No Such Thing As A Fish - 147: No Such Thing As Burrito Party Boy
Episode Date: January 14, 2017Anna, James, Andy and Alex discuss the unluckiest politician in the world, the elephant on the River Thames, and the best way of getting invited to Buckingham Palace....
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Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Things a Fish, coming to you from the
QI offices in Covent Garden. My name's Anna Tyshinski and I'm here with Alex Bell, James
Harkin and Andrew Hunter Murray. Once again, we've gathered around the microphones with
our four favourite facts from the last seven days and in no particular order, here we go,
James Harkin. Okay, my fact this week is that in 1683 some people were ice skating in the
Netherlands when the ice broke away and they floated all the way to Essex. Well, it happened
according to some people. So this is from a book called The Thames and its tributaries
by Charles Mackay. It's an old book and he says it's reported that this happened. He says that
some skatesliders upon those large icy plains were unawares, driven to sea and arrived living,
though almost perished with cold and hunger upon the sea coast of Essex. Okay, and you know what,
I don't really believe it, but it is a kind of thing that happened and it's kind of related to the
mini ice age that happened in the 17th century when it got really, really cold and basically the
sea was freezing and all the rivers were freezing and they had these frost fares in London and there
was lots of crazy stuff that happened whether this happened and I don't really know. But I believe
it. I want to. Did they put a sail up? Yeah, how big was the ice shelf? Well, that one sentence
that I said is the sum total of all the information I have about this fact. Did they accidentally
cut the raft off with their skates? Well, what used to happen is people would have these fares
on the rivers and then they would try and keep them going as long as possible because they were so
much fun, but then as the kind of ice got less and less and less, it would break up into icebergs
and then people would get stuck on these little ice flows and that definitely did happen. Yeah,
they also tried to keep them going because they were quite economically important. So the London
Thames frost fares happened partly because when the Thames freezes over, all the trade from the
sea has to stop. And like on one occasion, I think it was two months that the Thames froze over. So
all the people that are usually working on the docks and stuff like that had nothing to do. They
had no income all of a sudden. It was all the ferrymen as well and they were really cheeky. So
what they did, they would guard the access to the river basically because there are ladders and
slipways. It's not just a case of walking straight out onto the river and they would charge you
two or three pennies to climb down the ladder and get onto the river and then they charge you
another penny to leave. Even if you left up the same ladder? Even if you left up the same ladder.
Really? And you can't talk to the ticket inspector in the office and ask if you can get a refund on
an oyster card? There's no office, there's no oyster card. I don't know about the incentive
programmes they had to come and use the same ladder again. What happens though, if you spend your
last penny on a bit of, you know, candy floss or something and then how do you get off, you have
to stay on the river until you float off to the devil or something? They must have been so exciting
though the Thames River Fairs and partly because there weren't that many of them. So this little
ice age, I think you were saying was in the 1700s but it sort of spanned from the 13th century to
the 19th and reached its peak then and there were only five Thames Frost Fairs, I thought, in that
period where properly the Thames froze over and all industry moved onto the Thames. So it must have
been so thrilling when it happened and they had like, you know, an elephant walked across, didn't
it, in the 18, was it the 1814 one? 1814, yeah. The last one, yeah. But what happened was the
elephant walked across the river right next to Blackfriars Bridge, which seems unnecessarily
dangerous, doesn't it, when you've got a bridge and you literally lose that. Yeah, huge Blackfriars
Bridge. Bit of a slap in the face at the bridge builders. They are kind of dangerous because
there was a bloke who, because a few people died falling through the ice, really, really few compared
with the number of people there but one of them was a plumber who was carrying a load of lead
across the river on the ice and he, you know, clearly got to a weak bit of ice and fell in.
But apparently if that happened, a load of people and tents would just get dragged into a hole,
which just sounds terrifying. That happened on a couple of occasions, like just a huge chunk of
ice and tents and people would disappear. There was one time when the ice broke up and it was,
there were things attached to a local building and then the ice broke up and kind of drifted away
and pulled this building down. Oh yeah, I think it was a pub, wasn't it? And it was when a ship
had been anchored to a pub near Rotherhithe and they just tied it around the beam of the pub and
then it dragged the pub down with it when the ice melted. Like when you take your dog to a pub and
leave it outside and tied up. But it's the world's strongest dog. Clifford.
