Lateral with Tom Scott - 5: When time goes up to 30 o'clock
Episode Date: November 11, 2022Rowan Ellis, Vanessa Hill and Grady Hillhouse face questions about logo longevity, Kodak complaints, and perplexing playgrounds. LATERAL is a comedy panel game podcast about weird questions with wonde...rful 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. RECORDED AT & EDITED BY: The Podcast Studios, Dublin. EDITOR: Julie Hassett. MUSIC: Karl-Ola Kjellholm ('Private Detective'/'Agrumes', courtesy of epidemicsound.com). ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS: Josh Halbur, Ben Justice, Lewis Tough, Arun Uttamchandani, Eglė Vaškevičiūtė. FORMAT: Pad 26 Limited/Labyrinth Games Ltd. EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS: David Bodycombe and Tom Scott. © Pad 26 Limited (https://www.pad26.com) / Labyrinth Games Ltd. 2022. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The answer to that question at the end of the show.
My name's Tom Scott and this is Lateral.
Our three guests today have willingly given up their time to play some clever lateral thinking puzzles and not at all uh because they owe me favors uh first of all from the queer movie
podcast and her own youtube channel rowan ellis hello very excited to be here from practical
engineering and his new book engineering in plain sightain Sight, Grady Hillhouse.
Hi.
And from the YouTube channel, BrainCraft, Vanessa Hill.
Hey, Tom.
Thank you so much for being here, folks.
How are you all feeling about puzzles, questions?
Is this your sort of thing, or are you feeling like you're adrift here?
Absolutely not.
I'm very excited to be humiliated by getting none of these.
I mean, if none of us get them right, who will give the answer? What will the show be?
I'm last place in my Wordle group chat. I mean, you have a Wordle group chat.
That's a feat. Our three guests are heading on a journey packed with more twists, U-turns and hair-raising moments
than a 17-year-old who's just passed their driving test.
So let's hope today's questions are not going to be too much of a speed bump in the road.
First one comes from me, and here it is.
For a number of years, customers of Kodak were unhappy with seeing a cloudy effect
and black spots on their X-ray photographic film.
What was the cause of the problem, which proved to be outside of Kodak's control?
I'll give you that one more time.
For a number of years, customers of Kodak
were unhappy with seeing a cloudy effect
and black spots on their x-ray photographic film.
What was the cause of the problem,
which proved to be outside of Kodak's control?
It was the very first Instagram filter,
way before its time.
How can we just mask all of our wrinkles
and smooth that over a cloudy
effect yeah just just filter the whole thing out it's fine what they actually do is just provide
different films i was going to say they provide different films for different effects but that's
literally how film works i've just described people listening may not know yeah i love the
i love that the answer was just people were bad at taking photos.
It's like it's outside of our control.
You are just doing it wrong.
Like we've given you the equipment.
You just keep putting your fingers on the lens and smearing it up or, you know,
oh, there's a bit of dirt on the lens.
Yeah, there's going to be spots on there, guys.
You need to like step up your game.
I remember as a kid once trying to take a photo with a caption because, you know,
old film cameras.
Oh, you know what I'll do is I'll print out a little bit of little thing here.
I'll put it right next. I'll line it all up.
Yeah, I just I haven't learned about focusing.
What I got was a great photo with just a blur in the bottom where I'd stuck some paper in front of the lens.
You were part of this problem is what I'm hearing, Tom.
This is actually a personal story.
You're still looking for the answer.
Well, it's x-ray film, right?
Yes.
Grady, you picked up on one thing in there.
This is x-ray photographic film.
So this would be pictures being taken by dentists
and medical technicians of bones and things,
rather than nice.
I would like to try and take an x-ray photo of the landscape,
but I think that might be illegal for several reasons.
I mean, the training thing might be on the right track.
I'm trying to think of things that would interact with x-ray film
outside of, I don't know enough about electromagnetism
to be very helpful here.
I was going to say that if it was an x-ray film specifically,
I know that there's a whole thing about you're not meant to take film through
scanners like airports and stuff like that.
They warn you about like, oh,
you can ask it to be hand searched in case there's the kind of any disruption
to the film.
