No Such Thing As A Fish - 399: No Such Thing As Larry Grayson's Shut That Cock

Episode Date: November 12, 2021

Live from Exeter, Dan, James, Anna and Andrew discuss a puzzle in prison, a chicken on the road, and the lone vegetable detective of the high seas. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live sh...ows, merchandise and more episodes. 

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast, this week coming to you live from Amsterdam! My name is Dan Shriver, I am sitting here with Anna Tyshinski, Andrew Hunter Murray, and James Harkin, and once again we have gathered round the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days, and in no particular order, here we go! Starting with fact number one, and that is my fact this week. My fact is, in 2015, 86 inmates at the Exeter prison wrote an angry letter to their local newspaper, complaining that the weekly Sudoku puzzle was too hard to complete.
Starting point is 00:00:59 Yeah. You, you dogs. I don't think they're going to be in here tonight. So this was 86 inmates, they found it completely impossible. It was an unfinished puzzle that they ended up sending in to the editor of a local newspaper. It wasn't impossible, right? No, it wasn't impossible. The newspaper replied and said, actually, it is possible, sorry, sorry, sorry, but it
Starting point is 00:01:24 was possible. Well, they discovered that basically the inmates had got some of the numbers wrong in the middle, and once you do that in Sudoku, it's impossible to, to fix it, you know, if you're trying to just continue on. But how were 86 inmates trying to solve the same Sudoku puzzle? Because they don't get many newspapers in there, so they all join in and take turns and, you know, leave. Is there a queue?
Starting point is 00:01:45 You queue up, you do one number, the next person goes, because you can't get your heads all around. Is there 81 cells in a thing? They could have one cell each. Oh, yeah. They could have five people to just check it over. Great shout. That's nice.
Starting point is 00:01:59 It's a good system. Yeah, so they wrote this letter and it turned out that they were wrong, and that is a problem because they get access to Thursday's newspaper, but the answers are on a Monday and they don't get that. So they couldn't even check it. So they were so frustrated, that's annoying. That's why they wrote in. But with Sudoku, you know when you've got it right, really.
Starting point is 00:02:16 You don't need to check. Like, you know either you've got it wrong or right, right? I would argue you don't need the Monday's paper. You know you fucked up. Now get back to the word search, where you belong clearly. Can I just say, you don't always know when you've got it right. So for example, at the 2011 World Sudoku Championship, one of the contenders called Weihua Huang, he jumped up in the final.
Starting point is 00:02:40 He started high-fiving his friends in the audience, he'd won, and a judge had to point out he'd included the same number twice on the top row, and that he hadn't won. That's a moment. That's unbelievably embarrassing, but it's embarrassing enough to be attending the World Sudoku Championships. But then. Sudoku, I mean it took over the world, I don't know if you remember, 2006, the world became obsessed with Sudoku, and it was basically down to a New Zealander called Wayne Gould.
Starting point is 00:03:05 Are we going to, I'm so sorry, but I just know that there'll be 10% of the audience that is driving mad. Are we going to address your pronunciation of Sudoku? Thank you. So how are you saying it? I'm just saying how it's pronounced. And how am I saying it? You're saying it Sudoku.
Starting point is 00:03:18 So Sudoku is what I was saying before. Yes. Yeah. Right. So don't do that. Okay. So Sudoku is a. Tell us about Wayne Gould.
Starting point is 00:03:30 So Wayne Gould, Wayne Gould was from New Zealand, and he basically bumped into it in a newspaper when he was in Hong Kong, and he thought this is really interesting. And then when he was in England, he basically, he sold it effectively like a door-to-door salesman. He went to the doors of, I think it was the Telegraph newspaper at Times. That's how I pronounce Times. He went to the Times newspaper and he said, check this out. And they liked it and they started using it.
Starting point is 00:04:02 And he patented this idea of a computer generating all of the numbers so it could just generate multiple different Sudokas. Did you read the account by the features editor of the Times, there's a guy called Mike Harvey. And it genuinely was like a door-to-door thing. So he got a phone call, Mike Harvey, saying, there's a man who has a puzzle to show you. And so he thought, great. And he said afterwards, Harvey said, I asked one of my staff to get rid of him, but he said he was too busy.
Starting point is 00:04:29 So I went down myself, trying to get rid of him. But Wayne Gould had had a mock-up of the back page of the Times made, which included a Sudoku on it, and they ran it the following month. And as a result of that, Wayne Gould was named one of the world's most influential people of 2006 by Time Magazine. That's how big it was. It was a quite year, wasn't it? But what happened was that the Times decided to run this, but the word got out really
Starting point is 00:04:53 quickly and so all the other newspapers went, oh, we're going to get that in our newspapers as well, right? And it was just after the 2005 election. And so kind of there wasn't much stories left in the newspaper. They had lots of inches to fill, so they thought, let's just bang a load of Sudoku in there. And like The Sun, for instance, made a version called Sundoku, which featured topless women. How did you get a 9x9 grid of numbers? Lots of 8s and 0s.
