Stuff You Should Know - SYSK Selects: Who Gets to Name Continents?
Episode Date: November 14, 2020America is named after Amerigo Vespucci, right? Maybe not. And who named Australia? Find out the unusually uncertain origins of the continents and other interesting stuff in this classic episode. Lea...rn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hello, everybody.
Who gets to name continents?
That's a great question.
And we answered that on March 22nd, 2016.
I think this was a Josh pick,
a really interesting topic because heck,
I didn't know who gets to name continents, and now I do.
And if you haven't listened to this one, give it a listen now.
It's a very, very cool episode.
Who gets to name continents?
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know,
a production of iHeartRadio's How Stuff Works.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark.
There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant and Jerry's over there.
So this is Stuff You Should Know, geography.
We are in North America.
That's right, Chuck.
According to some.
Yeah.
Actually, according to everybody.
No, not everybody.
Oh, yeah?
Yeah, we'll get to it.
Okay.
We don't want to spoil like basically the fact
of the podcast already.
This is, as I said, about geography.
And if this kind of thing floats your boat,
I strongly suggest you go look at how maps work
or read or listen to that episode.
Yeah.
It was a good one.
It was.
Remember, we found that like people,
other people see the map upside down?
Sure.
Yeah.
It all depends on how you look at it.
Agreed.
And that actually kind of comes into play
not just with how you look at a map and say,
oh, I'm on top and you're on bottom.
So therefore you must be developing.
Right.
Naming continents is a kind of a,
well, humans are kind of big on names, I guess.
Yeah, agreed.
We're big on location.
Sure.
We're big on identifying with where we're from,
with where we live.
That kind of stuff.
It's that whole in-group out-group BS, you know?
Yeah.
And boy, I have to say for a short-ish podcast,
which this is going to be,
it's not going to be our longest one.
It was taken at break.
No, not yet.
I hazard to say that I learned more in this than-
10 Barbie podcasts.
Than 10 Barbie podcasts.
Actually, that's not true.
I learned a lot in that one too.
I love that one.
But this is just loaded with interesting stuff
because I am not the biggest geography buff
for someone who is a math or a maps buff.
Yeah.
Well, you like maps for their artistry, right?
Yeah, and I just ordered a great new map.
I wish I could remember the guy's name,
but it was, I read an article on this super detailed,
awesome map of the United States
that this guy spent years and years drawing.
Plotting the Arby's all over the country.
Not an Arby's map.
That would be great though.
Although you can just follow your nose.
You don't really need.
It always knows.
Yeah, just like smell the horsey sauce.
I love that stuff.
Although the Arby's sauce is by far the superior of the two.
Well, I think you got to mix them.
That's the key.
Not always.
I'm more of a beef and cheddar mix with the Arby's sauce.
It's delicious.
Than the horsey sauce.
Although I'm okay with horsey sauce sometimes.
I haven't had Arby's in forever.
Oh, yeah.
I like it.
It's delicious.
That disgusting roast beef sandwich is so good.
Right, yeah.
All right.
Anyway, I ordered this amazing map
and it hasn't arrived.
I can't wait for it to get here though.
It's going to actually,
I'm going to frame this one, I think.
Okay.
You don't have all your maps framed?
No.
You need like a huge, huge wing of your house
and just have every map you have framed on the wall.
I should.
And be like, I'm starting to see a pattern here.
That would mean I have a huge room
to my house all to myself.
And that's not true, unfortunately.
You know how to swing a hammer, don't you?
Yeah.
Just build another room.
Okay.
Chuck room.
I wish, my friend.
So Chuck, we were talking about continents
and their names and all that stuff, right?
Yes.
It turns out that when you think about the continent's names,
some of them seem kind of ho-hum or whatever,
but there's actually some really great stories
behind these things.
Agreed.
And we should probably start at the very beginning.
Way back.
Way, way back.
In 1948.
Even further back than that.
1926.
200 million years ago.
Oh.
If you looked at the planet Earth,
you would have seen that there weren't
a bunch of different continents.
So there was actually one huge continent
that wore a headband and had enormous like four arms.
Yeah.
Named Pangaea.
Yeah.
What a stud.
That continent was.
Yeah.
And there was one ocean.
And the name of that ocean was Panthalasa.
Yeah.
It wasn't all divided up.
It was just one big chunk of land
and surrounded by one massive ocean.
Right.
And then as we'll see later.
And this is a prominent theory, by the way.
Right.
We don't, like no one was around back then,
200 million years ago and be like note to 2016.
Right.
This is the way things are land-wise around here.
