No Such Thing As A Fish - 126: No Such Thing As A Boy Called Blclintn

Episode Date: August 12, 2016

Dan, James, Anna and Anne discuss literal sexual magnetism, Olympic races for old ladies, and all the children named after Tony Blair. ...

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from the QI offices in Covent Garden. My name is Dan Schreiber, I'm sitting here with Anna Chazinski and Miller and James Harkin, and once again we have gathered around the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days, and in no particular order, here we go. Starting this week with my fact, my fact is that the Olympics used to have a race just for old ladies, exclusively for old ladies, called the Old Ladies' Race, or Old Women Racing.
Starting point is 00:00:46 They didn't put much thought into the name, did they? It wasn't, yeah. The Roan Seal approach. There was a fuller name, actually, where it said Old Ladies Racing for a pound of tea. That sounds much better, I'd watch that one. Well, no, it turns out, you might as well be saying men doing the 100-metre sprint for a gold medal, because the pound of tea was the prize, it wasn't. It wasn't like re-hound racing where it's on a screen, but they did get it, right?
Starting point is 00:01:11 They got the pound of tea. Yeah, we should quickly say that this is not what we all perceive as the kind of the modern Olympics, the Olympics that are going on in Rio right now. What this is, is a much older version of the Olympics that started in a place called Much Wenlock, and this was back in the 1800s. This was way, way before the modern Olympics started again in Athens, and one of the races was this. It wasn't that much before, was it?
Starting point is 00:01:33 Because was it not that the Kuber Tan, who started the modern Olympics, visited Much Wenlock, and it kind of gave him a bit of the idea? Yes. He actually credited William Penny Brooks, who was the guy who set up the Much Wenlock Games as the originator of the Olympics. So even though everyone thinks of the Kuber Tan as being the guy who brought us the modern Olympics, he said, no, it was this chap. Ah, good on him.
Starting point is 00:01:54 And he also, they basically wanted to get him over at a time to actually see the Olympics in full flow in Much Wenlock, but they ran out of time, he couldn't get over, so they just had to put on a few events when he eventually visited, just as an example of what it looks like at the Olympics. Is that what the hastily improvised old ladies race was? The only people who weren't at work that day. Yeah, exactly. I have to take issue with that race, because do you know how old the old ladies were?
Starting point is 00:02:20 Go on. I mean, it's over 40s. Over 40s? Yeah, anyone over 40 is an old lady. But you're not thinking in terms of, it's like dog years with athletes. So Michael Jordan retired from basketball for the first time at 30. Yeah. Technically, if you're in your 40s, you are a sports old person.
Starting point is 00:02:39 According to the sports. According to sports. Yeah. By sports rules. And by 19th century rules, life expectancy is shorter. Even so, it hurts as someone who's only a decade off being 40 to read old ladies referring to 40 rules. Yeah, not that far off.
Starting point is 00:02:53 It's not. You're knocking on the door. I'm only 25, of course. To the nearest 25. I'm still 25. You're halfway there, then. Yeah. So in 1856, the race that you're talking about, the winner, a 45-year-old winner, Mary Speak,
Starting point is 00:03:10 and she defeated the person in second place who was a 38-year-old called Ann Meredith. Wait a minute. Hang on. She's over 40. How did she sneak in? Was it not even necessarily over 40s? No, no. It wasn't over 40s.
Starting point is 00:03:21 It looked a bit rough. She didn't even win. Yes, she came second. She got beat by a 45-year-old. Yeah. It was embarrassing. Wow. 38.
Starting point is 00:03:31 Yeah. So I found this fact in this month's issue of the 40 in times, and there's an amazing article by a guy called Rob Gandhi called Faster, Hire, Stronger, Weirder, all about the much-when-lock Olympics. That sounds like a great Duff Punk song, doesn't it? Yeah. Faster, higher, stronger, weirder. So they were pretty weird, a lot of the contests at those Olympics, weren't they?
