No Such Thing As A Fish - 122: No Such Thing As A Sticky Shell Spoon
Episode Date: July 15, 2016Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss holey spoons, the speed of snow and how to get more milk from a cow....
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Hello, and welcome to another episode of 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 am sitting here with Andy Murray, Anna Chazinski and James
Harkin, and once again, we have gathered around the microphones with our four favourite
facts from the last seven days, and in no particular order, here we go.
Starting with you, Andrew Hunter Murray.
My fact is that farmers in Botswana have started painting eyes on their cows' bottoms
to stop lions from attacking them.
So good.
We don't need anything more.
Time for fact number two.
Does it work, Andy?
Well, this is the really interesting thing.
This is in the trial stages at the moment, so it's by a British conservation biologist
called Neil Jordan.
He works in Australia and Botswana, so we're in Botswana here, and he wanted to trick lions
into thinking that they've been spotted when they're sneaking up on a cow.
So he's been working in the Okavango Delta, and he did a trial last year where 23 cows
had eyes painted on their bottoms.
They all survived, and in the rest of the herd, there were 39 cows which were not painted,
and of those cows, three were eaten by lions.
So it's a very small sample size, so he is literally, I wrote to him and said, can you
paint some eyes on my bottom, please?
And this coming Monday, in a few days, is going to Botswana again.
He's going to try a larger sample group, and the idea is that it's a very cheap way of
stopping a herd being eaten.
So the cost of painting a herd for a year is much less than the value of one cow being
eaten.
It's not cheap if the cows value their self-respect, though, is it?
No.
It's probably a very expensive social sacrifice.
They look like elephants, actually, because of their tails sticking out between the eyes.
I'm going to put up a photo on my Twitter feed, AndrewHunterM, and you can see what they
look like.
They should teach them to reverse as well.
They told them to walk backwards to make it really realistic.
You know they did the same thing to people for the same reason.
So in 1989, I found this in an old edition of The New York Times.
In 1989, thousands of face masks were issued by the Forestry Reserve in India to a bunch
of people who were living near the Ganges where tigers kept killing people, and the
face masks were to wear on the back of their heads.
And they found that within something like a year and a half, nobody wearing the face
mask on the back of their head, so they had a face on the back of their head got attacked.
Wait, so the way to avoid tiger attack is to look at it in the face?
Yeah, they won't jump at you if you'll...
Of course they will.
Tigers would obviously rather sneak up on you from behind.
I think they're not attacking you because you've got two faces.
It's like if you got to a supermarket and you don't buy the kind of...
The straight bananas.
Yeah, the bananas that look weird.
You don't buy them.
You only buy the ones that look nice.
So there's a company which has started selling ugly fruit and vegetables, isn't there, because
they're cheaper.
They sell really misshapen, disgusting-looking tomatoes, but they're completely the same
nutritionally.
They do.
It's France, I think.
Yeah.
And they just had a new rule in France to say that supermarkets have to give any food
which is about to go past its sell-by dates to homeless people.
That's so good.
Yeah.
A lot of them did it anyway, but the laws come in now to say they have to.
I can't believe we don't all do that.
It seems so obvious.
Speaking of cows bummed very quickly, have you guys heard of...
Well, I hadn't heard of this, so I apologize if this is very well known, but have you heard
of cow blowing?
The idea is that they want to induce more milk from the cow, so what they do is they
lift up the tail and they blow into its butt, and or vagina.
So it's one of the two.
There's always a common thing, isn't there, where people say, milking a cow, who was the
first person to ever think of that?
Like, that must be one sick individual, but then I would say it's an even sicker individual
who first blows into a cow's vagina and then they think, wow, they gave me even more milk.
I agree.
I know.
But weirdly, it is done, and Gandhi supposedly didn't drink milk because he hated this process,
so he was like, if you're going to blow cows, I'm not going to get involved.
That's one of his favourite quotes.
