Stuff You Should Know - What is colorblindness?
Episode Date: September 25, 2018Being colorblind doesn't mean you see in black and white, although in severe cases it can look a bit like that. The condition is on a spectrum ranging from dulled colors to shades of grey. Learn all a...bout what colorblindness means in today's episode. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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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.
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but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know
from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark, and there's Charles W. Chuck Bryant,
and there's Jerry over there.
So this is Stuff You Should Know.
About color blindness.
That's right, which I didn't know a lot about.
I guess I didn't either.
It's one of those things you just kind of assume you do,
but there's a lot more to it than you realize, right?
Yeah, I kind of wondered about myself though,
because Emily is always telling me
that I'm getting colors wrong.
So I took an online test.
I did too, how'd you fare?
Normal color.
I took one of those, what's it called, the scope one?
Anomalous scope?
Yeah.
I took one of those online,
and I said I had just very weak color blindness,
which I wasn't very surprised by,
because dark colors are kind of hard for me
to differentiate sometimes.
They said that you don't see black or white.
You're like Michael Jackson.
Right.
That's right, man.
I've always said that, but no one ever listened until now,
until I proved it on the internet.
Yeah, thank God for the internet.
So you want to talk a little history,
because believe it or not, there is color blindness history.
And I should say also, Chuck,
I looked up the more politically correct term
for color blindness, and there really isn't one.
Oh yeah?
Well, that's great.
Yeah, so we can feel free to use color blind,
in good conscience, okay?
Fantastic.
So back in 1794, John Dalton,
who came up with atomic theory,
he was a pretty important early scientist.
He presented his first scientific paper,
and it was on color blindness.
Did you know that?
No, I never heard of the guy.
Yeah, so his first,
it was from what anybody can tell,
the first scientific paper on color blindness,
and he wrote it about himself.
He and his brother were both color blind,
and he posited that he had some sort of blue fluid
in his eye that was affecting his color vision,
and he willed that when he died, his eye be dissected.
And when they did, they found that,
no, it was pretty normal.
There was no blue fluid in there.
And later on, they preserved his eye tissue,
and in 1995, he was diagnosed
with something called deuterinopia.
So he was a deuteran in the parlance
of people who are color blind,
meaning that he lacked functioning green cones
or medium wave cones in his eye.
Interesting.
So he was the first dude, huh?
He was the first one to write a scientific paper on it,
at least.
Yeah, good for him, and bad for him.
Well, yeah.
I think so too.
I don't wanna like overstate how bad I feel
for people who have color blindness,
because I know they're like living life
and enjoying it and everything,
but I would not wanna be color blind
if I had my druthers, you know?
No.
And I'm sure most people who are color blind
would feel the same way.
You know, John Fuller used to work with us.
I believe he has some sort of color blindness,
or maybe calling it color vision deficiency.
I saw that.
Is a better term because color blind,
a lot of people that don't know anything about it
might think, well, if you're color blind,
then you see in black and white.
Which is a form of color blindness,
but that's the most extreme form.
There's definitely a gradient appropriately enough
between full color vision,
which is called trichromacy and complete color blindness.
Yeah, so let's get into the vision a little bit.
Okay.
Have we done one on the eye?
Dude, I was like,
a lot of this sounds kind of familiar,
and I looked high and low
and could not find anything on vision,
on seeing, on the eye, nothing.
So I don't know if we did like maybe a video
on this once or something,
but some of it seemed familiar,
but I couldn't find an episode on it.
All right, so we have a retina in our eye.
Like everyone knows, the retina,
senses light, deals with color and vision.
And there are rods and cones.
These are, they're called rods and cones
because of their shape.
They look like cones or rods.
So rods help you see in low light,
and the cones are what,
where the detail and the color come from.
So the cone malfunctioning or not being there at all,
if you don't have three cones,
and you have to have at least two to see in any color.
But if one of those cones of the three,
if you do have three is malfunctioning,
then you will fall somewhere on the scale
of color vision deficiency.
Right, right.
