Lateral with Tom Scott - 98: 65 luggage bags
Episode Date: August 23, 2024Eglė Vaškevičiūtė, Bill Sunderland and Dani Siller face questions about mammal moments, brand boundaries and artist assistance. LATERAL is a comedy panel game podcast about weird questions with w...onderful answers, hosted by Tom Scott. For business enquiries, contestant appearances or question submissions, visit https://lateralcast.com. HOST: Tom Scott. QUESTION PRODUCER: David Bodycombe. EDITED BY: Julie Hassett at The Podcast Studios, Dublin. MUSIC: Karl-Ola Kjellholm ('Private Detective'/'Agrumes', courtesy of epidemicsound.com). ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS: Jamie, TreeSpawned. FORMAT: Pad 26 Limited/Labyrinth Games Ltd. EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS: David Bodycombe and Tom Scott. © Pad 26 Limited (https://www.pad26.com) / Labyrinth Games Ltd. 2024. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Own each step with Peloton. From their pop runs to walk and talks, you define what it
means to be a runner. Whatever your level, embrace it. Journey starts when you say so.
If you've got 5 minutes or 50, Peloton Tread has workouts you can work in. Or bring your
classes with you for outdoor runs, walks, and hikes led by expert instructors on the
Peloton app. Call yourself a runner. Peloton all access membership separate.
Learn more at onepeloton.ca slash running.
What's the unique selling point
of an Asian brand of bottled water called DMZ 2km?
The answer to that at the end of the show.
My name's Tom Scott, and this is Lateral.
Welcome to the show that's been described by critics as a laugh-a-minute. Unfortunately that minute was 11.45pm yesterday, so let's see who's here to help us increase
that ratio.
Well, it's the sort of show today that makes our question editors quite worried, because
we have an entire cast with us today, all of whom write their own puzzles,
their own questions, their own things very much like laterals. So with the best of luck to our
question team, we start with our returning players from Escape This Podcast, Bill Sunderland,
Dani Siller. How are you both doing?
Great. You'd think that would make us better at the show, wouldn't you? You'd think.
You have nailed quite a few questions very quickly here before. I think we've rolled
out the shiny bonus question for you a couple times when we've gone through very quickly.
True, but I have also seen all the comments on the videos where we don't and they sit
there going, you idiots! How did you not know? It's a cube! It's a famous cube!
I can't even remember that question. That's clearly burned into your head.
Oh, I've made it up, but it sounds like a lateral question.
There's always a famous cube in the middle of these shows.
Danny, if you can name one famous cube we've talked about before, I'll be amazed.
I'm stuck on famous spheres right now. We've definitely had those.
Have we? I must have asked 500 questions by now, I've got no memory of them.
That's how it goes.
Well, thank you very much for coming back and running the gauntlet one more time.
We have a new player with you.
We have freelance quiz writer, professional question editor for various things.
We have Aghla Vashka Vichutta.
How are you doing?
Hello, I'm... I guess okay.
These days it's been less hot, so I stopped melting.
Which is a great thing, I think.
You have written questions for Lateral before, I believe?
Yes.
Do you remember any cubes or spheres?
Not cubes or spheres.
I do remember two that made it onto YouTube highlights, so...
Alright.
That was very great, you know, moments of 15 minutes of fame.
But yeah, nothing about spheres, I don't think.
Not here!
Well, we are putting our question team in the limelight today, front and centre.
Very best of luck to all of you.
Our questions are a bit like onions.
If you peel away the layers, one at a time, they're still very likely to make you cry.
So it's chop chop as we slice and dice our way through to question one.
This question has been sent in by Treespawned.
When playing a game, how might you benefit from coyote time?
I'll say that again.
When playing a game, how might you benefit from coyote time?
Now I am really glad that the panel is blank on this one, because I was like, oh, it's
obvious, I know that one, thank you, good.
You said gaming, I was excited. And then?
I am unblanked. I am gonna say I'm not even gonna help, because I think I know this.
Oh, no.
I think I know what Coyote time is, I think I know how it helps in games, and I will disappear
into the shadows.
And then we'll scare us when you're back.
Alright, I know a bit about games, I know very little about coyotes. Do you have
any coyote knowledge?
I mean, they're canine? That's kinda it. My first thought was that maybe coyote is
some part in a board game, like a character in a board game, so you're required to yell,
oh, it's coyote time, and you do this specific thing.
Uno, but much more intense.
It's probably not that.
No, but I can totally see a board game with just coyote time on the side.
That's because I have a friend who released a game called Muffin Time.
That's why that's in my head.
That's...
Now I keep thinking about a coyote eating muffins, so there's that.
Oh, Tom, you're poisoning the waters.
Right, what else is there about coyotes? So there's that. Ah, Tom, you're poisoning the waters.
