Lateral with Tom Scott - 13: A glassware tax affair
Episode Date: January 6, 2023Cleo Abram, Simone Giertz and 'Legal Eagle' Devin Stone face questions about colossal chains, prudish paintings, and golden goblets. LATERAL is a comedy panel game podcast about weird questions with w...onderful answers, hosted by Tom Scott. For business enquiries, contestant appearances or question submissions, visit https://www.lateralcast.com. HOST: Tom Scott. QUESTION PRODUCER: David Bodycombe. EDITED BY: The Podcast Studios, Dublin. EDITOR: Julie Hassett. MUSIC: Karl-Ola Kjellholm ('Private Detective'/'Agrumes', courtesy of epidemicsound.com). ADDITIONAL QUESTION: Devin Stone. FORMAT: Pad 26 Limited/Labyrinth Games Ltd. EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS: David Bodycombe and Tom Scott. © Pad 26 Limited (https://www.pad26.com) / Labyrinth Games Ltd. 2023. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Why does the University of California, Berkeley, have parking spots marked NL reserved?
The answer to that at the end of the show. My name's Tom Scott, and this is Lateral.
I've been joined by three people who we've recruited from a fertile ground for guests,
a support group for procrastinators. Ready to avoid editing their next video for 45
minutes or so, we have Devin Stone from the YouTube channel Legal Eagle.
Happy to be here. Easy for you to say.
You try saying support group for... See, it's impossible. Support group for procrastinators.
It's impossible. How are you doing, Devin?
Well, I'm just happy to be here. Thanks for having me, Tom.
Thanks for being on the show. Also, Simone Yetch, inventor, maker. How do you describe yourself these days?
Board member of the Support Group for Procrastinators. Yeah. Also known as SFP.
Sure, that works for me.
I'll see you at the meeting.
I'll see you at the meeting.
And finally, booked by complete coincidence onto the same show as the person she's making a nuclear fusion reactor with, Cleo Abram.
Hello.
How do I describe you? Video journalist?
What's the best way for someone who is literally making a fusion reactor with Simone?
Video journalist, amateur, wannabe engineer.
It all works.
All around amazing, solid human.
Well, thank you very much to all of you for being on the show.
Good luck for the next 40 minutes or so.
Our show is like an epic quest with three intrepid adventurers
trudging through uncertain terrain to find the Yeti.
But the only things abominable here are the questions.
So good luck.
Here's the first.
Michael Mannion from Staffordshire, UK
has a large illustration from Where's Waldo on his ceiling.
Why?
I'll say that again.
Michael Mannion from Staffordshire, UK
has a large illustration of Where's Waldo on his ceiling.
Why?
I did deliberately translate that because it's Where's Wally
because he's British,
but we've got three people from North America.
It's Where's Waldo.
That did make it significantly...
Why wouldn't you put Where's Waldo on the ceiling?
I think that sounds like a great idea.
Yeah, because that would be awesome.
To be fair, I should have started the question with Where's Wally
and just made you all figure that one out first,
like step one of the question.
You have to take a lift to his bedroom
where he's got
where's wally on on the ceiling uh because he used to keep him in the boot of his car i don't know
i'm trying to come up with britishism yeah either um insomnia or weird fetish
i was gonna say yeah yeah weird fetish i was not thinking weird fetish but I was thinking
insomnia like if you're lying in bed just an ineffective insomnia tool because your eyes are
open when when you said he took the lift Devin in my head there was like a scissor lift in this room
that you have to take like like up to the to the top of the Sistine Chapel or whatever it is for
this enormous was no it is just uh an illustration that you can see kind of at,
at ground level at regular.
Was it in his bedroom?
No,
no.
I just said ceiling.
Okay.
Oh,
good,
good clarify.
And to clarify to Simone's point is Waldo fully clothed in this ceiling.
Yes.
And that was the most loyally phrasing
of that sentence possible.
I think also it's like,
psych if he's not wearing his striped shirt.
It's like, yeah, you couldn't find Waldo
because he was naked.
Is he Waldo anymore at that point?
Who knows?
Does he need a reason though?
That is my main critique of this question,
because that seems like it could just be something that you would do,
and you don't need a good reason for it.
Coming soon, wallpaper from Yetch.
Yeah, definitely.
Oh, but you'd have to build a thing that tiled that, wouldn't you?
You'd have to make a looping Where's Waldo.