Actually, it's attributed to him, but I think it might have been Churchill.
There is an actual quote, just for the sake of saying it, since I had come to know that
the cow and the buffalo were subjected to the process of fuka, it's called PHWKA, of
course it is.
This is all they do.
I had conceived a strong disgust for milk, so it's called, yeah, it's called cow blow
and all.
And wait, do you just have to get in there?
They sometimes do it with a tube, or they sometimes...
Sometimes with a tube, I should have always...
Oh no, you should watch YouTube videos, they're amazing, it's quite common.
Sorry, Gary, we've forgotten the tube today again, so...
Oh no, Gary, that's the wrong end of the tube.
Oh, Gary.
No, Gary, you're meant to blow.
It's also called insufflation, and yeah, it's quite common in African countries in
Kenya and Tanzania, I think they do it quite a bit, but you should watch videos, it looks
hilarious, they just lift up the tail and thrust their noses right in there, didn't they?
Because it's been around since Herodotus, who was the first person, the first...
I know, I know, it's not a great start, any scientific thing, but Herodotus described
this happening in horses, so he said that people would insert a tube into the mare's
anus, then blow.
So this fact is about bottoms, that this is not the only bottom related story in the
week's news, so I don't know whether you've seen this, but in the times recently there
was a tiny article about a robot bottom which has been invented for doctors to learn how
to do prostate exams.
I'm very indebted to Tom Whipple, who's the science editor at the times, so he told me
a bit about this.
It has prosthetic buttocks and an adjustable rectum.
The really exciting thing is what this is designed to replace, and there is a system
at the moment, which is that there is someone in the UK whose job is rectal teaching assistant.
He goes around the country lending out his bottom to prostate trainees.
Is there only one person?
There's only one person in the entire United Kingdom who goes around with his bottom, and
I've written to his people, but they haven't got back to me yet.
He has people?
He has people, yeah.
So is he furious that this robotic bum is now...
He's very glad, and he won't be losing his job, because he is also very important, it's
just that he's quite overworked at the moment, because just one of them, they've developed
a robot assistant.
He provides very useful feedback on what the procedure is like from a patient's point
of view.
Presumably you can't feel anything at this point, and you can't possibly have the average
rectum anymore.
I think this man's a bloody hero, I really do.
How did he fall into that job, that is incredible.
So this guy probably doesn't suffer from another condition called dormant bottom syndrome.
What was that?
This is a real syndrome.
It's a guy called Chris Colber, who's a sports medical guy, and he reckons that the increased
sedentary lifestyle of humans means you sit down all the time, and it means your gluteus
maximus doesn't get enough exercise, and the muscle isn't strong enough, and it means that
other parts of your leg get a lot more stress, or your knees might get more stress, or your
hips might, because a lot of work that would be done by your gluteus is not done by that
anymore.
That's very interesting.
Wow.
So a good way to avoid the agonizing knee joint pain, I'm already getting age 30, is to stand
up more, basically.
Two more squats.
Two more squats.
And then you won't have dormant bottom syndrome.
That's amazing.
Have you guys heard of skipper caterpillars?
No.
No.
These are very cool animals.
Basically caterpillars get preyed on a lot, and one of the ways the predators find them
is they trace them by their poo, so it is bad as a caterpillar to be near your own poo.
But skipper caterpillars, they have a trick which they can do, which is to fling their
poo as if from a catapult.
They have a flap under their anus, and they build up blood pressure to build up pressure
and pressure and pressure.
And then eventually they fling their poo.
They can fling it 40 times their own body length.
Wow.
So that's the equivalent of a human being able to throw their own poo, 80 metres.
Wow.
You do get arrested for that, as if you didn't know, you should have worn 80 metres.
James, that's really hard.
Yeah, I know it is, but I'm thinking like, okay, let's say a Discus world record is going
to be around 80 metres like that.
Yeah.
That's a Discus.