Right.
What else is there about coyotes?
I don't know anything about their behavior.
So I can't even tell you, are they nocturnal?
That feels like if I'm trying to think of coyote time, that feels like essential knowledge and I don't even have that.
I think there may be a bit low.
So is coyote, the question is, is coyote related to the game or is it just some sort
of local slang term that's used for, for example, going off to make some tea or going
off to take a bio break or things like that?
LARISSA I was definitely more thinking that than something
100% related to an individual game that has coyotes.
GERARD That does remind me. I've stepped out of answering this one, so I might just take some coyote time. thinking that than something 100% related to an individual game that has coyotes in it.
That does remind me.
I've stepped out of answering this one, so I might just take some coyote time.
Come back in five.
Oh, I don't know what that's a euphemism for, and I'm worried about it.
Only good things.
But I was also totally thinking video games, because people tend to figure out more strategies
for video games than they do for their board games.
I was actually thinking more board games, but maybe just, I don't know. Because they
usually have more weird phrases like that, but maybe that's just me.
In this case, it's Danny that's on the right lines. This is not one specific game, either.
This is in quite a few.
And it's something that can help them do a bit better at the games.
It's something advantageous game-wise.
Yes.
Huh.
Coyote time.
What other weird ones are?
I know what smurfing is, but not coyote-ing.
That sounds worse than coyote time.
It does. It does. You're right.
That sounds so much worse than coyote time.
It's completely innocent as a phrase, and yet.
And yet is also much closer to the answer than you might think.
What? What do coyotes do?
There is a weird connection through the Smurfs here.
What?
I know, I know the connection.
Like I know the answer, I also know the connection.
So I guess for the audience,
smurfing is when you're playing on an account that looks significantly lower level than you actually are in the game.
Yeah, so you can destroy all the little people.
Is Coyote like the opposite? If that could be a thing? Or maybe if you're, you know, if you're...
That's gargamelling.
Fair.
I wouldn't get hung up on the Smurfs specifically.
But it's named in kind of the same way.
Billy, can you give us a hint?
What aspect of coyotes should we be paying attention to?
I can give you a hint.
Coyotes with an S at the end?
That's irrelevant.
Don't worry about coyotes.
Oh.
Oh, that's a good hint.
You've done this before.
Oh, well, in that case, I only know one famous coyote that is coyote singular.
Oh, the… I forgot his name, but the one from The Neat Meat.
Yes!
Wiley Coyote, I think.
Wiley Coyote, yes, and Roadrunner.
Alright, now what does… but Wiley Coyote notoriously does not do well at things.
There are many things that are done too, Wile E. Coyote.
The connection with the Smurfs, though, was just me pointing out the animated character
thing.
This is both stuff that's been named after animated characters.
Is it, in some way, is it that sometimes video games have bad frame boxes
and you can just sort of hover off cliffs a little bit
in the same way that Wile E. Coyote takes a moment before he falls to his near death?
Oh, that makes so much sense.
It makes a lot of sense.
That is 95% of the way there, but it's...
You phrased it as bad boxes.
And this is less an accident and more a specific choice
by the person making the game.
Invisible planes for you to walk on?
Or to find hidden stuff?
It's time, not space.
Welcome to Coyote Space.
Some sort of delay in falling and stuff like that.
And taking advantage of that.
Why would that be a thing that you would want to put in there? I think the that and taking advantage of that. Why would that be a thing
that you would want to put in there?
I think the classic example you see of that is in stuff like, I mean, I suppose you might
argue with the thing for like double jumping, but also if you see it a lot in especially
like speed runs of like Donkey Kong Country, where they'll go off the edge and there's
still time for them to jump and then get an even further jump between two gaps because they can run a little bit past the edge before
the game registers that they're falling and they can still jump from nowhere.
Okay, see, I do this a lot in video games.
I assume that was me being great at the game in ways that the designers didn't intend.
So is it just sort of to account for lag or something like that?
It's more to just give the player a little bit of leeway.
If you make it frame and pixel accurate, that the moment you are one pixel off that ledge,
you plummet to your doom, players will think, oh, this is rubbish, I absolutely got that,
I was safe, that's wrong.
If you give them a couple of pixels and maybe a couple of frames of time just to hover over
the edge of the cliff like Wile E. Coyote and save themselves, they will have a much
better playing experience. And that is called Coyote Time.
I think we're going to go to you for the first guest question of the show, please. Okay, so my question is...
In Ucacha, Argentina, a three-foot-long section of a wooden pole was strapped high up an electricity
pylon. Why?
And once again, in Ucacha, Argentina, a three-foot-long section of a wooden pole was strapped high
up on electricity pylon. Why?
You know sometimes when the entire panel goes, I've got this.
This is the opposite?
