No Such Thing As A Fish - 51: No Such Thing As Dodecahedral Shredded Wheat
Episode Date: March 7, 2015Episode 51: Live at the Soho Theatre, Dan, James, Andy and Anna discuss the most common safe words, the lizard of Oz, and why the world's happiest man isn't happy. ...
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Hello, and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast.
This week coming to you from the Soho Theatre in central London, my name is Dan Schreiber
and sitting here with Andy Murray, James Harkin and Anna Chazinski, 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. Anna.
My factors week is that the son of the man who invented shredded wheat was also an inventor.
He invented round shredded wheat. That was, that was what he did.
He actually called himself an inventor. It's not even a, so he wrote a letter to Time magazine,
I think, in the 1920s about his father and growing up on his father's influence, saying,
I grew up under the influence of my father's enthusiasm, his works in every department
of his shredded wheat factory, and actually became an inventor myself, made some inventors of my own.
In 1920, I invented muffits, and if you look at muffits, they are shredded wheat, but round.
Do you think on the time he was working in this, in this factory, he was just
totting every time he saw a square or a rectangle and he's like, oh, for God's sake.
He got it all wrong! He had an ideas book, which was just shapes. Triangle, no.
Dodecahedron, no. Too complicated.
One other thing he invented was symmetrical text or a symmetrical font. Do you know about
this? No. This is amazing. It's a great idea. So you have all the letters from A to Z,
but you can read them all back to front as well. So A is easy because that always looks that way.
But then B, he kind of had a line on both sides, so you could read it from left to right and left
and right to left. And that was his idea. He thought it was too much of a trouble to read
from left to right and then go to the next line and read from left to right again. And he thought
you could write that way and then just go down and write that way and then go down and write
that way. That's awesome. Cutting corners again. I've seen the text and it is terrible. It's a
horrible idea. But there was actually an old way of writing that Monks did back in the day,
back in the Middle Ages. It was called Bustofagon and it meant as oxen turned when plowing. And the
idea is you write from left to right and then you rotate the page and so then you read from left
from right to left, but you've turned it upside down and so you're reading it the right way again.
And they used to write like that. There are manuscripts written like that.
Why? Sorry to ask a silly question. I think, again, it's kind of cutting corners because
then you don't have to lift your pen from the page. Have we said the name of the
Shreddy's father and son yet? No, no. The son was called Scott H. Perky and the father was called
Henry Drussell Perky. Yes. Good names. And Henry invented Shreddedweeds to cure his
either diarrheal or constipation because he's very on that. But yeah, he had cereal. He was a
dyspeptic and he decided that there needed to be something he could eat that wasn't great. It was
a bread replacement, Shreddedweed. At the beginning, you were supposed to eat it with a poached egg on
top or with like it was to be spread on. It was like a bread. The family actually put out cookbooks
which had different recipes for Shreddedweeds. And a lot of them were savory, not just for
breakfast. And they also had a cereal restaurant. They had loads of dishes and they weren't all
just Shreddedweed. They had other things as well. One of them was Shreddedmeat inside Shreddedweed.
That is so horrible. There was Shreddedweed ice cream, wasn't there? What?
His restaurant. And the restaurant was over Niagara Falls. It sounds amazing how this roof
garden is first Shreddedweed restaurant. Shreddedweed ice cream and a Shreddedweed drink,
which sounds terrible. It's just, I mean, it's pulverized wheat, I guess. They also
have roast turkey stuffed with Shreddedweed. I'm really into the idea of just relative combos
where they do the same career. I feel like we definitely live in an age where actors and
musicians were seeing their children come up and doing the same thing. But when you get
inventors, it's so much better. My favorite family of all time, I have to say in terms of
what they've done, the Picard family. Do you know the Picard family?
Yeah, but it kind of, it's putting down your own family a little bit when you say,
this is my favorite family. It's not what you say on the Christmas dinner. It's like,
you guys are great, but you know. Sorry, Mum, Dad. Yeah, no, the Picards are incredible. So,
Auguste Picard was the first person to travel basically to the closest point of space in a
balloon. And then his son was Jacques Picard, who went to the bottom of the ocean to the Marianas
trench. Well, and then his son was John Luke Picard. And he went boldly into it. Yeah. No,
his son was Bertrand Picard, who was the first person to go non-stop in a balloon completely
around the planet. So in three generations, they went up, down and around. There's a Picard right
now at a dinner table who's like 18 going, what the fuck am I going to do with my life?
