No Such Thing As A Fish - 79: No Such Thing As A Sad High Five
Episode Date: September 18, 2015Live from The Edinburgh Festival, Dan, James, Andy and Anna discuss Scrabble's unlikely champion, why you shouldn't pick a fight a hairy frog & all the latest in itch news. ...
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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 Edinburgh Fringe Festival. My name is Dan Schreiber. I'm joined
once again by the three other elves. Please welcome to the stage it's Andy Murray, James
Harkin and Anna Chazinski. And once again we have gathered round with our four favourite
facts from the last seven days and in no particular order here we go. Starting with my fact this
week, my fact this week is that the current French scrabble champion doesn't speak a word
of French. This was in the news not too long ago so I feel like some people know it but
I just found that absolutely amazing. Did he just randomly play letters which all turned
out to be accepted in the French scrabble dictionary? He memorised the French scrabble
dictionary and then he just used that and even in the finals he told the French guy,
that's not a word. Yeah, it's an amazing character. His name is Nigel Richards, he's from New Zealand.
I read an article about him on shortlist.com entitled why Nigel Richards is better than Lionel
Messi. Well they do call him the Tiger Woods Scrabble don't they? Because we should stress
he is not known to be an adulterer. I read a thing, a guy who's written a book about
scrabble, he's a sort of scrabble expert, he's called Stefan Fatsis and he said, right
now Richards is, I'm quoting here, like Tiger Woods at his peak and then Tiger saying, I
think I'll also take up tennis and then winning Wimbledon the next year. Wow. Do you think
in golf people call Tiger Woods the Nigel Richards of golf? Yes. That's what happens.
I saw an interview with him on YouTube and they asked what the secret is and he said,
I'm not sure there is a secret, it's just a matter of learning all the words. It's not
secret anymore. And apparently he's read the 1,953 page Chambers dictionary five times
and memorized every single word in the dictionary. Wow. Apparently you're at more of an advantage,
scrabble players say, when you don't speak the language that you're playing in. I bet
it's the French who said that, is it? No, it's apparently it's more about memorizing
the coding of it, the mathematics of it. You look at it like you look at a, I don't know,
a big... I mean, certainly what you do need to do is know all the two-letter words because
they're the most useful ones and most of them aren't really real words. They're just like
two letters put together. Like really? Like really? Like a common two-letter word? I think
it's the most common two-letter word? Yeah. It's the most commonly used word in all of
scrabble. It's chi, which is about QI. Do you want to hear a move that Richard's made in 1998?
Yeah. You do. Right. It's 1998. I've set the scene. So he was pretty new at the time to
competitive scrabble and he had C-D-H-L-R-N and then a blank tile. Children. There wasn't
an E on the board and he could have played that and used up all seven letters and got
a 50-point bonus. Yeah, that's... Like an idiot. Oh. Yeah. Instead, he found two O's and an
E, which were all in a line on the board, not connected to each other and played all of
his letters to make the ten-letter Chlorodyne. Oh, my God. Yeah. That is like a dream because
you always want to connect all of those vertical columns but it never works. Yeah. Wow. And
he only learned the game at the age of 28 and his mother introduced it to him and she said,
this is her words, I said, I know a game you're not going to be very good at because you can't
spell very well and you weren't very good at English at school. Unfortunately, he is a mathematical
genius. So you can see all the... He just sees it. Yeah. But another scrabble move that's been
made was in the first ever World Scrabble Championships in the early 90s. There was a
winner but the person who was runner up, the reason he lost was because one of the last words
he played and sometimes, you know, you've only got a few letters left, you take a pun on a word
that you hope exists because there are lots of weird words. And the last word he played was
the word Smale has in snail with an M in the hope that that could get him some points and it
couldn't but now that's... Smale is an anagram of another word which gets points. Males? Yeah. So
he could have played males and he lost the Scrabble Championship because he played Smale instead.
What a dick. What an idiot. That's awful. He's very much the today's Tiger Woods of Scrabble.
