No Such Thing As A Fish - 414: No Such Thing As Miles Davis's Jazzercise Workouts
Episode Date: February 18, 2022Dan, James, Anna and Andrew discuss Army squads, Leggy squats, and heady squabs. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. ...
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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 Sudolberg.
My name is Dan Schreiber, I am sitting here with Anna Toshinsky, 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 Anna.
My fact this week is that in the 19th century you could be rejected from the army for having
bad breath.
Wow.
Why?
Why?
Let's...
Well, the justification is really no more complicated than you think which is that
it's fucking gross for everyone else.
I can imagine like if you're in a submarine or something.
Well, what if you have to give another soul the kiss of life?
But you accidentally send them into the arms of death.
I don't think the kiss of life had been invented yet even.
This is from a book written in 1840 which I don't know why I was reading it but it's
called Hints on the Medical Examination of Recruits for the Army and there's some great
stuff in there and the thing I read was some recruits are so offensive in their breath
as to be intolerable to their mess mates and from these causes are discharged from the
French service and ought to be from every other.
Wow.
So...
This book is really good.
It's great fun so I highly recommend it because it's talking about how you examine people
for the army and there are lots of reasons for rejecting people, unsound health, fair
enough, scrawfielder, loss of teeth, flat feet.
You had to be inspected sober and naked by the recruiting doctor.
How are they going to get you naked if you're sober?
Great point.
They also...
Large testicles, you're out.
You're not allowed in the army.
Oh really?
It's too big.
Why too big a shot like if they're aiming for you?
Why was the reason for too big balls?
Any remarkable enlargement or induration of the testicle is a cause of rejection.
I bet so many people claim that was why they got rejected.
Everyone's leaving away from their breath, actually it was the testicle and then I didn't
get it.
I think they're talking about sort of hydraseals or conditions where you have it but they really
do get very big indeed.
Also you get turned away for having a narrow chest or for relaxed abdominal rings which
I think might just mean you'd die a year.
I don't know.
For me that was like having like a belly, like what do you call them, like a love handles
kind of thing.
Oh that makes a lot of sense.
That makes more sense.
Imagine that inspection if it's up the anus.
No, sorry mate.
Your abdominal rings are...
Not tense enough for me.
Crikey.
I've never said that before.
I just want to be clear.
If anything that would make me more tense.
Oh there was also, so when it was talking about how to, because you get turned away for being
a habitual drunk and so the book gives information on how to spot a habitual drunk and it says
you can sense it on their breath so that's another reason why bad breathing might get
rejected for it because if you can smell old alcohol on their breath and also look out
for grog blossoms, do you know what they are?
I think they're like spots on your nose or something.
Sort of a flush.
It's really close.
Like a general that ruddy flush that you get if you...
Basically it's birth blood vessels, yeah, you're skirting around it, yeah, isn't that
because you know, if you're an alcoholic you've got birth blood vessels all over your face.
I like grog blossoms.
That's cool.
There was a guy, it was in the news quite recently that too many people were getting
turned away from the British army and it was like oh this is the end of the world, this
is going to happen.
There was a guy in Leeds called Jack 17, we don't know his surname and he said that he
didn't get in because he had acne, he said there was two things, he had acne and cold
hands and feet on the day of the test and he said well I've had acne before and it
literally just clears up within a day or so and also it's snowing outside.
Right.
But they were having none of it and they wouldn't let him in.
Yeah, but it hasn't put him off, he's going to reapply when his acne goes.
And it's the summer maybe?
Yeah, exactly.
So why, the enemy is not going to shoot at you more if you've got acne.
This was a weird thing, this was, they found that there were so many medical conditions
that they were turning away that as a result they were really understaffed for new recruits
for the army.
So they had a target of 82,000 people and they fell short 5,000 because people would be turned
away for acne, they were being turned away because you know someone had a nut allergy
which you know apparently that's important.
Yeah, if you're going to go and seize that nut factory from the enemy then that's a
problem isn't it?
I guess it makes it easier, yeah, if you're allergic to nuts, you know, if Bond was allergic
to nuts it's way easier to kill him, right?
Do you think what you would do is tie him down on a table and just throw peanuts closer
and closer to him so they land him in his nuts?
Yeah, unless of course it's an airborne nut allergy in which case you just need to leave
a packet of peanuts slowly being opened by a machine and that's the thing, then he's
got to get out before the packet of nuts.
So I would watch all of these, all of these scenarios happen.
If that is that guy, he said and the reason that this guy in the news is because nut allergies
can be really, really, really dangerous but he had a nut allergy that he didn't need an
EpiPen for and hadn't had any reaction for over 10 years.
