No Such Thing As A Fish - 35: No Such Thing As A Good Sloth Onesie
Episode Date: November 15, 2014Episode 35 - In a special live episode for the Chortle Comedy Book Festival, Dan (@schreiberland), James (@eggshaped), Andy (@andrewhunterm) and Anna (#getannaontwitter) discuss the invention of sarca...sm, the Antarctic Fire Department, dogs disguised as lions, and a Ming dynasty astronaut.
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We ran it on QI a few years ago, which was, there's no such thing as a fish.
There's no such thing as a fish.
No, seriously, it's in the Oxford Dictionary of Underwater Life.
It says it right there, first paragraph, no such thing as a fish.
Hello, and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish,
a weekly podcast this time coming to you from the Turtle Comedy Book Festival
in Camden, London.
My name is Dan Schreiber.
I'm sitting here with Andy Murray, Anna Czazinski, and James Harkin.
And this week, all of our facts are coming from the new QI book,
1411 QI Facts to Knock You Sideways.
So here are the four facts that we entered into that book,
and in no particular order, here they are.
Fact number one, James.
So my fact this week is, Viking names included Desiris of Beer,
Squat Wiggle,
Lust Hostage,
Short Penis,
Able to Fill a Bay with Fish by Magic,
The Man Who Mixes His Drinks,
and The Man Without Trousers.
But so, okay, when you say that these are Viking names,
were they like, were there more than two sometimes in a ship?
Was it like, did you have to be like, do we have a surname here?
Because we've got two short penises on the moment.
I don't know about that.
There's a great long list of them.
These come from names of people actually from the Sargas,
from the Icelandic Sargas and the Norwegian Sargas.
And these are the kind of nicknames
rather than actual first names, I think.
Did you find out anything about the specific, like, a Squat Wiggle?
Do we know what that is?
What it is?
Is it some kind of...?
What it is?
Well, I don't know.
I assume the person who was called it did it.
Squat at Wiggle.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Is that the thing you do on the dance floor
where you, like, go down to the floor and then up again?
That I do on the dance floor.
Yeah, or in the office sometimes, we all find it a bit weird.
I think it's like when a dog wipes its bum on the ground, on the carpet.
You know, it does that little Squat Wiggle.
So you know how Native Americans name their children
after the first thing they see after they give birth?
Do they?
I think Squat Wiggles' parents saw this dog doing the thing on the floor.
Wait, what?
Really?
Yeah, that's the idea.
I've always thought that was a myth as well.
Yeah, they can't be wrong.
So someone gave birth next to a sitting bull
and that's how they got their name.
Oh, jumping badger.
Is that literally what it was?
Well, that's the idea. I don't know if it's really true.
I think it depends what kind of Native American you were,
what tribe you were from.
Some of them named their children, I think, the Miwok tribe,
named their kids after how the nearest stream looked
when they gave birth.
Oh, really? Yeah.
Surely a limited number of, yeah.
Yeah, you've got to be very imaginative with your adjectives.
Yeah, wet, wet, wet.
Is that where the band got the name from?
They were all in the Miwok tribe.
I hope the short penis and the man without trousers
were friends with each other.
I hope one named the other.
I found out a few more of them.
They're all from the Landnamabok,
which is medieval work about when the Norse went to Iceland
and settled it.
And so there's a load of, it's a bit like a doomsday book.
There are loads of records of people
and where they live and all of this.
And a few more of them, the same names, same source.
Harmfart, arson victim, that was the name.
Arson victim, a person in trouble or in disgrace,
but I think that's inaccurately transcribed,
and able to remain warm in winter.
That sounds like a euphemism of fat, doesn't it?
Able to remain warm in winter.
One of my favorite ones is King Ragnar, Harry Bridges.
We might have mentioned him on QI, actually.
A few people know him.
He got his name because his wife made him
hairy trousers from animal skins,
and they were supposed to protect him in battle.
They were magic trousers.
What, really?
Yeah, magic trousers.
Did they work?
Did they work? Well, he's dead.
We should have used it.
I like that, you know that situation when you're in a room
and someone comes up to you who you blatantly know
and you've forgotten their name.
I'd love to see that scene in Viking times.
That'd be amazing.
Short penis? No, sorry.
Ugly, gross face.
Dick head?
Is it dick head?
You look like a dick head.
I'm sorry, it's just, you're right.
Maybe they were more catchy in Norse.
Did you think they were quite long-winded, aren't they?
Yeah, they used it.
That's actually a name of a person.
Long-winded.
I thought I'm stuck on a dinner table with a long-winded.
The word gun is Norse.
How weird is that?
Gun, yeah.
And it's because there's an inventory of weapons
from the Tower of London, which was in 1330,
and there was a bellister, a big projectile device,
which was called Lady Gunilda.
So again, Gunilda meant war or battle, so that's where...
So even though they weren't really around at the time,
were they? Guns?
No, no, no, Vikings.
I had a moment of crisis of confidence about when they...
When did you say?
Thirteenth century.
Yeah, you're fine. You're safe ground.
Something else invented by the Vikings
or from that area, this is one for you, Anna, sarcasm.
Well, thanks, James.
Yeah, great.
The words or the concepts?
No, the concepts. According to Clans Gruber,
the Danish ambassador, whose name also sounds made up,
he says that the Danish and the British
have a similar sense of humour with our sarcasm
and the way that we make jokes, and so he reasons
that it must have come over with the Vikings.
Okay. Do you say Clans Gruber?
No. Clouse Gruber.
Oh, Clouse Gruber, sorry.
I thought it sounded like Hans Gruber, the baddie in Die Hard.
One for the Die Hard fans.
Does his name have a good meaning in English, do we know?