Well, you wouldn't you? You'd have to make a looping Where's Waldo that... You would have to. It would just get extremely expensive
if you have to paint
every single unique panel
of wallpaper. This feels like an
AI thing. It feels like someone could make
an infinite Where's Waldo with that, but
you would also have to train it to not put more
Waldos elsewhere in the picture.
Yeah. Is this guy
obsessed with Waldo? is he a collector of some
kind no there's there is a purpose to this that was a question you asked a little while back
there is definitely a reason it's there a non-sexual is this kind of like a sistine chapel
situation for kids like are we is this a a group environment like a museum? Or is it his personal ceiling?
It's neither of those.
This is at a place of work.
But yes, it is for visitors.
Does he work at the company that makes Waldo?
Whatever company that is.
Not quite.
Well, actually, no.
I don't know why I said not quite.
Not even close.
Sorry.
Seemed like there was something there.
He has experienced a life of neck problems
that he wants other people to be able to relate to it.
So he put this thing that people have to look up
and then he's like, does your neck hurt?
Yeah.
Deal with it.
I've had 34 years of this.
He's an eye doctor and it's a test. He's an eye doctor and it's a test.
Oh.
He's a brain doctor and it's a test.
Dentist.
There we go.
That's it.
Absolutely right, Simone.
Yes.
A dentist.
Really?
Spot on.
Nicely done.
So you're right.
People are lying down and looking up and that is a distraction for them as he pokes around
in their teeth.
He is a dentist.
Honestly, I feel like we should have gotten there earlier.
That's, yeah.
It's always worth saying the silly things out loud.
Like, he's not an eye doctor.
That wouldn't be on the ceiling.
And then that's the clue that gets you in.
Yeah.
Yeah, because who doesn't enjoy being distracted
from people working on your teeth
by getting incredibly frustrated
by not being able to find Waldo on the ceiling
at the same time?
Yeah, because he's not wearing a shirt.
When I was a kid, the dentist I went to just had a poster on the ceiling that was,
whose are these smiles? And it was like six photos of celebrities, which was
vaguely interesting the very first time you go there. And then it was exactly the same for many
years. I feel like dentist appointments would
be one of the few things where i was like yeah i'd put on an oculus rift for that oh i i i'd be
distracted by like being in vr you couldn't move your head around though you just yeah no that's
true any like dentist and gynecologist, I would be happy to wear an Oculus.
Put something on the ceiling.
Yeah, just something.
I don't want to be here right now.
Just let me escape.
I mean, I feel like the solution could also just be a TV screen.
Also, I'm not sure I'd want, like,
the TV screen of Damocles mounted above my head,
ready to crash down at any moment.
Right, right.
So yes, Michael Mannion from Staffordshire
is a dentist and has a Where's Waldo illustration on his ceiling.
The next question comes from one of our guests.
As always, I don't know the question.
I definitely don't know the answer.
Simone, we're going to start with you.
What have you got?
So in 1805, Francisco Goya completed the painting La Maha Vestida
of a reclining young lady.
The first version of the same woman, painted a few years earlier,
had an important difference. At any one time, only one version was put on display by the original
owner. Why? In 1805, Francisco Goya completed the painting La Maha Vestida, of a reclining
young lady. The first version of the same woman, painted a few years earlier, had an important difference.
At any one time, only one version was put on display by the original owner. Why?
One was his current wife and one was his previous wife.
Or one was his mistress.
Same woman.
And so he would only display same woman.
Yeah.
I like the idea, though.
It's whoever's in his favorite that uh at that
moment um la maja vestida i assume that's just gonna be like reclining lady but i do not speak
the language and also you do not speak the style of the painting important in any way
no okay strike it out is the lady clothed i'm just curious um
i feel like devon would have would have phrased that in the loyally way as opposed to.
Yeah.
She got her clothes on or what?
So my initial thought was if you've got something that is switching back and forth,
and maybe this is just because we're filming this like end of 2022,
I was thinking like king and queen,
that maybe there's something in the background for whether it's a king or queen on the throne. And so it's got like, I don't know the dates or the
country, but like the gender of the monarch change and the painting has like king in the background.
