Lateral with Tom Scott - 51: Snap! Hacker! Pop!
Episode Date: September 29, 2023Toby Hendy, Matthew Schuchman and Julian O'Shea face questions about superlative streets, marine mutinies and blacked-out books. 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: The Podcast Studios, Dublin. EDITED BY: Julie Hassett. MUSIC: Karl-Ola Kjellholm ('Private Detective'/'Agrumes', courtesy of epidemicsound.com). ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS: Jeff Green, Becci Andrews, Jon Reeves. FORMAT: Pad 26 Limited/Labyrinth Games Ltd. EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS: David Bodycombe and Tom Scott. © Pad 26 Limited (https://www.pad26.com) / Labyrinth Games Ltd. 2023. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Why is Second Street the most common street name in the US?
The answer to that at the end of the show.
My name's Tom Scott, and this is Lateral.
As usual, I'm going to be orchestrating some lateral thinking problems,
and we'll see if our three guests today will work in harmony or end on a bum note.
We start from the Overdue Rentals podcast.
Matthew Shugman, how are you doing?
I'm great. Thank you so much for having me.
We've got three first-time players on Lateral today.
How are you feeling about it?
I'm going to try not to be too competitive.
I get very excited about these things.
It's not that I want to be right, but I want to figure it out.
All right. Tell me a little about Overdue Rentals,
because I'm pretty sure I'm going to be on this show at some point soon. Yeah. And we look forward to
having you. We like to talk about films that were like really big at one point, like you couldn't
avoid them. But for some reason, people just don't talk about them anymore. They could be good. They
could be bad. We don't care. We just want to talk about them again. Well, good luck on the show
today. Over on the other side of the planet, we have from the YouTube channel Tibbies, Toby Hendy. How are you
doing? Hello, I'm good, thank you. How about you? I'm doing well, thank you for asking. Tell the
audience a little bit about what you do, what they can find on your channel as well. Yeah,
so I make math and physics videos over on my channel Tibbies and I've been making a lot of
videos lately about four-dimensional shapes, including the Tesseract.
So I hope that will help me to think outside of the box today.
Oh, nicely done.
Was that on the spot?
Did you rehearse that, Lykes?
It was very good.
I come prepared, Tom.
Well, also hopefully arriving prepared,
we have also from the other side of the planet,
hello from Australia, Julian O'Shea.
Great to be here. And I do not have a zinger in my back pocket. So thank you for,
yeah, standing me up, Toby. The last time I saw you, I think we were talking about the
Montague Street Bridge. Yes, indeed. So this is a iconic piece of Australia for those that have
never been. This is a bridge that gets hit by trucks on a bit of a regular basis. And you've
done the definitive video on it to the extent
that I did not do a video on it because you just kind of covered it. Yeah, I actually quite close
to it to the point where when it gets hit by a truck, if I'm on Twitter fast enough, I can get
from my house to the bridge and pick up souvenir pieces of truck smashers to give out as gifts when
people come to Melbourne. Good luck to all three of you on the show. Remember, there's no points or prizes here.
In fact, the only thing we offer is some moments of distraction
before the heat death of the universe.
I should really start sending the guests a free pencil or something like that.
On that cheerful note, I'm going to start you off with question one, which is this.
This question was sent in by an anonymous listener.
In the late 60s and early 70s,
how did some people obtain free long-distance telephone
calls for years after buying a single box of Cap'n Crunch cereal? I'll say that one more time.
In the late 60s and early 70s, how did some people obtain free long-distance telephone calls for
years after buying a single box of Cap'n Crunch cereal? I know this is going to be something like
there's a coupon or some sort of code
that came with the cereal,
but my mind immediately goes to,
you know, those movie tropes
of like people picking out gum wrappers
and putting up the receivers
and somehow getting the phone to dial
without any, you know, charges to them.
I'm not sure if it's going in
any weird direction like that.
I mean, there is a movie reference
immediately from you there, Matthew. I was like that. I mean, there is a movie reference immediately from you there, Matthew.
I was expecting that.
I'm thinking about the cards that,
I noticed you said long distance phone call
and you could buy like long distance kind of vouchers
to plug in and use that were different to like domestic ones,
at least as I remember them.
So I wonder if there was like a, yeah, like you said,
like a voucher or some kind of card in the box.
Was it something, well, it's Captain Crunch.
It doesn't have like letters and numbers.
I wonder if there was something on the box that wasn't meant to be there,
but ended up being a code that people could use for something.
I'm remembering the air miles guy who was,
I can't remember the details, that did get turned into a movie.
And there was a voucher for free airline miles on, I think it was chocolate pudding.
Yeah, that's the Punch Drunk Love.
Yeah, yeah.
That's it. Yeah. I know that was a real guy.
