Lateral with Tom Scott - 40: Swimming without water

Episode Date: July 14, 2023

Anna Ploszajski, Scott Manley and Bill Sunderland face questions about cheffy shortcuts, red ropes and pricey papers. LATERAL is a comedy panel game podcast about weird questions with wonderful answer...s, hosted by Tom Scott. For business enquiries, contestant appearances or question submissions, visit https://www.lateralcast.com. HOST: Tom Scott. QUESTION PRODUCER: David Bodycombe. RECORDED AT: The Podcast Studios, Dublin. EDITED BY: Julie Hassett. MUSIC: Karl-Ola Kjellholm ('Private Detective'/'Agrumes', courtesy of epidemicsound.com). ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS: Leo, Mike Salter, Miriam Cronberg, Marcus Kontiokari. 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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Starting point is 00:00:00 Why are trainee chefs taught to touch their cheek, chin, nose and forehead in that order? The answer to that at the end of the show. My name's Tom Scott and this is Lateral. Joining us today are three guests who are currently touching various parts of their face in various orders. First, joining us for the first time on the show, we have storyteller, materials scientist and engineer, Anna Posheisky. Hello, very, very happy to be here. Welcome to the show. Thank you for being here. I have to ask, a materials scientist and storyteller connected here, is that part of what you do?
Starting point is 00:00:42 Yeah, absolutely. So I started out my career as a material scientist. I was researching hydrogen storage materials, which if anyone has seen the Glass Onion movie, you will be well acquainted. And because I was researching hydrogen, my friends and family basically thought that I was building hydrogen bombs. So I got very interested in public engagement and science communication early on to try and dispel the myths that I wasn't actually building bombs. I was trying to solve the energy crisis. And then that led me on to everything from stand-up comedy to writing. And it's all pulled together by the idea of storytelling and telling a good old tale about science.
Starting point is 00:01:22 Also telling good old tales about science. and I think having a very different reason for hydrogen storage, we are joined by someone who asked me to describe him as internet rocket nerd Scott Manley. Hello! You had to do the hello? I had to do the hello. Has that catchphrase got a little bit old now? Are you still happy with doing that at the start of every video?
Starting point is 00:01:44 I'm still happy doing that at the start of every video. I notice now that ChatGPT knows who I am if you ask for the style. It does the hello in the fly safe. Oh dear. It actually dates to the 90s with a friend I knew at university who would greet everyone like that. And it just sort of became the easy way to get me into a video recording state. And I'm assuming hydrogen storage,
Starting point is 00:02:07 kind of a big thing with what you're dealing with at the moment. Well, it depends on the type of rocket. But yeah, you know, talking about hydrogen bombs, like Apollo 13, it was actually the oxygen and not the hydrogen that exploded. So yeah. There you go. Myth busting all round. Yeah, fuel cells.
Starting point is 00:02:20 Not always the hydrogen that explodes. And our last guest is returning, one of our regulars and one half of Solve This Murder Bill Sunderland I'm back baby I'm ready to think laterally thank you
Starting point is 00:02:33 that is the name of the show thank you for dropping it in there now the other half of your podcast Dani she was on recently and wrote some of her own questions are you bringing your own questions today? Or are you letting her take that accolade?
Starting point is 00:02:49 Now, you're hitting the dynamic of our relationship on the head. Dani has prepared. She has written. She's created something lovely. I have had that given to me by your question writers, and I thought that was fine. So I don't have anything prepared. I'm with pre-written questions, and I'm fine with that. Well, as our guests are about to find out,
Starting point is 00:03:10 lateral is a bit like playing jazz. Improvisational, unpredictable, and occasionally going off key. But if we do hit a bum note, we'll just claim it was intentional and that it's avant-garde. So with that, I will start you off with question one. After basketball star Donnell Cooper took a routine test, he received some surprising news that earned him a two-year suspension from the game. What was it?
Starting point is 00:03:32 So I'll say that one more time. After basketball star Donnell Cooper took a routine test, he received some surprising news that earned him a two-year suspension from the game. What was it? Ooh. Well, I guess we can assume that this is a medical test. Is that a fair assumption? Do you think? I don't know if it, like,
Starting point is 00:03:50 it is, it's definitely the assumption the question wants us to make. And maybe that's justified. Or maybe it's a deliberate little I never said medical. And the old hand starts helping the new players through. Yeah, maybe he's a college player and took an exam
Starting point is 00:04:07 and was basically kicked out of college. Oh, I love that. The idea that just like the test is so unrelated and it's just, oh, you failed this test. You've been kicked out for two years. When you come back, you can play again. I think that's a very nice little secret. I mean, college basketball is huge here, I've noticed.
Starting point is 00:04:25 It's better than my first thought, which was that he got a test that went, oh, actually you're two years younger than we thought you were and you're not old enough to play. Turns out you got your birthday wrong on a form somewhere. You're actually on 13. I don't understand college sports as a thing.
