Turkish and the Bengalis and the Pakistanis and the Indians and the West Indians and the
06:17Africans and the Huguenots and the Jews and the Normans and the Vikings and the Angles
06:21and Saxons and the Romans and the Jutes and those bloody Celts who were first in the door,
06:25the foreign f***ing idiots.
06:27It's been downhill ever since.
06:29Still, who cares what I think about immigration?
06:33Let's ask a foreigner, specifically US comedian and shambles Doug Stanhope.
06:37Here's his view.
06:38I'm Doug Stanhope and that's why I drink.
06:51Immigration again?
06:52Really?
06:53Who is it this time?
06:55The Bulgarians are coming.
06:56The Bulgarians are coming.
06:58Bar the door and lock up the wives and hide the children and put your pants on backwards
07:03so they don't get their mitts in your zipper.
07:05You know what?
07:06Honestly, I was surprised to find out the UK even had immigration law of any kind.
07:12As shitty and miserable and dire an existence as you live, you'd think you'd welcome anyone
07:18willing to live there with open arms and ask them stories about the outside world.
07:23All the stereotypes you hear about immigration are always, oh, they're lazy and they steal
07:28and they don't speak the language and then they turn around and go, and they're stealing
07:33our jobs.
07:34Hey, Kevin, we'd like to keep you on.
07:36You've been great, but we just found a slovenly, illiterate thief and we think he might do
07:43a little bit better than you, so you gotta go.
07:48Besides, I thought the Polish people already stole all your jobs.
07:52So maybe the Bulgarians are just going to come in and steal Polish jobs so you can relax.
07:57In the States, when we say immigrant, it's just another word for Mexican.
08:01We live on the border in Bisbee.
08:02We see the fucking border patrol hustling all these guys up, 11 at a time, coming out
08:07of a Ford Tempo like a fucking clown car.
08:10They have to wander in the desert for six days and they just get over it, they're dehydrated
08:16and filthy.
08:17Yeah, you're probably right.
08:18They don't speak the language and they probably have minimal education and if that guy can
08:24show up like that, as qualified for your job as you are, you're a fucking loser of
08:32such dynamic proportions.
08:35I would be ashamed and humiliated if anyone found out that guy just took my job.
08:42How simple and menial a job do you have where they can do the job training in pantomime?
08:50Hey, come here, girl.
08:51Crank, crank, crank, crank, crank.
08:54Oh, see, crank, crank, crank, crank, crank.
08:56Yeah, you got it.
08:57Then you go.
09:00Oh, no, no.
09:02Yes, you're hired.
09:05You never hear people with legitimate skill sets complaining about immigrants taking their jobs.
09:10You don't hear brain surgeons sitting around the Beverly Hills hotel lounge going,
09:14you know what, chaps?
09:15That's my ass, Patrick.
09:17These fucking Guatemalans come up here.
09:21Don't speak the language.
09:22They steal all of our neurosurgery positions.
09:28Let's go thunder down some Jack Daniels and put on our steel-toed boots and go out tonight
09:34stomping guats, what do you say?
09:38And the Romanians.
09:39See, I don't even think that one's a real country.
09:42That's like from a fable or something.
09:44Shit.
09:51Reality and grisly prick observation chamber celebrity big brother
09:55kicked off once again with a star-studded line-up.
09:58This year's twist saw faded celebrities handcuffed and incarcerated in front of a jeering crowd,
10:03a gimmick they've stolen from Operation Yewtree.
10:05This year's housemates include...
10:07Judy Finnegan and Philip Seymour Hoffman,
10:10a Bratislavian prince from a 1920s silent film,
10:13Madeline the Rag Doll,
10:15a young David Hasselhoff,
10:16an old David Hasselhoff,
10:18some atoms in the shape of a woman,
10:19Thingy off Thingamajig,
10:21Dorian Gray and his picture,
10:23a typical American,
10:24businesswoman of the year,
10:25and Jennifer Aniston.
10:27Highlights thus far include Dappy's surprisingly successful mating ritual,
10:31which has echoes of Hannibal Lecter.
10:34It's too early to say which ones are worth hating and which ones aren't worth hating yet,
10:38so you're best off hating all of them and then retrospectively withdrawing some of that hate
10:42if they break down or die or piss in Dappy's cornflakes.
10:51Food! And with the horse meat scandal behind us,
10:54the new year got off to a grisly start as a Chinese branch of Walmart
10:57discovered its donkey meat was tainted with fox.
