No Such Thing As A Fish - 391: No Such Thing As A Sausage Swingboat
Episode Date: September 17, 2021Anna gets exasperated about Tin Tin, Dan is vindicated in a fact about camels, Andy tells the best joke you'll ever hear about the Umayyad conquest of Hispania, and James finally learns what a giraffe... looks like. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes.
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Hi everyone, James here now as you will have noticed the last few weeks
It is holiday season for us mostly because we have a brand new massive stonking UK and Ireland tour just about to happen
And we need to get as much rest as we can that before that happens
By the way, you can get tickets for that by going to qi.com slash fish events
But anyway, what do we have for you this week? Well, we have another compilation the last one went down so well
You all sent loads of really nice messages about how much you enjoyed it
So it's another hour of us being so silly
These are the times when everything got derailed a little bit too much
So we couldn't fit it into the actual show
But I always gather them together because they're always so much fun and I put them in a nice little package for you guys
We will be back again next week with a normal episode. It was recorded while I was away actually
It's another super special guest one that I particularly am quite upset that I wasn't there for
Because it's a really good friend of ours someone who's incredibly interesting and funny
I'm actually really really looking forward to listening to that one myself because I haven't heard it yet
But anyway for the meantime, please do enjoy this compilation
And we'll see you as a force them on the road or on this podcast feed very very soon
Okay on with the podcast
You guys though soldier boy soldier boy tell him you guys know he's a
Come on guys. No, he's a rapper. No, he's a rapper. Okay. He's got a song called kiss me through the phone
Which gives a phone number?
Halfway through it and a load of people decided to call it and it turns out to be a house in Oldham
Who according to the Guardian we're getting a load of crank calls
But I don't need to tell you guys that that's a terrible missed opportunity because one of his main songs is called crank that
So they so they should have called it crank calls crank that's calls. Yeah, probably
Okay, I really misjudged my audience with this one
Like Dan might have had a prayer
Britain's leading female table tennis player is this woman this girl called tin tin ho and
Do you guys can you guess why she's called that she's got a quiff tin tin?
That's why I was a small dog called snowy
Confusing is not related to the character of tin tin wait. She hangs out with an old fisherman called captain haddock
But she has a pair of twins that she hangs out with called the top
You can't just stop us making tin tin jokes and immediately you gotta live with her her father is called her jay
Right as I have made quite clear. It's not related to tin tin and there must be other avenues you can pursue
She's Belgium in
I'm just gonna tell you okay. No, no, no, no. No, I feel like we're close. She's made of 10. Yeah
Yeah, he's found something different
But incorrect. No, it's because her dad is obsessed with table tennis and
Sorry
I was so sure you're gonna say her dad is obsessed with
He's obsessed with table tennis and the initials of table tennis are TT
So we called her Tintin and in fact her brother is called Ping and she said there was it was between her being called
Tintin and her being called Pong when she was born. So she says that she is delighted that
She didn't get bombed. You can't have two kids who call them Ping and Pong
The social services will get involved
Here's a stolen dog in
1860
During the second opium war the Anglo-French looted and burned the summer palace and found five Pekingese dogs
Guarding a corpse of a lady and so they stole the dogs and one of them was given to Queen Victoria who renamed her Lootie
After all the all the looting that the British were doing Wow China at the time lol
Isn't that amazing that is quite open. I would have thought she would name it something like completely legal
taking of stuff
Wow P.G Woodhouse he collected Pekingese dogs or he bred them or he you know he had dozens of them
Did he steal them from he stole all of them from China?
Yeah, that's why his books have very low sales figures there. It's really interesting that Pekingese
Like they're quite small aren't they but they almost look a bit like a lion because they got like a mane kind of around their face
And there are a few myths about where they came from according to one myth a lion fell in love with a marmoset
And he begged the gods to shrink him in size so that he could have sex with a marmoset and
They did and that's where the Pekingese came from
You'd pray for a massive marmoset. Yeah
Expand the marmoset
No, I'd rather a tiny lion
There's another theory. This isn't a myth. There's another theory that Buddhist monks
Like in Buddhism a lion is a symbol of strength is a symbol of wisdom and they want to have dogs that looks like a lion
So they bred Pekingese to look like lions
Which is true we might never know there was a guy who was a stunt flyer back in the very early days of flight called
Al Wilson and he hit golf balls off planes
Which is not as impressive as scoring a putt on Concorde except that he was standing on top of the plane at the time
So he would climb up onto the top of a biplane and just do amazing drives off it
No photos of him doing that. That's how is the air friction there not knocking the golf ball off the tee? I don't
Maybe he nailed the tee into the top of the biplane before
Clambering up you'd have to nail the ball also onto the tee
Yes, maybe he did that too and then well then how did he hit it?
maybe
Maybe it was one of those velcro balls, you know that you throw it paddles. Maybe he just
Except hang on he was in the 1920s and Velcro had been invented at the time
so maybe he is the unrecognized inventor of Velcro and
We are giving him his moment of glory excellent. Well our Wilson. Congratulations
Gibraltar named after Jabel Al Tariq
Who was the general who brought the Islamic army from North Africa into Spain?
