Lateral with Tom Scott - 8: What Liechtenstein shares with England
Episode Date: December 2, 2022Brady Haran, Mary Spender and Eric Johnson face questions about an unwanted win, a gruesome graveyard and a lucky performance. LATERAL is a comedy panel game podcast about weird questions with wonderf...ul answers, hosted by Tom Scott. For business enquiries, contestant appearances or question submissions, visit https://www.lateralcast.com. HOST: Tom Scott. QUESTION PRODUCER: David Bodycombe. RECORDED AT & EDITED BY: The Podcast Studios, Dublin. EDITOR: Julie Hassett. MUSIC: Karl-Ola Kjellholm ('Private Detective'/'Agrumes', courtesy of epidemicsound.com). ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS: Josh Halbur, Ben Justice, Lewis Tough, Arun Uttamchandani, Eglė Vaškevičiūtė. FORMAT: Pad 26 Limited/Labyrinth Games Ltd. EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS: David Bodycombe and Tom Scott. © Pad 26 Limited (https://www.pad26.com) / Labyrinth Games Ltd. 2022. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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What's the link between a gallon of water and Jane Austen?
The answer to that very British question at the end of the show.
My name's Tom Scott,
and this is Lateral.
Three very smart cookies are joining me today and hoping not to crumble under the weight of
some lateral thinking questions. Joining me today are, from the Follow Friday podcast,
Eric Johnson.
Hey.
Musician, YouTuber, singer-songwriter, Mary Spender.
Hello.
And from just far too many YouTube channels and podcasts to count, Brady Haran.
Thank you for having me.
Thank you very much for joining me.
This is a game where there are no points.
There are no prizes but reputation and bragging rights.
But there are some rather difficult lateral thinking questions.
And we start with this.
What unusual event happens just before England play Lichtenstein at a soccer match?
I'll give you that again.
What unusual event happens just before England play Lichtenstein at a soccer match?
I think I might know this.
I think I might know.
Okay, so we know what happens here.
Yep, I step back.
You step back.
If you want to get that immediately,
if you have paper and pen, write it down.
We'll take your word for it.
No, no, I'll write it down.
You write that one down.
But if I'm wrong, I miss out on all the fun of the game.
Oh, yeah.
I think I need to step back.
If you're wrong, we get to roundly mock you.
Like, this is a gamble you're taking.
I am. Sounds like a win-win to me. Like, this is a gamble you're taking. I am.
We absolutely...
Sounds like a win-win to me.
Well, the other side of the gamble
is I just say it,
and if I'm right,
I ruin it, so...
At this point, Brady,
you are committed,
and it's the only way
you can look...
It's the only way on the show
that you can look vaguely foolish.
Good luck to you.
Eric and Mary,
this one's for you.
What unusually bad happens
just before England
play Lichtenstein at a soccer match?
Mary, I have some very bad news for you, which is I know nothing about soccer.
So you are so screwed.
Well, I know nothing about soccer either.
So can I ask what year it was?
This would happen whenever England play Lichtenstein.
I mean, in the last century, since professional football became a thing.
Okay.
And so it's...
It would happen whenever they played.
It's like a very small country, right?
If I remember right, Snoop Dogg once tried to rent the entirety of Lichtenstein for a music video shoot, which is...
Of course he did.
That sounds right.
Of course.
Well, it's on my list of to-do thing,
you know, to do for the next music video.
Rent a country.
Rent a country.
I don't think he actually managed to.
I think he asked if he could.
Well, I will manage to.
That is my new objective.
Was there something unfortunately embarrassing
with the audience
or it would always happen so they would come to see something
between the spectators?
I mean, if you don't have faith in the behaviour of English fans,
yeah, this would probably end up being quite awkward.
It's happened twice in 2004 as part of the qualifying stages for Euro 2004.
I don't know the colours of Lichtenstein's flag,
but I'm wondering if it has something to do with maybe trading jerseys.
Maybe if they have the same team colours,
then everyone takes off their shirts and trades them or something like that.
Something to do with the colour of what the fans are wearing.
Because it's a fan activity.
Is it something that I will be ashamed of my
country? I don't think you need
particular soccer knowledge for this one.
You need to know vaguely
about what happens at sporting
events, but it's not a specifically soccer
thing, this. So,
drinking,
clothing, singing songs.
I do like the idea of
swapping jerseys and colours,
but in that case they would be wearing a different kit.
There is a rule that you don't have a clashing kit, you have an away kit.
