Lateral with Tom Scott - 19: 315,000 obsolete index cards
Episode Date: February 17, 2023Cleo Abram, Simone Giertz and 'Legal Eagle' Devin Stone face questions about confusing conveyors, flooded fields and bad-faith baseball. LATERAL is a comedy panel game podcast about weird questions wi...th 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: Sarthak Chandra, Aidan Henson, David Fichtmueller. 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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What was invented by Caleb Bradham in 1903 to prevent dyspepsia?
The answer to that at the end of the show. My name's Tom Scott and this is Lateral.
Welcome to our 16th heat in the Weird World Quiz Championships. The winner goes on to the
quarterfinals in Melbourne next month with no expenses paid. Joining us we have, for the second
time, Devin Stone from Legal Eagle.
Hello, happy to be here. I thought Alex Horne was going to come out and give us various tasks
to complete. I may be on the wrong show. For trademark reasons, absolutely not.
Also joining us Simone Yedge. Hi!
I still don't know how to introduce you. Inventor, maker, what's the right term?
Inventor, breaker of things, mender of things.
I run a YouTube channel about things I build,
and I used to be known as the queen of robots.
And we're still going to have to bleep that.
Yeah, go ahead.
As long as you don't call me the queen of silly robots.
I'd rather take a bleep than silly.
And finally, from Huge If True, among many other things, and from making a fusion reactor with Simone, Cleo Abram. Hey, everybody. How are you doing? Doing great. Excited to be back.
Round two. Let's go. Thank you very much to all of you for joining us. If you've heard the show
before at home, you'll know these are nuanced questions devised so they can be interpreted on
a number of levels. And we call those levels question, denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance, and finally answer. So good luck to
all of you. We start with... This question's been sent in by one of our listeners, so thank you to
Sarpak Chandra. Complete the title of this slate article from 2010. The Big Red Word versus the
Little Green Man. The international war over what?
I'll give you that one more time.
Complete the title of this slate article from 2010.
The Big Red Word versus The Little Green Man.
The international war over what?
Conspiracy theories?
Oh, hold on, Devin.
If you think you've got this right away,
and you look like you have, hold on, Devin. If you think you've got this right away, and you look like you have,
hold on.
If you want to take a gamble on this and sit out
and say, you know what, I think I've got this immediately,
that's your call.
Because I definitely, well, 2010,
I probably wasn't, I might have been reading Slate at that time.
But I do think I know the answer to this one.
Cleo and Simoneone this one's for
you little green man has to be alien right i'm keeping quiet this early no that was the first
one that i thought big red i don't know i was immediately thinking
yeah the big red word i would be be like conservative Republican. And then I was like an alien.
And I went with conspiracy theories, which might be.
To be fair, like in my head, I've now got like Republicans versus aliens,
like the old Cowboys versus aliens film with Harrison Ford in it.
So yeah.
It could be the big red word.
Maybe the big red word is menstruation.
Probably.
Yeah.
The little green man being the branding mascot for a tampon company that I do not know of.
The international, what was it?
The international war over something.
Mucinex.
I don't know what that is. That sounds like a medication for having a bad cough
which apparently i have at the minute that that's exactly what that is yeah it is they have a little
green man they have a little green man mascot that is like a booger or something what is the
little bit maybe it's a bacterium but he like does ads for why you need mucinex to get rid of your your congestion uh
there is unfortunately not another uh country that has a big red word as their mascot for
decongestants sadly not to my knowledge anyway i might be wrong big red word you will be familiar
with both of these things by the way like very very clearly you you will have seen these a lot so little green
man could be aliens but could also be um or like extraterrestrial life but could also be like
back in 2010 i don't know if he's a little man but wasn't al gore you know doing an inconvenient
truth and trying to persuade everyone that climate change was you know something we had to focus on i
don't know when an inconvenience was.
I feel like that was earlier.
I feel like that was 2003, 2004.
Okay, good.
I mean, I'm glad.
But this war has been going on for longer than that and will go on much longer.
Also, in terms of war, this is your journalist title description of war.
Disagreement.
Got it.
Differing styles would be other ways of putting that.
But that doesn't get you the headline.
I really hope I know the answer here
because otherwise I'm just sitting
here looking superior
waiting
and I'm sitting on the wrong answer this
whole time. Yeah, watching the women
do all the work for you.
