No Such Thing As A Fish - 256: No Such Thing As A Puddle Photographer

Episode Date: February 15, 2019

Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss flirty cuttlefish, rooster beer and the best weather for starting a business....

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 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 am sitting here with James Harkin, Andrew Hunter Murray and Anna Chazinski and once again we have gathered round the microphones with our four favourite facts from the last seven days and in no particular order here we go. Starting with back number one, and that's you, Anna. My fact this week is that Halford Business School recommends companies locate their headquarters in rainier places because it makes employees more productive, and that's
Starting point is 00:00:52 why our output is so massive here. This actually goes against what people think, so they, as part of the same study or a similar one, they asked people what effect they thought bad weather would have on productivity, eighty percent of people said they thought it would decrease it, turned out they did this big study in a Tokyo bank and they found that employees processed loan applications much faster, so that's something that requires a lot of focus and concentration, much faster and more quickly on rainy days than sunny ones, and it was because when they investigated it that nice weather causes more cognitive distractions, i.e. people sit in their offices
Starting point is 00:01:28 fantasising about what else they could be doing. Yeah, they worked out that the effect is so great that if it's a sunny day versus when it's rainy, that $937,000 is what they would have made if it was continuously rainy, basically. This particular... Yeah, this bank turns on the size of the business, it's not like you can have an ice cream van and you'll make a million quid. It's actually not when it rains. I think in actual facts, ice cream vans is one of the few businesses where sun is better.
Starting point is 00:01:55 Well, this doesn't all go well for my Welsh chain of ice cream vans, does it? But weirdly, my sister and brother-in-law had, they've just left Abu Dhabi, but they had an ice cream business out there as a side business and it was a little ice cream shop by the beach and they couldn't operate it in summer, it's so hot in Abu Dhabi, it can only function in the winter. What, because it all melts? Yeah, it's just too hot outside, it gets up to 50. But is it that people don't really go outside?
Starting point is 00:02:20 Yeah, yeah. Right. So it's not like... It's not like the ice cream melts. Well, that's too... It's not like if you buy an ice cream, it instantly vaporizes. I demand another, where is this one? One thing I found is, so this was from the same article that this came from, which is
Starting point is 00:02:37 I really like this, Campbell Soup, that company, they advertise based on the weather. So when the weather is bad in particular cities, they buy more advertising space because they don't know that people will want cozy, warming food. That's a great idea. So like a nice, thick country vegetable soup on cold days, and maybe a light broth on some gasp at show on a hot day. A thin mist of ice cream. That's brilliant.
Starting point is 00:03:01 It's weird, it's so cool. When it's cold and everyone has flu, they could have chicken soup because everyone likes it. They have a flu index as well. Did they? Yeah. So they made a thing, so the thing Andy's talking about is called the Misery Index and for them it's actually a happiness index because it means more sales.
Starting point is 00:03:17 And when the Misery Index goes up by 5%, then they queue chicken soup advert on the radio and then that was so successful, they've got a flu index now. So as soon as there's a flu outbreak, they must be praying for Spanish flu to come back or something. They're not evil. No, you're right. They're just selling soup. You know, if it's very rainy, there's what type of business it's actually good for?
Starting point is 00:03:41 Umbrellas. Ponchos. Oh, I've opened up. People who take photographs of puddles. The three main rain-based businesses. I run out after two. You make a million more dollars a year if you take photographs of puddles in the rain. Newspaper editors are all over, get me some puddle photographs.
Starting point is 00:04:06 I was actually talking post rain, towels to dry things. No, helicopter businesses do very well, particularly for orchards because when there's huge amount of rainfall, certain things, certain vegetables, certain grapes get so saturated that they need to get the water out immediately. So they hire helicopters in and cherry orchards will have helicopters just hovering over them and drying off all of the grounds to get it back on the road. That's really cool. The helicopter business.
Starting point is 00:04:39 Do you know the kind of weather that one study found is the only type of weather that really has an impact on your mood? So I can give you the weather categories or do you want to make that? No. The earth is hit by a meteorite and there's rain of metal falling from the sky. Firestorms. People don't mind at all. They just go about their day.
Starting point is 00:05:00 We're very stoked. Okay, give us some options. So, this is a study in the 1980s and it found the best predictor of mood was in a certain type of weather. They looked at sunniness, temperature, raininess, wind, humidity and... It's not going to be the last one. Can I bet on the last one, can I bet that it is the last one, which I think is mist? Because I think mist always affects my mood very much.
