Lateral with Tom Scott - 152: Microwaving chocolate
Episode Date: September 5, 2025Ruth Amos, Evan Edinger and Abby Cox face questions about sneaky stickers, fat fingers and banished beetles. LATERAL is a comedy panel game podcast about weird questions with wonderful answers, hoste...d by Tom Scott. For business enquiries, contestant appearances or question submissions, visit https://lateralcast.com. 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: Nick, Madison M., Dante Hicks, Cameron Omara, David Lyford-Tilley, Gary C., Jackson Conte. 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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A hotel has a booking.com sticker in their window that is purposefully upside down.
Why? The answer to that, at the end of the show. My name's Tom Scott, and this is Lateral.
Welcome to the show with questions that have a lot in common with bananas. They're both bendy, slippery in places, and slightly radioactive.
So if a guest seems to glow when they get something right, it might just be the potassium isotopes.
hoping to prove that they are the pick of the bunch.
First, we have from his own YouTube channel and from Across the Atlantic.
Evan Eddinger, welcome back.
Hello, I'm now Across the Atlantic.
Always a joy to have you here.
Look, you never give me a decent, like, you could list off multi-hyphenate stuff,
you could list off what you've been comparing recently.
This video is going to come out months ahead of when we record it.
Evan, how would you like to be known to the world?
I'm an American British man who likes too many things.
and has too many niches and loves it all.
So words and language
and just interesting differences between countries.
Are you Thomas Jefferson?
Yeah, actually, I am.
How did you know?
I'm on the nickel.
He spent some time in France,
and then he came back and helped the revolution.
He actually wasn't the nicest guy,
so I'd rather not be.
No, no.
But thank you.
All I know about Thomas Jefferson,
but I think I'll help my own.
Oh, is there some bad history?
with Thomas Jefferson.
Oh, yeah, I could send you a podcast after.
He was not just an awful man with slavery, but...
Well, Evan, I apologize to you.
You are not Thomas Jefferson.
I'm the one who asked, and it was mostly this a joke
because, like, Thomas Jefferson, like, loved books and reading
and was, like, super nerdy and, like, into all sorts of different things.
And I wasn't...
You wasn't implying that Evan owned people.
That's probably for the best.
It was more just, like, what, 18th century nerd?
living up to her previous description on this podcast
of unhinged history and culture
archivist. Was it archivist? Commentator, I can't remember.
Abby Cox, welcome back to the show.
Hi!
Great to be here.
Accidentally insulting Evan on accident,
just trying to make a joke.
Don't worry, my social anxiety will wake me up at 3 a.m.
and I'll be horrified.
I'll never stop thinking about this.
I'd like to think this was all in good spirits, but what have you been working on, Abby?
What's in the pipeline right now?
Because this is going to come out a few months ahead.
Oh, gosh.
It's probably videos.
Depending on where this comes out, maybe my book manuscript has been turned in, fingers crossed.
Can you say what you're writing about yet?
I've been working on a book about women's corsetry.
And basically, the woman's, like, the feminine lived experience through her corset.
and using sources that were written by women for women to tell the story
because so often when we talk about corsetry,
we actually center men's opinions on the corset and what they thought.
Both Evan and I are really resisting making a joke right now.
I can see it on his face.
He's already been compared to Thomas Jefferson.
Let's not make it worse for him.
Of course it makes sense for that.
Of course it does.
Of course it.
Well, good luck to you on the show today.
the third member of our crew,
who has been remarkably quiet so far
as the two Americans have...
I don't think I can...
I don't have enough American history
to join in with this banter
without massively offending someone,
so I'm just staying very quiet in the corner.
Ruth Amos from Kids Invent Stuff.
Welcome back to the show.
How are you doing?
Thanks for having me.
I'm doing great.
Yeah.
Tell me about the workshop you're in
because there is a lot of stuff behind you right now.
Yeah, it is slightly chaotic in here.
It does need...
tidy up. But yes, it's not a very big space. It's like 3.8 metres by 3.8 meters, but I do
cram it with stuff. We have been doing lots of, like, live events and shows at the moment.
So we've been building backdrops as well as kids invention ideas. So, yeah, it's just very
chaotic, very chaotic here. You got a Guinness World Record, I believe, since we last talked on
the show. Do you know what, Tom? Actually, I've got, I've got two. So, you know, yeah, I know. Tell me
about it. I know you had world's biggest toothbrush. So you got world's biggest toothbrush and then
the second one that we got is we did a live show where everyone made and fired confetti cannons
that fired popcorn actually, popcorn cannons. And so we got world record for that. And I think
when this comes out, we will either be asking for or have asked for kids invention ideas for
world records. So the plan is to build a kids world record. So yeah. Very best of luck to you on
that. And with the show today, before you all go bananas, it's time to enjoy the fruit
of the question team's labors as we unpeel question one. This question has been sent in by
David Leifford Tilly. Ian rings a phone number. Half an hour later, someone arrives at his
house and hands him a voucher for a takeaway. Why was this important? I'll say that again.