They needed to change it. Now they change it back depending on, I've been rambling a long time and
no one said yes. So I'm just going to assume I'm wrong on this one it's more of a uh from one
day to another type of swap huh is it is it seasonal one is for you know the winter one is
for the summertime i was trying to work out if anything changed between like 18 it's a few years
early so like 1800 to 1805 what changed around then i'm sure nothing but does
it change once or does it change back and forth repeatedly back and forth repeatedly okay okay
so i like the king and queen thing but if it's day to day it's not a night and day situation is it
they wouldn't change a painting based on that i mean no okay it was it was a few years apart for the painting so
the original lasted for a few years and then they decided to start changing it
oh um okay actually uh is it it's the same woman so i'm thinking maybe it's his wife or his
mistress and in one she's fully clothed and in
the other she's not fully clothed depending on whether that woman is residing in the house
in which it's displayed or or the place where it's displayed
it is not depending on if she is there but rather on who is coming and how PG do you want it to be. So one is of the lady fully naked.
And that was the original.
That was the Maha Desnuda, which is the naked woman, I think.
And then they painted a second version of it where she's fully dressed.
And you could actually switch back and forth.
And apparently in the 19th century, it was common to have clothed and nude versions of the same artwork,
which could be swapped if you wish to share the blushes of any visitors.
I mean, that's just the old-fashioned equivalent
of having an Instagram profile and a private Instagram profile.
Yeah.
Which one are you getting friended on?
Oh, it's that one.
Okay, right, fine.
Yeah, the very first instance of a finster.
Yeah.
Devin has the basket here, but I will take the layup
because I asked if she was unclothed just out of curiosity.
No, you did, and I was like, dig further.
You got it.
You got it, Cleo.
Not that I'm partial.
But also, I kind of wish that instead of doing two different paintings,
they would have just sewn her some clothes that they could hang up i think it would have been it would have been
really easy you just take a small black piece of wood paint it black and then just hang it
on the the objectionable parts of the painting just have the black bar and then it gets the
20th century you've got that sort of thermochromic paint and you just put a little heater behind it and just click the paint.
Oh, I think that would be such a cool project, though, to like have like a blurred bar and you could put that over paintings.
Like a lenticular?
Yeah, and like blur different parts of it.
I feel like that would be a fun, that's like a good commentary on how we censor things
and how censorships have changed throughout history. I'm going to write this down.
Yeah. I think you have your next video idea.
Yeah.
Self-censoring paintings.
So the reason that Francisco Goya painted two versions of the same painting was because one
of them was fully dressed and one of them was fully naked. And depending on who visited your house, you could swap out between the two.
Back to me for the next question. Good luck, folks. In Lakehurst, New Jersey, there is a loop
of yellow chain that is 72 feet long by 15 feet wide, but it should be about 11 times larger.
Why is it there? One more time. In Lakehurst, New Jersey, there's a loop of yellow chain
72 feet long by 15 feet wide, but it should be about 11 times larger. Why is it there? One more time. In Lakehurst, New Jersey, there's a loop of yellow chain 72 feet long by 15 feet
wide, but it should be about 11 times
larger. Why is it there?
Has anyone been to Lakehurst,
New Jersey, first of all?
No.
I'm sure it's beautiful.
I, uh,
did the lake grow?
Like, so it was supposed to
go around the entire lake, but then there was a lot of downpour and the lake grow? Like, so it was supposed to go around the entire lake,
but then there was a lot of downpour and the lake grew?
No.
Ooh, animal welfare.
There was some animal,
and technically you need a much bigger pen for their well-being.
It sounds like there's just one link of chain,
and it's a yellow link of chain.
So, like, one link. Oh, no, a loop of chain. Not a single link,'s a yellow link of chain so like one oh no a loop of chain
not not a single link but a yes right right right okay but it's not like a chain link fence or
something like that no it's just a just a loop of chain is it is it on the ground yes oh it's on
the ground okay so on the ground implies not underwater and not like around a building super high in the air.
Okay, so it's just lying there.
I mean, given that we're talking about New Jersey, my mind immediately goes to giant places of pollution, superfund sites,
and that you need to cordon this area off because there's nuclear waste and they got funding.
And, you know, they only got enough funding for a 72 by 11
chain link you're uh you're a new yorker right no no i'm uh i'm in dc okay i just just wondered
what the opinion of jersey was that's not high not high it's the legal policy analysis they must
have applied for a permit and then they didn't get it.
Well, wait, why would you have a chain?
So it's not even like a little bit up in the air.
It's just laying on the ground.
Yeah.
72 feet by 15 feet.
It's not there to keep something in or out.
No.
And it's also not a circle.
Well, it's a loop.
Not necessarily.
