No Such Thing As A Fish - 92: No Such Thing As A Frozen Chicken Haunting
Episode Date: December 18, 2015Live from the Up The Creek Comedy Club in Greenwich, Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss coughing giraffes, naked Roman ghosts, and why we should stop punching glass. ...
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Hello and welcome to another episode of None of Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast
this week coming to you from the Up the Creek Comedy Club in Greenwich. My name is Dan Shriver
and please welcome to the stage is the three regulars Anna Czazinski, James Harkin and Andy Murray.
And once again we have gathered around the microphones with our four favorite facts from
the last seven days and in no particular order here we go. Starting with you, James Harkin.
Okay, my fact this week is that there is only a one in eight hundred thousand chance that nobody
will cough during this podcast recording. How are those odds looking?
Yeah, so there's a recent study done. I saw this on the improbable website and it was by a
Professor Andreas Wagner from the University of Hanover and it was called Why Do People Not Cough
in Concerts, the Economics of Concerts Etiquette. And he basically found out the the probability
that a certain number of people would cough and I kind of extrapolated his data into the
number of people who are here tonight and got it completely wrong. I did hear genuine coughs,
right? There was one. No, we put the idea in their minds now. Yeah, I have an unbearable urge to
cough. I'm not very suggestible, but this could really have spoiled the entire podcast.
So I read a different report that suggested that people actively try to cough more when they go
to classical concerts. Yeah, what? Yeah, they find themselves just wanting to. Well, I knew it,
that's so annoying. Why are they doing that all the time? I don't know. I mean, hang on,
you haven't looked into what their motivation is. I was kind of hoping one of you guys had,
it was at the top of the Google search, I figured you guys would read it. Well,
luckily enough, I did look into that. Told you.
There's a few different thoughts. One is that you might be showing displeasure to the performance
and you'll think it's a bit like, I'm not happy, I'm just going to cough. Yeah, great bar, chummo.
Yeah, and the other thing is maybe you are actively suppressing the idea that you're going
to cough through most of it and then suddenly you think, okay, this is a loud bit, I can finally
cough and you would do it then. Okay, people always do in the loud parts. There's a guy called
Robert R. Provine who writes amazing studies on sneezing and yawning and on coughing and he does
all these studies on sort of bits of the, bits of human experience that don't get much scientific
attention because they're not seen as important. And so he has studied lots and lots of people
about coughing and he did an experiment. He asked people to cough. So on average, you can cough
within 1.7 seconds if you're asked to. Whereas if you're asked to sneeze on demand, most people
can't do it. And if they can, the average time is 8.1 seconds to summon up a sneeze, which I think
is amazing that anyone can do that. In eight seconds, it would take me ages to work up a sneeze.
Yeah. Yeah, I used to have a friend that could vomit on command.
It's true. It's true. Some people have this and he would only need a tiny sip of something and then
he'd go and just yak up onto the street. It was extraordinary. What does he do these days? He's
on Australia's Got Talent. Do you know that so talking of sneezing and coughing, a cough leaves
your mouth at 50 miles an hour, which is quite fast. And I think it's 3,000 droplets are expelled
when you cough. So one cough, 3,000 droplets are expelled. When you sneeze, it leaves your
mouth at more than 200 miles an hour and more than 40,000 droplets are expelled from your
mouth in one sneeze. How cool is that? How many miles an hour? More than 200 miles an hour for
a sneeze, 50 for a cough. So it's way ahead. If you sneeze in a car that is going at 80 miles an hour,
I suppose technically that sneeze is going at 280 miles an hour. I feel like I need to explain
relativity to you. No, I mean, now is not the time. So people who are extremely bothered by
coughing might have a thing called mesophonia, which is basically it's a kind of thing where
you're really bothered by any kind of noise. But coughing is one of them chewing food is another
one. And we've got a few mesophones in tonight. Mesophones? I think it's someone that sounds like
a cough. There's a 10 level scale of mesophonia and you can go online and see which one you are.
