The Bugle - Flippin' Tech
Episode Date: January 19, 2023**MERCH SALE NOW ON**Andy is with Alice and Ian Smith (debut) for a scary tech special, plus some Italy news, because we always have time for Italy.Why not listen to our new show, celebrating 15 years... of Top Stories: https://www.thebuglepodcast.com/topstories.Featuring:Andy ZaltzmanIan SmithAlice FraserProduced by Chris Skinner and Laura Turner. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Dancelaguard fans, you will be thrilled to know a book is coming out if you fund it via Unbound.
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Currently, still one of the United Kingdom's leading exponents of meaningless, unnecessary and slightly over long silences.
Yeah, still got it. I'm in the shed and the shed is cold today, but joining me today, from hopefully, so it's certainly less chilly than my shed, well we have someone old and
someone new, not old as in tumbling into the Inescapable more of senescence and decreptue,
I just mean she's been on the Google for quite a long time now, and not new, as in literally born yesterday, or fresh off the factory production
I wear most comedians come from these years. I mean new to the bugle.
Firstly, yeah from Australia, once again, luckily not competing in the Australian Open tennis,
so she is able to join us from Sydney, it's Alice Fraser. Hello, Alice.
Hello Andy, yes, it's 10 days since my last birthday. I am beginning crone life right now.
It's pretty exciting. I feel like I could poke people with a stick on public transport, no one can
question it. Yeah, that's, you know, that's I guess one of the privileges of
of seniority. Can I just say I would like to make a statement at this point. It's come
to my attention that a joke that I did on the gargle also appeared on the bugle and I
would like to address this scandal, this joke stealing scandal, me stealing a joke from
me. First of all, I don't know which joke it was. My policy on podcast is the same as
my policy on Zoom calls. I just put a postit note over my bit so I don't get distracted by my own beauty.
Secondly, we will never know which one was recorded first and for which show I originally
wrote the joke.
So is it Gargle Alice stealing from Bugle Alice or Bugle Alice doing a tribute to Gargle
Alice?
I could tell you obviously, but I won't because I refuse to respect linear time or artificial
boundaries between work personas and selves.
Right.
Hello, this is last post-allocin. Can I say that this is true of
all post-allocin?
Cool.
Well, you know, I mean, joke stealing is a curse in comedy.
Allocin, I'm afraid you're just going to have to sort it out between yourselves.
Well, it sort of depends on which of me is the most famous.
Well, I mean, this is a controversy that could run and run.
And into this world of tumult.
For the first time in a his life be the history of all humanity and see this podcast 15
and a bit years of existence.
I'm delighted to welcome you after several outstanding appearances on the news quiz coming
to you in a minimum of five dimensions from South London. It's Ian Smith. Hello, Ian. Welcome to the bugle
Yeah, thanks for having me. I guess this is the point where I need to make a statement and say
Last night I did quite a long routine about garlic bread
It was very similar to Peter K's.
So I guess I'll take that out with him as well.
So Ian, you live in Peckham?
I'm not too far from me in Glantland, Glantland, Glantland,
Glantland, South London area, originally from Gould,
one of the greatest named towns in England.
Yeah, I part of the rumor is it comes from a word that means cesspit.
I haven't looked like an old sort of word that means cesspit and there's a
local historian trying to disprove that at the minute. But they don't have much
evidence, they're just desperate to not live in a place that's called cesspit basically. I should clarify for our listeners, Ian, before we get
criticized for booking you, that you are not the late former leader of Rhodesia, just to clarify
that, nor are you the former New Zealand wiki keeper Ian Smith, nor the Australian actor
best known for playing Harold Bishop in the Neo-Sixbearing, Ron Trudge, Combe, Soap, Pop, Brut, Neighbors, nor the film producers, credits include Mad Max Fury, Road, nor the Australian actor best known for playing Harold Bishop in the Neo-Shirt Spirit in Rum Trudge, Com Soap Opera, Neighbors, nor the film producer, who's credits include
Mad Max Fury Road, nor the legendary Scottish rugby union player who's got a record 24
international prize in the 1920s and 30s, a record which stood for over 50 years, who remains
sadly as dead as he has been down for 50 years, nor Ian Smith, the pseudonym used by Colonel
Gaddafi, when he entered the World Darts Championship qualifying in 1993. Nought Ian Smith, the original name for the crime
bust in Cartoon Dog Scooby-Doo, nor even Ian Duncan Smith, the former leader
of the Conservative Party, and hopefully inadvertent quota of the motto from
the Gates of Auschwitz. You are not of those Ian Smiths.
