No Such Thing As A Fish - 461: No Such Thing as the Milkmaid's Tale
Episode Date: January 13, 2023Dan, James, Anna and special guest Rhys Darby discuss boats, goats, Tintin's tuft and mystery moose. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. Â Join Clu...b Fish for ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at nosuchthingasafish.com/apple or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon
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Hey everyone, welcome to this week's episode of Fish. Before we get going, I just want
to let you know that we have a very exciting guest on this week, Andy unfortunately was
away and is actually furious he was away because he missed out on the absolute tornado
of comedy that is Reese Darby. You probably know Reese for his roles as Murray the manager
on Flight of the Concords or as Nigel Billingsley from the Jumanji movies or perhaps you listen
to his absolutely brilliant podcast about the mysteries of the universe called The Cryptid
Factor which he hosts with his buddies Buttons and a doofus called Dan. But what you may
not have seen if you live in the UK is Reese playing his greatest role yet, Steed Bonnet,
Gentleman Pirate in the sitcom Our Flag Means Death. This is such a great series, it came
out last year on HBO Max but it's only just come to the UK on BBC2 and it's all about
the real life story of Steed Bonnet who decided to give up his entire life and become a Gentleman
Pirate of the Seas. He befriends Blackbeard who's played by the absolute genius comedy
director Taika Waititi and you can watch it now in the UK on BBC2 every Wednesday at 10
pm or if you're impatient like me just head straight to BBC iPlayer and you can watch
the entire series in one bingey go. Anyway it was so great having Reese back on the show
you can find the previous episode in the Fish Archives if you want to hear his first time
here with us. Andy wasn't on that show either, poor guy can't get a break. But we hope you
enjoy it and then make sure to watch Our Flag Means Death immediately afterwards. Okay on
with the show.
Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast this
week coming to you from four mysterious locations around the globe. My name is Dan Schreiber,
I am sitting here with James Harkin, Anna Tyshinski and joining us once again it is the
return of our very special guest Reese Darby and once again we have gathered around 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 Reese. My fact is that Pirate
Steed Bonnet invented the idea of walking the plank. That's a pretty big invention I
would say in the world of pirating. I don't use it in my day to day life, it's pretty
niche isn't it? It's putting together two things that already exist, walking and planks,
it's not like it doesn't come up with anything new there has he? I know but if you're even
a child and you dress up as a pirate one of the first things you learn in your entire
life is that they walk the plank. I mean he is what a legacy. That's right. Is it true though?
Let's put it this way it's more of a myth really that he came up with it. That's fine that's
what we deal in. It's a Dan fact you know. Yeah you know the show. So well he might have done
right? He might have done some people say that he did. I actually believe he did because even
though it's out there as a myth I believe knowing Steed as I do playing the role of Steed for two
seasons now that he would have come up with it in reality because the whole idea behind walking
the plank is they blindfold the the person and they make them walk it and so then they get away
with not being accused of murder because that person has killed themselves. The captain has said
all right walk along that plank will you all the best and and the guy's like uh what hey what's
happening hey what walk along here whoa whoa whoa you know you can imagine it as I'm describing it
here oh I've got to blindfold on what what what's where's this plank going you know and then
that's the shark. Yeah so he wouldn't want to stab someone or shoot someone no he wants to do it
he wants to be slightly away from the action right and say you did it yourself. Absolutely very
uncomfortable with the idea of of killing someone. Why are you hitting yourself? Why are you punching
yourself? Why are you letting yourself get eaten by sharks? Exactly that's it. Is that getting you
into heaven? I was uncomfortable with killing people so I just let them kill themselves. He's
still he's walking a fine line isn't he? He's walking a fine plank for sure but I think yeah I
think that's the point that's the it's a moral issue and so he can think to himself oh I didn't
kill him he killed himself he walked off that plank that I designed and it's quite a ingenious
idea really to think that especially back in those days you could make someone kill themselves
without you having to actually get your hands dirty. Yeah which was we should say like seven
golden age of piracy 1718 was it he died? Yes I think so 1700 17 to 1730 was the golden age
he was right in the middle of it. Wasn't he very short lived really as a pirate for a pirate who
is quite famous it was quite a brief career wasn't it? Two years. I live at the net I think it was
like a year and a half. I think we should just quickly praise see this guy in his entirety this
was someone who was a really well-to-do character he was living very rich he had a wife he had some
kids and then he just decided as part of ultimately what was I guess a midlife crisis or he was dealing
with trauma of a quite difficult childhood just left his family bought a ship and just said I'm
now a pirate got a crew named the ship the revenge and just started sailing and he paid his staff
you know he paid the pirates he was he was as you say a gentleman pirate with zero abilities. Didn't
he not tell the pirates that they were going to be pirates I read somewhere that he kind of brought
them on he got all of these guys to be his staff and then only when they were at sea he said oh by
the way you're pirates this isn't just a fun cruise this is a that sounds like him as well knowing him
being in his shoes absolutely yeah he definitely he bought the ship it was it was already called the
revenge I believe and he liked the name of it and there was actually quite a common name for ships
back then and then yeah he installed this is the really really fun stuff he he installed a library
on the on the boat so he built a library because he loved his books he wanted to leave home and
leave his wife and life but he didn't want to leave his books something you might do Dan so he
brought his entire collection of his books and put them on the ship I reckon Dan I reckon you would
go being a pirate with your books of course but also probably your Ben Elton collection absolutely
well you're signed everything signed you've got in your house would come with yeah I would need
memorabilia to sort of yeah wow blackbeard with you know yeah no actually Ben Elton did I think
actually hold this particular bit of tissue um yeah really wow yeah I was actually going to say
it's pretty it was pretty hard on his wife with the book stealing not only is she lost her husband
but he's nicked all the bloody books but actually in your case Dan it would be quite a relief probably
for Fenella yeah it'd be like the ultimate mari kundo or whatever that book was called it's like
