Lateral with Tom Scott - 166: A severed sleeve

Episode Date: December 12, 2025

Caroline Roper, Ella Hubber and Tom Lum face questions about restaurant reportage, banned bulbs and opportunistic operations. LATERAL is a comedy panel game podcast about weird questions with wonderf...ul answers, hosted by Tom Scott. For business enquiries, contestant appearances or question submissions, visit https://lateralcast.com. HOST: Tom Scott. QUESTION PRODUCER: David Bodycombe. VOICEOVER: John Lumapas. EDITED BY: Julie Hassett at The Podcast Studios, Dublin. MUSIC: Karl-Ola Kjellholm ('Private Detective'/'Agrumes'), Andreas Dahlbäck ('See You in the Rear View'), courtesy of epidemicsound.com. ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS: Aaron Weber, Simon, Amir Sarid, Alex Dzurick, Stijn. 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

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 On the 8th of May, 2025, which US fast food company wrote a post on X that contained just the company's name spelled out? The answer to that, at the end of the show, my name's Tom Scott, and this is Lateral. Lateral is filmed before a live studio audience. Honey, have you seen where I put my left shoe? Isn't it right next to your right shoe? Oh, yeah, there it is. Yeah. Did you remember to turn off the oven this time? I'm not cleaning up another marshmallow lasagna explosion.
Starting point is 00:00:41 Oh, that was a right old pickle. Did somebody say pickles? You look, not in bed yet. I'm heading out. Try not to miss me too much while I'm thriving. Well, you're not going out to dress like that young lady. Your outfit is missing something, like fabric. What's that look?
Starting point is 00:01:04 You look like you're about to headline a Duran Duran Revival Tour. It's called Fashion, not like you'd know. Hey, hey, come on, kids, don't be like that. Friday is family podcast night, just like the founding fathers intended. Honey, I'm not sure the founding fathers knew what a podcast was. They would have loved them. Franklin totally had Theo Vaughan energy. Kids, kids, kids, let's all...
Starting point is 00:01:28 sit together in the podcast nook, because the family that podcasts together stays together. I love you, Mom. I love you too, I guess. Okay, look smart. Your father's about to start the show. Joining me today are three people that have more bouncer in 1980s sitcom theme song. It's the gang for Let's Learn Everything. It's so nice and it brings a tear to my eye thinking about all the families, the nuclear families,
Starting point is 00:01:55 sitting around listening to this podcast. That must have been so uncanny for them. White Picket Fence, podcast, Nick. I got that script through from producer David. I was like, that's a lot to ask. That's a lot of us of our returning guests there. And we have a lot to answer. I'm assuming that behind the scenes,
Starting point is 00:02:13 you all have character names and biographies and everything. Yeah, absolutely. Well, your actual names here are not the characters. Please welcome Caroline Roper. Welcome back to the show. Thank you so much for having us. This is exciting. Last time, we did all gang up on.
Starting point is 00:02:28 on you in a somewhat sitcom-like fashion. Yeah, I have only just stopped crying about that. And I've only just stopped feeling guilty about it, so does that. It was Caroline was the only one who didn't know the answer, and so we decided to try if just they answered 1V1. I have never been so stressed in my life. Oh, my goodness. I used to have, like, stress dreams about being, like, in my GCSE exams again as an adult.
Starting point is 00:02:58 Now it's going to be this. It actually does sound like a nightmare I would have. It's a lateral recording and I don't know the answer. Well, hopefully this will be more like a dream today. Also, joining us, I always worry saying, like, the second third of let's lie. It implies a hierarchy. But today, the second third of Let's Learn Everything, Ella Hubber. Hello.
Starting point is 00:03:21 Ella would love that you ranked her higher than Tom. Higher Tom, I think, actually. Disappoint. I should be the, I am the first third. but you don't know that, so. Alphabetically, the second third of Let's Learn Everything, a la Hubber. Fine.
Starting point is 00:03:36 I'll allow it. You should plug the podcast for the folks who've tuned in for this as their first show and just got that fever dream nightmare of an introduction. Yeah, you're in for a wild ride if this is your first one. We are the cohort of Let's Learn Everything, the show where we learn anything and everything, interesting. We cover a science topic, and we cover a miscellaneous topic. And finally, the...
Starting point is 00:03:58 This is why people say last but not least. The last third of, let's learn everything. Tom Love, did somebody say pickles? What I love is the audience will have heard the cheering and the whooping and the applause sound effects. And now this version? We just had to sit for five seconds in silence there. Used to it.
