No Such Thing As A Fish - 117: No Such Thing As Dr No Teeth
Episode Date: June 9, 2016Dan, James, Anna, Andy and special guest Tim Minchin discuss performing racoons, blue hailstones, and the giant that provides constipation relief. ...
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Hello, and welcome to another episode, and no such thing as a fish, a weekly podcast
coming to you from the QI offices in Covent Garden.
My name is Dan Schreiber.
I'm sitting here with James Harkin, Andy Murray, Anna Chazinski, and special guest Tim
Minchin.
And once again, we have gathered around the microphones with our four favorite facts
from the last seven days, and in no particular order, here we go.
Starting with you, Tim.
Okay, my fact is that Bulgaria has an agency that shoots rockets to kill hail.
To kill it.
To kill it.
Well, to minimize it.
It's preemptive strikes, hail strikes.
So I thought all this weather manipulation technology was bollocks, but apparently it's
not.
So Bulgaria has lots of agrarian, Bulgarian land, and they grow stuff, and hail damages
crops a lot.
And because of its geography and its variable landscape, there's lots of hail.
And so they use seeding techniques to, well, there are various ways you can lower hailstones
by seeding.
So do you want to know about it?
It's really super boring.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I think it's more boring than it actually is.
So you basically, they discovered in 1946 or something that if you put dry ice, solid
carbon dioxide into clouds, you can increase precipitation, basically, and later they found
out that something silver iodide and potassium iodide also do it.
There's various techniques.
You can drop them from a plane or shoot them up from a rocket, which is what the Bulgarians
do.
In terms of fighting too much hail, the main technique is basically that you shoot these
chemicals up.
It changes the chemical structure of the stuff within the cloud, and it actually makes more
small hailstones that compete for the available water.
So by the time they hit the ground, they're no longer hailstones because they started
too small.
I think I've misunderstood the fact because I thought they were shooting rockets at falling
hail.
I assumed it was like there was an attack happening, and they were like when you shoot
a missile at a plane to take it out of the water.
Like a game of space invaders.
Like a game of space invaders.
That would be amazing, with enough people and enough tiny rockets.
That'd probably work, but it's like those meteor or disaster movies, you've basically
got one massive hailstone coming towards Seineid Bruce Willis and that guy who sings
Love in an Elevator or his daughter.
Do you know that Armageddon fact about the fact that NASA, so they don't do it officially,
but they unofficially show people who are being recruited for NASA, the movie of Armageddon,
and the job is to spot as many inaccuracies as possible.
Oh good.
I think the...
It's over a hundred, isn't it?
Yeah, I think it's over two hundred.
So it's an icon of poor space fact.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah.
So that's actually a thing that they sit down and...
So I can't get the song in my head.
Don't wanna close.
Oh, don't wanna.
That's the guy.
I'll sleep cause I miss you, baby.
Oh, so good.
That's not inaccurate.
That's perfect.
Did I spot that?
It was the only bit they didn't quibble with.
How good the song is?
But there's sort of dodgy technology.
There's things called hail cannons.
So in medieval times they used to ring church bells and fire cannons into the sky and to
try and stop hail.
Oh, wow.
But they have things that still in modern times called hail cannons, which basically make
an explosion at the bottom of what looks like a large loud hailer.
Ironically.
And they send up a sound wave and it's meant to distribute hail and it doesn't work.
And they essentially don't work, do they?
No.
But they're still marketed everywhere.
If you look up kind of wine growers tips and stuff in Europe, people will try to sell
those things.
And they are like gigantic ice cream cones a bit, aren't they?
They're the same ones.
Yeah, they look like huge cones.
What you're saying about bell ringing, they used to do that to get rid of thunder.
Oh, yeah.
So they would send people up a massive tower with a bell in it to ring the bell to get
rid of the thunder.
And they get electrocuted.
Yeah.
It's next to a massive metal thing really high up.
Yeah.
I was reading just the other day about a miracle in the Middle Ages, which was where the church
bells started to ring by themselves because they were so happy.
So windy.
They were really thrilled at a particular religious event.
Do you know what my favorite thing about this fact is that the person who discovered that
silver iodide works as well or better than solid carbon dioxide in cloud seeding was
a guy called Bernard Vonnegut.
