No Such Thing As A Fish - 157: No Such Thing As High-Fiving The Beatles

Episode Date: March 24, 2017

Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss the first ever high-five, an iceberg storage facility in Antarctica and how to put make-up on in space....

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 Dad Schreiber, and I'm sitting here with James Harkin, Andrew Hunter Murray and Anna Chazinski, and once again we have gathered around the microphones, 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 with my fact, and my fact this week is that the man who popularized the high five only has four fingers, and this was a basketball player called Wiley Brown.
Starting point is 00:00:59 Back in 1978 slash 79 sees in a basketball, he and his mate started high-fiving, and they talk about it really, really interestingly, I read an interview where he said, you know, no one was doing it, they all did it low, there's all these low fives going on, no one did it high, and he said then the first time we did it, both of us looked at each other and said, did that just happen? So they're really into it, it was a magical moment. Can I just ask, when you say four fingers, you mean on one of his hands? Exactly.
Starting point is 00:01:33 So nine fingers. Yes, exactly. So he had nine fingers in total, he was missing a thumb, he lost his thumb when he was four years old, and a prosthetic thumb was made, which meant that he could still become an amazing sports star, because he played basketball and football, he was a bit sort of carefree about his thumb at times, he actually went to the finals of a basketball match, having left his thumb back at the hotel that he stayed at, and they had to rescue it. That would be awful if you had to hitchhike home.
Starting point is 00:01:59 Well, you could only do it on one side of the road. He actually hated his thumb, his prosthetic thumb, he tried not to wear it, so he played basketball without the thumb for ages, and then one of his coaches said, you're really good without that, I bet you'd be even better with it, and they made him wear one, and it kept on flying off at matches, and he said it made him look like a freak, because you know, someone would bash into his thumb and it would fly into the crowd, and so he tried not to wear it, and the coach was adamant, and so much so that he said if he wasn't wearing his thumb, he wouldn't let the other teammates pass to his right hand, which really damaged
Starting point is 00:02:35 the game, so they could only pass to his left hand. That's a suck. But yeah, he wasn't a fan. I should say that I got this fact, it was sent in to us by a guy called Michael Buccino, who is a listener, and again, quickly I have to say this, if you want to see the finest interview ever, ever recorded, go to YouTube and put in Wiley Brown talking about the high five. It is nine minutes of interview where they ask a question, which is, so you invented
Starting point is 00:03:00 the high five, how was it? He says, yeah, it's great, and then they've got nine minutes more of interview, and... It's too long. It's not too long. It is. I watched it. No, because they run out of questions, but he does not run out of answers. He is so enthusiastic, and he has a new tale for each time the high five started.
Starting point is 00:03:16 So he did it with Derek Smith, who Wiley Brown says is the actual creator of the high five, because in all the stories, Smith is the one who instigates it. So for example, another story is that he said he was going up during practice to Derek Smith to give him a low five, classic low five, as they always did, and then he said, out of nowhere, Smith looked brown in the eye and said, no, a pie. I mean, that's fucking awesome. There is another theory about who invented the high five. Yeah, it's actually very controversial, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:03:46 Yeah, so there's a baseball player called Dusty Baker, and another called Glenn Burke, and it's claimed that when Baker was getting back towards the dugout, Burke offered a raised hand, and Baker, not knowing what to do, smacked it. Again, very much the same sort of amazing foundation moment, and then Burke went out and he got a home run, and then on the way back, he gave another high five, and that was in 1977 that that supposedly happened. So that's earlier. It's earlier, so that predates, so that's maybe an origin.
Starting point is 00:04:14 Do you know Glenn Burke, who you were talking about? He's famous because he was pretty much the first major league baseball player to come out as gay, and there was a documentary in 2010 called Out the Glenn Burke Story, and they said that the Dodgers executives offered him $75,000 to get married because it would cause such a problem if people found out he was gay while he was still playing. No way. And apparently, when they said, you know, would you take $75,000 to get married, he said, I guess you mean to a woman, which is quite a good reply.
Starting point is 00:04:49 That's a great title for a movie, Out, I guess you mean to a woman? Oh right, no, no, Out, the actual movie itself. Do you think there was any confusion at the start when people would say, hey, how's Glenn? And then you go, oh, he's out, and they go, no, he's not, he's still there, just years of playing. Yeah, that's good. And then Dusty Baker, just one fact about him, he was famous for liking to chew toothpicks. He said, toothpicks are an excellent source of protein, which he was wrong about.
