No Such Thing As A Fish - 135: No Such Thing As Queen Of Clean, The Sausage Machine
Episode Date: October 14, 2016Dan, Anna, Andy and Alex discuss animal babysitters, supermarket laser tag, and the best party in the history of the world. ...
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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 Alex Bell, Andy Murray, and Anna Chesinski.
And once again, we have gathered around the microphones
with our four favorite facts from the last seven days.
And in no particular order, here we go.
Starting with you, Andy.
My fact is that scientists have developed barcodes for zebras.
Not zebras.
They've also developed a separate and identical system for zebras. Not zebras. They've also developed a separate
and identical system for zebras.
We'll get on to how to
say the name of the thing in a bit.
But this is a team of
scientists at Princeton, and
what they've done is, this is a particular species of zebra
called the Grevy's zebra,
and it's the rarest of the
species of zebra. And
they've persuaded volunteers to take 40,000 photos of different animals.
And the scientists have then used this software on them
because they've all got completely unique stripe patterns.
And it combines barcode technology
and facial recognition software.
And so you can now identify an individual animal from it.
Leven Skyra, who's been on as a guest,
he has a show in Belgium and one of the
games, because when you go to a supermarket in Belgium, they give you a scanning gun to take
around now. So you can just scan as you go along the items and then you hand the scan gun in at
the end and then they tally up what you have to hand in your badge as well. So he convinced the
supermarket in allowing him to have him and his friends have barcodes
printed up on t-shirts and they ran around the supermarket like laser quest and we're trying to
scan each other's shirts and they had to collect all the kills as it were very yeah very cool game
at the end they're like well i got three zebras it's it's really i had no idea this is how it
works but each gap and space combo is a number and so each
digit is a combination of seven
black and white bars. So to say one
in a barcode, it's
white, white, black, black, white, white, black
You put those all together so it's slightly
thicker white and black bits and that is
number one. It's kind of like Morse code. Did you read
about the guy who invented it and how he came up with it? Well it was several
people who kind of developed it but one of the people
in charge of developing the idea was a guy
called norman joseph woodland and he was thinking about it when he was at the beach and he uh drew
a sort of morse code pattern in the sand sort of by doing dots and dashes uh poking them in the sand
and then pulled down those dots and dashes into bars and came up with a barcode but then the
developers turned it into the shape of a bullseye so the first barcodes were actually bullseyes oh yeah they took up loads of space didn't it
so it's actually much more efficient to just go with the long line yeah um you know that guy joe
woodland who you just mentioned yeah it's one of the pioneers supposedly he came up with the idea
indirectly because of the atlantic city mafia go on Okay, so he got the idea when he was at Drexel University in Philadelphia
and he was doing a master's degree there.
And he hadn't originally wanted to do a master's.
He wanted to start a business where he made a music system for Lyfts.
And he wanted to set up this whole firm.
And his father said, no, the mob control the music at Lyfts.
You in Atlantic City or on the east coast of the USA,
you're not allowed to go into that because they'll get you.
So instead he went off and did a master's and came up with a barcode instead.
What a weird industry to decide to control if you're the mafia.
I think they had a whole range.
It wasn't just lift music that they controlled.
That feels like it was really like the mobster's baby brother.
They needed to give him something.
Have you seen that in Venezuelan supermarkets since last year?
You've had to scan in your fingerprints to get to buy anything.
Because, you know, Venezuela is going through a very horrible time at the moment
and there's a lot of food shortages.
And so the government's had to ration stuff and people have been panic buying things.
Like they'll just buy in loads of grain or loads of cigarettes or whatever it is they think the country is going to run out
of um and so in order to stop them doing that supermarkets have installed fingerprint scanners
and when you buy something you have to get provide id you have to give your name your address your
date of birth and you have to scan in your fingerprint so they can make sure that you
haven't been over buying whoa if you just want a loaf of bread um i was looking into other animals with codes on
so uh in um 2010 farmers in summer be painted qr codes onto their cows um so that to try and
raise awareness of their website uh this is dairy farming.com well it's worked oh my god best
website ever i spent all afternoon on it it's really good there's videos of new dairy farm
technology there's a there's a farmer's dairy diary, which I quite like.
Did you read it?
Yeah, I did.
Yeah, there's a cow of the month as well,
a little profile on the cow of the month.
That's really good.
And there's also what it's like to live as a cow,
and you can follow the journey of milk.
It's a really good site, genuinely.
I'd recommend it.
So the cows are writing the diary?
No, the cows make the videos.
They put cameras on the cows,
and then the cows go around and make videos.
Really?
When you say make videos, what, the cows then go and...
They don't edit or do anything like that.
They just gave a cow a video camera.
They did that recently.
Did you see, there's a small island.
I can't remember where it is, but Google Street View has not got to them yet.
