No Such Thing As A Fish - 432: No Such Thing As Sexygesimal Time
Episode Date: June 24, 2022Dan, Andy, Anna and special guest Bobby Seagull are discussing charts, talking clocks, and having a chit chat about Kitcatts. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and... more episodes.
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Hi everyone, just to let you know, we've got a very special guest on our show today is one of
Britain's top nerds. Oh, is it me? It's even more top than you, James Harkin. You're not even supposed
to be doing this bit. Oh yeah, sorry. I know you look you're very welcome. It is Bobby Seagull.
He's not only a maths teacher, you might know him from University Challenge where he came to
prominence. He's a TV presenter. He's written a book called The Life Changing Magic of Numbers,
which will change your life. You should definitely get it. And he's also written The Monkman and
Seagull Quizbook. He's a brilliant guy, full of interesting nerdy facts. He now co-host the
Mass Appeal podcast, but today he's on ours. Yes, and I'm not on ours. So I'm not even sure why
I'm here to be. Oh, I know I am here. I'm here to remind you that we are going on tour in the autumn
and in the last day of summer. If this is how you count your seasons, basically the 31st of
August, we're going to be in Inverness. Then we're going to be in Edinburgh, Aberdeen, Glasgow and
Cardiff. If you're in any of those places, come and watch our show. It's going to be so much fun,
loads of facts, loads of silliness. We just can't wait to be back on tour again. That's right. And
even if you don't think that the 1st of September is the first day of autumn, which I don't happen to,
if you disagree with James's delineation at the seasons, just come anyway. That's right. It's
from the 31st of August to the 13th of September. Go to no such thing as a fish dot com slash live.
Get your tickets now. On with the show. I'm with the podcast.
Hello and welcome to another episode of no such thing as a fish, a weekly podcast coming to you
from the QI offices in Covent Garden. My name is Dan Schreiber. I'm sitting here with Anna
Andrew Hunter Murray and our very special guest, it's Bobby Seagal. And once again,
we have gathered around the microphone 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 Bobby.
My fact this week is that the UK pop charts were originally compiled by phoning around 20
record shops and asking what their best selling songs were that particular week.
So we're talking 50s, are we? This was November 52. So the Queen's jubilee year. Yeah, 52. So that
means for the first few months of her reign, there was a different way of assessing the music
charts as it were. So in the US, they had the billboards. So for the billboards, it was a,
I think since the 1940s, it was like weekly sales. But in the UK, they didn't have a chart
based on music sales. So it was an organization called the PRS, the Performing Right Society,
and they would look at the best selling sheet music. The word sheet always annoys me.
In school, if I say the word sheet, it's just like, sir, is that what? Do you have two sheets on
you, sir? We've got the sense of humor of your students. Bobby's a teacher, by the way. Yeah,
we should say. So it was the sheet music. So a man called Percy Dickens. So
Hale Percy Dickens. So he was a magazine advertising salesman. And he was actually a founding member
of the new musical express magazine, which is now Enemy. Oh, there's Enemy Shut now. It's still
online. It still functions online. RIP print copy. But yeah, Hale to the digital copies.
So he thought, actually, what's the best way of getting advertising revenue for a magazine? And
he said, actually, we can attract commercial advertising revenue if we tie up something with
the record industry. So then he thought, oh, actually, how about we do some sort of record-based
music chart? And that's how the initial brainwave sparked. Okay, so records were sort of like an
obscure, you know, why buying a record, you could just buy the sheet music and your own piano.
Okay. And then they decided calling around 20 shops would be the most reliable ways to do that.
Yes. So but why his system was like that. But so what the management of Envy decided was they,
I think they agreed with 50-ish shops that they would be willing to exchange data. So but with
those 50-ish shops, I think it's 53, but it's 50-ish. It's always safe. As an mathematician,
you know, you don't like giving exact numbers. So every Monday morning, Percy Dickens would pick up
the dog and bone phone and call up about 15 to 25 shops on average, 20 shops. And each store would
give their top 10. But this is where things get a bit murky, because he would then have a points-based
system that'd allocate to this. And this is a bit, we don't know, it's like a Eurovision type
system. We don't know the exact system. But because of that, it meant that his first ever
top, I think he was trying to do like a top 12, but there were 15 entries, because three entries,
number seven, eight, and 11 tied. And we all know in reality, it's unlikely that three songs would
have exactly the same number of sales. But because he went to 20 shops, you just, yeah,
you're gonna probably have like two songs with 17 sales each. And then how are they monet,
because I sort of read that they're not that great at monitoring anyway, are they, the shops?
And also, they might just say the song that they like best.
Well, if they were told, we're going to be ringing you up and asking for your sales,
they probably would keep the sales. Maybe they can.
I like that. I would just, I do find myself wondering if anyone ever tried to game the
system by picking a particular shop and saying, well, I'm going to send 15 different friends in
here all to buy this one single. Hope they get phoned up this week by Percy Dickens.
That did used to happen, though. I don't know specifically to do to British charts,
but certainly overseas in America, you would have, you know, the really rich people just buying
huge units of an album from one specific store just to get those numbers up, to get them into
the charts. There was that was a thing to get in the charts. I mean, that's happened forever.
You know, Taylor Swift's doing a gig and she's bundled it with the new album or she's released
a new t-shirt and she bundles it with the album. And so you cheat the sale because you're
attaching it. It used to and not anymore because they noticed that bands were just,
you know, cheating the system. They were gaming the system.
So are they actually not popular at all? Ed Sheeran, Taylor Swift, does it turn out?
No, no, no fans, no fans.
Almost qualify top 10s or false.
Exactly. Well, no, but May 2020, Dua Lipa, she had future nostalgia, which was the
lowest selling number one album ever. Imagine getting to number one and finding out you were
the worst asset. That's all good record to have. Why did they tell her that? That's mean.
Yeah, 7,317 copies in that was the that was the sixth week that she was at number one.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
There's going to be some tidying off. Yeah.
But what was that was still number one in that week?
Yes, it was still number one in that week. Yeah.
And so what's amazing about this is that it's basically since streaming music has come along
that the charts have been altered in such a weird way. So a thousand album streams equates to one
record sale is what they say. One physical product. Yeah.
I think that's in the UK, isn't it?
Yeah, that's in the UK. That's how that's how you do that.