Starting point is 00:05:20 So on high fives, there is a basketball team called the Phoenix Sons. Yes. Have you heard of them? Yeah. There is a football team called Manchester United. It is. You're on it. Anyway, these Phoenix Sons, in 2016, they announced that they were keeping track of
Starting point is 00:05:40 all the high fives that their team passed to each other, hoping that they would create more camaraderie. Like throughout the season, they did this. And supposedly teams which embrace the most in terms of high fives or other celebrations are more successful. I think it's surely more likely that if you're more successful, you score more points than you high five each other more. Yeah, that's true.
Starting point is 00:06:00 There is a cause and effect thing there. But I've read articles saying that sports players who touch each other more are supposedly better at the sports. Right. And I'm pretty sure the England cricket team always touch each other on the bum whenever they do something good. Yes. And I think that kind of comes from that idea.
Starting point is 00:06:17 Sports, psychologists. Most sports do, yeah. Bum slaps all the time. If we want to improve our performance on the podcast, should we start slapping each other's bum? No, I don't think we should. I think we should just... That was a high five, by the way, not a bum slap.
Starting point is 00:06:31 There is a machine that an artist has invented where it does self-high fives. Have you seen it? No. It's unbelievably disgusting-looking. This sounds like the saddest, loneliest machine in the world. She's a Turkish-born artist. I think she lives in America. Good.
Starting point is 00:06:46 Denise Ozuiger. Sorry. How does she pronounce her surname? I don't know, but I don't think it's like that. I'm so sorry if I've mispronounced it, which I definitely have. So she cast her own arm, right? She made two casts of her arms, and then one of them is just sticking out of this machine, and the other one is rotating very slowly, like a kebab thing.
Starting point is 00:07:08 And every minute, they come into contact because it's going round in a circle, the moving arm, and it just slowly brushes the fingers of the other arm. So that's not really a high five. That's how you would imagine Michael Gove would high five. Yes. Yeah, it's really weird. What's the point in it? It only does one high five per minute.
Starting point is 00:07:25 I'm not sure what the point is. One high five per minute. But it's hard. It's hard. That's the point. It's hard. OK. The thumbs up that Donald Trump's gradually destroying for everyone else in the world.
Starting point is 00:07:35 Do you know what the origin of that is? Apparently, there are a lot of theories. It was in basketball when someone got hit in the face by a stray thumb, and they held it off and said, who's this? It's a strong theory, but no. So apparently, there's quite a strong myth that says that gladiators, you give the thumbs up for gladiators if you thought they should live and then the thumbs down, they should die.
Starting point is 00:07:58 But I think that's not true. I think you just put your thumb out and that meant... I think we've got no evidence that the thumbs up meant live and thumbs down meant die. But Desmond Morris says that it's from medieval times where if you were a businessman doing a deal, then the way you do it is you'd lick your thumb, and then you press it up against someone else's licked thumb, and that was how you were like, hey, deal is done. Wow, that's like blood brothers, but slightly weirdly more disgusting. What it reminds me of is, do you remember in the last QI meeting, Anna, when you were
Starting point is 00:08:27 trying to show us some pickup lines and you tried one on Andy? You missed this, Dan. She licked her thumb, wiped it on Andy's clothes and said, let's get you out of these wet clothes. Yeah, that's a good one. As he was smitten. The single most erotic moment of my life, was that. Wow. You know couples, marrying couples, used to shake hands at the altar.
Starting point is 00:08:53 Oh, really? So this is... BBC History magazine claims this, but yeah, in the 17th century, you got married and then you shake hands with the bride. Is it because it's like a contract, Moppy? Yeah, exactly. The kissing thing, when I got married in January, the priest told us that it's not a thing, you don't need to do it, it's just people just started doing it, it just caught on
Starting point is 00:09:12 like the high five and just people decided to do, but it's never been officially a part of the ceremony. Yeah, I know. You may kiss the bride, it's not a line, a part of the ceremony. Who popularized it, Dan? I think it was a half-lipped man. Yeah, I don't know. It's quite American, I always think of it as not a...
Starting point is 00:09:27 What, you may now kiss the bride? Yes, in fact, that's what he said to me, he said it's something that was seen in American movies and then everyone thought, oh, there's meant to be that line, and then we started doing it. So, when I was looking at stuff about high fives, I came across an article about a lollipop man, he's quit because he was high-fiving the children as they walked across the road and he was told not to do it and he was like, right, fine, I'm going to quit. Okay.
