No Such Thing As A Fish - 52: No Such Thing As A Worthless Bucket Of Urine
Episode Date: March 14, 2015Episode 52: Live at the Soho Theatre, Dan, James, Andy and Anna discuss Tutankhamun's fashion choices, how to get ahead in a marathon, a city full of socks, and the most boring day ever. ...
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hi everyone James here I just wanted to start with an apology unfortunately the
audio is very bad in this episode and some of our microphones failed so we
only had one mic and you'll be hearing it from that so it's going to be a bit
tinny a little bit like we recorded in a toilet but that's kind of back to our
roots because that's what most of our early ones were like but enjoy the show
anyway we think is a good one get through the audio next week will be much
better
welcome to another episode and no such thing as a fair show weekly podcast this
week coming to you from the Soho Theatre in central London my name is Dan
Schreiber I'm sitting here with Anna Chazinski, James Harkin and Andy Murray
this is our one-year special it's our birthday we've once again sat around the
microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days and in no
particular order here we go starting with you Andrew Hunter Murray hello my
fact is that the route for the Hong Kong ultramarathon is to run up and down the
same stretch of road 25 times
this has been on the news a bit recently it's because it's just happened the
first ever ultramarathon they've had on this route for one of a better word and
it's 31 miles long because apparently anything longer than the standard 26.2
is an ultramarathon which I think is cheating because I think it should be at
least double and I say that as someone who's never run more than 200 meters
and that was at sports day
and I came fourth
out of four
so yeah that's it
well how far do you say it was?
31 miles
yeah because normally ultramarathans are more like 100 miles or 100 miles 200 miles
whatever but if they had done that here they probably would have been
suicided borderline
actually sorry I read that if you run 200 miles it's less tiring than if you run
100 miles
right
that can't be true
yeah apparently what happens is when you know it's going to be much longer
your intensity is much lower so you take take your time a lot more they found
the people who do the longer ones feel better at the end
so you'll just say you do it much more slowly you're saying it takes you
you conserve your energy better
you walk it
you take job when you get the tube
so the thing about this marathon is that everyone's been describing it
particularly the people doing it as the most boring marathon
possible because of the repetitions and I was looking into boring marathons
and there is an annual boring marathon what yeah there's an annual boring marathon
there's an ultra boring marathon
and it's actually apparently quite exciting it's just it happens to take place
in a town or city called boring Oregon city yeah
which is an actual place and their motto is the most exciting place to live
they all add their twins with a town called Dull in Scotland
yes yeah yeah they have an annual dull and boring day
which is I think it was august 9th
someone worked out recently the most boring day in modern history
and it was equal to 11th 1954
oh yeah that's a bad one
a bad time it was a scientist about the computer program to work out the day
where the least interesting stuff happened
it included a general election in Belgium
so sorry sorry Belgians
the front page of the New York Post was two cops attending a conference on
juvenile delinquency
front page news
so they put that into a machine right and it's generous
so it was like three million bits of information
300 million
three was it 300 million
was
wow so they said find us the most boring day
they came up with this date
we're April 11th 1954
as I read this as well side note to it
which actually caught my eye more than the fact itself
is that the guy who was a Cambridge scientist
he was a computer programmer
his name uh his name is William Tunstall Pito
he'd change his surname wouldn't he
I was trying to research the fact I got so sidelined
so you're keeping that
you got Charles Dickens came up with Fordham
as in he invented the word
yeah I've read his books yeah
oh word
um yeah it's in the Bleak House
he says someone is bored to death by marriage
so
so maybe he's not incomplete
people just assumed that's what it meant
maybe it meant thrilled
what do you mean thrilled
is that what people say to me when I'm talking to them in the pub
and they're saying I'm so bad
yeah
they're actually saying they're thrilled
is that why you keep going on and on
there's um there's a tribe in Papua New Guinea called the Baining
and they value work as the highest ideal
the best thing you do is work
and they have been called unstudiable
because of their failure to do anything interesting yet
so harsh isn't it
there was an anthropologist called Gregory Bateson
who said who spent 14 months attempting to study them in the 1920s
before giving up entirely
they don't even like sex is that right
they don't like it very much
no they don't like it but they do have kids
but often a lot of adoption
because they don't really want to have kids
wait when are they about to be thrown
it's been neighboring tribes or something
yeah I don't know
but they also don't like play
because it's a natural state of children
and they don't like children
and they're sometimes
they will punish their children who are playing
by putting their hands in the fire
that's not boring
that's an exciting thing to do as a kid
I think the most boring sports ever
the most boring sporting event ever
was the cycling event of the 1964 Tokyo Olympic
where it involved people watching
two people who were cycling head to head
sitting still on bicycles for more than an hour
what were they exercise bikes
you know it's the sprint cycle when it goes head to head
and you know they often like hover at the start of it
because I think is it a slipstream thing
so because they want the other person to start cycling first
so they can get in their slipstream
and these two guys just have this standoff
they're still on the bikes, bouncing on the bikes
but over an hour and an hour and sitting on the bike
so that's pretty hard
yeah I know impressive
that sounds exciting to me
because if you're wondering it'll always go
the commentator had to leave
it's something else to get on with
the excitement was too much
can't handle this
do you know that the way they induce boredom
scientists want to test boredom
obviously there are definite ways of doing it
so to do pain
they put your hand in a bucket of icy water
and to do boredom they make you copy out the phone book
that's the official way of doing it
but if they want to really test you
they just make you read the phone book
and see how to focus on it
and really concentrate
and but it improves your creativity
what are you doing the phone doctors
what being bored
as in induced by this and the experiment they did
so they tested they had people who could
just copy numbers out of the phone book
or not do that
and at the end of that
everyone who'd been in it was asked to
this is the test
think of it as many uses as they could
for a pair of plastic cups
which is apparently a test of divergent thinking
and how crazy and creative you are
and people who've been reading the phone book
or copying it out are much more creative
you're like throw them at the person who told me to read the phone book
and there's a scientific test
at the boredom proneness scale
that's come up with by two psychologists
and it's 28 statements
which you have to agree or disagree with
and it consists of statements including
I have projects in mind all the time
things to do
or much of the time
I just sit around doing nothing
if you could do that successfully
I don't think you're easily bored
no I sometimes read my own phone book
and test myself on people I've forgotten who they are
who is Rose?