Like, make some questionable theories?
We get quite a lot of a surprising number of words
from the Vikings, don't we?
And they're all quite negative,
which might be how, like, pillage and so forth.
Like pillage and hell, I think,
and weak, skulls, slaughter, anger, dirt.
It might be that I've gone through them
and chosen the most negative ones.
That's the purpose of my point.
Muggy?
Muggy? Is that negative? I guess so.
It's never a good thing, is it?
Berserk.
You've got to come outside, it's so muggy.
Feeling too dry.
So what about Berserk? That's something to do with Bers, is it?
So Berserk, the Berserkers were the Viking warriors
who were just insane, weren't they?
And they think that either they worked themselves up
into some kind of meditative trance,
because they were so, like, forced themselves
to be so angry that they became vicious warriors
or they were just on drugs.
Anyway, they were called Berserkers,
which is where we get the word Berserk.
There's one theory that actually Vikings weren't worse
than anyone else, but the only reason
that we have only bad stories about them
is because they attacked monks who were much
more literate than them.
And so the monks were the people who were writing things down
and they wouldn't write anything down.
That's a proper theory, yeah.
The modern equivalent is like writing something
really about Mark Zuckerberg a few hundred years from now.
Your name will be mud.
That's very cool.
So, I mean, what I love about this obviously
is we're talking about silly names.
And I had a fact, just to tell you guys,
I had a fact that I tried to use on a previous podcast,
which got rejected in the office,
which was that 40% of all penises are in America.
And it's the surname...
It's the surname Penises.
You can go on our website and it tells you where they all are.
40% in America, Fiverr and Britain.
And the most popular name?
Shot.
There must be someone who's named Shorty Penis.
Well, there was one guy called Penis, Penis, Penis.
And actually, that was a popular name because it was involved.
No, it wasn't a popular name.
That's a confusing error.
No one.
Was it hyphenated?
No, it was just pure Penis.
Penis is married to each other.
Penis, Penis was also a very popular name.
Next to Penis, Penis, Penis.
It's a double-barrel surname obviously.
So this surely must be people filling in online forms
with rude words.
I don't know, the most popular is Bob Penis.
So I don't know.
It's an actual name.
They didn't let me do it on the show.
I'm not going to get in this wiki, though.
Did you guys get speaking of stupid names
and kind of vikings?
There's a Swedish couple who are being fined
because they failed to register a legally-approved name for their child.
And they've presently called their child...
I don't know how to pronounce this.
It's...
11116.
Apparently...
Apparently it's pronounced Albin,
but it's a series of consonants.
So they were told they weren't allowed to register that
as a name for their child.
And so they said they were willing to change the child's name
to A, the letter A,
which also wasn't accepted.
And so they've been fined.
But yeah, the explanation was that the naming of their child,
as such, was a pregnant expressionistic development
that we see as an artistic creation.
That's not really going to cut it when he's been bullied in school.
Did you see today?
There was an article on the paper today,
and I can't, so maybe someone here will remember it.
The number one hacker,
internet hacker in the world,
they managed to crack his code
and get into all the places he's been hacking
because his personal password
was his cat's name
with one, two, three at the end.
It was just in the news.
The worst thing was his cat was called Password.
Wayne Rooney had his computer hacked
and his password was Stella Artois.
You're not helping yourself when you're him
with the stereotypes, are you?
Other beers are available.
Interesting naming traditions.
So the Amazonian Amondawa tribe,
when you say you get your name at birth
and then when your younger sibling is born,
you have to give your name to that sibling
and take on another name.
And you have to constantly change your name
throughout your life.
And that's the tribe that doesn't have a concept of time,
so they're really interesting
because they don't have any words for day, week, month.
And so the only way they distinguish time
is by the stage of life that you're at.
So you get a new name for whatever stage of life you're at.
So if you graduate, you're called a history degree.
I don't know how many history degrees they're getting, but...
Wait, do you have to change your name
until your parents have their last child?
Do I understand that right?
Yes, you do.
As soon as one of the family changes the name,
the rest of the family also has to change the name.
So even if you were 30 and your parents had another child,
all right, that's not likely.
Wait.
But you can change your name to 10, 20 years later.
I guess sharp penis must have been really hoping
that his parents had a good child.
Come on, guys.
We're not going to do it, son.
You inherited your father's traits.
I'm not going there again.
My favourite pop star name change.
I've done a few in the podcast, so I can't say that loud now.
But what I discovered recently, Michael Bolton.
That's not his real name.
Michael Bolton's what?
Real name is not Michael Bolton.
What is it?
It is Michael Bolton.
He lost an O from it.
A single O, and he lost it.
And there's another singer called Michael Bolton,
who's a country singer in America,
who they keep asking him, like,
obviously you're trying to make a career in music
and you're called Michael Bolton.
Why have you not changed your name?
And his answer was, why should I change it?
He's the one who sucks.
Very strong principles.
It's not going to work in the sales.
Yeah, yeah.
I found a thing about Viking mice.
What?
I'm just...
Right.
Well, bear with me.
There is such a thing as Viking mice.
So all the mice in Scotland and Ireland
and bits of Wales are Viking ones
because they're directly descended from
Norwegian house mice,
and they came over with the Vikings,
and they were much more effective
than the weedy Anglo-Saxon mice.
And that's how they think they know
that the Vikings lived in Scotland and Ireland
first in enough density to support house mice,
because house mice only live somewhere
where you get quite a dense concentration of people.
So that's how they know that the Vikings
were hardy enough to live there,
is because their mice went there with them,
and they lived there in enough numbers to support them.
Wow.
Vikings are quite cool,
so they have a god of skiing,
don't they like?