So there's like something called,
so like I said, if you have normal color vision,
you have trichromacy.
If you have anomalous trichromacy,
it means that one of those cones
is not functioning properly.
Although they all still work.
They, it's just out of alignment a little bit.
Yeah.
And the way that it can get out of alignment
is those cones.
Each of them has a chromophore, I think is what it's called,
which is like a little molecule
that is attuned to a certain type
of a certain wavelength of the visible spectrum.
And those wavelengths that it picks up
kind of overlap depending on the cone.
Like red and green cones,
what they pick up on the visible spectrum overlap big time.
Green and blue kind of overlap.
And then red and blue overlap the least.
But if the alignment of the wavelength
to the visible spectrum within that cone
is just a little bit off,
you're not going to see colors like other people see colors,
but you're still gonna see something, right?
And that's called anomalous trichromacy.
Yeah, and there are,
well, I mean, there's so many different subcategories,
I guess we should go through some of these.
For sure.
If you have that anomalous trichromacy,
some of the stuff is so hard,
you do have your cones.
So that means you have three cones,
but one of those cones is defective.
So if you have the deuteronomally.
This can be a fun.
Deuteronomy, no, wait, that's a Bible book.
Right.
What is it, deuteronomally?
That's right, it just sounds weird.
Yeah, I think so.
I'm really bad with anomalies.
I think you just nailed it, man.
Yeah, but it was clumsy, but that's fine.
Deuteronomally, yeah, deuteronomally.
It's a really tough word.
It's an anomaly of your deuters.
That's right.
So that deuteronomally you're just talking about,
that's if your green cones are out of alignment.
All right.
And there's proto anomaly or protonomaly.
And that's your red cones being out of alignment.
And then tried anomaly is blue.
All right, so if you're missing a cone all together,
that's for malfunctioning.
You have three, but one of them doesn't work quite right.
If you're missing one all together,
you have dichromatic vision.
And then we said, of course,
that the worst is monochromacy.
That's basically seeing in black and white
in sort of shades of gray.
Right.
But if you are a dichromat
or a person with dichromatic vision,
maybe that's the PC distinction.
It's to not call someone a dichromat.
Maybe.
You think?
Maybe.
I saw, depending on your condition,
there were like abbreviated terms for it.
But I saw people being referred to as dichromats all the time,
but it really flies in the face of that whole thing
of describing people by their condition
rather than like a person with dichromacy.
You know what I mean?
Gotcha.
Yeah.
Well, within the dichromat though,
there are the three different subtypes,
which are the deuter, the proto, and the tritah.
That's the easiest way to say it.
Right.
So that's what those fall under.
Yeah.
And so the big difference between anomalous trichromacy
and dichromacy, dichromacy says it all.
It means you have two functioning cones.
And because of all that overlap, Chuck,
with all of the wavelengths
that the different pigments in your cones catch,
that's a huge pallet of colors
that are produced in the human brain when we look around.
But if you remove one of those cones,
there's an enormous reduction in colors.
Supposedly each cone multiplies the number of colors by 100.
So if you start out with just one cone,
let's say you can see 100 shades,
just by adding a second cone,
you can now see 10,000 different colors.
And by adding a third cone,
you can now see a million different colors, right?
So if you remove one of those cones,
you're suddenly down to 10,000 colors.
That's a significant difference.
And that's the thing about dichromacy is
it's not that your cones are misaligned.
One of your cones just is not producing at all.
And so you're lacking a whole range of colors
that other people with all three functioning cones can see.
Right.
And like I said earlier with monochromacy,
that's when you see basically in black and white and gray.
And there are two types there,
rod, monochromacy and cone type.
And if you have the rod type,
you also have very poor vision
and you're very sensitive to light.
And you might also have something called nystagmus,
which that is when you have, they call it dancing eyes.
That's when there's a horizontal version,
which means your eye basically darts back and forth
to the left and to the right constantly.
Like Pruitt, Taylor, Vince.
Does he have that?
Mm-hmm.
I've never noticed.