Yeah, I mean, I think I'd like a more creative name.
It's difficult with Smith as your surname, because you'd have to put so much
creativity into the first name
That it would just sound ridiculous
Like Rasmus Smith or something
Yeah, I've met this I mean that could have given you a very different career
I mean it'd been very hard to be called that and not to become a professional jazz saxophonist I think
We are recording on the 70th of January
jazz saxophonist I think. We are recording on the 70th of January 2023.
On this day in 1961, the departing US president Dwight D. Eisenhower, three days before
hanging up his presidential socks and passing the ceremonial sausage of office to Youngster
John F. Kennedy, gave a farewell address to the American nation in which he said,
Bye, bye everyone!
See ya!
But he also said some words that even today, clatter us in the face like a frying pan
of first grade four-warnery and four-site fullness.
The man known by his nickname of icicle, sorry,
Ike, voice getting mixed up with Ike's and Bikes,
did you know that the full term for tri-school
is actually a trison hour.
Anyway, Eisenhower said some extraordinary,
prescient things, including, as we peer into society's future,
we, you and I, and our government must
avoid the impulse to live only for today, plundering for our own ease and convenience the
precious resources of tomorrow. And it's good to know that the human race took those words
on board and then threw them overboard into the ocean of practicality. I mean, it was an extraordinary speech in which he talks about, you know, not, he said,
we cannot mortgage the material assets of our grandchildren without risking the loss
of also their political and spiritual heritage.
We want democracy to survive for all generations to come, not become the insolvent phantom of
tomorrow.
And I don't know if he listens to this show from beyond the grave
Eisenhower, I know most former US presidents do they just like to keep up on what's what's going on
But he must be fucking pissed off at how thoroughly those words have been ignored
As always a section of the bugle is going straight in the bin and well today we have an
Antarctica special section in the bin commemorating another anniversary on this day 111 years ago
in 1912, British Polar Explorer Robert Falken Scott was approaching the South Pole and
we've dug into the archives and we can pick up commentary now with Scott very close to the poll on the call 111 years ago
Expert summarizer Fritch Offnanson and with him the BBC's Brian Strapple Green
And here comes Scott as he left it too late
He's just yards away from the poll now looking tired and it must be said really very cold
He's seen off votes outcomes the fin down fin, down goes Evans, it's Scott,
Scott's going to lead this team home, here he comes, the 43 year old former
naval officer in his trademark reindeer fur gloves, the crowd are going
noisily berserk, it's Scott for Team GB, he's into the red zone, he's out of
the bowl, and second, seconds, just five weeks behind the Norwegians, and you can see
how the supporter of the yearC is the devonian.
But it's called for Ammon sort of Norway silver
for Scott and great Britain and well-known
are super effort from Scott,
but you've got to say, not quite good enough on the day.
Yes, Brian, you'll be freezing his Pollux off out there.
I don't know if you get to a poll first.
It looks like it's complaints of referee.
Maybe suggesting Ammonson got a fault start, I didn't see it myself, but terrific
poll are exploring from both teams.
Yes, Dads, and well we won't be seeing the Bobby Scott swooping Falcon celebration today,
nor the Larry Oates Penguin Waddle, it's second for Team Terran over.
More analysis on where it went wrong.
Coming soon on the Pulse Apart podcast with Frick Jeff and Ernie
Shackleton but too. So let me do that again. More analysis of where it all went wrong,
coming soon on the Pulse Apart podcast with Frick Jeff and Ernie Shackleton
too. But thanks for joining us today. There's more live polar exploration right
now as we cross over to our colleagues at the ABC for live commentary on the
Australasian Antarctic Expedition Dougie Morrison and the Chilleros getting stuck into the coldest continent on earth.
Your commentary, for this one, Nimrod Exploration Veterim, Ed's Worth David and Lady the
Call, Jim Maxwell.
There's so much audio magic happening there and you multiple accents, background noise
and eh, eh, don't think I didn't eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, near the recording which is a punitive strawberries. And absolute man decision from me there.
Top story this news humanity is being taken over by technology.
This is a story in analysis that we've touched on at various points over the
bugle history. And do you think we've now on various points over the Bugles history.