Starting point is 00:04:23 What sort of stuff have you been learning lately, Tom? We have learned about such science topics like international space law, what's the most boring element, as well as miscellaneous topics like the nuances and the negatives of true crime, as well as things like trading card art. Well, very best of luck for all three of you. I don't think any of those subjects come up today, but we do have a little longer than 22 minutes to resolve the storylines with a heartwarming moral. Just don't touch that dial as we move to question one. Thank you to Stein for this question. In 2009, the European Union began to outlaw the sale of lights with a low energy efficiency rating. How did two German entrepreneurs manage to legally sell 4,000 bulbs that would normally violate this ban? I'll say that again.
Starting point is 00:05:15 In 2009, the European Union began to outlaw the sale of lights with a low energy efficiency rating. How did two German entrepreneurs manage to legally sell 4,000 energy efficiency rating? legally sell 4,000 bulbs that would normally violate this back. They're not used for lighting. Maybe they're in something else. That's fun. They're used as packing peanuts. I love to reach into my packages and get a handful of glass.
Starting point is 00:05:47 My brain goes to, so in a lot of lighting design, more efficient lightbulk. actually produce more lighting, which can cause light pollution and stuff like that, whereas older, inefficient lighting, often that's quite orangy, can sometimes be better for light pollution and wildlife and stuff like that. So is it? We did a topic on light pollution. It's also, sadly, so much of my job is talking about efficient lighting these days. Oh, yeah, yeah. Do we have any info on here, any inside knowledge? I wish.
Starting point is 00:06:20 I once spent a long time trying to get the right colour balance in my flat. I'd replaced the bulb with a new energy-efficient one. Nope, so it's the wrong colour. I end up buying theatrical lighting gel and lining the lampshade with it, just like, I've got to get that right. If anyone was going to say I spent a long time trying to get the colour balance, it's you.
Starting point is 00:06:43 Not even on camera, just for your life. I guess that's important for your life. That's fair. Are low-efficiency bulbs that they get hotter quicker? So they sold them for, like, heating lamps or something for reptiles. That was going to be my thought. I was just going to say, also, Tom, to be loved is to be known. Yes, more or less.
Starting point is 00:07:09 Reptiles isn't the right thing, though. But the heating side is. I'm trying to think, are these, like, I was like maybe like a tanning booth? Maybe these are like, um... Although that needs to be UV, I don't think that heat is the thing that is important there. I don't think you want to be getting too hot in a tanning. Yeah, I know, I don't think that's actually... Wait, what? Oh, no!
Starting point is 00:07:33 It's much simpler than that. Like, you added a thing that didn't need to be there. They were just selling them as heating. They were just selling them as mini heaters, yes. Wow. That's... Wow. Yep. And they called themselves an entrepreneur. after that? Well, they sort of call themselves artists as well. It was sparking discussion about the ban,
Starting point is 00:07:54 but they did still sell 4,000 bulbs as heaters to the folks who really did not want to switch to energy efficiency. As like a pastiche on it, as like a joke to poke fun at like loopholes, I would get that. I do enjoy that, yeah. But you don't actually need to sell 4,75 watt light bulbs in order to do that, yes. You can still buy, though.
Starting point is 00:08:17 as heaters. There are still like heat bulbs you can buy for bathrooms and things like that if you want to warm the place up, but that is delivered to solve with it. That seems massively inefficient to heat up anywhere. Yes. Yes, the EU banned the sale of bulbs over 60 watts. Siegfried Rauthauser and his brother-in-law sold 75-100-watt incand-cent bulbs as small heating elements under the brand name Heatball. Great.
Starting point is 00:08:48 They did say that a portion of the revenue went to a rainforest protection initiative. Oh, that just makes it all okay then. Caroline, we're going to go over to you for the next question, please. This question has been sent in by Simon. In 2007, a concerned mother bought 80,000 cans from Just for Kicks, Inc.
Starting point is 00:09:12 And arranged to have them shipped to the Middle East. What was it for? One more time. In 2007, a concerned mother bought 80,000 cans from Christopher Kicks, Inc. And arranged for them to be shipped to the Middle East. What was it for? I'm worried about giving my, just off the top of my head, answer because they've been, in the last episode, we're so good.
Starting point is 00:09:34 And we're not going to get invited back if I'm just, if I'm just consistently this good. And it's not, and it's not because I don't, and it's not because I don't have any ideas this time, right? I was going to say, that have said to a few folks on here, if you do that, you are setting yourself up as the villain. I love being the villain, Tom. You know it. Natural wrestling heel.
Starting point is 00:09:59 I actually have nothing. That's our secret. We're all the heel. So just for kicks, right? And you said cans? I did. Am I wrong to think that these are like a snake in a can, like prank toys? You know, not snake.
Starting point is 00:10:17 in a can, but you're along the right lines. I just got hooked on the phrase kick the can, like kick the can down the road, and got kicks and can confused. I hadn't thought the kicks might be like a novelty gag thing, like a, a merchandise company. Yeah. How many again? 80,000.
