Lateral with Tom Scott - 133: Boxes and benches

Episode Date: April 25, 2025

Matt Gray, Daniel Peake and Charlotte Yeung face questions about drumming dates, careful cleaning and remarkable records. LATERAL is a comedy panel game podcast about weird questions with wonderful an...swers, hosted by Tom Scott. For business enquiries, contestant appearances or question submissions, visit https://lateralcast.com. Join the Producer's Club via https://www.lateralcast.com/club for ad-free episodes and bonus content. HOST: Tom Scott. QUESTION PRODUCER: David Bodycombe. EDITED BY: Julie Hassett at The Podcast Studios, Dublin. MUSIC: Karl-Ola Kjellholm ('Private Detective'/'Agrumes', courtesy of epidemicsound.com). ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS: Gustav, Gannon Murphey, Huw Morris, Leo Taanila, Nick M., Valentine, Chris Tam. FORMAT: Pad 26 Limited/Labyrinth Games Ltd. EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS: David Bodycombe and Tom Scott. © Pad 26 Limited (https://www.pad26.com) / Labyrinth Games Ltd. 2025. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Rider, rake, step, walk. Riding a bike in the Ride to Conquer cancer is like being part of humanity's greatest. The money you raise, the time you spend, the energy that you give is helping people live. It's giving people hope and that's just so beautiful. To calm things down, why does Claire always play the drums on the same two days every year? The answer to that at the end of the show. My name's Tom Scott and this is LATTRAL. Welcome, seekers, to the celestial sphere of LATTRAL. The stars are aligned, the tea leaves have been read, and the psychic vibrations are...
Starting point is 00:00:56 probably being caused by the builders downstairs. But fear not, for the cosmos has revealed three guiding lights that are attuned to the subtle energies of creative thought. First, we have, from Matt Gray is Trying, Matt Gray. Hello, thank you for having me back. Welcome back to the show. What are you working on at the minute? What are you trying? Well, at the end of the last episode I was on, I prematurely promoted a video that wasn't out yet. So as we're recording now at the end of March, I'm just about to release my search and rescue video
Starting point is 00:01:28 where I went out on Dartmoor with Dartmoor Search and Rescue trying to rescue an actor who had pretended to break their leg. But we heard some real shouts for help while we were there, so it turned into a real search halfway through. So if you want to see that, then look up Matt Gray is trying on YouTube. Full plugging, I appreciate it. Why do you think I'm here, Tom? I'm not here to support my friend's podcast. No, that's fair enough. Next up, I'm just going to move on from that.
Starting point is 00:02:00 Next up, we have quiz and puzzle writer and editor Dan Peake. Welcome back to the show. Hey, thank you for having me. It is good to be back. What have you been working on? Well, nothing as exciting as Matt. We can start with that. My job at a newspaper is very, very samey.
Starting point is 00:02:16 So essentially, every week I just have to make sure we get all the puzzles out for it. I have to work on my puzzles, make sure all my stuff is edited. So it's the same in Week In, Week Out. It can be a little bit monotonous. But here's something I think you'll identify with, Scott. The name's Tom, but we'll go with it. Here's something you'll identify with, Tom. No, no, no. Don't go back and try and edit that fluff out.
Starting point is 00:02:38 Don't give us a nice neat edit point. We're keeping that in. So, Paul. When you want to have time off, is it a pain in the wasp names? We're keeping that in. So, Paul............ ... ... ... ... ...
Starting point is 00:02:51 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
Starting point is 00:02:59 ... ... ... ... ... ............... A4 page over the top to say, sorry, puzzles have gone on holiday. Do your own puzzles or look elsewhere. They still want their Flippin' Little Puzzles, so at the moment I'm just working really, really hard compiling lots of little puzzles for people so I can have three days off.
Starting point is 00:03:13 Lovely. Very briefly, on Flippin' Little Puzzles, your accent went full Danny Dyer. Just for a moment there. Just a little bit. I've been called worse. The final member of our trio today is a little bit. I've been called worse. The final member of our trio today is a new player, studying for her PhD in drug delivery systems, and, perhaps more importantly for this show, one of the players on ITV's new series Genius Game.
Starting point is 00:03:38 Surprise! Charlotte Young, welcome to the show! Thank you for having me. And you can tell from those gasps that I did not tell Matt or Dan, who are, like me, fans of the Korean original, why you were here. I have watched every episode of the Korean original, and some of them more than once. All the seasons? Yes.