None of the panel got this!
You don't think it's, you know, you didn't get my idea straight away, it's a little bridge
for birds.
Little bird bridge, in case they want to walk along and not hurt their little feet on the
wires.
That's better than mine, I was going to pretend they're going to conduct more electricity.
Oh yeah, but that would hurt the birds.
The birds can perch on wires because they don't connect to any other wire.
But the minute you link two of those wires, you're going to have...
The electricity is going to be out of phase, I think.
It's a different phase per wire.
If I remember my pylons correctly, if you bridge the two wires, that's when you're
going to be in trouble.
Even with a piece of wood?
So do you think this is causing...
Oh, if it's an electricity pile, it's gonna be tens of thousands of volts up there.
Like, that's enough to...
Are there any bad birds that they really hate down there?
Yeah! What's the most hated bird in Argentina?
Argentina, right. Three foot wooden pole up an electricity pile. Okay.
So you can use it like a flying fox!
You hold onto the wooden pole and you slide down the wires.
I can't think of anything logical, so I'm willing to roll with that.
Did you not see the public information films or public service announcements as a kid saying
don't play on construction sites and don't play around pylons?
We got shown terrifying films in school, like this is what will happen to you if you go
into electricity equipment, you will die.
Like, they were grisly.
This is little Jimmy.
Don't recognise him.
It's because he's a pile of ash.
Because he was too close to the pylons.
That stain on the floor is little Jimmy.
And it could be you, Tom.
You, Tom Scott, I'm talking straight to you.
Ha ha ha!
That got slightly too personal for me, but never mind.
I got that one as well, weirdly.
Yeah, it doesn't work for most people, but when it hits, it hits hard.
I mean, it worked.
I did not go into electricity substations, so.
I'm pretty sure I've seen videos of you standing and playing around on electric pylons, so
I don't think it worked at all.
Okay, yes.
Yes, with permission.
Question. Back to the question, what's the answer?
How are we visualising this thing having been attached?
Because Bill, it seemed like you were going horizontal.
I pictured horizontal, bridging wires,
but apparently that's a bad idea.
Oh, in my head it was dangling.
In my head it was attached there
and just kind of blowing in the wind.
I'm gonna say none of you are right in that. Ooh, okay.
Diagonal!
So, maybe it's along the wires, then.
Oh.
There's no good reason for it to just be sticking straight up to make it taller, to be the tallest
pylon in the village.
That's it.
Oh, I assumed it was in the wires, not in the structure of the pylon itself.
Been over this many times.
I don't know how anything is built.
Especially when electricity gets involved.
It was attached to the pole itself, but it wasn't dangling.
Oh, is this like a telegraph pole?
Or is this like a big metal structure pylon with a lot of different bits to it?
Is that the one you'd have on a street or across a country?
So yeah, it was just like you'd have on a street or like across a country?
So yeah, it was just like you would see on the street.
Okay, okay.
I have to change my mental picture.
I do wish I was better at GeoGuessr because this is the sort of thing that they know.
They know everything about every pylon and different little straps of tape that get attached
to them, everything like that.
I'm sure they know why.
So the stick is on the body of the post? It's on the wooden body of a telephone wire sort
of thing?
The telephone post isn't wooden.
Oh, okay.
So this is like a concrete pole or something like that that holds electricity wires, things
like that, and then you have three foot of wood attached to it for some reason.
Correct.
Just kind of stuck on the side.
The wooden pole, like I think when I initially pictured it, I was picturing like a broomstick.
But is it like a wooden section of like old wooden pile on? Stuck on the side
of a new cement one?
It was sort of an old pile on pole.
Tom's looking excited.
Does that town in Argentina really like its woodpeckers?
Yes!
What? Oh, that's so cute! They replaced the pole with concrete or metal or something like that, with a modern one.
So the woodpeckers got sad!
And then the birds were like, we can't nest in here, and so the locals put the old pole
up or put an old pole up, something like that?
Oh, that's lovely.
That's exactly that, yes.
So because the town was developing, there was new housing built and the
local manager was aware that the birds like the wooden poles,
specifically woodpeckers, that were residing in that town. And because
you had to change from old wooden poles to concrete ones, the birds couldn't nest there anymore, so a section of old wooden pole with a hole in it were connected, were strapped next to the metal pole, the new concrete pole, so the birds would still be able to nest and have a habitat there.
Oh, that's nice. That's lovely.
Has anyone here seen a woodpecker in real life?
Yes!
Really?
Are they as cool as they seem?
They're really cool.
I usually see them in cemetery, and it's not- I usually more hear them than see them,
but the last time I was there I was able to actually see one, and I was really excited.
That's so cool!
That's nice.
Yeah.
So in a way, when Bill immediately opened up with something about birds, I was just trying
not to laugh and not to give away, because he was right on the money right from the get-go.