who is that?
does anyone else do that?
one yes one yes thank you
I did a terrible thing the other day
I got a message on my phone from someone saying
hey how's it going
and you know that terrible moment
when you haven't got their number
and you're like oh my god
the message is so familiar
I definitely know who this is
they're gonna hate
so I have to do the old classic
sorry it's a new phone
haven't got your number
who is it
and the person wrote back going
it's Sheila
and so I did the lamest thing
that I've done at you is
I wrote back saying
sorry I'm Australian
there's a lot of Sheila's
which one do you do?
she didn't write back
I found this the most boring
this is very unfortunate
there's a resort in Switzerland
and I was a bit confused
because it's described as a village
and a resort
so I feel like the village is like a ski resort
yeah and it's been described
as the most boring resort in Switzerland
and you know when it's like
oh I had a nice time
they're all of their things
it's just this is so dull
this is my dull face
and the tourist board there
released a statement
they said that they think
they got this title
because their quiet village
has nothing
does nothing
and offers nothing
and then they added
we think that's a positive
but so they've combatted it now
by going
they had a meeting
and they're like
how do we sort out the boredom
levels of our
of our town
how do we make it exciting
and vibrant
and they started a
stone skipping competition
which they're now trying to make
a worldwide thing
but then they found out
that another similarly dull town
also decided the way to combat boredom
was to set up a Skimming Stones
competition
so they had to call them
and say
could we do the qualifying round
before they get to
you can't even go and see
the finals
yeah
yeah
okay some stuff on
ultramarathans
yeah
okay so ultramarathans
athletes sometimes
have all their toenails removed
before or after
before
not during
but like between races
so
but you're often there
so you'll end up
you'll run
and you'll have real problems
with your toenails
and they'll get worse and worse
and then they get better
and then once they've been
a problem once
they get worse and worse
all the time
and so
yeah quite often
they'll have them
taken off
just weekly
what
it reminds me of the how
how
yeah how
how do they take them off
do you want me to show you
the how
they would surge
that surgeon would do it
yeah
that's not what I wanted
I wanted a method
I think it's a yank
and the other thing that happens
in ultramarathan people
is their body gets
in such
trouble because they're really
really pushing it
that they
are insatiable
and want to have lots
and lots of sex
apparently
this is according to one
of the athletes
who I met in a pub
yes he was boring
but I couldn't help myself
he says that when
is when a person is in
various traits like that
sex becomes a priority
because naturally
we want to perpetuate
the species
we want to procreate
so it's like
we're in such trouble
we're about to die
we need to have kids quickly
that's what he said
wow okay
marathans were
considered so dangerous
that they weren't supposed
to happen again
weren't they
in 1902
the 1902 olympics
or the 1904 olympics
it was decided
because it was so badly done
that one guy
so the doctors
drove in front of them
along this dust track
and like
one of them did
one of them collapsed
had like a pulmonary failure
or something
collapsed very nearly died
because he'd inhaled
so much dust
another one
the guy who won
in the end
collapsed
and had to be picked up
and was given
strychnine
which is that
pesticide that we now use
on crocs
to try and stimulate him
and then some brandy
it was a
at that time
it was a useful stimulant
that didn't do anything
except slowly killing you
and then there was a guy
who won initially
who was called someone's laws
who decided he couldn't
hack it after about nine kilometers
and jumped in a car
passed by
waved all the other athletes
jumped out at the other end
sprinted to the finish line
the 50 yards
and won
50 yards
and then
there was no one nearby
presumably
because I would stop a mile back
you know
I was just thinking
well
what he claimed was
when he was taking his trophy
and someone did say
by the way
I did see you dry
most of the way
he did say
he'd always been meaning
to give it back
it was just a joke
but that is the kind of thing
you think are cleaners
and if no one says anything
that I've won
and if they do
I'll just say I was kidding
anyway yeah
it was
how strong was going to do that
wasn't it?
