Lateral with Tom Scott - 17: Some 3-D movies from 1903
Episode Date: February 3, 2023'Karen Puzzles' Kavett, Rebecca 'Dr Becky' Smethurst and Stuart 'Ashens' Ashen face questions about political powercuts, red rectangles, and astonishing anvils. LATERAL is a comedy panel game podcast ...about weird questions with wonderful 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: Julie Hassett at The Podcast Studios, Dublin. MUSIC: Karl-Ola Kjellholm ('Private Detective'/'Agrumes', courtesy of epidemicsound.com). ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS: Deniz Montagner, Adam Austerberry, Karen Kavett, Lewis Tough. 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 did the writer George Bernard Shaw call his garden shed London?
The answer to that at the end of the show.
My name's Tom Scott and this is Lateral.
Our three guests today clicked on a link hoping to see a video of an adorable kitten,
but instead they've been hoodwinked into this instead.
First we have, from the channel Ashen's, Stuart Ashen.
Hello.
How are you doing, Stuart? What are you up to these days?
I'm very well, thank you. I'm working on many media projects,
most of which you'll never hear of because that's the way the media works.
Are you just pitching things and at some point a commissioner is just going to come along and go,
no?
That's pretty much it, yeah.
Sometimes I just write ideas and post them through random people's letterboxes.
It seems to have about the same net effect.
Next up from her own YouTube channel, Karen Puzzles, it is Karen Cabot.
How are you doing?
I'm doing really well.
I've been listening to a lot of Lateral while doing puzzles to prepare for this.
This is good. You're all ready for it. Congratulations on the championship win as well.
Thank you. I mean, championship second place.
That's still one of the greatest puzzles in America. So congratulations on that.
Oh, well, thank you.
And finally joining us, it is PhD astrophysicist from her own channel. It is Dr. Becky. How are
you doing?
I'm good. Thanks, Tom. How are you?
Honestly, this is the first show we're filming in a new run. I am out of practice at doing this,
but we're going to be fine. Thank you for asking. What are you working on at the minute?
I've got two research papers on how supermassive black holes grow that I'm hoping to submit to a
journal very soon. Very exciting. I'm waiting to see if I've got time on the very large telescope,
which, you know, if no one cares about astrophysics,
no one will care about this.
But if you are a space fan, also got a book out,
you should have, you know, under publisher's orders put in the back.
It's called A Brief History of Black Holes.
If anyone's a black hole nerd like I am.
Technically, the section to plug your stuff was at the end,
but I appreciate just full on going for it at the start.
Breaking the mould everywhere, Tom, it's fine.
Ah, it's fine.
So the game's very simple.
I've got some tricky questions,
and I'm hoping you've got some answers.
The questions may seem more chaotic than a teenager's bedroom,
but don't worry, the script was thoroughly disinfected earlier.
I'm going to start you off with this.
In 2015, after 47 minutes,
Niccolo Falcone received
a payout of $20,580 after staying in prison as long as possible. Why? I'll give you that one
more time. In 2015, after 47 minutes, Niccolo Falcone received a payout of $20,580 after staying
in prison as long as possible. Why? So he stayed in prison as long as possible,
but that was only 47 minutes?
Yes.
And why would he get a payout for doing that
unless he was being paid to be there?
Were they a journalist of some form?
Not exactly.
Actually, I don't know why I said that.
Not even close.
Sorry.
I'm trying to do the improv thing of yes anding your answer
while not giving too much away.
But no, sorry.
That's just...
I mean, it sounds like one of those YouTube channels
where you're like, whoever can touch the thing
for as long as possible gets all this money.
But I don't think that's it.
Also, that was an old, like, actual competition series.
Like, there's a load of people who just, like, hold on to this thing for as long as possible think that's it. Also, that was an old, like, actual competition series.
Like, there's a load of people who just, like,
hold on to this thing for as long as possible and you get it.
And, like, that's a challenge that goes back to, like,
I think the 80s and 90s. It used to be called, like, Touch the Truck or something like that.
Touch the Truck.
A car dealership would just, like, hands-on,
last one for their hands to fall off gets a truck.
Was that a TV show?
Like a Gilmore Girls episode, it sounds like.
You know, some sort of crazy thing that goes down in Stars Hollow.
I have a vague memory of a Dale Winton TV show.
Yes, you are correct, I believe.
I believe also people have died by touching the truck outside for too long.
Wow.
If I recall correctly, yeah.
So that's brought the mood down a bit.
Yeah, it has.
It's also entirely irrelevant to the question,
but never mind.