But also what they found is so interesting. Such an interesting time where gigantic musicians
who are global names are fighting it in the charts with bands that are independent local
British ones with a big fan base who can get them to that number. So they're in the charts.
But because everyone's streaming the biggies, they're not buying the album. But then the little
ones that got such hardcore fans who might buy five or six copies to give to their friends and
family, they're making a dent in the charts. Oh, I see. So you mean the bands that only
their friends and family are buying it, they buy physical albums. But because that's so rare to
do. And they come more in the equation as well. So I think for singles charts, a hundred paid streams
is one sale and 600 free streams. So the freemium versions is one sale. So if you pay for your
Spotify iTunes and you're streaming it, it's six times more valuable than someone on an ad-based.
Wow. Oh, that's good. Because if I find a song I like, I will often listen to it six hundred
times. If you buy it once, it's the same. Oh, you don't have to subject yourself to the six
hundred reasons and you can just buy it and then never listen again. I want to A, save the money
and B, I do really like the songs I like. So I'm just back to Percy Dickens and the first
list in 52. I was reading about the first ever number one single, which was called Here in
My Heart and it was by Al Martino. Do you guys read about him? No. He was crazy. So I never heard
of Al Martino before. He was an Italian-American singer and former bricklayer and he went on to
great fame because he was in The Godfather playing a singer called Johnny Fontaine. Oh yeah. And
Johnny Fontaine is the one who leads to someone getting a horse's head in the bed. Yes, yes.
That's right. Confession. I've not watched The Godfather. I was told off at a party recently
about this. I do know the fact, but I have not seen The Godfather.
Well, it's a very exciting... It's only average. It's no grown-ups without him sounding like that.
But then, okay, this is the really weird thing about Al Martino. So he played a
singer connected to the mafia in the film The Godfather, but then eventually he was forced
to leave the UK by the mafia because they tried to buy him out of his American marital contract
and there was some controversy and there was some disagreement. So... Really? Yeah. Yeah.
So he was involved in mafia-ish circles, it sounds like a bit. It sounds like you may have
met them sometimes. The Godfather filming, maybe. I don't know. Oh my god. Method acting. Good.
Oh my god, I love that. I went to Method. I'm Percy Dickens. Yeah. So do you know his second
claim to fame? So obviously the charts is his first claim to fame, but the second one is,
so do you know we have modern sort of like award ceremonies and stadium rock concerts?
So he actually, in the early 60s, he pioneered the something called the Enemy Poll Winners Concert
and he managed to get, I think, the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. And again, this is like a
tenuous claim to fame, but some people in the music industry say that was responsible for
the sort of award ceremonies we have nowadays. So he was the first person in the UK to say,
all the winners of the awards, music awards, let's get them all together in a big concert
at Wembley. So I think it was Wembley Arena, which is the empire pool at the time. So that's
the second his fault. We have these award ceremonies. I love that. What a big character.
So he's from, I didn't realize, he's from my hometown of East Ham, East Ham from the London
Borough of Newham, which is why I'm a Master West Ham fan. But I never knew he was from East Ham
and I was trying to find out where in East Ham and I can't, but if there's people, listeners out
there, we need to get a blue plaque for this man in East Ham because he sounded the chart and possibly
pioneered the music award ceremony. Yeah, that's incredible. I agree. I was reading about, did
you guys happen to read about the first ever top 100 Billboard single? So this was in 1958 and it
was a song that was called Poor Little Fool by Ricky Nelson. And yeah, so it came out was a massive
hit and it was actually written by a woman called Sharon Shealy. And she wrote the song because she'd
met Elvis Presley when she was 15 and he basically encouraged her to get into writing. So she thought,
okay, I'll do that. She based it, the song on a very short fling that she had with a guy called
Don Everly of the Everly Brothers. So the song that's the first number one is actually based on a
musician, which is quite cool in its own right. And effectively, she might have dabbled with some
other songs, but from what I read, this was the first song that she wrote. And so she thought,
I need to get someone to record it. So she thought Ricky Nelson could be perfect for this. So she
drove to his house and she faked breaking down outside of it, the car, not emotionally.
So she broke down her car supposedly was broken down and she was like, please,
can you help me? And he was like, yeah, okay. And he came out and he tried to help her with
the car. And then she went, I've got a song. You got to hear it. I want you to sing it.
And he heard it and he went, okay, I'll do it. And that's the first number one. Her first song
at 18, handing it by faking a breakdown. Yeah. Did he fix her car that wasn't broken?
It fooled him because he didn't know he could do that. He subsequently left the music industry
and became a mechanic. Because of the worst mechanic. There is someone who collected every
single track that entered the top 40 from 1952 onwards, a guy called Keith Sevier,
and he died in 2015. So the collecting stopped then. But he bought every single track,
every one that entered the top 40. Wow. How many is that? Do you know?
Well, his lounge alone contained 35,000 vinyls. He had and 10,000 CD singles as well. I mean,
it was a lot. We think that's cool. But for his kids, every time they went home,
you'd have that conversation with your dad like, dad, have you thought about clearing these out?
I mean, he lived in a normal house in Twickenham. But it was not a big place, but it was entirely
full of stacked records. Just insane. Wow. If I was his kids or children or
nephews or nieces, I'd feel like a responsibility to continue that from 2015. You can't just
like from 52 to 2015, you can't just leave it like family tradition. Exactly. I read a piece
about it and I don't think anyone in this family was saying, oh yeah, we'll keep going.
Can I just tell you something fun about sheet music charts? What type of music?
Sheet music. How many sheets? This music is sheet. So Bobby, you mentioned earlier about sheet music
being how the charts were compiled before the 50s. And so yeah, that was how people took in music.
Basically, they went and bought sheet music and then I guess they'd have to play it at home or
look at it and imagine it being played. And so sheet music publishing and promotion was a huge
industry. And you got people who hired us some songpluggers who would be like demonstrators
who would sit in shops that were selling sheet music and they'd have to play the music. So
someone would say, I want to buy this by so-and-so. And then people, so certain people got their
starts in life doing that. Lil Hardin, who was Louis Armstrong's wife, started as a songplugger.
Irving Berlin, George Gershwin started as songpluggers. Did they slip their own songs? Is that how
they got big? This is a cracking hit. People come up to you in the shop and do they say,
I want to buy a song that goes like this, and then they play it? No.
They could do that. I guess you'd adapt to your customer. So if you came in and, you know,
sang the, I don't know, that they'd say, oh, well, you might like this song.