When Spain became an Islamic country in
Whenever that was the 8th century or whenever it was
But he was in charge of the whole army. They came over they landed in Gibraltar
They took over most of the Iberian Peninsula
There was him who was Jabel Al Tariq and there was another guy called Musa who were in charge these two generals
and then for some reason in
714 they were both accused of misappropriation of funds sent back to
Damascus and they both died in complete obscurity. So they were the ones who brought the Islamic invasion into
Spain and for the reason now that you know, there's a lot of Islamic culture still there a lot of buildings and stuff
But yeah, they just got kicked out for nicking a load of money. Right. Wow. Yeah
Fittingly it's known as a little bit of a tax haven now. So I suppose doing it doing him proud
The money knicker. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Well, that's the thing about money. It's very Moorish
Yeah
Probably one of the most famous
fictional minerals in the world is kryptonite, I would argue
Kryptonite was invented as an idea for being a thing of vulnerability for Superman that would make him really sick
Because when the first radio series happened in America the actor who played Superman who obviously had to be there all the time was
Desperate to have holidays and they couldn't have holidays because he's the main character
So if in a previous episode kryptonite was introduced like he was hidden behind a door where kryptonite was holding it closed
The actor bud Collier could go on holiday and not have to be in the episodes and the rest of the cast would be going
Poor Superman. Where's he disappeared to but we all know he's behind the door
He can't say anything. Yeah, how boring were the episodes where Superman wasn't in them?
What happens in those well, everyone going wonder where he is. Is he better? Have you seen him? Did you give him
Do you think Lemsip works against kryptonite? Oh, yeah, that's everything. Yeah
It's so weird how long we went without dissecting human bodies. So we just we I will claim
So the first known dissections in the West at least were
Herophilus and erasistratus and this was a third century BC and so this is quite revolutionary
They thought if we start cutting into human bodies, we can figure out how they work what the anatomy is and
They died and it immediately went out of fashion people said we don't actually need that. It's totally unnecessary
It's kind of gross. It's ungodly then the Christians came along and they totally banned it
And we don't really think anyone dissected a human body for science for another 1600 years
Until about so about 1231 the Holy Roman Emperor said actually we should start doing this and made a decree that medical students had to
and so there was this rush on bodies and
There was such a rush that there was a big old shortage the demand and supply didn't work out and so there became a situation where by the
15th century in Italy
medical students had to pay for the funerals of
Corpses and that's that would be their way of saying look I'm gonna pay you but you have to give me that corpse afterwards
So basically you get your funeral expenses paid by a doctor
Yeah, as long as they then cut you open. Yeah, but at the end of the funeral thing
Plop you over their shoulder and walk off with you. It doesn't feel I don't think they would do
I think they'd wait for the curtains to go across before they did that
I don't think someone's walking a gun. Are you done with that? I
Paid good money for that
Have you guys heard of Jacqueline Oriole? Oh
So she was the daughter-in-law of the president of France in the
1940s after the war and she helped to decorate some of the rooms of the Elysees Palace
After the war and she was known as one of the most elegant women in all of Paris
And then in 1948 she thought fuck this the Elysees Palace. It's fine. It doesn't need any more work
so she decided to become an aerobatic pilot and
She got into a massive crash and crashed into the Sen and she had to have 22 operations to rebuild her face
That was how bad the the crash was but then in 1953
She became one of the first ever test pilots to fly Concorde and she was the first woman to fly Concorde
Yeah, imagine that for a CV to go from like interior design in the palace in in Paris and then to that
Incredible, yeah, but no one would believe you were the same person because you've got the rebuilt face
My god, I'm just that's so right. It's not the same person. Is it no you've fallen for a really obvious
Is it Conair where they changed the face of Nicholas Cage and stuff? Yeah, I think so. Yeah
Is it face-off face-off face-off? Yes, it's a face-off is the same plot as Conair, isn't it apart from the face of coming off
Yeah, I think face-off and Conair the merging of the two is your story
I just have one more recent dog napping that I liked this was a journalist in Boston called Juliana Matze
Did you see her? She was
Reporting on a dog that have been stolen in the local area kind of slow news day
she's speaking on camera about a missing German short head pointer and
She spots a man who matches the photos that have been put out the CCTV photos of the dog been stolen
With the dog that looks like the dog. So she goes up to him and she said hey, can I just pet your dog?
Checks its collar. It is low and behold the stolen dog. So on camera that you can watch it. It's very awkward interview
She says is this your dog and he's like, um, no
It's not it's been missing for a day for 24 hours
And she says why do you have it and he says I walked past a car and it was barking
And I thought it was the dog that I was supposed to be walking because I'm a dog walker
One has got into a car
Maybe he was tired of walking
So I broke into the car and I took it and she said why didn't you call the number of the person on the dog collar?
And he said I was sort of tribe at my phone broke and then I lost my phone
Simple mistake. This guy's had a horrible day. Well, that's an incredible story Anna
But also what the hell kind of tv station is doing news video packages about a lost dog within
24 hours
It's like I say slow news day in Boston
I should also say the verdict has not been returned on his guilt. I don't think so
jury is out
Okay, jury's out
Well, good luck to him
Can we get done for subjudicious?
Definitely. I don't think so. Do you know where the american fear of sharks?