And they're quite furious because they've learned that Google Street View is a fantastic way about getting tourism
because a lot of people just go, wow, this place looks amazing, we should go.
So they've attached cameras, their own cameras,
to the heads of sheep and goats
and they just have them walk through
and they've been taking photos.
So this whole island's being mapped by sheep now.
But all sheep do is eat grass.
So presumably all you're seeing is this place is full of grass.
That's true.
Full of real close-ups of grass.
And also sheep follow each other.
So you're just going to get a lot of the same pictures. Just a lot of sheep's bottoms in grass. That's true. Full of real close-ups of grass. And also sheep follow each other, so you're just going to get a lot of the same pictures.
Just a lot of sheep's bottoms of grass.
Tourism has plummeted.
And also unnaturally low down as well.
Yeah.
It's not practical.
Also on barcodes,
embryos are going to get them.
They're developing these at the moment,
and this is to stop baby swap disasters,
because there are always a few news stories every year where people end up with the wrong baby. are going to get them. They're developing these at the moment and this is to stop baby swap disasters because, you know,
there are always a few news stories every year
where people end up
with the wrong baby.
The barcode doesn't go
on the embryo.
It goes on the egg.
It goes on the egg
or on the sperm.
On the actual...
Wow.
On the sperm.
Oh, barcode of sperm.
Well, they're on it.
It'd be a nine-meter scan
apart from anything else.
It kind of goes off
500 million times.
Not anyone at one.
Here's the thing about barcodes.
When they were introduced in the 70s, I think the first item bought with the UPC, which stands for Universal Product Code System, was a bit of chewing gum. But it was really hard to introduce because
obviously you need hundreds of products to have barcodes in order for it to be worth anyone's while.
And also they didn't used to come on the packaging.
So you used to get the food into the shop and then you would have to stick on the barcodes.
The shopkeepers had to glue them onto the boxes and then you could scan them.
I mean, that's not really that weird because a lot of reduced foods in supermarkets come with a fresh barcode.
That's a good point. But people were frightened of them initially. because a lot of reduced foods in supermarkets come with a fresh barcode for the reduced price.
That's a good point.
I'm sure of that.
But people were frightened of them initially.
In the 70s, people thought that they'd be blinded
because there are lasers involved.
Oh, yeah.
Blinded by the scanners.
By the scanners, not by the barcodes.
Yeah, if you scan a barcode, that's a bit...
Yeah, but it is quite alien, isn't it?
If you're used to someone just ringing up goods at the till
or a label which says 50p, this weird...
I'm not frightened of them.
I'd like to make that very clear.
It was the 70s.
We'd landed on the moon.
I don't think witchcraft. People running out of supermarket screaming.
The devil's in there.
No, we'd landed on the moon before we had the barcode.
That's weird.
That is odd.
It feels like the moon landing is the last thing
that we should do.
I'm not sure we should have landed there yet, even.
Funny that you mentioned the devil,
because the universal product code is part of a big devil conspiracy.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
It begins and ends with some sort of easy identifying lines
so that the lasers kind of know where the code begins and ends.
And that resembles a 666 on either side.
No, there is. There's a 6 and a 6.
There are three 6s throughout the barcode.
They're not quite 6s.
There are 6s as well in the barcode, obviously.
But at the beginning, they're just markers that look like 6s.
They're not quite 6s.
And the guy who developed the product code, George Joseph Lara,
has got a section on his website where he addresses this constant accusation.
He says, there's nothing sinister about this.
They resemble sixes.
It's simply a coincidence, like the fact that my first, middle, and last name all have six letters.
If you'd like to ask me anything more about this, sacrifice a lamb on your lawn at midnight.
He does say, I will not be answering any questions of this as of
October 2000 or something.
There's a section on his website. Like the
video that, do you remember Ringo Starr?
Peace and love. Peace and love. Peace and love. I'm not
answering any more fan mail as of this date.
Peace and love. Peace and love. The thing is, I genuinely believe
that Ringo Starr gets quite a lot of
fan mail, whereas I really struggle
to believe that this man is just
inundated.
Or if he is, it's the same two mad people and he can just block their addresses um i was trying to look into
how zookeepers identify different species of animals say they have a bunch in the cage and
what do they do to do that sometimes they have training to teach them the difference between
say a rabbit and a giraffe exactly it need the better resourced zoos, though.
And I didn't find anything.
But this is the only reason I wanted to mention this, is that there's a great hashtag that you can find on Twitter, which is hashtag ZookeepersProblems.
And it's just really fun because zookeepers around the world just put up their problems.
So a few I have here.
From Yummy Tease, at Yummy Tease.
I have way too much lemur pee in my hair right now.
From Jillian Erzar, at Jillian Erzar.
Punched in the vag by a tortoise.
