No Such Thing As A Fish - 131: No Such Thing As Walking The Life Jacket
Episode Date: September 17, 2016Dan, James, Anna and Alex discuss duct tape for ducks, duck tape for ducts, Duck duct tape and ducks in ducts. And ducts....
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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'm sitting here with James Harkin, Alex Bell, and Anna Chazinski,
and once again, we have gathered round the microphones with our four favourite facts
from the last seven days, and in no particular order, here we go, starting with you, James
Harkin.
Okay, my fact this week is that when she was Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher ordered
that all government documents should have slightly different word spacing, so that if
a letter was leaked to the press, they would know who it came from.
Are we sure she wasn't just trying to make up the word count and make it look like she'd
written more?
How did this work?
Well, if you could imagine a load of text on a piece of paper, and each of the space...
Whoa, whoa, whoa, still trying to picture that!
So yeah, imagine a load of words on a piece of paper, and each of the letters or each
of the words has a space between them.
You could make that space slightly bigger or slightly lesser, depending on the word
processor you're using, and say the ones that came from you had a 0.2mm gap, and the ones
from Dan had an 0.3mm gap, then when they found the leaked document, they would know
whether it came from you or Dan, depending on the space.
But I mean, was there someone employed?
Because it's obviously going to have to be extremely tiny margins of error, otherwise
you'd just have words that were a meter apart, and they're ridiculous.
So was there someone in her office employed to measure with a very precise ruler the
gaps between words?
Perhaps they didn't do it with a ruler, perhaps they had some other kind of technology to
do it.
Something even more advanced.
So that's the thing, this is kind of a type of steganography, which is kind of hiding
messages in pictures or in text or whatever.
And a lot of this is very, very slight differences, that when you look at them really carefully,
you can see the differences.
Okay.
Were there any documents that we know of actually leaked in her time?
I don't know.
So I found this fact on another podcast, it's called Futility Closet, it's a really awesome
podcast from America, and it was also in a book called The Investigator's Guide to Steganography
by Gregory Kipper, but actually there wasn't that much information about it anyway.
It seems to be something that it said that happened, but whether it did or not, I guess
it's possible that it's just one of those stories, but quite good sources.
I like the idea of it as well, because it's something that we hear so much about these
days in the news for new movies and so on, just trying to prevent leaks and the kind
of the extra mile that they go to in order to make sure.
So like Star Wars, The Force Awakens, all the scripts were printed on red paper.
If you photocopied them, the black of the writing would not show up.
And that was just a tiny little thing.
You can see photos of the screenwriter sitting with JJ Abrams holding red scripts.
So the scripts look like Darth Maul.
Oh, yeah.
They often watermark the scripts as well, as in put the name of the person they're giving
the script to all over the paper in sort of grey, and writes the words on top in black
because you can still read the script, but it's got the name all over it.
But they do it in the films as well.
So when you go and see a movie in the cinema, the movie that you're seeing has dots encoded
in that particular reel so that if it's pirated by someone bringing in a camera and filming
it in the cinema, even if you then take what was recorded on that camera and compress it
and kind of change the filters and put it up online and then download it, you can still
find these semi-visible sequences of dots that appear all the way through the film and
work out which cinema it was that the film was recorded in.
Oh, wow.
What, and then track down the person who did it based on people who went to the cinema or
something?
Exactly, yeah.
What you're going to say is that each version of the movie has a slightly different gap
between all the words that they say.
And so you get some people where it's like, frankly, bye, dear.
Is that what, how would Pinto plays are all about?
The distance between each sentence.
I mean, he's quite sensitive for walking, he's such a popular Hollywood actor.
Interestingly, the Star Wars thing, just another thing that they did in order to avoid leaks
and spoilers, they didn't release the soundtrack until the day that the movie was released.
It was scheduled to be released before, I think the book was as well, the novelization,
but the soundtrack was released on the same day.
Because if you listen to the whole thing, the music suggests to you the plot twists
and it suggests to you the resolution of the movie as well, which kind of makes sense.
Sort of, but it also means everyone who's working on that film's got far too involved
in it and read way too much into what to any normal person would just be a piece of classical
music.
Except that it's geeks of the world who will be listening and analyzing anything that's
leaked ahead of time.
They'd all get it wrong.
You just end up with a thousand different variations of what isn't a Star Wars storyline.
That reminds me a bit of, I was reading an article online about what Hodor is called
in all the different languages in Game of Thrones.
And without giving too much away, his name is explained in one of the later shows.
But they have to have the explanation that works in all the different languages.
And so it's working out what Hodor would be in French, say, which has the same explanation
of how he got the name.
But without giving too much away so that if you heard them in both languages, you would
just know what the giveaway was.
Do you know what I mean by that?
Yeah, but that sounds incredibly complicated.
Yeah, it is.
And it's really interesting.
I might post it up actually on Twitter.