I like, so I like father-son combinations as well. Do you know what Einstein's,
Einstein's son was quite high achieving. Yeah, yeah, he was. Do you know what he was most famous for?
Being Einstein's son. Well, let's be honest. And in second. Okay. In second place, he was a leading
figure in the field of sediment transport. Yeah. Sorry. In the, in the small fields of sediment
transport. I think that's why most people know of him, Hans. I have read that. They've said he wrote
the defining paper on sediment transport. He did. It was the defining paper of three.
Sorry. I'm just, I'm not leading in any field. So I'm putting this guy down. What was it,
what was it called? It was called bed load transport as a probability problem. He was very
successful. Um, but yeah, not, not as widely known, I guess. And then there was Randolph Churchill,
who before Winston, his dad became prime minister, announced to his parents, I'm going to be prime
minister one day, and then his dad was instead, and he was rubbish. Uh, tried to join parliament,
eventually did even his own dad wouldn't have him in his wall cabinet. I don't think.
It's not, it's not a father and son, but my favorite grandfather, grandson,
combo is you and your own grandfather. No, it's Pickard and Pickard.
Uh, it's, uh, it's Dick Van Dyke and his grandson, Shane Van Dyke, because Dick Van Dyke did
everything to make his family. And he has a whole family who got into movies and TV as well,
and they did everything they could to bring them into whatever they wanted to do, silver spoon
kind of thing. And they said to Shane Van Dyke, you want to be a director, you want to be a writer
and actor, what would you like to do? And he said, I have a project that I would like to make.
It's called Titanic Two. Has anyone seen Titanic Two? Basically, the story behind Titanic Two,
and bear in mind that Shane Van Dyke wrote this. Titanic Two is set 100 years after the launch
of the original Titanic. They decide that they're going to take the exact same course, but this
time, no icebergs. They're like, if we see them, we're going to move. That's like they say that
in the movie, right? That's good thinking. Yeah. They're like, definitely we're steering clear of
those. I don't think so. When the Titanic launched, it wasn't like you see an iceberg, you make a
beeline. You have to face icebergs down. They're more afraid of you than you are of them. 90%
of iceberg charges are bluffs. So Titanic Two is making its way through the ocean,
and they get word from back home that an ice shelf in the distance has collapsed,
and it sends a tsunami towards Titanic Two. But here's the thing, they radio Titanic Two,
and they say, good news, guys, the tsunami's not big enough to take you down. You're fine.
But what they didn't count on is the fact that the tsunami was big enough to carry on it, like
surfers, icebergs, which it then slams into Titanic Two. Titanic Two then goes down. One person
survives. Spoiler alert. Yeah. Best line ever in a movie as well. The captain, who was like,
this will never happen again, leaves the cabin. He turns to his entire crew. After it's been
hit and it's going down, he goes, looks like history just repeated itself.
But yeah, Shane Van Dyke, what a dude. That's amazing. I think we should talk about breakfast.
Oh, yes. So do I. Have you got something? Well, I think you have as well. Yeah, I do.
So there was a study at Tel Aviv University that found that eating chocolate cake
for breakfast was good for losing weight, which is good. They looked at 193 obese people over
32 weeks. And they all had different diets. And some of them had a 600 calorie breakfast,
including a chocolate cake. And these people lost more weight than those who didn't have the
chocolate cake. Really? Yeah. That's good, isn't it? And the idea is that if you have sweet things
of breakfast, you're less likely to want them throughout the rest of the day. Oh, it's not
just because there's no chocolate cake left. On sugary breakfast cereal. Oh, yeah.
So the first ever sugared cereal was called Ranger Joe Popped Wheat Honies, fine. And the
man who designed it designed it to actually lower children's sugar consumption. Because he said,
if I make a very slightly sugary breakfast cereal, then children won't put lots of sugar on their
own breakfast cereal. It's not going to work. Well, no, it didn't work. I think the highest
ever was sugar smacks. Has anyone ever heard of these? Has anyone ever had one? Really?
Cool. They contain sugar and smack. Yeah. That was the worst.
That was a test the police are in and they have been taking notes.