Starting point is 00:03:58 Charlotte, would you like to explain the show and how you're part of it? So, The Genius Game, which was, as you've said, a Korean kind of... originated as a Korean series, but moved down into the UK, is a series of little puzzles, kind of like what Daniel's job is. And there's 11 of us contestants, and every day there's a new round, and after around eight rounds there's two finalists, and we're competing for a prize pool of up to £50,000. And within all of these days, everyone has a chance to get knocked out, everyone has a chance to get taken to a death match,
Starting point is 00:04:37 everyone has a chance to win and get immunity. It's very exciting, it follows a very similar format to the Korean series. And yeah, I am one of the contestants. It is the smartest and best puzzle show I've ever seen on television. And this is where I can also reveal to Matt and Dan that I have seen the first two episodes of the season. And I think the best compliment I can give it is I want to see the rest of it. So Charlotte, thank you.
Starting point is 00:05:05 I just want to watch it now. I'm in the same boat. I also want to watch it. And I haven't even seen the first two episodes, so... Okay, then I will keep my mouth shut. Very best of luck to all three of the players. It is time to embrace the resonating energy that's flowing through my script, and dance around the aura of Question 1.
Starting point is 00:05:28 Thank you to Nick M for this question. Why do some people choose to have Xavier Roberts tattooed on their buttocks in solidarity with kids who were adopted in the 1980s? I'll say that again. Why do some people choose to have Xavier Roberts tattooed on their buttocks in solidarity with kids that were adopted in the 1980s? Cheeky question. Hey!
Starting point is 00:05:52 That is my contribution. Oh look, it's on their buttocks. I don't remember much of the 1980s and I certainly don't remember our tattoos. Charlotte, am I right in assuming you're post 1980s? I am indeed post 1980s. I think you could double that and I still wouldn't be alive. But you know, here we are. Is Xavier Roberts like a common, a well-known... Do you guys know who Xavier Roberts is? Not familiar, no. If you did, that would solve the question immediately.
Starting point is 00:06:31 Oh. So, the tattoo might not have happened in the 80s, but the adopting did? Yes, that's right. The fact that Xavier starts with X is a big, big flag for me. Sorry, that hand action! I was looking down at my mug. Oh, okay, yeah, there was a lot of...
Starting point is 00:06:54 I can only describe it as that you put both hands in front of you in fists, and then kind of extended and retract your fingers in quite a manner there. Yes. It's a big flag, certainly, Tom. It's, yes. The fact that it starts with X feels very important. Now I immediately assumed it was the tattoo of the whole name, but it's not going to be the whole name.
Starting point is 00:07:16 It's just going to be like XR or something. It's just going to be a couple of letters, because you wouldn't have a whole name tattooed on you, would you? The only Xavier that I know is Professor Charles Xavier from X-Men, if that's the right name. Is it Patrick Stewart? Is it because his bald head could look like a butt cheek? Oh!
Starting point is 00:07:33 Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Could it be something to do with, like, in America,
Starting point is 00:07:41 make a wish? And perhaps Xavier Roberts was like a founder of something that had helped these children find their families or maybe even more like helped save their lives. That is slightly closer. Not that close. It's not Make-A-Wish. But yes, Xavier Roberts was very much the founder of this. The inventor, perhaps. The genius is getting us closer. Solidarity is a very specific type of paying homage to someone, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:08:17 Yes. Adopted. The kids didn't know they were adopted. Is it the kids that had the tattoos as well? Yes, the kids did have this tattoo. Tattoo is perhaps a little bit of a strong word here, but yes. Birthmark? Branding.
Starting point is 00:08:34 Branding? Not in the way you expect. Goats! Kids are goats! Oh, are we in goats? Ha ha ha! We are we in goats? We are not in goats, but you are correct to point out that I have always used the word kids here. Because branding small human children would be classed as brutality. Yes. Whereas in farming it for some reason isn't.
Starting point is 00:09:03 So other than goats have kids? These tattoos on the people who choose to have them are evoking a happy memory. Oh, are these animals that have been taken away from food farming to be kept alive? No, no. More than 130 million kids were adopted. Oh, that's a lot. It is a lot. Is adopted a play on words?
Starting point is 00:09:29 Um, because, like, you can adopt a practice. You have correctly worked out that I'm being tricky with language here, but the terms they used were kids and adopted. Like, those are the correct words for this. They may just not be used in the way you think they are. Charlotte, in your drug delivery research, I'm sure there's a lot of people there with happy memories from that. Yeah. I'm bawling in happiness, honestly. Every day is not a stressful day for me, no.
Starting point is 00:10:02 This makes me think that maybe there was like a popular TV series or a popular... I don't know, like Pokemon was popular for me. I've got a bunch behind me, you know? La Boo Boo's are popular now. Was there something popular at the time that you guys were children? Yes. Yes, absolutely, that was. Sometime when I was not alive, guys. Beanie Babies.