Starting point is 00:04:41 We've got three guests across three very different time zones here. So the only one who's actually in the US right now is Scott. I don't understand college sports. Like, why are these two things merged? I have no idea. You know why? Money. There's money that can be made. And if you can promote it to the people that go to that college, you've got an audience, it's built in forevermore. That's why they spend money on it, I guess. And that's why it becomes a big thing. I don't know. It is kind of like the feeding thing to the major sports leagues, right? All the people that play football, sorry, helmet ball, they have to go to college, right? And So they're all technically getting degrees, right?
Starting point is 00:05:26 It's true. And forgive me if I'm preaching to the converted. I'm sitting here in London talking to people in the US about college sports. But as I understand it, it's done a huge amount for women's sports in the US because at college level, women's sports and men's sports are funded equally. So unlike in many, many other fields where women's sports wouldn't have had the investment because they're funded equally at college level, which is very, very high level sport, it means that the women's game in all sorts of different areas is really, you know, world class.
Starting point is 00:05:57 I remember being at UConn, University of Connecticut, and their basketball program is famous and basically the most famous thing about the school, but it's specifically the women's basketball program is famous and basically the most famous thing about the school, but it's specifically the women's basketball program. And you're right, that would not happen in Europe for the sports where those are separated. I will drag it back to the question and say that it's not an academic test. He did not fail a college test.
Starting point is 00:06:20 It was a lovely guess. And you're right, Bill, that's exactly the sort of thing that the question writers would throw at us. Yeah, that's how you always get us. It's not an college test. It was a lovely guess. And you're right, Bill. That's exactly the sort of thing that the question writers would throw at us. Yeah, that's how you always get us. It's not an academic test. Oh, I thought that was so clever. I thought we were done.
Starting point is 00:06:32 I thought we were vamping for time the entire time. I thought you'd hit the nail on the head. Driving test? What other test could it be? Yeah, I mean, it could be a medical. We've sort of glossed past medical. But is there a medical test? I mean, look, I mean, it could be a medical. We've sort of glossed past medical, but is there a medical test? I mean, look, can we get it out of the way and just say,
Starting point is 00:06:49 hey, Tom, was he using banned substances and then just got a suspension for the drugs he was taking? Yeah, he did. That was the reason for the suspension. But that wasn't surprising news to him. He knew that. Yes, because I was going to say that wouldn't be... Okay, so what's a surprising substance
Starting point is 00:07:05 that you could take some obscure substance yeah there was a big thing with this with like i remember with tennis could you try again oh i said there's a big thing with like tennis sorry i appreciate that you heard siri barging in there i'm just as, as asked, just started over again. That's lovely. Well, you know, I gotta be polite. AI is going to take over the world.
Starting point is 00:07:29 Like you gotta get in there early. I work with Siri professionally. So, but there was, there was a thing in tennis, like five years ago, maybe with a lot of like female tennis players. And there was controversy over like they were
Starting point is 00:07:45 taking something that was performance enhancing but not banned because there was some medical justification for it there was debate over like oh are you taking it for your asthma or are you just pretending you have asthma to get uh so maybe there's something that has a separate effect like this person was taking some kind of drug for an unrelated thing and they went oh did you know technically that's a performance enhancer get out you're out of the game no aspirin it keeps your blood pumping so you can play better too much coffee too much coffee you're so fast he was trying to avoid detection he was using a banned substance and he was trying to avoid detection so i think he
Starting point is 00:08:25 probably had like a fake urine bag in his jacket or something right and they caught him it was leaking or something like that you know or is it that he borrowed urine from someone and they were also taking a different or the same performance enhancing drug and it's like why didn't you tell me i was using this urine to cheat you're so nearly there you're so nearly there it's just the word surprising news and it might help to think about who's and then the doctor jumped out from behind a table and went you're out and he went oh my god i thought i'd done dom next question it might help to think about whose urine he might have borrowed. Snoop Dogg. There's a taking the piss joke in there somewhere and I can't quite find it.
Starting point is 00:09:15 Oh, did he borrow a woman's urine and was told that he was pregnant? Yes. Spot on, Anna. There you go. Not only that, he borrowed his girlfriend's urine So he found out that he was going to be a father And also he was banned from basketball for two years on the same day What a lovely little story
Starting point is 00:09:36 What a day What a story Each of our guests has brought a question with them I don't know the question, I definitely don't know the answer And we start today with Bill. All right. So this is a listener question. It was sent in by Mike Salter.
Starting point is 00:09:51 So thank you, Mike. At the 1924 Olympic Games, Jean Jacoby from Luxembourg took home a gold medal for rugby, even though he hadn't set foot on a rugby pitch. An Irishman received the silver medal for swimming without getting wet. How? And I'll give that one to you again.
Starting point is 00:10:11 At the 1924 Olympic Games, Jean Jacoby from Luxembourg took home a gold medal for rugby even though he hadn't set foot on a rugby pitch. An Irishman received the silver medal for swimming without getting wet. How? They were thieves. They stole them from the winners, obviously.