Actually, on music, when Madonna released her album American Life in 2003, she released
a fake version of the album beforehand to try and counteract piracy.
And it was much better than the original.
It was just a series of empty tracks.
Like I said, it was much better than the original.
With her saying, what the fuck do you think you're doing in every single track?
Oh, really?
But then that was a really annoyed Pirates.
And so they got hold of...
Made her what?
The Plank?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Smiley Pirates loved Madonna.
A pirate then hacked into her website and posted the real pirated album.
Ah, so the Pirates win.
I read this the other day and I don't know if it's something that I didn't know or whether
nobody knows.
And that is, if you do walk the Plank, do you know what happens to the Plank?
It just gets pulled in and...
Yeah, I thought it was like a push-out-a-ball.
Yeah, that's what I thought as well.
But apparently what it was is you would get the Plank and you would put it on the edge
of the ship and people would walk and then it would be their weight which pulls them
over the edge and then the Plank would go into the water with them.
What?
Wait, so does every pirate ship have like 50 Planks with them that they...
Well, pirate ships are usually made out of Planks.
So I think they just took one of them.
Yeah, but you're like, we can't afford to have any more trespassers with dismantling
our ship to the point where...
It's true, but I think once you've made 50 of your members of staff walk the Plank, that's
probably the least of your problems.
There's also so many people you can get to walk the Plank before they're in a better
position than you are because they've got all the wood with them.
So they can just fill their own pirate ship.
I actually thought it was a myth that people walk the Plank anyway.
So that's a really good point because I thought that was true as well.
I can't remember where I read this either, so it might be that I dreamt it.
Cool.
Does wood float in water?
Yeah.
So they're effectively giving them...
Boats work.
No, that's specifically not how boats work though.
You don't have to bother about something that floats.
Yeah, you don't know that is fair enough.
How do you think rafts work?
Well, it just makes no sense to give them a gigantic life raft in a Plank of Wood once
you've chucked them off the boat.
Well, maybe you don't want to kill them.
You just want to not have them on your boat anymore.
I don't know if you're ever trying to make a gigantic life raft out of one Plank of Wood,
but it is harder than you're making it sound.
I'm just saying it's like you're going to walk the lifejacket and then it goes in with
you.
You're helping the guy out.
I think a more common way of punishing people was to just put them on an island and give
them some water and some food and just say, right, you're not on the boat anymore, you've
just got to stay on this island.
And all they get is the Bible and a copy of their favourite album.
Imagine if they gave you the wrong Madonna album.
OK, it is time for fact number two, and that is Alex.
My fact this week is that duct tape shouldn't be used on ducts.
OK.
According to whom?
According to a physicist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory who did some tests on
all the different types of tape that you could use to fix a duct and what would be the most.
And he said that of all the things we tested, only duct tape failed.
It failed reliably and often quite catastrophically.
And the main problem is that it doesn't respond well to heat changes, which is something that
ducts do a lot because they have hot and cold air and it's not according to US building
codes is not a satisfactory way to repair a duct.
So duct tape was originally called duct tape.
Yeah.
Could you use duct tape on a duck?
What would you want to do that?
Just like keep the bill closed so they're not making so much noise.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah.
Do you want to explain the duct duct thing?
So a lot of people miss here duct tape and call it duct tape and everyone thinks that's
wrong.
But it was originally called duct tape possibly because it was invented sort of around the
Second World War and there was this type of cloth based rubbery tape that was used to
seal ammunition boxes.
And it was waterproof and it was called duct tape because ducts are waterproof.
And then after the war people actually did use it for the ducts.
And so then the company changed their name to duct tape, but then there is now another
company.
No, now people mishear it and actually call it duct tape.
But there is a brand called duct tape duct tape.
There is.
Yeah.
It's called duct duct tape.
Did you read the story of the woman who invented it?
It's very sweet.
Yeah.
It's amazing, isn't it?
Yeah.
So it was this lady called Vesta Stude and she worked packing rifle cartridges.
So as Alex said, tape had to be used to keep these rifle cartridge boxes closed.
And the way they were sealed at the time was they were waxed down and then there's a little
paper tab which poked out of the wax and in order to open the cartridge container, then
you pulled up the paper tab and it opened.
And the thing was the paper tab kept on ripping off.
So that meant that soldiers in the heat of war would suddenly need to get to their ammunition
and they'd rip off this paper tab and they wouldn't be able to open these boxes and it
would take ages to open.
And she spotted this and so she designed duct tape and her colleagues didn't go for it
and her bosses didn't go for it.
And so she just wrote a letter straight to FDR, straight to Mr. President and was like,
I've had this idea, my colleagues haven't gone for it, but I think it's going to save
your children's lives and my children's lives in the war and you've got to make it happen.
And within a few weeks, he'd forwarded it on to the military and he not only received
it, he read it, then forwarded it on as an idea.