Starting point is 00:10:38 Good Lord. What is the... I'm trying to think if is the region, of the world just like relevant to like where this person was living, where they had family. Is there like a specific country or event or time of year? So this person, great questions, Tom. Or does this actually have to do with any of the nuances of any geopolitical issues in that area? Okay, this is a concerned mother in 2007 sending something to the Middle East.
Starting point is 00:11:14 Like Tom, you talked about nuances of the geopolitical. situation. Is she sending these to her kid who is a soldier in the Middle East? They're sending stuff like US Army? Yeah. Yeah, you're spot on. This is a concerned mother sending something to her son that is a soldier in the Middle East. In Iraq or Afghanistan? Yeah, in Iraq. Iraq, okay. The US military has enough money to buy a lot of stuff. What does a concern mother need to send 80,000 of... 80,000 novelty stakes to use as weapons, obviously. I know there is a big, like, US forces post office thing.
Starting point is 00:11:55 And the thing that is stuck in my head was some Delhi in New York City. And the phrase that has apparently been stuck in my head since I saw it on a wall or a poster or something like that was, send a salami to your boy in the army. Like they had a system where folks could just pay to ship their product to, as like a morale booster to your kids off in the army. Wow.
Starting point is 00:12:21 This is a thing that America does. Like America... Yeah, that sounds right. America has a lot about the military that other countries perhaps do not. Caroline, is this like a... Is this like a lighthearted, goofy, silly thing that she was trying to do?
Starting point is 00:12:36 Is this a very practical thing? Is this a... This is very practical, very useful. Were they like used to, and this is now going full bore into sort of what could possibly like, is this, were they like used to trigger IEDs or minds, you like throw them onto somewhere and then it like, I don't know. It's not for triggering something like that, but you're kind of, you're really along the right lines with that thought process. Did she also send 120,000 meters of string? Oh, can telephones. If that's right, I'm going to walk off this podcast.
Starting point is 00:13:29 Tell him it's right. No. Quick, quick, quick, quick. He said it. His thing, the minute those words came out my mind, I was like, I've just said. myself up for a punchline there, haven't I? I just, we got it.
Starting point is 00:13:46 I didn't take it. Oh, honestly. Okay, not that then. Beans. Yeah, so the product I'm assuming, like, isn't food, right? In the cans? Tom, you said, like, snake coming out of a can. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:03 And that wasn't right, but, like, think about other products that a company like this might sell that comes in a can. A novelty canned product. product, peanuts. Novelty canned stuff, canned bread, canned... It's not food. Yeah. It's not a food item, no.
Starting point is 00:14:23 And what might they be running out of? What is the US military not able to supply enough of for soldiers? Or might not be allowed... Might not be able to supply for one reason or another. Think about it. This is a novelty item, essentially.
Starting point is 00:14:42 Whoopie cushions. Like spun glasses. Gosh. Fart smell. Oh, Ella, you're like getting so much closer. Candles? Candles? The difference between Ella's and all the other ones was that the thing that Ella mentioned
Starting point is 00:15:02 was sort of aerosol base. Is it like joke air, like air in a can from like a region that's like a thing you could do? No, but you're so close. Oh, Silly String? Yes! Oh, my God, I knew this! Oh, no! I've seen this story.
Starting point is 00:15:22 It's to find tripwires. That's exactly what it is. Yeah, well done. As you're walking into somewhere, if there's a trip wire that'll set off an IED or something like that, you want to be able to discover it, but not set it off. And Silly String is perfect for that. You shoot that out before you, and it will land on the trip wire, but hopefully not set it off.
Starting point is 00:15:42 Yeah, that's exactly it. So US soldiers essentially discovered this use for silly string where, as Tom said, they would shoot it out of the can and if it fell to the floor, there were no tripwires, it was fine. But if it sort of hovered in the air, that meant that it had caught on a trip wire and that a soldier shouldn't go that way. Wow, and it wouldn't even trigger it.
Starting point is 00:16:01 It would just sit on top. That's wild. Because this was a party gimmick item, essentially, when this was discovered, the US Army couldn't supply it to soldiers. I can understand why they wouldn't. Right, yeah, yeah. Oh, it's not just that it's a party gimmick,
Starting point is 00:16:16 it's the whole US military complex of getting a supplier that can tick all the boxes and make sure they can... Yeah, they've got to fit 300 military regulations. No novelty company's going to do that. Mm-hmm. But a concerned mother absolutely would. Or the US military secret clown force. And that's the movie, Baby,
Starting point is 00:16:41 Clown force. There's going to be some big, like, U.S. military, industrial complex supplier that is now taking orders for, like, $50 cans of tripwire detection coagulant or something. Yeah, yeah, Lockheed Martin's silly string. Yeah, right? That will exit, and it will fit every specification that they have required for it. So, yeah, this was Marcel Schreiber, or Marcel Schrever, learned this information from her son. She then started this campaign to send these 80,000 cans over to Iraq. The shipment took months to organise because of all of the specialised commercial shipping that was required to get these cans over there.