Yeah.
So that was the thing about that.
Yeah, yeah.
There was, you guys may have come across this in your research, in 2020 there was a potential
recruit who was rejected from the army for having a tattoo and the problem is that once
you apply to the army, if you say you have tattoos they ask you to send in photos of
the tattoos and he had a six inch tattoo of a penis on him and they said that's no good,
we're not allowed that.
The only statistic was this tattoo.
It was extremely realistic.
Couldn't you know I've just said this is my actual penis?
Yeah.
It was in the uncanny valley between looking too much like a penis to be comfortable with
but not so much like a penis that you think that's just...
Right, but you feel nice and comfortable.
Exactly.
Thank you.
Was he turned away?
He was turned away.
He was turned away.
He was told thank you for your interest but we can't take you into the army so the rules
are very strict on any tattoos which have kind of, you know, sexual meanings or offensive
meanings or potentially offensive meanings.
Where was it?
Well that's the thing which I think is slightly unfair, it was on his inner thigh so it wasn't
in the wrong place.
Was it to remind him where to leave it?
Yeah.
Like a parking spot.
Yeah.
It was a very roomy parking spot, it really was, it was, it's quite like it's...
Why would you do a big one?
You've got the comparison right there.
Do a tiny, tiny penis tattoo.
Well because you can see it right.
It's cold.
Here's what it usually looks like.
It's a perfect alibi.
Oh look at the ink staying on my leg again from my penis earlier in the day in the foot room.
It's not even once like trying to get into being rejected from the army before you get
into it.
There's a story I read which is of someone who was in the army who they were desperately
trying to get out through loopholes and this was Timothy Leary who was, you know, LSD,
he was one of the big gurus, he was a counterculture character in America and he was part of the
armed forces in America and he kind of did a lot of pranks and he exposed some of the
generals to weird things that embarrass them.
So they desperately tried to get him out so he was shaving once and he cut himself and
they tried to get him out on the grounds that he had damaged military property.
Was he the property himself?
Yes, because when you're apart and this was back in the 50s and 60s, when you sign up
to the military, you sign your body over, you are the military, so that was damaged
to their property.
What if you cut your nails?
If you, well, they were trying to get him out so they were loopholing it.
I know, but it sounds like, did it work?
He stayed in, he managed to, he managed to stay in, but they desperately tried all these
things.
Another group of people who wanted people to leave the army or leave the British army
was the Nazis and so they decided that they would drop a load of leaflets on the allied
forces to give them tricks of how to get kicked out of the army and the thing said, oh, you've
done a really good job but now's the time to give up because you're going to lose anyway
so this is the best way to get out of the army.
So they had these little pamphlets.
One of them advised men to fake heart disease by smoking 20 to 30 cigarettes per day.
And it said, if you normally smoke that much already, why not double the number?
There was an interview in Vice Arabia which interviewed people who had successfully exempted
themselves from the army and found ways of doing it and one guy said he just spent months
and months completely gorging constantly.
So every meal he'd eat, burgers, pizzas, pastries, he said, I added mayonnaise to everything
I ate and then I would have mayonnaise as its own snack between meals.
He gained five stone in six months.
That's amazing.
Mayonnaise is a snack.
Yeah, delicious.
I know.
Can't believe he wasn't doing it already.
We're going to have to move on very soon to our next fact since it's gone so quick.
Just quickly on bad breath and halitosis, the phrase often a bridesmaid never a bride.
That comes from listerine and it was to do with bad breath.
Oh really?
So these were adverts in America where they would have wording like Edna's case was a
really pathetic one.
Like every woman, her primary ambition was to marry.
Most of the girls of her set were married or about to be, yet no one possessed more
grace or charm or loveliness than she.
As her birthdays crept towards the tragic 30 mark, marriage seemed farther from her life
than ever.
She was often a bridesmaid but never a bride and that popularized that phrase and that's
why we use it.
Their adverts are unbelievable examples in basically negging your audience.
So they're all things like he never knew why and it shows someone being socially shunned
or they say it behind your back or my favorite one.
Are you unpopular with your own children?
I know you think it's because your balls are too big but you've got halitosis.
Okay, it is time for fact number two and that is James.
Okay, my fact this week is that in 1888 there was a squatting competition in India.
Despite being up against the country's best wrestlers, the winner was a 10 year old boy
who managed several thousand squats but was then bedridden for a week.
So cool.
So this is the exercise, the squats basically.
And this is a young boy who later became a wrestler and he was known as the Great Gama
and he's one of the most famous wrestlers from Indian history.
In the time there was loads of Maharajas and stuff like that and there was this guy called
the Maharajra Jodpa and he decided that he wanted to find the greatest squatter in the
whole of the land.
