No Such Thing As A Fish - Merry Fishmas!
Episode Date: December 25, 2017A special Christmas Day extract from the audiobook version of The Book Of The Year. ...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Mary Fishmas, everybody.
What?
Nothing. No, it's good.
You don't like Fishmas?
I don't love it.
Okay.
I like it. It's very nice.
Well, it's happened now.
It's there.
It's out there.
Mary Fishmas, everyone.
I hope you've had an incredible day.
And you're probably thinking,
hey, it's not Friday.
What's going on?
This is a bonus episode.
Is it a present from us to everybody?
It is.
It's exactly what it is.
Very nice.
What this is is the first chapter of our audio book of the year.
We spoke to the people at Random House.
They really kindly said, go for it.
Give them the first chapter of the audio book.
That's what this episode is.
It's the entirety of A.
And what we did is we sat in a studio, the four of us,
we read out the book and we just jumped in
and interrupted each other along the way,
like a classic podcast.
And the other present is for everyone in North America
because we weren't going to be able to sell
the audiobook of the year in the USA.
And now we've just had the news from the publishing company
that we are going to be selling it there.
Yeah, it means that it's now available.
So it's over nine hours long.
You're only going to hear about 30 minutes of it.
So if you want to get it, do go to Audible.
It's available on Amazon as well
or wherever you get your audio books from.
And it's not just North America.
Vanuatu, we're available to you now.
Pitken Islands.
Tuvalu.
Nauru.
I mean, it's everywhere.
It's in Australia.
It's a New Zealand.
It's also in massive countries like all of Europe as well.
So.
Oh yeah, all of Europe.
So yeah, I hope you enjoy it.
Have a Merry Christmas, everyone.
Listen out at the end for a couple of outtakes
that James has managed to track down.
And we'll see you in the new year.
Merry Fishmas.
I knew you liked it.
I do like it.
A.
A.
In which we learn how Brexit was triggered in a space egg,
whether computers or humans are better at Pac-Man.
Why Australia is air-dropping kangaroo sausages,
which King doubles as an airline pilot,
and who's invented an underwater warehouse?
Ardvarks.
A zookeeper performed Mouth to Snout
on an Ardvark for an hour.
Only five Ardvarks were born in Europe in 2016.
So when one was born in the Polish city of Rocklav this year
and struggled to survive,
the head of the Small Mammals Division at the zoo there,
Andrzej Mioska, did all he could to keep him alive.
We spoke to Rocklav Zoo
and asked how you perform CPR on an Ardvark.
This is what they said.
Mr. Mioska acted on instinct.
He cut the cord, placed the baby on his fleece jacket,
and started rubbing it vigorously but gently with a towel.
He then placed the baby's snout in his mouth
and blew the air in.
At the same time, he was doing chest compressions
using his fingers and continued rubbing with a towel.
After a few rounds, the little heart started beating,
but the cub still wasn't breathing.
So Mr. Mioska went on with the mouth to snout,
All together, it took about one hour after he came out.
I am so glad you didn't do the accent there.
I thought we were going to start on a big Polish accent.
I like the idea that to do mouth to snout on Ardvark,
you have to hold the end of the Ardvark snout
and then basically you can get both your hands
around the rest of the Ardvark snout.
For people listening, Andy is doing the mime.
Like playing a trumpet.
Exactly, yeah.
This reminds me of a story actually
that happened quite a few years ago in China.
There was a small monkey that had eaten a peanut
and it wasn't allowed to eat the peanut
because its stomach couldn't digest it.
So someone had thrown it into the cage
and it laid on its back in the cage dying.
And it was such a rare little monkey,
they couldn't actually operate on it.
So no one knew what to do.
All these zookeepers were going,
how are we going to save this monkey?
And suddenly Zhang Bangshun,
who was the veteran zookeeper at that zoo,
stepped forward and said, I know how to save this monkey.
And he went up to the monkey
and he didn't perform mouth to snout,
or mouth to mouth even on the monkey.
He performed mouth to bum bum.
He, I'm sorry,
he could you spare us this technical mumbo, Zhang Bangshun?
He looked the monkey's butt for over an hour,
sort of drawing the peanut through the system.