Do you think we've now reached the point in history where the robot takeover, which is
obviously now totally inevitable, increasingly inevitable, if an ever-sability can indeed
increase, but it's not something to be feared, but something to be wholeheartedly welcomed
as potentially a vast improvement on the floundering, w litterings and the fuddlements of the human race.
I mean, is this now, you know, should we do every time we hear about a story about
you know, robots dehumanizing humanity, we think we're good.
Well, look at the CES Roundup, right?
And the the efforts of tech companies to go viral by creating technology
that's either ground,breakingly new and cool
or so weird.
You're going to tweet about it whether you want to or not.
Like the Withings U-Scan P-Sensor, which is a device that sits at the front of your toilet
and when you do a Wii, apparently it's best to sit down when you do it so you can act
you at reading.
It collects the urine, analyzes it and then sends you the results to your phone via Wi-Fi.
Which is great.
I think this is all a very positive piece of technology.
It'll weed out the toxic masculine people
who believe that sitting for Witt to We
is only for girls.
It also replaces the old P analysis tool
where you just get a medieval doctor to rinse some round
his mouth and then prescribe bleachers or bloodletting.
Which of course, I never understood by people are like, oh,
what terrible doctrine, of course you're going to prescribe awful courses of treatment,
you've got a mouthful of piss, you're only human.
The only option before this urine analysis, other than the medieval doctor, of course,
was that guy who used to lie at the urinals at gay clubs and he can't be everywhere. I mean it's an extraordinary piece of technology, the Waz scanner. Ian, can
you see this becoming a big part of your home technology setup? I think so, yeah, but
largely because of the gossip potential, because if it's in your toilet and you have guests
around and then they go to the toilet
and then you'll get a notification on your phone. So when they come back down you can go,
oh, Steve you've got a chlamydia, I hope that doesn't put a dampener on the slur-cut
wax cheek that I've done tonight. You've come in with a lot of foody stuffy and a punnett of strawberries and a slur cook box chicken.
That's my go to trying to impress people, meal, slur cook talk street and a
climidia diagnosis.
Yeah, it does feel like a lot of these sort of, so solving problems that I'm not really concerned about.
There's a big thing about a wireless TV and it was saying like gone are the days of
like desperately trying to hide your cables, but I don't feel ashamed of them.
The cables from a TV, like someone's looking at them going like, you use like trisity
for that.
Yeah, that's how it's going.
I've just put the TV...
My rule is put it as close to a plug as possible.
And then you're not creating like a sort of
high-tech laser protecting a museum
piece style cables going across your living room.
It doesn't feel like a big issue for me.
Well, I enjoyed the Citizen Smartwatch.
It can gauge fatigue.
So it's a smartwatch that can tell you when you're tired.
Because that is my favorite kind of tech innovation,
which is to say something that we have already got a really
good way of doing.
But the tech is attempting to render this human function
obsolete and it might just succeed. I promise you don't need to look at your watch to realise you're exhausted
like.
No, you just need to remember whether or not you have children, I think that's the bad
place. Oh god.
Oh, we have.
It'd be amazing to be so stupid you don't realise you're tired. How productive you'd be if you were too fict a realised.
But then you wouldn't be able to do many jobs.
I mean, I've got to say you've either got to be thick or a baby, literally a baby, because
I have an argument with my daughter, literally every day that goes something like this.
You're tired, that's why you're being so awful.
Trust me if you sleep, things will feel better.
And she goes, not you're trying to trick me.
That's very much the same conversation that Margaret Thatcher's
advisors had with her when she was prime minister in
legendary four hours sleep a night.
So with disastrous consequences, it must be said.
Just a couple of other things that struck me from the consumer
and electronics are mood fridge. I mean, a couple of other things that struck me from the consumer electronics.
A mood fridge, this is a fridge that apparently changes color
depending on your mood.
I don't know, actually, I just read the head on mood.
I don't know if it's your mood or the mood of the sausages
within, you know, sausage fields, impending fate,
closing it on it.
I'm not sure.
Is this like those mood rings from the 90s
where they'd just sort of go with your body heat
and tell you that you were horny all the time?
Which is obvious, because only teenage is bought them.
I feel like a sure bad.
You don't have to be psychic to realize
that that's what the ring needs to read 90% of the time.
That's a lot of color changing tech.
A car that can change color,
which was one of the big innovations. Everyone was very impressed by the car that can change colour.
