No Such Thing As A Fish - 132: No Such Thing As A Creepy Weather Forecaster
Episode Date: September 24, 2016Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss computer-playing cars, fratricidal kookaburras and what paper was first used for....
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Hi guys, just before we start this show we wanted to let you know about last week's show
on which you might remember we had a few facts about Leonardo da Vinci that we were slightly
suspicious about and we just asked someone if they could get in touch and provide us with a
reliable source so that all these things that sounded too good to be true could be verified as true
and someone did get in touch to tell us that they weren't true. I'm afraid Leonardo da Vinci
doesn't seem to have had a long and lustrous career as a chef. He may not have even made the
giant whisk. We fell for a hoax. This is a hoax book that was written in the 1980s. It's called
Notas da Cocina da Leonardo da Vinci and it's full of lies, cruel lies that were then repeated in
biography after book after history magazine throughout the decade solely for the purpose of
making me look like an idiot. Thanks so much to Pedro Almada who was the person who emailed in to
tell us about that original text and who also managed to avoid writing in huge capital letters
utotal and utter gullible morons. Very grateful to him for being so restrained on that front
and for letting us know and I'm so sorry to the rest of you for saying these things that turned
out not to be true. It won't happen again. I promise the upcoming podcast is almost entirely true.
Okay, on with the show.
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 next to Andrew
Hunter Murray and Etchazinski and James Harkin and once again we have gathered around the microphones
with our four favorite facts from the last seven days and in a particular order here we go. Starting
with you, James Harkin. Okay, my fact this week is that the least creepy job is that of a weather
forecaster. According to you? According to a new paper from this year in the journal New Ideas
in Psychology called On the Nature of Creepiness by two scientists called Francis T. McCandrew
and Sarah S. Koenker. And what did they do that they personally meet up with? Creepy people. Yeah.
No, what they did is they did a survey of 1,341 people and they asked them, they gave them a
list of a load of jobs and said which of these is the most creepy. And the top creepy job was clown.
Oh yeah. Followed by Taxidermist, followed by sex shop owner. No, I'm friends with loads of those.
And then funeral director and taxi driver. Is that a taxi driver just because it sounds like Taxidermist?
Is that the confusion there? Could be. So this is only a small list of jobs? Yeah, there were 21
jobs in total. So things like weird butcher weren't on the list. We might be even creepier than clown,
but we don't know. Weird butcher. You've got the normal butcher and then the next door shop is
always the weird butcher. He's always rubbing his hands on the awful. So who else is on the list?
So the bottom three, as in the least creepy meteorologist or weather forecaster came least
creepy, followed by teacher and then farmer. Quite surprised by teacher because not that teachers
are creepy generally, but you often would hear school children saying about teachers are creepy
and stuff. Maybe it's a survey done once people have grown up. Nowadays everyone thinks of teachers
as being great because you think, oh what a good profession to be in. Everyone has had one creepy
teacher though. It's sort of unfair to lump an entire profession into creepiness, isn't it,
based on probably one person's experience of a weird physics teacher? I reckon I'd answer that
a creepy job was a hairdresser because I had like one creepy hairdresser once. Right. You know,
and then I think that affects your view of the whole profession, doesn't it? Yeah. My parents
are hairdressers. Yeah, that's the one we're talking about. Yeah. Your mum just really strange.
So what is being creepy? Okay, so being creepy is kind of a feeling of unease about somebody.
And it's interesting. I read this paper and they say it's not just that you feel like you're going
to be in harm because if someone comes at you with an axe, you wouldn't say that's creepy. You'd
say that's just scary. It was really creepy. It was so creepy, wasn't it? It's on my hand
off. It's creepy. It's such a creepy. We were talking about this the other day that there's
certain words that I get given over to sort of like murders and stuff that are just a bit too
playground. So copycat. Yeah. That's just like stealing my murders. You're nothing but a copycat.
That's the same creepy. But yeah, creepiness is more like the potential to do harm, isn't it? Yeah.
Or actually, it's a lot more like the ambiguity of whether someone might do you harm or might not
do you harm. Yeah. So yeah. Maybe this is why because I think this study also had the creepiest
hobbies, what people found with the creepiest hobbies for people to have, and the top creepiest
hobbies were collecting things, which I think that's so the examples it gives are dolls, insects,
and body parts. Well, I think that dolls and insects, I'd be upset if I was lumped in with body
parts collectors. It actually said that body parts such as teeth, bones or fingernails were
considered especially creepy. So just a few more things from this study before we move on.
They asked for creepy traits. And what they did was they said, imagine a creepy person
that is talking to your friend, what traits might this creepy person have? And ones that they went
for were the person stood too close to your friend. The person licked his or her lips frequently.
Is that their own lips or the lips of your friend?