But I guess if it's specifically x-ray film,
there would be
something that they and we've said that this is outside of codex control so it wasn't a problem
with them not having the technology correct for the particular machinery that was being used i'm
assuming is it something to do with um maybe how they ship it like maybe the post office had
a scanner that scanned for certain things that messed up the film or something like that.
So you're right that it wasn't user error either.
It was something going on. It was something going on outside of Kodak's control in the world.
So Kodak had made the film to spec.
People were using it correctly, but there's something happening in between that process.
Absolutely.
Humidity.
This is also, the other thing in the question is that this happened for a number of years.
This started at a point and then they worked out a way around it.
Is it, when you say it started at a point and they worked out a way around it,
is it that that particular point, like something was happening at at that time like it would only have happened if it was
happening at that time not like interesting i'm like what what was happening when i mean can you
tell us about when that was is that one of the clues you're about to tell us like the sort of
era or is that i do have that on my clue list but it is the last one in the list because it will basically
give away everything. I think Grady was on the right track if we're thinking about shipping
and something to do with shipping. Maybe not the scanning, but is there something happening
in the world, how things are being transported at a certain time?
I'm going out on a limb here, but I'm thinking about stuff that would affect the environment
for a set period of time or in a particular way which to me is like either warfare of some kind or
nuclear issues yes like the film was being produced near chernobyl so you are inching
around the correct answer rowan that is absolutely right that's that's the key insight it was being
exposed to radiation literally being exposed to radiation. Literally being exposed to.
So there was...
It was during the nuclear warhead testing program?
Yes.
Was that it?
They got all sorts of complaints about it.
Kodak found that a new isotope,
Sirium-141,
had contaminated the strawboard packaging.
So the test went off,
contaminated the stuff they were packaging the film in,
and that caused it to be just steadily exposed
as it sat in transit.
So here we're concerned about the film
and not the people who are actually
unpackaging this and handling it.
There is one other detail here
which made it really, really difficult
for Kodak to work out what was happening.
What would that have been?
You're cheating here, Tom,
with a second question we have to work out what was happening? What would that have been? You're cheating here, Tom, with a second question that we have to figure out.
Bonus question.
Just, this is, it's the military in the 1940s and 50s.
It was all, it was all secret.
Yeah, not have allowed,
not like confirmed anything necessarily.
Absolutely right.
They knew there was contamination coming from somewhere,
but they couldn't exactly call up the government and go,
are you doing top secret nuclear tests?
This you guys, this you.
Where was this happening?
This was the Trinity bomb test, New Mexico, 1945.
So it was known that it was happening
because you can't easily disguise a large nuclear explosion.
But trying to get the details of what was going on was significantly more difficult before, you know,
before everyone had a cell phone to point at the big cloud.
It surprises me that there was any kind of film production and shipping happening in New Mexico at that time.
So I think it might be, although I'm going off the details
on my sheet, I think it might be that the packaging was being manufactured from plants nearby. So they
picked up the radiation that got shipped to Kodak. Kodak just used it as strawboard packaging for the
big pallets and that contaminated the film. Wow. Dang. I do wonder if there was any
ramifications like on a personal level,
because if you're doing medical x-rays, having a smudge or having a dot on the x-ray is kind of
the issue that they're looking for. So I was worried about those people where the doctors
were like, okay, there might be something wrong. And they're like, okay, the same thing is wrong
with everyone. We maybe, you know what, scrap what we said before. Maybe we'll like just put
a pause on that diagnosis for now. We're just going to go and check with Kodak for a bit.
So yes, customers of Kodak were unhappy with the cloudy effect because the problem outside
of Kodak's control was the US government detonating nuclear tests. So now the tables turn and one of
our guests is going to be asking a question. As ever, I don't know
the question. I definitely don't know the answer. I am as much in the dark as the other players.
We're going to start with Rowan. What's your question, please? Okay, so the question I have
for you is, a US company devised its new logo when it had three stores. They planned to update
the logo regularly, but soon dropped
the idea when they expanded too quickly. Which company was it and what was the gimmick?
A US company devised its new logo when it had three stores. They plan to update the logo
regularly, but soon dropped the idea when they expanded too quickly. Which company was it and what was the gimmick? Wow.
So we've got one Brit and one Australian and one American. So I'm looking at Grady straight away.
Oh my gosh. Did we find out what type of store this was?