Really cool.
In fact, they have a god and a goddess of skiing.
They have the god of skiing who is Ulur,
U-double-L-R,
always pictured with skis and a bow and arrow,
and then the...
A proper skiing equipment, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Hey, are you going out on the slopes?
Don't forget your bow and arrow.
Yeah, goddess Skade.
They weren't in a relationship or anything,
but yeah, she was the same, always on skis,
always bow and arrow,
and she married another god called Njord,
and they split up because they had a bitter fight
about the fact that he loved the coast
and she loved the mountains and skiing.
So that's in Norse mythology,
and Skade is where the word Scandinavia comes from.
Goddess of skiing.
That's cool.
So the Vikings had quite a cool way of making fire,
fire that could last a long time,
where they collected fungus called touchwood from trees,
and then they would like bash it down,
and then they lit it,
oh no, they boiled it in water for a few days,
and then they lit it,
and instead of catching fire properly,
it just kind of, what's it called, kind of smoldered,
and then it would last a few days,
and it would be, you know, a useful fire
that they could take on ships and stuff.
I was reading today that fire is a problem
on Antarctica, apparently,
because you wouldn't think it, would you?
Because it's cold.
Is that what's melting at all?
No, because it's so dry and like a lot of wind
which can blow the fire somewhere,
so if you, yeah, it's one of the things
I'm most worried about on Antarctica is fire.
They have a fire department.
How does it sound?
There's a fire brigade on there.
Really?
Yeah, yeah, an Antarctic fire department.
Because they're a bit,
because the driest place in the world is in Antarctica, isn't it?
It is.
There are these valleys.
Yeah, valleys, yeah.
I haven't had any rain for two million years.
And even then, it wasn't much.
They're muggy.
Yeah, it's all.
We need to move on, guys.
Really?
Any last things you want to get in?
I just have one more thing about a different type of Vikings.
It's a bit sad.
The Minnesota Vikings, I'm an American football fan,
and there was a Minnesota Vikings fan
who vowed to let his beard grow
until his team won the Super Bowl,
and he died in 2013 with a 38-year-old beard.
Aw.
So sad.
We salute him.
Yeah, what a dude.
That's amazing.
I found one last fact that I want to add,
which is from the book festival.
It's from our new QI book.
This is the fact, and it's to do just with names.
Johnny Cash is a state once refused permission
for his hit Ring of Fire
to be used in a commercial for hemorrhoid cream.
Just wonderful.
Good decision.
Should we move on to facts?
Yeah, let's go.
Okay, time for fact number two.
That's my fact, and as we said at the top,
all of our facts come from this new book that we've done.
There's 1,411 facts in this book.
I, after much, much work,
only managed to get one fact into this book.
I wait till you hear it.
This is my fact.
And it concerns the model Jordan.
Otherwise, that was Katie Price.
Why did you only get one in?
They were all about Jordan.
All 900 dance emitters were about Jordan.
So my fact this week is you only live once
is Katie Price's fourth autobiography.
And that's on page 334.
It should be on page three, shouldn't it, really?
Oh, yeah.
Is there any sign in it that she's aware of the irony of it?
Like, is it a humorous, ironic comment
on modern-day celebrity autobiographies that she's making?
Of course there is.
It's Katie Price.
Have you read it?
No, but neither has she.
No, in fact, I've never read it.
I've never read it.
I've never read it.
I've never read it.
I've never read it.
No, in fact, I'm pretty sure she hasn't
because she was promoting her new autobiography,
her fifth autobiography.
And they asked her, where does it pick up from?
And she said, it picks up from the amazing ending
of my last book, which I think was about when I broke up.
No, I stopped reading it there.
I was like, you cannot say where I think
about your own life in a book.
Like, that's unacceptable.
But that's, yeah, I just love it.
You didn't get Hillary Mantel going.
I think was Cromwell, was he dead yet?
I'm not sure what happened to Winston Smith.
Anyway, ask me about the books.
Katie Price has written more books
than Shakespeare wrote plays.
Well, Shakespeare didn't write any plays, really.
And I don't know if you're right.
Katie Price hasn't written any books.
They should meet.
They should meet.
They would get along like a house on fire.
No, but she's admitted it.
She has admitted it.
She had a quote when she was talking about her book.
She said, I'm not going to lie.
I don't sit there with a typewriter and write it.
So this is someone who still thinks
I'm going to play a book with a typewriter.
I don't want to knock her, by the way.
Like, we don't do that on this show.
I don't want to knock her.
But apparently it's full of good facts.
They did.
They did.
Yeah, everyone's laughing because you said knock her.
So this is another thing that she...
So Katie Price, I mean, there was an interesting thing.
It actually has gone on the latest QI book.
Sorry, no, it's on the latest QI episode
about Katie Price, which is actually outsold
all of the booker list, didn't she, at one point?
Yeah.
I mean, so she sells massive, which is insane.
But all of them are ghost-ridden.
She's admitted that they're ghost-ridden,
and ghost-riding is just ginormous.
Now, ghost-riding is so big at the moment.
This is insane.
They've started outsourcing it to other countries.
So they go to the Philippines for ghost-riding now.
Celebrity order biographies get sent to the Philippines
and they have people doing that.
Are they good at writing ghost-riding in the Philippines?
Yeah, why not?
Quite a lot of people do admit to not reading
their autobiographies, don't they?
Ronald Reagan as well.
Ronald Reagan as well.
Ronald Reagan.
What did he say?
Oh, he had a great article.
I was like...
He said, I know that many of you are looking forward
to reading this book, and so am I.
So am I.
Cool.
Oh, I hear it's very good.
I can't wait to read it.
Yeah.