I think, yeah, exactly. Like a Spotify algorithm. They're radio. They're live radio. They're just
playing the hits, presumably from the week. People say, oh, I like that one. What's that song you're
playing? Yeah. Yeah. They're like a jukebox. Like a shazami type of. Yes. Yeah. The original
shazami. Yes. But they did, it wasn't just playing. They'd also be paid by the song publishers to do
things like they go into theaters and in the intervals, they'd be paid to start singing a tune
really loudly. And you'd have to get the whole audience to sing along with you.
Which you have to be quite confident to do that because you are just looking like a psychopath.
But yeah. And then people are like, God, I heard that tune at the theater in the interval recently.
I'm going to buy it. Yeah. That's really cool. Yeah. What a clever way. I mean, we should do that.
We should go in the intervals at theater and go, my fact this week.
Okay. It is time for fact number two. And that is my fact. My fact this week is that
there are two members of the National Trust's food and beverage team who both have the surname
Kit Kat. So I got to tell you how I got this fact. I was at an event recently and someone came up.
It was a podcast event and someone came up saying, Hey, I really like your podcast.
I said, Oh, thanks. And we had a bit of a chat. It turns out he worked for the National Trust.
And then I went off and then about an hour later, then you went off. He said, I worked for the
National Trust and you just turned around. I actually slapped him before I went. And then
so I had to go to an event and then I finished. And as I came out, he clocked me from across the
room and he kind of ran towards me and said, I forgot to tell you my favorite fact. And this
was the fact. So his name is Jack Glover. He's a podcast producer for the National Trust. They
have their own podcast. And yeah. And he was saying that basically it's, he doesn't know either of
these Kit Kats, but someone mentioned that there was a Kit Kat who worked for the National Trust.
And as they were Googling it, they found not one, another Kit Kat. So they're related. They're
not related because they're spelt differently. So Louise, yeah, Louise a Kit Kat who spells it
K-I-T-C-A-Double-T. And then you've got Sam Kit Kat, who's just got one T. We don't know if they
know each other. I've tried to find them online. They're on LinkedIn. I didn't have time to get
through to them. I think Louise is on Instagram, but it's a private account. So I couldn't get
through to her. Some weirdo trying to contact me all week.
I've just never heard the surname Kit Kat before. No, me neither. I've never heard of that.
Well, it's a brilliant fact. Yeah. Amazing. Food and beverage. Love it.
Should we say what, I don't know if overseas every country has its own National Trust in the
same kind of way, but in Britain, there's basically an organization. They're an independent charity
and they buy up places of national importance and they make it public. So they make places
that might otherwise have been private like Winston Churchill's Old House Chartwell that was bought
by them and it was transformed into a public place. And so it means that the public can go
and visit all of these extraordinary places. Yeah. And yeah. The National Trust has some
amazingly weird stuff. Yeah. Oh my goodness. So I was just reading about like the odd things they
have. Did you know they've got the National Rhubarb Collection? Cool. Is that just lots
of people mustering away in the background? Yeah. They've got the largest fern in the UK
at Colby Woodland Garden. It's 400 years old, 19 feet around. Wow. Big fern. Big fern. Big fern.
And they've got one nudist beach, which I've been to actually. Have you? I may have mentioned
that before. It's in Dorset. I went down there with my friends and we didn't know it was a
nudist beach. Did you get naked? No, we didn't. Well, I didn't. I don't know if they did, but
no, we didn't. But you happen to be naked at the time. Fortunately, I was able to seamlessly blend
in. No, um, yeah, there were the, it was because it's quite sandy. So it's quite, the landscape is
quite undulating. So it's not immediately apparent that it's a nudist beach. But every so often,
someone will just hove into view who is naked and you sort of pop up like a little meerkat.
And you think, oh, that's funny. And then pop back down. Anyway, yeah. Do you think the undulations
are a nod to the human form? Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. Because this actually doesn't link to
another national trust property. Oh, really? West Wiccan Park. West Wiccan Park gardens were designed
in the shape of a woman's anatomy. Apparently. Which anatomy? Like the whole thing. I think the
whole thing. The ear, the left earlobe. No, it's mostly centered on a mound of Venus, which has
a passageway underneath it. So I think that's a vagina. But this is so cool. This was the home of
Sir Francis Dashwood, who was, who founded something called the Hellfire Club, which is the, I mean,
it's an awful club. It's basically a worse version of the Bullington Club, but also really fun,
which is basically the Hellfire Club. Oh, maybe it is. Sounds, it's a club for posh people to
meet up and do really sordid stuff that probably is still around. But yeah, he designed this house
and gardens. And then this hillside nearby, which you can also visit, which is National Trust.
And it's full of tunnels and caves that were covered in like fallacies and pre-apic statues.
And they'd like act out religious rituals there, but in a porny way. And so they'd have nuns,
but they'd be sex workers. And they'd be asked to lie down. And then the members of the club would
lick holy wine from their navels and stuff like that. But lots of people got involved in it. Ben
Franklin paid a visit. A bit of navel licking, I'm afraid. Ben. Wow. Ben. First name terms.
Abbreviated. That's what got me. Ben EF. Ben EF. Yeah. Well, in the club, we refer to each other.
Anyway, after he died, Francis Dashwood, then his heirs called in Capability Brown,
the famous garden designer to remove quite a lot of the more sordid elements of the garden.
You could still visit. Do you know what the membership, anyone know the membership price for
National Trust or a single person? I don't. I have been a member. So, you know, Benjamin,
how much is that in the States? Benjamin, is that a $100 bill? Yes, it is. We call it a Ben, but yeah.
So actually, I think maybe based on try, it might actually be the price of a Ben.
I think it's about £76.80, which might be a Ben. Yeah. Yeah. That's a Franklin. Yeah. Does that
get you into all of them? Yes, it's £76.80 for one year. That has gone up a lot.
Cost of living crisis, hello. Yeah. People can't even afford to visit state the homes anymore.
I've had to buy cheap wine to look out at this sex worker's navel.
So, I was looking at the National Trust website and they very proudly declare,
we have 5.37 million members, which is more than Costa Rica. Are they planning like an invasion?
We shall arm, get your shovels and picks and your membership cards. We shall go to Costa Rica.
They're quite prominent. I mean, that is huge. That is really huge.