Good luck, folks.
Here's the next one.
A metal plaque lists the following items. One Volkswagen Passat,
six Grizzly Bears,
65 luggage bags,
454 Chihuahuas,
30,000 Snickers bars.
Why?
I'll say that again.
A metal plaque lists the following items.
One Volkswagen Passat,
six Grizzly Bears,
65 luggage bags,
454 Chihuahuas,
30,000 Snickers bars.
Why?
I actually know this.
Alright.
Yeah.
And I was trying to think of a way to make this into a question, and I did.
And for my part.
In the end, this one was written by David the Producer, and he just wrote the contents
of the plaque.
That's just the whole question.
Danny, Bill, this one's for you.
Alright, well, it started...
I think I've got some more reasonable guesses,
but it started to get more morbid as it went down,
because I started going,
oh, you know, there's some airline,
and this is all the things that they've lost over time.
And then we got to 452 hours,
and I got really sad.
Sorry, six grizzly bears is the more concerning part of that guess.
That's one very specific flight.
That's true.
Back in the very old, upsetting circus days.
How many chihuahuas can you fit on a plane?
I would expect more than 450, because chihuahuas, they don't weigh much.
They're like two or three kilos for a chihuahua.
Yeah, I think an A380 has more than 450 seats for people if it's all filled out.
Yeah, we're barely cracking a ton of chihuahuas.
I have seen a picture of, I think it was a flight from Dubai, where there were five
or six falcons on board with their handlers.
Oh, nice.
And they just sat there with a hood over, just restrained with the handler there, and
it's just, this is the fastest that falcon's ever going to go.
It feels almost a waste to put a bird in a plane. It's not going to appreciate the view.
It's like, this is normal.
Is it a bird? Is it a plane? Well, technically, it could be both.
Thanks to our producer, who has just quickly researched our On Qatar Airways,
passengers can have one falcon with them, with a maximum of six
falcons per plane.
Whereas my first thought was that this question had big Alex Horne energy, and they're all
different ways to measure the same thing.
It's like, well, it's either six grizzly bears, or maybe it's 450 chihuahuas, or about
30,000 Snickers.
But I think it's
all the same weight as whatever this thing is commemorating.
Yes. Spot on.
It is a plaque dedicated to Alex Horne. In the only way that he would like the taskmaster
to create it.
If Alex Horne weighs the same as one Volkswagen Passat or six grizzly bears.
Hey, look. I don't want to say anything bad about him, but have you seen him lately?
Oh! In my head now, Alex Horne is just listening to this podcast. If you are, Alex, hi. Just
deeply upset at this slander.
No, Alex loves it. I know. He's loving it.
Is it just a peculiar lift elevator that has decided? Maybe it's not even like trying to say these are our restrictions.
It's trying to make you feel better if you're scared of a lift cable breaking.
That's trying to say, don't worry, you'll be fine.
This thing could handle 452 hours and I don't know any other way to make you feel better.
Unless you have recently consumed 30,000 Snickers bars, you're going to be fine.
I love it because that's just like their version of the, like, this fits 11 people.
I don't know if you know what I do, when you get into something that says 11 people
and you count the space and you're like,
I could fit 11 people in here, easy.
We're all gonna crash. Oh no.
You are absolutely spot on.
I am.
The full sign says 20 persons or 1,500 kilograms, alternative, one Volkswagen Passat, also one Hippo, six
Grizzly Bears, a few other ones in there as well.
But yes, this is an elevator sign pointing out the weights that it can take.
Amazing.
Bill, over to you for the next question.
This question was sent in by Jamie.
Underwater swimming was an event at the 1900 Olympic Games in Paris.
Competitors had to swim underwater for as long and as far as possible.
Peder Lickberg swam for the longest time and the furthest distance, but only came third.
How?
One more time.
Underwater swimming was an event at the 1900 Olympic Games in Paris.
Competitors had to swim underwater for as long and as far as possible.
Peder Lickenberg swam for the longest time and the furthest distance, but only came third. How?
So my thought is that what if it wasn't a closed pool and if he was underwater he couldn't see if
he was finished with the race distance or not. So for placement-wise he was third but overall for
how long he swam and for how far he swam he was you know the longest and that kind of thing.
But two other people hit the finish line then he hit the finish line and kept going?
Right, because he didn't realise that he was already finished or something like that.
I was thinking the opposite, that it was like a closed pool and they just reached the end,
but that would be joint first, not joint third.
It does, in the question, it is specific. It was swimming underwater for as long and as far as possible.
And this person, Peter, did go for the longest time and the furthest distance, but did come
third.
So it's not a joint first thing?
No joint first.
There was a first place, there was a second place, and there was a Peter.
How specific are these rules from these quirky 1900 games?