Do you guys know about the inventor of Scrabble? He was called Butts. Yes, Alfred Butts, which is
just a lovely surname. Alfred Mothra Butts was his, that was his middle name, not his nickname,
right? Yeah, and he only revealed a few days before he died. He looked so quite old. He was 93,
I think. He said that he was he was a bad speller and everyone was like, that's hilarious. And then
he died was less hilarious. But he on his tombstone, it said RPI. So he invented Scrabble. He called
it it originally. I had another name for it and then someone boarded off him and turned it into
Scrabble. So then we use this word. And so he had that whole thing of the difficult second album,
you know, and he actually released the game and it was called... Oh, sorry, I've lost it now. I know
what it was called. Yeah, what's it called? Alfred's Other Game. That's it. The follow-up to Scrabble
was called Alfred's Other Game. No one knew who Alfred was. It's incredibly hard to know anything
about it because no one's ever bought it, as far as I can tell, except four reviewers who reviewed
it online, all of whom say it's like Solitaire, but it involves two players, but the two players
don't interact with each other at all. So I think it's basically two Solitaire sets and you're just
supposed to sit next to someone while you do them. Right. Yeah, he wasted a lot of his talent on the
first one, I think. So he decided the points for Scrabble based on he studied the front page of
The New York Times over a series of months, didn't he? And then logged the frequency of certain letters
in The New York Times that appeared and decided the point scores based on that. So a lot of people
now think we should change it. I wonder if he counted the letters in New York Times, which appeared
every single day. That is such a good point. Yeah. And that's why why isn't worth as much as it should
be. Yeah. Yeah. That's probably why I'm so bad at Scrabble. Yeah, and actually, like, if you're
playing it in another language, it's not just the words, it's also the letters are worth different
amounts. So that must be pretty hard. In Polish, a Z is worth one point. Although a Z with an
accent on it is worth 10 points. Really? Yeah, that's weird. In Ukrainian, an apostrophe is worth
10 points. But in Armenian, the board is 17 by 17 instead of 15 by 15, because they have longer
words. And they also have loads of letters that I've never heard of. So for one point, the letters
Jeck and Ken. For two points, the letter Men. For three points, the letter Ben. And for four
points, the letter R. I assume that's how you pronounce it. It's R-R-A. Well, did you see that
grr has been added to the official Scrabble dictionary in the last update, which was made in
2011? The words grr, thang and blingy have been added to the Scrabble dictionary. You can now play
those. There's this huge war between the Americans and everyone else, because... Classic war there,
lovely. So, we'll, as you guys know, use the OSPD, the official Scrabble players dictionary,
when we're playing Scrabble, and we've actually combined that with the OSW, the official Scrabble
word list. But the US refuses to do that and keeps on using its own dictionary, the tournament word
list, which is a completely different list of words. I mean, there's probably some overlap.
I mean, as long as both have thang, I'm happy. But yeah, people get very angry about this. Well,
they don't like swear words in the American one. That's a big thing. Yeah, they've banned all swear
words and ESPN decided to put the Scrabble championships onto their channel. But they had
a thing where they said, these are the lists. I think it was about 170 words that they said,
you can't say this on television. You can do this in normal Scrabble competition,
but you can't do this on television. But so, what they did was the first 30 rounds of the
competition, they could use all the rude words that were banned. And then when it got to the
televised bit, they couldn't do it anymore. That's pretty bad that they were allowed it for half of
the tournament and then not afterwards. Because what about someone like me who only ever plays
rude words in Scrabble? I'm going to be nailing it halfway through, and then I'm going to be
absolutely useless. I was on TV as well. I will be using a lot of those words, but not on the
board. I'm going to have to move this on in a few minutes. So if anyone's got anything else,
there's a very cool thing about Scrabble in Senegal, where it's an official sport,
and they take it so seriously. And Senegal hosted the French Scrabble World Championship
in 2008. So this was before Richards won. But the Senegalese government composed an official song
to mark the occasion. And I read this in an article about it, that in Senegal, you can buy a set of
Scrabble on most street corners, which I can't quite believe, but I want to believe. And I'm
never going to go to Senegal in case it turns out not to be true. It comes free with your bag of crack.