Yeah, they put a cable around the beam in the middle of the pub and then they put an anchor in
the cellar of the pub to keep it there attached to the ship. I mean you're just asking for the pub
to be ripped out of its mooring. Kind of, yeah. Five people died though. Apparently the highlight
in 1814 was they roasted an entire ox on the ice and this guy called Ivan Day has replicated that
and says it takes 24 hours to spit roast an ox and it would feed 800 people. It's also interesting
that you could light fires. Apparently a lot of the tents, like the shoemaker's tents and things,
had fires in them to keep the people inside warm and that worked somehow and didn't melt the ice
because it was really thick. They also had a lot of souvenirs which you could get, right? But basically
they just had tat and books and toys and things that had been made in London and they just took
them out of the ice, put a label on them saying, sold on the icy Thames and then sold them for three
times as much. I don't know. Wow. Yeah, well there was one book that was made in the Frost Fair. It
was called Frostiana or A History of the River Thames in a Frozen State and the entire book was
typeset and printed at a printing store which had been set up on the Thames. That is very cool.
I haven't heard of any other book which was printed at the place that it's about and then sold
there as well. Do you know they had ice brothels? Did they? It sounds very uncomfortable. There were
sex tents on the ice. Nice. I know. It was written of one woman. The heat of her buttocks made such a
great thrill. She had leaf to drown the man of the law. You know what's really sad? It's probably
not going to happen anymore. I mean obviously it hasn't happened for 200 years but the reason it
happened in the first place was that it happened near the old London Bridge, right? And that had
loads and loads and loads of arches. So it was really annoying for river traffic because the
arches meant you couldn't get big ships through there. And as a result that slowed the flow of
the water down and it meant that it was froze over much more easily. It actually sped the flow of
the water up. What slowed the flow of the water down was that the Thames was much wider and shallower
then because it hadn't been embanked. There was no embankment. So what the old London Bridge did was
the arches were much narrower which meant that it was much easier for a block of ice that was
floating in to get stuck and sort of form the beginning of a dam which ice could then form
crossing. I reckon that we have the technology now to freeze the Thames if we wanted to. I was
going to say it would be really cool if we did it again by just injecting natural or something.
Yeah, probably cost quite a bit but Siddy can come on. I don't know if that one penny entrance
and exit fee is going to pay for the technology freezing the entire Thames. They used to play
spots while it froze over on the Thames. They played football for instance. They also played
donkey racing, nine pin bowling, throwing at cocks. Sorry, just to go back because I read
about the nine pin bowling and I want to know when they added the extra pins to bowling.
I like the way that I went nine pin bowling and throwing at cocks and it was nine pin bowling
but you had a problem with. My understanding of nine pin bowling and ten pin bowling and this is
going off really old knowledge is that they banned nine pin bowling for gambling and then
they kind of put in an extra pin to try and get around the law. I see, very clever. Throwing
at cocks actually sounds like it's the same as nine pin bowling really, doesn't it? It does but
with cocks instead of pins. Yeah, it's like an upgrade. That's pretty much what it is apart from
so you get a chicken and you throw stuff at it. That's kind of how it happened. Nice. It was also
shooting at pricks. Wasn't that? Yeah, it's not the same as throwing at cocks. It's kind of shooting
at pricks is an old name for a kind of archery apparently. What was the prick? I imagine it
must be the sharp bit at the end of your arrow. I would have thought that as well but you don't
shoot at that, do you? You're right. Are they throwing the board towards the arrow? No,
prick is an old word for a small indentation or something. That sounds like a needle prick.
So that's what you were aiming for, the little indentations. In 1540 the word prick was a term
of endearment for a man. So instead of darling or sweetheart, you would say my prick. Is that
because of the penis thing? Prick, I'm sure, has meant penis for quite a long time. Yeah,
I think it has. I think it's Shakespearean-ish, isn't it? Yeah, and you say watch a cock?
I do say cock sometimes. You say that all the time? Not all the time. Carlson is saying it to me.
Well, in the 1960s a spare prick at a wedding was a bit of British slang for someone who is
embarrassingly out of place in a particular situation. I think that's worth bringing back.