It's in a rectangle. It's 72 feet's a loop. Not necessarily a circle. Right, but it's in a rectangle.
It's 72 feet by 15 feet.
Is that what it was?
Yeah, but it's a loop.
So I'd call it more of an oval-ish shape.
Okay.
I mean, the last time I saw a chain link on the ground
was for like mountain climbing.
So you secure it as you go up a mountain.
Is it a safety thing like that?
The thing you've kind of skipped over
is that it should be 11 times larger, roughly.
Right.
I wonder, is it like a miniature of a sports field or something?
Or they f***ed up the rules of soccer.
I don't know.
Also, 72 by 15 is really big already
and it should be 11 times larger.
11 times larger?
What is 11 times 72?
Roughly 800 by 160.
Very roughly.
So that's quite a bit larger than a football field.
Yeah.
A football field would be 300 feet long.
If you wanted to make this full scale,
it would be utterly impractical.
Oh.
Is it a, okay, so is it a miniature of something?
It's a two scale of something, yes.
A full size version of this
would be utterly impractical. You're absolutely right. Devin, you said it'd be larger than a
football field. And yeah, it would be. So this is this is to scale to commemorate something.
But did they when they made this, was it the right scale or like was it one-to-one with the original but then the original
grew no no is the color yellow important so that no that's just so people don't trip over it
oh okay wait he just said it's to commemorate something i did i was wondering if anyone was
gonna pick up on that oh shoot it's to commemorate something. They built a small thing
to commemorate a larger thing
that was an 800 by 160 foot oval in New Jersey.
Is it a submarine or a ship of some kind?
Oh, I'm smiling.
Anyone who's guessed it will know why I'm smiling
because I can literally say no, the opposite of that.
Is it a rocket?
Probably a rocket.
Yeah, or an airplane.
What's the opposite of a submarine?
Like a Zeppelin, like a blimp.
So why would you commemorate something like that?
Is it the Hindenburg?
Yes, it is.
Oh.
That is the commemoration site of the Hindenburg.
They built, they wanted to build a giant outline of the crash site.
That is utterly impractical, just as you said, Devin.
So they built one to scale.
And there is a loop of chain that is one to 11 scale of a Hindenburg in a field in New Jersey.
I am kicking myself because I actually did know. Is New Jersey responsible for the Hindenburg crash? It's where the Hindenburg in a field in New Jersey. I am kicking myself because I actually did know.
Is New Jersey responsible for the Hindenburg crash?
It's where the Hindenburg crashed.
I did know that, actually.
Well, Cleo, you are the MVP of this so far.
Yeah.
So yes, Lakehurst, New Jersey has a loop of yellow chain, 72 feet by 15 feet.
It's on a concrete slab with a plaque on it.
It marks the crash site of the Hindenburg.
The next question comes from Devin.
What have you got for us?
This question is from me, actually.
Oh, we've got someone writing their own question.
This is going to be fun.
So a congressman and lawyer, Clement Vallandigham,
was defending Thomas McGeehan in a murder trial.
McGeehan was accused of shooting a well-known tough guy,
Thomas Myers.
Now, how did Vallandigham get his client acquitted?
So the question is,
Congressman and lawyer Clement Vallandigham
was defending Thomas McGeehan in a murder trial.
McGeehan was accused of shooting a well-known tough guy,
Thomas Myers, in the stomach.
How did Vallandigham get his client acquitted? Wow. Okay. Did I need to write the names down
there, Devin? Should I have been paying attention to the names that were in there?
Not really. I think you just need to know that they're sort of old-timey names.
And I'll let you know that this was a very unique defense god intervened
something uh you might you might say that oh okay that's a strong start yeah
but also it's not that close no but it did it have did the acquittal have anything to do with religion and no what
what year was this did you say was it a natural disaster uh it was not there no natural disaster
the saying that god intervened might be less helpful than helpful this is um at the end of
the 19th century oh so there's not much to go on here.
It's just... Yeah, but there was no, like, superstition,
anything where it was like,
oh, it was a demon that pulled the trigger, or...
The victim, Thomas Myers, was shot.
So McGeehan was accused of shooting this guy.
The injury actually ended up helping him
because he had had knee pain his entire life.