Hashtag zookeeper problems.
How slow is Jillian?
Zebras cause the most injuries to US zookeepers zookeepers more than any other animal are those injuries
caused when the zookeepers mispronounce their name so egregiously just like andy did earlier
yeah because i think that's fair what did i say hey zebra that's gonna be the only kind of
the only kind of feedback we'll get about this episode is people saying why on earth does andy
say zebra yeah is it a problem it's going to be. Believe you me.
Potato, potato, zebra, zebra.
Yeah.
Zebra?
No.
No, doesn't sound right.
So why are they injuring?
Because they're wild animals, but people think they're like horses.
So I think that it's just you're more likely to be injured.
So have we not domesticated the zebra?
It's impossible to domesticate a zebra.
They're really...
In fact, there's only one person I found who managed to even slightly domesticate a zebra. They're really... In fact, there's only one person I found
who managed to even slightly domesticate them,
and that was Walter Rothschild.
Have you heard of him?
Yes.
He is an amazing man.
He was late 19th century, early 20th century.
He was a zoologist, naturalist.
He had the most amazing collections of animals.
He collected tens of thousands of butterflies.
He was a Rothschild from the banking dynasty,
the Rothschilds,
so he was seriously wealthy.
He didn't care about any of the banking stuff.
All he wanted was to collect animals.
And he had a carriage harnessed with four zebras,
and he rode it along Piccadilly
and into the forecourt of Buckingham Palace.
Oh, I think I've seen a photo of that.
Yeah, it's one of these historical photos that gets trotted out a lot i'm surprised that um we still haven't it seems to be
one of those evolution questions that we haven't solved yet of why they have the black and white
my favorite theory i just can't believe this is that it cools the zebra down because air
might move more quickly over the black uh bits of skin which absorb light
and then more slowly over the white stripes which reflect it which might make little convection
currents around the zebra to cool down i cannot i cannot believe that's true well i i mean first of
all i think that god slash darwin is looking down on the zebra debate and going you guys are
overthinking this so i just thought it would be fun.
The theory that God slash Darwin is looking down right now.
Only one of them will be looking down right now,
if they're right.
In fact, it's either both of them or neither.
Oh, that's right.
Sorry.
So you are right.
Yeah.
Okay, it's time for fact number two and that is Alex.
My fact this week is that Agatha Christie was once turned away
from a party held in her honour.
Nice. I think we've all had that.
Yeah.
Was she too drunk?
No, she was too shy, actually. That was the problem.
So this is in April in 1958.
The Mousetrap, which is the play in London
that is based on the book that she wrote,
became the longest-running production
in the history of British theatre,
so most performances ever.
2,239 performances.
And there was a big party in the Savoy Hotel,
and so she turned up, all dressed up,
and went to the party room,
and the guy at the door didn't recognise her.
And she was so shy that she just got very embarrassed and went and sat in the lounge and had a drink by herself for most of the evening.
She'd been asked to turn up early, hadn't she, by Peter Saunders, who was the producer of Mousetrap,
who said, avoid the press by turning up early and you can sneak in early.
And I think when she did that, she couldn't get in until the party actually started oh so she did make it into the party she did get into the party yeah because i
read an account in the british newspaper archive from the stage newspaper in 1958 and it was an
account of the speech that she made and richard attenborough actually gave this interview about
what she'd said and she just stood up it was one of the shortest speeches in theater history she
said well darlings i think we'll get a few months out of it so yeah which is weird
because at that point she'd already got 10 years out of it um in 1972 to exacerbate her shyness
there was another party held in her honor because there seemed to be constant parties held in honor
of someone who was very shy it's like a form of torture um but in 1972 uh she turned up to the
party and she forgot her false teeth because she was in her 80s at that point and so none of the
guests were allowed to speak to her except her very
closest friends because she didn't want to open her mouth.
And did that cure her shyness?
Does it cure your shyness if nobody speaks
to you? I suppose it might do because
then you have to go and speak to other people.
Can you imagine? You're a shy type.
You've plucked up the courage to go to your
party. You know everyone's going to want to
talk to you and you haven't brought your fucking tea oh man yeah it's a tough moment it's a tough moment
so um i was reading this mousetrap um uh play when she died the rights went over to her grandson
matthew pritchard and there's been this big thing where he's been in a bit of a fight with Wikipedia.
Because Wikipedia often, whenever they put a novel or anything,
they'll often do a really detailed plot analysis of what goes on. And Mousetrap famously has a plot twist right at the end.
And it's up there.
And so he's been trying to get them to take it down.
And it's very funny because even on the Wikipedia,
they now acknowledge that he's trying to do it.
But so he hasn't won.
Wikipedia says
this is just information.
It stays up there.
But it's interesting
this plot twist
because the plot twist
Hang on, wait.
I'm not going to say it.