You'd recognize him and like he's just well known,
he's the actor with...
Oh, I know him.
I just never noticed his eye.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like you can tell a director's like,
all right, let's really get that going for this scene, okay?
Oh, wow.
So when you think about the color wheel,
red, orange, yellow, blue, indigo, green, violet,
I said them out of order.
I don't know what that would spell.
Doesn't spell Roy G. Bibb, though.
But if you're colorblind, like everyone wants to know,
like what does it look like if you're colorblind?
And it's a little hard to describe
because it's very subjective when you think
about how each person sees color.
Because I imagine everyone sees things
a little bit differently, but if you're colorblind,
that palette is just not as varied.
It's more muted.
Yeah, for sure.
Because again, those different cones are interacting.
They're overlapping to produce a huge palette of colors.
It's not like we just see everything in red,
green, and blue.
There's those things mixed together
and interact to produce colors beyond those three.
So yeah, if you're missing one,
you're missing a lot more than just green
or just red or just blue.
Yeah, and things, you know, it doesn't mean
that it's altogether gone either
because it's on a spectrum.
It depends what kind you have.
Like it could be red-ish but very muted
or green could look a more green-grey.
But it's just not that sort of robust,
standard color wheel that you're used to seeing
with what I guess you would consider normal color vision.
For sure, and like if you have one of the opiates,
if you have like proton opiates,
which is your red cones don't function at all,
the reds are brown-ish, the purples are blue-ish,
your yellow is totally normal,
but the green is also kind of like a weird,
kind of khaki brown itself.
And that really overlaps with deuterinopia too.
The big difference between those is that your red,
what would look like a dark, dark brown to a proton opi,
for deuterinope, it would look kind of like
a kind of a drab brown-ish olive,
which is not what you want to see
when you look at like a bright red apple.
Olive, look at that huge olive.
Right, it looks delicious,
and then you take a bite and you're like, that's no olive.
So let's take a break, have some olives,
and we'll talk about animals
and testing for color blindness right after this.
["Hey Dude the 90s"]
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?
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So leave a code on your best friend's beeper,
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as we take you back to the 90s.
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called on the iHeart radio app,
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Oh, God.
Seriously, I swear.
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Um, hey, that's me.
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All right, so I think a lot of people
have always heard growing up on the playground
that animals see in black and white,
especially dogs and cats see in black and white.
Some animals see in color.
Some see in black and white.
It kind of depends.
Dogs and cats, they actually do see color.
They just don't see the whole Roy GB of color spectrum
that you and I know.
Apparently apes and monkeys see the same way we do.
Then you have really colorblind animals,
like black and white types, like raccoons, seals, whales.
Black and white types.
I love it.
And then birds, apparently, see more color than we do.
Yeah, and there's other animals
that see things like ultraviolet.
There's a visible spectrum, but that's what we humans see,
where technically, if you had some sort of chromophore
and an opsin that worked together in a cone
to produce the red, green, or blue,
if you had one that was attuned to gamma rays
or x-rays or ultraviolet or infrared,
we would be able to see in those, too.
But we don't have that.
But other animals are attuned to other things.
And yeah, from what I saw, two birds seem to really see colors
like nobody's business.
Those birds.
And dogs, I think, tend to see blues and yellows,
just like us, in a little more robustly.
And the other colors on the spectrum are more muted
or just don't show up like we see them at all
or more like browns or something like that.
So if you get your dog a ball, you want a blue ball
or a yellow ball,
they'll be able to spot those a lot easier.
Well, it doesn't mean they can't see it.
It just means they'll see a grayish ball, right?
Yeah, if you get like a...
Yes, for sure.
But who wants to play with a gray ball?
I think is my point.
I always wonder how they test for that stuff in animals.
You just ask.
Yeah?
Yeah.
Blue.
Red.
That's a good Scooby impression.
All right, so testing for this,
you can go on the internet, of course,
and you took one of the anomalous scope tests.
I took what is known as a PIP,
which is a test called the Ishihara plate
and pseudo isochromatic plate.