Starting point is 00:05:21 I don't know. Sixes and 9s, I don't know. But one newspaper editor said they were so popular, they called them Viagra for newspaper circulation. Wow. And the editor of The Observer said, I'd put one on every page if I thought it would increase circulation. Wow.
Starting point is 00:05:36 Something when it exploded in America, certain newspapers carried it, and the other ones didn't in the early days. And people who were lifelong readers of newspapers changed allegiance just for the Sudoku. They suddenly were like, OK, I'm going to read the right-wing thing or the left-wing thing that I never read before. Shit, is that why Brexit happened? It's just because 10 years earlier, all these Guardian readers preferred the Telegraph Sudoku. I can't believe this fact, but I'm going to say it anyway.
Starting point is 00:06:00 This was a report in the Daily Mail that said that global pencil sales increased by 700 percent in 2005. I 100% believe that. I don't even know. You would never have a pencil before that. I would never have a pencil. Why would you? You write with a pen.
Starting point is 00:06:14 You're not a child. You've got to write those little digits up in the top corner then when you get the fill up, then you've got to erase it. Got it. I mean, there are just a few more things about the craze, which was all 2005. Radio 4 apparently did an audio version of Sudoku. I have no idea how that worked. Cool.
Starting point is 00:06:30 I have no idea. They just read out the numbers, didn't they? They went gap, gap, gap, gap, gap, seven, gap, gap, gap, gap. Maybe, yeah. That's probably it. Did they? Genuinely. Oh my God.
Starting point is 00:06:44 Sky One commissioned a 275 square foot Sudoku in a chalk hill at Chipping Sobbery. Cool. Yeah, but do you know the thing about that? No. It was wrong. What? What? So it was on the bath exit, or near the bath exit of the M4, and it was specifically
Starting point is 00:07:01 put in a place where there was a 40-mile-an-hour speed limit introduced, because otherwise it would be dangerous and distracting. Yes. I always try to solve my Sudoku below 40 miles an hour when driving. I keep it to the built-up areas. The responsible way to do it. But they offered £5,000 to the first person to solve this, particularly fiendish Sudoku, and it was revealed later that it actually had 1,905 correct solutions.
Starting point is 00:07:25 Wow. Wow. That's the one thing that people hate, isn't it, if there's more than one solution. This was in the very early days. The mail in the telegraph really rushed out the Sudokus, and the telegraph's compiler called Michael Mepham, he made some puzzles that had more than one solution, and he said, my golly, I did get some mail. Right.
Starting point is 00:07:45 What's the problem with it? It's just because it's unsatisfying if there's lots of different answers. There should only be one right answer. Yeah. Do you have any positive answers? Yeah, exactly. Part of the craze thing, one thing that happened in Sydney, Australia, there was a court case that was going on for three months.
Starting point is 00:08:01 They had 105 witnesses, and while someone was giving evidence, they looked up and they sort of noticed that the jurors were looking a bit distracted, and it turned out that they were secretly doing Sudokus underneath their desk, and then it turned out that four of them were in cahoots, and what they were doing were printing out Sudoku on photocopiers and sharing them around, and while the trial was going on, and witnesses were talking, they were doing it underneath and then comparing notes in the breaks and seeing how far they got. So that cost a million dollars, that trial, up until that point, and it had to be thrown
Starting point is 00:08:34 out because it turned out the jurors weren't listening. Oh my God, what was it? Oh, drug trial? No, it was for conspiracy to manufacture a commercial quantity of amphetamines. Sounds like a drug trial to me. Yeah. But it wasn't. It was a conspiracy trial.
Starting point is 00:08:51 Oh, see. Thanks, Ted. Sorry. I was reading an article about the World Championships in 2009. So what they often do in the World Championships is they'll have normal Sudokus, and then when you get to the final, they'll give you some kind of crazy Sudokus that are a little bit different. Like, they might be jigsaws that have to come together, might be bigger, and in this case,
Starting point is 00:09:10 the final variants were so different to normal Sudokus that the winner from the previous two years, who's a guy called Thomas Snyder, says it was like playing the final of a basketball championships with a different size ball, the hoops are higher up than normal, and everyone has trampolines in their shoes. That was the difference. That's how different it was. There was a second puzzle hidden underneath the first puzzle, but then for two of the competitors, the first puzzle accidentally fell down halfway through, so that gave away
Starting point is 00:09:38 the surprise. This was all in an article in the Irish press, so they were quite interested in how the Irish team got on, and they said that the Irish team came second to last, and three of the four Irish players were beaten by Tiang Xiong, a 10-year-old boy. The only guy from the Irish team who beat them, a guy called Bernard Sellers, he said, I must make it clear that this is due to incompetence, not lack of effort. He said, he has beaten us at Sudoku, but let's see him after a few beers. We need to move on, guys.