Starting point is 00:09:53 So, just very quickly, a lollipop man, because I didn't know this until I got to this country, is someone who stands by a zebra crossing and allows school children to walk across, I had no idea. He's holding a large lollipop-shaped object to stop the cars. But he doesn't sell lollipops for a living. And a zebra crossing is a road crossing with black and white stripes on it. That the Beatles walked over on Abbey Road. Yes, but there are thousands and thousands of zebra crossings, it's not like Britain
Starting point is 00:10:15 has one zebra crossing and all school children have to cross that before they go to the school. I was surprised they got the space to take that photo with all the kids. Anyway, lollipop man. So, this guy, he was from Plymouth City Council and then I just carried on reading the rest of the Google searches on pages two and three that people don't normally go to and there was also a lollipop man in Edinburgh who was told not to high five children. What?
Starting point is 00:10:40 There was a lollipop lady in the Vale of Glamorgan who had the same. There was two lollipop men in Essex that I found. Wow. There was a guy in West Dunbartonshire who's left his job because he wasn't allowed to high five kids. What? And there was a guy in Australia, in Bayside, Australia who was also left his job because, well, he got told off because he was high five in children.
Starting point is 00:11:04 So this seems to be a real problem. Amazing that it's like a deal breaker for keeping your job. Yeah. No high fives? I'm out of here. That is so weird. It's so weird. It's just a thing that seems to be happening all over the world.
Starting point is 00:11:18 That's amazing. I bet no one else has made that connection in the world. I bet even they have not made that connection. I bet they meet. It's born a lollipop. I bet they meet. The high five club. They meet and high five each other.
Starting point is 00:11:28 Yeah. Is it because it's dangerous? So the idea is you're supposed to be concentrating on the road and not high fiving kids as they go across. And presumably what's happened, I might be completely wrong about this, but it seems to me like a memo's gone out to all the different councils and they've all gone round checking that no one's high fiving people. I don't know if that's right, but it's a real coincidence.
Starting point is 00:11:52 It doesn't take that much concentration to high five, does it? I would have thought you could focus on the road as well as also distributing high fiving. If someone was repeatedly high fiving while driving, I would not be so comfortable as a passenger. How would you do that? Stick your hand out the window? I guess so, yeah. And then you're driving too close to the pavement, you know.
Starting point is 00:12:11 No, you would high five other drivers coming in the opposite direction, wouldn't you? Oh, cool. What you can't see on the Abbey Road cover is a crest fall in Lollipop Man on the other side, taking his P45 slip. Yeah. Don't ever high five the Beatles again. Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is Chuzinski. Yeah, my fact this week is that when the first American woman went into space, NASA designed
Starting point is 00:12:39 a makeup kit for her. And this is an interview I was reading this week with Sally Ride, who was in the first group of female Americans who went into space. And yeah, she said that NASA called her in for a meeting and said, look, we're really worried about this, but we're sending women out there now. And we obviously need to design you a makeup kit. So what kind of stuff should we be putting in there? Because we're a bit stuck with that.
Starting point is 00:13:02 What did she say? And she said it was the last thing she wanted to be thinking about at that time. Effectively, this fact is about the sort of slightly backward, massively backward sexism that happens to a lot of women. We don't want people to look like a minger for the aliens, do you? So there was this interview with Sally Ride, too. It was quite sweet saying that when NASA came to her, they were a bit confused about various things, like they didn't know how many tampons they would want out in space.
Starting point is 00:13:28 So they suggested 100 tampons per person for a week. And she was like, you really don't need to do that. What if you need to build a fort? Tampon fort. At least when your child is dead. It's like a pillow fort, but for a mouth. But some of them, I read an interview with another of the women who went up who said that when they came in and asked them, do they want makeup, and what kind of makeup do
Starting point is 00:13:51 they want, they were loud guffaws by some of the women. But one of them said, look, these pictures taken in space will follow us around for the rest of our lives. And I don't want to disappear into the background. So a couple of them did take these makeup kits up. Wow. Yeah. And they sort of specially tested makeup that would adhere to the skin even in a micro
Starting point is 00:14:08 gravity. What doesn't happen with makeup, Andy, is women don't put makeup on at the start of the day. And by the end of the day, it's the gravity's just pulled it down to the bottom of their faces. It's on your feet. That's a good point. Face on crotch.
Starting point is 00:14:23 Look at about three p.m. No, it's extraordinary, though, but they sort of. It is weird. And what's also weird is how long NASA took to send women into space given how long the Soviet Union did not take. So it was 20 years after it was an odd way of phrasing that speech. They untook a long time. So the Soviet Union sent Valentina Tereshkova up in 1963.