Starting point is 00:10:30 How could you steal from a swimmer without getting wet? Yeah, swimmers are always soaking wet, aren't they? They're always in the water. They're awarded on the podium. I know the old Olympics were charitably a mess. There's an Olympic marathon in the 1900s that is just legendarily a mess. There's an Olympic marathon in the 1900s that is just legendarily a mess. People went off the route.
Starting point is 00:10:51 People cheated. They were all massively dehydrated because there was no water along the run. But that feels more like an organisation problem in one sport rather than there being one in swimming and one in rugby. I wonder if the year is a clue. What was going on in 1924? Nothing, thankfully. It was before World War II and after World War I.
Starting point is 00:11:16 And if history teaches us anything, nothing happened during that time. I mean, if British history lessons teach me anything is that nothing happened during that time exactly it's ancient greece ancient romans two world wars that's it don't talk about anything do not talk about the empire you're just not gonna not gonna put that in there so we're confirming he didn't steal them from the winners yes i can confirm no no medals were stolen in this olympics that that were relevant to this question. Were the medals counterfeit in some way? Were they fake medals?
Starting point is 00:11:49 Real medals. I mean, we're doing the thing, which I try not to do, where we're drilling down into like keywords in the question. Bill, you've set us up on this. But you did say received and not won. I could reread it if you like and say they also won those medals. Okay. Did the rugby
Starting point is 00:12:10 player have no legs and therefore couldn't set any feet on the pitch? Yes, that's the trick. He had nobody to go with. Rugby's a team sport. Rugby's a team sport. You don't receive the medal. Your team gets the medal.
Starting point is 00:12:25 I think everyone in turn gets a medal. Coaches! Coaches is a very good thought, specifically because somebody else thought of it and gave me a clue to say to you, which is no, they were not coaches. Someone's already waiting for you there. Okay, but if the team wins gold and someone was never substituted in,
Starting point is 00:12:50 do they still win gold? Like, is this a swimming relay race where they only needed three of the relay team? That got away from me, but I'm trying to see if there's... Yeah, they were so far ahead, they just called it. They went, don't worry about it. Don't even do the backstroke. Just move on. Maybe we're swimming in a dry suit.
Starting point is 00:13:11 Was there, like, a swimming event that involved, like, deep-sea diving suits with the helmet and stuff? Because that's cool that that's never been in the Olympics, right? That would be a good, like, picture of 1924 Olympics, just people in full diving bell helmet running across the bottom of a pool why is that not an event you're right without getting wet sounds a bit odd doesn't it it does it there's not really you couldn't really you couldn't swim and not get wet so they
Starting point is 00:13:37 didn't sort of cheat this the swimming there unless they're wearing this diving suit unless you're wearing the diving suit. Right then there weren't rules against all these performance enhancing garments that swimmers wear. You know what? I think that detracts from your performance as a swimmer. I was going to say. You could just run across the bottom of the pool.
Starting point is 00:13:59 I know those modern sleek swimsuits got ruled out at some point, but I don't feel like a diving suit. Just run along the bottom of the pool come on uh but no that is not the answer was everyone else disqualified was it by default again fair question but no no no rugby players no swimmers were disqualified for this to happen were the swimming pool not even working? Did they drain the pool and then hold this event? Swimming pool was working. Plenty of swimmers won medals for swimming and being wet.
Starting point is 00:14:33 Specifically for being wet, yes. Did they win by default? Like, only one rugby team arrived. Only two swimmers came in for that event, so he just didn't get in the pool, but he still came second. No, no winning by default. These people won on merit. They earned those medals. Did he just cheat and run around the pool? Was that a marathon?
Starting point is 00:14:58 It was a triathlon or something? No, didn't cheat. They performed exactly as they intended to and they were awarded thusly. But did they have the same name as swimmers and rugby players who actually did get wet and play rugby and then they just got the wrong person on the podium? Not to my knowledge. But again, no, they earned these medals. No, no tricks. No, no bits. There's clearly a trick or a bit here bill that's clearly one stop thinking laterally just uh you were right to think that the year is important the fact that it's 1924 is very relevant to this question or at least that it's in that time period is relevant
Starting point is 00:15:40 if only we were taught history well what do you know about the do you know anything about early olympics in general so that 1924 doesn about the, do you know anything about early Olympics in general? So the 1924 doesn't matter, but do you know anything about what the Olympics were like in the very first days of the competition? Messy. They were in black and white. They were messy. They were in black and white.
Starting point is 00:15:58 I don't think there were that many like professional sports people were there back then. Oh, they were much bigger on amateurs. They really properly enforced that. There was one other thing that was a key part of these early Olympics. I will say neither of these people were very good at sport at all. They got a gold, they got a silver. Wait, there were art competitions.
Starting point is 00:16:18 There were art competitions? The Olympics early on included art competitions and very much not sports stuff. There was also trumpet competitions in the earliest Olympics, like back in the Greek times, there was trumpet competitions as well. Yeah. So did they win in something else? Did they enter both a sport and an art and won in the art? Or did they just draw pictures of people swimming and playing rugby?
Starting point is 00:16:44 That is how they won. Artistic impression. He won a gold medal for rugby. The name of the painting that won the gold medal in the 1920s, a picture of people playing rugby.