When will we ever have that sentence again?
Maybe you didn't have much on that day, old FDR, but there was a case of duct tape saving
some ducts recently, which yeah, there sure was.
So this was in Idaho a couple of years ago, I think, and people noticed that a mother duck
was standing over a drain and some of her little ducklings had fallen into the drain
and so the residents of this place gathered around and they got some duct tape and they
wrapped it with a sticky side out and they inserted it at the end of a stick into the
drain and attached the chicks to it and pulled them up.
So they're still attached to this day?
They are, but they're grateful to be out of that drain.
So duct tape should be used on ducks?
Yes, it should.
Duck tape should be used on ducks, but not ducks.
But only ducks trapped in ducts?
Yes.
Speaking of that, a duct tape company, I was looking into their products because they
have a lot of novelty products and one that I found was they do a one direction duct tape.
So if you like the band One Direction, you can buy duct tape of One Direction, you can
buy Justin Bieber as well.
I went on to Amazon, it's incredibly popular.
They've had 236 reviews, 80% of which are five star reviews.
In fact, there's only a few one star reviews.
I wrote one down.
I brought duck brand One Direction printed duct tape, but instead arrived a regular one
without the images of Harry, Liam, Louis, Niall or Zayn.
I don't want a regular one.
I want the product that I bought.
One star.
Yeah, they do all these novelty things and fans are obsessed with it.
It kind of makes sense.
I think that's really cool.
They write names on the wall using the duct tape.
That's very cool.
Is it cool?
It's kind of cool.
It's very simple circles.
For a 14-year-old girl, maybe.
Yeah.
I'm going to say yeah, maybe.
There is a whole culture of making things out of duct tape.
It's the most versatile thing on this, I swear.
Whoa, strong claim.
It is.
That's a human man made product.
Well, that's many products.
Duct tape is a natural, you can tear it with your hands, but then if you fold it up on
itself so it's two tapes thick as it were, that can lift nearly a ton without breaking.
And there is one duct tape company that holds a high school competition every year to all
the best prom dress created entirely out of duct tape and the winner receives a $3,000
scholarship.
Wow.
The lifetime of bullying.
Yes.
I could never get it off.
There's the annual duct tape festival as well that happens every year, hence being called
the annual duct tape festival.
It's in Ohio because you can do everything, sculptures.
You can make hammocks out of them.
It's awesome.
You can't go to space with just duct tape.
You can do a lot.
And I feel, have you guys ever visited the website of the duct tape guys?
No.
I think they might be your soulmates, Alex.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, no, it's all my favorites, obviously.
It's incredible.
So much effort has gone into this website of these two guys who are just obsessed with
duct tape.
And the way you enter their homepage is theducttapeguys.com, I think, and it says, click on the
duct tape luggage to enter.
And I didn't realize what it said, I just clicked on anything.
And then there are five, four pictures of luggage, one of them is made of duct tape,
the others aren't.
And the others, you don't get into the site.
Very clever.
Tells you what they're about.
And they have page after page after page of things you can make out of duct tape.
It is extraordinary.
But yeah, like quite good ideas, stylish flip flops, they suggest, which I thought I might
give a try.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Quite cool.
All these things are great, but you can make them all out of other materials.
And the fact that people are making them out of other materials, like flip flops, for
instance, the fact that people make them out of rubber and not out of duct tape usually
makes me think that perhaps duct tape isn't the best material.
I guess so.
If you're on a desert island, your luxury item might just be a roll of duct tape because
of the amount of things that I would have one with Justin Bieber's face on as well, because
it's company as well.
Yeah.
Is that the kind of company you want?
Let's hope you get the right one shipped to you because Amazon has a history of sending
imagine that disappointment.
Imagine that you're on the desert island, you've got some duct tape without Justin
Bieber's face on and Madonna rather, where she's saying, fuck you and a plank.
Anna, you said it can't get you to space earlier.
Interestingly, space is one of the places where duct tape is the most useful thing that
you can have.
Oh, yeah.
Almost like a desert island kind of situation.
So it's carried on every single flight since about Gemini missions.
Yeah.
It's on every one.
Wow.
That's just an Apollo missions.
Yeah.
What kind of stuff is it doing now then?
So just through, I don't know, like on the ISS right now, but Apollo 13 very much says
that one of the main reasons they were able to get back was because of the duct tape.
And also, if you're in space and let's say you're on a mission to the moon and someone
suddenly goes nuts, suddenly lose, they just say, what am I doing up here?
This is too crazy.
You can take them down.
You take them down.
Then that genuinely was part of the manual.
I'm not sure for the Apollo missions, but it says you immediately what you do is you
duct tape their hands and feet together and then maybe to the wall or something like that.
What they take them down is not you don't tape them to the wall.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They take their hands.
Yeah.