I don't recall you saying specifically in one breath.
So was their time and their distance averaged out by the number of breaths they took throughout
their run?
Swim?
You were right to be thinking about the specifics of the rules, but one breath across everybody was the same.
It wasn't about taking multiple breaths.
That's such a weird event.
That wouldn't be allowed now because it's...
Well, actually, it would.
It's free-diving under a different name, isn't it?
It's a breath-hole challenge or something like that.
But I feel like an event where, if you don't complete it, you risk dying
probably isn't the spirit of the modern Olympics.
It's the 1900 Olympics, Tom. It was the Wild West back then.
They were doing whatever they wanted.
This is interesting. What weird rules can we come up with?
I was thinking, what if it wasn't the only event?
Like, you have a heptathlon or a pentathlon.
So what if in that race, that was, you know, Longest Farthest,
therefore first in that event,
but only third in the Olympic event as such.
I think, Bill, you might have been talking about this when you said this was becoming
your shtick.
I feel like you had a question like that at some point before.
My last Olympics question, I think, was about paintings done during a 1904 painting event.
I would say that's a classic Olympics gotcha is the heptathlons and the septathlons and
the decathlon. In this case, one event, they just go for as long and as far as possible.
Wait a minute, 1900s. This could have been in a river, not in a pool.
Maybe there was a current or something like that that changed...
Again, it's not like it had changed that much.
It's not like they were...
Suddenly the floodgates opened and he's definitely swum further
because he's been pushed two miles downstream.
Just this one swimmer?
Just this one swimmer.
You're right. 1900.
Is that... I'm iffy on my early years.
Was that a Paris one?
It was Paris.
Is that relevant?
No.
Okay.
We had to try.
You're thinking a lot about the Olympics, which makes sense, because this is a
question about the Olympics and it's about sport.
Weirdly, my question might be to think more about maths classes in like year
nine, I think I'm trying to remember when you sort of learn this, this sort of
fact, but there's a, there's a mathematical fact that you would have
learned in school that's relevant.
I was going to ask something faintly about this, uh, which is something
question mark, question mark, horizontal distance,
vertical distance, with someone doing lots of diagonals and lots of Pythagoras and 1900
Paris couldn't take it.
There's close, it's not about the, it's, it is about sort of like types of distance
that you might think about.
So if we think three dimensionally, is there a depth included in this?
Is there a... were they doing laps around the pool and one of them cut the corners?
Something parabolic.
Something Pythagorean.
You're getting close to the idea. He swam the longest and he swam
He did go, he swam the longest and he swam over like over a longer distance. He swam the furthest, the furthest of anybody, but he came third.
He had the worst displacement despite having the best distance.
He had the worst displacement.
What?
Do you want to just, can you describe for people at home who don't know what
displacement and distance is, Dani, would you like to describe what this is?
Okay, so the difference between distance and displacement is distance is just overall amount
that has been travelled, but displacement is the distance from a starting point. Meaning
that if you go a really long way and come back to your starting point, your displacement
is zero. So was it like current or ocean tides or something like that that moved?
Was it an accident or did he just not know that this was a problem?
Or did the competitors just not know how to go in a straight line?
Now I cannot guarantee we have limited sourcing, but that seems to be the case.
While his two competitors swam for, he swam for 90 seconds while his two competitors swam for 90 seconds.
His two competitors swam for 20 seconds less.
They swam 60, 70 seconds.
But they swam in one straight line forward while Peter, presumably not fully understanding
the rules in the wild west of the 1900 Olympics, swam in circles and he went circles
and circles and circles. So even though he swam much further than the 60 meters that his competitors
swam, he was only credited with swimming 28.5 meters based on where he ended up compared to
where he started. Man! That's not a good setting.
Now, my real question following this is, were there only three people in this race or were
there some people who did even smaller circles?
There were other people.
Peter swam so well, he still got third.
The time underwater and the distance were scored separately.
So he made up a lot of points on the time underwater,
even though he lost a lot for swimming in circles.
Oh, that's a heartbreaker.
Heartbreaker. Poor Peter.
I guess work smarter, not harder.
Go forward!
Next question's from me folks, good luck.
A secure outer perimeter fence surrounds Jean-Lessage International Airport in Quebec.
However, at several locations, a panel encircles a round hole in the chainlink fence,
which is large enough for a fist.
Why?
I'll say that again.
A secure outer perimeter fence surrounds Jean-Lessage International Airport in Quebec.
However, at several locations, a panel encircles a round hole in the chain-link fence,
which is large enough for a fist.
Why?
I think I've heard this one before.
It's so the woodpeckers can get through, back to the tree that I like so much.
No, the woodpeckers have actually just drilled out the hole out of the chain-link fence over time.
That's it.