yeah you know step four make your husband a pirate lose all thank thank god yeah and so in in the
series as well there's the relationship uh the fact that he in real life meets blackbeard the most
famous of all the pirates and what's crazy as well is I assume blackbeard must have existed for a
long time but he had a two-year run as well that was it yeah blackbeard's pirating years were two
years it's amazing you lived pretty fast and loose as a pirate didn't you it probably wasn't the safest
line of work to go into if we're being honest no no they were like the Liz Truss of Pirates
sweat they those guys literally that's the most fluttering comparison Liz Truss has ever got
but yeah blackbeard and him had quite a weird relationship it's kind of the relationship to
a needy loser uh and they're the real cool guy of the open seas because steed wasn't that good at
pirating especially at first was he no so I mean you know there's the reality through the knowledge
we have from various accounts and history and then there's the obviously the the fictional
version which my show is so without getting too confused about which which is real and which
isn't because the real reports you know are sketchy at best as well but when you look at it it kind
of makes sense that you know something happened between the two of them even if it was just a
friendship blackbeard was fascinated by this guy because he looked glorious in his outfits he had
these little winker picker shoes and glorious coats and and various things like that he was a
fancy man and blackbeard must have gone what the hell are you doing in this job because you know
they're all desperate they didn't want to become pirates that was like the only life they had to
go into because of of their circumstance and so here's this guy who's like I want to be part of
this too he's absolutely not supposed to be there and he was wounded and I think instead of just
let him like killing him or getting rid of him I think there was a massive fascination I think
maybe if you look at blackbeard wanting to see the other side of how the other side lives
like it probably a lot of people did back in those days you're either ridiculously poor and
haven't got anything going on or you're the aristocracy and never the twain shall meet and
so when they do I think that's when you've got this really interesting like oh how can I become
you or how can I learn from you or how can I steal your ideas to make me better so you
was like the Louis Theroux of the pirating world spending a few weeks observing getting all the
perhaps because he could have just killed him he could have just got rid of him I mean this guy
back in history was not he's not as portrayed as capable as I am in the show you know and that's
saying something but I reckon it's this is a really interesting way of doing history right
because we don't have much information about Steve Bonnet we have little bits here and there
but Reese you've lived as him for two years in the show pretty much and I reckon you've got a really
good insight into what he might have been thinking and what he might have done and stuff yeah why the
hell he did it that's the always the great mystery isn't it it's always portrayed as this huge midlife
crisis which makes sense it's the fantasy that every eight-year-old has that we grow out of by the
time of 12 that's not midlife is it eight years old I feel like when you have a midlife crisis you
revert back to those tragic fantasies you had as a child that are unrealistic and it was portrayed
in um you know that the famous book of pirates which is where we get basically all of our pirate
knowledge by a mysterious person called Captain Charles Johnson who was written a few years later
and his portrayal which is often what is repeated is that he was trying to bear the awful situation
of having a nagging wife but yeah Reese you've been him why did he do it I really I really hope
that you James and Anna are subtly trying to get Reese to sort of channel Steve yeah and he comes
through now so I'm hoping Reese is no longer here we've got English Dundee Steve is just on the show
look I definitely think there was a midlife crisis situation going on if you look back at the accounts
but also he had this life that he didn't uh necessarily want he was born into aristocracy
and at that time piracy had just kicked in and it was this ridiculous adventurous
out at sea life that was pretty much the opposite of what he's doing and he's never even been to see
by the way this guy so he's imagining oh wow what would that be like and of course anyone who's
really intensely into their book reading has a great imagination and I think he just one day went
look I've actually got the means to to change this and he probably had one massive fight with the
wife that obviously he wasn't really getting on with and went right that's it I'm out I'm out
and in the middle of the night you know he he sorted this out and just took off on a whim
and I think that you know he probably thought that he had the means to to get away with it
because he was a chiefly person he was someone who was sort of high up there and so he probably
didn't even imagine he was going to get into trouble it certainly seemed like he didn't it's
confidence blind confidence yeah I once walked a plank in a virtual reality video game okay and
this is why I was thinking about how these guys were blindfolded so we weren't blindfolded when
we did this but you're walking the plank on the top of a massive building and then the idea
was you got to the end and then you jumped off and then you were in virtual reality and you thought
you were dying and then you kept falling falling falling and then you hit the floor and you absolutely
shit yourself because you thought you were dead but actually you're in virtual reality
but what I thought was it was more scary because I could see what was happening whereas these
guys were blindfolded yes so is the idea that they wouldn't know when they're getting to the
end of the plank they'll just keep walking and that's it or yes well let's let's let's have a chat
about that I mean I think why do they need to be blindfolded for a start because you know they know
they're out at sea they're on a boat all right step up step up onto the edge yeah oh this is well
I can feel that this is the edge of the boat no no it's not no you're going you're going into one
of the rooms we're going to have a little party no no I can feel the wind in my face here no no
no it's fine walk just keep walking just there's a there's a plank there all right yes yes oh well
this is going out into the sea isn't it no no no this is a little it's actually a bridge towards
the bar I've got a cocktail here waiting for you Larry okay okay was very windy yes or that we're
all blowing blow oh that does it feels feels like normal when not you know what your wind's
like Larry ah cheeky bugger just keep walking down there mate and I know I've really got into that
but you know I think I've forgotten what we were asking but I actually think that's true because it
means you couldn't have like surprise parties on a boat could you because every time you put a blindfold
on oh yeah you're walked into a room and they say it's a party yeah I think that's a good point
we've got to and history there's been no surprise parties on pirate ships for that reason happy birthday
it actually doesn't make any sense that they would be able to walk a plank while out in the rough