Throughout the general pop place comes from where it originated
No, it was so it wasn't jaws it was before that jaws for sure
Okay, um, so originating the fact that sharks eat people in the water
But they don't tend to eat you if you live in Montana or you know
No, it basically comes we think probably from world war two
There were lots of stories, especially in the newspapers. Um, this did happen
That planes would kind of crash in the water and then the sharks would get the get the people
But it didn't happen that often but the newspapers used to report that it was happening all the time
Um, but nevertheless the u.s. Military needed to come up with a way to stop
Sharks attacking not just people who've crashed but also munitions. So if you're in a submarine
You need to stop them from coming towards the munitions. So the office of strategic services, which was that kind of
Office which kind of came up with lots of wacky kind of dick dastardly plans
Um, they hired someone called julia child
As part of their team to try and work out the chef the chef. Yes. What?
So before she became a chef
She was a person who worked in the war to try and come up with ways to stop sharks from attacking people and munitions
And she tried things like clove oil horse urine nicotine
rotten shark
Asparagus she tried all these things to try and stop
Sharks from coming near them and in the end none of them really worked that well
And so they came up with this thing called shark chaser
Which was a little pill and you put it in the water and it would release like a dye into the water
So the shark wouldn't be able to see you so it wouldn't repel it
But it would stop it from being able to find you that is crazy
God it's awful if you confuse a julia child recipe with one of her shark repellents, isn't it?
Well, she's for anyone who doesn't know her she was the one who basically brought french cuisine to americans
Um, so um, she was huge. She was massively famous. She had her own cooking show
Didn't she one of the first people to do that? She was huge. Another good cv. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah amazing cv
And you're sure it wasn't someone with the face trans plant james
Nicholas cage
Yeah
um
There is a uh, there was a thing in 2012
Where bowing the plane company fixed their wi-fi on their planes using 9 000 kilos of potatoes
Okay
So did they just happen to have so much potatoes on board the flight at the time or?
I think they especially got them in and they got them in to pretend to be humans because
They needed to test
The wi-fi on their planes and where you get, you know hot spots and then cold areas and you wanted to fix it all the way through
Um, and it turns out that potatoes block internet signals in much the same way that human bodies do
And so they got 9 000 kilos of potatoes and just sat them in the seats of the plane
and pretended that they were people and um and tested it that way and they didn't need paying and they didn't need feeding what?
That's great. This is so weird. They have the same water content as humans like that kind of thing, right?
Yeah, I guess so and they're maybe about as dense as humans
It reminds me of the time when I was on a plane and the wi-fi stopped working
And I asked them to turn it off and turn it back on again and they said we think this is the button
But we've never pressed this button
I said let me come and have a look at it and I looked I'm like, yeah, I'm pretty sure that's the router button
Wow, sorry. They they took your advice
Yeah, oh my god. Random dude on a plane. Cool
Right
That's amazing
Well, I had my um, it was the nfl draft for my fantasy football team and I really needed to go on the internet
Wow, right. What would jose that's real confidence in your abilities to identifying a rooster
What else is it gonna be? What a weird place to put the ejector seat?
All the spontaneous combustion button, you never know. All planes have one
Right next to the router
And no more
Table tennis was a big thing in britain in the sort of early 20th century
I think it was kind of invented in the 1880s went under
Came back in the 1920s and was popularized by this guy. Iva Montague. Did you read about him? No
He's that's disappointing because this is gonna be a long section
Uh
Have you not noticed we've been doing this for eight years now?
And we always say no whenever someone says have you heard of this person? We always say no
Because otherwise it'd be a pretty yeah. Yeah, we've all done the research. I genuinely haven't though
I've no idea about this seminal figure in table tennis. I thought I covered the basis. I haven't clearly
Well, Iva surprised for you and because Iva Montague is the thank you grandfather of table tennis in britain
But he was also a spy
so he's such an amazing character he
Founded the english table tennis federation and then he founded the international table tennis federation in 1926
More spying opportunities internationally. Nice. Well, you joke
But british intelligence was incredibly suspicious of him all the way through the war world war two because of his ping pong habit
Yeah, because he kept standing in airports with two ping pong bats in his hands, didn't he?
Yeah, just redirecting planes into the english channel
Because they thought it was so weird
So there's a letter from an mi6 agent who writes to the agent in bulgaria
basically about all these letters that are being exchanged between iva montague and these two guys in bulgaria and
They're sort of discussing like intricate details of the game. They discuss bat weight
They discuss the spin on different balls and mi6 was convinced this was code
And so he wrote to this agent in bulgaria and said look you've got to investigate these two bulgarians
He said the reason for our interest will appear to you rather quaint
But the thing is they write interminably to iva montague about table tennis and trying out of table tennis balls
so
The agent in bulgaria investigated these guys and replied saying it seems as though these guys are just perfectly solid individuals
Who spend their time testing table tennis balls?
And and that was that wow seemed that way
It did but the big reveal in the 60s was that he was in fact a soviet spy
Really?
Yeah, so wait wait wait, but were they writing about table tennis balls as well. Do we know that element of the story?
It's not clear. We know he loved table tennis. It doesn't seem to have been declassified whether or not this was code
So I don't know. He was really into the game and a spy. What do you think?