Kind of like, you know, if you drop a ball in a pool
and you have to do that little wavy thing at the corner
to bring the wave, to bring the ball back to you.
He licked for an hour this peanut out of the monkey
and the monkey survived.
There must have been a point about 45 minutes in
where the other zookeepers were saying, Zhang Bangshun,
what are you doing?
I think I'd say it earlier than that.
I think he would have looked at them and went,
give me 15 more minutes.
I also think we've gone off topic really early in this one.
So meanwhile in South Africa,
scientists finally caught Ardlaks having a drink
250 years after the species was first described.
It had long been assumed that they got all the water they needed
from the juicy bodies of termites,
but a zoologist at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
in Port Elizabeth, Graham Curley, and his team
announced that evidence exists for Ardlaks
drinking from puddles.
So we've never known them to drink before.
Now, this is huge news.
Feels like we just haven't been watching them hard enough.
I mean, surely if they're drinking from puddles now,
they've always been doing it.
It's not like puddles are new, are they?
Puddles have been around as long as water.
This wasn't the only puddle news from the year, by the way.
Researchers in Australia found that koalas are now getting
their water from puddles.
They used to think it was just from eucalyptus leaves,
and they've never seen it before,
but they think because of climate change,
they're now drinking from puddles.
It's a bad year if you're a puddle.
Suddenly, there are two new massive threats to your existence.
Changes, is there any advice for people who want to drink like Ardlaks?
There is. If you can't find a puddle,
there's a bar in Exeter that's selling an Ardvat cocktail.
It's served with real ants.
The drink's made with rum, lemongrass, and lime,
and it's served with an ant chaser.
The bar owner, Patrick Fogarty, describes it as crunchy,
yet satisfying.
Abdications
The Japanese emperor wanted to abdicate,
but wasn't allowed to tell anyone.
Japan's Emperor Akihito is banned from making political statements,
including any that suggests that he wants to abdicate.
As a result, he had to make a speech,
very delicately hinting at his concerns
about being able to fulfil his duties.
The government eventually worked out what he meant
and allowed him to step down.
I wonder if they said to him,
so do you want to abdicate?
And he said, I didn't say that.
Pretty much, yeah.
But he had to be so subtle about it.
So I'm feeling pretty old, guys.
And then eventually, they sort of figured it out.
But there is still a problem for him,
which is that he has a distinct lack of heirs.
Once the new emperor takes over,
there will only be three heirs in total.
Because empress have to be men,
although there is now some debate about this.
Some experts are worried that if the youngest heir, Prince Hisahito,
has no sons, the 2,600-year-old imperial line will be broken.
Although Hisahito is only 11,
so this is a little early to tell how this will.
And there's a lot of pressure on him, isn't it?
Huge amount of pressure.
That must be the smallest royal family in the world, is it?
Well, actually, I think that the Vatican
is technically a one-man elected monarchy,
and that is a royal family of one.
But I know you disagree, James.
I do disagree, yeah.
What about Saudi Arabia?
They have a lot, don't they?
I think that's the largest royal family in the world.
They've got 4,000 princes.
I know.
So, just back to Hisahito.
As a young man, he had a list of 800 candidates for marriage
prepared for him, and he rejected every single one of them
in favour of someone he met playing tennis.
And he's quite an interesting guy.
His main interest is marine biology,
and he is an expert on the Gobi fish.
And when the Gobi equivalent of an emperor,
the dominant male, dies, he is replaced by the next in line.
But if there are no males,
then a female will change its sex and take the emperor's place.
Abkhazia, a country that most of the world doesn't think exists,
had an election that assumed most of its population didn't exist.
Abkhazia is a self-declared republic
that's trying to break from Georgia,
and is currently recognised only by Russia, Nicaragua, Venezuela,
and, bizarrely, the tiny Pacific island of Nauru.
Still, despite the lack of more general recognition,
parliamentary elections were held there this year.
And technically, elections in Abkhazia are deemed invalid
if less than 25% of people vote.
But although only 21% of the population voted on this occasion,
the election was still declared valid as it was decided
that any citizens who hold Georgian passports
should not be regarded as Abkhazian nationals.
The country was also the subject of a critically acclaimed
Romanian documentary this year,
called Ualei Louis Tarzan, or Tarzan's Testicles.