Starting point is 00:16:59 So wait, the guy that won the swimming, he didn't use watercolors? Well, he didn't get wet. You can't paint without getting paint on you. That's physically impossible. I don't know how good this guy was. Actually, fun fact. So the Irishman, the Irishman who won silver, it was the same event.
Starting point is 00:17:21 He won the silver for swimming. It was Jack Y yates who was actually the brother of wb yates for for all you yates heads in the audience there's a there's a fun connection there but yes uh this was the olympics for arts uh from 1912 to 1948 the olympics awarded medals for various art disciplines, including painting. Jean Jacoby won for rugby, and Jack Yates got the silver for swimming. Next question's from me. Fed up with using cornflakes and plaster, Frank Capra's team used fomite, sugar, water
Starting point is 00:17:59 and soap instead. This solved which post-production problem? One more time. Fed up with using cornflakes and plaster, Frank Capra's team used fomite, sugar, water, and soap instead. This solved which post-production problem? I love this question. This sounds like a materials question. Then we'll make it a bomb. Yeah, this sounds like an Adam Savage question. Okay, we're gonna, I think you're right. I. This sounds like an Adam Savage question. Okay. We're going to, I think you're right. I think it's like using these to like substitute something maybe.
Starting point is 00:18:29 Like what is, what was the original cornflakes and plaster? Yeah. That would be the kind of thing you would make statues from that you wanted to break maybe. To me, yeah. This sounds like maybe like a concrete aggregate, maybe some way of making. Oh, for when a cat, when someone in your film needs to kick a wall down,
Starting point is 00:18:50 the wall is just made of cornflakes and plaster. That sounds like a good phrase. Oh, it's all just made of cornflakes and plaster. Because sugar, water, I don't know what fomite is, but it sounds foamy.
Starting point is 00:19:03 Fomite sounds like where you should be jumping in to tell me exactly what fomite is. I've never heard of it. I mean, it sounds... Is it fake Vegemite? Fomite. To me, that sounds like a kind of foamy concrete type thing, but I don't know. Yeah, it feels like something that you would just like, it would just like puff up and then harden in place.
Starting point is 00:19:26 Right. And it would look really cool. And you could put a slow-mo video of it on YouTube and get a million views. This is fomite with an A, F-O-A-M, not like without an A, which means like any surface that transmits a virus, just to be clear. Obviously. Yeah, yeah. I was going to come in with that, but yeah. virus just to be clear obviously yeah yeah i was gonna come in with that but yeah so fed up of making with cornflakes and plaster as if that's fed up of all these cornflakes and plaster like
Starting point is 00:19:53 maybe they're doing fake rocks or stuff in the background of sets because in fact crapper made movies although but but we're missing one key element here that if it was making a set if it was building on like building rocks building concrete whatever that's not a post-production problem is it or would how would that cause a post-production problem where this is a ppp that we're dealing with here are we definitely talking about um because in post-production i i thought that just meant like like producing the materials producing the items i didn't think of like films wouldn't that be pre-production oh yeah i'm thinking films yeah you're yeah pre-production would be building
Starting point is 00:20:31 the sets post-production would be editing together this mess that we're making it's feeding his editors he used to just feed them cornflakes yes but that was too, so he went down to fomite and sugar water. Fomite is what is or was used in fire extinguishers back then. Ah, okay. So they moved from cornflakes and plaster to fire extinguisher foam, sugar, water and soap. I mean, that sounds like what you would make custard pies from in movies. But I don't think you would make a custard pie from caught from plaster and cornflakes right that's what i'm trying how are these materially similar i think these would both mimic if you mixed this all up i think they'd both kind of look a bit like
Starting point is 00:21:20 sick like vomit is this like fake vomit frank capra's the exorcist oh that's interesting you are closer with vomit than custard pies but only only just only it's making a substance though you're pretty much along the right lines there making a substance we're back to where we started. Which is nowhere. We've officially heard the question now. But what could the problem be? Yeah, what's the post-production problem caused by cornflakes and plaster?
Starting point is 00:21:53 The plaster post-production problem. Was it rats? Is it like vermin getting into the sets? No, not for this. That would be a production one. This is post. So they're using this fomite solution to do something. Is it achieving something in the editing, mastering, production? They're dealing with film.
Starting point is 00:22:16 It's making that process a lot easier, yes. Making it easier. Not the physical film, but it's making the edit and post-production a lot easier. Were they doing foley for sound effects for like strudging through things like that they used to do mud such trudgy sound effects using plaster and cornflakes and then it became something else it's actually the opposite of that problem the opposite of wait hold on how did be the opposite of sound? Light. Oh, they were using it to light everything up. Anti-sound. Anti-sound. Sound cancellation.
Starting point is 00:22:52 Oh, dampening. It's like, yes, soundproofing their booths. Boothproof. You're edging around it. You're so nearly there, but it's a substance we're looking for, and it's an onset substance. But it made post-production easier. What might you fake up with cornflakes and plaster, or with foam and sugar and water and soap? Snow?