Starting point is 00:03:51 And it grew out of something which wasn't supposed to be specifically sport. So it was actually set up as more of an educational thing. And so in the 1950s, when the much-when-lock games were happening, a lot of the races or competitions were things like essay writing or poetry or art. Oh, I always thought it was ballet sport. Yeah, you nailed this one. The other RT events that happened there, there was Best Odes. You could enter the Best Odes competition.
Starting point is 00:04:22 That was one as well. What, ahead of their time? Yeah. You just sing Don't Stop Believing. Yeah, exactly. But also Don't Stop Believing hadn't been invented yet, so they had to probably do an ode. Yeah, really enthusiastic ode in a group.
Starting point is 00:04:37 Knitting was another one. And then knitting stockings was another one. That's not fun to watch. That's a separate category. But Ann, you can knit as well, can't you? Yeah, really slow. You'd be a double gold medal winner in this Olympics. I would be kicking ass.
Starting point is 00:04:50 Did you enter your knitted stockings into both of those compositions? The knitting and the stockings knitting, or was it all knitting except stockings is allowed to enter knitting? I don't know if they were accepting finished knitwear. You know what, if they're allowing 38-year-olds in the over 40s race, I think they're not sticklers for the rules, really. Just because James just mentioned the word stickle, so there was another kind of Olympic Games that preceded these Olympic Games, and they were actually the Cotswold Olympics,
Starting point is 00:05:17 which started either in 1622 or 1612, we aren't quite sure. But I was reading that the Cotswold Olympics, which had various weird sports like shin kicking. It's not that weird. I'm from Lancashire. We do that all the time. Proud traditions. Sorry. It was in barrels.
Starting point is 00:05:32 Yeah, in barrels. How do you match each other's shins when you're in barrels? You're in the same barrel. Oh, you're in the same barrel. Tan just brings his own barrel and sits in it alone. No one will kick me. But anyway, the umpire of these mainstream, serious sports like shin kicking was called the stickler, and I think there's a theory that maybe he was called the stickler because
Starting point is 00:05:53 he held a staff, or it might just come from another old English word. But that's where we get stickler when we say he's a stickler for the rules. It comes from that umpire. They were quite violent as well, these contests. There was once a sword fight between Sir German Poole and Mr. Hutchinson, and Mr. Hutchinson lost three of his fingers before he'd even drawn his sword, and then he responded by slicing off Poole's nose and pocketing it so it couldn't be reattached. What?
Starting point is 00:06:19 Quit. We've got an hour to reattach it. Ah, it's in the guy's pocket. It's gone. It's gone. That's as good as gone. But it's still going. It's this year.
Starting point is 00:06:27 They just in July. They just did the 130th much one lock games, and it's still got interesting events. I looked through the events that were done this year. Golf was won. So golf's just joining, isn't it? The Olympics. That's just joining the Olympics. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:41 Gliding was won. Yeah. It was a gliding event. I reckon they're not going to have professional golfers there, are they? I doubt it. So I wonder how good I'd have to get. Yes. And anyone can enter.
Starting point is 00:06:52 James, you could genuinely enter the golfing tournament and win an Olympic medal. Yeah. Well. And if they're still, I don't know, knitting and poetry and odes. We're going for the writing rather than the odes. I can give you a go. You just need to speak the writing. That's all the odes.
Starting point is 00:07:06 I stick to Shinn. Get the right rhymes in. Dan, you can go and bring your own barrel. No one will kick you. I'll bring my own barrel, but I'll just be a spectator. Stopping. Old ladies race. Given eight more years.
Starting point is 00:07:23 I'm not risking second place. Shall we move on shortly? Of Wenlock. Do you remember the really horrible London Olympic mascots? Wenlock and Mandel. They were like a big eye on a TV remote. They were made by Hornby who make the train set and apparently wiped a third off their value because they did so badly.