Starting point is 00:10:11 We need to get to our next fact. OK, let's do it. Let's do it. OK, it is time for fact number two, and that is Andy. My fact is that in 1913, it was claimed that French farmers were raising automotive chickens, which were bred specifically to throw themselves under passing cars so the farmer could claim compensation. Wow. So we now know the answer to why did the chicken cross the road?
Starting point is 00:10:35 Absolutely. It was on a mission. Do we think this is true? I don't. Everyone else has read a thing or they like. I think it's Huey. But it was printed in a newspaper called Le Figaro from a famous French paper. And, yeah, farmers were breeding this chicken so that the owner could claim, you know, five
Starting point is 00:10:52 francs or whatever of damages from a driver. And I just find it hilarious that I did find one guy called William K. Vanderbilt. He was known as a scorcher. He was American, not French. But he was well known that he would pay compensation if he ever hit your animals. And so there was newspaper articles that people would deliberately push livestock into his way.
Starting point is 00:11:12 So it was kind of some of it happening, wasn't there? Poor sucker. I wonder how many times he had a chicken suddenly appear in front of his car before he started to suspect it was like the 12th time that day. It's just another cow. Yeah, some people said it was horses that got pushed in the way of his car. You think he must have been quite a bad driver if you can't see a horse. How could you get a chicken to do that, by the way?
Starting point is 00:11:33 How could you? You couldn't. It's not a thing. But if he was paying compensation all the time, you could throw it. You could throw it. Wait a minute, you can. If you can get a chicken to do that, you can get a chicken to do that. Someone in the audience has just claimed I could get a chicken to do that.
Starting point is 00:11:46 For one second, I forgot we were in Devon. I'll do that. I think if you were to draw a white line on the ground, sometimes chickens will just follow that white line on they. That's true. I think that's a thing. That guy, Vanderbilt, William Vanderbilt, he was like a squillionaire. And this fact came from a great article, I think in Littub, the website.
Starting point is 00:12:12 And it mentioned that he had these crazy adventures. He may have been the inspiration for Mr. Toad in The Wind and the Willows. You know, he's always got his car and he's going poop-poop and all of this. And that's a good impersonation. You know, right, get out of my way. He's Mr. Toad. Sure. Anyway, OK, but he he did have a lot of crazy adventures, which were even more exciting than Mr. Toad's adventures.
Starting point is 00:12:34 So in 1899, visiting France, he had to kill two dogs, which were trying to bite his tires and then flee from a mob. He had to kill two dogs. Circumstances forced him to shoot. He did it a lot. He had a gun a lot of the time. He traveled with a gun like Mr. Toad. You know, crowds with whips and rocks would try to attack him
Starting point is 00:12:54 because he was just such a reckless driver and he'd shoot in the air and shoot over their heads and then drive off saying poop-poop. They were people were just generally terrified about the car for a long time as well and angry and farmers, especially. But around the same time in Pennsylvania, the legislature passed a law that all cars traveling on country roads at night had to send up a rocket every mile to let everyone know they were coming. Sorry, thank God.
Starting point is 00:13:18 That's just, you know, big on firework. Suggested a law of the Post-it, though. No, they passed the legislature, passed the law and then it was rejected by the governor. So the legislature said, pass this law and then they had to send a rocket up every mile, explode it, then wait for 10 minutes for the road to clear. And then the driver had to proceed with caution, blowing his horn and shooting off Roman candles as before.
Starting point is 00:13:39 Wow. So if you were on your horse, you'd have to judge was that a mile or two miles that the rocket went up, right? Yeah. It was like, you know, when a thunderstorm is coming and you count the seconds, was it like that? Yeah, between the light and the sound. Yeah, yeah, that would work.
Starting point is 00:13:53 And patent number one million one hundred and twenty two thousand seven hundred and forty two in America. Don't tell me. Don't tell me. I know this one. I'm so annoyed. I know the one before it. It was a huge knife that you attached to the front of your car.