Right.
Any relation?
None information.
And I just, which is so weird and it's Kurt Vonnegut's brother.
Yeah.
And the weird thing is whenever I think of cloud seeding, I think of Katz cradle.
I think of us nine.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
And Katz cradle is all about an isotope that freezes liquid on contact.
And it's, so that's obviously what he was reading and thinking about.
Yeah.
His big brother was, because he was a science nerd, but I didn't know.
That's extraordinary.
It's one of my favorite.
It's a great book.
That's incredible book.
Yeah.
It's a scary book.
I'm glad for this hail fact.
So the thing that you were saying earlier about cloud seeding, not thinking that I had
no idea that worked.
And apparently it does.
I was reading that.
The Beijing Olympics for their opening ceremony.
They made sure that they had no clouds by doing literally that firing rockets into the
sky in order to knock them out.
And is it proper science?
Well, there are all sorts of question marks over it.
Okay.
Sometimes it works.
So it might have been a coincidence that there just was no clouds.
Yeah.
It's always hard to tell, basically.
I mean, you know, I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean,
I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean,
there was no clouds.
Yeah.
It's always hard to tell, basically, because you can't say it definitely would have rained.
There's no control group.
Yeah.
No.
And because the data set of any weather is chaotic, not climate, but weather, is chaotic.
You can always draw inference where there was an inference, you know?
Yeah.
But there's no way.
I mean, the Chinese government, of course, would say, like, we got rid of the cloud.
That's a very character.
Pleasant.
But it's not pseudoscience because you can measure impact, but the impact is never from
100 to zero.
It's percentages of manipulation.
Okay.
Have you read the accounts of people going in and doing cloud seeding?
No.
It's so hardcore.
People in planes, you know.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
People go in the plane.
So a Bloomberg journalist went up with a couple of cloud seeders who were doing cloud seeding
in Bangalore because India has drought problems.
So they were trying to solve that by generating a bit of rain.
And so what you do is you go under the huge storm cloud you can find, and there's a big
updraft in the middle of it, and you fly underneath that in your little plane, and you let yourself
get sucked up.
And I think you get sucked up.
You get sucked up at 800 feet per minute.
And so this journalist was just like, I was in the back behind them, just vomiting the
whole time.
Then what?
Then what?
Because you don't want to fly into clouds.
Are you?
Yeah.
So they've got, I think he had eight rockets on each wing and it fires the substances off
into the clouds and then allows them to seed.
But it sounds absolutely terrifying.
Wow.
That sounds terrifying.
He said he couldn't lift his hands off his lap because you're going up so fast.
There was a thing about, so when the USA was starting to get involved in a really serious
way, because they tried it over Laos during the Vietnam War, but also the USA had a national
research experiment in the 70s, and it lasted for four years.
And I think they closed it down because they hadn't got the technology right.
But when they were doing it, some farmers were very angry about the idea because they thought
that cloud seeding would reduce the rainfall and damage their crops the other way.
And some of them fired shots at aircraft, which they thought were doing cloud seeding.
Right.
So adding to the risk of being a seeder.
Do you know loud, this isn't very cheerful at all, but I haven't remembered it since I
was there about 10 years ago.
It was the most bombed country per square kilometer in the world because of during the Vietnam
War.
It's good to have a record of some description.
Yeah.
Exactly.
It's very proud of it.
Yeah.
It's on all their posters.
The only other thing is they have all those jars, don't they?
They have the plain of jars.
Plain of jars.
Full of unexplained jars.
We think they might have been for funeral uses.
Yeah.
The putting bodies in maybe.
Or they might have been for storing grain.
It's just hundreds and hundreds of massive human sized jars on a plane.
Wow.
Fantastic.
We don't know why there's jars on a plane coming this summer.
Do you know the biggest hailstone?
No.
2010.
A hailstone larger than a bowling ball fell on Vivian during an exceptional hailstorm.
Wow.
Vivian is a town in South Dakota.
Thank goodness.
It's going to say it didn't even get a surname, James.
It's really disrespectful.
She's like Madonna.
The hailstone obliterated her surname on her name tag.
Wow.