I can tell you that this started in the late 1970s.
Is when the war started?
I mean, war is a strong term,
but this couldn't have happened before.
Could it be nuclear something?
Nuclear reactors?
What else happened in the 70s?
Abortion rights. It's clearly over dancing. something nuclear reactors what else happened in the 70s abortion rights
it's clearly over
dancing right
the disco came out
the green men were dancing
disagreement
if you want a formal date
for when this started
it would be when the little green man was made
an ISO standard in 1985
ISO standard in 1985.
ISO standard?
As in like... International Standards Organization.
The Little Green Man was made an ISO standard.
Wow, I feel like once we get the answer to this,
I'm going to feel so stupid and be like...
I've had plenty of questions like that.
I've had questions where I just absolutely kicked myself. know what all these words mean separately you're both in the
u.s right you're both in north america at least you will be much more familiar with the big red
word than the little green man oh is it um metric versus um imperial that is that is closer It is a war of standards And a war of designs
Of designs
Devon's just sitting there nodding
I'll say as an aside
Around the same time
Slate published an article
Saying that
You shouldn't have
Two spaces after a period
That
I vehemently disagree with.
Oh, we're going to war over this one, Devin.
Yeah, that is a standard that I do not agree with.
And I think Slate should be burned to the ground for publishing that article.
So is it Fahrenheit versus Celsius in any way?
It kind of is.
In terms of geographic distribution, yeah.
There aren't many countries that use the big red word.
The little green man.
Could it be a dollar bill?
No.
Okay, I still don't know what the big red word is,
but let's think of all the stuff America does
that's different than the rest of the world.
Yeah, and as a Swede who lives in the States.
So there's a lot.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Simone, you're going to be great at Imperial.
Like, our plugs are weird.
You will have seen both of these, then,
in public buildings all over the place.
Both the Big Redwood and the Little Green Man?
Depending on which country you're in.
Yeah, so it has to be...
It's not a unit of measure.
No.
But it's a standard for a product of some sort.
Yeah, absolutely.
Is it like CE certification
versus something?
Yeah, it's an ISO standard
versus the American standard.
Okay, I'm thinking of like
when you see a sign,
you could either see
a big red word on the sign
or you could see an icon
that's a little green man.
I have no idea
what the little green man icon means
or what the big exit,
exit versus little green man.
Oh! Yeah, absolutely absolutely there that's it devin what have you got your your camera is not focusing on your screen dev i will i will take
your word for that that it is uh exit signs what wow i can't believe that we got there. Yeah, from aliens to, oh, wow.
Wait, so which one's standard where?
Oh, we have green man in Europe, right?
Yeah, so basically everywhere,
everywhere outside North America,
your exit sign will be a green sign
with a man running out a door.
And sometimes the man is white on green,
but that was the original design in 1970s in Japan was green man exiting.
America, exit.
Big red words.
Because America is, of course, going to assume
that you speak English.
Yeah, I was in Quebec the other week
and it says sortie, which...
Right.
Because it has to be legally in French.
So you would think they would use the international standard,
but no, North America just has a big red word that says exit.
Wow. Good point to Cleo.
So yes, the title of the Slate article was
The International War Over Exit Signs.
Our first guest question of the show comes from Cleo.
What have you got for us?
This is a question that was sent in by David Fitchmuller.
In the basement of a Massachusetts office building, there's a collection of 315,000 index cards.
Each card has two things typed on it. One would make sense to you and the other probably wouldn't.
What is the purpose of this index?
All right, here's the other probably wouldn't. What is the purpose of this index? All right,
here's the question one more time. In the basement of a Massachusetts office building, there is a collection of 315,000 index cards. Each card has two things typed on it. One would
make sense to you and the other probably wouldn't. What is the purpose of this index?
If I say the word DymaxIAN, does that mean anything here?
Okay, I don't know what the word DIMAXIAN means.
Okay, no, that's fine, because that will be on there. So I was nearly going to step back
from this question. There's a thing called the DIMAXIAN chronophile, which is Buckminster Fuller,
the famous... the guy... I hate to... the guy who invented the Epcot ball, and I'm sorry to the estate of Buckminster...
Yeah, Geodesic Domes, Dyson's Fury.