So this was a doctor in Japan.
He developed this test for the Japanese army,
Dr. Ishihara.
And if you go and look at it,
it looks truly kind of cool, slightly psychedelic looking.
It's a circle composed of a bunch of little colored dots.
Back in the day, he would just hold up cards
like a Rorschach test.
Like watercolor cards.
Yeah.
And it's a circle with a bunch of little colored dots
in the middle.
And then within all those dots,
there is the shape of a number composed of different variations
of colors.
So there will be like a circle with a bunch of dots
that are mainly red and shades of red.
And then within that will be like a number four
that's really, really close.
And it depends.
Some of them really stand out as obvious
and some of them really blend in or are camouflaged almost.
And you pick out these numbers and say what number you're seeing.
And then after you go through this whole series,
they'll be able to say like,
you know, you're pretty good on the reds,
but you obviously have trouble with the greens
or something like that.
Yeah.
Because depending on what color scheme they use,
if you are like a proton oak and can't see reds,
you're not going to be able to pick out the red three
that's embedded within these dots because you can't see red.
It's all just going to fade together
and just look like a field of dots to you.
Whereas somebody else who can't see reds
would just see it clear as day
that there's a three in the middle of that circle.
Yeah.
Which is pretty ingenious test.
And that was like the test for a while,
but it's definitely advanced by leaps and bounds since then.
There's more tests than just showed up in this article.
There's one, I can't remember the name of it,
but it's made of,
you have four rows of something like 20 or 30 tiles
of varying shades across the spectrum.
And you're supposed to basically put them in order
to match a line, like a control line.
And it's kind of like an anomalous scope test,
but it's more hands-on.
Yeah.
And then there's one that the,
I think the Coast Guard and the Navy and the Air Force use
called the Farnsworth Lantern Test.
Yeah, my brother-in-law is a Marine and he's a pilot
and he had to take this.
So this is an additional test basically.
If you fail the PIP test, then you will use this.
The FAA also uses it because if you want to be a pilot,
you can't be colorblind.
So it's basically a backup and it's like a little box
that shows you colored lights.
And you have to identify these colored lights
as they come up from a distance.
They'll show two at a time, maybe one at a time,
and you just have to pick them out and identify the colors.
But they do dim, they use a filter.
So like you can't cheat your way through
by knowing that something is bright,
so it might be yellow.
Right, because when you start looking at colored lights
and stuff like that, it does become clear
that some are just brighter than others,
which is why I think people who have yellow,
blue color blindness or Tritonopes,
they tend to be very sensitive to bright light,
which kind of makes sense in a weird way.
But a lot of this stuff, it was like,
wait, how does that happen again?
You know, like Deuteronopia and Protonopia,
they overlap so much that they call
both of them red, green color blindness.
And they both see reds as browns,
and they see greens as browns.
But it's just bizarre to me when I really kind of drill into it,
the actual details of it are really fascinating
because you just raised your whole life to think like,
oh, this person can't see red, this person can't see green,
this person can't see blue.
And it's as simple as that.
And it's the exact opposite of as simple as that in reality,
because there's so much nuance to colors
that are produced by these three RGB cones.
Yeah, and I mean, I imagine diagnosing a kid,
I mean, it's not, I mean, we'll talk a little bit
about living with color blindness in a bit,
but it's, and I'd love to hear from people,
it's not like it might hamper you,
I don't think to the point of danger.
I guess maybe if you were a monochromat,
that might be possible.
Sure.
But it seems like more an inconvenience
than anything else, right?
You'd be like, what is this black liquid
pouring out from a major artery in my arm?
I don't know what this is.
If it were red, I would know it's blood.
That's right.
Yeah.
As far as how it's caused, it is largely genetic,
although there are some drugs and diseases and conditions
that could cause it later in life, but it's generally genetic.
Yes, so especially red-green color blindness is,
what is it, sex-linked recessive.
Yeah, and way more men and way more Caucasian men
get it than women.
And I'm not quite sure about the Caucasian part.