Have you heard about the guy who had weird blue hail fall in his garden in 2012?
No.
Did you think it was urine from a plane or something?
He didn't because my urine isn't blue, James.
Is yours?
I am going to have to see a doctor.
George III had blue urine, didn't he?
This wasn't George III's urine being caspotted out of a plane.
This was a guy called Steve Hornsby.
He lived in Bournemouth.
It was in the middle of a hailstorm.
These jelly-like three-centimeter diameter blue balls fell in his garden.
I think about a dozen of them fell in his garden.
He said they were squishy jelly-ish eggs.
They don't know what they were.
One of the researchers said that it might have been a bird's egg, like an undeveloped bird's egg.
She said bird's eggs have been implicated in previous strange goo incidents.
Apparently, because birds hold their eggs in their claws when they're flying,
but if they're hit by hail, then they let go of them in a panic.
This guy just had 12.
Birds hold their eggs in their claws when they're flying.
Apparently.
They'd better host the premise of my movie.
The whole first scene is a bird flying with an egg in its claws.
Is it actually?
That's a good spoiler.
Thanks.
We've got a scoop there.
It's only the beginning.
Do you think critics will walk out if it's actually an actuary to write on the music?
I can just picture a little kid next door to that guy in Bournemouth just throwing blue jelly over him,
watching the dude's face in one half.
Watching the journalists show up.
Have I taken this too far?
I have a couple of things on Bulgaria.
Did anyone want to go to Bulgaria?
No, but do it.
First off, I try to find a famous Bulgarian, which is quite hard.
There isn't really any.
It's still Stochkov.
OK, so we've got one.
Yeah.
Any lead on one?
I've got Simeon Saxokoba-Gotha.
OK, so who's your football player?
Football player, yeah.
And yours?
Mine was the prime minister of Bulgaria until 2005.
But here's the cool thing.
He was...
He is one of the only two...
Who had blue urine.
Who had blue urine.
He's one of the only two people who's currently alive,
who was ahead of state during the Second World War.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
He was the Tsar of Bulgaria in 1943,
when he was six years old,
and the Soviets invaded,
and he was exiled,
and then he stayed alive,
and stayed alive for a long time,
and then won an election in his native country in 2001.
Oh, wow.
That's so cool.
How cool is that?
That is cool.
Imagine the six-year-old.
I'll be back!
So you've got no Bulgarians?
No, I do.
I should just qualify and say internationally famous Bulgarians.
But it turns out that the grandparents of Mark Zuckerberg
are Bulgarian,
and he's named after his Bulgarian grandfather, Marco.
So he's there trying to claim him as Bulgarian.
Also, I found one very good politician from Bulgaria
who got fired in 2010,
because he was playing too much Farmville,
while they were trying to...
So Farmville's a game on an app,
and he was fired and he was dismissed,
and they added in his dismissal that he would now have more time
to attend to his virtual farm with his hail cannons.
I thought they'd send him down to be Minister for Agriculture.
Yeah, you would think.
And when he was dismissed,
he came back and he basically tried to explain himself
and tried to say that he wasn't the worst.
He said he'd only reached level 40,
while his Daniele Zelokov had the counsellor from the rightist Democrats
of the strong Bulgarian party,
was already at level 46.
So he was furious.
Okay, it's time for fact number two,
and that is Chizinski.
My fact this week is that we judge music more on how it looks
than how it sounds.
What?
What am I talking about?
So this is an experiment that was done by researchers at UCL in 2013,
and it was actually a sequence of seven experiments,
and it involved over 800 participants,
and some of them are musical experts,
and some of them are professional classical music judges,
and some of them are just amateurs, just plebs like you and me,
and they...
I take exceptions to that.
Accept you, James.
Different types of plebs.
And they got them to listen to recordings of people
who'd been entered into classical music competitions,
and to tell the participants
who they thought had won these competitions.
And when the participants just heard a recording of the recitals,
they had no better chance than just random chance
at knowing who'd won the contest.
And when they were watching the person performing
at the same time as listening to them performing,
they also had no better chance than just what would be random chance.
But if you muted the visuals,
and they just watched the person on the piano
doing the classical music recital,
suddenly the chance of them guessing who'd won the competition
went way up, and they got like...