And the person laughed at unpredictable times. I would put... Sorry.
I would put oscillating on there as well. Oscillating as in kind of rocking. Yeah,
just rocking. I find that a bit odd. Sure. I'll be in bookshops. There's always an older guy
standing looking at a sort of the naughty section of a bookshop, you know, sort of like
romance, erotica. And they oscillate. And I always say, don't go near an oscillating man.
But is that more down to the position that he's in, as in he's in the sexy departments of the
bookshop? Like if he was oscillating somewhere else in the bookshop, would it be less weird?
Because actually like sexual predation is one of the things which people associate with creepiness,
of course. That is creepy. Yes. I concur. Did you guys see that on the list as well was
birdwatching, birdwatchers. Oh, that's very unfair. It was quite unfair. And a guy who is a birdwatcher
wrote an article on his website called Audubon. And he just wrote, he said, I'm just going to step
away from my usual articles because I need to address this creepiness thing. And he said,
here are a few of my thoughts. Number one, first of all, only squares use the term birdwatching.
It's birding. That's a serious bird here. Yeah, he sounds like not a square. He sounds like he's
a cool guy. And he says, and he says as well, like what they're not, what they're suggesting is,
is that birdwatchers just stand there watching birds. It's not about that. It's about going to
exotic locations at adventure. This man sounds misinformed because birdwatching is not going
to look for a rare bird that's twitching. That's the thing that the birdwatching community gets
quite annoyed about. So twitching are the people who are just in it for the excitement who they
hear there's been a weird parrot spotting in Cornwall and they get down there. Birdwatching is
sitting in your garden or in a forest all day, usually listening out for bird calls because
you can't see. Well, he does say listening and thinking and anticipating. I mean, can't wait
for the letters after Anna said that this guy who writes a birdwatch watching the website
on Audubon, which is the most famous birdwatching website. Yeah, yeah. I think this is it's his
site. He just to the final point. Number four is he says, you know who I think the real creeps are
here? These psychologists sitting around thinking about what's creepy all day, constantly asking
people, do you think this is creepy? And how about this creepy? What a bunch of creeps. I think
these scientists should get out of the lab a bit more, maybe pick up a hobby. I know the perfect
one. Slam. Do you know who came up with the term the creeps? As in that gives me the creeps? No.
Charles Dickens. David Copperfield. That's the first use that the Oxford dictionary has.
Was it in reference to birdwatchers? It was not. And it also around that time, mid 19th century,
creepiness was known as being clammy. If you that was another way of describing someone who was a
creep, it was very clammy. Yeah. So I think the reason just to explain why birdwatching and it
was birdwatching and other hobbies that involve watching, like the other examples given word,
taking pictures of people, watching children, pornography and birdwatching. So you can see
why he was upset at being lumped in with those guys. But this study, the study concludes by saying
that creepy people are the personification of something called the prospect refuge theory,
which is this idea that humans seek places where you get refuge, so safety, and you get prospect,
so opportunity. And basically what that means is places where you can hide easily, but you can see
lots of other things around you, potential threats. And I think maybe the idea of people
who watch is that they're concealed. So a birdwatcher is watching you, but often you can't see him
if you're a bird. And that's why in like a Victorian house, we'd be creeped out because
there are lots of nooks and crannies, people could, you know, round corners that people could be
hiding in. And if you're on a big open moorland, people often find that a bit uncomfortable because
there's no way you can hide. Sure. When I used to play laser quest, when I was a teenager, I used
to like to hide in the corner so that no one could shoot me. And then I would shoot them from where
I was. Does that make me creepy? Yes. And I also hate people who do that. Yeah, I know. Well, I was
a winner. So yeah, I played two weeks ago laser quest. It was great fun. That's I'm afraid that's
the extent of the fact. My fact this week, I'm back in the nineties. Really good. It's great.
So I think it was discovered by maybe Richard Wiseman did a study in the early 2000s and someone
asked before that that any area that has infrasound, any sound that's below 20 hertz, which is basically
below the level at which humans can hear makes us creeped out somehow, even though we don't know
it. So he did this study in Edinburgh, and he sent people to two apparently haunted locations,
and two not haunted, but didn't tell them which were which. And they were more scared in the
apparently haunted ones. And then he realized that's because there was this constant rumble.
I think it was caused by the traffic, but it was just below that frequency at which we can hear.
I'm sure this must be made up. I remember at school, someone telling me that when Hitler did
all of his speeches, what they used to do is before he came on, there was a it was that kind
of noise. So there was an unsettled feeling amongst everyone who was there for the speech. And then
as soon as Hitler would come out, they would turn the sound off. And the matching of the sense of
calm from the sound disappearing with this person who you would like to see was like, ah, our
leaders here kind of thing. Is that true at all? I've read that. Right. I don't know if it's true.