Starting point is 00:10:29 Now we're getting closer. What? Is it the label from a Beanie Baby that was on the arse of all the Beanie Babies? You are very, very close, Matt. But they were from the Thai company, named after someone called Thai. Er... Kids. Cabbage Patch Kids? Cabbage Patch Kids. from the Thai company, named after someone called Thai? Er, kids. Kids.
Starting point is 00:10:46 Cabbage Patch Kids? Cabbage Patch Kids! That's it. Charlotte set it up, Dan knocked it home. Tell us about it. Matt was there. LAUGHTER I don't really know...
Starting point is 00:11:00 What were the Cabbage Patch Kids? They were small dolls. Yes. They were small dolls with apparently XR tattooed on them or something? I don't know why you went for that XR. The inventor's name is Xavier Roberts, and for seven years the dolls had his signature inked on their backside as a sign of authenticity. And so some fans have paid for a tattoo of that signature on their backside.
Starting point is 00:11:25 Is this how you tell if someone's actually a member of Extension Rebellion as well? If you do backside, yeah, yeah. Yes, the dolls came with a birth certificate and adoption paper. So that as a kid, you could have this doll fill out the paperwork and adopt your doll. Am I right in thinking the heads kind of looked a bit cabbage-y as well? Which sounds weird saying it, but I feel like the dolls did look a bit cabbage-y? Quite sort of large and round, I think. I don't know where Cabbage Patch came from, but yes, they're kind of big, big round faces. Certainly not realistic looking dolls.
Starting point is 00:12:01 I also grew up with Pokemon when I was young, and I realised the other day that I have been taken by the Pokemon Company for about 30 years now, which is just, I don't know, it's happy. It makes me happy. I don't mind capitalism at this point. Each of our guests has brought a question along with them. Dan, we're going to start with them. Dan, we're going to start with you. Thank you very much to Gan and Murphy for sending in this question. From the 1930s to the 2010s, the Westin St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco offered a cleaning service. It was popular with the hotel's guests, but absolutely reviled by a few people who never went there. What was the service and why was it controversial? So, from the 1930s to the 2010s, the Westin St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco offered a
Starting point is 00:12:54 cleaning service. It was popular with the hotel's guests but absolutely reviled by a few who never went there. What was the service and why was it controversial? Matt, Charlotte, this one's on you because I, many years ago, asked to film this service and they'd stopped. So did you find out that it had stopped before you went? Well, yes, when I sent the message saying, can I do a thing about this? We don't do this anymore. Okay.
Starting point is 00:13:22 Would it be something to do with body, body cleaning or like bodily fluids in that kind of sense? Because you would be less revolted by yourself, but more revolted to know if it's, you know, about someone else. I mean, that's undeniably true, but thankfully no body fluids are contained in this question. I'm going to pedant you that technically there could be a little bit of body fluid. I'll allow it. But no, it's not, it's not the primary thing. Nothing.
Starting point is 00:13:47 Okay, so the hotel was the West in St Francis. I'm going to assume the name of the hotel doesn't matter. It doesn't. Other businesses in the area did start to copy the idea, so it wasn't just the one hotel that did it. And it was a cleaning service. I'm trying to think, Charlotte, can you think of any cleaning services that hotels offer other than maybe laundry?
Starting point is 00:14:10 They also have to clean the entire room and I was gonna say laundry as well, that was my second part. They offer shower facilities and saunas in the basement. And it's popular with... Sorry, I just had a slightly seedy with the saunas in the basement, if you know what I mean. Nothing dodgy going on down there, no.
Starting point is 00:14:37 And it's popular with the guests, and America likes cars, so it could have been valet car cleaning or... The cleaning service, I will just say, didn't involve rooms or laundry. Didn't involve cars either, but you are starting to think along right lines. The people that reviled it, were they also guests or were they non-guests? No, they weren't guests at the hotel at all. So maybe it's one of those things that sounds like a bad idea until it happens to you and then you go, actually, no, I quite like this. Is it something like cleaning of your ears?
Starting point is 00:15:12 Because that's actually very, very comfortable and... I want to have that done now. No, it isn't. Do you mean like ear wax removal? Yes, ear wax removal and sometimes they put like just a little bit of liquid in but they manage, they do get it out. It's not dangerous. Well, when done by a professional.
Starting point is 00:15:30 I've had that done and the moment when you can suddenly hear again, not realizing you've been half deaf for a while is kind of amazing. So it's not that. What else do I know about San Francisco? It is a sunny, windy and foggy place. It's on the coast and has hills nearby and throughout it. All true. All irrelevant.
Starting point is 00:15:57 The only other thing I can think you can get in hotels is like I've seen fancy hotels have like shoe cleaning kits in them and like it's not like laundry kind of stuff it's so you can when you're there for your fancy business meeting make yourself look a bit nicer or... You're right that there's a particular object or set of objects that is being cleaned. Suitcase? Not golf clubs? No.
