No Such Thing As A Fish - 462: No Such Thing As A Luigi Board
Episode Date: January 20, 2023Live from Up the Creek in Greenwich, Dan, James, Andy and Anna discuss ring mutts, King Tuts, reincarnation and the Restoration. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise an...d more episodes. Join Club Fish for ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at nosuchthingasafish.com/apple or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast this
week coming to you live from up the creek in Greenwich, London!
My name is Dan Schreiber.
Here I am sitting here with Anna Toshensky, Andrew Hunter Murray and James Harkin, and
once again we have gathered round the microphones with our four favourite facts from the last
seven days, and in no particular order, here we go!
Starting with fact number one, and that is Andy.
My fact is that some shows at the Roman Coliseum featured sausage dogs.
People fighting sausage dogs?
It's so unclear, it's so unclear what the actual thing is.
The thing is they would be quite far away, you wouldn't get great visibility on a sausage
dog from that distance.
If you were in the back, you'd have no idea what was going on.
Yeah, that's true.
But maybe it was a swarm of sausage dogs against one Christian, you know, that is possible.
Would you rather fight a thousand Christian-sized sausage dogs?
A thousand Christian-sized sausage dogs?
Or what?
Or not.
They often didn't get a choice, fun fact, in the Coliseum.
So we should say there's been an archaeological study done recently, and these are Daxons,
Vena dogs, whatever you want to call them, and they were the kind of precursor, the prototypes
of these dogs, because the modern breed only emerged in about the 18th and 19th century.
But they were basically this kind of dog.
If you went back in time when you saw one, you would think it was a sausage dog.
Exactly.
The thing is we genuinely don't know what they thought, and the archaeologists have been crawling
in the sewers under the Coliseum for a year.
They spent a year crawling in the mud on their stomachs, and they found lots of stuff.
They found seven coins, which does not feel like a good return on investment.
It's not a good wage, is it, for the year?
And they found some bones.
They found some leopard bones.
They found some lions and ostrich bones.
But they also found these dogs, and we don't know were they part of staged battles, which
is great fun, or were they acrobats, which is also fun.
Which is amazing.
So the fact that there's a slightly more boring explanation, which is that they might have
been used to kind of hunt rats, because when you're in the Coliseum, loads of people there,
you're eating lots of snacks.
It could be that they tried to stop the rodents, but I mean, I'd rather think of them as acrobats.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's all speculation.
Did we not write stuff down back then?
Because I'm pretty sure we did.
How is it that sausage dogs have escaped history, yet we are...
That's a great question.
There was a lot going on at the Coliseum.
It was some mad shit for about 500 years.
You couldn't write every single thing down every day.
I'm sorry.
If I walked out of the end of an evening at the Coliseum, and I saw gladiators fighting,
I'm not saying that.
I'm going, did anyone see the fucking sausage dog?
But no, but there was so much more weird stuff than that.
Like the real acrobats did amazing things.
And one of the frustrating things is we don't have that much information, because people
write about it in fragments.
Sometimes we've only got little bits of writing.
There was the Pertauris, which the sources we have suggest was a giant seesaw, and we
think it was used at kind of half time in the Coliseum.
So there's huge seesaw, and you'd have two opponents competing on either side, and one
would jump onto it, and it would fling the other one up in the air.
I think about 30 feet in the air.
No, stop it.
Stop it.
Apparently.
OK.
They'd go through hoops of flame, I think, one of the sources said, and then come back
down, and then the other one gets flung in the air.
There is an account of them falling to their death sometimes, as will happen.
Wasn't there an account of them putting criminals on there?
Yeah.
And the idea is, the lions come in, right, and they're going to attack the guy who's
the bottom of the seesaw, so you're always trying to get to the top of your seesaw so
that he's at the bottom.
I think that satsums is speculated that that might be what they were used for.
It is, but there's no suggestion.
The problem is, as soon as the other guy gets eaten, you're fucked, aren't you?
Yeah.
Yeah.
The weird thing is, this is all the halftime shows, though.
Lots of what we're talking about now is the halftime shows in between, what, chariot
races, and then maybe other final gladiators, but a lot of the damnatio ad bestias, so being
killed by wild animals, basically, organised by a group of people called the bestiary.
There are lots of sources claiming that the bestiary were incredible trainers of animals,
and they would train animals to kill people in incredibly elaborate ways that referenced
myths for people.
So they would recreate death scenes.
You guys remember the story of Prometheus?
He stole fire from the gods, and then he was punished, he was chained to a rock, and a
liver would fly down every day and peck out his eagle.
So, eagle would fly down every day.
But they recreated it the opposite way around.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Supposedly one bestiary spent months and months training a single eagle to remove a man's
organs.
I can't believe that's true.
The halftime shows sounded amazing.
They kind of sound like a modern halftime show of, let's say, a basketball, if you watch
American basketball.
Super Bowl, maybe?
Super Bowl.
Like, it's really show-stoppy kind of stuff, so they would do things where snacks would
fall from the sky, and including from, I mean, they're not from the clouds, obviously,
but they were sort of launched, kind of like how the people that would stand in the middle
and shoot out t-shirts out of rockets.
They had a toga cannon?
Exactly.
Yeah.
Well, what they actually had, though, which is amazing, is you got this wooden ball where
on the inside you would win something like a t-shirt or, I know they didn't have t-shirts,
so it's very progressive.
No, but it would be food or it would be money or it would even be the deeds to a house,
you know, or an apartment.
Wow.
Yeah.
So a lot of people really fought over it.
But were there bad things?
Were there bad things in the balls as well?
No, I don't know.
So, like, if you open the bowl, you might get a t-shirt or it might be you have to go
on the seesaw?
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah.
It did sound pretty cool, though, didn't it?
Yeah.
They had, possibly, we think, like the spectators would have water sprinkled on them, because
they had toilets with running water, so they would kind of get the water from the river
and kind of get it to go through the stadium and go through where all the toilets are.
But they also had huge...
We think because they had this in pool and we haven't seen it in the Coliseum, but it's
very, very similar.