Starting point is 00:14:08 Can you guess? Can you guess why you might do that? Cababs, chicken, chicken, cabab. To make everyone get the fuck off the road. Kind of. So like I said, people were really scared of cars, but they also hated them. And there was a thing where people put ropes across the road to try and stop you from going too fast, because then it would like, you know, like a barrier
Starting point is 00:14:31 would stop you. And so this thing was invented to kind of cut those ropes. Wow. Nice. So it's crazy. What do you read about it? Because it sounds like it was just hectic to drive a car in those early days. There are accounts of where sort of like farmers and locals would sort of
Starting point is 00:14:46 sprinkle nails and broken glass on the road. They would, as you say, tie ropes across. They would dig holes in the ground. So they would just, you know, fall into it. There was a story that near Sacramento in California, 13 cars were captured. You know, like captured is the word they use of the article. Yeah. And they were trying to stop people from speeding.
Starting point is 00:15:06 So there was one town in America where they put a big sign up just said the speed limit this year is a secret. And the idea is everyone drives. They go, oh, I'm going to have to go slow now because it's probably really low. God, it sounds really fun. Sounds like it's like doing an obstacle course driving back in the day. It's like you're rally driving. It's very well worse, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:15:28 Yeah. But one of the legitimate concerns, which is like the opposite of the concern we have now with driverless cars, is that humans were going to have to be responsible for concentrating the whole time. Because if you think about it, cars back then were called horseless carriages, basically. And the difference between a horseless carriage and a horse carriage is that you can kind of leave the horse to do most of the work, much like a driverless car.
Starting point is 00:15:49 So, you know, if you're driving, if you're the cabbie, you can lose concentration. You have a chat with your friend. You can have a little snooze. The horse has it under control. And one of the terrors was that, you know, if you're driving, then it's all up to the human and we're shit. Yeah. And they were right.
Starting point is 00:16:03 Another thing in the 1920s, there was a judge who said that the automobile was a house of prostitution on wheels. And that of the 30 girls that have been brought in front of him charged with sex crimes, 19 offences had occurred in cars. Really? So there's a real worry that young people are going to be able to get away from their parents and stuff, and they would be in an enclosed vehicle and you never know what they're going to get up to.
Starting point is 00:16:26 Well, you know, was that a chance? Right? It didn't matter, but we have sex in a car. Carriage. That was the big thing, wasn't it? A horse car, yeah. And in 1926, the Cleveland Motor Company realised this was happening. And so they invented the honeymoon special car.
Starting point is 00:16:41 And that came equipped with a foldable bed, which could be put up in just one minute and the doors were fitted with curtains. That's really rude. For the 20s? Yeah, for the 20s, you're on a saucepot. Yeah, I thought you were going to say there was a car company which invented, you know, the car with a knife in the middle so you can't go near anyone. Yeah, yeah, yeah, an inflatable dad of the daughter or something.
Starting point is 00:17:05 I like this in 1895 in the spectator. It was talking about how when the car first came about, everyone said horses were going to disappear off the face of the earth, which was kind of true. But it happened more slowly than people had predicted. And the spectator wrote, when the car first appeared, it was a common prophecy that the horse was a doomed animal. But the threatened institution of the horse drawn cab has managed somehow like the House of Lords to survive in full vigor.
Starting point is 00:17:31 I just love the idea that even in 1895, people were looking at the House of Lords going, how the fuck is this still surviving? That's so funny. It feels like that. So one of the big problems with all these early day cars is that they would come round and they would spray dust on these roads into houses. And in France, where this fact begins, we were talking about the fact that it was really badly received.
Starting point is 00:17:55 And part of that was people trying to say rent out villas and so on. They were losing all their business because as cars came by, all this spray of dust came and no one wanted to be there. So roads were effectively invented by people trying to stop that because they started putting basically asphalt and so on just outside their house, just strips so that when the car went over, it would miss the house. And then it kind of, my theory is it caught on and that they went, well, let's put more of that down.
Starting point is 00:18:19 That's a good theory. Yeah. There was in 1905, the Royal Commission on Motoring was held in Britain. And they, again, were looking at the dust and saying, this is terrible. They blame the dust for throat and eye infections, for the inability to hang washing to dry and the clogging of at least one lady novelist typewriter. Things are serious. That's so fun.
Starting point is 00:18:46 We need to move on in a sec to our next fact. I've just got one more thing. Yeah, well, I found it because I was searching about chickens and cars. And it's a piece of advice about playing chicken in a car. OK. Oh, yeah. I mean, don't. But if you are, there's advice from a 1960 work called the strategy of conflict.
Starting point is 00:19:02 OK, so chicken is like two cars driving up to each other. Absolutely. You're driving towards each other and whoever swears first loses, you know. And this is by a Nobel laureate called Thomas Shelling. So it's legit stuff. All right. And what he said is that extreme irrationality can be rational. So if you are playing chicken in a car, the best thing to do is rip off the steering wheel from the column and throw it out of the window.