that was just a joke guys
have you heard of Rosa Ruiz?
no
no
she won the
1980 Boston Marathon
she's 23 year old New Yorker
and she was very very fast
she was the third fastest time
ever recorded for a female runner
and she was completely
swept free and composed
when she crossed the finishing line
car
obviously
no one saw her during the race
none of the checkpoints
none of the other runners
photographs of the race
she was nowhere
she was so fast
they couldn't get her in the photo
she
not car, subway
just got the subway
straight across
and does it count though
if you're still running
while you take all these shortcuts
if you ran to the subway
it just had to
that should count right?
just on the spot
on the train
I was running
I just got created with it
but again
she just jumped back in half a mile
before the end
which seems very cocky
yeah
why don't you often in subways
you have to run up a lot upstairs
I reckon that's more tiring
we've got to move on very soon
to the next fact
can I just quickly give a few
Hong Kong things
so because I'm born and raised in
Hong Kong
and there's a
can I bet money on a Hong Kong fact
that you will say
in the next 20 seconds
oh okay yeah
I'm just wondering if there's a
Hong Kong fact about Bruce Lee to follow
no there's not
oh my god
although there is a good Bruce Lee fact
you've made it through
why did I do it?
he was the 1958 char char champion
in Hong Kong
there you go
how many people have it?
as you are
yeah so
one thing I discovered was that
after the handover happened
there were a lot of things that the
Chinese admitted to doing
that they were sort of
tripping the British colonialists
about
when they first arrived
and one thing was the names of places
in Hong Kong
and I've been to a lot of these places
and I had no idea that their
translations meant
what they are
so for example
there's a place called
He See One
so when the British were like
oh what's this called?
they went up
He See One
that translates as
vagina discharge day
vaginal discharge day
there's Niu Shi Wu
which is cow shit lake
and Dao Tao
which is penis head rock
the needs have been on signs
in Hong Kong for ages
and they've started changing some
so foreign level sex organ
has now changed
has become pyramid rock
and all sex corner
is now some main dragon cake
oh that's really cool
I had no idea when I was there
did you guys have any more that we
yep
okay
time for fact number two
and that is
yep my fact is that
the meter is wrong
typical honor
everyone everything's wrong
because I hate it
what what does that mean
so the meter
it was determined that the
meter
so in a guy called Pierre Mecha
was a French astronomer
in the 1790s
he determined that he would create a
they decided to go to a decimal system
and the meter would be the unit
of the system
and it would be exactly
one 10 millionth of the distance
between the equator
and the north pole
so he went on this big tour
to measure out arcs of the earth
and stuff
and do calculations to work out what
the meter was
and there was a slight error in his
calculations
a slight problem with one of his bits
of equipment
and he was 0.16 of a millimeter
out for every meter
the meter we use now
he realized that he'd gone wrong
so we tried to draw people's attention
to it
but at that point they were like
we've made all these like
meter long sticks
we can't just go and un-make them
and so it just stayed that way
so he's
I mean but that's so unscientific
for how science usually works
well we've made them
it's just gonna have to be it
sorry
I heard that he went back
to where he had made the original
mistake later in his life
and he wanted to correct it
he was on this campaign to get it
corrected
and he got to where he made the mistake
where he caught malaria and died
I'm just going to show you
never check
you're working
he kept getting arrested
didn't he
when he was doing all this stuff
because it was during the revolution
people thought that his
what do you call these things
instruments were weapons
didn't they
yeah
so it just kept on him at prison
all the time
yeah
and it was that
but that was actually a good thing
well was it good or was it bad
because it was when he was in prison
that he realized he'd got it wrong
he thought I've got nothing else
except recheck my calculations
and when he did that
he realized it was wrong
but then it didn't do much good
so in fact there was
in 1875 there was the
treaty de la Métro
or the treaty of the meter
in France
00:18:14,720 --> 00:18:15,040
thank you
it saved me 10 valuable minutes though
I'm just going to leave it
and I remember you were here
and that decided to consecrate
his wrong meter into
like being the actual meter
so to say actually
Michelin's meter is the proper meter
the meter is now going to be one meter
and not 0.616 millimeter long
and so they created the standard meter
at this conference
so they had to create an exact replica
of the wrong meter
but this time say
this is now the right meter
but they couldn't just take his wrong one
and say this is the standard meter
because that had been wrong
does that make sense
it didn't
but yeah
I'm still on treaty de la Métro
and so before this happened
in 18th century France
there were more than 250,000
different types of measurement
in France
what?