They don't get to do the spin before.
And they're not flattens your poo into a Discus shit.
Also, you're not throwing it with your own anus, are you?
Oh, that's true, yeah.
If it was the anus Discus, I think the record would be much lower.
It would be a great spectator sport.
Amazing.
The shit pot.
Or the Discus.
OK, it is time for fact number two, and that is James.
OK, my fact this week is that my top speed running in armour is the same as the top
speed of a snowflake falling to earth.
How have you tested this?
No, so I read this in a study by Graham N.
Askew et al, it's in the Proceedings of the Royal Society, and they said that a 38-year-old
man can sustain a maximum speed in armour of 1.7 metres per second.
And I'm not quite 38, but I'm a bit out of shape, so I reckon that's about my maximum
speed.
And according to the internet, especially the Telegraph of the 7th of January, 2010,
the average snowflake has a top speed of 1.7 metres per second as well.
Oh, so you worked this out?
Yeah.
Because I was looking for the article when you mentioned this, and I couldn't find the
scientific experiment where a man in armour raised a snowflake to a destination.
It takes the average snowflake an hour, the journey from the cloud to the ground.
Wow.
Yeah, it's an hour's trip.
Oh, well that's all it is, and an hour's run, amazing.
This is the fastest that a snowflake can reach, I think, rather than the average here.
Right.
OK.
Is the Hussein Bolt snowflakes?
Yes, you're quite right.
Some of the things that are 1.7 metres per second, according to the internet, it's the
speed when ponies tend to change from walking to trotting.
Nice.
It's the kind of average speed of a 100 metre freestyle racer during the 1972 Olympics,
swimming.
And it's the speed that trapdoor ants trapdoor themselves away from predators, because they
can kind of jump away from predators.
But for them, that's really fast, isn't it?
Because they're tiny.
Yeah, exactly.
That's very cool.
Yeah, 1.7 metres per second, I'm struggling to get a grip on how fast that is.
In miles an hour, is that like a really fast walk, or is it a small short run, Nora?
You could probably run about twice that, just under twice that speed without any armour,
because actually armour isn't as heavy and awkward as people used to think it was.
There's this kind of meme of people in massive suits of armour hardly being able to move
at all, but actually that's not true to life, because obviously that would be ridiculous
in a battle if everyone could just kind of move very slightly.
And apparently those swords weren't as heavy as we think they were either, because the
other thing is the swords are these huge, like incredibly heavy weapons, and actually
they were never more than five... five.
I thought five was quite heavy, actually, I think.
Oh, I've been working out.
This is interesting, because there was a study in 2011, which put knights on a treadmill,
or put people in suits of armour on a treadmill, and they got tired.
They thought the one problem was that you're wearing a backplate and a breastplate, and
basically you can't take a huge breath in.
You can only take small, shallow breaths, which means that you do get quite tired quite
quickly, because you can't get enough oxygen to your muscles.
So this new study seems to completely contradict that one.
I'm not sure.
I mean, you say they got tired.
Did they put them on the treadmill at high speed for eight hours?
Because we need to qualify at what point they got tired on the treadmill.
They ran for 23.
They found it used twice as much energy as doing the same thing without armour in this
previous experiment.
Well, actually, this experiment as well, they're saying, yes, definitely it takes more energy,
and it's harder to walk at any speed in armour, but actually it's just not as much as you
think.
Right.
Well, okay, so here's the thing.
You know, they have actual jousts these days, I mean, there are genuine competitions which
take place.
So there's one woman called Nikki Willis, but she jousts as...
Oh, it's St. Retham, because she's from Stratum, or she says she's of St. Retham, so she's
brilliant.
And she has just taken part last month in the first ever competitive of jousts between
a man and a woman.
Oh, great.
And I didn't know this about jousting.
Do you know what you get points for?
I think it's where you hit them on the body, isn't it?
Exactly.
It's not knocking someone else off.