But the plot twist
has become famous
for being a plot twist.
And so I for one
know what the plot twist is
because of people saying
oh there's this famous plot twist
where this happens.
I've never actually experienced the actual twist. And I reckon the majority of people know, oh, there's this famous plot to where this happens. I've never actually experienced the actual twist.
And I reckon the majority of people know what the
twist is without ever having actually had
the twist happen to them, which is a shame.
I don't know what the twist is, so I'm not
going to go on the Wikipedia page. I kind of
feel like it would be sporting of them to take it down.
Well, there is, surprisingly,
or rather unsurprisingly,
on Wikipedia, there's a page
you can go to with huge
discussions from all the Wikipedians about
the attitude they're taking towards
spoilers. That sounds like a really fun reading
on a sunny Saturday afternoon.
Yeah, I mean, it
depends on the role of an encyclopedia, doesn't it?
Is the role of an encyclopedia to tell you everything
about the ending of all
plots? Or is the role of an encyclopedia
to pique your interest
so you want to know more?
No, I think it's the first one.
To find out what zebras really are,
you'll have to come and see the stage show.
Do you know how she described herself?
She said she was a sausage machine.
Sausage machine?
Why?
Not a sausage party
vital difference
no she was
this was at a time
of her life
when she was writing
two books a year
she said
I'm a sausage machine
a perfect sausage machine
there was one year
where I think she wrote
seven books
plays
collections of short stories
right
yeah
insane
so if anything
she's a mystery novel machine
rather than a sausage machine
I think
but I think it was a metaphor rather than her actually just describing what she is a writer and that was what made her so
brilliant as an author is she never you know she sometimes would not literally describe the things
she was what i love about her novels all those sausage similes yeah all the time is that the
plot twist in the manuscript yeah the lead character is a sausage all along it was in the
drawing room with a sausage i like the idea of her at the press conference
where she's giving the interview saying,
the thing about me is I'm just a sausage machine,
a perfect sausage machine,
and every single journalist trying to suppress that snigger
as they wrote it down.
Especially saying it without any teeth in as well.
Do you know where she did a lot of her writing?
On paper? On paper?
On paper and in Iraq
I didn't know this
Her second husband was an archaeologist
And a really eminent archaeologist
And she went out
And did a load of digs with him
So there are loads of stories happening
Exotic archaeology dig sites and that kind of thing
Or there are a fair few at least
Which do and that's why She was a very keen archaeologist wasn't she in the second part like she herself got
into it as well as her husband yeah she said to her she said to her husband there's a sort of
famous anecdote where she says i just wish i knew a bit more about this kind of pottery stuff and he
says do you realize you know more about this ancient pottery than any other woman alive in
the world today because it wasn't really studied by women at the time.
Right.
It was quite a closed shop.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Wow.
If you go to the British Museum,
you can see a bunch of artifacts that he uncovered.
I think he made a particularly important find in Nimrud,
which is an ancient Iraqi city.
He found a bunch of sort of 3,000-year-old artifacts,
and they're in the British Museum
because she cleaned all his artifacts.
You can go and see stuff that's been cleaned by Agatha Christie.
That is so cool!
Isn't that cool?
So the British Museum says the reason these have probably been preserved
so well over the last 100 years
is because they were perfectly cleaned by Christie.
They called her the Queen of Clean.
They called her the Sausage Machine.
Queen of Clean, the Sausage Machine.
I was looking into other people who've been turned away or kicked out from their parties
Nirvana kicked out of their own
Nevermind release party
what did they say as they walked away
it's really odd though because you read what they did
when they got there basically they started tossing around
a watermelon
and they effectively started a food fight
and they were told to leave the release of their album.
That's a pretty hardcore food fight to start throwing an entire watermelon.
Yeah, that's true.
I can understand if it was lobbed at someone's face that that might be.
Start with mashed potatoes or something.
I've got a fact about parties.
Yeah?
There are schools in Japan for how to have a party.
Oh, no.
Yeah.
Oh, cool.
Because it's not really the done thing,
because most people live in very small homes,
so you don't really have parties
where you have loads of people around very much.
So there is this group which has been set up
called the Home Party Association,
which teaches you how,
and there are three levels of certification.
First one, you just have to send them about
22 quid and pictures of a party
that you have thrown.
Second one, level two, you have to attend
five hours of lectures in how to throw a party
and you have to write an essay
and that costs about 200 quid.
The third one costs about
450 quid for all the training and you have to
successfully host a party attended by
the examiners of the school. Oh my god.
Get this, get this. The failure
rate is 90%.
Whoa. No shit.
Any party attended by examiners is gonna
be crap. By definition, inviting
your teachers to a party ruins it.
