No Such Thing As A Fish - 401: No Such Thing As Scandalnavia
Episode Date: November 26, 2021Live from Ipswich, Dan, James, Anna and Andrew ask the questions: did a plant cause the American Revolution of 1776? What the hell actually is a red panda? And who really was Cotton Eye Joe? Visit no...suchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes.Â
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Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast this
week coming to you live from Ipswich.
My name is Dan Schreiber, 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, my fact this week is that there's
a special piano that only Benny from ABBA can play, and he can only play it if he's
six miles away from it.
This is such a cool thing, there's an ABBA museum in Stockholm which is a fascinating
place, and in it is a piano that belongs to Benny, and what they've done is they've synced
up the piano with Benny's studio, and so anytime Benny's at home and he plays on it, the piano
in the museum just starts playing whatever it is that he's playing as well.
So what if I go to Benny's house and I'm not very good at playing the piano and I just
play chopsticks, will that play on there as well?
Well, I think it'll probably summon an ambulance to Benny's house.
Send it out on SOS.
It's what's saying, it's hooked up to an iPad, so it's not everything that plays, he has
to decide when he's allowing the museum to hear what he's hearing.
They also have a phone where only four people have the number of the phone.
Who are they?
Is it us four?
It's us four.
No, it's ABBA.
And if the phone rings in the museum, then you know that it's one of the four members
of ABBA phoning that phone.
And they got the idea from Yoko Ono, didn't they?
Did they?
Yeah, so Yoko Ono has got quite a few of these what she calls telephone pieces that's been
in various different exhibitions around the world over the last few years.
She did one in Argentina, she did one in New York, and her idea is that she will ring it
from time to time and someone will answer, and when they answer, they're completing the
piece, the artwork, if you think about it that way.
So the first time someone did that, they were in a Toronto exhibition in 2002, and the phone
rang and the guy said, hello?
And Yoko Ono said, are you in China?
And he said, no, I'm in Toronto, Canada, where the exhibition is.
And she said, oh, I'm not in China either.
And she hung up.
Oh, wow.
Did he then get paid half the money that she'd made from selling a exhibition?
That'd be amazing.
Wow.
ABBA.
Oh, yeah.
They were pretty unpopular in Sweden.
No, they weren't.
They were very popular.
In Sweden, right at the start of their careers, they were seen as being, I can't believe this
is true, but they became really famous in, what was it, 1974, the Eurovision when they
sang Waterloo?
Yeah.
When they became really popular in the world, Sweden was so snotty about them that they
cancelled the Swedish top of the pops and abolished the pop charts.
What?
Come on.
No way.
Yeah, that's what I read.
Why?
Because they thought that just they were a bit commercial.
They were a bit commercial.
They were a bit poppy.
They were, I mean, they had an incredible and different sound, but they were also very,
yeah, commercial.
But they were weirdly like a super group because both Benny and Beyond had very big bands that
they were in before ABBA came along.
And then they got married to Agnatha and Annie Frid, who both were big singers and it didn't
work.
And one theory by one of the people who worked with them is because they had a terrible band
name before they came up with ABBA.
So their original band name was Beyond and Benny, Agnatha and Annie Frid.
That was their name.
And then they became ABBA because that was the shorthand that was used for it.
It was a newspaper competition that got named.
Was it?
Yeah.
They'd had other names, which included Alibaba and Fab and Baba.
And then a Gothenburg newspaper held a competition.
So we've got to get this band a better name because these all stink.
And ABBA was the winning.
I read that they borrowed the name from a fish company, and that was on the website of the
fish company.
They said that we agreed to lend our name to the pop group.
I was like, they're going to give it back at some point.
It does because it's a big fish company and everyone knows ABBA fish company.
And so I can see that it would have been controversial.
So they did have a weird time.
The two couples that was made up of the two married couples got divorced within basically
two years of each other between 1980 and 1982 while writing their best song.
So if you listen to the winner takes it all, that was written by Bjorn, wasn't it?
And then he got Agnatha to sing it and they'd been married.
And she says, it's very interesting reading what they say about the divorce because he
says, God, it was the friendliest divorce on the face of the earth.
No marriage break-up could have been easier.
Best friends forever.
And then you read her on a separate interview going, everyone thought it was a really easy
time, but it was actually hell and particularly being made to sing the lyrics of this song,
which are things like, you know, talking about does she kiss you like I used to kiss you
and he'd gone off with another girlfriend weeks after they divorced.
She's there on stage singing it.
So yeah.
That's awkward.
It was 1981 when the final divorce went through.
And so by 1982, they were all single and their first album of 1982 was called The Singles.
Yes!
That's good.
That was so good.
Do you know there are, just on that note, there are Abitributax, which include the Bjorn
identity and the Bjorn ultimatum, but not the Bjorn Supremacy.
Very funny.
This is so good.
Alfred, not Swedish.
Scandal.
Really?
Norwegian.
Bullshit.
Scandinavia.
Scandinavia.
Absolutely.
She's really interesting though, her background is so interesting.
She is what's called a Tisgabarnas or German child.
And these were people in Norway who during the war, the 1930s and the Second World War,
the Nazis had a policy of interbreeding their men with Norwegian women to create perfect
Aryan offspring who would then sort of be given back to the SS and be, you know, a brilliant
Aryan race for the Nazis.
And she was a child of that, but she was born in 1945, so her mother was Norwegian, her father
was a German soldier who was in Norway.