That's in their website. I don't see further digging. Actually, it's apparently 5.9 million
rather than 5.37. So, their website's out of date. So, in theory, they could be more ambitious,
forget Costa Rica, Denmark or Singapore. They could invade them. National Trust.
Which would you go for? Denmark, I think, probably has more historic features that they could get.
Easier to get to from Britain as well, like the Vikings. Take back, take back.
Yeah, Denmark. Let's take a Denmark. There we go.
Yeah. I love, there's one place that Jack was telling me about who sent me this
fact called Orford Ness and it's a nature reserve and they have lots of amazing animals there.
They have the whiteface woodland sheep, but they've also got a nuclear bomb.
Oh, okay. So, really? Is that why the sheep looks so pale?
It's still there. So, basically, Britain detonated an atomic bomb in the 1950s, 1952.
There were a few tests and things like that. Yeah, exactly. We had some tests and the pre-test
was done at this place, Orford Ness and the reason that it was done there is what they did was they
built these big kind of buildings that would go into the ground and the bombs were effectively
being tested for their stress levels. So, what they did was they put them in the buildings
and then they just shake them and just kept shaking them and just shake, shake, shake, shake,
shake, shake, shake, shake. And the idea was if you were transporting a nuclear bomb by playing,
they wanted to make sure that it didn't detonate as it was being flown to the place purely
because of the stress levels that it would have. So, this is where they did it and they still have
one of the bombs sitting there. It's deactivated. Okay. They always use deactivated. I mean,
yeah, they didn't test it with an armed bomb anyway, but it's sitting there next to the sheep.
I'm going to Orford Ness in a couple of weeks. Get out. Go shake the bomb. Go shake the bomb.
I will. That's so cool. Yeah, the founding story of the National Trust is it's got a lot of great
characters at its beginning, hasn't it? So, there were sort of three founders. It was a lawyer,
clergyman and a social reformer. Sounds like a salvo joke, doesn't it? A lawyer, a priest,
and a social reformer walking down. What happens? They make a socially responsible organization.
But yeah, this woman called Octavia Hill, who was the eighth daughter of her father,
which I always like if you're called Octavia or Tertius or whatever, be the eighth.
So, maybe that's why he had a daughter, so he could call on Octavia. She was amazing. Her parents
had sort of set up a school for the poor and stuff and would do good as anyway. So, she had good
examples set for her. But then her dad went bankrupt and left the family in the 19th century.
Maybe. Because he had eight. I've read a story when age 14, she was left home alone,
her family had gone to church. Oh, I know this story, isn't it? And two burglars.
The iron on the face. Yes. Yes. She mutilated them horribly. Yes. But they came back.
They came back. Now, you've said that I think this might have been the home alone origin story.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Because it was, it was one burglar. Oh, seriously? Yeah, yeah, one burglar
came in, came out, fell out of a cupboard, actually. She was on the surface of the house.
He fell out of a cupboard where he'd been hiding. And apparently, she said,
how did you get in here? And he said, I walked up the stairs. And she just said,
then will you please to walk down them again? And then she led him down the stairs and out
of the house. Wow. So, that's a much shorter whole load. Didn't need to punch up, didn't it,
for the Macaulay Culkin version? Yeah. But what a compliant burglar, like how responsible.
To ethical burgling. Ethical burgling. So, if you asked me nicely, I won't do it. Yeah. And
didn't she, I think I'm right in saying that she later went to New York and she got lost,
didn't she? Yeah, she boarded the wrong plane. Yeah, Octavia Hill amazing. But I kind of got
sidetracked reading about the clergyman of the three founders, Canon Hardwick Drummond Rawnsley,
which is such an incredible name. Yeah, it is formidable. So, he was a bishop from Lincolnshire.
He was described as the most active volcano in Europe by one of his parishioners because he was
so energetic, involved, always, you know, coming up with new schemes and committees and plans and
projects and papers and all of this, you know, constantly writing and thinking and meeting.
But his main interest, as far as I can tell, seems to be building bonfires. Like he had this huge
passion about bonfires. So, there was a diamond jubilee for Queen Victoria in 1897, I guess.
Yeah, and he was the head of something called the National Bonfire Committee. He basically
spent his whole time suggesting huge bonfires at any opportunity, any national opportunity. So,
when the First World War ended, 1919, they had huge bonfires everywhere. Coronation in 1911,
huge bonfires. So, how many national trust properties did he burn down?
It's just amazing. Like, these huge towers of work. The coronation ones in 1911 are so
impressively massive. And he organised 2,200 of them across the entire country. It was a mega,
it was a mega theme of his life. Really? We should have like a bonfire czar, national bonfire czar.
Oh, that's such a good idea. That's an awesome idea. Because we just had the jubilee and there were
lots of beacons. But they were tiny compared with these things. I mean, I didn't know. We're
making cuts to the civil service. I'm not sure we're talking about the bonfire czar and Boris's
vision. Just back to Altavia for one second, because I think it's worth mentioning there's
quite a lot of descriptions about her character and who she was by her friends. And I find them
such like bizarre representations. So, she had a friend called Henrietta Barnett. And Henrietta
described her saying she was small in stature with a long body and short legs. She did not dress,
she only wore clothes, which were often unnecessarily unbecoming. Her mouth was large and mobile,
but not improved by laughter. Really quite cutting stuff. And one of her friends writing this thing.
Yeah, it was her friend. Gertrude Bell had a comment about her saying she was despotic. So,
not a great review. And the Bishop of London, who was called Frederick Temple, he had a meeting
with her and afterwards he wrote, she spoke for half an hour, I never had such a beating in my
life. Really? Yeah. So, you know, it sounds like she was really, you know, sort of confident. She
was formidable, definitely. But then I was really just quick moment of determinism. Sorry, Bishop
called Frederick Temple. Yes. Yes. Good pause. Good pause for that. Octavia Hill as well. Hill
National Trust. Oh, yeah. Because the first thing that was donated to the National Trust was a hill
side. Really? Yeah. By something, someone called Fanny Tolbert. You know that one of the lawyer
that was one of the trio was Robert Hunter. He's a lawyer. Lawyers are like hunters. They're like,
find it. You stretched it too far, Bobby. I'm sorry. That's one too. It's okay. You're new to
the show. It's fine. You'll find your feet. You've lost everyone. Beatrix Potter too. I'm sure you
guys came across this. Yeah. What did you just say? Beatrix Potter. I'm sure you guys came across
Beatrix. He's pronouncing a name in a really odd way. Beatrix Potter. Oh, God. I've said it all my
life is Beatrix. I say Beatrix Potter. Beatrix. Yes, Beatrix. What did you say? Beatrix. Oh,
like Beatroot. Yeah, I guess. People are going to have an absolute field day with that. Yeah. Well,
get over it, guys. I say Beatrix. Sorry, come on. Christ. She donated so much to the National
Trust. She'd made 4,000 acres after the success of Jemima Puddleduck and Mr. Jeremy Fisher and all
of that. She just devoted her time to breeding sheep. Sorry, Puddleduck? Oh, God. How do I,
how are you meant to pronounce this? Well, no, it's just another, you know. Jemima Puddleduck. Yeah.