Starting point is 00:07:40 Really? Of the company. Yeah. I think it was at one point because they sold so poorly that they had to issue a profit warning and their stocks went way down. Wow. I've got some stuff on modern day old ladies running. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 00:07:55 So the world record for the 100 meter dash for people over the age of 100 or women over the age of 100 has just been beaten by a South Carolina middle school teacher called Ella Mae Colbert and she beat the record in 46.791 seconds for 100 meters. She came very far behind the other competitors but because she was older, she was in a different category so she broke the record for her age group even though she didn't do it. Oh really? So she was there racing with... Everyone.
Starting point is 00:08:27 20 something people who were doing it. I think he was still citizen. It was Tyson Gay, Usain Bolt of this lady. Yeah, it was one week after celebrating her 100th birthday that she did that. So there's a guy called Fuja Singh who I think is one of our greatest athletes in the UK. He holds the UK records for the 200 meters, 400 meters, 800 meters, mile and 3,000 meters for the over 100s and he set all of those records within a single 94 minute period. He's awesome.
Starting point is 00:09:07 So they're UK records and he also once set five world records in his age group in a single day and some of the events that he got the world record for, they didn't have a record holder because no one over the age of 100 had ever even attempted them. Wow. That's pretty good. That sort of puts your old lady to shame a bit, doesn't it? What? Oh, the end, yes.
Starting point is 00:09:29 Don't talk about my wife. Okay, it is time for fact number two and that is Anne. My fact is that there was a Victorian comic song that was called Tony Blair. That's so good. And it goes? I can't find it. Oh really? Yeah, no, we don't know how it goes.
Starting point is 00:09:49 If anyone listening knows the song or has a sheet music, please do send it in. There could be an Olympic medal in that. Yes. We bring back to Anne's Ode's Challenge. So I found this on the BBC's 10 Things We Learned This Week, which is a great feature they do every seven days. And it was by a guy called Jeremy Clay who's on Twitter at Ludicrous Scenes who writes a column for them called Victorian Strangeness.
Starting point is 00:10:09 So we checked out online on the newspaper archive and this is a report from the Croydon Advertiser and East Starry reporter, October 1879, of a performance by a group called The Black Diamonds. And it followed a performance of a song that was called B-R-O-W-N, which I like to think is Gordon Brown's version of R-E-S-P-E-C-T. And B-R-O-W-N quote excited much laughter as did Mr. Harrison's rendering of Tony Blair. Wow. I would really like to see Gordon Brown dancing and singing R-E-S-P-E-C-T.
Starting point is 00:10:41 But to B-R-O-W-N, do you think we could make that happen? There's a lack of letters in his name, isn't there? So he's not going to scan. He could do it to the song D-I-S-C-O, couldn't he? B-R-O-W-N. Or you could spread the W into three syllables. It does kind of work. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:56 B-R-O-W-N. B-R-O-W-N. Why his advisers weren't making him explore this option at the time of his tenure? Yeah, that's hilarious. So this is definitely real. There was a song called Tony Blair. It basically is very popular around the 1880s. In 1887, it was performed in North Devon to show that it was so densely crowded that large
Starting point is 00:11:14 numbers of people were unable to obtain admittance. Really? Although that show also contained a procession of firefighters, Hans and Mentham Ilfakum, and their horse-drawn carriage. So I don't know which was drawing them in. I reckon the Hans and Mentham Ilfakum. That would get me. And Tony Blair.
Starting point is 00:11:28 There was also a song called When She Comes With The Milk In The Morning. Also a highlight according to the local paper. And what's great about that report is that it's kind of a whole evening of revelry. And the paper recorded some of the jokes from the evening. Would you like to hear some satire from 1887? Oh yeah. Why does Mr. Pitt Lewis resemble a shrimp? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:11:47 Why does Mr. Pitt Lewis resemble a shrimp? Because each has MP at the end of his name. It's like Andy's in the room. And Andy's Edinburgh show is currently going on at the Pleasants Theatre. Wow. And that is, I mean, it's not funny, but it's... It is a joke. It's not satirical.