They were more than twice as likely to...
Why do we think that's the case?
I mean, like, 96% of the professionals
and 88% of the amateurs said
that they would judge almost entirely on sound.
But actually, they think that we use visual cues,
so we don't quite realize it.
But when they say what they appreciate in the music,
they'll say something like passion.
And actually, they're getting passion out of the way
that a performer's moving.
And they're thinking, oh, I'm really enjoying hearing this piece.
I'm really appreciating the nuances in the music,
and how they're passionate.
I just thought it was really interesting that...
Yeah, that is interesting.
So whenever I'm seeing a band play,
the one that's coming to mind is Montpred & Sons.
There's a guy on the keyboards, right?
If I ever see it at a festival, and he goes for it,
and he's like, he's rocking on it,
but you know he's just playing a G.
Like, it's just a G over and over,
and it's like, why are you putting...
But if that was muted...
So it's not an acoustic instrument,
so you can't get more out of it by hitting it harder
but it's the same watching a pianist play
a beautiful acoustic piano,
and you'll watch some classical pianist
sort of ease their body in,
and their wrists down,
and they'll just sort of place their finger on the key,
and most of the cue you're getting from that,
the reason that sounds like a beautiful note
is because of the approach.
And you could go...
You could get a robot to go...
And it would sound exactly the same.
Well, this is the thing, this is why they have
blind auditions for orchestras these days,
because they noticed that they were...
Oh, and the gender bias is insane.
Yeah, and until the 70s or the 90s
about 5% of an orchestra was with female musicians,
which is obviously statistically surprising.
Well, but of course the assumption was,
ah well, you know, their brains are different
and they're physically not as capable
and so they can't cut it.
And everyone just took that as given,
ah well, women aren't as good as men at music.
And then they started blinding the auditions.
And guess what, it's like 50-50.
There's nothing to do with it.
But they had blind auditions
and still many more men were being chosen
for the orchestra than women.
And they worked out a possible explanation,
which was that the women were going
and wearing high heels to the blind audition.
Clip-clop, you heard the sound of their feet
and that might have been subconsciously affecting people.
Fools, they should have known.
I mean, women are idiots, I'm sorry.
I shouldn't have worn high heels.
That was the point I was trying to make there, right?
Yes, that women are idiots, great.
Yeah, it's pretty depressing.
This reminds me, this is a digression
but of blinding instrument tests
because have you guys discussed this?
No, no, I don't think we have.
About the Stradivarius effect, you know,
the knowledge that an instrument is,
I guess it is very related,
the knowledge that an instrument is worth a million quid
changes not only the audience's appreciation
but the musicians.
So a first chair or a soloist, classical violinist,
will, you know, get on lease or buy
if they're very lucky a Stradivarius
worth a million bucks.
And they'll play it,
and now everyone will swear black and blue
that it sounds better.
But if you, blinding this is quite hard
because the wood smells different
and it feels different and stuff,
if you control as much as you can for those variables
putting, you know, blocking their noses
and just get the players to play it
and hear it, they can't pick a Stradivarius
from a thousand dollar Chinese violin.
And this has been true for about 200 years.
I think they've been doing these studies
and it always shows, no one can tell.
But then every single year you get another thing saying,
oh, it's because of the wood, it's a special kind of thing.
They try the special kind of that, yeah.
Do you know what's valid though?
I mean, I was thinking about this today with disease
psychosomatic illness and stuff,
that if you have someone with one of these
umbrella diagnoses like chronic fatigue
or they'll be this outrage
if anyone suggests there's a psychological element
to their disease.
But that assumes a dichotomy
between neurology and physiology
that is something that increasingly we don't,
we realize is not true.
So the fact that a disease has a psychological element
or a neurological element, psychological and neurological
are kind of indistinct.
If it does have a psychological element
it doesn't mean you're not still sick.
It's just you're not necessarily sick.
These people want it desperately to be a tick
or some kind of pathogen.
But if you tell them it's neurological
they're like, no, it's not all in my head
and it's like it doesn't matter, it's all in your head in the end.
Pain and sickness and it's all interpreted.