But not somebody with their cock out. That would work as well, isn't it? You wouldn't be out of
place like that, that standard ferret wedding, isn't it? We have just been to Dan's wedding
and I don't remember much of that going on. Oh, you were in the wrong room.
So Russia was quite used to these kind of things. It wasn't as exciting there. They were
accustomed to their rivers freezing over and having big fares and stuff on them. Still are.
I've skied on the Moscow River. Have you? When I went to St Petersburg, I saw a wedding
actually happening on the frozen earth, did you? It was amazing. It's been quite hard to stand up,
go down the aisle, everyone's sliding around. Or to see the bride. Yeah. Well, she's floated
up to Finland and I've accidentally married a snowman. Okay, moving on to fact number two,
and that is from Alex Bell. My fact this week is that former Argentinian president Carlos Menem
had such a reputation for bad luck that people would touch their left breast or testicle while
shaking his hand. I find the while shaking his hand a bit pretty insulting. I think they used the
other hand. I understand, but it's fairly obvious what you're doing if your hand slides into your
pocket. Yeah. As you're shaking hands with the former president of your country. Yeah, absolutely.
This guy is extraordinary. Yeah, we should call him the unnameable because it's bad luck to say
his name. So he's like Voldemort in many ways. Yeah, people instead say things like Mendes or
Menen, where with Voldemort, you don't just say Voldatron. So he's supposedly not allowed to attend
football matches, Argentinian team football matches, because in 1990 in the World Cup,
he visited when they were playing and he approached the goalkeeper to shake hands.
And this was ages ago. So clearly the myth was established even then that he was cursed.
The goalie refused to shake his hand because of the curse. He's just sort of put his hands up and
said, no, you're not going to know. So then Menem laughed and he gave him a pass on the knee. And
in the match that followed, A, Argentina lost and B, the goalkeeper fractured his knee.
How do you pass on one's knee? It's such a stretch to get down there.
He was probably aiming for the left testicle. Do you know that witchcraft is explicitly banned
in Malawi, I think it is, in football? Is it? Yeah. As in it's in the rules that you're not
allowed to. Really? I don't think it's explicitly illegal in British football, but I did write to
a referee about this to find out what the truth is. He hasn't replied weirdly enough.
But I reckon that it would be un-gently conduct, a yellow card and an indirect free kick. I don't
think that matters though if you've just turned stoke into pigs. Football is full of these
superstitions though. It's all, you do something once, you win a match and then you have to do it
every time. Yeah. It's like scoring goals. So there was another Argentina guy, Carlos Bilardo.
In the quarterfinals, the goalie had to pee on the pitch because they were about to have a penalty
shootout and there wasn't time for him to get back to the dressing room and have a pee there.
So his teammates all surrounded him in a wall and he had a pee on the pitch
and then he blocked two shots and Argentina ended up going through. So the next match.
Every time there was a free kick and they made a wall, he peed against them.
The next match, Bilardo made him pee on the pitch again because he thought it would be lucky.
Right. Did it work? It did not work. They did not win the next match.
You're going to be under pressure, aren't you, like with, you know, 60,000 people watching here?
So yeah, back to Menem and the reasons that people think he's bad luck. I like the fact that he
shook the hand of the World Powerboat Racing Champion who was called Daniel Schioli in 1989
and immediately Schioli's boat crashed and he lost his arm. But then Schioli became an MP
for Mr. Menem's party. Michael Schumacher, I think, he shook his hand and then Michael Schumacher
was immediately shunted. Yeah. But then he narrowly won the next race. And if that's the curse of Menem,
is that you win by slightly less than you're normally accustomed to. I think it's not much
of a curse. Yeah. He's also known as the father of the devastating 2001 economic collapse, which is
a pretty heavy title to be taking. If you want to be the father of anything, it's not that.
Yeah. Menem did become famous for his womanizing as well. So he married a former Miss Universe
when he was about 73. Bad luck for her. I like this is confusing. So there was an article listing
all of his bad lucks and it ended on this. So it went through all these people that he's cursed.
It ended by saying, the night before the 2000 U.S. presidential elections, the unnameable,
as in Menem, is said to have called his good friend George W. Bush to wish him good luck.