Ian rings a phone number. Half an hour later, someone arrives at his house and hands him a
voucher for a takeaway. Why was this important? And just to translate that for the folks across the
Atlantic, hands him a voucher for takeout. Had some a coupon. A coupon. First off, coupon. Thank you.
Secondly, takeout or delivery. It's a coupon. So, uh, maybe it's, so sometimes when you get food
deliveries, I find that, um, either food just doesn't arrive or the guy gets hungry and eats it. So he's
like, here's a coupon. You can have it next time for, for free. I ate your food. Sorry.
The worst thing is when you get food delivered
And they forget something
So you're like, hang on
And then there's not a real person to talk to
Because it's done through an app
So you just have to like
Complain to an AI robot
And then yeah
But all you want is your burger
That's all you want
See, I don't like having stuff delivered
Because it's always cold
So I just never do it
This does seem to be an American thing
I've been literally burnt
From Takeaway before
So that's why I'm surprised
That's why I'm like
That must be nice
Because usually I get it
And it's like
Ew
My value to this is like, well, obviously it's important because he was hungry,
but he didn't get food.
So that's sad, and I feel bad.
So Ian gets a voucher after 30 minutes?
Yes.
Oh, it didn't get delivered on time.
Ian rings a phone number, and half an hour later, someone arrives at his house, gives him the voucher.
Nobody rings phone numbers these days.
It's 2025.
I don't think it was.
I think it must have been, so, was there a fast food restaurant that did a thing when they launched it if they didn't deliver
in a certain time, you got the meal for free or something.
That was Domino's.
It was, and they had to cancel the promotion after delivery drivers kept dying in car crashes.
Yeah.
What if you happen to be reading the terms and conditions, right?
And you scroll to the bottom because this is what you do for just for fun.
And you see something and says, if you call this number, you can get a free voucher for pizza.
And you're like, well, I'm on as well.
And then he called the number.
But you do get that if you do a survey.
Mm-hmm.
Oh, maybe he didn't order the, yeah, maybe he didn't order the takeaway.
Maybe he did something else.
Maybe he won it on a live show.
Maybe it was back, like Saturday night takeaway without a debt.
It's a very British reference here.
I get the reference.
They've done stuff like that before.
They've gone in trouble for stuff like that before.
There was a national competition they did where you called in on a premium rate phone number
and they would pick someone and send the camera van to your house by the end of the show.
What?
Except, well, yes, the trouble was, they knew where the camera van was,
and they had to pick a house within the radius of that van.
So if you happen to be outside that radius, you had no way of winning.
And that, it turns out, got some complaints.
That's fair.
You are correct, Ruth, that this was not the phone number for the takeaway.
Oh, okay.
He was doing something else.
That phone number was about something else.
Okay.
But not a survey, so not answering questions.
No, someone turned up after only half an hour.
Filing a complaint.
Why would someone turn up after only half an hour for something like that?
Was the food really bad and they called the health people, inspector people,
and was like, the food's terrible, and they came with a voucher?
No.
That phone number really has nothing to do with food.
That's not why you'd call it.
It's more related to an emergency.
Is it like, so if you're diabetic and you have a high or a little,
but the voucher would be useless.
I'm thinking like if you had a medical emergency and you needed voucher for takeaway,
is it like, oh, did he like, okay, so he's wandering along and outside his house are two orphaned children.
He doesn't know their orphans, but essentially there's two children and he calls the police
and they're like, you need to feed them.
And he's like, I don't have any money.
And so they send someone with the voucher.
The voucher is kind of secondary.
This is not one of the typical emergency services.
Sorry.
No, it's not one of the typical.
So we've got police, fire, coast guard, ambulance.
Yep. Paramedics.
Yep.
Prison wardens.
Like, is it like a gas leak?
And so, like, there's a gas leak and the person can't cook.
And so they call the gas and they give them a voucher for food?
Absolutely right, Abby.
Out of nowhere.
Genius.
Talk us through it.
Like, what's the situation?
situation here? I was just thinking the fact that my mother is currently without gas because she has a leak and she is
like, I'm like, did someone turn up and give her a compensation value? No, because this is America.
She instead was told that she would have to like, it's a very long story and it's just awful. And anyways,
she's been complaining this whole time and my mom's like an hour and a half away and I'm like, I don't know what to do.
I'm sorry. But I know that if she had called the gas,
company and said, I'm out of gas. I cannot cook. And they delivered a food voucher. It would make
her life so much better. Yes, this is the gas emergency number. If you smell gas, there is a number
to call. They will send someone out as quickly as they can for obvious reasons. And if they then have
to cut off your gas supply, you may, it's not guaranteed, but you may get a voucher for delivery
food to make up for it while they fix the leak. That's nice. That's really nice. Part of
that's compensation. There is one other reason that they might give that voucher, and it's for safety.
So you don't try to turn the oven? Yes. You're not tempted to switch on.
Yeah, so you don't go out and reconnect the gas so you can cook. Absolutely right.
Ruth, it is over to you for this question. So this question has been sent in by Nick.
When filming an exterior scene for Breaking Bad, the crew were having difficulties completing a take successfully.