We got a Dale Winton reference early in
that will be completely lost on, Karen,
and anyone not from the UK, but never mind.
Okay, so when you say prison,
is this like a legitimate jail prison?
This isn't like something they set up
for some kind of challenge?
That's a very good question.
No, it is not a legitimate actual prison.
Oh, okay.
It wasn't underwater or something, was it?
The 580 is a very specific number.
So that makes me think that for every...
It was a very deliberate number.
Oh, I thought it was like a...
Like it was paid in pounds and translated into dollars or something.
No, that was chosen very deliberately.
Was it a certain amount of dollars per second he stayed in there then?
No, it would have been...
However long this was, it would have been that much.
He wasn't in prison for all those 47 minutes.
He went in and out several times. Oh. Right. Is the prison itself in some way dangerous to life?
The prison is... How do I put this without immediately giving the game away?
The prison was his mind. I mean, this is making me start to think of like,
was it like a shark tank?
And he was like in there with a shark
or something that could hurt him.
But I don't know why you would get
this specific amount of money.
Or is it extremely hot or extremely cold?
But then why would he be in and out of it?
It's gotta be something where you can't
physically stay in it for too long.
So like, yeah, he's got no oxygen or it's too cold or it's too hot.
Yeah, there is a reason you would be forced to leave after a while.
Is Piers Morgan in there?
Turns out, 47 minutes, the maximum amount of time anyone can stand Piers Morgan.
But in and out, does it count?
Because if it was something like holding your breath underwater,
then it wouldn't count if you came out and took a breath again
and came out and took a breath again.
That's true.
So I'm going to give you the question again,
because there's a little bit of a really nitpicky bit in here.
Oh, it's trivial pursuit, isn't it?
There's always a clue in the question.
You are surprisingly close with that joke. In 2015, after 47 minutes, Nicola Falcone received
a payout of $20,580 after staying in prison as long as possible. Now, staying in prison as long
as possible was a strategy. If we're talking about board games, could it be like the go to jail square
in Monopoly? Is there like a Monopoly
championship? And that was
the prize?
Karen, I think you've got it.
Yes, you absolutely have. And there's a reason
I said prison instead of jail.
You're absolutely right.
Niccolo Falcone was the 2015
World Monopoly Championship
winner. And his strategy was stay 2015 World Monopoly Championship winner.
And his strategy was stay in jail as long as possible.
Who knew there was such a thing,
says the person who just competed in the jigsaw puzzle championships.
Did you win 22 grand, Karen?
Oh my gosh, I wish. Because if you didn't, you're in the wrong game.
So it was $20,580.
Why might it have been that much if it was a Monopoly championship?
Yeah, is that the amount of money in a Monopoly set?
Yes, that's right.
There are $20,580 in a US Monopoly set.
So all that was converted to real money and given to him as the prize.
This was at the Venetian Hotel in Macau.
Like, this was apparently a big publicity event.
I don't know if this is a regular thing that they do.
It feels more like gambling than it should, frankly.
But yes, after 47 minutes, Niccolo Falcone received $20,580
after staying in jail as long as possible,
because that was his strategy for Monopoly.
The next question comes from one of our guests.
As always, I do not know the question.
I certainly don't know the answer, unless I'm very, very lucky.
So Karen, we're going to start with you.
What's the question, please?
All right, so this question was actually suggested by me, and I helped to write it.
The company Fisher & Norris were very proud of their Eagle brand anvils.
Their tempered cast iron anvils greatly improved the health and safety of blacksmiths using them,
thanks to one key advantage.
What was it?
Oh, so the last time that I was on the East Coast of the US,
you invited me to the Fisher & Norris Anvil Museum,
which I couldn't make it.
The dates missed out.
And I kind of feel like this is revenge for me not being able to make it to the Anvil Museum,
which is like in your family.
That's right, isn't it?
Yes.
So my dad actually collects Fisher and Norris anvils.
And this question, all of the information comes straight out of the book that he wrote about them.
Blimey. Okay. I don't know much about anvils and this question all of the information comes straight out of the book that he wrote about them blimey okay i don't know much about anvils how about you becky and stewart i know everything i know about blacksmithing from fantasy novels okay unfortunately same here um i feel like
health and safety for an anvil is like you don't want to hit your hand with a hammer so is there
nowhere you can put your hand down on the anvil like is it so slippy that you just straight off i feel like that would
be more dangerous yes slippy is not a quality you want for an anvil yeah but it'd be it'd be
slippy for skin but not for metal or something i i don't know if that's physically possible. I was going to say.