Starting point is 00:17:23 And especially a shipping company that was permitted to carry aerosol products as well. So yeah. Thank you to an anonymous listener for this question. Emperor I of the Han Dynasty Once woke up and cut off the sleeve of his own robe Why? I'll say that again Emperor I of the Han Dynasty once woke up And cut off the sleeve of his own robe
Starting point is 00:17:48 Why? You know, sometimes you just get a question And it's like, wow, my brain's gone to so many places That I don't quite know where to start with this one. Huh. You never, it's like you wake up And you just like toss the sheets out Because it's too hot, similarly.
Starting point is 00:18:04 My first thought is like, is this something someone would do today or does it, is this something about the time period? It was real itchy and he was just like, nah, I can't do it anymore. Yeah, I'm like, clearly it's, it's, you know, a specific name mentioned, but I don't know if that's how relevant that is or if, uh, cutting off a sleeve. Is this anything like symbolic that we would have to know about? No, my first note here is you don't need any knowledge of Chinese history for this. Ah, okay. Okay, so why have it be Emperor I of the Han Dynasty then? If we don't need to know anything about Chinese, there has to be something in the names, then I would have to assume.
Starting point is 00:18:55 Was the sleeve valuable or made a valuable material or something like that? I believe this, because if this is the Han Dynasty, then it must have been when the army was retreating. And so as a result, he had to call off his sleeves because his armies were in his sleevelies. Oh! I didn't see the bit coming. That didn't see it. Thank you. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:19:23 Oh, that's so bad. That was so cool. Oh, they're throwing flowers. They're throwing flowers. Sold it perfectly. I knew the bit was coming, but the dad joke really hit me. All right. This next question comes from another.
Starting point is 00:19:40 Yeah, so, honestly, bugs was my first thought. Was that Caroline that mentioned that in terms of like, you know, you have bedbugs or something like that? You might want to do that. And then heat was my other thing, right? Like if it's just too hot. Is the name important? I know. It's not important. It's just that this has become something of a legend.
Starting point is 00:20:05 Oh, okay. It's one of those stories that could be apocryphal, but is so well known that it's associated with him. He woke up and cut off his sleeve. I feel like I've heard this before. He was like, you know what would be great? Like a three-quarter length sleeve. Let's go and do that. And now Tom Lom is fashion as a... Yeah. Demonstrating one beautifully. For mobility is another thing.
Starting point is 00:20:30 To show off your, you've been working out is another reason. Is it both sleeves? Is it one sleeve? Is it that relevant? The sleeve of his own robe. So one sleeve. I'm trying to think if this is, you know, to do with an emperor. Maybe there's something about like, my brain goes to like, I don't know, like an assassination attempt or a coup.
Starting point is 00:20:53 Maybe he was doing it to prove something, right? It's like the same way you might like. I don't know, try to trick someone to be like, oh, actually, I only have one sleeve, and that's how you know it's me or something like that. Is this like the origin story of where something came from? Of tank tops. Yeah, yeah. Is he like cutting off his sleeve to marker retreat,
Starting point is 00:21:17 and that's where we get like the white flag from or something like that. Oh. There is a phrase that comes from this, but it's not one that's well known outside of China. That's a great shout, Caroline, that it's like, it's not about. about the out, it's like the use of the portion that was cut off, is that the trick here, Tom? No, no, it's not. If he'd have woken up later,
Starting point is 00:21:41 he might not have had to do this. Getting a suntan. Because remember, he once woke up and cut off the sleeve of his own robe. So woke up like in the middle of the night, presumably, or earlier than normal? Oh. If he had woken up later, he wouldn't have to have done it.
Starting point is 00:21:58 Yeah, used it as a blindfold. or some, like, you know, a sleep mask or something? Yeah, that's good. On that vein, did he have to, like, burn it for light or something? Well, Tom said that the thing itself wasn't used, unfortunately. Yeah. Oh, okay, yeah. And earlier, Tom, you said it was something you could do today.
Starting point is 00:22:18 You absolutely could. Should you happen to sleep with a knife on your person? Okay, if you happen to sleep with a knife on your person, you should wake up and cut off your sleeves. Mm-hmm. Your sleeve, the sleeve, The sleeve. Yes.