After several failed attempts, they solved the problem by swapping two words around.
Which two and why?
When filming an exterior scene for Breaking Bad, the crew were having difficulty completing a take successfully.
After several failed attempts, they solved the problem by swapping two words around.
Which two and why?
Bad Breaking. Not the name of the TV show. It's Breaking Bad. Sorted.
No.
I've never seen Breaking Bad.
I've only got one picked up through osmosis.
So if someone could clue me in on details here, that would be appreciated.
It's just a science teacher who likes making science.
I know it's a chemistry teacher who goes into...
It's a very American science.
Right, yeah.
So there's two words that are swapped in an exterior scene.
I'm wondering if they're spoken by Walter White
or if they're spoken by one of the more Hispanic actors,
maybe there's a certain word pairing that's difficult for them.
Exterior scenes got to be important, though.
Because the load of exterior scenes that get interrupted by things like planes flying over
or the public in the background or something like that.
Like if you're not filming on a sound stage, there's going to be something outside their control.
I wonder if there was like construction going on and people were yelling,
cut, like they were cutting a line. And so, like, camera people would hear someone yelling
cut, and then they would cut the camera, the filming, thinking that it was the director. And instead
it was, you know, someone working on like a water or gas line. And then obviously they had to
give out compensation vouchers to everyone nearby as they cut the gas line off. Yes. Yes.
Absolutely. I'm, so I'm, I guess the angle would be, is it something to do with the outside
environment rather than something to do with linguistic hurdles. I feel like the outside
environment now makes more sense. Yeah, outside environment. I think between Abby and Tom,
you're heading in a good direction. So the script had it written one way, and then they had to
reverse words. Which means they can acknowledge the thing that's going on instead of having to
try and wait until it stops or gets out of their way, I'd guess. The words aren't actually
part of the script dialogue. Oh, okay.
So this isn't in a script.
It's just two words in general.
So that makes way more sense.
Okay.
And it wasn't the actors.
It was the crew.
Correct.
It's not like White Walter.
So what's going on outside they're having trouble with?
So let's see.
Like outside filming in that neighborhood.
So it was like a suburban neighborhood, depending on where they're filming, right?
It's in New Mexico.
So we have utility works.
We have like street work, like, you know, paving road work.
There's school buses.
There's.
There's weather.
anywhere. No, there's no weather in New Mexico.
Fair.
What I've seen of the show, too, especially,
because I think it takes place in Albuquerque.
It's very sunny. It's a desert area. It's hot.
So it's, like, unless it was weird weather happening when filming,
but, and I've never finished Breaking Bad because it got too dark for me.
It could also be too dark literally in that, like, night is falling or something like that
is that's affecting their shot?
Yeah.
I'm just trying to think of, like, if, I mean, when it comes to, like, crew communication,
like, what words would they need to flip around in order to...
Okay, well, the obvious ones are lights, camera, action, but...
Yeah.
Rolling.
That's not really what gets called on professional film sets these days, because the lights don't
need to get turned on immediately before the camera starts.
Yeah.
So it's, like, cut, rolling.
Yeah.
What's the word they call extras these days that's less offensive to them?
So you're heading in the right direction
At the beginning
Abby said one of the words
And then you kind of detoured off again
And then Tom you said one of the words again
So you're heading in the right direction
The first one I ever thought of was cut
Because I was thinking of like utility work and cutting
Because we made the reference about the gas
Then I said rolling
And then
So cut the only one that
Yeah so cuts one of them
Okay cuts one of them
So cut is the first word
What might come before that
Action?
Yes.
Okay.
So they're the two words.
Action and cut.
So why might they be swapped?
Because if you say action cut, then you start, stop.
And if you say cut action, you stop, start.
It's more about what other people around them might be doing.
So if you say action, what usually happens on a film set?
People act.
Yeah.
And what might stop, what might be a problem if people are acting and you're trying to get seen?
Oh, I've seen this done. I've seen this done. And it's a...
They're filming in public, right?
They are.
So someone kept interrupting the shots.
Evan literally said it almost word for word.
So the two words that were swapped for action and cut, and it was to fool a neighbour that was interrupting them.
So season one, episode five, Grey Matter, was partly filmed on a patio outside a real home in a residential neighbourhood and a disgruntled neighbour.
annoyed at production,
sought to ruin the shots
by doing yard work
and started up his wood chipper
every time the director called action
and he then shut it off
when he heard cut.
So production told the cast and crew
to swap them round
and so action meant stop
and cut meant go.
So the place I've seen that before
was a news gatherer,
journalist, that's the word,
journalist, sorry, news gatherer.
Someone with a camera
trying to get just a nice, calm,
just people walking in the street shot
and people just weren't behaving naturally
because like, oh, there's a camera on me,
I'm going to line up for this camera, we get it.
So what he did was he just kind of said,
all right, cut, we're done,
and just kind of held it by his side
and everyone just went back to being normal.
And that was the shot that made it into the final piece.
Yeah, weirdly, after this incident,
the Homeowners Association for this neighbourhood banned
use of any properties for being used for sets in the future.