Need I say more? I mean, George Bush won that election. Actually, he won that election despite
losing that election. So it's incredibly good luck. My favorite thing about him is that his surname
is a palindrome. That's pretty much all I like. Which means that he has something in common with
ex-Cambodian president, Lon Null, who, as far as I can tell, is the only head of state ever to
be a complete palindrome. Really? That's really good. Do you think they meet? Well, they have a
little club. Yeah. Quite a meet in the middle somewhere in Panama. Yes, in a canal in Panama,
in a man in a canal in Panama. In his election campaign, one of the ways he won is that he
swore he'd throw the Brits out of the Falklands. And then as soon as he did win, he started really
trying to ingratiate himself with Britain to the extent that he angled desperately,
according to The Guardian, for an invitation to Buckingham Palace. So many times did he announce
that he had been invited to London, that the foreign office eventually had to let him come.
Well, I didn't know you could do that. If you just announced repeatedly that the Queen's invited
you to Buckingham Palace, she's eventually forced to let you through the door. No, work for any
party. I'm coming tonight. I'm really looking forward to coming tonight. It's going to be great.
Everyone, I'm coming to this party. I think that would work. Yeah. Do you think it would?
Well, you're playing by a rule that other people don't recognise, or rather you're not playing
by rules that other people do recognise. Yes. So if you just say, I am invited to this party,
people will be embarrassed, even though it's nothing to do with them. It's all you embarrassing
yourself. The embarrassment will reflect on them. Okay, yeah, fine, whatever. It doesn't affect my
life so much if they come to my party. Yeah. And I don't want to look like a rude idiot. Weirdly,
I did get a letter from the Queen yesterday asking if I wanted to attend her private
reception next week. Yeah. I found a really questionable list on quora. I think it was
of some other superstitions in a discussion. I like the way you said the word quora in a
real undertone in the hope that people might miss that as a source. My favourite ones were,
apparently, it's bad luck to leave your purse lying open on the floor because that means that you'll
lose money, obviously, somehow related. Also, if you eat watermelon with a glass of red wine,
you'll die. Apparently, loads of Argentinians just like, that's just a proper wise tale that
people don't do that. You'll die. I've heard things like that, not just in Argentina, because it used
to be, I think that you would have foods that were very hot foods and foods that were very cold foods.
And even if they weren't necessarily hot or cold, they were felt that that's the effect they would
have on your body. And the watermelon would be particularly cold and icy, whereas the wine
would warm you up and it would think that like the two opposites would kind of clash.
It's Friday the 13th today, which is one reason we might be talking about superstitions.
And there's a vet in Australia that has a promotion for Friday the 13th,
where it's discounting its neutering for black cats.
So we've got a black cat. I could fly to Australia and save loads of money getting it neutered.
Is that is the aim so that there are fewer black cats? Because some people think they're
bad luck. I think they're good luck. It depends which way they cross the road. If they cross
from left to right, it's one. If they cross from right to left to the other. But is it different
in the UK and the rest of Europe? That's a really good point, it must be. And also,
which way you're going on the road as well? No, you're coming towards the cat. So if it crosses
from your left to your right, it's one. It's relative to you, whereas someone walking the
other way will experience opposite luck based on the movement of the cat. You know left and
right is always relative. That's the thing about it. That is the interesting thing that it's
impossible or there's not very many ways to explain to an alien, say which is left and
which is right. If you don't have a similar field of reference. I'd have more important
things to talk about. I bet you'd freeze up if it actually came to it. I'd be very nervous.
I'm not good with new people. I'm your whole new species. So I'm really looking forward to
coming to your planet. Yeah, you've said that five times.
Okay, we should move on to fact number three. And that is my fact. My fact this week is that
Isambar Kingdom Brunel once spent six weeks with a coin stuck in his windpipe as a result of a
magic trick that backfired. Did he? He did indeed. Yeah, so I found this. I was, for some reason,
I was looking him up in the British newspaper archive, a bit bored. And I found an obituary for
him from 1862. And it said the closest he came to death was when he was trying to impress his
children in 1843. Hang on. This is the part from his actual. The closest he came to death was one
second before he died. The second closest he came to death. I'm sure they issued a correction the
next day. He was trying to impress his children by doing a magic trick where he swallowed a half
sovereign coin and then brought it out of his ear. But instead, the sovereign landed in his windpipe.