Level five is when you cover your ears if someone's coughing or kind of chewing or whatever. Level nine
is consciously suppressing the desire to do harm to others. And level 10 is actual violence.
At level seven, I found really interesting. It said in level seven, there was a few different
things and one of them was there may be unwanted sexual arousal. I read, I did read a wiki page
about that called coughing fetish, where yeah, it's an actual thing. It's an actual thing.
And we are a growing group of people who demand your respect. No, it's so but actually it's
a bit misleading because coughing fetish is not sexy. It leads to it leads to redirects to a page
called smoking fetish and it's the fetish of watching people smoke. Well, speaking of getting
turned on, you know when I think you have a new member of your group. If I can introduce myself.
I'm actually okay and I can promise I will never cough again in case it stands nearby.
But you know when someone has a cold and like, let's say you're going out with someone who has
a cold and they're like, well, that's disgusting. You have a cold. I'm not gonna come anywhere new.
So I'm gonna kiss you. Actually, there is almost zero percent chance you're gonna get infected
from a cold by kissing someone. Like the only way you can get infected is if nasal mucus dribbles
into your mouth during that. Well, exactly. You're not kissing that guy anyway.
So you can't. It's not an excuse. It's not an excuse. But it's also not a reason for someone
to kiss you just because you've got a cold. Fish cough. I've not got much on this.
That's the shortest fact ever is it's just two words. Nine letters. Yeah, they sort of they
have particles that clog up their gills. And so it's a half cough, half sneeze. It's not exactly
a cough. There's an internet factoid that giraffes don't cough. Oh, yeah, I don't think that's true,
isn't it? It isn't. I found a medical study of a giraffe that was coughing. I can't find it.
Would the giraffe know it was about to cough before a human knew they were about to cough
because it's got further to go? Yeah, well, most people can cough within like 1.2 seconds.
It's like three and a half minutes for a giraffe. But no, there was a giraffe with
severe respiratory disease who couldn't stop coughing and ended up dying. But
death visits us all, ladies and gentlemen. So yeah, it would have died of something else.
James, I've lost them.
Dolphins don't cough. Do they? No. Do you have any more of that fact?
Back to you, Andy.
Mice cough.
Which is the same length as fish cough. So I've got a joint shortest fact. But scientists have
tested it by spraying them with little mists of capsaicin, which is the molecule which makes
chilli pepper spicy. So they made a mist out of it and they sprayed a little bit of it at the mice
and then they had tiny microphones to listen. Because normally you can't hear mice coughing
because it's such a small sound, so they needed extra sensitive microphones. But what,
have they built a mouse-sized version of this in my hand? The mice aren't holding the microphones.
There's a tiny mouse podcast somewhere. Humans cough.
We're going to have to move on to our next fact.
Okay, get a few more. Oh my god. So drinking cough syrup before a pie eating championship
can shave 1.2 seconds off the time it takes you to eat a pie.
Why? It kind of like lubricates. And lubricates as well, both of those things.
Yeah, and so there was a ban on what they called outside gravy
in the world pie eating championships. Outside gravy, that's disgusting. Yeah, exactly. But it was,
it was, the world pie eating championships is held in Wigan and they thought that people
were coming in with this gravy that was mixed with cough syrup. In 2009, Barry Rigby was the
champion of the pie eating and this was the first year they brought in the new rule. And just that
they asked him what is the trick of being a great pie eater. And he said, I'm not giving too much
away. But the basic rule is bite, swallow, bite, swallow.
Okay, time for fact number two. And that is my fact. My fact this week is that the Colosseum
has recently banned centurions. Yeah, so basically, obviously, it's a massive tourist attraction
now the area. And like if you went somewhere like Hollywood, they'll have Spider-Man and Superman
dressed up there. That's the same thing with the Colosseum, you get people dressed up as centurions
and they're sort of hassling the tourists, they're charging too much, they're just getting in the
way, they're like a pest there now, basically, that they've said you guys are banned. And so
it's the big holy year next year. And so they want to clean it up before the holy year happens.