But yeah.
But it made it feel so real.
I am delighted to say we have another live recording coming up. We're headlining the UK leg of
the cheerful, earful, comedy podcast festival. Our show is on Sunday, October 12th at the
Clapton Grand in London. Doors open at 12 noon for a 1pm start. We'll be playing a regular version
of the show with three fantastic celebrity guests, Ria Lina, Alastair Beckett King, and Izzy
Lawrence. To get your tickets, go to lateral
That's lateralcast.com slash live. That's lateralcast.com slash live. And hopefully we'll see you there.
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Thank you to Jackson Conte for sending in this question. Once a year, Kelly microwaves a bar of chocolate.
what's her job and what is this procedure for?
I'll say that again.
Once a year, Kelly microwaves a bar of chocolate.
What's her job and what is this procedure for?
It's once a year, so only every once in a while
you'd want to pipe chocolate on or something.
Is it like Valentine's Day?
Or Christmas?
Ooh, there's so many chocolate holidays.
Yeah.
But like, so Christmas, like, especially in the United States,
people will like melt chocolate chips or like Hershey's kisses or something because they microwave
really easily and melt down easily without like getting really messy and you can like dump pretzels
in them and like sprinkles sprinkles on them or 100,000 is what do you guys call them and or whatever
and like you give them out as presents and like it's like homemade candy I thought you had you like
use a double boil no you don't have to no okay Hershey's is actually famously created specifically
to not be easy to melt compared to real chocolate.
Well, it's just a chocolate bar, but like, we, like, we can do that here.
Like, that's how, like, especially, like, kisses, like, Nestle's, like, like, it's
either, like, dunking strawberries for, like, Valentine's Day or, like, making homemade,
like, sweets for Christmas to give out as gifts.
But it's her job.
What job would, what job would involve?
I mean, holiday prep is a job.
Let's be honest.
We've been undervaluing.
The labour of putting that microwave, chocolate bar in.
But, like, if you're at, like, a restaurant or something, right?
And you have, like, a special, like...
Yeah, but it's one bar, right?
One bar?
One bar of chocolate, once a year.
And it does have to be a bar.
If you're melting it, why does it have to be a bar?
She also has to remove the turntable first.
Is it, like, some weird health and safety thing?
So, like, they make microwaves.
Someone could put the whole bar in with the foil wrapper,
like, let's test it.
And every year they test that, and that's her job.
And she gets a little point, well done.
I think the strongest part of that was you saying,
little point, well done.
Ooh, it's a, oh, is it like a school test?
Like, educational thing.
It is an educational thing, yes.
Yeah.
Okay, so are we talking, now the question then is, like,
is it this like an educational, like,
Comeck, like, high school, middle school type of, like, education, or are we talking, like,
you know, chef school, pastry school type of situation. Like, so more like, welcome, here's
how to crack an egg, kids. Please. Well, it's only once a year. Yeah, so it's like a final exam or
something. Or it's like one part of a course in a semester. Yes, correct with that, Abby. Yes,
that's why it's once a year. So it's an exam. Once a year, part of the syllabus is this. And it's
obviously, food-related or some sort of science-related, think.
Is it not?
Or science-related.
More in science.
More in science.
Okay.
Is it to do with she puts it in the microwave to show the children the crystallization
of chocolate and why you should always melt chocolate properly
because the crystals don't form back and it goes white and grim?
Unless you're an American and you have the correct chocolate to do it at home.
Everything up to show the children.
Absolutely right.
but that's the wrong
lesson, that's the wrong subject
it is not actually to do with
the chocolate itself. She actually only wants part
of the chocolate melted. Is it to do
with the fact that the way the microwave cooks, if the
turntable isn't in, you can melt the centre
of the bar without the rest of the bar being melted?
You!
What do you mean by centre of the bar?
Well, essentially the way that the rays...
I'm trying to remember how microwave works,
but the way that the microwave works
means that part of the spinning turntable is to make sure that you evenly cook food.
So if you took that out, you could show scientifically what the microwave does
because part of the chocolate will be melted and part wouldn't, I think.
Yes, this is to do with the hot spots in the microwave.
You're spot on, that's why the turntable exists.
That's why you sometimes get hot and cold spots in there.
What might be the next step in that demonstration?
You open the chocolate bar and bits of it are melty.
Yes.
Bits of it are, bits of it aren't.
There's something you can work out from that.
And I suspect this is a demonstration
that is popular in schools now
and probably wasn't when most of us were growing up.
It's become popular.
Does that mean it's due with climate change
because no one cared about climate change
when I was at school?
It's a TikTok actually.
No, this is measuring a face.
famous constant.
Plank's got nothing to do with this.
I study old clothes.
I liked mechanical engineering and electrical engineering,
and then that's where I bailed out at that.
I think from electrical engineering, Evan,
you might be able to work this one out.
I said my planks.
I'm out.
You have a microwave and its specifications,
and you have this bar of chocolate,
which actually probably doesn't have one melted point in the center.
It has a couple of melted points.
the hotspot areas.