Starting point is 00:23:16 Snow. Is it snow? And when the plaster and the cornflakes fall, it's like great snow. And they walk around set like, what's that? Oh, it's really cold out here. With Corn Flakes and Plaster, they would have to dub all the dialogue again later because it made so much noise as they walked around.
Starting point is 00:23:37 Amazing. It's a Wonderful Life. It's a Wonderful Life is a Frank Capra film. It's a Wonderful Life. The Christmas film that he's famous for. The snow scene there, they switched to fomite, sugar, water and soap because it meant they didn't have crunching noises as the actors walked. I'd still like to see Frank Capra as the exorcist, though.
Starting point is 00:24:00 Oh, you can't vomit here! Go vomit in Bill's house! Our next question is from Anna. Whenever you're ready. Okay, this question has been sent in by Leo from Florence. The question is, the British prog rock band Jethro Tull released their fifth album, Thick as a Brick, in 1972.
Starting point is 00:24:23 The original edition came with a spoof 12-page newspaper, pristine copies of which are extremely hard to find these days. Why? Okay, I'll say that again. The British prog rock band Jethro Tull released their fifth album, Thick as a Brick, in 1972. The original edition came with a spoof 12-page newspaper, pristine copies of which are extremely hard to find these days. Why? I'm assuming it's not just because newspapers age. Yeah, it's not just it's from the 70s. I feel like collectors would take that into account.
Starting point is 00:25:01 Absolutely, yeah. It's not to do with the material of paper, yeah. Yeah, I mean, you know, it's one of those things that it would be released on vinyl and then it probably wasn't included in the CD version. True. No cassettes wrapped up in newspaper. As much as I love vinyl, yeah. So we're looking for the original 12-page newspaper.
Starting point is 00:25:25 The thought that has jumped into my head, and it's one of those thoughts where it could well be so nothing, but I have to say it and I hope it isn't, isn't right. Is like, it's specifically that wording of like, it's so hard to find a pristine copy of this novelty newspaper. Is it just like a fake newspaper? It's like like please use me as toilet paper hi i'm just ruined this bit some instruction something that is an instruction to be like hey mess this paper up this is this here's the newspaper something about the joke if you're in on the joke you're gonna mess this paper up or did they advertise the album being fish and chip shops being fish and chip shops.
Starting point is 00:26:04 Fish and chips! Good thought. As far as I know, there was no instruction of how the paper should be used. Oh, that rules out several things. I was like, do you have to destroy it in order to get access to their gig or something like that? Yeah, you can fold this piece of paper
Starting point is 00:26:21 into an aqualung. Well, there was a Magic the Gathering card years ago that was like very they're all really really collectible and one of the ultra ultra rare ones was I think the instructions were that you had to, when you use it
Starting point is 00:26:38 you had to throw it at the table from a certain distance and any card it landed on was taken out of the game. And there was a legendary story about someone who took this very expensive card, ripped it up and then threw the confetti at his opponent's part of the table to take out way more cards to win a game. And I just like collectibles and things like that. The value is based on destroying it and i was thinking that
Starting point is 00:27:06 but no apparently not in this case you're along the right lines there the value of the collectible so does does are we are we missing something like the little details is there something that everyone knows about jethro tull is like oh you you know. They're Scottish and he plays flute, you know? Yeah, there's flute named after an agriculturalist. You said that with a certain amount of spite there, Scott. What? No, no, I'm fine. Big fan-ish.
Starting point is 00:27:38 All right, okay. My dad was a big fan of Jethro Tull. They're just, the tone was have a certain amount of viciousness in that flute there. Plays the flute. Oh, no, no, my wife plays flute. I'm an ish
Starting point is 00:27:51 fan-ish. She's into jazz, you know. Or does thick as a brick play into it anywhere? Like,
Starting point is 00:28:01 please wrap this newspaper around a brick and send it through someone's window. Yeah, throw it through a window. Oh, yes. The newspaper just says, please buy our album. You just chuck it through the window.
Starting point is 00:28:12 Oh, so were they encouraged to paste it up somewhere as an advert of the album or something like that? No, you said no instructions, didn't you, Anna? Sorry. That's a very good thought, but yeah, there were no instructions as to how the newspaper should, or what should happen to it did it was it was it sadly prophetic they had like a satire and then it was then it became true and everyone's like oh no for some reason they
Starting point is 00:28:36 ripped the papers up not quite but you you could think about what different sections the sections of the newspaper mimicked the sections of a real paper crossword section unmarked something to fill in you're right crosswords isn't a bad idea a pristine one when no one's done the sudoku from 1972 you're exactly right but it wasn't sudoku it was a crossword yep uh the dot to dot and a crossword yep over the years people um were they couldn't help themselves even though they knew it would be valuable one day they couldn't help themselves doing the dot to dot uh therefore limiting its value the thing that would be an amazing collector's item is if you could find like this is the jethro tull uh newspaper and it was filled
Starting point is 00:29:23 in by mick jagger like that would be a great piece of collectible to have. That's true. I think that would up its value, you would think. Well, Mick, if you're listening and you've got one, send it over because we all want it. Karen from the Karen Puzzles channel, who's been on the show before, has just done a video on crossword jigsaw puzzles. And some of them are just a crossword design that is also a jigsaw. And some of them, each square of the crossword
Starting point is 00:29:49 is also a puzzle piece. So you kind of have to solve both at the same time to make it work. Oh, that's very cool. But then she's the sort of person who will happily do a 5,000 piece puzzle that's all one colour. So I do not understand that.