Oh my god. What they should have taken
tips from is the party
of the century in the 20th
century and I'd never heard of this but it's
this party that apparently is the party of the century it was in 1951 it was thrown by
someone who was known as charlie who was heir to some great mexican silver fortune
and it sounds incredible and it's been remembered in great party history great party law
um as the greatest party ever thrown. And so...
You said a bunch of stuff there that doesn't exist.
Great party law.
The great party law.
The big book of famous parties.
Mentioned at every party.
It's a great encyclopedia of party legend.
I never throw a party without reminding all my guests
of the greatest party of the century in 1951.
If you guys had attended these Japanese lectures, you'd be highly familiar.
What was it like?
What happened at this great party?
So this is what happened.
It took place in the Palazzo Labia in Venice.
Oh no, okay, it sounded good.
You weren't wrong.
It was called the Bal Orientale, or the Bal Oriental, depending on which pronunciation
is correct.
So sorry, an oriental ball inside a labia yeah that's correct yeah the host wore 16 inch platform shoes so uh he was six
foot ten so he towered above all of his guests he changed his costume 16 times throughout the
evening um and the roof of the place had a garden designed by dali and dali actually did attend
dali attended and christian diali attended and Christian Dior attended,
and they came dressed up as each other.
That was just a fun little trick.
It was a costume ball,
but Orson Welles' costume didn't arrive on time,
so he had to wear just a normal suit,
which is very embarrassing for Orson.
He came as himself.
That's quite a good costume for a party.
Yeah, he should have just claimed he wasn't Orson Welles.
Daisy Fellows was there he was a very famous uh i think journalist um or socialite at the time and she it was the first time anyone had ever worn leopard print so she started the trend for wearing
first leopard print in the in the west it was the first time you know a western person had
worn leopard print this party is sounding better and better yeah isn't it so many people threatened
to be clear patcher that it had to be up to the host to settle who was
going to come as a clear patcher anonymous phone calls someone going to be clear patcher at your
party um americans who hadn't been invited because it was so famous it was happening
uh they sailed over and arrived in the lido nearby in their yachts just in the desperate
hope of getting an invitation
so there were all these wealthy people's yachts
parked in nearby coastline
and Lido's just in the hope that they get it.
Doesn't it sound incredible?
I've never heard of it.
But who's Charlie?
Just a super rich guy. No one really knows anything more about him.
That's amazing.
It sounds kind of Great Gatsby-esque.
So Great Gatsby.
Was the period of... Gatsby-esque so great gatsby what was the period of is that
20s really um truman capote threw a party as well which uh was to tie in with the publication of in
cold blood and that apparently uh in america was the big party uh of 1966 um yeah so um it was
dubbed the night capote made 500 Friends and 15,000 Enemies
because the invitations were so coveted.
The idea that he was saying no to people to come to this party
created more enemies than the people who ended up coming, liking him.
And everyone wore masks, so it was, you know,
no one who knew who anyone was there.
Frank Sinatra was there, apparently.
Lauren Bacall, apparently.
No one knows.
They had a mask on.
The only person without a mask was Andy Warhol,
who just decided not to wear a mask because he's so arty.
And yeah.
That's like when Bryan Cranston went to Comic-Con
and he wore a plastic mask with his own face on
and no one recognised him.
That's really good.
It's funny.
Are we sure Jim and Capote didn't just invite
a few thousand randomers off the street,
put masks on them, take photos, and then point at the various photos going,
that's Frank Sinatra there?
Skepticism from the woman who told us this cock and bull story
about the greatest party in 1951 ever told.
I just don't like being faced with this Capote competition.
Salvador Dali once said,
I am never alone.
I am used to being with Salvador Dali always,
and that, for me, is a
permanent party.
Okay, it is time for fact
number three, and that is Chudzinski.
My fact this week is that different
species of dolphins babysit each
other's children.
So this is some research that was done a while
back and reported in the marine mammal science journal and it's about bottlenose dolphins and
spotted dolphins and how they work together and they do loads of stuff together and one of the
things they do together is leave their children with each other so when dolphins dive deep to hunt
squid for instance their kids young dolphins can't dive that deep so they leave them with
someone to care for them and these two species it's the first instance of species um properly
cooperating in this way it would be great if you could get an animal babysitter just for your kids
what kind of animal would you pick to babysit presumably not dolphin not ever either but yeah
well dolphins are very well qualified if you give the kids armbands and drop them in the sea, then get a spotted dolphin to look after them. No, I don't...
They're a bit sexy
towards any human
they come into contact with,
aren't they?
Dan speaks from personal experience.
I don't know.
Anytime I've read about
people with dolphins,
there always is a sort of
weird humping going on.
I feel like you want to tell
a sexy dolphin story.
No, no, no.
I just, anytime
I've read about dolphins...
Oh, okay.
But then maybe
I shouldn't be Googling those particular keywords.