Nope. Okay. So I'm trying to imagine logos that have three of something in
them. So we're looking for something with a three-pointed logo, three stars on the logo?
Like the US flag gets updated every time there's a new state, right?
As if that's a common thing that happens every month, but you know.
Every few years when there's a new state. When Puerto Rico finally gets statehood.
What company expanded too quickly?
So it's got to be one of the big franchises
or something like that.
So I'm immediately thinking fast food.
I'm thinking...
I'm thinking like McDonald's with the three arches
or something like that, but it's also an M.
So wait, there's also only two arches.
I wasn't going to call you on that.
For a moment in my head, I was like,
I got a couple.
I will say you're in the right ballpark
in terms of like the change each time was minor.
It was going to be a small change that they were making,
like adding something or doing something
slightly different each time.
Grady is thinking so hard.
Like you look at Grady's face and he's staring up into space
with a very concerned look.
I'm looking through every chain store in my head.
Like does Target have like three bullseyes,
like three rings in the bullseye or something like that?
I was trying to think of something that maybe wasn't like the number of things in the logo, but maybe like the sides of a polygon or something like that. I was trying to think of something that maybe wasn't like the number of things in the logo,
but maybe like the sides of a polygon or something adjacent to just adding a new element each time.
Because that doesn't seem like a very practical plan to start out with.
Yeah, you're right.
If you think they were trying to go to 20, maybe someone had ideas to go to 20 or 25
or something like that.
You need to have...
It's like they're adding dots
like on the US flag or something like that.
Yeah.
Someone was just so excited to have three stores
that they just kept updating the logo.
Or they just keep making it bigger.
It's the exact same logo.
They're just tiling it next to each other.
We've got a thousand stores now. The logo runs down the street for half a mile i just want to say to anyone who is listening
to this afterwards once you once i reveal please go back and listen to what these people are saying
because there are it's almost like they know because there's just certain words you're using
which is so close this is very amusing for me.
I'm just running through all the US brands and chain stores I know,
and I can't think of anything that has three of something in a logo.
I keep going for like threefold symmetry stuff,
and that just comes out with, you know, Mercedes.
Yeah.
You will definitely know this logo.
Although it is a US store, it's not like a US-only store.
Oh, what a nice clue.
You're welcome.
Is this a food store, Rowan?
You know, I'm going to give it to you, Tom, this time.
It is a food store.
Wow.
There's an amazing clue prompt, which I've been given, which I'm going
to say right now, because I love it because it's, it could make it so much more confusing for you
or immediately get you to understand what it is, which is that specifically, um, it wasn't just
the idea of, Oh, okay. It's we're going too fast. It would be too difficult to keep having to
update it. Um, the logo specifically would have
become problematic once the company opened their 13th store wow so is it a clock if it was
if it was going one o'clock two o'clock three o'clock so when they get around to 12
it doesn't so you think that the the logo it's at three o'clock and they just stop.
It's at three o'clock because they've got three stores.
I can't think of a clock logo.
I can't think of a clock logo.
It's either that or something with a dozen in it, perhaps.
Like Baker's Dozen.
I've just made that up, but I'm sure it exists.
Dozen Eggs in a Carton, something like that.
Yeah, Eggs in a carton is good.
I was going down a completely different path of people being superstitious about the number 13.
So like a building with 13 floors, sometimes, you know, people are superstitious about it.
There is no 13th floor in my building. Okay. Or a calendar where Friday was going to land on the 13th or something
like that. The entire logo is just the fresco of the last supper. And as soon as they get to 13,
they've got to add Jesus. And that's just sacrilegious. That's just...
Too controversial in America.
I like the clock. That's my favorite guess so far. I just can't think of any logos with the clock in
it. You're very close in that any logos with the clock in it.
You're very close in that it's not a clock,
but it is that same idea of something
where you would only be able to add up to 12 within this.
And you, earlier on, you said, which was great,
maybe they're adding more circles,
like on the US flag, where I was like,
yes, the US flag, notorious for its circles.
You know what I meant.
Know exactly what I meant. You didn't know exactly what I meant.
You've kind of hit onto it in that the thing that was changing was the addition of a circle for each of the stores.
Okay, so we have something that potentially has three circles,
can't go over 12 circles.
Oh, I am just...
Our producer is sitting back laughing.
Oh, my God.
