No Such Thing As A Fish - 195: No Such Thing As A Hummingbird With A Greggs Steak Bake

Episode Date: December 8, 2017

Live from Manchester, Dan, James, Anna And Andy discuss how much Coke a human-sized hummingbird would drink, the world's first rollercoaster, and American grocery bag-packing competitions....

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast this week coming to you live from Manchester! My name is Dan Schreiber, and I'm sitting here with Anna Chazinski, Andrew Hunter Murray, and James Harkin, and once again we have gathered round the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days, and in no particular order, here we go! Starting with you, James Harkin. OK, my fact this week is that the first Loop the Loop rollercoaster closed because so many riders were passing out.
Starting point is 00:01:02 That's the end of the show! They were passing out, they were passing out, this was, so it was on Coney Island, it was in 1901, and what it was, it was a Loop the Loop, and I don't know if you would notice this today, if you look at a Loop the Loop, they're not circular, they're kind of like elliptical things, and the reason is if you have a circular Loop the Loop, it basically kills you. Really? Yeah, this one is called the Coney Flip Flap, and it was giving people, it was, is that rude
Starting point is 00:01:31 in Manchester? I know! So the Coney Flip Flap produced 12 Gs of gravitational force. How, how, what is that? That's a lot. It's about 9 G is like the maximum that like jet pilots, fighter pilots ever go up to. Oh my God, exactly. So the biggest, the craziest rollercoaster today I think is 6 G, and this was 12 G.
Starting point is 00:01:55 I mean it just, basically you went on it and more often than not you passed out or you got whiplash or whatever, and they made more money charging spectators to watch the frightened riders. You just put on someone you don't like, oh no, I bought you the ticket, go on mate, you take it, I'll see you in a bit. That is so funny. I actually read, and I've only just noticed, this is the case, looking at the year in my notes, but there was a rollercoaster in France in 1846 that did have a Loop, but it was just
Starting point is 00:02:29 a cart on a track, but it went fast enough to have a Loop there, and there were lots of reports about it, but people who operated like fairgrounds or the equivalent then were prone to exaggeration, so first of all, all the news stories at the time reported it as going at 150 miles per hour, which is as fast as the fastest rollercoaster today, so that's impressive. They tested it at the time using soundbags, eggs, and monkeys, and apparently they had loops up to 12 meters high, I read, in a book called The Incredible Screen Machine, but the book also points out that the makers were prone to massive exaggeration.
Starting point is 00:03:06 Apparently they could snap riders' necks. That is bad. It put people off. You don't want the photo to be going off just at that moment, your neck starts to be... I think embarrassment is the least of your worries at that moment. And those, I think the French ones, it was just a one person loop the loop, so it was just you in the sled, you go down the thing, loop the loop, your neck breaks, and then the next person comes in.
Starting point is 00:03:32 The next person still gets on. This is a really cool thing. OK, so Coney Island, they had a load of roller coasters, and one of the first ever ones, I think it was called the Switchback, and it was founded by a women's underwear magnate called LaMarcus Thompson, and it was a moral mission, because Coney Island was full of alcohol and other immoral attractions. I really struggled not to say the word prostitutes there, didn't I? It's great that you avoided it, though.
Starting point is 00:04:04 And he made a roller coaster, but the thing about it was, it went at ten miles an hour, which is not especially fast, and it had to be hand-pushed, so workers would push it to the top of the first hill, everyone gets on, it then goes down a big slide, and then slides along a bit and then stops, everyone gets off, workers have to push it to the top of the next hill, everyone gets back on again. Oh, wow. Did you say it was an underwear magnate, though? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:04:29 It was a moral mission, because I would have thought that actually, setting up a roller coaster was an extremely good way to advertise your underwear, isn't it? Because the way it works, often, it's on display. I don't think I've, I don't think, I think I missed that one at Thorpe Park, you know? What? Where have you been taken? My mum used to dangle me out the window by my ankles, and then tell me where I've been taken.
Starting point is 00:04:52 Yeah. This guy, LaMarcus Thompson, is his name. He was the inventor of it, and as Andy's saying, it was about morals, but specifically he invented it to stop people from being tempted by Satan, specifically. So he was worried that Satan would get people, and he thought this roller coaster would bring them back to Jesus. That was genuinely the idea behind the invention of the Coney Island roller coasters. That's cool.