Starting point is 00:16:24 Once something has been cleaned and like all of that there's all of the dirt maybe the dirt gets pushed out into the public and that's why it revolts. Ah no no it isn't that but I see why you say that. The people who didn't like the service felt it was a bit destructive in some way. So that's the sense of, like, abrasive cleaning? I think they would think it's that, yeah. I think there's probably an element of that in it a little bit, yeah. Exfoliation!
Starting point is 00:16:51 If your exfoliation is abrasive, Matt, that's... I just sunblast myself in the shower. Heavy grit sandpaper just to go. Is it jewellery? Ooh, close. Like, if you're buffing your jewellery with more than just a polish, that can make it shiny by taking the top layer down, which would be destructive. It's not jewellery.
Starting point is 00:17:18 Something less valuable. And we're dealing from the 1930s to the 2010s. So it's not going to be a mobile phone screen? No, but I think if I can drop a hint in, Dan, thinking about technological progress, there is a reason that it's not really being used that much. Do we need to roleplay to figure this one out? So, er... Hello, hello, madam.
Starting point is 00:17:42 Welcome to the Westin St. Francis San Francisco. Thank you very much. I would like to check into my room, madam. Welcome to the Westin St. Francis, San Francisco. Thank you very much. I would like to check into my room, please. Cool. Could I see your reservation and your passport, please? Passport? Not passport. How do I even show my reservation? Here's a piece of paper. Keys, room keys. That's kind of, if you clean a key, that could be abrasive and stop the keys working? Other people wouldn't particularly mind if a metal key was cleaned, though. Other people did dislike this cleaning, and they never went to the hotel.
Starting point is 00:18:13 It's something people can see, then. It's people being judgy about what they can see on someone else's person, then. Er... I think these people who felt it was destructive might be being a bit judgmental, maybe. Millinery? You missed a really important step of checking. Did I? Yeah. Ringing the bell.
Starting point is 00:18:34 Is it getting your bell cleaned? I suppose people don't use bells anymore because it's more of the digital kind of thing. Mmm. Certainly, Charlotte, you could stay for two nights. How... Can you put a deposit on the room or something? With my cash, because we don't use cards. Check.
Starting point is 00:19:00 Not check. I'm thinking of the card machines that imprint, they go dunk dunk. I think we're before cards, certainly the 1930s. So it's not, so coins, get your coins cleaned. Uh huh. And coins value is based on its weight in the olden days, so people might be sad that an abrasively cleaned coin could have lost some of its weight and therefore its value? Not necessarily the weight, but maybe just its general condition, yes. It's exactly that.
Starting point is 00:19:32 Having your coins cleaned is felt by numismatists to be a bit ruining to the actual coins, you know, degrading them in some way. So what, you check in, hand over your coin purse and they'll give them a good rubdown or something. Yes, it's exactly that, Matt. It is having the coins cleaned. So the question was, what was the service? Your coins are being cleaned. And why was it controversial? Because some, because coin collectors weren't fond of the damage that could be done to the coins as a result, because it can be a bit of a breeze.
Starting point is 00:20:04 And it stopped in 2010 not because people use coins less, it's just because no one cares. If I remember my research right, one of the reasons was not necessarily just to clean your coins, but so the change you got from the hotel was always sparkling and never grubby. Oh. Oh. But they hired a specific coin washer. The service finally stopped when Rob Hulson, the hotel's primary coin washer, retired after a 40-year career. So the hotel had a policy of physically washing all coins that passed through their coffers,
Starting point is 00:20:38 using detergent and vibrating birdshot. This led to very clean coins, but coin collectors weren't terribly fond of the damage that it could do to some of the coins. The tradition started when the hotel manager saw that the coins were soiling the gloves of the ladies. And at its peak hundreds of thousands of dollars in change were washed every week. And the demand has of course decreased over time as cash payments have been decreased. And also fewer people wear white gloves. But not zero. But not zero. have been decreased, and also fewer people wear white gloves.
Starting point is 00:21:05 But not zero. But not zero. We got through that entire question and no one made the money laundering joke. Oh damn! Well that's an opportunity missed. Last time that BP Trivia advertised on Lattrell, they had a lot of our listeners join their quiz leagues, so they're back! BP Trivia is just starting the search for their 2025 Trivia champion, and it might be
Starting point is 00:21:31 you. BP Trivia is good trivia in your browser. No computer-generated questions or multiple-choice gimmies. The questions are handwritten and well-researched. I get angry at bad pub quiz questions, and BP Trivia's standard is so high. They have a wide variety of games, free daily mini-games and month-long quizzes you can take at your leisure to fast-paced five-minute blitzes, and real trivia leagues with promotions, relegations and stats tracking. You'll compete against people at your level, and if you're good enough, you'll be up
Starting point is 00:22:01 against literal Jeopardy champions. If you sign up via BPTrivia.com slash lateral, you'll get a free month of BP+, which includes entry into the championship series, their flagship daily trivia league. That's BPTrivia.com slash lateral. Back to the show. Thank you to Valentine for this next question. At the 2012 London Olympics, Usain Bolt ran 100 metres in just 9.3 seconds. He wasn't assisted by vehicles, other people, or the wind. Though he didn't break any rule, he didn't receive an official world or Olympic record. Why?