What do you think is the world record for slicing the most watermelons in half on your stomach with a sword
in 60 seconds
Oh, no, no, no, I know I know the queen has this record
It was a record beaten by friend of the show ashrita firman
Who um, his life's work is just to get as many random Guinness book of record things as possible
60 seconds on your belly with a sword slicing slicing them himself. He's slicing them himself. You're not allowed to wear any protection
So you're slicing down on a sword onto your stomach basically. Yep
14. Oh, I see you're lying on your back
And you oh, wow
Um, it's someone placing the watermelons or do you have to um, someone would place them onto him each time
Okay, 14 sounds like a very sensible bet from out. That's quite ambitious because you get to 13 and you think oh my god
I don't want to do the unlucky one. I'm holding a bloody sword
I'd better slice really really fast apart this 40s one. Yeah
I'm gonna say 23
Oh, come on. Yeah. That's what I said. This guy's a record holder. Yeah. Well, that is really close. It's 26
It's
And there was an interview with mr. Furman who said my first reaction is I relieved I didn't kill myself
Um, do you know what you used to do in the 14th century in the sahara if you got bitten by a snake?
Come on guys. We've all done the research. We all must know this
We know this. Yeah, it's so hard faking not knowing any of this
What you would do is you would cut the throat of your camel
And you would put your hand into the camel's stomach and leave it there for the whole night
And in theory that would suck out the poison and you would be fine
Um, I learned this from there was an account of a traveler a Moroccan traveler called ibn batuta. He traveled more than
Marco polo who went 15
Thousand miles. He went 72 000 miles all the way around the world. It was an amazing traveler
And when they went through the sahara, this was the trick that they used
Uh, unfortunately, it didn't really work and the guy had to have his fingers cut off anyway
But it was worse for the camel. Let's face it. It was worse for the camel. Definitely. No one comes out of this well
I must say
Apart from possibly done because when I was reading this account
I read that when they ran out of water
They would kill an antelope and they would drink water from the entrails of the antelope
Which many many many years ago done. I think said on this podcast and we all
Poo pooed it but this in the 40th century. This is what this traveler used to do
Vindicated this is genuinely like five years later. We were just doing that thing where we pretended not to know the facts, you know
We all knew it's true
One landlord was sacked for selling hay out of the back of the pub. So there were strict rules
This was dora, right? This is dora who did this the old cow
mythical old cow dora
the defense of the realm acts which
Had loads of other fun rules as well as well as all this pub stuff
So you weren't allowed to light bonfires or fireworks or fly a kite. I think in case it was taken for
A bomb a zeppelin
Yeah, you weren't allowed to whistle for a taxi in case that was mistaken for an air raid siren. What?
How loud is your whistle?
People whistled louder back then
Famously right if um, you can mistake whistles for air raid sirens
Then when the actual air raid siren went off were a load of taxi drivers driving around looking for these
Rides the whole time. It was absolutely tragic. Yeah, orange lights going on across london. Yeah
all killed
The um doctor who theme tune was written by an australian composer called ron grainer the melody
But actually the importance of it is the crazy effects, right? Yes, this amazing piece of electronic music
And really when it was invented there wasn't really a such thing as electronic music or the kind of was but it definitely wasn't popular
It wasn't done much and the mix was made by a musician called delia darbyshire
And she basically took each note of the melody
And individually made it by taking a version of it played on some strings and then kind of speeding it up
Slowing it down splicing it with something else
Every single note was put together to come up with this amazing iconic theme tune
And delia darbyshire was brought up in coventry in 1940 and she said she was inspired to get into music
By the sound of the air raid sirens as the Germans were bombing coventry
And it was those kind of noises that got her interested in sounds and that eventually got her interested in music
So
What a glass half full
That's so funny I have actually been to a place which has a an annual tooth festival
Oh
Really well actually is it like one of buddhist teeth?
It's the temple of the tooth in candy in shrillanka
And the town is called candy and it is one of it's a tooth of the buddha dating to about 300 ad
You can't really see it when you go there when you're in the temple because it's in a casket
Which contains five progressively smaller caskets and in the smallest casket is the buddha's tooth and
It's an incredible brouhaha every year. I wasn't there at the time of the festival annoyingly
But there's drumming music as dancing as cannon fire
Massive great elephants many with their own biographies on wikipedia now the elephant parade through the elephant
Yeah, four of the main elephants. They're called tuskers. You know, they have these great big tusks
They parade through the streets with the uh tooth container. I mean, it's a it's an amazing temple site
It's really I've been to another one. I've been to one in singapore, which is the same
Were you at the incisor or the canine or the molar?
It was the wisdom. It was the wisdom of the buddha
Very nice
My feeling is that that one and this is so far going off memory that it might be completely wrong
But I think the tooth like really doesn't comes out very very very rarely as in
You know, do you mean the candy one? No the one in in singapore?
Yeah, this one's the candy ones all over, isn't it?
But it must be so confusing for the elephants who are employed to carry this tooth all about town
This tiny tooth looking at each other going if they've seen our teeth
look at
But they are they're celebrated for their massive tusks they are
That's why that's why they're recruited for the job in elephant academy
And the the crazy thing is that this is all in a place called candy, which is normally very bad for your teeth
Exactly. I thought that's why they were having the festival. So many teeth were falling out. They thought we've got to do something with these
Also, they always invite rob becker over to do an opening set
Because he's got such big teeth
He actually carries it through the streets if the elephants not available
Esther ransom for any older listeners
Just like are we now doing a sort of choose your own podcast?
Yeah, what about the tiktok generation? Who's got big teeth on tiktok?
Right in nobody they've all got perfect teeth
The idea that formaldehyde can preserve people was discovered by a guy called third nand bloom
uh blum and he was using formaldehyde as hoping to use it as an antiseptic
And he was kind of putting it on things and then he noticed that he put it on his fingers
And his fingers got really really hard when he put the formaldehyde on his fingers
So he found it kind of by accident as I know that you love that kind of story and oh, yeah
Yeah, yeah, of course. Did he stop at his fingers once you noticed that they went really really hard
Did he proceed anywhere else?