And they got all these wrestlers in to see who could do it best and this guy who was
his original name was Ghulam Muhammad Baksh but he was coming from a really kind of
a wrestling dynasty and his father had died quite young and they decided this young boy
was going to be the greatest wrestler in the whole world and we're going to do it.
Even at the age of 10 he's going to do loads and loads of squats, loads of push-ups, everything
and at the age of 10 he managed to beat all of these wrestlers in the whole country.
To be fair you've got less distance to cover if you're 10 and squatting.
I would say that every squat should count for half a squat.
That would be the rule that I imposed, right? It's much easier to go up and down.
You haven't been through puberty so you've got less muscle mass so it's harder.
Hannah's a bit right because you know like on Britain's gun talent when the kids win
but they're actually a bit shit compared to the adults.
To be fair to him, yes he was a kid so maybe he had an advantage but this guy...
He didn't have an advantage. I didn't mean that seriously.
I'm not slamming him just in case someone's alive who's descended from Gama and they are.
He didn't have an advantage.
OK, cool. Don't track Hannah down and squat on her.
But how do you feel about the tightness of these rings?
LAUGHTER
But this guy went on to be one of the greatest wrestling champions of all time.
That was like watching when you watch a Superman movie and Superman discovers...
He effectively became world champion.
Everyone called him the world champion.
They didn't have proper championships in those days but they called him the world champion.
By the time he was an adult we got a picture of him here.
He had 30 inch thighs and 56 inch chest.
Just to put that into context, there was a guy called Roberto Carlos who some of you might know
a soccer player who had famously massive thighs and his were 24 inches compared to 30 inch for Gama.
His inch was 56 inches and Arnold Schwarzenegger's chest was 42 inches.
That's how big this guy was.
His diet training sounds incredible.
His daily diet included 6 pounds of butter, 10 litres of milk, half a litre of ghee
which is basically clarified butter.
A few snacks of mayonnaise.
And one sachet of Hellman's mayonnaise every day.
But he did 3000 press-ups a day and had 40 wrestling belts against other people.
And 5000 squats a day.
A squat, I didn't think it was essential to making a world champion
but I tried some today just to feel what it's like.
It's hard to squat.
After the first three, it's really...
Thank you Joe Wicks.
We don't know exactly how many he did actually.
We have his work for it, they did 5000.
We know it was very, very high but we don't know exactly how much it was
and that's because no one ever saw him start a routine and then the routine
because no one stayed in the gym for as long as he did.
That's brilliant.
Very boring spectators for watching someone squat to be fair.
I did think that with the squats.
If you were doing a competition and watching how many squats are going on
how do you monitor each individual?
Like do you have like a little bell at the bottom?
There should be an angle you have to hit, shouldn't there?
It was basically time.
They asked him how many he did.
They're pretty certain it was over 2000.
He said he'd done thousands but had lost count
but they knew that it was over 2000
and the modern record of consecutive squats is about 3200.
So it's not completely out of the question number.
It's kind of a reasonable number.
Have you ever asked a 10-year-old how many times did you just run around the garden?
Oh, a million.
We'll write that down in the history books.
Anna really got it in for the child stars and child afterings today.
He never chose a word.
I also don't chose a word of his diet.
I find it so interesting the legends that build up around these people.
The details of his diet are just implausible.
You'd have a heart attack.
He was consuming like 50,000 calories a day as far as the legend is concerned.
You wouldn't have time to do anything else.
I'm not calling him a liar.
I'm calling his press team liars.
I kind of agree with you.
I think this whole period of entertainment from magicians
through to these strong men acts and stuff like that,
it's a period where there is no truth, I feel.
Well, if you guys don't find that plausible,
you are going to love this next one.
This is a more recent report, actually.
This is a report from the Telegraph a few years ago.
I think it was in 2011.
This is about someone who could do one-finger push-ups.
So it's an athlete called Xi Guizong from China
who holds, and I'm quoting directly here,
holds the record for the most one-finger push-ups in 30 seconds.
He did 41 one-finger push-ups in 30 seconds,
set that in December 2011.
I'm still quoting, the power of Guizong's finger is so strong,
he is said to be able to kill a man just by pointing at them.
Yes!
Oh, wow.
That's amazing.
What are these people saying?
That's in the Telegraph!
I just love the idea of him, you know, he's trying to pick teams of football.
You! Oh, shit!
You know, birds do press-ups before they fly, baby birds.
Really? How sweet is this? That's amazing.
Is that to get their muscles better?
Exactly. They have this puppy fat when they're young,
and before they fly, they have to have enough strength.