Starting point is 00:22:40 And one more time, at the 2012 London Olympics, Usain Bolt ran 100 metres in just 9.3 seconds. He wasn't assisted by vehicles, other people or the wind. Though he didn't break any rule, he didn't receive an official world or Olympic record. Why? Tube doors were closing. Had to get on really quick. I did that on the way back from something the other week. And I got through the tube doors.
Starting point is 00:23:04 I did the Indiana Jones flying leap. and my friend did not make the leap for that ground. And I just turn round, and I wave, and we do not see each other again for the rest of the day. Oh, perfect. Yeah, yeah, come back to my place. Yeah, yeah, I haven't got bored of hanging out with you. Shonk! Yeah, yeah, come back to my place. Yeah, yeah, I haven't got bored of hanging out with you. Wolf. Shonk! Sorry, Usain Bolt. 9.3 seconds for 100 metres.
Starting point is 00:23:30 I mean, the quick response to this would be, was the record actually faster than that, so he didn't get near it? Oh, I don't know what the record is. Something like 9.8, I want to say. 9.3 is quick. It's quicker than the record. Yeah, Usain Bolt has the record at the moment, it is 9.58.
Starting point is 00:23:47 But he ran 100 metres in 9.3 seconds. I've remembered the answer, I think I know it. Oh! It's you and me, Charlotte. Right. Here we go, Dan. Okay. Straight down. It was 100 metres straight down, 9.3 seconds. Wait, that's about the same speed as gravity! Gravity, yeah. Oh, that's true! Which is faster, gravity or his same bolt?
Starting point is 00:24:12 Gravity, definitely. Gravity is 9.8 metres per second, per second. Oh, that's true. Very true. No, hold on. I'm not certain of this now. I was like, it's absolutely gravity. It is. It's gotta be. Yes. It depends on what distance, but yes. You'll do 100 metres in less than 10 seconds going down. Yes, you will, but for just a second my brain was a little confused there. There's some jokes from the physicists. I also know that producer David will just have googled a freefall calculator
Starting point is 00:24:44 and will be doing the sums right now. So London 2012... Was there something wrong with the way that the race was set up so that there was no official time recording? We've not even been told it's a race. Oh! Oh no! Okay, I think I know how it is now. We've not even been told it's a race. Oh. Oh, no.
Starting point is 00:25:06 Okay, I think I know how it is now. Oh, okay, just me then. Sorry, Charlotte. No, that's not how this works. That's not how this works. We don't get an increasing number of people going, oh yeah, now I've clocked it. Matt said you'd remembered this.
Starting point is 00:25:21 So I'm going to go to Matt first. I think I've heard this before. Yeah. Did he do a 9.3 second 100 metres as part of the 400 metre race? I was thinking 200, but I think it's part of a different race. You are absolutely right. It was the second half of a 200 metre sprint. So it was a running start for the final 100 metres.
Starting point is 00:25:43 And he can't win that because he was already at speed when the 100 metres started. Yes. Which you aren't when the normal 100 metres start. Yes. Though I would like to see a catapult launch 100 metre running race. You have to land on your feet. Yes, there have been several other performances with even better splits. Johann Blake, in 2011, managed 100 metres in 9.12 seconds.
Starting point is 00:26:07 Woof! Which is incredibly fast, but not from a standing start, so it does not count for the record. I've done 9.3 seconds 100 metres before, but that would have been on a bike or in a car, or a plane, or... And producer David has had time to do the calculations. It would take 4.51 seconds to cover 100 metres by free fall. So actually, little less than half, but the difference is not as great as you might think. You would be going 44 metres a second by the end of it, though.
Starting point is 00:26:39 Not for long. So, yeah, like, covering the first 100 metres in free fall, 4.5 seconds. Covering the next 100 metres, that's very fast. And then going round the corner at the end for the rest of the track as you slow down. Charlotte it is over to you for the next question. Alright, this question has been sent in by Gustaf. Steve needs to fly his helicopter at low altitudes over long distances as part of his work. Fortunately, his helicopter has two more blades than normal.