Did it happen between the football teams, the two teams,
or did it happen between the two sets of fans?
It was a part of the event is the best way to describe that.
And it happened twice in 2004.
Just before they played each time.
So some kind of entertainment before they went on the pitch?
I mean, Brady's starting to get a slightly smug expression on his face,
so I think he has nailed it.
Mary's a chance of getting this one, I think.
This is almost your wheelhouse, Mary.
Yeah, it's not...
I wouldn't quite classify it as entertainment,
but certainly there's...
Something to do with the national anthem?
Ah, yes.
What might that be?
Do their national anthems have the same melody, maybe?
So they're playing the same tune twice
because it's an instrumental version?
You are absolutely right.
Brady, let's see what's on your card.
I wrote same anthems.
You are absolutely right.
I love the teamwork between the two of you there as well.
Yes, they both use the same tune.
England has God Save the Queen.
Lichtenstein has All Ben Am Hjongen Rhein,
which is High on the Young Rhine
It's by Snoop Dogg
There we go
Thank you Brady
I read that off my notes
and my brain just couldn't quite complete the joke there
Yet you also have Norway's Royal Anthem
the same tune
and the American patriotic song
My Country Tis of Thee
They are all the same tune There's a hundred composers who've ripped that off We learned My Country Tis of Thee. They are all the same tune. There's
a hundred composers who've ripped that off. We learned My Country Tis of Thee in elementary
school. And at some point, someone told me that it was specifically kind of a little bit of a
middle finger back of the UK after the whole independence affair. That basically the words
were rewritten as a way of claiming what was a very good melody and just making sure no one here knew God Save the Queen.
Well, a virtual high five, Eric.
Yay, teamwork.
I mean, these days they presumably get sued over it.
I assume that musicians' copyright is now,
you're not going to be reusing anyone's melodies.
It depends how old it is, I think.
Copyright laws, I think it's after 70 years
if it's older than 70 years you can
I mean I know it's a complicated
number there
Oh I know you can use the old stuff but I'm guessing
at this point no composer's going to just
take someone's melody and change the lyrics
to it. I think
they literally could depending
on how old the melody is in the first place
I mean Lichtenstein did
If you took an Ed Sheeran song and then tried to, I think he'd come after you
because people have gone after him.
But I don't think you're going to use an Ed Sheeran song.
That was just the really, the really threatening idea of Ed Sheeran just coming after me.
And now please rise for the national anthem, which is The Shape of You.
But if we made an Ed Sheeran song their national anthem,
and that's like the whole country, where is he going to sue them?
Like, what jurisdiction?
The country's not going to, you know, you can't sue us in our country.
Didn't that just happen with the Australian Aboriginal flag?
Really?
The flag of the Aboriginal Australian flag
is copyrighted, or at least it was,
because it's a modern design.
And in a lot of countries,
I think like the US,
simple geometric design,
you can't really copyright it.
Australian law, you absolutely can.
And people slapping it on merchandise,
we hadn't cease and desist.
And I think this year,
the Australian government has actually just bought
the copyright to it,
which is still kind of complicated
because that is not the right people to own it,
according to a lot of folks.
This is a complicated issue that I don't understand
and we'll just step in a minefield on.
But yeah, I don't think you can just steal a pop song
as your national anthem and claim,
no, it's our anthem now.
Only one way
to find out.
I think, although I do like the
idea, because I like the idea of
Ed Sheeran as a copyright claimant going up
against a nuclear power.
I'd back Ed Sheeran.
Yeah.
But yes, the answer is
the same national anthem theme is played
twice, once for England, once for Lichtenstein,
and I just have the horrible feeling that the England fans sing along to both.
We now go to a question from one of our guests.
Mary, kick us off this time.
What question have you got for us?
In 1861, a Frenchman won something and became a soldier.
In 1891, he won it again and became a painter.
What did this famous person win twice?
And he became those things as a result of winning whatever the thing is.
That's a terrible lottery.
He became a soldier.
Is there cause and effect there?
Well, it's a particular concept that he won
So I don't think it led to him
Alright
That's fine
You don't need to give us too many hints
We've got to stumble around in the dark for a while first
Well, I don't want to burst your bubble
But you did just sort of kind of hit it on the head
With one word
There's a lottery
You're kidding you absolutely nailed it i don't know you just won the lottery tom you just
won the lottery i was making a terrible joke that can't possibly okay no we okay so that's that's a
big hint we've got to still figure something out here. Why would winning the lottery make you, or a lottery,
make you become a soldier and then a painter?