Starting point is 00:05:25 Is it? And it goes way or bad way? Sort of, this makes me feel spooky. Does it? Yeah. You know, you look long, you can't see anything. It's a bit spooky. That's true.
Starting point is 00:05:33 Yes, it's quite exciting. You feel like you're in a Victorian novel. Yeah, so that's the main effect that I think. I'm going to say it's wind, because it makes me feel more agitated, because the molecules around me are still agitated. They kind of somehow make me feel a bit on edge. Yeah, I get that as well. I think it's got to be one of these two.
Starting point is 00:05:52 I'm going for sunniness. Sunniness makes me a dickhead. It's why I had to leave Australia. I was a right ass all over there, but now I'm sort of a bit more calm. But I get in a horrible mood when it's way too hot. Do you? Yeah. Oh no, so you're not talking about sunniness.
Starting point is 00:06:06 No, I'm talking about temperature. Oh yeah. Right? Because it can be sunny and cold. It's sunny today, for instance. A beautiful Sunday today. That's true. But he has been a bit of an asshole today.
Starting point is 00:06:14 How do you explain that? It's just being a bit of a tricky dick. Okay, so yeah. So why? You've listed almost all the things, except the one that it is. Humidity was found to be the only one that has a significant impact on activity and mood. And it's because people feel very sleepy and they can't concentrate. Which is true, right?
Starting point is 00:06:30 When you go to a humid place, you feel really gross. Kind of. So I grew up in Hong Kong, which was all humid all the time. I've established you're always a dick in now. I've never thought how this weather has really molded me. Did you find your concentration improved when you came here? Mate, I'm not the good case study to ask about. The wettest day of the year on Earth, whatever day it is, what percentage of the rain from
Starting point is 00:06:55 the year do you think falls on that one day? Okay, so if there were 365 days, it would be a bit less than 0.3% on an average day. So I'll say 1% triple the average. I'm going to say 35%. Love it. Love. Great day for the puddle photographer. He's a billionaire.
Starting point is 00:07:19 It is 8.3%. Wow. That's a lot. It's about 12th of the Earth's rain falls on a single day. What day is that? What day? Well, we don't know. It's different.
Starting point is 00:07:30 We don't know. Surely that's the one day we would definitely know. It's the same day every year. The same day? I know. Oh, yeah, right. I meant when was the last time that we... No, it's always the third Tuesday after Easter.
Starting point is 00:07:41 And 50% of the Earth's precipitation falls on the 12 wettest days of the year. Wow. That's amazing. Isn't that amazing? That's incredible. Wow. That's really cool. It'd be so great if it was the same every year.
Starting point is 00:07:54 And we could just do a 12 day... What was it? 12 days? 12 days. 12 day long hibernation or something. I wonder if it happens in a period of the year though, because lots of countries have big rainy seasons. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:04 So there must be a likelihood of it being... Well, the paper, the article where I read this, it said, one key question the researchers wrote is when during the year these extreme precipitation events are likely to occur. So I think basically they don't really know when it's going to be, but they'll try and work it out. Rainy conditions, as in preparing for rain, have you heard of the rain shader? No. This is a new kind of umbrella which has been invented in the last few years and it is
Starting point is 00:08:29 designed to solve the problems of... What are the problems of umbrellas? They get in people's eyes. They get in people's eyes. Inside out. Oh yeah. That's the main one actually. That's the main one.
Starting point is 00:08:39 Yeah, that's a really good one. And there's one more. You never have one on you when you need it. That's not the one I'm looking for. They break the... I'll just take them if you leave them in front of the store. They're awful, aren't they? If it's really windy, you might blow away like Mary Poppins.
Starting point is 00:08:53 Yeah. Have you seen the film? She's not trying to help the mountains suddenly against her will. She's blown away into another land. That's why the sequel's only 17 minutes long. Very sad. Yeah, opening lines where, sorry about that. Where were we?
Starting point is 00:09:10 No, it's that when you tilt it, all the water can fall off onto someone else. Oh, kind of. That's a small problem. Upside down. But you could... What? So the rain shader is this new... It basically looks like a motorbike helmet, but in umbrella form.
Starting point is 00:09:28 So it's open at the front, and then at the back it's really low. It's like wearing a big helmet that's sort of cut out at the front. So that means you can't ever poke someone in the eye with it. That's really good. I don't think that would turn inside out either. So I think it's solving more problems than it claims to be. I think it might. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:45 In Harvard Business School, there's a paper that they wrote quite recently called Toxic Workers. And this is about superstar workers who outperform their colleagues by two to one or more, but who are awful to be around. And they want to work out whether it's useful to have these kind of amazing workers, or whether they do way too much harm than good. What do you think? Interesting. What do we think of James?