Some Scrabble tiles. I was on some online chat forums, just separate to work. And
it was one of those, I was just taking a break. And it was, you know, it was like a Yahoo!
answers thing or something. And it was a parent who said, this is literally what it read,
my seven-year-old just swallowed a Scrabble tile. No, wait, it's a banana-grams tile,
he tells me. Anyone have any experience with this? I mean, it is exactly the same,
a banana-grams tile to a Scrabble tile. I guess she meant to specify not.
I would probably just like make another tile out of cardboard and use that.
Okay, it's time for fact number two, and that is James Harkin. Okay, my fact this week is that the
world's only venomous frogs headbutt their enemies to death.
They're very little known species from Millwall.
And you googled violent football team, didn't you? You've got no idea what you just said.
And I'll never go in case it turns out to be true.
I think that's very safe. So yeah, you get a lot of frogs which are poisonous,
which means if you eat them, you would be sick. But these are venomous, so they stick the poison
into the body of the prey. And they are called aparasphenodon brunoi and chorifomantis greening
and they have really flexible necks and really pointy skulls and they have poison on their skulls.
Actually, a single gram of venom from the first one of those frogs would be enough to kill 80
people. Wow. So they're proper hardcore and they're only little guys as well.
Wow. Have you heard of the hairy frog? No. So the hairy frog does this thing that when it's
getting into a fight, it will break its toe bones to snap them, which is always intimidating to see
someone doing that when you're in a fight with them, when they start breaking themselves
before they go for you. So they'll just snap their toes off and then they push their toe bones
through their skin like wolverine and they just come out and they go, do you want some? And then
that's the most aggressive fighting I've ever heard of. Andy, I don't know if you know this is
exactly what they do in Millwall. Also, sea cucumbers, just while we're on the kind of fighting
defense thing, they shoot their internal organs out through their asshole. So sorry, Andy hates
when they say words like that. That's why you two never play Scrabble together.
Yeah, that's that. Imagine that shooting bits of your body out through your ass. That's quite
crazy. They can regrow them afterwards. They can regrow them. And the idea is that the predators
will eat the stuff that's come out and they won't eat the cucumber themselves. But actually,
they also have fish that live inside the rainices called slender pearlfish. So that must be pretty
bad for those fish who are just sitting in a nice little home and suddenly everything gets ejected
out. A nice little home. Oh, we've got it great, haven't we? Look at our anus. We've got a nice two
up two down anus. We're really hoping to move to a bigger anus in the country.
So the zoologists were in Ecuador recently and they spotted this frog that was obviously a new
species because it was like covered in spikes that they'd never seen before. So they were like,
this is really exciting. And they spotted it ran away. So they spent years and years in Ecuador
looking for this frog again. And they eventually found it, I think this year or last year. And
they got it and they put it in a jar overnight. We'll deal with that tomorrow, you know, classified
or whatever came downstairs in the morning and all of its spikes had gone. And so the zoologists,
the females zoologist said, I thought I must have just picked up the wrong frog. So I was very
disappointed. But I just, you know, she said I laid down some moss so it would be comfortable in there
and then I decided to take it back out into the wild the next day. And then the next day the spikes
were back and it became apparent that this is a shapeshifting frog, the first known shapeshifting
amphibian. Do we know if they can turn into princes? I read that in a scientific manual.
Yeah. There was when Disney released The Princess and the Frog, more than 50 children were
hospitalized with salmonella from trying to kiss frogs. Wow. Just play bananas with them like
normal, much better. In 2008, some scientists found a frog with no lungs. So this is really,
really cool. It's called Barbarula Calimantanensis. Don't write it. And it hadn't been dissected
before because they only had two specimens of it and they didn't want to destroy the only two
specimens they had. So nobody suspected that it wouldn't have lungs. And then they found another
one and they thought, well, let's dissect it. And sucks to be the third frog. The early bird catches
the worm, the second mouse gets the gene, the third frog is dissected. But it gets all its oxygen
through its skin. It's so cool. And the really, really cool thing is that it actively threw away
its own lungs. And then it used to have lungs and then it thought, I don't need these. And because
it saves space on lungs in its body, it's a bit slimmer and flatter. So it has a bigger surface
area so it can absorb more oxygen proportional to its size. Well, that's like there's the
scrotum frog, which does quite a similar thing. Yeah, the scrotum frog is called that because
it just has incredibly floppy skin. So it's got these really tiny lungs that can't really take
much, but they've got way too much skin. And so it's loads of surface area. And so it looks like
a scrotum because obviously far too much skin is kind of gross. But it does help it respire.