So what happened? So what happened was he had chest pains for a while and quite bad coughing.
And he, because he's an engineer, as we know, possibly the most important thing he ever designed
was a contraption in order to extract it. And I couldn't find any diagrams of it, but apparently
it was a movable platform with hinges on it, which I think he strapped his body to and it
bent his body over an 80 degree angle. And then he was repeatedly struck on the back and the idea
was that this would dislodge the coin. So he tried this out and it almost killed him one time. So
they didn't do that again. And then he took six weeks having various doctors fiddle about with him,
one of them tried to get forceps in there and pull it out, but he nearly died again. And then
eventually he went back to the contraption, but this time with an incision cut in his throat.
And he bent himself over on this contraption he designed. And there was an incision on his
throat, which was, you know, when you have like a tracheotomy that was allowing him to breathe.
And so he then managed to choke the coin up. And as it was rising up through his windpipe,
he was still able to breathe because the incision was there in his throat. And he coughed it up.
And he actually did say that the moment when he heard the gold piece strike against his upper
front teeth was perhaps the most exquisite moment of his whole life. Wow. It was a really famous
thing throughout the country. The isn't working to Brunel coin thing. Everyone knew about it
because he was very famous at the time. So for example, there's a famous Victorian historian
called Thomas Babington Macaulay. When he read the good news, supposedly he ran along the street
yelling, it's out, it's out. And everybody knew what he was talking about. It's an incredible
story. It is so ingenious the way he got himself out of it. Yeah. And crazy that he caught himself
out of it and that, you know, all these doctors tried and then he just built a machine. Yeah.
Is he clever for getting himself out or is he stupid for getting himself into it?
I'd say a bit of both. Technically, he got itself out of him.
But yeah, I was actually looking him up because I visited recently the Brunel Museum in Rotherhithe,
which if you are passing is really cool. It's absolutely tiny. And it's the Mark Brunel Museum.
So it's about the Thames Tunnel, which is the first ever tunnel that was built under a river.
And it was designed by Mark Brunel and Isambar Brunel, his son helped him out.
And it's a really cool place. Go there. It's an amazing story. It was like an unbelievable
feat of engineering. And that's where he came third closest to dying as well. I got an extract of
the description of the conditions that the workers put up with. They were showered in raw sewage
and dodged flames from ignited methane gas whenever they worked. It was the worst job in the world.
They only worked four hour shifts because they collapsed after four hours and then would be
replaced by men who were still breathing and then they would work for four hours and then be replaced
by another shift. And they were constant. There were five floods, I think, in one of which
Brunel was down there and nearly died. And it's just insane that they carried on.
Why did they have showers of raw sewage? I think because there was constant leaking
and the Thames was disgusting then. So you know when it froze up, would it just be like frozen
turds everywhere? I guess it would have been, right? Bumpy skate rink. I guess you have snow on
top as well. So he brought a lot of this on himself in the tunnel. So he nearly drowned three times,
right? He fell into a water tank once. That could have happened anywhere. So that's not so bad.
But then there was a time where he was with a party of influential visitors in a rowing boat
and he was trying to freak them out by rocking it from side to side, fell in, nearly drowned.
And it was the third time, the most deadly time, which we've just talked about, was because he
was told you shouldn't dig through there. That soft mud that'll bring the river in.
And he said, no, it's fine. Don't worry about it. And he did. And he dug through that bit.
River came in, the ceiling collapsed and he was pulled to safety. But six members of the evacuation
crew died. Just quickly on the tunnel, something else you should look up is the painting that's
been done of the banquet that they had inside it. So one time when it flooded to celebrate the fact
that everyone hadn't died and it was still going, they held this enormous banquet and they invited
all of high society there. That is asking for trouble. Everyone almost died. What shall we do?
Let's get all of society back in the tunnel. Apart from everything else, you're basically
asking for the Riddler to attack. Well, it looks very exciting. Nobody died. So crisis averted.
No, and it looks amazing. And they used to have stalls. So what did happen in the tunnel was
they had lots of little market stalls running all the way through it. And it was a tourist attraction.