But it's another one of those things that sounds good in concepts.
But you will realise very quickly if you've ever lost your car in a car park.
A terrible idea. It's a terrible idea.
Or it's going to be like, oh, it was definitely on level two and it's a red car.
Or possibly a blue sedan.
I think if it's Tuesday, I made up a rhyme to remember what colour my car is today. If it's parked on F2, the possibly a blue, sedan. I think if it's Tuesday, I may have arrived to remember what color my car is today.
If it's parked on F2, the color is blue. Oh no, wait, was it? If it's on F2, it's parked, the color is red.
I don't... Sorry, sorry, wait. If on F2, it's parked, the color is red.
It feels like it was designed for like getaway drivers only.
Like the end sequence of the Italian job would be so much less impressive if they were just
changed the car to green.
And then the police were like, well they've gone.
I'd be slightly more useful if they were just changing colour.
It changed vehicle.
So you know, we'd go from a car to a motorbike to a donkey to a...
You could just go gradually back in time.
I mean, it's not a self-driving pram though, is it?
I mean, that's the real... That was just, that meant that this was the absolute killer product to emerge from this
year's CS.
That the, I mean, have you, Alice, your daughter is 15, 16 months old?
Yep.
Have you ever thought a wish this pram could drive herself?
Well, I mean, first of all, it isn't a self-driving pram.
Speaking of it, not being a self-driving pram, it isn't.
It's an electrically assisted pram, which is great for people with mobility issues,
or lots of hills near where they live, or remarkably fat babies.
But it's not more self-driving than like an e-bike.
It won't drive unless it senses that your hands are on the handles.
And sure, I guarantee tired parents everywhere have already thought of six ways to bypass
that rule from feeling washing up gloves with meat scrap and strapping them to the bar
to becoming the vizier just so that you can take the hand of a thief in punishment in
order to send baby for a solo role.
But I think what you want is a remote control plan.
Actually.
Right.
You don't want one that's got a mind of its own, is one thing.
Yeah, I mean, this does feel like scene one
in some extremely low budget dystopian horror film,
in which prams take over the world.
I don't trust my baby with autonomous technology.
She's really smart.
If I send her off in a solo pram,
she'll come back on top of it controlling the thing somehow.
That's step one in Mad Max Future.
Mad Max Jr.
I mean, this is a movie franchise waiting to...
Could be strapping safety scissors to the wheels like Booty-Cutler.
Well, that would be quite good to make these self-driving prams into a sort of robot-wise
style TV show and get the babies battle and against each other.
I believe we've lost as a civilization in, is the simple joy of watching infants fight
to the death.
It's PC, God mad, for what I'm concerned.
Today I was trying to put her down for a nap,
and she evaded my nap, got up and did a little victory
dance to him on the my head, and then lent over and gave me
a benevolent kiss on the forehead, which I felt was
the most contemptuous touch.
I know I'm not going to name their name,
but I know someone who told their daughter to go on the
naughty step, and then their daughter wet
themselves and basically said this is what's gonna happen if you put me on the
naughty step. Evil genius! So she's never been on the naughty step since. I say
fantastic way to avoid punishment. I think we'll probably still work as an adult
for certain situations. That's what I'm going to try.
You're going to be careful where you're wet yourself now.
You might get a diagnosis.
Yeah.
I will expect exactly.
I believe it does sound like this small child has a lucrative career in corporate finance.
Well, just back to the WAZ scanner, which is you said you just put it on the front of your
Crapstone International, you expalt your Pidladio, and the device scans your expeditions
and tells you pretty much everything you could possibly need or want to know, but not
just about your health, apparently in the high tech edition, tells you about your priorities
and life, your deep-seated fears, your musical tastes, your views on personal A-sons, art, and the historical figure you'd most like to play
snooker against. I've got a beat a version to test out and it turns out that my
answers to those in order are the pursuit of the groove, the death of test cricket,
blues, magical, unnecessary and Charlemagne the Great.
So, there's a laser scanner that reads the lumps on the head of your penis and diagnoses your personality.
It's a fenulomology.
Family show, Alice.
The first phrenology joke that's been made on the bureau?
It's definitely not the first phrenulom joke.
Almost certainly not.
I mean, we are what, 550 plus episodes in, or not coming up to 550 episodes.
Next week is the 250th episode since relaunch.
There must have been a chronology talking that,
but just by the law of probability, even an inadvertent one.