So does the wattage of the microwave
have any effect here on the experiment?
The frequency of the microwave.
Ooh, can you work out like the wave length of something?
So yes, with a ruler, you can work out the wavelength of the microwaves.
And that with a bit of physics means you can work out something else.
Can you measure the hotspots to the non-hot spots and somehow
calculate the, with that, how they are on the bar?
Yeah.
With the size of the bar?
The distance between the hotspots makes a big difference here.
That is a really important thing.
You combine that with some data from how the microwave works.
You can work out something fundamental.
How quickly you could cook something.
How quickly is, how quick, perhaps?
How would cook something?
Perhaps more, how fast?
It's something that's very quick indeed.
The speed of light.
You're absolutely right, Evan.
This is a high school physics demonstration
to work out the speed of light.
Tell us how to do it at home.
You melt the chocolate until parts of it are just melting.
You measure the distance from one melted point to the next one.
You double it.
That gives you the wavelength of the microwaves
that are used by that microwave.
The frequency is going to be on the spec sheet.
You can do maths to that, and that will give you something very close to the speed of light,
depending on how accurate your ruler is.
And how long you left it melting for?
Yeah, and how accurate those little points are.
To within a couple of percent, a high school student can work out the value of the speed of light
by melting a chocolate bar in a microwave.
We did have a thing where we had to build a parabola that was made out of like mylar reflective material,
and then on a hot sunny day, we put a hot dog in the fulcrum in the middle
so we could make a solar-powered hot dog roaster.
That was similar, I guess.
Abby, the next question is yours.
Okay.
This question has been sent by Madison M.
Mount Hope Cemetery in Rochester, New York
sometimes puts a plexiglass cover over one of its gravestones.
This is to protect it from damage caused by adhesive.
Why?
Again,
Mount Hope Cemetery in Rochester, New York,
sometimes puts a plexiglass cover over one of its gravestones.
This is to protect it from damage caused by adhesive.
Why?
Okay, so a long time ago, there was a magician and his dog,
and people loved the dog so much that when it died,
they come to the cemetery and they glue on balloon animals,
shaped like said dog.
and that's what they're protecting it from.
This is so funny.
Just...
So you're headed in the right direction.
Yes!
But it has nothing to do
with a magician and a dog.
That's how this show works.
It's like,
keep going with that,
but...
But don't.
Not as whimsical.
Keep going for don't.
Not as whimsical.
I was thinking
like super glue protests
but that's because I watched something on the Just Stop Oil protesters
who have been supergluing themselves to stuff.
And I don't know why you'd do that to a gravestone.
That's not particularly disruptive.
I was thinking of stamps for some dumb reason.
Again, since we're laterally thinking here, right?
Protesting absolutely is related to why...
Wow.
There is adhesive involved.
But it's not necessarily an act of protest at that moment.
I thought it might be
the inventor of some sort of adhesive
and people are
paying tribute by gluing things
to the gravestone?
So it was a Buddhist that died there
and he has the little Buddhist symbol on it
however it kind of looks like a swastika
so people kind of protest that
thinking that it's a swastika
when it, no.
I also would
not a man.
Oh, okay.
We honestly, we keep throwing these men in
and it's all these women, isn't it?
I mean,
Kind of like assuming women are dead, so, you know.
All right, Thomas Jefferson.
Okay, so this is, okay, I'll give you guys another, like, hint.
This person is someone that I would know a decent amount about.
Andrew Jackson.
Ew, gross.
Marilyn Monroe.
She's not in New York.
The leap, like, I almost said, like, when I was a woman, it's not Maryland, just so that
we can be like, it's not Maryland.
Her gravestone actually is vandalized by lipstick kisses.
Like, there's usually red lipstick on her.
Oh, that's grim.
This is side quest, but there was like a rich guy who bought the one above her and he was buried up.
Oh, yes.
Well, that's the famous guy that started the Playboy, isn't it?
Yes, Hugh Heffner, I think.
I don't think it's, is it Hugh?
I'm pretty sure.
I believe that is the stat, yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
I mean, good news.
I think he's dead and you can't libel the dead.
So let's just go with it's Hugh Hefner.
Yeah.
So, yeah, it's not Maryland, even though, like, but, oh, oh, okay.
So to circle it back to Maryland, it's the same sort of vibe and energy, if that makes sense.
All right, it's an ill-advised tribute.
We are gluing a thing to this gravestone because in life, she helped me out here.
Remember protesting.
this protesting was involved with this thing.
One of the suffragettes?
I don't know if there was an American branch, if you like, of the suffragettes.
I assume there was a civil movement.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
We learn about that.
So actually, in the hatpin video, like, I give an account about, like, they were, like, one
of the accounts I was given of these women were protesting in D.C.
And they were being followed by men, and the girls whipped out their hat pins to keep them
away to protect their freedom of speech and their right to assemble, to protest for
their right to
vote. So yes, this is absolutely
has to do with the suffragettes movement.
Did she famously glue herself to something
as protest? No.
I'm going to say, again,
this is probably something that
Evan will get.
