QI. Image shows from L to R: Alan Davies, Sandi Toksvig. Copyright: TalkbackThames
QI

QI

  • TV panel show
  • BBC Two / BBC One / BBC Four
  • 2003 - 2024
  • 312 episodes (21 series)

Panel game that contains lots of difficult questions and a large amount of quite interesting facts. Stars Sandi Toksvig, Stephen Fry and Alan Davies.

Episode menu

Series F - Fire And Freezing

Special Christmas episode, with Dom Joly, Rob Brydon and Clive Anderson.

Preview clips

QI. Image shows from L to R: Alan Davies, Dom Joly, Stephen Fry, Clive Anderson, Rob Brydon. Copyright: TalkbackThames

Theme

- The panel are dressed in winter clothing.

- The buzzers have a fire theme. Alan's buzzer features Sir Alan Sugar insulting him and telling him he was fired.

Topics

- In Native American smoke signals, one puff usually meant "Hello" and two puffs usually meant "All's well". However, the meaning of signals did differ from place to place.

- Tangent: Wet straw is used to make the smoke black in the Vatican whenever a new Pope has not been elected.

- Tangent: For centuries in Britain, the signals used in case of invasion were flaming beacons.

- Communicating with paper fans came about in the 19th century in France. A booklet was made of signals that users could make to each other - this was probably designed to increase fan sales. To swing the fan around means, "I love another", and closing the fan slowly means, "I promise to marry you". Fans were invented in China, and were brought into Europe via Italy by Marco Polo.

- Nothing has happened to the fireman's pole. There are many stories printed in the newspapers about poles being removed for health and safety reasons, but it is completely wrong. The main reason why there are fewer poles nowadays is because most modern fire stations are built with just one floor, so no pole is needed. The longest fireman's pole in Europe is in Birmingham, measuring 40 feet long. (Forfeit: Health and Safety Gone Mad)

- Tangent: The fire brigade was invented by insurance companies. When you took out the insurance, you got a metal plaque which you put in the wall of your house saying which company was protecting your house. If your house did catch fire, fire brigades would come from all the insurance companies, but they'd turn around and go back if you didn't have a plaque from their company. If you had no plaque, then your fire would not be put out, that is unless your next-door neighbour had a plaque, in which case your fire was put out to prevent their property catching fire too.

- Tangent: Rob explains, in a very long-winded and deliberately patronising way, that smoke tends to kill people before the fire does, This is because smoke makes it harder to breathe.

- Tangent: When striking a match, always strike it away from you, otherwise the flash point will come towards you and might cause you to catch fire. Alan was once told about an old woman who died when striking a match towards her. Dom says that one contributing factor to the death may have been urine, because a property of dried urine is that it is flammable.

- Tangent: In Australia, people say, "I wouldn't piss up his arse if his kidneys were on fire."

- The worst thing you can do if you are a fire-eater is to inhale, as this causes 'Fire-eaters lung'. Fire-eating is as bad as it looks and it causes terrible damage to the mouth. It is more akin to fire spitting than eating because the mouth is filled with lighter fluid (which is toxic) and then spat into the fire.

- During the Second World War, there was a plan to make an aircraft carrier from substance made from ice and sawdust, called 'Pykrete'. Pykrete is stronger than steel and does not melt. Lord Mountbatten convinced Winston Churchill to make a pykrete aircraft carrier after he threw some in Churchill's bath and showed him that it did not melt in his bath water. The proposed ship would have had guns on it that fired super-cooled water to immobilise the enemy, and could be repaired using seawater. However, the ship was never made because of the D-Day landings.

- Tangent: Dom correctly points out that the ship in the picture shown to accompany the question is not an aircraft carrier, but a destroyer.

- The original 12 Days of Christmas, does not contain the most famous line associated with it. A man called Frederic Austin changed the line "Five gold rings" to the version we know now, and the line is still copyrighted today, so whenever it is played you owe Novello and Co money. (Forfeit: Five Goooold Rings)

- Tangent: There are games such as, 'In my trunk' in which you say one item, and then you have to say and then another item, and then those two items and another item and so on until you cannot remember the whole list. Stephen's favourite version is called "Christopher Biggins has got up his bottom tonight", in which you say a person's name (e.g. Arnold Schwarzenegger) and then you say that name followed by another whose first name begins with the last letter of the previous surname (e.g. Rodney Bewes).

General Ignorance

- When you blow out a candle, there is a drop in temperature that causes the fire to go out. Fire needs three things to work: oxygen, heat and fuel. Trick candles use a wick that is made out of a material which burns at a low temperature, this is the reason they are hard to blow out.

- Tangent: Rob comes from Port Talbot, the same town as Richard Burton, Anthony Hopkins and Michael Sheen. Rob's father and Anthony Hopkins grew up in the same street. Stephen says that English people grew up in houses.

- Yes or no: "You know how sometimes it can be too cold to snow?" The answer is no. While it is true that you need some moisture in the air to snow and that there is less moisture when it is very cold, snow has been recorded at -41 and even -50 degrees Celsius. The only temperature where it is too cold to snow is absolute zero, where nothing happens at all. (Forfeit: Yes)

- Tangent: -40 degrees Celsius and -40 degrees Fahrenheit are the same. This is the point where the two scales meet.

Scores

- Clive Anderson: 8 points
- Alan Davies: -6 points
- Rob Brydon: -8 points
- Dom Joly: -16 points

Notes

This is the first episode of QI to be shown originally on BBC One.

Broadcast details

Date
Monday 22nd December 2008
Time
9pm
Channel
BBC One
Length
30 minutes

Repeats

Show past repeats

Date Time Channel
Tuesday 30th December 2008 10:00pm BBC1
Friday 2nd January 2009 10:00pm BBC2

Cast & crew

Cast
Stephen Fry Host / Presenter
Alan Davies Regular Panellist
Guest cast
Clive Anderson Guest
Rob Brydon Guest
Dom Joly Guest
Writing team
John Mitchinson Question Writer
Mat Coward Researcher
Justin Gayner Researcher
Justin Pollard Question Writer
James Harkin Question Writer
Molly Oldfield Question Writer
Will Bowen Researcher
Production team
Ian Lorimer Director
Piers Fletcher Producer
Lorraine Heggessey Executive Producer
Katie Taylor Executive Producer
Nick King Editor
Jonathan Paul Green Production Designer
Howard Goodall Composer

Video

It's not the fire...

A preview clip from the Series F Christmas Special.

Featuring: Alan Davies, Stephen Fry, Clive Anderson, Rob Brydon & Dom Joly.

Press

A little piece of history tonight as one of Auntie's most ardently admired panel games, QI, makes the journey from BBC2 to BBC1 for its latest series.

It's not the most obviously conformist of comedies: a blend of the scintillating and the silly, an echo of Radio 4 on TV, hosted with avuncular omniscience by Stephen Fry, who puts panellists to the test with questions so arcane that points are awarded only for the most outlandish or 'quite interesting' answers (with suitably massive deductions for the incorrect or predictable).

Wit, that rarest of commodities, is the show's stock in trade and it is a marvel to behold how much is distilled on a regular basis by panellists drawn from a broad cross-section of contemporary comedy talent.

Gerard O'Donovan, The Telegraph, 22nd December 2008

Even if you're not a regular QI watcher (what's wrong with you? It's fantastic!) it's always a good idea to tune in at this time of the year, just in case one of the subjects covered might help you with a Trivial Pursuit question. It's the law at Christmas that all families must play board games.

The Mirror, 22nd December 2008

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