We're going to kick ourselves.
I can't believe this.
And can we confirm that this exists outside of America?
Yes.
Yeah, I'm feeling a lot of pressure here.
I literally saw one like two days ago.
Wow. Okay, so, Tom, I need you a lot of pressure here. I literally saw one like two days ago. Wow.
Okay, so Tom, I need you to start brainstorming food chains in the UK.
That have come over from America.
It can't be five guys.
They don't have a logo other than the word.
It's not like it's three guys.
It can't be Taco Bell.
They just have a bell.
Yeah.
KFC just has a giant head. A man. Fast food chain or like...
Oh, I got it. I got it. Domino's pizza. Damn it! You are absolutely correct, Grady.
Man, I was thinking through, just cycling through logos. Yep.
Love that.
Yep, the dots on the Domino's pizza logo
would have indicated how many stores they had.
Currently, it's got the two on one side
and the one on the other, and obviously once you get to
six on each side, that's as many dots
as you can have on a Domino, so it would have
become very problematic for them.
I'm so proud of you,
Grady, because it was so embarrassing.
When I was saying earlier about you kept saying things, you were using the word circle,
use the word tile at one point. And I was like, I feel so close. You have no idea how close.
So yeah, the three, the three dots on the current logo, uh it seems they reverted back actually to the
three dots i think for a while there was at least one with four or potentially more but they reverted
back um when the logo was devised in 1960 they planned on adding an extra dot to the logo each
time they opened a new store um but i would say probably a good idea that they stopped because
they currently have over 18 000 outlets out out kind of worldwide. So that would be
too many dots. They have an entire domino rally set up.
So the US company that devised its logo with the idea that they would keep updating it and very
quickly had to change their mind was Domino's because it turns out you can only have 12 dots
on a domino. Back to me for the next question.
Good luck, folks.
A small girl asked her father to take her to the Arrow Park.
After trying all the local playgrounds unsuccessfully,
he finally understood that she wanted to go somewhere quite different.
Where was that?
I'll give you that one more time.
A small girl asked her father to take her to the Arrow Park.
After trying all the local playgrounds unsuccessfully,
he finally understood that she wanted to go somewhere quite different where was that the only thing i can
think of right now is street signs just like arrows on a big sign yeah i think it's to me
it's either two things it's one that there is a sign or something visual which is an arrow
or it is something that sounds like arrow park like she'd heard someone
say something that sounded like arrow park and then was like the arrow park yes but i don't know
which it would be like a park where you can see planes landing like the arrow park or something
like that like arrow instead of arrow why do you say planes landing it was from what Rowan said, that it was kind of just a kiddie jumble,
like she had heard someone say Aeropark and it was Aeropark.
I see.
I have a two-year-old right now who's just starting to learn to talk
and it's been so fun to hear what he names different things
in his environment and stuff like that.
So I think that's a perfect guess, or at least on the right track.
You are very much on the right track to the point where I think,
I'm actually just going to give you that one, Vanessa.
That was close enough.
The arrow arrow thing, it turns out, is actually just a coincidence.
You spotted that.
The kid just thought that the aeroplanes looked like arrows,
so she wanted to see where the arrows landed.
The arrow park was actually the airport.
Wow. That's adorable.
But you know what? That was absolutely right.
We'll just roll with that. Congratulations.
Easy.
Oh my God, that's amazing.
There's also a couple places in in the US
mostly the western US
they're called air parks
which is a fly-in
community
like the houses all have
garages for your plane
and the roads are all wide enough
to take like a Cessna down them
and it is like
the epitome of like Western US,
we've got all the space, we've got all the gas, we're going to build stuff to fit that.
Yeah, notoriously, there's a story my dad loves to tell, which is that a friend of his,
they, when the kid was little, a load of his friends had gone to Disney World,
their parents were like, he's just, he's too young. Like he won't remember this.
Maybe we'll take him,
but when he's a bit older.
And so they took him to the woods
and told him it was Stickworld.
And for like years,
they would take him to Stickworld
and that kid was obsessed.
He would tell everyone,
he'd be like, guys, whatever.
I went to Stickworld with my family
every weekend.
Yeah, wonderful bit of lateral thinking there, Vanessa.
It wasn't an arrow, arrow thing.
We hadn't even noticed that.