Is it like just, maybe in those days, like, you could buy a commission
if you got lots of money.
So he bought a commission into, like, the military.
And then when he won a lot more money, he was like,
oh, I don't need a job anymore.
Now I can just do what I want and I want to paint.
That's true because you could take, you could join you could join the military as a, I don't
know what the French ranks would be, but very low down, or you could pay for a commission
position. That was right, wasn't it?
You could do it in Britain. I don't know if you could do it in France. That's my guess.
Yeah. I mean, the other thing is that it could be a draft. It could be like the US had a...
The US for the Vietnam War had the draft lottery
and it was by birthday, I think, or something like that.
So maybe they were two different lotteries.
Maybe the second lottery he won got him out of the military.
So he got drafted in 1861
and then he won a whole stack of money in 1891.
So he's like, I can get out of the military now and paint.
Well, I also wonder that the idea that he became a painter after winning the second lottery
makes me think that maybe it was some sort of government arts program
where it was like, everyone who wants to get an education in the arts,
you enter into this lottery, and if you win, we will send you to this great art school
that you couldn't get into on your own merits maybe.
I mean that sounds
like a lovely program.
I somehow doubt it but...
I don't know, it's France.
They actually have culture there.
I don't know whether to be insulted by that.
The question was who was he, wasn't it?
Who was he?
I thought you were trying to... Oh, yeah. The question was, who was he? Wasn't it? Who was he? Oh, right.
I thought you were trying to. Oh, OK.
What did this famous person win twice?
So who is the famous person and what did they win twice?
Mary, did he win the same thing or did he win two different things?
It's the concept that he won.
So it is a lottery or a drawing or something like that.
Yeah, but they're not necessarily the same.
I mean, famous French people in the late 19th century is not one of my specialist subjects.
No, no, same.
Well, there's a hint, you know,
he won it again and became a painter.
That helps decide.
Okay.
A French painter.
Oh, God.
Yeah, that's the problem.
That's the problem.
You've got three people with no art knowledge here.
What about the one who's a little person?
Wasn't Degas, was he?
No.
I can't remember his name.
I just don't know the years for all the famous painters.
I don't.
Monet?
No.
Oh, well, yes.
Yes, it was Monet.
How do I keep stumbling this?
You are laterally thinking.
I didn't even know Monet was a soldier.
Yeah.
Well, okay, so the answer, Claude Monet won a lottery twice.
Won a lottery twice, not the lottery.
In 1861, Claude Monet drew an unlucky number in the lottery system
used to determine who would be chosen
for seven years of military service in Algeria
he only served for one year
since he contracted typhoid
in 1862 and his art brought him
out of the army after that
but in 1891
so 30 years later he won
100,000 francs in the French National
Lottery this allowed him to quit his job as a messenger
and become a painter full-time.
Nice.
That's a lovely question.
The lottery, not always evil.
Would you use the word win for being drafted in any way?
I'm not sure you would.
Next question is from me.
Good luck.
Why did many people, including Franz Kafka,
queue up to look at a blank wall?
I'll give you that again.
Why did many people, including Franz Kafka,
queue up to look at a blank wall?
Some kind of trendy art piece?
Yeah, some sort of modern art.
Yeah, that seems, feels too obvious.
Yeah.
Well, that's the aim of my game. Be very curious.
It just worked for me.
I mean, we don't know what colour the wall was.
It's a blank wall, but we don't know if it's necessarily a white wall.
It could be some specific colour.
Maybe it could be like a newly invented pigment.
The darkest black.
Yeah, something like that. An anish kapoor or it could be
i guess i guess like a stone wall could still be blank if it's not painted or adorned otherwise so
it could be something interesting about the type of material used to to build the wall i feel like
there's a double meaning to the blank wall i feel like there's more to this blank wall than we're
then we're yeah too literally the blank wall oh is the blank wall. I feel like there's more to this blank wall than we're taking it too literally,
the blank wall. Is the blank wall then screened
upon by a film? No, it is
very literally a blank wall.
Right.
There's
how do I phrase this? I'll just
leave you with that. No, it is very literally
a blank wall. Is it a wall
of some import?
Hmm.
That's an... I can't answer that without giving away more.
Okay.
Do you think it's the Berlin Wall?
Is that a blank wall?
I'm not sure Franz Kafka lines up with the dates for the Berlin Wall.
Oh, no, yeah.
