No Such Thing As A Fish - 231: No Such Thing As A 24-Minute Podcast
Episode Date: August 24, 2018Dan, James, Anna and Alex discuss the first ever stripper to jump out of a cake, the Queen of Sweden's business cards, and why holding your breath underwater is cheating....
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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 and I am sitting here with Anna Chazinski, Alex Bell and James
Harkin and once again we have gathered round the microphones with our four favorite facts
from the last seven days and in no particular order, here we go, starting with you, Chazinski.
My fact is that the world record for the longest time spent holding one's breath is exactly
the same length as this podcast episode.
How on earth could we possibly know how long this episode's going to be?
My magic powers and knowledge that you're a good editor have told me.
So tell me how long do I have to edit to?
So you have to edit to 24 minutes and three seconds if that's okay and this is a record
that was set by Alex Segura in 2016 and he's a champion in the sport of static apnea.
I can't believe it's a sport.
It's a sport.
It's amazing.
It's a sport.
It's the sport of lying face down in a swimming pool and holding your breath while remaining
still.
That can get unbarred with for the Olympics.
We should say that this record that he broke is looked down upon by some static apneists
including himself actually because this one involved him inhaling pure oxygen.
That means you can hold your breath for much, much longer.
So that doubles the volume of oxygen that you can store in your lungs.
So you breathe oxygen for something like 30 minutes before you go for the record attempt.
So 24 minutes.
That's the length of a sitcom episode if you were watching an American sitcom without
adverts.
Is it though?
Yeah.
Well, not the new Netflix style sitcoms, but if you go classic Seinfeld a Friends episode.
Specifically Seinfeld.
Seinfeld's getting shorter.
What?
So the TBS have been caught broadcasting episodes of Seinfeld in fast forward 9% faster than
the original recording.
So does he sound like a chipmunk?
No, weirdly he doesn't because you can get away with maybe up to about 15% without really
noticing it.
If you put them side by side, obviously, like you noticed, but who does that?
Was Alvin and the chipmunks originally like four hours long each counting?
It was a sort of cinema noir.
That is amazing.
So you lose what?
Six minutes an hour?
Yeah, exactly.
So you get an extra minute or so of adverts for each episode.
On sitcoms, do you know that the world's first sitcom, no episode, survive of it?
This is just a kind of, I've only mentioned this because it's the kind of thing that
makes Alex really angry, but it was on the BBC and it was broadcast from 1946 to 47.
It was called Pin Right's Progress.
And I was just really excited to see it because it stars someone called James Hater, who played
Fry Tuck in a Robin Hood film that I swear no one else on Earth has ever seen except
me.
And I recognized him.
Oh, I thought it was because you're a James Hater.
And that's subconsciously, I think, was the reason that I pursued this fact further.
There was a footballer called James Hater and my brother used to always like him because
my brother's also a James Hater.
We've got a big club, but yeah, they've lost all the episodes.
James Hater was also, by the way, the original voice of Mr. Kipling makes exceedingly good
cakes.
That's very cool.
The thing I love about this breathing thing is people who do it without oxygen have gone
for about half as long as Alex Segura, but whoever does it, if you really push yourself
to the limit, when you come up, would you have thought you'd breathe in or out?
You always breathe out.
You always breathe out, right?
Despite where's there's no oxygen now?
Because you have loads of carbon dioxide in your lungs, right?
Well, so we always breathe out, right?
Because when you suddenly start getting out of breath underwater is because your body
has this automatic response to having too much buildup of carbon dioxide, which is an
emergency response, which says, get up, get up, breathe, breathe, because if you've got
too much carbon dioxide, it knows you're going to run out of oxygen.
But all these champion static apneists have learned to totally override that response.
So they go underwater, they hold their breaths, and the oxygen just gets absorbed and absorbed
and absorbed.
So by the time they come up, they need to breathe in straight away.
So that's how you spot the difference between an expert and an amateur.
We breathe out and they breathe in.
I suppose the other way of spotting an amateur versus expert is the expert comes up 24 minutes
later.
I was reading that insects often hold their breath and they do it for hours and even days
at a time.
And the reason is, is that too much air would actually kill them.
So they're actually stopping air from coming in to save their lives because too much of
it damages their tissues.
So it's simply a process of stopping.
So too much oxygen damages them?
Yeah.
Exactly.
They oxidize.
Do they rust?
Yes.
That's why they're all a bit brown.
Yeah.
They're all rusty.
They're all just rusty, yeah.