Can I do some stuff on headbutting? Yes, yeah, yeah. So a Welsh police force has trained its dogs
to disable their targets by leaping at them and delivering a flying headbutt rather than biting
them. And this is because people were being bitten by police dogs and kind of getting compensation
or whatever. And they thought, well, a better way of doing it is just having them attacking
the people with their heads. I read that if cats headbutt you, this is what the scientist report
I saw said, that when cats headbutt you, it's the equivalent of them giving you a high five.
What? And that's science, you say? Yeah, that's from my way. They just come over and they're just
going, yeah, man, you're all right. That's a loose definition of the equivalent of a high five.
I mean, so they rub against you to express affection. Because why can't I take it up with
science? High fives can signify so much. Joy, sorrow, affection, sorrowful high five. That's
the last time I take you to a funeral. Just one more thing about headbutts. Bedfordshire
Council, apparently, according to this newspaper article I read, they banned local artists from
displaying paintings behind glass. And there are a few different reasons they gave, but one of them
was that someone might headbutt a picture and cut themselves. Who's going around art galleries
headbutting pictures? The Millwall fans day out to the National Gallery. I'm sorry I even mentioned
a Millwall fan. Actually, have you read that the headbutting world record has recently been set,
recently been reset and beaten, and by quite some way. Wait, wait, wait, what to do what?
Oh, so this is what you have to do. You have to crack walnuts with your head. And so the record
previously was 44 walnuts. So you lay walnuts out on a table and you're just bash, bash, bash.
44 walnuts held by an American. And then this Pakistani guy called Mohammed Rashid
has reset the record and he cracked 155 walnuts within the space of a minute.
A minute? One minute, yeah. He's the Tiger Woods of competitive headbutting.
I'd just like to say that Mr. Rashid is not an adulterer as far as we know.
That's what, two and a half a second? Is that right? Can that be right?
But is he smashing a big bunch of them or are they all in a line? No, no, they're in a line.
You've got to do one at a time. Wow. Yeah. I couldn't do that with a hammer.
No, I know. That's why you're not even anywhere near the competition.
That's why I failed to place. A, turned up with a hammer. B, did not break record.
We're going to have to move on in a minute. Any last before we go?
Just, did you hear, do you remember reading in 2005 about the exploding frog freak out in Hamburg?
It's so weird. So suddenly this started happening in Hamburg.
Thousands of frogs started exploding and spattering their end trails all over the streets.
And their end trails would spatter up to like a meter wide.
And people didn't know why they were doing this.
And there were these weird theories flying around about what was going on.
So some people thought frogs were deciding to commit mass suicide for no apparent reason.
Someone else thought they'd caught a virus from race horses.
Go on, James. Just wondering where the horse racing theory came from.
Yeah, the horse exploding scandal in Hamburg the week before was.
Can't believe I didn't mention that. So what actually happened?
So what happened was, it turned out it was crows.
So crows had figured out that you can't eat the whole toad because its skin is poisonous.
And so, you know, you die. But you can pierce the skin.
And the only good bit of a frog, any, you know, food kind of so knows is the liver anyway.
You suck the liver out. And then what happens is the liver of these toes is what's keeping all
their other organs in. And so they end up like they puff up in defense and all their organs
start exploding out of their body. Wow. Yeah. But the crows have a nice bit of foie gras
and aren't poisoned. So it depends who's side you're on.
Okay, we're going to move on to our next act. Time for fact number three. And that is Chazinsky.
Yeah, my fact is that when the film All Quiet on the Western Front was released in Germany,
Goebbels went to see it at the cinema. And within 10 minutes, he'd released stink bombs,
itching powder, and white mice in order to scare everyone out of the cinema.