And so with this violin thing
maybe it doesn't matter that it's bollocks
because the musician feels more passionate
about their music when they play it
and maybe it changes their body language
and changes the audience experience
and the fact that it's psychological is fine.
It's part of our experience.
It is, it's good stuff.
We should keep lying.
Let's re-label all violins.
Let's just do it.
I'd sell them all for 200,000 pounds.
If we do it.
If we do it and we cover it up 200 years from now
people will be enjoying music much more.
There was this guide.
He made thousands and thousands and thousands of bands.
He's still making them.
It's amazing.
The quick thing about cognitive bias
which this is kind of about
but which this is about
which is how we convince ourselves of things that aren't true
is that almost everyone thinks they're above average
and if you present people with most skills
and you do studies on how good they think they are at skills
and then you test how good they are at skills
people will think they're better than average at most things.
I think some things are particularly high.
There's a study in 1977 which is quite famous
where 94% of professors said they were above average
in relation to their peers.
So obviously this is people
we are so good at convincing ourselves of certain things.
With driving a lot as well isn't it?
Is there a gender thing there?
I bet men are worse.
In driving I think actually it was gender equal
because I was expecting that as well and I was disappointed.
I bet I'm above average thinking I'm better than you at things.
Do you know about what you guys discussed
the Dunning-Kruger effect?
But there's also a correlation between how bad you are
it's slightly a misinterpreted thing
but the gap between how good you are
and how good you think you are increases
as you get worse at a thing.
It's sort of like the less you know about other things
the less you know how bad you are at the thing.
The thing that people make a mistake with this data
which is very interesting data
is they think those people are so dumb
they don't know how dumb they are
but it's actually all of us.
We have things where the Dunning-Kruger effect
the point is it's the things we're shit at
that we don't know we're so shit at.
You've basically written a song about that haven't you?
The first song in Matilda is basically like that.
Oh yeah I guess.
The idea that everyone thinks their kid is above average.
Yeah.
Specialness is deregur above average as average go figure.
It's one of my best rhymes.
It's a children's musical.
You've got to go see it here.
Come on you people.
Okay it's time to move on to fact number three
and that is James.
Okay my fact this week is that the BFG's
dream powder also helps
against constipation.
Aw bless.
Is that an edited chapter?
So this is not in the book.
This is a thing that I read
by Ophelia Dahl who was
Roald Dahl's daughter.
She was talking about her childhood
and before Roald Dahl wrote the BFG
he kind of had this idea already
and his kids couldn't sleep
and he was like oh you know what
there's a kind of a dream powder
that people blow into your bedroom
and it gives you good dreams
but it also helps for anything
from maths problems to constipation.
Okay and then the kids kind of went to sleep
and then he ran outside, got his
ladder, put it up against the wall
ran up, put a bamboo pole
into their bedroom and pretended to blow in
sleep powder and then from there
that's where the idea from the book came.
So supposedly they knew
that it wasn't, that it was him
but they pretended to him afterwards.
And was there a lot of constipation
in the Dahl family?
Not after this.
They all immediately shot themselves.
Oh my god.
They did once
get suspicious I think
so they said how
are we supposed to know that this is real daddy
and so they went downstairs and confronted him
and he said how dare you question my
truthfulness and then the next day
they said they woke up and opened the curtains
and they saw the letters B, F, G
burned into their lawn and he loved his lawn
so much and apparently he was very angry
about this and that proved to them that the BFG existed.
So they were very easily convinced.
He sounds like a great dad.
I was reading about the first movie of the BFG
the animation and the original
voice was meant to be Spike Milligan
and I'm very upset
that it's not because I look at
the BFG's face and I see Spike Milligan now.
Right.
And when he showed up to the audition
they said he had to go home and shave.
I don't know why because it was a voice job.
Well, Dahl hated beards.
Oh really?
Was he a poginophobe?
Yeah, totally.
That's what...
I was at the twits.
He hates Mr. Twit.
I mean that's real.
I've talked to Lissy about that.
He really didn't like beards.
And he's saying they're a hairy smoke screen
behind which people hide.
And yeah, he really loathed them.
But is this true about beards
that this is difficult? Because he said that it was
a bad representation of male
vanity and no man should be vain.