He was buying millions and millions of puddings by the...
Yeah, he has gold status on American Airlines for life, I think, now, and ended up donating
a load of pudding to charity.
Well, firstly, I know that long-distance phone calls aren't worth much these days.
I imagine if you gave someone free long-distance phone calls for life, they just wouldn't use
them.
Generation's head.
Millennials never pick up the phone.
What's the value of that this day?
About two calls a year.
I studied telecommunications engineering, and this is one which is a bit of an urban legend
in my world.
So I think I know the answer.
So I might hand it over to Matthew.
And I think the reason you chose
to hand that over to Matthew
is that this might well be a movie reference you get.
Oh man.
See, now it's going to be something very popular
and very well known,
but like one of my blind spots of some sort.
Oh, geez.
You were close with finding something inside the box i mean normally you just think of toys and stuff like
that so they didn't put actual phone cards in the box by accident did they you're actually right that
it was a toy in the box i don't know if this is starting to ring any bells for anyone a bit of a
bit can you hear that whistle that kind of there we go kind of? Okay. Julian, you know this one. Take it away.
This is a bit of an American thing. We've never had it in Australia, but I believe in America, you'd get toys in a box of cereal.
And at one stage, the toy was a whistle, a whistle that was sitting in the bottom of the box.
But it wasn't any whistle. Go ahead, Matthew.
I still don't know the answer of the specific movie or something like that,
but that's what I was talking about, like the gum wrapper.
That's what they do.
They would use like a whistle tone in the movie,
and that's what would get you free calls.
They switched to a gum wrapper because they did not want to accidentally
give a genuine way of getting long distance calls.
I mean, it didn't work anymore.
It's been patched, but it was the Cap'n Crunch whistle
that just coincidentally happened to blow a tone at 2600 hertz,
which is exactly the frequency that the telecoms companies used for.
This should be a long distance call and you don't have to bill for it.
So the movies didn't lie, technically.
They lied just enough to avoid giving a blueprint for crime.
I love that idea that there's a tone that just gives you free stuff.
Doesn't it make you want to invent a musical instrument that you just blow around in different shops
where you turn up and you're like, does this one work for parking?
Does this one work for, you know, if I just start yelling at a vending machine,
do I get a Coca-Cola?
Is there any other frequencies, magic frequencies out there?
You have to yell at the right frequency.
Yeah, good singing voice.
Now people are just going to be running around with like flutes and recorders,
just going over they can, just blowing certain tones, just trying to figure it out.
There's an old Ken Dodd joke about a big drum, which he has.
He just says, yeah, you can get a discount anywhere in there.
You just walk in with a drum and go, I want fourpence off!
Yep, this was the Cap'n Crunch whistle, which blew at 2,600 hertz,
exactly the right tone for free long-distance calls.
Each of our guests has brought a question along with them,
and we start with Julian.
When you're ready.
This question's been sent in by Becky Andrews.
UK government ministers transport important paperwork
in red boxes that resemble a briefcase.
Why are some lined with lead and what other design features means you can't forget to lock them?
I'll say that again.
UK government ministers transport important paperwork in red boxes that resemble a briefcase.
Why are some lined with lead and what other design features means you can't forget to lock them?
I mean, they've got to be lined with lead so they can't be x-rayed. I was going to say so Superman can't see through them. I was thinking radioactive
with the lead like they, you know, there's some kind of radioactive element here that's emitting,
I don't know, rays and you want to stop them. So you're leaning into the Superman thing.
An x-ray needs a receiving plate.
Like there's lots of science fiction movies and films where you have like x-ray vision or just the ability to take an x-ray photo from afar.
But that only works if you've got something to receive on the other side.
So I'm guessing there aren't supervillains trying to x-ray government ministers that they leave number 10.
There might be.
I mean, I guess they get stolen.
It gets burned out of their hands and taken somewhere where they could use some sort of machine to look into it, right?
With the x-rays, I don't know if it's – you couldn't really see inside the paper.
You couldn't read the text. And I wonder if this important paperwork you're trying to prevent people reading it.
And so are these security measures more about stopping people seeing what's inside?
I'm thinking invisible ink type stuff.
It's taken me this long into this question to realize that you cannot actually read using an x-ray machine.
Unless someone's using very, very heavy ink.
So Toby, and you're all under something, that is a security measure, but not x-rays.
This is a stupid suggestion, but it's-rays. This is a stupid suggestion,
but it's just really heavy. Lead is just really heavy. So if you leave it on your desk somewhere,
it's less likely to suddenly get snatched by someone who's running by.
They would have to like drag it out. You're only going to get stolen by people that have been doing
it on the leg days and on the lifting days. Yeah, I like that. So speedy, speedy folks.
It would also allow you to have a metal detector in the building,
perhaps, to make sure no one's running out with it.