Geodesic Dome, and many, many other things besides,
kept a minute-by-minute index
of everything he did in his life on cards,
and that's stored, I think,
somewhere at a New England university.
I'd have to research more about that, but it's not that.
If you don't have the phrase Dymaxion Chronophile on that card, it's not that.
Not that.
Wow, I can barely get myself to journal once a month.
Yeah.
That's impressive.
So does it have something to do with language?
Like is it a translation, index cards with translation for a lost language?
The idea that one would make sense to you and the other probably wouldn't doesn't depend on what language you speak.
All right. And there's 315,000 of them.
It sounds like the Dewey Decimal system where you're referencing, you know, a bunch of books.
It's not that. I can't remember where it is.
There's a state which has really lax business regulations.
And so all the companies incorporate there and are basically all in one building.
Like there's one building somewhere in New England that has like, I don't know, maybe 315,000 companies registered there.
Maybe they have to have a sign. Which state is that, Devin?
It's Delaware.
Oh, Delaware. Yeah.
100% it's Delaware.
Not Massachusetts.
But no, that's not it.
It is somebody's Rolodex of old girlfriends.
Oh.
Yeah.
315,000.
A busy person. Yeah.
It is not.
I'm thinking like, to me me i think they have to be translations
of some sort like it has to be from to like decipher something or where it's like oh what
how do i say that in if it's not this language then in something else that's what i was thinking
computer oh that's a good thought that it's it's the first language translator. Yeah, but does it have anything to do with language, Cleo?
You could speak every language, and that wouldn't guarantee that you understand the second thing on the card.
Sorry, my brain apparently has multiple stories about, like, big boxes of files stored in university basements that doesn't surprise us
because there was the ivy league nude photo scandal like a couple of universities took
nude photos of every freshman coming in for like multiple years as part of some sort of research
study that was really ill-advised yeah What? Yeah, like if, basically like presidents, congressmen, as far as I know, they've all
been destroyed now. But for a long time, there was a naked photo of every single university
student at these Ivy League colleges just held in a basement somewhere.
Wow.
It's also, I assume, not that.
No, no, it's not that.
There are a lot of things stored in a university basement.
Also, this isn't a university, is it?
It's a Massachusetts office basement.
Yeah, I got hung up on universities.
It's an office building.
Does the index cards have anything to do with their business?
So when you're thinking about language and translation,
that's a good avenue to go down, deciphering.
communication that's a good avenue to go down deciphering but it's not it's not that it would tell me in french or something so i mean since we've been talking about international standards
is it like a index of emoticons or symbols um or hieroglyphics or pictograms, maybe. It's not that, but you're getting generally warmer.
Okay.
315,000.
The population of Massachusetts is way more than 315,000, right?
It's not like one a person.
This is a thing that would be done by a computer today.
When you said that, I was thinking they're like the Pantone color chips or like the official color things.
Yeah.
It's something that computers would do today.
Something about the words that you would be able to read on the index cards.
So it's words to binary or like, does it know nothing to...
It's not computers or punch cards.
It's...
But it's something computers would do today.
I mean, none of us have said library catalog.
So I'm going to say the obvious things.
It's just a library catalog or something like that.
But something you don't...
Something about the words, something a computer would do today,
not something that's specific to Massachusetts or...
Oh, we're going to kick ourselves.
So it's not about the Red Sox.
Is, would I find normal words,
would, like, every word that I know
be on this punch card and then an equivalent?
Like, would horse... Would there be a punch card and then an equivalent like would horse would there
be a punch card with the word horse on it yeah probably each card would have an English word on
it so it's just a card word something else yeah yes horse and it would say horse. For 315,000 English words.
There aren't that many words.
Yeah, and it can't be a definition.
It's not like a prototype of a dictionary defining all of these things.
No, but a company that deals with words slash dictionary is very hot.
Dictionary, Thesaurus, Encyclopedia.
Mary Webster, what are they called?
Yeah.
It's their catalog of words.
Yeah.
So, okay.
So the building is the headquarters of Merriam-Webster.
Ah. But it can't be is the headquarters of Merriam-Webster. What?
So, but it can't be like the list of words and definitions.
So what's the other thing on the cards?
A QR code.
That's the question.
Pronunciations.
Very close.
Getting closer.
Oh, shoot.
Etymologies.