But yeah, if you see an insect, it's most likely holding its breath.
That's so cool.
I was reading a 2016 Savage University study about sighing and sighing is really interesting.
So sighing is basically just a breathing in and then breathing in again instead of breathing
out.
So you're just taking in twice as much air and the reason you do it, one of the reasons
you do it, is to inflate the alveoli more than it usually gets because your alveoli are always
sort of collapsing.
Yeah.
The alveoli are the tiny little sacs on the edge of your lungs that absorb the oxygen
into the rest of your body, aren't they?
Yeah.
Lots of different alveoli are just collapsing on their own.
And so they periodically need to just be re-inflated with a massive amount of air in your lungs
and that's what sighing is.
Really?
I always thought I sighed because I was really fed up with the 29th pun in a row that James
had told.
But it's actually just all about my alveoli.
Yeah.
Who I thought?
James Hater, go back to your club.
And what's really interesting is that when they originally built iron lungs, which are
the coffin-like things that you put people in when they were having breathing difficulties
and it's basically a pressure chamber that forces people to breathe from the outside,
the mechanism didn't account for sighing, as in the iron lung didn't sigh, it only did
normal breathing in and out and people kept dying and this is what accounted for it because
their lungs were collapsing.
They sighed themselves to death.
No, they didn't sigh themselves to death because they weren't sighing because the iron lung
was only doing normal breathing for them and it wasn't doing some sort of sigh.
If we didn't sigh, we'd die.
If you don't sigh, you die.
Yeah.
That should be on signs everywhere.
Interesting case.
It is a subconscious reflex, Hannah.
You don't usually need to advertise those.
They don't have signs everywhere going, don't forget to breathe.
Keep blinking.
Sometimes I need these things.
I forget.
Okay, it is time for fact number two and that is Alex.
My fact this week is that Nicola Tesla was one of the guests at the first ever party
with a stripper jumping out of a cake.
Amazing.
Incredible.
It's a really cool party.
What was he doing there?
Well, he was just one of sort of several quite prominent guests.
This was a party thrown by a guy called Stamford White, who was sort of a member of the New
York elites at the end of the 19th century.
Really interesting character himself actually.
Controversial character as well.
So he threw all sorts of exciting dinner parties and drinks parties and this one was on May
the 20th, 1895.
One of the attractions of this party was a scantily clad girl called Susie Johnson.
We actually know her name, emerging from a pie made from galvanized iron accompanied
by a recitation of singer song of sixpence.
Well, plus birds, right?
I think birds flew out along with her, didn't they?
That would make more sense.
The birds that came out were canaries and in the movie of this, which I watched the other
night from research purposes, it's called The Girl and the Velvet Swing starring Joan
Collins as the character who is basically Susie Johnson.
The guy comes in and he's like, oh, sorry, I couldn't find any black birds, but I've
got canaries.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Was it also like, I couldn't find a Velvet Swing, but I've got a cast iron cake.
Well, we'll probably get to this in a bit, right?
How did you sing it?
Was it like sexy, like singing a song of sixpence?
Because I can't work out how you sing it.
To be honest, the bit with the pie, I kind of left the room and went to my kitchen to
get a drink and when I came back, I think I missed the pie.
But the rest of it is all about this guy, Stamford White, who like Dan's about to say
is very controversial.
Yeah, very controversial.
The reason for the title of the Velvet Swing is to do with his controversiality.
He used to like to sneak girls back to a house of his in Manhattan and no good way of saying
it, drug and rape them.
That was his very bad human and the girl on the Velvet Swing refers to a girl who he
did this to when she was age 16.
Yes, because her husband, who I think's name was Thor or something like that, not Thor
as in the Norse guard, Thor as in what happens to snow when it's warm.
He then shot...
A bit very confused in the cinema.
I saw a very boring film that I was very much looking forward to.
The Marvel movie where it's just snow melting.
He was at a theatre performance of Mamoiselle Champagne's I Could Love a Million Girls and
then Thor came over and shot Stamford White in the face.
Yeah, and this was about 1905, wasn't it?
But this is why this whole jumping out of cake thing became well known because in the
court case, everyone suddenly read about this amazing cake woman party and then I guess
it became a thing.
Imagine that's the bureau obituary that sticks out.
So you've just been murdered by a millionaire in a public space and then everyone's going
hang on, what's this cake bit?
That sounds pretty cool.
He made history in the industry of raunchy parties.
Yeah, he's done the world of service in his murder.
But he did the world of disservice because there were more repercussions afterwards.