I read that and it says that you tape the hands and feet like you say, but then you tie
them down with a bungee card.
But that means they have a bungee card on them.
What's that being used to?
I think that's what they should do with spacewalks, right?
Just do like bungee jumping out of the...
That's amazing.
Yeah.
I have just one last example as well for space, which was Gene Cernan.
So he's the last man to stand on the moon.
When he was up there for his mission, they had a moon buggy and the moon buggy, as they
were about to get into it and start exploring, he ripped off the fender of the moon buggy.
The problem was is that obviously the buggy still operated without the fender, but they
needed it on.
The reason they needed it on is because if you drive in space, the moon dust will just
shoot up onto the astronauts' costumes, which sounds fine, but I found this really interesting.
Apparently if your space suit gets covered in moon dust, that means that the sun can
start overheating you because it conducts it a lot better.
Really?
So the idea is that as an astronaut, you would just fry in the suit.
It would absorb it because it's darker.
Yeah, exactly.
So it was a big thing.
So they had duct tape and they managed to duct tape the fender back on and that kept
the whole mission going for their geological expedition that they were doing.
I don't think they call the space suits costumes, though.
It's slightly trivialising the science party shop costumes.
Well, everyone go into this fancy dress party in the same outfit, how embarrassing.
OK, it is time for fact number three, and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that Oxford University's first-ever professor of chemistry believed
that fossils were actually frozen urine.
And they're not, are they?
No, it's worth pointing out that he didn't think it was animal life at all.
Frozen urine was one of the things that he thought it was.
He thought generally fossils were salt.
I think he thought that that's what made their mark.
But at no point at all did he think that it could have been an animal.
I don't know if it just didn't occur to him.
So his name is Robert Plott, a founding curator at the Ashmolean Museum.
And he's also very famous because he found what was the first-ever dinosaur bone, as
it were.
He did a drawing of it.
And again, he didn't know that that was a dinosaur bone.
He thought that it might have been a giant human, the thigh bone of a giant human.
And so, yeah, he's a very famous guy for doing quite a few things.
And can we just go back to the bit where he looked at a fossil, and we've all seen examples
of fossils, and thought what that reminds me of is frozen urine.
Yeah, he was obsessed with it.
Can we know why he drew that conclusion?
Well, I think what it was is back in the day, so this is what, 18th century?
This is 17th.
17th century.
So you had like two lots of people.
Some of them thought that they were natural things that had been made from animals, and
the others thought it was just a physical process that they were made out of rocks, and that
they had nothing to do with animals at all.
And he was one of these people who thought they were made out of rocks, and his idea
of how they might have formed is that the urine reacted with the rocks, I think.
Yeah, it's urine salts, isn't it, or something?
Yes.
They have what they're called urine salts that he thought made that specific pattern.
And what I thought was quite interesting was that the dominant view was that they weren't
living things.
They were really, really controversial for reasons probably related a lot to religion.
But the dominant philosophical way of thinking was platonic at the time, and so they adopted
this neoplatonic approach, which is what they call it, which is the idea that everything
in nature sort of mirrors everything else, and there are patterns throughout nature.
So something that you find in the ground will have a pattern that imitates something that
you'll see in the air, or patterns on birds will be the same as patterns in the earth.
And so when they found these fossils, that almost just confirmed the philosophy that
a lot of people lived by, that Plato had said, this is how the world works.
There are all these things on earth, and they all conform to this specific pattern.
So they saw something that had exactly the same spirals as an animal might have on it,
and they thought, well, that makes sense, because things in existence mirror other things
rather than thinking maybe that is actually an animal.
Wow.
Some people, of course, there was folklore behind them, so you would think that an ammonite,
which is the kind of spirally fossil, was actually a snake which had been turned to
stone by St. Patrick.
Oh, yeah.
It was thought by a lot of people.
Really?
Yeah.
All St. Hilda.
And stars were a common apparent cause of fossils, weren't they?
People often thought that they'd been caused by falling stars, or that the action of stars
on the ground had created fossils.
I think that was something that Leonardo da Vinci tried to tell people, definitely couldn't
be true, it didn't make any sense.
Oh, and another thing was, it was a controversial thing that they were living things, that lived
more than, let's say, 6,000 years ago, because at the time, everyone was kind of creationist,
and so they couldn't believe that anything existed before that.
The universe was supposed to be created in 4,004 BC.
Yes, exactly.
But for some people, fossils, when they were discovered, confirmed creationism, because
they were evidence of Noah's flood, having swept lots of sea creatures up onto the mountains.
And so they were saying, look, this is his, the flood did this, it brought these things
up to the mountains, and then it retreated, and left them here.
Which is kind of almost true, isn't it?
Yeah, it is, yeah, it's just a much longer time frame.
The guy who came into curating the Ashmolean straight after Plot, who was called Edward
Lloyd, he thought that vapours came from the sea, they carried spores, the spores landed
in rocks, and then somehow the rocks managed to turn the spores into animals like fish.