Do you not know Jemima Puddleduck? No. Oh, that's a character. That's a character within the 19th
century reform. The president reforms particularly. The founder of the National Trust, I thought we
would say. She advocated, I think, for free bread for everybody in the Puddleduck. Yeah.
Near like watering holes. Oh, come on. Who gives a duck a serenade? That's unfair. Oh, my God.
Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is Andy. My fact is that the French
speaking clock was created by an astronomer who was annoyed that members of the public kept
phoning his office to ask for the time, which would be annoying. So this was, this is from
an article in The Times, which was about the fact that the French speaking clock,
l'horloge parallente, is winding down and winding up and closing down.
Clock related things. Yeah. It's the oldest speaking clock in the world, I think, or it was the
first one founded, and it was pioneered by a man called Ernest Esqu'Longand in 1933,
who was a French astronomer, and I think was at the sort of official, you know, the government.
He was the director of the Paris Observatory. Oh, there we go. Okay. Yeah. And people kept
ringing up to ask the time because that was one of the ways, before speaking clocks exist,
you verify the absolute nailed on time, was you found an astronomer and his phone line was
constantly busy with people phoning up and his office staff were always being distracted by
people saying, yeah, 1033 and a bit. So that was the inspiration. I love the idea that maybe he
spotted an oncoming comet, you know, crashing into earth and he just wasn't able to notify anyone.
Did he have then a reliable clock sort of in front of him that he set or would he, how was
he telling the time? I don't know. I think it would have been, that's where the official time
keeping device for the country was kept. That's where it started. I think the Paris Observatory
was where it was. Yeah. More like the way that Greenwich were the official stewards of, you know,
official time. Because there was huge rivalry time wise between Britain and France. It's the
main beef between us almost to this day. I would say it wasn't there. It was like, where's official
time going to rest? And it ended up being Greenwich for the world. But I think Paris Observatory was
the other big contender. I think they defined Greenwich time as Paris time minus two and a half
minutes or whatever number of minutes it was. And they did it so until about the 1990s, like they
really dug their heels in on Greenwich time. So this clock, the first speaking clock in France,
it was the 14th of February 1933 when it debuted and on its very first day,
Valentine's Day. That's true. Yeah. That's lovely. So 140,000 people called up or rather
recalled up trying to hear it because they could only get 20,000 answers during the course of the
day because they had 20 lines that were doing it. So that might have been one person just recalling
just desperate to hear it. But yeah, very lonely people on Valentine's Day that year.
When you were children, did you ever call up the one, two, three number in the UK? We've got
like a one, two number. Yeah, I do. I used to call them up or the number and you'd hear like,
at the third stroke, the time would be and then 10 seconds later, I'd call again. And then my
parents get like an enormous bill. It was so expensive. So expensive. But in the UK, I think
is the BT speaking clock. And at some stage, they called it, I think they called it timeline,
or they called it Tim for short, because for the major cities, if you're trying to get the time,
you dial 846, which T I M will be on that. Although I, although ironically, even though
the name was Tim, the first two clock speakers in Britain for the first 50 years were females.
Ethel, Jane Kane and Miss Pat Simmons. But the first one, there was an incredible competition
to select them. So there was a pool of 15,000 telephone operators who worked for the general
post office. And they organized a nationwide competition to find the golden voice and a bit
like X Factor or Britain's Got Talent. They got like the judges. We've got the poet laureate,
John Mayfield. We've got the actress Dame Sybil Thorndike. We've got the chief BBC announcer,
Stuart Hibbert. Yay for this week's edition of the speaking clock. Who will win this week?
Awesome.
Proper competition.
It was so eminent, the panel. Yeah.
You're a laureate. And Sybil Thorndike, who's a famous name even today.
Who's that? I actually don't know.
Just an incredibly famous actress from the time of, you know, great heroin of stage,
basically. I think she was a bit pre-screen almost.
Yeah. But then you've got the crap one on the end. Is there one of those in X Factor,
the one who's like the expert, but no one cares about them?
Someone called Mrs Atkinson and Lord Eiley were the rounded out the committee in 1936.
But so they always have a kind of fancy panel of judges, which I love. So I think we're only
on the fifth voice of the speaking clock now, the official speaking clock. They always have a
fancy panel who choose. And I think the panel these days always includes the previous speaking
clock voice. If you see what I mean, they sign up too. So it was a guy called Brian Coby,
who was on the committee in 2006 when they were picking the new voice, but he had been
the voice for the previous 20 years. So they had him, the current voice, Natasha Kaplinsky,
newsreader, and strictly come dancing.
Yeah. Did she win the first, or was she in the first season?
She was in the first season.
I don't know if she, this was pre or post her strictly triumph.
So she knows how to read stuff. I guess she knows what a good voice sounds like.
I know. And the other voices, the other members of the panel included the guy who voiced the
national lottery. Oh, okay.
47. Yeah. Exactly. Reading numbers is basically that's the gig.
My dream job. Who can read numbers best? You're going to get the lottery guy.
And then a couple of others, but it wasn't the poet laureate.
No, you mentioned Brian Coby, because I found unsubstantiated claims that at one stage,
he may have been the person that did the voiceover to the Thunderbirds Five.
But I think the Thunderbirds, the main creator says it wasn't him, but
Brian Coby claims it was him.
Interesting. Wow. Okay. Controversy.
I didn't find that. What's happened there?
It's quite a strange thing to claim if it wasn't you, isn't it?
You might think it like, you know, Brian blessed claims that he was the voice of Tarzan's
when Johnny Weismiller couldn't do it anymore. But is that true? I don't know.