I know
how many people were there?
was it just
just different weights and measurements
and 250,000
yeah
it's a lot about that
yeah it's a lot yeah
they were totally really arrogant
weren't they
when they wanted to go to the decimal system
and there were a lot of people saying
I can't believe you think you can just like
make the whole world abide by your ridiculous system
but obviously they did
Japan went metric in 1924
and no one noticed
or did anything about it
and they had to do it again
40 years later
oh my god
well I think the US has tried to a few times
in the 1960s they were saying
let's do it
and they've just never got around to it
and now because there are three countries
that are metric aren't there
so Burma, Liberia and the US
but Burma's about to go imperial now
so it's about to just be
you're about to go metric
yeah
about to go metric sorry
so it's just be Liberia
and I'm better at it
yeah
wasn't that great
I don't know the full fact
I hope you guys do
which is that
I thought that was complete the fact
Mount Everest
when that was originally measured
what was it 29,000 feet
yeah
so
the first to say it
yeah yeah
so they worked out exactly how tall it was
it was 29,000 feet
but they thought that
if they put that as the actual number
people won't believe them
they would think they just rounded them up
and so they put an extra two feet on top
so they called it 29,002 feet
yeah
can you imagine
you've just done this incredible thing
you've measured the greatest mountain
the highest tallest mountain in the world
and it's a perfect number
and you can't tell them that it's bad
because no one will believe you
poor guy
you must be like
can't fucking believe my life
what's in that
I really I really like mistakes
I think history definitely
some of the things that we find is an everyday thing
like the meter is as a result of a mistake
one of the things that almost seems to have come out of being mistakes
is phosphorus matches
the head of matches
the only reason
I mean we may have got to it eventually
but the actual reason that we did end up getting to it
is because a guy in 1675 called Hennig Brand
got obsessed with the idea that he could make gold
by converting buckets of urine
into gold
so he in his basement
fit the buckets of urine
going on to a winner here
and it went all soupy
and it went all waxy
and it just didn't at all go goldy
if he had a cleaner
he must have had to have a load of every single bucket
please leave
but so the weird byproduct of him doing this
is that it actually led to this substance
tubs of urine
yeah well no the tubs of urine
did this waxy substance
that he ended up having
sort of lit up when light was making contact with it
and they were going what is this
and they realized this was a way of making fire
and so actually each bucket became way more worth than gold
so he actually exceeded the amount of money
that he would have made from turning that into gold
if I shine a light
no no it's like setting light to it
oh right okay yeah yeah
do you know the first matches were a yard long
seriously the first sold matches
and the guy who invented them sold 168 in something like three years
and they were a toy for the for rich people
and they were also incredibly dangerous
because once you'd lit it
it was more like a home science kit almost
it wasn't a practical thing
but once you'd lit it
the globular flaming stuff had this
amazing tendency to just fall to the ground
and set fire to whatever you were standing on at the time
I guess because they weren't very practice-advising matches
so once you'd lit it
well not on their yard long as well
helps taking two people
yes
yeah good for bonding maybe that's why they did it
maybe
and before the 19th century
there was a unit of measurement
which was called a lot
but how many was that
it was about not very much
not very much
it wasn't it was the 30th of a pound
so it wasn't an awful lot
that's great
the word acre used to mean
an open field of no particular measurement
and yard comes from
Saxons used to wear like a gird
it comes from the same origin as gird doesn't it
because remember belt that people used to wear
and then they take it off to measure something
when they needed to
no speculating as to what
and
I'm nice
some people understood
how big is this conch
so there are some other good units of measurement
the Garn
you'll know the Garn
the Garn is a unit of measurement
that measures space sickness
and it's named after
he was the first US politician to go into space actually
it was named after Senator Jake Garn
who was so sick during a space mission
that now it's meant one Garn is considered very space sick
that's great
that's like the uh the mini Helen
the mini Helen is the amount of beauty
you need to launch one ship
it's weird lots of units of measurement
that we have are quite similar
so there's a Japanese measurement called
I'll mispronounce this
but Kanejaku
it's an obscure one
as in it's not used anymore
but it's about the same as an English foot
and both of those things are about the same length
as the average man's foot
so it's a sort of you know
common origin for lots of these things
which is quite cool
like the qubit is the distance from it
what is it
your elbow to
to the beginning of your hand
so you would send out someone with a big
arm to buy cloth
in ancient Egypt
that because
they would be able to get more cloth for their money
because they had bigger arms
it's just one guy with a really massive arm
yeah yeah
just one all that one huge arm
it's amazing that we took so long
to get to grip to the fact
that all humans are different sizes
and we can't face a measurement system
there's one called a
piédrois
which is a Charlemagne introduced
and it was supposedly
you know the size of his foot
it wasn't
it was it was
he was just trying to understand those things
but
so it was bigger than his foot
our smaller than his foot
I don't know
but I don't know what size his foot was
but I also don't know what size the thing was