They had huge, huge towers with loads of water in, and that water would kind of sprinkle
over everyone to keep them cool.
And they also had a retractable roof.
No!
This is amazing!
I know, they were more than 2,000 years ahead of Wimbledon.
It's so amazing, isn't it?
There we go again.
They just had a canvas roof that they could bring over whenever it got too hot or cold.
Yeah, the Valerium, I think, and it was operated by about 1,000 sailors who would pull on the
ropes because they used to pulling on rope sailors.
Oh, wow.
But, yeah, and you'd have advertising up, and we've got the, I want to say, etchings
in the stones, but we've got the evidence that you'd advertise, there will be shade.
Vella errant, you know, there will be shade for you.
It's incredible.
Although Caligula liked to wind it back so he could watch people just boil, boil up.
Oh, yeah, absolutely classic Caligula.
Yeah.
It sounded hectic working there, though, because basically you could be a part of the show
if anything went wrong, if the emperor decided.
So Claudius in particular, there was a biographer called Suetonius who wrote about the fact
that Claudius, if he was watching a show, and something went slightly wrong, and everything
was operated underneath in terms of the, if the gladiators were fighting, or the animals
that came up into the stadium, they were all in the hypergeum, which was underneath, which
is this extraordinary kind of like the backstage of a theater where they have just a crazy
amount of stuff that you wouldn't realize to make shows happen.
That was happening underneath.
And so if something went wrong where something came up at the wrong time and it pissed off
the emperor, he would just say, whoever the staff is down there, they're now in the show.
Get them up there to fight the lions.
Anything that went wrong, if the catering went wrong, get the caterers in there.
So he just kept adding people to be killed in the...
Right.
Sounds great.
I heard that sometimes hecklers would be thrown to wild animals.
Really?
That's fair enough.
We should start that.
I like the hypergeum because it's like, it's like whack-a-mole, isn't it?
It's like a lion would pop up somewhere, and then you had to go and fight it, and then
some monkeys, and then a sausage dog would go to see you.
But the whole point was that there wasn't spots you knew that they would pop up.
There were so many spots that, like the whack-a-mole, you could be facing this way, expecting a lion,
and then it comes behind you.
And apparently, the system to bring them up sometimes was so supercharged that the lion
would be lobbed into the stomach.
Come on.
That's an encounter, right?
Oh, my God.
There's so much speculation about this stuff.
It's amazing.
And the first, the best seats were reserved for the emperor and the Vestal Virgins.
All right.
They got the best seats, and then if you went a little bit higher up, you would get the
senators, and then you would get the knights and the nobles.
And then the very, very furthest strata was for commoners.
And then they built one more, even right at the very, very back strata.
And do you know who that was for?
A commonist.
What was it?
Women.
Women is exactly right.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
I'm afraid so.
Because they gave us the best seat.
Well, yes, exactly.
You wouldn't be able to see the sausage dog unless it was flung really high.
It seated a lot, it seated 50,000 people, the Coliseum, roughly.
And I went to Wembley to see a show.
And that gives you, like, if you were watching a sausage dog down, as you said, like, because
I went to see, I went to see Billy Joel at Wembley.
Oh, yeah.
And my wife booked me this ticket as part of a Christmas present.
And I said, what are the seats like?
She said, I didn't really check.
I'm sure they're good.
You couldn't be further away from Billy Joel as possible.
It was so far away that when the gig was playing, we could hear the song and the screens
that allowed us to see him, which genuinely, he's sausage dog size at that distance.
It was out of sync with the visuals.
And I was like, oh my God, Billy's going to be so angry because, you know, so much money
is spent.
That's the way we were.
Sound and vision were traveling at a different rate that they were not in sync.
So if you counted the number of seconds between the time he opened his mouth and the time
you saw it, you could tell how far away he was.
You could tell when you're going to get struck by lightning.
That's right.
Amazing.
Well, you say 50,000 sounds big, but I just don't think we ever make a big enough deal
of the fact that this Coliseum basically replaced Circus Maximus, which was its predecessor,
sat 250,000 people, still the biggest ever stadium.
It's just, I find that just amazing.
That was Rome as well, but it was, you know, they got bored of it.
That was where they had lots of chariot races and then chucked the Coliseum in, which they
never called the Coliseum.
They called it the Flavian Amphitheatre.
And we think the reason they changed the name is quite funny.
So it started being called the Coliseum in sort of early medieval times.
And we believe it's because the Colossus at the time was the Colossus of Nero, this gigantic
100 foot tall classic Nero statue of him, which had, as Nero went out of fashion, its head
kept changing.
So whatever emperor was in power at the time, they'd shove his head on the statue.
And eventually someone wrote a poem about the Colossus saying, so long as the Colossus
stands, Rome shall stand.
When the Colossus falls, Rome too shall fall.
And when Rome falls, so falls the world.
And then almost immediately after that was written and published, the Colossus fell.
And we think they went, well, shit, everyone's going to think the world's going to end.
We better change what the Colossus is.
And so then we think they named the Coliseum, the Coliseum.
Wow.
Because it was right nearby.
And they said, let's just pretend.
Wow.
That's really cool.
I've got some stuff on sausage dogs.
Of course you do.
Sorry.
Very nice.
We've actually got to move on.
No, absolutely not.
Absolutely not.
Don't go near it.
I thought this fact would go in a very different direction.
I've basically only got sausage dog stuff now.
Do you guys know where the sausage dog capital of the world is?
Oh, Germany.
No, it's out of this year.
It's in the UK.
Oh.
It's almost totally ungettable.
Is it Maidstone?
It's on the coast.
On Light Maidstone.
No, it's not.
I don't even know why I say it.
It was in Southwold this year in Suffolk.
Oh, yeah.
They had, well, a lot of, you know...
Push people in the audience.
This year, Southwold hosted the world's largest ever single breed dog walk
when 2,238 sausage dogs turned up for a walk.
Whoa.
At the same time.
That's a lot.
The size of one gladiator Christian.
You said turned up.
Like, A, they were posters up around town
and the dogs just trotted up on their own.