And then immediately they were completely ostracised and had a hell of a time and they couldn't
get jobs and like most of them like have really awful lives as a result.
And I think they got compensation from Europe a few years ago.
Did they get it in the end?
I remember that.
I'm actually not sure.
I know they fought for it, but still, not fucking Swedish.
Just on the sort of mania of when they hit and became absolutely stratospheric, I didn't
really appreciate how huge they've been.
So just for an example, they visited Australia in the mid-70s, their TV special in 1976 got
more views than the moon landing.
Wow.
Yeah.
They were, they were so popular in the year 1976.
Oh, in the 1970s though, in 1976.
More TVs, right?
Sorry?
More TVs.
I guess more TVs.
And they showed it four times.
Yes.
I mean, there are factors that mitigate, but still.
It was a big event.
What time of the night was it?
The moon landing in Australia?
I don't know.
I don't know.
Look.
Okay.
They were so popular.
In 1976, they had the number one spot for 39 weeks and after 12 weeks of it, their version
of Top of the Pops just stopped showing the music video because you've seen it for 12
weeks, guys.
In Australia that was.
Yeah.
Fans absolutely righted.
And that was on the Australian version of Top of the Pops, which was called Countdown.
Yeah.
The Australian version of Top of the Pops was called Countdown.
Why are we not talking about this constantly?
Oh, really?
Yeah, you've just been hanging on to this fact in your head for like eight years.
Yeah.
Well, when you say fans.
Why are you moving on from this Top of the Pops Countdown thing?
What?
Absolutely.
Like, is there a letters and numbers show called Top of the Pops in Australia?
No, I don't think so, but.
Well, what do you call Countdown?
I don't think we have Countdown.
All right.
They can't spell it.
When you say fans rioted.
Did I say rioted?
Yeah.
I meant, were furious.
One complaint was registered with the ABC.
But genuinely, look, when they toured, one mother ran and she put her baby down on the
road so that their tour caravan would stop and she could get an autograph.
There was a hotel which cut up their bedsheets after they'd left and they sold it via newspaper
all the time.
Yeah.
They did that with the Beatles as well.
I've got that.
Not the baby thing, though.
I just want you to know we will not succumb to that kind of blackmail.
If there's a baby in front of our tour bus, we're going straight over it.
I think that's fish policy, right?
Yeah.
It's really important to get that clear from the outset.
That's good.
Oh my God.
Who do you think is the biggest band ever from Sweden, according to the Billboard charts?
The biggest band ever from Sweden?
Yeah.
I'm going to put my foot on the lamb mine and say ABBA.
It is not ABBA.
It is Rockset.
Isn't that interesting?
Yeah.
Rockset have had four number ones.
ABBA have only had one.
And the interesting thing about that is they were a band in Sweden and there was a high
school student who was on exchange in Sweden, heard about Rockset, went home, brought a
record home with him and pestered the local radio station in Minneapolis every single
day saying play this, play this, play this.
Eventually they did play it and within two months they had a record deal in the US and
the number one single.
Wow.
Isn't that cool?
That is.
But really mostly the best, well we all know what the best band from Sweden really is
and that is Rednecks.
The singers of Cotton Eye Joe, they're from Sweden.
Cool.
Cotton Eye Joe, the song.
Do you know what that's about?
I forgot.
I've been there long to somewhere.
He's been somewhere.
Where did you go?
Where did you come from?
Cotton Eye Joe.
What's it about?
What's Cotton Eye mean?
He's a teddy.
He must be a teddy.
No, he's someone with syphilis.
Ah.
So we think possibly it's from the 1800s, it's an African-American folk song about a man
who has Cotton Eyes and that's either from syphilis or from drinking too much moonshine.
Right.
What do you mean?
Syphilis turns your eyes to cotton.
It kind of makes them go like milky.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
So the other really interesting thing about Rednecks is when Napster came out and everyone
started sharing music, the manager who owned all of the rights called Peter Edinburgh,
he decided there was no point selling records anymore.
What we're going to be is like a band who just goes around performing and so he got
rid of all the original members and brought in 20 new Rednecks and that means they can
play five different gigs on the same night.
Wow.
There's a Rednecks in Australia so they can play in Australian gigs.
When are we going to do this?
This is amazing.
There's an online shop where if you pay 11,111 euros, you can get a private show anywhere
in the world from Rednecks and if you pay 2 million euros, you get the entire band.
Oh, I was going to say, can you mix and match?
Can you like make your fantasy Rednecks team kind of thing?
That'd be amazing.
Wow.
Why don't you take Larry over here?
He's got gonorrhea.
Yeah.
I have one tiny last thing before we move on.
Eurovision just very quickly back to that because that's the thing that exploded them
to the world.
The UK, do you know what they gave them point-wise?
Null points.
Did we?
We're famously good in Eurovision at judging and participating.
And you know who the interval act was at that year's Eurovision?
No.
The Wombles.
What a Eurovision.
That's class.
That's class.
That's a big year.
They would have won.
If they had been formally entered, they would have won.
They would have cleaned up.
Well, listen, we need to move on to our next fact.
It is time for fact number two, and that is James.
Okay.
My fact this week is that by changing the genome of a daddy-long legs, scientists have created
a daddy-short legs.
What do they do to the genome?
Because it sounds like if you want shorter legs, you're going to make shorter genes, right?