If you play it backwards to all 550 odd episodes,
there will be a phenology reference somewhere.
Moving on to, well, the world of robot ethics and films, E and U are our robot ethicists,
ethics correspondent.
Oh, good.
Congratulations on the good promotion.
Highly prestigious posting.
You've been keeping on the films that will be,
well, are basically telling us what our future relationship
with robots is, so it brings up today.
Yeah, well, there's a film out called,
well, I guess it's called Megan, but they've replaced the EU
with a freeze. I don't know how he pronounced that now.
M-Mafregan, I guess.
Yes. I mean, generally in this country, I mean, depending on what newspaper you read,
you pronounce Megan as, which who is destroying the country and everything we hold dear.
So I don't know if that's...
Yeah, that's...
So I've got to stop reading the Daily Mail, but...
But anyway, let's go with Mafreegan or Megan.
Yeah.
Well, I guess it's a similar sort of vibe, really, because the plot of this this film is there's a girl, she doesn't have many friends. Luckily her mum is developing an AI
little girl. It's just one of those lucky situations. Hold up, her mum dies.
Oh yes, yeah okay well phone off, she hasn't had a lucky coincidence here actually. Mae'n gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gwer ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei'r ei Yeah, and it all just goes wrong. And the Gagin didn't article debating how close we are
to this sort of thing happening.
And the answer is not very,
but they've spun an article out of it, which is quite fun.
But it's, I mean, surely, they might say
it's not very far away,
but surely that's what the robots want us to think in.
And really, it is just probably weeks away
from becoming cold cold hard reality.
I mean, you know, is this the future? And if it isn't the future, I want to know why not.
But also, I mean, the whole area of these sort of programmable robots, I mean, I guess the question
old-ass is does Gary Kasperov's sleepless haunted defeat stricken face mean nothing to these
s**tkey people? We can't risk it. They're all going to talk about that. But then logically,
I guess if we're going to leave robots and computers in charge of our economy as we essentially do,
is it not logical also to leave them in charge of our children who are units of productivity in
the future economy? Alas, I know that's how you look at your own child
as a potential future functioning economic unit.
Oh yeah, absolutely.
People can talk about how unrealistic this is.
The AI robot goes mad and starts murdering people
and they talk about how far away we are from that.
But of course, of course, the AI childcare robot
goes crazy.
Children are terrified.
If you've never had a child stand at the foot of your bed and say, I can't sleep, there's a man behind you. Like, you haven't lived.
I mean, I've got two human children, decent quality ones, but we've not yet left them in charge of robots, but I don't really have a leg to stand on saying people shouldn't
do this because we have left them in charge of an education system run by successive conservative
governments for a well-a-decade each now, so I'm not really in the position to judge
or lecture anyone. An interesting thing with this article in Katie Darling,
who is a tech ethicist, I think is the term,
tech ethicist, assistant at MIT,
which is the Massachusetts Institute for the Take
or Evolving Manatee by the uncontrollable robot advancement.
She said, people have completely skewed expectations
of what robotics can do at this point, thanks
to movies like this.
But is that not the whole point of movies like about anything to give us skewed expectations
about life, about skewed expectations, for example, about the power of love conquering
all, about aliens being covered in green slime, about the ease of robbing banks, and about
the likelihood of an Italy-based political leader being slain by a vengeful, mortally wounded gladiator. That's what films
are for to raise unrealistic expectations.
My favourite sort of expert opinion in the article was, there's a guy called Ronnie Bugani
who is an artificial intelligence ethicist and attorney for children's rights, which is
a mad pair of professions.
And he said, I don't know why we need a robot to have a head. Look at humans, wear a piss
poor design of a product, why are we copying it with robots? And I don't think that's right.
It doesn't feel very arrogant of us when we design robots to think, to look at ourselves
in the mirror and think, yeah, that's got to be the best. That's got to be the best we
can do.
Yeah, it's just like when economists talk
about developing countries, like,
oh no, they have to go through child labor
and be paying people below minimum wage
and unsafe conditions, because that's what we did.
It's like the economics version of my parents hit me
and I turned out fine.
Like it's just perpetuating horrible mistakes. I think what all robots great way to make a great choice. I think it's a great way to make a great choice. I think it's a great way to make a great choice.
I think it's a great way to make a great choice.
I think it's a great way to make a great choice.
I think it's a great way to make a great choice.