Naomi Campbell.
Models obviously don't like to read
they're in autobiographies.
No.
Barry Manilow didn't write the song,
I write the songs.
Oh, yeah.
That's true.
That's an actual fact.
The first ever autobiography was Ghost-Ridden.
Well, the first ever autobiography was...
The Bible.
The first...
I don't know.
Jesus is autobiography.
Jesus is autobiography.
I don't think you meant to call God a ghost.
It was Holy Ghost-Ridden.
Holy Ghost-Ridden.
That's what the Holy Ghost was for.
What purpose do you think it's for?
Nobody knows.
The other two are so obvious in their roles.
He's from the Philippines.
No one knows it.
Holy Ghost.
No, the first autobiography in English was written by someone called Marjorie Kemp
and it was written in the 1400s and she was an illiterate woman who wrote the whole thing
in the third person and so she said...
I read it.
Have you?
Have you?
Yeah.
What?
I did an English degree and they make you read a lot of...
What?
Yeah.
It's not very good.
Oh.
It's really not.
There's no...
I'm not here to knock Marjorie Kemp, we don't do that on this podcast.
She spends maybe 300 or 400 pages crying and weeping and crying and it's just...
How do you cry?
All the words are smudged from the name.
Can't read this.
Yeah, it's very hard going.
It's really weird though because she imagines herself married to Jesus and lying in bed
there with him and it's a very strange text in lots of different ways, yeah.
That's not funny, it's just true.
She was from Lancashire, wasn't she, I think?
Or was she?
She was from my neck of the woods, yeah.
Was she like a wise woman or something?
Yeah, she was like a prophetess.
Yeah.
Who had a religious awakening.
It's very interesting but at the same time it's also quite boring.
A surprising amount of people used to do ghost writing, so Mozart used to do ghost writing.
Really?
Yeah, yeah, he'd write, he would be commissioned by other people, they'd put their names to
it, Mozart would then provide the music for it, yeah.
Charles Dickens' very first book, it was a book that he ghost wrote for a clown called
Grimaldi.
Yeah, just going back to Mozart, when he first played in Europe, he was very young, like
nine years old or something, and everyone thought he was a dwarf in disguise.
That's true.
What?
Yeah, it was written that they thought he was.
Because that was most likely.
What you're going to say is, if you're going to disguise a dwarf, you don't make him the
same height.
You're making him taller.
Yeah, that is a good point, but that's true, that is true.
How do you make him taller?
You can't stretch a person as part of a disguise.
Stilts.
Put him far away on a hill so no one can tell.
With a small piano, right?
Gary Brown started as a stiltwalker.
Gary Brown started as a dwarf.
He just stretched him on the rack for 20 years.
Someone who does stretch his body is Superman.
Remember that?
Oh yeah, that's true.
Yeah.
So as part of Superman's disguise, he puts on his glasses, but he can also make his
spine two inches smaller, so he kind of goes smaller.
No, when he becomes Clark Kent.
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah, shorter as Clark Kent, so people for extra realism don't tell.
I mean, he's not real.
That was going to be my fact next week.
Damn it.
I have a few good, so titles of autobiographies, which I just really like.
Colonel Sanders wrote one called Life As I Know It Has Been Finger Licking Good.
Leonard Nimoy wrote one called I Am Not Spock, and then a follow-up called I Am Spock.
I've read them both.
Love you.
Really good.
Highly recommend them.
Book festival for you, then.
Don and I sit next to each other reading I Am Spock and Marjorie Kemp.
And Judge Judy.
Anyone know Judge Judy?
American too.
That's a weary ascent.
Judge Judy wrote one called Don't Peel My Leg and Tell Me It's Raining,
which is apparently an American idiom.
It's sort of, don't lie to me.
Have you?
Don't piss up my back and tell me it's raining.
Yeah.
Might be a Bolton thing.
In Bolton, it's necessary to say that.
In 2010, a man was caught masturbating to Alan Sugar's autobiography in Crawley Library.
The man was cautioned and banned from returning to the library.
Was the book cleaned afterwards?
No more information.
In 1979, Gerald Ford released his autobiography and Betty Ford,
his wife, was releasing hers at the same time.
And his was called A Time to Heal, the autobiography of Gerald Ford.
And hers was called The Times of My Life, which obviously sounds much more fun.
So that year, for Gerald Ford's 64th birthday, Betty gave him a T-shirt that read
I bet my book will outsell yours, which is quite sweet.
And it did.
Yeah, by a long way, yeah.
Wow.
Yeah, so good prediction.
Yeah.
And then next year, the T-shirt said, told you.
Yeah.
And then they divorced.
No, they didn't.
Alec Baldwin wrote one which sold 12 copies in its first month,
which is amazing.
And it has an amazingly bad title.
It's called A Promise to Ourselves, Colon, A Journey Through Fatherhood.
Yeah, that's the noise I'm making.
Is it true that the Bronte sisters, their first book of poetry,
there were three of them wrote it and they only sold two copies?
Yes.
So they didn't even buy one each?
In the first year, it took a year to sell two copies.
Unbelievable.
Yeah.
Well, they live together.
You can share.
Yeah, you're right.
I like the fact that autobiographies used to be called Apologia, didn't they?
So when you look back to antiquity, then it was always Apologia,
which was sort of apologizing for what you've done wrong,
and it seems like much more people should do rather than, you know...
It was kind of false modesty.
Yeah, it was.
It was usually a justification of what all their critics had aimed at them
and explaining that it was, yeah.
But Augustine as well, who a lot of people say is the first autobiography
of kind of a non-classical age.
His was just called Confessions,
and that was his explaining all the stuff he'd done wrong
and not even stuff that he remembered.