If it's in a library or something important,
some building containing it.
Look, the weight is part of it,
but not just about stopping it from the thieves
that haven't done bench presses lately.
That was going to, yeah, because I was starting to think maybe
since you said some did and some didn't have lead,
maybe it was meant to be some sort of decoy that somebody picked it up
and they felt it was heavy that they thought would be important.
But that doesn't seem to make sense now.
All the government ministers just have really hench arms
just from lifting this heavy briefcase all the time.
The weight is the point.
Oh.
Yeah, we haven't spoken about the fact about you can't lock it you can't
forget to lock it um yeah i wonder if that means something there's something crazy about it when
it's unlocked when it's open that makes it impossible to move or or otherwise be normal
as a briefcase oh if you made the um i don't know what the name for the bit of the briefcase that you open and leave on your desk.
Like, you open the briefcase, you've got the flat bit that stays on the desk,
and then you've got the bit that stays up so you can access the briefcase.
I feel like there should be words in the English language for those sections of a briefcase,
and I'm not sure there are.
The old upper briefcase-y, toppy bitty?
Because it's not a lid, is it?
It's not the lid of a picnic basket.
We'll call it the knave.
It's the knave of the briefcase.
The knave of the briefcase.
There we go.
If you make that really heavy
and balance it so it cannot be left open,
I guess that would increase security.
There are two parts to it.
One's got to do with the lid and the weight
and the other one is this feature you're talking about now. Does it have to be on a specific type
of scale itself that takes part in the opening somehow? It knows that it's kind of, not knows
it's being weighed, I guess, but there's somehow, there's a part of the scale itself that knows that
this case is on it, that that allows you to open it. The old Indiana Jones, how much does it weigh technique?
I wasn't going movies.
Oh, thank you.
Producer David has just chimed in to say the lid of the briefcase
is technically called the flap, and I don't like that at all.
Yeah, let's all pretend we didn't know that.
Let's go back to a different time.
So the flap is very heavy, is what you're saying, Julian.
I'm saying that the lead is very heavy, is what you're saying, Julian? I'm saying that the lead lining is heavy, which makes the whole thing heavy.
Do you need a special tool to be able to close it?
You don't, no.
Other than the normal kind of features that exist in a briefcase.
But can you open it anywhere?
Does it have to be in a specific location for it to be open?
Not a particular location, no.
But the way it opens is part of the design.
A particular orientation, perhaps.
Indeed, Toby, a particular orientation.
Okay, so you can only open it sideways when it's the wrong way up?
Normally, instead of lifting it, it just falls down.
I don't know why that would help security, but...
Yeah, that's what I'm trying to...
Like you have an impractical briefcase,
but I'm not quite sure how that helps secure it.
You open it the wrong way and there's just nothing in there.
So it's like a magic briefcase.
Ooh.
You know, so one side is empty, the other side is a rabbit?
Yeah, the rabbit being secret government paperwork. and it depends on which way you open it.
That's right. Here we come. We've got some nuclear codes. No, it's not about the
secret one. It's more for the user than it is for the thief. Why might, yeah,
why might which orientation you open a briefcase make a difference?
The paper would fall out. The paper would fall out.
The paper would fall out.
So why does that matter?
Oh, if you forget to lock it, it's built in a way that when you pick it up,
the papers just fall out and cause you a problem.
So you can't forget to lock it.
You can't carry it unlocked.
That is entirely correct.
You've got one half of this problem solved.
Well, there's only half.
Okay.
Your options are briefcase wide open and heavy,
and it's heavy, so it will immediately fall out.
If you forget to lock this before picking it up,
your papers fly everywhere,
and you swiftly learn to lock the damn briefcase.
Okay.
So I'm giving you half points, full points,
saying that that's correct. So what happens here is the handle is on the same side as the hinge,
which means you cannot forget to lock it. So you've done half. That doesn't explain,
though, the lead lining. Why are these briefcase red boxes so heavy?
I spent like a good 30 seconds trying to describe something that you summed up as
the handles on the same side as the hinge.
Thanks.
Yeah, that's...
They use them to this day, but this is tradition.
Now, the reason for the lead lining is that it was used more in the past
with how these suitcases were used.
Just as a bludgeon, just anyone attacks you,
you can just hit them with the
briefcase repeatedly. The old lead briefcase to the head. Not only are they on the ground
bleeding, but also they've got lead poisoning. That's right. And they won't forget their papers
because of the hinge. No, not a weapon. Not a weapon. I actually thought that was it.
Sorry. Sorry. So historically, people would travel with these briefcases.
But think about traveling in the past.
Before you said that, I was going to say something about way stations.
So if you had like one car with one with lead in it, one car with one without lead in it,
you'd know which one had it.
So you knew where to direct them or something.