Is it a Brian thing? Brian's just make up random shit about themselves.
When Coby recorded his script, so he started in 1985, I really like this. So you don't have to
do 24 hours, obviously. You just, there's a limited number of numbers that you have to record.
And that's something like 86 different prompts. But you have to, you have to record, you know,
for about an hour, I think. Oh, okay. But the script that Coby recorded was about 33 pages
with various different things on it, you know, that you have to. But amazingly,
they spent a while in the recording studio, they sent him home, and then they had to
summon him back because they forgot to record the o'clock. You only need that once.
Oh, okay. It is important. It is important. Yeah.
You need it for the beats, because when it's on the hour, because usually it'll be, you know,
it's one and 24 minutes. But if it's, oh, you know,
Do they say precisely at that when it's like a round time?
Yeah, exactly. Yeah, yeah.
Two o'clock precisely. Yes. Precisely. That's what everyone loved about the first reader was her
precisely. Oh, really? Yeah, that was the famous, yeah, the famous word, the most, her most famous
word. Can I ask, did they like it because it sounded quite sexy? Is that, is that what you
were trying to get your brain out of the gutter? Just curious. Like, you know, sometimes people
with sexy accents, you know, can make any word sound sexy. I'm sure there are people on Valentine's
Day who did ring up in a, I don't know, cock in hands.
I do like the use of the word sexy. Where that came from. I do like the use of the word sexy for
time because time is based on base 60. Oh. And sex, sex, sex, yeah, sex adjustable is the
answer. That is very sexy. They need a sexy voice. Sexy time. Yeah, yeah. And that's the joke
you were making, wasn't it? Exactly. I knew that we had the mathematician in. I thought,
I'm just going to leave that. She, Ethel Cain, she had a speech impediment, which they didn't
notice when they were recording it. She had a slight speech impediment. She whistled a bit
at the end of each word. It's two o'clock. And that's where the cuckoo clock comes from.
Yeah, but they didn't notice in the recording. So it must have been quite slight. And then
they spent, they decided, because the clock ran on these beautiful glass discs. I have read about
it. I don't understand fully the mechanism they used, but they had to take the glass discs out
of the machine and edit them. And it took about a year to fix this. Very minor thing. Yeah, way.
She can say the word precisely. Is that the word precisely? Precisely. Yeah.
Down at the other end of the line. So in the 1970s, I think 1971 UK experience
decimalization. So we lost the imperial system. We're not lost. We had imperial with the decimals
as well. But in 1975. Not for much longer though. Oh, yeah. I miss my ounces and my miles and
farthings. Farthings. So in 1975, in a Northern Ireland BBC programme called Scene Around Six,
they had a newscast and it started off saying, it looks a lot more frightening than it actually is,
but the government's preparing people for the phased introduction of the decimalization of time.
You'll need to get dual standard timepieces. There'll be 100 seconds to a minute, 100 minutes
to the hour, 20 hours per day. But it was the first of April, 1975. Oh, so good. Meanies,
those meanies at the BBC. They said, you'll take 10 years for this to come through. So don't panic
right now. Yes. Wow. That's brilliant. Do we know if people believed it? It was a BBC broadcast
scene around six. So people wouldn't. I thought the French government actually did something similar
with the calendar, didn't they? The French revolutionary calendar had 10 months in it.
They wanted to. Yeah. I think they might have even tried it. They did an April first. No,
it wasn't the April first. Just do this or you get your head chopped off thing.
Napoleon loved a joke. What if the French Revolution was just an April Fool's that got
badly out of hand. Guys, we were joking. What if there was no king?
Say no king. I said joking. Oh, God. The people who do the speaking clock just quickly on that,
sorry, back to my obsession, Brian Cobby, who I love. Bizarrely, two out of the five of them have
been from Hove. I don't, I'm not suggesting any conspiracy or anything like that, but I just
find that quite weird. They always have loads of finalists, by the way. The last time they did it,
there were 15 finalists, which is so many for the judges to listen to. But when Brian Cobby got
the job, the runner-up was Lady from Lowestoft and she got the consolation prize. Can you guess
what the consolation prize for this specific job would be? Dean of the London Underground
announcement. Not bad. Very close. That's good. Oh, doing like a Sainsbury's announcement,
you know, sort of aisle six. Yeah, it's replenishing. It's very close. Okay, I'll tell you.
She got this. You will all have heard this. The runner-up became the voice of the number you
have called has not been recognised. No. Yeah. That is the most terrifying words you can ever hear
as a child, which was she the person who did the, when he did 1471 as well. Oh, I don't know.
Because I think you were called today at 1722. Oh, I think you might, it is a similar voice. I
think it might be. I think it might be, because I always found that most terrifying thing was.
Really? I was kind of quite sexy. Oh, god damn.
Do you have this in Australia? When you did 1471, if someone called, you're alone in the house,
you're 12. And usually it would be, you were called today by this number. And then, one in 10
times it would go, you were called today at 1700 hours. The caller withheld their number.
Why would they do such a terrifying thing? Look in the cupboard on the third floor.
Yeah. The ethical burglars will be fine.
I was just generally looking into interesting clocks, not just speaking clocks. Can I give
you a couple of interesting normal clocks? Are they sexy clocks to go with this new facet of
your personality? I'll let you be the judge. I'll let you be the judge. Now, I was reading that
Windsor Castle, so on the Queen's staff is an actual clock man who goes around every single day
checking out all of the clocks within the Windsor estate, which is up to 400. There's 250 clocks
within the castle itself. If he looks at his, you know, pedometer, he gets 16,000 steps in every
single day. Yeah. And the clocks there are absolutely amazing. So there's your normal clocks,
but you've got historical clocks, right? So my favorite one is that there was a clock that was
made by Charles Clay in 1740, and it plays melodies by the composer Handel. And four of the songs that
it plays were composed specifically by Handel for this clock. So they're original pieces,
they worked in collaboration, and they think, I think they made a few of these that went out to
different royal families all through Europe. And it, you know, it's just an extraordinary thing
that has pipes underneath it and so on that plays out the tunes. And they have all sorts of clocks
like this that have historical relevance within the castle itself. Yeah. Can I tell you one more
weird time? It's actually not a time thing. It's just a weird disability speaking voice thing,
which is an innovation in Tokyo. It's a toilet that has just been launched in Tokyo where
you don't need to touch anything. How do you wipe your bum?
