No Such Thing As A Fish - 289: No Such Thing As A Horse Called Brian

Episode Date: October 4, 2019

Dan, James, Anna and Andrew discuss leaping maggots, the point of motion sickness and why you shouldn't put on too much red lipstick. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandi...se and more episodes.

Transcript
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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 am sitting here with Anna Chazinski, Andrew Hunter Murray, 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, James. Okay, my fact this week is that using too much red lipstick can make your urine turn red.
Starting point is 00:00:43 That's weird, so it gets into your, um, your kidney somehow. Yeah, I reckon. How do you wear lipstick? I must have worn it wrong. You've worn it, what, you're not wearing it on the outside, are you? I screwed it up, you put it on your tongue, didn't you? Um, so, I found this on the website of improbable research, our friends, uh, the, who also make the Ig Nobel Prizes, and this was a case for a 28-year-old woman who turned up at a nephrology
Starting point is 00:01:09 clinic with a five-day history of passing red-colored urine, but she didn't have any other symptoms. She had no pain, she didn't have chills, like, she didn't have anything else that could have caused this, like, blood in your urine, for instance, and the doctor said that the only noticeable feature was her bright red lipstick, which I think it sounds a bit harsh, actually. Yeah. Um, I'm sure she had lots of other great features, but anyway, they tested all the other things like her liver function and her blood count and everything like that, and they found out
Starting point is 00:01:39 that she would apply her lipstick 20 to 25 times a day, and they worked out that it was the lipstick that was causing the urine to turn red. And it kind of makes sense because, like, lots of things can make your urine turn colors, like lots of food. Yes. And you're definitely ingesting this stuff, then it could happen. Is that an abnormal number of times to reapply lipstick over the course of a day? It's certainly more than I've ever done.
Starting point is 00:02:03 Yeah. Wow. It's weird, because just the idea that it's, let's say, beetroot, not known to color your urine, I don't think, so much as the back passage when you go to the toilet. Oh, no, it does both. Yeah. What? I would say it's more commonly is known to color your urine.
Starting point is 00:02:19 Yeah, it is. It's so, so discreet the way you said back passage. And also, it doesn't color your back passage. Although it might do. No. It's more coloring the thing that comes out of your back passage. I mean, it's a bit of a stain on me. How have you been eating it?
Starting point is 00:02:36 Have you been having the beetroot suppositories again? Yeah. Exactly. I've been smuggling. Do you get that, then? Yeah, I do. Yeah, I've stopped eating beetroot off the back of that. I find it too scary to look down and see a blood bath in my toilet.
Starting point is 00:02:50 You're quite special. So it's only like maximum 14% of people who get any kind of coloration from beetroot. So it's quite lucky to have it. Lucky old you. And what percent is through the anus? We should say in case people start to panic at home, it does also come in the poo. It comes back out both sides. Oh, OK.
Starting point is 00:03:09 But it's, yeah, and it's called beeturia, the condition. And it's harmless. But if you suddenly start doing it and you've never done it before, so suddenly you beetroot, you're wee red or you poo red and it hasn't happened before, then you should get it checked out because it might be an iron deficiency because the reason that most of us don't have red wee when we eat beetroot is because the iron reacts with the red pigment, which is called betelene. So any iron in our stomachs reacts with that.
Starting point is 00:03:34 And so that creates a different compound, which isn't red. And so you might be iron deficient if you're not doing that. That's interesting because you, I know, Anna, and also Andy, don't like beetroot. I hate it. I never eat it and I love it. So if I ever have iron deficiency, I'm going to be one of the first to know about it. You are one of the first people on earth. We could be anemic.
Starting point is 00:03:56 As you guys might be. Yeah, exactly. But you would never know, right? Yeah. Maybe this is why I faint 15 times. And it's only some lipsticks, I think, that can do it. And it just happened that this lady was doing it because apparently most of them dissolve in fats.
Starting point is 00:04:11 And so once even if you apply certain lipsticks lots of times a day, you might be all right. We won't turn red, but as well. When we go on tar, we ask people to send their own facts. And one of the most common ones that I get is that if you want to choose the perfect shade of nude lipstick, as in that looks natural, then you should get the color that is the same color as your nipples. Oh, this is an unbelievably common fact that I get said. It's so weird that it's one of the few that I get like five or six times every tar.