Starting point is 00:05:15 So, another licentious kind of theme park. This one hasn't actually opened yet. There was, they were hoping to open it this year in Brazil, but they haven't opened it because of the political problems there and the financial problems. But it is a sex-themed amusement park called Eroticaland, okay? It had penis-shaped dodgums. Oh. But one should be a penis-shape and one should be a vagina-shape, right?
Starting point is 00:05:39 So when you crash, it's like, oh, that's sexy. Is that sexy? James, at Eroticaland, everything is sexy. And the locals were really worried, and they thought that maybe, like all of the people going to this theme park would just end up having sex all the time, but the guy who was behind the project, Mauro Morata, said that no one would be having sex in this theme park. But if attendees do want to take things to another level, they can go to a nearby motel, which we will operate.
Starting point is 00:06:09 Do you know the sort of king of roller coasters? The great lord of roller coaster design is a guy called Ron Tuma. He died a couple of years ago, I think in 2011, but he couldn't go on roller coasters himself. So he got extreme motion sickness, but he's the person who's pioneered every roller coaster design, you know, any kind of spin, the loops, all that kind of stuff. And he himself said, riding roller coasters never really appealed to me. I rode once or twice, and that was enough for me to get a general idea of what it felt
Starting point is 00:06:42 like. Wow. Then he designed like 93 roller coasters. And he also designed a heat shield for the Apollo spacecraft missions. No. Yeah, he sure did. Wow. He's kind of a guy called Richard Rodriguez.
Starting point is 00:06:54 No. He's so cool. So he has spent his whole life pretty much on roller coasters, i.e. in 2007, he spent 17 consecutive days and nights in Blackpool on a roller coaster, 17 days and nights. He slept on there. He ate on there. He took a five minute break every hour, just a shower or go to the loo. He will throw up Brazilian, but he's been doing this since 1977, and he keeps on breaking
Starting point is 00:07:19 his own record. In 1977, he did four days in Coney Island, and he trained himself by sticking his head out of a car window for hours on end. Like a dog. Do you know what the oldest operating roller coaster is? The oldest continually operating one. No. The only reason I mention this is that I used to live in Melbourne, and I went on this with
Starting point is 00:07:41 my mum, and we went on it and we came off and said that is the most painful, uncomfortable experience of either of our lives. And it's because it's a roller coaster that's over 100 years old and no one's ever done anything to it. It's in Luna Park in Melbourne, and it's been continuously running since I think about 1905, but it's a horrible experience. Is it because your skirt was up the entire time? A few years ago, Thorpe Park, they asked the public for donations of their own urine to
Starting point is 00:08:06 help make an authentic smell for their new horror movie themed ride. And if you have strong feelings about that, you can just send your own donation to the park management. Were they just going to spray it in the air to give it a sense of... I don't know. I think it was a publicity stunt, to be honest. There must be rules about that. Although, who would write the rules?
Starting point is 00:08:29 It would think, of course. There's someone going, I know it seems really farfetched, but I just want to write this rule because I reckon just possibly someone's going to ask for the public's urine for roller coasters. I know it seems niche. I don't know why. Can we put it in the big rule book? Is there a big rule book?
Starting point is 00:08:45 Yes. So, just going back to this loop-to-loop, so it was, did I say 12G? I think it was 12G, and that is pretty much as much as you can manage as a human, or that's what people thought. But then there was a guy called John Stapp, who decided to make himself a sled, which basically went really, really, really fast and then just stopped. And he wanted to see how much g-force the human body would be able to stand. And this was important.
Starting point is 00:09:13 It was in the 1940s. It was important because new aeroplanes were coming and they needed to know what people would do. And they thought that actually most people would maybe kind of die around sort of 12 to 15, something like that. But he managed to do 46.2G. No. Wow.
Starting point is 00:09:28 Yeah. For one instant, his body weighed 7,700 pounds. Wow. What? Yeah. Wow. Do you know how you do it though, if you ever do need to withstand huge amounts of gravity? How?
Starting point is 00:09:44 So I was reading this in an article about how jet pilots prepare for it, and the way they get prepared is they're put in this chamber at the end of a really long arm that's spinning round and round, and they're trained on how to deal with it. And what you do is you have to strain like you're doing a poo, and you make sort of a hick sound. So you've got to sort of, and that prevents the blood from flowing away from the brain too fast, so it means you can remain conscious longer. And the guys who can tolerate lots and lots of G-force are called G-monsters.