Starting point is 00:10:12 The question we're being asked here. Apparently, according to them, it's better to hire two average employees than to keep one superstar on the payroll. Do you guys know about the... This has always been one of my favorite studies, the Harvard Grant study, which is this massive, it's famous longitudinal study, and it's followed 268 people for 80 years. So it started following them when they were at Harvard,
Starting point is 00:10:39 and it studies every tiny aspect of their lives. And so it's told us so much about the decisions that you make and the personalities that you have, what impact that has on your life. It's like an unbelievable level of detail. So it measures things like the size of molds on their body and how many teaspoons of sugar they have in their tea and the hanging length of your scrotum. And then they sort of follow them.
Starting point is 00:11:01 The hanging length, guys. As opposed to when you've got it pinned back. Not a trip over it. So they measure all this and they find out, you know, are they successful? Actually, JFK was one of the people who was originally in it, so he was successful, but actually quite unlucky. And at the moment, I think there are only about... Not many of them left now, obviously.
Starting point is 00:11:31 I think there were 19 left a couple of years ago. But it's all the ones with the longest scrotums, and that's the interesting thing. Maybe if that was true. It was the sole predictor of how you do it. No, because they all tripped over and concussed themselves years ago. What they basically have found, or what the person who's in charge of it now says is the most important discovery, is that your relationships are the most important predictor of health, mental and physical,
Starting point is 00:11:53 but literally the most important, more important than cholesterol, more important than diet. It's, you know, the warmth of your relationships. And that dictates how much you'll earn in the end and it dictates how successful you'll be and how happy you'll be. Very good. There we go. Or it could just be that rich people can buy relationships.
Starting point is 00:12:14 Yeah, I think it's that. OK, it is time for fact number two, and that is Andy. My fact is that when they are mating, male cuttlefish can flirt with one side of their body and simultaneously pretend to be a female with the other side of their body. It's a really weird thing they do. So cuttlefish are mollusks in the ocean, are they? They're a kind of mollusk, and they're a bit squidy and a bit octopus-y. Yes.
Starting point is 00:12:43 They change the pattern of their skin all the time for camouflage, but they do it for lots of different reasons, so they might do it to avoid predators or they sometimes do it even to catch prey, but one thing they do is when they're courting, male cuttlefish display, you know, courtship patterns to females on their bodies, but they don't want other males to fight them. So they simultaneously make the back half of their body display a female pattern. So a male who's standing behind the flirting male will think,
Starting point is 00:13:13 oh, that's just two female cuttlefish having a chat with each other, and he won't get in the way. But if it looks like it's a male chatting to a female, they might try and break it up. But is there no chance that the male cuttlefish will start flirting with the back of the female camouflage? That sometimes happens. Yeah. Because that could just be a long queue.
Starting point is 00:13:34 Well, basically, yeah, that does happen. So some males have harems of females, which they guard jealously from challenges, and other males disguise themselves to look female, sneak in, have sex with the real females, and then sneak out. But sometimes the disguised males look so good that the alpha male will guard him as part of his harem. So you can have a harem which has mostly males in it, unbeknownst to you, or pretending to be females.
Starting point is 00:13:58 They only look good from the back, so they're just never going around the front. They're strictly ass-based references. They are amazing. They're incredible. They also have two prehensile tentacles, I think, on the front, which sometimes they hide. They've got pockets under their eyes where they put them when they're not using them and get them out of the crab stock.
Starting point is 00:14:20 It's under their eyes. Such a great place to have a pocket. They're so weird. It's so weird when you don't. Because octopuses, I think we all know, are quite weird. So when you talk about them, it's kind of... But this is all just like, what is this animal? Are we just joking?
Starting point is 00:14:32 Are we lying? It's got pockets under its eyes. It turns its butt into a woman. Come on. The most amazing thing about cuttlefish, which people maybe know, and David Attenborough is very good at showing, is that their disguise is right. So they disguise themselves even better than the octopuses
Starting point is 00:14:45 that can do it and other things. And they can do it within a few milliseconds. They can just change color and they can give themselves stripes. Like you say, kind of courting patterns. It is incredible. They can, as well as changing the color, they can change from smooth to bumpy, the skin. Wow.
Starting point is 00:15:00 Which is a really cool idea. Yeah, so they mimic the object that they might be camouflaging themselves on. Yeah, but not just color, but also the... Yeah, the texture. Like covering yourself in warts. Yeah, exactly. If you want to pretend to be a witch.