Starting point is 00:14:51 And one NASA official was actually asked what he thought about this at the time and he said it made him sick to his stomach to think of women in space. But this is the weird thing about Tereshkova's trip. She was only allowed to go because she wasn't menstruating. Oh, because they were worried about what would happen with periods. No, they just didn't have enough payload to take 5,000 tampons of that. No, there were all these reports sort of worrying about it. So basically all your blood sort of pools in your torso and in your head because there's
Starting point is 00:15:20 no gravity. So that is something that on Earth is affected by gravity. And there was a report in America in 1964 which said it will be hard to match, I'm quoting here, a temperamental psychophysiologic human and the complicated machine, i.e. the spacecraft, both need to be ready at the same time, i.e. we think women will be too mad if they're menstruating to operate a spacecraft. Wow. And they also worried that the blood from that system would also float up and cause,
Starting point is 00:15:49 it could cause theoretically a dangerous condition called peritonitis, which can be fatal as they thought, well, maybe, well, what if that happens? But the reality is that normal blood circulation is completely different to menstrual blood, so it was never a risk. And actually women going up into space is very sensible and a good idea because they can do everything that the men can do, but they're smaller, generally speaking. Yeah. So that's power to get women up there.
Starting point is 00:16:13 Oh, I thought you meant every bit counts. You don't have to send them as far because they're smaller, so they'll look the same size even when they're a bit closer. That's the whole point. That's why we send people into space so they look smaller. To see what humans would look like if they were one centimeter tall. That's one small step. No, it's a normal step.
Starting point is 00:16:31 It's just a long way away. There's another astronaut called Svetlana Savitskaya, and she went up in 1984. She did a mission, first woman to fly in space twice. In 1995, she gave an interview, and she was talking about the sort of sexism that was going on with being a female astronaut. When she arrived at the Salu-7, as she came in, there was another astronaut there who handed her an apron and told her to get to work. That was her arrival in space.
Starting point is 00:17:07 Was that a tongue-in-cheek thing? No, no. It was very much a... It seems like, well, women shouldn't be up here, so I'm going to say something extremely offensive. Oh, so it was a deliberate, like, you shouldn't be here. You shouldn't be here. Put the apron on if you're going to be here and clean up the shuttle.
Starting point is 00:17:20 Wow. They've been deliberately letting dirt build up on the shuttle and jeopardizing the entire mission to make this incredibly petty point. Where'd he get the apron from? He has an apron in space. He would have had to smuggle an apron. We would have had to craft an apron. They're already from vital bits of the spaceship.
Starting point is 00:17:38 On the ISS, do you know they have to vacuum every day? Really? Yeah. Because they need to keep it clean and they need to keep it clear of germs and bacteria, and yeah, so they have to vacuum every day. It's quite ironic the fact that they're bringing the vacuum into space. Do they? Because the stuff isn't adhering to the ground, because of the absence of gravity or lack of
Starting point is 00:18:00 gravity. So do they just wave a vacuum in the air? I think they must do. They must do, right? It's so easy. I guess what happens is it kind of floats around and then it'll just stick to things. Yeah, electrostatically. I think it does.
Starting point is 00:18:11 We've mentioned before, you know you get calluses on your feet because you're not walking around on the ground, so your underside of your feet gets soft, and then the top of your feet, because you're hooking your feet around railings and things, it gets very hard. Those calluses break off and then they're just floating around the space station, bits of your own foot skin. So you have to vacuum those up. Don't they wear socks most times? You should be wearing space socks.
Starting point is 00:18:34 I guess. No. Yeah, I guess so. But it is cool they have reverse feet in space. Yeah. I do love that. Is that what we're saying? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:18:44 That's what we're saying. If you live in space, you have reverse feet. Do you know what happened on the maiden space shuttle Columbia mission in 1981? The toilet got clogged when they were up in space, and they had to use these tube-shaped bags, which attached to your bottom with a sticky seal to go to the loo. It was very unpleasant. And then, as they were re-entering the Earth's atmosphere, the toilet was broken and the vacuum-dried excrement got into the ventilation system and then started floating around in
Starting point is 00:19:11 the main cabin. No. Bad times. That's... See, you really need the vacuum cleaner then, I think. Yeah, you do, yeah. Suck that up. You can't suck up poo in a vacuum cleaner. I wouldn't use it again after I'd done it.
Starting point is 00:19:23 If it's vacuum-dried. Oh, OK. If it's vacuum-dried, you can. Which is why I always vacuum-dry whenever I get a loo. Just one more thing on the extreme sexism in space theme. Yeah. Great theme. So it's such a strong theme.
Starting point is 00:19:39 It's just a real laugh a minute. So in 1971, there's a NASA memo, which is about psychological issues with long space flights. And so this is in 71, and this is about how men can suffer in various ways. And one of the ways that they'll suffer is that they don't have a direct sexual release because they're up in space, all a bunch of men on their own. And this NASA memo says, the question of direct sexual release on a long-duration space mission must be considered.