Starting point is 00:10:13 Oh, cool. I've seen that contraption, so they sit at the end, they spin round and round. I've seen it, I've seen Brian Blessed do it. Was he straining? No. Well, no. He was training to be an astronaut in Russia, because they said they were going to send him up to space.
Starting point is 00:10:35 There's footage you can see, if you want to see it, it's on YouTube. He gets into it, and he's saying, you know, I've been built, I've been up Everest, I'm built to last in this thing, I have a body and lungs bigger than anyone else. I'm amazing. And he sits inside, and it starts, and immediately he's just there going, it's the funniest thing I've ever seen. It's just a terrifying blessed, going at G-forcer astronauts go, I go, but that's actually also what he looks like when he's straining on the toilet.
Starting point is 00:11:05 And we move on to our next fact, time to go on to fact number two, and that is Andrew Hunter Murray. My fact is that America has a national grocery bag packing competition, and this is a huge deal in America. They get crowds cheering and gathering, and people film it, and it's just people who work at checkout tills packing groceries into a bag. That's it. And is it to see the fastest person to do it, or the most groceries packed in a bag?
Starting point is 00:11:32 The criteria are so strict, I love it. So you all get the same stuff, like you and your fellow competitors. So we would all get the same items, but they vary hugely in terms of weight. Some of them are fragile, some of them are very dense, and the criteria you get marked on is speed, but also bag building technique, style, weight distribution between bags, attitude, and appearance. Attitude. But they're really strict, so one person finished really, really fast, but his bags
Starting point is 00:12:04 weighed 17 and 21 pounds, and the woman who won, her bags weighed 19 and 19 pounds, she got it dead on. Wow. Yeah. And did she know the weight of the objects prior to putting it in? No, no, no. You're just picking it up. Wow.
Starting point is 00:12:17 You're just feeling it, smelling it. Yeah. It's so good. Well, you don't need to smell it to work out how heavy it is, but that would be attitude. That would get you attitude points. That's about 12 kilos. Yeah. I'm at your coins for attitude if someone sniffed my shopping while they were back here.
Starting point is 00:12:33 I once shopped in, I lived for three months in Kosovo, because my grandmother was living there, and there was our local grocery store, which took an hour each time, even if you were buying like six items, because they didn't have any price tags on each item. So the person at the counter would pick it up and stare at it for ages, and never spoke out loud. But I could see they were going, if I were a can of baked beans, how much would I be? And really thought about it and then slowly packed. So I feel like that's good attitude.
Starting point is 00:13:04 Yeah. So there's one contestant from each state in America. There are 50 competitors out there. If there are two really good bag packers in your state, then they have to have a bag off. That's true. And they call themselves bag fleets. Oh, like athletes. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:13:22 Bag fleets. It doesn't quite work, does it, as wordplay? If you win your store where you work, your home store gets a gold-plated cash register. How useful. Oh my God. It doesn't. Sorry. It's quite good if robbers come into the store and they ask for all the money from the
Starting point is 00:13:43 till, you're like, stupid robbers. But the Washington state competition has a guy who is called a bagger whisperer. Again, doesn't quite work, does it? But he's a store manager and he's coached a couple at least of successive champions. Yeah. It's not as impressive as being a horse whisperer because horses don't speak English. And so it's really amazing that you could communicate with a horse. Communicating with someone who banks shopping.
Starting point is 00:14:09 I mean, I find that quite easy when I'm in the shop. Put it in the bag. Look, look how she is actually putting it in the bag now. As well as so, the really elite ones are called bag fleets, but actually they're all called baggers, aren't they? They all call themselves baggers if they do this job. And I went on to Urban Dictionary to find out any other meanings of the word bagger. Go on.
Starting point is 00:14:38 It's just a flamboyant member of the tea party in America is known as a bagger. It's a derivative of the word tea bagger and it describes the costumes. It describes the costumes with tea bags that the members wear. But he does also say sometimes it is used as a derogatory name because it also depicts a unique sexual act. And you can fill in the rest yourself. Did you know the first time that you could bag your own stuff was in 1916? So this is the first self-service grocery store.