It could be magnetic.
I didn't want to say it.
It could be ferromagnetic and therefore hold stuff on it,
but not your hand.
Sparks are a danger, aren't they?
What if it's made of something that doesn't cause sparks
when you hit it with a hammer to the same extent?
Perhaps.
I'm trying to think.
I've done like two hours of blacksmithing with a guy called Alex Steele,
which is just the best name for a blacksmith.
And I got burned, like I got one minor burn,
and it was just because I gripped the metal wrongly.
So I feel like the anvil itself...
Is there something like Eagle?
It was Eagle brand anvils, right?
Eagle branded, and then it was like cast iron tempered or something?
No, I mean, that's just to tell you that they were made by this company.
Don't worry about the Eagle word.
Okay.
I was hoping they just had wings that folded out and just kept something safe.
Just talons on the bottom.
What if like the biggest danger is knocking the anvil itself off onto your foot?
So it's somehow just, it comes with a stand and it's bolted down.
You know how like you can get them coffee cups that like you can't knock over?
Maybe it's the anvil equivalent of that.
Anvil's a heavy thing though.'re not gonna yeah while a lot of anvils did come with stands or could be put on stands that's not
the feature we're going for is it something noise related because like if you're hitting it all day
it's been going bong bong and ruining your hearing is it made of something or made in a way so it
makes less noise? Yeah.
Yes.
You said it was tempered steel.
No, I think you're close enough.
I think that's about right.
Yeah, good job, Stuart.
You didn't even have to take my other hand.
I feel so surprised.
I was not expecting that.
Halfway through saying that, I was like, oh, but there we are.
It's always worth saying it out loud. So it was just like noise reduction?
Right. So they had a special patented process for the iron and the steel that they used
so that there wouldn't be a loud ringing sound when you hit the anvil, and that can eventually cause deafness in blacksmiths. And
so they would advertise their anvils as not causing deafness. Wow. That's a hell of a
claim to be able to make. I feel like earplugs would also be a solution there.
Oh yeah, such over-engineering. Yeah, that's fair. That's fair.
Also, another fun fact is that because of this,
they were the only anvils rated for use in the military.
And so they could be used on naval battleships
where you don't want some super loud blacksmith shop on a ship.
For some reason, and I don't know why,
you said that and my brain was like, submarines.
Yeah, that's where my brain went.
Really? Yeah. A, you don't want like a said that and my brain was like submarines yeah that's where my brain went really yeah
A you don't want like
a blacksmith shop
in a submarine
and B
what year was this
this would have been
from the 1800s
to about
the 1960s
alright
okay
yeah
I mean
I was thinking more like
the worst thing you want
in a submarine
is this ghostly like
boom boom noise and you're like is that outside inside I was thinking more like the worst thing you want in a submarine is this ghostly like boom, boom
noise.
And you're like, is that outside? Inside?
Yeah, even though they don't
cause deafness, they're still not going to be quiet.
I was going to say
alright, Shiland's running now.
That's a terrible short story.
Shiland's running now.
Not a noise.
Clang,ang Clang
Yeah
Someone tell Dave
In the blacksmith shop
To shut it down for a minute
Surface
Surface
Oh sorry we can't
Tom's filled the submarine
Full of anvils
Drop the ballast
Just shove the anvil
Outwards
Yeah
Airlock
Waterlock
I don't know what you call it
On a submarine
So to summarise
The Fisher and Norris anvils would advertise that they didn't make as much
of a ringing sound when hit, which could cause deafness.
Next question is mine, and it's from a listener. Thank you to Adam Osterberry for sending in this
one. Less than two years after the first Catholic bishop of Orlando was ordained,
his diocese grew to over 1,500 times its original size, at least
according to the letter of the Catholic Church's
laws. How?
I'll say that one more time. Less than two years
after the first Catholic bishop of Orlando was
ordained, his diocese grew to over
1,500 times its original size,
at least according to the letter of the Catholic Church's
laws. How?
Is this Orlando,
Florida, or... Yes, it is. Otherwise. Orlando, Florida. Okay, I'm glad you
asked that because I also didn't know and I also know nothing about the Catholic religion. I mean,
that is exactly the trick that one of these questions would play, that it's actually
Orlando, Greenland and they discovered a new island. No, this is actually Orlando, Florida.
Did you say their flock, or did you say their diocese?
The diocese.
Okay, because if it was in Wales, it'd be like, oh, it was sheep.
Do we know what year this happened?
We do.
I'm not going to tell you that right now, though.