Starting point is 00:30:02 So it was the decimating of these puzzles that people just couldn't help themselves with. And apparently the band spent more time designing the newspaper and the album cover than they did writing the music itself. Next is a listener question. Thank you to Marcus Contiocari. A police force of 300 slaves used to walk around the Agora of ancient Athens every
Starting point is 00:30:28 few weeks. Why did they carry ropes stained with red paint? One more time. A police force of 300 slaves used to walk around the Agora of ancient Athens every few weeks. Why did they carry ropes stained with red paint? What does Agora mean again? It's like the marketplace.
Starting point is 00:30:50 It's like the central market-y area, I think, is the Agora. So they're wandering around. Everyone's there doing their business, buying ancient Greek food, and they're walking around with ropes that are stained with red paint, being like, if you don't behave, I'm going to whip you, and you're going to get all red. You don't want to get all... The character work started, Bill.
Starting point is 00:31:10 At some point, the character work always starts. What are you doing? Oh, you're taking one pot and replacing it with a slightly different pot? The only things that exist in ancient Greece? I'm going to get you. Isn't it the slaves that usually get whipped rather than do the whipping? They're the irony brigade. Oh, the irony brigade.
Starting point is 00:31:28 Oh, they were like, hey, if we're going to be police, can we all agree to hold red ropes, a rope stained with red? That could have been. I don't know. Yeah. Is it like a, do you reckon, and I'm not asking you, Tom, so just don't jump in. I know you want to.
Starting point is 00:31:46 It's only in the question. I've learned nothing. Is it? Do you reckon it's like a practical, like, we're going to use these ropes that have red paint on them to achieve a purpose as we police this Agora? Or do you think it's like, yo, wear the red ropes and we're going to get you. Don't you mess with us red ropes. Like, Do you think
Starting point is 00:32:05 it's a symbol or is it a tool? I wonder, I guess the question that's in my mind is, whose idea is this? Did somebody ask the enslaved people to do this or was it their own idea? I did a little bit of research on this question, and all I can sum up is it's complicated. It doesn't map to any modern concepts. All right, there we go. Let's get our brain into some ancient concepts. That is not relevant to the...
Starting point is 00:32:37 It's not particularly relevant to the question. It's just that I looked at the history there and went, oh, that's just... Yeah, I'm not going to try and explain that at all. It is not weird in ancient Greece that there was a police force of slaves, apparently. Cool. So it's just, why would someone policing the Agora, why would a group of people policing the Agora need red ropes?
Starting point is 00:33:00 Yeah, what were they policing? We suggested thieves. I mean, would they just go around and and hang a red rope on everyone that paid their market fees? Oh, they'd give out the red ropes. So they'd give them out red ropes to say, hey, okay, you're legal for this one. You're under our protection. That's not too bad. Tom, would they start the day with more red ropes and they would finish the day? No, they would have exactly the same number of red ropes, but...
Starting point is 00:33:28 Would they use them for crowd control? Crowd control, Scott. Those are good words to use. Could you mark people in the crowd who are... You've got red paint on a rope. Could you just be like huacheng onto the back of their toga? Why not? Whatever they wear.
Starting point is 00:33:44 And be like, keep an eye on this guy. I hit him with a red rope so everyone can be like, thateng onto the back of their toga, why not, whatever they wear, and be like, keep an eye on this guy. I hit him with a red rope so everyone can be like, that guy's trouble. That guy's trouble. You're along the right lines there. Okay. Somebody drag me the rest of the way down this line and we'll get to the end of the question.
Starting point is 00:34:00 The ropes are being carried horizontally between the slaves Yeah They're not just holding the rope And they're using this to move people around Yeah, moving people around So it's like holding hands but holding ropes So they become a little corral
Starting point is 00:34:15 You're sweeping people in and out You're nearly there, Scott You're very nearly there I mean, would the slaves just literally be Like the red velvet ropes that separates the people like you're on this side the people are on this side you know the rich people are on this side the poor people are on the other side it was all abolished someone came out and said i've invented wooden posts why do we need wooden posts we have perfectly good slaves to do the holding
Starting point is 00:34:42 no i'm saying it's cheaper to put a wooden post in the ground. I'll never be. Yeah, the rich people can walk through the crowd surrounded by their slaves with the ropes saying, yes, you shall not cross this line. They were trying to improve democracy. Ah, so are they separating voters into like, or they're making sure that you go in
Starting point is 00:35:04 on one side of the slave line and you come out the other and they pen you away they corral people trying to to convince people to vote for them so get out of here we're a wall yes i'm gonna give you that one bill that's that's pretty much what's going on so why the red paint oh is it because they wanted only people were only allowed to vote once and so once you'd voted you got branded with the red paint yeah you're very close this is going into the the monthly and then later quarterly meeting called the ecclesia where all the common people were supposed to go to to debate and argue and vote on things. Is it the opposite?