seas blindfolded and shaking with nerves I mean you fall off you don't get to the end of that plank
do you no such a good point you're falling off straight away also is this where we got the
diving board from yeah yes I was just thinking imagine the cockiness of someone that you've
sentenced to death who walks flying forward to the end of the plank jumps off and does a triple
backward that's amazing what a death what a death
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okay it is time for fact number two and that is James okay my fact this week is that goats
like it when you smile at them but only if you approach them from the right hand side
how can that possibly be true why could it be true it was the findings of a study in 2018
at the buttercup sanctuary for goats in Kent and what they did was they put photos of humans
men and women black and white and they put one on the left and one on the right
and one of them was smiling and one of them wasn't and the goats always went to the smiling one but
only when it was on the right hand side when it was on the left hand side they couldn't give a
shit they would just they would randomly go to one or the other but when it was on the right
hand side they always went to it and two things here one not many animals care whether humans are
smiling or not we know that dogs do we know that horses do that's because they're domesticated
animals and this is one of the first other animals that we found that actually cares if
humans smile and the other thing is that perhaps why are they only bothered about the right hand
side well it could be the way that their brain processes things so maybe they're processing
emotions on one side of the brain or visual things on one side of the brain we're not really sure
why do they use a black and white photo can you not fork out in the budget for a color
for something do they see color do they see color uh that's a great question got well
recent you you're from you know with you know goats almost as well as you know steed bonnet um
do you think they see color i would like to think they do especially my ones when i when i turn up
to feed them um i always come in from the left and they're smiling uh i'm smiling but i but they
you always make sure to smile that's part of it i'm just mentioning that i must be smiling because
i'm happy to see that i don't see them or a hell of a lot because they're in new zealand but i spend
time with them when i'm there of course they are they are emotionally intelligent i hadn't realized
that they were to this extent so they did a study where researchers recorded goats making
certain noises noises when they were happy and noises when they were sad
so this did involve the researchers making the goats happy and sad so they'd make them happy by
sort of giving them food and then they'd make them sad but and this is sort of like really
minimal level of sadness they'd isolate them from their herd for five minutes or they'd get a goat
to watch another goat eat when that goat didn't have much food apparently the but i know goats and
that is very sad for them that's that's tragic the two things they really care about are being
together and eating oh really that's it oh yeah that's it and to have fun they climb so they love
to get on top of things and they love running around but they always much prefer to be doing all
that sort of stuff to see it okay well maybe this was like torture for them perhaps and also also
anna i've been in the restaurant with you when one of us has got our food and yours hasn't quite
arrived yet the look on your face i make some pretty weird noises i can't deny that okay i make
a weird goat like bleeding sounds anyway the noises that goats make are pretty much indistinguishable
to us when they're happy and sad in those situations except probably reason for your own goats you pick
up on it but if you play those sounds to their fellow goats just audio recordings their heart
rates will stay normal and they'll be all chilled out when they hear the happy sounds but when they
hear the almost identical sounding anxious sounds then their heart rates kind of shoot up so they're
feeling this empathy on behalf of this other goat wow reese have you ever this is a uh leaning
into a myth here but i'll just be curious have you ever dipped your feet into salt water and then
let goats lick your feet no no okay i've already but i have taken the goats for a walk down on
that's the thing i know you've got a beach near you been through salt water yeah so okay next time
you're back in new zealand give it a go because i'd be curious to hear whether or not this hurts
this was a a sort of myth that's been in books for a long time and possibly it was tried once or
twice who knows where the ancient romans were said to have used a thing called tickle torture
and the idea was that you would get someone you would soak their feet in salt water and then the
salt um would then be licked by a thirsty ghost ghost
oh no i just checked my notes down and all this is actually about ghosts
all this stuff i've been saying about goats it's ghosts like it if you smile at them
always approach a ghost from the right hand side yeah now it's making sense yes um so apparently
that's if a goat licks your feet because they have really rough tongues that the torture and
because they're so thirsty and the salt makes them thirstier they keep licking and then they
rip your feet off and that would be a that would be a method of torture back in rip your feet off
their tongues aren't made of no sorry they would they would they would slowly like um like a lollipop
lick their way through your feet oh yeah yeah i tend to not let their mouths too close to my
body bits okay because they have teeth and everything you know and and they're very they're
always wanting to to nibble and so they nibble on my clothes they pull my garments and i certainly
can't see myself getting my naked feet out and dangling them in front of their faces with salt
do they then another question about your goats do i mean do they urinate on themselves and each
and each other or themselves so first of all they'll they'll wheel over themselves to attract
a female and it looks kind of cool billy goats shove their heads right between their legs
because they want to wean their bids because i guess that gathers up the the smell better
and they wheel over them and then they will go to the lady who can tell that he's up for up for a
shag but then he tests her urine as well to make sure that she's eligible to make sure that she's
actually on heat and so she will squat down and he'll put his head between her legs and then
she'll wheel over him and then they do this the curl up the lips the flame and response
which is where if you see a go expose its lip like curl up its top lip it's got all these receptors
in it yeah james is doing it right now it's very attractive look actually uh it's got receptors in
that pick up whether the urine has the right hormones in it that says this woman is ready
to be fertilized by you and so it's very very wee based courting process it's sexy stuff i know
nothing of that because i only have boy goats oh really yeah well when you have both you know
you're intimating and if you've got females then you then you're into milking so i've only got
male castoffs which you know the boy goats are only good for either meat or pits yeah oh wow so
