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Matthew, Mark, Luke, and Chaz
One legally changed name.
Can one anal retentive, two gossips, and a guy named Chaz write the true story of the savior of the world without bickering after five minutes?
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Telling Tales
Hampered, as he sees it, by a family that never manages to be quite like other families, he recounts his early years in Leeds - 'a place where one learned early on the quite useful lesson that life is generally something that happens elsewhere': there is hiking every Sunday, trips into town and teas in cafes.
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How to Lose Friends and Alienate People
In 1995 high-flying British journalist Toby Young left London for New York to become a contributing editor at Vanity Fair. Other Brits had taken Manhattan - Alistair Cooke then, Anna Wintour now - so why couldn't he? But things didn't go quite according to plan.
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Skinny Dip
She knows that Chaz is not the brightest marine scientist in the world - hell, he can't even work out which way the Gulf Stream runs. And if there's one place he hates it's the Florida Everglades, an area he's supposed to be working to protect. Chaz is on to something though, and it's something so big and so lucrative that it's worth killing for.
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Goon Show, The - Volume 10 - You Can't Get The Wood, You Know!
Go-on - take a trip to Montmartre with Neddie Toulouse-Lautrec, the famous French impressionist (all right, do Al Johnson). Or help sell snow to the Sudan, track down the fake Neddie Seagoon or hunt the Great Bank Robber in a horse-hair stuffed Zeppelin disguised as the 7.20 to Bradford.
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Have I Got News For You
Who said yesterday's news was only good for wrapping your chips in? Ever since 1990, BBC TV's media-savvy comedy quiz "Have I Got News for You" has been proving that even the most sober headlines can provide some of the funniest and near-the-knuckle banter ever heard on air.
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Have I Got News For You 2
Since it first took our screens by storm in 1990, Have I Got News For You has entertained, embarrassed and downright humiliated the famous and the infamous with a popularity which remains undimmed. This compilation features highlights from the first four series, with Angus Deayton as chairman, plus the very best moments from the 2003 and 2004 series, where the guest presenters include Alexander Armstrong, Jimmy Carr, Martin Clunes, Greg Dyke, William Hague MP, John Humphrys, Des Lynam, Dara O’Briain, Kirsty Young and – who could forget him? – Boris Johnson MP.
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