Starting point is 00:04:42 It's because you keep wearing lipstick that really clashes with the rest of your face. Because I do the Tartopolis, why he's got green nipples. And this apparently is kind of half true. So it came from most people got it from a show called The Doctors on NBC. They famously mentioned this and they say that it generally does work. But then Washington University Medical Center, when asked about this, did point out that your nipple color does change throughout your life. So it's kind of an average works.
Starting point is 00:05:15 But if your nipples have changed color recently, then maybe yeah, well, they go gray, don't they? As you age. My hair. That's right. Yeah. And you should wear gray lipstick. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:27 Absolutely. So wait, should you take an average of your lifetime nipple color and always use that lipstick? Or should you have your lipstick vary in accordance with your nipple color? I think you should go into the lipstick shop, get the color of your nipples and then if it doesn't look right. I've tried that. I've tried to expose myself in lipstick shops.
Starting point is 00:05:45 I get removed from the building. What you need is a top that only exposes your nipple so you can subtly compare the lipstick color to the nipple color. I don't know how subtle that kind of top is going to be. I've just got a thing just as we were talking about beetroot before because beetroot was actually a substitute for lipstick during the war, during the Second World War. Yeah. So there was a big push that the English government did, which they had a slogan for, which was
Starting point is 00:06:08 beauty is duty. And this was a thing because Hitler supposedly really disapproved of makeup. So the British government wanted to make it a proud thing in the country. And they released, there were certain lipsticks that were released during World War II that were called like regimental red or lips in uniform. But this was before rationing became, you know, and the materials were sort of depleting. And so they stopped doing it. But as a result, women still wanted to sort of keep up the appearance of makeup.
Starting point is 00:06:35 So beetroot juice was done in place of lipstick and mascara and so on. And boot polish was used as well as, but yeah, it was interesting, you know, beetroot juice. Yeah. You know why Hitler didn't like lipstick? No. It's because he's vegetarian. He said that lipstick was evil because it was made from animal fat rescued from sewage. Oh, so wait a minute, but it is kind of made with animal products, a lot of makeup, right?
Starting point is 00:07:00 Yes, it is much less than used to be, but yes. But the red in lipstick for centuries has come from these bugs. Yeah. Cottoneal insects. Yeah. I think now they often make plant-based, but yeah. But in Hitler's time, they didn't use catch-in-the-lure. I think maybe sometimes they did, not necessarily rescue from sewage though.
Starting point is 00:07:18 They would have definitely. But it's had this weird history lipstick where it's just gone in and out of fashion and popularity and it's been condemned and then praised and then condemned and then praised. And so just before the Elizabethan period, it was basically evil. So Catholic priests would say that a woman wearing lipstick was essentially the spawn of Satan. You'd have to go to confession and confess that you'd worn lipstick and it was thought as being deceitful.
Starting point is 00:07:44 So you were deceiving men into falling in love with you and it was grounds for annulment for instance in a lot of places in Pennsylvania, I think, and in Britain for a time it was grounds for annulment. It's grounds for annulment. Yeah. If you married a woman who had worn lipstick at some point while seducing you. Come on. False advertising.
Starting point is 00:08:03 No way. False advertising. Annulment's worth it under this law. I imagine there were a few, but they were mostly loopholes as in they were looking for an annulment. Yeah. It wasn't any man who got home, woke up next to his wife the next morning, went, oh my god, what are they?
Starting point is 00:08:18 Yeah. Wait a minute. Your nipples and lips are completely different colours. So in Egypt, prostitutes had to wear lipstick. And the reason being that if they didn't, they would be punished because it implied that they would deceitfully posing as ladies. God, you just can't, it's a rough beat being a woman wearing lipstick or not wearing lipstick, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:08:40 Yeah. Either you get your marriage cancelled or you get mistaken for a prostitute or. But then in other times then you're really popular like Queen Elizabeth loved it and so it became popular then. So I think it's important if you're a woman time travelling to know exactly what time period you've been dropped in, so whether you wear the lipstick. Also important to be a queen rather than a prostitute. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:00 Really speaking, easier life. If you did, if you wear a prostitute wearing lipstick in ancient Egypt or ancient Greece, then you made it out of quite weird stuff. But actually one reason why being a prostitute might have been better than a queen is that you couldn't afford the good stuff, which was actually often the materials that really damaged you and poisoned you. Like lead and stuff. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:09:23 So you made substitutes, so they'd make it from sheep sweat, was very popular apparently. I don't even know how you harvest that. And human saliva and crocodile excrement in ancient Greece. I have the thing about crocodile excrement that I don't think it's actually crocodile excrement. Really? I think it's a metaphor for Egyptian soil. I knew that you thought that for contraceptives, but do you think it's the same for this?