What? Okay, you might need to touch one thing.
You just stand and sort of, fully the pumps come.
Because there are lots of studies that show that when people use public toilets, they kind of avoid
using their hands, they'll step on the lever, which is actually a reason why you would need
to step on the lever of the previous 50 people have all stepped on it. Anyway, so you walk in
and you just say hi toilet and it kind of responds. So it gives you a menu of actions. You can flush
the toilet. Hello, Andy. Back again. The sexy toilet. I don't know what you could say. I don't
know if you could say get my knob out. I don't know how I can do that. So how's it work?
You say turn on the tap or flush the toilet. So that's the hands-free element of the system.
Okay. I think it may even be able to raise and lower the seat. I'm not sure.
But you've still got to sit on the seat, which is, I would argue, largely the biggest bit of
touching that happens in the... You can hover slightly above it.
Can you? I don't have the thigh muscles to achieve that, I'm afraid.
You lay the lube all down on the seat. I cover the whole thing.
But you can do well. You can lay it and hover. Wow.
I feel like doubly pretend. Double say. Well, I mean, we have those anyway. We have toilets where,
which is so irritating. Voice activated ones. No, no, but as in we have the non-touch version,
which I hate, which is the ones where when you stand up, they flush off their own accord.
So, you know, sometimes it'll just start not to turn around a bit, wipe your bum, whatever, or
to hang up your coat halfway through a wee and then it flushes itself.
Mid-wee. Mid-wee. I'm just going to hold this in, take my coat off, hang it up.
It's going to practice. It's like, clench those muscles.
Is this at home? Where are you hacking at? Are you going out the toilet to the
hangar in the hall?
Okay, it is time for our final fact of the show, and that is Anna.
My fact this week is that Spain's gold reserves can only be accessed via drawbridge.
It's very cool. And they have a dragon as well, don't they?
Yeah, they do.
The other end of the drawbridge, yeah.
And a trumpeter, like, doodledoodle.
This is most of Spain's gold, which is in a bank of Spain vault in Madrid,
and it's very well protected, as a lot of gold reserves are, but it's such a cool setup. So,
to get to the gold reserves, you have to penetrate three massive steel doors,
and they waste, like, the first door weighs 16 tons, which is about eight hippos worth.
And also, they fit so well. So, when the door closes, it fits so tightly that, according to the
bank, even if, like, a tiny bit of fluff got in there, it would sense it and would not be able
to close. It would say, you know, you've got to get rid of that fluff. Anyway, once you've got
through these doors, then you go down a 35-meter elevator shaft underground, and you'll let out,
I think you walk through a tunnel, and then you've got to cross a drawbridge.
So, a drawbridge has to be let down over a moat. It's not a moat, it's just a ditch.
And I think it's about three or four meters drop. But I struggled to find, like, obviously, pictures
are quite limited for this kind of thing. They're quite sensitive about it. And once you've got
through the retractable drawbridge, you've got the gold. No, there's another door, isn't there?
Oh, then there's another door, one of the last doors. Yeah. And there's two people standing
outside, telling you a riddle. I love the way they, because they have, it's not just a ditch,
they have a mechanism for filling that ditch with water. So, the entire vault is under, obviously,
under the city surface, but it's under, there's a subterranean canal, which flows along beneath the
city. And then the vault is beneath that. And so, if they need to flood it at any point, they just
divert a bit of the subterranean canal, which will then slosh down into the drawbridge area,
and then completely flood that, so there's no way of getting in or out. And that's your fish.
And that's your fish. A trained fish. A goldfish.
Very nice. Gotta watch out for them. Is it possible that this is just all made up?
It's just in someone's back garden, isn't it? Yeah, it's just a tiny, like a hotel safe,
you know, with just four punched numbers in. Have they just created a myth so that we think,
whoa, it's like Area 51, you know? Those are impossible. The hotel says,
I find to get into, I have a curious knack of, like, locking myself out before I've put any of
my stuff in safe. I have to call someone at reception, and it's a whole thing.
What do you do? Do you put your stuff in the hotel safe? You're paranoid Android?
Yeah, of course I do. Passport, money belt, travel with checks, any pack, any pack.
But you've already talked about those locks. Can I just, as a mathematician,
raise a bugbear about terminology. So, you know, these locks, bicycle locks,
what do you call them? A combination? Yeah, combination. So, if imagine the combination
was one, nine, eight, four, like the Orwell book. My birth year. Oh, or, yes, Orwell's.
But a dystopian year in many ways. Imagine you put one, nine, four, eight, would it unlock it?
Oh, Terry Pratchett's birth year. I'm like, why would it not unlock it? I just think it was
mass listening. Why not? Because it's in the wrong order. Yeah, correct. Mathematically,
one, nine, eight, four, and one, nine, four, eight are the same combination, because combination is
just a set of numbers or letters in any order. The word, when they're in the precise order,
in the precise numbers, it's a permutation. It's actually, you should be called a bloody
permutation lock. It's bugged me for years. Wow. Well, I'm so glad you've had a chance to air it,
and now we'll all call them permutation locks. I, that, I mean, that is, because James calls a
single panini, a pinino, and he is going to be absolutely thrilled to hear that it's a permutation
lock. This is great. I really want to set James up in some way, like expose him to a combination
lock, get him to refer to him as a combination lock. Okay. One of us next week picks a combination
lock. That, yes. Take him down right at the top. Sorry, Bobby. Sorry. That's so good. That's great.
This bank vault door, the armoured door in the Madrid vault, there's one extra thing about it,
which is that it's constantly covered with a thin layer of Vaseline. Just in case you got a bit
excited. Just in case. Wait, is that a talking vault?
Sexy talking. That turns up. There's robbery tools in one hand.
Did you get the gold? Actually, I got a bit distracted.
But it stops it rusting because it's made of steel, but not stainless steel. And so it constantly
has to be very slightly protected from, from rusting. And someone's job is to apply Vaseline?
There must be like a, basically a vault goblin who has a huge tub of Vaseline.
Smooth as hands on it.
Welcome. Remove the fluff, then apply the Vaseline.
Fluff on the door. Very bad.
I could find out why they're not stainless steel. It says everywhere, they've got steel,
but it's not stainless. So you need Vaseline. Did they just cock it up at first?
Maybe it's old. It's an old door pre stainless steel process. I mean, lots of bank
vault doors are very elderly because, you know, you make them once. Yeah. Or is it all bullshit?