I couldn't find any explanation for that,
but there's a very clear and easy explanation
for why more men have it.
Something like 8% of Caucasian men,
and I think like 5% of Asian men,
tend to have red-green color blindness
of some varying degree, right?
And if you have red-green color blindness,
50% of people are going to have mild,
and the other 50% are going to have it so severe
that it would basically be protonopia or deuterinopia,
which again means your cones just aren't functioning,
just like one of your cones isn't.
But the reason why there's way more men than women,
I think something like 0.5% of the population
in the US of women have color blindness
is because it's carried on the X chromosome.
That's right.
And since it's recessive, men only have one X chromosome
and they have a Y chromosome,
which means that all of their color vision genes
are just on the X chromosome.
And since it's recessive, if that one gene is defective
and that you don't have normal color vision,
the man's going to have color blindness.
But for a woman, it takes two defective X chromosome genes, right?
That's right.
So that makes it sex-linked recessive,
which is kind of, it could be an okay album name.
I don't know about a band name.
Sex-linked recessive, sure.
Yeah.
And I talked about diseases and conditions.
Glaucoma is one, diabetes, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's,
leukemia, MS, sickle cell, alcoholism.
If you literally drink yourself colorblind,
like that sounds like something made up.
Yeah, it does.
You know?
You wouldn't be able to detect the pink elephant anymore.
Yeah, that's true.
You say, who's that gray elephant?
And they say, all elephants are gray.
Drinking yourself colorblind, man, that's nuts.
That's a Tom White song.
There's also, it should be for sure.
There's also like some drugs that can do it too, right?
Yeah.
I didn't get to look into these as much though,
but it says that digitalis and chloroquine.
Yeah.
The second one's a malaria treatment.
And the first one is a reckless heart treatment.
Yeah.
But I guess both of them can cause color blindness.
The thing about color blindness, if it's acquired,
if it's genetic, it's probably red, green,
you're probably a boy and you're probably a Caucasian boy.
Yeah.
That's the likeliness.
But if it's acquired, it's likelier that you're yellow, blue colorblind, right?
Yeah.
And that can actually get better if it's acquired.
It can get worse, but it can also go away,
depending on say, if you stop using the drug that is causing colorblindness
or maybe you give up drinking.
Right, but there's no cure for color blindness genetically.
So you can't take a pill or get a shot or get any kind of treatment.
There apparently are corrective lenses that they have out there,
but I don't know about that.
That doesn't sound like a great idea.
I'm not sure how effective those are.
Supposedly they kind of work for color,
but they also affect like depth perception too,
which it's kind of robbing Peter to pay Paul in that sense,
maybe even worse than that.
Interesting.
And it looks them up there.
They don't seem to be any further along than when this article was written,
but there's gene therapy.
It just hasn't been tested in humans,
but it's been shown to work in monkeys where they inject genetic material directly into the eye
and hope for the best, but apparently it works in monkeys.
Again, same thing as what you were saying.
How do you, how do you know?
Yeah.
How do you test for color blindness in animals?
I want to know.
That's fascinating.
Just the idea of it.
I bet someone out there knows.
Sure.
Hopefully they'll write in.
So let's take a break and then we'll come back and talk about living with color blindness.
Chuck, how about that?
Yeah.
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.
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 want to 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.
And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you.
Oh man.
And so will my husband Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
Yep, we know that Michael.
And a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life step by step.
Oh, not another one.
Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy.
You may be 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 Podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts.
All right.
So like I said before, uh, and I do want to hear from people that are color blind,
it seems like more of an inconvenience than an actual danger or a threat.
It, it could limit like maybe what kind of job you might want to get.
Like I said, you can't be color blind if you're a pilot or if you want to be a pilot.
It's funny they mentioned in here, if you're an electrician,
like color coded wires or problem, never really thought about that,
but that's probably a pretty good point.
Or I guess if you're, uh, may never work for a bomb squad.
Oh yeah, that's a good one.
Is that your life calling?
That's sad.
Also, so if you're a meat inspector, you probably can't be color blind.