11:00These days you just don't know what the fox you're eating.
11:02The sad news was expertly reported on the slightly odd Blue Ocean Network,
11:07anchored by the world's first Lego human.
11:09A man that bought a package of what he thought was donkey meat at a local Walmart
11:13turned out to be fox meat instead.
11:16Talk about Fox News!
11:19The report rounded off with a helpful Jamie Oliver-style austerity cooking tip.
11:23To be on the safe side, boil fox meat with spices before consuming.
11:27And to be on the really safe side, throw it away.
11:30Still, if you think fox meat's bad, what about the North Korean scandal
11:33where dog food has reportedly been found to contain traces of uncle meat?
11:37Yeah, there was this sort of nature show about dolphins.
11:40It was just like a normal natural history programme, but set underwater.
11:45Sort of like Finding Nemo, but if fish were real.
11:48Dolphins live downstairs where the sea is.
11:51And the programme was really clever
11:53because they'd filmed it underwater using magic robot animals.
11:57It was like a game where you had to guess
11:59which things were the real sea animals and which were the robot animals.
12:03And sometimes it was like an advert for robots, you know?
12:06A spy dolphin reaches 50 miles per hour and also has HD cameras for eyes.
12:13The thing is, the robot sea animals were so sophisticated,
12:16there were loads more interesting than the real sea animals.
12:20So some of the sea animals got jealous and attacked the robot sea animals.
12:26It was like a war between robots and the sea,
12:29something I didn't expect to see in my lifetime, if I'm honest.
12:33But then I was surprised when Wi-Fi came out, so maybe that's just me.
12:38It told you all this stuff you didn't know,
12:40like that dolphins talk by making noises, like a squeaky floorboard,
12:44which gets on your tits after about six seconds.
12:46DOLPHIN SQUEAKS
12:49Usually dolphins are pretty,
12:51which is why unhappy people have big posters of dolphins
12:55jumping over sunsets on the walls
12:57and slogans that pretend life's worth living printed on them.
13:00But in this, because the dolphins didn't know the cameras were there,
13:04they were filmed from all these unflattering angles.
13:07So you saw that dolphins are actually sort of ugly,
13:11like a grey undersea pig.
13:14You wouldn't want that on your wall.
13:16The thing is, it was really magical and fascinating
13:18with all this incredible footage of dolphins jumping in the air
13:22and you're like, that's amazing, you know?
13:24And then they're jumping in the air again and you're still amazed,
13:27but not as much.
13:28And then they jump and spin at the same time
13:30and you're like, OK, that's clever, that is clever.
13:33And then they jump and spin again and you're like, do something else.
13:36But they don't, they just keep jumping and spinning
13:38and jumping and spinning and just landing back in the sea.
13:42And they don't stop doing it, it's all they do.
13:44Fucking dolphins, fuck them and fuck everyone who likes them.
13:47If dolphins are the best thing the ocean's got to offer,
13:49they might as well conquer it over the sea.
13:52EastEnders, the BBC's expertly realised ongoing simulation
13:55of what London might look like if human beings spoke and behaved
13:58in unrealistic ways, has been facing a crisis.
14:00Viewers were turning away in droves,
14:02even though no-one knows what a drove is.
14:04It's not quite clear why people haven't been enjoying this tale
14:07of downtrodden proletarians suffering endless miseries
14:10beneath a battleship grey sky.
14:12It can't be the fault of the richly drawn characters
14:14like Purple Ronnie here, or Ian, or Cat, or Ian, or Dot, or Ian,
14:19or, I don't know, who's that, Colin?
14:21Or the bald one, or the other bald one,
14:23or the sort of newer bald one.
14:25Actually, there's so many bald heads in it,
14:26it's like watching Finding Kimo.
14:28Seriously, when two of them meet,
14:30they must think they're looking in a mirror.
14:32Anyway, now there's a new boss driving the EastEnd bus
14:34and the square's being sexed up,
14:36literally, with some mature erotica.
14:38They've paired Phil Mitchell up with Sharon again,
14:40which is good news for anyone who's ever wondered
14:42what it might look like if scientists made a woman mate
14:44with a giant thumb, and bad news for anyone
14:46who doesn't want to witness his delighted post-coital gasping.
14:49SHE SNIFFS
14:52SHE EXHALES
14:53Ah...
14:55SHE INHALES
14:56Ah, I just love the sound of them saying.