Do you think Theresa May is just getting to turn the machine off when she starts?
Clowning was number one on the list of creepy occupations, right?
So the clowning community is very aware that they are being seen as creepy,
and they need to do something about it. So one of the things is that they teach people who are
petrified of clowns not to be petrified by inviting them to come along and they give them
counseling, they call it. And counseling sessions involve meeting the person. They then get done,
they're made up done and stuff in front of them. And then you see them in the circus and you realize
it's a normal person behind the clown face. Did you see this last few weeks in the news there
have been some clown sightings in South Carolina? No, they're not native to South Carolina. That
doesn't make any sense. What do you mean clown sightings? So they have been reported sightings
of lurking creepy clowns that people have been telling the police about. Police in South Carolina
have warned that anyone dressed as a clown could face arrest because so many people are being scared
by these clowns. And at least one performer in Georgia has decided to inform police of his
movements whenever in costume so that he doesn't get arrested. What's the what's the offense though?
Because it's not an offense to be creepy. No, but there's reports of them kind of
trying to get children into the woods. There you go. But here's the thing, right? In 1981,
there was a very similar thing happening where people saw these clowns and they were supposedly
kind of lowering children into woods and stuff like that. There was one event where there was
a clown who only had half his clown suit on. And he was even more scary because he didn't have the
bottom half on. He was naked from the waist down. But they had over 20 calls at this time and it
was in the newspapers. But they found out that basically no adults had seen any of these clowns.
And they reckoned that maybe it was just overactive imagination of kids. And that was what caused
it. Oh, okay. I'm scared of clowns again now. All that counseling I had.
It's literally gone out of the way. Four years of counseling.
And actually, these ones in South Carolina at the moment, I think no policeman has actually
seen any of these clowns either. So I wonder if it also might be another kind of example of mass
hysteria. That's another example of also a playground where effectively what sounds like
sexual predators out on the go, those clowns will get those clowns one day.
I have one more creepy thing before we move on. Yep, sure. Go for it.
There was a news report about donations left to Shelter Scotland, a homeless charity,
and they gave their weirdest and creepiest donations a mummified cat and a sack of creepy
severed dolls heads with their eyelids glued shut. Yeah, that was donated to a charity.
Donated to a charity. What possible use could you have in the charity shop?
Because sometimes the dolls heads fall off and you need a replacement.
Well, I love these dolls heads, but I'm afraid the eyes are just too open for me. No thanks.
Okay, it's time for fact number two, and that is my fact. My fact this week is that
self-driving cars are playing grand theft auto in order to learn how to drive better.
So this is, scientists are basically teaching self-driving cars to identify stuff better,
and that's quite hard when you don't have a program that has things mapped out,
because you need to do it. You need to teach the algorithms to learn better, to understand what
every single potential thing you might encounter on the street is, and they realize that instead
of having to build all these programs that simulate a real life driving experience,
why not use something that is extraordinarily detailed, like grand theft auto,
and let it play it, and let it just understand and start labeling all the things that you don't
want to run over. There's this lab in Germany, which has developed this, it's basically a
software layer that sits in between the game and the car, and the idea is that it's just
automatically starts classifying all the things and feeding it into the algorithm.
Do you think the game would be annoyed if it knew that it was being played by a
not a human? What do you mean by that, Andy? I don't know. I think you thought that was a more
profound question than it actually was. It's interesting, you've got one virtual reality
thing interacting with another, and it's pretty weird. So I read a list of how detailed grand
theft auto is now. Some of the things that they've programmed into it, if you were playing the game
that you would notice. So if it begins raining, puddles will slowly and realistically form in
the road, and if you shave your head, or you have a clean shave, your hair and stubble will grow
at the same rate that, say, if it was mine, they just calculated one person's growth. It's stuff
like that. But yours is quite fast growth. Yes, mine's a very fast growth. As if it was mine,
it wouldn't be fast growth at all. So have they taken an average of everyone? No, I guess they've
just used one person's. It's the idea of hair growth, so it all... Well, that's not realistic at
all. What are the cars going to do when they're put into real life, and they come up against
someone who doesn't have such fast growing hair? They're going to absolutely freak out.
Really good point. On the bright side, people always get critical of grand theft auto, and kids
playing it because it maybe teaches them to commit crimes. But it's quite safe for a car to play a
game about stealing cars, because a car has no incentive to steal a car. It's like teaching it
about real life. This is what might happen to you. Yeah, it's a warning video. Yeah. I read an
article about someone who was in a Google self-driving car, and they were saying that it's
really interesting because the car uses a mixture of 3D laser mapping, GPS, radar, and when they're
using the radar, the radar goes through objects, as opposed to just slapping onto something,
as it were. Like our eyes do. Yeah. When your eyes slap onto something. Yeah, when you slap onto...