No.
And this theory actually was,
we've talked about it before.
It had to have been in the Earthquakes episode.
This guy was awesome.
Alfred Vega.
Yeah.
Back in I think 1915,
he published his theory on continental drift.
Yeah.
It's pretty amazing.
The theory, well, there's some reasons behind it,
but the theory is that, you know,
the Earth has made up these big plates.
If you listen to our volcanoes or earthquake episodes,
we talk a lot about that.
And over time, these things cracked apart
and shifted and drifted.
And we now have many continents.
Right.
But that's not what people thought for a very long time.
Like they, I guess they just took for granted
that the continents were the way they were.
But Alfred Fegner, first of all, he noticed on a map,
like, wow, it looks like you could really tuck West Africa
into the Eastern part of South America really nicely.
Yeah.
And in fact, the more I look at it,
the whole thing looks like a puzzle
that kind of fits together.
Yeah.
If you have a brain.
So that's where he got his idea first.
And then he started setting about proving it
or supporting, coming up with evidence.
How about that?
Good.
And one of the things he looked at was coal seams
along edges of these puzzle pieces
and found that they were composed
of basically the same stuff.
Yeah.
Like coal in Pennsylvania, deposits in Pennsylvania
were similar or the same to those in Poland
and Germany and Great Britain.
Yeah.
Which shouldn't happen because what coal is
is basically compressed former organisms.
Yeah.
Decaying matter, right?
Yeah.
And I don't think that these different organisms
would have evolved differently on different continents
if they weren't together.
And the fact that they were the same and decomposed
in about the same amounts suggests
that they were all part of the same land mass at one point.
Pretty neat.
And then he also found fossils on different continents
that really shouldn't have been the same.
Yeah.
He saw plant fossils and said, wait a minute.
I'm finding this stuff in places that are wildly different
from one another, these fossils.
So maybe, again, that lends to my theory.
Or how about this mountain range?
The Appalachian Mountains, very similar to the Atlas
Mountains of Morocco.
Maybe it was all one big mountainous mass at one point.
And it turns out they probably were.
That's right.
What was the name of that mountain range
that the Appalachians were part of?
The Central Pangea Mountains, which apparently formed
through the collision of the supercontinents
of Gondwana and La Russia.
Yeah, because we're also, in addition to this How Stuff
Works article, you found a great article by Tia Ghosts, who
writes for Live Science and writes some pretty great stuff.
Yeah, this is really good.
And Ghosts basically just broke it all out,
like how Pangea formed, what Pangea broke into.
It's a really interesting article.
Yeah, and concise.
I like articles that it's not fluff, you know?
Right.
It's just packed with packs.
Get to it right at the beginning, OK?
I love it.
And don't let up, don't stop till you have enough.
So in the article, they talk about the process that
spanned a few hundred million years with a continent
called Laurentia.
That's a great continent name.
Which includes part of North America
and some other microcontinents that
formed eventually Euramerica.
That's not bad.
It sounds like a Kraftwerk album.
Oh, it does, totally.
Euramerica crashes into Gondwana, which I mentioned before.
I like Gondwana, too.
I'm just going to count and say it.
I like these pre-current continent names.
Pre-white dude names, right?
I guess so.
But I think they were named by white dudes, probably.
More creative white dudes.
And Gondwana included Africa, Australia, South America,
and Indian subcontinent.
Yeah, so it's so hilarious that all of these ideas
of nationalism and all this.
Man, if you'd just gone back a few hundred million years ago.
It used to be one.
You'd be neighbors.
Let's all just lighten up, shall we?
Exactly.
And that's actually a thing that we talked about in the maps
episode, too, is when you draw a map,
you are making a political statement.
There's such a sense of otherness and togetherness
based on geographical distribution.
And it's interesting.
It says a lot about the human psyche.
Yeah, we should do a podcast one day
on the human family tree.
Yeah, we should.
Super interesting.
So getting back to the supercontinent, a couple
hundred million years ago, Gondwana split off from La
Asia.
That's a good one, too.
50 million years later, Gondwana broke up.
And then 60 million years ago, North America split off
from Eurasia.
And these are all the prominent theories, again.
Yeah.
Well, they follow the continental drift theory.
And it's not like they're just like, we'll say the Indian
subcontinent broke off from this continent.
It's like, no, they have gone through and done the geological
comparisons and have seen when this basically matched up
to that.
And that's what they've come up with.
It's pretty astounding that you can do that if you have
that enough patience.
Yeah, and brains.
So interestingly, they talked a little bit in the article
about a climate and what it might have been like back then.