Like a dartboard.
It's like a dartboard, yeah.
And the article I read said it was a prearranged thing, as though you have to, like in like
in pool where you name the pocket you're going to sink and you say, right, I'm going to hit
them on the shoulder or whatever.
I'm not sure whether it's that or whether it is just like a dartboard where you get
most points for hitting them in the helmet.
I thought in the olden days it was like treble 20 would be a helmet.
If you've got them on that thin line where the eyes are, jousting didn't really exist
in medieval times.
It was the Malay that was the big sport that they do, which in the Malay was lots of people
galloping towards each other, and a bit of a side line at these big Malay festivals
would be the joust, which no one really watched and no one cared about.
And then as these ideas of chivalry and this one night ruling above everyone and attracting
the best women and stuff came into the fore in Tudor times, then the joust became the
centerpiece of these tournaments.
I remember reading about the Malay, wasn't it?
I read about one where it was like the French and the English were all taking part and then
the French kind of cheated or the English cheated.
The English cheated, but they copied the French.
So the English cheated by saying they weren't going to get involved in a Malay.
I think this is in the 15th century.
They kind of stood on the side and went, oh, you guys carry on, and then as soon as everyone
else was tired and lost all the fingers and stuff, they kind of ran in.
Yeah, there were several nations fighting.
I think that was it, and the English just sort of hung around on the edge.
Maybe we should have done that in the Euros.
Just sat out the first few rounds and then rocked up.
Instead of the last few rounds.
They're the wrong way round, guys.
Do you know what's...
So this is a cool thing.
The whole medieval thing got kickstarted in the 19th century.
They had kickstarter back in the 19th century, yeah.
No, it was in 1839, there was a thing called the Eglinton tournament, and it was this
quite eccentric lord called Lord Eglinton, who just said, I'm going to revive the idea
of chivalry.
We've been going without it for too long, and he hosted this massive medieval tournament,
but it was in Scotland, unfortunately, which meant that it was a total washout.
Like huge rains, huge storms, huge winds, and the whole thing was a disaster, and the tilting
yard had this huge roof, and there were huge crowds, and then it started leaking, and basically
the crowds did not come back on the second day, but he just had paintings done, which
made it look amazing, and then everyone else said, oh, well, this is great, we should do
this.
And if one looked at those and went, ah, do you remember the great tournament of 1836
or whatever?
Exactly, yeah.
Oh, cool.
You know, there were quite a lot of paintings of female jousters and knights in armour.
I was going to mention one earlier, and you think of women as not having been really
involved in that, but there were a few female knights in history.
You can only think of Joan of Arc.
There's Joan of Arc.
I can think of that lady in Game of Thrones.
There was obviously her, I think she was...
Brienne of Tar.
Yes.
Yeah, 14th, 15th century Brienne of Tar, whatever.
Yep, there was a noble woman called the Countess Jean de Pontievre, but there are quite a few
medieval depictions of women in armour jousting and stuff, but it was thought to be improper
to show them with something as phallic as a joust, and so they'd show them in jousting
tournaments, carrying a disc staff, which is one of those needles that you wrap wool
around when you're sewing.
You would think that instead of painting the joust, they'd paint like a vagina or something.
Yeah.
I thought you were going to come up with a weapon that looks like a vagina, but no.
I couldn't think of any.
If I could have thought of one, I would have said it.
I know.
There aren't other.
No.
It's harder because longer and pointier things is what is traditionally used in battles.
Yeah.
A bear trap?
That's pretty messed up, Ben.
Don't blow it to that vagina, don't you?
Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that archaeologists have started throwing artefacts into skips because
there is now too much history for them to store.
There's just too much history.
Too many bits of history, and all of their back rooms are getting clogged up, and they
don't know what to do with them.
It costs too much to store them, so they just have to throw them away.
What happens is you put it all in a landfill, and then in another thousand years, they come
to this landfill with loads of different types of history.