So this was the story of the world's oldest primate centre,
the Institute of Experimental Pathology and Therapy,
in the Abkhazian capital of Sukhumi.
The institute provided the monkeys that the Soviet Union
sent into space in the 1980s,
and it was founded by a man called Ilya Ivanov,
whose lifetime obsession was creating an ape-human hybrid.
The advertising for the newly opened
Trump International Hotel and Tower in Vancouver
claims it is six floors taller than it actually is.
Trump hotels claim that the building is 69 stories high
when actually it is only 63.
They arrived at their total by including below-ground stories,
which were mostly used for parking in their calculations.
In the course of his career, Trump has claimed
that a 67-story tower has 78 floors,
that a 43-story building has 46 floors,
that a 44-story building has 52 floors,
that a 31-story building has 41 floors,
that a 70-story building has 90 floors,
and that he lives on the 66th floor of a 58-story building.
He needs to get his story straight.
Meanwhile, the Trump International Hotel and Tower in Toronto
paid a reported $6 million not to advertise itself as a Trump hotel.
The hotel decided to part ways with the Trump name
following many years of construction delays, lawsuits,
and more recently, because it become a gathering point
for protests against the president.
The agreement they reached allows the management
to remove all of Trump's branding from the 65-story building,
which, incidentally, has only 57 floors.
The world champion of the ancient Chinese game of Go
was beaten by a 3-year-old Brit who then immediately retired.
One way or another, it's been a pretty bad year for humankind.
We've been defeated by artificial intelligence
at no-limit Texas hold and poker,
and the fighting game Super Smash Bros.
But perhaps the most crushing defeat came when AlphaGo,
an AI program developed by Google's DeepMind Technologies,
beat the world champion China's Ke Zhi 3-0.
AlphaGo was born in 2014 and was classed as British in the Go rankings
as the team behind it is based in London.
After beating the world champion, it immediately retired.
DeepMind's CEO, Demis Hassabis, said that winning these games
had been the highest possible pinnacle for AlphaGo as a competitive program.
Owing to its incredible complexity,
Go had been one of the final games at which humans could still beat the machines.
Ke Zhi later said,
last year it was still quite human-like,
but this year it became like a god of Go.
James, I've never played Go.
Can you quickly give me an idea of what we're talking about here?
Yeah, sure.
So you have a board with lots of squares on it,
and you put pebbles on it to win territory.
And it's extremely complicated.
There are 10 to the power of 10 to the power of 171
possible combinations of move, which is pretty hard to imagine, right?
Can you put that in some kind of metaphorical context for me?
Yes, I can, Anna.
Oh, how convenient.
If every grain of sand on Earth each contained the number of stars in the Milky Way,
and each of those stars had 100 planets,
and each of those planets had 10 billion humans,
then the number of cells in all those humans would be fewer
than the number of zeros in the number that we're talking about.
Wow.
You know that famous story, there's a chess board,
and each has a grain of rice, and it doubles and doubles,
and suddenly he's got all the rice in country.
Do you think in this scenario he'd be like,
I've gone way too far?
This is a lot of rice.
But that interview with KG, actually,
Chinese fans didn't see the interview because China,
presumably for reasons of national pride,
wouldn't allow the match to be shown on television or streamed online.
Air drops.
Australia is dropping sausages over its outback.
They come in two flavours, toad and kangaroo.
I will take kangaroo, please.
They're not on offer for you, I'm afraid.
So for years Australia has had this problem with cane toads,
which aren't indigenous to the continent,
so many of its native animals eat them,
and because the toads are toxic, they tend to kill their predators.
So to combat this, scientists are dropping cane toad-flavoured sausages
laced with a chemical that makes predators feel sick
over the outback in the hope that it'll deter them
from biting the real toads in future.
A bit more brutally, the Aussie government is also
dropping poisoned sausages to deal with their feral cats,
who are also partial to a bit of kangaroo wiener.
Still fancy that kangaroo wiener, Andy?
Now you know it's poisoned.
Oh, but it fell, actually.
This year, Canada also combated an environmental issue
with air drops, this time of pregnant bison.
Banff National Park has not had any bison for more than 100 years,
and the ecosystem suffers from their absence.