Starting point is 00:15:14 A lot of those on the bottom of the ocean, actually. I read it as they have the equivalent of hundreds of cocktail umbrellas under their skin. So they have all these structures that they can sort of lock upright to make themselves look knobbly, basically. If they want to look like coral. Yeah, wow.
Starting point is 00:15:31 For example. And that camouflage, they can freeze it and lock it in place for up to an hour. So they change it all the time, but they can just go, okay, I'm going to stay like this for an hour now. Wow. They are really weird and really cool.
Starting point is 00:15:42 It's crazy. Yeah, and also these changes are to do with their mood and whether they're hungry or scared or whatever. So you can look at the colors on a cuttlefish and work out what it's feeling. That would be useful in humans. They can do a chessboard pattern. No, they can't.
Starting point is 00:15:57 They can. They can make themselves look exactly like a chessboard. Why? For when they need a camouflage next to a game of chess going on. Because they can do the bumping stuff as well. So you're saying they can do the pieces? They can have an actual game on their own body. That would be amazing.
Starting point is 00:16:15 That's very cool. Can you explain the chessboard thing? Why would they do that? Well, they've been tested by scientists. There's no natural chessboard pattern, but it's just to show how versatile they are. That's incredible. Oh, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:29 And they can... Richard Hammond, who used to be on Top Gear, put... He can also do that. He can do that. But terribly sadly, he doesn't know the rules. That's a real shame. No, he, as one of his shows, they put a cuttlefish in an underwater lounge,
Starting point is 00:16:44 which they had mocked up, which had also like a zebra patterned sofa and stuff. They were just putting into his faces. And that was in Richard Hammond's house, did you say? No. Sorry. How did he come into this? He was making a show,
Starting point is 00:16:57 and it was about cool animals or something, and it featured... They created an underwater lounge with all this stuff. Right. Richard Hammond's lounge is not underwater. Okay, so they perfectly mimicked the chessboard. That is so cool. It's really bizarre.
Starting point is 00:17:16 Yeah. Perfect. Don't get excited. No, but I mean, I'm actually more excited by the experiment that we are taking non-underwater-based objects and seeing if they can mimic that, because you wouldn't naturally see that.
Starting point is 00:17:28 Yeah, I'm interested that they can... I didn't realise they could actually mimic stuff that they'd never seen before. There might be half a dozen cuttlefish in this room now. We can't know. This entire building is cuttlefish. From top to bottom. My favourite cuttlefish is the bottom-dwelling flamboyant cuttlefish.
Starting point is 00:17:43 What's that again? The bottom-dwelling flamboyant cuttlefish. God, if you've got something dwelling in your bottom, you don't want it to be flamboyant, I think. It's the only mollusk with a quadrupedal gate. That's amazing. Yeah, that is incredible. The way they hunt is cool.
Starting point is 00:17:59 So they've got... If you look at them, they look exactly like the oods from Doctor Who, and I know only Dan will know what I'm talking about, but that's what a lot of them look like. So they've got these big, long funnels on their nose, and the way a lot of them catch prey is by blasting their funnel at the sand, and they'll blow up a prawn that's having a nap.
Starting point is 00:18:18 It just shoots up into the prawn's nap. I suppose they must do, right? Everyone's got a nap. They hunt in the day, and prawns are nocturnal, so they're often asleep in the day. What a horrible way to wake up being blasted out of your bed into the mouth of a nude. One thing about cuttlefish that might also be known
Starting point is 00:18:36 is they give us sepia. They give us basically the look of Victorian photographs. What? Yeah, sepia ink. There are three things that develop when they're in embryo. The first three things develop are their two eyes, weird-shaped eyes, and then their ink sack, and that's a defense mechanism,
Starting point is 00:18:52 so they blast out ink as a last resort if they're being chased, and that's where we get sepia. It's our main source of that colour. Still to this day, or the original... Wow, that's amazing. So sepia is like that browny colour, isn't it? Yeah. Yeah, that you put over photographs to make them look old.
Starting point is 00:19:07 That's sort of Victorian looking photo. Wait, sorry. Did that get used in the Victorian photo process? We needed cuttlefish ink. Yes. Yeah. That's incredible. Yeah, that's amazing.
Starting point is 00:19:18 They're a handy, handy little guy. You just wouldn't think there would be enough cuttlefish to make enough sepia for the Victorian photo industry. But there's so much cuttlefish. And also probably wasn't that bigger industry in those days. Oh, yeah. It's not like mobile phones where everyone's got a camera these days. That's true.