they're never aroused your goats they never need to know themselves they've never aroused and i've
never even seen them wee are they must they must never never seen them wee that might mind you
mind you know mine a pedigree so i don't think they do yeah good point i've heard that about
certain breeds they just explode with urine at their death don't they it's a him really yeah
well sometimes i see them hiding and i and i'm i come to the pin and i think oh what's oh you're
having a wee are you and then i can hear don't i've done coming here i'm in here and then that
kind of thing and so i wonder there's probably something happening there and then they just come
through oh hello dad what's what's going on today did they call you dad yeah they call dad i didn't
see you coming dad you came on the left hand side did you yeah sorry i was uh i was going to
check on you guys see who you want to go for another walk down to the beach oh no i'm fine
alexander's just behind the pen they don't go going around there he's just doing something don't
worry about him i don't he's sure you've got goats not sort of pantomime act as a goat cross trees
here's an interesting thing about goats so you said like pedigree goats you can't get them
you can't get really good goats especially for milking and stuff and in order to get those you
might need a stud so you might need a really good male goat who's gonna have sex with lots of females
but the thing is that they can only have so many they can only have sex so many times right
there's only so many hours in the day that you can do that and so recently they've come up with a
new way of basically what they do is they put some genes into a goat which changes its testicles so
they're effectively the testicles of another goat and so this goat which isn't the normal stud
can have sex with a female and the the offspring will be the offspring of the original stud even
though the stud's just at home having a coffee oh my god you know really that's like the handmaid's tail
kind of where you think you're shagging one person but you're actually shagging the more fertile
person it's like it's actually a less dark version of the handmaid's tail without the feminist dystopian
undertones the milkmaid's tail I wonder if that's quite demoralizing though for the goat who the
person said your testes aren't good enough we're just going to shove these other blokes on you
who you've always been intimidated by anyway I don't think they even know they're goats
probably goats of course they know me goats do they yeah very good so I've tried to take them out
you know we've gone into town and my guys have gone no no we can't we're goats we can't go in there
we're not gonna we won't be allowed in there dad can I can I can you take the blindfold off me
no just just you'll be fine Alexander we're just we're going into town I can sense there's someone
coming up up to me on the left hand side I can sense it he's asking me for ID dad what do I do
dad I don't have any ID I'm a goat I told him I'm a goat look I'm sorry he doesn't know he's a goat
if you could just let him I do know I'm a goat dad I told you and get the blindfold off me
I saw a photo earlier today of it was a tree which looked like it was growing goats there was
like an apple tree there was like 30 goats they love climbing trees they were just all sitting
in this tree and I didn't think they had the dexterity to do it hadn't you yeah they're they're
big on yeah they do like climbing trees and they like climbing but often if you see those photos
some places will fake it um just fake it for tourists basically they'll kind of tie the
goats into trees and then say look all these goats have climbed this tree and they're all free well
because at the end of the day they need the tourists to come and take the photos but the
goats aren't going to do what they want sometimes they'll climb and sometimes they won't so they
yeah they kind of fake it sometimes oh that's that's the shocking reality of tourism in some of
these places but I'm afraid so um the other thing is there's a theory that goats used to be birds
and that sorry that's why they're in the trees a lot because they are reverting back to their previous
life is that and the scientific papers written supporting this theory or is this just some bloke
in your local pub no I'm just I'm pulling it up now okay here it is scientific theories yeah yeah
goats yeah goats used to be birds here it is uh goats goats used to be birds here it is in bold
letters absolutely incredible well that's two pages and it's signed at the bottom two pages
that's your evidence they believe they're flying that's the closest thing they can get to going back
to their old life as a bird by flying and then they'll end up in the trees and you'll you'll often
hear them um uh twerking twerking no twerping you should see him twerk he's amazing what's the
actual word that birds make tweet tweeting oh tweeting I think chirping that's why I'm getting
confused you mash them together yeah I'm mashing those two together and coming up with twerking
yeah um I think that's how the working was born actually wasn't that how it was created yeah um
well that's that that's absolutely amazing uh thank you for sharing that fact another another goat
fact yeah which is isn't as amazing as that but is true is that we've never talked about myotonic
goats and I think they always deserve a mention the myotonic fainting goats oh don't mention on this
podcast the they're a breed in Tennessee that basically have an anomaly in their genes where
when they panic if they're approached from the left for instance or not smiling or there's a
loud noise something like that then they try to escape but what this does is contract their muscles
so they stiffen up completely and then just kind of fall over onto their side and it's quite comical
to see if you've never seen it it's bizarre I've seen videos of that yeah it's very interesting
do we know why it happens Anna because it feels like it would die out quite quickly uh well I think
it was only dyed in as it were quite recently um through breeding so I don't think it would have
any evolutionary purpose and you're right in the wild they probably wouldn't survive very long
but they are now bred um from the same batch that have this I think Steve Bonnett suffered from that
same uh gene anomaly just sort of stiffening up and fainting in the at the side of any sort of
oh yeah yeah and he overcame it did he well how did he overcome it well you know just really sort
of uh you know getting with a really tough pirate and learning how to proper be a pirate
and I think goats if you you put those little feinty ones in with uh you know some real hardcore
proper rustic goats uh that probably learn the ways and and would become more goaty yeah less
feinty Billy goat blackbeard takes them under their wing um that's right what you can also do is
you can deprive them of water which bizarrely cures this problem there are other problems if you
don't get the water out now so it's a very fine balance to strike but they're they're kind of
useful now because myotonia is also a thing in humans like sudden muscle seizures some people
have that and the jumping Frenchmen of Maine are they called or something like that I remember
really I didn't know I don't know about them are they yeah I think there was a there was a group