You guys probably, British people
probably won't get
because there's always
something that happens when
voting occurs.
Law and order.
I did vote recently
I didn't get to go vote in person I assume
I did I actually flew over to New Jersey just to vote
I got a sticker it's in my house still actually
Oh you get a sticker oh do people put stickers
The I voted stickers
Who gets the sticker on her gravestone
Hillary Clinton
No she's not dead
All right
famous women who are dead
Here's a fun fact
She was on a dollar for a while
A dollar coin I know we had dollar coin
Susan B Anthony
Yes
Susan B Anthony she's on a silver pound coin
I'm already too British
Wow
Evan I know the name
But I do not know who Susan B Anthony was
Susan B Anthony used to be on the dollar coin
A silver coin
She's a famous suffragette
Coincidentally I believe she's buried in Rochester
New York.
Fun fact.
I literally couldn't tell you much
except I know her from the currency
and... And when you vote
in America, you are often given a little
I voted sticker. And so women
will go, in that area,
will go to her gravestone and put their
I vote a sticker on because she was
one of the first
encouragers of the suffragist movement
in the United States. She was not
a... I don't know when Susan B. Anthony
died.
like because we got the right to vote in 1920 is when that like passed but she was alive in the mid-19-hundred like mid-1800s
so she was also just a part of like the dress reform movement women's rights movements she like
I actually literally was just writing about something that she was a part of with like the bloomer costume in 1851
and she and her friend Lucy Stoner were wearing these costumes out about and they were getting her
and assaulted by men for wearing these costumes out and about, and they were like a friend
sent a carriage to pick them up so they could, like, escape because it was causing such a
big ruckus. So, yeah, she is, as with so many Americans in history, she has had a huge
impact here in the United States, but she is also a problematic, complicated individual
because she was not supportive of black women
being a part of the suffrage movement.
And so she's a bit, as with so many, she's complicated.
And the I-voted stickers go on her grave
if you're in Rochester, New York, then.
Thank you to Gary C for this next question.
How did the website Fatfingers.com help people to save money
and why is it no longer as useful today as it used to be?
One more time, how did the website Fat Fingers
dot com help people to save money and why is it no longer as useful today as it used to be?
Is it to do with, so back in the age of the internet when we were all choosing our lovely email
addresses, some of which we do not use today, if you accidentally type then you could go back
and you could change it on fatfingers.com. But now you can't have a new email address because
they're all taken by us lots. You're right in that it was used in conjunction with another very
famous site. Also, why
did you go to that idea of
the phrase fat fingers? Because I feel like fat fingers
mistype. As someone
who's in the workshop and has long nails,
I always get told, like, how can you do that? And I'm like,
it's fine if I had fat fingers. I wouldn't
be able to have very small hands. Fat fingers
would be worse. Yeah, or on your phone. Yeah. Or on your
watch. If you've got a watch, oh no.
Oh, yeah. It's so hard to, yeah, with your fat.
So, like, maybe you
like, miss type to someone. I don't know.
Oh, could you, could you, like, reverse
a text or something? Like, could you
Like, back in the day, when we didn't all have, like, unlimited phone contracts,
you could register online for, like, to get free text.
Was it something like that?
Like, there was really useful things that we would never use now
on the internet back in the day.
It is that kind of era, certainly.
This would be pre-smart phone.
I keep wondering if it's not to, like,
if you accidentally find yourself on a seedy part of the internet
and you're trying to delete your browser history
or, like, you're trying to fix it,
And it's like five fingers is like to delete all traces.
You can do that in your browser, though.
A website wouldn't actually be allowed to do that.
And remember, it's being used in conjunction with somewhere else.
Yeah, I'm thinking about what the conjunction would be if it's used with Google or a search engine
or if it's used with a very specific news website or...
Yahoo.com. Ask jeeps.
Yahoo!
It helped people to save money.
Oh, yeah, that bit.
Oh, was it in case you put your card details in wrong?
Or you didn't put in a coupon, a voucher on the site or something?
No.
And I love the idea that there is a website you type your credit card number into to avoid leaving your credit card details.
It's mine. I've just started it.
If you don't like to put your credit card details into it, I promise you, it will stop you from having your details taken by anyone that isn't me.
It is definitely encrypted.
We're talking early e-commerce sites here.
So it has to do with misspelling and like fixing typing errors.
It has to do with commerce, but it's not...
If you ordered 20 of something, like when people accidentally, they just couldn't understand,
oh, I just want one of these, and instead they put 11, and then they got like a load of them.
It was to undo that.
There is another website which might help you with that if you had a surplus of something.
It was one of the old ones.
eBay.
eBay.
Spot on. This is in conjunction with, well, not officially.
Is it half to do with, like, sniping?
Like, did it work with, like, sniping on eBay where, like, you would type in your amount and fat fingers would...
There was a different website to help with that, where you'd come in at the very last second with a bid, but not for this.
You can tell that we did not do eBay as young people.
Oh, I did eBay as a kid, actually. I sold my Pokemon cards and my beanie babies.
I didn't use any... See, I had very thin baby fingers, all right?