But that doesn't seem to be the case now.
We're going further back than cars, team.
We're going much further back than cars.
Horses and carriages.
It doesn't bounce around and fall out of your horse and carriage
going over cobbled streets.
No, we are doing transport, but we're not in horse and carriages.
We're wheelbarrowing them around?
Trains, planes, automobiles.
Trans.
If it falls in the Thames, it'll sink.
That is entirely correct.
Hey!
So the lead lighting was a security measure
and it was so it would sink.
So when you're taking things by boat or by ship
and you lost it.
Because the Thames a long time ago
used to have a load of ferries over it.
I don't know if it goes back that far,
but members of parliament used to have to travel by boat occasionally.
But I guess any water, it'll just sink.
Oversea, that's right.
So the Navy, for example, would put weights into their code books.
So same idea.
If they were kind of under attack, they can...
Overboard.
And it goes forever.
Thank you to John Reeves for sending in this question.
In the early 1980s,
millions of people in the United States
gladly purchased something for twice the advertised price.
What was the problem and the common workaround?
And I'll say that again.
In the early 1980s,
millions of people in the United States
gladly purchased something for twice the advertised price. What was the problem
and the common workaround? Look, there's lots of things that people pay surcharge for,
but what's the problem? And why are people happy to do it? Now, I wonder if the price has something
to do with it. We're like literally costing twice twice the price like maybe the
price number makes it more relevant yeah like why is it i don't know so for example uh in in um
some cultures like eight is considered a you know lucky number so maybe something that's 44 bucks
you'd be like 88 bucks sure what a what a lucky price this is yeah it is curious the actual two
times price i was initially thinking
like scarcity or, you know, that as being one reason why people pay more for something. If
they're worried it will run out. I wonder if it's like a two for one sort of deal that's
helping with the two times price here. There was some scarcity involved here,
a little bit wider, a little bit more geopolitical. But yes, scarcity is definitely involved.
Early 1980s scarcity, something that people would pay double for,
it just immediately made me think of the Cabbage Patch dolls
that just took over everybody's life.
And people were fighting in aisles and punching people
to get them for their kids for Christmas.
I thought you were going to say some kind of blockbuster movie
that scares everyone when it's rented at once. your kids for Christmas. I thought you were going to say some kind of blockbuster movie that was
scares everyone wanted to rent it at once. That wouldn't be twice the advertised price,
though. They just price gouge on that. Like the price would have gone up. It might be twice the
recommended retail price, something like that. But in this case, it was twice the advertised price.
If it was $10 on the sign, they were paying $20. It feels so specific, doesn't it?
About twice the advertised price.
Yeah, it's quite specific.
Okay.
Okay.
So an advertised price is what they're putting on their bus ads,
they're putting in the newspaper, they're saying it's this price,
and people are walking in happily paying double it.
If they're not getting anything extra in return,
why would you pay more? In a sense, who would know that you're paying more? Is it for your own
conscience that you want to pay more for something or does somebody know you're paying more? So maybe
you're getting a better product or something like that. It would seem odd if you're just paying more
and nobody knows about it except you.
It could be a pay it forward type thing
where you buy one and then you get someone else, you know?
Like maybe there's a bit of positive karma going into it.
Yeah, I wonder if it's karma, like good luck vibes kind of thing.
Just trying to think what I've bought.
Double price and go, this is great.
This is the life.
I'm sure most of you,
certainly most Americans,
most adult Americans
will have bought this
at some point in their lives.
When I think of Americans
and I think of,
you know,
automatically having something to buy,
it only comes up to three things,
which is toilet paper,
paper towels and sponges.
And it's not a service,
it's a natural item.
Sorry,
that's some very specific things
to think of Americans there.
And you're American. Those must be the things that
sold out during the COVID rushes
of shopping.
Even beforehand, it's always like, I've got to make sure
I'll add milk to the list.
Those are always the big
things when it comes to how to go out and buy stuff.
As a non-American, when I heard the phrase,
all Americans have bought this, my brain just went to Starbucks.
Went to coffee.
Don't know why.
No, nothing to back it up.
All right.
So we've all bought it.
And double the advertised price.
We're not price gouging.
No, no one's being scammed here.
Is it a service or is it a commodity?
It's a commodity.
Was it anything to do with money like coins and notes?
Was it anything to do with money like coins and notes and they're like trying to change a note into a certain coin by paying a certain amount?
That's something I can think of having done, like, you know, wanting to spend $2 so you get $3 back or something.
It's not quite that, but certainly we're talking about a fairly significant figure that had just been reached and topped.
It's not like gold standard, silver standard.
We're not buying bars of gold and silver.
No, not here.
It's way more common than that.
Most people in America will have bought this.
This is Reagan, yeah?
This is... Yeah.