Oh, sure.
Looks good to me.
Right.
It's all gray instead of it's all good.
Oh, God, great.
Um, and they, uh, similarly, if you, um, have a, uh, red color blindness,
you can't tell whether a steak's cooked or not based on color.
Ooh.
And, uh, similarly you, if you have a green color blindness,
you might have trouble with ripe fruit, whether fruit's ripe or not.
Luckily, anyone that knows what they're doing with a steak,
you could be blindfolded and cook a steak right.
Sure.
And plus, even if you don't know what you're doing,
there's meat thermometers that all you have to do is get it to like 160,
I think, and you're all right.
Yeah, but I mean, we've talked enough about cooking steak in here.
Sure.
It's a, it's a time thing, a temperature thing.
And at the very least you can touch it and know what's going on.
Sure.
If it's, if it gives your thumb frostbite, probably not done yet.
Because if you're cooking a steak by color, that means you're,
uh, you're cutting into the steak to see if it's done.
Right.
Which is the worst thing you could ever do.
It's, it's a sin.
Yeah.
I'm just, I'm horrified at that whole notion.
I am too choked.
What about little kids getting dressed and coloring crayons?
That's why crayons are labeled.
Right.
But I mean, if they use some names that don't really mean anything to the color,
that's not very helpful, you know, but, uh, yeah.
If you have crayons with the labels peeled off and your color blind, that's not good.
I also saw diamond appraisers.
Oh, interesting.
Casino dealers, this is the chip colors.
But now they have things like, uh, software
that can actually change colors on the web so that you can see them more clearly,
depending on what kind of color blindness you have.
Oh, interesting.
So that, I think it used to be like a real problem.
And then they came up with a lot of different, um, software that you can buy and just run on your computer.
Um, which that's got to help quite a bit.
Yeah, that didn't surprise me.
I mean, I figured in the olden days, it was just like, well, sorry for you, but,
but now there are so many different things that they can do to,
to, to help people out with various like slight conditions like this.
For sure.
And I think a lot of the worries were kind of overblown, um, like the FAA used to,
used to say like, you have to have normal color vision to be an FAA employee.
And they repealed that in 1996 because there's so many other ways you can design things other than colors.
Right.
Um, and it's still a problem for what I can tell, like with color blindness, um,
um, the same light will be used on like an electronic thing to show it's fully charged or to show it needs charging.
Whereas if you just have a light blink to show that it needs charging,
that would help tremendously rather than just using a green for fully charged and red for needing charging.
It doesn't help somebody with color blindness because it just looks like an ugly brown light to them.
Um,
I never thought about that.
A lot of things blink now though that I've seen.
Right.
And I'll bet that's why actually, because it's just a better design.
Yeah.
Not using different colored chalks for emphasis in school, um,
using for graphs rather than like just colors.
You can also use like cross hatching or dots or something like that to indicate differences.
Um, and then the reason I said why it seems like people are coming around to the idea of
it being unsafe to be colorblind in this world, um, being overblown.
Japan had a real like, um, bias against people with color blindness for many, many years.
Did you read that article I sent?
I didn't see that one.
Man.
So back in, I think 1920, the crown prince Hirohito was about to marry a woman.
And it turned out that she had color blindness in her family.
And one of the, one of the royal family stepped up and was like,
I don't want him marrying this, this girl because her family has color blindness in her, or lineage.
And the marriage went on anyway, but the publicity involved really got people's attention.
And they really took it to heart.
And for decades up until a few years ago, there was discrimination against people who were colorblind.
Like you could not enroll in some high school courses or college courses.
If you were tested as colorblind and all kids were tested at a young age to see whether
they were colorblind or not, um, you couldn't get some jobs and not even where it was conceivably
safe or unsafe.
It was just like discrimination against people who are colorblind.
In some cases, people who were fully blind could enroll in some courses that people who
were colorblind could not.
So there was like no scientific basis to it whatsoever.
It was strictly like this kind of, um, distaste for color blindness that had been in the culture
since 1920, and it's finally fading away as, um, as time goes on.