Right.
He was wrong as well.
Oh, but he thought that life was created from non-life.
Not necessarily life, but it was that these objects, so you've got something that looks
like a fish, what created it, it might never have been alive, but something has been made
that looks a bit like a fish, and he thought it might have been spores who had gone into
the rocks, and there was some kind of process which allowed that rock to turn into a fish.
Okay.
Wow.
He's not too far away, because he still at least placed a life form into the, so suddenly
it was partially organic.
It's hard, isn't it?
Because these things don't make any sense until you know the answer.
Yeah.
So you've got to come up with something, haven't you?
Well, I was thinking, so yeah, when you saw the dinosaur bone, that makes total sense
to go, well, this must have been just a giant human.
Back then, that maybe wasn't an outrageous suggestion, because they were finding all
these weird, big things, and they thought, well, maybe we shrunk as well.
I always wondered this, because you always find evidence of a giant millipede has been
found a million years ago, or a giant lizard, or a giant bird, which is a dinosaur, or a
giant shrew has just been found, or a giant kangaroo's been found.
Where are the giant humans from the past?
The thigh bone that Robert Plott discovered, 100 years later, it was given to Richard Brooks,
and he called it scrotum humanum, because it looked like a giant scrotum.
And it's quite annoying, because he went through Robert Plott's papers, and he started looking
through them and organizing them, and he found that drawing, and he wrote scrotum humanum.
And it sounds to me like he didn't genuinely think that that was a solid ball.
Yeah, because I don't think anything has solid balls like that, so it's odd to think
that that was, but yeah.
He's a florist, does.
He's a florist, does, to one exception.
You know, he thought it was an elephant when he first found it, and then he wrote that,
so he found this huge bone, and he said, I thought it was an elephant bone from when
the Romans invaded, so they came across with elephants invading us, was the theory.
And then he reported that, they happily came to Oxford while I was writing of this, a
living elephant to be shown publicly with whose bones I compared ours.
So an elephant just rocked up into town, and I don't know how he got access to it.
I guess he compared his own thigh bone to the elephants and went, ah, doesn't look the
same at all.
I like the idea of that happy coincidence.
There happened to be an elephant in town, yeah, that's quite cool.
I wrote to the Ashmolean Museum to say, do you still have the bone?
And they said, we don't keep dinosaur bones here, and you should try out other places,
and I started looking into it more.
Turns out they lost it.
No one knows where this bone is, where this giant scrotum is.
And actually the giant scrotum, it plays a very fundamental role in our understanding
of dinosaurs, because yes, Richard Brooks saw it, and he described it and called it
the scrotum of a human.
But then Richard Owen saw it as well, and Richard Owen at that time was putting together
his theories about what eventually led him to coining the word dinosaur, and the first
dinosaur that he put together, the pieces together, was the megalosaurus, and that bone,
scrotum humanum, was part of the megalosaurus.
So that initial drawing actually led to the conclusion of dinosaurs, which is quite cool.
So Plot had no idea what he'd discovered, but there we have it, the first drawing of
a dinosaur bone.
Yeah.
Quite cool.
He was super useful, even though he had wacky theories, I guess it's like a lot of people
from that era.
He just collected loads and loads and loads of stuff and recorded it, right?
Yes, yeah.
Things that we later realised would have been drawn from his work.
Got to give him some credit.
Yeah, I mean everyone would have been thinking like that at the time.
Yeah.
It would not have been out of place to suggest some sort of mythical, mystical kind of background
that is in line with the church at the time.
He died in 1696 after suffering from a urinary complaint.
I thought that was quite...
How fitting.
Yeah, fitting.
In April this year, we discovered an ancient daddy longlegs that's been encased in amber
for 99 million years and it has an erection.
Really?
Yep.
Wish I was not just a spare leg.
No, it's definitely an erection.
They had bays on the Daily Mail.
I didn't know they could get erections.
I mean, I just didn't know they had a stick penis either.
Yeah, they do.
Just my favourite theory about where fossils came from actually from this era was a lot
of people thought that they were a prank by the devil to try and test your faith, but
others thought that they were God-practicing to make life.
So he made these fossils before he had the balls to really go ahead and make a living
thing.
He thought, I'll practice with some of the shapes.
And so they were just like his sketches before he made actual living creatures.
That's a great theory.
That's good, isn't it?
Yeah.
Maybe the moon is a practice earth then, if then all the fossils are practice animals.
Maybe.
You would have fitted right in in the 1600s.
On urine fossils, urine can fossilise and hyrax urine is telling us about climate change.
So this is this really clever geologists have discovered, which is that hyraxes, which live
in South Africa and places like that, you can probably picture them.
They look like big gerbils or guinea pigs, although actually their closest living relatives
are elephants and manatees, which is kind of cool.