So this was fun guy Goebbels. Everyone's favorite clown.
So he did it 10 minutes in. He started doing it at the start, but he wrote in his diary.
He kept 10,000 pages of diary entries, which my God. And one of his pages related how he started
doing it. And within 10 minutes, the whole cinema was in chaos. People were running away itching
themselves, you know, fainting with the smell. They really didn't like that movie, did they?
Because it was the fact that the German soldiers died in a not brave way and the French soldiers
did die in a more brave way. So he got banned. But then ironically, in Poland, it also got banned
because it was pro-German. Yeah. So Germany banned it from being anti-German and Poland banned it
from being pro-German. Well, it's pretty crazy as well. I was reading the IMDB page for it today.
And in the little trivia bit, they were saying that a lot of the extras in the movie were actual
German soldiers from World War One who had moved over to America, who they said, we're doing this
thing and we just want to know about how you would march and so on in the uniforms. Can we have a
better look? And they all said, I'd love to be in the film. And so a lot of the German soldiers
in it are actual German soldiers from World War One. Pretty crazy. Yeah. Pretty bold casting.
So the intervention, there was kind of, I think he had a lot of brown shirts or the essay.
It was the brown shirts, yeah. To disrupt the, yeah. To freak people out. Yeah. And then it was,
I think it was banned shortly afterwards in Germany. It was banned, yes. Before the Nazis
came to power, I think it was 19... Yeah, it was. It was 1930. 1930. But you know, they were already
a thing. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So yeah, he brought the brown shirts in and it was banned. And the
writer of the original book, who was called... Remark. Remark had to leave the country and then
he was invited. So he was told he had to leave because he'd written this unpatriotic book and
turned it into an unpatriotic film. And then Goebbels obviously rethought that and wrote him
a few months later and said, actually, no, no, honestly, come back. Do come back. But at this
point, you know, people were starting to get the hang of the whole Nazi's not-being-good-guys idea.
And so Remark wrote back and said, what, 65 million people want to get out of the country and I'm
supposed to come back of my own free will, not on your life. And he never returned, which is
probably a good move. He was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize for that. Who was? Remark for the film.
So it's quite cool. You can go on the Nobel Peace Prize website and look at all the nominations that
were more than 50 years ago when they'd been released. And that saved me in 1931 that he was
nominated for writing All Quiet on the Western Front. Also, the government of Finland was nominated.
I don't know why. Yeah. Just really peace-loving guys back then. Yeah. Not like now when we're all
living under the Finnish jackboot. I have a few things about censor shape and stuff.
There was a British council who banned the life of Brian, even though they had no cinemas in their
boundaries. And in 1999, the censors in Bournemouth asked to see a sexually explicit French film
with a view to banning it, even though no cinema had expressed any interest in showing it.
Wasn't the first ever thing not banned but censored in the film industry in this country
was the cheese board. Sorry, it's not an actual cheese board. It's like a group of people who
talk about cheese a lot. And there was a movie that came out where they showed, I think it was a
close-up on cheese and all the bacteria and stuff. So they asked for it to be censored. And it was
censored. It was the first ask and get of censorship in cinemas. What a movie though. It sounds great.
Can you imagine ordering the cheese board at a restaurant and you get 12 blokes who just love
cheese delivered to your table. I wish I had had the pudding. On Monty Python's Life of Brian,
because it was banned in lots of different local boroughs in the UK, as James says,
and in Thanet, in Kent, the ban was overturned and there were local adverts placed in the
newspaper saying, have you seen Monty Python's Life of Brian? Thanet District Council have,
because they'd had to see it in order to overturn the ban.