What was Reagan up to then?
It's one of the most expensive,
like, regular purchases
that Americans would make.
Like, regular in terms of schedule, not in terms of ordinary, in terms of maybe once a week, you'll have to buy this.
I'm thinking we're talking oil. We're talking oil crisis. We're talking petrol.
Yes, we are.
We're talking we're in the petrol crunch.
That was the oil crisis in 1981.
So we've got oil crisis. The things are spiking.
We're happy to pay double. And the reason we're happy to pay double...
Happy to pay double the advertised price. It's because it was limited, maybe. Like,
maybe if you paid twice at the pump, you could get more fuel through some workaround in the way
that your car measures or the fuel pump measures how much is going out.
That's very, very close.
So remember, they're not paying double.
They're paying double the advertised price.
There's shortages and rationings.
And by paying double the price, you get more or ahead.
More fuel out.
Maybe they're naively measuring just the amount of money spent on fuel
and using that to do their restriction.
We're in an oil crisis.
The price is going up at a faster rate than the ads come out.
So if the ads came out on a day saying it's going to be X dollars per gallon,
as we use in America, but the actual price is higher than that,
but the advertised price is lower than twice that, you're still getting a deal.
Not quite. This isn't an It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia scam where they're just putting
it into big tubs and then selling it later on when the price changes so they make money off
of it themselves. I mean, that's less a scam and more arbitrage.
Toby, you said fuel pumps. Yeah, I don't know if this links with what Julian just said, but
the logic was somewhere around the fuel pump and the way it measured how much fuel was going out.
Maybe it only was measuring money, not fuel. I don't know. Some link there. Some link is missing there.
There's a problem and people found this workaround to pay more.
Yeah. You're nearly there. There's one last jump to make. Where might that price be advertised?
On the fuel pump itself, like the little screen is different.
On the fuel pump itself. So why are people happy to pay twice the price that's advertised on the fuel pump?
Because they were actually getting the real price that was advertised on the billboards
instead of the pump.
Exactly.
Because gas had just done what?
Skyrocketing price.
And what number has been breached?
The dollar.
Yeah, gas has just gone over $1.
And what does that mean?
Is it that the displays don't show the full dollar?
So it's like, instead of being like 1, 0, 0, it goes back to something? Gas has just gone over $1. And what does that mean? Is it that the displays don't show the full dollar?
So it's like, instead of being like 1, 0, 0, it goes back to something?
That's what would have happened.
So the gas stations put a workaround in.
Maybe they just halved the price so that it would fit on the screen.
Yes.
More or less, they started charging by the half gallon instead of the gallon because the alternative was buying new pumps with more numbers on them.
So they just put up signs on all the gas stations saying, and I'm quoting here,
pumps register half total purchase. And you had to look at the gas pump, double the price in your
head, and that's what you actually have to pay because that was much cheaper for the gas stations
than actually having to get new stuff in the pumps.
That's goodness.
Australia, I remember when Australia passed a dollar for the first time.
That was in my lifetime.
And do you know what they did on that day?
They got sheets of white paper and just drew a one next to it and stuck it on the thing.
So it said 02 or whatever.
They just, a sheet of A4 paper.
Whereas those crafty Americans with their half gallons, eh?
Well, don't forget that this is 1980s
so a lot of those gas pumps were actually on mechanical clickers.
It wasn't just a screen that could update,
it was an actual mechanical gearbox.
So they swapped out the gearbox in the gas pump,
charged by the half gallon instead
and just told people to double the price
until the price went back down.
Our next question is from Toby. Take it away.
As a sneaky tactic, sometimes an enemy ship would pretend to belong to a different country before launching a surprise attack. This is the origin of which 18th century phrase?
18th century phrase.
All right, I'll say it again.
As a sneaky tactic,
sometimes an enemy ship would pretend to belong
to a different country
before launching a surprise attack.
This is the origin
of which 18th century phrase.
I don't want to just
blurt it out here,
but is it the enemy
of my enemy is my enemy?
Also, I'm pretty sure
the enemy of your enemy
is your friend, isn't it?
Yeah, exactly. Excuse me. Can enemy? Also, I'm pretty sure the enemy of your enemy is your friend, isn't it?
Yeah, exactly.
Excuse me.
Can I just say,
I like that your brain at least had one of the words correct,
where mine's like,
okay, think of every phrase you've ever known and try to cross them out one by one.
My brain went wolf in sheep's clothing,
but that's more of a farmland thing
as opposed to being on the water.
Because my first one was,
there are too many cooks in the kitchen. I don't think that's related. So that's one down, about 10,000 more to go.
We can do this all day, my friend. We can do this all day.
Yeah. Let's go down the list, Julian. These have all been great phrases,
although none of them share any commonalities with the answer.