of French immigrants in Maine I think uh and they had this kind of thing where as soon as you
shocked them they were just feint oh wow wow yeah how long are they stiff for how long do they like
does it just slowly wear off yeah I think so it's the goats they just kind of wake up don't they the
goats it's like a feint yeah yeah I've seen the videos it's bizarre I've seen the videos it's
bizarre I imagine if people did do that and it's a very bizarre trait isn't it um yeah it would make
the start of the hundred meters not much good would it as soon as the bang goes off everyone
just feint it would be a race to see who came round the quickest yeah that's why the goat
Olympics have never taken off yet we call yet we call the best in the world the goats of what's
going on yeah okay it is time for fact number three and that is Anna my fact this week is that
Tintin's hair originally lay flat on his head until it got blown upwards in an early comic strip
and it never came back down wow and that's that's why he's got that famous stupid quiff
I think it's brilliant it's iconic how dare you yeah what are you talking about your stupid
actually Reese is sporting it's sort of half Tintinian quiff at the moment so
be careful but yeah and it doesn't it was not mentioned anywhere in the comic it's just the
very first Tintin comic that was released this is in January 1929 and it was a Tintin or paid
to Soviet Tintin in the land of the Soviets and about sort of 10 pages in in the version I was
reading he drops out of a tree much like a goat and falls into a convertible car sitting underneath
it deliberately and drives the car away and in the next plate you see his hair pushed up
and then you follow the story through and it just never drops again so weird did they do it on purpose
was this a subconscious thing we'll never know we'll never well I actually have the book here
of course because oh wow you do big Tintin fan and and I looked at this and uh yeah you're right
we can we can have a look here I think it's as you say around page 10 yes yeah this is an audio
format yeah you've you've all got imaginations at home we want you to imagine Tintin climbing up a
tree so climbing up a tree see his yeah his quiff here is forward uh huh yeah okay he climbs up the
tree and then there he is um for those at home that are um listening to this you guys can hear him
hear jumping now he's in the car and it's flipped to the back and it's because of the wind of the car
and you can all hear that in that panel there yeah but that's that's that's pretty amazing that it
happens midway through a comic it's not like the start of a new comic it's like it's like Herge the
the creator and the illustrator of Tintin did that in one panel and went oh that looks good
I think so well I'll just leave that yeah yeah and do you know what's amazing about what you just
showed us there's a little something in that comic which is what absolutely exploded Tintin
into the masses of Europe and it and it was a very specific thing that you might not have
noticed as we were all just looking at these cartoons which is did you notice at home anyone
write in if he's spotted the moment the dances I mean the the four of us is what I'm talking about
and what it was is that this is 1929 this is the same year that Popeye was invented by the way
um so this is and you know it's years before Superman and Batman this is really old school
comic books what they have in these drawings are speech bubbles right and Europe did not
have speech bubbles at this point in their comics they were over in America but they were
a completely new idea to certainly Belgium and let's say surrounding countries I don't know about
the UK specifically Luxembourg possibly Luxembourg and the Netherlands the Netherlands yeah let's go
there yeah and I read a great biography or rather I read a few pages from a great biography by Harry
Thompson about Tintin saying that basically his words in these speech bubbles were treated as if
they were carved on tablets of stone they became quotes and they became something you would remember
as a result of these speech bubbles and that is why Tintin exploded so sorry oh always claiming I would
say at the moment for me the invention of the speech bubble is up there with the invention of the
concept of walking a plank um I don't know if it's getting kind of he didn't invent it he didn't
exactly didn't even invent it and it's not it didn't independently appear did it it wasn't like oh
wow how weird they've got these in America presumably they just read a comic in America and
thought well let's start doing that is that right no but do you remember when ok go did their first
video on treadmills and you barely even heard the music you were so busy watching this innovative
video yeah that's what it was couldn't tell you what the song is exactly the treadmill song what the
treadmill song exactly what a relatable for future generations well you know in like 300 years
everyone will be talking about you know how we all do those treadmill dances now yeah you know how
everyone does them well guess who did the first yeah it was exactly yeah that book by the way the
Tintin in the soviets country so whatever it is I have that as well but if you go to the Tintin
shop in London they'll only sell it to you under the counter oh no yeah so I went to um it was my
tin anniversary and I thought I'd buy my wife some Tintin stuff and she's Russian so I thought I'd
buy the Soviet Tintin book and I went and it wasn't anywhere and I didn't really know enough about
Tintin that I knew it existed but I assumed that it was maybe really rare and I said oh do you have
this book and they went yeah well we keep it under here now and since the Russian invasion of Ukraine
they don't put it on display anymore in that shop yeah that's so weird so you feel like you were
buying comic book porn is it quite exciting um they gave me in like an unmarked paper bag yeah
do you know it's crazy so 1929 is when Tintin debuts by 1930 the comic is so massive that
Herge was invited to meet the um Empress who was the ex Empress I guess Zeta of Austria-Hungary
at the time and when he arrived he arrived by train and there was just huge crowds of people there
to meet not Herge specifically but Tintin because they hired an actor to be Tintin
who was an unknown kid who didn't have the right colour hair and he was mobbed and not only did
he not have the right colour hair he also couldn't quite keep the quiff up so Herge had to keep this
little like little um tin of oily grease hair grease I thought you were going to go something
about Mary about it there Dan for a second oh Jesus Tintin had to ejaculate every 30 minutes
like those poor goats like the goat but he had to have someone else's testicles implanted into him
exactly yeah clustering badicals Tintin but yeah so they came off this train and Tintin the kid
was mobbed and he was he was ripped away and Herge had to go and chase him and bring him back but
it was like one direction yeah right um if you remember them cool guy yeah yeah it was and in
fact you said you gave a famous Tintin quote there James blistering barnacles blistering barnacles
it's captain haddock right who says that yes yes frequently and this these are quite interesting
thing about translating Tintin into English because obviously it was originally written in French
I was reading an interview with Leslie Lonsdale Cooper and she was one of the two