And you'll need shorter genes once you've got shorter legs.
Wow.
That was the joke.
Thank you.
I'm just a hype person.
Everyone strokes today.
I appreciate that.
I really do.
Okay, so just to confirm, what we're talking about here is Harvestman spiders.
And that is what Americans call daddy-long legs.
We would sometimes call those daddy-long legs, but more often we would say crane flies are
daddy-long legs.
But anyway, they're actually not spiders or arachnids, but they have four pairs of legs.
They walk around.
They have two pairs of legs that feel stuff.
And their legs have got these things called tarsimias.
And if you think about your hand, you've got these little knuckle bits here.
You've got like two on each finger, and it means you can grip stuff.
They have got loads of these, which means they can really grip around stuff.
And the scientists wanted to learn more about them.
And so they did so by turning off some genes.
And in this particular case, they turned off the gene that made all these extra little
nubby bits, and they ended up with really, really short leg spiders.
Why?
It's science, Anna.
Just to see, right?
Because they're confused by the harvestman, the daddy-long legs.
And they just think, why have you got, it's like having 100 knuckles on a finger.
Exactly.
So imagine, Anna, that we work out which gene does this in the harvestman.
And we could somehow get that gene sorted in ourselves.
We could have the bendiest fingers like Mr. Tickle.
That's the dream.
It's the dream come true.
They use them to mate with each other, don't they?
That seems to be the main purpose of their career.
Yeah, I'm not saying we would do it that way.
I mean, you must have a vested interest in this somewhere.
No, they seem to sort of mate by lassoing their arms around each other.
So yeah, they'll extend their arms and they'll wrap it around the male,
wrap it around the female's arms dozens of times.
So it's really locked on.
And then they mate, throat to throat.
James, I have a question.
Were these daddy short legs bad at sex as a result?
Were they able to...
I didn't try.
I imagine they would be.
I can't tell you for sure.
It wasn't in the paper whether they were bad at sex.
But you would think so because the legs, like I said,
they are quite important in the sexual thing with the harvestman spiders.
For instance, the male will often grab the female's leg
and just start nibbling on it because it's really hairy.
So he's got a really hairy leg and it'll just sort of nibble on the hairs.
Right.
We don't really know why they do that, though, right?
It's like, and they sort of jiggle the leg around and stuff.
Yeah, they can't tell why.
The article I read said, presumably for her pleasure,
but that's a big presumption to make, isn't it?
Yeah.
Oh, there is another thing about that.
Actually, the oldest genitals found in 2003 were...
I don't know if it's been superseded by some even older genitals,
but it was a harvestman which was 400 million years old,
which I find absolutely mind-boggling.
There was another one found a bit later in Myanmar,
which was, again, trapped in amber, like in Jurassic Park or whatever,
which was 100 million years old,
but it was very exciting because it was erect.
And the story about it in life science, it started with the words,
if you think an erection lasting more than four hours is a problem,
try one lasting more than 99 million years.
But it's amazing that we found it
because it's very rare to see a harvestman or daddy long legs
with an erect penis.
Exactly.
It's a very rare thing.
And it's even rarer to see it in fossils slash in amber.
We've only ever found, up until the point of this article
you're talking about, 38 fossils of harvestmen in history.
And one of those has a penis coming out of it,
and they didn't expect it,
and they could tell that it was a different species to other ones now alive
because of its penis.
It has a sort of heart-shaped top.
Aw, that's romantic.
It's really sweet, yeah.
And when you look at it, it's genuinely, it's like,
ah, it's like a little emoji, like it's very cute.
But that penis, that erection,
we think it may have been mating,
but we think it may not have been mating as well.
It might have just been watching dinosaur porn or something,
whatever it was back then.
We think either it was mating,
and it got stuck in the amber,
and then somehow the female got away, for example,
or the amber started to roll over it,
and its blood pressure just went boom,
it went right up,
and the penis was literally just pushed out of it
in a kind of big death erection,
and then it died.
I'll be honest, when I did this fact,
I thought we would be talking about spiders
and daddy long legs and genomes and stuff,
and we seem to have gotten onto this.
Sorry, the death erection.
We were going to get onto the penis
because they are the only arachnids with a penis,
and so I imagine that they would want us
to be mentioning that,
if they knew that we were talking about it.
Spiders just have, like,
pedipalps that they put their sperm onto,
and then spray around.
You know a spider man?
Yes, I think he has the pedipalps, not the penis.
Does he?
Yeah.
That's funny.
Wow.
There are so many species,
there are 6,500 species of harvestsmen,
and then that's not even including crane flies, obviously,
and they let off a disgusting smell
when they're under threat,
which apparently you can smell.
So if you see one under threat,
which it probably will be if you're approaching it,
then try and touch it,
and it smells a bit like petrol, apparently.
Yeah, and sometimes you get massive clumps of them, don't you?
There was one in southwestern China
that had 300,000 individuals in a clump.
Whoa.
And it just looks like this hairy blob
that's kind of going around.
Oh, wow.
What do you mean?
They kind of roll like a ball together, kind of thing.
They don't roll so much as kind of walk and crawl,
and there are some on top as well,
so they're a little bit kind of on top of each other.
It can be hundreds of thousands of them,
and they think that possibly, again,
we're not sure why they do this,
but one reason could be that if they're all giving off
this farty smell,
then it might make it even more potent.
Oh, okay.
You can't be blamed if there are 300,000 of you in the same...