I mean you would wouldn't you
If you noticed that putting formaldehyde on your fingers made you go really really hard
The cock is the obvious next exactly. It's a short step. Wow. What a what a world we could have had
Yeah, where that was standard. You just pop and get some formaldehyde
Yeah, yeah, no, okay. I don't know if it would have flown off the shelves
It wouldn't look great if medical students were getting boners because they were dissecting a body
In Peru if you go and eat potatoes and you go into the top of the andes and you go to a potato shop
or a little stall
They might give you a little bag of clay
To eat with the potato
And you might put some water in the clay and make it into a little bit of a dip
And then dip your potato in it and then eat it because that's like one traditional way to eat potatoes in the andes
And the reason is that potatoes used to be poisonous. They come from the same
The same family as like deadly nightshade and stuff, don't they?
And in the early days when they were first domesticated, they were still a bit poisonous
But if you eat a little bit of clay while you're eating your potato
Then the clay will attach to these molecules called glyco alkaloids
And it will stop your body from processing them
Which means that they won't become poisonous anymore
And so there's still today
It's a traditional way even though they're not poisonous anymore. You might still put your potatoes in a bit of clay
That's so cool. It is really clever. And what's clever about it is how do you learn that right?
How do you decide I'm gonna put my potatoes in clay?
And what they think is
That humans saw parrots doing it or saw llamas doing it and copied the parrots or the llamas
But hang on that just raises a second question. That is so annoying. Exactly. Oh, yeah, we just learned it from the llamas
Well, how did the llamas learn how to do it? And how did the parrots learn?
Yeah, animals learn different things to us. That's you know
But where did the learning start if we're if we're saying that our learning must have come from watching another animal do it
Their learning must have come from watching another animal and I don't believe the para originated it
If anyone's a copier rather than originator
I did look up if there was a
George the fifth potato and I don't think there is because the king Edward is named after Edward the seventh specifically
But there are other things named after king Edward
so
There is poulard
Edward the seventh because he was a big eater basically and he was a famous gormand
So he had lots of dishes named after him by crawly chefs
Is that chefs from crawly?
It is. Yeah. Yeah. He he always he always flew from gatwick. He made sure to go by crawly on the way. Um
Um
Poulard Edward the seventh is chicken stuffed with foie gras which feels like the most decadent thing
I can possibly imagine eating have you guys heard of christina zanato
Crustina or christina
No, crus christina
Like the why would you assume crostina?
Because we're because we're talking about the ocean and we were talking about I thought it might be a crustacea
Person's name christina
christina zanato
And she is sometimes called the shark whisperer
Uh, she works in the Bahamas and whenever any shark in the Bahamas gets a hook in its mouth
They go and see christina
Wow, isn't that amazing?
How's the word got out with shark? I don't know she put flies up. I don't know how they know but
Ages and ages ago there was a shark came up to her and she realized it had a hook in its mouth
And so she took it out and now it does seem that whenever any shark one that she's never met before
Gets a hook in its mouth. They somehow know to go to her and get it fixed
They trust but not not when she's not when she's in land. No, not when she's in a restaurant
Excuse me. Sorry. Sorry. Um, are you crustacean zanata?
She scuttles away sideways to fill his own meal
Um, so you never know because there are nine species of shark that can walk
So you never know they could enter that restaurant could be that is so cool
But isn't it weird? So she she spends loads of time in the water. I guess and they just yeah
She's a diver and a researcher and stuff
She spends a lot of time looking at sharks and looking with sharks, but she just seems to have according to the article
I read she seems to have this reputation among sharks as being a person they can trust if they get a hook in their mouth
That's incredible. Just insane
I once went to a restaurant in I can't remember where it was now
um
Mauritius, maybe I think
And um, it was a floating restaurant and the sharks would swim around where your tables were
And the waiters would throw bits of meat into the water to kind of get them to come up and bite and stuff and yeah
I would not order the fish there. What are sharks dislike? Yeah, toffee. Yeah
Actually speaking of this there is a story that Isaac Newton and Edmund
Halley of Halley's Comet fame. Am I saying that right? I think but yeah, we say you're kidding
I thought it was Hailey like Bill Hailey and the Comets. There we go. Um, there's a story that newton and
Halley Hawley once dissected. This is a nightmare to read out a dolphin in a coffee shop. It's actually a dolphin
There's a story that they dissected a dissected a dolphin in a coffee shop called the grecian coffee house
And uh, I've traced it back and maddeningly. I think it's not true. So I'm just here to bust this myth wide open
Was it a poppus?