14:58Oh, thanks for that, love.
14:59Just going to go pat my dick dry on a tea cosy.
15:02But these thrilling developments were nothing compared to the news
15:05that Cockney actor Danny Dyer, The Thinking Man's Dick Van Dyke,
15:09was joining the square to play the exotically named Mick Carter,
15:12a mystery wrapped in an enigma cocooned within a bloke.
15:17Git Carter has purchased the Queen Vic, an iconic Walford landmark
15:20used for absorbing meaningful looks from characters,
15:22as well as housing countless brooding grudges
15:24and impromptu shouting contests.
15:26What?!
15:28Oh, Nancy!
15:30Swear down, touch me again and I will rip your bits off!
15:32Despite buying the Vic late in the afternoon on Christmas Day,
15:35Carter apparently had a licence to sell alcohol granted by the 27th,
15:39which makes Walford Council more efficient than the Nazis.
15:42Contrary to popular opinion, Danny Dyer can act.
15:45He seemed uncertain at first, openly asking other cast members
15:48how he should perform each scene.
15:50I was thinking, how do I play this?
15:52Do I try tears?
15:54I don't know, Danny, what does it say in the script?
15:57I'm not going to tell Linda that tomorrow our little girl
15:59is getting married to a man we hate.
16:01Oh, you're supposed to do it gruffly, apparently.
16:05Dyer is surrounded by a supporting cast of Carters,
16:07including a wife who walks around in the street in curlers
16:09like she's just wandered out of Birds of a Feather,
16:12a daughter who inexplicably dresses like she's in EMF,
16:14a son who's gay but won't talk about it,
16:16and a sister who's gay and won't talk about anything else.
16:19Right, that's it, I'm splitting the room.
16:21I'm building a lezzanine.
16:22No-one is building a lezzanine.
16:24Shirley there is Mick's other sister, and her sex life's been horrible,
16:28because in the past she's also been filled in by the human thumb,
16:31hence their loaded glances.
16:33But then she's not picky.
16:34It won't last, Shirley.
16:36You'll blow it.
16:37Just like you blow everything.
16:39And everyone.
16:40Oh, yeah!
16:42Nice.
16:44Not all the language is that racy.
16:45In fact, most of the time there's no language at all,
16:47because the inhabitants of Albert Square chiefly seem to communicate
16:50by staring mutely at each other
16:52in some sort of weird silent theatre of the mind.
17:05Prompt!
17:15To be fair, this is some of the best dialogue Albert Square's seen in years.
17:18Anyway, after a couple of episodes, something disturbing happened.
17:21The old soap osmosis kicked in.
17:23Before long, I was caring about what happened to the characters,
17:26like Ian and Bald Man and Cat and Alfie and Ian and Bald Man 2 and Ian again,
17:30but mainly Danny Dyer.
17:32And then I realised that rather than watching EastEnders
17:34so I could laugh at Danny Dyer,
17:36I was watching EastEnders because of Danny Dyer.
17:38He's a canny choice, because there's something weirdly watchable about him,
17:41no matter what he does.
17:42Whether he's picking up a bird, standing around looking hard
17:45or enjoying a steamy threesome.
17:47Come on, then.
17:48There's a good girl.
17:50Come on.
17:51Come on, then.
17:52Come on.
17:53It's a good girl!
17:54Yes!
17:55Oh!
17:56Ooh, you know, even if that dog joined in,
17:57it still wouldn't be as disturbing as that bit where Phil came out of the bedsheets
18:00all satiated like a manatee surfacing for air after a big underwater shit.
18:05Ah!
18:07Bleurgh!
18:08It's a big, bewildering world, isn't it?
18:10It's a big, bewildering world, isn't it?
18:12And we're all just trying to make sense of the damn thing, aren't we?
18:15Well, yes, we are.
18:16Well, here's someone who's trying harder than most.
18:18He's trying to make sense of everything from geopolitical tensions
18:21to Russell Brand.
18:22And he's called Limmy.
18:24This is Limmy.
18:30Hi, so I just started hearing Russell Brand getting mentioned everywhere.
18:35Russell Brand, Russell Brand.
18:37Psst, psst, psst.
18:39Russell Brand.
18:40So I checked it out and he's going on about how,
18:42oh, we shouldn't bother voting because...
18:44What's the point?
18:45And I thought...
18:46Good on you.
18:47And I thought...
18:48No, hold on.