Yeah.
They can't lose legs,
but they can't grow them back.
So in the same way that we can lose legs,
they can lose legs,
but they do it more often,
so they'll lose a leg defensively sometimes
if they're being predated on,
then they'll kind of rip off one of their legs
and leave it behind,
and they can be fine.
They can be basically fine with two legs lost,
but their gait changes a little bit.
So it seems that they start to use their body
as a replacement leg,
so they do what's called stocking
if they're down to seven legs,
which seems to be they brush their bellies
against the ground with every stride,
and then if they lose two legs,
they turn to bobbing,
which is where they really bounce,
like a bouncy ball along the ground,
up and down.
And sometimes they just bob up and down
on the spot really, really fast.
We don't really know why,
maybe to like evade birds or something.
Wow.
It's weird how...
So like in picture of daddy long legs in my head,
but the body is not quite in my head,
so just as a sort of an equivalent
if humans had the length of the leg
that a daddy long legs had,
it would be as if we had 80 foot long limbs.
Wow.
80 foot?
80 foot, yeah,
compared to body size, the torso bit.
That is Mr. Tickle, isn't it?
Just to go back to...
Oh, it is.
That's what he's got, basically.
That's true.
Wow.
The daddy long legs,
Harvestman and Cranefly,
they've only been known that since 1820.
Before that, they were known as father long legs.
No.
Yeah, in the 1740s, father long legs.
That's nice.
And even 100 years before that,
Craneflies were known as Harry long legs.
Oh.
I've read that in Ireland,
they're called Skinny Philip.
I don't know why.
That's a cartoon I would watch.
Skinny Philip.
Oh, man.
So, yeah, the Craneflies,
which I think maybe we know a bit better in the UK,
just there are so many more of them,
especially in autumn,
they live underground for 10 months,
and then they come out for a few days,
they mate, and then they die.
What we're seeing is,
it's almost none of the story of the daddy long legs.
But the rest of the story is quite dull, isn't it?
It's like following Sleeping Beauty's story
while she's asleep.
They're not asleep.
They're well alive under the earth.
Are they?
Yeah, of course they are.
They're alive.
No, I know they're alive,
but what do they do?
They're awake.
Well, they're moving around.
They have expandable arses when they're loving.
I think we all do.
No, they have like inflatable arses
that they fill up with like hemolyph,
like kind of like fluid.
And that's how they move through the soil
to like push them forward
as they inflate their bottoms.
And they're fat worms.
They're much fatter than a daddy long legs' body
when they're worms.
And then it lodges them in the earth.
So if they need to eat a bunch of leaf matter,
then it roots them in
because their bum just, you know,
clogs up the soil around them.
It's a very clever move.
That's awesome.
Yeah, watch that show.
There you go.
It's the best time of their lives,
and we never get to see it.
Yeah.
We're going to have to move on in a second, guys,
to our next fact.
In 2016, there was an entomologist called Liz Fowler,
and she went to the island of St Helena
to look for something called the Basilevsky's crane fly.
People thought it'd been extinct for about 40 or 50 years.
No one has seen one for 45 years.
While she was driving along,
one of them flew into her car and landed in her hand.
Oh, wow.
Did you know that was it?
She didn't sort of crush it, toss it out.
We'll see you in about a year's later.
Well, listen, we need to move on to our next fact.
Okay, it is time for fact number three,
and that is Andy.
My fact is that Q Gardens has managed to keep
the same pot plant alive for 246 years.
Yeah.
It's beaten my record by 246 years, pretty much.
Yeah, it's an incredible plant,
but it's also an incredible effort.
That was really amazing.
So it's a plant called Encephalatos altensteini,
and it's in the Palm House at Q Gardens,
which is one of the really, really warm greenhouses.
It weighs a ton, literally it weighs one ton,
and it's four meters high,
and it was collected in 1774.
Isn't that amazing?
So that's what King Louis XVI in France,
pre-French Revolution.
I heard someone say that it's older
than the founding of the United States of America.
Just about.
Just snuck in there.
Just snuck in there, exactly.
My God, maybe that was what made them strike for independence.
Yeah.
Talk us through that.
When the British took it.
It's hard to see the chain of causation,
but it could be.
Yeah, that's a song missing from the Hamilton musical there.
Lynn was desperate to get in.
I met it recently.
I met the pot plant.
Oh, yeah?
Did you?
Yeah, we did a gig on this tour in Richmond,
and before we went there,
I went with my family to go see it,
and we were in this beautiful,
this greenhouse that you go in,
and it's so hot in there.
It's very sweaty,
and you're cutting around the corner,
and then there's this little post
that says,
oldest pot plant in the world,
question mark.
I did a really weird thing,
which was I hand shook its leaf.
What?
Because I read that print.
You're such a star fucker.
It's unbelievable.
Anything for a photo with some celebrity.
I didn't get a photo.
I respected its privacy,
but I, because I'd read somewhere,
I think we did on the podcast
that Prince Charles,
whenever he plants a new tree
before he goes,
he shakes its branch
and says,
have a good life.
And so I...
What?
Yeah, just because he talks to trees, right?
So I knew he talks to trees,
but I didn't think he sort of
formally spoke to them.
Yeah, no, he shakes their branch,
and he says,
good luck.
Hope it goes well.
And so I did the same thing.
I sort of gave it a little shake.
Okay.
It feels like the ship sailed.