Obviously, you can't just try flying, especially if you're leaving a high nest.
And swifts have been observed, they do these press-ups
and they push and extend their wings,
and they rest on the wingtips for up to nine seconds.
Wow.
I mean, almost all animals don't do exercise.
No, it hasn't caught on.
No, but that's because animals don't have to do exercise, normally,
because muscle changes get triggered by not exercising most animals.
So, like, bears, it gets triggered by seasonal changes, the weather changes,
and then it just releases muscle-forming compounds into their bloodstream,
and then they get fit.
Really? It's incredible.
Yeah, humans do not have this skill.
Just like if every, you know, every April,
just you walked into the office and everyone's buffers out.
Yeah, exactly.
It's so good. It's so unfair that we don't have this.
Morning turn, morning.
Someone comes in still really skinny and forgot to hibernate.
Can't believe it.
Baby birds do do that, but birds do that even before they're babies.
They exercise, and they exercise, if you can say.
No, come on.
This is true. So, these are baby birds who are parasitic birds.
You know, like cockles, for instance.
They lay an egg in another bird's nest, and then their baby will come out,
and often they'll attack the other birds,
and they found some parasitic birds who will do exercises inside the eggs
so that when they hatch, they're already hench as fuck
so they can beat up all the other birds.
Isn't that amazing?
That's so funny.
Going back to Gama for a second,
there's a really cool thing where there's a museum that you can go to
that has a giant rock that he once lifted,
and it's so heavy that they were like,
that needs to go in a museum.
So, it's 1,200 kilograms heavy.
Well, he never lifted that.
You don't, do you?
I mean, like, he might have been said to have lifted it,
but no one's ever lifted more than 600 or 700 kilos.
As far as we know.
Pick Andy up on the old pointing fingers attack.
Well, I'm saying he's picked up a rock.
Okay, I think that never happened either.
Thank you.
That's about as heavy as a bull, right?
Like a big bull, or a quite small hippo, I think.
Yeah, maybe.
I mean, smaller in size, right?
Like, it's harder to pick up a hippo.
Sure. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Unless you go underneath it and sort of lift it up.
It fights back, though, which rocks don't.
I think that's often why they use weights rather than hippos
in these continents.
You know that when you've done exercise and you have muscle
and then you don't exercise for a while and you lose the muscle?
Atrophies.
Atrophies, yeah. That is an evolutionary aid.
We're designed to do that.
It's a good thing, really, yeah.
This is because kilos of muscle are really expensive to maintain
and you are about 40% muscle on average,
and so it's a lot of your energy.
It's about a fifth of your basic energy budget.
It just goes on keeping your muscles going.
It's an advantage that you don't keep the muscle
when you stop exercising. It doesn't feel like it.
It would be very nice if you just kept it forever.
I'm having a real flashback on your behalf
after you being 14 at school and explaining this
to the seven buddies around you.
Guys, you're actually very inefficiently big.
Do you know Zumba? We were talking about exercise.
Zumba used to be called a rumba size.
Can you think of where the word rumba size comes from?
Is there a dance called the rumba?
The rumba, yeah.
Exercise.
No, no, no. It comes from a mixture of rumba and jazzercise.
Oh, of course.
I see.
Jazzercise, I find really interesting.
Jazzercise was started by a woman called Judy Sheppard-Missett in 1969.
Basically, she did it just as a warm-up to start off with
and everyone loved it and soon it was all over the country
in the US and then eventually all over the world.
Absolutely huge.
She decided she wanted to turn it into a thing,
so she went to her bank and she said,
you know, can you give me some money
to kind of set up this jazzercise thing?
And the bank looked at the numbers and they said,
no, this is just a fad, it's a complete waste of time.
And then she said, seven years later,
that bank went out of business,
50 years later she was still working.
Isn't that cool?
I don't know what the hell jazzercise is,
so I don't know who these hordes of people are who are doing it.
I would have thought it's incredibly difficult to exercise jazz music.
If there's one genre of music,
I'm not exercising too.
It's Miles Davis' crudely way.
I'll be honest, it's more just jazzy than jazz.
Yeah, probably more trap jazz
than like a 12-minute bassoon solo.
We're going to have to move on in a sec to our next fact.
Can I tell you my favourite squat terminology that I learned?
Sure, yeah.
It's Finnish and it's slang used in Finland
and it's squat wine.
Life has in the drink wine.
Yeah, the drink wine.
So squat wine is a wine that is so cheap
that they keep it on the lowest shelves of a supermarket.
You need a squat to get to answer, to read the labels.
That's so good.
Okay, it is time for fact number three,
and that is Andy.