Yeah, I think you're hanging out in the wrong section of the library.
Do you know that dolphin nipples are secret?
Even they don't know about them.
They're hidden.
They have these abdominal slits,
and the nipples are kind of inside the slits,
the mammary slits and the the nipples are kind of inside the slits are the the mammary mammary slits they're called and also the penis of the male dolphin is the same it's in a
slit and it sort of it can poke out but it can retract within the slit as well so it's not how
convenient external yeah i read an article title that was called dolphins have scary hand-like
penises and did you read that as well well i, but I've read a debunking of it.
But you say, what have you...
No, I just, they have a retractable penis.
And the idea was that they use it to find things.
If they're near a sort of a surface area,
they'll use it like humans in the dark use hands
to find their way around things.
Oh, so it's not...
I'm afraid that's not quite true.
I've read a thing by a science writer called Justin Gregg,
who's a bit of an expert on these masses.
And there's a myth that dolphins have prehensile penises,
and that doesn't really make any sense,
because prehensile, like prehensile tails,
which can be used to grip and grab things and wrap around things,
they can extend it and they can retract it,
and they can bend it in different directions to help with mating.
But they probably can't pick up keys, for example.
That's enough if you give someone directions with that kind of...
You could give someone directions with it
if you really tried hard, yeah.
Oh, so that's not too far off.
It's not too far off.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So this is an interesting thing.
They have such control because dolphins, like whales,
they have pelvises because they evolved from land animals
which got bored of being on land and went back into
the sea, right? So all the muscles which
attach to their penis and give them this control
so left, right, in, out, that kind of thing
they are directly
attached to the pelvic bone.
And one scientist said it's like operating a
trick kite where you pull two strings
and pulling left and right makes it go
in a loop-de-loop. But I don't think... That's quite a specialised... I don't think dolphin makes it go in a loop-de-loop but i
don't think wow that's quite a specialized i don't think dolphin penises can do a loop-de-loop you're
talking about the secret nipples it's really interesting how the babies drink the mother's
milk so they have a tongue that they can turn into like a little straw you know when you kind
of like loop your tongue over and some people do that yeah oh yeah like that they do that and their
tongue has little fingery things on the end that kind of go into the nipple
and act a bit like a zip, like they kind of latch on
to make it a little bit of a seal.
Because it is difficult, because they're drinking milk underwater,
so it's liquid and liquid.
Oh yeah, otherwise it would seep out.
Yeah, exactly. And it's got the consistency of milkshake, apparently, the milk.
And yeah, it lasts about 5-10 seconds.
But it smells of fish.
Imagine a milkshake that smells of fish.
I imagine everything smells of fish in the ocean.
But can't they only taste salt?
Ooh, yeah, I think you're right.
Yeah, I think that is true.
They lost all their other taste buds to that.
And they lost the sense of smell.
They used to have it when they were on land.
And then, obviously, in water, you don't need to smell the air.
And then their nostrils moved above their head to become the blowhole.
I want to know about the middle of that process where the nostrils were moving north.
The orphan adolescent stage where they had their nostrils in their forehead.
The unicorn look.
It's bizarre, isn't it?
It's so bizarre.
You know, dolphins' grandmothers sometimes feed them.
And they employ wet nurses, I think.
It's underwater. They're all wet nurses.
I think it's underwater they're all wetness there's a theory that male dolphins can tell when female dolphins are pregnant they take we know they take
a special interest in females when they're pregnant and there's a theory
that's because they have capability to use ultrasound so that they can do
without make an appointment at a sonogram. Do they see them and go,
oh, it's a boy.
Don't tell me.
I was trying not to look.
I feel like we quite, in dolphin-esque,
that would be quite rude actually to look at someone else's
baby. Don't look inside my wife's stomach.
It's like having x-ray specs all the time.
Yeah, but just for babies.
Imagine taking your wife to the ultrasound
and it's just a dolphin.
You'd be like, oh great, we're in good hands except they're not
we have this impression that dolphins are really nice
but some dolphins
some male bottlenose dolphins kill
newborn calves
which is not nice
why do they do that?
they do it, it's really grim actually
they do it because it frees up the females for mating.
Because if a female has a newborn calf,
she will be looking after the calf for some years.
She won't be interested in having any more offspring.
Whereas if the males have killed off the calf
and within a few months she might be ready to mate again.
Do they have to, I don't know if we would know this,
but do they have to do it sort of behind,
while the mother's away on a trip?
No, on a trip.
On a holiday.
Well, babysitting's going on,
presumably.
They just kind of mob the mother,
and so the mother will try
and protect her calf,
and often will succeed
in protecting her calf
from the males
and get away with them.
Yeah.
And then the mother's fine
just to mate with that
dolphin again.
They get over it, don't they?
Pretty fast in the animal world.