They stopped testing kids in Japan in the last year or two, um, for color blindness because
they're like, we understand it better now and you're not a monster for being colorblind.
Man, that's amazing.
Isn't that interesting?
Yeah, there's something you should know.
Something I should know.
So colorblind, is Chuck, you got anything else?
No, well, actually that one little interesting tidbit that apparently people that are colorblind
can pick out camouflage better because they look more at texture than in the actual color.
Yeah, I saw that they make better spotters for sniper teams.
Nice.
Yeah, I guess so.
Um, all right, what about now?
You got anything else now?
Nothing else.
So if you want to know more about color blindness, go ask somebody who's colorblind.
Sure, they are going to have some fascinating stuff for you.
And we want to hear from colorblind people too.
So please let us know what it's like to live as somebody with a color vision deficiency
or color blindness or let us know exactly what we should say.
And, uh, since I said that, it's time for Listener Mail.
All right, I'm going to call this, uh, Little Price's Right follow up.
Okay, we just released our live game show live in Denver, Colorado,
where, uh, we had a lot of our stuff, you should know, army members
traveled in and met each other for the first time.
Yeah, that was pretty cool.
Which is really, really neat.
We had a backstage hang and, uh, you know who you are folks.
So it was, it's great to see you as always.
Yeah.
We'll be back to Denver because we did two sold out shows there.
Yeah, it's great town.
It was really good.
All right.
So here we go, uh, with a little bit about the price is right.
Hey guys, fairly new listener started in July.
Wow.
Well, welcome to the show, David.
Um, but he's working his way backwards, which is great.
So he listened to game shows and he said, I'm a child of the 80s.
And like Chuck, my summer and home sick from school days were built around a plethora
of awesome daily game shows.
Uh, when talking about the price is right, Chuck mentioned
trotting out the very tough cliffhanger game.
Uh, and this might throw me into the dork category, but I'm obsessed with getting on
the show.
I've been to three tapings in the past year and I've studied tips and tricks.
So he's like, uh, what's his face?
Oh man.
I wish the guy who beat, uh, yeah, Michael Larson.
Yeah, Michael Larson, uh, except he's the Michael Larson of, of cliffhanger.
He said he claims this is a 100% foolproof way to win.
So listen up everybody.
Every time he's done it, it's worked.
Here's the trick for the first item, bid $20, whatever the actual price is, doesn't matter.
Add $11 and make that the bid on the second item.
Okay.
Then whatever the actual price is for that item, add $11 to that.
And he said it works every single time.
Weird.
I wonder why.
I don't know.
Well, they're probably going to change you because as everyone knows, true carry listens
to stuff you should know religiously.
I'm sure true carry does not care one bit who wins and who loses uncle cliffhanger.
I don't know, man.
I read this, uh, I think a GQ Vanity Fair article about this guy who is accused of cheating on
the price is right and true carry was mad about the idea.
Well, sure.
If you cheat, I guess that's true.
Yeah, that's a big distinction.
Uh, and then he says this, my other interesting tidbit is regarding the Japanese game show that
you discussed to Keshe's castle.
Starting in 2003, Spike TV took old episodes and dubbed them in English, and it totally
transformed it to one of the funniest things you'd ever watch.
If you have 20 minutes to burn, hop on the YouTube and catch an episode.
Thanks for the great work.
That is David Mills.
Uh, I have a cousin named David Mills, and I'm assuming that is not you.
You never know.
Surely he would have just texted me.
Cousin Dave?
He's the formal type.
Yeah.
He doesn't like to take shortcuts.
Hey, man, I like it.
Except with cliffhanger.
Yeah.
Well, thanks a lot, cousin Dave.
We appreciate that.
Uh, if you want to get in touch with us to share your tips and secrets for game shows or
for getting through life, whatever, we want to hear from you.
You can hang out with us on socials by going to our website, stuffyoushouldknow.com,
and finding all the links there.
Or you can send us a good old-fashioned email.
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