My fact is, there was a breed of dogs in Victorian times
which only existed in taxidermy form.
The perfect pet.
It's quite weird, isn't it?
Because how do you stuff something that doesn't exist?
Well, exactly.
So this is from an exhibit at the Horniman Museum
in South London, which is a great museum.
They've got lots of stuff and lots of stuffing.
They've got lots of stuff things.
And they've got these dogs, which they look like dogs,
but they're not proper dogs.
So they're dog skin.
Basically, the Victorians loved tiny dogs.
Guys, just tune out for a while.
I'll come back and...
What we know up here, because we've had to read about this fact,
is that Andy's trying to describe something quite gruesome.
It's quite charming.
They took still good puppies,
and they loved miniature dogs,
and they loved incredibly tiny toy dogs,
but there are dogs which don't exist in this smaller form
in their actual life.
So they would take puppies that had not been born alive,
would arrange those into the shape and sort of situation
of proper adult dogs, but looking tiny.
They called them Roman dogs or dwarf dogs,
and they were kind of fashionable things to have.
So basically, it's an incredibly tiny Great Dane in a glass case.
But the thing is that actually, they kind of convinced people
that they were real kind of Lilipushan,
you know, St. Bernard's or whatever, didn't they?
They were like, it's normally a big dog.
This is a real tiny one.
You can buy it for thousands of pounds.
And people did buy it for thousands of pounds,
not knowing that they had this kind of trick.
It's like the micro pig craze.
Ten years ago.
Well, when people accidentally just bought normal pigs,
they were like piglets.
Piglets, yes.
Yeah, so it is pretty gruesome, but it's...
It's amazing, though.
It's astonishing that they did it.
And the mannequin that you...
And they still do this today in Taxidermy,
which I didn't realize, which is you kind of...
you take the skin of the animal.
So it's not...
I always thought the insides were probably still there
of a Taxidermy thing, of an animal.
You thought it was sort of like rotting organs and flesh.
No, I thought those bones and the bones.
It was like a little thing.
Like, you know, it was just, yeah.
To be honest, I haven't really thought about what's inside.
The dog in my living room.
But I don't have that.
Yeah, but it's basically...
you buy as if you were passing a shop
and you saw a mannequin out there and they put the clothes on it.
It's kind of like that.
There's a mannequin shape of the animal,
and then you fit the animal over it,
which is bizarre, but that's how they do it.
So I just find like putting a sock on or something.
Yes, yeah.
Or trying to get a tent back into that bag.
Oh, I was thinking of stretching it over,
but you're thinking of stuffing in.
We've got different Taxidermy techniques.
You're right.
You'd both be fired from the Taxidermy club.
Just quickly, the Victorians were really bad for dogs.
We think of the Victorians as dog obsessed
because they invented Crofts and all this stuff.
Actually, it was a disaster.
They became obsessed with particular breeds
because they invented dog shows,
and they invented this huge genetic bottleneck
where loads of dogs, which didn't happen to be fashionable in dog shows,
died out.
So all these breeds of dogs that we don't have anymore,
because they weren't suitable for being shown in dog shows,
or just weren't trendy enough.
But did Crofts used to have a stuffed dog category?
No, there was never...
What? You think they're just dragging it?
A lot of them were traps and stuff.
They smashed through every single fence.
It's a disaster.
I think you just be like, stay!
Well, every dog has won that round.
The Victorians were really great taxidermists, weren't they?
They were much more imaginative and creative
than maybe you imagine taxidermy.
They loved putting different animals in different human activities.
So a bit like that picture of dogs playing poker or whatever.
They put squirrels, particularly.
They like to put doing things like boxing,
so they dress them up in boxing gloves,
or they'd have croquet playing cats.
They'd have little rabbits all sitting in a schoolroom,
with little books they're writing in,
and spectacles and things like that.
I mean, it's disgusting, but also quite sweet at the same time.
There's so many people that we know the names of
for very different reasons, who were all taxidermists,
or loved taxidermy.
Yeah, so like Captain Bird's Eye,
before he was a fish finger person.
These taste disgusting!
He was a taxidermist.
And one day he just sort of noticed,
oh, I've got all my fingers inside this fish,
and then he thought,
what if all the fish was inside the finger?
I like that moment.
In 2017, a woman from Dundee
advertised her dog Snoopy on Facebook,
who was dead, and she wrote,
this is the offer.
What do you mean advertised?
Well, she wrote this,
had our dog turned into a rug when he died,
treasured family pet has to be sold
as new dog keeps trying to hump it.
And that was Snoopy.
Did she get peanuts for it?
She was looking for £100 on near offer.