And maybe the interior of this large supercontinent
was completely dry because it was surrounded by mountains.
Maybe parts of what is now North America
used to be like the Amazon rainforest,
like a super lush jungle.
Right.
It would be kind of cool.
Yeah.
But once you got into the interior, when you crossed the,
what was it, the central Pangea Mountains?
Yeah.
Like you were just, apparently there was a ring of mountains
that ran around the middle of the whole Pangea
in the interior.
And it just produced rain shadows
that kept rain out from the interior of the continent.
Yeah.
So it would have just been just a totally arid desert.
Pretty cool.
It is cool.
And of course, this isn't over.
They point out in the article that things are still changing.
Australia is creeping up on Asia.
Yeah.
Very slowly, of course.
Yeah, pretty cool.
And part of Eastern Africa is trying
to get out of the rest of Africa.
Yeah, Eastern Africa is staying in so long.
I'm going off on my own.
I'm going to seek my own fortune and adventure.
Of course, this is over the course
of hundreds of millions of years, so.
You will likely not be around unless the singularity
happens soon.
Yeah, exactly.
Then you may.
And you can be like, this is pretty cool.
The people of Sydney will have a docking party
with the people of Hong Kong.
I love that.
So you want to take a little break here,
then we'll talk a little bit about these names?
Yes.
Yes.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s,
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into the decade of the 90s.
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So Chuck, that is the theory of continental drift.
And the whole idea is that there's a layer of magma.
Yeah.
And then on top of it are the continental plates,
and they're constantly shifting and moving.
Again, I'll be at it very slowly.
And when they do, they expose a fissure, and you've got
volcanic ash.
And then, you know, they're constantly shifting and moving.
Again, I'll be at it very slowly.
And when they do, they expose a fissure, and you've got
volcanic activity, or two plates slide up against one
another, or one subducts below the other one,
and you have earthquakes.
So there's a lot of evidence that continental drift is real,
and that things like hollow earth are probably not correct.
Probably.
Have you noticed every time we do any kind of geography,
especially when we mention plate tectonics,
that the hollow earth people come out of the woodwork
and just send us emails and leave comments,
and they're like the high fructose corn syrup people.
They're like really active in the comment section.
Yeah, Frodo and the gang.
Oh wait, that's middle earth.
Different.
In Pangea, we should mention is Greek for all lands or all
earth.
So that's a great name for the original supercontinent.
Right, in Panthelossa is all ocean.
The ocean that surrounded it.
And Pangea was what's considered a true continent.
And we should say this because it'll come up later,
but a true continent is a landmass.
Surrounded by ocean on all sides.
I'm looking at you, Asia and Europe.
I know.
You know?
I know.
In fact, part of, actually I think you sent this idea,
didn't you?
Yeah.
What?
The whole idea for the show was from you,
but not too long ago, I was, I think Emily asked me,
she was like, what is Russia?
Is that part of, is it Asian or is it European?
And I was like, well, I don't know.
Asia.
Let's go look.
Well, it depends.
Part of it.
Really?
Well, yeah, part of it.
And same with Turkey, it's split.
And you know, some people identify with Europe,
some people identify with Asia.
Wow.
That's why the term Eurasia.
Well, no, I got that and I got it from this article,
but I didn't know that like Russia itself was split.
You know?
Yeah, that's what it says.
Like I could see like Kazakhstan or something being
like straddling the sides, but I didn't realize
like Russia itself was split some.
That's pretty interesting.
Yeah.
Maybe some Russians will write in.
Tell us how you identify.
Yeah.
Are you Eurasian, Asian, European?
Which one?
Yeah, because obviously a lot of these lines
are drawn culturally.
Right.
Cause they're mountain ranges that separate it.
That's not a, I mean, it's a geographical border,
but when you're speaking incontinence, it's not.
Incontinence?
Right.
Should we tell them Jerry's bad joke?
Yes.
Before we started, Jerry said,
I guess we're technically all incontinent.
And I said, no, technically we're all incontinent.
And then she said, or within continent.
And none of the three things that we said were funny.
But that's how things happen before we hit record.
Yeah, that's why we don't release this stuff beforehand.
It's usually much better than that.
So let's get down to this, Chuck.
Let's talk about naming continents, right?
All right.
Apparently with continents,
if you are prominently involved with this discovery,
you typically get some sort of naming rights.
Yeah, and a lot of these are very,
just conjecture goes into maybe who named these
and who didn't, one big exception is Antarctica.
Right.
Because it's new-ish.