Starting point is 00:20:07 Practical considerations preclude men taking their wives, so it is possible that a woman qualified from a scientific viewpoint might be persuaded to donate her time and energies for the sake of improving crew morale. No. Whoa. No. Space prostitutes. That sounds like a movie, doesn't it?
Starting point is 00:20:27 Star Wars. So they weren't suggesting that. They were suggesting that providing women, they talk about sublimation, which is the idea that men will be sexually relieved by just being around a woman. It will improve them around rather than being on their own because it points out that masturbation is messy and that homosexual behavior shouldn't be encouraged. I would say, as long as it's freeze-dried. If you ever go to Addy's house, you'll notice.
Starting point is 00:21:05 Oh, dear, mate. OK, it is time for fact number three, and that is James. OK, my fact this week is that the Indian justice system has a backlog of 31 million cases. 31 million? Yeah, that's not so terrifying. And if all of the judges managed to deal with 100 cases an hour and didn't take any breaks, it would take them 35 years to get rid of the backlog because there's hardly any judges. It's between 13 and 15 judges per million people in India.
Starting point is 00:21:45 And in America, it's more than 100. Is it? Yeah. So I saw this in a review of a book called When Crime Pays Money and Muscle in Indian Politics in The Economist magazine a few weeks ago. And what it was really, it's an article about how corrupt politicians are in India. And they said in this article that if you are a politician with serious charges hanging over you, you have an 18% chance of winning your race.
Starting point is 00:22:14 And that's compared with 6% for someone who doesn't have any charges against them. So you're three times more likely to get into parliament if you have a serious crime against you than if you have no crime, which is insane. Where's the causation correlation link there? Do they speculate? Because I can't believe people are voting people in just on the grounds of their criminal history. Well, the speculation is that getting the Indian state to do things is very difficult because there's so much bureaucracy.
Starting point is 00:22:41 And sometimes you just have to bang a few heads together to get things done. And so people think, well, this criminal knows how to get things done, specifically crimes. But if he can do crimes, he can probably sort out the roads and the railways and stuff like that as well. So is it only the people who have done crimes well that are getting elected? If you do crimes that well, you tend not to get a prison. Well, indeed. They've been caught, so I would have thought. Well, a lot of these people haven't been found guilty or anything because there's still 31 million cases. Two thirds of all people in prison in India have not been convicted of anything.
Starting point is 00:23:15 They're waiting for their trial. So they still put them in jail, though. There are 400,000 people in India in prison, which is actually, I think, a bit lower than the British proportion. Because Britain's got about 80,000 people in prison. So they've got five times as many, but their population's way higher. So you might have to wait 10 years for your case to be brought to court, and you might be innocent that whole time. And some people can't afford bail, or some people don't know that bail is available to them. So they're just sort of left mouldering in jails for years and years and years.
Starting point is 00:23:42 Wow. And in the lower house in India, the Lok Sabha, 34% of the MPs have got criminal charges filed against them. So that's more than a third. And according to this article, you can pretty much walk from Mumbai to Kolkata without stepping foot outside a constituency whose MP isn't facing a charge. Oh, my God. And that's about 2,000 kilometres. Wasn't there a thing in the American election this year that you told me about, Anna,
Starting point is 00:24:11 where one of the people running had a warrant out for their arrest? Oh, yeah, the Green Can today. That's why they were running. Oh, vote for me. I've got to go. I'll see you later. Bye. Vote Green. Yeah, Jill Stein.
Starting point is 00:24:28 Jill Stein. And it was for protesting. Yeah, it was for vandalism, because she graffitied something at an environmental protest. It was in a particular state, wasn't it? Yeah. So she just didn't campaign very much there. Yeah. Or at all.
Starting point is 00:24:41 Or really anywhere else. Wow. So obviously there are people who have to wait a very long time to get their cases heard. One example is a guy, an 85-year-old man, who in 2014 was granted a divorce that he'd filed for 32 years earlier. Wow. You're probably made up by then, haven't you? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:02 Well, you'd hope so. Otherwise, that's a lot of resentment that's festering for 34 years. Yeah, true. In 2008 in India, government whips sprung six MPs out of prison so that they could vote us. Yeah. Oh, if only our whips were that cool. The most rebellious thing they do is not obey Jeremy Corbyn.
Starting point is 00:25:21 Yeah. Imagine if they were springing people out of jail. Absolutely. So it was going to be a really tight vote, and they decided, oh, we're going to need these six people, so they got them out of prison. That is amazing. Like on a day trip, we're just all together out of prison. I think they put them back in.