Starting point is 00:12:08 It's not satirical. What does Donald Trump have in common with a shrimp? Pink. Is it the MP thing? It is. It's like Andy's still in the room. So in 1877, a ten-year-old David Cameron fell into the harbor in Dundee. He was rescued and taken home.
Starting point is 00:12:27 Oh. A Mr. Theresa May in 1940 was a shop manageress who broke the blackout. Do you know there's a glamour model called Theresa May? Yeah. Different spelling, right? Different spelling. Yeah, no H. But if you go onto Twitter, her handle is real Theresa May.
Starting point is 00:12:41 And according to one of her recent tweets, her website has had over six million hits since the MP Theresa May has become Prime Minister. Didn't her bio used to say, I am a UK glamour model, not the Home Secretary. Yes. I am not an MP. I have nothing in common with a shrimp. No M's and P's in my name. May I tell you about Mr. J Corbyn?
Starting point is 00:13:02 He ran Corbyn's British Baking Powder, the cheapest and the best. Wow. He found that in the paper. Dairy Journal, 1892. James Harkin has opened a new wine and spirit bar in the Longtower. Liquors of the best quality all within stock. Sounds right. Classic.
Starting point is 00:13:17 And you were killed in 1896. You were a gamekeeper. Going to be in a case against poaching. Wow. Wasn't that the year of the modern Olympics in Greece? 1896. Chazinsky, headline Chazinsky for the Bristol Hippodrome. This was a great dancer.
Starting point is 00:13:32 He was coming from the Budapest Royal Opera House. That. Came in 1923. That was me. It contains a helpful pronunciation guide to Chazinsky in the article. If you pass that on to them. Another kind of thing about names and similar names. If you go into Wikipedia and search for Neil Horan, you get the message.
Starting point is 00:13:54 This article is about the dancing, laosized Roman Catholic priest. For one direction members see Nile Horan. Does it say that on Nile Horan's page if you were looking for the dancing laosized Roman Catholic priest? Please click here. That made me think about disambiguation on Wikipedia. If you search for disambiguation, you get word sense disambiguation. For other uses, see disambiguation disambiguation.
Starting point is 00:14:24 That's fantastic. That's very good. I did disambiguation on Tony Blair. I wanted to see are there any other famous Tony Blair's out there. I found my favorite Tony Blair. It's a high title. Yeah. I've worded with great caduceas.
Starting point is 00:14:39 This is interesting because it's not a single person. It's a lot of people called Tony Blair. It's T-O-N-I-B-L-E-R Tony Blair. It's a male name that's given out in Kosovo. It's because it's in honor of the fact that during the 1999 NATO air campaigns, Tony Blair was seen as a massive hero. They've created a name now, which children and now adults carry. I think Pristina has a big road called Bill Clinton Boulevard.
Starting point is 00:15:08 It does. I lived in Pristina for three months and everywhere you went, there was a picture of Bill Clinton. Interestingly, I then clicked onto Kosovo names for new male children names and no Bill Clinton name. Tony Blair got given a name, but Bill Clinton didn't. Bill got the boulevard. The kids got Tony Blair.
Starting point is 00:15:30 Can we go back to the songs? B-R-O-W-N. B-R-O-W-N and Tony Blair were songs. I found a website called monologues.co.uk, which has an enormous list of Victorian and early 20th century music whole songs. They're just amazing, so can I read some out? Please do. Don't stick it out like that.
Starting point is 00:15:53 OK. Open your mouth and shut your eyes. Whoa. Take it as her. What about this one? I'm a member of the county council. That sounds like a great song, doesn't it? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:10 It could be the precursor to Tony Blair MP. And they bunged him in my growler. What? We're going to need that last word. Dan, can you grab the notes? And they bunged him in my growler. So the words go, they bunged him in my growler and I made the Gigi fly.