So chapter one of Augustine's autobiography was him saying,
when I was a child, I don't really remember it very well,
but I know I will have committed loads of sins,
and for that I'm really sorry I feel terrible about it.
Don't know what they were, but I'm sure I did.
Really, really bad.
Sorry, guys.
Wow.
Yeah, no.
John Henry Newman, who was an eminent Victorian,
wrote one in 1864, which was called Apologia Prosuavita,
or Apology for His Life, which sounds very sarcastic.
Like, sorry about my life, guys.
Adolescent.
We should move on.
Yeah, we're going way over here.
Anything else, Andy?
No.
I got a couple of interesting things, which I didn't know,
which is, so there's a number of things that are happening.
You have ghost writing, which is obviously just ghost writing,
someone's autobiography.
There's a term in the music world, which is called a Hummer,
and Hummer is someone who takes claim of having written a tune
on a movie.
So like, back when Charlie Chaplin used to make his movies,
he's always said written, directed, music by,
he would go around, so he'd walk up to a musician who he'd hired
and go, mm-hmm, mm-hmm, mm-hmm.
Good luck.
And then he would take claim for having written that song.
What?
And that's called a Hummer.
A Hummer is someone who takes claim for a song
off a hum that they'd done to say,
Hang on, because they hummed near somebody who wrote something.
Yeah, exactly.
No, no, they would hum an initial tune and say,
build on it, and then they would do it.
Oh, right.
So it's ghost writing.
It's fake.
And also, I was really surprised by this.
There's script doctoring, which is done as well for Hollywood movies.
And obviously, that is done a lot of the time,
but I didn't know these famous people were involved with it.
So Tom Stoppard, we all know Tom Stoppard.
Tom Stoppard was a ghost writer in the movie sense.
So script doctor for Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.
What?
For the Born Ultimatum.
And for Star Wars III, Revenge of the Sith.
Isn't that amazing?
It's amazing in the way that I don't believe it.
No, it's true.
Is it true?
Yeah, it's absolutely true.
Speaking of Tom Stoppard and Star Wars,
Carrie Fisher, Princess Leia of Star Wars.
Actually, Ghost wrote most of Tom Stoppard's plays.
They just don't swap.
She did script doctoring for Sister Act,
Lethal Weapon III, Last Action Hero, The Wedding Singer,
and she wrote all of Tinkerbell's dialogue in hook.
Well, Carrie Fisher's on the Christmas episode of QI this year, isn't she?
Yeah.
Well, I've had to have known that and I got to write the script
instead of spending all that time.
That's true.
Okay, we should move on.
Okay, it's time for fact number three and that is Czazinski.
Yeah, my fact from the book is that William Morton,
father of Anesthesia, first experimented on himself
but kept falling asleep before he could describe the results.
That's amazing.
Day nine.
Very optimistic about it.
That's amazing.
Yeah, he loved experimenting on himself and various things.
So this was in the late 1830s, 1840s,
and he was experimenting with Aether
and he also experimented on his wife's chicken.
He cut off its crest to see if it would be in pain,
which she said that it wasn't.
Psychopath.
What do you even know this one?
I was just cutting beds off and seeing if it was painful.
How does he know as well?
It's like, yeah, did that hurt?
No, okay.
I'll keep going.
He spoke chicken.
That's one of his gifts.
Wow, that's mad.
Yeah, he experimented on a goldfish, on the pet dog,
on various pets, on his students.
We're not still cutting things off, are we?
Yeah, just decapitated.
No.
And yeah, because people tended not to want to volunteer themselves
but eventually he had to get a volunteer
because he did keep falling asleep.
So once his wife walked into the room
and found him unconscious on the floor
and had to rouse him and he'd been asleep for about 12 minutes
and he said he thought he probably would have died
had she not interrupted.
So his wife went through a lot.
So his wife said, he was obviously quite a strange character,
loved these kind of grotesque experiments on himself
and things around him.
His wife said,
never shall I forget my sensation as a young bride
sleeping in a room where a tall, gaunt skeleton
stood in a big box near the head of the bed,
which I just like as the image of coming home
on your wedding night and going,
what's that?
Is that gonna stay?
Just this human skeleton that he kept by his bed.
Amazing.
Yeah, deal breaker, I would say, but whatever.
Well, once you're already married, it's too late.
Yeah, I know that you can do.
Picky, picky, picky.
But yeah, so it says in the book Father of Anesthesia
and he's quite controversial.
So if there are any Horace Wells lovers out there,
I understand that Horace Wells was the guy
who experimented with nitrous oxide,
which turned out to be more effective in a lot of ways
as an anaesthetic, but he was unfortunate
because it seemed to be working,
so he decided to do a public demonstration
of how effective an anaesthetic this was in 1845
and he slightly misjudged the amounts he had to give
and the length of time he had to give it for
and this public demonstration ended in,
like, the screaming, hysterical, agonized fit
of the person in question.
So everyone went home and said,
well, this is rubbish, isn't it?
Let's not try this.
I know that.
There was a lot of surgeons
didn't really like anaesthetic at the start.
I'm not sure if I've said this before,
but there was a Russian surgeon called Nikolai Prigov
and he didn't like using laughing gas
because he was accustomed to the screams
and reactions to pain of his patients
and found it much more difficult to operate
on an unresponsive body.
Yeah, but apparently he wasn't alone.
Like, a lot of surgeons like to know
that if you prod this bit, someone screams,
they say, no, it's not the right thing to do.
They said it guided the scalpel and a lot of people
went, oh, don't go there, okay.