They'll have some Victorian stuff, some Roman stuff, and they'll think, wow, all these people
live together with TVs.
Time travel happened.
They cracked it.
This is one amazing point.
It's where they all...
Guys, we're screwing with the future.
This is terrible.
We need to leave notes in landfills saying this did not all come at one.
It's really interesting because they're being told lots of local community archaeology groups
find things.
They take them to museums, but because of lots of funding cuts, the museums then say we have
no storage, and then I think they have to give them back to the people who own the land
it was found on, and those guys who own the land might just keep them in their house,
and if they die or move, then their inheritors or the next people might think this is rubbish
and throw it away.
The museums have to charge.
It's like taking out a PO box, as it were, for mail to be delivered from somewhere that's
not your house.
It's you pay for a box if you want something to be put in a museum, and that can range
between 20 pounds and 600 pounds, so you're effectively saying I'd like to donate this
bit of history to you guys, but then I now need to pay to have it stored as well, and
people can't afford that, so just things are being thrown away.
That's terrible.
It doesn't sound like people are finding full statues of Cleopatra and chucking them away.
I think it's obviously shards of pottery that do have amazing inscriptions on them and so
on, but they have lots of examples of it, so they'll be...
Yeah, there was an excellent article on cracks, and I love it when cracks does articles written
by someone with this job, but there was this article on cracks by an archaeologist called
Hadas Levine, and she's an Israeli archaeologist, and she said they throw away about 65% of
what they find, and the bits of pottery, the only bits of pottery that are useful at the
bottom and the top, because it's only at the lip and the base that you can really date
it, and all the stuff in between, you just chuck it straight back, unless it's got some
really cool thing, like an engraving of a penis on it, and then obviously you keep it,
because we love that.
They're pretty similar to us in that way.
But remember, Andy, you, ages ago, were telling me about the fact that there was a new train
system that was being built, and as they were digging, this was in Istanbul, I think, and
as they were looking, there was just too much history.
Rome.
Rome is having another underground line built at the moment, and they just, they've had
to delay it three times now, because they keep finding, oh, well, it's another massive
barracks full of statues and, you know, ancient important stables and things like that, so
yeah.
I think that happened with Crossrail a bit as well, didn't it?
Yeah.
They kept finding things.
They kept finding plague pits when they first built the tube.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think there's a kink in, I'm going to say it's in the Piccadilla line, but obviously
some people listening would know, but I think there's a kink in it, which goes around
a plague pit.
Oh, really?
That must be a classic problem of anyone building underground rail.
Well, yeah, and I think if we mentioned before, with HS2, there was an archaeologist shortage.
And there still is.
Yeah.
If you're listening to this and you're wondering what to do with your life, become an archaeologist
or go around letting people put their finger up your bum.
There's a shortage in that too.
It's just a binary choice now.
All of our jobs are filled.
I went onto a website called, it's a tumbler, called Archaeologist Problems, and there's
a few of those.
One of them is being asked if giants really exist, but their discovery is covered up
by the museums.
Apparently that's something they get asked quite a lot.
I thought I was being original with that question.
Archaeologist joys finding massive amounts of well-preserved artifacts in one small location
followed by archaeologist problems.
Said small location is a privy and the smell is stuck on your clothing, your hair, your
field gear, everything.
Wow.
So that's a problem they have.
Also a problem they have is getting teased in Europe for sharpening your trowel and getting
teased in the US for not sharpening your trowel.
Archaeologists can be so cruel.
Yeah.
But I think this is a good tip because, Andy, you're saying that people should become archaeologists.
Maybe if you're going to become one, then make sure you always sharpen your trowel in
the US, but don't do it in Europe.
You better have got that the right way round, James, because if you're responsible for the
rampant bullying of all archaeologists henceforth.
If you're going to become an archaeologist, maybe become a US one.
So if you get into a fight with a non-US archaeologist, you'll have a sharp trowel.