And so centurions are no longer loud at the Colosseum. The quote from the mayor is amazing,
because he said that they were inappropriate, insistent, and sometimes aggressive,
considering they're dressed as men who, you know, conquered Europe.
Well, centurions, I mean, I think this is very well known, but I just want to make it clear how
many people they tended to rule over. Okay, so not 100. It is quite weird, yeah, that they ruled over
80 people. There would be eight soldiers, and then there'd be 10 blocks of eight, and that would be
a centuria. And centurions rolled over them. But I like that two centurions, you know what they
were called? My centurions? No, it was actually called a mannipal. No. What? It's called or mannipal.
But let's not mispronounce for comic effect.
Mannipal. Yeah, mannipal. A mannipal is two centuries of Roman soldiers, and it means literally
a handful. It's from the same origin as manipulation, which is a handful. So they try, because they
keep for centurions getting into fights. And in 2013, this is just a story of the kind of
scrapes they got into, one of them attacked a tourist, and the tourist fell over and broke a
finger. And the tourist, it was called Jose Asna, said that he had offered the centurion more cash,
because that was the thing they posed for a photo with you. And then they say, give us some money.
They say, give us five euros or 10 euros, whatever. And he said he had offered the centurion more cash.
But, quotes, when I offered extra dollars, he said, in Italy, we blow our nose with dollars
and called me a son of a bitch, a mafioso, and a cuckold.
But it's a hard job being, being a living statue, isn't it? There was a guy, read an interview
with a guy called Paul Edmedes, and he is a living statue. And he said that he's been spat on,
prodded, pushed over, sniffed at by dogs, perched on by pigeons. But he said that occasionally
a dog would urinate on him. But he said he liked that because it was a sign that he was doing well.
Wow. But imagine going home after work and your wife goes, oh, how was your day? And you're like,
it was great. I got pissed on by six dogs. There were the first arrests related to
living statues in the UK in 2011. And it happened when the invisible king was convicted of assaulting
the silver wizard. And the king accused the wizard of stealing his spot, which was by the
London Eye, Prime Turf. But the twist is, they were flatmates. Imagine that flat
when they're watching TV. Are they working? Are they not working?
I was looking at street performers on living statues, and there's a street performer in Paris.
In 2013, there's a street performer in Paris called Stephen Cohen. And with his performance,
he wanted to evoke his situation, which was being torn between two countries. So his native
country was South Africa, and then it was France, where he currently lived. And so what he did was,
he went to the Eiffel Tower, and he was dressed like a bird. And he was wearing a garter and tights
and these long red gloves and no underwear or trousers, and had tied a rooster to his penis,
and was being led around the Eiffel Tower by his penis by a rooster. And that was his art,
and he was arrested in decent exposure. Yeah, sure. I'm cool with that.
He missed a chance to say it was being pulled around by his cock.
I looked through an online database of street performers, and I found,
just I love these guys, they're called Whispering Trees,
an absolute surefire shocker, brilliant either side of an entrance, watch the queue jump,
so they just dress as trees, stand really still, and then whisper at you as you go by.
I also found Big Rory. Okay, and this is the exact entry on Big Rory in this database. Big Rory,
the Scots giant with power presence and bagpipes. Dangerous, but safe.
It's funny, it's a job where you have to be slightly shit to do well.
That's true, there's no one paying statues money. Exactly, maybe Nelson on top of Nelson's
column is a living statue. He's been there for 200 years, not under penny.