Conservationists collected pregnant bison
from the nearby Elk Island,
and took them to the pastures of the Rocky Mountains.
They spent the last 25 kilometres of their journey
packed into shipping containers,
dangling underneath a helicopter by a rope.
Their horns were covered in plastic hoses
to stop them injuring each other in transit.
Aliens
Eleven promising alien signals were reported this year.
Unfortunately, they all turned out to be from mobile phones on Earth.
This is the Green Bank Telescope in West Virginia,
which listens for radio signals
that might indicate signs of intelligence
from 692 of the nearest stars to Earth.
It turns out, however, that the signals
that aliens might send are very similar
to those given out by mobile phones.
This wasn't the only alien mystery
that may have been solved this year.
The wow signal was named in 1977,
when an anomaly was found in a list of data
and astronomer Jerry R. Erman was so impressed
that he circled numbers on his computer printout
and wrote the comment, wow.
Antonio Parris, an astronomy professor
at St. Petersburg College in Florida,
has now suggested that the signal
didn't come from an alien life form,
but from a couple of comets that were passing by at the time.
Not everyone is convinced, though.
Alan Fitzsimmons, a scientist at Queen's University Belfast,
has described the theory as rubbish.
There were a lot of names in that paragraph, James.
Antonio Parris, Alan Fitzsimmons,
can I throw another name into the mix?
Sure.
Former frontman of Blink 182, Tom DeLong.
Okay.
He was named UFO researcher of the year this year
at the 2017 International UFO Congress.
And he got this because it turns out
he's secretly been emailing high-level security people
in America to talk to them about the alien threats.
Okay, like who?
Well, last year, when the pedestrian emails were leaked,
he was the campaign manager of Hillary Clinton.
That was part of the big Wiki leaks that was happening
that ruined her campaign largely.
Amongst those emails were emails from Tom DeLong,
Blink 182's former lead singer,
and he was saying, I want to talk to you about all the stuff
that I believe is going on and that you have knowledge of
on the inside about alien life and our contact with them.
And as a result of all his digging and all of his expertise,
he is officially the UFO researcher of the year 2017.
And the rest of us missed the big story
about Hillary's email leaks, it turns out.
What are the awards like?
Are they a sort of golden probe that you win at the UFO Awards?
Can I just, I always thought it was Blink 182,
but you said Blink 182.
I've always said Blink 182.
Does anyone say Blink 182?
So the hunt for ET moved up a gear this year
after the 500-meter aperture spherical telescope,
also known as FAST, the world's largest, joined the search.
FAST is so vast that you could fill its dish
with enough corn flakes to supply every person on earth
with one bolsworth every day for a year
and still have some left over.
It's cited in Guizhou Province, southwest China,
and it hasn't proved universally popular.
Its construction involved the forcible displacement
of 9,000 villages.
Amazon.
The founder of amazon.com became the world's richest person
for just four hours.
A surge in Amazon's stock on the 27th of July
increased Jeff Bezos' net worth by $1.1 billion,
which meant that he overtook Microsoft's Bill Gates,
who's worth a measly $90.7 billion.
However, by the middle of the next day,
Bezos' stock had fallen back, and a few days later,
he was down to third place behind Amansio Ortega,
the owner of the fashion company Zara.
Amazon's stock performance was largely thanks
to increased sales.
In the early days of the company,
a bell would ring every time there was a sale,
and staff would gather around to see if they knew
the person who had made the purchase.
They don't do that anymore.
If they did, then on their biggest sales day in 2017,
Amazon Prime Day, 11th of July,
a bell would need to be rung more than 80 million times.
Sorry, would you mind putting that
in some kind of context again for me?
Okay, I'll just rustle up something on the spot.
That is the equivalent of every church bell in England
being rung 2,400 times.
Hang on, how many church bells are there in England?
Well, you can work that out if you divide 80 million by 2,400.
I'm not sure I can, James.
We'll leave that as an exercise for the reader.
Each second is very important to Amazon.
They've calculated that if their page is loaded
just one second slower,
it would cost them $1.6 billion in annual sales.
Amazon expanded beyond the online sector this year,
opening a physical bookshop in New York.