As opposed to seeing through it. Yeah. But so as a result, there are moments when this person
was in the car where the car would suddenly stop because it recognized the cyclist who was halted,
and they would have gone into it, except for the fact that the cyclist was on the other side of a
hedge. Whoa. So it could see through the hedge to see a cyclist. It was going head on. A thick mist.
What would it register that as? Would it register that as a sort of spread out hedge? I don't think
cars need to register a thick mist, do they? Pass a certain thickness, mist becomes fog.
Okay, so a really heavy fog. Yeah, I think my point stands because...
No fog has ever been so heavy to act as a wall against a car.
So it would have to be... What you're saying is that they don't use cameras, they use radar.
Yes. So it would have to be a fog thick enough to show on radar.
Yes. Okay. Like a fog of insects. Like sometimes if there's a load of insects, kind of like mayflies
all come at the same time. Right. They get show up on radar. What about that, Anna? What about a plague
of locusts or cicadas, which is in the middle of the road?
James, I don't know why you're trying to dig Andy out of this. It's very generous of you.
I thought it was an extremely profound question. Thank you.
Google cars just had their first accident caused by a Google car rather than a person,
I think. Do you mean fatality? No. I mean the smallest car accident you could possibly imagine.
It was in February this year and it actually exposed something quite clever that I didn't
realise they do, which is they've trained Google cars to... You know when you're going along a main
road and you need to turn right off the road and there's traffic coming the other way. So if you
just stay in the middle of your lane, then you hold up all the traffic behind you. So what you
usually do is edge to the right hand side of your lane so that traffic can get around you.
And they've taught the Google cars to do that. So a Google car needed to turn right,
so edge to the right hand side of his lane, but then spotted that... I don't know why they've
installed this in the area where they're training the cars, but there's a bunch of sandbags blocking
its route. And so then it indicated left to get back into the middle of the lane and it scraped
up at two miles an hour against a bus that was coming on its left hand side. So that was pretty
dramatic. Was it in Britain this? No, I don't think it was. I think it was in America. So that would
be turning left rather than right, would it? Absolutely, would be. I've said... So listen to
what I just said and then swap around all the lefts and rights. Right. And then you've got it.
Have you seen the Rolls Royce one that they've developed? I'll put this up on Twitter, but it's
the photo on Twitter, but it's worth you guys seeing right now. What Twitter are you going to
put it on? I'll put it on at QI podcast. This is a design that they're planning to actually...
Square wheels. Yeah, square wheels. It's a silver beast that looks like it's from the Jetsons.
Isn't that extraordinary? If you're just listening to this and you're not on Twitter,
it does not have square wheels. It's got sort of wheel guards on it. Yes.
Are you sure that's not just a car that's still mounted on its block in the display room?
It looks like a Monopoly piece, doesn't it? That's the best way to describe it.
Is it real or is it a concept car? No, no, it's a real car. Imagine if all the self-driving cars
all look like different Monopoly pieces. That'd be amazing. Oh my God, driving around with it
with old boots. Yeah, giant top hat, cruisers pass you.
And what's the new one? They've introduced the new... The cat. Oh yeah, you'd always swear at
the cat, wouldn't you? Just new, fangled youth. Yeah, it's not gone down too well this car in
terms of design. I like the design, but they said in the article, one reviewer is called the car
but ugly. And I think maybe a lot of people will agree, but I think it looks awesome. That's a very
skilled reviewer. It's got a real way with words. Well, the point of driverless cars, I think,
of the design, for instance, that Google's going for, is to make them look incredibly friendly
because we're quite very nervous about handing our lives over to robots, even though that's
not really justified, we are. And that looks like a very intimidating car, so I think they've
gone entirely the wrong direction. So that the Google cars, if you look at them, they've sort
of made a face on the front of them, like a friendly face, the lights are a pair of eyes,
and then below the bumper, it's like a smiling mouth. Saps they must take us for.
The killer robots are smiling. I think it's true though, because you know the new London Red
Buses, to me, they look like they're pissed off with me. Anytime I see one from the front,
I'm like, that bus is angry with me. That's the drivers. And it's because you keep standing in
front of them. So there was an interview with a guy called Barry Kirk, who was an expert from
the Canadian Automated Vehicle Centre of Excellence. And he was very worried that people would start
having sex in driverless cars. Oh yeah. Because you're not driving, so what are you going to do?
Like, whenever I'm not driving, I'm always having sex. But that's why you're driving.
The driving to sex driving away from sex or having sex. Or driving people away from sex.
He was saying, yeah, he reckons that people will be in cars and they'll not be driving,
and they'll be like, well, what are we going to do? So we'll have sex. And he thinks that's
going to be a problem because... All right, Mum. Every school run.