And the world, they have a world statue championships in the Netherlands every year,
and it was won by a Briton in 2009, which is really exciting, a guy called Chris Clarkson
of Southport. He does a lot of statue work, but before that he was an actor, and he'd worked
in a touch of frost and in holly oaks, where presumably he was fired for having a bit too
much expression. They asked him like how to be a good statue, and he said to stand in front of
the television for an hour and a half without moving, and then you'll get a feeling of what it's
like, because apparently it just really hurts, like standing still for long periods really,
really hurts, especially if you're watching the holly oaks. An almost linking fact back to Roman
legions and Roman soldiers, but also sort of on the street performances, did you know that Bath
is haunted by a naked Roman soldier? No. Yeah, I didn't know this either, but
apparently the apparition is said to be quite convincing, and at one point a police officer
in Bath must look it for a genuine streaker and chase it down the street, only does it
disappear into thin hair. So look out for that, it's a naked Roman soldier, and the question
this article asked, which I think you're going to ask me now. If he's naked, how do you know he's a
Roman soldier? That is the question. Is he shouting Vaini Vidi Vici? Sometimes you just know.
That's so good. I didn't read, I've been reading a book about haunted bits of Britain by Derek
Okora, and that's not in there. There's amazing places, can I tell you my favorite place in there?
I wrote it down, it's Yovil Railway Station's buffet is haunted by a sausage roll.
So just back to the Coliseum very quickly, they had what was probably because obviously it was a
huge arena, and they had seating, there was a seating plan as well, and they had probably the
most early version so far as I can read of ticketing, and the ticketing was done on pottery.
So you were given shards of pottery, and they'd have chiseled into it, your seat,
the row that you were in, because how many people could they sit in there? That was about 50,000?
Yeah, that's a lot of pottery. That's why you know when they find ancient Roman pottery, it's always
in little bits and pieces, because it was a little broken up. Is he equivalent of One Directions back
in town? I'm going to smash up these. Okay, time for fact number three, and that is Chuzinski.
Yeah, my fact this week is that from 1978 to 1991, tens of thousands of chicken heads were
dropped from helicopters over Switzerland. Okay, so yeah, okay, why? Tell us the story.
So this was because there'd been a rabies epidemic in Europe from about the 1930s,
I think, and foxes were infected with rabies, and it was spreading, and I think it spread
about 20 miles a year, so it was gradually encroaching, and they didn't know how to get rid
of it until they came up with this idea. In Switzerland, a Swiss scientist came up with this
idea of putting rabies vaccines into chicken heads that were left over from slaughterhouses,
and then dropping them from helicopters over Switzerland, and then foxes eat the chicken
heads, and they're immune from rabies, and I just think that's ingenious, and it works. So
lots of European countries took this on, so I think Germany in the late 1980s said, okay,
it's a bit weird and barbaric that you're doing this whole chicken head thing, so they manufactured
just little fish pellets and dropped them instead with the vaccine in, and it turned out that worked
as well. Yeah, it's not as cool though. Imagine being in a helicopter with a sack of chicken heads.
You'd feel like the king of the world.
But the worst thing is, oh, the king of the world is flying over us. I wonder what he's going to
distribute. But they did, they, before they worked out the chicken head thing, they did try other
options of how to vaccinate foxes, and one of the things it was called the vac trap, and it was
basically the equivalent of a bear trap, so anything that stood on it would trigger
a giant needle that would just go into them and inject them, and they had to stop because too many
hikers kept walking along, suddenly getting walloped by a needle. But did you see that they
actually didn't stop because of the hikers because they were concerned, the people who manufactured
it, that that would be a problem, and you know, people are getting vaccinated against rabies,
they don't have when they're on a walk, and they set these traps on a, this is in the US,
they did this, they set these traps on a beach, which was a deserted beach, and they thought this
was a good place to test out our vaccine, and it turned out that the US Navy was planning to use
that deserted beach a few days later for a mock invasion as a training exercise for all of its
soldiers, and so the people who'd set them offered to remove them, and officials argued that the
hazards would serve as an additional measure of the invaders prowess.