It's like Pluto.
Yeah, as far as when people discovered it.
In fact, you can go to the New York Times
and read in 1904 about the naming of Antarctica.
Yeah.
If you were so inclined to be bored to tears.
No, I love those old articles.
I like a lot of them too.
Like remember the subway accident
where people got shot out of the subway tunnel
that was being dug?
Yeah.
That was an interesting article.
This one is, it's bad.
Oh, did you read it?
No, just this one.
Okay.
Well, a man named Sir John Murray
was a great explorer and oceanographer.
He was part of the famous HMS Challenger expedition,
which for my money is the greatest
of all ocean going explorations.
The Challenger?
Yeah, man, 69,000 nautical miles.
Wow. Unbelievable.
If you look at the map of this thing, the route,
it was just, it's staggering.
Do you have a map of it?
I don't own one, but I looked it up today.
Okay.
Which is pretty neat.
Anne, I never knew what HMS stood for.
Did you know that?
Her Majesty's Ship.
Yeah, I never knew that.
Yeah.
Oh, it's just like, yeah, HMS.
There's another one that I don't, like RMS.
I don't know.
And what is the USS, just United States Ship?
I don't know.
I never thought about that either.
Probably.
Probably.
Someone from the Navy
can maybe point us in the right direction.
So anyway, John Murray, even though the expedition,
the Challenger expedition did not,
they kind of buzzed Antarctica.
They didn't actually see the land, but they came close.
But he would later go on to do,
like actually go to Antarctica.
Oh, okay.
I was going to say, like, then how did he know anything about it?
I guess his interest was piqued.
He saw icebergs and stuff.
Gotcha.
I'm coming back.
Yeah.
Because this place is cold.
He's come, I'm coming for you, Tarot and Jiro.
So in 1904, he actually was able to name it
as a combination of Ant opposite and Arctic the North Pole.
So it's opposite of the North Pole.
AKA the South Pole.
Pretty neat.
And which one has penguins and,
so Antarctica has penguins and the North Pole doesn't.
Isn't that right?
I don't remember.
But that's like, that's the case, right?
Doesn't one have one and the other one doesn't?
I know, we got a lot of emails.
We did.
I don't know why I'm doing this again.
I know.
I might as well just hook a car battery
up to my nipples or something.
It'll get the same effect.
I got you on that one.
Yeah, that was good.
So let's talk about America because-
I just realized something, Chuck.
This may be played in geography classes
in like middle school and stuff.
So if that's the case, I want to go ahead
and apologize to all the middle schoolers.
They just had to hear me say that.
That's okay.
And don't try that at home.
Bad idea.
No, it doesn't matter what grade you're in
or how long out of school you are.
Agreed.
So America, the name America,
if you went to took civics class
or geography and elementary school and high school,
you probably got the story that
America of Espiuchy was named after him,
European explorer.
Yeah, that guy has been slandered, maligned,
maybe worse than Columbus even.
Yeah.
Apparently he had a lot of rivals back in Italy
and they worked very hard to sully his name
and it was quite effective over the centuries
to the point where there was a big,
almost a revival in hatred for America of Espiuchy.
Interesting.
And a lot of really inaccurate ideas
were revived based on propaganda,
contemporary propaganda against him.
So what's the idea that he ripped off Columbus?
Well, that's not,
it depends on your definition of ripped off.
So I don't have the impression that he ever said,
I discovered America, he said Columbus discovered America
but the distinction between Espiuchy and Columbus
is that Columbus didn't realize
that he hadn't hit already,
that he hadn't hit undiscovered
or previously undiscovered by European land, right?
He thought that he had just found another route
to the West Indies apparently until he died.
Espiuchy was the one to say,
no European's ever seen this before, please.
That was great.
No, it wasn't.
I like it.
And so he is the one who supposedly,
this continent was named after
because he was the one to recognize it
as previously uncharted land.
Yeah, and it's on record in 1507,
a German cartographer named Martin Waldsemiola.
Our two favorite accents.
Yeah, Italian and German.
Yeah.
Two of the only two you can still do these days
and not get taken to death for.
Sure.
He very famously made a map that was a big effort in France
in the 1500s to really bring the modern map
into the forefront and like these old maps,
like these were made by a bunch of dummies
who didn't know anything.
So let's really expand our geographic knowledge.
Well, yeah, this is when like Mercator started working.
Yeah, so this woodcut map that Waldsemiola made
was the first to depict a separate Western hemisphere,
the first to show the Pacific Ocean as a separate thing.
Oh, this guy, he was here.