I think every film should be advertised. I was looking at pranking and in the 19th century
electricity-based pranks were really fashionable because they just discovered how to how to sort
of wield electricity. There were things on sale like electric hammocks you could buy. You lie in
a hammock and electrocute someone. That's quite fun. Electric carpets, so someone's walking over
your carpet and then you could, it's the same idea. I read one that was called the wireless trick
telephone. Did you hear about this one? Okay, the wireless trick telephone. This is the description
for it. When the candidate attempts to answer this phone, a 32-caliber blank cartridge will explode
with a loud report and at the same time white powder will be blown with a strong blast from the
transmitter into his face. That's a full-on prank. And then check this one out. The pledge
altar, right? This, if you bought it, is an altar. It's the size of like, we've all got altars in our
home. Exactly. So a very practical prank that you would almost do daily. This is for Vickers
making pranks. It must be right. Who's using the pledge altar? Okay, well let's picture it as there
that it is in the church. This is what happens. This is the description. The candidate kneels
before the altar in a darkened room when low up before him jumps a skeleton with large illuminated
glaring eyes. A blank cartridge is exploded. A stream of water hits him in the face. An electric
shock is shot through his knees. April Fool's Day, pretty wild in the 1800s. That's amazing.
The original thing was about itching powder, wasn't it? Yeah. And in World War Two, the
British put itching powder into German uniforms to try and... I think this is in the early days
when we weren't sure we wanted to go all out. We weren't sure we wanted to pull the full pledge
altar trick on the Germans. Yeah, they called it itch krieg, I believe, in the business. No,
they did call it that. No way! That's amazing. But how do we get access to German uniforms to put
itching powder in them? They infiltrated laundries. So they had members of the resistance in Germany
who would go into laundries and then, you know, well, it's obvious from there. But another thing
that happened, so in Norway, the Norwegian resistance when Norway was taken by the Nazis,
their resistance coated condoms in itching powder and sold them to the Nazis. Wow. Which I think
caused problems. Yeah. Be very stimulating for a second. You're so positive about everything
that happened. You know the seven year rich, it's a saying for after seven years in a relationship,
it all goes sour or whatever. It seems to be a thing that a lot of scientists do studies on
to see when the actual time is, it's not seven years, it's another time. And obviously the
newspapers pick up on it. There was an article in the Daily Telegraph a couple of years ago that
said it's actually a four year rich, not a seven year rich. And the Daily Mail seems to go for this
almost weekly. They have had various articles over the last few years that say actually,
rather than a seven year rich, humans have either a 12 year rich, a five year rich, an 11 year rich,
a 25 year rich, a three year rich, an 11 month itch. Or the most recent one I found was a two
year, six month and 25 day itch. I think someone has been supplying the Mail HQ with these condoms
describing. It's been a very exciting few years for itch science, I think. I've seen
number of headlines, we've cracked a lot of mysteries in the last few years. 2011 they worked
out why they've worked out that itching is contagious. So that's a big moment. And in 2014
they've worked out that scratching makes you want to scratch more. So when you say contagious,
do you mean from one person to another? Yeah, so if I if you start itching, I'll be like oh that
looks good. And then I'll just do it. We've already established your itching fetish.
The only reason Dan knows so much about itch science in the last few years is he subscribes to
itch monthly. It's good. You know in cinemas, I don't know if anyone here knows about them,
but I'd certainly never heard this. Cinemas used to have crying rooms. Do you know about that?
Yeah, I know. So immediately I thought it was for any sort of like Millwall fans go I'm not gonna
cry here and then suddenly the notebook is really getting to them and they're just like
just I'm gonna be gone for a minute and they go into this room. It turns out it's for babies.
It's mothers with babies, they would go in there if it was crying so they could continue to watch
the movie and it would be just a soundproof room and they would have speakers coming in but they
could watch it from in there and not have to miss the movie themselves. Or fathers, that was really
sexist of me, fathers and and babies. That sounds like such a fantastic thing. I quite like the
idea of just being individual booths for everyone so I don't have to be near anyone else in the
cinema. I think that's called just your bedroom. Or the cedar parts of Soho. There are places that
you can do that in. We're gonna have to move on. They're crying. Okay, it's time for our final
fact of the show and that is Andrew Hunter Murray. My fact this week is that defunct sports from the
early 20th century include archery golf, boxing on horseback and competitive flagpole sitting.
This is from a book I read recently and it's such a good book. I loved it so much. It's called
Fox Tossing Octopus Wrestling and Other Forgotten Sports by Edward Brookhitching and it is electric.