So the whole thing was covered by a journalist called Merrill Goddard and then Merrill Goddard
was so good at covering this case that Randolph Hearst, who was a newspaper proprietor, decided
to take her for his newspaper.
She was working with Pulitzer and then Hearst and Pulitzer had a massive competition against
each other for who could get the most readers for their newspaper.
And that turned into sensational journalism and that's why we have red top journalism
today.
Wow.
It all came from there.
So your fax says she jumped out of a cake.
It was a pie.
Sorry.
When did it become cake?
It was a pie.
It was like a crusted top pie.
In the movie, it looks like one of those.
You know where it's got criss-cross of pastry on the top of it.
But that might just be for the movies.
I guess it makes sense that traditionally there's like in banquets and stuff in sort
of medieval times, you've got very elaborate pies and things coming out of pies and then
it becomes more of a tradition to do things at parties and at parties we now have cake.
So they just said, well, why don't we have people jumping out of cake?
Because it's a bit weird to have a pie at like a birthday party.
I guess cakes are more practical to jump out of and to hide in really, because they can
be taller.
You could have a tall pie.
Yeah.
I don't think so.
I think they look a bit weird.
I mean, I'd be suspicious if I saw a really tall pie, I'd be like, there's a person in
there.
Whereas you can have a big cake and be like, have no idea there's a person in there.
Hang on.
Hang on.
If you saw a giant cake come in, you would suspend the suspicion that there's a human
in there and think this is probably all cake.
Because we've all watched Bake Off.
It could be a big cake.
Can I give my favourite jumping out of a pie incident?
Yes, please.
So this was one of the earliest ones, I think it was in 1454 and it was when things being
hidden in pies was used as a rallying cry of the Christians against the Ottomans.
So this was kind of during the era of the Crusades.
It was King Philip who threw this really, really elaborate banquet with sort of jousting
and these amazing table decorations that we've talked about before.
And then he led everyone into this really long table and on the table he had this giant
pie and the pie opened up mechanically to reveal 28 playing musicians.
So an orchestra of 28 people who leapt out of the pie and played.
Do you think if you saw a cake that size, you'd think just a normal cake?
Well, if it had music coming out of it, I'd be like, there's something else going on.
Maybe not people inside.
We don't know what song they played.
We don't know what song they played.
Although we do know at that same party there was a statue of a beautiful woman who had
wine springing from her breast that people could drink from.
At this party, Stanford White's party, he was serving wine but he had a blonde waitress
who only served white wine and a brunette who only served red wine.
Really?
That's quite nice.
It's like having a lid to match the bottle kind of thing.
I know what you're saying, but then on the other hand, it's not very wop, is it?
It's slightly objectifying these women.
I'll give you that.
That's what we've established.
This guy doesn't have the best track record with women.
Susie Johnson, the lady who jumped out of the pie cake.
We don't know what happened to her.
She's another mystery in the whole story.
She disappeared.
People tried to track her down because she became, as you say, we know her name.
Did they just check every cake?
She's not in this one.
It's the Mr. Kippling Factory.
She's not in this one.
Multiple weddings ruined once again.
The cake police swoop in.
OK, it's time for fact number three and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that when in London, Queen Louise of Sweden always carried a card saying
I am the Queen of Sweden in case she was hit by a bus.
Cocky.
Yeah.
She used to travel around London as it were in disguise.
She didn't go around with an entourage.
She loved shopping and so she would just go on her own and one time she was almost hit
by a bus.
As a result, she decided, God, if I was hit by this bus, how would people know who I
was?
Why don't I carry a card inside my handbag that says I am the Queen of Sweden and then
they'll be like...
And then the people who found her, rather than going, I guess we'll just leave her there.
We don't really care.
We'll go, oh, hang on.
She's the Queen.
We better sort out this car accident situation.
Also, it's a really weird reaction to have when you're about to be hit by a bus.
The normal reaction is, wow, I should be more careful crossing the road.
When that inevitably happens again, I better make sure I'm properly labelled.
Well, you're the only one that I know of who's almost been hit by a bus.
How did you react?
They shouted at the bus.
What did you shout?
Go back to bus school.
This is one of the greatest anecdotes in QI history, isn't it?
That comes up basically every week.
It's a joke.
Go back to bus school.
It's the greatest line ever.
Would you keep that in a card in your handbag?
Just hand it out to the bus driver.
Wouldn't it be amazing, though, if whenever you're called 999, if you find someone unconscious
on the floor, you call 999 and they say, OK, cool.