Cross-referencing.
Something computers would do today.
Here's another clue.
It's not an additional fact about the word.
You could derive the second thing from the first thing.
Tom's brain is breaking.
Really, really.
I should know this.
I studied linguistics, for God's sake.
I should know there's an index card system under Merriam-Webster.
I just, I cannot think of this, of what unknown thing about words.
Be dumber.
Be dumber.
It's in all caps.
Yeah.
Close.
So close.
Be that level of dumb.
The spelling. The spelling of it the uh if it's a noun it's not initial fact it's it mirrored how it yes wait what what it is it it's it backward
what why why marionster? Why would you do
us dirty like this?
The answer is, this is the
backward index of the Merriam-Webster
dictionary, which allows you to find words
with the same ending. It is
helpful for rhyming
things.
Oh, I hate this question.
But why do they have it on printed out index cards?
I don't get it.
Because they had it before the 1990s.
Wow.
Because if you needed to go in and say all the words that end in I-N-G-S,
you had to go in and you need an index starting S-G-N-I and...
This feels like a Tom Scott video if nothing else.
Yes, it does.
And that's why I'm angry about this question.
Who should have known this?
He studied linguistics.
Yeah.
And loves archives.
Yeah.
No, it turns out there's another thing full of index cards in an American basement
that I didn't know about.
Wow.
You are a disappointment to your own personal brand.
I know that, I know that.
There's a basement somewhere that has
Buckminster Fuller's entire Dymaxion diary,
but it's backwards so that he can cross-reference
the first part of his diary first.
I can, that would take such, I feel like we could have guessed for a million years and not got into
that. So the answer is the backward index of the Merriam-Webster dictionary, which allows you to
find words with the same ending. This is an index that is sorted alphabetically by the second
backward word. All right, back to me for this one. In some industrial processes, conveyor belts were
used to convey hot ashes or foundry sand. In 1957, B.F. Goodrich patented a simple improvement that
allowed the belt surface to cool down for a lot longer. What was the difference? I'll give you
that one more time. In some industrial processes, conveyor belts are used to convey hot ashes or foundry sand.
In 1957, B.F. Goodrich patented a simple improvement that allowed the belt surface to cool down
for a lot longer.
What was the difference?
Wow.
I mean, B.F. Goodrich was, yeah, famous for rubber and tires.
I didn't know that.
Wait, so was the conveyor belt,
like, did he invent the conveyor belt where it goes in under?
Or did it not go, maybe it just went, like, round and around before,
but now he has, like, oh, it actually goes in under
and that gives it more time to cool off?
It was the same size, same speed.
You didn't need to buy more belt for this.
Because that would be the obvious solution
is you just keep it running for a long time.
Yeah. He made it
longer. Crazy invention.
Did he convert something
from rubber to metal?
So he invented the
escalator or the
moving walkways in airports
so it's a metal grate that can rotate around itself?
No, no extra parts required.
The goal was to keep it cool when it's doing hot things, right?
It allowed the surface to cool down for longer, yeah.
And it runs at the same speed.
Was there any change of materials?
Nope.
No extra parts?
No extra parts required. Not even, like, just putting a fan on it? Nope. No extra parts? No extra parts required.
Not even like just putting a fan on it?
Nope.
These are all great solutions,
but they're not BF Goodrich's patent.
Oh, I was going to say he ran it faster
and created more air turbulence.
Did he change the environment that he had it in?
Like put it, you know, because that wouldn't be an invention either.
I mean, we've got a great brainstorming session for anyone with hot conveyments here,
but it's none of these things.
So was the invention somehow having to do with the coal or the material itself?
No.
Oh.
Sorry.
I realize I meant to like give suggestions give suggestions. I'm just going to
say no to these. They're all, they're all good suggestions. They're not what he did. So he didn't
change the speed of anything. He didn't add another part. He didn't swap out the materials
that it was made of. And he didn't change the coal or the hot things. It was a very simple
improvement, but was enough to get patented. Did he change the distribution of the hot things. It was a very simple improvement,
but was enough to get patented.
Did he change the distribution of the hot things?
So it was sort of further apart or no?
He prayed really hard and used the power of Jesus to cool it down.
Devin, as the lawyer in the room,
I have to ask if you could patent that.
Yeah.
No, I don't think so.