But it meant you put less smack on yourself, didn't you? No, it didn't. That was the theory and it
didn't work. It just ended up having more smack. Sugar smacks are 56% sugar. Whoa. So I was looking
at cereals anyway, breakfast stuff. And there was one cereal, Kicks Cereal, which might exist in
America, KIX, which in 1947 when atomic bombs and atomic energy were quite fashionable, it released
an atomic, it released an atomic bomb ring as one of the three gifts that came with the cereal
packet. It was atomic bomb ring. It contained polonium that glowed. What? And you can be
your own little atomic bomber when you got it. Yeah. Wow. It contained polonium.
It made it very clear on the packaging. I should be clear in case they sue me that it was perfectly
safe capital letters on the packaging. I think you've got a problem when you have to put perfectly
safe in massive letters. I will check this out. There was a chocolate that you could get in Germany
in the 1930s and this is what it was called, Radium Chocolate. That quickly went off the mark.
Yeah. Highly radioactive chocolate, which came with the slogan, eat this and feel great.
You know, great, the Tony the Tiger, the Frosty's thing. This is really cool. The man who voiced
Tony the Tiger for 50 years, he wasn't the first one, but he was by a long way the longest to do
it. It's called Thirl Ravenscroft. He flew Winston Churchill as a pilot. Really? No. Because he was
a civilian pilot navigator during the whole Second World War and he flew Winston Churchill,
Bob Hope, he flew to meet the troops and he was great. And he was one who said great. Yeah.
And when you look it up, this is genuinely on the Wikipedia on Frosty's. Tony the Tiger has been
the mascot of Frosted Flakes since its introduction. Tony is known for uttering the serial slogan,
the great brackets pronounced as one elongated word, not a stutter.
I saw a Wikipedia page on Snap, Crackle and Pop. You know, these guys from the, what are they from?
Rice Krispies, that's it. And they explained what they do. They said, snap is always portrayed with
a baker's hat, pop with a military cap and uniform of a marching band leader.
Okay. Crackle's red or striped stocking cap leaves his occupation ambiguous.
We've said before, I think that Kellogg, John Harvey Kellogg, invented Corn Flakes as part of
a health drive, which in a big bit of that was an anti-masturbation drive because he believed
that he actually spent his wedding night writing an anti-masturbation tract. Amazing.
Sure, if he doesn't need it anymore, there's no on their wedding night.
He wrote of masturbators, chronic or otherwise. He said it killed you. He said such a victim dies
literally by his own hand.
Um, guys, we need to move on to our next round.
By the way, should we do that? You got anything else you want to add?
Okay. Okay, time for fact number two, and that is Andrew Hunter Murray.
My fact is that in the 1960s, a Canadian psychologist visited cafes across the world
counting how much couples touched each other. In Puerto Rico, it was 180 times in an hour.
In Paris, it was 110. In London, it was zero.
Um, I worked out whether it was romantic couples. I think it was just people who were
in pairs in cafes, so it could be friends or family or anything, you know. Yeah.
But also, I'm not British. Is that seen as a very... I see a lot of touching...
Well, this was the 1960s, so things were different.
Oh, okay. Yeah, they must be uptight in the 1960s.
The British 60s, as they were called.
I like... Do you guys know about, uh, Knutsford in Cheshire,
with the campaign that it ran at the end of last year, I think, to widen its pavements?
Because, um, so it's, it's finally been agreed that Knutsford in Cheshire is going to widen
its pavements so that two people can walk along it, and the reason two people can't walk along
it is because there was this spinster called Lady James Stanley, um, who in the 19th century,
she lived in Knutsford, and she dictated that couples shouldn't be allowed to walk along the
pavements hand-in-hand, and so she funded the building of all the pavements in Knutsford and
made sure that only one person at a time could walk along it. Her epitaph reads,
A maid I lived and a maid I died, I never was asked and never denied.
She sounds horrible. Why do you think she was never asked?
Why did she not like people walking side-by-side? Was it because she couldn't get around them,
or she just didn't like the affection? She was offended by the idea of couples holding hands.
She just liked cues. She liked, she liked the conga. She got a kick. She got a kick out a single file.
Um, no, she didn't. She objected because she was alone. She was a single file. She...
Sorry. Um, so, yeah, touching. Social touching and all kinds of touching. Touching is amazing.