Oh.
I mean, could it be that, like,
Disney World had just been built
and a lot of new people moved to Florida
and a lot of them were Catholics?
That's what I was going to say.
I'm keeping quiet here.
You're talking amongst yourselves.
I guess that's not it.
It might not be Disney.
It could be SeaWorld.
I feel like Tom's quietness suggests that that is what it is.
Oh, is it something to
maybe um the kennedy space center is under the jurisdiction of orlando and it was back when the
space race was happening because there isn't like a catholic church or something in disney world is
there not to my knowledge i feel like that's a fact that would be in the back of my head here
but i feel pretty confident that disney does not have any churches no i feel. I feel like that's a fact that would be in the back of my head here. I feel pretty confident that Disney does not have any churches.
No, I feel like Disney is trying to be as religion neutral as possible.
But we should start a new conspiracy theory about that's what's inside the princess's castle.
Like, according to their laws, is what he said at the end.
So it seems like there's some sort of technicality there.
Like, did the county borders change or something,
or the city limits change?
Yeah, the rule is from the 1917 Code of Canon Law,
according to my notes here.
1917, so that's before any of the Disney parks.
The rule came in 1917,
so this would technically have covered the opening of the Disney parks. Unfortunately, it in 1917. So this would technically have covered
the opening of the Disney parks.
Unfortunately, it's not that.
Was it something to do...
Okay, 1917 was like Prohibition era, right?
I'm just thinking it was something to do
with the legality of redrawing boundaries
and including people who were bootlegging alcohol.
Yes, of course that's it.
Because if you are taking the blood of Christ,
you can drink alcohol.
So people were pretending they were Catholic so they could have alcohol.
Huh, that could be it.
I love your enthusiasm there, Stuart.
I love the way you were really certain that was it.
Unfortunately, it's not.
And it's wrong, isn't it?
I was so behind that.
1917 is when the rule came in.
That kind of establishes the earliest possible date here.
It was a little while after that.
Ah, okay.
So the specific rule was for land
not already covered by another diocese.
And just to be clear,
like diocese is like land area.
It's the equivalent of parish.
So it's not necessarily the number of people.
It is the area.
Was it reclaimed land?
Because most of Florida is like swamped.
Did they drain something and create land? Not quite. The thing is, if you'd followed another path in this
conversation a couple of minutes ago, you were so close. You were so close. And the minute I give
you another clue, you're all going to get it the same time. So I'm just going to let you stew for
a little bit longer. Okay. Well, what else else have we said we talked about space um we talked about
sort of city borders um and i was very cagey about the year so it could be like 69
definitely definitely could be 69 so it's something to do with the moon landings. Or the space race.
Oh my goodness.
They don't technically have a diocese of the moon or something, surely.
You're absolutely right.
Why would that be 1,500?
Like 12 people went to the moon.
Yep, but the area that it covers is 1,500 times the original size of the Bishop of Orlando's diocese.
And I'll bet he's never visited it.
I thought you meant number of people, not land area. Oh my gosh.
Yeah, Stuart, you're spot on.
The rule covered instances where land wasn't already claimed by another diocese
and determined that the new jurisdiction depended on the starting point of the journey.
So because the Bishop of Orlando covered the Kennedy Space Center,
which you mentioned, Becky, you said that so early on,
and I just, I can't give that as a hint.
We're only like 20 seconds into the question here.
So Apollo 11 departed from within that diocese.
Orlando's bishop is now the Bishop of the Moon.
That is amazing.
It makes me want to give up being an astrophysicist,
go through the church, become a bishop
so I can claim Bishop of the Moon.
I want to be Moon Pope.
I think that means technically the pope is the moon pope oh i suppose so yeah yeah um follow-up question where does that leave the international space
station oh it would be so i mean pieces from california and from Florida, I think, right? Who went up there first?
I mean, at this point, I'm going to ask my producer to Google this
because I really want to know the answer to it.
It would be the first person to head to the International Space Station
would arguably be the person.
The commander.
But then surely it's the land that's created,
which is actually the actual structure itself.
So is that where the structure was constructed?
Or is it where the structure was launched from?
I feel like there's an entire...
What's a collective noun for bishops?
Chessboard? I don't know.
Producer David has just pointed out
that it would have to be the first Catholic
to go to the International Space Station.
If we're going off people, not machine.
And I will say this has never been recognised in any official capacity by the Catholic Church,
but Bishop William D. Borders did introduce himself as Bishop of the Moon
when meeting the Pope in 1969.