It is sort of this list of incredible sports that we've forgotten about so.
An archery golf just to confirm is archery hyphen golf not archery comma golf.
Right, because we still have those. Ah yes yes yes this is where you have golfers and
archers on the same course at the same time. Because I read an article where there was one
person the archer was playing against the golfer. Was that the standard way you'd have an archer
versus a golfer? If you archers take a ten point handicap against golfers because obviously they
got a bow and arrow. So the archers fire their shots and everyone tees off from the same spot
except the archers are firing towards the hole. Don't want to get old technical.
And so for archers the hole is something like a tennis ball balanced on a tin can. You have to hit
it and you have three different kinds of arrow that you use. You have a light one for the first
drive and then a really heavy one for the putting. Yeah and people played it until the 1970s. It was
a sport. Sounds great. How about horse boxing? Talk us through that. Is that... Boxing against a
horse? Yeah no. It's two guys sitting on horseback and boxing each other and you lose if the other
guy knocks you off your horse and you're unable to get back on within 10 seconds. Well it's similar
to chess boxing right. People like to inject boxing I think into other sports to make other
sports more exciting. Like chess boxing where you play a round of chess and then you do a round
of boxing and I think the winner is the person either who manages to checkmate the other person
or to knock them unconscious. It doesn't sound fair that does it? Because I'm okay at chess but
probably we get knocked out immediately in boxing so you have to get checkmate pretty fast.
Well that's you've got to be multi-talented and also you probably get increasingly worse at chess
the more you are concussed. Yeah but then the other person doesn't get worse at boxing the more
I put him closer to checkmate. If anything it'll only make him angrier. Just on the horse boxing
thing. You had to wear boxing gloves obviously because they played by Queensbury rules but that
made it very hard to grip the reins so most of the round involved lining your horse up next to
the other guy's horse. Really hard to do with boxing gloves on. So a few other of the sports
that was in that book I did have a look through the book and it's amazing. Ice tennis which seems
really cool is literally what it says it is. Phone booth stuffing and the record is 25 just
if anyone wants to go against it. Yeah and flagpole sitting that's my favorite one. Oh yeah yeah
because they produced huge celebrities off the back of it. Honestly so there was one guy in
particular called Alvin Shipwreck Kelly. So no one's quite sure why he's called Shipwreck other
than he claimed to be involved in five Shipwrecks. He claimed to have been on the Titanic. Yeah
but people aren't sure about that because the passenger records seem to not indicate him. Yes
yeah. I don't think you'd let someone called Shipwreck on the Titanic. He probably gave him a
false name. John Iceberg Smith. Welcome on board. You're all good mate. Nice to see you.
But Paul sitting genuinely was I think a proper fad in the 1920s and 30s in America. People were
really into it and constantly breaking records for it and so I was looking into the the British
newspaper archive during that time and we really disapproved of it. Like every single article that
references Paul sitting in America talks about this degrading exhibition has now reached the dangerous
stage. So basically I mean the competition is you just sit at the top of a pole for as long as you
possibly can until it gets uncomfortable and then you come back down. I always thought poles would be
quite spiky at the top. They often had a platform. I mean I don't know which one is that different.
Really really tiny you know. Yeah but you know.
Grosen balls guys. 71 hours was the record in the Dundee courier that was reported.
Well Shipwreck Kelly supposedly sat on it for 49 days and one hour. Yeah that's good. Yeah that's
pretty amazing. It's very much the Tiger Woods. He did a 28 city tour of sitting on poles and he
did a tour and he charged people with roof access so that they could see him at the top of his pole
so you bought tickets to the roof of buildings and you could watch him doing it. He did it all
through his life. It's a bit David Blaney isn't it. Yeah exactly. Yeah and he was sleeping obviously
because he would have to sleep a bit. He would cut holes into the side of the flagpole and put his
fingers in there and then if he slept and he started to sag right down it would hurt his fingers
and he'd sort of you know stay up there like that. Yeah keep him up there. It's an odd career choice
isn't it. He died you know broke many years after the glory days. Yeah exactly his career went downhill.