Starting point is 00:09:46 Yeah, maybe. I mean, it seems like clear, doesn't it, that they're going around French kissing a crocodile pat. What sheep sweat a metaphor for? Probably something. I don't know. How do you get sheep sweat? Do you ring them out?
Starting point is 00:09:58 How do you get it? Yeah, I don't know. And that wouldn't be red though, I imagine. I think the earth would be red, but the sheep sweat was just going to make your lips taste a bit salty. Sweat. Don't hippo sweats red or purple? They do.
Starting point is 00:10:14 They were very popular around there. You don't want to get up and harvest hippo sweat, do you? Just for a bit of lipstick. No, but you could, I suppose if you lived with a bunch of sisters, maybe you'd have a room where you kept the hippo and you just ran and snogged it quickly and then ran away. Why are you snogging the hippo? It's the quickest way to get the lipstick on. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:30 No, it's hippo sweat. Yeah. No, you're not kissing it in the mouth. You're just wearing sweat on it. Oh, you're just kissing the hippo's side? Yeah. Right. Queen Elizabeth was wearing an inch of lipstick when she died, apparently.
Starting point is 00:10:40 No, she wasn't. Come on. Wow. An inch. Do you know how big an inch is? It's ridiculous. I'm just reporting what people reported at the time. It's like those trout pouts that you get these days when you put Botox in your lips and that
Starting point is 00:10:52 kind of makes them stick out about half an inch. She looked like one of those. Botox gone wrong. She was lipstick gone wrong. It can't be true, Anna. It can't be true. Look, I think an inch is probably an exaggeration from the time. You know, people are seeing a bit blurry when someone's died.
Starting point is 00:11:05 You would say the only way is the Earl of Essex because he was one of her favourites. And of course, that's a big lip look that's popular on that TV show. Of course. That's very good. Of course. OK, it is time for fact number two and that is Andy. My fact is that some maggots can jump 40 times their own length, but only in August. I know.
Starting point is 00:11:30 It's true. So we've just missed it. If you want to see it, you've got to wait another year. Yeah, I'm sorry. So this is a specific species of maggot or fly because maggots are the larvae of fly. It's called asphondilia and they're only a third of a centimetre long, but they've been observed jumping up to 12 centimetres, which is really impressive. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:50 It's the equivalent of a human jumping 200 feet. Yeah. Although we always say this, it's not the exact equivalent because it's much easier for small things to jump these distances than big things. It's the equivalent of a miniaturised human jumping 12 centimetres and what's the size of a maggot? It's very impressive. And are they practicing for when they fly?
Starting point is 00:12:10 Is that the idea? Yes, they are. Yeah. No, it's actually an escape plan. So they're hatched out onto these plants and then they need to make a swift exit because they're very easy prey when they're just sitting around on these plants. So they need to jump quite far. They're born in galls, you know, the larvae are laid in plants, the mothers lay the eggs
Starting point is 00:12:33 in plants and these create swellings called galls and they hatch out of them. So then they need to escape. And the cool thing is they have no legs and yet they jump. Yeah. How are they doing that? What? Like a slinky. It's a press spring.
Starting point is 00:12:48 Yeah. Yeah. Basically. Yeah. Cool. They sort of improvise a leg. I've seen your improvising badly and very good as it is, you don't suddenly sprout a leg. No, you're right.
Starting point is 00:13:00 We don't do whole limb work. Well, that's why he's recently been replaced with a maggot in presentations, hasn't he? They sort of fold themselves up. So you know how octopuses sometimes make artificial elbows, right? You know, they just fold their limb at a certain point. So they do that and they build up a load of pressure leaning against that slightly folded leg. And then they flick, they release and they flick themselves into the air.