If you're wishing good luck
to the already,
you know,
246-year-olds.
Well, no,
because he's at the other end
of the journey,
or she is at the other end
of the journey.
So it was quite hard to work out
the sex,
because they are one of the few
plants that have distinct sexes.
So they need a member
of the opposite sex
in order to be able to germinate
and create offspring,
which is why they all hang out
together.
They're very sociable.
So we might be doing quite a
cruel thing by keeping this poor
chap on its own.
Oh, yeah.
They did a study.
There's lots of mysteries
about cycads,
given that,
you know,
people are fascinated by them.
There's a lot we still don't
know,
like how exactly they're pollinated.
We thought it was pollinated
by the wind,
but found out recently that
actually they heat themselves up
like a radiator,
and that vaporizes all these
compounds,
and then that attracts insects.
Wow.
And their seeds are too big
for most things to eat.
So we didn't know
how they were dispersing their
seeds.
And so they did this study
to look at how their seeds
get dispersed
and how they spread.
And it was so cool how they did
it.
The scientists who did it,
they basically turned up in
Queensland,
in Australia,
and they superglued a bunch
of metal bolts
to the exposed bits of seed
when they were on the original
cycad.
And then they returned a few
months later with a metal
detector,
and then just went around the
ground seeing where the seeds
had gone.
And they'd gone underground,
have they?
They'd gone on the ground.
No seed had traveled more than
five metres away from the
plants.
They're very lazy.
Yeah.
When you shook hands with
the plant, Dan,
they ask,
did you wash your hands
afterwards?
Uh-oh.
He's never washed that hand
again, has he?
Yeah.
Because they're incredibly
poisonous.
Like, really, really, really,
really poisonous.
Yeah.
Super poisonous.
Uh-oh.
They were used to execute
criminals in Honduras.
What?
What?
And cycads.
This, more generally,
cycads.
Yeah.
There was a guy called
Villam de Vamley.
He was on Rocknest Island,
which is near Perth.
And he and his soldiers
etched some of these plants.
And they said that it violently
affected them both upwards
and downwards.
Wow.
I could have in an awkward
moment in Kia Gardens.
God, I'm lucky I didn't do
that, because I genuinely used
to.
This is really
embarrassing.
But there was,
when I was a kid,
if I met a celebrity,
because it was so rare,
I had this weird reaction
where I'd lick my hand.
All right.
So after I met Julian
Lennon,
I licked my hand.
Did you think that some of
his DNA was going to get
into your mouth?
Some awesomeness would come
into me from
the son of John Lennon.
Yes.
Have you given up that habit
over the last 18 months?
No.
No.
No.
No.
Over the last 18 months,
or have you kept
talking with it?
Yeah, yeah.
The last thing I did
that with was a travelling
piece of stone from
Tutankhamun's
burial chamber.
God, it's gone downhill
since the days of Julian
Lennon.
You're very lucky
to be alive,
because Julian Lennon,
of course, is extremely
poisonous.
Wasn't he used
to execute criminals?
Yes, he was.
Yeah, I think.
This thing,
it's one of many amazing
plants in Q.
So there was a
collector called Francis
Masson,
who was unbelievable.
I think he's the
plant hunter who collected
this.
He was the one who
collected it, yeah.
So he had this incredible
life going around
collecting plants.
He introduced a
thousand different species
of plant to Britain,
and he had a bad time,
as in he got caught
in a battle
on one occasion,
just absent-minded.
He was in a hurricane
which destroyed all
of his specimens
another time.
He was taken
prisoner by the French,
attacked by French
privateers,
a different time.
Basically, he was a plant
hunter at a time when
the world was at war
over its seas,
and so this created
a big problem.
And the French
just didn't like plant
hunters?
They did not.
He managed
to talk his way out of it
most times.
So there was a time
where he was in South
Africa, and he was so
interested in the plants
he was hunting
that he lost all
sense of time and space
and completely stopped
focusing on the world
around him,
and he forgot the
main thing he'd
been warned before
his day's work started
because he'd
been warned there
was a party of
escaped convicts
on the loose.
And he then heard
these clanking chains
coming near him,
and he had to just
run away as soon as
he realised that.
That's amazing.
Was he there?
He was there watching them
thinking, I know this
rings a bell.
I'm supposed to do
something now.
Is it approach them?
Shake their hands
and lick it?
It was in
South Africa that
he found this plant,
right?
The one that's
in Kew Gardens.
And he was
around there with
two other people,
one called Thumburg
and another one called
Lady Ann Monson.
And Lady Ann Monson
was really interesting.
She was the great
granddaughter of
Charles II.
She was described
as a very
superior wist player
and a remarkable
lady botanist.
There's a flower
now called Monsonia,
which is named after her.
And it was named
by Linnaeus,
who didn't really
know her,
but used to
write to her.
But he really,
really,
really liked her.
And he wrote to her
saying,
this is not the first
time that I have
been fired with love
for one of the
first ex.
And your husband
who is on her,
who can look at
so fair a flower
without falling in love
with it through all
innocence?
Should I be so happy
as to find my love
for you reciprocated
that I ask for
one favour of you?
Strawberry.
Always strawberry.
I ask for
one favour of you
that I might be
permitted to join
with you in the
procreation of just
one little daughter
to bear witness
to our love,
a little Monsonia flower.
Oh, he really
kept that till the end.
She must have
read through it.
Fucking hell.