It was much like the ice fairs and people would have to pay a few pennies to go into the tunnel
and they'd walk through it. Come and see the death tunnel of death.
He also built an atmospheric railway, i.e. a vacuum railway pumped along by pressure.
And can we refer to it as the atmospheric caper, which is what they called it?
That's so cool. It didn't really work, unfortunately. So basically, it would be huge pipelines pumping
out air to create a vacuum to push the train along with atmospheric pressure. But it's such a cool
steampunky reason it failed. The technology needed the air pipes to be sealed with leather
flaps, right? They needed to be kept supple and moist. So they needed tallow kind of fat to be
sort of smeared on them, right? Unfortunately, rats like eating tallow. So they ate a load
of the flaps and stopped the system from working. So yeah, the system, the design was perfect. It
was just the time that it was made. Exactly. And it did work for seven months. It successfully
carried people from Exeter to Plymouth, I think. And there is a pub now in a place called Starcross
called the Atmospheric Railway, which sounds all modern, but that was from, you know, the mid-19th
century. Really? Yeah. You'd be expecting a really atmospheric pub. I was going to say it's
been dead inside really ironically. We should say the good thing about the Atmospheric Railway,
the reason he made it is because you don't need to carry your fuel with you, because there would
be fuel planted along the way, so that the way that the vacuum was created was through piston
action. And every three miles, the pistons were fuelled by steam, by little steam sheds. And so
you didn't need to have all this heavy fuel that you carried with you on your train. So it would
be efficient. But then we found electricity and we didn't need any more. So Mark Brunel, great
engineer, Isambar Kingdom Brunel, great engineer. So it's gone through the family. There is another
direct descendant of Brunel called Morwenna Wilson, who made a craft, made entirely out of folded
paper and managed to sail it on some water. That's really cool. Great engineering, right?
It's completely made out of paper, apart from the keel, which is made out of wood and polystyrene.
I mean, what even is a keel? It can't be that important, right? Oh, that's pretty cool though.
Yeah, no, it is good. That's awesome. Does she charge people two pennies to get in it and sail
across to me? And then does she rock it from the side? That's really tarnished my view of
Isambar Kingdom Brunel. I was thinking there was an absolute child. Well, he was a bit of a slave
driver. Like a lot of people died on the huge tunnel he built on the Great Western Railway.
Box tunnel. Box tunnel, that's right. Yeah, supposedly about 100 people died in the day of
that. And he supposedly did it so that the sun shines down it on his birthday. I read that
that's a myth though. Well, did you? We worked it out and we think it's pretty much not far away
from being true. Oh, really? Whether he did it on purpose or not. We actually asked the railway
company if we could go and check it out. And they said, no, there's high speed trades going through.
The one thing we asked you not to do is trespass on our railways. Yeah, so they wouldn't let us. But
we reckon that at least it should pretty much work. Do you know one thing he did do in the
box tunnel? Speaking of high speed trains is he used to quite like driving the steam train sometimes
and he was driving through the box tunnel once next to the driver and he was the one who was
driving the train. And he suddenly saw a big obstacle in front of him too late to break and
avoid it. And so James Bond put his foot down like went full steam ahead and just blasted
straight through. That's what happens when I research. And it turned out that it was a carriage
from another train that had accidentally fallen off the train and left on the track and he just
blasted it into smithereens plowed right through it. He was an action man. All of his work actually
came from the time when he nearly drowned in the Thames because he went to convalesce for
ages and ages in Clifton near Bristol. And that's where he got hired for a load of jobs because
he was thinking and writing and designing all the time he was convalescing. And at Clifton,
so they had the two towers of the bridge. They didn't have the main body of the bridge,
but they did have an inch and a half thick metal wire rope going across the gorge by the time
while he was still alive. And he went across in a wicker basket on a pulley and it jammed while
they were halfway across. And if you started rocking it. If you've seen the Clifton gorge,
you know that is terrifying because it is so high at instant death if you fell. And he looked up,
took off his hat, climbed up to the pulley, unjammed it and they continued along the way.
That's a fourth closest he came to. Actually, the foundations of the Clifton suspension bridge
were invented not by him, but by a lady called Sarah Guppy who gave the plans to Brunel for
free because she believed that women must not be boastful. Wow. Yeah, there's someone's written
a book basically saying that Brunel was not nearly as good as we all think. And he didn't
design the Clifton suspension bridge. Hardly any of it was related to his original design,
even by the time it was fully made. I think it was pretty good. Well, read the book, Andy.