Starting point is 00:15:15 So before 1916, you had to go into a shop with your shopping list and you had to give it to the person who worked in the shop and say, go and do my shopping for me. And then you waited for them to bring it to you, which was really time consuming and you needed lots of clerks to go and do it. So in 1916, the first self-service shop was set up, what we would call just a shop. And it was called Piggly Wiggly. I'm in Tennessee and no one ever knew why he called it that. The founder was someone called Clarence Saunders and he launched this shop with a beauty contest
Starting point is 00:15:43 and he gave free flowers and balloons to all the kids who came. And he'd never explained why he called it Piggly Wiggly. He did once. Was this why he said he just thought it was a funny word so he didn't even want to talk about it? No, he got asked. Yeah, why is it called Piggly Wiggly? And he said, so people will ask that very question.
Starting point is 00:15:59 Sorry, so you're saying 1916 for that? Because I was reading in 1929 was in America, the invention of the grocery bag as a paper bag and it was a guy who invented it called Walter Dominaire and he woke up in the middle of the night. He had a vision in the middle of the night and he woke up and he went, oh, bags. And because he had it, he had it. I like the way he kind of does this. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:28 And then he's getting, I've got nothing to breathe into. Yeah. Yeah. Good boy. So he woke up. He went, he went bags and he, he woke his wife up and he said bags. And she, they had a, they had a shop, a grocery shop and he went down with his wife early in the morning and his thought he had was to have these brown paper bag and to punch holes
Starting point is 00:16:52 in both sides to put the strings in. And so they did that. They put strings in so that it was handles. And then that day they started selling them and people went nuts for it. They sold them, incidentally, very sort of full circle for five cents, you know. So it was, you bought it for what we've now returned to. Oh, wow. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:11 But so he sold them. Everyone went crazy. They were buying more bags and they were the actual stuff in the grocery store. And then they ran out of bags. They bought more bags and then she sat there customizing all the bags with magazines and newspapers. So she cut out pictures that she thought were really nice and she stuck them to the side of each bag and just sold that.
Starting point is 00:17:30 And then he filed it as a patent and he became a multi-millionaire over the next couple of years and they were the largest manufacturer of grocery bags in America for a very long time. I think I've made that bit up, but they were, that fuels right, doesn't it? So that, yeah. Just quickly. Do you know what people had before they had shopping bags? Oh, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:17:48 This is so cool. Before you had a shopping bag, some people, not everybody, but a lot of people, had corn eucopias. So you know, in sort of old paintings, you have these horns of plenty and it's full of fruit and lobster and white grapes and everything. Yes, people would take... Like a big horn. Like a big horn.
Starting point is 00:18:07 It was wicker and you would take your horn of plenty to the shops. Oh, wow. How cool is that? Why don't we all have horns of plenty? Why have we been cheated from our birthright? I think we could, we could have a new business, couldn't we? Yes. Like according to Dan, this other guy made billions.
Starting point is 00:18:23 Yeah. He's not making horns of plenty for life. Would you buy a horn of plenty? I think if you come up with any business idea, starting with the phrase, according to Dan, you need to be really careful. Plastic bags, when they started, the marketing was so confident that it was going to change the world. This is from the Baker-like Corporation, who were the first people to put out plastic
Starting point is 00:18:51 bags. They said, and this was literally their PR, that this bag had transcended the old tax... How do I say that? Taxonomy? Taxonomy? Thank you. Always good to have an edit point. Had transcended the old taxonomy of animal minarets.
Starting point is 00:19:06 I said... Really close. So what's it again? Taxonomy. Taxonomy. Taxonomy. I mean, soft petal it. Taxonomy.
Starting point is 00:19:17 Yeah. They said it had transcended the old taxonomy of animal... That's going to be awkward to edit with that massive cheer. I guess the people of Manchester just really love taxonomy. Darling, did Manchester invent taxonomy? Come on, Dad, you've got to get to the end of this. We've lost it. Oh, my...
Starting point is 00:19:52 This would better be fucking good, Dad. Jesus. The Baker-like Company said that it had transcended the old taxonomy of animal... Of animal mineral and vegetable, and now we had a fourth kingdom whose boundaries are unlimited. That is cool. Yeah. Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is my fact.