I know.
And they had one person to walk all of them.
It was a nightmare.
Do you want to hear a fact that's not about Dachshunds?
Yeah, and then we need to move on.
OK, OK.
So I was reading an article in researching this about a Dachshund
which was caught on CCTV in Germany
and it was the only police lead for a case, a crime case,
because it had an unusual lead
and they couldn't see the face of the criminal
and they could only see the lead on the Dachshund
and that was the police link.
So it was such a confusing case.
Do we have any leads?
Yes, we've got this one lead.
I told you.
LAUGHTER
But I only mentioned this because of the final paragraph
which I loved but is not Dachshund related
but it was in this story.
So here I'm just going to read it verbatim.
It may not be the first time a pet has provided key evidence.
In 2017, a woman in Michigan was convicted of killing her husband
partly on the testimony from their parrot
which kept repeating,
Don't shoot in the dead man's voice.
Oh.
Wow.
Spooky.
In his voice.
It was supposedly in his voice.
I've never heard a parrot that can do voices
but this one can.
Wow.
Amazing.
But he didn't say don't shoot Mabel, did he?
Oh, yeah.
So we don't know who he was talking to.
Yeah, yeah.
How did that help convict her?
OK, well, tune into Anna's new true crime podcast
where she frees this woman.
Stop the podcast.
Stop the podcast.
Hi, everybody.
I just wanted to inform you that we're sponsored this week
by LinkedIn Jobs.
That's right, LinkedIn Jobs is the place that you need to go
if you have a new company and you're thinking,
hey, 2023, let's do this.
Let's pump in the best, brightest minds into this company
but how the hell are we going to find them?
I know, we head here.
LinkedIn Jobs.
That's right.
So presumably you finished off 2022
by firing all that dead weight
that's been holding a business back for so long.
It's time to fill those roles up with some fresh talent
and LinkedIn Jobs is really great for doing that
because they'll go through their 875 million member profiles
and they'll put your posts in front of the most qualified candidates.
It makes it really, really easy to screen and rate applicants
based on your job qualifications all on one platform.
That's right.
So if you want to turn your business into the best that it can be,
you just need to go to linkedin.com slash fish
and you can post your job for free if you use that offer code slash fish.
That's right.
Terms and conditions do apply but go to linkedin.com slash fish
and post that job for free.
Okay, on with the show.
On with the podcast.
It is time for fact number two and that is Anna.
My fact this week is that in the 1920s,
spiritualists started complaining
that Tutankhamun was appearing at their seances too often.
It's just sort of spamming them.
Was he disruptive or was it just there's too much of this?
Sometimes.
Yeah, he seemed to have quite bad mood swings
which I guess he was a teenager.
So this was...
Go to your pyramid.
No!
Fuck, go to your tomb.
Sorry, there we go.
Sorry.
This was in Tutankhamun's second heyday
which was the 1920s I guess.
So he was, his tomb was discovered in 1922.
It was this huge deal and he became this massive celebrity.
Obviously no one had ever heard of him before this.
And at the same time seances were very popular.
Spiritualism was very popular.
And so he kept on popping up
and there was an addition of a journal called Light,
a journal of spiritual progress and physical research.
And a letter in it said,
we are getting a little tired of Tutankhamun.
Messages purporting to be from him
which consists of vague generalities
are quite worth this.
Anyone could compose them.
And saying basically, you know,
either give us good evidence of your identity,
I don't know how, write some hieroglyphics or something.
They're hard to do on a Ouija board.
You need the expansion pack for that.
You do, yeah.
You need the right font, don't you?
Some wingdings on there.
Yeah, they said we don't want just random celebrities claiming to turn up.
Either we want the good evidence
or we want their message to be of such high quality
that their identity becomes unimportant.
Some very fine teaching comes from these visitors
and it's being spoiled by Tutankhamun.
And the thought was, wasn't it,
that the reason he started coming up
because of this heyday thing
is because the attention was so great on him
that he was, like, invoked back into existence.
That was the excuse, wasn't it?
Yeah, rather than why is Tutankhamun not been, like,
breaking into everyone's seance prior to that,
it's because, well, he didn't know he was needed prior to that.
Yeah, as in he was, like, they were claiming
he was a bit of an egotistical attention seeker
and so he was up there, like, well, no one cares about me.
And then they started caring, so he decided,
fine, I'll come and visit you now.
So what was he saying?
What were the messages he was ringing?
So sometimes he was angry, his tomb had been violated,
and he would smash everything up,
he injured a medium,
he broke lots of Egyptian sculptures
that were in the room,
and then sometimes he was a nice guy.
He really depended.
I wonder who a modern equivalent of that would be,
as in someone who's very, very famous.
Well, in 2003, there was a pay-per-view
Princess Diana seance.
I don't know if you remember that, yeah.
2003, God.
Yeah, but pay-per-view.
Why do you sound appalled at pay-per-view?
Because it's event television, it was sort of...
Normally it would be a huge event that you would have pay-per-view
because, you know...
Got it.
Right.
But you're saying it should have been BBC then.
License fee only.
Prime time.
Yeah, absolutely.
Budget cuts for the BBC.
They just can't afford it.
But check this out.
This is a seance that I'd never heard of before.
This was a medium who was quite famous called Lillian Bailey,
and she claimed that she had a spirit guide
who was called William Headley Wooten,
and he was a captain during World War I.
He died in World War I,
and she would use him in order to bring other people to talk.
And she received a request one day to go and do a seance,
but they said it's a bit high profile, the person.
So what we're going to do is we're going to pick you up from your place,
we're going to blindfold you,
and we're going to take you to the place.
So she was sat around the table,
and then she wasn't allowed to take the blindfold off.
So she did it.
And at the end of it, having contacted someone,
she took the blindfold off and sitting in front of her
was Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Philip, the Queen Mother,
and a few other of the royals.
And what it was is it was not long after the King had died,
and the Queen Mother was obsessed with the idea of contact.
So the Queen was at a seance.
Can you imagine taking that blindfold off?
Bloody hell.