So just on things being thrown away by mistake.
In 2014, Bournemouth Council, they launched this new scheme where it was a food waste
collection service and you basically had your own little bin which clipped on inside your
bin.
And then bin men accidentally threw away a hundred of the little bins.
Doesn't that matter?
You know, a huge number of coins get thrown away, coins that add up to a massive value.
So I was looking at a study which was called a statistical analysis of coins lost in circulation
and it said that in 1995, but I can't see why it would have changed much, the average
one cent coin in America had a 0.3 circulation rate.
So I think that probably means for every one coin that you put in circulation, you get
0.3 coins back.
So pretty much 70% of coins never come back in.
They just, well, you know, you chuck a coin into like a pot and you never use it again
or it falls down the back of the sofa.
Down a well.
Down a well.
Happens with pennies especially.
Yeah.
So they've estimated that $3 billion worth of pennies go missing every year.
Every year.
Every year.
If you could get all those pennies, but you can't.
You can't.
And I think it ceases to be legal tender after you pay 20 P's worth of copper.
What?
Seriously?
Something like that.
It's 20 something P I think.
So if you want to pay for something and you want to pay just in pennies, they can still
accept it if they want to, but then don't legally have to accept it anything over.
I think it's 20 people.
It might be more.
That is fascinating.
There are those machines now though in the supermarkets where you can put them in.
Yeah.
You'd probably be there for about.
If you have 3 billion.
Yeah.
I did.
They have those in Australia as well.
And when I moved there temporarily and I was unemployed, I had no money, but my boyfriend
had a lot of change lying around the house.
So I went and collected it all up.
Collected our stole.
You went over at night when he was asleep and collected it.
But yeah, I remember just feeling like such a weird person walking up to the bank with
this enormous suitcase full of coins.
It was something like $400 worth of coins.
It was great.
It got through the next year.
Yeah.
He's ridiculous.
He holds it.
He's collecting it, which means you stole it.
Look, he'd never noticed.
Did he also collect his television as well?
One American bloke, he walked around the town he lived in and he would go on long walks
every day.
And whenever he passed by a car wash, he would just feel in the chain slot in the vacuum
machine, you know, you pay a few coins and you get to use the vacuum machine to hoover
the inside of your car.
He made an average of $5.60 per trip and over a decade, he made $21,000.
Just from that.
He's actually still not enough to live on, is it?
Nope.
It's a really nice bonus.
But I'm also thinking he could be using his skills for better use because what he's
doing is he's putting his finger into a small hole and feeling around.
There must be another job that he could do.
I can't think of anything.
OK, it's time for our final fact of the show and that is Anna Czenski.
Yeah, my fact is that restaurants in 1950s Vietnam punched holes in their soup spoons
to stop people stealing them.
It's amazing.
Right.
So weird.
So I read this in an excerpt from this cookbook called The Foe Cookbook by Andrea Nguyen.
And yeah, she was saying under communism in the 1950s, a lot of people were stealing cutlery
from restaurants and so restaurants decided that they would punch holes in the middle
of soup spoons, which she described as making the soup a lot harder to drink.
It had to be gulped down extremely quickly because otherwise it dribbled all out of the
spoon before it got to your mouth.
Right.
But apparently it was to stop people stealing them.
It's weird, that, isn't it?
Because you would think either the hole makes it completely useless that you can't drink
out of it or it's still OK in which case you can use it in the restaurant but you can
also still use it at home.
Exactly.
By the end of your meal you've mastered the use of a holy spoon and you bring that home.
Yeah.
Well, they actually did it again.
There's one other newspaper article citing it being done in 1993 in Russia in the city
of Cheboksary and it did conclude that this anti-theft advice did not work.
So this was saying that the anti-theft idea in this place was to put holes in the spoons
and then diners at the cafe were instructed to ball up pieces of bread that came with their
meal in order to plug up the hole in the spoon.