You can so imagine that, can't you?
Like, he'll always say, I'm the Bishop of the Moon.
So yes, since Apollo 11 departed from within the Diocese of Orlando, Orlando's Bishop became the Bishop of the Moon. So yes, since Apollo 11 departed from within the Diocese of Orlando,
Orlando's bishop became the Bishop of the Moon.
Our next question is from Stuart.
Whenever you're ready.
Right.
During the 2009 elections of Lok Sabha, which is India's lower parliament,
a suspicious number of power cuts took place.
However, rather than an act of hindrance or intimidation,
the perpetrators really wanted voters to turn up and vote.
Why?
Okay, I'll say that again.
During the 2009 elections of Lok Sabha, India's lower parliament,
a suspicious number of power cuts took place.
However, rather than an act of hindrance or intimidation,
the perpetrators really wanted voters to turn up and vote.
Why?
Okay.
So my first thought was those monkeys
that are all over the streets of India,
they're a hindrance, just like chewing on power cables.
And there was some law that was going to be passed
that was protecting the monkeys,
that's where my brain went.
I'll give you a subtle hint.
No.
It's not monkeys.
Not monkeys.
Definitely not monkeys.
Okay, so here's where I first went.
Could there have been a big event on TV that they wanted people to stop watching
in order to go vote, like the World Cup or something like that?
I was thinking a cricket match. There was some reason that the voters would be staying in,
and it was television. But you'd think that they wouldn't. That can't be a whole day thing
for the vote, surely? No. I mean, what other purposes might a deliberate power cut have
other than to disrupt something on television?
Because I was thinking that they're presumably not electronic voting systems then.
They're presumably...
I think India does use, I mean, this was 2009,
I think India does use electronic voting,
but I feel like they'd have enough battery backups
and things for that, surely.
Also, it's to improve turnout.
Is that right?
Basically, yes.
Whoever perpetrated the power cuts wanted people to vote.
I have an idea.
Air conditioning.
There was only air conditioning in the building
where you could vote.
So if people were really hot, they would come in and vote.
Or food like the democracy sausage in australia like you can't cook food anymore at home so come in i'm sorry the what the democracy sausage do you not know what the democracy sausage is
no now i need to in australia when you vote there's i don't know if it's like an organized
thing or if it's a community thing,
but the tradition is you go and vote
and then they have a barbecue
where you can have a hot dog
and you get given what is nicknamed
the democracy sausage.
I thought voting was compulsory in Australia anyway,
but don't get me wrong, it's a great idea,
but I think there's more like penalties
if you don't vote there.
Or maybe it's more like penalties if you don't vote that. Or maybe it's
one that's like, we have to go do it, so let's make it good
with a big barbecue cookout.
Yeah. Maybe there's a similar thing
in India. Maybe
they had a power cut so people would come in and vote
and couldn't cook at home.
Probably everyone's gas cooking.
It is not food related.
Not food related. Hold on a minute.
Stuart, just to check,
you said this was for the lower parliament, right?
That's right, yeah.
Who's voting here?
Is this like a big all the public vote?
Good question.
Or is this like some kind of...
Okay, it's not like some internal government thing
where they just need to get...
Oh, no.
Okay.
No, no, this is for all the peoples.
All the peoples.
And it's nothing to do with temperature of the air, like air conditioning or heating? It is not, no, this is for all the peoples. All the peoples. And it's nothing to do with temperature of the air,
like air conditioning or heating?
It is not, no.
This is infuriating because I think all of us,
when we got this question, were just like,
oh, it's going to be some television show or cricket match or something.
No.
Damn it.
Except me who went monkeys.
That's where my brain went.
Think, give humans a little bit less of a uh nice uh thought so to speak what are bad
things people do i think negatively sorry i just put just a massive category in there
crime yeah i mean it's a wide category yeah did they have a street lights turning off because
of the power cut so people were worried more about crime and they would go vote?
No, not directly.
Is this specifically to increase turnout?
Yes, yes.
But turnout of a certain kind.
Like young voters?
How could you influence the result of an election?
All right, so if you know that a certain group
is more likely to vote your way
and you want them to turn out.
Does not every single person in India
have power in their home?
So only the people who notice the power going out
are going to go vote?
Ah, interesting.
No, no, it's a bit more nefarious than that.
Is it releasing people from prison somehow
because there's no power?
No, no, no, no prisons related.
School children.
If you were planning a heist
and you had a deliberate power cut as part of the heist,
why would you be doing that?
You'd be turning off the security systems or causing a distraction.