So first things first, have you looked through their handbag and have you checked their business
cards?
Is it the Queen of Sweden?
OK.
This has happened before.
She was really great, though, Queen Louise of Sweden.
In her first passport, it had a thing called special peculiarities where you put things
about your face, if you have a scar or whatever, and she wrote, walks like a parrot.
Really?
She's just to put her into a bit of context.
She is the auntie of Prince Philip.
Yes.
So she was the Mount Batten family, formerly Battenbergs, wasn't she?
That's right.
Battenbergs who hurriedly changed their name to Mount Batten when the Germans became the
bad guys.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And she was the great granddaughter of Queen Victoria, I think.
But all the European royal families are all just related to each other, aren't they?
They are.
Really?
I was touring World War II because all of the royal families are all related to each
other, but then they were in haulin countries that were all fighting against each other.
She works as a messenger, kind of giving messages between all of her family who weren't
allowed to talk to each other.
Not a spy.
I suppose you could call it a spy, couldn't you?
I mean, it's pretty much basically a double agent, but I think she was doing it quite
explicitly and not hiding it.
Not sitting on a bench, handing over a message, and they're like, I am the Queen of Sweden.
What does this mean?
I'm sorry, you're on camera.
And presumably it was more like, Bobby just had a baby rather than the Nazis are on their
way across the channel.
Yeah.
The Swedish royal family is quite interesting, though, and the modern Swedish royal family
is as well.
So there's Karl XVI, who's King now, who I don't think we've ever said on the podcast
is the 10th King Karl of Sweden.
Who did they miss out?
They added lots.
It goes back to the 15th century when a guy called Johann Magnus wrote this sort of fanciful
history of all the Swedish kings, and he just added a whole bunch of kings.
So he made up six Erics and six Karls, and they've kept that numerical system ever since.
But why were they referring to this fictional account as history?
It became really popular as a bit like the sagas, you know, it became a thing that was
always read.
I think it's like, we have King Arthur, for instance, and so if we were to have a new
King Arthur, we would probably call him Arthur II, wouldn't we?
Oh, I'd love to see.
And if Prince Harry became King, he would be Henry IX.
He'd be our first Henry since the dreaded Henry VIII.
Well, if he kept the name, right?
Although sometimes you take on a different name when you become royal.
Because Prince Charles will, we think, become Henry.
He won't become Charles.
No, we were discussing this.
We were.
We had a party last week at my place, which you were invited to, but you didn't come.
And it was so exciting that we started talking about the regular numbers of the Kings and
Queens of England.
We were so great at the time.
You so couldn't make it, guys.
He's going to be great.
Edward the Ninth, I think we found.
That was what you thought.
That's what the bookies reckon.
Is it?
I think so.
I should quickly add, just about the main fact itself, read this in a few places, found
a few sources, but nothing that I would say is concrete enough that I truly want to see
the card.
And if anyone knows if the card exists.
So the source for this, the original source was Queen Louise's niece, Dollar, who was
the Margraveen of Barden.
I don't know what that means.
But anyway, it was a relative who first said this.
Yeah.
OK, that's a good source.
Thank you.
Thank you all for helping me out.
There's a big reset.
OK, it is time for our final fact of the show.
And that is James.
OK, my fact this week is that last year in the UK, two eight year olds were caught speeding.
This came from a freedom of information question that was posed to the driver and vehicle licensing
agency.
And they asked for all of the different statistics.
And they also found out that 900 people in their nineties got penalty points for speeding
last year, including three people aged 99.
Although I reckon 99.
That's the oldest, but it's quite a coincidence that it's 99 and not 100 and something.
So I reckon anyone that's over 99, they just put 99.
Maybe there's only two spaces in the farm or something.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
I reckon.
Or you just don't find someone who's 100 or more for speeding.
You just ask their age, you go, fair enough, mate.
Go on.
Unfair that you dock the 99 year old, though.
Well, you know.
It's like one more year in your home.
Yeah, you've got to hang on to your 100th birthday.
That's like saying unfair that you won't let the 15 year old smoke when the 16 year
olds are allowed to.
I mean, you've got to draw the line somewhere, haven't you?
OK, sure.
99, that's a line.
I also think the smoking age might have gone up since I was a smoker.
So 16 year olds, if it's illegal, just check.
Well, you know, whatever, don't smoke as well, maybe consider that.
There have been quite a lot of weird speeding fines and driving fines this year.
So there have been two instances of people getting caught driving to the hospital
because their wives are in labor and getting stopped for speeding.