Starting point is 00:13:22 But they also have on either end these kind of little hairs that when they touch each other, so when they bend forward, it's like touching your toes, they kind of, it's like an adhesive. So it holds on really strong. And as they push all this liquid down into their bottom, the tension gets greater and greater, but they're still hanging on and when that snaps, they just fling into the air. Yeah. Nice. Relatable octopus-based analogy to help me understand that better.
Starting point is 00:13:45 No. Who knows the octopus-elbow thing? I'm not sure we've talked about that. We probably have, but it's pretty arcane, isn't it? People are going to remember all those things. Yeah, you're right. So a related fact is that octopuses sometimes improvise elbows, which is pretty cool. Like, if you're chatting to me in the pub, you could say that because you know that I'm
Starting point is 00:14:05 going to tell that. Do not improvise your own limbs at home. Yeah, that's incredible. We've missed the big one here, though. Why just August? What's going on that it's one month of the year? Is it because the football season's just started and they get really excited? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:21 Do you know, I don't think we do know exactly why it is. It may be because they hatch in August. Yes. And then after August, they've turned into flies. Yeah. And they don't need to do this jumping trick anymore. Okay. I think that's a bit of a...
Starting point is 00:14:34 I'm genuinely not sure. I did have a look at the paper and it wasn't actually very clear why this happens. Okay. Okay. Apparently, this study came after the group had a load of these goal maggots in a Petri dish and then they came to look at them and there were only two left because they were jumping all around the office and they thought, oh, I'm going to have to properly study this. That's so funny.
Starting point is 00:14:56 Yeah. Maggots are really cool. No. Actually, they can get really hot. Go on. Because when they eat, they increase their temperature because of all the digestive juices and they're kind of wriggling around and stuff like that. And there's usually a load of them in one little place and they're all wriggling and
Starting point is 00:15:14 they're all getting hotter and hotter and hotter. And sometimes it can get so hot that they start to die. Oh, that doesn't have a funny, jokey, fact-y ending at all. But, seriously, it's God. But they do... I think they can sometimes recognize that this is starting to happen, like, you know, the guy next to him's just died, so this is getting too hot. So what they'll do is they'll, as a group, just retreat to a cooler place.
Starting point is 00:15:35 Yeah. Well, actually, it's like the ones that are in... It's a bit like, you know, groups of penguins. Again, this is the kind of thing that me and Andy are going to know in our conversation about most people want. So, like, the ones on the outside move to the inside and the ones to the inside move to the outside to kind of keep the temperature. Do they do that?
Starting point is 00:15:51 Yeah. Imagine being in a restaurant and people are just going so crazy about the food they start dying. That is an exciting but also stressful restaurant opening, isn't it? I think it's more like being in a mosh pit and getting so hot people die, which maybe they would. Yeah. But the thing that's like the penguins is also how they manage to eat so fast.
Starting point is 00:16:08 So, maggots are useful for things like clearing up garbage. You can use maggots for clearing up our trash and stuff because they can consume stuff at an amazing rate for their size. They can't carry it away quite as quickly as the bin man. They're working up to it. And your neighbors really hate you, by the way, Anna, you're pouring the bags and bags of maggots over your bins every week. It's got to stop.
Starting point is 00:16:30 They're very efficient, we've got to give them work. So they do this and they are less efficient than the bin men, but the reason they are still efficient is that, for instance, if you've got a lump of food, then they'll be, let's say, 100 maggots and they'll form a little mountain that climbs up the mound and the maggots can eat solidly for about five minutes and then they get a bit tired and they need a break. And so they'll be maggots pushing them further and further up the mound of food because there are maggots queuing behind them.
Starting point is 00:16:58 And then once they get to the top of the mound, then they've had enough food and they tumble off the top and back to the back of the queue. And the next maggot is up there eating it. Do you see what I mean? So it's like a cycle. It's like going up the escalator on the tube and you have to eat one donut every time you go three feet up, but then you get to the top and you're full of donuts and then you go down the...
Starting point is 00:17:19 Shrae, yourself down the down the down the down. Look, Mr. Nalogy did start so far, but he's quite good at that. So this thing of mounting themselves up. I read an article saying that they can be mischievous sometimes, maggots, and that's a bit of a stretch. But if you keep them in a glass enclosure without food and without a lid, they will organize themselves into a prison break because they will all get together in a corner and they will push up and up and up, they will pile up until the ones at the top can escape.