Oh, they're very industrious up there.
Yeah.
Yeah, but they did it in circles, so it took them longer to do than the ones that just
went through.
We're tying it all together here.
We're tying it all together.
Now just to make sure we're all on the same page, when we say a panel surrounds the circle,
are there like eight completely useless Canadian bureaucrats gathered around just deciding
what to do about these circles.
They haven't fixed them up, they've called a panel together, they've said, listen, we
need to have a meeting. Are we going to do anything about this?
Sometimes Bill, it is worth nitpicking the words in these questions. In this case, that's
not worth a nitpick.
Now, the description of large enough the size to put a fist through, relevant or just
a good visual for us?
What do we think?
It's an Alex Horne measurement, you know?
You just sort of measure things and fist widths.
Fist widths is a Dickens character, isn't it?
If it's a fist width, that is a handing bribes through, I believe, if it's about the width
of a fist and it's meant for a fist.
What do you do fist widths? fist and it's meant for a fist.
What do you do fist width? What do you need to stick a fist through an airport for?
I mean, not necessarily a fist, but like a hand to give someone their lost ticket or
something, or passport maybe.
Yeah. Yeah, it's very, oh, it's a very specific, like if you've built a fence, ideally you
build it to not let things go through it.
That's like step one of fence building.
You don't want it full of holes because it's a fence.
So why, what do they keep, like, presumably they're keeping people out or cars out or
animals out.
Yeah, this is the perimeter fence at an airport.
They want to allow something through.
So presumably these are things that, at least from the inside, only a very specific subset
of people would be able to go there and have access to this hole. Like, only ground workers
from the way I'm picturing it. From the inside, yes.
What would they be handing in and out? Do we know how high those holes in the fence are, like from the ground?
The fist width, are they fist height?
Yeah, they're more or less fist height. I'll give you that.
The height, now is that the height that if I stuck my, like, are we talking like five
feet high or like just off the ground?
We're talking like about four or five feet high, yeah.
Okay.
What I would call fist height. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's established parlance, we don't need to read it. off the ground? We're talking about four or five feet high.
What I would call fist height.
Yeah, that's established parlance.
You say fist height, that's almost my full height.
I have more fence-based questions.
My first picture was just like a metal chain link fence, which almost almost has fist size holes all over it if you're a baby.
Good point.
Yes.
Is it a chain, it is a chain link fence?
It is a chain link fence.
Oh, so the fist size holes are not much larger than the regular holes.
Uh, Agla, take it home!
Oh yeah, I was just waiting for this moment.
Is, is there anything attached to the hole, like? Like a pipe of sorts so that you can
send things through?
I mean, I suppose we got the panel, right? Like…
Oh yeah, haven't been thinking about that.
There is that panel with some writing on it. Says the area is reserved.
What do we know about Canada?
Yeah, what do those Quebecois love? St love sticking their arms through fences.
It's a national sport.
It's to prevent six grizzly bears or 450 chihuahuas from coming in.
That's it.
I've got a panel.
Like a metal panel?
Just a big sheet of metal?
Just a sign panel.
Just a sign.
Just giving you a warning, a note that this space is reserved.
It says this space is reserved for people.
It's not like it helps you to see anything better.
You're not going to look through the hole because you can look through the fence, right?
Keep going that way, Bill.
When you first started describing it the being of the question, I went,
oh, you know, like at an amusement park, you stick your face in the hole for a photo.
Is it meant for photographers because they have elongated?
Wait, are you kidding?
So they can stick their lens through?
Yep. Exactly right, Agla.
I don't know how those things are called, but yeah, the camera fronts.
The lenses.
Lenses, there we go.
This is for photographers.
These were specifically set up because the photographers were annoyed that if they try
and take long lens pictures of aircraft, the fence is in the way.
So these are about the size of a fist or about the size of a hand holding a camera lens.
As they put the long lens through that hole, the sign says area reserved for photographers.
I have seen those photographer holes in a couple of places.
Photographer holes doesn't sound good.
I want a different name for those.
Sorry, Tom.
That's accepted pilots.
Forbidden peoples.
Yeah, forbidden peoples.
Go for that.
There's a couple of airports that will charge admission to their viewing terrace,
because they know they can make some money out of the photographer nerds,
the aviation geeks who want to go up and spot the planes coming and going.
It definitely took a slightly more wholesome route than I was expecting,
because talking about all these photographers,
I was very much thinking,
oh, you know, the paparazzi trying to get the celebrity as they
walk down off the aircraft, hoping to catch them fall.
I thought it was done for purposeful marketing, because you do need shots of planes to put
on your social media.
Makes a lot more sense.
Or, you know, a company website or things like that.