main translators of Tintin from French into English and she was doing for 30 years but
she said one of the great challenges is fitting the words exactly into the speech bubbles because
you get exactly the same images but I don't you know when you hear a French announcement on a
tanoi and then you hear the English one and the French one always goes on about five times longer
so I don't know how she was compressing that but blistering barnacles was one of the things that
she came up with as a translation of actually me sabore I think it was in French which means a
thousand portholes he's from Belgium though isn't he so yeah but they speak speak French
in half of Belgium they do um he's supposedly based on a Frenchman wasn't he Tintin uh Robert
Sexy yes that's a good name it's a great name isn't it Robert Sexy he was a uh French journalist
and apparently he looked a bit like Tintin he went on adventures to the Soviet Union to the
Democratic Republic of Congo and to the US in the same order that Tintin does those books
but Herger always said Tintin c'est moi so he always claimed that Tintin was based on himself
I think he might have been inspired by various different journalists there was another theory
that Tintin and all the characters were based on the family members of Herger and he denied it later
in life he said no no no it's nothing to do with them but let me just quickly tell you about his
family um there was his younger brother Paul who had a round face and a quiff there was his dad
Alexis who was a clumsy man who had a twin brother called Leon who lived nearby and the two of them
would go for walks and they would wear identical bowler hats and carry identical canes singing
in unison as they did his dog Snowy uh who originally had the name Milo in French uh
who does have the name Milo who's sorry rather who does have the name Milo in French shares
that name with Herger's first girlfriend yes but that's no yeah a lot of people a lot of people
have suggested are you saying something rude but Harry Thompson points out that at the time it was
considered to be a great crime if you were a young boy hanging out with the opposite sex
certainly if you were depicting that in comics and so the only way he could represent this person
who was very fond of was to put her as a dog in there otherwise he would have gotten a lot of trouble
what what kind of weird excuse maker for the fact that Herger put pretty much zero women
in all of his comics were you reading oh we weren't allowed to include women in comic books
they had to be dogs they had to come in disguise he just didn't put any women characters in it is a
bit of a bit of a hard to draw hard to draw women that's not true what about uh Bianca
Kesterfuhrer the opera singer she's a huge character in the you're right she's she is a heroine as well
that's true no you're right he had one he had Bianca that is true and he did have the dog who
maybe was based on his girlfriend but also weirdly the person James mentioned sex there
he had a travel companion called Milu as well so it might be no way yeah have you guys read what is
apparently the best tint in and I haven't read it I'm ashamed to say but tinted in Tibet people seem
to say um I'm guessing have you read that Reese yes so that's that's um that's my favorite I mean
I've I've let people know that I yeah I think I remember back it might still be there on uh
used to be on one of the social medias you put down your favorite book and I just always put
tinted in Tibet oh you've got such good taste that was his favorite you probably know this that was
Herger's favorite as well oh really yeah I didn't know that that's awesome um I just because it's
got a Sasquatch in it as well that's why oh yeah of course that's why it's your favorite I thought
you liked it for the great philosophical undertones and the exploration of kind of Buddhist theology
but it's it's a Sasquatch no I've never read it I just I just flicked through and and go straight
to the Sasquatch and look at the pictures every time well it makes tinted the only fictional
character to have received the light of truth award from the Dalai Lama so this is like the
best honor that the Dalai Lama can bestow and it's to anyone who improves public understanding of
Tibet which is questionable if they did chug a Sasquatch into the storyline but yeah the Dalai
Lama gave tint in this amazing light of truth what's a Yeti you know yeah it's a Yeti yeah it's
perfectly correct it is yeah right it and he's a good guy like he saves them so really I love it
when that happens yeah there's there's it's a good it's a great book does the Dalai Lama believe in
Yetis do you know if anyone knows I would say so yeah so he has alluded to a belief unfortunately
the person he alluded that belief to was Brian blessed so I'm not sure if we can trust Brian's
reporting but he when Brian was looking to climb to Mount Everest and obviously looking for Yetis
along the way he had a what's it called an audience with the Dalai Lama and he met him they
they apparently did some boxing together um Brian took a walk with him in the wood he saw him revive
a headless dead snake back to life and then they talked about Yetis and he suggested that yeah
that they are real okay that headless dead snake back to life what did he do just pick it up and
wobble it oh my god you're you're just wobbling that it's alive it's alive again he's doing it
like the thumb trick where you make it go hey look at that well here's the other thing too I'll say
about the hair the haircut on Tintin um yeah think about when you do find your your do you know when
you you you're young or whatever you may be in your 20s you're playing whether you're sorting
something out and you go right that's me quite often not everybody but a lot of people will
will keep that hairdo for their entire life and so that kind of fits in when you think about that
because yeah even even when you lose your hair or it goes gray or whatever you know you go into your
your later stages of life you still got that same hairdo you had when you were in your early 20s
that was a really good point there was a thing wasn't there there was a scientific paper written
about Tintin which was when the first book was written he was supposed to be 14 and by the time
the last book was written he must have been about 60 because Herge was writing them for so long
but he was 60 years old never had to shave none of his hair's fallen out yeah he's still got those
boyish features and according to these scientists they reckon he suffered from hypopetuitorism
due to repeated blows to the head and some of the early bucks oh and does that stop you aging
properly yeah it means you never go through puberty I see poor guy he's got sort of an inverse to what
most middle-aged men have where he's bald all around the middle of his head and then he's got
just lots of hair in the middle and I'm looking at James has actually brought a Tintin doll
oh you have a Tintin yes yeah to this episode another visual feature that will be lost on our
audience but it looks like a mohawk for me he really does doesn't it yeah I don't know that he
does have hair sorry when you turn it around yeah it does it's just from the front he looks bald
I'd just say one one final thing is that that he he really didn't like Tintin at the end much the
way that Arthur Conan Doyle got sick of his creation of Sherlock and he threw him off a cliff