Starting point is 00:27:14 What is his job? And again, Steve needs to fly his helicopter at low altitudes over long distances as part of his work. Fortunately, his helicopter has two more blades than normal. What is his job? I have an idea. I'm not certain, so I'm just going to take a step back, but I have an idea. No, no, this is happening again because two of us have an idea. I know one job that you use very low-flying helicopters for. So there are going to be three guesses here. We're going to have to talk it out between
Starting point is 00:27:40 ourselves. Dan, you spoke up first. Some form of forestry or lumberjacking. I was thinking crop dusting. There are helicopter pilots who have two extra, they're not really blades, but things to throw out pesticides on big fields. And I was thinking cherry drying, because after a rain, helicopters will fly over fields low down to dry out the trees so then the rots doesn't set in on the cherries.
Starting point is 00:28:09 Yes, this is, I think, California? Somewhere like that? Because a cherry crop can be ruined by one badly timed rainstorm. Yeah. So you have to dry them as quickly as possible, and there are cherry drying pilots on standby. All very good ideas. All wrong, but that's okay. Yay! Yay! Delivered perfectly there, Charlotte.
Starting point is 00:28:33 Thank you very much. Specific helicopter knowledge. We have three nerds here who absolutely all thought, oh, we've got the answer to this one. Perfect. But I thought you might be right down from blades. Yeah, so where are the blades going to be? They're not going to be the typical blades on the top of the helicopter
Starting point is 00:28:53 or the one at the back. Is it going to be underneath? That's how I had it. I know there's been movies where you've got rotating saw blades underneath a helicopter, but... I mean, there haven't just been movies. There have been... That's an actual thing that exists. I've watched that. I've probably spent too long watching that on YouTube,
Starting point is 00:29:15 of people clearing forests next to power lines with what looks like a dangling set of circular saws beneath a helicopter. It doesn't look like it, it is. I've also seen videos of people inspecting power lines from a helicopter. And what they do there is to stop arcing happening while they're inspecting the power line. The helicopter's hovering there, and then they stick out a rod, so then it is connected or touching or resting on the power line, so then the helicopter's at the same potential as the power line, and then it won't spark, so maybe they call that a blade?
Starting point is 00:29:59 This is the same reason that birds don't die if they land on a power line. Nothing's being earthed. So as long as the helicopter's safely tagged, it can work on live power lines. You can put someone on a live power line as long as you don't make a connection down to ground. So why would the helicopter be making long straight lines then? Is it going along the power line? I've seen people be dropped off by a helicopter. The helicopter jumps away, and then as the helicopter's coming back, the stick comes... Two blades!
Starting point is 00:30:28 One on the person and one on the helicopter, so they can assist in chapel their way together. That's not really a blade though, is it? You guys are right with the power lines. Ooh, okay. Helicopters are used for remote powerline inspection where you can't... Well, it's either long distance, like it says in the question, or it's in the middle of nowhere, it's really hard to get to. So that is, yeah, that could be through forests or up deserts or...
Starting point is 00:30:57 I'm still hung up on the long straight lines bit, I think. That's what's fooling me. So whether you're going to follow a path that's already there, hence long straight lines, or you're going to make a path. No, I think that's you're following the power lines for some reason. Yeah, okay. Because they are laid out in straight lines because it's cheaper. But it's not the forestry. It's not chopping the trees down. It's something else. So if it's not chopping trees, like, blade still implies some chopping.
Starting point is 00:31:27 So I'd be very surprised if a helicopter-mounted pair of secateurs was chopping wire. Because those wires are massive, and the amount of tension on them would mean it would whip and hit the helicopter. In both senses of the word tension. Yeah. It feels to me like it's not the most safe way of cutting down a power line, is to just chop through it with a helicopter. It feels slightly against health and safety. So if they need a new round for Schlagdent Star or whatever it's called...
Starting point is 00:31:59 That's a very specific reference. It is, it is. But two of us appreciated it. So what do you guys think would be the consequence if the blades didn't cut the power line? very specific reference. It is, it is. I got it. Two of us appreciated it. So what do you guys think would be the consequence if the blades didn't cut the power lines? Oh, is it snippy bits on the end of the swishy bits of the helicopter in case the helicopter gets caught in the power lines? So it destroys the power grid, but it's more likely to not kill the pilot. Very very close.
Starting point is 00:32:24 So thinking along the right lines, pretty much there, as opposed to the snippy bits around the blades of an aircraft where it would still get caught. What do you think? How do you think these blades are positioned? On the helicopter's toesies? In the pilot's handsies? He's just got... You went with toesies, I'm going with handsies. He's just got a giant set of secateurs in case he needs to cut a wire? Oh, on its tummy?