Starting point is 00:17:51 So if you keep maggots, if you're a scientist, you sometimes have to have a moat around them to stop them escaping. Wow. Isn't that crazy? Yeah, that's awesome. One of the two the poor kind of Bruce Willis and Armageddon guy is who stays behind and gives them another leg up. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:18:05 But I think most of them stay behind, don't they? Yeah, yeah. Really? It's only a few of... Yeah. A few brave souls make it out. Yeah. Gosh.
Starting point is 00:18:14 Yeah. I guess the most intelligent ones get to go out to try it. No, it won't. It'd be the strongest ones. But they've got to find a way of busting the rest out, so who do you free? Of course. Probably a group of maybe five or six, you'd have one quite strong one, one really smart one, one sexy one.
Starting point is 00:18:28 Yeah. Well, just to keep the others entertained. Speaking of sexy, they can breathe through their bottoms. Cool. Cool. And that's... Breathe. Breathe.
Starting point is 00:18:41 Yeah, not breathe. Oh, yeah, I was going to say. They breathe through their bottoms and that's another way that they eat really quickly because they can just continuously eat like you say until they get tired because they're breathing out their bum. Yeah. So they don't need to breathe out their mouths. That's great.
Starting point is 00:18:53 That's amazing. That's so cool. That means they can't poo as quickly as we can because they need to break constantly during pooing. Yeah. But no, they switch back to mouth breathing while they're having a poo. Yeah. What they can't do is eat a hot dog and have a poo at the same time, which we can do that.
Starting point is 00:19:10 Yeah. So that's why we are a higher being than maggots. Yeah. I mean, again, I'm not coming to any of your restaurant openings. That is the big pitch. You'll notice your seats are also toilets and go. So they do, they do love rotting meat. And that was the cause of this massive misinformation campaign about maggots that went on until about
Starting point is 00:19:33 200 years ago, which is the spontaneous generation thing, which I don't think we've talked about before. But so everyone used to think that maggots were spontaneously generated out of dead flesh because you'd have a rotting carcass and then maggots would suddenly appear and flies would come out of that. And that's just how people thought life happened. Kind of makes sense when you think of it. If you didn't know, you know, there's absolutely no reason you wouldn't think it if you didn't
Starting point is 00:19:57 know what we know now. And it was finally proven in 1668 by this guy called Francesco ready that flies come from maggots and flies aren't just spontaneously produced from carcasses. And he did that by putting sort of rotting meat in jars and some of the jars he'd cover up and some he wouldn't. And he'd be like, look, life isn't in the jars that I covered up. But he had to because he was around about the time of Galileo and lots of other scientists who were getting in trouble with the church.
Starting point is 00:20:23 So every time he found something out like this, he had to go through the Bible and find a bit of Bible passage that supported it. So he'd find the Bible passage that said, all life comes from life. So it's OK. Got some nice light. Don't worry about it. I mean, it sounds like he would have been quite low on the church's inquisition list after Galileo.
Starting point is 00:20:42 Galileo is saying some pretty punchy things about the relationship between the earth and the sun. I don't know. It was a huge deal. It really is. So just saying that life couldn't come out of nothing and questioning where life came from was a massive deal. Because where did Jesus?
Starting point is 00:20:56 Not Jesus. Where did God get? Jesus wasn't a maggot, I think. But how did God make life? If we're saying life always comes from life and you need the original thing, how do God make it in one day? OK. Let's get him in for some inquisition.
Starting point is 00:21:11 He's a big man. But his ideas, his ideas, he debunked. The debunked ideas dated back to Anaximanda of Miletus. And he thought something really cool. So he was 7th century BC. He was the first person who posited this idea of spontaneous generation of life. And he thought how it happened was he looked at fetuses of children and he thought they looked kind of fishy.
Starting point is 00:21:32 And so what he thought was that he thought that if water warmed up with the sun, then it sort of created a fish. OK. So there'd be this reaction which created a living fish. And then some fish gestated and gave birth to other fish. And then others that decided to gestate for longer would eventually create a human. And so he said fish would crawl up onto the bank when they were really far into their pregnancy, give birth to an adult human.