The company recognizes that people have a habit of browsing in shops
before buying their books online,
and so registered a patent to stop customers in Amazon shops
from checking out competitors as they look around.
It's not the only patent application
that Amazon has filed in the past few months.
They've also invented an underwater warehouse
in which everything is stored in watertight boxes
at the bottom of a lake.
Each has assigned a unique sound,
which, when triggered, inflates a balloon
that floats the box to the surface.
The idea is that this will be more efficient
than having people or machines fetch the packages
because they'll be transported by the water buoyancy instead.
Amazon also holds a patent for a flying warehouse.
The Foreign Office warned Britons to look out for terrorists in the Antarctic.
The population of Britain's 660,000 square miles of Antarctic territory
may be only 250,
but, as the Foreign Office points out,
you can never be too careful.
According to official guidelines it issued in May,
although there's no recent history of terrorism
in the British Antarctic territory,
attacks can't be ruled out.
Visitors should therefore be vigilant,
but they will probably be fine.
The last crime to be committed anywhere on the continent
was back in 2003 and involved computer hacking,
and even that wasn't homegrown,
it was done remotely from Romania.
One Britain who braved the terrorist threat
was Patrick Burgle, great-grandson of Ernest Chackleton,
who made the first ever crossing of Antarctica by car.
It was a month-long 3,600-mile trip
sponsored by Hyundai in a normal family car,
although it was adapted to run on jet fuel.
I'd argue that isn't a normal family car then.
On an almost normal family car, I'd say.
And to avoid littering,
the team had to drag all the excrement behind them
in a huge fuel drum.
Again, not the same as my family car.
So when he was first asked to make the journey,
Burgle hadn't even taken his driving test.
He modestly insisted that,
compared to what my great-grandfather did,
this was one-thousandth as hard.
I would say that's less modest and more just accurate.
I think his great-grandfather would agree his job was harder.
So as if going on four wheels wasn't hard enough,
Canadian Hank Van Wilden attempted a 700-mile bike ride
on a custom-made 10,000-pound bicycle across Antarctica.
He was meant to complete the journey in 30 days,
but after six days of pulling a 90-kilo pack
in minus 40 degrees Celsius temperatures, he dropped out.
He later said,
I got a taste of it and I got my ass kicked by it.
Apps.
If you want to make an emergency confession,
there's an app for that.
A new app developed in Spain and called Confessor Go
tells you where your nearest priest is for confession
and maps the best route to him.
Handily, it also tells you the priest's name
and the year he was ordained.
In addition, it includes the Ten Commandments
to prompt you to recall what you might need to confess.
So if you've coveted your neighbor's ox or anything.
Unlike Uber, the priest doesn't come to you,
but on the plus side, he doesn't charge extra at busy times.
What is a busy time for sins?
Ah, good question.
Christmas, I imagine.
Do you think so?
Yeah.
You're always coveting people's oxen.
I think you've got time on your hands.
Right.
Also, a priest's available 24 hours for confession.
I don't think so.
Yeah, I assume that there was a sort of time
that they get in that photo box.
You know, the confession booth.
The confession booth.
They should combine that with passport photos.
So you look really happy once you've got everything off your chest.
You have a nice big smile.
So there have been other apps built recently
for various different things.
So there have been apps built that will help you
if you want to find a celebrity lookalike partner.
The dating app Badoo has added a feature
that allows users to look for celebrity lookalikes.
Soon after launch, there were 1,405 people on the app
who supposedly look like Ed Sheeran.
According to them?
According to the app, I think.
There are other apps which can help you find
where the nearest iceberg is, providing you're in Canada.
And there's one app that can stop you from buying things while drunk.
So once you've consumed alcohol up to a self-imposed limit,
the app stops your bank card from working.
Unfortunately for the app to take effect,
you need to be sober enough to tell it that you've been drinking.
If you're talking to a machine, you're drunk, I think.
Not if the machine can respond to you.
I mean, sure, if I'm talking to my washing machine,
then that's a bit weird, but if I'm talking to Siri,
I think that's okay.
While we're on smartphones,
Donald Trump has only downloaded one app on his phone.
It's Twitter.
But he has inspired 250 apps and more for Android alone,
including one that measures how many times a man interrupts a woman,
one where you can draw your own executive order,
and a third one, DJ Trump,
which uses a huge archive of words that Donald has said
to enable you to make the US president say anything you want.