But yeah, he thinks that this is a problem because when the humans have to kind of take
over because something goes wrong, they'll be having sex. Right. I'll be playing a board game,
thanks very much. I'll be needly folding a cardigan.
And his post-sex ritual.
Let's add this chat up line. Nice cardigan. I'll be folding that later.
You know where your cardigan would look good. Fold it up in a draw.
Do you guys know how old driverless cars are when they date back to?
Five years.
Thanks. That's really sweet of you to do that because it's actually much longer ago than that.
Is it? And it's going to make my fact sound even better.
5,000 years.
You dickhead.
No, so the earliest driverless cars date back to the 1920s. And actually, you'll see
various articles referred to the earliest one has been called the lindricken wonder,
which was made in 1926. And it was radio controlled. And so there was someone driving
in a car behind it who had a radio connection to the car in front. Then I looked, I searched in
the British newspaper archive for this. And there's actually an earlier one that it referenced in
1921. So this was in Ohio. And again, it was the same idea. It was invented by this guy called
Captain Vaughn, who drove another car 17 yards behind it and controlled it with a little remote
control. Oh, wow. And it said the article said to the to the surprise and dismay of passes by
it made its way through the main streets, obeying the traffic signals, taking the turns and blowing
its own horn at careless pedestrians. So you could have an automated horn as well.
Some things on Grand Theft Auto. Yeah, sure. So if you you can get your character on Grand Theft
Auto, look at their smartphone and open some websites. And Grand Theft Auto has more websites
than North Korea. Whoa, there are 83 sites available on the game. And there are 28 sites
in the whole of the North Korean intro web. Wow, that they're allowed to go on. The guy who voices
a character called Michael in Grand Theft Auto, a guy called Ned Luke. He put on 25 pounds for the
role. For the voice role. He's a method actor. And he said he wanted to really get into the
physicality of this role. Put on some weight, dedication. That's amazing. That's incredible.
If you complete the game, having found every peyote location, this is Grand Theft Auto 5,
and complete the mission, the last one without killing the Sasquatch first,
and then you play another go of the game as Franklin on a Tuesday between 5.30 and 8.30
while the weather is foggy, then you can play as a Bigfoot. That is awesome. That's so cool.
Oh, there must be videos of that on YouTube. Probably. Yeah. Yeah. And it was for a long time.
It was a kind of a conspiracy theory between Grand Theft Auto players that you would be able to do
this, but no one knew how to do it. And then someone just found out how to write that you
were describing that knowing that you've never played it. And neither have I. It was kind of
like listening to grandparents talk about the internet. Like yesterday when my friend's mom
asked me to send her an app of the show that I do. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Just hearing you try and
pronounce all the words in Grand Theft Auto. So it was... Most of those words were perfectly
normal English words. You just sounded not comfortable doing it. You're quite right.
Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is Andy.
My fact is that Kookaburras are born with a hook in their upper beak, which is specifically
for murdering their siblings. We all have that. Okay, that was creepy. That was creepy.
So this is what's known technically as a morphological specialization for sibling
rivalries. That's basically like having an arm just for hitting your brother with.
Actually, with my brother, that was his own arm.
Why are you stabbing yourself in the beak?
Yeah. So Kookaburras, they have this thing where they always lay three eggs and they
hatch out at separate times. And in about half of Kookaburra broods, the youngest
one to hatch is killed by their siblings. And their siblings, they peck it to death.
And normally, or they push it out of the nest, and it just helps the other to get to a larger
weight when they fly the nest, which allows them to be more successful breeding later on.
And it's basically done as an insurance policy by the parents, because there is a chance that one
of the first two will die, and that will limit your reproductive success. So as a result, you
have the third one just in case. But normally, it's clear that it won't be required. So it's
really brutal, but it happens. They're a substitute. It's like being on the bench, except at the end
of the match, you don't celebrate with the team, you get killed by them. Yeah.
There's a few birds that do this, actually. Honey guides, they do this. And one of the
children will peck the other one blindly before it's even opened its eyes. So just been born,
still blind, and it just kind of blindly pecks around until it hits its brother or sister and
then just murders them. And is it as it definitely know what it's doing? Or is it is it kind of just
like I've just been born, I'm just feeling around birds ever know what they're doing?
It's not an accident that I mean, I think you can really defend the accidental repeated killing
of your siblings, just saying you were flailing around. Definitely. I wouldn't say it's an accident.
Okay, so they mean no. So for instance, black eagles do this as well. And once they were studying
them, and they found that one of the larger eagles pecked the smaller one 1,569 times before it
died. Right. So you couldn't really call that an accident. Right. There is a thing about eagles.
This is bald eagles, I think, but it's really interesting. So they have again, three checks.
And the first two to hatch, they have this massive dose of testosterone in the egg yolk.
