Lateral with Tom Scott - 58: Straight-line sports

Episode Date: November 17, 2023

Bernadette Banner, Emily Graslie and Dani Siller face questions about jogging jobs, textual T-shirts and dangerous dogs. LATERAL is a comedy panel game podcast about weird questions with wonderful ans...wers, 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: Katie Waning, Andrew Esteban, Bernardo Fajardo. 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 When British people stand, but Americans run, what are they trying to be? The answer to that at the end of the show. My name's Tom Scott, and this is Lateral. Welcome to the podcast, where we take sideways thinking so seriously that we've turned this studio into a rhombus. First to get into shape today, we start with science communicator and the person behind the Brain Scoop, Emily Grassley. How are you doing? Hi, I'm fantastic. How are you?
Starting point is 00:00:31 I'm great. And that was a really enthusiastic hello and introduction. Thank you. That's just how I'm feeling today. I'm ready. I'm primed. Let's go. And also joining us, one half of Escape This podcast and one of our regulars, Dani Silla. Hello, hello. You've already broken my brain with that intro question. So thanks for that. See, that came through to me, the script did. And then I realized that actually this studio is just a completely irregular quadrilateral. None of the walls here are at 90 degree angles to each other at all.
Starting point is 00:01:04 And you just, if you're watching on one of the video highlights, you just see the background. It looks, everything is slightly askew, which does feel right for this show. Our last person today joining us for the first time, Bernadette Banner, dress historian, historical fashion YouTuber. I don't know quite how to describe you. Hi, I'm not quite sure how to describe me either, so we are off on perfect footing. The last time I saw your channel, you were working out on the impossible task of costuming time travel and how Doctor Who works on, or doesn't work, with fashion. Oh yeah, it was great fun. I always, I come from a background of costume design for theatre, so sort of melding the realities of having to costume fiction with the history of dress as we know it is
Starting point is 00:01:52 endlessly amusing to me. Well, good luck to all three of you. As always, I've got a number of lateral hurdles for you to jump over, so strap on your mental roller skates and let's hope no one does the splits. We start with this. Early one morning, Steve puts on a grey t-shirt. Although it looks plain, it contains the hidden message, you can go home now, in large letters on the front. Why? I'll say that one more time. Early one morning, Steve puts on a grey t-shirt.
Starting point is 00:02:20 Although it looks plain, it contains the hidden message, you can go home now, in large letters on the front. Why? I think I know the answer to this one, so I'm not going to say anything. Okay, if you think you know it, step back. This one is for Bernadette and Dan. Oh gosh, this is not my period of study. It's clothing! Have you heard of hidden messages clothing in your field of study? Well, yes, you could embroider things into linings and seams and things, but I've not quite heard of that being done on a t-shirt. First thing that came to my mind when I pictured gray clothing with secret messages,
Starting point is 00:02:56 as always in my life, I went straight to a Simpsons episode where they're wearing, they've been forced to wear gray school uniforms, but then when the rain hits, all of the gray runs and they become super colorful and it heals their broken spirits. But I wouldn't call that a secret hidden message exactly. I mean, it's secret. It's, you know, maybe it's an affirmation that those kids didn't know they needed.
Starting point is 00:03:24 And then in a time of anxiety, they're like, oh, well, there we go. That was a surprise to me, too. I mean, you know what? It's better than anything that ever happened to me in school when my very white school uniform shirt got wet. I'm just remembering those kind of global hypercolor T-shirts from the 90s, which were kind of. I can't remember what they actually reacted to. I just remember one person having them, and then everyone suddenly wanting to kind of touch
Starting point is 00:03:50 and move the T-shirt around, so it changed color. It was like solar activated, right? Solar? Yeah. So I had one of these when I was a kid, a child of the 90s. I think mine, I had a couple. One had dolphins on it that I got in Florida.
Starting point is 00:04:04 The other one was from NASA. And it was one of those things where they are plain. And then you walk into the sun and something about like solar activation changes the color of it. I think it might be kind of similar to like mood rings. That's exactly what you were making me think of. A whole body mood ring this reminds me of that dress from 2015 that no one could decide on the color of oh no is this the place to rehash that argument i don't know we probably haven't thought about
Starting point is 00:04:37 that in a few years global hyper color was um i think that was a brand name i seem to remember that was the brand name i don't know why I'm being so specific about it. But yeah, it reacts to either heat or sunlight. But basically that was because it was heat. It was just reacting to which bits of it were hot and cold. So I used to work at the Field Museum of Natural History, and they always were trying to figure out, like, you know, if you get a visitor badge, they want to prevent
Starting point is 00:05:06 you from being able to like leave the museum and come back and leave and come back. So they actually had name tags that were also solar activated that had your name on it. And if you left the museum, the name tag would turn purple so that you couldn't come back in. Oh, that's crafty. Right. And like that was And that was some interesting technology. I assume they'd make it responsive to the sun or something like that, so it'd just age over 24 hours? Or maybe it was inside a sealed case, it'd react to oxygen,
Starting point is 00:05:38 and you ripped it open to give it to a visitor. But I think just putting it on thermal papers is probably a cheaper way of doing it. Yeah, I think that's what it was. And then they stopped doing it. I guess they decided like that wasn't. So then they just went back to plain name tags. Maybe they were just cheaper or maybe they didn't really care if visitors were like coming
Starting point is 00:05:56 in and out of the museum. They realized it was better for them to look really busy, even if the people weren't paying quite as much. There you go. Well, I know a lot of the national museums in Britain are free by law. I think if something is a national museum in the UK, it has to be free to enter. So they just want to make sure they count every person that goes in there. They'll hustle you for donations. There's lots of upcharge and things like that. But there's always someone on the door who wants to make sure that they count every single person going in that building so they can then get the stipend they get from the government for them. Yeah. None of this has any relation to t-shirts, but you did sort of get quite close quite early there. Interesting.