But I would have thought that it's much more effort to shave
but he said I think it must take at least
twice as long to wash thoroughly a face
that is matted with bristly vegetation
so that no dirt or food remains
among the hairs than simply to shave.
But I didn't realise beards required that level
of cleaning. That does sound
phobic, doesn't it?
I mean I've never
considered washing my beard.
Do you have to clean like comb food up your beard
every night before you go to sleep?
No, should I?
That does sound phobic though, doesn't it?
Sounds like a sort of fantasy version
of what a beard might be like.
Or maybe sort of just sort of thinking
of big Dostoyevskian beards and
I don't know.
He had supposedly this cabinet of curiosities
and sort of odd things in his shed
and I imagine he would have seen all of these.
Yeah, I was actually one of the last people
to see it before it moved.
And now it's in the museum in Great Missinden.
He had some of his spine
in a jar
because he had a terrible spinal injury
when a plane crashed in the Libyan desert
during the Second World War.
And he also had
he had a draw on one of his filing cabinets
and the handle of it was
a bit of steel which had been put into his pelvis
during an unsuccessful hip replacement.
So he said well I'll just turn that into a
handle for a filing cabinet.
He was medically, he was extremely
unlucky I think in terms of people around him
and himself, wasn't he?
Sad.
So he lost his daughter and that obviously
just destroyed him but then
Theo
got, you know, his son got hit by a car
in New York when he was a little tiny infant
in a pram
but he invented this
shunt.
He got a model maker from down the road
and a doctor who turned out
bizarrely after I'd written Matilda
I found out as a friend of my grandad's.
My mum was reading his biography
and went Dave this is your father's friend.
So
that was very exciting when mum got to meet Lissy
but yeah
he just felt that
he should be able to fix stuff, you know
and such an interesting brain
this darkness and light and the
darkness versus the fantastical
you know, I just
absolutely intriguing guy.
And it did, you know, you hear about people
patenting things and being a bit wacky
but his invention genuinely did save
thousands and thousands of children's lives
didn't it?
It was superseded quite quickly but it was huge.
I think it was, yeah, very effective in its time.
3,000 children I think had it fitted.
And that is, you know, charity
saves a whole lot more and it's pretty incredible.
You know you had no teeth.
Really? He had them all out in his 20s.
It would have been a spy because
he was a spy briefly, a sort of military
attaché in Washington in the war
but he would have been a spy with no teeth.
At that awesome time. That's a great book isn't it?
A spy with no teeth.
It's on Ian Fleming's
backup list.
Doctor no teeth.
They were friends actually, weren't they?
Well done Ian Fleming.
They worked together a fair bit.
All they knew each other release and had mutual respect for each other
and they both sort of worked for MI5 together
at that time.
And they worked on two movies as well.
Yes and they worked on films together afterwards.
Did he do the spy who...
No, he did. You only lived twice.
And he also did Chilly Chilly Bang Bang.
Dahl, this is a thing I found out that I had no idea
is that he was
buried with a power saw.
Not that it was used to dig the grave.
I mean he was literally, he's got a power,
in his coffin with him or sort of in the,
I'm not sure whether, maybe it's a tomb,
a snooker queues,
some burgundy,
chocolates, HB pencils and a power saw.
We need to find that tomb
and get that burgundy.
We are low on wine.
He used to write for Playboy, didn't he?
He did, yeah. Wrote Playboy stories.
In fact Hugh Hefner did a thing
where in one of the editions
of Playboy he included 10
golden tickets and if you got
a golden ticket in the Playboy
copy, you then got to go
to the Playboy mansion to an exerated wonderland
where you had a chocolate factory.
Oh, that's great.
Nine year old has the most
traumatic day of his life.
This is just one tiny fact about dreaming
but because the BFG is about dreams,
am I right? Yeah, sure.
So there was a study done in Germany
about nightmares and five most
common themes for nightmares are
falling, being chased,
being paralysed, the death
of family or friends and
being late.
Which is like,
is that up there with all these other
traumatic things that could possibly ever happen to you?
Not knowing your lines
is what I get. Really? Oh yeah.
Having to go on, not knowing my lines.
Often Shakespeare.
Having to go on in a Shakespeare
and not knowing my lines. Would that be worse
because a lot of people are just going to know all the lines anyway.