Starting point is 00:20:21 My fact is, one of the things you need to know in order to become a British citizen is who introduced shampoo to the UK. It's an actual thing that you get asked. And who was it? Well, his name is... It's too slow. Get out. His name is Sheikh Dean Mohammed.
Starting point is 00:20:42 He was a Bengali Anglo-Indian traveller, inventor. He opened the very first curry house in the UK, it was in London, but he also opened up these amazing things called the shampoo baths of the UK. There were shampooing baths where you would go in, and it was basically a massage, and it was all sorts of oils, and it was like a spa, it was a bathing spa, and weirdly, that is a question that you get asked when you're sitting down to work out if you're allowed into the UK as a citizen. Have you seen the list of questions?
Starting point is 00:21:14 Yeah, it's amazing. I mean, they're unbelievably hard, aren't they? Yeah. Literally, no one would be able to get any of these answers. Yeah. It's like, you have to know what year was the Battle of the Boine just off the top of your head. Who's 1680?
Starting point is 00:21:29 Get out. Damn it. 1680. I don't know when it was. You get out. I know you're going to have to carry the show from this point onwards. In the previous version, it was worse in the past, in the previous versions of the test, you needed to know 49 different websites and 36 telephone numbers, including the phone
Starting point is 00:21:49 number for the National Academic Recognition Information Centre. You still need to know, there are still five telephone numbers on it, so they have pared it down, but you still need to know the phone numbers for the House of Commons, the Welsh Assembly. And the Scottish Parliament. But weirdly, in the five telephone numbers that you need to know, 999 is not there. No way. Hello, is that my MP?
Starting point is 00:22:14 There's the burglar in my house. God, what are you going to do about it? Oh, fine. I'll ring the Welsh Assembly, unbelievable. I read one question that's in it. Apparently, it used to have this question, suppose you spill someone's pint in the pub. What usually happens next? Punch up.
Starting point is 00:22:36 I rather think that that depends. The answer in London will be very different from the answer in Manchester, I think. What happens in Manchester? Well, why don't you try it tonight? Is it a quaint local custom that if you're a newcomer to the city, you have to spill as many people's pints as possible? Yeah? That's right.
Starting point is 00:22:55 Okay, great. Any stuff on shampoo, maybe? Yeah, yeah, sure. This is just interesting, the word shampoo is kind of an Indian, a Hindi word, and it comes from shampna meaning to need, and it comes from the same word as chapatti. No way. Just an interesting thing. I got completely distracted when I started looking at how people's hair and how animals
Starting point is 00:23:18 clean themselves, because if you don't shampoo, eventually your hair gets back into a kind of balance. Well, actually, I tried that. Oh, yeah. For QI, right? Yeah, for QI, I tried going six months without washing my hair. I remember that. And it does not work.
Starting point is 00:23:35 And his wife was not happy. Well, this was before I was married. Actually, I was single, actually. Oh, okay. Yeah. Actually, around the same time, I read something else, which was that if you put an onion in your shoe and walk around, then by the end of the day, you'll be able to taste it in your mouth.
Starting point is 00:23:52 Mm-hmm. And that doesn't work either. Wow. But it does probably explain why I was single. James, there are so many reasons. So when a fly cleans itself, right, it combs itself, it sort of combs its body, and it's got hairs sticking out of it. When they clean themselves, the particles that have gathered on them are catapulted off
Starting point is 00:24:14 the hairs at 1,000 G. What? No. Well, it's 1,000 times the acceleration of gravity. Is that G? Yeah, it is. Yeah. But do you know how cicadas keep themselves clean?
Starting point is 00:24:29 This is so cool. They have on their bodies tiny, tiny nanoscale pincushions that mean that when a bacteria bumps into them, the bacteria explodes. Wow. And what that cleans them through the explosion. Well, it doesn't clean them. It just means they don't have a bacteria on them anymore. That is so cool.
Starting point is 00:24:47 Not if you're a bacteria. Sure. Yeah. No one ever speaks up for the bacteria. It was on the cicada side. Actually, the reason we need to wash our hair, I think, is quite interesting. It's that we have all these sebaceous glands, and they secrete oil into our scalp, and so it gets really oily and gross, and it's to waterproof.