Franz Kafka, yeah.
Franz Kafka himself is not relevant to the question.
That's just trying to give you a vague kind of area and time.
Lined up just there.
Oh, oh, wait.
Great War with China?
Mine's quite sinister.
My answer's quite sinister.
Is it a sinister answer?
I mean, Franz Kafka is quite sinister, but...
Yes.
Did people line up?
Oh, no.
I know where you're going with that.
Okay, thank God.
No.
But yeah, something bad had happened.
Not that bad, but something bad had happened.
It's not like me being a child and being told to stand up against a wall
because I'd been naughty.
With my face against the wall.
I was on timeout or something.
Franz Kafka stole his mother's cookies and he was facing the blank wall.
That is a very, very modern art experience that you just line up and you just stare at that wall for five minutes.
Honestly, you could probably charge admission to that in Shoreditch.
I know, I think I will.
Think about what you've done.
Did the wall stay blank?
For a little while, yes.
For about a year.
This was 1911, 1912. For over a year, that wall stayed blank.
It didn't used to be, and it wasn't afterwards, but for more than a year it was blank.
Huh. How long did people stand in front of it?
I mean, not particularly long. I mean, there were a lot of people standing in front of it, but they didn't need to be there for too long.
So was the wall blocking admission to something?
No, you're in the right area with art, by the way.
Was it the Mona Lisa being missing or something?
Yes.
Oh.
Was it?
Yeah.
Oh, my God, I was just literally...
Don't know where that came from all of a sudden, yes.
Wow.
I'm so jealous because I just spent all...
I saw the Mona Lisa last week,
and I would have spent three or four hours reading about the theft of the Mona Lisa
and I never once came across Franz Kafka.
So they went, oh, I don't even know the story.
I feel like I do know the story, but I don't know the story.
Is it the theft of the Mona Lisa?
The Mona Lisa was stolen or was it just preserved in the war?
No, it was stolen.
August 21st, 1911.
Yeah, and it was gone for ages until they got it back.
And so people still went to visit the blank wall?
Well, it was the Louvre.
This is where the Mona Lisa was stolen.
That's your new tourist attraction.
The Mona Lisa wasn't famous at that point.
It was actually quite an obscure painting.
Really?
Well, not obscure, but it was not a famous painting.
And it was the theft of the Mona Lisa and its disappearance for like a year
that generated all the buzz around it.
And it became like, now it's famous partly because it got stolen.
I am so proud of myself.
I am now officially smug.
We've all had our moments.
It was a guy who thought it should be repatriated to Italy, wasn't it?
Because da Vinci painted it.
Yeah, it was Vincenzo Perugia was his name.
I don't know why I bothered rolling that R.
It's Italian.
That was the wrong accent to do it in anyway.
But yes, he revealed he had the painting just over two years later.
But by that point, the Louvre had given up and hung a different portrait in its place.
So yes, for roughly a year, there was a blank wall.
This is where the Mona Lisa used to be and people queued up for it.
It was actually though, it wasn't like it is now where it has its own wall.
It was actually like a series of paintings.
It was like painting, painting, painting, blank space, space painting painting painting so it was it was such an unimportant
painting it just sat amongst the others but yeah ah well done mary but i'm mad at myself about that
because i was just reading about it don't you think with um with the influence we could have
uh what boring painting shall we now make the new Mona Lisa?
Where it's like, hang on a minute.
Do you know anyone?
This is kind of like a...
Do you know anyone who's a painter?
Because you could make them very rich.
I actually do know a painter.
Steal one of their paintings
and make a new story about it.
Yeah, hang on.
Last time we were on the show,
didn't we plot to form a gang
and commit a theft?
And now we're doing it again.
Heist team!
We are just a heist movie.
I think, yeah, I want to ruin my reputation online.
I'll tell you, can I say one last thing about the Mona Lisa?
Because I'm full of Mona Lisa information at the moment.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
If you want to see something interesting, go and Google the back of the Mona Lisa.
It's really interesting seeing the back of famous paintings.
And there are lots of pictures online of what the Mona Lisa looks like on the other side.
It's really interesting on the wooden back.
More interesting than you'd think.
Have you ever watched those documentaries where they do literally like x-ray paintings and show what was underneath?
Oh my God, it's so fascinating.
Wow.
They've done that to the Mona Lisa so many times.
It must be radioactive by now.
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Time for another question from one of our guests.
Eric, it's on you this time.
What do you have for us?
All right.
I have a question about Turkey.