I should say this fact comes from a book called Touch the Science of Handheart and Mind by David
Jay Linden. And, um, I think it's a very interesting book. There are so many cool things. So there are
some people who don't feel pain. So there are people in a place called Norboten, probably pronouncing
that wrong, which is in Sweden. And it's genetic, the reason that some people don't feel pain. So,
some people are born without that ability. And one of the people studied in this book is a girl
called Camilla. At the age of nine, I'm quoting here, she would entertain her friends by jumping off
her bed and landing directly on her knees. She said she'd like to hear the crunching sound they made
just like popcorn. Wow. I think the problem with people who have this genetic problem is that
they couldn't... they would die early, wouldn't they? Yes, because you don't know. You don't...
Yeah. You put your hand in the fire and you just wouldn't know that it's not.
Yeah. Um, so basically touch is vital. And, um, for babies as well, if they don't experience a parent
touching them, then it's extremely bad for them. And you can get all kinds of conditions that way.
Sort of, we're not sure how, but... Um, Adolf Hitler...
didn't like touching. He didn't like that as well!
Did he like anything?
I'm starting to really dislike this guy. For me, this was the final straw.
Um, he... So, this is... Martin Amos has claimed recently that Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun had sex
without touching each other or removing their clothes. How does that even work?
I assume you got the necessary parts touched, but he kept it to an absolute minimum. He hated
going to the tailor because tailors, you know, they have to touch you and... A badge of being
Adolf Hitler's tailor, oh my God! I did like this, this is... I read about this in the International
Business Times. And the way it reported it was, it was saying about the recent claims that have
come out that he had sex without touching Eva Braun. And I said, while Hitler's already tarnished
reputation, it was further questioned. Wow. So, if you touch someone, they're going to trust
you more, apparently. That's the thing, isn't it? Don't do it! Richard Wiseman did a study on this
and found that when you asked someone on a date and you were touching them at the same time,
they were 20% more likely to offer a dance in a nightclub, 20% more likely to accept that,
and 10% increase on people giving their telephone number to a stranger in the streets,
just from touching them. Does it make any difference where you touch them?
I think further research is required.
Thus, you apparently... I struggle to believe this because I cannot empathise with it, but as a sales
person, if you touch people, you're about 20% more likely to make a sale if you touch them on the
arm, which I find incredibly creepy. Yeah, just a light touch on the arm. But it's culturally
specific, so they've tried these experiments and getting people to sign a petition in the street,
it goes from 55% to 80% of people signing it. However, not in Poland, where you're like a Polish
man, Anna, because Polish men react very, very badly to being touched lightly on the arm. A study
in Poland found this. They found that people are less likely to sign the petition. Because like,
I'm a quarter Polish and I've never been able to access the Polish part of myself and maybe that's
what it is. It's the skin.
There seems to be a lot of controversy in the papers. I just wanted to see what Britain and
touching certain people in Britain, and apparently the Queen is someone you definitely should not
touch. You've met the Queen, haven't you, Dan? I've touched the Queen. Yes, I've met the Queen.
Oh, Dan. No, I did. I'm not meant to. It sounds like you knew and you did it anyway.
I read the fact to her face as I touched her.
Where did you touch her? Her hand, we shook hands. But yeah, because I'm an Australian and the
Labour PM, Paul Keating, he was not current. He touched the Queen on her lower back, which a
number of people have done and it's always led to massive controversy. And the tabloids went
insane and they called him the lizard of Oz. The tabloids then recommended that all Australian
expats be sent back to Australia, Clive James included, because they ruined their chance.
It is a peculiarly sleazy feeling, someone touching your lower back. I mean, I can understand trying
to extradite every member of the national ante that tried to do. Other people you're not allowed
to touch, the Thai royal family, you weren't allowed to touch them traditionally. And there was a Thai
Queen who drowned after falling from a boat. This was in 1880 because onlookers were too scared to
touch her and so she drowned. No way. Yeah, that's bad, isn't it? I mean, they probably didn't like
her very much either. Because even if I was supposed to, you know, not touch someone, if they were
drowning, I think I'd help. Yeah. Well, the law says that you'd be put to death if you did touch them.
Put to death? Yeah. Oh, okay. Yeah. In Tonga, the undertakers who look after the King are not
supposed to use their hands for three months after touching the dead body of the King. But that's
better than it used to be, because 300 years ago they would have their hands chopped off.