It's uh, there's a diary of a member of the royal society called thorsby from june 1712 and it says
In and he says in his diary attending the royal society where I found dr. Douglas dissecting a dolphin
Lately caught in the Thames where were present the president sir Isaac Newton both the secretaries the two professors from oxford
Dr. Halley and keel with others whose company we afterwards enjoyed at the grecian coffee house
Okay, so that to me implies. Yeah, they dissected the dolphin
Then they went for a coffee rather than dissecting the dolphin at the coffee house, which makes so much more sense
Yeah, that's the way to yeah
They're not going to let you into starbucks with a dead dolphin. Are they they're not going to give you a stamp on your card
I think it's still is a remarkable story that those two characters were dissecting a dolphin
In
London, I mean that's that's pretty cool. That's a sort of three things. I didn't expect to be near each other
So yeah, that's quite good
Virginia wolf is another one who has a famous plaque situation going on right because she lived in the same house as george bernard shore
So they it's I think it's one of the only places with two blue plaques on it
And I realized that wolf and shore their lives collided much later
So there's a letter from virginia wolf to george bernard shore in 1940
They'd only sort of met a couple of times. They'd stayed in the same country house in 1915
And it's so flirty. He was in his 80s at the time. She was about to commit suicide and
I hear I hear romantic
Painted the romantic picture
He was in his 80s. She was on the brink of suicide
Well, she sounded um, she sounded in a good mood in the letter. She said to him
You have acted a lover's part in my life for the past 30 years
Wow
Yeah, but presumably his work more than him
But and he'd already confessed his love to her from another letter saying I fell in love with you the moment
I saw you ever
Likey and she said if you ever drop your handkerchief near my house, you'd be welcome to come on
I'll pick it up and we can hang out
Sexy
Yeah, but they it was very jokey by the way. They didn't actually fancy each other
Okay, I sort of disliked him. Oh, wow
What? Okay. This is the roller coaster that you've said this on
It was pride and prejudice. They started off not like each other
She thought he was a probably a fusty sexist old man
She said he had the mind of a disgustingly precocious child of two
And then they gradually warmed to each other over the course of their 40 year romance
And what was the thing about if he drops his handkerchief? Is that so she can look at his bum or what is that?
So she can look at his bum
Well, if you drop your handkerchief, he has to bend over to pick it up
Mate, I didn't get that, but now you've said that I think it is. Yes
It's normally the lady dropping the handkerchief. That's what I thought
Was she saying if you, you old man, drop your handkerchief
I think from what I remember that was the wording. She did like to invert gender norms sometimes for Jenny Wolf
He's in his 80s as well. That's a hell of a bend
Maybe that's why she's offering to pick it up
Oh
Do you know what the standard dissection kit in America in the 19th century consisted of knife?
Yep knife
Um, you've got the knife
Oh four seps. I'll give you that fork four seps sound similar. I'll tell you I saw
Starbuck set kind of thing. I bet it did. Yeah. Yeah. Um, there were scissors scissors because they're very useful for
You know cutting through bits of stuff. Um, there were some hooks
There were some scalpels and that was a blowpipe
Oh
Yeah, a blowpipe isn't just a pipe, isn't it really like a pipe blowing
Was it? Oh, no, it's not it's not just a pipe. It's as pipe specifically designed to be blown into you wouldn't just blow into any old pipe
Can I guess a theory?
Yeah, go was it a pipe that was um
Used for people's bum bums to make sure they weren't dead
You know the thing where you blow into it in order to so it was just to make sure that your patient was actually dead
Can I make a guess?
Yes, that might be right what dan said, but I was just thinking maybe
We already know that a large portion of um bodies that were dissected were dolphins
So did they put it in the blow hole the blowpipe? Very clever. Yes
I retract my suggestion and I put all my money on james's
I'll take down suggestion
Anna, it's just as well. You did it was for the colon
It wasn't to test whether or not people were dead by the time they were on the slab
They generally were dead, but it was to make the colon easier to see
What like in doing a dissection to inflate it. Yeah, exactly
Yeah, so it was for it was for the bottom. Don't suck
I'm sure it had a very strict instruction on the pipe Britain. I probably also this site was lowing this
placing good to the anus
Ultra sound with animals can be quite difficult
I saw um, there was in london zoo. They tried to do ultrasound on an acarpi
And they had a real problem with that. Can you can you guess what the problem was with the acarpi?
ultrasound
Can you describe an acarpi again? I can't quite it's like a deer
Uh, oh, so that means it might have antlers
Uh, acarpis. I don't really have antlers
It's a bit bigger that it's like a mixture between a deer and a zebra
I would say an acarpi
Has it got a lot of confusing orifices on its body and they didn't know where to shove the
You tend not to shove well, I might get to shoving things in a minute
But with ultrasound the whole point of it is it's on the outside. You're absolutely right
I was thinking of an endoscopy and I don't know why because it's my fact and it's about not
Don't forget that. Um, I'll tell you
It's so well camouflaged that you can't see where it is to do the ultrasound because they're prey animals
It's no it's not that it's when you have an ultrasound you have to put this gel on
Which kind of helps the sound waves to come through and alcarpies really love licking it off
So they really like the taste of it if you put it down there
There if you're a rhino and you want to look at the reproductive tracts of a rhino
They're so full of fat that um ultrasound doesn't really work
But you can do it by going up the bum
So that is kind of where you were coming from Andy. I think that's what you were thinking of
That certainly is where I was coming from
Yeah
Also, that's a massive machine. Are you going into one of those machines? Because you can't build one of those for a rhino
What an ultrasound an ultrasound is is just like you're firing some
Sound waves into the body. You're right. It's not like an MRI
Yeah, you don't want to put a rhino in an MRI. You're right
What we've ascertained is very few of us know the difference between an ultrasound an MRI and endoscopy
Thank god we're not doctors. Thank god we're doing a relatively harmless job
They are amazing trunks because there's no bone in them. There's a hell of a lot of muscles
They've got way more muscles in their trunk than we have as humans in our entire body and
it's
It's just so weird because it doesn't show up on fossil records as a result
I just wonder how many animals in history that we have the fossil records of
Actually amazing appendage a big floppy trunk somewhere every single dinosaur could have a trunk
Yeah, t-rex might have had a massive schnozzer right at the end actually and other like muscly appendages all over their bodies, right?