In the district of Eyup, E-Y-U with a little umlaut P,
I don't know how to pronounce that.
In Istanbul, Turkey, there is an old grand cemetery
that houses the graves of rulers, religious leaders,
military commanders, intellectuals,
and artists. On a hill just beside here lies a separate graveyard with blank headstones.
What type of people were buried there? So one more time, I'll read that again. In the district
of Eyup in Istanbul, Turkey, there's an old grand cemetery that houses the graves of rulers,
religious leaders, military commanders, intellectuals,
and artists. On a hill,
just beside here, lies a separate graveyard
with blank headstones.
What type of people were buried
there? I think
I might know this one. I
might have to accuse myself here.
But I might be setting
myself up for a fall. I'm not sure.
Brady and Mary, I think it's on you.
Well, I would just think of the stereotypical unmarked tombstones
if they don't know the names of the dead.
Yeah, like unknown soldiers sort of thing.
I can tell you that the headstones were deliberately left blank
when they were installed.
Wait, did Brady just not get it with soldiers there?
No, he did not.
Well, I get to be the foolish one.
I thought I knew this story
and I thought it was the graveyard
that's technically in another country
or something like that
and I got it completely wrong.
So I am the foolish one today.
Sorry, that's on me.
You're back in the game, Tom.
You can help us again.
I am, but with egg on my face.
That's on me.
Intentionally blank.
So were they naughty?
Had they been...
Did they...
Had they not paid for something?
Ooh.
No, it's not a result of a debt because when you go to
the royal society they have the people who've been elected fellows of this esteemed science
institution in this in this book and sometimes you go through all the old names like isaac newton and
christopher wren and that and occasionally you'll see a name that literally has just been crossed
out they've all signed the book they've all put their autograph in the book and someone's crossed out.
And you're like, why did that person get crossed out?
Nine times out of 10, it's because they didn't pay their dues.
I've got a very cynical answer.
Go ahead.
If everyone was, you know, an artist or a, what was the list of people in the marked
or the creatives?
The other cemetery has rulers religious leaders military
commanders intellectuals and artists so i would assume they're all men was it their wives in the
unmarked or no you get a little bit colder okay it's too cold okay good i'm glad a little bit
colder that's that's a cynical answer is there some kind of religion or people with some kind of belief
that don't like their name to be memorialised?
No.
So I would say this is more political than it is religious.
And I'll tell you, it has something to do with the people
who were buried in the second cemetery.
They performed a job during the Ottoman era.
They'd all done a particular job, I should say.
I've got...
Ooh, had they murdered the other people?
Was not having their name
for protective reasons
or was it a sign of disrespect to them?
Very good thought.
He's not answering that one.
It's just a very good...
Who would need to be protected?
Yeah, so they could be like, you know, spies or like, you know... They don't need to be protected, but their families need to be protected? Yeah, so they could be like, you know, spies or like, you know.
They don't need to be protected, but their families need to be protected.
Because if Uncle Bill was a spy or, you know, in some secret organization.
Very warm.
You're getting much warmer.
Like the stars they have at the Pentagon for for cia cia agents who die in service
and they can't name them and they've just got this that wall of stars the last clue i have for you
here is you're very close here some families would have borne a specific grudge towards these people
any guesses i mean i feel like i'm walking on a minefield here because i do not know enough about
the history and politics that area area. So did they do the
killing? I don't know. I just keep going on about this.
They're like executioners.
Is there death involved
here, Eric?
I think Mary started to get it and then Brady said the magic
word. They were executioners.
Executioners.
People could only be buried at the
executioner's cemetery at night.
Their headstones were left blank to reduce the chance of retaliation
by the families of any of the people they had killed.
A few of the Executioner's graves still exist to this day.
That is the bleakest question we've had in a while.
Oh, so it was dark.
It was dark.
I went dark.
Yeah, no, you had exactly the right instinct there, Mary.
Again, I wrote the wrong thing down. So had exactly the right instinct there, Mary. Again, I
wrote the wrong thing down, so I
get the shame on me for this question, but
yeah, congratulations.
I think that is a bleak
question. Well done.
So, to wrap up, in the
district of Eyup in Istanbul, Turkey, there's
two cemeteries. One has all the rulers and
religious leaders and so on, but next to
it, there's a separate graveyard with blank headstones, which is full of executioners.
They were buried at night and they were left blank to reduce the risk of revenge.