Starting point is 00:22:32 One of your sleeves. One of your sleeves. I'm assuming you've got one or two. Is this like a survival thing? Is this something like you're, if you're camping, you might need to do this or is this just a, gosh, you're sleeping, you cut off one sleeve of the arm. You're sleeping. You wake up.
Starting point is 00:22:51 Somebody's come to assassinate you. You stab them. Oh no, I've got blood on my good sleeve. You cut the sleeve off. Evidence is gone. There you go. That's the answer? Not that.
Starting point is 00:23:03 But you are technically closer. It was an assassination attempt. It was not an assassination attempt. I'll steer you away from that. But you are closer and right to think of what else might be in the scene. I am so stumped. I've been absolutely used to this time. Or who else might be in the scene?
Starting point is 00:23:22 A lover. Yes. You want to get closer to your partner. Get further away from them. get further away from them. Absolutely. Huh? Oh, is the presumption like... Oh, they're lying on your sleeve. Oh, babe, you keep scratching at my sleeve.
Starting point is 00:23:40 No, they're lying on your arm or whatever, and so to get away, cut off his sleeve, so you could slip out. This is an act of extreme thoughtfulness. This is not slipping away because you want to leave them behind. This is slipping away without waking them up. You are absolutely right, Ella. Oh, and they're resting on the awes. that's very sweet.
Starting point is 00:24:01 Our brains went to such different places. I was like, not an assassination attempt, but there is someone else in the room. You know, there's someone else there. Yes, the Chinese term translated I have here is the passion of the cut sleeve. It is someone who cared so much for their lover that rather than wake them up,
Starting point is 00:24:20 cut off the sleeve and let them keep sleeping. Very cute. Of course, we could never come up with something sweet. Of course, that stumped us. That was the word. First thought, assassination attempt. Why is there someone in the bedroom with you? Assassination, absolutely. Tom, over to you for your question, please.
Starting point is 00:24:39 Rock and roll. This question has been sent in by Amir Sarid. In the US, why does the number of phecdomies performed increase by up to 50% every March compared to a typical month? I'll say that again. In the US, why does the number of vasectomies performed increase by up to 50% every March compared to a typical month. I'm out for this one. It's over to Caroline and Ella.
Starting point is 00:25:04 Okay. September, October, November, December, January, February, March. So, sorry, I'm just looking for like a nine months from March, a baby being born situation, which would be July, I think, which doesn't spring to mind as like a particularly important day. If it was like nine months from Valentine's Day, then you could be, it could be like, oh, all the kids are being born and the father's like, I need to go and get a vasectomy right now. You know, Ella, I've not had a single thought
Starting point is 00:25:38 since you started talking. I've just been watching you, like, where's this going? I think that that made sense. But not that. No. It's not a sudden burst of children. They get cheaper. There's a discount.
Starting point is 00:25:53 Oh. No, although maybe they should. But no. Um, it's not, it's not something to do on the end of, uh, it's not something to do with that. I only know this one because I know something about American culture. There is, there is a specific reference here that I'm not sure the Brits will get. But I think you can still get close enough to it. I think you can still work this one out. It's in, uh, that song, uh, we didn't like the fire. It's like, one of the lyrics is like,
Starting point is 00:26:22 the sector me and much, you know, you know. What? We didn't start the fire. You get your resect to me in March. You know, that, that's famous. Oh, my goodness. Tom Mom looked so shocked for a second that I was like, is that right?
Starting point is 00:26:41 Is that correct? I'm really annoyed. I've just looked up the lyrics to We Didn't Start the Fire. And it's in there. No, I know most of them, but there isn't a single line that ends in E that I can rhyme there. Like there's maybe you two, Singman-Ree,
Starting point is 00:26:57 Paola and Kennedy... Chubby, Chekker Psycho... No, that doesn't rhyme. Oh, yeah. Because it's... No, it's in the Congo. Right. It's an A, B, C, B... I like this song a lot if you did. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:09 There isn't a rhyme in there that I can swap out for something March Vesectomy. It's not in there. Yeah, Harry Truman, Doris Day, Red China, Johnny Ray, South Pacific, Walter Winter, Joe de Machuio. And that's why we have to stop it because of copyright. Joe McCartney, Richard Nixon. Don't. Stop, please don't.
Starting point is 00:27:23 Stop! Because otherwise, we're going to have a We Didn't Start the Fire Off, and I think you're just going to win it. Okay, so, it's an American reference. Yeah. Oh, oh, is there like a rhyme, like, um, something. Sorry. Wow.