Starting point is 00:16:33 Felt so gay. Sang all the way to Peckham Rye. They picked me up in the strand and I drove him ever so far. The night I took the prodigal son home to his dear mama. And they bunged him in my growler. That's a beautiful song. So they used to be really raunchy. I think the idea of music calls was supposed to be partly that they would be a kind of entertainment for the working class,
Starting point is 00:16:56 but the guy who sort of set them off and started them off, Charles Morton in the mid-19th century, said that women should be allowed to come because he thought it meant people behaving in a more respectable manner. What that actually meant was men just invited loads of prostitutes. And they were these bawdy, really, really rowdy places. And yeah, they'd have song books called things like The Frisky Vocalist and the Gentleman's Spicy Songster. But they used to get really violent. So I think in one performance there was evidence that a dead cat was thrown at the performers. There'd be bottles and old boots would be thrown at the singers.
Starting point is 00:17:31 The industrial towns favoured hurling iron rivets, apparently. And so much so that waiters in music halls would have to have their bottles that they served from chained to their trays so that people didn't grab the bottles and start fighting with them. And if there was an orchestra in the pit, sometimes it would be covered up with the steel grill so that the orchestra couldn't be attacked. Was this only if they didn't enjoy it, or did they just do it anyway? I think everyone's pissed there are prostitutes around, you just get rowdy. It's not necessarily a negative or a positive thing.
Starting point is 00:18:02 Imagine just like, I'll bring the dead cat just in case. It turns out to be a great gig and you're like, oh, that's coming home with me. Back in the bag. OK, it's time for fact number three, and that is Pepe Chazinski. Yep, my fact this week is that the first president of the UK's Women's Institute used a frying pan as a whip, wore an entire stuffed owl on her head and officially named the city of Cumbra. It's a hell of a CV.
Starting point is 00:18:38 Yeah, it's so impressive. So I didn't know anything about this woman, but she was Lady Gertrude Denman and she was this eccentric English woman who just achieved an extraordinary amount in her life. So she became president of the National Federation of Women's Institutes in 1917 and she held that post until 1946. And yeah, she was just this great force of a woman. So the reason that she named the city of Cumbra was that she married the man who went on to become the governor of Australia, so they moved out to Australia
Starting point is 00:19:09 and it was decided that she would be the one who opened this little golden casket which contained the name that had been chosen for the city. So someone else came up with the idea, but she was the one who chose it. So she was the official name. So did you know that Australia had a King O'Malley? So it was in 1911, there was a competition to design the new capital. They were going with the working title, Federal Capital City. But then two years later, King decided to suggest people in Parliament put forward names for it.
Starting point is 00:19:36 They had 39 suggestions which included Eden, Hopeton, Aurora, Home, Unison, Andyman, Flinders and Fraser Roo. I also heard Kangamoo. Is that right? Is that one of them? Yeah, they wanted to call it after that some of their animals. So they also suggested Cucaburra and Marsupiala. Although there were so many good suggestions actually for the name of Cumbra. I think my favourites are things like Bunkham and Bungtown are there and gone broke.
Starting point is 00:20:03 One suggestion was Climax. It could have been called Climax. But the one that comes up a lot is the name Sid-Mellad-Per-Brizjo, which is obviously a hyphenated combination of Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Perth, Brisbane and Hobart. They thought they'd combined them all. That's such an interesting idea. Very diplomatic. She sounds like an amazing character. According to one description of her I read, she was a compulsive lumberjack.
Starting point is 00:20:28 Compulsive? Does that mean you literally can't walk past a tree without chopping it down? When she was riding the horses and whipping them with the frying pan, they just say that she couldn't pass a tree without chopping it down. So she had the knacks on her at all times. It's a very interesting character. Her dad was called Wheatman. W-E-E-T-M-A-N.
Starting point is 00:20:49 That's the first name. So let's get that going again. My first son that. Okay. Another one, second one, Tony Blair. Just some other good things Lady Denman did. When she came to Australia, she sort of created waves. Everyone thought she was really, really cool.
Starting point is 00:21:02 And she didn't act really up herself like former kind of governors had. And she did things like she played golf down the corridors of her house. So she would put cushions out and there would be the holes, I think. And then she'd play golf towards them. She wrote a letter to her brother explaining how she did a lot of lumberjacking and a lot of shooting. And she also played hockey in the ballroom. And then she said in the letter, this last amusement must on no account be mentioned. She was a massive aristocrat though, wasn't she?