The draw bridges. Fucking ditches. Yeah. Yeah. Didn't know this before.
Gold bars get ultrasound done on them, like pregnant women. Right. Yeah. They probe it.
And they, they measure the reflections from, from the bottom or from within it.
And that's because in the early 2000s, there was a panic that gold bars might have been
adulterated with tungsten because tungsten has a very similar density, really similar density.
Yeah. But sound travels at different speeds through tungsten or through gold. So if you had
gold bars, which had been adulterated, you'd know. Yeah. So if, when you think of gold vaults,
what was the Bank of England, any other famous places you can think of? Fort Knox.
That's the one. Fort Knox. Yeah. So I think, yeah, Goldfinger 1964 is probably what gave
its prominence. People think it has up to half of the American gold reserves.
Wait, sorry, was that the, that was the bond plot line for that movie?
Yes. Yes. Fort Knox. Right. Yeah. So in, so the conspiracy theorists again, like,
there's no Fort Knox. There's nothing inside there. There's just like Vaseline and fluff.
But so presidents actually denied access to Fort Knox, apart from one president. Do you know
which one? The first half of the 20th century, often known by three initials. Okay. FDR.
LBJ. LBJ. FDR. Yeah. Franklin Delano Russov. In 1943, he's the only US president to have visited
Fort Knox. Really? Because he was concerned that it wasn't secure enough to be protected
from foreign invasion if the worst happened in World War II. So he's the only president
that we know has visited it. Are they allowed to keep presidents out? I thought the president
could basically go where, wherever he liked. They're not given access to it. But yeah, he's
like, I think maybe if they, like, said back to Obama Trump, I want to see Fort Knox, probably.
But he's the only one that we know. That's amazing. But what's even more fascinating is in World War II,
they were worried about bombs falling and washing in DC. Certainly they moved things like
the originals of the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and the Declaration of Independence
to Fort Knox. But even like Winston Churchill got on the act. So our Magna Carta was moved in 19,
so the International Magna Carta is like the UK version of the Bill of Rights, 1215. They moved
that to Fort Knox in 1939. Because I know we moved our gold to Canada, which I hadn't realized,
which seems like a huge undertaking in the Second World War, but was sent to send it to
Canada. And so the Bank of England vault became a canteen in the Second World War.
I've been to the Bank of England canteen.
Have you? Cool. Hang on. So is that...
It's not still, the vault hasn't, the vault has been turned back into a vault.
Is that back into a vault now? So have you been to the vault that Walter canteen has?
The actual canteen. Twice.
You've had a sandwich at your local branch of Lloyd's.
They're like, why have you brought all this Vaseline?
The Bank of England vault key is three feet long.
Yeah, that's pretty cool. That is great, isn't it? It's a real old school.
That's a dragon and moat style stuff.
But is it mainly like a chaplain stick with one thing at the end, or is it all the way down?
It's not. It's not notched all the way along.
Yeah, it's not notched all the way along. That would be amazing.
Yeah, that would be really good.
That's really funny.
Yeah. I think it's pretty remarkable, by the way, that the Bank of England,
which is in central London, Bank Station, is right next to it, if you get on the underground
line. In fact, the actual tunnel itself has to take a bend.
Next time you're on the underground, you'll notice that there's a turn,
and that's because they're going around the vault.
It's because they're literally going around the vault.
And inside this vault is 400,000 bars of gold.
So that's worth over 200 billion, just sitting something like a half hour's walk from where
we are right now. $200 billion.
Waiting in half an hour, guys.
I got some Vasili.
It is. It's amazing. Yeah.
And there are really strict rules about how many layers of gold
you can keep in the Bank of England vaults.
And this is a big difference between London and New York.
So London is mostly on clay.
So you're not allowed on most levels to stack the gold higher than four or six
pallets, because it will start sinking into the ground, and that is a problem.
So whereas New York is on granite, and you can store gold as high as you like in there,
it will not collapse.
Yeah. And I think north of the river in London,
generally the surface is stronger.
So if Bank of England were south of the river, it would sink even further.
Yeah, you're so right, because that's what caused,
that's why we could build the underground at a certain level.
Is that where there are no underground stops south of the river?
That was one of the reasons, yeah.
Really? Yeah. Grounds too soft.
Yeah.
Just outside of gold, but still with vaults,
I was looking into sort of precious items that have been kept in the vaults of our world,
and it's stuff that is kind of seen as the precious secrets of our world.
So for example, the formula for Coca-Cola, supposedly kept in a bank vault.
Well, not equals MC square, but because Einstein's eyeballs are in a safe deposit box in New York.
Do you remember after he died, there was a surgeon who took his brain away
and took his eyes and took it.
And so the eyeballs are still not in route.
Just his brain.
No, his eyeballs are sitting in a vault.
Or a safe deposit in a bank vault.
They must be preserved, like they can't just be looted in a box.
I think they're probably in from Aldehyde, sitting in a little beaker, I imagine.
I didn't know it was that because they had to get the brain out the eye sockets,
do you think? They had to remove the doors first.
I think once you're just collecting bits of them,
you might as well grab them while you're there, right?
That's so creepy.
Yeah, it is creepy.
Dr. Pepper, the formula for Dr. Pepper, that's sitting in a vault somewhere.
The secret ingredients of how you make WD-40 are sitting in a vault.
And they were moved once, which was on the product's 50th birthday.
The guy who took it was the CEO, Gary Ridge,
who rode on a horse through Times Square while wearing a suit of armor
and holding the secret ingredients to WD-40.
Before he reached the drawbridge, yeah.
That's incredible.
But it wouldn't have been possible to rob him actually on that occasion,
because he'd been so thoroughly lubricated in the armor.
The robbers would just slide off.
Okay, that's 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 be found on our Twitter accounts.
I'm on at Shriverland, Andy.
At Andrew Hunter M.
Bobby.
At Bobby underscore seagull.
And Anna.
You can email podcast at qi.com.
Yep, where you can go to our group account, which is at no such thing,
or our website.
No such thing as a fish.com.
Check out all of our previous episodes.
They'll be up there.
Also links to the final dates of our nerd immunity tour.
We're going to be doing them in September.
Come and see us live.
It's lots of fun.
But if you can't, we'll be back here with another episode next week.
And we'll see you then.
Goodbye.
you