I feel like you could try to patent that and it would get turned down.
What could possibly have changed?
If he didn't change the environment, he didn't add anything.
He must have subtracted something.
Must have removed something.
Weirdly, still no.
What?
Ah.
He didn't change the material.
Was it about the people using it?
Was it the people, something about the way that it was used?
It just allowed the belt's surface to cool down.
This is a horrible question.
There's nothing to glom onto here and get a...
It's one of those questions where afterwards it seems incredibly simple,
but actually no one thought of it,
which is probably why he managed to get a patent on this.
He put it in a fridge.
That's definitely extra parts.
He, oh yeah.
He blew on it.
There's just one guy going.
Yeah, it's great.
Patent that guy.
In theory, this could have also made the belt
last a little bit longer.
Did he make the belt thicker?
No, you could use the same belt for this, but you're getting closer with that.
It's about the belt and how it worked.
Yeah, so it's about the belt itself changed.
Something about that changed, yes.
He turned it off at night.
Was it just that he had a bigger,
so the conveyor belt has barrels in it.
Did he remove those in some way
so there was nothing under the belt?
Like the conveyor belt itself was hollow?
Not quite, but there's certainly some kind of
geometrical trickery going on here.
Yeah, so he made a belt, instead of it being solid,
it was like a grid or something.
So...
He poked holes in the belt so that there was airflow.
Yeah, air holes or airflow.
That might still tear it apart.
There's some of the belt going unused here.
How might you be able to use a whole extra bit of the belt?
He made it go, he put it on an angle oh you're getting closer and closer now he made it go around in one flat
circle like a turn like a like a like a belt at an airport as opposed to going over like a long
tire on a um you are you really close. You are really close.
It's a geometrical change to the belt.
No, so like instead of having a conveyor belt that kind of goes like a train track just in circles,
the belt itself goes in under the table.
So like the surface that rolls around,
it goes in under the table,
similar to like at a cashier.
It was already a belt that was doing that.
But instead of it being a belt that goes around,
it was just barrels that rolled.
That's still a change.
It's a really simple change.
And it's deeply frustrating.
It's a geometric change to the belt
that means you're getting basically twice the surface for free.
They ran it on the inside of the belt as well.
How would you do that?
Oh, you run it as a Mobius strip.
You run it as a Mobius strip.
So you injure it one side.
You make a belt with a half twist in it
so that you have a Mobius strip conveyor belt.
Wow.
That was not as, oh, wow, that is going to be so simple.
No.
I think that is technically non-Euclidean,
which means it's not a geometric thing.
I think that was a...
It's definitely Euclidean.
It's definitely Euclidean, Devin.
Get him, Devin.
I want to criticize this question
before I start getting it.
It's deeply frustrating,
but the patent in 1957 was for,
I don't think it was exactly called that,
but it was a Mobius strip belt.
So that as it goes around,
there's a half twist in it.
And so you are using both sides of the belt.
Well, you are using all the surface area of the belt,
which now only has one side because geometry.
Wow.
That's a really good idea.
Yeah.
It still hurts my brain.
I need like an animated gif to see this.
I can't easily demonstrate this in audio,
but yeah, if you get a strip, put a half twist in it,
link them up and trace your finger round,
you will go all the way around the outside and inside. And so you got twice the belt. That meant that it could cool down. So yes,
BF Goodrich's patent was for a Mobius strip belt. So the surface had much longer to cool down
because you got twice the surface, basically for free. Our next question comes from Devin. All yours. All right. Your question is, from 1979 to 2007, the residents of this North American town, Naco, would hold a famous volleyball match.
In the early years, the ball was in danger of bursting. The annual tradition stopped when conditions became too difficult to play. Why?
Let me read that one more time.
too difficult to play. Why? Let me read that one more time. From 1979 to 2007, the residents of the North American town, Naco, would hold a famous volleyball match. In the early years,
the ball was in danger of bursting. The annual tradition stopped when conditions became too
difficult to play. Why? That's a very carefully phrased question because it says North American.
Didn't say United States, said North American. So I think that's like question long form for Canada.
I think this is going to be Canadian,
which means I think we're up in the Canadian North.
I don't know.
Americans are famously humble.
We like to share our continents
with other people in other countries.
So who knows?