Starting point is 00:06:46 So it got really hot and really cold and the clothes may have changed or some other external condition made the clothes reveal something that they don't always reveal, do we reckon? External to the clothing, certainly. That's an odd specification. It's very odd, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:07:03 I was really specific with that. Does this have anything to do with uniforms? Oh, no. Of the things to pick up about Dani's horrifying story about her childhood, uniform was not the right word in that sentence, but somewhere else was. All right. What did I go with? Simpsons. Probably wasn't specifically about that. Rain. Does that feel like a likely one, do we think? You're getting closer there, but the message is you can go home now. Who do we think this is addressed at? I can't even remember if the question specified. I don't think so. I think it was just a person leaving with a grey shirt. And at some point that's going to start showing
Starting point is 00:07:45 that message. What does the early morning have to do with it? Might be a bit of a routine here. Emily's just got this look of glee on her face. You might get to give the answer here because we've got all the pieces. It is something to do with the t-shirt changing and getting damp. And it is a routine that you might have a grey shirt on for in the morning. Going to the gym, exercising. Yes. Spot on, Bernadette. So what's the full story here? Did he sweat?
Starting point is 00:08:16 Yeah, you put on your grey shirt, you get on your treadmill or whatever your favourite thing is, until you have sweated so hard your shirt changes. And that's your permission to leave that is exactly the shirt reveals you can go home now when it is soaked through presumably with the gym goers sweat oh wow that was a leap i saw a picture of that on my social media feed and i just thought it was absolutely brilliant because like that would motivate me. I'd be like running and be like, oh gosh, dang it. I guess I'll run faster. Each of our guests has brought a question with them. As ever, I don't know the question and
Starting point is 00:08:58 I definitely don't know the answer. And we're going to start today with Emily. What have you got for us? This question has been sent in by Katie Wanning. Okay. After the successful reintroduction of puffins to remote islands in Maine, some of the birds started to behave like flamingos. Why? All right. After the successful reintroduction of puffins to remote islands in Maine, some of the birds started to behave like flamingos. Why? And I just have to say the picture that they sent along with this is so adorable. It just like made my heart like, oh gosh, I love puffins so much. They're puffins. Of course, they always look adorable. It's impossible not to. They're one of those birds that you don't think is actually real.
Starting point is 00:09:43 Really? How could they be? It's like a toucan. I don't think is actually real really how could they be it's like a two right i don't really believe in toucans they're too cartoony having seen toucans they act cartoony too but they're like oddly vicious so i was in costa rica and they have at one of these like eco lodges a platform platform with bananas on it. And they throw bananas on it every morning. And you have all different kinds of tropical birds coming to it. And they have our caries, which are like two cans, but they're a little bit smaller.
Starting point is 00:10:13 And the two cans are huge. Like, you don't understand. These are like Turkey sized animals. And I guess you're all in the UK. So I don't know if you know the size of an American Turkey, but you know, it's about American turkey. But, you know, it's about this. It's a big old bird.
Starting point is 00:10:29 It's like this. But the toucans would come down from the canopy and I saw one pick up an aracari in its bill and throw it and be like, get out of here! It was wild. It's like, this is not
Starting point is 00:10:44 the Froot Loops mascot of my childhood. Every once in a while, I feel like you're reminded just how strange and sort of like dinosauric the whole species of bird is. I know there's a place in New Zealand with birds called Kia. There's a place in New Zealand with birds called Kia. And I was not able to film the Kia gymnasium because the problem was that the Kia were getting bored and just kind of stealing things off cars and just destroying cars.
Starting point is 00:11:19 And then they built a gymnasium for the Kia. And the Kia then got bored of it after a while, went back to tearing things off cars, so the gymnasium had to be taken down. So I was like, oh, I'll go and film the Kia gym. No, the Kia have got bored of it. Oh, no. Are these those, like, parrots?