Yeah, probably.
Shouting it out.
Or not to me.
I have a fact about constipation.
Oh please.
This is from, you know the Guardian used to do notes and queries
and you sometimes find
they're very old columns online basically.
They have one question and a load of people answer.
Have they stopped doing it now? I'm not sure
but a lot of them look archived now basically.
There was a thing about old books, right?
And a couple of people
wrote in and one person wrote in saying
the father of a friend of mine used to find
that breathing in the atmosphere of a
well-stocked secondhand bookshop,
the mustier the better, was a certain cure
for his acute constipation.
That sounds like the Mariko Aoki
phenomenon. Yes, exactly.
There's a phenomenon we've talked about on this podcast
which is this woman, I think, Mariko Aoki
where she was overwhelmed
by the urge to have a poo when she was in a bookshop.
I wonder,
and there's another letter, another person
second down wrote
I first became aware of this little known side effect
of my interest in old books some years ago
and have been plagued by it ever since
I'm reassured to know there are other sufferers.
I think we might have cracked the phenomenon.
Well, you do get a lot of
kind of not bacteria but fungal spars
don't you in old books?
So maybe it speeds up the process.
It might do. Yeah, it must do.
I thought it might be associative.
So these people are people who read their old books
on the loo
and their brain goes,
oh, old book, poo time.
That's an amazing theory.
Can I just, there's one cure for constipation
that I like that I didn't know about
which is the violet ray device
and so I think this was
kind of sort of invented by Tesla
so it's an electrical device
which was used to cure a whole bunch of stuff
as late as the 1930s
and it basically is a
therapy to, and you put
the instrument that puts an electric current
through whatever bit of your body is ailing
you put it on that and it cures it
and you're supposed to put it into your rectum
and you saw an electric current
up there and it relieves constipation.
It feels like it would work.
In the 1930s, if you look at newspaper adverts
it's all over it, the violet ray device
or violet ray therapy.
Electric kind of butt plugs to get
semen from rhinos that happen to know.
Oh yeah, yeah.
I'll give you all my names.
OK, it's time for a final fact of the show
and that is Andrew Hunter Murray.
My fact is that Britain has only one
performing circus raccoon.
So I found this fact in the spectator
it's from the House of Commons papers
and there are not many animals
performing in circuses left in the UK
and elephants and big cats have both been
banned from British circuses.
There are now two travelling circuses.
They're turning up drunk.
It does make us like they've misbehaved.
They can't come to a circus drunk mate.
There's raccoons on stage.
They can't do their job.
So there's the circus Mondeo
who have horses, camels, llamas, mules,
donkeys, reindeer and one zebra.
OK.
And there's Peter's Jolly Circus
which I phoned up both of these circuses.
Did you?
Yeah, they had a chat with them
and Peter's Jolly Circus has
horses, donkeys, ponies, a camel,
two zebras, llamas, a parrot
and Reggie the raccoon.
I spoke to the guy who keeps him.
What does he do?
Well, he does a lot of stuff.
Firstly, he did an advert with Gary Linnaker.
A crisp advert.
I imagine it was a crisp advert.
Reggie salted.
Very good.
Very good.
As you are.
So I thought you guys might ask
what does Reggie do?
And I asked the keeper and he said
he basically, I'm paraphrasing,
but he said he basically walks around
the ring fence and goes up on a ramp
onto a platform and goes in and out of
poles like dogs do for there's agility
things and then comes back down.
So maybe that's why there's only one.
Fantastic.
But the keeper was at pains to point out
he's not the UK's only performing raccoon
because there's a lady who did Britain's
Got Talent with a raccoon.
So raccoons have public toilets,
they have their own latrine area,
and we don't know why they do it,
whether it's from a sense of cleanliness
or one the article's reading said
maybe for communication purposes,
but they have the group of raccoons
will designate a toilet place and they
will go and shit there and that's
where they do that.
Well, raccoon droppings are very poisonous.
They have little nematode worms in them
that can kill you.
Really?
I think there's like even no cure or something.
That's why I was wondering why quite a lot
of the warnings are very alarmist about
raccoons.
That explains that.