That's a great idea.
It's amazing how much stuff gets stolen from restaurants.
I didn't realise this.
Jamie Oliver said he lost 30,000 napkins, oh I don't know whether it was a month or
a year now.
Oh yeah.
But it was some vast number.
His napkins have got like branded Jamie Oliver on them or something, don't they?
Yeah.
He says Jamie Oliver on them I think.
Have we mentioned the Virgin thing before on the Virgin?
He's got children then.
I don't think we can make this out of his.
He's a virgin.
No, Virgin Airlines had a similar problem years ago.
They had these little planes, salt and pepper shakers and people kept stealing them because
they just looked so cool.
And so they thought rather than combating it by stopping production of it or trying to
work out how to stop people from stealing it, they ended up just having a little embossed
thing at the bottom saying pinched from Virgin Airways and it became a huge marketing tool.
Everyone loved the idea.
So they were encouraging people to steal them.
This is like, Oaxaca had an amnesty on stolen spoons recently actually because I think Oaxaca
spoons are also quite distinct, I think they're big and round and plastic.
They're like plastic, aren't they?
Yes, and colourful.
So they had an amnesty where they said if you return stolen spoons, then we'll give
you free food and there were posters up which said, sure, they're irresistibly bright and
some say ergonomically perfect, true, there's no finer ladle for your last mouthful.
But please, please, can we have them back?
The State Parliament in Russia, the Duma, they had a lot of problems with people stealing
cutlery.
Do they?
In 2004 at least they did.
They were losing 30 to 40 spoons and 15 forks a week, so they're losing that much per week.
And there was a guy, an MP called Sergei Glotov, and he thought that basically because they
didn't have a gift shop whenever anyone came, they just thought I'm going to have to take
something so I'm going to take some cutlery instead.
When I went to Russia, Lodzka, which is spoon, is one of the few words that I learned and
people kept over the course of the week, nicking me spoons from around the place.
Because you just kept saying Lodzka, Lodzka.
Yeah, I kept saying Lodzka and people found it very amusing and they gave me, I came
back with about half a dozen spoons.
Lodzki meaning spoons is also a musical instrument, I think.
The spoons, yeah.
Yeah, it's like the spoons but they're like decorated and they're big and I have some
at home.
Nice.
You should have gone round Russia saying the words, learned the words for slightly more
valuable exciting things.
Yeah, I get it.
So I was saying diamond, diamond.
I know.
Should have learned that.
Yeah, so disappearing spoons seems to be a major thing to the extent that the British
Medical Journal in 2005 published a report called The Case of the Disappearing Teaspoons
Longitudinal Cohort Study of the Displacement of Teaspoons in an Australian Research Institute.
And it was a study where they investigated the lifespan of a teaspoon and how soon it
would be stolen.
And they worked out that the half-life of teaspoons was 81 days.
If you wanted to have an institute-wide population of 70 teaspoons in this research institute,
you would need to buy 250 teaspoons in one year.
And their conclusion was that the loss of workplace teaspoons is rapid showing that
their availability and hence office culture in general is constantly threatened.
We suggest that the development of effective control measures against the loss of teaspoons
should be a priority on national research agendas.
It's Fox in this office, isn't it?
Yeah, it is.
We need to get into another study on this office.
Do you remember when you guys accused me of throwing away all our cutlery?
I still think you might have accidentally thrown them away.
I didn't do it.
And I think they were an archaeological fight.
And I'm an Australian, so this is matching up with this report that you just read.
Yeah, it is very odd though.
So we, you know, like little things, like coasters.
The prime example is biros.
Mm-hmm.
Like, biros just go.
Douglas Adams has this whole riff about, you know, they square it all themselves away
through space-time to their own dimension.
But it is bizarre.
I frequently put three biros in my bag and I end the day and I've got none.
Yeah.
Where are they?
They're in my bag.
I know I was collecting them.