Starting point is 00:11:36 I think the parrots are kaka. I think the Kia... There's a lot of weird birds there. Anyway, what were the weird birds we were meant to be focusing on again? Oh yeah, toucans. No, puffins. Puffins behaving like flamingos. Puffins. Yes. Right. Okay. What do we know about flamingos? What do flamingos do? Are there flamingos in Maine? Is that a place where flamingos normally hang out? No, not at all. But where did they come from? Did they come from
Starting point is 00:12:02 a zoo or? Oh, were they, that's a good point. Were they introduced or did some puffins just end up there? After the successful reintroduction of puffins to remote islands in Maine. Some of the birds. They just had a holiday in Florida or something. Or were hunted to extinction, possibly. I hear we do that to some animals. Don't get me started. So it's a reintroduction project. The puffins come back in.
Starting point is 00:12:28 And OK, so the obvious thing about flamingos is that they're standing on one leg. Yes. But I feel like there's a lot of other things about flamingos. And what would cause completely different birds who had not seen flamingos to start doing that, except that half of the ground was really sharp or hot which seems unlikely so i know some waterfowl like ducks and geese will stand on one leg for like heat regulation just because the water's very cold and they can just tuck a foot into their body and keep that warm but i feel like puffins are kind of built for that
Starting point is 00:13:05 temperature. That doesn't seem like a thing that would cause them to do that just because they've been reintroduced to Maine. Yeah. You've got the action of the puffin doing. That's a critical part of it, is the behavior. But the behavior is not motivated by the behavior that is why flamingos do it. Honestly, I'm that is why flamingos do it. Honestly, I'm not sure why flamingos do it either. No, is that a regulation thing? A temperature regulation? I hadn't thought about it.
Starting point is 00:13:34 Yeah, it is. So there is an environmental impetus for flamingos to do it. It's a little bit, I'll redirect it a little bit more and try to think of bird reintroduction efforts. Like what are some of the techniques that researchers would use to try and introduce? Oh, oh, hang on. Are they, are they wringing the bird's legs? So you have the behavior. the bird's legs. So you have the behavior. It's, so it's the tucking of the leg is important, but it's not, it doesn't have to do with banding
Starting point is 00:14:10 and it doesn't really have to do with the environment, but it does have to do with some of the other techniques that researchers would use to reintroduce animals. I thought you were going to say it does have something to do with Maine. It's just the state of Maine. It's just, it's just a legal requirement in that part of the US that birds have to stand on one leg,
Starting point is 00:14:29 and it's just enforced. There you go. You got it. Hit it. Balls out, Tom. They just really like hopscotch up there. It's one of those ancient laws that survived from the American equivalent of the medieval times
Starting point is 00:14:41 where you can't carry ice cream in your back pocket, but you have to stand on one leg in the summer or something yeah it's fine you're allowed to shoot a scottish puffin from within the boundaries of york with a crossbow that's that's how it works yeah it's like you guys were like the lateral thing and then the graph of this just went we're just sharing with you everything we know about America right now. I love it. I love it. And I'm apparently sharing everything I know about waterfowl,
Starting point is 00:15:11 which isn't much and not relevant to puffins. But it is, though. But it is. The behavior is critical. Yeah, what else do researchers do? When they handle the puffins, do they pick them up by a leg or something? Oh! And it just hops off to where it's not that it's it's if you if you think about puffins like they are adorable, they're just pure.
Starting point is 00:15:36 Just think of them as being so pure and sweet and they don't know what they're doing. They've never really been a puffin before. They've never seen other puffins act. They're just trying to figure out who they are. Wait, are they just picking it up from another bird? There's another bird out there that stands on one leg. And they're like, all right, that is a bird. I am a bird.
Starting point is 00:15:58 And thus, I will stand on one leg. Yes, but you are so close. What bird in Maine will stand on one leg a lot i thought for a second i went oh i do know one other bird that notably stands on one leg and then i realized i was thinking of lawn flamingos yeah you actually got really close with that no lawn flamingos i don't believe you you're yeah yeah you just Yeah, you just got to run with it. Oh, my God. Oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:16:28 They have lawn flamingos in their lawns. So they're not lawn flamingos, but they are decoys. They're not like hunting decoys, are they? They are. The only reason I know this is because years and years and years ago, I met someone who was volunteering with a charity called Ducks Unlimited in the US, which from my naive view was, oh, they're protecting wetlands and wildfowl. Yes. So they've got hunting grounds that they can shoot the ducks.
Starting point is 00:16:57 And some of the decoys, they're just like a duck on a stick, right? They're just like a duck on a stick, right? Yeah, yeah. So that's what exactly the researchers were like. How could we encourage other puffins to resettle here? So they made decoys, but that were puffins. Puffin decoys. But the puffin decoys, the way they were mounted was by a single stick in the ground.