Yeah.
Or perhaps even simpler...
Or you'd be causing a distraction.
You'd be expecting a thing.
Ah!
It's a little bit simpler than that.
What else?
I mean, when you turn the power off, what happens at night?
It goes dark.
Exactly.
So what could you potentially do under darkness?
Could you rig the ballot boxes?
Not rigging the ballot boxes.
Not quite.
Is it just that there was a group who didn't want people to vote?
No, no. These people definitely wanted people to vote.
Is it somehow like people who couldn't be seen by other people?
Like they weren't allowed to be looked upon by other people or something?
No, no, nothing like that.
Far simpler and far more naughty.
Sex workers?
Not quite that naughty.
Not in that sense, at least. Say you were going
for parliament, like, I need Stuart's vote. How could I get him to vote for me? What's the most
base human thing you could do? Bribery. Yes. Wait, you're... What? Think it through. Think it through.
think it through think it through
it's easier
it's easier
to bribe someone
if the power's off
yep
because if the power's off
nobody can see
who you're bribing
or who is getting the bribes
you had to walk us through that
from start to finish
it was not an easy one
was it
basically
the idea was when it's completely dark,
the political representatives could walk from house to house
giving the bribes to everyone who would sell their vote,
which apparently vote bribing is a bit of a serious problem in India for some time.
This is our second India bribery question on this show.
Somebody wants to draw attention to this problem.
And funnily enough, when the elections are over, the power cuts just stop.
Do you know, I think it's a good thing that none of us got that question.
It shows that we are pure of heart and not nefarious and would not take a bribe.
Absolutely.
So basically, yeah, bribery has been a major problem in Indian elections for some time,
and there's various ways they've been distributing bribes.
In the Sivaganga district,
an opposition candidate left people's money
at the local grocery store
so that you could literally grab your bribe
at the same time as you did your shopping on the way out.
His subtlety was not particularly part of this.
And voters in Southennai have reported that there's door dash style food delivery couriers that just distribute cash alongside
the food orders next question is from me and actually it's another listener question thank
you to denny montagna in 1903 a movie director was in a hurry to have his films developed and
distributed before they were pirated two of his short films were able to be converted into 3D decades later. How
was that possible?
I'll give you that one more time. In 1903, a movie director was in a hurry to have his
films developed and distributed before they were pirated. Two of his short films were
able to be converted into 3D decades later. How was that possible?
I'm going to start you off by saying this did not
require advanced computer-generated trickery for 3D conversion. I think I know this one
from what you've said, so I'm going to sit out like a good boy. Yep, that's how it works. You
take the back seat. Karen and Becky, this one's for you. Okay, so the area that my mind first goes to is that I believe that in the cult classic, The Room,
they filmed with a digital camera right next to a film camera.
So could he have just filmed with two film cameras literally side by side
and then they could take those two film reels
and sort of put them on top of each other to make a 3D image.
Yes.
Yes, that is the correct answer.
I was going to say, I thought you needed three cameras for 3D.
Because I thought you needed, when you take glasses off in a 3D movie, which I do all the time,
because I'm obsessed with knowing what it looks like without the glasses.
There's always like the main image and then there's like a blue one over here and then a red one over here.
So I always thought that like you needed three images, but this was just two?
Yeah, you only need two cameras for 3D, left eye and right eye.
Particularly if you're doing like the modern techniques that aren't blue and red,
where you're just sending a different image to each eye.
Yeah, you need two cameras about an eye's distance apart.
And yeah, you're absolutely right, Karen.
You've got most of it there.
He filmed with two cameras side to side.
So I'm going to just change the question slightly.
Why might he have done that?
Why might that have helped him get his films developed
and distributed before they were pirated?
How would filming it twice prevent piracy?
Could he have sent one reel off to get developed really quickly while the other one was still filming?
But if they're filming them at the same time, no, that wouldn't work.
My brain went to, yeah, well, if they filmed it at the same time, which presumably they have to to get the 3D image,
my brain went to, like, there's one of the cameras that he's filming on is the actual true movie that will be distributed in cinemas.
And the other one, like, is like a catch to be like, oh, that's I can tell that's a pirate version because it's come from this camera that wasn't the official one that went to cinema.
Oh, that would be really clever.
So you have various scenes that look.
It's the paper town of film reels. Or those internal corporate memos that get,
when someone leaks it, like,
oh no, we changed the punctuation or we made a typo here
that's different in each version we sent it to.
And so we can tell it's you that leaked it.
Oh, it's Colleen Rooney all over again.