And there's a scientist from the University of Oklahoma called Douglas Mark, who said,
I think this is brilliant. The yolk is like a bagged lunch that the kid takes to school.
You can either give your kid a lunch packed with steroids, so he'll be a brute by recess,
or you can give him peanut butter. And so the third, the third one born doesn't have the
huge mega dose of testosterone. You'd be called in by the teachers saying,
your son's lunchbox today was a bit the youngest with the peanut butter. That's fine. But old
steroids. It's not an acceptable lunch. So this is what's so cruel about it is the parents sort
of deliberately set the situation up. And sometimes the kids will be fighting and the parent knows
which is the weakest, the one which needs to die, and will hold that one down so that the others
can get at it. It's a really bad example to be setting your children, I think. Yeah, yeah, it is.
Do you know what I thought was weird about cougar burrows is that the female who gives birth
controls the timing of when she lays the eggs. And that's part of her strategy. So by timing them
so that the eggs hatch at different times, it means that they're slightly different sizes,
the kids. So it sets up some to be able to beat the others. But also the first egg that she lays
is male, and the second egg is female. So the first egg to hatch is male, second is female,
and the third is 50 50 could go either way. Lucky dip. Yeah. And that's strange. You know,
cougar burrows used to be called the ha ha pigeon.
Isn't that the best nickname? I thought they were called laughing jackasses. They get
called that they have a lot of names. Yeah, breakfast bird, because they have this really
loud laugh. And it sounds like they got called the settlers clock. Well, hang on. Hang on. Why
you started explaining why they're called breakfast? Wakes you up for breakfast.
That's thinking, well, I don't always laugh when I'm eating my brown flakes.
And I was thinking, can I buy these in Tesco, fry them up with an egg? So
you do have to finish these sentences. Sorry, breakfast bird or settlers clock. Or they also
get called the giant kingfisher, because they are the largest member of the kingfisher family.
They are in the family. I think ha ha pigeons the best though. That's brilliant.
There's a very famous Aussie song that we used to sing as kids. Cougar burrow sits on the old gum
tree, very classic song. And I was reading about that song because obviously it is very famous.
And I googled it. And what came up was that there's an Aussie show called Spicks and Specs.
Ages ago, this happened, Adam Hills was the host. And it's like never mind the Buzzcocks of Australia.
One of the questions was which song, which famous song has Cougar burrow sits on the
old gum tree in it. And the answer was Men at Works, I Come from a Land Down Under. Now,
no one had made that connection before. And so the people who own the rights to the song Cougar
burrow sits on the old gum tree got in touch, sued Men at Work, and won and $4.5 million
roughly in that region after years and years of them having to battle it out in court,
got handed over. And they lost the case and they proved that there were two
flute moments in it that copied the lines from this song, which was written by an Aussie school
teacher and then handed over to a library. Yeah. That's I bet they felt bad to ever set that question.
Yeah. I know. It would have been Adam Hills, I imagine. Yeah.
I'm just a headline I found, which was sausage addicted Cougar burrow too fat to fly.
And yet you didn't read the full article, which I did. I did as well. Yeah, we all read the article.
It's all we've done. Some links you just can't not click. She was a Cougar burrow and she became
very fat, but from sausage handouts. The article said the article really is kind of summed up
quite well in the headline there, isn't it? Yeah, reading was quite disappointing. There was very
little more to be gained. Well, it gets attacked by dogs at one point and then people notice it.
Is it because they smell like sausages? Someone thought, oh no, the poor thing. It must have
broken its wing and been able to protect itself from the dogs. I know it's just been eating
sausages, so it can't fly away. Did you read that thing? Someone sent this to us. I think
Mark Abrams had retweeted it. Mark Abrams of the ignoble prize had retweeted it and it was from
Errol Flynn's autobiography. I saw the tweet, but I didn't read it yet. Okay. So what did you
read it, Andy? It's basically he suddenly says it is autobiography that he started experimenting
on ducks. He's like, I did a lot of scientific experiments on ducks and he had read that if
you gave ducks a bit of pork, so I'm just going off Kukaburra's eating sausages, if you gave ducks
a bit of pork, it immediately goes through their system within like two to three minutes. They
put it out on the other side. So he had a thought of, what if I tied a bit of string to the pork
and let it go through the duck? And he did. And so it went through and then he gave another bit
of pork to another duck and another duck and he basically created a string of ducks. A human
centipede. Exactly. Duck centipede. And he used to charge people to come and see his scientific
experiments and people would come and watch duck centipede. This is awful. Yeah. It's in his
autobiography. It got sent around on Twitter. Wow. Yeah. There are some plants which engage in
cyblicide. Really? Yeah. Wow. So there's a tree in India called the Dalbergia tree and it makes
all these flat pods full of seeds and the seeds get dispersed by the wind. They get spread around
so you get more trees elsewhere. In the seed pod, the very first seed to develop produces these
chemicals which gas all the other seeds in the pod. Wow. Yeah. And it means that it is much
likely to be the one which survives. Isn't that crazy? Very clever. Okay. It is time for our final
fact of the show and that is Anna Chazinski. My fact is that the first ever mention of paper
recommended it as a cure for frizzy hair. How does this cure work? Great question. Well,
I don't think it does. Is that one? Sorry, James. I'm just going to boots if I were you.