So Francis Masson,
he basically,
he brought it back
from South Africa
to London,
and they brought it
on a boat.
They strapped it
to the deck of the boat
because they wanted
to make sure it got
water and sunlight
so it didn't die
in the process.
And then it was taken
on a barge down the Thames.
I mean,
it's like an explorer
in its own right,
this plant,
before it lands.
So it's meant
to produce cones,
this plant.
And in the whole
240 plus years
that it's been in queue,
it's only ever produced
one cone,
a single cone.
And it was witnessed
by Joseph Banks,
who was the great
explorer botanist as well.
That's when he was,
I believe,
a director unofficially
of Kew Gardens.
So it's...
And it was like just
before Banks died.
The year before he died.
It says that in the article,
it said the year before
his death,
as if it was like
the next time a cone comes,
he should be.
Well, maybe he licked it.
Yeah, that's true.
But my favorite thing
about this tree,
which I didn't notice
at the time,
at this pot plant,
is that it's so old now
that,
like if you were old
and you're getting tired,
it can't really stand too well.
And so it's leaning on
a lot of props,
just looking like it's still
doing okay.
Just knackered,
just going,
fuck it out.
Yeah,
it's helping being helped up.
Its name
means
bread in the head,
which is a cool name.
And cephalatus.
And cephalatus ultonstinii
is a specific one,
isn't it?
And end cephalatus
means bread in the head.
And that's because you can
get bread from it.
So you've got to be careful,
obviously,
in case you do the whole
bit accidentally executing
yourself thing.
But apparently,
like it's stem is full of
starch,
like a really good quality
starch.
So you take the pith out
of the stem,
if you bury it for two months,
it gets rid of the poisonous
toxins.
And I actually haven't seen
any evidence that this
genuinely works.
And I'm not sure you'd actually
die if you didn't bury it
for two months.
It's in Jamie Oliver's
15 minute meals, isn't it?
Yeah,
there's a few different ways
they do it.
The Cochai people,
they tie it up in animal skins
and bury it,
don't they?
And in Australia,
there's quite a few tribes
who will put it under running
water,
like in a river.
They'll leave it there
for three months,
and then that supposedly
makes it better.
Right.
A long time to wait
for breakfast, isn't it?
Yeah.
We need to move on soon,
guys,
to our next fact.
Can I quickly mention,
well,
I was reading just a few
things about Q Gardens,
generally.
And it's a pretty amazing
place outside of the plants
that they have there.
They've got bits of,
so in the 19th century,
London Bridge was sold to
America, right?
All of it was shipped over,
except for quite a few
chunky granite blocks,
which were part of the bridge.
And that's in Q Gardens now.
And there's a bit where
it's got parked benches on top.
And so a lot of people
are sitting on London Bridge,
and they have no idea
that they're sitting on.
Oh, so cool.
Did you see anyone
while you were there
sitting on the benches,
looking at their watch,
going,
they said they'd meet me
at London Bridge.
I don't understand.
I want there to be one person.
They have their own police
force in Q Gardens.
Q Gardens has its own
constabulary,
which they have the power
to arrest you.
So, Dan,
you got very lucky,
actually, with your,
you know, watch.
Can you be arrested
for licking your hand
after you've touched a plant?
I didn't licked my hand.
I think it should be
an arrestable offense.
I think that's the old me.
All I did was shake its hand
and say,
good on ya.
I think it's a bit,
it's a bit tree too.
Did they?
Hey, you're doing it.
Look, we won't accept
sarcastic rounds of applause,
all right?
It's not on.
Come on, beggars,
can't be cheaters.
OK, we need to move on
to our final fact
to the show,
and that is Anna.
My fact this week
is that red pandas
like artificial sweetener.
They're very way-conscious
turns out.
Yeah, this was,
this is like
if we were in a room
full of red panda biologists,
there would have been
such a gasp at that
because that is astonishing
information, guys.
We did not think mammals
could taste artificial sweetener.
It doesn't make sense.
Primates are supposed to be
the only things
that can taste artificial sweetener.
All other mammals
can taste normal sugars,
or some of them
can't even taste that,
like cats
have lost their ability
to taste sugar.
But then there was this study
in 2009
at a Swiss zoo
where a bunch of mammals
in the zoo
had chosen a choice
between plain water
and sugar water,
or plain water
and water with sweetener in.
And all the other animals
didn't care
between the plain water
and the sweetener,
the mongoose,
the meerkats,
the lions,
the ferrets,
but the red pandas
way-preferred sweetener.
And in fact,
their favourite
was aspartame,
which is the candorail one.
Do we know why
they in particular
seem to like sweeteners?
No, I think we can speculate
that maybe it attracts
them to bits of their diet,
which is all bamboo,
so I don't know why it would.
Interesting.
So there is a thing
about some animals,
like if you eat a lot
of plants,
then you taste more
bitter things
as opposed to like cats
that eat meat
can't really taste
bitter things very well.
And that's because a lot
of plants have toxins
in them, which are bitter.
And possibly some
of the taste receptors
that let you taste
bitter things
are also the ones
that let you taste
sweet things.
So it might be
that kind of thing,
but yeah, you're right.
We don't though, basically.
Yeah, just random.
But they can have
a chandelier in their tea
and be satisfied.
We should say
what a red panda is.
Yeah.
I did not know before.
So pandas are black and white,
aren't they?
Pandas are black and white,
and these are red.