Starting point is 00:19:25 But you should only do that if you are confident that the other driver has seen you do it. Oh, wow. Yeah. What year was that? Is that early day as well? It was 1960. He died the next year, weirdly. Horrible car crash. I read about the first car, horn, which was in 1649. And this is car as in a horseless carriage.
Starting point is 00:19:48 And it was a carriage invented by a guy called Johan Housh. And it was a dragon which went at the front of the carriage and it rolled its eyes and it spouted water to clear pedestrians out of the way. It's fucking cool. Isn't that cool? And the horn part was carved angels on either side, holding trumpets that were constantly blown. And this didn't need any horses to pull it amazingly. This vehicle, although it did have two men concealed under the body of it,
Starting point is 00:20:12 who had to run along with the actual stone. That's incredible. We need to move on to our next fact. OK, it is time for fact number three, and that is Anna. My fact this week is that when libraries flood, the books are saved by putting them in the freezer and then vacuuming them. Yeah, I was reading that library book salvage and it's so cool. So basically any library worth its salt has to either have its own
Starting point is 00:20:38 massive industrial freezer or have access to an industrial freezer. And you freeze the paper as soon as it's got wet. And this is both for floods and fires, because the biggest problem really for books in libraries with fires is the getting wet afterwards. Usually they're put out in time, but they're put out with so much water that they get covered in water. If you freeze it immediately, then the water stops making the ink bleed and it stops mold growing and all of those things.
Starting point is 00:21:03 But then obviously you've just got a massive freezer full of frozen books. It's really difficult to read and you can't just melt it. And so then you vacuum it, by which I mean, put it in a massive vacuum chamber. And that means that the water can go straight from a solid to a gas can sublimate GCSE chemistry there. Because it reduces the pressure in the air in a vacuum. And so that means that there's not enough pressure for water to form. It becomes gas immediately, because there's so much space.
Starting point is 00:21:32 All the solid ice molecules just jump around in the space and become a gas. That is amazing. But could they not just buy some new books? Shit, you should mention that a lot of time has been wasted. Yeah. Now, these are precious old books, aren't they? Yeah, these are the originals. Yeah, there was one. There was a massive library fire in 1986, the biggest library fire in America. It was in Central Library in L.A.
Starting point is 00:21:55 And that one, they had to ask a load of there are a lot of fishermen in L.A. And they had to ask the fishermen to lend them all of their fish freezers, put the books in. I didn't see where you were going with that at all. I thought you were going to say they had to get the fishermen to get the books out of the library with their rods, because it was still too dangerous in there. They're very attracted to maggots books, actually, they leap up.
Starting point is 00:22:15 And the reason, and that really is, if you look that up, it doesn't go down that much in history, because it happened three days after Chernobyl, and so it was very much buried in a slightly bigger explosion that week. The only paper that put it like proper front and center, I think, or this is what I read in a book called The Library Book, which is very good book by Susan Orleans, Pravda in the Soviet Union, funny enough.
Starting point is 00:22:38 So there was nothing else happening that day. Exactly. How embarrassing for America, there's library fire, right? Look at that. They should have, like in libraries, just giant freezers. You know, in Australia, when you go to the bottle shop, the bottle load, there's always just a wine shop. Yeah, wine shop, and you get beers.
Starting point is 00:22:57 There's always this giant freezer room that you go into. It's freezing to be inside, but it's very common in every bottle shop that you get there. And yeah, they should have that just where all the precious books just can't be. Well, I suppose some of the bigger places do, right? Like the Natural History Museum, not a library, but they have a huge freezer. Can you guess what's the largest animal they could fit in the freezer? Seal, but a big seal.
Starting point is 00:23:20 A Diplodocus. Diplodocus, giraffe. The answer is a fully grown rhino. Oh, I think we'll fit that in there. And the largest fridge in the world, 2,800 pole away. This is in Richland, Washington in America. That is big enough to fit every single living rhino in the world. And actually, they have a bit of space as well.
Starting point is 00:23:43 They'd have to be on top of each other's shoulders. Yeah, yeah. I don't think that's going to be your biggest logistical problem in terms of gathering all the rhinos, getting them to the fridge. I think once you've done that, shoving them in is going to be an easy job. Yeah, OK. Whose fridge is this and how big is the party they're having? This is a huge fridge that they use in America.
Starting point is 00:24:01 Their farmers will send all the goods there and it will keep the fruits and vegetables kind of fresher for a bit longer. Nice, really nice. Imagine how many magnets you get on that. So many. It's a lot of shit drawings from your children, isn't it? Libraries. You know the Bodleian Library in Oxford?