and and killed him I arguably it's just a wet cliff only because I went there a few weeks ago
to the right to the right light falls yeah all right would you say wet cliff is an accurate
description so he um he really didn't like Tintin at the end and he was quite sick of him and so
the final Tintin book that Herge was working on up until the point of his death was a book called
Tintin and Alph Art and all we have is the sort of rough sketches of it but the final pain
that he got up to the final bit of the story was having Tintin covered in liquid polyester
and being sold as a work of art and we that's the cliffhanger we don't know what happened
does he die does he survive Tintin is like like Woody from Toy Story left on a cliffhanger we'll
never know so do you mean he was put in like a work of art like a Damien Hurst kind of thing
yes is that the idea knowing Tintin as I as I do I would say he'd probably escape from that
yeah but his his god might have turned him against that right like Herge was who knows
what he was going to do there we just don't know we don't know Rhys it's it it's interesting isn't
yeah I will uh it's interesting isn't it they these people that play also when you think of actors
that play these characters that are so loved and they get sick of them as well I was just
thinking of Harrison Ford with Han Solo no does he not like did he not like Hans by the way he
he said he'll come back to Star Wars but he wanted the characters to die which is a spoiler but at
least that's if you haven't seen that one it came out a few years ago now um but and then the whole
James Bond dying in that last bond that that Daniel Craig that's a bit more fresh that's a bit more
fresh it reminds me of that character Anna Corellino I don't know if you stop the podcast stop the
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okay it is time for our final fact of the show and that is my fact my fact this week is that for
over 50 years now the author of a nearly complete history of the moose in New Zealand has been looking
for moose in New Zealand despite there being no moose in New Zealand or is there oh yeah exactly
or is there is there no there isn't well there could be there is could there be
all right well talk to us about why would he not be looking is it quite a short book it sounds like
there's not much to put in this book right now if there are no moose in New Zealand are you kidding me
though there's plenty in this book and it's not his only book he's written a bunch of books he's
written a wild moose chase he's this guy is a legend of New Zealand yeah i knew you'd like that
chance um this is a man called Ken Tustin and he has been in the national parks in New Zealand
in Fjordland looking for moose because there was moose back in the 1920s 30s when they were introduced
and there's your clincher there was moose so there is not like oh he's going to look for
fairies and i hope there's some there you know there there was moose put there then i'll be
dead by now those ones it's 100 years ago it's a little thing called mating oh is that yeah
go down to the sea get your toes wet come and meet me on a wet cliff mate
wow oh blindfold you
is that someone blowing no it's not it's just the wind all right get your idea out
show us your twerks here we go and mating say this is okay so um i i got the uh the decade
slightly wrong this was in 1910 and what it was is that New Zealanders basically in 1910 wanted
something to hunt and they had no natural land mammals of that size and so moose were introduced
basically to rectify that so initially the moose really adapted well to the surroundings but then
red deer were introduced into the area and that changed the whole food change so much
that by 1952 so there was a good you know 40 odd years that they were around the moose population
really dwindled and then basically by 1930 disappeared altogether but then in 1952 one
was caught on camera so there's 20 there's a 20 odd year period where people thought they were
extinct and then suddenly boom here is a moose and that is why this guy says there may be more
moose because moose are really good at hiding yes they are they're really they're really hard to
see they're huge i know but they're actually i know i know but this is a huge national park you
know it's really hard to spot one um a moose could be standing in a in a field 100 yards away and you
won't see it wow they do get they get hit by cars a lot don't they moose like that is a big problem
in Canada and is that because of their this invisibility that they can well that must be right
yeah because they they've got this mystical ability they can stand still for a long time
and one of their i think one of their look if you can just take this seriously one of their um you
know like a a security measure defense mechanisms there you go there's the terms i knew you'd get
there uh is to you know like um they're caught a lot of animals use that where they just freeze
like the goat thinking and it's always yeah well no that's a different one that's you know but that
well kind of but that's there that's a gene anomaly yeah i'm just trying to think of some
other animals that do it do the old freeze um a few bugs in headlights they would rabbit headlights
mules mules do that definitely i think when they're they just freeze when they can't deal with
situation i think so yeah like a possum something they would kind of pretend to be dead no i think
all of the examples you've given so far are incorrect okay there are some bugs and things out
there that will just i think okay here's one the stick insect because i saw it yesterday
okay and a frozen stick in sex so the thing is i used to have pet stick insects as a child
and they never moved ever it wasn't that as soon as they were in danger they stopped moving
they just stayed no that's defense mechanism they were scared of me yeah absolutely so i've had one
i had one on my uh steering wheel the other day this is back in new zealand when i was on the in
the rural property and i went to grab my steering wheel to to to drive as you do and there's a
there's a sticky on there and i went oh come on mate because of my hands need to be there he was
in the two position because you know you go for 11 and two it's the worst place and i went i grabbed
the 11 and i always grabbed the left first grabbed the 11 going for the two oh there's a sticky there
and i says to him come on mate and i and he just honestly i see him looking at me i'm on the right
hand side of him no prob's there but he's not moving and i come in slowly i'm cut and i even
told him coming in with the hand buddy coming in because you're on my two position and nothing
just absolutely frozen so in the end i just picked him up and he made out like he was a stick the
whole time i even come to think of it it might have been a poor poor stupid stick insect because
i see what you're saying now you're saying animals that are camouflage to their environment
freeze but he's not a steering wheel insect so it would be good if you could know as an animal
that the thing you're sitting on yeah it's not like you look nothing like it yeah i mean chameleons
they're the other ones that lizards in general will will freeze or really dart away but lizards
are the ones that will will freeze as a mechanism so let's go back to what what what was your fact