And she slowly put it back on.
Take me home.
But she kind of used that in the future as a kind of she's the Queen's official medium.
Well, you were?
Yeah, yeah, by royal appointment.
That's who she said she was.
And the Queen Mother often would book sessions with her afterwards
to try and do it.
And the person who set it up, which was not in the movie,
was a man called Lionel Logue,
who was the therapist who treated the King for his stammer in the King's speech.
Right.
He's the one who set up the seance.
Wow, they should have put that in.
Yeah, what a scene.
Oh, my God.
Do you speak in a seance when you're one of the guests,
or do you only speak when you're the medium?
You're not really supposed to.
OK.
I just thought, because that would have given it away,
not enough people speak like the Queen and Prince Philip
and the Queen Mother to conceal your identity.
Maybe they put an accent on.
Not like an Aussie accent, or...
Cockney, Irish or something, you know?
German.
LAUGHTER
Whatever their best at.
Actually, speaking of Germans,
there was a big thing in the war, wasn't there,
where there was a medium called Helen Duncan,
and she was a Scottish 25-stone, working-class mother of six
who swore, smoked and drank whiskey.
She sounds great, right?
But at the time, she was like, in the upper classes in London,
they thought she was an absolute genius.
They thought that she could speak to the dead.
She was really, really important in the high society.
And then, in 1941, she was in a seance in Portsmouth,
and she claimed the spirit of a sailor told her
that a certain ship had been sunk,
and it turned out that that ship had been sunk,
but it hadn't been reported yet.
And so, obviously, she became...
They were really worried about her.
First of all, maybe, you know, she is somehow getting messages
from the dead, or maybe she's getting messages from the Germans,
or...
Yeah, they thought she might be a spy who was ceding...
Yeah, and, of course, she got done for witchcraft.
Yeah, she was the last person, or the second last person,
the last person to be imprisoned under the Witchcraft Act.
But she got imprisoned under the Witchcraft Act of 1735.
So what was she being imprisoned for?
Being a witch.
It's absolutely incorrect.
Not being a witch.
That's absolutely right.
Oh!
So the Witchcraft Act of 1735 was not about persecuting witches.
It was the first act that acknowledged witches are not real,
and so people pretending to be witches
are the ones who need to be punished now for faking it.
And so she was punished for pretending to be a witch.
That's brilliant.
God, that's a real Catch-22 situation as well.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it is, isn't it?
Have you guys heard of Colin Evans?
No.
Colin Evans was a Welsh spiritualist in, I think, the 1920s,
and his big thing was claiming that he could levitate.
So he would get an audience, probably an audience around this size,
a few hundred people.
He would request the room went completely dark.
The audience would sit around him and pitch blackness,
and they would chant.
They would all chant the same thing, an incredible atmosphere,
something amazing to be found.
Levitate.
Levitate.
Levitate.
Levitate.
Now the lights down?
No.
It was completely dark, and then he provided proof of it.
He would take photos of himself at the very moment
where he was levitating.
But the thing is, he was just jumping.
He would just jump, take the photo, and then land.
That was quite impressive.
That was the whole act.
When was this, though?
20s?
Photos took a long time to expose back then to capture something.
No, no, no.
You had a flash photo in the 20s.
It might have been 30s.
Exposure times were right down.
Was he smiling in the photo, or was he serious?
He was very serious.
But his feet were slightly blurred, and that also gave away.
But also, I suppose Dan is right that the technology
must have been new enough that people didn't, like, catch on, right?
Didn't assume.
I guess.
And it was also, even if you were in the room,
you'd see a tiny flash of light, and him...
Oh, so that would provide the light as well.
Mid-Jupiter.
Mid-Jupiter.
I always think that back in these olden days,
the Seance days in the 1920s,
it must have been so much darker than it is today.
I just think there was less natural light around.
Maybe we didn't have a moon back then,
because basically all the tricks they did
were based on it being pitch black.
Maybe you have one candle, you know?
Just a bit of atmosphere, one candle.
No, you can't have any candles.
Well, because you had things like Seance trumpets,
which were these trumpets through which the spirits spoke.
They magnified their voices,
and they used to float around in the middle of the room,
and they'd have glowing rings on their back-end and front-end.
And the way they floated was that a medium's assistant
would just be holding it up, but he'd be wearing black.
So no one would see.
And it's like, how dark does it have to be
that you can't see?
And the ectoplasm, probably the best thing about all Seances,
the weird, like, physical manifestation of spirits,
which was kind of white stuff,
gooey stuff that would come out of orifices of the medium.
I mean, it's got to be pretty dark for you
to think that's anything spooky,
because usually it was handkerchiefs
that they would stick up their nose as far as they could
and then kind of pull out.
There was one amazing medium, Mary M,
who produced ectoplasm with photos of Arthur Conan Doyle on it.
So she said, Arthur Conan Doyle's coming out of my nose.
It was after he died, look at this,
and then pulled this tissue out of her nose
with a photo of him on it,
which someone pointed out later was the same photo
that had appeared in a newspaper about a week earlier.
It had obviously been stuck on.
Oh, my God, yeah.
Arthur Conan Doyle solved an incredible case
where someone was claiming that they'd contacted a celebrity
from the other side,
which was there was a book that was released
called The Mystery of Edwin Druid.
We've spoken about it before on the podcast.
I actually wrote about this in my book as well.
I got obsessed with the same.
What's that called, Dan?
The theory of everything else out now.
If anyone needs a Christmas present available.
It's actually in most shots, so, yeah,
and they have lots of copies, so if someone could find one.
But no, I got obsessed with,
but there was a period where there were people claiming,
because seances were so massive,
that celebrities who were dead, Mark Twain, Charles Dickens,
all those were, they were dictating from the other side
new novels, new works, and they would go on sale
by real publishers, and people would buy them.
They'd be reviewed in The New York Times,
even if skeptically, they got sort of space,
and there was one book which was The Mystery of Edwin Druid.
It was the final Charles Dickens book that he never finished,
and he didn't leave any notes of what had happened to the character
and who had killed Edwin Druid.