Very cosy and unusual piece,
she said, I don't know if it's sold.
That's amazing.
The father of taxidermy is kind of this cool guy
called Carl Akely.
I think that's how you pronounce it.
So he started out stuffing animals in museums,
and he really changed it, because back in those days,
the idea of taxidermy was just,
you'd stuff an animal as full as you possibly could,
so it was really bloated,
no idea of its shape, how it was supposed to look.
He literally said, if you had a deer,
you'd turn it upside down, you'd hang it upside down,
and you'd just drop stuff from above into its skin,
and then you'd sew it up.
And he came up with the idea of actually making animals
look like they had in life.
And he was amazing, though,
so he went to Somaliland in 1896,
and he was pounced by a leopard,
and he killed this leopard
by shoving his hand down its throat, I think, wasn't it?
Shoving one hand down its throat,
and then one hand around its throat.
It's pretty...
And I think the story is that it's sort of...
He heard something rustling in a bush,
and he thought, oh, great, a tortoise or something,
like, quite manageable,
and he just disappeared into the bush,
and then his colleagues saw him rustling with a leopard.
Oh, my God.
It was terrifying, yeah.
He was responsible for a lot of conservation,
so he shot gorillas and things,
and then he started feeling really queasy about it.
He thought, ah, this isn't right.
This feels like murder, to be honest.
And it's thanks to him that a big...
I think it's Virunga National Park, Virunga.
Oh, really?
That was Africa's first national park,
and it was set up largely thanks to his efforts
and his advocacy.
So thanks to him, the mountain gorilla,
which he had shot and felt awful, awful about shooting,
it's largely thanks to him that it survived
to the extent it has.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, so he really had a 180 turn
on this. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's cool.
I hate to move us on.
James, do you want to do one more thing, or...?
Just that if you live in Anchorage, anyone listening,
then...and you go to the local library,
you can get books out,
but you can also get stuffed animals out.
They have...
Apparently, this is not quite well known,
even if you live in Anchorage,
but you can go in and you can say,
I'd like a stuffed rabbit, please,
and you can take it out, and then you can bring it back.
And the most popular thing they do is owls.
Can you guess why owls are the most popular thing
they give out?
Is it the Harry Potter Cosplay?
Yeah, close enough.
It's kids' parties.
Like, so whenever children in Anchorage have a party,
if they have a Harry Potter-themed party,
they always get the stuffed owl out.
Ah, cool.
So I can't wait for this podcast to go out.
The scenes at Anchorage Library the next morning.
It doesn't have to be all queuing up.
Where's my stuffed rabbit? Where's my stuffed mountain dog?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Sorry, sorry.
I was reading Brian Blessed's autobiography,
and he says that when he was a kid growing up,
if you found a dead cat on the side of the road,
you kept it sort of as a toy, and you used it with your mate.
So you'd go around holding a dead cat.
No, you didn't.
That's what Brian...
No, it doesn't.
You call it Brian Blessed and exaggerate it.
I like it.
Someone who's going to go around telling Phil...
I'll tell you.
I actually sort of believe that he did that.
He's an extraordinary man, but that's what he said.
And he said you would swing it around like how you'd see
a posh person swinging a cane or Charlie Chaplin.
You would swing it by the tail.
This is... I'm just reporting the facts from Brian Blessed.
Yeah, he could somersault over walls as well, he says.
Okay.
It's a really good autobiography.
We're going to have to move on soon, guys, to our next fact,
final fact.
On the stuffed...
Again, like lots of ancient stuffing techniques
and stuffed animals, there were lots of railway stations
in the UK, had station dogs,
which would...
In life, they would collect money.
So there were dozens of these dogs all over the place.
And they would collect money for particularly the widows
and children of people who'd worked on the railways
and died in accidents, things like that.
So widows and orphans, that kind of stuff.
There were dozens called London Jack all over London.
And Slough has stationed Jim still on the platform to this day.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
And they would collect coins in their mouths originally
and then just sort of, you know, gather the coins together.
But then they had to have boxes tied to them,
sort of a little holster.
And the reason they had to do that was because Brighton Bob
was found to be buying biscuits at a local bakery with the coins.
LAUGHTER
Okay, let's move on to our final fact this show.
Time for a final fact, and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that in October 2021,
the pop star Shakira attended the world championships
of keeping a balloon in the air for as long as possible.
LAUGHTER
There's a slight knowing laugh and applause happening here
because the audience is aware of something
that happened in the first half of our show tonight.
But this is a thing that has started a new annual championship
that will no doubt rival some of the great championships around the world.
Like a World Cup, an Olympics.
Exactly.
And a keeping a balloon in the air for as long as possible.