Starting point is 00:24:22 I think it's one of only three libraries which gets a copy of every single book published in the UK. So it's the Cambridge Library, the Oxford University Library, which is the Bodleian and the British Library. For 250 years, the librarian of the Bodleian was supposed to be celibate and none of them were. It was one of the main... Founded by a guy called Thomas Bodle, who had read this main thing
Starting point is 00:24:44 and he wrote up a list of rules when he was founding the library. The first rule was celibate. I want no librarian to have sex ever. The first librarian got married that year, the year he founded it. All the successes did, pretty much. And it was 250 years, it was kept in place, and then they repealed it saying, this is a ridiculous rule. And why celibate?
Starting point is 00:25:03 Because you must love the books more than you could ever love the human flesh? Or what? Why? What a lovely poetic way. I think it's... They didn't want to get any come-in-the-books? Oh, my God! LAUGHTER Oh, my God!
Starting point is 00:25:15 That's poetic from James, isn't it? LAUGHTER No? No? It wasn't that, no, I think it was... It's sort of gas. Yeah, no, it's fine. And I'm blushing on stage now. I didn't say... Oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:25:28 I think it was because it was kind of connected to the priesthood. And so it kind of came from that tradition that he was... But Bobby himself was a bit of a mug. He said they didn't want idle books and ref rafts, which was anything not in Latin. And the library got a first folio of Shakespeare's works. Pretty good, pretty nice book in 1623, pretty valuable. And then a few decades later, the third folio came out,
Starting point is 00:25:52 and they just sold the first folio off. They said, well, we don't need this, we've got a more modern one there. Right. And so as a result, they had to... Wow. Yeah. Just on random, fun things about libraries, I was reading about Berkeley Library in America,
Starting point is 00:26:05 and they have every year an edible book festival. And the idea is that there's a few categories, but one of the main things is you need to do food-based puns on existing books. So infinite jest becomes infinite zest, for example. So I've got a little quiz for you guys. Okay. Wait, who needs to do... How does it work? I'm going to give you the book name and see if you can guess what they did with it.
Starting point is 00:26:29 Yeah. Waiting for Godot. Waiting for Cheddar. Waiting for Gouda would be better. There we go. That's my answer. One nail to James. He just crossed it, and I just knotted it in the corner.
Starting point is 00:26:41 Nuts. That's for a game of Thrones. Game of Cheddar. Game of bones? Game of scones. Game of scones. Game of scones. Also, game is already a type of meat.
Starting point is 00:26:51 Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. James is submitting no change. Technically, game is a kind of meat. Question number three. One flu over the cuckoo's nest. You can eat a cuckoo, says James. No change.
Starting point is 00:27:09 One flu over a cuckoo's nest. Oh, yes. That's good. One flu over the cuckoo's nest. One flu over the cuckoo's nest. Cuckoo's nest. Can we play this for the rest of the podcast? I'm enjoying this so much.
Starting point is 00:27:20 So, I'll give you two more, okay? Something wicked this way comes. Something wicked this way buns? Very good. But no, it's dumpling wicked this way comes. And last one. Dumpling wicked this way comes. Heart of darkness is the last one.
Starting point is 00:27:36 Heart of Cheddar. It's correct. No, it's not. Well, actually, part is already part of an animal that you can eat. Yeah, artichoke heart of darkness. Oh, that's good. It's part of darkness. And I think Andy takes it with the wind down.
Starting point is 00:27:52 I demand a recap. Have you guys heard of Barbara Pratt? No, no. This is now more on refrigeration than on libraries. But she was hired by the shipping company Sea Land, who's now MERSC. And basically what would happen is they would refrigerate fruits and vegetables and stuff and send it around the world. And then sometimes it would be fine and sometimes it would be rotten and no one could work out why.
Starting point is 00:28:17 And so Barbara Pratt spent seven years living in shipping containers being shipped around the world. With a load of vegetables and working out how to stop them from going rotten. Whoa. Is that the one thing more boring than watching paint dry? Watching vegetables rotten. She is an absolute hero. Incredible. Isn't that amazing?
Starting point is 00:28:38 She had bunk bed. I don't know why she had a bunk bed because I can't imagine. Because she had to have some fun. And bunk beds are fun. I mean, that's a pretty boring. I would say like the Bodley. And this is a place where you're probably celibate if you do this job. But yes, she would monitor temperature, airflow, humidity, all that kind of stuff.
Starting point is 00:28:56 She had loads of microprocessors, all that kind of stuff. And eventually worked out the regimes that they use today to make sure that peppers and watermelons and stuff can go around the world and not go off. That's great. Isn't that amazing? Did they ever have like an inspection of the shipping container and they just open it and they find a load of watermelons and Barbara Pratt just goes, hello. I fear that didn't happen.