I think it's a great way to make a great choice.
I think it's a great way to make a great choice.
I think it's a great way to make a great choice.
I think it's a great way to make a great choice.
I think it's a great way to make a great choice.
I think it's a great way to make a great choice.
I think it's a great way to make a great choice. I think it's a great way to make a great choice. I would agree, humans are a terrible design, albeit I have lived in my own body for 48 years now,
which is maybe not the best possible example of the human form.
But, you gotta say, I mean look at human biology, it is a, as anyone who's ever owned
testicles or a womb, or has had to fight man-o-man-o with a crocodile and a pond, or run away from a cheetah,
or take on a condor and a who can stay af float longest after jumping off this high rocky outcrop contest
We are shittly designed by comparison with a lot of other creatures on this earth. Yes, being compensation God gave us smugness
That's it that smugness and opposable thumbs are really worth sitting at the evolutionary race
the evolutionary race. Of course technology wasn't just invented yesterday, not all of it anyway, although an increasing amount of technology on a daily basis was invented yesterday.
But it goes back to many yesterdays ago. And scientists have discovered that apparently It was not humans that made the first tools, but monkeys are AB cousins.
Alice, you are a prehistoric technology
advancement correspondent.
Tell us what the, what were the monkeys doing?
And why have they been sitting on their laurels ever since
and not really inventing anything like a chatbot or a robot child.
And if this news makes me think monkeys are even smarter than I did before,
faced with the option of choosing to develop their tool use and becomes
sophisticated, they threw that away. I've seen TikTok, I know where tool use leads,
take me back to that monkey magic moment where we decided to copy that monkey and develop tools and make the other call
You want me to choose tool use the same thing that killed Julius Caesar?
No, thank you
I'll take the other fork and put the fork down and go back to hand life simpler times if I can't cut it with my teeth
I'm not interested actually as a woman
I am very pro tool use but I can understand why your sort of
Andrew Tate types would be against anything that would remove the natural
advantage men have of everyone else, and having testosterone and aggression, so
that they can die trying to bore an antelope to death.
I'm not joking there, that's actually, did you know that's the evolutionary
genesis of podcasts? Because when you're chasing down prey,
humans' advantage in hunting is persistence.
So basically, you just pick a deer and Joe rogan it
until it falls down dead.
LAUGHTER
Well, I think that's a nice again, that's
along with opposable thumbs.
And, almost the other one.
The huge, or revolutionary or evolutionary advantages.
Smugness.
Smugness, that's it.
Smugness, T-Dume.
LAUGHTER
In other technology news, a big breakthrough for Europe.
They're renowned continent.
And with the discovery of rare metals,
with a crucial in the manufacture
of things like smartphones and all the other shit that's taken over the world. And a huge
stash of it apparently has been found in the Arctic region of Sweden, which could potentially
reduce the dependence on Chinese and Russian products.
I mean, this is something we don't often think about, I think, when it comes to technology
is where all this stuff comes from, because it sort of arrives magically in a very neat
box, and there's no sense that anything happens to create it other than the wonders of
technology itself. But I mean, I guess, you know, in terms of the kind of human history, you know, it does,
is a thing really important unless we've fought a massive war for it.
And if we have this stuff in Europe, does that not reduce the potential for global conflict and is that a good thing or a bad thing?
Bad.
Bad, right.
I've just gone with it, it was a 50-50 question.
Correct answer.
I've hedged my bets there.
I do think, yeah, it's weird that something that, like, we've fun, something that
would become so reliant on is made out of something so rare.
It's like, sort of, making life's part machines out of dodo and meat or something.
But also, I think, so, they found one million tons of rare resources, which feels sort of,
like, I don't think you can call them rare now.
One million tons feels like, like they say, I don't know, like pandas are rare,
but if there's one million tons of work of panda, you'd probably be thinking about
calling some of them. Well not if it was just one giant panda that weighed a million tons.
Yeah. I'd love to see it.
The zoo that gets that one would be over the moon.
I'm probably visible from the moon.
Yep.
I mean, it's so exciting and you rare earth minerals in Europe at last.
I cannot wait for the Tories to start pitching, sending refugees to the salt mines to earn
their Union Jack brand.
I just feel like Alice, you should remember now not to say things like that out loud.
You just can't be too, you never know, to quote the World War II poster, you never know
who's listening.
And it was probably some 23 year old PPE graduate
working at high level in the government minds.