I certainly haven't, but I read an article about it.
Okay, we should move on to fact number four and that is Andy's fact. Yes, my fact is that to
deal with violent or drunk people, Japanese police carry massive futons and roll the offender up in
them to calm them down. This is fantastic. They genuinely turn criminals into burritos.
And with that calm you, Dan, do you think? I think it would. If you're rendered completely
immobile and you're just sort of in your comfy futon, I would, yeah, I'd calm down. Yeah,
like when you put a bag over a horse's head and it stops. Yeah. Stop doing that, Alex.
So this is from a podcast which is called My Perfect Country. Each episode is about
a country that is doing something right in a particular aspect of law or society or whatever
it is and you're doing it perfectly. So for example, this is about very low crime and particularly
gun crime in Japan. It's almost impossible to get a gun in Japan. You have to do exams,
you have to score more than 95% on a rifle range test. So if you do get a gun at least,
we know you'll be incredibly accurate. Yeah, there's no attempted murder charges ever.
So that's what they should do. If you get less than 5% in the rifle range, they should give you
help yourselves. Yeah, and as a result, there were six occasions last year when the Japanese
police fired their guns in total and in 2014, there were six gun deaths. I mean, they just,
they just don't really have them. That's good. We do have very similar stats with police people
firing guns. Yeah, so anyway, this is about Japanese policing methods and how they roll people up.
Yeah. It's from the sushi tradition, basically. I think someone looks at some sushi and thought,
wait a second. Why don't we carry massive bits of seaweed around with us?
What if that bit of cucumber was a violent offender?
Yeah, I think it would be quite awkward as a police officer if for this very occasional time
when you get a violent offender, because like you say, there's not many guns, but you always
have to carry a massive futon around with you. They are slightly smaller in Japan, aren't they?
So futons are a big thing in Japan. A lot of people sleep on futons and they're not
like, I imagine, which is kind of a proper sofa that turns into a bed kind of thing.
They're just like a roll-up. Yeah, they're not duvets. Sorry, they're more like
duvets than mattresses, aren't they, basically? Kind of. They're pretty supportive.
It's a thin mattress that you sleep on, but do you know what else gets a futon in Japan
if you want it? It's your wallet. So there's a futon company. Yeah, it's a futon company called
Nakate Gawa Futons, and they've started making sai futons, which means wallet futon, and it's
made of high quality cotton. It includes a little cover, like a duvet cover for your wallet,
and it includes a pillow for the head of your wallet, whichever end of your wallet is the head.
It says it's been blessed from priests at a shrine in Tokyo, and if you want to go more
expensive, you can order a little bed that comes with it. I'm going to go out on the
limb and say this company is not going to last very long. Do you see the amount they charge
for these futons? They cost about 115 quid, give or take, for a futon. The futon and bed is 340.
So then you've got nothing to put in your wallet.
Oh no, it's hilarious. They are beautiful, though. Look them up. I mean, I'd be tempted,
but then I'm a sucker for stuff like that. Have you heard of the Bora Boroton?
No, no. This is a legend, which is like an evil spirit described as a tattered futon
that comes to life at night, and it's basically part of a group of these kind of demons, these
spirits called Tsukumogami. They're basically household objects that either they're possessed
by spirits or ghosts, or if you use them constantly for 90 to 100 years, they eventually become sentient,
and they will be, they'll be fine, and they'll just kind of do like, they'll just behave like
normal household objects unless they're feeling ignored or needless, in which case,
they will come to life and try to strangle their owners and they'll float around through the house,
or they will throw noisy parties with other members of this family. So you'll get all your
household objects having a party and they're trying to kill you. But how do you, how do you
stop a violent offender futon? Wrap it up with a drunk person. So the police in North Wales a
few years ago, this is in 2010, they hired a troop of actors to pretend to be drunk. Did they? It was
to do a sting on a load of pubs in North Wales. They had about 50 pubs they wanted to check and
see if they'd serve people who were obviously inebriated. So they hired a troop of actors
to dress up as trunks and they gave them all the clothes and costumes as well. Like they gave
them shabby jackets and manky trousers and shoes and they said, go in, pretend to be absolutely
blind drunk and see if you can get served. Wow. But then you couldn't prosecute anyone because
they're not drunk. I don't know. I imagine you could arrest on those grounds. You don't think so?