Yeah, there was a French surgeon called Magendi
who thought it was ridiculous all this
experimenting with anaesthetics because he said
the pain was essentially irrelevant
and it was barely worth noting the pain of actual surgery
and I've looked into him and he was never operated on.
So I didn't know.
And then a lot of religious, a lot of Christians
thought that it was what God intended for us
and that it was kind of anti-Christian.
Suffering and bearing children.
Exactly, yeah.
Very controversial.
Before they had, before Morton got involved
and kind of before Wells got involved as well,
they just had laughing gas shows
which just travelled the country across America.
Supposed professors would travel from town to town
giving lectures and then just put people
under laughing gas and then people would laugh
and then stagger about and then fall over
and talk rubbish and yeah,
and they just happened on the pavement
and it was at one of these that Horace Wells noticed
that someone had a painful accident
and didn't flinch and so he thought,
oh well I'm going to go and try this,
try this out on people and the next day
he had one of his own wisdom teeth taken out
under the influence of nitrous oxide
and that's what set him off on the whole.
It took a long time, didn't it?
Because when was, what's he called
nitrous oxide, Humphrey Davy,
that was the 1790s wasn't it
when he was dealing with laughing gas
and it wasn't until the 1840s though.
So for ages they'd just laughed for 50 years
just going there must be a use to this
at the moment.
I ran it really good
so James has got a subscription
to the British newspaper archive which
if anyone wants to I would highly recommend
because it's so fun so I looked up
Are you going to offer everyone your login details?
James Harkin, yeah, no.
It's his cat's name, 123.
So there was a letter
written to the Liverpool Mercury in 1824
and this was in the era when a lot
of people were going to shows and having nitrous
oxide tried on them and it was by someone
who'd been to one of these shows and he tried
nitrous oxide and he wrote a letter to the paper
describing it saying
the sensation somewhat resembled those I've
experienced when coming in for a share
of super fine wine.
Which wine it most resembles, I cannot
determine, but if you or any of your friends
are anxious to have the point settled, you have
only to send me a few specimens of superior
champagne or burgundy and not like
that.
What a guy.
I'm really
obsessed with people who do self-experimentation
because it feels
like it was a long gone era
where they were doing it and now
you look at the news almost virtually every
day and it just seems to be going on more and more
people just going into their own world
not asking for permission.
The guy Barry Marshall won the Nobel Prize.
One of your countrymen.
Yeah, an Australian fellow Australian won
the Nobel Prize
for trying to explain
that you all know this better, so why don't you just say this?
Yeah, a lot of people know it.
So he won the Nobel Prize
because he proved that
stomach ulcers were caused by a bacteria
called Heliobacter pylori
I think it's called, and he found
that out by testing himself
by giving himself this bacteria
and then he turned out that he did
get these stomach ulcers and then he
took some antibiotics and it got rid of them.
It's not all stomach ulcers, but it's a lot of them.
Yeah, but he effectively, he should
have died off the back of what the medical community
thought would happen to him, so he just went,
screw it, I'm going to drink a petri dish
for a bacteria myself and I'm going to do it to myself.
I really admire that, but it has been going
forever and my favorite ever
self-experiment story is back from
2000 BC, it's from the Ming Dynasty
and it's a guy called Wan Hu
from China who decided
to become the first ever astronaut.
It's going to be the first ever
astronaut? When was that?
When was it? It was Ming Dynasty.
Good grief. Yeah,
so he decided he was going to be the first
ever astronaut. They didn't have rockets then, did they?
What they did have was
fireworks.
So,
so he sat on a chair
and attached to the chair
47
rockets.
He had 47 attendants
candle ignite
the 47 rockets.
There was a massive explosion
and neither one
or the chair were ever seen again.
So they might be in
space.
It could have worked.
It could have worked. I
thought they did do that in the movie Up.
That would have been pretty funny.
The press announcement from Pixar.
Sorry, we really cocked up this time.
Try to send a character into space.
He's dead, the chair is gone as well.
No, it's
no one really agrees that this definitely
happened. It's definitely apocryphal.
But at the same time, there is a
crater on the moon named
one who... I thought you were going to say created by
his impact.
There's a crater and yeah, spoken to my friends.
Wow. Okay, some more
self-experimenters. Herbert Woolard
and Edwin Carmichael did some
experiments in 1933
and they wanted to know how it felt
to put certain pressures on the human
testes.
And so they placed
weights on the testes
and they explained
how it felt. So
I'll give you some of the things they said.
300 grams
slight discomfort
in the right groin area.
550 grams
definite discomfort in testicular region
followed by a dull ache
in the right lumbar region dorsally.
Should we stop now? No, let's keep going.
I don't know, I'd like to stop though, we're going on.
And then when they got up to
850 grams
there's a quote of what he said
and he exclaims at once
that is quite different from the
left side.
Good understatement.
So speaking of crushing testicles
do you guys
do you guys know
August Beer
who
so he's someone who pioneered
the cocaineization
of the spinal cord in like 1898
which is where you inject cocaine
into your spinal fluids and it has a
numbing effect and it was quite successful.
So he and his assistant August Hildebrand
decided to try it out. First of all
his assistant was supposed to try it
out on him and used the wrong size
syringe for the needle which meant that he injected
August's spinal cord
and his spinal fluid just spouted out
all over the room because it didn't fit there
well this is useless and then he was drained
of all this spinal fluid so they couldn't try
that again. So they switched places
and the assistant agreed to have him
inject his spinal cord.
I would not switch places with someone who's
spinal fluid I just wasted.
I would feel very bad about that.
So they did it and it was quite successful
it was very successful he lost all the
feeling in his legs and so
to check that it worked
August kicked, stabbed
bludgeoned and burned his shins
plucked out his pubic hairs
stubbed out cigars on his leg
and then crushed and tugged his testicles.