Starting point is 00:17:23 And so when the puffins started coming back, they're like, do we stand on one leg too? Oh, poor little sweet butts. They were just trying to be like the decoys. And there's a whole fashion trend started for puffins. I wonder if they'll ever meet other populations of puffins and start spreading that behaviour. I don't know. And it's like one of those things after there are a number of generations and they have to, you know, they'll eventually phase out the decoys, I imagine. Like,
Starting point is 00:17:55 will that just be a trend that continues? And none of the puffins know why. Next one's from me. Good luck, everyone. Niren hits the same ball in roughly the same direction for about two hours. He then hits the same ball in the opposite direction for a further two hours. When a red light is lit, he doesn't hit the ball. What's going on? One more time. Niren hits the same ball in roughly the same direction for about two hours. He then hits the same ball in the opposite direction for a further two hours. When a red light is lit, he doesn't hit the ball. What's going on?
Starting point is 00:18:29 So what are we thinking? Strange sport or strange science experiment? This makes me think of like a stop-go kind of game a little bit, where it's like red light, green light. Do you switch in tennis? You hit it one way and then you switch to the other side and you're hitting it the other way. But is there a red light that green light? Do you switch in tennis? You hit it one way and then you switch to the other side and you're hitting it the other way. But is there a red light that tells you to switch? Yeah, two hours would be a while. I don't sport. I'm like, I knew way more about the puff and stuff.
Starting point is 00:19:00 Sport ball, kick. I mean, I'm thinking that's a lot. That's four hours of kicking a ball. I would have just gone home. I would have been like, I don't know why I'm doing this. I feel compelled. Of all sports to last four hours,
Starting point is 00:19:13 tennis was a good pick. Oh, what's another one? Oh, like cricket. Like one that just goes on forever. But they're kicking the ball. Was that part of the... Hitting the ball. Hitting. It wasn't kicking. It the ball. Was that part of the... Hitting the ball. Hitting.
Starting point is 00:19:26 It wasn't kicking. It was hitting. I'm kind of crossing my fingers and hoping it's not sport and that we should try to think of some other weird situation where ball hitting makes sense. Right up at the top of my question sheet, it's just got category sport. Okay.
Starting point is 00:19:42 Good luck. Back to the sport ball. It okay we got this it kind of makes me think of again back to the bird stuff with me i just can't quit it um so like corvids like crows are super super smart and um there are a few of them researchers realize that they got really smart they can't open these really hard nuts themselves. And so what they would do is drop the nuts they wanted to eat in like a crossing section and wait for the cars to drive over them and open them. And then when the cars stopped, they would wait for the red light
Starting point is 00:20:18 and then they would hop in the intersection and pick up the nuts. And then they knew to fly away when the light turned green. So is our main character human i try not to give too many hints early on these questions but i will confirm that nirin our main character is human yes dang although you're absolutely right about the crows i have a friend who during the pandemic it wasn't so much that they trained a flock of crows it's like the crows trained them. So after a while, they were just feeding the crows so regularly that they would leave their house
Starting point is 00:20:50 and a flock would arrive and descend to be fed. And they have so many good pictures of crows off that. But in this case, Niren is human. Dang. But we're looking for a sport that normally takes about four or five hours to play. I have never looked into a sport that would take longer
Starting point is 00:21:08 than an hour to do. Golf? Yep. Spot on. Wow, well done. That would not have occurred to me. Is it a sport? Is it a game?
Starting point is 00:21:17 I don't know and I'm not getting into that argument. This question's filed on the sport. Is he... Wait, is it... Wait. Is he golfing across a road and there's a stoplight and he has
Starting point is 00:21:26 to well i guess he would be going when it's red that is close it's very close no all right what is there something like more extreme than a road like he was golfing over the panama canal and when a red light happened that was because a boat was going past. Or like one of those fog sirens. That's how canals work, right? Or if there's lightning or something. Oh, golfing in the fog. That's a challenge and a half.
Starting point is 00:21:59 You've got most of the points here. Why would it be in one direction for two hours and then back for two hours? That's not how golf courses are normally designed. Unless you're really bad at it. Or if it's like, what if it's a tournament, like a golf tournament and you go in one direction and then you turn around and it's like a different, maybe they just didn't have a very big golf course. And they were like, we got to switch this up somehow. So go back the opposite way. It's certainly a very limited design of golf course. Kind of snuck into quite a limited area.
Starting point is 00:22:33 Is it mini golf? Oh, no, it's regular golf. Mini golf doesn't take five hours. You haven't played mini golf with me, Tom. Okay. Yeah, I realized the minute I said that. You were close with road. Not that close, but close enough.
Starting point is 00:22:51 Why might there be a big red light that says, don't hit a golf ball right now? They're planes. It's planes. Oh my God, it's near an airfield and they can't hit the... Why? This is the Kantara Golf Course in Bangkok, Thailand, and it is between two runways.
Starting point is 00:23:12 Oh my God. Oh, wild. Which came first? Someone made a bad decision. The Air Force Base came first in 1914. Golf Course came in 1952, and it was Bangkok's main airport until 2006. And there is a golf course in between the two runways. So why does that red light go on? Because of the planes. Yeah, they're like, don't throw, don't hit a ball.