So the rabies vaccine was invented by Louis Pasteur,
a few other people as well, but he's like the headline guy really. One of the things that he
did in the lab is he would get some saliva from a rabid dog, and then he would use that for his
experiments, but unlike everyone else who kind of used kind of gloves and, I don't know, helmets
of glasses or whatever people use, he just went straight in there and just went up to the rabid
dog and just got the saliva out of there, right, which is pretty brave considering that if you got
bitten, the protocol was to be shot immediately. If you got bit, you just got shot. That's fierce
protocol. That is hardcore. I read that he sucked the saliva from the mouth of a rabid dog, which
was sort of secured on a lab table, and he's supposedly using a pipette held in his mouth,
which seems needlessly, it seems needlessly bravado-ish. It kind of feels like he's the bear
grills of his day doing unnecessary feats of apparent courage. Well, I have a fact about
airdrops and animal airdrops. So wasps pick up ants when they're competing over food and drop
them away from the food. This is true. The researchers observed this in the world, and
then they tested it on real situations. They put out some tuna, they let some ants go and start
eating the tuna, and then they released some wasps, and sometimes the ants will attack the wasp,
and even though they're much smaller, they can spray formic acid and stuff, and so sometimes
the wasps just pick up the ants, fly them away from the tuna, drop them, and then go back to the
tuna. Imagine if you're flying around and just dropping ants anywhere you want to. You'd feel
like king of the world. I regret sharing my fantasy with you.
It's possible that the ants could enjoy that though, right? It's like my meal was interrupted,
but it was fun paragliding. Yeah, and ants are actually small enough. There's a certain size
of animal. The ones you get small enough, you probably wouldn't die because your maximum
velocity you can reach is not high enough to squish you. I think even mice, you can drop from
a really high height, and they're not heavy enough to hurt them properly. Okay. Horses on the other
hand. I have a chicken fact, if we could go to chickens. Pond Square in Highgate in London
is haunted by a half frozen chicken. Oh, I know who's chicken that is. Yes, this is a bit.
Okay, so for a very long time, there's been a half frozen chicken that's been haunting this pond,
and everyone has been sort of going, oh, there's a half frozen chicken. And it turns out that the
half frozen chicken belonged to a man called Francis Bacon, who if you remember died when he
was experimenting on, hang on, which bit don't you believe when you're shaking your head? First of
all, he supposedly died of a chill after stuffing a chicken with snow, didn't he? But I don't think
that's true, first of all. And then the rest of it, obviously, I don't think that's true either.
Why would the chicken horn Highgate, though? That's what Francis Bacon might horn Highgate,
but the chicken was already dead, I think. I know it's a really odd situation.
So chicken heads can help pro athletes, actually. And this is real, there's a guy called...
Ouch. Wow. It's a terrible burn on everything we've heard so far.
No, chicken heads can help pro athletes. There's a guy called Hans Wilhelm Mula Wolfart.
He was the doctor from Bayern Munich until quite recently when he got fired.
But he used to inject an extract of chicken heads into the kind of tendons of athletes to help them.
And there's a little bit of evidence that it might work. He treated Michael Owen, Steven Gerard,
Usain Bolt, Paula Radcliffe, Bono. The five great athletes of our time.
But he got fired quite recently and he is quite controversial. He once prescribed goat's blood
injections into a striker from a football team. But because he's called Hans, he's known as healing
Hans. But he is quite famous, actually. Do you guys know about chucking? No. Okay, I'm glad.
Apparently this is a social media phenomenon where you chuck and it's kind of like planking,
but instead of lying flat and impersonating a plank in front of the camera, you pretend to be a frozen
chicken carcass in public. Do you have to fall in the high gate? You can actually do it anyway.
So all you have to do is take all of your clothes off and then crouch down and then have a photo
taken of yourself and then a naked person crouched down in a fetal position sort of on their knees.
Looks like a chicken, a chicken carcass. How does someone sat there naked look like a chicken?
Any more than a centurion.