One question remaining from a guest and one big question left from me. If you're all ready,
Suzanne Asbury Oliver can only write about seven letters at a time in the 10 minutes available.
She must do so in mirror writing and she finds S and W the hardest. Asbury Oliver can only write about seven letters at a time in the ten minutes available.
She must do so in mirror writing and she finds S and W the hardest.
What is her job?
I'll give you that one more time.
Suzanne Asbury Oliver can only write about seven letters at a time in the ten minutes available.
She must do so in mirror writing and finds S and W the hardest.
What is her job?
I have a guess that I'm going to write down. Oh, not again again eric i'm not very confident in this one if that helps i'm not so confident then talk it through talk it through
then play it through yeah okay my my thought is if you work in an office with like labels of
different offices in the building and you have someone who's writing the name of the person
and their occupation on the inside of the door,
wouldn't that have to be written backwards
so that from the hallway you can see what their name is
and what they do?
But why only seven letters at a time
in the ten minutes she has available?
And it's not like a...
So it's time-sensitive,
so it's not like a game show
or something that's time sensitive
that you'd have to write.
Ooh, is it something to do with
winning a competition?
The names they have to engrave?
Engraving.
I was thinking about engraving on trophies.
Yeah.
But I couldn't see the S.
I can't see why you'd have to do that in mirror,
and I can't see where the S and the W.
You'd have to do something backwards.
I mean, I imagine there is a competitive,
like humans will create competitions out of anything,
so there probably is a competitive branch of this.
But no, this is her job.
She's not competing here.
It is something she is hired to do.
Maybe it's like trophy
engraving like there's only a limited amount of space and one of those little little labels at
the bottom of a trophy saying who won something i mean i i did see when when england won the women's
euros that just for a moment they cut to the shot of the trophy being engraved live um and put that
on the jumbotron for the fans who went even louder than they
currently were um it is but seven letters at a time you're gonna have trouble if switzerland
win there oh is it something to do with something setting if she's only got 10 minutes and it's
going to set in the time but she can only get seven letters it's not like the hollywood walk
of fame or something you know not that but, but like something along those lines where it's urgent.
Yeah, what's creating the time limit?
Yeah, something setting in concrete or something.
The medium.
You're close there.
The medium is creating the time limit for the writing.
Hmm.
What material sets in ten minutes?
I have another guess.
Okay. Aerial sets in 10 minutes. I have another guess. What about, what if they're a sky writer
and they're drawing letters in the sky
and those only last for a few minutes
and then they get blown away by the wind?
You are absolutely right, Eric.
Spot on.
Suzanne Asbury-Oliver is the only active female professional sky writer.
She's been employed to write Pepsi in the sky around America for 25 years,
among many other commissions.
She has to write them back to front
so they look correct to the people on the ground.
Oh, and W would be terrifying.
W and S are really difficult to write.
The slow running speed isn't her own body.
It's that she is pulling high G aerobatic manoeuvres
in order to get the S and the W there.
How fascinating.
You are absolutely right.
And yeah, she's got about 10 to 15 minutes.
So if she's not done with seven letters or so by then, the first one's blown away.
Wow.
And then it could spell something very, very bad.
I was once at Disney World and I looked up in the sky and there was a Skywriter up there.
And it looked, when I first looked up, it said, love go.
And I thought, oh, wow, it's a board game enthusiast.
But it was just someone in Florida who hired a plane to write love God, which is, I think, much less interesting.
There are also sky writing teams now who fly in formation, kind of seven planes next to each other,
and then kind of drop pixels of smoke behind them to spell out letters,
which almost feels like cheating and is presumably way more expensive than hiring one person.
But they can just put a whole message across the sky just by flying past.
When are you hiring someone to do that? Or have you already hired someone to do that? I feel like
that's something you would have done already. mean you're not wrong and oh i need to
go thank you mary that is an idea for a video you're welcome you can have that one for free
you need to be in one of the planes though yeah can i come can i come be part of it
tom if you could sky write anything over london tomorrow what would you write
i i wow i feel like i should have an answer for that, and I really don't.
The devil on my shoulder is something like,
run, just as a general threat to cause chaos.
I feel like that's the opposite of writing Love, God in the Sky.
Sky writing is currently legal in the UK.
There is a consultation going at the moment.
My producer just sent me a note. They are wondering if it could be legal in the UK soon.
But right now, the answer to what do I want to write over London is nothing because I'd be
arrested. The last big question of the day then comes from Brady. What do you have? All right. What did Ronald Reagan do in 1939
that caused his own life to be saved in 1981?