So a guy called T.P. James actually finished the book
by contacting Dickens from the other side,
and he said, this is the final book, they published it.
There was a new forward written by Dickens as well,
to explain the process.
They had a new book that they were working on together
called The Life and Adventures of Buckley Whippleheap.
It was a very exciting thing.
And it was Arthur Conan Doyle
who said he didn't contact Charles Dickens.
The reason Arthur Conan Doyle knew that
is because he himself did a seance
in which he contacted Charles Dickens
and asked him, did you finish this book?
And he said, no, it wasn't me.
Just on the Ouija board.
We're saying it right, Ouija?
Ouija, Ouija.
Ouija, Ouija.
Ouija, Ouija.
Ouija, Ouija.
Ouija, Ouija.
Ouija, Ouija.
Ouija, Ouija.
Ouija, Ouija.
Ouija, Ouija.
Ouija, Ouija.
Ouija, Ouija.
Ouija, Ouija.
Ouija, Ouija.
He was a former woodworker who took over the business
and you know,
it was so popular,
again around the time of the 20s and 30s
at one point he had several factories
all just churning out Ouija boards.
They sold thousands and thousands of thousands of them.
And he only sat up in such a big way
because the board had told him
prepare for big business, so yeah.
But this is the really spooky thing.
He went up on the roof of one of the factories
to see a flagpole being replaced, right?
And then he fell off and died.
It just fell off.
Yeah, yeah.
OK.
And then he came back and said something.
No, no, no, no.
But it still makes you think, doesn't it?
Oh, yeah.
The reason I think that it's pronounced Ouija
is there's a YouTuber called Sexkick
who went on to Yahoo Answers
and searched for various different spellings
of Ouija board and found,
how do you make a Ouija board?
Have you played the Ouija board
and can you burn a Ouija board?
And it seems, and quite a lot more,
and it seems like there's a lot of people in America
who think that it's not a Ouija board, but a Ouija board.
It's really good.
It's coming through.
Who are you?
It's me!
OK, it is time for fact number three,
and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that according
to his various biographers,
Pythagoras could talk with animals,
be in two places at once,
had a shiny golden leg
and was able to tell fishermen
the exact number of fish they'd caught in their net
just by looking at it.
So this was a sight...
I could do the last one, I reckon.
Well, it depends how many there are.
It depends on the...
Maybe not a trawler, then.
Two.
Screw you, Pythagoras.
I'm genuinely really shocked
that we've done 400-plus episodes
and we've never ever mentioned Pythagoras,
and I'm doubly shocked that
after all the years of us doing this stuff,
I didn't realise what a mad life
he supposedly had according to the stories of his life.
We all know him for his theorem, very famously.
He was a mathematician, he was a philosopher.
I didn't realise there was a cult around him
that sort of put him into a sort of paranormal territory
where he was able to reincarnate and...
But he wasn't really a mathematician, either.
That's the weird thing.
Cos I thought he was a mathematician.
He wasn't really, he was kind of a mystic
and then cult leader and political figure.
But the cult were very into numbers, weren't they?
So that was part of it.
And numbers are very maths-related.
So...
They're maths-adjacent.
Not when you're doing algebra.
Great point.
Oh, didn't you get a long way?
Look who did GCSE!
But no, he wasn't really a mathematician.
Pythagoras' theorem had been come up with
about a thousand years before him.
Oh, actually, related to the first-ever episode
we did a fish, there's a Pythagoras fact.
One of the people who proved Pythagoras' theorem
in a new way that had never been demonstrated before
was...
President Garfield.
President Garfield, yeah.
Lying in that hospital bed, being fed through his arse,
you've got to do something to distract yourself.
That's a confusing sentence if you haven't heard
the first episode.
I'll just have to go back and listen.
It's a great teaser, yeah.
They were obsessed with numbers, as you say.
And numbers, every number had a different personality.
Now, I don't know, because I couldn't find out anywhere
how high up this went.
Because it can't go forever.
But masculine numbers are odd numbers,
and feminine numbers are even.
Even are considered the only perfect numbers.
Although odd ones are equated with divinity,
so all the genders are doing well out of this.
Oh, yeah, quite sweet.
The feminine number is two, and the masculine number is three,
and then five is the marriage number.
But, yeah, all these numbers meant specific things to them.
Yeah, it went about, I think it went as far as ten.
Because they had to...
How far is it?
They had this special thing where it's like...
Can you imagine, like, a snooker bowl triangle
where you have one, then two, then three, then four,
and that added up to ten.
This was very special to them.
And they had a poem, or a hymn, really,
blesses divine number,
thou who generated gods and men,
the mother of all, the all-comprising,
the all-bounding, the firstborn, the never-swerving,
the never-tiring, holy ten.
Right.
Yeah, they love ten.
Yeah, yeah.
And they love triangles.
Blake's nooker must have been hell, actually.
White agarine.
I get it, the right angle thing.
What do you guys think he was like?
Like, let's imagine we're living in the time.
OK, well, I can say so.
Like, a lot of the things that you've said there
about the golden thigh and talking to animals,
they were written much, much later.
Exactly.
But some of the things that were written at the time
when he was alive, they said that he did believe
that the souls of humans could return as animals.
Yes.
So he did believe in reincarnation.
We know that because people said it at the time.
And also that he, you know, he had his own kind of wisdom.
He had his own kind of learning.
So we know all that kind of stuff happened.
Like, maybe not.
OK, so what about...
Because there's a story about a dog.
And he was passing someone in the street.
He believed that, you know, people could come back
in the form of animals and all of this, as you just said.
So he once stopped someone who was beating a small dog
in the street because he recognised in the barking...
You should be in the Colosseum.
No, he recognised in the barking,
the voice of a friend of his who died.
He'd then been reborn as a puppy.
The whole story does kind of imply
that he recognised the barking as a friend of his.
He wouldn't have thought anything was a mess.
Must have been a bad dog. Just leave it.
But what does he then do with the dog?
We don't...
You're turning this into a very different kind of talk show
type of podcast. Jerry Springer's style.