Although none of them share any commonalities with the answer.
OK, so you are in the Navy sailing the seven seas in the 18th century and you are looking to work out if a ship is friendly or not.
You're going to be looking through a telescope, I guess, or a spyglass or something like that to try and see what a ship on the horizon is flying what flag they're flying i think flag has got to do with it because the way that you disguise your ship you've got a couple of choices one you get a large fake nose and mustache with
glasses and put that on the ship that's one strategy the other is you change your flag so
i reckon we're playing a flag yeah but now that all i can think of is let your freak flag fly and that's definitely not it not not the phrase we're looking for but it has got yeah you
you're on the right track with with the mention of flags because this is way too early for things
like dazzle camouflage and things like that like that's i think early 20th century as they used to paint ships with things like zebra stripes at strange angles just so you couldn't work out what it was from a distance.
It could make it appear smaller or different sizes.
But, yeah, it's got to be flags.
It's got to be flags, surely.
So I wonder back then, did they have like a flag department that just had all the other flags there?
have like a flag department that just had all the other flags there or if they were doing it?
It feels like that scene from the movie, you know, where like they grab a pirate's underpants because it's blue and then they cut in with something else so they can whip it out. Or was
this someone's job, a flag decoy officer? No, because there's flag communications,
like there's an A to Z of various flag patterns that every ship should have a copy of. And if
you fly one of those,
like the letter P will mean something like, I've got a diver down or something like that.
There's a lot, or Q for quarantine. I think there's various meanings like that. But I feel
like, I feel like you would just lie by putting up some other nation's flag. And like, as the
commander of a ship, if you don't know the enemy flag, I feel like you're missing
some vital knowledge there.
Here comes another one that I just thought of.
Is it, I like the cut of your jib?
Oh, again, nice phrases, but not the ones we're going for.
Tom, you said something which I don't know if you realized was what they were doing.
You mentioned that they are flying flags that are not their own.
And so that's down the road that we're thinking here.
Which is a shame because I had several good riffs on like flag communication.
We could have gone with that.
Maybe it would help if you knew of a word that is sometimes used to refer to a flag when it is on a ship.
Colors is one.
Hoisting colors.
So could it be like true colors?
Yes, Tom, keep going with that.
Flying your true colors or.
It's yeah, you've got it 80%. It's just rearranging those words to demonstrate the intent
that you might say.
If a ship is, you know, disguising itself like this
before a surprise attack, what is the way you would word
that sentiment?
Show your true colours?
Julian has got it.
Show your true colours is the has got it. Show your true colors is the phrase.
Oh.
Yes.
All right.
So the pirates or ships from hostile countries would either lower their colors,
which is, you know, their flag of allegiance, or fly a fake one.
And then I think with a pirate ship or any attacking ship,
they would use this as a tactic to get close enough to attack. And then once they are close, they would switch it out
for their true colors or their real flag and then attack from there. Do you know what? This is
useful advice. I think anyone listening to this podcast is going to get less likely to be like
pirate attacked because of it so yeah you're doing
community service here toby yeah you're winning hearts and minds good luck with the next one folks
a man goes to the headquarters of a large company to meet two people he takes out a chainsaw and
then puts it away again a few minutes later unused the ceo gladly pays the man a large fee
why i'll say that again a man goes to the headquarters of a large fee. Why?
I'll say that again.
A man goes to the headquarters of a large company to meet two people.
He takes out a chainsaw and then puts it away again a few minutes later, unused.
The CEO gladly pays the man a large fee.
Why?
Okay.
Now, the man is from I'll Show You My Chainsaw for a Dollar Corporation,
and he's just doing his service.
I mean, I feel like you should start that.
That's a Twitch stream.
You can get some donations on there.
Absolutely.
Because I reckon modern business books say the way you motivate your staff is by showing them a chainsaw.
And then they come in, your staff see a chainsaw.
They're like, that was brilliant.
I love a chainsaw.
Back to work.
Oh, I thought you were just your staff see a chainsaw, they're like, that was brilliant. I love a chainsaw. Back to work.
Oh, I thought you were just threatening them with the chainsaw.
You were actually just motivating them by, this is really cool.
Look at my chainsaw.
Yeah, people appreciate a good chainsaw.
That is the opposite of thinking naturally.
Was this a scheduled meeting?
Did they plan on having this meeting?
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, they may have been surprised by the chainsaw, but the meeting was scheduled. Scheduled how far in advance? I had one crazy idea,
but the advanced scheduling of it would ruin what I think it is. I'll go for it anyway.
I'll go for it anyway. My idea is that perhaps the person paying this fee wanted to be scared
and wanted to be scared by a chainsaw. And I was thinking maybe they had
the hiccups and the shock would sort of, you know, shock the hiccups out of them. And they're like
gladly paying the fee to get rid of their hiccups. But if they're scheduling this long in advance,
I'm not sure that would work. But what if that is what if it was one partner wanted to scare the
other? And so he had he planned for the guy to pull the chainsaw out
and paid him later.