Wow. And I bet undertaking courses were not popular in the country, were they?
Yeah. So you can't use your hands for three months, you have to explain this.
But these days you would be put into a nice house and looked after for three months,
so it's actually quite good these days. We're gonna have to move on.
I've just got one more thing which I think is really interesting. Things you can touch,
something you can't touch is the papers of Marie Curie. They're still so radioactive
that you have to put on a full body suit in order to look at the papers
that are talking about the subject itself. That's insane.
I'm on touching in the U.S. There's been a campaign in U.S. schools recently to limit
touching between people, but just between pupils, because girls often hug each other, I think. So
there was a complaint by a head teacher saying that girls having been separated for 40 minutes
gone to different lessons will have to all hug each other in the corridors, and it was clogging
up the corridors. So there was a campaign in a school in Iowa, I think it was, which was the
hands-off or handshake campaign, which apparently was genuinely successful, which was saying to
girls, you cannot have to hug each other every 40 minutes, maybe just a handshake,
and now girls in this school go down the corridor, see their mate, give them a handshake,
and that's that done. That's good. It's very much like 1960s Britain.
I shook so many people's hands last night.
That's nuts. We really need to move on. Okay, time to move on to fact number three,
and that is James. Okay, my fact this week is that in a very particular time and place in history,
you could avoid castration by shouting the word so-ho.
But just to be safe, always do it, everywhere.
Is the time and place here and now?
We've asked the staff. Yeah, what do you mean time and place?
Yeah, it's not in so-ho itself, which is where we are today, and this is an Ashanti law from the
18th and 19th century that said that if someone saw a member of the chief's harem naked, then he'd
be castrated, and so if one of his attendants needed to go into the harem, he would shout out
so-ho, so-ho, and the ladies would get dressed, and so he wouldn't be, he wouldn't see them naked,
and he wouldn't get castrated. Is it Ashanti? Ashanti, yeah. Which is where?
They are Ghanaian, and they're part of the Akan kind of group of tribes.
So if you really had a grudge against a guy and you're a woman, you just leave your clothes off,
he's seen you naked, he gets castrated. That'll do it. Wow, tough. Yeah. But fair.
So the Ashanti law was it would punish acts that were hateful to the tribe, because they
believed that their ancestors would come back and punish the whole tribe if they did anything that
was bad, and also they thought that one of the most severe punishments that they had was ridicule,
and there was a proverb that was, if it was a choice between disgrace and death, then take
death. So ridicule was the worst thing that could happen to you, although castration sounds a bit
worse. They always shook hands, because we were talking about handshaking, they always shook hands
with the left hand, didn't they, because that was the hand that you had held your shield in,
and so it signifies the fact that you don't feel any need to defend yourself against them.
That's true, and Baden Powell was a big fan of the Ashanti, and that's why Boy Scouts were
traditionally supposed to shake with the left hand, because he liked the Ashanti so much.
I saw some amazing footage eight years and years ago of David Attenborough when he was making a
series called Zoo Quest. I think it was the Zoo Quest series, and there was this one episode
where he was going into a territory so that he had a group of people guiding him around
of a certain tribe, and they stopped at this hill, and they said, we're not going any further,
because the tribe that are over there are quite war-like, and we don't want to get into this
territory, and Attenborough was like, okay, you guys stay back, me and the camera guys are going
to go forward, and they have this on camera. Attenborough is walking over this hill when suddenly
this warring tribe comes running over the hill towards him, and they just come, like, you know,
yelling, and they're going, like, just war-yells, basically, running towards him,
and he has no idea what to do. He's panicked into a standstill silence, and literally, as they
approach him, the only thing he can think to do is to walk forward, put his hand out to shake,
and says, how do you do? Yes! Yes! And then it turned out that that was their way of greeting you
by intimidating you. It's like a great practical joke on that, and they came, and you see the guy
go, oh, and then shakes Attenborough's hand, but it's the most British thing I've ever seen in my
life. Literally, on the brink of death, how do you do? Extraordinary! This is completely unrelated
to the subject matter, but on David Attenborough, you know, he's the only person who's won a BAFTA in
black and white colour, 3D and HD, and some other weird thing called 4X or something,
and there's 5 formats! That's when he's literally massaging you with your eyes!
5 formats he's got behind it! That's very cool! It's impressive! He's old! So the Ashanti...