Starting point is 00:25:35 Yeah. But that's like during John Major's government in the UK, because he had this wafer-thin majority, didn't he? And they kept on having to bring in, you know, if there were MPs who were really seriously ill to get legislation through, they were practically bringing in stretchers, you know, sort of pushing them through. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Do we know how they sprung them out of prison?
Starting point is 00:25:52 Was it a great escape-style tunnel digging sort of endeavor? The tunnel digging, you'd need to know that the vote's coming up a long time in advance. Order 12 bulldozers on taxpayer's expense. There's one court case in India that's been going on since 1878. I think this was the oldest I could find. That's a long divorce, isn't it? Great grandchildren are getting divorced. It's over a plot of land that's less than two acres, and it's a fight between a Shia Muslim
Starting point is 00:26:25 family and a Sunni Muslim family. And one side argues that their graves are on it, and so they need to keep it. The other side argues it belongs to them. It's been going on since 1878. The Election Commission of India says that no person should have to travel more than two kilometers to cast a vote. So in the state of Gujarat, there's a temple caretaker who lives in a temple in the middle of a forest who is the only person who votes in his special voting booth.
Starting point is 00:26:54 Okay, so the police come in whenever there's an election. They have to go through this massive forest with snakes and lions and stuff like that, and they put the voting booth in the middle of the forest and they sit there and they wait for him to come. And he says in the morning he has his breakfast and he has a cup of tea and he works out who he's going to vote for, and then about 11 o'clock he wanders down and puts his vote in and they can go home. That is amazing.
Starting point is 00:27:18 Isn't that cool? That's really cool. That's hilarious that they haven't specified a time. They've just got to sit. Turnouts very low this year. Just one thing we've never talked about actually that's another weird thing about the Indian justice system is the case of Lal Bihari who set up the Uttar Pradesh group of dead people who aren't really dead.
Starting point is 00:27:39 I've never mentioned this, but this is totally bizarre. He's this guy who in 1975 wanted to apply for a bank loan and so he went to try and get proof of identity from the Revenue Office and he found out that he was dead because his uncle had declared him dead so he could claim the land that he inherited. Turnout this is a massive problem and he set up his organization which is to represent people who have been declared dead in India even though they're alive. And he eventually in 2004 he eventually in 1999. I told you he was dead.
Starting point is 00:28:10 I told you and I'm right. In 1994, sorry, he finally managed to get himself declared alive, but his organization which is the Uttar Pradesh Dead People Association has over 20,000 members and by 2004 they only managed to declare four of them alive. I remember reading about him where all the times he tried to prove that he was alive. So he started doing things like illegal stuff like robbing a bank. They'd be like, we can't arrest you, you're not alive, we can't arrest a dead man. So do you think he was robbing the bank and they're like, oh it's a ghost?
Starting point is 00:28:46 We just move mugs around. Just walking to seances. There wasn't, sorry, on seances there was a legal case in the UK that had to be redone because it turned out the jury, this was in 1994. It turned out the jury had made their decision based on a seance. What? Yeah, it was a double murder case and they had to spend the night in a hotel because the case was going on a while and they all got really drunk and then one of them emptied
Starting point is 00:29:15 their wine glass, turned over and went, all right, let's ask a ghost whether he's guilty or not and they did and then they had to redo the case because that isn't allowed. Why would the ghost know? Like what was the... I'm not sure the ghost did know. Who was the ghost of the murdered man? Who killed you? Did he do it?
Starting point is 00:29:37 Oh, so it specifically wasn't just a ghost. Well, it might be because ghosts can talk to each other, right? So the ghost, whoever it was, could have gone and asked the murdered person. So the ghost went, I'll get back to you. I'm seeing him next week for a ghost lunch. I will... Oh, I don't know who did that one. Mrs. Dumpfler.
Starting point is 00:29:56 Oh, who asked her? OK, it is time for our final fact of the show and that is Andy. My fact is that scientists are building a special bunker in Antarctica to store bits of glacier from the Alps. It's so exciting. It's amazing. Why? Because glaciers are melting all over the world and I didn't notice that this is a job.
Starting point is 00:30:23 There's a job of being a paleoclimatologist. So like a paleontologist does dinosaurs, a paleoclimatologist does ancient weather basically and all these glaciers, they're really old ice and it contains lots of data about what was in the atmosphere, how much of which kind of gas, what the weather would have been like, what the climate was. So if they melt, you suddenly are losing tens of thousands of years of data. So what kind of weather do they learn? It's like, oh, it was snowing. It was snowing before that and snowing before that.