They are both non-pandas
and they are the original pandas,
okay?
So they were,
these little mammals,
they look a bit like raccoons.
They were thought to be raccoons.
They're not raccoons either.
What the hell are they?
They were put in the bear family.
They're not bears either.
What the hell are red pandas?
They are in their own...
This sounds like a kid's book, I reckon.
What the hell are red pandas?
Yeah, yeah.
That is a really good idea
for a children's book, actually,
because they're very sweet as well.
And it's very satisfying
when you see one.
Yeah.
They are in the Iliuridai family,
and they are,
I think, the only animals
in the family.
Yeah, the only ones left, certainly.
The only ones left.
They've got no relations.
So no.
But they are a panda then.
Well, they were called panda
before pandas were called pandas.
If anything has the right
to be called a panda,
it's a red panda.
And pandas,
am I right in saying aren't pandas,
because they're bear family?
Well, there's no such thing
as a panda.
A panda is just a word.
That's right.
New name, new name.
They're both pandas,
because it's in their name.
But yeah, panda bears are bears.
Although there's been this constant debate
about whether either of them are bears.
They're really bears, panda bears.
I think we discovered panda bears
are bears in the 80s.
We always thought they weren't,
and they used to be called giant pandas.
And then in the 80s, someone went,
oh, actually, it turns out,
it is just a bear that's black and white.
We can call it a panda bear.
And the weird thing is,
before they were called panda bears,
they were called party-colored bears.
Yeah.
Cool.
That's a great name, isn't it?
Yeah.
It's like disco pants.
Disco, yeah.
Yeah.
If you're trying to picture right now
in your head what a red panda looks like,
you all know kung fu panda?
Yeah.
Kung fu panda?
That's a real giant panda.
Well, but is it a panda?
Because pandas aren't panda bears.
So it's a bit weird, right?
But the kung fu master in it
is a red panda.
Yeah.
So he's the real kung fu panda of the movie.
Yes.
Okay.
There's another thing which is really annoying
about red pandas and pandas.
So pandas, giant pandas, have a pseudo thumb, right?
They have this weird spur on the side of their hand,
which helps them, I don't know.
So like it's where a thumb should be,
but it's not an actual thumb.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Because they don't have thumbs
because they're not primates, whatever.
So giant pandas have that.
But red pandas also have that.
And both of them have evolved it separately
for different reasons, but they've both got it.
Okay.
That's weird.
The giant panda got it to eat bamboo,
and we think the red panda got it to climb trees.
But then the red panda uses it to eat bamboo.
It's so annoying.
And that's why people thought the giant panda
was the same family as the red panda.
Exactly.
Because they both had this weird thumb thing,
but it turns out they're not related at all.
Wow.
But at least there's definitely only one species of red panda,
and we know exactly what that is, right?
Wrong.
There are two species of red panda,
which no one knew about until about five years ago,
or whatever, when someone did some DNA analysis
and found out there are two separate populations.
One is Chinese, and one is Himalayan.
They're separate species of red panda.
They are, and we've been accidentally mating them
for years, haven't we?
Yes.
And then it turns out...
So bizarre.
Have they been having babies?
Yeah.
I think they're just about different species.
You know the definition of a species,
it gets kind of gray when you look too closely at it.
But it seems like the ones on one side of the river
are adapted slightly differently to the ones
on the other side of the river,
so we might be mating out those adaptations
by accidentally making a whole set.
It's so funny.
Imagine being one of those red pandas, though,
and it's because it's like being abducted by aliens,
and then just being put in a room with a bear,
and the alien's in there, you're looking at it,
you're like, go on.
Yeah.
But they're compatible.
That's what's weird, though, right?
Okay.
Like, could a red panda mate with a panda bear
and have a baby?
I don't think so.
Have we tried?
The first red panda that we know about in history,
as in, like I'm talking about in the olden, olden, olden days,
a fossil, it was twice as big as the modern red panda,
it was found in Felixstow.
Oh.
That's down the road from here,
in terms of, like, of quite close geography
to the rest of the world listening to this podcast.
It's compared to the rest of the world.
It's close.
Yeah.
This is the closest date on the tour to Felixstow.
And that's because this area of Suffolk used to be where
giant red pandas lived, and pumas lived,
and mastodons lived, and, you know, bison's lived,
and everything used to live around here is like a jungle place.
And then, obviously, they all died.
But yeah, really good fossils around here,
and also really good coprolites, right?
And that's why when you guys were doing the soundcheck earlier,
I went down to Coprolite Street, which is just down the road.
Yeah, Coprolite Street.
This is, we, James and I spoke about this ages ago.
There's, as far as I can tell, I don't know if you've looked into it more, James,
there was only one street in the whole world called Coprolite,
and that's here in Ipswich.
It's amazing they haven't named any other streets after fossilized poo.
But you'd figure somewhere else.
And it was, there was a guy, there was a factory,
which was on Coprolite Street, which is established by a guy called
Edward Packard, aka the Coprolite King,
or the golden muck man of Ipswich.
You're making it up.
No, that's what he was called.
Incredible.
Yeah.
Are there signs on Coprolite Street saying,
please do not pick up after your dog?
We're in this for the long haul.
Red Panda's not very good at pooing, incidentally, on their own.
Really?
Or baby ones aren't very good at pooing.
And this is a problem for, well, or a privilege for zookeepers
who have to look after them, because sometimes their mothers
don't seem to be very good at maternal care.