That's a reference that will not land
for a lot of the audience, but I enjoyed it.
That would be a really clever thing,
to splice in different shots for each distributor.
But in this case, it was to get things out in a hurry
before they were pirated.
Bear in mind, this is 1903 film piracy.
So was he just hedging his bets?
So I've got two copies of the film.
I'm going to send them off to two different labs
and see which one comes back the quickest.
That's actually fairly close.
This is director George Mellier in 1903.
Where might those labs have been?
Oh, that's not okay.
I was going to say it was a different frame rate,
but where would the labs have been?
Like, where was Kodak's labs?
Anybody got any ideas?
Like, presumably he was filming in california was like french so um oh yeah yeah it's more like big picture where would these have been sent
just in terms of like like who would have been where would these have been sent to be produced
and then distributed like mgm or it kind of predates that a bit, doesn't it?
Does it?
Did he just send one to America and kept one in France?
Yes, you're absolutely right.
In order to speed things up, he took two shots at the same time,
sent one to the laboratories in Europe, the other one to America.
That way it couldn't be leaked, passed on forwarded to America
because they got it as fast as Europe did.
Barring the shipping delay.
Literally the shipping delay.
Yeah, you're absolutely right.
Georges Méliès tried to defeat movie pirates
by filming his scenes with two separate cameras at the same time.
And many years later, someone realised that that basically means
you've got a stereo picture with just a little bit of work.
So our last guest question of the day comes from Becky. Whenever
you're ready, take it away. Sure. All right. Last question. It's eight inches wide by 10.75
inches high, which is what? 20 centimetres by 27 centimetres. It's usually red. And if not,
it's usually a big deal. What is it? I'll repeat the question.
It's eight inches wide by 10.75 inches high.
It's usually red.
And if it's not, it's usually a big deal.
What is it?
Yeah, I'm trying to imagine.
And I'm trying to come up with something that isn't an innuendo.
So...
I was like, it's eight inches wide.
Circumference or...
Yeah.
Yeah, 20 centimetres by 27 centimetres, yeah.
Oh, that is almost an A4,
because A4 is 21 by 28, I think.
So, yeah, it's about that size.
He says, holding up a piece of paper in a radio show.
Sorry.
So, yeah, it's about A4 size, more or less.
So it's something for keeping paper in, probably, like a briefcase.
No, not the budget briefcase in the UK, the red briefcase the Chancellor brings out.
Yes.
So I'm going to think super laterally here.
She didn't say it's usually the colour red.
Could it be R-E-A-D as if it is an item that is red, like a newspaper?
Interesting.
It is not.
It is the colour red.
However, I do like...
Oh, that was genius, Karen.
So it's a red box about the right size to hold paper.
I can't hear you say red box without thinking about Julian Clary.
Sorry, carry on.
My God, that's a throwback.
Yeah, it is.
I don't think we said it was a box, did we?
I think it sounds like a briefcase.
I was thinking it was a cylinder,
because we've got a width and we've got a height.
We haven't got a depth.
So in my head, it's a cylinder.
That's interesting.
I was thinking of the Chancellor's red briefcase,
because people make a fuss if they don't use the red briefcase
when it's shown publicly.
So I was also thinking of the phrase big deal.
Are we using that in the traditional sense as it's important
or are we talking about like a poker hand as a deal?
You've got the hang of this quiz, Karen.
You've absolutely got the hang of it.
Absolutely.
Find any technicality in the question and go for it.
I'm thinking of deal or no deal now with calling the banker.
Yeah, so am I.
It's about the right size
for those boxes as well.
And they're red. No, we're talking about
big deal in the sense of
it's an occasion.
When this is not
red, it's a big
occasion. So is
it like a green light or something like that or a red uh
red light that gets changed to green or why might you repaint something for an occasion uh like a
visit from a head of state uh a small red flag i don't know where would you use a small that seems unlikely um so yeah I think instead of
boxes and uh whatever else we were thinking it was briefcases you weren't too far away Tom
when you were thinking it was the size of a piece of paper all right is it a piece of paper
just just to ask not a piece of paper it's not a piece of paper um but it's been around since
1927 so it's definitely not going to be when tom scott doesn't wear a red shirt that's fair
that's fair that was amazing that was Also, I am not eight inches wide
and 10.75 inches high.
I didn't want to say that.
Is that true?
I'm going to measure the monitor.
Hang on.
And I feel like that's going to get taken out of context.
On the average TV screen that people watch YouTube on,
Tom Scott appears eight inches wide by 10 inches high.