Starting point is 00:25:05 So our scalp is quite waterproof. Our face also has quite a lot of them, so that's quite waterproof, but we don't have any of these glands on the palms of our hands or the soles of our feet. So if you grow hair on the palms of your hands or the soles of your feet, you don't need to wash it as a consolation. I have hair on my feet. I've got, like, hobbit feet, so some of the soles of your feet don't. Some of the soles.
Starting point is 00:25:27 Yeah. The b- No, you don't. The soles of your feet are hairy. Hang on. Are we quibbling over what soles mean? I think so. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:35 The bottom bit. Okay, no. Right. Yeah. Oh, my God. Okay. We should move on to our final fact. You guys ready to go to the final fact?
Starting point is 00:25:46 Okay. Time for a final fact of the show, and that is Chazinsky. Yes, my fact is that if your metabolism was as fast as a hummingbird, you'd need to drink a can of coke every minute to stay alive. Wow. It's, this hummingbirds have the most incredible metabolisms that we can't imagine. So they process sugars so fast that they need to drink one 12-ounce can of fizzy drink. No, no.
Starting point is 00:26:16 The equivalent of. Sorry. Yeah. I've been seeing a poor hummingbird get back to its nest with a 16-pack of coke, then quarter of an hour later, then back to the bloody shops. But that is, if we had to have the equivalent to survive, then we'd be eating or drinking 202,000 calories a day we'd have to eat to stay alive, so they have to visit 2,000 flowers a day.
Starting point is 00:26:43 It's a lot. I read 1,500 flowers on, obviously, another website every day, and what I liked about that is it's approximately the same number as there are gregs in the UK. The human flower. But what I worked out is with all the calories that they get and everything like that, if you were a hummingbird, it's the equivalent of going to every gregs in the UK and eating half a steak bake in every one. Coincidentally, I have never managed more than half of a steak bake.
Starting point is 00:27:16 Yeah. Am I a hummingbird? No. Wow. Hummingbird hearts are so cool. They beat 10 times a second, and that's quite slow for a hummingbird, despite being the size of a rubber on the end of a pencil. That's the size of hummingbirds?
Starting point is 00:27:31 No, the heart. Just the heart. Oh. Sorry. But they're small, though. The rest of them. They're tiny. They're six foot tall animals with hearts the size of a rubber on the end of a pencil.
Starting point is 00:27:45 They would be fainting all the time. But so the heart beats up to 1,200 beats a minute, which is very fast. But even when they're resting, it's 500, and as a result, at night, just to prevent themselves from dying overnight, basically every night they go into a coma and their heart slows down to 50 beats a minute. 50 beats is still pretty fast. It's like hibernation. It's like hibernation, yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:11 It's like hibernate literally every night. And you can prod them, and they won't wake up. Obviously don't. Yeah. They also, just all the figures that you read about hummingbirds, you really have to think about and process. So their wings flap up to 100 times a second. That is completely insane, and as I read it, I think, I must have written it wrong.
Starting point is 00:28:34 Yeah, I don't think you haven't. I read it in the National Geographic, and so I should say, by the way, that this came from an amazing article on hummingbirds from the National Geographic sometime in the last year, so you can't get it anymore, but it was really good. But that's, I mean... Something quite cool that researchers have done to work out what their visual perception is like is they've worked out how they respond to optical illusions. So this, again, was in the National Geographic, and they got one of those optical illusions
Starting point is 00:28:59 that is a spiral of black stripe with white stripes in between it. And when you spin that round, it looks like it's moving away from you, and they put a test tube full of hummingbird food sticking out of it, and so the hummingbird gets its beak in, and it's got its little forked tongue that drinks from the test tube, and then when they start spinning the spiral, the hummingbird, just like humans do, thinks that the spiral is moving away from them, and because they can fly backwards, they reverse out of the test tube because they're like, sorry, they think it's moving towards them, so they reverse out of the test tube.
Starting point is 00:29:30 So they do have the same eyesight as we do, and also their kind of idiots, they kept backing away from their food. They've got really interesting legs as well. They basically, they've got almost like display legs in that, they're sort of, they're attached to them, but they can't walk on them, so they land, and they can't walk, and they can't hop. So they're just there for like standing purposes. What do they do?