But anyway, these big gerbil things that are related to elephants and they always urinate
in the same place to the extent that once they've picked a urination spot, they'll keep
doing that generation after generation for thousands and thousands of years.
Wow, the same family just forever.
Same family forever.
Some of these fossils date back 30,000 years or more.
They've been urinated in the same spot.
Your father's father pissed here and your bloody piss here.
Imagine how rebellious a hyrax it would be who pissed somewhere else after 30,000 years.
But anyway, this eventually has crystallised over thousands of years into blocks of stratified
material.
And by investigating it, we can see what hyraxes were eating at different times in the last
30,000 years, let's say.
So if you get a strata that smells of asparagus.
Exactly.
It was a smelly time in 10,000 BC.
You can tell what vegetation's grown.
And so we can tell what was growing when based on these sticks of hyrax urine.
They've essentially taken samples from the surrounding area and just...
Yeah, exactly.
They've collected their own geological samples.
Maybe that's why they're doing it.
And we've just come along and kind of smashed it all up to look at it and they're going,
okay, cool.
We were going to make a museum out of that in a few thousand years.
Where are we going to piss now?
OK, it is time for our final fact of the show.
And that is Chizinski.
My fact this week is that Leonardo Da Vinci made sculptures out of marzipan and got
angry when people ate them.
Was it a massive, you know, David or?
That was the original David, yes.
Or were they tiny little things like spotton cakes?
No, I think they were very elaborate, a lot of them.
So I know this from one of his notebooks in which he says that he'd made all these
intricate marzipan sculptures for the court in Milan that he worked for.
And he said, I have observed with pain that people gobble up all these sculptures.
I give them right to the last morsel.
And I am determined to find other means that do not taste as good.
So my works may survive, which he did.
Fortunately, it seems like you think maybe for his whole life, he was doing
sculptures in different things like cheese.
It's like, no, they're eating that as well.
Steak.
The original Mona Lisa was made out of pizza, but that's very long.
He has a whole.
I genuinely did not know this until you told us that fact that he had a whole
career working as a chef.
Yes, I had no idea.
Like he ran a restaurant.
I've struggled so much verifying this because there's this book of notes,
which some of a couple of places say is controversial, that it's his.
But then a lot of books write this down as his absolute career.
But I don't know how dangerous it is that we say it.
What you're saying is maybe his notes have got like mixed up with God and
Ramsey's notes are very sweary around page five.
But yeah, they do say that he used to be a chef, didn't he?
So he worked at a restaurant.
Yes, stepfather was a pastry chef and he had a nickname when he was 17, a fat boy.
And he was a wedding planner.
Like it extended into him doing wedding planning.
Yeah, this whole side of Da Vinci.
I had no idea about and he took over the only reason he became a chef.
So he was just working in the restaurant, but supposedly in 1473,
there was a poisoning that killed the majority of the cooking staff.
So he just took over as chef in the three snails, wasn't it?
Yes, yeah.
But then I think he got fired because he liked to make kind of nouveau cuisine
style, really tiny, delicious, perfectly sculpted portions.
And people didn't care for that.
They just wanted huge amounts of food.
But there's another continuation of the story, which says that he
paired up with Botticelli to do some art with Botticelli at one point.
That's definitely true.
And him and Botticelli started a restaurant together called The Three
Frogs.
And this is on the Ophisi Gallery website in Florence, the Gallery in Florence.
And various other Spanish sources and Italian sources say that, yeah,
him and Botticelli started this restaurant together.
And the way it works, according to tourist sites, but again, I would love
first hand information on this, if anyone has it, is that the guest could
choose the dishes by reading the menu, which was written from right to left,
because that was how Leonardo da Vinci famously wrote, or they could choose
the dishes by looking at the pictures that were drawn by Botticelli,
which sounds so implausible.
But what a great idea.
It's like a themed restaurant.
It's like a Hollywood restaurant.
He invented a giant whisk, apparently.
Oh, yeah, his inventions.
It was larger than a man.
What could you whisk with that?
I think the model.
So this is just a sketch of his.
I don't think he actually created.
We always say inventor stuff when he just drew it.
I know, he drew it.
I was just saying, it's a doodle.
But all that is, is it's a normal sized whisk with on the right hand side
scale, one to a hundred.
It's not like his drawing will have been bigger than a man.
He drew a man in the whisk.
I think part of the operation of the whisk is that a man has to be inside it.
That's just a man with no sense of perspective in his drawings.
How can we be sure that he didn't invent the tiny man?
Looking at some of his other bits of artwork that have been destroyed
and kind of not respected.
And so, I mean, we know the last supper came really close to destruction
during the war and the Allied forces bombed it.
And there's that amazing picture of the whole building destroyed,
except for the one wall that's got the last supper on it.
Yeah.
And so he was also sort of a bit of a sculpture.