He's like, get that sea monster off of there.
I'd leave a sea monster.
Okay.
Just for fun.
But he...
It's an Easter egg.
Yeah, there was one of these maps.
There is one of these maps still existing.
And in 2003, the Library of Congress bought it
with donation from Discovery Channel.
Oh, is that right?
Apparently.
Nice.
For 10 million bucks, it was in a castle
for 350 years in Southern Germany.
And they're like, let's buy it and display it.
I read about a guy who found an original copy
of the Declaration of Independence,
folded up behind a painting that he bought
at a yard sale for like four dollars.
Amazing.
And I think he sold it for like a few million
and then Norman Mailer bought it for like eight million.
Wow.
But yeah, somebody just found the Declaration of Independence.
I guess in much the same way.
That's amazing.
I got nothing in my attic.
I even looked.
Oh, you did look.
I was gonna say, you don't know, but I guess you do.
That's some old doors.
Doors can be worth 30, 40 bucks.
Yeah, the door from the early 1930s.
Yeah.
People love those things.
They go crazy for them.
I think it's neat, but you know,
I wanted like a stash of gold bullion or something.
Like prohibition era of money.
Yeah, my house isn't old enough.
Where's your house built?
Yeah, like 1930.
Prohibition.
Yeah, I guess so.
Maybe some old booze, some old moonshine.
Right.
That'd be delicious.
So the reason this map is significant by.
Valsamule.
Is that it says America, like North-South America
are designated America by this map.
And this is map that is in question was from,
when was it?
1507.
1507.
And somebody said, hey, buddy,
why'd you call it America?
And he said, I did it in honor of Amerigo Vespucci.
Sure.
So the first guy who really uses the word America
is on record apparently is saying he named it America
after Amerigo Vespucci.
Yeah.
But a lot of people said that's a lie.
It's a historical fallacy.
It's inaccurate.
Right.
So one guy went so far as to say that
Amerigo Vespucci actually changed his name
after America was named.
And that his real name was
Giovanni Vespucci?
No, Alberigo Vespucci.
Oh.
And that he changed his name to Amerigo from Alberigo.
To conveniently align with the naming of America.
Right.
But apparently, and this is, again,
this is contemporary stuff.
People said, you changed your name, you big liar.
Right.
And then in like the 1970s,
I think some historian revived it
and like that was the idea.
But somebody else went back and apparently found
his baptismal certificate that lists him
as Amerigo Vespucci.
The thing is, is that still doesn't mean
that America was named after Vespucci.
True.
There is a long tradition among cartographers
that had already been established
by the time America was discovered to name new lands
if you were naming it after an explorer,
you named it after the explorer's last name.
If you want to name it after royalty,
you named it after the royalty's first name.
So think about it, Georgia.
Yeah, yeah.
Virginia.
And then Columbus or Hudson.
Like the explorer's last name or royalty's first name
is how you name things.
So they would have named America Vespucci land.
The United States of Vespucci.
Exactly, rather than America.
Yeah, that'd be great.
But if it's not named after Vespucci,
then where did America come from?
Well, there are some theories.
One is that it was named after the Ameri-keek.
Ameri-keek.
Ameri-keek.
It's a Mayan word, actually.
Yes, mountains in Nicaragua and...
This is where my money goes.
You think so?
So people think that Columbus and Vespucci
both went to these mountains after American natives said,
hey, there's gold in them Darhills,
which of course is really all they wanted anyway.
Well, that's not true.
They wanted to discover new lands,
but hopefully new lands with gold.
Right.
And people you could subjugate.
Exactly.
So that they went there and then it was named
after those mountains.
Yeah.
Not bad.
And did you say both Columbus and Vespucci
supposedly traveled to these mountains?
Yeah, because they wanted the gold.
Right, so that's a pretty good reason to call it that.
And when you combine that with the evidence
that a cartographer likely would have named it
Vespucci land rather than America after Amerigo,
it's entirely possible that America is actually named
after a indigenous Mayan word for some mountains.
I think it means place of wind in Mayan.
Interesting.
Yeah.
Another theory, and this one I don't think it holds water,
but there was a British royal rep named Richard Ameriq,
A-M-E-R-I-K-E, and supposedly explorer John Cabot
became the first, well, this isn't supposed,
in 1497 he definitely became the first to sail
under the British flag to the new world.
And apparently when he got back,
he got a big wad of cash from Ameriq,
and he was like, hey, I'm gonna name the country
and continent after you then.
But there's really nothing to substantiate that, right?
No.
And then Cabot retired to make some pretty decent voter.