But this, I read this in a book called Paper Trail by a guy called Alexander Monroe,
which is such a good book, really readable, really interesting. And he cites this bamboo
document which was found in a Chinese tomb in 217 BC and that document uses the Chinese for
paper in it for the first time. But the context in which it uses it is it says,
if a man's hair without reason stands erect like worms, whiskers or eyebrows.
Sorry, erect like worms. Yeah, I know. I don't, maybe worms were different back then.
If a man's hair stands erect like worms, whiskers or eyebrows, he would have encountered a bad
spirit to resolve this boiler hemp shoe with paper and the evil will be dismissed.
That's when paper, paper first came into our lives. Yes, being boiled with a shoe.
Wow. Amazing. So this is the word it's G. Is that how you pronounce it?
True. Z-H-I. Yeah, Z-H-I. True. Okay. And I'm also reading a book about paper at the moment by
Mark Kerlansky. And he has another time when they use this word very early. It was in 93 BC.
And it wasn't when a guard advised a prince to hide his deformed nose with a piece of paper.
Did he draw a more perfect nose on the bit of paper and just hold it up?
Didn't say, but that would make sense. I like when they do scaffolding on buildings and they put
on the outside of the scaffolding what the new building's going to look like. Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, but for a nose. Yeah. It's very clever. My mom said when she was a kid,
the queen was once visiting the area she grew up in in Manchester. And their line of terrorist
houses, they decided the castle beside looked a bit skanky. And so they put covers on all of
their houses. So stop all in covers that the queen would think they were nicer. Wow. Yeah.
That's amazing. Yeah, how weird. Like a Potemkin village kind of thing. Yeah, exactly.
They might as well have just not taken her to Manchester.
Why just take her to Bath? Take her to Bath and say, oh, this is Manchester. Oh,
it looks a lot like Bath. Oh, no. So paper in China. There's a thing in China. It's a sort of
tomb sweeping day, basically. It happens every year. And you take paper money, fake paper money,
to burn at your ancestor's grave. Yeah, I used to go and do that. Yeah. Did you? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so is it stacks of? I didn't have any ancestors myself. So I just had to use other
people's ancestors. Did you? Yeah, yeah. Honestly, it was a thing. It was a big day there in Hong
Kong. Yeah. Is it like you buy monopoly money and you burn that? It's money for the dead. It's
a specific currency for the afterlife and you burn it by the grave. And it's... Did the other
people not mind that you were doing it for their ancestors? Oh, I went with friends. And also,
there's a lot of graveyards where it's kind of unmarked tombstones and stuff belonging
to a forgotten person. Was it only money that you were burning then? No, because in Taiwan,
is this what you're going to say? Well, they've now started burning cardboard iPads
for their ancestors so that they can have them in the other world. That you get helicopters
and whole models of houses and plastic servants you get. So they do that largely for funerals as
well. In China, in Taiwan, Hong Kong, what they do is they build replicas of the things that you
had in life and maybe give it a bit of an extension so that you can bring it into the
afterlife. So I've seen it go by. You see these huge, they look like giant pinata kind of things.
And they bring it, yeah, to all the cremations and so on. It's amazing. That's so cool.
And what you do is that you get that in the next life, is it? Yes, yeah. So they will make
exactly servants and little, you know, Cadillac cars and all that sort of stuff. Yeah.
Yeah. So about the history of paper. The fact that we have paper now, a lot of it is thanks to
Buddhists. So when they first started making paper, a lot of it was used for kind of holy books.
But if you think about it, a Jewish book like the Torah would be just read over and over again,
the same book. If you look at an old Torah, it's like really well worn, it'll be well read.
Christian books would only be read by monks. So they don't really need that many of those.
And the Koran you would just memorize. So you don't really need many of those. But in Buddhism,
you kind of helps you to reach enlightenment, helps you if you just copy things out lots and lots of
times. And in order to do that, it's better to have a cheap writing material. And that's where
paper came in. Or one of the reasons why it proliferated so much in the early days. Very interesting.