That's what I'm telling you! And this fact is... So the Ashanti are famous for their golden stool.
Yes. This was the throne of the Ashanti people. It's quite a small stool, and it's so important to
them that it's never allowed to touch the ground, so it has its own chair. So it's like a stool on
top of the throne, which is pretty cool. Sorry, I read that the legend comes from the fact that the
golden stool started in the 17th century in modern day Ghana, when it came down from the heavens and
landed on the king's lap, which seems like such a strange thing. It was sitting on him! Yeah,
that's how good it is! It just sits on you! But it caused the War of the Golden Stool,
didn't it? That's right. I think we caused the War of the Golden Stool. Well, some blame the stool,
some blame us! Negotiations broke down! This was when it was classic British colonialism,
when the governor of the Gold Coast, as it was at the time, who was called
Frederick Hodgson, heard about this golden stool thing and demanded to be allowed to sit on it,
because he said, you know, the queen is your ruler. Where is the golden stool? Why am I not
sitting on the golden stool at this moment? I'm the representative of the paramount power in
this country. Why have you relegated me to a non-golden stool chair? And so then the quote I read was,
the chiefs listened in silence and then went home to prepare for war.
Quite right, too, I think. Yeah.
The current king of the Ashanti is a man called Atompho Ossay Tutu II,
and he is qualified in Accountancy and Public Administration,
which actually is a really good thing for a king to be qualified in. He studied at Kilburn Polytechnic.
And he has a doctorate from London Metropolitan University, which is where he did the Public
Administration bit. I've got some Soho facts, but like Soho is in where we're recording tonight.
Well, I say I've got some, I've got one. It's on the very street that we're on, Dean Street,
where there's a pizza express up the road, and before there was the pizza express there,
there used to be an ear hospital, and it was the very first ear hospital in the UK,
something in all of Europe. No one had done it before. There's a guy called John Curtis.
He was a bit of a charlatan. He used to do this thing where he would try to convince the patient
that he cured them and made their hearing better. So they'd come and go, oh, I'm having trouble
hearing. And then he would go, okay, well, listen to this clock, and he'd have a silent clock.
And they'd be like, I can't hear anything. And he was, and then he'd get some hot water in a
syringe, and he would put it in their ear. And while they were like doing that to their ear,
he'd get his other clock, which made a noise. He went, what about now? And they go, I can hear
it. He went, I cured you. They'd go off. Yeah. But that only works for people who can actually hear,
who don't have hearing problems in the first place, right? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. But this one ear
hospital has now expanded into what become great ear hospitals. So it actually turned into a great
yeah. So a little bit south of here, there's a nose hospital. And then way further down,
there's a throat hospital. Sorry. So we're on the Soho Theater is 21 Dean Street. And apparently,
Mozart played in this building or in this building was a seven year old Mozart played the harpsichord
accompanied by his four year old sister. Wait, a seven year old Mozart, how many, how many
really he did? Apparently, yeah. Wow. Yeah. According to the websites of this very company.
Right. Apparently, mulberry cigarettes as well. They started selling and manufacturing cigarettes
on Great Mulberry Street. Oh, and Mulberry, no, no, it was, it was the name. And then they removed
at the end, because they thought that's not as sexy a look as a thing. And on top of it,
they were lady cigarettes. They weren't for men. Wow. It's not for men.
Genuinely, when they started up, they were for women. And because it was at a point where women
were encouraged to start smoking cigarettes, which if you've ever seen an Adam Curtis documentary,
what was it called the power of nightmares? It's where he shows where one person who was a grandson,
I think of Sigmund Freud, convinced the entire world, because at that point, only men smoke
cigarettes, and they called them flame, what was it? Sticks of liberty, flames of awesomeness,
liberty, liberty tortures or something like that. So mulberry was a, and that was just down the
road. And he is the man who invented eggs and bacon for breakfast. Oh, he was the father of PR.
Yeah. And the father of good health. Yeah. And his son invented round eggs and bacon.
Um, I think a theater, the great memorial theater in Soho was the only theater not to close down
during World War II to support the war effort, wasn't it? Because it was an exotic dancing slash
naked, what do you call this places where they're naked women strip club? It was that. And it was
decided that it was too important to sacrifice for the cause of war. So the great memorial theater,
yeah, it is no longer a strip club if you're going there, I'm pretty sure. I think it's just a
theater now. I think it is. You think it's still a strip club? I think so. Look at him, I think.