Starting point is 00:21:31 She was born into a really, really wealthy family. Oh, she was born super privileged. So it's alright when you're like that and you can just wear an owl on your head and play hockey down the street. Working class people couldn't afford stuffed owls. No, they couldn't even afford a barrel each. So a lot of the information that I'm talking about here about the WI and about Lady Denman comes from this great book called To Be Reckoned With by Jane Robinson. Do you know that during World War I the WET fleets had women members out patrolling
Starting point is 00:21:58 and after the war they cancelled it so the boys were back giving back their jobs and the WI did a 26 year campaign to get them back. And they did. Wow, 26 years. They just waited for the next war to start. It was during World War II when they came back. I think that's brilliant. I didn't relate it in my way. That's terrible.
Starting point is 00:22:13 And also good on the WI. Yeah. During the second World War, meetings might include something called a pin the mustache on a Hitler competition. Or the passing around of a lemon with a penny buying you a sniff. What? It was a different time. It was. There wasn't a lot to do for some people. It sounds like one of James' musical songs.
Starting point is 00:22:33 I'll give you a sniff of my lemon. What I really like as well is they've got tons of branches and there's lots of different ways of doing it so I completely am keen on this one. This is Gothic Valley, a WI branch in North London. They are a goth branch of the WI but they welcome non-goths. And according to the website, they like baking, jam making, crafting and wearing lots of black. And then they also say, come and join us. Help put the black in Blackberry Jam.
Starting point is 00:22:56 I think they sound awesome. Yeah, that sounds great. Speaking of jam, actually the reason that I found this fact is that there was a police commissioner recently who announced that the WI is the largest organised crime group in the UK because it's actually illegal to pick wild berries and sell them for profit. And the WI not only does that but encourages its members to do that because they pick berries and then sell their jam at fates. Is that really illegal?
Starting point is 00:23:21 Apparently it's illegal according to him, yeah. There was a really nice story how in World War I the home guards needed wood and so they came round and they chopped the legs off the piano that was... Chopped the legs off every single member of a WI. One of these guys must have a wooden leg. The WI members retained their legs but the home guard chopped the legs off one of their pianos and then at future WI meetings in the area where that happened the women still continued to sing Jerusalem and the pianist just lay on the floor playing the piano.
Starting point is 00:23:51 Another contemporary WI is the Seven Hills WI in Sheffield. Their average age of the member is 34 and their speakers have included the tour manager for the Arctic Monkeys. See, it's cool. There's something incredible and they do all the things. As we walked in today, Anna, you said I'm thinking of joining the WI now. I think that I will. Anna's really into the Arctic Monkeys.
Starting point is 00:24:11 They were so influential. So they were really a big deal, especially in the early days. I really like... I was reading a story about a guy. So they do do a lot of talks, they get people to come in and talk and they got a man to come in who was a retired sailor from North Devon and they wanted to talk to him about his experiences. So basically he wrote a book about being kidnapped by pirates and he thought I'll go and do a talk, start doing talks and they booked him.
Starting point is 00:24:36 But this is what he said. When I arrived there, there were ladies with blue rinses wearing pirate hats and waving swords around. They'd been led to believe that it was a talk about piracy through the ages and not something right up to date. So basically a man who'd been held for 47 days to tell about his traumatic experience. You can see a photo. He took a photo with them.
Starting point is 00:24:57 They've got the, you know, the skull and cross modes, that kind of weird Captain Grudge hat. That's because back in their day, that's how pirates look. Yeah. Didn't they famously boo off Tony Blair or something? They clapped. They slow clapped. They watched it today. It's amazing. They didn't want any party politics and it's a huge hole full of...