We don't know what he was like.
No, as in...
What's the dilemmas? Sorry.
My friend is a dog.
My friend's a dog. Stop beating the dog.
OK, I'll stop beating it.
Wouldn't you be like, Greg, what's up?
Have dinner at all.
He's just going to be like, all right, see you, buddy.
Enjoy your new life.
It sucks, you're a dog.
Catch you later.
Stop harming my leg. You never did that before.
Yeah.
He did love numbers,
but he hated irrational numbers,
or at least he didn't believe they existed.
Is that why they're called irrational,
because he was so irrational about them?
He had an irrational loathing of them.
Sorry, they're the ones that go on forever.
And they're numbers that you can't be expressed
as a fraction or a ratio,
which I only realised when I was doing this research,
having kind of known this irrational I ratio,
they're numbers that you can't express as a ratio.
So, five, six over two.
Yeah, you idiot, can't believe we...
Can't believe we were all thinking that.
So, if you take 22 divided by seven,
it gets to quite close to 3.14 something,
but it doesn't get to pi, which is 3.141, blah, blah, blah, blah,
which goes on forever.
And that would be an irrational number.
And he didn't believe in them, because he loved finite numbers.
And they were on a boat one day, on a cruise or something.
And one of his followers, called Hepaceus,
proved the existence of irrational numbers
by saying the square root of two is one,
which not is one, is one, is one.
This is why I got no further than GCSE.
And he, according to reports, was tossed overboard.
Yeah. Really?
So, you've got to be careful with strict teachers.
Wasn't they killed him? Yeah, they killed him, yeah.
They killed him for proving that the square root of two
is an irrational number. Yeah, supposedly, yeah.
But he made him walk the plank.
But he believed in reincarnation,
so he probably thought he'd bump into him on the street.
Greg! Greg, dude.
I don't know what happened with my temper that day,
but, wow, it was a fun cruise, though, wasn't it, while it lasted.
When you joined his cult,
you had to say nothing for five years,
and that was how you got to the next level of the cult.
OK. And also, he had a...
If you'd have gone four years in 11 months,
that's a tough one, isn't it?
And you'd bang your foot. Yeah.
But he had a system for his followers, right?
So, there were the Mathematikoi,
who were the senior followers, right?
And he would meet them in person,
and he would discuss proper maths with them, hard maths,
and, you know, they would think a lot,
and they'd do a lot of, you know, they'd do the big stuff.
And they had to make sacrifices.
They had to give up meat, women,
they were all men, and private possessions, OK?
So, that's the senior tier.
And they never touched white roosters.
Is that true? Yeah. Wow.
OK. I'm out.
You'll have to give up meat, women, and private possessions.
Fine, fine. Anything else?
There's one thing. I'm out.
A couple more rules. OK, yeah.
Don't eat your brain.
Don't eat your brain.
Couldn't find out really anything else,
but I suppose that's all you need to know.
Don't break bread.
Don't poke fire with a sword.
Never urinate into the sun.
I've heard don't urinate into the wind.
Never into the sun.
You might put it out.
And we say that they couldn't eat any meat,
which was mostly true,
but they did still sacrifice an ox
and whenever they proved a mathematical formula.
Sorry, what am I being sacrificed for again?
Normally it's to a piece of gold or something.
This doesn't sound important.
You're being put into a pie.
Oh, my God.
That's sympathy.
That's the best joke you'll hear for months.
But then, he also had these junior tier followers,
who people who basically hadn't subscribed,
and they were called the Akusmatikoi.
Is this like a Patreon?
It was a Patreon.
Genuinely, he had a subscription service,
so the Mathematikoi were in,
and then the Akusmatikoi,
he would only speak to them from behind a curtain.
Wow.
And they weren't allowed to see his face,
and they couldn't learn any proper maths,
like any detailed maths.
That was really because he wasn't the real Wizard of Oz, was he?
He was just an old man.
He had a curtain so that you couldn't see him as he was talking.
There is one of the stories of his death
is directly associated with that,
so someone on the lower Patreon level was part of that,
couldn't see his face,
got so angry that he couldn't see him,
was furious that he burnt down his house,
He burnt Pythagoras' house down,
and then he chased him into a field.
So Pythagoras was in the lead,
he's going good, he gets to the field,
he's escaping this man, this is how the story goes,
and then he notices that the field is full of beans,
and Pythagoras refuses to step on beans,
because he believes that beans,
much like dogs, are the reincarnation reg.
I thought what you were going to say is that the guys chasing him
went round two sides of the field,
and he went diagonally across it.
So he gets to the field of beans,
and he stops and he thinks,
I'll step on these beans, I'll kill the beans with my feet,
and so the man catches up,
and rather than going, fuck it,
I'll just stamp on some beans,
he just stands there while the man cuts his throat,
and kills him, and that's the death of Pythagoras,
according to one opinion.
I think there's another version of the story where
loads of his followers gave their own lives,
so that Pythagoras, go Pythagoras, go, go,
you must go, we'll give up our lives,
well we're killed,
and they still get to the head of the bean field,
I can't do it, I can't sacrifice them,
I can't do my beady friends.
You supposedly had the power to write words
on the face of the moon.
Oh yeah.
And I forgot to write anything more about that.
I said, did he ever do that,
or was it...
I'd love to tell you Andy, I'm afraid,
that's a single sentence there.
And for just $2.99 a month,
you'll be able to see the words I do write
on the face of the moon.
Stop the podcast.
Stop the podcast.
Hey everyone, this week's episode of Fish
is sponsored by Babbel.
That's correct, Babbel is the way
that you can learn a new language
in the quickest and easiest way possible
to be multilingual
within seconds, well not seconds,
but within months.
It is a phenomenal tool
for helping you to learn a language.
It was created by over 150 language experts globally.
They have 14 different languages
that you can explore, so if you want to get
your Spanish or your French or your Italian
or German up, this is the place you can go.
It's got speech recognition technology
that helps you really improve
on your pronunciation and your general accent.
Do they have Babbel for English?