Oh yeah.
Is that him?
I think so.
Okay.
Surely it's him still.
Maybe.
And he's several hundred years old.
Do you wanna take a break again?
Yeah, let's break and then we'll talk
about our favorite continent, Australia.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews,
co-stars, friends, and non-stop references
to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger
and the dial-up sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper
because you'll wanna be there
when the nostalgia starts flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it and popping it back in
as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
This
thinking, this is the story of my life. Just stop now. If so,
tell everybody everybody about my new podcast and make sure to
listen so we'll never ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart Radio app, Apple
podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm Mangesh Atikular and to be honest, I don't believe in
astrology. But from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my
life. In India, it's like smoking. You might not smoke, but
you're gonna get second hand astrology. And lately, I've been
wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop
running and pay attention. Because maybe there is magic in the
stars, if you're willing to look for it. So I rounded up some
friends and we dove in and let me tell you, it got weird fast.
Tantric curses, Major League Baseball teams, canceled
marriages, K-pop. But just when I thought I had to handle on this
sweet and curious show about astrology, my whole world can
crash down.
Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a
skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are going to change
too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart Radio app, Apple
Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. So Chuck, you were
telling everybody our favorite continent is?
Australia. Yeah. That's what Lex Luthor, Gene Hackman, is
Lex Luthor wanted in Superman. He wanted Australia?
Yeah. To his own?
Or Superman 2. Yeah, remember when the three Terrence Stam and
the gang came down and Lex Luthor was working with them and
they were like, well, what do you want in return for delivering
Superman? He said, Australia.
I don't remember that. Man, Gene Hackman was great. I saw this,
the beginning of a movie with Robin Williams and Walter
Matthau. Robin Williams was like a baby at the time, but they
foil a robbery and become heroes. They go to a survivalist
camp or something? Yeah.
I think it's called Survivors? I think so.
I saw the first 10 minutes of it. I totally know the movie.
But I was like, man, there is no one, no one on the planet like
Walter Matthau anymore. He was awesome. Then I was like, God,
I just can't imagine Robin Williams and Walter Matthau working
together. Then didn't they do Moscow on the Hudson too? Wasn't
that one? Well, I don't think Matthau was in that one.
Oh, he wasn't? I thought he was. Maybe he was.
I could be wrong because I never saw it.
Those early Robin Williams movies were great.
They were. According to Garp.
I never saw that one. That was by the guy who did Ciderhouse
Rules, right? Yeah, John Irving. He was pretty great.
But then it made me think about Couch Trip. You remember that
movie with Dan Aykroyd and Walter Matthau?
I didn't see it. Was it good? Yes. It was so good.
I haven't seen it in decades, but I guarantee it still holds up.
I mean, it's Matthau and Aykroyd. Yeah.
One's like a con man pretending to be crazy.
And the other one actually is crazy who is the only person who
consents that this guy's a con man. You know, I've never been
the hugest. No, I'm sorry. He's a con man pretending to not be
crazy. Oh, okay. That makes more sense.
It's great. I've never been the hugest Dan Aykroyd guy.
He definitely is Dan Aykroyd, Dan Aykroyd in this thing.
I don't dislike him. But Walter Matthau is providing a nice
slow burning distraction over here. If you don't like Dan Aykroyd,
you'll still like Couch Trip. Yeah. And boy, the odd couple,
Matthau and Lemon. I don't know if I ever saw that original one.
So good. All right. That's called Movie Sidebar with Josh
and Chuck. And that started with Gene Hackman. We didn't
mean to talk about him. Oh, I love Gene Hackman. He needs to
unretire is what I'm saying. Seriously. Like go make another
movie. Yeah. Your swan song. That's what I say. All right. We
own you Gene Hackman. Australia, which is what Gene
Hackman is like Luther wanted. It is a bit of a mystery too.