so it could be actually
yeah
you know what they said
I've been with indeterminate size feet
can I just say very quickly
just as a side note
every time that we've said
oh what's that called
someone from the crowd
his gun is called that
you don't get this at any other
comedy gigs
the audience are treating it like a pub quiz
are you hearing that
yeah can you not hear it every time
every time
listen out
you'll be there
just quickly the carrot
I just just kind of interesting
the carrot measurement for
diamonds is from
carob seeds
because they thought people used to think
they're all carob seeds
were exactly the same amount
so
they're kind of the same word
they don't
they don't
the same amount
yeah
like um
who was it was it Barth
who weighed out 60 coffee beans
for each cup of coffee he drank
oh yeah
oh he gets all of your weight mate
he counted them out
yeah it was one of them
it was Barth
it was whoever wrote the coffee canta after
which I think was Barth
he wrote a whole thing of praise of coffee
who was it
how did the coffee beans Barth
wrote the coffee canta after
I can told you
um guys we're gonna have to
then we have to go on next time
this is hard
and the next fact comes from that lady in the audience
okay so I'm for fact number three
and that is James
okay my fact this week is that
St Andrews Aquarium has three meerkats
called Churchill, Admiral and Sheela's Wheels
I love that Sheela's Wheels meerkat
they also had a Viva and Direct Line
but they both died unfortunately
who's that doing the credit punch
um but yeah meerkats and funny names
one question
first of all
do does an aquarium have meerkats
because they've realized there's no such thing as a fish
they had this little bit
it's a brilliant aquarium by the way
but they had this little bit of rock
where they didn't have anything to put there
and they got offered some meerkats from a different studio
and they said yeah great
meerkats why not
everyone loves meerkats
so you um just you you actually
I was there this weekend
yeah you went that's how you found this out
yeah did you see the meerkats
I did meet the meerkats
and fed the uh what do you call these things
penguins
and saw all the different fish
yeah it was great
really really good
definitely recommend it
so why are they why are they named there um
oh so they were named uh by someone on facebook
and they thought there's such great names
that will name them that
they have
wait I know they're existing names
so they
no they were allowed to name them
when they they were born there
and they were allowed to name them
my head Admiral has a tiny
jacket with epaulets
and the main two are called
Kate and Will's
the others are named after
members of the um
of the royal family as well
and they have a penguin
who is called Angby Murray
do they do
yeah they do
and it's a female
okay
all the other penguins
are named after the Murray family
not your family
the tennis player
yeah
um interestingly that the meerkats
are named after Kate and Will's
because meerkats too
are threatened by inbreeding
inbreeding
so um meerkats
as when they're fighting
they line up in a line
and they just charge at each other
really
yeah like a horizontal line
like a key
like a horizontal line
and so it's like one
against the other one
and they just charge into each other
and that is how naval warships are
in the other
so presumably Admiral
that's what you're talking about
very good
um uh and one way they stop
from fighting each other
is because they get a lot of
their thing from scent
they rub vicks vapor rub
on the meerkats
because then they can't smell each other
and they don't get angry with each other
but they also can't smell
who's related to them
no but that's that's a good thing
they because they recently had
one meerkat
who was completely segregated
they just like
we don't want you
and they named the meerkat Oliver Twist
because he was orphaned
and one of the guys there
had to look after Oliver Twist
and that was the sentence
he said we're gonna
we're gonna completely cover them in vicks
what's it called
vapor rub
vapor rub
and um
we're gonna cover him as well
and that will allow him back into the group
because they won't know
that he wasn't smelling the same as us
so I just reminded me
of a brilliant thing that I read this week
you you have already I'm sure
a new scientist
which is that when you shake someone's hand
you smell your hand afterwards
because you're trying to get the scent
of the person who you shook hands with
and all humans have been doing this forever
and no one's ever noticed
not me I can assure you I don't do that
I am
they videoed a lot of the people
in the room
shaking hands
and counted how often they were touching their faces
around their nose and mouth
and it was a certain number
and when they shook hands
it always went up
it's amazing
that's incredible
it's such a good face
I've been watching
my boyfriend
a weekend
we've found various instances
of we've played on a board game
shake hands after them
and then I watched him
and he holds his nose
after he shakes hands with me
yeah which I've not taken a good sign
on meerkats
they're the only animal
we've observed
the cyber mass who we've seen
like employing proper teaching methods
to teach their young
how to hunt
so because they hunt individually
you can't
the young can't just follow their parents around
to see how they hunt
so the parents bring back dead animals
and then explain to their kids
how to dismember them
another thing meerkat mothers do
is they kill the children
of other meerkat mothers
so that those mothers
will breastfeed their own children
so that they can go out
and have fun
nice guys
so they turn that mother
into a babysitter
because she's lactating anyway
so she'll be like
okay you can look after my kids
and I've killed yours
I'm gonna go out in the past
they aren't
they're horrible
they're not good pets apparently
according to some websites
because they can be very cruel to each other