That's what happens
this is for my spinal fluid
But they said so he felt
nothing so they thought this has been great
and they celebrated by getting really pissed
and smoking loads of cigars and
they woke up the next day
and apparently it was awful
and they felt like hell for five days
apparently that's a common side effect
of loss of cerebrous spinal fluid
I guess combined with quite a bad
hangover.
We shouldn't have had that seventh
line of cocaine into our spines
wasn't we?
I think it was the seventh that did it
Wow
We need to move on
Another self experimenter
this guy is unbelievable
in 1804 he was
an American student called Stubbins Firth
what a name
and he wanted to show that yellow fever was not contagious
and so he did so by
ok brace yourselves
inhaling the vapour of
sufferers simmering black vomit
he then
injected the vomit into his own veins
and into cuts on his arms
despite the fact that a dog he had injected had died within minutes
and then he smeared his body
with patients blood, sweat and urine
and drank patients saliva, blood and vomit
he didn't catch it
because
the samples came from late-stage patients who were no longer contagious
alright ok let's move on
to our final fact time for a final fact
and that is Andrew Hunter Murray
ok my fact
is that
Chessington World of Adventures
banned animal onesies to stop the animals there
getting confused
so did they genuinely
get confused
we're all confused by animal onesies aren't we
so they weren't confused
that it was another animal
that was similar to it
that's a poor fashion choice
I don't know why you've gone for that
it was a temporary one
to stop the, they had a new giraffe and a new rhino
and they hired
new scientists
and if you went in an animal onesie
apparently you were going to be given a grey boiler suit
to put over it
which would make you look more like a rhino
and a big pointy hat
why
we don't know
I don't know
there's an article in New Scientist about this
they asked an animal expert
and she said some colorations do give warning signs
to other animals
so big cats get interested
if someone limps past their enclosure
because they look weak and then she said
possibly the worst thing you could do
is limp past the lion enclosure in a zebra print outfit
what about climbing into it
also bad
second worst thing limp past
since 2012
the company Kigu who make onesies
have sold twice as many panda onesies
as there are pandas
sad fact isn't it
it's easier to make a panda onesie
to be fair
I'm just saying you don't have to put two panda onesies together
and then leave them for five years
or however long it takes
a panda onesie is more keen to shag each other
is that what you're saying
than pandas
much easier
have we talked about the zoo in China
that tried to disguise really crap animals
as really great animals
in the Henan province
I feel like we might have so
dressed up a Tibetan mastiff
as an African lion
rats posed as snakes
dogs dressed up as leopards
and in an effort to save face
the zoo's animal department chief
claimed the real lion had been temporarily
sent to a breeding facility
although they didn't explain why there was a mastiff
dressed up as a lion in the lion's enclosure
they also said
by the way we've got Mozart playing tonight
you should come and see him
they do
when you start to google
zoos and
people dressing up as animals
most of the articles that come down
are from the idea that it's the zoo people
who are dressing up
so there were pandas talking about pandas
they had a small baby panda
that was born and they wanted to put it into the wild
so all of the zookeepers
dressed up as pandas
so they didn't think that there was human
contact going on so
maybe it does actually confuse the animal
we're not giving them much credit
animals are very good at recognizing each other
aren't they? a lot of animals are
I think we talked about wasps last week
that they can recognize each other's faces
so if you put wasps in a maze
and you show them a photograph of one wasps face
that leaves something bad and one wasps face
that leaves something good
then they learn the wasps face
and learn to go that direction
rather than the bad wasps face
which I don't know what happens when they meet those wasps in real life
and have
me down a bad way
but yeah sheep are really good at recognizing each other
which is weird because they all
famously look the same
now you're being sheep racist
I am
I'm a sheepist
yeah if you show sheep
so I think they experimented on 50 sheep
and if you show them a picture of one sheep
like a couple of sheep faces
then they can always identify the one
that's associated with something good
or 85% of the time I think they identify the one
that's associated with something good
so yeah I don't think animals
are being confused by humans
dressed in furry suits
well then in a different case
at a zoo in Tenerife
they have a thing
they do this in zoos now where they dress up
certain members of the team
as an animal
and get them to try and escape the zoo
and the costume bit
the costume bit
is just to add effect
it's to test if a gorilla
escaped from an enclosure
and it started running out how they could
have an emergency situation
they have an emergency routine if something escapes
and they have to make sure they know what they're doing
but a guy in a gorilla suit
can't rip someone's arm off
so they add extra realism
by ripping someone's arm
well what happened in this case
is one of the zookeepers wasn't told this was happening
saw the gorilla escaping
and shot a tranquilizer dart into the person
genuinely this was
this was this year
they had to bring them to hospital
and bring them back too
so evidently animals are better at noticing
humans dressed up as animals
than humans are
in 2008 if you rang up Dublin Zoo
you would get an
answerful message saying
if you are calling to speak to Mr Rory Lyon
C Lyon
G Raph or anyone similar
please be aware that you are victim of a hoax message
or
or perpetrating one
that's exactly what I would do
if I had thought of it
so I really like history of zoos as well
so when London Zoo was
first opened it was obviously
much more wild westy than
modern zoos
so they thought they would use zebras
to pull people around in passenger carts
and carriages and things
you could play with the bears sometimes
just let you play with the bears
and they didn't have proper vets
you know they just
and also sorry
play with the bears
that's never going to end well
and they died in their hundreds
a female seal disappeared
two weeks before the grand opening
and they only found it two days before the public
first arrived
how does a seal escape?