Arrests human.
A mafia boss famous for having a permanent erection
was caught in Spain after seven years on the run.
Francesco Castriotta said his prior pism
was thanks to his out of control cocaine habit.
As he sat in court during a previous hearing
with a bag of ice on his aching groin,
one policeman remarked that he could expect a stiff sentence.
Sorry, his name is Castriotta.
I know. I didn't notice that until I read it just now.
No, me neither. It's very exciting, isn't it?
It's like his name is begging out for his penis to be removed.
Other notable arrests include a man in India
who was arrested for trying to create a fake ID card
using the name Osama Bin Laden.
He even uploaded a blurred photo of the former Al Qaeda leader
as the profile picture.
Police discovered the man's real name was Saddam Hussein.
A woman in Bangladesh who believed
that she was her husband's third wife
had him arrested after discovering
she was in fact his 25th of 28.
Police arrested him at the home of his 27th wife.
And lastly, a man was arrested by New York state police
for driving under the influence of alcohol.
This only came to international attention
because Joseph Talbot didn't want anyone to know about it.
After learning that his local paper The Times of Wayne County
had covered the story,
he tried to buy every copy of the relevant edition
to stop people finding out.
Unfortunately, the fact that he managed to purchase
around 900 copies became a story in its own right
and then spread.
Art.
A giant snow globe was made using the confetti
meant for Hillary Clinton's election night.
This was designed by an artist called Bunny Burson,
whose former works include collages made from chads,
which are the punched out pieces of ballot paper
that famously decided the year 2000 presidential election
in favor of George W. Bush.
It took Burson two weeks to find the confetti
that had been loaded into Hillary's victory cannons,
ready to celebrate the election result last November.
And when she did,
she got the company who produced it
to write a letter of verification.
She then placed the confetti in a glass case
with the slogan,
and still I rise,
which she took from a poem by Maya Angelou,
who was a close friend of the Clintons.
In a less overtly political act,
a French artist called Abraham Poirchaval
attempted to live like a chicken
and successfully hatched nine eggs.
He sat on the eggs in a glass case
in a Paris museum for a month,
and they were underneath his bottom on a laying table,
which had a dugout section in it
to stop the eggs from being squashed.
Poirchaval said that his work, egg,
raises the question of metamorphosis and gender.
Despite animal scientists saying
that the task was nearly impossible
due to humans lower body temperature,
after 21 days,
nine of his original 10 eggs had indeed hatched.
The chicks were sent to a farm.
He is an amazing guy, Poirchaval.
Yeah.
So in February this year,
he spent a week in another museum
inside a 12 ton limestone boulder.
It had a hollowed out section,
which was only slightly bigger than he was,
and he was sealed within it.
Wow.
Yeah.
And he had little niches
where he stored his food and drink,
and also his excrement.
Do you think that maybe
he has been kicked out of his flat,
and he's just looking for museums to live in?
He did live inside a stuffed bear for a while too.
Did he?
Actually, there is a lot behind that theory, I think.
Another artist that hit the news this year
was a Russian artist called Fyodor Pavlov Andreevich,
who in America faced potential charges
of public lewdness,
criminal trespassing,
and disorderly conduct
after he was arrested
for having himself delivered naked
inside a clear plastic box
to the exclusive Met Gala in New York.
This was the fifth time
he'd had himself sent to an art event,
his aim being to donate himself to institutions
that have difficulty understanding
or accepting performance art.
In a statement, his friends clarified
that the box had also been arrested.
In their view, the charges were ludicrous.
They said even the policemen
were showing signs of having fun.
Ashes.
Carrie Fisher's ashes were placed in an urn
shaped like a massive Prozac pill.
The giant pill was one of her favorite ornaments.
At her funeral in January,
her brother said of it,
we felt it was where she'd want to be.
This year, people have also chosen
to have their ashes sprinkled
in the toilet of a baseball stadium.
The ashes of New York plumber
and baseball fan Roy Regal
have been sprinkled in baseball stadium toilets
all over America
by his best friend Roy McDonald.
McDonald said he has sometimes used the toilet
at the same time as scattering his friend,
but that,
I always flush in between.