Starting point is 00:35:48 Do you get the red mark if you didn't turn up? And that's the last piece of the puzzle. If you didn't go in, you would have to dodge, as you walked around town, people holding red ropes that would mark you with red paint as someone who was shirking your civic duty. Oh, I'd love it. They should do that today for people that don't vote. See, I live in Australia. I don't even understand the concept of people who don't vote, Anna.
Starting point is 00:36:13 We all do it down here. If you had a red mark on you, you would be fined. So it was compulsory voting, compulsory attendance there, and there were people going around with red ropes to mark people who were trying to dodge their civic duty scott over to you for your question what have you got for us well this listener question has been sent in by miriam kronberg in the 1950s jack churchill regularly shocked fellow passengers on a London commuter train by throwing his briefcase out of the window. He'd then get off at the next station.
Starting point is 00:36:49 Why did he do this? In the 1950s, Jack Churchill regularly shocked fellow passengers on a London commuter train by throwing his briefcase out of the window. He'd then get off at the next station. Why did he do this? I love this question and I've used it for a completely different series a few years ago that wasn't lateral. So I'm going to sit back. Anna, Bill, this one's up to you. He just hated briefcases. They kept giving him new ones every day. He was like, I don't want these things. Get him out of here. Well, it was the same briefcase every day cool okay so same briefcase every day so that means that when he got off he went back to get the briefcase or could he do you
Starting point is 00:37:33 reckon he had to go back to get it or was there something set up there that could make the briefcase continue on to the next station ah as if it was on a rope just out of view of the window he threw it out And he really just invented Very nice fishing wire So everyone's like Whoa, the briefcase is gone He's like
Starting point is 00:37:51 Ha ha ha, rubes It's just on a wire Got him again, Jack But then why would someone do that? Just for jokes? You know Jack Churchill He's a character He's only got one joke
Starting point is 00:38:04 He does it every day. Having done a whole episode of a different show on Jack Churchill, he was very definitely a character. Is this some expectation that as a human being, I should know who Jack Churchill is? No, he's not a well-known figure, but he was certainly a character. Good, because I don't. Me neither.
Starting point is 00:38:26 But you should know who he is. Your life is less for not knowing who he is. Okay, so let's do a scene. Let's paint the picture. I'm a London commuter, and you're Jack Churchill, and we're on a train. Okay, great. And I say, what's that man doing with that briefcase? Ha ha ha ha ha!
Starting point is 00:38:48 Throws briefcase out of the train. I'm so shocked! And then I feel like everyone would talk to each other and be like, why did that guy just throw his briefcase out of the train? Boop bop boop bop boop bop. Yeah. And then Jack says, don't worry everybody,
Starting point is 00:39:04 I'll go and get it. And he jumps out of the window, falls to his death. A new Jack Churchill arrives. He says, I'm getting off to the next station. And it's like a prestige bit. There's so many of them. And then he walks back in through the door and everyone's shocked and they raucously applaud. It's the man with the briefcase. Oh Oh my God. We saw him jump to his death and now he's arrived at the briefcase. A masterpiece. Everybody give him 10 pounds.
Starting point is 00:39:30 10 pounds each. And that's how he made his money. Are we close? I guess back then they didn't have like podcasts, right? So what would you do on a commuter train? The only entertainment was watching men throw briefcases out the window it was all they
Starting point is 00:39:46 could do back then exactly it was post-war there was not there wasn't much going on there was literally nothing not even podcast nothing happened until vietnam they just had to wait um okay so make their own entertainment so he throws a briefcase out a window. We're back to square one. We've had the question read to us. Yes. What do you achieve? So he's like, look at this. And then presumably he gets the briefcase back.
Starting point is 00:40:14 He throws, does he, does he like, could he know the timing of the trains really well? So he throws it out one window into another train that's also going to the same stage. And he just knows it. It's the same. Just look at this, everybody. Whoa. And then it lands on the next train. He gets off, crosses to the other side of the platform, gets his suitcase, walks away. Briefcase,
Starting point is 00:40:32 not a suitcase. He's not traveling. I think there's definitely something in there, in the commuters, in the doing it every day and at the same time every day. I wonder whether there was some kind of reward for finding lost property or for like stuff being on the track and getting it off the track maybe he was trying to do you think he's profiting or do you think it's just a bit do you think he's just having fun i mean that could be our answer was it just a comedy bit it was just doing a bit hey i'm doing a bit no no he was definitely benefiting from the results of this endeavor. Okay, okay, so he's getting some, there's a practical reason. He's a pragmatist, Jack.
Starting point is 00:41:11 He wasn't getting money. It was just practical purpose for this little stunt. Oh, do you reckon, okay, say, okay, I'm Jack Churchill. And I work in an office. And I work in an office. And I work in an office. And I know my office is, is this an elevated rail? Is it the underground? Is it like an above ground rail that we're talking about?