He got hit by a car and so he died from being hit by this car and they found on him a scrapbook
of his life and it was called the title was the luckiest fool on earth. Yeah. Yeah I want to know
the name of this book was octopus something and fox what's fox tossing. You have an arena right
and you get men and women lined up opposite each other and you're all holding long long
strips of cloth loose and slack on the ground. You release a load of foxes into the arena
when they run over the bit that you're holding you and your partner pull it taught and the fox
flies into the air. That was a genuine sport that the aristocracy played in the 17th century in Europe
and the fun was in seeing the foxes die. The fun was in seeing the foxes fly through the air.
I think that's biased reporting. Well we're not all as wholesome as you Anna. I read an article
about that and the end of the article said it was not unknown for the terrified animals to turn on
the tosses. There was a spot in ancient Egypt called fisherman's jousting. It was really popular
and you would basically get people in boats and they would joust against each other trying to
knock each other off the boat and it took place on the Nile but of course the worst thing about
the Nile is it's full of crocodiles and because the crocodiles were sacred it was illegal to
fight back if that came anywhere near. You're being big trouble mister if you fight back against
the crocodile that's eating you. What legal sanction exactly can be worth. It's true it's
a very much a no-win situation. Do you know the national sport of Afghanistan? No. Is goat
dragging. Buzkashi which is played in countries across Central Asia but it's like polo but with
instead of a ball a headless goat. So the goat's been stied already and you've removed the head.
George's died already once you've removed the head. I know I said that in the the right order I
think. It died then you removed the head and then you have to drag it towards a goal and then
throw it through a goal. I don't know why you'd use a goat instead of a ball. Namely they're
shortened balls but that's the national sport of Afghanistan they love it. Well we would have
used a pig splatter for soccer back in the old days. Not an entire pig though. No. It's much
more unwieldy. A mill wall apparently they do though. I don't know if you know about that.
Can I tell you a bit more about flag poles? Yeah. So I think the all-time champion of
flag pole sitting was a saint called Simeon Stylites who lived up a pole for 36 years
and he started with a flag pole six feet off the ground. Sorry not a flag pole but just a
little platform on a pole and then he went to a higher one until eventually he was 60 feet up in
the air. Wow. He lived up there and I read a book about early Christianity about this guy and as it
says what was he doing? There are lots of theories as to why he did it. Either he found the crowds
who approached him asking for wisdom and advice too exhausting or he I read one theory that he
wanted to be physically closer to Christ because Christ is in the sky or he wanted like just a
more spartan existence than if you get in a monastery and his Wikipedia page says it has been
stated that as he seemed to be unable to avoid escaping the world horizontally he may have thought
to attempt to try to escape it vertically. Nobody says what he did with his poo though
because you'd have to drop it off wouldn't you? He just threw it, held it at those irritating people
constantly asking him for advice down at the bottom because he still has followers doesn't he?
I think his most well-known followers guy called Maxim Kavtaradze and he's a 59 year old monk
and he's been living on a stone pillar in Georgia and he comes down once a week
but he spends basically his entire life up on top of this pillar. He climbs his 131 foot ladder.
He has to have staff who pull by a pulley system his food and supplies up to him so you know these
people need to be well staffed and yeah he drops down twice a week to give some advice to his
following masses and then he pops back up onto the pillar and hangs out there. What a good man.
We're gonna have to wrap up in a sec so have we got anything throw in before we go? The current
sitting up a poll competition record is held by a poll that's all. His name is Daniel Baraniuk
and he is from Poland. 196 days for fans who aren't. Okay we are gonna have to wrap up that is it
that is all of our facts thank you so much for listening. If you'd like to get in contact with
any of us about the things we've said over the course of this podcast we can all be found on
Twitter. I'm on at Shriverland, Andy at Andrew Hunter M, James at Eggshapes, Chazinski. You can
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of our previous episodes so you can go listen to them there. We're gonna be back again next week.
Thank you so much for being here guys really appreciate it. Thanks for listening. We'll see
you again next week. Goodbye!