Starting point is 00:30:52 Cold, cold, cold, still cold. They learn about the gases in the atmosphere and they have to... They're not collecting cross sections of ice, they have these circular drills. They're like cookie cutters and they just bore right down into the ice and then they bring it up, slice it into one-metre sections, label them and they're currently building this massive bunker which is going to be in Antarctica. Is their research group, are they the ones called Protecting Ice Memory Project? Yes.
Starting point is 00:31:20 Okay, so this is this big international project. Wait a minute, PIMP. Oh yeah! Did they call themselves PIMPs? I think it's PIMP project, I think it's just a... I could see why they didn't bother with the project. They make a big deal of that space with a PIMP project. PIMP pause project.
Starting point is 00:31:43 Yeah, it's unbelievably cool though, actually, so these ice cores that they pull out. Just the idea that all of this stuff that's happened for hundreds of thousands of years is literally frozen in time and we can look at it. So find volcanic ash or find when carbon dioxide was in the atmosphere and how much of it. And that's how they get a lot of climate data which I hadn't realised. So when we say, you know, when you have those graphs which show how much CO2 was in the atmosphere X number of years ago, very often that's because they've studied an ice core and they've found a little bubble of it somewhere beneath that's been preserved for hundreds of thousands of years.
Starting point is 00:32:13 It's always the bubbles, isn't it? And they just keep the bubbles. That's true, because it'd be easier to store, wouldn't it? And the reason it's an Antarctica is that even if the power fails, it's still minus 50 degrees outside. Whereas if you have it somewhere warmer and the power fails then obviously all your precious data melts. Do you guys know about Project Iceworm? Project Iceworm. I know what Iceworms are.
Starting point is 00:32:39 What are Iceworms? They're worms that live in ice. Alright, yeah, that's amazing, James. Wait, is that true? That can't be true. They have worms that live on glaciers, but Anna can tell us about her thing and then I'll tell you about Iceworms in the game. Let's compare Iceworms. So this isn't actually in Antarctica, this is in Greenland,
Starting point is 00:32:55 but Project Iceworm was this American plan in the Cold War to build this massive underground network of tunnels below the ice in Greenland and then they would be missile launch sites, so that way if they went via Greenland then they could get easy access to the Soviet Union. And we actually did this, so if you go to Greenland, way, way under the ice, there's this network of tunnels that they started building that's full of stuff like sewage and loads of diesel fuel apparently, some pollutants, some radiological waste and I think 21 tunnels were dug underground in Greenland
Starting point is 00:33:29 and then they decided it wasn't actually going to work because it wasn't viable for people to live under the ice for long periods of time. They had hospitals, they had a cinema, they had shops, yeah, yeah. What's all this sewage there for? Yeah, I don't know why all the sewage is there. Maybe it made you have a funny tummy if you're living on Greenland. Makes it easy to freeze dry. Yeah, that's true.
Starting point is 00:33:50 But it's a problem because the ice sheet might melt on Greenland and then you've got all the radioactive sludge which is going to... No, but bad news, the ice sheet melts and the seas kind of rise and stuff like that, good news, we find a new cinema. Oh yeah. Imagine that day when the ice melts and there's like an odion. Yeah, covered in radioactive waste and sewage. I can imagine it being a hipster destination cinema actually.
Starting point is 00:34:17 People are going to go, it's going to be very fashionable. You have to dig through 12 meters of ice to get there. Okay, okay, I can't wait anymore. Nice worm. Oh yeah, sorry. That's why you've been quiet all this time. It took so long. Well, a nice worm, like I say, is just a worm that lives on ice.
Starting point is 00:34:35 They live in glaciers and they eat little bits of pollen that have been trapped in the glacier. They're little black things so you can see them really easily. And do they burrow through the ice and live under ice? Well, sometimes they do, so if it's warm on the outside, if it's above like say two degrees, they'll go into the ice because if they get above five degrees, they melt. And they literally melt, they turn to liquid, these worms.
Starting point is 00:35:01 It's like an enzyme in their body which starts to liquefy their whole body. So if they go above like say two or three degrees, they will melt. And you see them on glaciers, the little black things. Wow. That's so terrifying being them. For some reason I feel it's like speed where you can't go over a certain amount
Starting point is 00:35:19 and they're obsessively watching the thermometer all the time. Sometimes glaciers enter this sort of super fast state and they go... How fast? Not very fast. So not super fast. Well, they call them glaciers surges and they move at 100 times their normal speed.
Starting point is 00:35:38 But I read that the fastest that they've ever gone is 11 miles per year. That's pretty fast. Is it though? Is it? Well, it's about 45 meters per day. Sure, it's like Southern Rail. Exactly, yeah.