It was just that the planes looked a bit like arrows
and the kid wanted to go watch the planes.
And it was the arrow park, which was the airport,
which is really not a safe place to play.
Our next question comes from Grady.
This one's over to you.
So good luck, everyone.
All righty.
So you sit back in your chair, you sip your drink,
and you think, I'm having a great time here in Vegas.
But then you start to worry.
Some people seem to be getting very lucky in your craps game.
How would you quickly and easily tell whether the dice being used were loaded?
We'll give you that one more time.
You sit back in your chair, sip your drink, and think, I'm having a great time here in Vegas.
But then you start to worry.
Some people seem to be getting very lucky in your craps game.
How could you quickly and easily tell whether the dice being used were loaded?
Huh.
I have an idea of how you could tell, but I think, I don't know if it's right, but it could be close.
So I'm just going to hang back for a second.
All right. I mean, it could be, it was quickly and easily, right?
So you can't like roll them a hundred times.
Whoever's got the crooked dice is not going to let you roll them a hundred times to see if that works.
Do we need to know the rules of craps here, Grady?
I don't think so.
Just that dice are the main element of the game.
So craps works by you have a big – it's the one you see in movies where you've got that kind of big open table
with the small wall around it
and you roll the dice off the backboard
and they kind of bounce around
and you roll either seven or snake eyes
or something like that
and the crowd cheers or boos.
You've got one person whose job it is
for that round of the game to roll the dice
and score for everyone around the table.
Are they a dealer?
Are they employed by the casino?
No, the dice rolling person is a civilian.
Oh.
At most casinos.
They hand the dice over to whoever.
That really introduces more room for error, doesn't it?
Yeah.
But you've got to throw them well.
You've got to bounce them off the backboard.
You've got to actually send them all the way down.
You can't...
You can't... This isn't just a maths thing, Greg. You can't... You can't...
This isn't just a maths thing, Grady.
You can't just total up how many times and do it.
It's quickly and easily.
What would a casino give you that could happen?
I mean, a lot of drinks.
If you're gambling, they just...
What?
Put them in your drink?
That's my idea.
I mean, someone's sipping a drink, right?
So there's like a lot of liquid left in that glass.
Wait, if you put the dice in...
Yes, but they'll float freely.
If they're not weighted, but if they have a weight in them,
wouldn't they sink to the bottom of the drink?
Or they'll always turn up the same numbers.
Grady's nodding.
Yep.
Vanessa's right.
You got it.
I thought that question was phrased very strangely.
Yeah, I made sure to mention you have a drink.
You're sitting on your drink.
Yeah, and if you're in Vegas and you are gambling,
there are just people walking around just taking drinks orders
and just giving you free drinks because it is way cheaper for them
to give out a bit of well vodka and some mixers
and have people spend more money than it is to make people
go to the bar away from gambling.
So, yeah, that's a lovely question.
I did a little research and it turns out that not all dice float. And so a lot of people as
a quick check, they use like very salty water to make that's more dense. So to make sure that the
dice will float and if they're loaded, they'll turn to, to face a certain direction each time.
So where would you put the weight?
Like, say you wanted the number six
to always come up at the top.
Where would you put the weight in the cube?
Presumably on the one.
Because all the sides of a dice,
like opposing sides of a dice always add up to seven.
So I'm guessing you want the six to come up.
So you roll the dice and yeah,
you put the weight in the one, I guess.
Underneath the one.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
That would make the most sense to me,
but.
And I think it has to be reasonably noticeable just because there's a lot of
dark,
just from my D&D knowledge.
There's a lot of dice that have inserts in them and up,
up until a certain amount.
So like someone,
when they're making the dice and pouring in the resin or whatever,
we'll add in like glitter
or they'll add in little flowers
or plastic things.
But the idea is you'd have to put
so much in there for it
to actually make a difference
to the rolls.
So those are still dice
you're allowed to play with.
Like that isn't really a problem.
So I think it would be so significant
that it would be,
like you said,
like noticeable in the drink
that it was kind of waiting to one side
or it was kind of bobbing down.
I know there are teams of people who've gone into casinos and like
logged every number that's come up on a roulette wheel to see if there's any bias there.
Because the house edge isn't just narrow enough that you've got enough of a biased wheel.
You can just about eke out a profit on something like that.