Good point. No, so, okay, so if you were just very quickly, if you were going sort of profile and
you were leaning on your knees and you were leaning over a human in that position, looks
remarkably like a frozen chicken. So many mistakes on Christmas Day. Can I, this fact has the element
of talking about these, these were dropped from helicopters. I started looking into helicopters
slightly. Do you know that the world's biggest helicopter can carry, it's big enough that it
can carry a plane? Wow. No way. Do you know when the earliest helicopter was? No. Da Vinci supposedly
had one, did he? He drew one. He designed one, yes. But it wasn't as early as the helicopter that was
invented in 400 BC by the Chinese, which because officially, so this was, it was called the bamboo
copter apparently, which stresses me out. I think I might have mentioned on the podcast before that
one of my favorite etymologies is helicopter, because it's the etymology is so unusually split
up. So it's helicos, which is a spiral and a potter, which you wouldn't expect to be a word on
its own, which is like the wing. So by saying bamboo copter, they've stomped right in the middle
of that word, helicos. You should never say anything copter, should you? It should be either
or helico. Exactly. Yeah. I feel your pain, Anna. Yeah, I've written, I've written a strongly
worded letter to ancient Chinese emperors. You know a very popular escape from prisoners via
helicopter? I mean, popular. Define popular. It seems to be, so people actually do it more often
than you would think. France holds the record for most prison escapes via helicopter. And that's
11. So actually not as much as I was, as I was saying earlier. It's epidemic proportions.
But there's a guy with the world record for most helicopter escapes from prison,
which is three. He escaped in 2001, 2003, 2007. And at no point did someone go,
we should watch out for this guy every time he goes into the yard. I say let's put a roof on
David's cell. I say we should. Okay, time for our final fact. And that is Andrew Hunter Murray.
My fact is that in 2015, a 10 year study concluded that punching glass is very dangerous.
Wasn't the only thing they found out, but it was pretty much the headline.
It was a study by a group of Australian doctors, and they concluded in about July this year.
They measured everyone who came into a particular hospital from 2003 to 2012, collected lots of
data. And they said that it is really, really dangerous to punch glass. And they found out
other things. They found out the typical patient who punches glass is a 26 year old single male
who is unemployed and intoxicated. Of the 137 people that they found who punched glass,
113 were men, 122 were single, 95 were unemployed, and 91 were drunk.
Wow. And they had one conclusion as well, which is how to deal with this thing.
Preventing young intoxicated males from aiming punches at glass is a difficult task.
And perhaps the only rational method, although costly, is to replace all glass within arms
rich with safety glass. No more glass for you. That's amazing. I think it might be cheaper
to replace all drunk men with sober men. This was in Australia, but there was another study in
Sunderland. And there were only 67 patients in this one, but it was in Sunderland. England's Australia.
Well, they found that all of the people had consumed alcohol.
But it's so it's dangerous. Why is it dangerous? Well, Anna,
because you can mess your hand up real bad. I mean, like the glass breaks and then a glass
gets into your cat's neck. I just wondered if there were any more complex conclusions in that
your hand. So it was just that people got injured a lot. Yeah. People say that because I put my
hand through a window once, but I wasn't even drunk. You weren't drunk in 26 a male at the time.
I wasn't any of those things. But I remembered the fact that I was about 15. I remembered that
people had said that the time people most get injured is when they retract their arm,
when they've broken glass, because that's when it like slices up against you. And so I held my
hand suspended out with the window and I was in my family home and I was like, Daddy,
what do I do now? But I think that is true. Well, I held my arm there through the hole in the glass
until my dad came upstairs and went and you can pull your hand out of the glass now. Right. Yeah.
And it was absolutely amazing that you would have that presence of mind to think I remember
reading a paper about this guy. And thus was a QI researcher born.
I was researching great bits of glass just to see
just to see what was considered to be. And thus was a great QI researcher not born.