Starting point is 00:23:37 I feel like you wouldn't want to be anywhere near a plane taking off. I mean, there's that as well. Like, do they have time to like get inside or like get away from the wind? I mean, have you seen some of those terrifying tourism videos of the island airports where the planes go two meters over people's heads? No, people just look on as planes land beside them. It is two hours one way and two hours the other because the golf course is the length of the runway out and then back. Oh, that's fun. That sounds fun. I don't even like golf, but that kind of sounds fun. I mean, just watching the planes for me. It's a good plane watching trip spoiled
Starting point is 00:24:21 by needing to hit a ball. Bernadette, the next question is from you. Take it away. This question is sent in by Andrew Esteban. Matilda goes to an Australian bank with some current Australian banknotes. The cashier says, quote, the three notes you gave me are worth a total of 19 Australian dollars, unquote. Matilda walks out with $19 contentedly. How is this possible? Once again, Matilda goes to an Australian bank with some current Australian bank notes. The cashier says,
Starting point is 00:24:55 the three notes you gave me are worth a total of $19 Australian dollars. Matilda walks out with $19 contentedly. How is this possible? We have one Australian on this call. Dani, do you know this one off the top of your head? Off the top of my head, absolutely not. I can throw out as many fun facts as we like and see which one of them turns out to somehow be relevant, though.
Starting point is 00:25:20 The one thing, like, we, I'm sure there are some people that probably don't know like much about which bank notes we do have as our normal ones. So probably worth mentioning. Our lowest current common note is the $5 and then just five and then 10 and then straight to 20. I assume nothing higher than that is going to be relevant here. Five,
Starting point is 00:25:44 10 and 20. So you don't have like singles? No, no, those are all coins. That said, I know that we also have some weird stuff where we have a fair few out of circulation currencies that technically can be accepted. They still count. They were never made illegitimate currency. Illegitimate? They were never
Starting point is 00:26:06 delegitimized as currency. I don't know if that plays into it. Doesn't the Perth Mint have something like a million dollar coin or something like that? They cast just as a thing to show off. And it's actually worth far more than that in gold. And they just decided, oh yeah, that's a million dollar coin. That's our museum exhibit. more than that in gold and they just decided oh yeah that's that's a million dollar coin that's our museum exhibit um if you tell me a story about perth i just have to say yeah probably like you know when people say oh that thing that's true about australia and everyone else in america has to go yeah that could be true that's me with perth right okay so the number thing confuses me. My first thought was, does this person have like a sight impairment where they themselves can't see the banknote? So they need like additional confirmation about what it is.
Starting point is 00:26:55 Most banknotes that aren't American have some fairly significant differences between each of them. But the British ones have different colors and sizes and big, bold shapes on them as well, just so you can be sure even if you're visually impaired. Yeah, that goes here as well. Go figure, America lagging behind accommodation for people who might need it. Anyway, don't get me started. I'm trying to see if I can approach this as like one of those puzzles with like the five gallon jug and the three gallon jug and you have to make four gallons.
Starting point is 00:27:26 But I don't know if that works with banknotes. Yeah, I can't see how this works with that trick that kids think that they have where if you cut the banknote in half and then give it to the bank, they have to give you a clean one in return. Is that a thing? It's absolutely not quite a thing. But boy, do kids love to think that it is. You have to have the serial number, right? To get a replacement for a think that it is. You have to have the serial number, right? To get a replacement for a broken note, I think you have to have the serial number. You are kind of getting close with that.
Starting point is 00:27:51 That's interesting. Man, I was clearly way off. I was then going along the lines of, I don't know, there's just one particular $10 note out there that has a defect on it that makes it worth $14. there that has a defect on it that makes it worth $14. Australia decimalised at about the same time as the UK did, I think. They took a different approach to it, but they used to have pounds, shillings and pence, same as we did. Yep. We had a handy jingle. So even I know exactly when that happened on the 14th of February, 1966. Okay. What's the jingle? It was to the tune of Click Go The Shears,
Starting point is 00:28:29 if that's a familiar one. Out go the shillings, out go the pence, in come the dollars and in come the cents. I love how you're like, it goes to the shearing as though we have a sheep economy
Starting point is 00:28:42 in the States. Okay, 5, 10, we've a sheep economy in the States. Okay, five, five, ten. We've got five, ten and twenty. We've got three notes and we need to make nineteen. And it's something, it's current money, right? You said that? Current, yeah. The current banknotes.
Starting point is 00:28:59 No coins, checks or other items of value are exchanged. Just the three banknotes. checks or other items of value or exchange just the three banknotes but somehow our discussion of possibly cutting things was a hint relevant yes was i wrong in my earlier assumption that we didn't need to know about higher banknotes some higher banknotes are involved like how it's involved like what did they have to do with the crime? Okay, so it's part of a... I'm trying not to give too much away. Yes, higher banknotes could be applied to the same situation that Matilda is encountering.