Let me say that again, just so the gravity hits home.
What did Ronald Reagan do in 1939
that caused his own life to be saved in 1981?
So in 81, was he the president then?
I can't remember my presidential dates.
Okay.
And I believe 81 is when there was an assassination attempt on his life.
A guy tried to shoot, a guy did shoot him,
and he had to be rushed to emergency surgery.
So he did something.
So did something happen?
So it was 39 that something happened to him? He did something. He did something happen? So it was 39 that something happened to him?
He did something.
He did something. Was it something internal that then blocked something? That's probably a bit weird.
Yeah. Like my first thought is like, is he, did he start wearing something in 39 that then he was wearing when he got shot?
It blocked a bullet.
The movie version would be he joined the military, got some dog tags, and they magically deflected the bullet.
Yes, exactly.
I mean, 1939 in America, he wouldn't have been going to war then.
No.
Did he give up smoking or something that then saved his life later
or took up smoking or took up smoking that saved the cigarette case deflected the bullet
sorry i'm getting stuck on deflected the bullet here which which didn't happen he got shot um
yeah i know that the famous story from when he went into surgery is he was lucid enough to
say to the the surgeons who are about to operate on him, I hope you all are Republicans.
But the smoking thing is interesting.
Maybe if he stopped smoking,
I don't know where he got shot,
maybe the bullet hit one of his lungs,
but you only need one.
So maybe that helped him survive.
Did he agree to be an organ donor? Oh, interesting.
And then,
not an organ donor,
but recipient of organs?
I don't think you have to elect to be an organ recipient.
In 39, that wouldn't have been a thing.
I was thinking, like,
did he have a kidney removed
and then there was a hole where...
Yeah.
But I don't think surgery in 39
was that good.
You guys are doing great work, and I love your work.
But we're wrong.
I think you're going down the wrong road.
All right.
Let me tell you, there's a third party involved here.
Oh.
There's another person is involved.
Was Reagan in the military?
Maybe you need to think about what Ronald Reagan was doing in 1939,
and it wasn't in the military.
Yeah, maybe he was already an actor.
Maybe he started acting in the 30s.
But I don't know how that would have saved his life in 81, necessarily.
Did his movies inspire someone to become a doctor,
and that doctor saved his life or something like that?
Oh!
Close.
But he was acting. I don't know Oh! Close. But he was acting.
I don't know how old Reagan was.
He was acting.
He was acting in 39.
I mean, Tom, you were impossibly close, Tom.
No, I'm just trying to work out the dates,
and it just occurred to me,
yes, of course Reagan was in Hollywood in 39,
but that just seems almost too long ago for that.
So he inspired someone that then came to his rescue later on in his life?
The Secret Service agent?
Maybe he didn't inspire a doctor.
Oh, I think Tom's mumbled something key.
The Secret Service agent who, I mean, clearly didn't jump in front of a bullet point.
Attacked the shooter.
He indeed, you are correct, Tom, he inspired the Secret Service agent who saved his life.
So do you want to guess how he inspired him?
Was it through a movie he played a Secret Service agent?
It was through the movie.
It was through a movie.
Is this the football movie with the Gipper?
It wasn't a football movie.
It was a much more direct line he starred in a movie called code of the secret service
that that apparently was a pretty terrible movie but it inspired a chap named jerry parr to join
the secret service and jerry parr was the agent that played the crucial role in saving Ronald Reagan's life. So assassinations and
attempted assassinations of US presidents is actually a bit of a specialist subject of mine.
Most dangerous job in the world, isn't it? By like percentage.
I found this question completely fascinating. Obviously, Parr was the agent who pushed Reagan
into the limousine on March 30, 1981, when John Hinckley fired the
shots at the president. And Parr's quick thinking is credited with saving his life. In fact,
and he probably did save his life. But in fact, it was when he got pushed into the limo that he
got hit by the bullet because the bullet that hit Reagan deflected off the car into the limousine
and hit him. But if he hadn't been pushed by Parr, he probably would
have been hit much more directly. But the other thing that's interesting is then they didn't
actually think Reagan had been shot and they were driving him back to the White House. And then he
started bringing up some frothy blood. And it was Parr again, who said, guys, we can't take him to
the White House. We need to take him to a hospital. And that's even more credited with saving Reagan's life. So Parr kind of saved his life twice by pushing him out the way
and by making the call to go to the hospital. And another thing that I just found out today that I
found bizarrely interesting was famously Hinckley was trying to assassinate Reagan because he wanted
to get the attention of Jodie Foster, the actress who he was infatuated with. And he thought doing something that grand would,
you know, get her attention, which is obviously pretty misguided.