Starting point is 00:32:53 On a little dangly thing on its tummy? So the blades themselves are positioned above and below the helicopter and they're used as sort of safety mechanisms for when a power line does come in contact with the helicopter. The blades themselves kind of lead the lines into the sharp part, and then they cut them without injuring the pilot themselves. Ah. So if you accidentally fly up or down into a power line, it doesn't hit the rotor, it just slides down one of them,
Starting point is 00:33:31 gets to the centre, chop. It's like when a musketeer does like a block and the other sword slides out of the way into the hilt? Pommel? Yes, it's essentially a defensive pommel, defensive hilt. Yes, Steve works as an inspector for the electricity companies and he's checking to find any problems that he may encounter in the power network. The wire strike protection system was invented in the 1970s as a response to helicopter accidents that had struck electricity wires. It consists of two
Starting point is 00:34:03 spikes at the front of the helicopter, one above and one below the cockpit. If a wire hits the aircraft, the spike guides the wire towards a hidden blade that slices the wire into two. The helicopter can then make a safe landing. I'm going to have a great time hyper-focusing on that later. Thank you to Chris Tam for this next question. In Belfast, Northern Ireland, there is a plaza that is encircled by 46 benches and 39 boxes for visitors to sit on. Why are they arranged in a particular pattern?
Starting point is 00:34:38 I'll say that again. In Belfast, Northern Ireland, there is a plaza that is encircled by 46 benches and 39 boxes for visitors to sit on. Why are they arranged in a particular pattern? Suspicious numbers, suspicious numbers. You're giving us specific numbers for reasons. You had a look on your face during that question, Dan, and I was like, oh, Dan has just got this. Oh, I'm glad I look like I know things. This is excellent. 46 benches and 39 boxes. 85 total? Yes. This is a long shot, but perhaps because it's benches and boxes, it's long and short,
Starting point is 00:35:16 so maybe something to do with Morse code? Oh wow. And I know something about Belfast. That is where the Titanic was built. So there's a link with Morse there, because that sent out Morse. Does it just say the Titanic and Morse? It sent out Morse? No? Have I gone too specific? Not quite. Charlotte, spot on. Boxers and benches are dots and dashes. You've nailed it. Dan, we're right, it's the Titanic. But the question was, why are they arranged in a particular pattern?
Starting point is 00:35:50 I'm going to need to know a little bit more about that pattern. It doesn't just say the Titanic. Is it just SOS on loop? You know what, Matt? You have kicked that one home. It is not SOS, but it is the distress call from the RMS Titanic. Wow. The message spells out DE, which would be this is, MGY, repeated a few times, that's Titanic's call sign,
Starting point is 00:36:13 and then CQD and SOS, repeated. CQD was the old distress call, and SOS was the new one that was being introduced in those years. So yes, this is the Titanic Belfast Museum on the former grounds of the shipyard. It has an outline of the Titanic, inlaid in white stone with more benches in there. But yes, the boxes and benches are dots and dashes of Titanic's distress call. Well done, all three players on that question. Oh, give that to Charlotte.
Starting point is 00:36:43 Charlotte's all the way there. We're going to take it home. There is nothing more respectful than sitting on someone's distress signal. From early morning workouts that need a boost, to late night drives that need vibes, a good playlist can help you make the most out of your everyday. And when it comes to everyday spending, you can count on the PC Insider's World Elite MasterCard to help you earn the most PC optimum points everywhere you shop. With the best playlists, you never miss a good song.
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Starting point is 00:37:44 Three times the points. Do you go anywhere? Three times the points. Do you stream stuff? Three times the points. as well as on gas, EV charging, daily transit, streaming services, digital gaming and more. All the time. Get the RBC ION Plus Visa. Three times the points. Conditions apply. Visit rbc.com slash ion cards. Matt, over to you for the next question. This question has been sent in by Hugh Morris. During World War II, Germany tested a new technology by jamming a British
Starting point is 00:38:06 radar tracking station in Malta. How did the British stop this interference after just a few days? During World War II, Germany tested a new technology by jamming a British radar tracking station in Malta. How did the British stop this interference after just a few days? They wiped the jam off. Never mind. I understand the joke, it just wasn't good enough to ask that. No, and I nicked it from spaceballs, so never mind. I don't know, despite I did a degree in meteorology, so I know about radars in terms of radar systems in rain detecting. I don't really know how they work, to be honest.
Starting point is 00:38:50 It's send out a pulse and listen for it back, I guess. I mean, I'm a broadcast engineer by trade, and that's basically how I understand it too. I'm going to understand it even less than just ask did they just change the channel that they were using. Er, no. How would you jam radar? Again, we should all have knowledge of this, because I've done videos on radar. We've all got some knowledge here, but I don't know how you'd jam it. I guess you'd just send out a load of confusing signals, but
Starting point is 00:39:22 it does have to be the right frequency, you're right. Do you just look in a different direction? So they're sort of looking up at Germany from Malta up being north. Do they just sort of look north-west instead and look over there a bit? Could you have to point your dish? There was no technology needed on the allied side. It's going to be something innovative and silly, isn't it? Like, covering the radar dish in bread, or something like that. And then the birds that come along and eat all the crumbs actually scare off the radio waves, and I... I don't think you want birds near a radar dish.