So a red card in soccer, a red...
I would love it if they were that big.
As I said that, I realised quite how silly that would look.
Particularly because they've got to keep them in their pockets.
How about this?
The first time it was not red was 2001.
was not red was 2001 so from 1927 to 2001 it was red the entire time huh yeah i mean my brain just went to september 11th because i was thinking what happened in 2001
um okay so Okay. So, what would that have changed, though, since 1927?
The light at the top of the Empire State Building, the...
I mean, it can't be anything you write on particularly,
because red would make it very hard to actually read what you've written.
What else happened in 2001 that this might be signifying?
No, you're right with September 11th.
Okay.
What changed?
Has it happened again since?
It's happened five, four times since September 11th.
So it's something that happens at a major national emergency
or a big event that needs to be commemorated.
Yeah, you would think for a big emergency,
something would turn red.
It wouldn't turn from red to something else.
So what, I'm thinking like after September 11th,
the Eiffel Tower was lit up in different colours.
The, it's something that we're all missing that's really obvious that gets changed The Eiffel Tower was lit up in different colours.
It's something that we're all missing that's really obvious that gets changed
to commemorate a thing.
It's quite iconic.
Oh, the audience are going to be screaming at us.
There's something obvious that gets changed
as a tribute to something else.
I just can't...
Here's another clue then.
It's something that appears on a weekly basis.
Or it used to be weekly It's the top of a magazine
Like the
Like the heading of the sun newspaper
Or something like that
The masthead, that's the word
But it's not the sun
It's
Think American
Could it be Time magazine?
Like the cover of Time?
Karen, you've got to...
The red border.
The red border on the Time magazine.
The red border on the Time magazine is eight inches wide by 10.75 inches high.
And it's usually red, but there have been five times that it has not been red.
Would you like to hear those five times? Okay. I feel like now
we kind of have to. Lighthearted moment then. Let's name some tragedies. COVID?
Thankfully, they're not all tragedies. So the first time it was changed was a black border
on September 11th, which was 36 hours after the disaster issue um the second time it was changed was for
more happy reason it was green a green border for earth day in april 2008 then um in september 2011
a silver border for the 10th anniversary of 9-11 and then december 31st 2012 a silver border for
barack obama's person of the year issue. And then November 28th, 2016,
a red circle around a camera to celebrate an issue
of the 100 most influential photos of all time.
Break the tradition once.
It just all goes out the window.
The thing that was eight inches wide by 10.75 inches high
that's usually red is the red frame
around the cover of Time magazine.
Which brings us to the question I asked the audience at the very start.
Why did the writer George Bernard Shaw call his garden shed London?
Before I give him the answer, any guesses from the panel?
Because it was expensive and filthy.
Because it burnt down?
He had a great fire in it.
No, it was so when unwanted visitors called,
his staff could say,
I'm terribly sorry, Mr Shaw is in London today.
So with that, thank you very much to all our guests.
Let's find out what's going on with them.
Stuart, pitch your stuff.
What have you got going?
Well, all you need to do is Google Ashen's A-S-H-E-N-S
and you'll find all my things.
If you like, you can also watch our last feature film,
Ashen's and the Polybius Heist.
It's 100% on Rotten Tomatoes.
What more do you want?
You can Google it and get it in various places.
Karen, what have you got going on?
Well, I just released my first ever jigsaw puzzle
in partnership with Ravensburger.
It is called Puzzles on Puzzles and is available on Amazon. And if you want to learn more about jigsaw puzzle in partnership with Ravensburger. It is called Puzzles on Puzzles and is available on Amazon.
And if you want to learn more about jigsaw puzzles,
you can follow me on YouTube at at Karen Puzzles.
Becky, go for it.
I make a weekly video about all things in space
from obviously an astrophysicist perspective,
sort of like what me and my colleagues are excited about.
Now that's on my YouTube channel at DrBecky.
And then also I have a book out
on my sort of personal favourite thing in space,
which is black holes,
a brief history of black holes
using the history of science
to help understand these little animals.
And if you want to know more about this show
or send in a question yourself,
you can do that at lateralcast.com.
You can find us at Lateral Cast
on pretty much everything.
And you can catch video highlights
at youtube.com slash lateralcast. Thank you very much to Stuart Ashen. Thank you. And you can catch video highlights at youtube.com
slash Lateral Cast. Thank you very much to Stuart Ashen.
Thank you.
Thank you very much to Karen Cabot.
Thank you.
And to Becky Smethurst.
Thank you.
That's been Lateral. We'll see you next time.