He got shot in the knee and he got
magically cured so uh he got acquitted because it actually ended up being helpful the victim did die
oh okay he wanted to die anyway something's kind of crawling up from the depths of my memory here
which sounds terrible which is that did they like test the firearm in the courtroom or something
like that i've got a weird memory about a story of like a gun being taken into a courtroom and
fired at someone so they could prove it wasn't done that way something like that a gun was brought
in uh to for demonstration purposes yes was it brought into a courtroom or was it brought into like this was an early movie set?
There are differing accounts.
Some say it was in the courtroom.
Some say it was outside of the courtroom.
But there is a reason why this is a very unique defense that has never been tried again.
Oh, OK.
The gun was was faulty and triggered by itself.
That that was the the argument that was being made
yes so that's that's the argument that the lawyer clement landingham was making and what is the
question the question is so the question is why was the lawyer's defense successful in um defending
this guy accused of murder and the argument that he was making was that the victim shot himself.
Hold on.
So the defendant was holding the gun,
was pointing it at the victim,
but the...
But the defense was that the victim shot himself.
Correct. Correct.
So it's not necessarily clear that it was the accused murderer's gun.
Oh, the defendant didn't properly store or clean his gun.
And so when it was used as a demo, it was his fault that he got shot with it and died um it wasn't the defendant that uh
didn't know how to handle the gun uh but someone else uh did a really bad job of handling
what turned out to be a loaded firearm they were just cleaning the gun and collaborating on it
like they were doing something together with the
gun that was not the intention of the the victim's pet hamster jumped on the gun and accidentally
fired the trigger um i'll i'll give you a clue that um so the victim was shot but the gun might
have been shot later on uh at a different time uh by perhaps someone else oh he didn't die of the
same gunshot wound um i'd focus more on the lawyer how how was he able to create this defense
the lawyer shot him
the lawyer did not shoot the victim no the lawyer shot the defendant and he didn't shoot the
defendant either the lawyer shot the judge and just decided and through some weird technicality
in american law that actually uh that that that settled the uh yes according to the second
amendment if you shoot the judge then the uh the defendant is free to go you can't say that in your authoritative
lawyer voice devon someone will take that out of context you're so close who who else is possible
to have been shot other than judge shot him the lawyer shot the judge wait the lawyer shot the
judge the lawyer shot i'm drawing network diagrams in my head and it's not working did anybody get shot in the courtroom yes huh did the lawyer shoot
himself the lawyer shot himself what yes so it so in the process of demonstrating that it was
possible that the victim actually was taking the gun out of his own pocket and shot himself
and perished. The lawyer, Clement Vlandingham, was trying to demonstrate that this was possible.
You know, this is, you know, at the end of the 19th century. So you have, you know,
one of those Colt revolver sort of things with a hair trigger and in the process
of demonstrating that it was possible the victim in pulling it out shot himself pulled the gun out
shot himself in the stomach because he didn't know he was dealing with a loaded firearm
and as a result of demonstrating that not only was that possible but it can lead to someone
passing away in this case the lawyer who died several days later,
the defendant, after several retrials,
was acquitted and was set free.
Oh, wow. I can see why this has not been tried again.
Yeah.
That was one of those questions where all the clues you said
made sense and we just had to stumble towards the one connection there.
There are a lot of people who would like to see lawyers try this defense.
But sadly, no one else has done it.
The answer is that Vlandingham was demonstrating how it might have been the case
for Myers to draw his gun from his pocket and accidentally shoot himself in the process
and shoot himself in the stomach.
from his pocket and accidentally shoot himself in the process and shoot himself in the stomach.
And while the landing hand was performing this demo, he'd forgotten about his own partially loaded gun, which he'd been using to test things. And when he pulled the gun out,
he accidentally squeezed the trigger and shot himself in the stomach, demonstrating that it
was indeed possible for the victim to have shot himself. The lawyer perished a few days later.
Next question's from me, here we go.
In 1805, the scientist Alexander von Humboldt was working in France.
He imported a large number of specially made glass tubes from his native Germany.
How did he find a way to avoid the large import duty on scientific equipment?
I'll give you that again.
In 1805, the scientist Alexander von Humboldt was working in France.
He imported a large number of specially made
glass tubes from his native Germany.
How did he find a way to avoid the large import
duty on scientific equipment?
He put them in his butt!
Sorry. I just had to get that out of my
system.
How many?
Just as a PSA for people, do not
insert glass tubes into your body.
Don't recommend it.
I feel like that's a recipe for disaster there.
I appreciate starting with a lowbrow there.
Great start.
I just needed to get it out of my system.
He stored food in them and used them as food storage?