I'm wondering, I'm thinking like lightning storm,
having a volleyball match in a lightning storm,
if the ball has risk of bursting or if we're going with Canadian,
like is it like a winter volleyball game and it's a ball of ice?
The ice is melting and they can't.
Yeah, totally.
It's in the Northwest Passage and unfortunately it's just wet.
Is the answer climate change for why it became too
hard to play that is that is not the answer okay and it's also not in danger of being struck by a
hockey puck or a canadian goose it's uh is the material of the ball a significant clue no it is
a standard regulation volleyball what was the name of the town?
Naco?
Naco.
Naco.
And in the early years,
it was in the risk of bursting.
Sorry.
Yes, the condition that was leading
to the ball bursting did change over time.
Are they on a submarine or in space?
No, they are in the famous
North American town of Naco.
I'm convinced that's Canada.
On land, on land.
Okay.
I mean, yeah, the location of the town is important.
Why would a standard volleyball be at risk of bursting?
Pressure?
Something about pressure, that's what I was thinking.
Yeah.
So is it really high up?
No. Is this a really high altitude town no okay nothing to do with pressure they played it with
swords oh sword volleyball no no and in fact uh this volleyball game was a way of bringing the
community together as opposed to swords that would split them apart? Correct. Yeah, two houses divided, that sort of thing.
But was the volleyball game standard in other ways, or did they play it with any unconventional attire or tools?
It was standard in many ways. that was very unconventional, and it's not the apparel, it's not the size of the volleyball court or facility that they were playing on.
Instead of a net, they played it with something else.
What constituted the net is important.
Oh, oh, hold on.
It's NACO.
Is this a border thing?
Yes, it is.
You said North American, so I'm like, oh, it's Canada,
for the question right to be tricky.
But is this one of those places where the US-Canada border
goes through a town and the teams are on either side of it?
Because that's a thing that happens quite a lot.
You are very close.
But why was Zubala at risk of bursting in the early years?
Because somebody was going to shoot it.
Because it was going over the border.
You've got to pay import tax on that ball
every time someone sends it over the net.
That is not correct, but that is definitely the right idea.
Or is it US and Mexico?
I assumed it was US and Canada border. Is this
the US
Mexican border? But it was
until 2007.
So
it has nothing to do with MAGA.
It is the US and Mexico
border. Right. Is involved.
And the volleyball game is over
the border.
The middle of the game over the border. Yes.
The middle of the game is the border. Cool. Okay.
Yes. So, I mean, I think you've gotten almost all of it. There's only one aspect of this.
We haven't got the bursting. They changed the fence.
Yes, correct.
They changed the fence. It was at risk of bursting because it had spikes on top of the fence.
If you wanted to spike the volleyball down the opposite team and you were a little short it would hit the
top of the border fence and burst correct and so why would it stop in 2007 they raised the fence
they built a taller fence correct they built a bigger border wall so that they could no longer
play the game so the answer is that Naco lies on the U.S.-Mexico border.
And when the town was divided in two by the construction of the border fence itself,
locals defiantly started to play volleyball over the border.
And they were using the border fence as the net.
And the border fence had barbed wire across the top of it.
And so they had to cover the barbed wire with carpet
so that the ball wouldn't burst if it got caught in it and punctured. But as security increased
over the years, as it happens in the US, the height of the wall was raised and thus you were
no longer able to play volleyball. They still do occasionally, but it's a very, very tall fence now
and it's not a regular game of volleyball.
That feels sad somehow.
It does.
Yeah.
Bring back volleyball.
In NACO, yeah.
Make volleyball great again.
Tom, you were right though.
Tom, you were right though
that North America was the key phrase.
It was, and I just forgot about Mexico,
which does feel like a metaphor for something.
Next one is a listener question.
This has been sent in by Aidan Henson.
Thank you very much.
During a baseball game in 1981,
Amos Otis hit a valid pitch,
which slowly rolled over the foul line.
It was originally ruled to be a foul ball.
However, after some debate, he was allowed to walk to first base.
Why?
One more time.
During a baseball game in 1981,
Amos Otis hit a valid pitch, which slowly rolled over the foul line.
It was originally ruled to be a foul ball.
However, after some debate, he was allowed to walk to first base.
Why?
Do I need to know a lot about baseball?
Not really.