Starting point is 00:29:35 But it would still equal 19? So she's walked in with three banknotes, and we don't know that that was $19, because it doesn't say that. It just says three banknotes, they're worth $19, she leaves with $19 because it doesn't say that. It just says three banknotes. They're worth $19. She leaves with $19. So,
Starting point is 00:29:49 what? Are they damaged? Are they broken? Is she swapping a damaged banknote for new ones? Yes. Oh.
Starting point is 00:30:01 Then why wouldn't it have been like normal value? Why $19? Right. Yeah, because you... I don't think they barter. No, because at least the Bank of England, if you send in damaged notes,
Starting point is 00:30:13 they will check the serial numbers. And as long as you're not trying to double claim a note, they should exchange it. But what? So there is a special rule in force in Australia that pertains to this issue. What? Does anybody know?
Starting point is 00:30:29 No, I'm trying to do maths with like five tens and twenties here. Like, do you get less for damaged notes? Like there's a fee for changing them or something like that. Oh, I didn't consider that the banks might be fee stingy. That's interesting. consider that the banks might be fee stingy. That's interesting. Yeah, I feel like the idea of exchange rates or something sounded good. If there's some $1 bank fee in that way, I wouldn't have, no, I have not, I do not know about it. This rule allows for unusual amounts to occur. Wait, if you walk in with like nine tenths of a note because you've lost a tenth of it,
Starting point is 00:31:09 do they only give you nine tenths of the face value when you replace it? Yeah. If you have half a note, they'll only give you half the value. Can you cut Australian banknotes into fractions and then trade them for like other fractions of banknotes? Really? Yes. Wait, were we the origin of this of banknotes. Really? Yes. Wait, were we the origin of this cutting banknotes in half rule? Like rumor is children and it's only half a rumor?
Starting point is 00:31:33 The Reserve Bank of Australia allows for torn banknotes to be exchanged if they are between 20 and 80% intact. The value of the note is proportional to the amount still present rounded up to the nearest dollar. So to achieve $19, she had half of a $20 note, 80% of a $10 note. Did you say rounded up? Yeah, rounded up to the nearest dollar. That's funny.
Starting point is 00:31:58 She's got half of a $20 note, 80% of a $10 note, and 20% of a $5 note. So that's 10 plus 8 plus 1 equals 19. Three notes. Okay, I'm going to get a $20 note, cut it into thirds, which is 33%, which will get rounded up to $8 each.
Starting point is 00:32:18 And, okay, no, they'll come down on me for that, but what a ridiculous rule! That's amazing. That's so silly. I haven't tried to scam the bank enough. Andrew, who submitted this idea, adds, he quotes, I've successfully used a torn $10 banknote at a store in place of a $5 one.
Starting point is 00:32:42 Next one's for me then. A library containing 30,000 documents is consumed by fire. Staff looking after the library beg people not to extinguish the flames. This not only saves the documents, but leaves them in better condition than before. How? And one more time. A library containing 30,000 documents is consumed by fire. Staff looking after the building beg people not to extinguish the flames.
Starting point is 00:33:07 This not only saves the documents, but leaves them in better condition than before. How? Insurance? You know, like, thinking about my time working, like, in museums and archives, part of me is like, I cannot imagine, like, the library staff
Starting point is 00:33:24 not wanting to run into flames and, and like grab documents unless they were digital. Like that's it doesn't say if they're physical documents. And fire is notoriously good for computers. Yeah. My mind immediately went to the cotton library fire where they're like throwing books out the window. Like, why would you not want to save them yeah yeah the fact that it was not only okay it left them in better condition right this is quite something it's like there's people who fake their own death to claim life insurance is there some sort of like weird insurance thing where they can buy better
Starting point is 00:34:02 materials because the library is failing or it's underfunded or i mean another thing too is like you don't want to extinguish flames like the water damage from a fire actually can be worse than smoke damage for those kind of documents so like there's probably like don't black don't use fire suppression stuff because it will ruin the material but that still doesn't it doesn't make it better right is it just like a really small fire in a different part of the building and the library is fine but if you try and extinguish the fire then you set off the sprinkler system and then you damage the books no but then they wouldn't be in better condition. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:34:45 That would make perfect sense, except for that weird detail, which sounds like the books are made of one of those trees that needs fire in order to get fertilized. It does say documents. It does say documents, doesn't it? Yeah. Okay, what is something that documents could be made of that can be improved by fire?
Starting point is 00:35:09 I don't know. Is it documents in, like, your library folder on your computer? Or is it documents that potentially have information about, like, controversial origins of the material, and then if the evidence is just gone, it's like, well, we've got a clean slate now. Danny's a lot closer there. Danny's a lot closer.
Starting point is 00:35:29 You're right. You're looking for a material here that the documents would be made of that would be improved by fire. And you really wouldn't want to get water on right now while it's burning. Are we back to heat sensitive ink? Ah, they're made of hypercolor.