But the only sculpture we have surviving of his is a beeswax model of a horse
that was supposed to be a model for a proper sculpture, like a plant.
Was that a model for he was going to do a massive brass man and a horse?
Wasn't he called Heel Colosso, I think?
Yes.
And they basically got loads and loads and loads of brass from all over the country,
even all over Europe, maybe.
And they never made it because they went to war and used them to make guns or something like that.
That was a different one from the one made of beeswax.
But yeah, it was for the Duke of Milan.
That was what he was talking about.
And then he had made a plaster cast of fat and he was waiting for the bronze to arrive.
And then they used the bronze for the war and they used the plaster cast for target practice.
The last supper was also used for target practice.
I can't believe that.
Really?
When Napoleon's forces were camped out in that town, they used it for target practice.
Why isn't it more damaged under the police for Jesus?
Basically, they were aiming for Jesus' head and they got one bullet through it and it's been restored.
So they were terrible as well.
Yeah, awful.
Thank God.
Poor guy.
Just the entire history of his works being destroyed and, you know,
rats ate another one of his food sculptures.
I think I was reading this in...
That was the one he made out of cheese, wasn't it?
This was...
So James, you were asking at the start how big his marzipan sculpture was.
And this particular one was an altar of Palenta and marzipan that he made for his patron,
who was this guy called Ludovico Sforza, and it was for this guy's wedding.
And so he made a sculpture, our Palenta and marzipan, that measured 72 square yards
and was covered with cream.
And he made this a few days before the wedding and before the wedding could happen,
it was eaten by rats and insects and malan.
It was such a thing.
Marzipan, it seems that it was used for table decoration as much as it was used for eating.
And actually, a huge purpose of sweet food in the 16th and 17th centuries was to decorate tables.
We might have said before, in fact, I'm sure I must have said it,
because it's one of my favourite ever facts that Antoine Carin made a marzipan vagina
for someone's christening.
For the christening?
Yeah, it was the christening of a noble person in France, I think it was.
And he made a clockwork vagina made out of marzipan that a marzipan baby came out of.
I think we have definitely said that before, and I think you can't say it too much.
I think whenever it gets mentioned, we should leave it in.
Marzipan is apparently an incredibly malleable, really good.
It's like better than clay for building a sculpture out of.
That's why he liked it.
Apparently, it's better than duct tape at everything.
They make wallets out of it, they make flip flops out of it.
And my space flight, Marzipan is taken into space.
He's credited with inventing the napkin as well.
I've never heard that before.
Credited by idiots.
Yeah, most likely.
He was an event of the first CV, didn't he, the first resume?
Did he?
Did he?
Yeah.
Did he write on a napkin?
Which I don't know.
He probably wrote the fact that he made the first CV on his CV as well.
Oh, yeah, inventor of the CV.
So that's positive to this.
Again, that just can't be true, can it?
It can't be true that he was the first person to wipe his mouth with a bit of cloth.
And it can't be true that he was the first person to write down everything he did.
What he did was, when he was serving at the table of his patron,
he noticed that people would be just wiping their faces on the table cloth
or on each other's clothes.
He wrote a list of manners that were to be expected at the table.
And one of them was, nobody should clean his knife with his neighbour's clothes.
So people were just cleaning stuff with whatever was to hand.
And so he introduced the idea of giving everyone a napkin,
specifically for wiping their hands.
I like the idea of these like, well, now that you've finished eating my marzipan sculpture,
I spent ages at least wiping out of this that I've invented.
Some things that he definitely did invent that didn't exist beforehand
were his weapons for war.
Yeah.
So he invented a mechanism for repelling enemy ladders.
They're like Wallace and Gromit, they're brilliant.
Yeah, a more efficient way to pour burning oil on enemy heads.
Finally, a more efficient way.
So it's like an infomercial, because I'm dropping all the oil.
I never get it over my enemy soldiers.
He also is supposed to have invented the idea of the contact lens,
but I saw the picture and the idea is that it's a bowl,
basically a bowl full of water that you put your entire face in
and the water refracts, which isn't really practical.
Did he invent the snorkel as well?
This is the thing, you can't really use it for any length of time.
Hang on, so you plunge your face into a bowl of water and open your eyes
and you can see better?
Yeah, the water is supposed to counteract,
the refraction in the water is supposed to counteract.
The short-sightedness.
He sometimes misfire, didn't he?
I think.
He reckoned he pretty much always misfired.
A lot of his medical ideas, because he did dissection,
which was illegal, but he came up with lots of medical theories,
which were not accepted for hundreds of years.
But the truth is that people didn't read his work for hundreds of years
because it was illegible.
A lot of it was written in code.
So, and a lot of it just wasn't read.
So none of his scientific advancements were ever really useful
because by the time people translated his work
and found out that he'd come up with it,
they'd already made those advancements.