I mean, I also know someone who went into Vegas card counting.
If, um, have you ever seen Stephen? Was that profitable for them? I mean, I also know someone who went into Vegas card counting.
Have you ever seen Stephen? Was that profitable for them?
You know Stephen Bridges?
Yeah.
He is a magician and joined a card counting team, learned to card count,
took a load of casinos with some anonymous person bankrolling them
and did end up making a profit and also got banned from every casino in Vegas.
He took a hidden camera in for some of it.
It's lovely because he's got footage of bouncers kicking him out.
Why?
We just think you're very good at this game
and we don't want your business anymore.
Okay, right, fine.
I need it to be known that Tom claims to be my friend
and yeah, we did play,
did take me in to play a game of it was
essentially a bluff game with with steven and also someone who like professionally played poker
and i was like i feel like i'm at distinct disadvantage here tom yeah and you won yeah i did
i played the chaotic way of doing it where i simply didn't look at my own cards and so
no one they couldn't read you my strategy you. And so no one knew what my strategy was.
You were unreadable because you weren't, you were just playing randomly. It was a great strategy.
So Vanessa was right. One way to very quickly and easily check if dice are loaded
is to float them in a drink or in some liquid and see if one side always turns and faces upwards.
Back to me for this question.
Good luck, folks.
To avoid confusion,
which niche industry uses days that start at six o'clock in the morning
and end at 59 minutes past 29?
I'll say that again.
And this time I'll say it in the American style.
To avoid confusion,
which niche industry uses days
that start at six o'clock in the morning
and end at 59 minutes past 29?
Niche?
Niche?
Honestly, I don't know how...
I've always said niche.
I think a lot of people say niche.
I say niche, but I get called out on it.
Okay, so is this maybe something to do with space?
I was thinking about Mars.
Yes.
Is it a rover that needs to start and finish work at a certain time
and then just kind of accounting for the time difference
between Earth and Mars?
But that would constantly be shifting since the days are different lengths.
So it wouldn't be always this time to this time i think
because i've heard about again tom uh 6 a.m to 59 minutes past 29 50 what is 59 minutes past 29
it's it's 5 59 a.m but that's just before 30 um i say as if that's gonna be like yeah it's just before
yeah maybe it's like the other one yeah it's safe to rephrase this question as the day runs
from six o'clock to 30 o'clock oh oh okay instead i'm on the same page now
six o'clock at three o'clock so i'm one i'm trying to think of some industry where like No, I'm on the same page now.
Six o'clock at three o'clock.
So I'm one, I'm trying to think of some industry where like the one through five
would be used in the time code in some way
that might mess, that might be confusing.
There's also the, I guess it's like,
if you think about it being like,
it's essentially a 24 hour,
it's what we typically think of as a day
on this planet um but if it's 30 then that's another six hours that would then go back to
six am i confusing myself maybe that there's 24 hours but it starts at six yeah the clock the
clock at 29 59 ticks over to six. Yeah, absolutely right.
So I guess, Grady, that does make sense in terms of like,
why can you not use the one to five element of it?
Yeah.
So, Tom, this is the whole industry, you say?
Yeah, absolutely.
And it's an industry you will all know.
It is a niche industry, but it's one you do all know.
Interesting. Okay.
I think this is an industry that pretty much everyone on the planet
will interact with in one way or another.
I wonder if it's something to do with an overlap.
Maybe whatever they work on overlaps with days,
and so those first six hours of each day
are also relevant to the previous day in some way.
Okay, I'm seeing some nods.
I was going to try and, you know, quietly clue you in.
So it didn't turn out on the podcast.
I was guiding that.
But yeah, you know, I'll just say that.
We'll just call you out on it.
Absolutely right.
That's the reasoning behind it.
Oh, okay.
When we say six, but we're saying it's a whole industry,
and then you've said everyone in the world,
is this anything to do with time zones?
Is there some time zone issue here, or is that up the wrong tree?
No, each time zone would have its own version of this clock,
if that makes sense.
Okay.
Got it.
Grady, can you think of a single industry that kind of fits your reasoning?
I cannot.
I can't think of anything where maybe something overlapping would happen those first six hours.
But your reasoning is right.