I think it's basically anything that's low value, right?
So if it's low value, you don't really care about it, so it just goes missing.
Whereas if you had a really nice pen, then you probably would never lose it.
I was looking into other kinds of spoons that we've had throughout the years.
My favorite spoon so far, one I've not heard of, ear spoons.
We heard of ear spoons?
Yeah.
That's so cool.
Historical artifacts.
It's for getting wax out your ears.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Pre the Q-tip.
It was, you'd have a spoon with a little, with a long handle and you'd shove it down
your ear and you'd try and dislodge the wax inside and come out with a nice spoon for
the wax.
I think I have one.
Do you?
I think so.
We haven't been using it enough James.
Sorry.
It went in a few years ago.
In the E-series of QI, we found out about these things and we can buy them readily online.
I think, haven't seen it for years, so maybe I haven't got it still, but I thought I bought
one with a light on it so you can kind of go into the ears and kind of look at it.
No, I know.
I see the problem with that.
I think it's for other people if you're kind of digging.
If the light comes out of your eyes, you know there's no wax in your ear.
Also, I remember reading that, and I don't know if this is kind of a bit of a funny
pages thing, but apparently ear wax picking of your loved one was kind of a bit of a fetish
in Japan for a while.
It feels like just a made-up thing, but I remember reading articles about it.
Here's the thing about spoons.
In 1909, the Huddersfield Examiner reported that there had been a competitive spoon cleaning
competition.
There.
Pretty cool.
It's a good way to get everyone to do the town's washing up.
Do you know what the first ever spoons were?
Do you know what they were made from?
Oh, wood.
They were made of shells tied onto sticks.
Says who?
Says my researches.
OK.
OK, the Latin word for spoon is cochliare, and that comes from the word for shell.
So I think that's the thinking.
Yeah, but you're not going to find any sticks and shells tied together.
Dan's throwing them all the way with the office forks.
But you're not going to find that in an archaeological way, so I can see the language thing, but
even then, it could be the shape of it just reminds you of a shell.
Possibly, possibly.
Not sure.
Might you find it in a cave with just not tied together, but just sitting next to each
other?
You don't know.
I mean, you're always going to find sticks and shells next to each other.
When I go to the beach and I see a bit of driftwood and a shell, I go, those are the
ancient cutlery set.
You've got to use your imagination in a final work, Dan.
So do you know one of the oldest spoons that exists in this country is?
Yes, it's my sticky shell.
Sorry.
There's a sandy shell, and then, hot on the heels of that, this is the only piece of medieval
regalia we have.
So it's stuff from things that we use in medieval royal ceremonies, and it's the coronation
spoon.
So the most sacred part of the queen's coronation is when she gets anointed, which is when
the Archbishop of Canterbury in private puts holy oil on her.
I think it's her breasts, her hands, and her head, and he uses this coronation spoon, and
it's from the 12th century, which I just think that's incredible.
It's almost a thousand-year-old spoon.
The breasts it's seen.
In China, restaurants are pining or bring your own cutlery movement, because huge amounts
of cutlery get wasted.
So it's weird that we pick up plastic cutlery in a lot of the cafes that you go to, for
instance, in London, and it was worked out that they were wasting something like, it
was something ridiculous, like 80 billion pairs of chopsticks a year in China.
And so in Beijing, there's a bring-your-own-cutlery movement where a whole bunch of restaurants
now, hundreds of restaurants across the city, don't serve cutlery, and if you forget to
bring your own cutlery, then you're buggered, I guess.
That's a really good idea.
It's a really good idea.
Yeah.
And they used to do it in medieval times.
Everyone would have to bring their own knife, didn't they?
Yeah, you'd just have a knife on your belt, and that was the knife you used for meals.
That's exactly what we wanted, London people walking around with knives.
Okay, that's it.
That's all of our facts.
Thank you so much for listening.
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At Egg Shaped.
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Goodbye.