18:50Don't vote?
18:54And just let that lot walk straight in?
19:00Whose side is he on anyway?
19:03Is he one of us or...
19:05One of them.
19:08I mean...
19:10What's going on?
19:13So I tweeted him.
19:16What's going on?
19:18Nae reply.
19:20So I headed out because, believe it or not,
19:22I have got bigger fish to fry than Russell Brand.
19:24I was sending a video to the council about the state of the fences in Victoria Park.
19:28I don't know if you've seen it.
19:29The state of that?
19:30But it was there that I remembered...
19:31Kay Perry.
19:32Kay Perry.
19:34Kay Perry.
19:35The ex-wife.
19:36She knows what's going on.
19:37It's all there in the lyrics.
19:38I see it all.
19:39I see it now.
19:40And...
19:41I'm wide awake, wake, wake.
19:42And you can see that she's wanting to tell people,
19:44but she knows that they're watching.
19:45She knows that he's watching.
19:46So she's doing it in riddles and rhymes for the people who can work it out.
19:49Like a code.
19:50So I sent her a code to tell her she can tell me,
19:53I'm wide awake.
19:54Follow me please so I can DM you.
19:58Big fan.
20:00DM me.
20:01Big fan.
20:03And they reply.
20:05And they reply for the council, either.
20:16The New Year began as it always does, with mankind declaring war on the sky,
20:20and exciting news reports of world leaders delivering inspiring words of hope
20:24in their thrilling New Year's speeches.
20:26Happy New Year 2014, Russia!
20:32Showing the world how New Year's Eve addresses should be done,
20:35the star of the North Korean remake of Game of Thrones, Kim Yong Joffrey,
20:39took to an outsized ornamental tissue box with seven inset microphones
20:43to swap feel-good stories about executing your own uncle.
20:46Back home, mechanical prime mini-droid David Camerobot
20:49stood in the factory that made him to deliver an inspiring message of hope
20:53with a slightly distracting glistening chin
20:55like he'd just been fellating the devil,
20:57which I'm legally obliged to assure you, he hadn't.
21:00But he wasn't as worried about greasy chins
21:02as the prospect of Scottish independence.
21:04This year, let the message go out from England, Wales and Northern Ireland
21:09to everyone in Scotland.
21:10We want you to stay.
21:12Yes, or to put it in terms you'd understand,
21:14OK, then please don't go.
21:19On the other side of the ideological curtain,
21:22head firebrand Ed Miliband started his own New Year's message,
21:25bits of which resembled Where's Wally?
21:27There he is, the sexy one.
21:29Red-hot Ed was shown posing for snapshots
21:31with delighted members of the public
21:33who couldn't believe they'd met a future prime minister
21:35because they hadn't.
21:36And he articulated their angry voices in his own sort of dorky way.
21:39People are thinking, look, I've made the sacrifices,
21:42well, where's the benefit?
21:44The government keeps telling me that everything's fixed.
21:46It doesn't seem fixed for me.
21:48He's just like Nelson Mandela, isn't he?
21:50It may be irrelevant in 2014.
21:52It being a new year, the mystery of time is on everyone's mind.
21:55Well, to properly explore that mystery, you need an expert.
21:58Luckily, we have one in the form of our very own Philomena Kunk,
22:01who will explore time for us and you now
22:04in the first of her landmark mini-documentary series,
22:06Moments Of Wonder.
22:20Time is precious,
22:22but it's not like other precious things.
22:25You can't hold it like a necklace
22:28or taste it like money.
22:34Time has existed since before time began
22:38and today it's all around us,
22:42on our phones, in the corner of the news.
22:45But once upon a time,
22:48but once upon a time,
22:50if you wanted the time,
22:52then you had to come here,
22:54to the headquarters of time,
22:56Greenwich Clock Museum.
23:01All the clocks in the world are set from here,
23:04which must take ages.
23:07So, what is clocks?
23:10Clocks was invented by the ancient Mesopotamians
23:16in ancient Mesopotamian times,
23:19but they didn't know it were ancient Mesopotamian times,
23:23because there were no clocks to see what the times was.
23:29Because of the shape of clocks,
23:32you might think that time goes in a circle,
23:35but it actually goes in a line.
23:38This is the famous Greenwich Meridian line,
23:42named after the band Meridian,
23:44who were named after this line.
23:46Every day that's ever happened starts exactly here,
23:51coming out of that time transmitter
23:54and running along this metal line on the ground.