Or was like, oh, this is just jam?
Like, we got jam in them?
They weren't disguised as anything other than glass tubes.
He didn't, like, add or subtract stuff.
Oh, so he didn't fill the tubes with anything?
No.
Oh.
Although, great way of doing it.
And you're sort of along...
You're vaguely in the right lines there.
There's clearly some shenanigans going on, but it wasn't just disguising them as jam jars.
Because then you've got to clean a load of stuff.
How large are these tubes?
Are these, you know, when you think of like a test vial, you think of like something kind of long and skinny.
I think that's something that might fit in one's behind.
I don't actually have the answer to that here.
So you know what?
We're going to say they're about that size, Devin.
That works.
That would be a valid answer to this question.
I was immediately thinking something about electricity or something about like a very early computing tool or something. Like we did use glass vials in like early,
obviously electricity, but also computing. Yeah, that's a bit or a bite, but that seems early.
That seems early for it. I will say he did get the manufacturer to seal the ends of the tubes and add a label.
But you say he didn't add anything or subtract anything, but there was some sort of disguise.
Yeah, they were capped off and labeled, but there was nothing.
He didn't, like, shovel jam into them or anything like that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. But he did manage to make them look like something else that wouldn't incur import
duties they looked they just looked like glass tubes yeah so okay i think the trick is then
finding a use that a glass tube would be used for so you could call it something other than
scientific equipment but it's still the same thing so like you know if you called it fluorescent
lights or something and crucially like not import duty know, if you called it fluorescent lights or something.
And crucially, like not import duty.
Yeah, so if you're importing
any sort of scientific equipment,
anything like that,
that would get taxed.
But if it was in another category,
it would not get taxed.
So if he said, oh no,
these are Christmas ornaments.
He could skirt around it.
They'd still get taxed.
Yeah.
Is the justification that they were French already,
that he was importing something from Germany that was like not from Germany.
And so therefore it wasn't an import.
Oh no,
definitely,
definitely getting cold with that.
You,
you,
you,
you,
you're dancing around the right thing.
And there's,
there's,
there's not much more I can say without getting it, which is frustrating.
Air.
This is nothing.
This is just air.
Yes.
This facial expression is telling me something.
Okay, so there's air in the tubes.
You're very, so what did that label say?
Uh, storage container.
Vessel?
Cleo, you basically got it.
Air.
Yeah. The label said Cleo, you basically got it. Air. Yeah.
The label said German air, Deutsche Luft.
And he claimed that he was importing German air into France.
Oh, wow.
Why would an air be subject to an import tax?
No one's charging for air.
As the story goes, the customs official said, oh, he's importing air.
There's no duty on that.
And like the old story of the,
you know the story about the guy
who was stealing wheelbarrows?
No, no.
No one's heard that one?
There's an old story about someone who,
every evening he leaves the factory
with a wheelbarrow full of dirt
and they check through the dirt.
There's nothing there.
Okay, on you go. No, he's stealing wheelbarrows. It's old story. This is the same thing. Well, I mean, they say that that's the reason, uh, uh, for the, is a hot dog, a sandwich
controversy is because sandwiches are taxed at a different rate than other kinds of foodstuffs.
Same with cake and bread.
And Subway Sandwich was running into this problem that their sandwich buns are so high in sugar
that they were actually classified as cake, which is taxed at a higher rate than bread.
And so Subway was saying, no, no, no, this isn't cake, this is bread.
But they had to pay an excise tax because of the high sugar content.
Yeah, the old British version of that is Jaffa Cakes. I don't know if anyone knows what those
are. They're like little, well, according to the tax laws, they are cookies, I think. I can't
remember which way around it goes with like jam in them and
chocolate, but they are labelled as Jaffa Cakes. And one of those is subject to tax and one of
those isn't. And there was a long court case about that in the UK about which category they fall
into. Scientist Alexander von Humboldt, working in France, imported a large number of specially
made glass tubes cheaply by sealing them up and putting on a label that said German air.
Our last guest question of the day then comes from Cleo. Whenever you're ready.
All right. On the Netflix television show Love is Blind, contestants go on a series of dates
where they cannot see the person that they are talking to. Great show. Throughout the program,
the producers give participants distinctive gold effect goblets to drink from.
Why?
Can I say why?
I have a theory about this.
Because in all reality shows, they're always using goblets that you can't see.
And I'm thinking it's for continuity.
So they never have see-through glasses.