Starting point is 00:19:33 Just the rich people. Anyone could be a puddle photographer these days. All they are has been lost from the trade. And it's not like every time you put a sepia filter over your iPhone photo, a cuttlefish has to die. We've moved on. There's no like when you go to Snappy Snaps, huge tank full of cuttlefish.
Starting point is 00:19:59 OK, it's time for fact number three. And that is James. OK, my fact this week is that William of Orange's favourite drink was Cock Ale. Which was? Which was a drink. It's made of ale with a cock in it. Cockerel, a rooster.
Starting point is 00:20:17 And it was they put the rooster in when it was being brewed. And the idea was that it would put something into the mix, which would give you virility. And it was like the Red Bull of its day, almost. And actually the first known recipe for Cock Ale was in 1669. And it was written by a guy called Sir Ken Elm Digby. People who know the podcast might remember his father. Everard Digby.
Starting point is 00:20:44 Kidding. Who was one of the gunpowder plotters. Everard Digby makes a return. This is so exciting. Sir Ken Elm Digby, he wrote a lot of cookbooks and he invented bacon and eggs as well, actually. Sorry, I think we give pigs a lot of the credit for bacon and chickens the credit for eggs.
Starting point is 00:21:05 He just invented putting them together. I think if we cook tonight, me, for example, I wouldn't be able to claim credit for the recipe. No, that's for sure. Yeah. That's very enough. The recipe of this, take eight gallons of ale, take a cock and boil him well.
Starting point is 00:21:19 Then take four pounds of raisins of the sun well-stoneed, two or three nutmegs, three or four flakes of mace, half a pound of dates, beat all these with a mortar and put them in two quarts of the best sack. Don't know what sack is. And then when the ale have done working, put these in and stop it closed six or seven days and then bottle it.
Starting point is 00:21:36 And after a month, you may drink it. Wow. So it's a bit like a mold cock ale. Yeah. I think sack is kind of wine, isn't it? Maybe fortified wine, I'm not sure. Well, there is a theory, which is a terrible theory. It can't be right, but because...
Starting point is 00:21:50 I know what you're going to say. I've read this theory. Yeah, because they were adding, you know, this new element ingredient to something that shouldn't be there. Cock ale was effectively the origins of cocktail. It's just not true. I'm saying it's a theory.
Starting point is 00:22:05 Where do you think it came from then cocktail? Oh, there are different... I can't remember. There are other bad theories as well, but that's worse. Here's another bad theory. So a cocktail used to be a horse with a docked tail because it looked a bit like a cox comb. And then it became a word for a horse of a mixed pedigree.
Starting point is 00:22:25 And then it became a drink because it had lots of mixes of different drinks in it. That's one theory. And H.L. Menken thought that it came from the French coquettier, meaning egg cup, because you would drink it out of a very small cup cocktail. Oh, I like that one. That's my favourite so far.
Starting point is 00:22:40 I think none of them are true. Yeah. I can't believe we know who made bacon and eggs for the first time. Amazing, right? We've just kind of danced over that, but that's huge. That's a big deal. That's a big deal.
Starting point is 00:22:50 Someone else probably would have done it. And actually, he was just writing down recipes, right? Right. He didn't invent... I don't think he invented cock ale either. I think he just wrote it down. Okay. The recipes were simpler then, weren't they?
Starting point is 00:23:02 You just wrote bacon, eggs. And you went down in history. No, they're really complicated. Lots of them. So, there's a 1739 cock ale recipe in a book called The Complete Housewife, which was one of the first big household manuals. And it starts with, take ten gallons of ale
Starting point is 00:23:16 and a large cock, the older the better. But then you had to stamp on it in a mortar until it was... its bones were broken. Oh. It said, parboil the cock, flay it, and stamp him in a stone mortar. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:28 Yeah. My mortar's not big enough to be stamping around in. Need a bigger mortar. God's day. These are another weird ingredient for old drinks. Cider in the 16th century used to have sheeps blood added to it. Cornwall sheeps blood.
Starting point is 00:23:43 I wonder at what point they realised that it's just nicer without the sheeps blood in it. One day they'd run out of sheeps blood and they just made cider. You would laugh out of the pub if you suggested it. Do you think we could? Yeah, so the sort of precursors to beer seem to all have been mould spice beer.
Starting point is 00:24:01 I think our kind of beer that doesn't contain any spices and flavours is the anomaly in history really. So you see all these recipes for kind of heating up beer. They always were adding cinnamon and cloves and nutmeg and ginger. Another thing they added almost always, if you look back to beer recipes, if you look in all old books and stuff
Starting point is 00:24:20 or from the 1600s, 1700s, toast. So they always put toast on top of beer, didn't they? Floated it. Yeah. Like a crouton in a soup, basically. Like giant croutons. I'd like a crouton. In a pint.