Ashes have also been sprinkled over a ferry.
A ceremony on an Australian ferry went wrong
when the ashes were blown back on deck
and over the passengers.
The daughter of the deceased said
it was her mother having the last laugh.
It could be worse.
In late 2016, a man tried to scatter
his opera-loving friend's ashes
at New York City's Metropolitan Opera.
Other members of the audience, however,
assumed he was a terrorist
who was trying to spread anthrax.
He apologized, saying it was
a sweet gesture to a dying friend
that went completely and utterly wrong
in ways that I could never have imagined.
Anyway, they've also been sprinkled
in a hockey penalty box.
Hockey player Bob Probert had his ashes sprinkled
in his team's penalty box,
or the Sin Bin,
because he had been involved in 200 mid-match fights
in the course of his career
and had therefore spent 3,300 minutes there.
And finally, they've also been sprinkled
in separate places.
A survey of Britain's funeral directors
revealed that they're now agreeing,
ever more frequently,
to split ashes up
to stop angry families arguing over them.
The letter that we ended up sending
to activate Article 50 was six pages long,
but it was nearly 100 pages long.
That's a big edit.
Well, they didn't start with 100 pages
and then just whittle it down to six.
The government sources said there were two options,
but they eventually picked the six-pager.
I think they may have thought
that sending 100 would have been excessive.
Yeah, and so who wrote it?
Was it Theresa May?
Well, she definitely had some civil service assistance,
but she did definitely sign it.
She gave it a wet signature,
i.e. with pen and ink,
but unfortunately, she signed it with a Parker pen
that was once manufactured in Britain,
but is now made in France.
Oh, really?
That's weird,
because also Article 50 was ratified in Norman French.
So as a law passes in the House of Lords,
the Lords have to say the words
la Reine Le Volte,
which is Old Norman French for The Queen Allows It.
Another thing about the letter
is that it was delivered by Sir Tim Barrow,
the UK's permanent representative at the EU,
and he took it from Britain's embassy in Brussels
to the EU headquarters,
which is known as the Space Egg.
Space Egg.
Well, that is just a nickname.
It's a futuristic oval building set inside a cube
made from recycled window frames from across Europe.
But the location is pretty interesting.
The back of the building was the Nazi headquarters
during their occupation of Europe.
Ah, speaking of Nazis,
I read that Article 50 was put into place,
partly because of right-wing politics.
The guy who wrote it did so at a time
when Austria had this far-right politician
called York Haider,
and people were really worried that he might be elected.
So Article 50 was basically written,
partly, to make it easier for a country
to storm out of the EU.
Yeah, that's right.
And the guy who actually wrote Article 50
is called Lord John Kerr.
And what I love about that is that in Spain,
his name would be Juan Kerr.
But they wouldn't understand that in Spain,
because they all speak Spanish.
Apart from the British people who live in Spain,
and they're not going to be there for long
because of Brexit.
In a few years, no one will get that joke anymore.
So it's not just expats.
We also need to work out what to do
with the word United Kingdom in the Lisbon Treaty.
So the Lisbon Treaty is the document
that underpins the whole of the EU, basically.
And there are 12 mentions of the UK in it.
And at the moment, they think they're just going to leave them in,
because it's going to be too much bureaucratic hassle
to actually go through removing every mention.
Is it true that Article 50 was given a lot of fake roots
on its way to the space egg,
so that when Sir Tim was delivering it,
it would confuse potential saboteurs?
It's possible.
It did definitely have an armed guard
when it was on the Euro star on its way over.
And the Daily Telegraph reported
that his path to the space egg was kept secret,
in case ultra-remaners grabbed the letter from him.
Wow. I mean, I wouldn't call myself an ultra-remaner,
but I did go on Google Maps,
and I did the journey from one place to the other,
and it is extremely short.
So I don't think there's much space for alternate routes.
No, it was about 300 metres.
Yeah, or 328 yards, as we're going to have to call it after 2019.
Aviation.
The King of the Netherlands revealed
he's been secretly moonlighting as an airline pilot.
Since ascending the throne in 2013,
King Willem-Alexander has been co-piloting commercial flights
twice a month without telling passengers.