You need to know that baseball has an enormously thick
and technical set of rules for every eventuality.
The thing that they were playing on was moving.
So if it was rolling and the playing field was moving,
then it rolled somewhere else, but it wasn't his fault.
He hit it correctly.
You're right with the second part of that.
It wasn't his fault that it went over the foul line.
In this case, it was a regulation game of baseball.
He hit a bird.
Not quite.
A bird hit it.
I've seen that video and it's awful.
It has happened.
Like someone has taken the pitch and taken out a bird.
But in this case, no, the ball was slowly rolling.
You're absolutely right.
There was some interference going on though.
Yeah.
I mean, the famous video is Randy Johnson threw a pitch so fast
and a bird actually flew in front before the batter could hit it
and the bird just exploded.
Oh my God.
This is not the case here this is this is
a ball rolling towards the foul his arm fell off as he threw it and it went yeah and it went with
the ball so baseball has a rule that if you if you hit a ball and it rolls outside of the um
foul line but it's between the base and the end of the field,
that's considered a fair ball.
Whereas if you just hit the ball foul
and it's outside of the field, that's foul.
And if you hit it outside the foul line
and it's inside of the base,
then it's considered a foul ball.
This is why I don't like baseball.
Yeah, and I've probably gotten that completely wrong.
It's hilarious.
You're moving further away.
Cleo, you got very close to start off with.
Like, the ball is rolling, a thing happened.
What can move a ball when it's rolling?
It's like the movement of the plane that it's on.
The wind was blowing.
It was crazy wind.
It was during a hurricane.
Simone, you are actually so close with this, but all of those things would have meant the ball was crazy wind. It was during a hurricane. Simone, you are actually so close with this,
but all of those things would have meant the ball was ruled foul
because it's just a thing that happened in the world.
If you're pitching into a strong wind, you don't get compensation for that.
Yeah.
It landed on the foul line and there was an earthquake.
That's all still part of nature.
Okay. But is an animal part of nature. Okay.
But is an animal part of nature?
Is it an animal?
Yep.
I mean, technically, yes.
But not in the way of thinking.
Oh, so it's a person.
Like streaker.
A streaker ran across it.
I don't know why they have to be a streaker.
It's right that it was a person. A fan got out of the stands and across it. I don't know why they have to be a streaker. It's right that it was a person.
A fan got out of the stands and grabbed it.
No.
And the opposition team,
it's not like the opposition team can kick the ball
or do anything like that.
But you've said all the right things.
You just need to put them into one thing.
Somebody blew on it?
Yes.
Absolutely right, Simone.
The opposition team saw that the ball
was going towards the foul line. It was very, very
close, and someone got down behind it
and went, and just
blew it over the line.
And the umpire initially ruled that that was
a foul ball, and then there was a lot of argument,
and they went to the rulebook,
and that was classified as interfering
with the ball, as opposed to wind
blowing it, and that was what was ruled as legal.
Wow.
Dirty, dirty tricks.
Yes.
They must have had some strong breath to be able to blow a baseball in any direction.
I think that sounds hard.
Was it the Yankees?
Because they blow.
Oh!
Was it the Yankees? Because they blow.
Oh!
So yes, this is May 27th, 1981.
Seattle Mariners and Kansas City Royals.
The third baseman got down on all fours and blew on a baseball that was rolling along the foul line.
And that caused it to cross the line.
That made it a foul.
And the umpires were like, there's no rule against it.
So there was a long
argument and dispute
and eventually
they agreed to overturn it
it was ruled in
the baseman
later claimed
that he wasn't blowing on it
he was yelling the words
please go foul
please go foul
and
are you guys ready
for another sports question
that doesn't really have to do with sports.
Oh yeah, we just had volleyball and we just had baseball.
I didn't even notice that.
No, this is the sports episode.
All right, let's go for it.
So in 1963, an Australia rules football pitch in Coburg, Melbourne,
had a lot of rainwater on its playing surface.
One person was able to clear the water without anyone else using a technique
that was already popular in Russia.
What was it?
You're gonna get it a second time.
In 1963, an Australian rules football pitch
in Coburg, Melbourne,
had a lot of rainwater on its playing surface.
One person was able to clear the water
without anyone else using a technique
that was already popular in Russia.