Starting point is 00:29:18 That's so good. On fridges, you know, there's a Guinness World Record for the world's largest fridge. Oh, is it not the one that I talked about in America? No, it's not that. Is it not? Yeah. The official, according to Guinness World Records, is the Large Hadron Collider in CERN. And it's because it has 9,300 magnets inside it and they need to be kept at an exact temperature.
Starting point is 00:29:40 And so it's got 10,800 tons of liquid nitrogen, 60 tons of liquid helium, and that creates the... Does it count as a fridge if you can't put your cold rice from the night before in it? But hang on a second. We said in the first ever episode of Fish that the Large Hadron Collider had to be stopped because a bit of tuna baguette was dropped into it. That's right. So if that is still in there, then it counts as a fridge. We need to move on to our next fact.
Starting point is 00:30:13 It is time for our final fact of the show, and that is James. Okay, my fact this week is that there is an ophthalmologist at the University of Leiden called Dr. I.C. Notting. It does work better than Irish accent, doesn't it? It does, and I'm not going to do it. So this was a post that I saw on the website improbable.com, which is run by Mark Abraham, who is a friend of ours, who's been on Fish, actually, and he runs the Ig Nobel Prizes, but he noticed this person, and she was part of a team in May this year that replaced both lenses in the eyes of a chimpanzee called Fifi.
Starting point is 00:30:58 Fifi could no longer tolerate light because of the situation that she'd been in, and so, like, really had the lenses had gone all cloudy, and she was the first person to ever do in Europe a double cataract operation on a chimpanzee. That's super cool, but at the same time a shame, because I just want to see a chimpanzee wearing sunglasses for the rest of their life. And apart from that, I know Notting more about Dr. Notting. She specialises in neuro-ophthalmology, cataracts, and trabismus, which I didn't know means being cross-eyed, and she's got a load of papers online, but they're so far out of my pay grade. It's unbelievable.
Starting point is 00:31:35 Her latest one is spectral domain optical coherence tomography in retinal vasculopathy with cerebral leukoencephalopathy and systemic manifestations and monogenic small vessel disease. Right. She sounds clever. She sounds super clever. She's got a funny name. I did find another optometrist called Hugh Seymour, which is a... That's great.
Starting point is 00:32:00 There's a big list of ophthalmologists on Wikipedia, and I went down looking for an app name. There was a guy who was the first person to prove that providone iodine could be safely used as an antimicrobial for the eyes. He's got a very apt name. His name was Leonard Apt. Right. He's going to be at home listening to this thinking, oh no, they've done it again. So this fact is basically nominative determinism, and the idea of that is you've got a name that matches the job that you're doing. So for example, the professor of geology at Exeter University is called Dr. Stone. Did they become professor of that because of the name?
Starting point is 00:32:39 Did it lead them towards that? And there's a lot of people who say there's no truth in that, but it is fun when you notice people that seem to have gone into it. So Leiden, where you were saying I see nothing is from. I looked at the University of Leiden, which is a different university, just to see if there was any people who had similar names to the thing that they do. So I found there's a professor of religion called Peter Bishop. Oh yeah. It's Bishop, but it's very, very close. Professor of European Law is Rick Lawson, and they have a professor of anthropology who's called Gerard Person.
Starting point is 00:33:13 Oh, that's good. So do you think that Leiden University is just literally choosing people just based on their names? Yeah. Sounds like it. Well, you'd think that academics would be above this kind of thing, and if they heard this, they'd be like, come on, just talk about my area of knowledge. But this is one of my favorite things. I don't think we've ever mentioned it. One of the most important papers ever written in astrophysics, the authors were Alpha, Beta and Gamma.
Starting point is 00:33:39 It's not quite Gamma, but it's close enough. And the reason for this is a guy called George Gammo, who's the professor on the project, and this paper was so important. It was in 1948, and it basically discovered that the background radiation of the Big Bang essentially kind of justified the Big Bang happening, and it talked about that it created hydrogen and helium and all the elements that we now live with today in their proportions. Seminal paper. So the lead author was George Gammo. His PhD student was Ralph Alpha. George Gammo said, hey, Ralph, wouldn't it be so funny?
Starting point is 00:34:10 I've got a colleague called Beta. He's really nothing to do with this whole astrophysics thing, but let's put him as an author on the paper. And then I'll be Alpha, Beta, Gammo. And Alpha said, absolutely not. This is a huge deal for me. And my PhD student, no. And he got completely ignored. And in fact, not only that, but George Gammo asked another one of his colleagues called Herman if he'd changed his name to Delta in all they could.
Starting point is 00:34:32 Oh, wow. That's too far. And they went ahead and like he was furious. Ralph Alpha was so angry for years afterwards, said it completely like undid my great achievements. So OK, yeah, nominative determinism, we think it's probably bunk. Right. But there was a paper by a group of researchers about medical workers and, you know, all kinds of medical work. And it was a group of researchers who found that there was a greater frequency of medical names in various specialisms than you would expect by chance.