aggressive to the people
they don't know
they smell quite ferrity
likely to be an animal
I was reading about aquariums
and I read about London's
very first aquarium
which was the Royal Aquarium
you guys heard about the Royal Aquarium
it was basically
it was 1903
sorry just before 1903
because it was pulled down in 1903
it had huge tanks
it was ginormous
central London
and the reason it was pulled down
and didn't do so well
is that all these giant tanks
contained no fish
they were completely empty
because they marketed it
as having sea life
so they needed salt water
and they realized
how extensive that was
and they couldn't afford to actually
put the right amount of water in there
with the relevant fish
so people used to come
and just look at tanks of water
I mean the promise at one day
that there would be fish in them
I don't think that was the first one
because the first one I think was at
London Zoo
which would have been
when did you say yours was
1903
it was taken down
London Zoo is opened in the mid 19th century
and it was called the Aquarium
but it used to be called Aquavivarium
which is a cool name
and then Aquarium
was originally a watering place for cattle
so you see sometimes troughs
where people used to let their horses
and cows drink
and it has Aquarium written on it
and it looks like the worst Aquarium
in the world but it's not
so did they call it Aquavivarium
so as not to be confused
and have cattle turn up
hoping for a drink
and then they had this thing
called Aquarium Mania
have you heard of this
no
this is so cool
sounds great
so there was a guy called Philip
Henry Goss or Gosser
we can edit that as appropriate
and he was one of the pioneers
of basically allowing fish
to survive
basically everyone went around
killing old fish
and he was like no this is wrong
we should let them survive
he came up with a system
whereby you could keep fish in a tank
and they would get enough oxygen
and you need plants in there
but suddenly everyone
started getting Aquariums
so people got them set into their windows
some people
or put into chandeliers
just hanging from the ceiling
some people built a bird cage
into an Aquarium
so there would be a bird living in there
surrounded by fish
which it could never eat
torture
yeah
they've made a Nike trainer
into an Aquarium
Nike designers now
it's they've transformed into
I don't know how functional
it is as a trainer anymore
but it looks really cool
if you look it up
there's sort of a fake turn into the Aquarium
in the base of the shoe
do you mean
the whole shoe is an Aquarium
so it's round the edges of the shoe
they filled it with water and put some fish in
what
that's incredible
that's a little bit
wow
that's weird
also there's the world's smallest Aquarium
isn't there
that's uh
all of them
is that not it
yeah
that's not even a full shoe
that's a heel
I think this one is 24 millimeters high
so
right
it's for zebrafish
it's this guy
Anatoly Komenko
who just designed
like he's a designer
his job is designing tiny things
and so
he's created the world's smallest book
that's he's put at the work of the human hair
is it
is it advice on how to keep your new zebrafish
just a few things
oh
I forgot
I was just going to say
did anyone see the
giant male octopus this week
that was trying to escape from its aquarium
oh yeah yeah
did anyone read what the Aquarium
it was an Aquarium in Seattle
the Aquarium owner said
um so there was
so this octopus
it's crawled up the sides of its aquarium
and it's clutched at the outside
and it's got some of its tentacles on the outside
and it's trying to get over
and
aquarium officials say
the octopus named Inc.
was not attempting a jailbreak
but simply learning to embrace his new home
with all eight arms
it was not an escape attempt
they said
well putting the lid back on
so good
all right so some things about name changes
and product placement
and stuff like that
oh yeah
so um
Aussie rules footballer Gary Hawking
changed his name by DePaul to Whiskers
one year
because he was paid a lot of money by then
so Tongvin Ruppistar Epitione
who changed his name to Paddy Power
and you can
you can change your name of your
your stadium and stuff
but it doesn't always work out
the MLS side Colorado Rapids
has changed their stadium
to Dick's Sporting Goods Park
but everyone calls it the Dick
yeah
and like changing your name by DePaul
as well I like all that kind of stuff
so there was a guy called Gary Brett
from Potter's Bar
Potter's Bar had changed his name to Potter's Bar
he changed his name to Mr Hong Kong Fui
okay
and he said I've loved Hong Kong Fui
since I was a boy
and always wanted to be named after him
I'm quite serious
I speak to a sad child
I'm quite serious about being known as Mr Fui
my wife was a bit upset
but she should be honored to be married
to a number one super guy
who's quicker than the human eye
but then there was a guy called Nigel Beil
who changed his name to Mr Toasted Teacake
and he said some people can't believe it
especially because I don't even like teacakes that much
just thought it was a nice name
it must be it must be so horrible
that if you love stupid names
that you've got to go to the
to the what's the name change
DePaul
and you must be in the queue going
okay this time it's just going to be Brian Smith
and you're saying hi to the guy in front of you
oh what are you changing your name to
oh Rainbow Sunshine Moonga
oh god damn it
and then you get home to your wife
she's like is it Brian Smith
it's ass like a dang dang
I couldn't help myself
it must be so hard if you love a name
at least you're now married to a number one super guy
there's a guy called Sean Hennessey
who changed his name to Nigel Bottomface
to win a bet with his friends
and he said my mum was furious
but at least I got a night out in Chelmsford
you're the sad life there
we're gonna have to move on but do you want to get
one last name
oh that's some five funny stuff on advertising
okay so the Churchill dog