There is the guy called Big Jet TV in the UK, who anytime it's stormy will rock up
on his van that he like, that he can
stand on the roof on in a hotel car park next to Heathrow with a really long lens and a
really good windproof microphone and will just livestream and commentate all the jets
coming in. He's like, oh, he's a bit bouncy here, is he going to make it, is he going
to make it, oh, he's taking, no, that's a go-round, good luck there, mate.
There is no enthusiast like a transport enthusiast.
That sounds dangerous.
Oh, he's a long way off.
He's got a very long lens, and he doesn't have to poke it through any photographer holes.
Now that sounds like a euphemism for something.
I really need a different word for that.
Dani, over to you for the next one.
Alright, I hope we're all ready for this.
Artist Walid Beshti displays artworks which consist of two objects of similar size.
One object is an empty cuboid of cracked glass.
It's the famous cube!
What is the other item?
One more time and I know I'm excited too. Artist Walid Beshti displays artworks which consist of two objects of similar size.
One object is an empty cuboid of cracked glass.
What is the other item?
Man, there is not much to go on here. An empty cuboid of cracked glass.
And something else of a similar size, maybe presumably the original contents of said cuboid?
There is an artist I only found out about recently. And I will have to ask Producer
David to frantically Google here, based on very limited information. He is, I would describe
him as David Blaine, but much less commercial and with a lot more artistic credibility. And the artwork
I saw from him was a big, like a bath, basically, which he is in that is then filled with sharp
shards of glass, like just broken glass. And the artwork is him very, very slowly and carefully
climbing out of it.
Oh, performance art.
Thank you to Producer David. His name is Jan Marisic. It was 600 kilos of glass that he
very slowly and carefully escaped from.
I mean, I'm relieved that it's not this person, that that's not the artist we're dealing
with in this one. As far as I know, no one rolled around and bathed on the glass involved in this.
Okay.
This is the moment.
There are these people listening to the show screaming at us, it's a famous cube.
What is wrong with you?
It's a famous cube.
We've come full circle, ironically.
It is a tough one.
There's not much to go on to start with.
Really got to get into the nature of this cube, Lloyd.
It's a piece of art, right? And aside from what people complaining about modern art on
the internet will tell you, there'll be a thematic connection between the glass cuboid
and the other object, right? It isn't random. There is some meaningful connection. Is cracked
glass cuboid just a way to obfuscate a description of an
object we all know?
Actually, no. This is extremely clear and extremely accurate. Looking at the pictures
of it, there is very little else you would use to describe it. It's a rectangular prism.
It is glass. It is cracked.
If it's using something that already exists in the world rather than creating the cuboid,
I'm trying to think where would you find a glass cuboid that someone or something would
eventually crack. All I can think of is fire alarms and buildings, but that's only part
glass and it's more 3D rectangle rather than a cube.
It's a cracked cuboid of a fire alarm that wasn't properly maintained and next to it is a pile of
ash and there's a guy who stands next to him and he says, that's little Jimmy! That's little Jimmy
who never fixes fire alarms! He didn't do the work and now because of this cracked cuboid he's dead,
just like you Tom Scott. Tom Scott.
We've got a lot of callbacks this episode, a lot of callbacks.
I'm a cuboid. What am I doing? What am I next to? Get into the mindset of a glass cuboid.
I'm a little cuboid short and stuff.
Short and stuff. My picture of a glass cuboid is like a chemistry sort of thing, like a
cuvette to do gas chromatography testing on. But I
imagine this isn't an artwork about gas chromatography testing.
Typically, I believe the glass cuboids involved in this would have been bigger than that.
Size of a fist.
I can't remember the dimensions exactly, but they had some substance to them. And honestly, I think trying to think
of real world glass cuboids that it might be is going to send you down a difficult path.
This is the more contrived part of the artwork, I'd say.
Okay, because I was thinking maybe it's, some perfume bottle and then cracked glass. And then if it was rose scented, there's actual rose next to it or something of that.
I like that because it's cracked.
This is what gave me my first impression of like, is the other thing, the previous
contents of the cuboid, it's been cracked to let something come out of it.
And that is now on display next to the cracked cuboid.
Quite the opposite.
It is the exterior.
It was the exterior of the cuboid.
The cuboid has been extracted from the other object.
It was a Damien Hirst artwork that was filled with formaldehyde in a dead animal, and now
it's just got a lake of formaldehyde next to it because the cuboid has been cracked.
The animal's escaped!
The shark's out for blood!
That is the other interesting side of this.
So yeah, we're on the idea of it.
The other thing is exterior rather than interior.
The other thing is about the glass being cracked.
What's going on with that?
And what I'll tell you about that is this artist Wally Beshty, he didn't just go,
all right, I'm going to take this glass cuboid and for my purposes, smash, smash, smash, done.
That is not what happened here.
It's a tin man and next to him is his little cuboid heart.