Starting point is 00:24:35 Well, I like beer and I like croutons. Seems likely that I would like both of these things. I think you'd love the 1600s. It's hard though, isn't it? Most beer glasses, most pints are not quite big enough for a full slice of toast to float on the surface. No. But these beers were fitting entire roosters in them.
Starting point is 00:24:51 The vessels were bigger. What was the point of the toast? Well, one recipe I read explained why the toast was there. It said, it claps the white waistcoat on a cup of good drink. Oh, brilliant. That's really clear. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:25:05 Yeah, great. Oh, right. Oh, yeah. The white waistcoat. Oh, well. We all just done that. I was reading about just the consumption of alcohol in the 1600s.
Starting point is 00:25:16 And I found this thing that Parliament passed. It was an act that I'd not heard of. It was the act to repress the odious and loathsome sin of drunkenness. It was because everyone was just getting so drunk all the time. But the wording of that is just stunning. Yeah, odious. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:33 So hops, which were medicinal plants, they'd been added to beers. And I think that was a way around of saying that you were doing it for medical purposes as opposed to it being, yeah, just getting drunk. Oh, yeah. And they didn't like hops. In Britain, they really didn't like hops.
Starting point is 00:25:49 So when we talk about beer from thousands of years ago, it's not beer like we know it. So beer to be classified as beer now has to be made with hops. But they only actually came to England in the 1400s, I think, from the Netherlands. And everyone thought they were a bit poisonous and they were a bit weird. So that's, you know, it's the plant
Starting point is 00:26:04 that adds the bitter taste to beer. And actually the first person to describe hops scientifically and talk about how they were used in beer was a woman. It was a Christian botanist and abbess who was called Hildegard of Bingen. Yeah, I've heard of her, actually. Yeah, she was a big deal. She was quite revolutionary in the beer industry.
Starting point is 00:26:25 Did she see lots of... I can't remember what about her now. I think she saw lots of visions and stuff, didn't she? Is that the same Hildegard? Oh, maybe not. Is there more than one Hildegard? It can't be that many. It's a very common name, surely?
Starting point is 00:26:39 There was one who saw lots of visions and then wrote one of the first books or something. Maybe it was a different one, yeah. It might have been her. She was big. She wasn't actually a fan of hops, even though she knew how they were used. She said they make the soul of man sad and weigh down his inner organs.
Starting point is 00:26:56 Whoa. That's kind of what it feels like after seven pints. There is a thing... I can't remember exactly what it is, but in Germany you're only allowed three ingredients in beer to this day. Really? I think it's hops, water and...
Starting point is 00:27:10 What would it be? Barley? Barley, yeah. And I think it's really strict. And they've had hundreds and hundreds of years so there was the Brau Ordnung in 16th century Bavaria where you weren't allowed to make beer between the 23rd of April and 29th of September. So no brewing allowed
Starting point is 00:27:26 because breweries caught fire very easily because they were all made of wood and there were lots of coal fires to heat them up. So it was bad for fires, so they banned it. But you had to have sellers to store beer from the winter so that you could drink it in the summer. And the breweries stored them in big underground cellars
Starting point is 00:27:46 and then above ground they planted trees to keep them shady because they wanted to keep the cool in the cellars. And then they started adding tables and gravel to these above ground tree areas. And that's the beginning of the beer garden. Oh, wow. So yeah, the beer garden comes from this ban
Starting point is 00:28:04 on brewing in the summer. And it was actually four beer, really, the beer garden, not for us. Yeah, we're in someone else's garden. Yeah. Then a bit of the beer. So just speaking of German beer, you know Pilsner.
Starting point is 00:28:22 So where that name comes from. I thought it was a place or something. So it is a place. It's from Pilsen, which was one of Europe's first beer brewing capitals. So it was called Pilsen when it became this beer brewing capital. And that is because
Starting point is 00:28:38 that was the German word for henbane, which is like a really deadly poisonous plant. But they used to put that in beer all the time. So they brew beer with henbane. Does that not make it really, I mean, that is really poisonous. Yeah, it's very dangerous. What were they doing with beer for hundreds of years?
Starting point is 00:28:52 Let's put cockles in it. Let's put sheep's blood in it and poison. There was no... No, when did they went? Three ingredients, that's it for that one. But a little bit of poison, no. It gave you hallucinations. If you managed to escape death, it was quite fun.