Starting point is 00:25:15 They thought it was a music hall song. They were trying to get the beat to kick it. Also, as per your 100 year old runner, that could just be the speed at which older people clap. And if he hadn't left the stage, he would have realized 20 minutes later they were actually giving him a standing ovation. It's just taken a while to get there. Okay, it is time for a final fact of the show and that is James.
Starting point is 00:25:52 Okay, my fact this week is that you can make yourself more attractive to members of the opposite sex by giving them a magnet. How powerful a magnet. So this is a controversial bit of science called social priming. Not everyone believes it's real, but there was a recent study at Texas A&M University where participants were given a couple of attracting blocks to play with and some others were given ones that weren't magnetic. And then they questioned them about their relationship
Starting point is 00:26:25 and they found the ones who were given the magnets were more positive about their relationships and found the people there were more attractive. And basically social priming is the idea that you can mention things and it will affect the way people behave. So there's a very famous study where they gave people words to do with old age and then as they left the building they walked slower. Now that study is very controversial because people have tried to replicate it and they've not been able to, but this whole idea of social priming
Starting point is 00:26:55 is a thing that people are currently studying. So the fact, this fact, your fact is sort of about how the things we speak about metaphorically can actually affect how we feel. So it's thought that the reason that you are more attracted to someone when they're holding a magnet is because we talk about magnetism and magnetically attracted to him. And that metaphor that we've used has actually seems to have made its way into now how we instinctively respond.
Starting point is 00:27:19 And there are other instances of this happening. So with the word sweet it was shown that we refer to people as being sweet people. And there was an experiment that was done where students were asked to write either about their experience of romantic love or about an experience of being jealous or just about a neutral experience. And then after that they were given, in one experiment they were given sweets and then in another experiment they were just given tap water. And in both cases the students who've written about romantic love found the sweets
Starting point is 00:27:47 and the tap water tasted sweeter because they'd written about something that they considered a sweet topic. We're in a happy mood to start with. Yeah, it's so interesting. Do you have another one? Well, I just thought this was really weird because the reverse seems to be true with sweet stuff as well. There was this study done in 2011 which showed that people who like sweet stuff are just sweeter people as a nicer people.
Starting point is 00:28:11 So this was published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology and it found that people who said that they preferred they had a sweet tooth were more likely to help someone out. So there was a professor who wanted to help with doing a study. They were more likely to help him out. They were more likely to help clear up sandbags after stopping a flood. And just they like sweet food and there seemed to be this correlation which obviously sounds very dubious.
Starting point is 00:28:33 Maybe they think, oh, I might get a sweet for doing this. Yeah. They're like, crunchy bar. Yeah, great theory. People give you plentiful biscuits when you help out. Such a good point. It does sound dubious, slightly. So I was reading also examples of where psychologically they think
Starting point is 00:28:48 that the opposite sex can make themselves more attractive. So in this case, how a man can become more attractive to a woman. One suggestion that they've said, why don't you try this, is to wear a T-shirt, a white T-shirt with a big T printed on it, just the big letter T. And the reason that they say is that women who see this shirt with the T on are 12% more attracted to this person. Women always want a pound of T, don't they?
Starting point is 00:29:11 We've already established that. Women like T. So what it is, is that they say that the top bar of the T makes it so that it broadens the shoulders of the person and then the bar going down slims the body, creating a V-shaped body. So that's my interesting fact. In order to get a V, you need to wear a T.
Starting point is 00:29:31 How cool is that? That is good. Everyone used to say to me, by the way, that raises an interesting point, because I usually wear a tie. I'm always a love wearing ties. And people have said to me that I'm directly trying to draw attention to the crotch, that apparently an arrow pointing downwards. I'd never heard that before.