They've got to procreate.
It's not a healthy family situation.
It's not.
I think, actually, I think bottlenose dolphins
might be the bastards of the dolphin world.
Because, actually, this initial fact was about
bottlenose and spotted dolphins looking after each other's children.
But the only instance they found is of spotted dolphins
looking after bottlenose dolphins' children,
not the other way around.
And, actually, there's quite a lot of
instances as well as them cooperating with each
other species wise, bottlenose dolphins
will just force their way into a group of spotted dolphins
and start shagging the women in them
and there's nothing that the spotted can do because they're half the
size. Yes. Yeah.
They just take their women.
So actually they're kind of bullies.
Bottlenose bullies. There's evidence
in marine research centres that kind of bullies. Bottlenose bullies. There's evidence in marine research centres
that kind of manage large areas of water
with lots of species in
that when dolphins get bored of all the human toys and things
that they use baby sharks as volleyballs,
which is definitely bullying.
Well, that's how dolphins kill baby dolphin calves.
They toss them out of the water
or they will hold them under the water too
because dolphins need to come up for it.
Have you guys heard of a wolfin?
It's a whale dolphin.
Half whale, half dolphin.
It's amazing.
How big is it?
Is it a massive dolphin?
It was in between the size of the two.
Because it was a false killer whale there.
I think they're slightly smaller than killer whales.
It must have been so bad for it though.
It's just so awkward.
Like, who do you hang out with?
You're way too small for the whales
and you're way too big for the dolphins
Sell it to Pixar
Sell it to Pixar, Alex
Okay, time for our final fact of the show
and that's my fact
My fact this week is that
Sylvester Stallone's mum is a bum reader
That's a bit harsh
That's no way to speak of her.
This is something she is very proud about,
according to her website, which she has taken down,
and we had to search very hard to verify.
This is the kind of fact you get when James Harkin is away for a week
for the podcast.
It's what slips through the net.
I know.
This is my only chance.
This is called Rumpology.
Why didn't they call it astrology?
Oh, nice.
Yeah.
Okay.
So for anyone who hasn't heard of rumpology or astrology,
the newly coined.
If indeed those people exist,
surely everyone's familiar with the art.
What they do is rumpologists look at people's bums
and they make predictions off the back of the creases,
off the back of any
there's one i don't do you have do you have to spread like how much detail is this
well depends how much how far into the future you want to see
your future is very dark but yeah so i was reading about this i i actually found out about this
because um i was emailing an author called David Bramwell,
who wrote an incredible book called
Number Nine Bus to Utopia.
And he's also the maker of a podcast
and a live show called The Auditorium.
And so he puts on these nights
and he had a rumpologist speak at one of his events.
And I thought, what the hell is a rumpologist?
Googled it, found out that Jackie Stallone,
Sylvester Stallone's mom has done
it and um she's done it to the point where even on her website again this is quite hard to verify
because it's been taken down um but suggestions sort of little echoes of a past website through
reading on reddit and so on suggests this that she used to charge six hundred dollars
and you would send a printed copy of your bum to her, and she would read your bum digitally, as it were.
I love a printed copy of your bum.
How does one print one's bum?
Now, with 3D printing, you probably can print your bum.
You probably can.
Oh, I think that was the perfect excuse for all the office parties,
whenever someone was caught sitting on the copy machine.
No, no, no, I want to know about my business prospect for the next year.
But according to Wikipedia,
Jackie Stallone has claimed
to predict the outcome
of presidential elections
and the Oscar winners
by reading the bottoms
of her two pet Doberman pincers.
So it doesn't,
it works on animals as well.
Yeah, she's reading,
she's reading animal bums.
And it doesn't seem,
it doesn't,
so it's one thing
to send your picture of your own bum
and get your own future.
But for some reason, these two dogs have the future presidential elections in them instead.
How does that work?
Sometimes they're just born lucky.
What are the odds of her having those dogs as well?
Yeah, amazing.
Dan, you briefly read out from the Wikipedia on rumpology just there,
which is surprisingly restrained, actually,
in what it says about this ancient art.
But I did want to read out one paragraph from it.
The American astrologer Jackie Stallone
claims that rumpology is known to have been practiced
in ancient times by the Babylonians, the Indians,
and the ancient Greeks and Romans,
although she provides no evidence for this claim.
Stallone has been largely responsible
for the supposed
quote marks revival of Rumpology
in modern times. It's the most sceptical
paragraph I've ever read about anything.
It's going in and out of vogue as well.
Yeah. I wonder if the ancient
Romans would have spent their time on it.
Just to clarify how you print a
bum, because I just feel like people are going to have been
wondering, and she does tell you, did you see
what she said you can do? No. You can henna your bum and then you sit on a piece
of papyrus she says because i guess she's trying to enhance the ancient origins of this practice
so you sit your henna newly wet hennaed ass on a bit of papyrus and then you blow it dry or
whatever and send that off to her and she can read the imprints doesn't even need the physical
that is fantastic.