But I was reading about what Parr did later in life after he was a Secret Service agent,
and he became like a Christian pastor. But he also was an advisor on two Hollywood films,
But he also was an advisor on two Hollywood films,
Line of Fire, which is about Secret Service agents,
and, bizarrely, Contact, which stars Jodie Foster.
So he's the one that got to meet Jodie Foster.
Oh, my God.
Poor Jodie Foster.
And you know what John Hinckley is up to now, I assume.
I mean, still in jail, I assume.
Did he get out recently?
He got out, didn't he?
He's out.
He's a musician with a YouTube channel,
so he has a lot in common with half of this panel,
or three quarters of this panel.
Are you serious?
Yeah, I'm serious.
He's now a musician.
He does, I think, country music.
Wow.
Last question of the day, then.
This is the one I asked to the audience just at the start. The quick question,
what's the link between a gallon of water and Jane Austen?
And this is a very British question.
And honestly, I'm slightly angry about this question.
So I'm just going to go around the panel
and see if we can work this out very quickly.
What's the link between a gallon of water and Jane Austen?
I'm going to guess that she was the first person to use it in writing,
to write about a gallon of water.
Obviously not.
Obviously not.
How dare you?
From the look of disdain on Tom's face.
Yeah, sorry.
It was more that I couldn't think of anything to reply to that.
Sorry, Greg, do you want to give me that again?
I'll be nicer.
No, no.
I want your natural reaction.
So she, did she, well, you're saying she was the first person to write it.
Was it an actual measurement at that point?
I mean, this is from long after she died.
You can also link this with Charles Dickens and Florence Nightingale.
Eric, like, good luck.
This is an aggressively British question.
Thank you for not coming to me first.
That's all I got to say.
No, I am completely stumped by this.
I have no idea.
Aggressively British.
Oh, I like that.
That's going to be my new band name.
You know what?
I'm just going to tell you the answer
and see if you can work it out.
The answer is £10.
Okay.
So they've all been on the £10 note?
A gallon of water hasn't been on the £10 note.
Jane Austen has.
So has Charles Dickens and Florence Nightingale.
Yeah.
What if one of you produced a £10 note now and dumped a gallon of water on it?
Then I think we'd be covered.
They would both be on the £10 note.
Well, how much does a gallon of water weigh? Does that weigh £10?
Almost exactly £10.
There we go, Brady. That's the link.
Oh, now I get a smile out of you.
Yeah, I just got this question.
I'm like, this is going to make everyone angry.
And apparently it's mostly just me.
Yes, a gallon of water weighs £10.
Jane Austen is on the £10 note.
I'm sorry. Thank you very, very much to our panel. Eric, tell us what's going on in your life right now. What are
you up to? Yeah, I'm the host of a podcast called Follow Friday. It's currently on hiatus, but you
can find it at followfridaypodcast.com. And there is an episode where I interview Mr. Tom Scott from
January 2022. And other than that, you can follow me on Twitter
and Letterboxd at HeyHeyESJ. Mary, what's going on with you?
As always, I'm making YouTube videos on my YouTube channel, youtube.com forward slash
Mary Spender, but I'm also starting to make live appearances again. So if you want to see me in
real life, maryspender.com forward slash tour. And Brady, plug your stuff.
I'm making a ridiculous number of videos and podcasts.
If you go to bradyharronblog.com, there's links there
and you'll see all the what's going on, the latest stuff.
Watch as many or as few as you like.
That's the most low-key sales pitch we've ever had in the outro.
Thank you, Brady.
Is it when you start making so much content
that you just end up cancelling yourself out
because you're just making too much and then...
Yeah.
Just make sure you watch my stuff
before you watch all that Hinkley rubbish.
Thank you very much.
That is our show for today.
Well done to all of our players.
If you want to know more about the show
or you want to send in your own questions,
it is lateralcast.com.
You can find us at Lateralcast basically everywhere.
And you can watch video highlights at youtube.com slash lateralcast. Thank you very find us at lateral cast basically everywhere and you can watch video highlights at
youtube.com slash lateral cast thank you very much to eric johnson thanks for having me mary spender
thank you and brady harron it has been an absolute honor i've been tom scott
brady's been sarcastic and this has been lateral thank you very much