Ah, right.
Oh, really?
I think that's my problem as well.
I have really bad handwriting.
You're just forcing my genius.
So I assumed there was a lot of artwork that survives of Leonardo da Vinci.
For some reason in my head, I had it at over 100, at least,
different paintings and wall paintings and so on.
But there's 15, and of the 15, a lot are disputed
because he never signed his name.
I think Mona Lisa might be the only signed one, is it?
Is it, really?
I know something in the back of my head says that.
I'm not sure if it's true.
I'm not sure if it is Mona Lisa signed
because the thing I read said that none of them are signed by him.
Maybe it is, though.
Maybe that might be an exception.
But a bunch of the paintings are disputed.
No one, all we are taking it upon as a verification
is that the art historian has said,
I think that this definitely is Leonardo's work.
That's true of a lot of paintings, I think.
That's extraordinary, though.
So we're kind of attributing a lot of the history of art
to someone that might not have done it at all.
So if you go into an art gallery, it'll always be like that.
But art experts do seem to have this bizarre magic knack
of telling exactly if a painting is painted by someone
or painted by the very closely imitating people.
There are lots of ways of telling them.
So mostly they can tell.
Yeah, the brushstrokes or the type of paint that they used.
All sorts of different ways of doing it.
But yeah, that's definitely true.
The Mona Lisa is a great one because there's
like three or four different versions.
There's the famous Mona Lisa.
There's a topless one.
Yeah, there's a new one that was painted at the Monavana.
And it's supposedly painted by his pupil, Salai.
And we also know him from his notebooks
because you've got all of Leonardo's notebooks
with his amazing backwards handwriting.
And then you've just got like shitty doodles of like penises
with legs running around.
So I didn't know if that was real because it looks so fake.
Yeah, Salai was apparently Da Vinci's lover as well,
which I think is almost undisputed.
And he took them in very young age, as an apprentice.
Yeah, and yeah.
Because there are very bad penises with legs
drawing apparently by him, but I can't believe it.
I'd love to see the original.
Yeah, but yeah, no, literally his version,
supposedly if it's his, he just did a version of Mona Lisa
that's just got no clothes on.
And then there's also another Mona Lisa
that is supposed to be exactly the same
that was apparently done by another one of his pupils,
which is in much better conditions.
It's not famous and it's just hanging somewhere.
Just in someone's living room.
Just, yeah.
Well, one of the paintings he did that was disputed
was his first ever painting.
And this was going to be my headline fact,
which is that the first painting he painted,
he had to paint as punishment for eating too many sweets.
But this was when he was an apprentice
and he worked in the studio of an artist called Verochio.
And he used to get packets of sweets sent to him
and apparently he had a very sweet tooth
that was responsible for crapulando,
which essentially means stuffing your face.
And so Verochio punished him by instructing him
to paint an angel in the corner of his big picture,
the baptism of Christ,
which I don't know why that's punishment
when you've come to study art and it's your main passion.
But anyway, that's apparently his first painting
is this angel.
If you look up Verochio's baptism of Christ,
there's Da Vinci's little angel in the corner.
You know that extremely old drawing of Da Vinci,
the self-portrait that's done in,
they call it the red chalk one.
So it's the kind of sketch look in it.
So even that is disputed about whether or not
that's Da Vinci and whether or not he did it himself.
And one of the main reasons behind that
is the guy in the drawing is way older than Da Vinci.
Live to.
Really?
Yeah, he's just way older.
Maybe he's being modest.
Well, no, so one of the theories that allows them.
Maybe he just looked a bit rough that day.
One of the theories is that he did draw himself
and that he drew himself older
because he was using it to put forward to give to Raphael,
who was painting Plato in the School of Athens
and he wanted to use Da Vinci as the model,
but Da Vinci wasn't old enough,
so he did an older version of himself.
But it would be quite accurate
because usually self-portraits are going to be mirror images,
but he writes backwards anyway, so.
So he would have drawn it backwards,
and so he inverts the mirror image.
Yeah.
I look really weird.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Do you think artists do that when they do a self-portrait?
They're looking in the mirror,
and as soon as they finish,
they step back and are like,
oh, is that what I look like?
Really?
Yeah.
Why did no one tell me I have a green thing in my teeth?
Oh, no.
I've got my eyes closed!
Dangit!
Okay, that's it.
That's all of our facts.
Thank you so much for listening.
If you would like to get in contact
with any of us about the things
that we have said over the course of this podcast,
we can be found on our Twitter accounts.
I'm on at Shriverland.
Alex.
Alex about UnderSchools.
James at egg shaped.
Ed Shazinsky.
You can email podcast.kui.com.
Yep, or you can go to our group account,
which is at kuipodcast.
Message us there or go to our website,
no such thing as fish.com,
where we have all of our previous episodes.
We'll be back again next week with another episode.
Goodbye.