Starting point is 00:29:55 They can do a sideways thing. You know when they can like, so like, no, no, no, no, because I don't know how to describe it, but you know, so like, they'll like land on a branch, and then they'll just be like, they'll do that thing. A shuffle, for anyone who's listening to the podcast, down shuffled sideways, that was the word he couldn't think of, so he had to stand up. Can I just say as well, for them, that's called a lek, and it's a mating dance, and I can kind of, well, I'm not sure I can see why they see it.
Starting point is 00:30:24 I can see that. It's like, hey, I had my wife. Hey, how you doing? That's it, yeah. Yeah, that's how they do that. And they do that on a stick attached to a tree, a branch, they do that on a branch. Their mating only takes half a second, beginning to end. What do you mean only?
Starting point is 00:30:46 And the courting only takes a few seconds, as well, and they dive. Yeah, they do, don't they? To impress women, they go up high, and they dive at 60 miles an hour down, and they also make chirping sounds, they tweet, but not with their mouths, with their feathers. So all hummingbirds make a different chirping sound, and it sounds exactly like bird tweeting, but they're doing it with their tail feathers. So it's when they swoop, the way that they vibrate as they go through the air, makes a certain noise.
Starting point is 00:31:15 And it's really beautiful. And as the Smithsonian put it, imagine if you could sing with your ponytail or your beard. That is what it's like to be a hummingbird. That's pretty cool. And that singing, to us, it just kind of sounds like a chirp, right? It is a nice chirp, but it's just a chirp. But if you slow it down and play it into a computer, they can hear real levels of complexity
Starting point is 00:31:34 that humans can't hear. Levels of complexity? Yeah. Like what? Please, I just want to stop drinking Coke. Can't. Just let me slow down. So there is only one known piece of DNA, invertebrates, with the ability to taste sweetness.
Starting point is 00:31:54 And hummingbirds don't have it. So even though they're drinking all this nectar stuff, we don't think they can taste sweetness. Oh, really? Yeah. It's tragic. I think there's a theory, though, that they modified. So we have a bunch of taste receptors.
Starting point is 00:32:09 We all know now sweet, salty, a bitter, sour, and umami. And as we all agree, umami is the kind of pointless, weird one that no one knows what it is. It's like savoury, isn't it? Yeah, it's savoury. And they actually think that hummingbirds have adapted their umami gland, and that's evolved to taste sweetness over the years. Which what that might mean is when they're going around tasting all these flowers 1500
Starting point is 00:32:30 times, it actually tastes like a Greg's steak bake. Did you structure this whole part of the podcast to come back around to that? So they've got really fast metabolism, don't they? And I was trying to work out the other end of metabolism, super slow metabolism. And sloths have extremely slow metabolism. And obviously we know them as a very slow animal. So they have an extraordinarily slow metabolism. But so I started just, this is very off topic, but I started reading about sloths because
Starting point is 00:33:08 I thought, why are they moving so slow and what goes on? It turns out, I think they're meant to be water based animals rather than in the trees. Because when you put a sloth in water, it can swim three times as fast as it can move when it's outside of water. And it can hold its breath for over 40 minutes underwater, which is 20 minutes longer than a dolphin. What? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:33 That is amazing. And they're just stuck up there on that stick attached to a tree. Yeah. Okay. That's it. That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening. If you'd like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we have said over
Starting point is 00:33:51 the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shriverland, Andy at Andrew Hunter M. James at James Harkin and Shazinsky. You can email podcast at qi.com. Yep. Or you can get us on our group account, which is at no such thing, or you can go to our website, no such thing as a fish.com, where we have all of our previous episodes. We also have a link to our book, The Book of the Year, which we're about to give a copy away to someone in the audience here live at our Manchester audience, because we asked
Starting point is 00:34:19 them to send in the fact, Andy, you've got the winning fact. I certainly have, Dan, and it's just on my phone, which is turning on, so I'd like you to fill for about 15 seconds, please. Oh my God. Okay. Picture. Right. I've got it.
Starting point is 00:34:34 I've got it. Okay. This is today's winning fact. It's from Evie Hull. In 1993, San Francisco held a referendum over whether police officer Bob Geary was allowed to patrol while carrying a ventriloquist's dummy called Brendan Osmarty. All right. We're going to have your copy of the book out there, guys.
Starting point is 00:35:02 We're going to be out at the back with our Book of the Year. If you want to buy a copy, we're going to be signing copies out there. Please come and say hi. Thank you, Manchester. That was awesome. We'll see you later.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.