Starting point is 00:29:50 Well, it's just because you have written on your tie penis this way as an arrow. It's just really inappropriate for the workplace. We talked about this. So the science of dating is interesting. I found one piece which concluded, the key to dating someone hotter than you, get to know them first, which is a really good tip. And another one that said,
Starting point is 00:30:11 sexually aroused by farts, you're not alone. Scientists are doing some weird studies. So there's a study done in 2010, which is kind of depressing, but it's interesting that this is still the case. And what it did was it put a man in a high status car and then the same man in a low status car. So there was a man in a silver Bentley Continental GT, which I believe is an expensive car,
Starting point is 00:30:37 and then that man was also put in a Redford Fiesta. And it found that when women are asked if the man is attractive, they're much more likely to think he's attractive if he's in the high status car. But in the reverse way around, when the woman is in the high status car compared to being in the normal car, then men do not find women any more attractive when they're in a high status car. Because traditionally, for thousands of years,
Starting point is 00:30:56 women have been attracted to men who can provide for them. In cars. That's why Fred Flintstone was so popular with the ladies. Yeah, I read an article which said that 89% of UK men think that a flashy car helps them with women, but only 41% of women think that that's true. But that's, I guess, they're not testing it out in a blind way, are they? They're just asking you what you think.
Starting point is 00:31:20 Yeah, so women, we don't think we're attracted to only rich men, but it turns out we're all extremely shallow, and that is the case. It's interesting. It's just, you know, men have been the providers traditionally, so it must be something that's so deeply ingrained in our for a lot of women that you want someone who you know can provide for you, even though consciously, we definitely don't feel like that's what we want. I have one more thing which is, the good news is,
Starting point is 00:31:41 B.R. does make you more attractive. The bad news is, it's to mosquitoes carry among area. We need to wrap up soon. We haven't done any magnet stuff. Has anyone got anything, just Magnesi? I was reading a report from the Royal Society of Medicine from 2005, which was called Painful Attraction, a Magnetic Penile Injury, and it was describing, it sounded horrific, but I did find it quite amusing,
Starting point is 00:32:07 it was describing an 11-year-old boy who'd arrived in A&E with two magnets stuck on either side of his penis, and they couldn't get it off. So he'd actually been referred to this hospital from another hospital, that hadn't been able to get these two magnets off, and the report said that it was impossible to remove the magnets either by hand or by surgical clamps. I've read this paper, I think, actually, and I think that they just kind of did some sheer force, didn't they,
Starting point is 00:32:33 so they pulled them sideways. They eventually did that, yeah, but they did sound, I was reading out the idea that he was overhearing them discussing their next options, it said in the report, there are two other ways of dealing with this, usually, with two magnets that are stuck together. One is to heat the magnet above the curie point, which is the point at which they lose magnetism.
Starting point is 00:32:49 Isn't that like 7000 degrees or something? It's about 500 degrees Celsius for the average toy magnet, and the other one is to apply heavy hammering, so you can imagine this point lying there going, oh god, that's extraordinary. What would you go for, Dan, would you go for the 500 degree heat or the intense hammering? Or would you just think, actually, they don't look so bad?
Starting point is 00:33:12 Exactly why I was like, you know, I'm cool. Wait, would that make you more attractive to the opposite side? They'd be like, ah, magnetic. The strongest magnets in the world, I think, are in America's national high magnetic field laboratory in Tallahassee. They're electromagnets, and this facility uses 7% of all the electricity used in the whole city of Tallahassee.
Starting point is 00:33:37 Whoa, it's absolutely massive, and if you want to do any magnetic stuff pretty much anywhere in the world, this is where you go. And the big sign there was in, do not put on your penis. Penis not this way. Okay, that's it. That's all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening.
Starting point is 00:33:57 If you would like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we've said over the course of this podcast, you can find us on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shriverland, James. At Egg Shaped, Anne. At Miller underscore Anne. And Shazinski. You can email podcast at qi.com.
Starting point is 00:34:13 Yep, or you can go to our group account, which is at qipodcast, or go to our website, no such thing as a fish.com. We have all of our previous episodes up there. We will be back again next week with another episode. We'll see you then. Goodbye. We should do an outfit for Andy's show. Go and see Andy's show. It's not at the fringe.
Starting point is 00:34:33 Go and see Andy's show. Go and see Andy's show. Go and see Andy's show. It's not at the fringe.

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