Starting point is 00:35:52 But they are moving four times faster than they were in the 90s. Or the summer speed of glaciers. Which is, that's big. Where they going? Well, they're melting. Downhill. Downhill and towards the sea. So that's what a glacier is basically.
Starting point is 00:36:06 It's loads and loads of snow that's fallen over loads and loads of years and it's just slowly with gravity moving down towards the sea like a river, but it's made of ice. So it's on land? Yes. Otherwise it'd be an iceberg. Yes, okay.
Starting point is 00:36:20 So that's the difference. That's what I didn't understand. Yeah, and actually a Fox's Glacier Mint shows a polar bear standing on an iceberg. You're right. So it's a completely inaccurate mint. It should be an iceberg mint. Yes.
Starting point is 00:36:31 Or they need to change their design. Either way. Until they do one of those two things I've got by a couple of those mints. I mean, to be honest, if we're being really pedantic they should show a Fox standing on a glacier. So they've got it wrong in a couple of ways. There's a polar bear on an iceberg.
Starting point is 00:36:45 What are you guys doing? It's like a bear iceberg mint. It should be. There are towns in the Alps who are still burying soldiers from the First World War thanks to Glacier Melt. What do you mean by that? Well, loads of soldiers were posted in the Alps
Starting point is 00:37:01 during the First World War and it was incredibly, obviously, very cold, extremely harsh conditions to live in and they were fighting very fiercely over almost no territory, basically. But lots of soldiers froze to death, got caught in the glaciers. They didn't get caught by the glaciers, but they...
Starting point is 00:37:18 Incredibly slow, like that Austin Powers scene edging away from the slow-moving glacier. Well, no, we've established that they're super fast so maybe they weren't ready for the speed of a glacier. About 11 miles per year. How did these guys get into the army? Anyway... They were caught.
Starting point is 00:37:37 They're now being discovered as the glaciers retreat as they melt. Bodies are being discovered and they're being buried. So there was a funeral for two of them and 13 and 500 people turned up to pay their respects. Were their bodies preserved properly? Because I remember when they found Malory on Everest, a lot of his skin was there.
Starting point is 00:37:59 His body was there because you're properly preserved, aren't you, in the cold? I don't know how well preserved they were, but there is a particular town called Peo where they do a lot of these perils because they're near a lot of the battlefield sites and that's where the bodies are being discovered. Wow. Amazing.
Starting point is 00:38:12 It is kind of... If you're looking on the bright side of global warming, it is good for glacial archaeology, isn't it? Because, like you say, it's suddenly revealing all this amazing stuff. So melting glaciers have suddenly revealed like lots of Roman coins, some Iron Age horses. There's a glacier called the Medan Hall Glacier.
Starting point is 00:38:29 I'm not sure, Anna. A couple of coins in a horse makes up for losing the entire Netherlands. No, she's right. What if you want your children to go into the same line of work as you when there's no more ice? It's only good in the very short term. Well, I think we've established that this view
Starting point is 00:38:45 is a very short term view, isn't it? I was worried about the long term. I would be concerned about climate change. As it is, I'm very excited about these Roman coins. And a forest. So there's a thousand-year-old... We could always do with more forest and there's a thousand-year-old forest
Starting point is 00:39:02 that's been revealed by a melting glacier in Alaska. I bet it's a rubbish forest after all the time under a glacier. It can't be good. It's a bit stompy. It's a dead squirrels everywhere. Yeah, that's strange, isn't it? Because you do want more trees as well. You want more forests, but you also want more ice.
Starting point is 00:39:20 So which do you choose? Oh, it's Sophie's choice, isn't it? But the ice, I think, will keep the ice. OK, great. Because you can go forests elsewhere where there's no ice, but you can't put ice. You can make ice. You can't keep it in the Amazon.
Starting point is 00:39:36 If you have a refrigerator, you can. But you can put a lot of refrigerators into the Amazon. It's not a refrigerator. It's a freezer. Why? A refrigerator is just going to slow down the melting. Is that why my ice tray is always full of water? I'm flimid. That's why my parties are never any good.
Starting point is 00:39:56 Do you want some ice in here, Jake? Dribble, dribble, dribble. Never mind. We'll have an ice cream instead. Oh, no! OK, that's it. That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening. If you'd like to get in contact with any of us
Starting point is 00:40:16 about the things that we have said over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter account. I'm on at Shriverland, James. At Eggshaked. Andie. At AndrewHunterM. And Anna. You can email podcast at qipodcast.com.
Starting point is 00:40:32 Or you can go to our group account. It's at qipodcast. We have all of our previous episodes up there. We'll be back again next week. See you then, guys. Goodbye.

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