Because then if they're jump cutting between different parts of the night, you're going to see the amount of drink
jumping up and down.
Is that true?
Oh, man.
Okay.
She didn't even know for sure.
That was a theory.
No, I didn't know for sure.
This is great because having watched that show,
though I would never admit to that in public,
I was wondering why they were using the
the opaque uh glasses i just assumed i've always thought about that i've been like in every reality
show they have that and i'm like it has to f**king do with continuity like that's the only reason i
can think of yes um very so it also is particularly problematic in love is blind because they stay
in these capsules with each other on either side of an opaque wall for hours.
They're in there 24-7 and they're recording all the time.
And you see these people staying like overnight, like chatting with their potential love mate.
What do we call this person?
And potential partner.
And so the producers were worried that they wouldn't be able to jump back and forth to
different parts of the conversation to make it make sense.
And so the opaque glasses, they also had an additional reason.
They were aesthetically helpful to distinguish the series from other shows.
There's a creator of Love is Blind told Variety, when you turn on the show, you know, it's
our show.
But that's the secondary reason.
Continuity is the first reason.
So also having watched international versions of love is blind again,
I would never admit to that in public. Um, it's, it's wild. The differences between the American love is blind. The Brazilian love is blind. And like the Japanese love is blind. Our cultures
are very different when it comes to these things and it is shocking
how reserved some of these shows are and just how out of control crazy the other ones are
is it the us that's out of control crazy or is someone crazier than we are i think the brazilians
are even crazier than we are a friend of mine watches love island which is one of the uk
reality shows and they being a. A friend of yours?
Yeah, and the reason I'm saying a friend
is because he ordered one of the water
bottles they have, because all the
contestants get a water bottle,
like one of those big, you know, sip-straw
things, with their name
written on the side, and at one point
he just posted on social media, got my bottle!
And it's just, you spent
like 20, 30 bucks on just a bottle with your name on the outside. It was bottle. It's just, you spent like 20, 30 bucks
on just a bottle with your name down the side.
It was not me.
I'll let you know that now.
I own this.
I have one of those.
Two friends of mine.
I'm thinking for the next episode,
instead of being a club of procrastinators or whatever it was, we should be recovering reality show watchers.
So at the start of the show, I asked why does the University of California, Berkeley have parking spots marked NL reserved?
Any ideas from the panel before I give that back to the audience? I mean, given that it's Cal Berkeley, I would think that it's reserved for non-liberals because there aren't going to be that many of them.
It is a two-word phrase. You're absolutely right. It's not that though.
By the way, it's a real shame that Berkeley is no longer the number one public university in
the world and that now UCLA is the number one public university in the world and that now ucla is the number one public university in the world where i may or may not have gone to school that's just i just thought
i'd throw that out there just gonna drop that one in um yeah no it is any last guesses it's
the kind of person who uh california barclay has has quite a lot of and they want to honor
nobel laureate correct yep that is reserve parking for the Nobel laureates.
Oh my God, Cleo.
MVP.
So that's our show for today.
Thank you very much to all the guests.
Congratulations on trekking through that.
Simone, let's start with you.
Where can people find you?
What have you got going on in your life?
At Simone Yatch.
Inexplicably spelled S-I-m-o-n-e
g-i-e-r-t-z yeah I'm on all social media platforms but less and less on Twitter these days oh we all
Devin how about you what you got going on uh you can find me on YouTube at uh my channel
Legal Eagle if you get into some real trouble you can find me at my law firm but I hope everything
just stays fine and you can watch my videos on YouTube and Cleo, you can find me at my law firm. But I hope everything just stays fine and you can watch my videos on YouTube.
And Cleo?
You can find me at Cleo Abram on every platform.
But the show that I make is called Huge If True.
So if you search Cleo Abram, Huge If True, you'll find me.
And if you want to know more about this show or you want to send in an idea for a question,
you can do that at lateralcast.com.
We are lateralcast on pretty much everything.
And there are video highlights every week at youtube.com at lateralcast.com. We are Lateral Cast on pretty much everything, and there are video highlights every week
at youtube.com slash lateralcast.
Thank you very much to Simone Etch.
It's an audio show, you need to say something.
Waving my hands, waving my hands.
To Devin Stone.
I'll see you in court.
And to Cleo Abram. I hope I don'll see you in court. And to Cleo Adria.
I hope I don't see you in court.
I'm Scott, and this has been Lateral.