And so one was in the UK going at 101 miles an hour.
And then there was another guy in the US who missed the birth of his child
because he was taken to a cell.
Oh, no. Yeah.
Oh, that's hard.
It's really rough.
Because in the movies, there's no repercussions when you see them
breaking all the laws to get to the hospital.
Usually, like, on the contrary, I'll give you an escort,
which has never happened in real life, ever.
That happened to me once in Oldham.
Really? I wasn't speeding, but I was stuck.
And then the police gave me a lift to the football game
because they thought I'd missed the game.
And they put the siren on and they're probably not allowed to do this,
but they put the siren on and everyone moved out of the way.
And we flew through Oldham.
No way.
I'm just to get you to the...
Yeah. How are you stuck?
We got off at the wrong train station.
There's nothing even when we're wrong.
That's just bad travelling on your part.
It's just awesome policing by the policeman who's probably since been fired.
Absolutely nothing else going on in Oldham, if they're just doing that.
Just being like, you where are you going?
Can we give you a lift?
Sean Connery was once stopped for speeding by an officer named Sergeant James Bond.
No.
Wow.
I really hope he did the names Bond, James Bond.
But I'm going to need to see your license to kill.
And then your actual license.
We have in our in our book, we've got a similar sort of story.
It's called The Book of the Year 2018, your definitive guide
to the world's weirdest news.
Do you know when it comes out?
Yeah, October the 18th.
OK, where's it available?
It's going to be in bookshops. It's going to be online.
Yeah. And he's not here. We can say Amazon.
It's coming on Amazon. Yes.
This is the first time I've heard of it.
Remember, we found that thing of the guy who was done for drink driving,
but claimed that he wasn't drink driving because he was only drinking
every time he got to a traffic stop site.
Stop, have a swig.
Are they going to go?
This is sorry, Gunn.
No, you know, if I was just sighing, I just want to stay alive.
Did you know the first person to pass a driving test was called Mr. Beer?
No, I didn't know that.
In 1935, he paid 37.5p.
Just found that out.
And also found this weird thing that driving tests were suspended
in the Second World War, which makes sense.
They were suspended suspended again during the Suez crisis,
which is quite weird, and especially given that during the Suez crisis,
learners were allowed to drive unaccompanied.
And I think I don't know about Suez crisis,
but it's definitely true, the Second World War, that if you learn to drive
during the war, they just gave you a license.
You didn't need to take a test at all.
What, just because you've been through the war and learned how to drive?
You obviously, if you could drive enough to defeat the Nazis,
you could drive enough to go to the shell, right?
You can drive a tank through a minefield and not get blown up.
I think you can manage the M25.
Speaking of tanks, I read this yesterday.
So you're allowed to drive a tank on the road in the UK.
You need a special license.
But if you could get a provisional license, which is really easy,
a provisional tank license, then as long as there's someone
sat next to you who can drive a tank, then you can drive a tank
through the streets of the UK at any time.
But you need to have learner plates on the tank.
But you would be able to do that.
After you know, I knew that because the QI's production
coordination was telling me a great story about how she had to get
James Blunt to drive a tank through the BBC.
That was because he was an army guy.
So he knows how to drive a tank.
Yeah. But where do you get a tank?
This still feels like the main stumbling block.
My body has a tank.
Yeah, she just knew a guy.
I think he had a tank, who's your buddy?
Ed, you've met Ed once.
We met him outside Burgershow.
Oh, yeah, the guy in the tank.
Yeah.
His name's Ed Superior, and he bought a tank.
He was in the lakes. He was trying to find someone to park.
He used to have it parked outside Ash Gardner of MPRESS's house.
They were neighbours, and outside was his tank.
And we used to go and sit inside it.
He made it into this really nice sort of, you know,
where you have Netflix nights.
Oh, it was a hipster tank.
It was a white tank.
Okay, that is 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
about the things that we have said over the course of this podcast,
we can be found on our Twitter accounts.
I'm on at Shriverland, James.
At James Harkin.
Alex. At Alex Bell.
And Czenski.
You can email podcast at qi.com.
Yep, or you can go to our group Twitter account,
which is at no such thing, or to our website.
No such thing as a fish.com.
It's just been remade.
It has everything you would need from us
if you wanted anything.
If you wanted anything from us.
It's got links to tickets as all of our previous episodes.
It has all of our merchandise.
It looks awesome.
Oh, I got speed up.
Okay, that's it. We'll see you next week.
Goodbye.