I had some bobby fingers.
I don't got no fat fingers.
Oh, was this a website where people who had misspelled items,
it would show the listing if someone was like had misspelled Beanie Baby,
then no one was seeing their listing,
which meant the bid was really low,
so Fat Fingers found the people that couldn't spell.
Absolutely right.
Fatfingers.com.
Evan, you look confused here.
Do you want to...
No, it makes sense.
I'm just so surprised that that's so successful.
because search was so bad that it would just be like,
oh, you misspelled it, that's it.
That's the last part of the puzzle, Evan.
That's it.
There wasn't really a good autocorrect system for eBay back then.
They didn't spell check everything that went in.
These days, the site still exists.
I think it still technically works,
but you could type in, for example,
so here's the thing.
The example on my sheet says AirPods,
but those did not exist back then.
But to this day, if you type...
Yeah. Beanie babies, that's what I would sell.
Beanie baby, it would give you a load of misspellings.
It would search eBay for many different misspellings of beanie babies
and give you back the ones that were misspelled,
so you might be able to get it cheaper than normal.
Evan, it is your question.
This question has been sent from Dante Hicks.
In the 1940s, visitors watching football games
at Berkeley's Californian Memorial Stadium
would often be plagued by Beatles.
What has caused this to stop in recent years?
To repeat, in the 1940s,
visitors watching football games at Berkeley's California Memorial Stadium
would often be plagued by Beatles.
What has caused them to stop in recent years?
Global warming.
Climate change.
My answer was like the massive depopulation of insect biomass,
because you know what,
Those were better answers, yeah.
We've killed them all. No.
They're dead.
And California's on fire.
Which is actually a problem.
Like, if you drive through a lot of, certainly America,
certainly the UK, you no longer get huge amounts of bugs on your windscreen,
you have to wipe off because there has been a massive insect depopulation.
I'm guessing that's not the sort of depressing answer that's in the question, Evan.
Bug spray.
Bug sprays got really good.
Killed a whole generation, wiped them out.
Oh, yeah, deep just destroyed everything.
No, this doesn't have to do with any of that at all, actually.
Have they moved the stadium?
No, they haven't.
Because the bowl is, like, iconic.
My husband actually, like, grew up in, like, rural California,
and he and his dad actually had season tickets to Cal to go and see the game.
So I am really annoyed that he's not here right now to, like, tap in and answer the question,
but he's going to be very excited when he listens to this episode because he'll probably know the answer.
I don't know the answer
All I know is that it's old
Like the stadium is old
And oh
If the stadium's old
Yeah what do they sit on
It's the benches that they sit on
Are really old and they're beetle infested
And now they replace them with plastic
It is the 1940s by the way
So like
That's not even a hint that I've been given to say
But I'm like the 1940s
Some things happened
I don't know
Oh World War II
Racism
Interniquette?
Thank God we're past that
Yeah, thank God we're not living in that
Hellscape anymore, geez
Fascism, out the door, not here anymore
In terms, so let me just reread it
So there were Beatles that were
plaguing the visitors
Of the football games
It's too early for the Beatles band, right?
So the Beatles are
I don't think there's an opposing team called the Beatles
That just like, because there are a lot of
Because there are a lot of teams with stupid names
You know, but it's not like they were playing
against the Beatles.
I mean...
Or playing the Beatles.
It was just some Beatles.
Like, okay, so part of me is going into...
One of the issues that we've had in the United States, like, overall, when it comes
to, like, our native scape and ecology and whatnot, is this influx of invasive species.
And, like, currently on the East Coast, Evan, I'm sure you're away.
Like, the lantern fly is like a...
Everyone's like, if you see it, kill it.
Like, hold no mercy.
Kill those things.
We don't care if they're pretty.
Murder them.
because they are destroying plants and trees and stuff.
Ladybugs.
Like, we have real ladybugs here, and then we also have, like, the Asian ladybug.
And as someone who has to deal with that in Indiana, like, when they hatch out, they swarm everything.
Like, once, side tangent, I thought I was having, like, a stroke or a seizure because I thought
I was smelling toast, and my husband was like, are you dying?
I was like, no, turns out a ladybug had just flown into one of our, like, lights in our ceiling
that are like these old really hot things and it like on fire and it just smelled like burning
toast anyways so i'm wondering my point is this i'm wondering if it has to do with an invasive
species that we have finally eradicated and it's a good thing that they're gone because they
never should have been there to begin with well you smell burnt toast i wonder that which is
quite you know because that bug he was he was burning up
in that lamp. That's quite an interesting
story.
Did the bugs
all like dry out and die
because it was too hot in the stadium?
Or they're attracted
to like food carts or something
like that that we don't. The lights!
You're on the right
path right now. You were
you're on the real right path
though. Keep trying us.
Are they using different lighting
now? It's nothing to do with
lighting. I was thinking the bugs were
attract the lights or something like that.
I did say the visitors
watching football games were plagued
by Beatles. So did they
have like little lanterns with them, like little kerosene
lanterns or little gas lanterns or like...
No. No, they... No.