Because I could use that desperately.
You really, really could.
Become fluent in 14 languages.
Why not? Why not do them all?
By going to Babbel.com
and right now
Babbel is offering our listeners
three months free with a purchase of a three month subscription
if you use the promo code
NoFish
or one word, so if you go to
Babbel.com
slash podcast22
and use the promo code NoFish
you'll get an extra three months for free.
That's right, so do it, do it through podcasting
through games, videos, there's even live classes
with a real life human language teacher
and it's all there on Babbel.com
that's B-A-B-B-E-L
dot com
forward slash podcast22
and don't forget to use the offer code
NoFish
one word, NoFish, because you'll be able to
get three months free extra
with a purchase of a three month subscription.
Okay, on with the show.
On with the podcast.
All right, I need to move us on
to our final fact of the show.
It is time for our final fact
and that is James.
Okay, my fact this week is
when the website health.com
listed the fattiest foods
in every state in the US
entrance included North Carolina's
liver mush
New York's garbage plate
and Indiana's
fried brain sandwich.
See, they never read Pythagoras
in Indiana today.
So yeah, this is a fact
just about the disgusting things you can eat in America.
Yeah, the fried brain sandwich
sounds really weird.
Weirdly, like the others are slightly
you've missed it, well not even that you've missed it,
but fried brain sandwiches are literally exactly
what they sound like. Oh, okay. Whose brain?
Well, it used to be
cow brains, but after
my cow disease came in, they're now
pig brains. One little tip
if you, when you
bread the brains, as in you put the breadcrumbs
on there, make sure you have cold hands
otherwise
they can fall apart. So that's a little bit of a tip.
The best place to get them
is Hilltop Inn in Evansville
and that has been dubbed
recently in 2009 actually
the manliest restaurant in America.
Oh.
I know I'm a man, but I don't actually want
my restaurant to be manly. No.
It's not even in my top five criteria
for a restaurant. Shall we go
with Italian, Chinese or manly?
Exactly.
This list is incredible though.
So you read out some of the
most amazing sounding ones, but even
the other things on it, the Colorado
the Jack and Grills seven pound breakfast burrito
is the least healthy food in Colorado.
Connecticut, the two foot long hot dog
which, and these aren't just in one place, lots of them are available
in lots of different places.
There's the quadruple bypass burger.
8000 calories.
I've had some
of one of them. Have you? Yeah, in Vegas, right?
It's not impressive to have had some
of one of them.
Don't put your photo on the wall for that, mate.
They'll put some of your photo
on the wall.
Did you hear about the Luther burger?
This is in Georgia, in the south.
Right, it's a normal burger, the Luther burger.
It's a normal burger. It's got egg,
it's got bacon and it's got cheese as well as the burger.
So far, so meh.
But it's not served between a bun,
can you guess?
Luther, between two church doors.
That's right.
Yeah.
Between the north.
It fills the gap between the north and south
doors on the transept. It's amazing.
No, someone in the audience
murmured it, actually.
It's between two Krispy Kreme glazed donuts.
Oh, yeah.
And was that part of his Protestant
theology?
The donut thing?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Right.
Shall I just quickly say the other two
very quickly? Yeah, yeah.
Sorry, liver mush is
a savoury sliced loaf made
from pork liver scrap meat,
often from a pig's head, spices and corn meal.
Nice.
And they have a liver mush eating contest
in
wherever it was, in North Carolina every year.
They also have a liver mush pageant,
but in last years
we've had
contesting of what?
Are there floats?
It really feels like putting lipstick on a pig
really trying to
make that attractive. It's basically a festival
and they have lots of things, but they have
basically local children
or young women that kind of...
Dresses liver mush.
Is it like a liver mush queen?
They often do that kind of thing, don't they?
And the liver mush eating contest
where last year the winner managed to eat some.
LAUGHTER
And garbage plate
is from Rochester, New York
and it's basically, this actually sounds really good,
it's a choice of any meats
so even though I am vegetarian
but let's pretend I'm not.
It's like hamburgers, hot dogs, sausages,
any kind of stuff, you shove a load of french fries on it,
shove a load of beans on it,
macaroni cheese and then cover it
in a special sauce.
That actually sounds quite good to me.
Really depends on the special sauce.
I think it's hot sauce.
We've mentioned it before,
James, you've been there
but I just love reading about it every single time
which is the Disgusting Food Museum
in Malmo, Sweden
and it just collects food that is
utterly horrible and James, you tried
a few things there which
tasted horrible. I was reading an article
by a guy who went there in 2019
called Arthur De Mayer
and he described, he gave a bit more
of an explanation about these particular foods
so you can have an Icelandic shark dish there
called Hakarl
and he said it was eating it
was like gnawing on three week old cheese
from the garbage that had
also been pissed on by every dog
in the neighbourhood.
That was one thing he had. I had that there
by the way. Did you vomit?
No, I didn't vomit at all from any of them
actually although I retched quite a lot.
Does that count? No.
But the Hakarl one was funny because
the guy told me that it was
seeped in urine
and I ate it and you could really believe it
tasted, it did taste like piss
and then I actually
put it in a QI script
and it turned out to be completely untrue
and it was a natural
uriny taste that it had
they didn't add any urine into it
so we cut it. There's another one
the South Korean wine, did you drink that?
Actually I think that's behind
a sort of glass because
you have fresh turds
of children specifically
and the owner of the museum
one of the founders of the museum
he actually went about scooping up
his 8 year old daughter's poo
in order to make this concoction.
That doesn't count. It's like if you're buying it
from South Korea is a special thing
that's one thing. If you're actually making it
from your own that's different.
But it says it has to be fresh
and no turd is going to be fresh
by the time it's gone from South Korea to Sweden.
I don't think turds are ever fresh
that's not
They absolutely are
They can be new
You can have them
I see what you're saying
like if you're at a fresh deli
you wouldn't expect to see it, would you?