Starting point is 00:35:04 And the researchers were named limb, limb, limb and limb. They were in the same family, but still. So, you know, they looked in the American directory of physicians and they found lots of doctors with the surname doctor or fix or cure or heal. And they also found that some promising partnerships failed to materialize. Doctors Batman and Robin are registered but failed to team up in any speciality. Selfish. It's almost like they've got bigger priorities. And the paper which debunked it, which most people point at was in the Journal of Personal and Social Psychology.
Starting point is 00:35:37 And it was called I sell seashells by the seashore and my name is Jack. Killjoy. That's so good. I think now because we we've talked about so much nominative determinism over the years, as in just names that are very apt. And now I feel like we have to go a level up. So you've got to like do the doubles. You know, if like two of someone's names are nominative deterministic like Andrew Drinkwater. That's I think that's loud.
Starting point is 00:36:04 He's head of research at the Water Research Center. That's good. Water. I think that's okay. I also like doubles. I just spend quite a lot of time looking at the students guide to the seashore that was written by fish and fish. I probably spent an hour desperately trying to find out if they were related and hoping they weren't because then that would be an amazing catch. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:24 They are husband and wife. I've discovered deep in the bowels of Cardiff University website. I think I'm also Andy's favorite thing of words like name sentences. Yes. Yeah. So what are the examples of that we always say? Like Ben Folds and Jeremy Irons. Tom Waits.
Starting point is 00:36:42 Yeah. Yeah. Wesley Snipes. Sting. Sting. No. Not Sting. I'm very appreciative, but that's not a it's not a proper.
Starting point is 00:36:52 Sorry, James. I was reading that. I was reading a study from 2018 and this is about injecting medicine directly into your eyes. Okay. It sounds pretty awful, but apparently if you have something called macular edema it really really helps. And the person who came up with that idea was a physician called Douglas Jabs. Oh, that's great. Sentence person and nominative determinism.
Starting point is 00:37:14 Yeah. Takes the film. I found a urologist who performs vasectomies called Dr. Richard Christy. It's called Dr. Richard Chop, a.k.a. Dr. Dick Chop. That's the double. That's the double. And that's well done. That's quite strong.
Starting point is 00:37:29 There was, in fact, on a similar vein, there was, and I think the 19... Vein. Or there was... Ron's clenching. There was a quote in the British Medical Journal in 1935, a guy calling for all male children to be circumcised in order to reduce masturbation, which he thought was very harmful. And he was called Richard Cockshut. No.
Starting point is 00:37:54 Very good. Shut that cock, kids. Shut that cock. That's a hell of a catchphrase. It's a sitcom from the 70s, isn't it? Larry Grayson, shut that cock. Have you thought about our names and what we, if we were connected to a thing, what would it be? Shriver is writer.
Starting point is 00:38:11 Shriver would be writer. Toshinsky means like little bird. Like a little bird. Like owls on my dress today. That's right. You'll notice I'm never not wearing a bird. Is that true? No.
Starting point is 00:38:23 I mean, how long have you known that? Years. Years and years. But I just thought, oh, my God, I can't believe I've never noticed that all this time. I'm the worst friend and colleague in the world. It was a test. I would have thought, I think Harkin is just a place in Ireland or something. Well, Harkin, no, that's got an interesting thing.
Starting point is 00:38:44 It goes back and back and so it's sort of like changes. But as it goes further back, bloody and pig are two things. Sounds about right. So a farmer, maybe? You knew about the chickens earlier. So maybe that's... What are you? Well, Murray, yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:00 Murray. Surely just a river in Scotland, isn't it? Yeah, I don't think it means anything. Sea and settlement is the kind of... It sounds a bit like Murray. If you were a wedding officiant, maybe at a stretch. I'd love to do that. He married me today.
Starting point is 00:39:13 That sounds disgusting. You'd rather he'd married me. Do you want to get married? Married? No. Reader, I married him. We need a wrap up. OK, that is it.
Starting point is 00:39:33 That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening. If you would like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we have said over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shriverland, Andy. At Andrew Hunter M. James. At James Harkin. And Anna.
Starting point is 00:39:48 You can email our podcast at qi.com. Yep, or you can go to our group account, which is at no such thing, or our website, nosuchthingasafish.com. All of our previous episodes are up there, as well as a link to the current tour that we are doing right now, Nerd Immunity. Thank you so much, everyone who came tonight. Exeter, that was fucking awesome. We really enjoyed it.
Starting point is 00:40:06 Thank you so much. And we will be back again next week with another episode. We'll see you then. Goodbye.

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