Most people will point to Matthew Flinders in 1802 as the
Namer because he was the first to circumnavigate it and create
that map. And Australis means southern, so it all makes
sense, right? Yeah. Back in the day, the cartographers were
already aware of Australia before Matthew Flinders
circumnavigated it, but they called it the Terra Australis,
which is the southern land. Matthew Flinders is like, I like
the sound of Australia more. It's more pleasing to the ear
apparently is how it was put. All right. The thing is, for a
very long time, that's how Australia was named as far as
anyone was concerned, but then Australia's National Library
discovered a way older map from before 1802 from 1545. Yeah,
from a German astronomer named Siriaco Jakob Zumbarth. That's
a great name. Great name. Not at all German if you ask me,
except for the Jakob thing. Zumbarth is, but that Siriaco
definitely doesn't look German. No. But yeah, 1545. That's
like way, way before. Yeah, and apparently there's maps that
are even slightly older than that around, and one of them
might have been produced by Mercator himself, that also
refer to the area around Australia as Australia's
something. So, not everyone was referring to it
exclusively as the Terra Australis. Okay. But it's
probable that the Siriaco Jakob Zumbarth is the one who
first labeled it Australia. Alright, we should do a
podcast on the history of Australia. Sure. Super
interesting. Starring Hugh Jackman for the World War II
part. By the way, when I mentioned Hugh Jackman is
P.T. Barnum. Okay. He is in fact playing P.T. Barnum in an
upcoming musical version of a movie, but I either didn't
know or I subliminally knew. Okay. But I didn't overtly know.
I thought later on after I found that out that you'd just
been messing with me the whole episode. Well, I apologize
for assuming that. That's alright. I either didn't know or
maybe I had read that and just forgot or something. Yeah.
Because you said it like three times. Yeah. Or maybe I
should get into casting. If you didn't know, then hats off to
you because that was prescient. So, now let's move on to
other comments. Oh, did you see some of the suggestions we
got though? Oh, for P.T. Barnum? Yeah, I think that my
favorite one was John C. Riley. He'd be an odd P.T. Barnum,
but he could totally do it. Yeah, I saw one. Someone said
Tom Hardy who like he'd be great in anything, but he's in
everything right now. He's so hot right now. And then someone
sent Cole Meany who was sort of like the. That name's like I
know the name. Who is it though? He's like the English John
C. Riley. He sort of looks like him. He's older though,
right? Or he may be Irish. Yeah, he's a little older. Yeah,
yeah, I know who he is. They kind of look alike. A bit. Cole
Meany's got a little more dapperness to him. A little
more suavness maybe. Well, there's nothing about John C.
Riley to suave. Have you seen we need to talk about Kevin?
Uh-uh. Oh, you'll love it. Is it a movie? It's a sleeper with
John C. Riley and Tilda Swinton about they have a kid who's a
bad kid and Tilda Swinton's having to deal with it.
Interesting. It's a really great movie. It's on Netflix
right now. I love John C. Riley so. He's kind of a a prop in
the background for this. It's mostly Tilda Swinton and I'm
sure they appreciate hearing that. He knows. Okay. There's no
way he played that role and doesn't know. All right. I
never knew we could talk so much about movies in this one. I
didn't see that coming. Um so let's talk about the other
continents. Um Africa, Asia and Europe, basically what it
boils down to with the rest of these is they were likely
named by sailors who had to call them something. Yeah,
probably. Um and the like Africa has a few different
contenders that are pretty good. Um there's a a the
Afarak people who are in the northern part of Africa.
They're they're a Berber tribe. Yeah. Not a bad source. Yeah.
Makes sense. Um and then apparently, apric in Greek or
aprica in Latin means sunny. Right? Yeah. That makes sense
too. Uh and then there's uh so who who knows? The point is
there's no documentation for when Africa was first named and
it was most likely Africa, Europe and Asia were named by
seafaring folks. Sure. Who were like we're going this place
and they needed a name for this place so they their um
families would know where they were to go look for them if
they didn't come back. Yeah. And so they came up with names
like Europe and Asia. Yeah, Phoenician sailors uh it's
believed they may have used their proximity to the sun uh
because Asia uh might come from uh ACU, a queue for sunrise or
east and Europe which is of course west uh closer to the
sunset if you're standing in the east. Right. Uh E-R-E-B
Arab which means sunset or west. That's a Phoenician word.
Right. So, it's possible Phoenician sailors named Asia and
Europe. There's other ones too like Europa is a Greek um
mythological figure. Right? Yeah. Um and then uh Asia could
have been named after a ruler named um Azios, a Trojan
ruler. Yeah. I don't think that's it. That's the fun thing
about things where it's like no one knows. You can be like
that's not right. Yeah, you read certain, you read theories
and you some make sense to you and some don't. Right. I like
that. Uh that's why I don't uh I think uh math never
appealed to me and why it does appeal to math fans just
because it's rules apply and like there is a right and a
wrong. Sure. I'm much more prone to be like to think
about something and have theories about it. Well, you
know, they say you read a lot of fiction, right? Yeah. They
say that people who read fiction are much more open to um
ambiguous resolutions or non-resolutions. Yeah. They're
lacking closure. Yeah. Um and because you so frequently get
that from fiction. It leads to the question though which is
first. Are you attracted to fiction because? Right. It
usually has resolutions like that or have you been trained
to accept resolutions like that from appreciating fiction?
