.... They're HERE
		
		
				
					
					
				
				
		
			
				
					Here's a list of questions asked on radio & TV quiz shows & the proof that THEY walk amongst us.  
QUIZMANIA (ITV) 
Greg Scott: We're looking for an occupation beginning with 'T'. 
Contestant: Doctor. 
Scott: No, it's 'T'. 'T' for Tommy. 'T' for Tango. 
Contestant: Oh, right . . . (pause) . . . Doctor. 
DANNY KELLY SHOW (RADIO WM) 
Kelly: Which French Mediterranean town hosts a famous film festival every year? 
Contestant: I don't know, I need a clue. 
Kelly: OK. What do beans come in? 
Contestant: Cartons? 
BEG, BORROW OR STEAL (BBC2) 
Jamie Theakston: Where do you think Cambridge University is? 
Contestant: Geography isn't my strong point. 
Theakston: There's a clue in the title. 
Contestant: Leicester. 
BBC NORFOLK 
Stewart White: Who had a worldwide hit with What A Wonderful World? 
Contestant: I don't know. 
White: I'll give you some clues: what do you call the part between your hand and your elbow? 
Contestant: Arm. 
White: Correct. And if you're not weak, you're...? 
Contestant: Strong. 
White: Correct - and what was Lord Mountbatten's first name? 
Contestant: Louis. 
White: Well, there we are then. So who had a worldwide hit with the song What A Wonderful World? 
Contestant: Frank Sinatra? 
LATE SHOW (BBC MIDLANDS) 
Alex Trelinski: What is the capital of Italy? 
Contestant: France. 
Trelinski: France is another country. Try again. 
Contestant: Oh, um, Benidorm. 
Trelinski: Wrong, sorry, let's try another question. In which country is the Parthenon? 
Contestant: Sorry, I don't know. 
Trelinski: Just guess a country then. 
Contestant: Paris. 
UNIVERSITY CHALLENGE (BBC2) 
Jeremy Paxman: What is another name for 'cherrypickers' and 'cheesemongers'? 
Contestant: Homosexuals. 
Paxman: No. They're regiments in the British Army who will be very upset with you. 
THE WEAKEST LINK (BBC2) 
Anne Robinson: Oscar Wilde, Adolf Hitler and Jeffrey Archer have all written books about their experiences in what: prison, or the Conservative Party? 
Contestant: The Conservative Party. 
BEACON RADIO (WOLVERHAMPTON) 
DJ Mark: For Pounds 10, what is the nationality of the Pope? 
Ruth from Rowley Regis: I think I know that one. Is it Jewish? 
THE WEAKEST LINK 
Anne Robinson: In traffic, what 'J' is where two roads meet? 
Contestant: Jool carriageway? 
UNIVERSITY CHALLENGE 
Bamber Gascoigne: What was Gandhi's first name? 
Contestant: Goosey? 
GWR FM (Bristol) 
Presenter: What happened in Dallas on November 22, 1963? 
Contestant: I don't know, I wasn't watching it then. 
RTE RADIO 2FM (IRELAND) 
Presenter: What is the name of the long- running TV comedy show about pensioners: Last Of The ...? 
Caller: Mohicans. 
QUIZMANIA 
Greg Scott: We're looking for a word that goes in front of 'clock'. 
Contestant: Grandfather. 
Scott: Grandfather clock is already up there, say something else. 
Contestant: Panda. 
PHIL WOOD SHOW (BBC RADIO MANCHESTER) 
Phil: What's 11 squared? 
Contestant: I don't know. 
Phil: I'll give you a clue. It's two ones with a two in the middle. 
Contestant: Is it five? 
RICHARD AND JUDY 
Q: Which American actor is married to Nicole Kidman? 
A: Forrest Gump. 
RICHARD AND JUDY 
Leslie: On which street did Sherlock Holmes live? 
Contestant: Er . . . 
Leslie: He makes bread . . . 
Contestant: Er . . . 
Leslie: He makes cakes . . . 
Contestant: Kipling Street? 
MAGIC 52 (NORTHEAST ENGLAND) 
Presenter: In what year was President Kennedy assassinated? 
Contestant: Erm . . . 
Presenter: Well, let's put it this way - he didn't see 1964. 
Contestant: 1965? 
SIMPLY THE BEST (ITV) 
Phil Tufnell: How many Olympic Games have been held? 
Contestant: Six. 
Tufnell: Higher! 
Contestant: Five. 
FORT BOYARD (CHALLENGE TV) 
Jodie Marsh: Arrange these two groups of letters to form a word - CHED 
and PIT. 
Team: Chedpit. 
LINCS FM PHONE-IN 
Presenter: Which is the largest Spanish-speaking country in the world? 
Contestant: Barcelona. 
Presenter: I was really after the name of a country. 