Starting point is 00:41:34 Like it's a 1950s British commuter train, really slow. Yeah. Because what if, like if the train goes past your office and then you get off on the station, you walk back the way the train came. You don't want to lug your briefcase back to the office. You go, that's my window. I'll leave my window open. The train goes past. It's in the office.
Starting point is 00:41:55 I get off, turn around, walk back to the office. Briefcase is already there. If I was Jack. Now, if I was Jack Churchill, that's what I'd do. You're very close. I'm very close. How can I be close and not right? Was it his house, not his office?
Starting point is 00:42:11 Oh, he's going home. Bingo. He lives by the tracks. There's a hole in his roof. Yes. He knew the exact point to throw the briefcase out so that it would land in his garden. And then that meant he didn't have to carry it i didn't have to carry it from the station and frankly you know if you know anything
Starting point is 00:42:31 about jack churchill you'll you would think he was not someone that shied away from work like uh from from bold endeavors let's say if i remember rightly he's the the scotsman with the claymore who or the bagpipes who ran into war with the bagpipes that guy i know that guy yes technically he's not actually scottish but he did play the bagpipes at 3am run around with a bow and arrow and a broadsword during world war ii and therefore he can be a Scotsman. Like, I'm cool with that. Yeah, I think that technically is what makes you a Scottish person. But he also, you know, after the war, he went to Australia for a while and was a military advisor there.
Starting point is 00:43:14 Came back and he was the first person to surf a tidal bore. So he surfed up the Severn for like a mile. So not only did he, he was this insane soldier commando dude that did everything. Yeah, he also invented surfing on Tidal. And weirdly,
Starting point is 00:43:33 halfway up the Severn, he just threw his suitcase off the bank and thought I'll come back for this later. One last order of business then. At the start of the show I asked why trainee chefs are taught to touch their cheek, chin, nose and forehead in that order. And every single person on this call is currently doing that. Before I give the answer, any punts from the guests?
Starting point is 00:43:59 I'll just do it over and over again. You see what's happening. What's going on here? It looks like you're doing a very weird religious ritual there. Yes, chef. Yes, chef. Heard, chef. Heard, chef. Behind.
Starting point is 00:44:11 Yes, chef. Is that it? Cheek, then chin, then nose, then forehead. Chin. Nice. Forehead. You've got to taste it. Then you've got to stick your chin in it.
Starting point is 00:44:21 Then you've got to smell it. And then you've got to think about it. And then you serve it to the customers. I have no idea. I don't know why chefs do anything. I mean, these are just bits that you don't want to accidentally cut off and put in the meal, obviously, along with fingers. I mean, fingers can go in, but apparently.
Starting point is 00:44:38 Oh, no, you're touching. I feel like touching your face and then touching someone else's food is generally frowned upon. Yeah, I'd tell the chef, don't touch your face at all. That's the rule of the one in my kitchen, don't touch your face. It is a sequence. So you're going from something to another. There's something about those body parts that you should be able to feel as you go through them.
Starting point is 00:45:01 Cheek, chin, nose, forehead. Is it like a mnemonic? Like C stands for crunch? No, it is about to. When I say chin, it's kind of just below your lip. It's not like bottom of your chin. Cheek, just below your lip.
Starting point is 00:45:16 Nose and then forehead. These chefs are crazy. I mean, it's different firmness of meat. It's for, like, based on you know, this is how cooked your steak is or something. Like a rare medium. Oh, that's fantastic. That is rare, medium
Starting point is 00:45:32 rare, medium, well done for cuts of steak. Well, I'm vegetarian, so I would never have got that. I knew that was going to be rough for at least one person on this call. Yeah, I'm vegetarian too, so. Thank you very much to all our players. Let's see where people can find you, what's going on with your work and your life. We will start with Anna.
Starting point is 00:45:50 My name is Anna Pozaiski. If you Google something that sounds roughly like that, you'll probably find it. And I've got a book out, which is called Handmade, A Scientist's Search for Meaning Through Making. Scott. Hello, it's Scott Manley here. You can just find me on the internet, primarily YouTube. I mainly talk about rocket science, space, occasionally nuclear weapons. And now that I've got my private pilot's license,
Starting point is 00:46:12 I talk about flying planes. And Bill. Look, you can find the fun podcasts I do, Solve This Murder, Escape This Podcast, but a project you might not know about. I also make some games. You can find a,
Starting point is 00:46:24 I made a tabletop role-playing game called Gateways, where you use interdimensional portals to try and pull off a heist. So if you want to Google that and try and find that, it's a great fun game. You can get it for free and play it at home. And if you want to find out more about this show, you can do that at lateralcast.com, where you can send in your own listener question. There are video highlights every week at youtube.com slash lateralcast, and we are at lateralcast pretty much everywhere. With that,
Starting point is 00:46:48 thank you very much to Bill Sunderland. Hey, it's me. To Anna Posheisky. Thank you. And to Scott Manley. Fly safe. That's been our show. I've been Tom Scott, and that's been Lateral.

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