It wasn't so much about terror or hiccups,
but you're not close.
Let me be clear, you're not close.
But there is a certain amount of nervousness
about what's going on, yes.
Chainsaws are quite precise.
Chainsaws are known for cutting down trees, for Texas massacres, and that is all.
That is their entire two use cases.
There is nothing else.
Why a chainsaw?
Why do you reckon a chainsaw?
I'm thinking about nervousness inside of a headquarters.
That makes me think a businessman is sort of
involved here and i'm thinking in terms of business you might be scared of public speaking or
some kind of meeting you need to hold and that could be a reason you want to be
scared out of it scared out of your anxiety i don't know if that would work um do you reckon
they're in they're in the um
adrenaline business you know you dial them in and be like you know you just need that dose of
something to do this talk they don't tell you how but they turn up yeah thrill seekers
keep you on edge that dose i don't know how nervousness would fit into it but would it be
something where this meeting there would be a reason this person would always have a chance on them.
It could have been about landscaping,
whatever it may be,
but it's just randomly
these two people needed
a tree cut down
in front of their office
and he did it for them
and he got paid for it.
Oh, no, no.
Nothing actually got cut here.
And Matthew, you said
one partner scaring another.
You're right that one of them
is the CEO.
Who's the other one?
I reckon it's the
chainsaw appreciator role that all companies have.
The deputy junior vice chainsaw appreciator.
Head of HR.
HR loves chainsaws in the office place.
So we've got a chainsaw coming to an office for a meeting.
Bit of adrenaline, bit of fear, bit of action.
It's not actually clear from this anecdote that I've got.
It's not clear whether the CEO knew there was going to be a chainsaw involved.
Okay.
Are they proving they've done something?
So, for example, is the chainsaw a piece of evidence, a documenting?
Like, you said blah, blah, blah.
Well, here's the proof.
Here's the evidence.
The chainsaw would be not evidence in itself, but if it had ended up being used,
yeah, that would have definitely proved something
one way or another.
All right.
But it is meant to scare this person for a gain.
This is not just like a Halloween prank
where they just had somebody come as something scary
and he happened to come as, you know,
Texas Chain Leatherface.
No, it's a very deliberate demonstration here.
It could have been a few other things.
It didn't have to be specifically a chainsaw,
but it had to be something that could do a bit of damage.
Is it something about the response of the person seeing it
in the sense that they wanted to scream or be able to like,
I don't know if they're an actor or something,
record a genuine scream or emotion?
The other person isn't the one being threatened directly, but they'd still be nervous about what
might happen. Are they trying to protect other people? So it could be some kind of a drill,
like how do you respond in a high stress environment? Yeah, the stress isn't specifically
from the chainsaw there, but you're getting quite close. What might they have needed to test or
wanted to test or check?
Response time.
It's the only thing I could think of.
Specifically, he's the head of IT.
So if this person were to actually use the chainsaw and cut their data lines,
how would you have a backup or be able to get our information back?
That's very close.
It's not the data lines, but you're pretty much there.
What might this consultant have turned up with the chainsaw and threatened to do?
To disconnect a power line to say that the uninterruptible power supply will work.
The IT guy's been saying, we're off the grid.
Don't worry if the power goes down, we're fine.
And the CEO is like, really?
I'm going to get old mate with a chainsaw and we'll see if your stuff survives.
That's basically what it was. You're absolutely right.
The CEO wasn't sure whether the backup servers would actually work.
He called in an IT consultant and the IT consultant, John Honeyball,
decided to turn up with a chainsaw and ask, what would happen if I just went through this server?
And the CEO said, I don't know, try it.
And the head of IT goes, no,
I'm not sure we want to do that. That's why we've got a backup system. And the head of IT is nervous
enough that it proves that he is not entirely certain that the backup system is going to work.
Can I say exceptional consultant? Oh my goodness, that's how you get that. That's what the fees are
for. Every time you're hiring them, they're buying chainsaws. So that's why they're so expensive.
Matthew, your big question whenever you're ready.
In 2013, Penguin Classics re-released a series of five books by an English author.
One novel had the title and author's name indented on the front cover
and then covered in rectangles of thin black foil. Why? Again, in 2013, Penguin
Classics re-released a series of five books by an English author. One novel had the title and
author's name indented on the front cover and then covered in rectangles of thin black foil. Why?
My first thought, if I hear a series of five books by an English author, is The Hitchhiker's Guide by Douglas Adams.
And there's a thing in there about the blackest ship possible.
It is a band that plays on board a ship that dives into a sun.