What was it? It was the holes in the field. You like punch holes in the field. And that's why
when you go into a field, sometimes there are those things that look like poop, but it's not
actually poop. It's just like they punch into the field and then little vertical like cylinders come
out and then it drains water. So this was less of like, oh, we're going to build a pitch
and improve the infrastructure of it to have it drain water
and more like, oh, the team is coming on soon.
We got to figure something out real quick.
And it's just.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, that's that's aeration.
And that's generally not for like draining.
This is just a guy going, that's wet.
I'm going to move that.
Yeah.
All right.
Moses.
He just kind of passed.
That wasn't popular in Russia, though, was it?
Like a leaf blower.
I mean, if the Russians are involved,
I would think that they would use like a giant flamethrower
and heat the water up.
A chrono plan.
Just ground effect cracks that just kind of
blast the water out of the way.
Just a pitch of boiled grass.
Wow.
Okay.
I've got so many Australia jokes.
Like, he just... He summoned a herd of magpies to blow it away.
He...
He used a giant crane
and turned the stadium on its side so everything drained out.
He blew on it really hard.
Cleo, you're hot.
A leaf blower.
He used air.
Thank you, Simone.
I'll take it.
He blew air at it and it blew slowly.
It blew more and more.
I mean, that would be hard to do for a whole pitch.
But what did he use to blow air?
A leaf blower.
A hovercraft.
A helicopter.
Helicopter.
A helicopter.
Oh, yeah.
Nice.
I should have got that.
Damn it.
Yeah.
After bad weather had canceled all their fixtures the previous week,
the Victorian Football Association employed a helicopter pilot to fly over the pitch.
The breeze from the helicopter's rotors helped to disperse the surface water and dry out the pitch.
The same technique has been used by a German football team in 2014
and an Alabama college football team in 2018.
And by cherry orchards.
This is why I should have got that.
There are helicopter pilots who,
during the cherry growing season, are on call every morning in case there's been rain, and they'll get
a call up and they will have to hover over cherry orchards and dry the leaves so the cherries don't
crack and spoil. And I've been trying to, I've been investigating that for a while to see if I
can go and film it, but it's almost impossible to go film because it's also quite dangerous.
It's like a lot of low flying.
And I cannot believe, having been researching that this week,
that my brain didn't go helicopter to dry a football pitch.
That's awesome.
It's pretty obvious when you think about it, Dom.
Yeah.
At the start of the show, I asked the audience this question,
what was invented by Caleb Bradham in 1903 to prevent dyspepsia?
Before we go, any guesses from the panel?
What is dyspepsia?
Yeah, what is dyspepsia?
I don't know.
Indigestion.
But there is a clue in that name.
Pepto-Bismol?
That's where Pepto-Bismol gets its name from.
It's not quite that one.
Pepsi?
Pepsi.
Absolutely right. It was originally called brad's
drink um and then bradham bradham was a druggist and he believed it helped with ingestion and he
called it pepsi wow wow that was just absolutely let me say a dumb thing oh my god yeah so wait
is that where the name dr pepper comes from That there's some doctor and it created some dyspepsia thing
and they called it Dr. Pepper?
I don't know.
I know Coca-Cola was originally like a tonic that relieved fatigue,
but that was probably just the cocaine in it.
So that is the show for today.
Thank you very much.
Well done, everyone, on getting through that.
Thank you for coming back for a second round there.
Let's start off with Simone. Pluggy stuff where can we find you i am at simone yetch
spelled s-i-m-o-n-e-g-i-e-r-t-z on most platforms mostly youtube yeah cleo what have you got going
on i'm cleo abram everywhere mostly youtube and tiktok uh and if you want to watch the show that
i make it's called huge if True. And finally, Devin.
I'm Devin Stone on Legal Eagle.
You can find me on YouTube or in real life
as an actual lawyer.
Do we get to meet Stephen Fry now or later?
Or am I confused as to what this game show is?
So am I these days.
If you do want to find out more about the show, Devin,
then you can go to lateralcast.com
where you can also send in your own questions we're at lateral cast on pretty much every bit
of social media and you can catch video highlights weekly at youtube.com slash lateral cast thank you
very much to devon from legal eagle see you in court i really hope not i got away from
see you on youtube and simone Yech. See you in your
basement while you're sleeping at night.
That's funny.
I'm John Scott. This has been Lateral.