23:58That's why this is the only place in the world
24:01where I can be in the past and the future,
24:04with the present running right up through my middle bits.
24:08No wonder time is such a mystery.
24:11Literally no-one can understand it apart from science men.
24:15One science man who knows all about time is this science man.
24:20Hello, science man. Who are you?
24:22I'm Dr Stuart Clark.
24:24I'm an astronomy writer and a fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society.
24:28What is time?
24:30We don't actually know.
24:32There are a couple of possibilities.
24:34Either time could be a physical thing that flows like a river,
24:39or it could be more of a psychological thing.
24:42When you say it's like a river, what do you mean?
24:45I mean that time flows like the water in the river
24:49and that the events in our lives are like things in the river
24:53that that water encounters.
24:56Like fish and stuff?
24:58Yes.
25:01Yes.
25:03You know when you store time on a clock,
25:07how do you get it back out again?
25:10Because when I was winding my watch up,
25:14I accidentally put it forward,
25:17so I'd got two hours more in my clock.
25:21But then I put it back, but I thought, is it still in there?
25:25Is the time still in the clock?
25:27So your watch doesn't actually measure time?
25:31Well, it does because it's accurate.
25:33It measures the oscillation of a crystal.
25:37And the change in the physical state of that crystal
25:41has to happen in what we call a certain amount of time.
25:45So from one moment to another,
25:47physical systems everywhere in the universe changes its state.
25:51And that change takes place in what we call time.
25:55And that's the only way we can infer the existence of time,
25:59but actually what time is, we don't know.
26:03Right.
26:05So even the people who understand time
26:09don't understand what time is.
26:11It'll always be an unknowable mystery,
26:14like why the seasons change or how a telephone works.
26:18Next time on Moments of Wonder,
26:22I'll be asking, what are these?
26:25And why are they everywhere?
26:35Gambling!
26:36And in a chilling online bingo advert,
26:38London is invaded by pop giant Mel B,
26:40clomping through the streets like Godzilla's cigar,
26:43terrifying pedestrians with the biggest camel toe in history.
26:47Not that it's that unusual a sight.
26:49The city is full of massive twats.
26:51Actually, I don't know why they've shown her playing bingo in the city.
26:54It's not a place anyone associates with huge destructive idiots
26:57mindlessly gambling and crushing the man on the street.
27:00She is massive.
27:02You think I'm massive? Get a load of this jackpot.
27:05Looks like someone's sitting on a full house.
27:07Bingo joke.
27:15Furniture!
27:16And in an alarming promo for a sofa and chair emporium,
27:19Mel B is on a domestic date with a two-faced kind of fella.
27:22I've got it for the design, and it's really comfy.
27:25That and the fact that we saved a bundle.
27:27Would you like some popcorn?
27:29What's worrying is he comes across like he's suffering from a split personality disorder.
27:32I like a man that's cost-conscious.
27:34You can thank me later.
27:36Would you like me to take your coat?
27:38I'll wear your skin like a coat.
27:40Breaks!
27:42And with 2014 already proving too miserable to bother with,
27:45holiday companies are doing their best to make us temporarily emigrate
27:48with this uplifting tale of a family in which Dad is a monster.
27:51Not a monster in the sinister tabloid sense, but a sort of cuddly ogre.
27:55After a bit of fun chillaxing on holiday,
27:57he finds he no longer has the horn in bed with his wife
28:00and attempts to run into the sea in a bid to end it all,
28:03only to find himself transformed into a sort of climaxing Chippendale.
28:06It's all quite heartless, isn't it?
28:09It's all quite heartwarming, really,
28:11until you realise he'll have to fly back to Gatwick in 48 hours
28:14for the whole soul-shitting cycle to begin all over again,
28:17until next year when another holiday makes him human again,
28:20and he's only got a few more years of that left
28:22until his daughter wants to go to Ibiza with her real mates,
28:25leaving him and his poxy wife alone to bicker and read books
28:28in lonely silence on the beach and...
28:31Actually, maybe I'm reading too much into this. I need a holiday.
28:36Well, that's all we've got time for this week.
28:38Till next time, go away.
28:44Charming. Well, if you still want to spend time with Charlie,
28:47his 2013 wipe is available now on BBC iPlayer.
28:50And more intelligent brain-teasing comedy tomorrow night
28:53here on BBC Two at ten with a new QI and everything kitsch.

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