They're overlapping because you're wanting to distinguish between the boundary of two days,
and this industry draws that boundary at 6 a.m.
this industry draws that boundary at 6am. So is there something that like,
where something very specific happens at 6am? I'm trying to think of like, like the local news where like there's a shift change and something like that. Maybe weather, maybe the weather,
weather, or weather staff, people who staff weather stations,
do a shift change at 6 a.m. or something like that.
Is there a process involved, Tom?
Is this an industry that makes something and it takes 72 hours to produce said thing?
Not particularly.
I'd say you're getting cold there.
I think it'd be, just to talk you through what this day would be like, it would be Monday at 11pm.
And after that comes Monday at midnight and Monday at 1am, 2am, 3am, 4am, Monday at 5am and then Tuesday at 6am.
So the clock resets to the next day at 6am instead of midnight.
Okay, so it's something to do with the weekday,
something that has a strong tie to which weekday it is.
Yeah, absolutely right.
And it's to do with human habits here.
I mean, I could think of a lot of things.
Let's go.
Well, I mean, people wake up around that time,
so it's like anything that's starting new.
You were close with local news, Grady.
Okay.
Wow.
See, I'm not a morning person.
So it's just really hard for me to think about what would happen at 6am every morning.
The sunrise?
That also kind of helps there.
If you're not a morning person, what are you instead?
An evening person.
Some kind of night owl related industry.
But yes, I think between you, you've figured out that this is, you know, this is a thing about the day changing at 6am.
Now, this is a thing about the day changing at 6am.
So for a lot of people, why might you include midnight to 6am as part of the previous day?
Some kind of like radio broadcasting.
Like if you're on the morning breakfast radio show and that broadcast starts at 6am,
that's the start of the new day.
You are so close.
So incredibly close.
Wow.
Is it TV?
Yes.
Absolutely right.
I feel like back in the terrestrial channels,
TV wouldn't actually broadcast.
Like we're used to 24 hour channels,
but I feel like there would just be,
like there were channels where there either was nothing going on and it would start at six
or it would be like just kind of filler stuff until until six
you're really close but we're talking about 24 hour channels here so yes you're absolutely right
tv listings tv ratings tv advertising sales all count the day from 6 a.m to 6am. Why might that be? Just because that's the same period of wake time?
Yeah.
They count that, yeah, as one day.
If you're watching TV at 2am,
you're not thinking that tomorrow morning is already here.
So for all the late night shows and everything like that,
for listings for advertising, they start at 6 a.m.
They go through to 30 o'clock because that way it works in the computer system
without the computer getting confused about the days
and which one you should assign it to.
How interesting is that?
Yeah, I mean, it makes sense if you think of like the late, late, late show
with James Corden or whatever it's called.
I try not to think of it, to be honest.
Sorry, unnecessary James Corden insult there.
Or necessary James Corden insult, depending on who you're talking to.
Exactly.
It took us a really long and kind of slow time to get there.
Yeah, we went all the way around the houses. Yeah, we sort of danced
around that one for a little while. But yes, the TV listings and advertising industry runs in many
countries on a clock from 6am to 30 o'clock, because that way the day changes at 6am.
Our last big question of the day then, I've still got the one from the audience to solve at the end,
but our last big question of the day comes from Vanessa. What have you got for us?
Okay, so from 1789 to 2015, a certain group of French people were forbidden from going on holiday
without giving notice to the local authority first and putting up a public notice. What did
they do for a living? I've got to sit back
on this one. So I'm going to
do the thing where I write down
my answer because I
nearly did a video on this
and couldn't get the story to quite work.
So I'm going to sit back.
I just
couldn't quite get the script to work, couldn't get the right
people to interview, but I
know the answer to this so I will sit back.
Grady and Rowan, this one's on you.
Oh, my goodness.
Oh, no.
We're one down.
Man, a public notice.
So I'm starting to think about people who are kind of essential workers,
like maybe they're in healthcare or some related field.
Was it 2015 you said wasn't when this ended yeah from 1789 to 2015 so what happened in 2015 what did happen
in 2015 an excellent question in france is is yeah because i feel like there's a lot of specifics
here so like specifically fr, specifically until 2015,
and specifically it's like they're going on a holiday,
like they're assuming it's something to do with your job would make sense
in terms of they're leaving, they're not going to be available.
They had to make a public notice and also notify a certain authority within France?