The government of the Bahamas
were protecting the Bahaman raccoon
and then someone did
some DNA test and found it was exactly
the same as a North American common raccoon
and so overnight they went from
protecting them to setting up an eradication
across.
That's so good.
It's such a horrible news to wake up to
as there's raccoons
in their four poster beds
darling, what's wrong?
I have a few facts about circus things.
Right.
Okay.
So I found an unbelievably good
book called Beastly London
by Hannah Velton.
It's so good.
It's a history of almost every animal
that's ever been in London and it's incredible.
So just a few circus shows
that happened.
There was The Singing Mouse
which appeared in 1843
at some private rooms in Regent Street
and apparently it could warble incessantly
for a quarter of an hour.
Wow.
Yeah.
Even better on mute.
And then a few years later there was a rival
Singing Mouse which set up off the strand
which we're very near at the moment
at a hairdresser's and tickets were sixpence
but if you got a haircut it was free
to see the mouse.
Weird enough that a mouse can sing but sing
and cut hair at the same time.
That's incredible.
I just remembered I went to a circus museum
in Florida.
I can't remember if it's somewhere in Florida.
I can't remember what it is.
And then they had a load of weird people
with things and one of them went downstairs
on his head and that was his whole act.
That's good.
It was just like...
Without using his hands?
Without using his hands he would just kind of
get on the top step with his head
and then I guess use his neck muscles or something.
One of the first ever circus performers
rode a horse standing on his head.
Was he one of Astley's?
I think he was pretty Astley so it wasn't
actually circus because Philip Astley's
the guy who invented the circus.
But he did a lot of weird kind of...
Astley did incredible horse riding.
There was a guy called Daniel Wildman
who was so good.
1772 this is.
He could ride a horse while standing up
right, pretty good,
with a mask of bees on his face.
That's awesome.
Isn't that incredible?
I'd like to see him riding a bee
with a mask of horses on his face.
So just one sentence about him.
He rides standing up on the saddle
with the bridle in his mouth
and by firing a pistol
makes one part of the bees mount over the table
and the other parts swarm in the air
and return to their proper place.
He was doing tricks,
kind of show jumping with the bees
while riding a horse
but apparently he held the queen bee in his hand
so to sort of get them to follow along.
That's amazing.
That sounds ridiculous sort of level of
imagination to work on the scale of a horse
and the scale of a bee at the same time.
Have you guys heard of the dog's toilet club?
Have we?
I reckon I've accidentally stumbled into it.
What is it?
It was an establishment on Bond Street
in the early 20th century.
Unfortunately it's not quite as good as it sounds.
It was where you could buy nice things for dogs
like toilet in the sense of like toilet water.
And it was incredibly lavish
because it was on Bond Street
so you could get scented baths
or hankies for your dog
or dueled collars or fur coats.
When was that?
Early 20th century.
That's weird that people have been doing that for so long.
Yeah.
So that dog's toilet club is also in the beastly London book.
I cannot recommend it enough.
One of my favourite circus facts of recent times
is that John Major's dad,
former Prime Minister of England,
John Major, his dad was in the circus.
And by all accounts,
I'm going to actually properly read about him.
Sounds like an extraordinary guy, Tom Major.
And the idea that everyone says is fact,
although I don't think David Bowie actually said it,
is that he used to see the poster of Tom Major.
That was Major Tom.
And that was Major Tom,
and that was in Brixton,
and that was where Bowie was at the time.
This song originally went,
This is Ground Control to Tom Major.
Ah, I just can't believe it.
Oh, the roar of John Major.
You will be the Prime Minister.
Okay, that's it.
That's all of our facts.
Thank you so much for listening.
If you'd like to get in contact with any of us
about the things that we've said
over the course of this podcast,
we can all be found on Twitter.
I'm on at Shriverland, James.
At Egg Shaped.
Andy.
At Andrew Hunter M.
Tim.
Tim Minchin.
And Chazinsky.
Podcast at qi.com.
Yep.
Or you can go to atqipodcast,
which is where all of us exist as one unit,
including Tim now.
And, or go to knowsuchthingasafish.com,
which is our website.
And we have all of our previous episodes up there.
We will be back again next week with another episode.
Goodbye.
Thank you.