Yes
Everything looked like a huge octopus in the olden days, but we've just got no record of the tentacles
They did one experiment where um participants were asked to take part in ice cream tasting test, which I mean, what a great
great study to take part in
And they were asked to take part with someone else and that someone else would either be someone without a visible social
Stigma or someone with one and the social stigma that they would have is they were either obese
Or they had a scar on their face a disfiguring scar on their face
And the person who was asked to do the study with them the ice cream tasting test
If the person without the social stigma ate shed loads of ice cream or hardly any then they'd copy them
But if it was the obese person or the person with the scar doing it then they wouldn't copy them
So they overcame that because I guess the idea is that you don't want to mimic someone who is has negative associations
I can see that with the ice cream
Like if you see and if the person saw an obese person eating an ice cream and had this kind of idea that
Obesity was wrong then wouldn't want to be like that
But the scar is really interesting. I would have thought that you wouldn't copy them if they were running with scissors for instance
If it's a scar often denotes
Perhaps being a pirate or
Or maybe a gangster and if a gangster was eating lots of ice cream and looking threatening at me
I would eat lots of ice cream too
Would you I wouldn't risk it in case he wanted mine as well. He obviously liked ice cream
But also interesting that what mimics people a lot
Parrots where the parrots live on the shoulders of pirates what the pirates have scars
This is falling apart this theory. I don't know what you're talking about
This has gone pretty loose
You guys may remember the e use wine lake and butter mountain, but I don't know if all are listened as well
Do you guys remember this?
So this is the idea that the e u creates too much of a certain product and they kind of
Star it so that the price doesn't go too low
Exactly. Yeah, so there was a period where the e u countries in total were collectively producing
1.7 billion extra bottles of wine each year, which feels like an enormous overshoot to me
And they paid farmers to turn it into ethanol
So you would go through the whole process of turning grapes into wine
And then they would just convert it back into undrinkable pure alcohol, but they were incentivized to do so
And the butter mountain was similar. Yeah, what did they use the alcohol for like industrial stuff? I guess
Yeah, I it can be used as a fuel can't it ethanol and um, and the butter think they just made a massive sort of slip slide
All the way down the Iger
Yeah
There was a beef mountain too, which is the unknown third element of the e u food surplus pyramid
Sounds disgusting. Welcome to beef mountain
Andy's theme park
I'm not queuing up for that
There's a big sausage swing boat
That's one of the rides
Um, I was listening to a really great podcast about this whole history of the shang dynasty
it was called chinese history podcast and
It was really interesting. There was a bit where the host of it
Put into context when this period was in time this supposed mythological
Um dynasty and it's 1600 bc to 1046 bc was the rough period
So in that time toot and car moon and nephra titty were over in egypt. They were living the trojan war was happening
moses
It's not funny
It's funny. I'm not laughing. That is right. I actually said titty. Did I you did? Yeah, dan
And we didn't hear anything else after that
I was reading about mary beard the academic. Um who died in 1956
I think or 58
No, no, no, this is
My heart stopped and then I thought what she'd been a ghost all this time
She's got so many great documentaries made because she was there
That's why she knows so much about history
Well, mary ritter married charles austin beard in 1900
And they were a really amazing couple of intellectuals
And mary ritter beard wrote a load of articles
One of which was a study of the encyclopedia britannica to see how many women were in the encyclopedia britannica
And basically the answer was not many
She said she questioned in the article why there was no article on queen even though there was an article on kings
In the encyclopedia britannica
She said that there were no women included in the article on health and medicine
She said according to the article on songs no women sang in europe
um, basically in history
And the contributions of nuns choir compositions and singing from women is not recognized at all
And so she had a right go at the encyclopedia britannica
And I thought I'd check if she was in britannica today and her husband is and she is not as far as I can see
She's mentioned in the article on women's history. This is the online one
I'm not in the office. So I can't check the actual you've got them behind your head at the moment
And so we could check them but yeah as far as I can see she's not in britannica at the moment. Wow
So let's get her in. Yes, mary beard
That's great. I mean, that's not great that she's not in but that's great. That's um,
The story you told the story you told is great
Um, wow
Shall I just see if she's in quickly?
Yeah, so she charles austin beard. I think he's in uh, he's in the online version for sure
But she died in 56. If she died in 56, they're not gonna be what what year is that?