The three things that we'll know about the air.
Yeah, that will be like the egot of the sporting world.
So the reason Shakira was there is because her partner,
Gerard Piquet, was part of the organisers
who set up this world ballooning event.
Actually, Gerard Piquet has won a World Cup, I'm pretty sure.
So, like, if he could win this as well,
he's only an Olympic title away from the egot.
Of course! God, he's won away.
Well, that's amazing.
So, yeah, this was set up and it happened in Barcelona
and all teams came in and basically, if you see pictures of it,
it is effectively people going around an obstacle course.
They're representing their countries and teams
and they're trying to keep a balloon up in the air for as long as possible
and the whole purpose is you slap the balloon away
and if it hits the ground, the team loses a point
and then they have another chance of trying to keep it.
So you're just diving over.
But you're convincing.
Yeah, it's two countries in the room at the same time
and you're hitting it so that they won't be able to get to it, right?
Exactly, yeah, yeah.
Otherwise it would be seriously boring.
Just on, you know, incredible achievements in the world of ballooning,
there is a ballooning Olympics, basically.
It's called the World Balloon Convention
and so you get hundreds and hundreds of twisters as they get known.
Oh, is this for, like, making balloon shapes?
Yeah, and making incredible castles and incredible displays
and people will turn up and twist, which is, you know, that cool phrase for it,
for 27 hours in a row.
Like, it's nuts. They do it so much.
And there are lots of people who are enormous celebrities in the balloon world.
One of them is a man called Larry Moss
and I didn't just Google Moss plus balloons for anyone listening.
He has been described as the best balloon artist in the world.
He once built a haunted house entirely out of balloons.
An entire haunted house.
How does that look different to a house?
Well, it's made of balloons.
And so that's a haunted part.
What's the haunted part?
Well, it's shit scary inside, you know.
It's got sort of...
Yeah, it's got skeletons made of balloons
and, you know, zombies made of balloons and vampires.
And a fully functioning carousel, I think he had,
like, that you could ride around on, made of balloons.
You saw it as well, Anna.
Yeah, yeah, I know. Oh, I know Moss, yeah.
It looks frightening, doesn't it? Yeah.
It's terrifying. It's absolutely terrifying.
I think the reason he did it
was because his wife, Judy, was in a coma in 2003
and he promised her that if she woke up,
he would build her a castle out of balloons.
And she did. And so he had to.
And then out of force.
Really? Wow. No.
Beautiful fairy tale ending, you hope.
That was a rollercoaster, right?
So this happens a lot, then.
We have lots of balloon championships.
It sounds like... That's amazing.
The twisters are great.
I was reading about another balloon twister
called Ralph Dewey, who's written 16 books on balloon twisting.
Wow. And a lot with 14 other books.
Great works of fiction, I am sure.
And he's also the...
He's a member of the Fellowship of Christian Magicians,
for whom he is the five-time recipient
of the best balloon lecture.
Huge.
And Anna, you're burying the leader here
because I read a bit about him, too,
and he's a key figure in the gospel clown movement.
What is that?
Well, it's kind of as it is on the tin.
Like, it's a group of Christian clowns
who believe in spreading the word of God,
but through clown...
Do they turn a bucket full of confetti into wine?
I think they just talk a lot about religion,
and they also do some clown stuff.
You know, it's like Jesus
when he put 27 people in that little car.
And this is a huge division in balloon world
because there is a schism in the ballooniverse, if you will,
between gospel twisters
who use balloons to teach Bible lessons
and will sometimes do things like balloons of Jesus on the cross
and adult twisters who do more raunchy balloons
Oh, there must be an in-between.
It's not like if you get a balloon guy,
it's either going to be a gospel guy or a sexy guy.
I think there is a sort of small rump of people in the middle
who are just sick of this balloon infighting.
But there are conventions, obviously,
and the conventions may not be big enough
to only have one or the other,
so they meet at conventions like the Jets and the Sharks.
You know, the sexy balloon people and the gospel balloon people.
And it's uncomfortable, it's awkward.
There must be so many burst balloons when they get to the bit
where they nail Jesus to the cross.
Did you read that the FBI were called by multiple pilots
to investigate a man with a jetpack flying over LA?
And I didn't realise that whenever someone is seen flying with a jetpack,
the FBI have to investigate,
because as far as we know, no one can really fly with a jetpack
except like a sort of a metre above the ground for about a centimetre,
and then they fall off.
So the technology hasn't quite got to better levels yet.
So it must be like the Russians, I guess.
That's the fear, or the aliens,
and this was flying at over 900 metres high.