Starting point is 00:29:08 So that's where Pilsner comes from, is after henbane, because that was a crucial ingredient of deadly beer. Whoa, very cool. Just one last weird origin thing. So you mentioned that that beer brewing book, you mentioned earlier a beer brewing book was for a housewife. Beer brewing was sort of solely a women's thing
Starting point is 00:29:26 across the world, wherever beer was brewed, until pretty recently, until basically the 15th, 1600s when hops actually came in. So the alewife is a thing, because it was always the woman who would do the cooking bee in the house, brewing the beer. Women would control the breweries. For instance, in ancient Egypt, they all had their own breweries.
Starting point is 00:29:44 Women would be in charge. So they became the main beer sellers and barmaids, still in sort of Dickensian novels. So women would start making surplus beer, because they'd been making it for the home, and then they would go and sell it. So they'd put greenery over their doors, and in some cases, they'd put a broom up against their door,
Starting point is 00:30:02 which signified that you were selling beer. And they would stand on the corner, and they'd advertise their beer by wearing a tall hat, and they would often have a pet cat who would chase the pests away. And what's all of them? I'm just a cuttlefish. What is this theory?
Starting point is 00:30:23 This is where the witch image comes from. Yeah, so they were tall hats, said, I'm the beer-selling lady, I'm the alewife. And they all had cats as well. They had a cat to chase away pests, because otherwise they ate the grain with which they made the beer. And then it's like Eye of Newt and stuff, while the testing thing was hallucinogenic.
Starting point is 00:30:40 There you go, stirring it around in their cauldrons. Or their massive mortars. Yes. Oh, my goodness. And then came the witch. Really? Wow. Yeah, so I thought that I haven't made up.
Starting point is 00:31:00 OK, it is time for our final fact of the show, and that is my fact. The fact this week is that after five months of forensically analyzing the indents made by a pen on paper, Dorset police managed to recover 26 pages of lost words by a blind novelist who hadn't realized that her pen had run out of ink.
Starting point is 00:31:18 That is quite remarkable. Yeah, it's pretty extraordinary. This was an author called Trish Vickers. It was her first book that she was writing. She had gone blind through diabetes, and she decided that she wanted to pass her time by writing a book. So she created a system,
Starting point is 00:31:35 and she did it longhand with pen, created a system where she had elastic bands along the paper, she would write out the pages, and then her son would come at the end of the week, and he would transcribe them onto a Word document or whatever he chose. So he came one week after she had this burst of inspiration. She wrote 26 pages,
Starting point is 00:31:52 but he discovered these blank pages sitting there. Turns out the pen had run out. She was devastated. He was devastated because she'd written such great stuff. And it is quite funny. It's incredibly funny. Thank you, James, for pointing that out. Yeah, so she was very upset,
Starting point is 00:32:07 and they go in touch with the police to say, can you do anything about this? And they arrested the pen manufacturer, actually. Yeah, so actually it's very sweet. At Dorset Police Station, someone said they would look through the pages with the special light that they used for forensics to see the little markings that the pen would have left on the page,
Starting point is 00:32:28 the little dents. And they spent five months. Now, it wasn't five months of intense analysis. The burglars at Dorset at the time were just having a field day. I believe it was one person who did it on her lunch break for five months. Although, if you're a burglar, having a field day
Starting point is 00:32:44 is probably a very bad day for you. Burglars call it having a house full of electronic equipment day. So she managed to get the book done. It was called Granifers Legacy. Sadly, she actually passed away before she could hold a physical copy in her hands, but it was published two hours
Starting point is 00:33:04 prior to her passing away the physical copies. Yeah, so she just missed out by two hours. She knew it was being published. She knew, and I think she held a proof in her hand. So I thought that the only method... You know, when you make indentations on paper, you can kind of read it, or you can shade over it with a pencil
Starting point is 00:33:22 and that kind of shows up, because the pencil shading doesn't fill the indentations. Do you know how the police do it? They have a special wand. First of all, they don't do the pencil thing, do they? Because that could damage the evidence. Right. But they have this device they've invented called an electrostatic detection apparatus,
Starting point is 00:33:42 and they basically... Documents which are charged with static, a piece of paper charged with static, builds up more charge in the furrows where the pencil is indented, or the pen is indented, than on the flat. Some really microscopic non-visible-to-the-naked-eye furrows exist.
Starting point is 00:33:58 So they put the document on this plate, and then they pass a wand charged with electricity over it, and then they apply this mist of toner, and the toner just gravitates towards the furrows, and you fill in a page of writing that way. Wow. It's basically a magic wand.