He only ever pilots short-haul flights, though,
and makes sure to always return home on the same day,
just in case he's suddenly needed as King.
Meanwhile, in Afghanistan, two MPs went one better
and took control of a plane they weren't even on.
After learning the MPs had missed their flight from Kabul to Bamiyan,
supporters of the pair apparently organised a team to stop the plane
from landing at Bamiyan Airport by blocking the runway.
It was therefore forced to fly back to Kabul,
where it picked up the two politicians.
According to Al Jazeera, one of them, Abdul Rahman Shahidani,
said,
Everyone will now know who I am and what my power is.
Shahidani added that he hadn't asked his supporters
to force the plane to return to Kabul.
Another MP embroiled in an aviation scandal was Indian politician
Ravindra Gaikwad,
who admitted to hitting an air steward 25 times with his slipper
and breaking the steward's glasses.
His excuse was that he had been given an economy seat rather than business.
Air India explained that Mr. Gaikwad had been placed an economy
rather than business because there was no business class
on this particular all-economy flight.
Avocados
The world's first avocado restaurant, where every dish contains avocado,
opened in New York.
It ran out of avocados on its first day.
Once all the kinks rined out, the restaurant became very popular.
They went through 650 pounds of avocado a week,
helped, no doubt, by the fact that diners who particularly like avocados
can double the amount of avocado on their dish for an extra two dollars.
So avocados reached peak hipster this year.
Millennials were told the only reason they can't afford houses
is that they keep spending their money on avocado on toast.
Avocados are dangerous too.
They were blamed for a rash of brunch time hand injuries
to people ineptly trying to cut them up.
The British Association of Plastic Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgeons
demanded that warnings should be placed on all avocados.
To go back to the avocado restaurant,
you know where you can double the amount of avocado on your plate
for an extra two dollars?
Presumably you can only do that once,
because like with the rice on the chessboard,
if you do that eight times,
that's already more avocados than Mexico produces in a year.
So M&S are going to be lasering barcodes into their avocados,
because at the moment,
they obviously have those little stickers on them with the barcodes.
And by replacing those with lasers,
they're going to save 10 tons of paper and 5 tons of glue every year.
And they did some early trials,
although they lasered them too deep,
and I think cut through the actual avocado.
So did they call them avocados?
Yeah.
They've also said that they're thinking about lasering pumpkins for Halloween.
But there's no pun involved.
So they've given it up.
So demand for avocados has increased,
but supply has fallen this year.
And that's because avocados are an alternate bearing crop,
which means that every other year, the harvest is smaller.
If you add that to the flooding in Peru,
and the workers' strikes in Mexico,
you have what America's national public radio has dubbed the guac apocalypse.
And with President Trump planning large tariffs
on goods coming from Mexico to pay for his wall,
it may be that avocado lovers will soon be waiting even longer
to get on the housing ladder.
Joe died on the 14th of February in Beijing.
January.
Was that wrong?
The January.
No, what did I say?
You read February.
I thought you read it twice.
Sorry, I'm really tired.
No, no, that's just amazing.
Yeah.
Joe died on the 14th of February.
Oh, God.
Joe died on the 14th of January in Beijing
in a hospital called Peking Union.
Terrible on Valentine's Day as well.
While statisticians were advising against putting glitter in envelopes,
doctors were... Sorry, I just remembered this bit.
While statisticians were advising against putting glitter in envelopes,
doctors were advising against putting it in vaginas.
After a product called passion dust appeared online.
It's a glitter filled capsule designed to be inserted into the vagina,
where it gradually...
I'm so enjoying this.
You do the crime, you do the time.
I don't know anything you would be willing to read out.
Oh, my God.
You guys are the worst.
Oh, I think about awful things.
Right.
We all are.
Rather than fabulous things.
It's a glitter filled capsule designed to be inserted into the vagina,
where it gradually dissolves and spills its contents.
According to the website, this generates...
According to the website, this generates a sweet flavoured...
I'm really sorry.
According to the website,
this generates a sweet flavoured sparkly substance called magikum
that will liven up the user's sex life.
Is that a latter word?
Yeah, I think it comes up in the Aeneid.
Multiple gynecologists strongly advised against using the product,
saying it could lead to bacterial infections, thrush and inflammation.
Phew.