I think three separate pilots reported it in sort of four separate months,
so it had obviously been up there for ages.
I don't know what this person was eating.
But anyway, the FBI had to investigate it,
and it turned out it was the character from Nightmare Before Christmas
from a Halloween which had been released.
Jack Skellington?
It was a new version of Jack Skellington from Nightmare Before Christmas.
It sailed up into the sky and was investigated by the FBI.
It is amazing, because you hear the LA pilots landing,
and they're like, there's a jetpack man right next to me.
It was a real mystery for ages.
The FBI, by the way, do have to look into some pretty weird things.
This is going back to an earlier fact,
but I saw on the FBI website a calling out saying,
FBI seeking Bad Breath Bandit in Northern California,
and it was just a guy who supposedly
they thought must have bad breath,
because he kept going into this pre-pandemic with face masks on.
Do you think they'll have one of those identity parades
where just people breathed in your face,
and you're like, it's definitely that guy?
Yeah, exactly, yeah.
Presumably they were seeking him for other crimes than having bad breath.
Oh, yeah, no, he was robbing banks.
Why did they think he had bad breath
if he was robbing banks and wearing a mask?
Isn't that absolute row one bank robbing?
Like, what?
That's such a good point, yes.
It was like a, yeah, no, no, that's just a fucking great point.
I don't know what to say.
I'm not sure this FBI know what they're doing anymore.
Weirdly, we need to wrap up soon.
We can do some spots, weird spots, like the balloon thing.
Yeah, go for it, yeah.
We call it AKQA, and they used artificial intelligence
to come up with a new sport.
They came up with something called Speedgate,
and this supposedly combines familiar elements of croquet,
rugby and soccer.
Right, sign me up.
It sounds great, you've got like a goal in the middle
and two goals on either side,
and you have to go through the middle goal to get possession,
and then you have to go round and knock it through the other goal,
and if you've got a guy on the other side of the other goal,
then they could knock it back through and you get more points.
It's amazing, it's quite a good game.
In Oregon, the Oregon Sports Authority
have now officially recognized it as a sport,
and there's a few universities that actually play it.
But the other things that the AI came up with
were not quite so good.
So they came up with underwater parkour.
Amazing.
They came up with a game where two players
were in a hot air balloon and on a tightrope,
and they had to pass a ball back and forward to each other
like tennis,
and they came up with an exploding frisbee game
where you basically throw the frisbee to each other
and every now and then it just blows up.
Wood watch.
That sounds like a great sport.
Exactly, with speed game, which actually is quite a good sport,
the AI created an official motto for it,
and it was face the ball, to be the ball,
and to be above the ball.
So good.
I've got a way to go.
I'd listen to that AI commentating, actually.
Have you ever heard of juggling?
Juggling.
Is it jogging and juggling together?
Yes.
It's jogging and juggling together.
You're a joggler if you do it,
and the championships are held every year
at the International Jugglers Association Festival,
and they're good.
There is a three ball event, there's a five ball event,
and a seven ball event over different lengths,
and juggling five balls is unbelievably hard,
and it's a seven, level and seven while running.
But get this, the 100 metre
three ball record is 14 seconds,
which is faster
than I could run for 100 metres
not juggling.
It's insane, it's absolutely insane.
How many times can you still be holding all three balls
and just chuck one up in the air as you cross the finish line?
You've got to be continuous in juggling.
That's a great idea, you could get one
and just chuck it 100 metres
and then leg it to the other end.
I just have to quickly say,
the top of this fact
was about Shakira attending
the world championships
of keeping a balloon in the air,
the balloon championships,
and I didn't say who won the championship.
So this year,
this inaugural year, it was won by Peru,
so just so everyone knows it was won by Peru.
The only reason I didn't say it is because
I genuinely spent this entire time
throughout this whole fact trying to work out
what I'd actually written down,
what I've got on my paper says,
won by Perv.
I thought, I can't be right.
Congratulations Andy.
Thank you.
Years of ball juggling
practised to be understood.
Anyway, look, we need to wrap up.
That is it, that is all of our facts.
Thank you so much for listening.
If you'd like to get in contact with any of us
about the things that we've said
over the course of this podcast,
we can all be found on our Twitter account.
And Andy at Andrew Hunter M.
James at James Harkin and Anna.
You can email our podcast at qo.com.
Yeah, or you can go to our group account,
which is at no such thing, or our website,
no such thing as a fish.com.
All of our previous episodes are up there.
And I just want to quickly say,
thank you so much to Norban's, that was so awesome.
We absolutely loved it. Thank you for having us.
We will be back one day.
Rest of you, we'll be back again next week.
We'll see you then. Goodbye.
Thank you.