Yeah. So I was looking into great bits of glass and then I came across a whole sort of,
did you mean great bits of glass to stand on? And so I started reading into great bits of glass
to stand on. Now, one of the best bits of glass to stand on, and it's not a type of glass, but
it's an achievement if you ever get to stand on this. There's actually at the bottom of the
International Space Station. So I know in a gravity-less place, they can't really be a bottom,
but it's the bit that's facing Earth. They actually have a glass floor that you can stand on.
Yeah. So you push yourself up to it and there's photos of astronauts looking down so they can
see all of Earth below their feet, which is really nice. I'd not heard that before as an
International Space Station. And it reminded me that in the Grand Canyon, you can actually go on
a thing called the Skywalk now, which is really amazing. So it's this incredible bit that hangs
over the Grand Canyon. It's complete glass and you just look down as you're looking over. When
they opened it, they wanted some spectacular people to walk on it. And they asked Buzz Aldrin,
would you be one of the two first people to do it? And there was another astronaut there,
a guy who's the only Native American astronaut, part Native American astronaut.
Oh, don't tell me that Buzz was the second person.
They were meant to meet up at the middle and Buzz stopped to do a salute and the guy got there
first. So he's the second, once again, the second man to make it to something.
On punching, so recent research has just been done into the human fist. And there is a suggestion,
and one scientist strongly believes on the basis of this research, that the human fist was evolved
for punching. So we think that humans are superior to, you know, all other beings because we evolve
with our dexterous hands for writing or for whatever. We actually evolved to be each other up.
And it turns out we're much more well adapted our fists. The fact that they fits our fingers
fits so well into the palm of our hands. That really is ideal for punch-ups.
So the idea is that an opposable thumb you could use to grab something, but you can also use it to
kind of buttress your fist to kind of properly hit someone, right? Hold it down. And nature's
being defensive as well as aggressive because apparently males have evolved to be punched.
Before you go any further, I have not.
Your face says otherwise.
Whoa, some woes over here, but some applause over there.
Do you know that the world record most punches, quickest punches, this is ridiculous,
by the way, but the most punches in 15 seconds is 200.
No way!
Yeah, it's not amazing. It's a guy called Bhaskar Joshi.
He's a martial arts expert from India and he managed to do 215 seconds.
What was he hitting?
I think he was hitting like 200 guys.
Yeah, he was hitting a punch bag, I think, but do you know there's a robot that they've trained
to punch humans? Why? Why would you do that? We've all seen Terminator 2, we know there is.
This is Fraunhofer IFF Institute in Germany and they've invented a robot that punches people
and the idea is that you can test how hard it has to hit a human before it hurts.
Wow, these guys are idiots and they're going to be the first against the wall when the robot turns.
They have like an ultrasound scanner that can tell whether you're bruising or not before you
actually bruise and the idea, according to them, is that it's going to stop in the future from
humans being injured by robots.
What? We're prepping for robot warfare. That's amazing.
You know they also, when you donate your body to science and you can read up now on how many
different ways they sort of take you apart and use different bits for different things,
one of the things is that they'll take your arm now and just have it punching a punching bag
constantly to see why we punch.
Wow, that's amazing. There's another one where you can become like a crash test dummy, can't you?
Because a normal crash test dummy is quite hard to get a real, you can't make it really like a human
but if you put a human in there and then see how they react to being in a crash then that really,
really does help science.
I think that's so cool.
It's like the most, if you've never done anything badass in your actual life, I think saying,
writing on your donor card at the bottom, please preference for crash test dummy.
It is the way to go.
I would like my head to be thrown out of a helicopter.
Okay, that's it. That's all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening.
If you would like to get in contact with any of us about the things we've said over the course of
this podcast, we could be found on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shriverland, James.
At Eggshaped.
Andy.
At Andrew Hunter M.
You can email podcast.qi.com.
Yeah, or you can go to KnowSuchThingAsAfish.com. That's our website where we have all of our
previous episodes and we will be back again next week. Thank you so much for listening.
Thank you so much for being here, guys.
Goodbye.
you