Starting point is 00:35:49 Do you have to sweat on them? They're heat sensitive. So by exposing them to heat, you can expose the ink and therefore make them readable and improve the document. But why would you have an invisible ink? Heat sensitive? Heat exposed? We have these pens in sewing
Starting point is 00:36:11 where you can mark on your fabric and then as soon as you iron them, they disappear. That's so cool. But they are still there. So if you freeze them, they come back. That's even cooler. But why would you have a library out of that?
Starting point is 00:36:24 Why would you be freezing? Why would you be freezing? Why would you be freezing? There have been a couple of costume departments for like films and shows who have used this marking pen to mark out seam lines and things. And, you know, they go away with the iron and then the costumes stay overnight
Starting point is 00:36:35 in a very cold trailer and all these markings come back. They have to iron them all again to get them all to go away. Oh, do you watch movies and you're like looking for those? I can't watch a movie normally anymore. You were more right with the historical track you were on there.
Starting point is 00:36:53 All right. All right. OK. Were the documents like covered in some kind of mold or something that burned away with the fire? Or was there a bunch of like arsenic? The question very carefully says documents, not papers. How old are we talking? Are these like stone tablet level old? Ah, now that's a very good question.
Starting point is 00:37:17 Oh my God, it's a kiln. They're clay tablets in a kiln. They're not deliberately in a kiln, but you're right. They're not deliberately in a kiln, but you're right. These are clay tablets from Mesopotamia in the library of Ashurbanipal in 612 BC. So the last part of this is why are they telling people don't extinguish the flames? Could getting water on them melt it all away and disintegrate stuff? Explode, yes. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 00:37:45 If you suddenly cool the tablets down at speed, they are going to explode. Oh. But yes, these are clay tablets from Mesopotamia that were just being baked a second time and were in better condition because they'd been fired again and were even more solid than before. Cool. Cool.
Starting point is 00:38:08 Wow. I didn't know. That makes me so happy as like a kind of a museum person. Like the one time a library caught fire and everything was okay. Last guest question of the show then is from Danny. Whenever you're ready. All right. This one's been sent in by Bernardo Fajardo.
Starting point is 00:38:27 Thank you so much. We started with animals. Let's get back to animals. In 1908, the New York Times reported that a Newfoundland dog had begun to push children into the River Seine in Paris on an almost daily basis. Why did the dog do this? And I'll read it one more time.
Starting point is 00:38:46 In 1908, the New York Times reported that a Newfoundland dog had begun to push children into the River Seine in Paris on an almost daily basis. Why did the dog do this? I'm stepping back from this one. Emily and Bernadette, it's for you. Were the children really dirty? And the dog was like, I can't handle this anymore you kids need a
Starting point is 00:39:06 bath and just was like it was 1908 i'm gonna go with probably yeah yeah is this part of the dog's breed instinct i don't know what do you know about them any do you know anything in particular about newfoundlands was it practicing rescue missions oh was it like trying to because new finlands aren't they the dogs that they send out for like helping avalanche victims and stuff like wasn't it wasn't maybe just trying to create like practice crisis scenarios that it then like it's like i'm a working dog i need to work you know you're definitely in the sort of right ballpark yeah like you're getting sort of warmer but uh that's that's a bit harsh it was pushing children in is this a sort of dog that herds sheep does it have something to do with trying to herd children by pushing them into the river. I would probably have said that the rescue instinct was probably
Starting point is 00:40:10 maybe slightly more relevant than a herding instinct, but there was possibly another instinct even more at play. Was the river frozen at this time? No, no, it was definitely a risk to the children. It was definitely water. Are these children on fire? The dog in this story couldn't get smarter. That's amazing.
Starting point is 00:40:40 And there were clay tablets involved in everything. Yeah. And the currency was ripped in half. Were the children covered in fleas? And the dog is like, because there's a plague at the time. I would say the vast majority of these children were perfectly healthy, perfectly innocent.
Starting point is 00:41:01 They didn't deserve this. Okay. A few of them, on the other hand, absolutely did. Just, just really. You can't deserve this. Okay. A few of them on the other hand absolutely did. Just really. You can't make any guarantees. Except for Nigel. Wow, I picked the least French name possible there, didn't I? I really did pick the least French name possible.
Starting point is 00:41:16 Pierre. The only reason I know this is because, and this won't be a helpful clue. A while back I was researching something called the Cobra Effect. And this was a weird example of that. That's not going to help anyone. I just thought I'd throw that in to muddy the waters a bit.