But I really like... I really like
we're going with that, as if in the 1940s
we're walking around with some garrisoned...
I was like, this is weird. I don't know why.
Can you see the Eagles? That's
actually the Pittsburgh Steelers.
I don't know why I did a British accent.
But I do like the image.
imagery that you're talking, I want you to explore the, what they're attracted to. Okay, so then we
would have had like thermoses, food, but like coffee, beer. No, they get again, not food at all,
but I want you to go back to the lantern possibly and think about something similar. I don't
know. What were they carrying? Were they carrying something that attracted them? The crowd were
enjoying something, not necessarily food that was attracting the Beatles. So was it like noise makers? Was it
Making a sound that would...
No, not necessarily.
Oh, wait.
Something like tobacco or snuff or something like that that the Beatles happen to be attracted to?
Yes.
You're on the right page.
Oh, okay.
I'm like, where does the lantern have to do with cigarettes?
But now I'm like, oh, lights.
No, not lights.
It's the flame.
It's the flame burning.
It's burning around my face, the flames.
So cigarette, like smoke?
Yes.
But why?
Are the beetles, like, nesting or like in the wooden structure or the seats or something like that,
and they get smoked out by the amount of tobacco smoke that's there or something like that?
No, quite the opposite.
They like the smell of the, they like it.
Yes, yes, yes.
Got there in the end.
Yes, they're attracted to the smell.
So these beetles are attracted to the smell of the smoke.
The name of these beetles, the insects are known as charcoal beetles, if you've ever heard of these.
Charcoal beetles are also called fire-chasing beetles because they lay their eggs on freshly burnt trees,
easier for the larva to eat.
So at the stadium, thousands of spectators would light it up, light up some cigarettes at the same time,
and that would make the beetles in the area think, oh, this is going to be a forest fire.
So they would swarm on in and hit all the people smoking cigarettes.
So they had to ban smoking in the stadium.
Well, that was banned anyway, so either way, there you go.
As smoking became less popular over the years, the beetle attacks reduced, and then they banned
smoking.
So now the Beatles just look for real forest fires, which I guess isn't as hard to find these days,
but there you go.
The final part of the show, then, at the top I asked this question sent in by Cameron
Amara.
Thank you, Cameron.
A hotel has a booking.com sticker in their window that is purposefully upside down.
Why? Any quick guesses before I give that for the audience?
The only thing I can think of is I'm a big fan of the theme park Efteling
and they have a ride called Villa Volta and it goes to taste you upside down
and on the theme park map on the app it is upside down
because that's what the ride does and I wonder if it's something like that.
So like this venue maybe goes down instead of up or something like that
which is why it's upside down.
It's a lovely guess and I appreciate it
And it's unfortunately completely wrong.
I can't even yes and that one. Sorry, Ruth.
I thought it was like something tongue in cheek with being Southern Hemisphere.
Everyone's like, oh, their toilets go the opposite direction.
It's like, so is someone just being like in Australia or New Zealand being like just very cheeky about like it's, you know, upside down type of thing.
What do hotels usually put stickers for in their windows?
To promote how you can book where you can book services rendered.
Do they not want you to use Booking.com?
No, they'd be happy with it.
It'll help the business as long as you don't look too closely.
Like, were whether their windows just dirty or something?
And they were like, oh, let's just cover that up.
What might be on a sticker that Booking.com sends?
A phone number, a website, their, like, actual thing, a QR code.
Was their QR code wrong?
Did they have to flip it?
No, no, QR codes will work the wrong way up.
There is a very prominent number on that sticker.
Oh, is it a rating?
Is it a rating sticker?
Like they have a hygiene thing
and so instead of it looking like it was the worst hotel ever,
it looked like the best?
Yes, why might they put that upside down?
Oh, six or nine?
There we go, yes.
Close enough, the website rating for the hotel was 8.6.
So they installed the sticker upside down
which looks like 9.8.
Absolutely right, you got it there.
What's going on in people's lives?
Where can they find you?
We will start today with Ruth.
So they can find me at Kids Invent Stuff making kids invention ideas.
They can find me over my tunnel, Ruth Amos, making bizarre things like 3D printing giant Lego trees.
And if you still watch normal TV or like to stream normal TV, you can catch me on yesterday and you bringing to life inventions from practical mechanics on Masters of Reinvention.
Evan.
You can find me at YouTube.com slash Evan.
Just making videos every Sunday on what I find interesting and little.
differences between countries and such. And Abby?
Mostly you can find me on YouTube, just Abby Cox, especially if you're into history or fashion
history, women's history. I'm also on every social thing. I am Abby Cox, and that, yeah.
And if you want to know more about this show, you can do that at Lateralcast.com.
We can also send in your own ideas for questions. We are at Lateralcast, basically everywhere,
and there are regular video highlights at YouTube.com slash Lateralcast. Thank you very much to
Abby Cox. Thank you for having me. This is so fun. I'm so happy I got to come back.
Evan Hedinger
That's me, hi
And Ruth Amos
Thanks for having me
I've been Tom Scott
And that's been lateral