Starting point is 00:27:45 As hosting a question goes, immediately bursting out laughing at someone's suggestion. I just, it's just, I don't know where your brain is going these places. You've gone to like, why? Oh, it rhymes. That's why they must do it. Just going around being like, you know, like, you have like Wednesday's child is full of whoa or whatever. So you don't want a child on Wednesday, maybe March, you know, March's child is full of. I'll say this. I think you're thinking, you're thinking of a different aspect of the
Starting point is 00:28:14 vasectomy process in terms of like. Not having kids. Um, yes, which, which, you know, is part of it. But the timing has less to do with that and more with the process. If that makes sense. Oh, do people like, Make it their new year's resolution to do it, but there's like a three-month waiting period. That's a good idea, but that's not it. It's a different reason for that month. Is it, is it something to do with like, people do it on a certain date, but they have got to have like a, they've got to come back for two sessions to make sure that they definitely want to do it. And therefore, it just happens to be March that this actually gets to take place. Almost, Caroline.
Starting point is 00:28:50 And it is, it's, again, because it's a medical procedure, so. Yeah, yeah. My brain's gone now. I was on the baby train. If it helps, this is a stereotype of men, is the reason why this happens in March. I mean, you know, men are assholes all year round. I don't know what's going.
Starting point is 00:29:13 That has to do with anything. Is it something to do with American insurance? And, like, you are. I was thinking, like, oh, does your thing, your insurance renew? And if you've got to, like, cash it in before. Does the tax year start in April, something to do with getting your money? I would drill down on what Tom said about other parts of the process. The consent form or the...
Starting point is 00:29:38 There is no part of this that is enjoyable. Is this... Were we supposed to find some part of it that's enjoyable? No. No, not at all. Yeah, this is a thing that happens in them is an American pastime of sorts. I'm so... What? Do they do it around, like, a sporting event so that they can be off work during that time?
Starting point is 00:30:00 Is it like around the Super Bowl or something? Yeah, you know what? I'm going to give it to you, Caroline. Because neither of the Brits are going to get the reference to March Madness. Oh, no. Okay. So my thinking is when you get a vasectomy, it's not the vasectomy itself. It's the, like, the rest period that your doctor forces you to have afterwards. Why not take advantage of that being around?
Starting point is 00:30:24 the sporting event that you really want to watch. In this case, March Madness, apparently. That is a real man stereotype. Spot on, Caroline. Spot on. No, but yeah, you nailed it. Urologist report that the two most popular times to get a vasectomy are March and the festive period. March is popular due to March Madness,
Starting point is 00:30:47 a month when nonstop NCAA college basketball games every weekend. And so men schedule their vasectomy. so they can enjoy a few days to watch the games while they recuperate. Reportedly, this effect has been known as... This is a stretch.
Starting point is 00:31:03 Vast madness. Wow, that's tough. Yeah. Is it the vast deference? Is that the thing that's being kind? Is that the... Oh, no, there's just a vast difference
Starting point is 00:31:16 between the monthly figures. Yeah. Wow. Wow. We'll move on. And we will eventually. And now a question that I apologise for.
Starting point is 00:31:33 James was given a pencil with the number 357-686-3-1-2-6-4-6-4-6-2-1-6-6-2-9-137 stamped on it. Why was that number chosen? James was given a pencil with the number 357-6-8-6-3-1-2-6-4-6-2-1-6-5-6-7-2-9-1-3-7 stamped on it. Why was that number chosen? Hi.
Starting point is 00:31:57 You said it too fast for me to be able to write it down so that I can look at it for like 10 minutes and just, like, be sad. Oh, it's 357-686-3-1-2-6-4-6-21-6-4-6-2-9-137. That was really helpful, thank you. Yeah, I got 357, oh, no, no, no, no, 3-3-7. Nailed it. Here's the thing. That's probably all you need. Okay.
Starting point is 00:32:20 I would not have read that number so fast if you needed to memorize all of it. But you need some of it. Is it a very large prime? It is Tom Lodd. It is. Just the largest prime? Let's go. Speed Run, baby. How did you know that?
Starting point is 00:32:36 What were you thinking there? I was just going through the list of primes and I hit that number. Well, so I know it didn't end on an even number. was my first thing. I was just thinking of like, what's a notable large number? At first I was like, maybe this is like, I was going to be like, it's the millionth pen pencil made, but it was that.
Starting point is 00:32:57 Nerds use pencils. Nerds do use pencils, Tom. And that's relevant here as well. Was it the person who discovered this prime? Or who, or were they using it to cheat on a test? Yeah, I'm like, why did they choose this? Is this a
Starting point is 00:33:16 celebration or is this uh someone being cheeky writing this somewhere sometimes prime numbers are used in like password protection and stuff like that could it have been a hacking thing oh is it being used for something yeah that's a good shout is it the circumference of the pencil you know in millimeters i don't know prime is definitely the fact to clue in on here prime it's not the largest prime my assumption was this was either found or like used
Starting point is 00:33:52 in some formula or discovery and so this is sort of like a celebration pencil like everyone who worked on the paper got this pencil as a gift but is this not is this for celebration or is this like Caroline is saying like being used in a silly way
Starting point is 00:34:08 like to cheat on a test or something it's not the largest prime but But you start to think in the right area there. Is it a special prime? Is this for... Oh, like, is it maybe like for... I don't know.