Italy news now, I know while a couple of huge stories coming out of Italy this week,
the arrest of one of the leading Italian mafia bosses and some frankly harrowing
alleged pigeon death news.
Should we start with the pigeon death?
This is a truly extraordinary story in which Michael Bay, the film director, has denied allegations that a pigeon was fatally injured
on a film set in Italy whilst he was making the movie Six Underground, which is also words
that I say when listing my top eight favourite ways of getting around London. It comes just a head
of an overground train, obviously ahead of bus, but behind jetpack, horse drag and motorisedized, Unicycle and Submarine, which is a bit restricted, but is a fun way
of going east to west to east.
It's an extraordinary story this.
I don't know what it tells us about the state of our species, that this story, a film director
denying that a pigeon may have been killed five years ago on a film set.
That's made, made their news. I guess five years on the relatives of that pigeon won't forget.
You know, they won't let this starry die and they're going to keep bringing it up.
But yeah, it just felt mad that Michael Bay, who is renowned for making films with so much destruction,
is having to defend himself for killing a single pigeon.
It feels like the least Michael Bay thing that could happen to Michael Bay.
His lawyer as well said that this story had tarnished Bay's reputation as someone who fiercely
supports animals financially and otherwise.
What is it otherwise?
You're like what?
Emotionally.
I would love to see him doing whatever otherwise is to a pigeon.
Yeah, I do know.
You know, a little song. The writer of poem. Yeah. Yeah, I do know. You know, a little song. Go write it a poem.
Yeah. Yeah. Great job.
That statue will never be the same.
I can barely tell that you've only got one photo on that foot.
Well, again, I mean, this story essentially is film director
denies belated allegation that one brackets one of the world's estimated
400 million pigeons
may, and I emphasize, may have been accidentally clunked to death
or at least clunked into a bit of a disease spell,
honest films that almost five years ago,
although no evidence of pigeon death has yet been presented.
And this happened in 2018, a year in which humans ate
over 70 billion of the allegedly dead pigeons
bird community colleagues.
It's, what are we trying to distract ourselves from
But this story is one of those distractions. It's got to be big
I think it's I think it's a sign that we've all become much more sensitive to animal rights
I don't know if you know the famous children's movie Milo and Otis, but they just shot like a hundred dogs off all waterfall
I don't know that film. It sounds like a interesting family watch. A lot of kids, it's a heartwarming story about a kitten and a puppy that got on an adventure
together but let me just say they're a kitten and puppy that start the adventure in real
life and not the kitten and puppy that are there at the end of the film. The, the, um, Matthew, I know you and you before you went into comedy, you did, you, you,
you had, you worked for several years in the Sicilian, uh, Matthew.
Hmm.
Tell us what that was like.
You know, someone from, uh, from Humbersell.
You put the Sicilian, the Sicilian, Matthew.
Well, the worst part of being in the Matthew, I, I, just the most self-conscious part is when you're
giving your Mafia nickname because it's really quite a sort of reveal, it's usually a physical
thing.
So this guy who they've captured was called the Skinny One.
So you just feel horrible because they get you in a room and there's maybe like 10, 20
of the other Mafia gang there.
And they basically brainstorm your nickname in front of you. So I had like a lot of people like
as you can see, we call it eyebrows. I've got eyebrows straight away. Sorry, you and
I brows Smith. Someone shout out Lurse Alpha Steam. I didn't really appreciate that. So, yeah, that's the tough part.
The sort of killing in the murders is okay really.
Once you've had yourself a steam battered like that,
nothing really affects you anymore.
What was that interesting insight into Matthew?
A lot of thank you.
Yeah.
I mean, this chap, his nickname was the diabolical or the skinny one.
And he's a nepot baby.
His father was a powerful mafia boss.
And he just stepped into his father's shoes
presumably after killing his father.
I don't know the details.
But yeah, how can he be proud of all of the murders
that he achieved, knowing that it was just
through family influence?
Or wait, isn't that the whole mafia deal?
He once claimed, he apparently said, I fill the cemetery all by myself,
which is only terrifying if he means bodies and not flowers.
It was a very generous man.
Well, strawberries, maybe.
Yeah.
My favourite bit about this story is that they've tracked him down, but there are so few pictures
of him, like from the past, that they basically had to guess what he would look like.
So they've basically been looking for like a 70-year-old man with like an evil look, some sort of a...