Otherwise, I was a great avant-garde play.
I mean, there was no plot whatsoever.
So, the start of this fact was about safe words, because it's something to say to make sure you
don't get castrated. And I went on, which is what a safe word is, right? Yeah. Well, to be honest,
I wasn't sure. So I went on Wikipedia safe words. And they said, in theory, a safe word is usually
a word that the person would not ordinarily say during sex, such as pineapple velociraptor
or Lindsay Lohan.
Oh, my God.
And then another one, this is really great. It's the next paragraph. It says,
since a scene may become too intense for a submissive partner to remember what a safe word is,
in practice, commonly the word safe word is used as a safe word.
I'm going to have to move us on. We've got to press on. I know. It's a shame.
Okay. Time for our final fact to the evening. That's my fact. My fact is that Matthew Ricard,
the man who was labeled the happiest man in the world, is unhappy. People call him that.
See, this is by science. They said you were the happiest man alive. He's a Buddhist, but
by science. Sorry. Sorry, Mr. Science. By Captain Science. He basically, they were doing this massive
survey on trying to find out about happiness. And he was one of the people that they did these
experiments on. They did it on hundreds of people. And he literally, they registered no negativity
in him whatsoever. He just loved everything. Until they said, you're the happiest man in the
world. He's like, fuck's sake. Yeah, apparently, according, I mean, I've not read it in a proper
interview with him that he is unhappy about it, except for this book called Talk Like Ted. It's
a new book that's out. And in it, she says that he's really unhappy about it. Okay, they did this
test. They tested the happiness biometric thing. So plus 0.3 was the most miserable on this scale
they had. Minus 0.3 was meant to be extremely happy people. And he scored minus 0.45. Isn't that
cool? Yeah, off the charts. He said he's not the most annoying person on the planet. That is Anna
plus 0.5.
He said when he was asked if he ever gets annoyed, he said, of course, I sometimes get irritated,
but I usually start laughing quite quickly at the irritation because it's so silly, which sounds
like an incredibly annoying response. He's surrounded by the unhappiest people in the world.
I also saw an interview with him when someone asked him about a laptop that he had stolen.
And they said, did that not make you unhappy at least? He said, I didn't feel aggrieved at all.
My only regret was that he hadn't been able to send the thief the power lead. Bullshit.
No one can be that happy. It's impossible. But he's like a Buddhist guy, right? He's like he's
he has meditation is the main thing. He's the Dalai Lama's right hand man. I believe. Oh, yeah,
really? Yeah. I saw an interview where they talked about the Dalai Lama and someone asked him,
does he watch the Marx Brothers? This does the Dalai Lama watch the Marx Brothers?
And this guy, Rika said, he doesn't have to. His life is so full of humor. Although I think he
used to wash mash. Best TV show ever. Yeah, well, that's my favorite. I don't think it's that funny.
So as we say, Buddhism is a thing that really focuses on a thing, a religion that really focuses
on trying to achieve happiness. And in Bhutan, obviously a Buddhist country, all new government
policies have to have a gross national happiness assessment. So every policy that's made has to
be run through the is this going to cause gross national happiness rings in order to establish,
which is so cool. And so they're really happy country. They're one of the poorest countries
in the world. And yet they're about number eight on the global happiness index, the number eight.
I think they're about there are so many lists of happiest countries. Usually it's Costa Rica,
number one, isn't it? Denmark, usually, I think, but Panama recently overtook them.
You've been to Bhutan. I have.
They're just all so bloody happy. Do they announce the happiest country at an actual award ceremony?
Because I'd love to see the camera pan across everyone's face when they find out it's not them.
Bhutan, I think they're so happy because they have a dragon king. How happy would we be if we
called our queen the dragon queen? That's what they call them. He went, he actually went to school
in England as well. Yes, Kilburn Polytechnic. He's called Wangchuk. He is, yeah. I've been funny
about that. And he's the last in the Wangchuk dynasty so far. There's been like four or five
Wangchuks. He's not been able to find anyone to take a surname. He's got seven sons, all of them.