Starting point is 00:34:23 Like, Matt Parker might get this if it's like, oh, it's your 10th year anniversary, so this is the 10th biggest prime or something like that. I will let you know that James in the question is James Grime, who you might recognize from Numberphile and who I was... All right. Who I actually know from uni, from way back.
Starting point is 00:34:42 Like, yeah, this is James is James Grime. He's done a video about this on Numberphile. It's the most boring prime number. Oh, absolutely not. Absolutely not. The most interesting prime number. There's a part of this question you haven't even talked about yet. There's more to the question.
Starting point is 00:35:03 I got so lost on the number, but I don't know if I heard anything else. James was given a pencil with the number 357, 638, 6,1, 2, 6, 4, 6, 1, 6, 4, 6, 1, 6, 5, 6, 7, 6, 29, 1, 137, stamped on it. Why was this number chosen? Because you can't use a pen in space, you can use a pencil. Oh, this wouldn't work if it was a pen. This wouldn't work if it was a pen? Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh.
Starting point is 00:35:31 As you sharpen a pencil, does it stay a prime number? Yes, it does, Tom, Lung. Ella, when you said the last. It is the largest prime, it is the largest prime that has that property. You cannot add another number on the left of it. Brilliant. That's amazing. That's so cool.
Starting point is 00:35:51 When you said you only need the start and the end, you actually only need the end. You only need the 137. So as you sharpen, the left numbers keep getting removed, keep getting removed, and you end up with 9-1-37, which is prime, 137, and 7. Wow. That is so... That is so freaking... Oh, no, we're nerds!
Starting point is 00:36:12 It's going to be. That's a very let's learn everything coded fact. Yeah. Ella, your question. Thank you to Aaron Weber for this question. Vlad and Barry agreed to meet up somewhere iconic on Main Street in Louisville, Kentucky, that you can't miss. However, one goes to a sports museum while the other waits at a novelty store.
Starting point is 00:36:40 What did they say that caused the confusion? I'll say that again. Vlad and Barry agreed to meet up somewhere iconic on Main Street in Louisville, Kentucky, that you cannot miss. However, one goes to a sports museum, while the other waits at a novelty store. What did they say that caused the confusion? Rock and roll Hall of Fame. Is that in Louisville, Kentucky? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:37:07 What's making you think, Matt, Tom? Am I wrong that Kentucky is sort of a music, huh? I'm thinking maybe more of Tennessee, but I know there's some, you know, that that's sort of what I would think around there, but then I was like, rocks. I was like, oh, it's, you say a thing that has two meanings. And if it was novelty, I'd be like,
Starting point is 00:37:27 I would name a, I would name a competing store, the rock and roll Hall of Fame. It's just a bunch of really round rocks that you roll around. Wow. I'm thinking, is it like... The logo of the museum and the shop are similar enough that it could be like,
Starting point is 00:37:46 oh, we're both going to, I'm trying to think of an example now. We're going to the can and it's like the can shop or the can museum and it's got like a logo on it or something like that. I've explained this really badly. But there we go. No, I get you. Yeah. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:38:03 Vlad and Barry are making me suspicious because my brain has gone. Vladimir Putin. Barack Obama. That's the sort of thing that a question writer would put in. Vlad and Barry are in fact Vladimir Putin, Barack Obama. Come on.
Starting point is 00:38:21 Have you considered that you've been doing this show for too long? Here's the thing. Whether that's right or wrong, I've still been doing this show too long. I'll say Vlad and Barry is... It's not Vladimir Putin and Barack Obama. But it is...
Starting point is 00:38:39 It is a cheeky reference, but probably don't focus on it too hard. Okay. I was going to say, does it have, is it like, um, um, to do with, like, if you say something with an accent, it might sound like something else? No. No, okay. The confusion. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:55 Idea you were both getting at in your own way was, you know, it is kind of you're getting there. Is there like a statue outside of both and you could end up getting the statue confused and you've gone like, oh, head to the big Ella. statue, and there's one outside of both. You are along the right lines. It is, you know, it's something you can't miss. This is something iconic in Louisville, Kentucky. That can be resolved to both a sports museum and a novelty store.
Starting point is 00:39:28 And the only novelty store I can think of as like Spirit Halloween, but there's... No, you're... Yep. Really? Oh. I mean, I don't know if it's not a Spirit Halloween, but... Okay. It, Halloween is...