as the one in the Fisher School Churchill at the start of this
back
the Churchill dog was initially a real bulldog
called Lucas
who had to be sacked after one advert
because he refused to hold a phone in his mouth
he refused
he was like oh no
oh we are gonna have to move on
so we move on to our final fact of the evening
and that is my fact
my fact this week is that the only
ancient Egyptian socks that we know of
all belonged to Tutankhamun
is that awesome
when they when he was when Howard Carter
went into the tomb
he found a lot of stuff
a lot of gold
a lot of walking sticks
and he found three pairs of socks
and what's amazing
is that up until finding these socks
there had been no depiction of socks
in ancient Egypt
whatsoever
and I can't believe that that wasn't the headline
they wore socks
also because he wore sandals
it means that he was a socks and sandal shirt
which is very exciting
do you normally have painted on the bottom of his sandals
this is cool
he had the faces of his enemies
painted on the bottom
so that wherever he walked
he would be crushing them into the dust
yes but except there was a lot of sand
so that would just be great branding
because you'd see the guy everywhere
that's like the ultimate marketing
try you Tutankhamun's enemy
um yeah they have that um
so there were some socks that I think
those weren't found intact
were they they were reconstructed
from the evidence that they had
but they're all the socks found intact
no no no they
sorry in in his tomb
they found three that were completely intact
and then they found three that weren't
but they think that they must have been socks
they were the other pairs
yeah so he actually had six pairs
but three didn't make the 3000 year period of time
as since past
there's a fact they also found the bottom of perfume
speaking of the 3000 year period of time
which still when they took the lid off
it still smelled
I think it smelled like
something rotten
oh no it smelled nice
it smelled like something like chamomile
or vanilla or something
oh that's 3000 years
um he was also buried with his own baby clothes
which I think is quite sweet
yeah yeah I wonder why
there was actually a few toys
weirdly there was a boomerang
yeah yeah
well they used them to hunt
and they used lassoes as well
did they
yeah yeah
cool isn't it
is he from Australia
yes
it's not a thing we did with America
where we thought it was India
it does sound like the outpack from yeah
wow
and he was buried with 413
what were called shabty figures
and these were little slaves
that he would take into the next life
because often people think that
if you were the slave of a pharaoh
and your pharaoh died
then you'd have to kill yourself
and be buried with him
or be buried alive with him
which is even worse
but that never happened
it was actually a little muddle
so I'll give you that you would do it
so
he was also buried with James
was telling me an erection
that was his confidence
yeah he um
he had a 90 degree erection
90 degree
and he's the only um
known pharaoh
as far as I know
who was buried that way
and no one really knows that
and James has studied the field extensively
there was a guy called George Glidden
who was going to unwrap a mummy
in front of a lot of people
he was a bit of a charlatan
but he did have a mummy
and he was going to unwrap them
and he said it was a princess
a princess mummy
and he claimed that he knew that
he knew her identity
who was
she was a daughter
an Egyptian priest
he knew that because he had
deciphered the hieroglyphics
on her sarcophagus
and then he unwrapped her
unwrapped her unwrapped her
in front of a load of people
and then they
they realized actually
that it was a man
and the princess had a rather large penis
that's where we get the photo
from the princess and the penis
and he
they
it was in boston this
and he explained that his error
was due to the poor handwriting
of the sarcophagus
a bad egyptologist
always blames the hieroglyphics
that's funny
um
have you heard of mummy pettigrew
mummy pettigrew was a guy
called thomas pettigrew
and he uh
he was
he just unrolled loads of mummies
all the time
he was an egyptologist
and
he unrolled 14 of them
and he would do a six-part lecture series
and he would always save the unrolling
for the very last lecture
in the series
to build up to it throughout it
and i just found one sentence
about it which i wanted to share
which is that pettigrew's dramatic
erotically-tinged unrollings
became so popular
that at one gathering
that the archbishop of canterbury
himself
got squeezed out of the room
that is a waste of study
and then later on
he was asked to turn
a victorian duke
into a mummy
there was a
the duke of howlton
was obsessed with mummies
and he said
will you mummify me
after i die
oh after he died
yeah yeah
um
and he did it
but unfortunately
he didn't fit in the sarcophagus he'd had
built
so they had to take off his feet
yeah
when they were excavating
toon coming's clothes
no actually this was later on
when they decided to recreate all his clothes
then the person who was recreating them
decided to tell her students
for the only way
that they could work out
exactly how he'd worn them
was by trying them all on himself
themselves
so the students of this archaeologist
got to just try and all toon coming's clothes
and they worked out
that something they thought was a headdress
was actually
apparently
these things to be worn
the arms
to form the wings of a falcon
um
that's what he went around with
but i don't know how you work that out
and it sounds a bit like
they were just pissing him out
and like
put a headdress on their arm
and went
he probably did
he was a very strange shape
they think he had
sorry too
sorry too
sorry too can come here
all right
um
they think he had a congenital
disease or something
because his
his hit measurements were extremely
loved
it was sort of out of proportion
with the rest of his body
and we don't know why
well much like
hate and wills
it was inbreeding
i'm talking about