Well, back to movies. One of my favorite things which really
bothers a lot of people are movies with ambiguous endings.
If it if done right, I think it's one of the coolest things you
can do in a movie. Yeah. Is to not wrap it up in a little bow
and kind of leave the end with a decision like sure what's
going on here. Plus, it leaves it open for a sequel. Well,
maybe. Um I bet math majors hate that though now that I
think about it. Oh yeah. You know? Yeah. Uh and then
finally, some people still depending on where you are in
the world don't recognize uh all the continents. No, and
this actually makes sense to me because we said earlier
continent is a body of land surrounded on all sides by a
body of water, right? So, that means that a lot of the
continents that we recognize over here in the west is
continents, incontinence. Yeah. They're incontinence. So,
according to some parts of the world, North America and
South America, that's just America. Yeah. Uh and then
Europe and Asia, just Eurasia. Yeah. And that's it. Uh I've
got a great pavement t-shirt that has North America on it
and it says Canada and then Mexico and in the middle it
says pavement and I get a lot of compliments on it and I
think it's from people thinking I'm making a statement like
the United States is just a bunch of pavement and like you
know, Canada, Mexico aren't. Yeah. When in fact, it's just
the band. Yeah. Or maybe they're all just pavement
vans. Yeah, maybe. You can't tell. You can never tell
these days. Did I tell you I'm Facebook friends with uh
Bob Nistanovich from pavement? You didn't. I tricked him
because we had some mutual friends. Your mom said that
you have to be friends with me on Facebook. No, it's pretty
great though. I like seeing insight into these like people
are Ruvier. Sure. He's a big horse racing guy. Oh, yeah.
Yeah, he likes the ponies. I don't like going to the track
necessarily but I like the big three. Yeah. Although I would
go to the track. We just don't have them around here. Yeah, we
don't. Uh and bring it on. Send the email about how I'm
wrong for going to the track or wanting to. If you want to
know more about naming continents or geography or any of
that jazz, head on over to howstuffworks.com and type in
geography in the search bar and it will bring up a mess of
great articles. Since I said mess, it's time for the
listener mail.
I'm going to call this road tripping. We get a lot of
emails from people that listen to us while they're road
tripping. Yes. Which is very nice. Uh hey guys, my husband
and I are adventuring on a road trip from Texas
throughout Florida. Uh I've been addicted to the show for a
couple of months now but my husband has not listened to a
podcast in his life. Uh I started the driving in the
trip and he asked if I could make it all the way to Florida.
First of all, husband. Tom? Yeah, that's pretty serious
stuff. Alright, we're in Texas, hun. Can you make it all the
way to Florida? Yeah. I gotta catch some Z's. I need some
sugar. Uh I said that if I could listen to stuff you
should know, then I wouldn't stop driving. He sighed
regrettably and then let me turn an episode on. Five days
into the trip, uh every time we get into the car, he now
says, educate me on stuff I should know. Nice. Uh our biggest
debates are deciding on which podcast to listen to next.
We literally made it to one of our destinations and sat in
the car for another 15 minutes after a three hour drive
just to finish an episode. That's wonderful. Uh thank you
so much for what you do and that is from Kim and Tom
Kepler and since we are not recording too far out these
days, they are most likely still on their trip. Yeah,
enjoy the trip. Be safe, have fun and drive, you know,
every now and then, Tom. Yeah, really, Tom. Let's get it
together, shall we? That's awesome. I hope they just
heard this. Yeah. Uh if you want to get in touch with us
because you love us on a road trip or you um whatever, you
can tweet to us at syskpodcast. You can join us on
facebook.com slash stuff you should know. You can send us
an email to stuffpodcast at housestuffworks.com and as
always, join us at our home on the web stuffyoushouldknow.com.
Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio's How
Stuff Works. For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the
iHeartRadio app. Apple podcasts are wherever you listen to
your favorite shows.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher and
Christine Taylor, stars of the cult classic show Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker
necklaces. We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off
point, but we are going to unpack and dive back into the
decade of the 90s. We lived it and now we're calling on all
of our friends to come back and relive it. Listen to Hey Dude,
the 90s called on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted
Tips with Lance Bass. Do you ever think to yourself, what
advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in
this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help and a different hot sexy teen crush
boy band or each week to guide you through life. Tell
everybody, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to
listen so we'll never ever have to say bye bye bye. Listen to
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app, Apple
podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.