Is that?
Yeah, they had to give notice to the local authority first
and put up a public notice.
You know, we treat police and ambulance and fire services
as kind of separate institutions now,
but I wonder if back in the 1700s,
if that was organized a little differently
in a way that persisted, you know,
into modern day in France somehow.
Or if it, when we, okay, when we say local,
how low, like when you say group,
did you say how many people in this group?
I am not sure how many people are in this group,
but I imagine it would be a lot,
like it's a profession, you know.
It's only a few in each town though okay because i was i was like oh okay wait are we talking about like it's this very specific town and it's a very specific group of people
or is it like uh there's they're kind of are everywhere but it's like the profession's the
issue yeah so it's a profession but this was specifically to do with Paris.
Mimes.
It's the mimes.
People can't live without their mimes.
They just love the mimes.
Oh, specifically to do with Paris.
So I would, I'm going to give you a hint that isn't in my list of hints,
but I would focus less on the dates, on the years,
and more on the profession and something that the people of Paris need.
Baguettes.
Eiffel Tower tour guides.
Some other goods. Bakers, maybe? Wait, wait, wait. You're really hot. some other
baguettes
bakers maybe
wait
wait
wait
wait
is it
is it
is it
bell ringers
no you already said it
is it
oh god the bell ringers
sorry it's because
I was like wait
when did Notre Dame
stop burning
um
Tom's got it
I put bakers down
right at the start
it's
it's an essential profession.
It's the people making the baguettes.
You're absolutely right, Rowan.
Oh, I was fully joking.
Okay, excellent.
Yeah, no, I was fully serious.
That was not a joke.
You were fully serious and you were correct.
Bakers provide a service to the people of Paris
and they need them on a regular basis.
So basically laws were put in place after the French Revolution
that forbid the owners of bread shops from going on holidays
without notifying the local authorities first.
And then they also had to put up notices of their holiday
in the window and give the name of the nearest rival bread shop
so that customers could go there.
People need a place to buy their daily bread.
Or they did until 2015 at which point
supermarkets were well enough established that yes the the law was scrapped in 2015 as part of a
crackdown on red tape too much across paris in general i wonder did they continue to adhere to
the rules like well into the 20th and 21st century? I mean, there was a fine
of between 11 and 33 euros specifically if they failed to comply. So possibly.
How interesting. So French bakers specifically in Paris couldn't go on holiday without notifying
the local authorities first. They had to put up notices in their window or they could face a fine.
But this was all scrapped in 2015. Which just leaves us with the question I asked the audience
at the start. What sort of person would be interested in buying 1.91 US dollars? Which
it turns out is really difficult to... I nearly said $1.91, but it's 1.91 US dollars I've got here.
Before I give the answer, any suggestions from the panel?
I've got to be honest. Any suggestions from Grady, who is going to be the one
most familiar with US currency here? 1.91. I mean, unless it's an exchange rate for something
else, I can't think of anything with that specific price or cost.
Well, they're trying to buy the currency.
I got nothing. I got absolutely nothing.
The answer I've got here is a coin collector. So yeah, a complete collection of US coins is
one cent, five cent, 10 cent, 25 cent. And then there are half dollar and dollar coins. So there
is a bit of obscure knowledge known for this one. Unless you're on the New York metro system, in which case it will give
you change in dollar coins and no one else will understand what they are. That is our show for
today. Thank you very much to all the guests. Congratulations on getting through those
questions. Grady, tell us what's going on in your life. Where can people find you?
Yeah, I'm working on videos for practical engineering.
And my new book, Engineering in Plain Sight, comes out on November 1st.
And Vanessa?
People can find me on YouTube.
It's BrainCraft, making a lot of videos about sleep and habits and psychology.
And Rowan?
Hey, I'm Rowan Ellis on YouTube.
If you search that, you will find a lot of video essays about queer history and pop culture.
And if you want to know more about this show, or you want to send in an idea for a question you can do that at lateralcast.com where lateralcast are basically everywhere and you
can catch video highlights at youtube.com slash lateralcast thank you very much to Grady Hillhouse
thanks Tom thank you to Vanessa Hill very welcome welcome. Thanks Tom. And Rowan Ellis.
Thanks for having me. I'm Tom Scott
and this has been Lateral.