Starting point is 00:41:35 Knowing the answer, I have a faint guess about what that is. In the dog's training, the researchers were showing it pictures of something that it misconstrued as pushing people into the water i'm going back to the puffins now yeah little newfoundlands and little children on sticks exactly i do think it's a good idea to think about the involvement of people in all of these events as they transpired. So yeah, maybe picture this dog's day. Does it have ulterior motives? Is it working on behalf of a pickpocketer and it's targeting these children and stealing their stuff and then pushing them in the river to make a getaway? I was thinking just the opposite. It's a service dog trying to protect its owner from the children
Starting point is 00:42:31 who are trying to pickpocket the owner. This is amazing. And while it's very little to do with the owner and it's not that shady of an ulterior motive. Ulterior motive is absolutely a good way to be thinking about this. Do they have food? Oh my God, the dog wants the food. This is interesting. Food is also very relevant to this story, but the children didn't have food. Did the person have food? And the kids were trying to, the person with the dog now now we've got the the criminal with the dog who needs assistance as well this poor person with the dog the the person who owned the dog they they were just uh a local they happened to live near the sen the the dog was just an otherwise friendly neighborhood dog some Some person has food. Yes, very importantly.
Starting point is 00:43:27 So let's, if everything here like went innocently and it was something to do with a rescue mission, picture how this might've gone down. Like, well, how might events have unfolded? Paint me a word picture. We need Bill and some character work here. I know, right? He'd be loving it he'd be
Starting point is 00:43:46 acting as the dog yeah i'm just trying to think of like if if they're if it's like a friendly neighborhood dog if the kids don't have food if it's not acting maliciously if it's not protecting an owner i don't i don't know i suppose maybe a good question would be a child has gone into the sen what happens next somebody has to jump in after it it wants the the the parent of the child to go in to the river after the child so that the dog can steal the food of the parent. There is a slightly less theft-related way of going about this story. You're getting sort of warm. You're very close. Oh, oh, wait.
Starting point is 00:44:37 The dog knows that it will get rewarded for rescuing the children, so it pushes the children into the river, then rescues the child and gets rewarded that is exactly what happened that's hilarious exactly it started out perfectly innocently a poor child drowning in a river this heroic newfoundland leaps in after it they drag the child out everyone is clapping applauding throwing stakes at dog, giving at the time of its life. And it learns. Oh, does it learn?
Starting point is 00:45:10 How many children? How many children did it push into the river? Oh, boy. I would probably say quite a few based on this one where it suggests, look look this probably didn't happen more than once or twice a day so i think it might have gotten away with it for a while not more than once or twice a day like this this dog is like it's taken a nine to five it's like i'm going to work i've got to bring home the bacon literally yeah you know how it is at these big tourist locations. There's always someone pulling a scam. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:45:47 Oh my gosh. On that note, the cobra effect, which is the reason I know this, is the probably apocryphal story that during colonial times in India, the British wanted to reduce the cobra population. So they put a bounty out for every dead cobra. So people started farming cobras. And when the British stopped the bounty, they then just released all the cobras and made the problem worse.
Starting point is 00:46:08 Now, is that true? Almost certainly not. But Newfoundland Dog pushes children into Seine in order to retrieve the treats for rescuing them. It's kind of the same thing. I think it must be a common snake story, because I thought that was true in Florida or Louisiana or something for the burmese pythons there i think they do have a bounty on them down there though because they are like they're huge and they lay so many eggs so many
Starting point is 00:46:37 eggs the population there is just like exploded it's actually if you want to see a lot of the reptiles of the world just go to south Florida, because so many people release their tropical reptiles that you can see chameleons from New Zealand and, you know, from Madagascar and from all over. Snakes from all over. What an experience. So this Newfoundland learned that it was rewarded with steak after each rescue, so it decided to start faking them. Our last order of business then. At the very start of the show, I asked the audience, when British people stand but Americans run, what are they trying to become? Before I give the answer today, I want to have a quick shot of that from the panel. Oh, is it prime minister or president or politician?
Starting point is 00:47:26 Some sort of office? Yep. It's any political thing. British people stand for parliament and Americans run for president. So congratulations, Bernadette. I think you have something close to a clean sweep in this episode. I don't think anyone's ever had so many like bright, light bulb moments that we don't have points.
Starting point is 00:47:46 But if we did, I think you'd have quite a lot of them. Congratulations. Well, there was a lot of help given. Never before a clue. It is, as ever, a team effort for each question, which means that first of all, we will go to Emily Grassley. Tell us what's going on in your life. Where can people find you?
Starting point is 00:48:04 I am kind of across the internet as a science communicator you can find me lately on Instagram I'm egrassley you can also watch related content
Starting point is 00:48:15 on the Brain Scoop channel youtube.com slash the Brain Scoop it's there Bernadette I'm Bernadette Banner on YouTube and Instagram
Starting point is 00:48:23 and everywhere else I don't use social media on. And Danny. Oh, all my podcasts, live streams, all that stuff, you can find at consumethismedia.com. And just for fun, I've recently started learning to roller skate. I did not know that when I read the opening gag to this episode. Thank you very much for that, folks. If you want to know more about this show
Starting point is 00:48:43 or you want to send in an idea for a question, you can do that at lateralcast.com you can find us at lateralcast on pretty much every social network and you can also catch video highlights every week at youtube.com slash lateralcast thank you very much to danny siller thank you to bernadette banner good to be here and to amelie grassley thanks for having me. I've been Tom Scott and that's been Lateral.

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