It's like potato prints but with your arm.
It's very skilled of her not to need the original bum. It's amazing. Isn't it incredible?
Yeah, I guess that's what you pay your $600
for, don't you?
Where do you get papyrus these days?
Is that in Ryman's?
Is that readily available?
Yeah, you're right. It's hard. It's next to the
80 GSM.
Papyrus.
Papyrus is really good, though.
I mean, it lasts a lot longer than our paper.
That means all the paper from our time,
this current bit of history, is going to go,
except for these bits of papyrus that just have ass prints on them.
Little is known of the civilization of the early 21st century,
but they accurately predicted every single thing that has come to pass.
So here's the thing. The ancient Babylon uh also believed that you could predict the future um and they believed it was by the liver that was the part of the body they thought was really
significant and but how do you know which bit of the liver means what and they had a model liver
so you would kill a sheep get out get a special priest get uh the liver out and you would kill a sheep, get out get a special priest, get
the liver out and
he had a special
wooden liver or there were even some
special bronze livers and it says
look if this bit is discoloured this way then
you're an alcoholic.
Yeah, it's hepatology.
No, sorry, not
hepatology. I'm sorry, that is the medical study of the liver.
It's not hepatology.
I think that's going to be the thing that gets most feedback,
not my zebra pronunciation earlier.
I'm not getting liver surgery in the next 10 years.
I'm going to correct it right now.
It's hepatoscopy, and it's a branch of haruspicy,
which was the Babylonian and Etruscan study of various organs,
which spelt out your future in some way.
But yeah, it was really popular, wasn't it?
A common way of telling the future.
And in fact, a very famous example of Haruspacy was in Caesar, Julius Caesar.
So do you know the way the Ides of March was predicted was because of this practice?
Beware the Ides of March,
famously, that Julius Caesar was told to do,
and he was told this by a Haruspacist,
who is someone who looks at the entrails of animals
to tell the future.
So I think it was the entrails of a sheep
which informed the Haruspacist
to tell Caesar to beware the Ides of March.
And that was recorded by, I think, Suetonius.
So here's the thing.
Isaac Newton himself did a lot of future predicting.
Yes.
And he was very interested in learning about the nature of God.
It's so contrary to the modern image of him.
He devised a chronology of all the great events before his life
and then he did a chronology of the future as well.
So he predicted a thing called the Tribulation of the Jews,
and he predicted a thousand years of peace
are going to begin in 2370.
And part of it was based on the life cycle of the locust.
I mean, it was seriously out there.
No, but that's also quite scientific in a way,
the idea of taking a load of data
and trying to find trends
based on kind of things that happen.
No, that's the kind of thing that conspiracy theorists do.
It's not scientific.
It's taking a load of data
and making it find the trends
that you want it to find, I think,
or find...
There is a scientific edge
to making future predictions
on, say, you know,
what's going to happen
with climate change
based on past data.
Like, that is science also.
There's good ways and bad ways to do it,
but it's two sides of the same coin.
Yeah.
I was reading about
one of Thailand's leading fortune tellers
whose name is
Luck Rakanithes, and he says that the tellers whose name is Luck Rakanithes.
And he says that the fact that his name is Luck, which means luck in English, is complete coincidence.
There was an interview with him recently where he runs this system now, which is more like a call center,
where people just literally ring in and they get their horoscopes or they get told what lottery numbers to choose or whatever.
He's a multi-multi-millionaire,
so hundreds of thousands of people call him every month.
And the way he did it was he just memorized a bunch of astrology books
when he was a child and then regurgitates it.
But he spoke to Channel 4, I think, in the last couple of years,
and Channel 4 asked him how he finds it,
just reading people's futures
and telling them what's going to happen to them.
And he said, i want to change my
life i'm not kidding i'm so bored of going places with people shouting teacher look at my palm tell
me my fortune he's basically completely well i don't think he ever believed it but he's now gone
these people are all idiots who are asking me what's going to happen to them and he acknowledges
there's no point in asking me if you're going to get rich you need to get rich using your own brains
i can't tell you what's going to happen to you.
You actually have to just go out there and make it happen for yourself.
You should sell that device over the phone to people.
Perhaps he is, yeah.
I don't think he'd make much money.
Press one for an angry rant.
Press two.
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 Shriverland.
Andy.
At Andrew Hunter M.
Alex.
At Alex Bell underscore.
And Chazinsky.
You can email podcast at qi.com.
Yep.
Or you can go to at QI podcast.
That's our group account.
Or you can go to nosuchthingasafish.com where we have all of our previous episodes.
We'll see you again next week.
Goodbye.