They sort of abandon them.
And so zookeepers have to raise the offspring themselves.
And the mothers, what they do to stimulate the offspring to poo and wee
is lick their abdomen and their anuses.
And so as a zookeeper, I'm afraid that you've got to go up there.
You've got to lick the anus of the...
I think you do the old Dan Shriver and you lick your hand,
and then you go for it.
The old Dan Shriver.
The old Dan Shriver.
I'll just shake you by the anus, so lick my hand.
Can't remember to lick the hand before, Dan.
But this is, I mean, that is a thing that you do with your own kids,
not the licking the anus, but Dan,
you cannot make us call the social in the middle of a show.
Well, you certainly don't do it twice.
You learn your lesson after the first go.
Yeah, like if my youngest Ted at the moment,
if he's not had a poo and you need him to have a poo,
you do things like rub his tummy or bicycle his legs,
or sit there going...
And then he goes...
And then he'll crap himself because his... has force behind it.
And sometimes you let a little thing out, but that doesn't matter.
But that, I mean, we do that with our kids, I think, as well.
Yeah, different tactics with the same end results.
Yeah, yeah.
Gosh, the world's...
Just feel like we all need a breather, you know.
The world's oldest living red panda.
Yeah, died.
Sorry.
OK.
Last year.
Not the oldest one ever, not the Jean Calmore of red pandas.
That one lived to 24, but this guy lived to 21 years old
before dying last year, and that's amazing
because they normally lived to about 12.
So getting to 21, big achievement.
Dyslexic, got it the wrong way around.
Sorry.
Easy mistake to make.
He spent his time with another panda who was called Zoe, right?
And he lost his eyesight due to his extreme old age,
and she would help him navigate around his enclosure every morning.
Isn't that sweet?
Also, the other account is that he would wrestle other red pandas
every morning at 9.15am on the dot.
Come on, you think you're hard enough?
Was he really angry?
I think it was just a species thing, but yeah.
At 9.15, did he have a digital watch?
I don't know what happened at 9.15, yeah.
Wow.
In the early 2000s, a red panda won Brummy of the Year.
Big award.
There was a big story about it.
There was a red panda called Babu
who escaped from the Birmingham Nature Centre in 2005.
Babu escaped and found four days later,
but in the interim, it was a big story of where's he gone
and they called him the Houdini of red pandas.
I'm sure there wasn't much competition, really.
They're always escaping, aren't they?
Literally, look up a red panda in a zoo
and you will be looking up a story about them escaping.
I don't know why we keep putting them in zoos
because they're desperate to get out.
There was one in Scotland that survived for two months.
It was just found up a tree by a farmer.
It's actually fucking bizarre.
They're hovering above your cows.
We're going to have to wrap up in a sec, guys.
Some stuff on sweeteners?
Maybe, yeah.
So, saccharin, which was the first artificial sweetener,
300 times sweeter than table sugar,
but there's one now that's called neotame,
which is 10,000 times sweeter than sugar.
What's interesting about that is because it's so sweet,
you only have to put a tiny bit in anything,
which means it's so small you don't have to put it in the ingredients.
So, you can just add this sweetener
because it's below a certain number of grams
you don't have to add something to the ingredients.
That's incredible, isn't that amazing?
That's really incredible.
Do you know what?
People keep discovering artificial sweeteners by mistake.
Did you guys come across this?
No.
It's because they keep looking plants, isn't it?
You've got to do the down-tribe.
It's all rainesses.
Anna, it is people doing the dancing.
Oh, wow.
Okay, so the first one was discovered by this person.
Can we just establish which thing is the dancing?
It's accidentally licking bits of yourself, all right?
If you like that.
Okay.
This Russian scientist called Konstantin Falberg,
he sat down to dinner in 1878,
and he'd been at the lab all day,
and he hadn't washed his hands,
and his bread roll was unbelievably sweet,
and then his drink was really sweet,
and then he found even his napkin was really sweet,
and it turns out he'd invented an artificial sweetener.
I don't know why he started eating his napkin,
but he realized,
and he went back and he just started tasting things
on his work table,
and he had created this unbelievably powerful,
the first ever artificial sweetener,
but that is not the only time it's happened.
It happened again.
Cyclomate is the next one.
A scientist called Michael Sveder
accidentally tasted something sweet.
Aspartame, something sweet.
A chemist called James Schlatter,
he was working on another,
he was working on an ulcer drug,
and he just tasted something incredibly sweet.
And sucralose is the last one.
Researchers misheard their instructions, apparently,
and accidentally tasted the compound
instead of testing the compound.
That's fantastic.
Look, guys, I hate to cut this off,
but we need to wrap up.
Okay, that is it.
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've said over the course of this podcast,
we can be found on our Twitter accounts.
I'm on at Shriverland.
Andi at Andrew Hunter M.
James at James Harkin.
And Anna.
You can email our podcast at qi.com.
Yep.
And you can go to our group account
at no such thing.
And you can go to our website,
nosuchthingasafish.com.
We have all of our previous episodes up there.
You can check out all of the upcoming tour dates as well.
We're going to be doing more on this nerd immunity tour
all the way into January, so do come along.
But that's it for now.
Thank you so much, Ipswich.
That was so much fun.
We love being here.
We will be back again.
And everyone else will be back again next week
with another episode.
We'll see you then.
Goodbye!