They're safe at least 5 days after their
best before date. I'm telling you
Gosh
it's got slightly distracted from this
because someone wrote in actually
to the podcast email account
podcast at qi.com
and this is from Eveline Keely
and it's the
Oklahoma has a state steak
you know these official state things they have
absolutely mad stuff
so Oklahoma's state steak is the
ribeye steak
the state drink is milk
this is a complete brackets
but they've got a state astronomical object
which is the rosette nebula
5000 light years away
I've no idea why
such an unreciprocated relationship
twinned with
but they've also got
this is what brought me back to the actual fact
which is the state meal
and the state meal is this
it's some chicken fried steak
followed by barbecued pork
followed by fried okra, squash, cornbread
grits, corn
sausage with biscuits and gravy
black eyed peas, strawberries
and pecan pie
that's the state meal
cool
a lot of that sounds good just not in the course
of one meal
actually just speaking of like many courses with meals
there is a footballer called
Robert Lewandowski who plays for Poland
and whenever he
eats a three course meal he always eats his
dessert first
isn't that cool does he have a reason for it
yes
he's Benjamin Button isn't he
this is a new
wish kind of diet
and the idea is you eat
a very fatty dessert
and then you eat your main course and then you eat your starter
and the idea is
what happens is if you eat a normal meal
you have your starter and your main course
and then the dessert will come and it looks really good
and you're like oh go on then I'll have it
and you find some extra space for it
but people are less inclined to do that for their starter
and they tend to choose
better main courses as well
and so there was a study done with people
who were either told to eat in the normal order
or
they could have a cheesecake and then choose their main
and choose their starter
or they could have some fruit
and then choose their main and then their starter
and they found that the people who ate the cheesecake first
had 30% fewer calories
than anyone else in their meal
and that includes the really fatty dessert that they had
that's brilliant
it's like a trick it's like you're tricking
your mind
you just cracked it haven't we
what do you think
that's amazing
the whole food thing
if that works
I've had a sticky toffee pudding so I think I'll just have a salad
for the main thank you very much
but do you want to finish your meal with a nice bowl of soup
or would you rather finish with a chocolate cake
I'd rather finish with a starter
a starter is everyone's favourite course isn't it
see
way fewer than a third of the people in the room said yes
sorry that's not proof
you'll always get at least one yes
you are one of those people who goes to a restaurant
and goes oh I think I might have 12 starters
quiz question
can you guys name
a processed food product
that the Earl of Sandwich was responsible for inventing
a processed product
a food or drink product
oh fuck I'm giving it away
or drinks did you say
yeah follow that
is it a liquid eye sandwich
it's the M&S new liquid sandwich
it's fizzy drinks
what
so he commissioned Joseph Priestly
the chemist
to work on ways of making stale water more palatable
and to keep water lasting longer
because of ships
ships would have stale water it would go horrible
it's a problem people don't want to drink their water on board
so they might be dehydrated
so he hired Joseph Priestly and Joseph Priestly created
carbonated water
and as a result it's slightly acidic
carbonated water so that means it's
slightly antimicrobial and it means it lasts
longer
so that is actually
the product that he is kind of responsible for
and the sandwich was way way earlier
and he just popularized it
you might remember this I got married in the room
where he invented the sandwich
did you
and that was such a cheap meal as well
interesting fact everyone
while you're eating your ham sandwich
it's a homage
enjoy your glass of coke
can I just say Andy
crisps are available for purchase
which will be a meal deal
which you can pay for when you leave
it's not a free wedding I should have mentioned
Andy said to us before the show started guys
I'm going to tell a personal anecdote tonight
was that your personal anecdote
it was my personal anecdote
pretty good
nice
he never tells anything
that was huge insight
it was very brave
well done
the guy from the council made such heavy weather of it in the room on the day
it was practically more of a sandwich talk
than a wedding
it was most of the ceremony
and do you wish to be sandwiched
between the holy laws of matrimony
can I just mention
one other food
American state food that I didn't know about
again we'll be very familiar to people from these places
but in places like Oregon
and Washington state
now it's spelled
G-E-O-D-U-C-K
G-E-O-D-U-C-K
GUIDUCK
weird to start with is GUIDUCK
spelled completely the wrong way
and I've never seen one they're the biggest
burrowing clams in the world
and they look they've got kind of a normal
ish size clam shell about the size of your palm
and then it looks like
looks like a slug's coming out of it right
GUIDUCK
yeah but it looks like a slug who's tried on a dress
12 sizes too small for it
it's coming out of it
you've got a slug the length of most of your arm
coming out of this bulging out of this tiny shell
and I mean it looks so phallic
it's very hard to get around the fact
that it is
and this is a delicacy
they've lived up to 150 years
so and their entire lives are
they're born they burrow
really deep with their shell into the sand
and the reason they've got this huge phallus on them
is so that it can stick up
and just pop out of the sand on the bottom of the seabed
so it can collect up what it needs
wait the phallus is collected
no no it's not a phallus it looks like a phallus
oh sorry I've got to go
it's that sweetest mouth
and it's a
it's a siphon
and he's going to be doing some googling tonight
it's a really creepy slogan it's not a phallus
it's a mouth
I don't know why
whose slogan is that
it's the slogan of the gooey duck
and yeah it's
it's actually a siphon so it sheds salty liquids
actually that it doesn't need anymore
in fact in water
I know it looks like a phallus and it's shedding salty liquids
but I assure you ladies and gentlemen
it is a mouth
if a gooey duck
looks like a phallus
and quacks like a phallus
look we've run over I need to wrap us up
okay that is it
that is all of our facts thank you so much for listening
if you would like to get in contact
with any of us about the things that we have said
over the course of this podcast
we can be found on our twitter account so I'm on
at Shriverland Andy
James at James Harkin and Anna
you can do my podcast at qi.com
yep or you can go to our group account which is at
no such thing or our website no such thing as a fish
dot com all the previous episodes are up there
there's also links to all the merchandise
that we've got and also club fish
are very secretive behind the scenes
place where we do extra episodes
and compilations and gossipy chat
it's really fun
so do check it out
but we'll be back again next week with another
episode so we'll see you then
thank you so much up the creek that was awesome
we'll be back again
goodbye