No. I mean, neither of us has tried it. Well, I did used to be a landlord. Used to be a landlord
for a pub. I had a personal landlord's license. Yeah. But is that like having a drinks cabinet?
Is that just in your house? No, it must. Personal landlords, because we've all, I've got one of those.
It means I could go to any pub and be officially by law the landlord of that pub. So about 15
years ago, they changed the law. It used to be that the building had the license. Right. But then
they changed it so that the landlord had the license. The reason they did it, I think, is because
they had a lot of chain pubs and stuff like that. And I used to be an accountant for a pub company
and I did my personal license. And so it meant that if there were like landlords on holiday,
I could go and work in the pub as the landlord. In fact, I wouldn't even have to work. I could
just be sat there while other people are doing all the job, but I'd be kind of the one responsible.
Wow. You can say, yeah, you can leave your ship outside. Yeah, put the cables down here. That's
fine. That's good to know. We should use that. I'm not anymore. It's slapsed. I mean, it lapsed.
15, 20 years ago, it lapsed. You're a pointless friend to us then.
They have drunk people on the streets of the UK. They've trialled drunk tanks.
What? They don't have drunk people on the streets of the UK?
They're all acting. It's always my line. It's the amdram capital of the world.
No, they have drunk tanks now. And the idea is that you get people out of A&E and you stop clogging
up ambulances with drunk people. And they've trialled this in Bristol. And I think they've
trialled it in other places as well. And in 2014, for instance, over one weekend, it kept 15 people
out of hospital. Because what they do is they had a mobile drunk tank, which is just a lorry,
which if someone's really drunk and thinks they're really ill and collapses, you shove them in the
lorry and then let them have a nap. That sounds like a party. I mean, I would get drunk and be
putting in a lorry. That sounds brilliant. I think these people might have gone past the fun part
of drunk. Oh, that is going to be the most, it's going to be full of vomit and piss, isn't it?
It's going to stink. Oh, my God. Do you reckon they have futons in there?
Everyone's roll up in a futon. Actually, they are just big futons made of metal then. It's the
same principle. Yes. I mean, you can say anything's a futon made of something else, can't you?
This building's a futon made of bricks. Excuse me, I've got to complain about this sandwich.
It's just a futon made of bread and cheese. You know, you can buy speaking of bread and
futons and all that kind of stuff. You can buy a towel, which is deliberately created in the
likeness of a flour tortilla. So you can wrap yourself up like a burrito. That's really good.
And sexy, too. Oh, yeah. That's weird, because the people who invented this,
they're a collective called Ampersand Friends, and Friends or something. They told the Huffington
Post that they were inspired by the fantasy of being a human burrito. Wow. It'd be weird if they
said that we were inspired by the collective works of Shakespeare. It makes sense. You are right,
of course, but odd reading of Hamlet. Actually, there is a guy who's addicted to being rolled up
in carpets. Maybe he's part of this collective. I think he might be the inspiration for it.
He's a guy called Giorgio T. He didn't want to be known by his full name. He's in New York,
and he loves rolling himself up in a carpet and having people tramp on him.
That's charming. That's the most charming addicts I've ever heard of rolling up in a carpet.
It is quite sweet, and now he hires himself out to parties and rolls up in a carpet and
women just trample all over him. He gets paid for that. He doesn't make it, does he?
People will pay up to $200 for him to perform. I mean, it's lovely, isn't it,
when your weird perverted fetish can turn into your job. Well, if anyone would like a burrito boy
to turn up at the house. Okay, that's all of our facts for this week. If you want to get in
touch with any of us, you can get in touch on Twitter. Alex is on at Alex Bell Under School,
James at Egg Shaped, Andy at Burrito Party Boy. Or if we don't use that at Andrew Hunter M,
we're using it. And if you want to listen to any of our previous episodes, you can go to
knowsuchthingsafish.com. That's all for this week. We'll see you again next week. Bye-bye.