And we should say we're talking about tree based paper. Because you've got papyrus, sorry,
tree or rags, yeah, because you've got papyrus, which is earlier and is made of
reeds, basically. And you've got loads of other styles. And actually, yeah, when you say tree or
rags, this definition of paper that Monroe uses isn't rags that he says specifically that paper
needs to be plant based, and it needs to be properly pulped. So it can't even be plant based
and sort of flattened out. Paper for him is pulped plant based. So that's what the paper in
my original fact refers to. The bizarre thing about the invention of paper, which happened
probably in like 100 or 200 BC, is what you're doing is you're taking bits of plant material,
you're mushing it down. So you release all the cellulose, which is inside it. And then you're
adding water and spreading it out. And then the cellulose mashes together and becomes paper.
But no one discovered cellulose until 1838. So how do you come up with this idea of making paper?
It doesn't make any sense at all. It's all these very, very long fibres that you get. And it's
better if you boil down your tree pulp rather than chopping it up. Yeah, shortens the fibres loads.
It was very popular for making kites in China, ancient China. And there was a
fifth century Chinese emperor who ordered that people should be executed by attaching them to
kites and having them fly away, which I don't think would have worked in reality, but that's
what he instructed. Yeah, nice. What a way to go. Quite a nice way to go, I suppose. Everyone's
singing, let's go fly a kite. That would have been a morbid ending to Mary Poppins.
Actually, one of my favorite things about paper has always been that paper was invented by wasps
long, long before it was invented by humans. And actually wasps taught us how to make paper.
Okay, are you reading my notes? You have to explain this.
Do you mean white Anglo-Saxon Protestants? No. Paper wasps are wasps that make their
nests out of paper, essentially, and they do it by chewing up wood and pulping it like we do,
and then exuding it in the same process. We don't chew up wood to make paper.
Oh, is that not how you've, that's what my notes are on. That's why they're a bit damp.
But it kind of, it was the same process, basically. It's exactly the same process. And in fact,
when I say they taught us how to make paper, they taught us in the West how to make paper,
because we were thousands of years behind the Chinese in this. So this was in the 18th century,
a French scientist called René Raumeur in 1719, saw, observed these wasps making paper nests,
and he wrote down in a book saying, I think we could use this, we could make paper like this,
as well. This seems like a really good thing to do, but never actually tries it. And then,
I think, about 50 years later, a guy called Jacob Schaffer read his book and thought, yeah,
good idea. I'll give it a go. And he made paper that way. We definitely had paper before that,
though, because the Mars brought it over to Spain in the 11th century or so. Yeah, that's
what I thought. So I wonder if it is exactly the same process, or if it's, I think it might be a
different helping process. The amazing thing is that wasps do not, to this day, know what cellulose
is, but incredibly, they retain the capacity to make paper. Do you think we're going to be the
equivalent of Spicks and Specs here, where a wasp is going to be listening to our show,
realizing the amount of money they're owed for this invention?
So for rag-based paper, cotton-based paper, they needed ammonia to make it. And so you would get
ragmen in lots of large cities going door to door saying, do you have any spare urine?
Yeah, that was the thing. And people almost always do if you wait long enough.
In fact, I would say that all urine I produce is spare.
But that is true, actually, in all the old paper mills. It wasn't just the ammonia of the urine,
they would make the paper out of old rags. And that would come from like soiled clothing.
And so you would go to a paper mill, and it would be the smells of soiled underwear and stuff,
and the smell of urine. And that's basically what it would be like.
Wow, great news. I've just shat and wet myself. I'm a paper magnate.
Ooh, what's toilet paper made out of? Paper.
Yeah, I was going to say, but if you've pissed yourself, is that then going into, is it like a
circular? There are two kinds of loo paper. So there's what they call virgin loo paper,
which is made of tree pulp that has never been used for anything before. It's only been
turned into loo paper. And does that have Richard Branson's face on it?
Jeremy Carbin sat in the toilet going, there's no way for me to sit in here.
And the other kind is recycled loo paper, which is not recycled loo paper. It's recycled
things like office paper. Yeah. The other thing about these paper mills is at night time,
they would close them because they're really noisy. But then often they, you know, if they had a
big order, they'd go all night and everyone would complain, but they'd close them at night
and then children would crawl around the machinery cleaning the little bits and pieces.
And then in the morning they would get hauled out, dried with rough cloths,
spanked to remove numbness from their skin, given a, given a large glass of wine and sent to bed.
That's the life of a paper mill boy. Wow. Sounds sort of fun.
Yeah. Spanking in wine. It sounds like 50 shades of gray.
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, Andy, Andrew Hunter M, James,
Ed Shaped, and Anna. You can email podcast at qi.com. Yep. Or you can go to our group
account, which is at qi podcast or go to our website. No such thing as a fish.com where we
have all of our previous episodes and no such thing as the news.com, which has all of our
previous TV show episodes. We will be back again next week with another podcast. We'll see you then.
Goodbye.