So it has the name of the ship written in black letters
on a black ship.
And honestly, I don't know how I connect that to foil.
I just heard five books by an English author
and like foil and thought science fiction, Douglas Adams.
I will say that the five books are not like,
they're not in concurrence with each other.
They don't have anything necessarily story-wise
to do with each other.
Okay.
When I heard indented, i was thinking about like tracing in in the sense that you could go over it with a
crayon and and sort of uh spell out the words that's kind of what i think from indented letters
it's not it's not it it's not far it's not completely in antarctica but it's it's it's
close do we think there could be a bit of mystery then? A bit of a Sherlock Holmes-y,
a bit of a Solve-A-Middle yourself?
I also got crime, like, detective vibes
from the way that it's a bit mysterious.
I wonder if that is the genre here.
You said covered in squares of foil, right?
Rectangles of thin black foil.
Thin black foil. Okay.
And again, not like you were saying,
like doing the tracing,
but think along the lines
of maybe what that could also do.
It seems to be they're obscuring the name.
Like with the foil and the indenting,
it seems that you can't read it easily.
So I wonder if it's not tracing it
with a crayon,
maybe it's that you have to feel it.
Is it braille or something like that?
No, I mean, it is covering it that's
that's definitely the case so okay penguin classics it's it's every classic british novel so
oh yeah no i don't know where i was going with that sorry i thought you're gonna start brute
forcing every book just like i was gonna do with the idioms tom just just name the role i was
thinking of doing that and like starting with any author beginning with A.
Alan Bennett.
Andrew someone or other.
No, go earlier.
Go A.A. Milne.
Just start right at the top.
It's Orwell's 1984 because they are blocking off and censoring things from the front of the book.
Oh, this is good.
That's most of it.
Yeah, you have the book and you have the idea of why they did it right there.
But why thin black foil?
They were demonstrating censorship, but also letting you still see the book.
So you could see from afar, it looks like it's a censored book.
But when you went right up close and you could see it under the light, you could at least make out the name so you could go and buy it.
It's pretty close.
You're definitely right on trying to show censorship, but it's not that you could see it if it was close up necessarily.
It's been years since I've read 1984.
What are the things in there?
What do you think would happen to foil, I guess?
It crinkles and sort of gets creased, maybe, if it's over the letters.
You've got that kind of black mirror effect of the telescreens in 1984.
Maybe it's trying to show that, but it wouldn't be like thin rectangles.
I should say that the rectangle is not like little thin pieces singularly making up.
It's just one block for the author's name one block for the the title
can you peel them off over time basically as you use it it would start to show the name of the book
wait it's like one of those scratch off things yeah oh oh that kind of foil yes one of the major
themes in 1984 from george roger ball was censorship so the black rectangles looked
like they were basically block censoring or redacting the cover.
And because the title was pressed into the paper,
the thin black foil wears away over time
and the title and the author's name is revealed.
Oh, I like that.
That's pretty neat.
I wondered though,
if you go to a bookstore though,
and you know,
I usually will open a book and look at it.
Just if it doesn't get sold
as people just like start wearing it away
in the bookstore.
Get one from the back. That's the secret.
One last order of business then. At the very start of the show, I asked the audience,
why is Second Street the most common street name in the US?
Does anyone want to take a shot at that before I give the answer?
I'm just thinking something has happened to First Street because that's usually where we would start. Well, we took all of our names from Britain and everything was First
Street at the time. So we went with Second Street. Our most common is, I think, High Street.
Yeah, apparently. Which is not usually a name you get in the US.
Lots of towns have Second Street, Third Street, Fourth Street, but sometimes they've got First
Street, but sometimes they've got Main Street. So they split the top spot and then second street rises up the list.
You've just run through not just my answer, but all the notes I have on it. That is exactly right.
There are more second streets than there are first streets because some of those first streets are
actually main streets. With that, thank you very much to all our players. Let's find out
what's going on with what you're making.
Where can people find you?
We will start with Toby.
All right, thank you.
I can be found on my YouTube channel and also on TikTok under the username Tibbies,
which is spelled T-I-B-E-E-S, making math and science videos.
Matthew.
You can find Overdurentals on every single one of your favourite podcasting streaming sites.
Come listen to us talk to our celebrity guests about movies that just don't seem to get talked about anymore.
And Julian.
My name is Julian O'Shea and I talk about design and cities and urbanism on all of those social networks.
And if you want to know more about this show or send in your own idea for a question, you can do that at lateralcast.com. We are at Lateral Cast basically everywhere and there are video highlights every week at youtube.com
slash lateralcast. Thank you very much to Julian O'Shea. Cheers. Matthew Shugman. Thank you very
much. And Toby Hendy. See you next time. I've been Tom Scott and that's been Lateral.