No, I'm Smith. Also, Bhutan has no traffic lights, does it? No, which may be why it's the happiest
country in the world. It's the traffic lights and the dragon king things. And they pledge to be a
carbon sink forever. Yeah. To be a net absorber of carbon. They did used to have one traffic light
in the centre of Timpoo. It's near the golf course, if you want to know where. You've been,
you've been, haven't you? I played golf there, yeah. But the place where they put the traffic lights
there and everyone got so upset by the traffic lights, they got rid of them and now there's just
a guy there the whole time who's doing the job of the traffic lights. Because they thought it was
too impersonal. Yeah. Because they're so happy-glappy. They need a, like a human to be doing their
traffic lighting for them. I've done karaoke in Bhutan as well, actually, with a load of monks.
No. Wow. That's another story. What is it? No. You don't get on the hook that easily here.
What did you sing? I can't remember. It was some, like, I think I sang some Bhutanese.
Because I'm happy coming home. That's, yeah, that's all they sing, Pharrell Williams,
five times in a row. Keep the points up. It's going down. Costa Rica's ahead. Come on.
Supposedly, in Buddhist teaching, there are 84,000 negative emotions.
Really? Yeah. And there are also, there are 87,000 drinks combinations at Starbucks.
Coincidence? Card B.
That's like, how many different types of smile are there? There are something like 18 different
types of smile on there and there's only one of those 18 that makes, that is a genuine smile of
happiness. Duchenne's smile, right? Yeah. The mouth smile. I'm out. There's a Pan American smile.
And that was air hostesses from back in the 50s. Just fake, fake with the mouth only. Yeah. But
it became, it was such a big thing, wasn't it? It was the classic, on the side of planes, they would
have the classic air hostess of the 50s look and it was the fake smile. I don't know if that's one
of the 19 or 18. It almost certainly will be. I think it is and the best one is the Duchenne's
smile and that's the one you can tell by the eyes because it's the wrinkles around the eyes,
let you know that it's a real smile. And that's probably why, so there's lots of data about how
the older you get, the happier you get and it's just because people have got wrinkled eyes when
they're older. I think because it is the happiness index goes up and like right into your 80s.
But it goes down until your mid 40s. Yes, it does. That's the least happy and then,
but from then on, it's all upwards. It's all upwards. Which means the graph looks a bit like
a smile. All right, Matteo Ricard. By the way, Matteo Ricard has on his website. Did you guys
look on his website? His website has a few features. My favorite feature is Smile of the Week
and it's just a different monk every week. He's having a good old smile. It's actually really
nice to look at. If he's unhappy about the happy thing, he's bringing it on himself if he's doing
a Smile of the Week website, I think. Yeah, he's been celibate since he was 30.
He has a little counter on his website.
Duchenne used to, as well as discovering the one smile that is a true smile,
he's electrocuted different bits of people's faces to create different expressions,
didn't he, to work out what different expressions meant. It's so funny and because it was the
mid to late 19th century and because it was the age of photography as well, he combined the two
and he just took loads of photos of these patients making mental expressions because he was electrocuting
them. These people were going like... Yeah, it's kind of mean. Yeah, I just got a flash. We're going
to have to wrap up. Is that what that meant? Yeah, that's what that was. Do we have any
final facts? Do you want to chuck in? Okay, well Hitachi has come up with a happiness algorithm.
You put a badge on your shirt and there's an accelerometer on there which measures your
activity and it means that the boss of a company can tell how happy everyone is in the company
and can adjust things accordingly. Oh, brave new world. Yeah, I got one last thing which is that
I was looking into just when I was doing the research, I thought science has labeled this
person the something in the world and I only had one thing come up which was the man with the
largest penis. Oh yeah, I know him. I don't know him. It was just one night. James, your eyes are
watering. No, he works as a dates or entry clerk in America, doesn't he? I think. Yeah. Yeah.
What's he using to enter the data?
All right, we don't even have time for the fact. That's it. That's all of our facts.
Thank you so much for listening. If you want to get in contact with any of us about the things
that we've said in this podcast, you can get us on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shriverland,
James at Eggshaked, Andy at Andrew Hunter M, Anna. You can email podcast at qi.com.
We're going to be back again in the Soho Theatre next week. If you want to hear any previous
episodes, this was our 51st episode. There's 50 episodes online. Thank you so much for being
here tonight, guys. Thank you to everyone listening and we'll see you again next week. Have a good
night. Goodbye.
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