Starting point is 00:40:02 Unless you want dinner. Yeah. Mmm, cooking! Hold on, what year was this, Matt? During World War II. Okay, if you'd said something like 1945, I was going to be like, they won the war. It just...
Starting point is 00:40:17 They won. They really should have invented the radar jamming a bit earlier if they wanted to have any hope of it. Radar jamming! They wiped the jam off! I've just got it, I'm so sorry. I'm so sorry. That's fine. It does explain why the joke didn't get much of a reaction. Yes, I just didn't get it. Don't worry about it. I got the joke first time as well. I just thought it wasn't funny.
Starting point is 00:40:46 Exactly. So, back to the radar jamming. The jamming signal from the Germans, this was a genuine problem for the British. They found the jamming station, they went to the operator, they punched him in the face. No. What simple things did the British do to worry the Germans during all of this? They did, they put up lots of fake places, didn't they, to fool Germans into thinking there's things over here, you know, subterfuge, that sort of thing. So did they distract the Germans and try and get them to focus their radar jamming equipment on somewhere else, thus freeing up the base in Malta?
Starting point is 00:41:37 No, no, not that, but the British did call the bluff of their enemies. Does radar jamming just mean that the forces were just putting out loads and loads of signals so that we couldn't understand anything? As far as I understand it, basically. And the Germans would have no technological way to tell whether their jamming was working either. So did the British just keep going on course without changing anything so that the Germans thought that literally nothing was happening and then they were like, we're wasting our time putting
Starting point is 00:42:08 all of our signals in. Yes. That is the exact answer. The British just pretended that the jamming didn't work and continued as they were doing and the Germans just got bored and stopped. That's so psychologically brilliant. Well done, Charlotte. There's a couple of stories like that. With the Enigma code breaking, there were a lot of very lucky observation craft that happened to spot some German boats, or some German fights, or some German troops.
Starting point is 00:42:41 The Germans were just having terrible luck. The observation planes just happened to run over them time and time again because that provided a reason for more troops to arrive later. Never mind that they'd actually just sent the observation plane because they knew where they were from breaking the code. They had to have that deniability. So you just pretend. That's incredible. The radar station staff asked R.V. Jones of British Intelligence for his advice. He replied that the Germans measured the effectiveness of their jamming by monitoring whether the station continued to scan.
Starting point is 00:43:14 Therefore he suggested that the station continue its operations as normal. After a few days, the Germans assumed that their jamming was not working and simply gave up. Oh, that's brilliant. The Germans only learned how this was done when German signal group head General Martini asked R.V. Jones after the war. And Malta was a strategically important base being close to both mainland Europe and the north of Africa.
Starting point is 00:43:40 I have just noticed the name General Martini. Maybe they had the conversation over a martini. Yeah. I could see why you were on the genius, Charlotte. That was excellent. Yeah, well done. Perseverance is key, guys. What a cute guy.
Starting point is 00:43:57 Which leaves us with the question asked right at the start of the show. Thank you to Fiona Atkinson for sending this idea in. To calm things down, why does Claire always play the drums on the same two dates every year? Any guesses from the panel before I give the audience the answer? OCD. I'm thinking fireworks. I'm thinking, is it a way to deal with pets and fireworks, and to try and get them acclimatised or the opposite? Absolutely spot on. So what are the two days?
Starting point is 00:44:27 Er, it would be... If it's in the UK, probably Guy Fawkes night, and... New Year's Day. And with that, the last question has been resolved. Let's find out what's going on with the panel, where can we find you? We will start with Charlotte.
Starting point is 00:44:42 Oh, I'm still studying. I'll still be studying for the next couple of years and I'm still playing League. So you'll find me online on the Rift or you'll find me in UCL. And presumably on ITV very soon. Yes, you'll find me on ITV on the Genius Game. Matt.
Starting point is 00:44:57 I am at Matt Gray. Yes, everywhere you should search for mattg.co.uk and you'll find all of my links to my series which includes Matt Gray's Trying. And Dan. I stream a couple of nights on Twitch, so find me, I'm Quizzy Dan on Twitch. And if you want to know more about this show,
Starting point is 00:45:16 you can do that at lateralcast.com, where you can also send in your own ideas for questions. We are at Lateralcast, basically everywhere. There are regular video highlights at youtube.com slash Lateral Cast and full video episodes on Spotify. Thank you very much to Dan Peake. Thank you very much.
Starting point is 00:45:31 Matt Gray. Thank you. Charlotte Young. Thank you. I've been Tom Scott and that's been Lateral.

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