in what are we talking about moose we were talking about mooses right that's right and so hey this is
pretty cool we wrote a book years ago race uh where there was a new zealand professor called neil
gemel who had gone to Loch Ness and he had used a new form called edna to try and sample the waters
of Loch Ness to see if the monster may exist and so edna seems like quite an obvious thing that you
would use in order to try and find the moose because you could go there and if the moose had
been let's say around a little stream or a pond and if it had been sipping from it in the last 21
days neil would be able to use this device to then take extra x out and say ah there's moose dna in
there that's that means they're alive yeah so i actually dm'd him on twitter and i asked him you
know is this is this a thing would you be up for doing it and he said it's so weird i actually met
ken i met this guy who's been looking for moose yeah and he met him when he went back to Loch Ness
to deliver the results of his findings about the water that he took from Loch Ness and ken happened
to be there on holiday and they met at no way to then discuss looking for the moose actually i might
seem like it's a massive coincidence but where is ken going to holiday it's obviously going to be
Loch Ness isn't it where are these two nutters that you've happened to have heard of going to see
each other how day so is he going to do it well he talks about it so he said um what did he say
he said ken and i've kept in touch and the plan was to jump on board with him next time he found
some sign of moose but there's been little found in the past few years still remains a possibility
we've surveyed quite large sections of yordland and do reasonably broad biodiversity surveys setting
baselines and looking for various things endangered birds some species that are presumed to be extinct
and of course moose so far there is no evidence of those however there's been a hugely exciting
thing for ken that happened in 2020 which is that a kid why i say kid he's a teenager and when i say
teenager he's in his 20s and he was on a flight he was a guy called ben young who was in a helicopter
flying over fjordland doing some surveying and he saw a moose he saw the moose now here's the thing
here's the thing he's a canadian who used to work with moose there you go he knows what a moose we
all know what a moose looks like no but canadians really know he was really know he was specifically
a former moose hunting guide in canada i still go listen james he would really know reese you're
the one who just told us a canadian could be standing 100 feet from a moose in a plain meadow
and not see it so there you go yeah normally but this guy was a trained moose yeah looker
wasn't he he's a trained moose looker yeah yeah it's i have to say it's not it obviously is not
the maddest idea they were there like you say it is a big place and um sometimes these things
come to fruition so there's another really great kiwi animal uh animal in new zealand the
tarkahey which i think are pretty rare i doubt have you seen tarkahey i think they're quite rare
aren't they reese yes they're they're rare nice nice looking very nice looking birds though what kind
of birds yeah they're the largest bird in like the rail family so like coots and mohens but much
bigger very beautiful blue green feathers huge red beak that goes all the way up over their
foreheads they can't fly but anyway we thought the tarkahey was extinct by about 1900 so i think
the first sighting by europeans was 1849 obviously the europeans captured it roasted it ate it they
sort of went quite quickly extinct and then there's a guy called jeffrey orbell who when he was a kid
his mum just showed him a picture of one i think in a childhood book and he got a hunch as a child
i bet that's still out there and he spent his life kind of reading up on them and he was he
was a doctor i think he was a an eye doctor so he was a legit had a job um he knew how eyes worked
so he'd be perfect looking for things he knows how they really work he could he could really know
yeah yeah so he took his expert eyes out on this 1948 expedition and he they went up this mountain
and you know these things haven't been seen for 50 years and they sat by a little bit of water
and two of them just walked straight into their nets these lovely little birds waddled in and
we discovered and now they have them i think they're only about 300 they're very unusual but yeah
they're very endangered yeah but look there you go i mean that's just one example of how
animals and don't forget you know the more intelligent they are they know we're around
they know that they're endangered there's only a small group of them and they hide and they worry
and they at their their survival instinct is their main feature and so they are doing whatever it
can take because otherwise they could be caught they could be shot we only think it from a human
capacity of how how would we hide how would we stay alive but we're nowhere near as good as animals
in the natural environment of the forest at staying alive yeah you're right a moose that's
ingrained in its system isn't it get away um just back to the fjordlands very quickly i just
want to give a quick shout out to a legend of the world of ornithology um he was part of the
ornithological society of new zealand uh joined in 1957 a guy called ron jack nilson who very sadly
passed away october 26 2022 um he was a legend of his field and he spent much like ken many many
years looking for an elusive supposedly extinct species of bird which are called the south island
coca-coa have you heard of that reese the south island coca-coa um oh yeah we found this this year
in november wasn't it yeah it was the first of november last year yeah when did he die
october 26 oh no oh god that is so close yeah um but no seriously what what what how do you spell
the bird name ko with a line above the ko sorry ka ko so coca-coa and it's a bird that hasn't been
seen for many many years um people occasionally have supposed sightings but no one has properly
confirmed it no one has a photo and if anyone in new zealand in that region is listening there is
at least there was when this paper was written a ten thousand dollar reward for any photographic
proof of the south island coca-coa there's quite a lot of quite a lot of money to be made isn't there
if you can find these things that don't exist oh it's not the easiest way probably to pull in a
decent sell a reliable salary if you tell your partner you know i'm going to quit my job because
i've heard lots of money to be made you're nagging me too much i'm going to get my books
and i'm going to go and find the coca-coa okay i'll see you at dinner the age old story
okay 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 accounts i'm on at schreiberland james at james harkin
Reese please don't contact me uh i think i hit this last time i haven't got time to read all your
messages and anna uh you can either 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 all of our previous episodes
are there do check them out but most importantly go and watch the entire series of our flag memes
death Reese's brilliant pirate sitcom the entire series is up now to watch on the bbci player
it's an absolutely awesome series um Reese thank you so much for being here and for the rest of
you we'll be back again next week with another episode we'll see you then goodbye