sketchy on detail here
it just was in the zoo but not
but in the lion enclosure
the very first animal at London Zoo
was a griffin vulture called Dr. Brooks
who was named after the anatomy teacher
who had donated him
and his job used to be to eat the corpses
when they were finished with
but then he had retired
so he didn't have a fresh supply of food
the corpses of the children who had been sent to play with the bears
no sorry
Dr. Brooks anatomy school
the bodies and then afterwards
the vulture could have the rest
but after he retired no more bodies
so he said we'll have to find a home for the vulture
wow
one in eight British adults
owns a onesie don't they
that's in one of our back books
from us Dan owns half of one
yeah
is that true?
show of hands
that's about one in eight
that's about ten
30% that wasn't ten
wasn't that one?
any animal ones?
which animal
wait someone in the front row
is wobbling his hand because he's not sure of it
is Godzilla
a good question
yeah
he's not a vegetable or a minimum is he?
this is interesting
this is onesie hour
you know when you find yourself looking up
there's really hopeful stuff
for qi research so today I found myself
looking up at one point
animals dressed in human onesies
in the test room
test room
oh please tell me that you found something
I didn't find anything
my god if someone finds one that would be good
there's a sloth onesie you get
if sloths get mange then you have to shave them
from head to toe but they need to remain warm
and so they've designed sloth onesies
there you go
yeah that's cool
that would be the worst human onesie
but also the worst
if you're trying to show a sloth escaping a zoo
because
you could literally go home come back the next day
and they've moved a meter
like that's not the animal escaping
sloths have lots of beetles living in their fur
so the onesies would have to be thick enough
for all these beetles to live in
and moths and all sorts
you must be the worst onesie buyer
you're returning it to the store
here in the description
where are the beetles
what the hell's going on here
it's a fucking joke
I made several attempts to lure beetles into my sloth onesie
we found that few of them
found it enticing prospect
Churchill had a onesie
Winston Churchill
yes
he called it his siren suit
because air raid sirens he spent a lot of the war
second war war working underground in the cabinet war rooms
and he had it especially
designed
people have dressed this up so they say he invented the onesie
which he did not that's not fair
because it's like an adapted boiler suit
but it was auctioned recently for thousands and thousands of pounds
really? yeah
it wasn't an animal
can you imagine
Churchill had a dog onesie
when Churchill talks about his black dog
and beats the team's depression
my black dog's back again
I'm imagining in the dog onesie
going oh yes
okay Chessington
Chessington World of Adventures
they imply
a lady who looks very nice
called Lisa Britton
and her job is a birds and the bees consultant
because I have questions for her
well that's
she's there to help children
or immature adults
to tell them what's happening
when they're walking past and animals are
having sex
is she all over
she walks around
does she know when the animals are having sex and rushing
I see her with a bank of CCTV screen
wait the sea lions are at it
I must go
she says she's most in demand
around three species
the monkeys who have no shame
and wave their monkey hood around
as part of their courtship
the lions because it's a noisy affair
and the tortoises
because it's a very slow process
and they are not discreet at all
that's amazing
I printed out the page for the history
of Chessington Zoo
because they have a little timeline on their website
and I just want to share three entries with you
from three different years
it was a civil war place
1991
following the development in 1990
there weren't any new attractions for 1991
1992
1992 was another year
of little investment
1993
fifth dimension
closed at the end of 1993
1993
I've never been
is it fun, is that a fun place
1991 and 1993
it is fun
there's a theme park I discovered
Dolly Land, have you guys heard of Dolly Land
is it Dolly Parsons?
Dolly Parton has a theme park
quick guess
sorry Dollywood of course
Dolly Land is a very different place
Dolly Land
and I am not allowed back there
Dollywood, I'm so sorry
that's so awesome that you knew that
Dollywood
anyone want to have a guess of the
opening hours of
it's 10 till 7
it genuinely is, missed opportunity
I don't know what they were thinking
hey listen, we need to wrap up
really soon
do we have any more final facts we want to throw into this
I quite like, if we're talking about theme parks
I didn't know what the first ever
roller coaster was
or the original roller coaster
are you thinking Russia?
I was thinking Blackpool
no Russia
1700s
1700s
they had Russian ice slides
and it was this fad in Russia that went through
1900s Catherine the great loved them
she had loads of them installed on her own property
and what they were were, they were the structures
that were up to 100 feet tall
so they were, you climb up a ladder
100 feet and there's an ice slide
and you just slide all the way down it
and people would have them installed in the halls of their stately home
so you'd go into a stately home, there's a huge ice slide
in the middle
and then the French during the Napoleonic
wars saw these and thought that's really
and tried them and said that's super fun
and then they
yeah, that was the predominant emotion in Moscow
in 1812
who's happening
well, they're going to city and we're starving
but
these ice slides
so the French brought them back and then built
the world's first roller coaster and called it Russian mountain
in
homage, homage, good fact
good fact, alright that's it
that's our facts, thanks so much
for listening to that
we went on way too long
but
for those listening to this
and not in the room, if anyone in the room wants to ask us
anything afterwards, we're going to be selling
books downstairs, we're going to be hanging out downstairs
so join us, that'll be awesome
if anyone listening wants to ask us any questions
about the things we've talked about, we're on Twitter
my hashtag, no not my hashtag
I do have a hashtag though, I don't
that'd be the labest thing, hey my hashtag
is, that would be terrible
hashtag Dolly Land
yes
yes
oh yeah, it is a land, yeah
my twitter name is
at Shriverland, James, at egg shaped
Andy, at Andrew Hunter
Anna
podcast at qi.com
yes, or you can get us all
together at atqipodcast
that's our twitter handle for the whole of us
we're going to be back again next week
with another batch of facts, thanks
for listening and we'll see you again, good night
good night