Yeah, you've got 300 way later than 1956. This is the newest like the pd of britannica
Not the old ones the founded 1768
Yeah, 1991 fine, right beard. I'm a bittersweet
Bible beryllium
Berlin wall. This is a great podcast. This is such good content
And he reads the encyclopedia britannica but only these oh my word beard charles austin
Yes, then next article is on beard lichen. She's not there. Oh
It's disgrace not lichen mary
I read an article about the origins of golf. This was in the espm magazine, but they spoke to um, like
Proper historians from scotland
Because that's where people think it began and the idea is there's a bit of land in between the sea and the bit you can farm
Which is called the links because it links the two bits together
And you would kind of keep sheep there or you keep rabbits there or stuff like that keep animals
But there's quite a boring job and so people would start hitting balls around
And what this article said and I haven't checked it yet, but it was well sourced is that the bunkers
You know, there's like the sand traps that you get on a golf course
They were formed by sheep who would hide behind little hillocks because the wind was so bad in that part of scotland
And they would kind of lie down and over years and years and years
They would make deeper and deeper holes which would get filled with sand
And he said that the first greens so the greens where you're putting are really flat
And they're easy to just hit the ball along the ground
Reckons they could have been rabbit warrens
Because a rabbit warren would be the rabbit would put a hole in the ground for it to go into
And then it would flatten around the area around the warren with its feet to make it flat
And he reckons that that's how those might have started
Wow, rabbits gave us golf. That's amazing. And who designed the golf clubs? Was that the badgers?
That would have been the beavers, right who were making the dams and they just had spare bits of wood. There we go
That's um, I mean that's do you
Do you hold to that James? I don't believe it at all
But it was really well sourced and sometimes when things are unbelievable
But they're said by people who have authority you kind of have to believe them a little bit. Absolutely plus that's making a really good disney film
I mean, it's quite a boring disney film if the length of time that james is describing has to take place, you know
It's just sheep laying down for a very long time
I don't know if you watch that for like, okay, you have to watch that for a hundred years
But at the end of the movie you get a game of golf. That's exciting, isn't it?
That is really perk things up. Yeah
The one thing more boring than watching a sheep lie down for a hundred years
Oh, shit
Um, do you know the fastest eating mammal?
Uh, is it I thought it was the star dosed mole
We did it. So Anna we did this last week
Can't it observe and um swallow a piece of prey in something like 120 milliseconds?
Yeah, something like that and that's even quicker than a human can react to a red light out. Oh, yes
670 milliseconds off the top of my head. Yeah, it's so top of the head top of the head
If you will insist on recording episodes when I'm not there then it's going to happen
Isn't the organ on the front of a star dosed mole's face um 12 times more
Um, what was it sensitive sensitive than a clitoris? I believe so and it's easier to find. Yeah. Yeah
And I'll tell you what since we recorded last week. I've tested that out and it's true
Yeah, we did that last week sorry. Well, I'm going back on holiday then don't worry about it
A giraffe would be a good thing to hang in a tree because you can sort of flop the neck over on one side
And it's quite convenient. It's like it's own coat hanger. Yeah. Yeah, that's true. Yeah, that's nice
Yeah, you could eat it from either side. So you know that lady in the tramps were getty scene
Imagine two of them gnawing their way up to a kiss the leopards and the giraffe
I don't want to be the one that ends up with just that scrawny neck and the other one gets the four legs and a body
I guess maybe it's a race to the body
It's a closer race on the leg side, isn't it?
There's not much meat on those legs is there
Although I don't I think the legs are longer than the neck actually and you've got to get through
Oh in the giraffe really come on. Yeah, I reckon legs are longer than the neck
I can't imagine things very well, but I'm surely a giraffe. It's famous for having the long neck
But it's bad. It's like there's four legs. So if you stack the legs up on top of each other
They probably I don't mean the legs stacked. You mean a single leg is longer than a giraffe neck
Okay, I never never ever google in this podcast, but I'm going to do it now. What a giraffe looks like
The only reason they're famous for the neck thing is because other animals don't have the long neck guys
Other animals have the long legs. So we don't go on about it. Sorry. Who here is voting that the neck is longer because I am
I'm saying front front legs longer. It's pretty close actually. Was it?
Yeah, I mean, I'm not willing. I'm looking at google images and I'm not willing to make a call on it
Oh my god. No. Yeah
Okay, interesting. I'm looking at an illustration sure and then there's a bouncy castle one next to it
Which has much shorter legs guys are the same length the average legs are six feet long the average neck is six feet long
Sorry, I went to actual facts rather than pictures. I know I was supposed to do things
What a coincidence that your legs are the same imagine
Would you rather have a neck that was the same length as your legs or legs that were the same length as your neck?
Easy answer for a giraffe is what we're saying, right?
They've got it just right. Wow. Oh, that's nice. So nobody wins and nobody loses
What a happy ending. What about the tail?
Okay, that's it. That's all of our facts
Thank you so much for listening
If you would like to get in contact with me
You can go onto twitter and you can message me at james harkin
If you'd like to speak to andrew you can go to his twitter, which is at andrew hunter m
Dan schreiber is also on twitter. His twitter handle is at schreiberland and anna tushinsky is still not on twitter
But you can get in touch with her by going to your email server
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And that is also the place where you can get tickets to come and see us live on our massive tour
It's going to be really really exciting
It's going to be a first half which we have not yet written
So god knows what it'll be
But it'll be definitely a load of fun with loads of facts and loads of silliness in the last tour
I sang baby shark for anyone who wasn't there
I definitely won't be doing that this time
But the second half will be a normal podcast
But it'll be the full unedited version
So you'll get all of these kind of silly bits that you heard in today's compilation
You will hear them live and for real and probably a lot of things that will never ever ever ever make it to air
So if you want tickets to that then go to no such thing as a fish dot com
Or you can actually go to qi.com slash fish events. It'll take you to the very same place
We will be back. Well rather they will be back with a very special guest next week
And we as a group will continue making these podcasts every single week as we have done for the last
380 weeks and as we will continue to do so until they don't let us do it anymore
We'll see you soon. Goodbye