the beer cuts
beer cuts
kato wills
yeah no
his um
his parents
were brother and sister
they
yeah
i really like the
so
when you were saying
the thing of
unwrapping the mummies
that was a massive craze
that the victorians
went through
where
they suddenly were just
digging up
lots of mummies
and using them
for virtually everything
railroads
used to use them
as fuel
they were just
that's not
i promise that's not for you
oh is that in america
they
oh okay
mark
mark trains said that they did
and um
we think he was taking the mickey
oh okay
he is a
wait so how about
the time traveler guy
when taking arcus court
that's not a
oh man
i've got some terrible news
being about philip trans bogus journey
all right
how about mummy brown
is that true
that's true
i think mummy brown is true
mummy brown is amazing
mummy brown
was if you haven't heard of it
is a um
it was a
it was a paint
that
that artist would use
it was ground up mummy
that would lead to a brown
and they would use them
on uh
on their paintings
and a lot of people
didn't they just thought
it was a cute name
and then someone explained
no it's an actual mummy
and
a lot of famous artists
actually got quite disturbed
by that and
and buried
the rest of the paint
giving it an honorable burial
because they just thought
well they did
there's a lot of stuff
about curses going on
back then
and they didn't want that
but yeah you get paint
i can't believe that
it's extraordinary
yeah and they used it as like
a panacea as well
that they they would um
use this mummy
and then they would take it
as a medicine for any illness
yeah
i think they used it
uh people in
beads used it until the 20th century
to heal bruises
really
which is amazingly
capitalier
considering
it's just a bruise
yeah why do you need to
you don't need to heal a bruise
you could get imitation
mummy as well
if you didn't have the real thing
and so you would
here's the ingredients
take the carcass of a young man
some say red-haired
not dying of a disease
let it lie for 24 hours
in clean water
cut the flesh into pieces
and add maire
a little aloe
and then bite for 24 hours
in the spirit of wine and turpentine
it doesn't sound artificial to me
it smells real
yeah it's real but not old
okay yeah
i was looking at
very interesting
burial sites
and burial rituals
but so the vikings
um
they were buried on ships
obviously but not at sea
and i read a really interesting
theory that
because they were often
buried with decapitated animals
so the um
osberg osberg
Viking ship
which is one of the most famous
Viking ships that's been on earth
it was this woman
she was buried with 10 decapitated horses
and i think a couple of decapitated dogs
and they think this is because
they because they have the ships on land
but to get to the underworld
you had to sail
it was in order to create a river
a convenient river of blood
from your decapitated horses
on which you could sail
to the underworld
wow yeah
grotesque
um and also
so the first evidence of a ritual burial
is from 28 000 years ago
of like a burial where people were
sort of buried with items
and it seemed like they believed in an
afterlife
and it was two young boys
and they were buried with mammoth tasks
over two years long
but they'd been straightened
and we don't know how they straightened
them
so they were
we think they boiled them
and then straightened the mammoth tasks
into
they were four feet long
and just straight tasks
i changed my will as soon as i go
that's what i want
and i'll tend to decapitated horses
and straightened the mammoth tasks
i read a thing that i want as well
for death
which was that
um
i was reading about
that's weird when you read
like someone's death
you're like
oh i want that
they sounded really cool
um
utzi
who was the um
the oldest
ice man
that we found
he was made of ice
he was he was
i don't know what period he was from
but um
he was complete
and they found everything on him
they found a bag
which had magic mushrooms in it
they found
he had shoes
he had socks
he had socks
but what's amazing is
is that they found him complete
and what they don't point out is
that they have found other people
who are complete
but utzi's a rare case
because he was just a whole
pink
sorry
utzi
utzi
not the q and a
but thank you though
again
these are the kind of heckles
at jongler's
it's like
you're shit
our crowds
utzi dickhead
did i say it right
utzi
uh
so utzi
was found as a full
a full body
but then i read about
these other deaths
where they found other people
and basically because of the way that
um
that tectonics
and just the way that things shift
they found full bodies
but people have been splattered
and cartoonified
you know at the end of roger rabbit
where he splats
and he goes into long form
they found people that are like
just fully like huge humans
in a huge world
like a book of pressed flowers
yeah
like some kind of pressed human bit
and that's how i want to go
which looks great
look at me
um
we're we're gonna have to wrap up
we've got uh
only a couple more minutes
is there anything else
you guys want to add
one third of the world's socks
are made in a single city in china
the way
yeah way
that's how it's called
but they get
one third
they come in pairs
handy
what is one third of six
oh
we are gonna have to wrap up
so i'm just gonna end over that
thank you so much everyone
those are all of our folks
if you want to hear more from our show
we've got plenty online
if you want to get in contact with any of us
about the things that we've said
our pronunciations
you can get me on that
Shrigerland on twitter
james
egg shaped andy
andrew hunter m
and anna
you can email podcast at qi.com
okay so uh
so that's it
we'll be back again next week
with another episode
from soho theater
thank you so much for listening
thank you so much guys
for being here
we'll see you again next week
have a good night
one last week
we're gonna go upstairs
and get very drunk
if you'd like to join us
that would be awesome
yeah hang around for a bit