Don't think too hard about the glass cuboid, but do just think about big rectangular prism.
I got a prism.
I got a-
What are you pulling it out of, perhaps?
A coffin?
A camera, a TV... thing?
Just a slightly larger rectangular prism.
Keep going. Tell me...
A slightly larger rectangular prism.
Okay, no, don't keep exaggerating.
An even bigger one!
But, yes.
It's rectangular prisms all the way down. It is rectangular prisms all the way down, but just one.
Extracted from another thing that is...
Very simple.
People deal with these exteriors every day.
You said simple, and I was going to say a hypercube.
And we're going dimensionally downwards.
This is difficult to describe, but yeah, the glass cuboid part is the more symbolic part of it.
The exterior is the more normal part of it.
Oh, I wouldn't take anything out of the die that I'm suddenly holding up.
A mobile phone screen, not a cuboid. That's more of a flat panel.
Even more normal than that.
What's the most normal cuboid?
Glasses? What's the most normal cuboid? What if glasses? Who normally comes across glasses?
What's the most normal cuboid in your house?
It may not be in your house right now, but statistically throughout the country, throughout
the world, oh boy, there are a zillion of these things right now.
The glass is an artistic choice.
The real object, the real cuboid that we all know and love that exists in all of
our lives is not glass.
If you say it was in our hearts all along, I swear.
No, it's in our homes all along. We should all know.
Oh, so the glass isn't even...
I think the glass doesn't exist in the real world.
It's artistically important. It is realistically not important.
The glass is a symbol. The object that is also a cuboid is a thing.
A book.
A book. A... Is it a cartonoid is a book. A book.
Is it a carton box to symbolize crash?
A phone.
Oh, Agla.
It's just...
A carton box to symbolize like crash, you know, fragile goods in delivery or something
like that?
The exteriors are FedEx boxes.
Oh, I know this!
I know this thing!
He sends them!
He ships the glass box to every...
When they move the exhibit, he literally just puts the glass box in a FedEx box, sends it,
and as it travels the world and as the exhibit moves, it gets more and more cracked from
being poorly handled by FedEx people.
And it's just showing this thing gradually
deteriorates through time as it travels and gets manhandled and isn't cared for.
Absolutely.
No, I've heard of that!
Yeah, you've absolutely got it.
That's what is going on there.
It's showcasing exactly what happens on one of these journeys.
And so the cardboard box, it's got its FedEx labels, it's got all of
the labels from the journey it's undertaken as it's traveled the world. And the glass
box, all of the people who have handled it through its journey don't realise that they're
participating in the art with their clumsiness.
Now, this is the kind of modern art I can't approve of.
I really like art like that.
Absolutely.
It's exactly my sort of like Oliver Elias and any kind of big participatory stuff.
It's... ah, yeah.
One last thing in this show, then.
At the start, I ask the audience what's the unique selling point of an Asian brand of
bottled water called DMZ or DMZ 2km?
Anyone want to take a quick shot at that?
I only have one idea for what DMZ stands for in my head, especially in relation to Asia.
And it's probably right.
Demilitarised Zone in...
Demilitarised Zone.
That's where I go.
Yes, so what...
So is it two kilometres deep into the DMZ?
Yes, it is sourced from an area inside the Demilitarized Zone
that has been untouched by humans for decades.
Well, they got the water somehow.
Yes, they touched it.
The two kilometres in the name is the distance between the natural spring itself
and the bottling plant, which presumably is not in the Demilitarized Zone.
One should hope.
That's a daring job that you take on.
That is our show.
Thank you very much to all our players.
We will start.
Agla, what's going on with you?
Where can people find you?
You can just find me on Twitter at Katnipiswise.
Other than that, nothing special.
Other than question producing for I don't know where, but they'll turn up somewhere.
Dani, we'll go to you first for the Escape This Podcast plug.
Yeah, you can find us at escapethispodcast.com or just Google it.
We try to make ourselves very Googleable with easy names, so Escape Room Podcast should
do the trick as well.
And Bill, what sort of things can people find there? Oh, you can find audio escape rooms with fun guests like Tom Scott and David Boddykin,
the producer of Lateral, being fun wizard hunters.
We have guests on every episode to play through audio escape rooms and it's a great fun time.
If you want to know more about this show or sending your own idea for a question, you
can do that at lateralcast.com.
We are at Lateral Cast basically everywhere, and you can catch video highlights multiple
times a week at youtube.com slash lateralcast.
Thank you very much to Agla Vashca Vachuta.
Thank you for having me.
To Dani Silla.
Thank you so much.
To Bill Sunderland.
Thank you, it was fantastic.
Cuboids forever! Cubes! Famous Cubes!
I've been DomSka, and that has been the Famous Cube episode of Laterally.