Starting point is 00:39:40 Wait, really? Yeah, imported. It's not like a big skeleton. Wait, you specifically said it was a sports museum. I've gone down. I've gone down. One of the sports museum, one's a novelty store. Oh, my brain's firing all sorts of connections here.
Starting point is 00:39:54 Louisville. Louisville Slugger is a baseball bat. We're talking about a sports museum. Is there like the... The baseball bat... The giant bat. The giant bat! The big bat.
Starting point is 00:40:07 It's a... Halloween and there are two big bats. That's it. Oh my God. Oh! So what did they say that caused a confusion? Here would be... Meet me at the giant bat.
Starting point is 00:40:21 Let's meet at the world's largest bat. World's largest bat. Wow. And Vlad is a reference to vampires and Barry is a reference to Barry Bonds the baseball. Yes, exactly. Wow. Wow. Got the bonus point there.
Starting point is 00:40:40 So if they agree to meet at the world's largest bout on Main Street in Louisville, Kentucky, there would be two locations that fit this description. The world's largest baseball bat, a carbon steel replica of a bat used by Babe Ruth in the 1920s, which is about 120 feet high. And then also, two blocks away, the world's largest vampire bat can be found on the site of Corfield's novelty store. Oh, it's actually the world's... Well, that's what they say. I mean, I have to assume how many are there?
Starting point is 00:41:10 They must have set that up as a parody. That's a deliberate choice, that is. What if it was the other way? What if there was a vampire bat? And then they're like, wait a second, hold on. And this vampire bat is 24 feet tall and 18 feet wide. And then you got the name Vlad as in Vlad, the Impaler, the inspiration for Dracula and Barry, as in Barry Bond.
Starting point is 00:41:31 A tiny little hints there. Wow. Which means we just have the question from the start. out of the show. Thank you to Alex Zurich for sending this one in. On the 8th of May, 2025, which US fast food company wrote a post on X that contains just the company's name spelt out? Anyone want to take a punt at that? I feel like so many surreal, you know, corporate accounts are doing stuff like this. Mm-hmm. Oh yeah, some social media manager was extremely proud of themselves. Was it timely? Was there like a clever reason
Starting point is 00:42:08 where it's like, oh, because someone named Wendy is in the news, we just say Wendy's. Yeah, you're pretty close. Is it Wendy's specifically? It's not Wendy's, but you are absolutely along the right lines. I'm like Burger King, someone was... Is someone famous die or... Not that day, but if it hadn't, this wouldn't be happening. Oh.
Starting point is 00:42:32 Oh. Who died on the... 8th of May this, earlier than that? Oh, no, no, much earlier. Or no, they're alive. No, no, no. Someone else died. Oh, my God. Is this about, like, the queen and then, like, Burger King? No.
Starting point is 00:42:47 No. There's a new Burger King. Oh, you, well, you're kind of close. Oh, was it his coronation? Was it, um, oh, it was King Charles's coronation or something, or his birthday? No, no, slightly too late for that. Oh. But you're along the right line.
Starting point is 00:43:03 So, dynasties, long, long chains of people who've been doing the same It's not Burger King. It's not, no. The letters were in the right order. The formatting was slightly different. McDonald's. Five guys. Just go through all of them.
Starting point is 00:43:24 We're not talking kings, but we are talking leaders here. Something to do with Putin, Putin. Poutine. This was a major world event. Like, it was in one country, but everyone around the world was paying attention to this. The Pope? Oh. Oh, Popeyes?
Starting point is 00:43:45 Yes, it was. So what did they send out? Pope, yes. Pope, yes. Oh, my God. This was the American fast food chicken chain, Popeyes. They shared a post that simply said, Pope yes, because Pope Leo the 14th had been elected that day. Thank you very much to our players
Starting point is 00:44:08 for running the gauntlet one more time where can people find you what's going on with this show we will start with Tom Lum We are, let's learn everything The Science and Comedy podcast where we learn about science and a little bit of everything else
Starting point is 00:44:21 Caroline Roper, what sort of things? Oh my goodness, we have talked about everything from black holes to tattoos all in one episode we've also talked about autumn leaves and swearing Where we are in the universe and carrot propaganda,
Starting point is 00:44:38 it literally can be anything and everything. And where can people find you, Ella Hubber? Let's Learn Everything.com, baby. And if you want to know more about this show, you can do that at lateralcast.com, baby. Woo! Not happy with that, regret everything about it. Well, you can also send in your own ideas for questions.
Starting point is 00:44:58 We are at lateralcast basically everywhere, and there are regular weekly video episodes in full on Spotify. Thank you very much. to Ella Hubber! Woo! Caroline Roper! Yeah! Tom Lum!
Starting point is 00:45:10 Woohoo! I've been Tom Scott and that's been lateral.

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