It'd be like if you got a wears wally book and the only description you were given was
you're looking for a man in his furties.
No, they did these generation, like AI-generated pictures of him aged up, which is all data that
you provided by putting playing that stuff
on social media.
So everyone who did one of those silly aged up photos of himself would feel proud rather
than ashamed.
I like the little fact in this article that he was known for wearing expensive suits,
a Rolex and Ray Ben sunglasses, unlike every other mafia guy.
That's not a quirky trait, you know.
They were apparently like arrested quite a few people in the past thinking it was him because of the kind of like having so little to go on.
But the best one, they said that a Liverpoolian man was arrested in Amsterdam at one point.
It just seems a Liverpoolian, the idea that as well as getting corrective plastic surgery
you'd be like, right, I'm going to learn a Scouse accent.
There's no way I'm going to have a Liverpool third kid on and a Scouse accent.
To be fair, it is a very unconvincing accent.
It's like, what are he trying to do?
What's the skydiving?
That brings us to the end of this week's Bugal.
Thank you very much for listening. A quick plug is we have a sail on.
Bugal merch, I've been reliably informed, is reduced by 40%.
If you go to theBregalPockast.com
and click the merch button, also if you want to join our voluntary subscription scheme,
and give a one-off or a current contribution to help keep this show free, flourishing,
and independent. That's also on the website, click the donate button for that. Ian has been
lovely, having you on the show. Do you have any live or other works
you'd like to listen to? I guess my career is in the sort of situation where when I do a
podcast I'm all I can really say at the end I guess I'm just wishing everyone all the
best. No I guess I'll be doing the Edinburgh Friends this year so maybe I don't know, keep
an eye out on my socials and stuff out and be doing work and progress and that sort of thing.
But yeah I'd love to be able to announce a sort of bigger event.
Well, after that, for your first appearance on the bugle, that was that has
fitted right into a proud long tradition of totally failing to market
ourselves. So you've slotted right in.
Ian was on the news quiz last week which you can find on BBC Sounds and did one of the finest
funnest jokes that I've had the pleasure of hearing in my time as host of the news quiz. I do
find that and it'll be on again this week as well Alice anything to plug
Aside from the bugles sister podcast the gargle the bugles sister the gargle the sonic glossy magazine to the bugles audio newspaper for a visual world is
Able weekly with me on it doing talking also. I've just
Launched season two of tea with Alice
Season one was 298 episodes long and then I took a year off and now it's back.
So that's exciting. Patreon.com slash Alice Fraser is the place to go for all of my stuff.
Also, if you want to come, I have weekly cellons where we have a chat and weekly writers meetings.
So that's a thing that you can sign up for. We'll be back next week and we will now play you out with some more people on the bugle
Voluntary subscribers' wall of fame and their great contributions to human advancement.
Nile Jackson plotted out the course of eight of the ten largest tributaries of the Amazon
River when it was designed, without which it would have run out of water by now. Kirk Roberts
designed the first ever space hopper at 20 meters in height, it would have enabled a family
of four to bounce down a motorway at up to 65 miles an hour if they got into a rhythm.
Sadly, it was never produced.
Christian Kaiser suggested that Morse code use a combination of dots and dashes rather
than a combination of the word Morse and the word Lewis, as originally planned by its
inventors, who absolutely loved the British TV show Morse. Ken Samuels was the person who
revolutionized basketball, by suggesting the real basket
on a high shelf be replaced with the bottomless pseudo-basket, with which we are so familiar
today.
Debra Swayne discovered what the function is of the famous shell part of the tortoise.
People always assumed it was defensive, explains Debra, but in fact it was acoustic, so the
tortoise could sound better when it sank to itself, a bit like Jimmy Hendrix playing his guitar in the toilet.
Just in Livinoise was the person who suggested using solid bats in baseball, rather than
frozen or fossilised snakes, a move which really paved the way for today's generation of power
hitters.
Kieran Johnston discovered that the plots of most of Shakespeare's plays were essentially
copied from a mid to late 16th century celebrity gossip magazine Scuttlebutt today, and finally
Elisa Pavlik. Disproved the widely believed historical theory that the 7th century didn't
happen, a theory that gained traction because no one in a survey of a hundred random members
of the public for a TV game show could think of hand of anything particularly noteworthy
that happened during it.
To join the Bugle Wall of Fame, go to the BuglePockers.com and click the donate button.