Starting point is 00:34:14 So they sort of charge up the indents that have got all the static. Wow. That's insane. Yeah, that's cool. Super cool. It's quite similar to fingerprinting, right, that kind of process, where with fingerprinting, you can kind of do it yourself. So apparently, a really good substance for putting over fingerprints,
Starting point is 00:34:30 so you can see them, is raw cocoa powder. If you want to do it, you can use raw cocoa powder or talcum powder. But you're not going to have the database of the entire country at home, are you? Well, you're just going to see a fingerprint that you can't really recognize. Yeah, but you can definitely,
Starting point is 00:34:46 if it's like who took my chocolate bar, you can definitely get your family's fingerprints, and in your room, and then compare them. It's a real insight into other's childhood. Yeah, definitely would have done that. The system, the magic wand system that you talked about
Starting point is 00:35:02 is called the electrostatic detection apparatus, ESDA. And it was invented by two DJs. Wow, cool. They were called DJ Foster and DJ Morance. They weren't disc jockeys, it was just their names. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 00:35:18 I was thinking they were bored in the booth one day. No, it's just a coincidence that they had the same two initials and I thought it was quite funny. It was a good setup. You had us going in the first half. We did not see it coming. I was thinking, those are pretty boring names
Starting point is 00:35:34 for DJs, aren't they? DJ Foster. Can I just say one more thing on ESDA? Yeah. So ESDA is kind of famous because it's what, do you remember the West Midlands Serious Crime Squad got into a lot of trouble for faking people's confessions?
Starting point is 00:35:52 Oh. The Birmingham bombings. Oh, yeah. The Birmingham Six. Yeah, they got released because of that. And it was using ESDA that they found that the police were making these fake confessions. Oh, really? Very cool. Not funny.
Starting point is 00:36:08 Val McDermid actually has written a book on forensics, which sounds really good. I was reading a summary of it. She's the sort of crime writer, isn't she? Of fiction. Yeah, of fiction. But this is a factual book. And so there's loads of good facts in there. But there's the story of the
Starting point is 00:36:24 arsonist called John Orr, which I didn't know about. He was quite a big criminal in the 1980s. He was basically a fireman who ended up being done for burning down loads and loads of houses. Because if you're a fireman, you know how. So I think he was suspected in more than
Starting point is 00:36:40 1,000 fires in California. And he was eventually caught. He was caught partly because of forensics. So they matched a fingerprint on one bit of sort of half burned match that he'd used. But he was also caught because... Did you think they went, we've got a match?
Starting point is 00:36:56 And they went, yeah, we can see that. So good. There was two hours of confusion there. Between Laurel and Hardy the fireman. So another thing that tipped them off that he might be responsible was that he'd written a novel called Points of Origin that contained a highly detailed description of
Starting point is 00:37:14 the same fire that they were investigating for several striking similarities. And also the fire that he was done for in 1984, everyone who investigated it said this is an accidental fire and he kept insisting that no, it was arson. So it's like he really had this desire
Starting point is 00:37:30 for people to know. Do you think he was one of these people who deliberately set fires so they can go and put them out? We did that. It's called something like that. Maybe. Well, he's not a hero now. He is serving a long jail sentence.
Starting point is 00:37:46 Very much a zero. Nice. That's what the judge said when he passed the sentence. A zero. I'd love to be one of those comedy judges that said something funny just as they said them down.
Starting point is 00:38:02 I didn't know that comedy judge was a career actually. I'd love to be the comedy judge. It is a regular judge who happens to have a bit of fun. There was that guy who got done for something, but he loved the Beatles and the judge sentenced him using
Starting point is 00:38:18 as many Beatles and lyricists. No, that's so naff. What did he do? Maybe he stole from the taxman. Brilliant. It was probably a cry for help. You may have had a hard day's night in your yellow submarine.
Starting point is 00:38:34 No. Wait, was the criminal a fan of the Beatles? Yeah. It was kind of like the Beatles were sending him down. That is really hard. You shouldn't have used your revolver. The big albums. You've got a rubber soul.
Starting point is 00:38:52 Because you know, it's like a bad soul. A rubber soul? A rubber soul is better. A rubber soul is better. I mean, none of these are good, are they? The comedy judge is poking. Okay, that's it. That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening.
Starting point is 00:39:14 If you would like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we have said over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shriverland, Andy, at Andrew Hunter M. James, at James Harkin, and Zhizinsky. You can email podcast at qi.com. You can go to our group account at no such thing
Starting point is 00:39:30 or our website, nosuchthingasafish.com. We have links up there for our upcoming tour. You can also find all of our previous episodes there. We will be back again next week with another episode. Thank you so much for listening. Goodbye.

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