Contestant: I'm sorry, I don't know the names of any countries in Spain. 
RADIO 1 EARLY MORNING SHOW 
Presenter: How many toes would three people have in total? 
Contestant: 23. 
NOTTS AND CROSSES QUIZ (BBC RADIO NOTTINGHAM) 
Jeff Owen: In which country is Mount Everest? 
Contestant (long pause): Er, it's not in Scotland, is it? 
THE MICK GIRDLER SHOW (BBC RADIO SOLENT) 
Girdler: I'm looking for an island in the Atlantic whose name includes the letter 'e'. 
Contestant: Ghana. 
Girdler: No, listen. It's an island in the Atlantic Ocean. 
Contestant: New Zealand. 
NATIONAL LOTTERY (BBC1) 
Question: What is the world's largest continent? 
Contestant: The Pacific 
ROCK FM (PRESTON) 
Presenter: Name a film starring Bob Hoskins that is also the name of a famous painting by Leonardo Da Vinci. 
Contestant: Who Framed Roger Rabbit? 
THE BIGGEST GAME IN TOWN (ITV) 
Steve Le Fevre: What was signed to bring World War I to an end in 1918? 
Contestant: Magna Carta. 
JAMES O'BRIEN SHOW (LBC) 
O'Brien: How many kings of England have been called Henry? 
Contestant: Er, well, I know there was a Henry the Eighth ... er ... er ... three? 
NATIONAL LOTTERY 
Eamonn Holmes: There are three states of matter: solid, liquid and what? 
Contestant: Jelly. 
RICHARD ALLINSON SHOW (RADIO 2) 
Allinson: What international brand shares its name with the Greek goddess of victory? 
Contestant (after long deliberation): Erm, Kellogg's? 
BLIND DATE (ITV) 
Girl: Name a book written by Jane Austen. 
Boy: Charlotte Bronte. 
CHRIS SEARLE SHOW (BBC RADIO BRISTOL) 
Searle: In which European country is Mount Etna? 
Caller: Japan. 
Searle: I did say which European country, so in case you didn't hear that, I can let you try again. 
Caller: Er ... Mexico? 
DOG EAT DOG (BBC1) 
Ulrika Jonsson: Who wrote Lord of the Rings? 
Contestant: Enid Blyton 
PAUL WAPPAT (BBC RADIO NEWCASTLE) 
Paul Wappat: How long did the Six-Day War between Egypt and Israel last? 
Contestant (after long pause): Fourteen days. 
NATIONAL LOTTERY 
Eamonn Holmes: Dizzy Gillespie is famous for playing what? 
Contestant: Basketball. 
NOTTS AND CROSSES QUIZ 
Jeff Owen: Where did the D-Day landings take place? 
Contestant (after pause): Pearl Harbor? 
DARYL DENHAM'S DRIVETIME (VIRGIN RADIO) 
Daryl Denham: In which country would you spend shekels? 
Contestant: Holland? 
Denham: Try the next letter of the alphabet. 
Contestant: Iceland? Ireland? 
Denham (helpfully): It's a bad line. Did you say Israel? 
Contestant: No. 
PHIL WOOD SHOW (BBC GMR) 
Wood: What 'K' could be described as the Islamic Bible? 
Contestant: Er . . . 
Wood: It's got two syllables . . . Kor . . . 
Contestant: Blimey? 
Wood: Ha ha ha ha, no. The past participle of run . . . 
Contestant: (Silence) 
Wood: OK, try it another way. Today I run, yesterday I . . . 
Contestant: Walked? 
NATIONAL LOTTERY 
Dale Winton: Skegness is a seaside resort on the coast of which sea:a) Irish Sea, b) English Channel, c) North Sea? 
Contestant: Oh, I know that, you can start writing out the cheque now, Dale. It's on the east coast, so it must be the Irish Sea. 
THE VAULT 
Melanie Sykes: What is the name given to the condition where the sufferer can fall asleep at any time? 
Contestant: Nostalgia. 
LUNCHTIME SHOW (BRMB) 
Presenter: What religion was Guy Fawkes? 
Contestant: Jewish. 
Presenter: That's close enough. 
BREAKFAST SHOW, RADIO 1 
Chris Moyles: Which 'S' is a kind of whale that can grow up to 80 tonnes? 
Contestant: Ummm . . . 
Moyles: It begins with 'S' and rhymes with 'perm'. 
Contestant: Shark. 
STEVE WRIGHT IN THE AFTERNOON (BBC RADIO 2) 
Wright: Johnny Weissmuller died on this day. Which jungle-swinging character clad only in a loincloth did he play? 
Contestant: Jesus.  
 
				
			 
			
		 
			
    
            
                 
            
            
                If God wanted us to be vegetarians, why are animals made of meat ?
                        
			
			
		 
	
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