Starting point is 00:21:57 And then that adult human would go away and have more kids. He's kind of right in a way. He's just missing out millions and millions of years of evolution. He's kind of right that you end up with a human and you start with a fish. You're right. He just sped it up a lot. It was fast forward. It was Darwin in fast forward.
Starting point is 00:22:12 Amazing. OK. It is time for fact number three. And that is Anna. My fact this week is that humans may have developed motion sickness to stop us falling out of trees. And read the rest of it. I've got just a theory but an interesting one for what you said round.
Starting point is 00:22:34 Yeah. Whenever I pitch that, it gets a flat out no. And here we are. Just an idea. Just a crazy idea. Well, this is an idea from scientists, not from some crazy yeti fanatic in Arkansas. I'm sorry. She doesn't mean that, Mike.
Starting point is 00:22:52 The theory is about how we and other great apes lived up trees as many of them still do. We are great apes, I guess, aren't we? We're the greatest of all the apes. All right, Donald Trump, let's calm down. And basically, if we ever lived up trees millions of years ago, hundreds of thousands of years ago, then it was quite bad for us to want to climb really, really high up onto the really wobbly branches because that made it more likely that it would snap and you'd fall off and die.
Starting point is 00:23:17 And that's why we developed motion sickness. And the fact is that chimps and things that still do live in trees do avoid going on those wobbly branches. And lots of other animals do have motion sickness. So it does seem to be like a risk aversion thing. Because if you don't, the thing about falling out of a tree, I guess, is it's quite hard to learn from your mistakes gradually and evolve that gradually. Because once you've fallen out, you're either really severely injured or you're dead.
Starting point is 00:23:42 And they've looked into this. I was reading a book about this and it talks about the actual frequency that elicits motion sickness, the amount of wobble, the pace of the wobble. And it is about the same frequency as the trees that people would have been in would have swayed at. Wow. I've also read that it's about the same frequency as is generated by wind generated waves. So there's another theory that it's from under the water because fish also get motion sickness. And if you get wind blowing waves, it makes you feel a bit woozy.
Starting point is 00:24:13 You get to a certain point where actually it's quite dangerous. And so you get away from those areas. Same thing. Fish have the aversion because then you get disoriented if you're being swept around by the waves. Fish get seasick. Yeah. Fish get seasick.
Starting point is 00:24:27 Well, humans get land sick. Yeah. If you go on a boat for too long and then you walk off the boat for a while, you feel really woozy. It's a French thing called Maldedibachement, which is like Maldemere, it's a Maldedibachement is illness from disembarking. Yeah. I mean, you also can just call it land sickness. I mean, that's what the French do call it, I suppose.
Starting point is 00:24:49 Yeah. No, there's a French podcast right now saying it is called Land Sickness. It's so weird to think of all the ancestors of ours, as in the, you know, ape-like ancestors of ours who didn't have motion sickness, who then died as a result because they were climbing. They didn't know not to climb a wobbly tree. Yeah. And as a result, they died out because there are in many ways the superior beings. Because they could climb so much higher.
Starting point is 00:25:13 They don't get seasick. Yeah. Yeah. Or tree sick. Or tree sick. Tree sick. And just on their seething as well, just because it's a fact, the word nausea comes from the same word as nautical or something like that, because it's to do with the sea.
Starting point is 00:25:29 Because it's to do with seasickness originally. Nausea, ancient Greek. Well, just on seasickness as well, I was reading that Nelson suffered severe seasickness his entire life. From age 12 onwards to his death, the guy was constantly vomiting on boats. Why do you not become a tree surgeon? Exactly. Well, he wrote letters about it, didn't he?
Starting point is 00:25:50 Yeah. And he signed off in his letters to his lovers. He'd sign off your affectionate seasick Nelson. And he said, I am ill every time it blows hard. Maybe this means something else. Yeah. He was writing to his lovers. We're unclear.
Starting point is 00:26:05 He said, nothing but my love of the profession keeps me at sea for more than an hour. Wow. So if you really love what you do, it doesn't matter if you vomit throughout. Do you know another great nautical hero who had seasickness? Jacques Cousteau. Well, Captain Ahab. Entirely possible. But it's the last Captain Birdseye.
Starting point is 00:26:23 He was really seasick. The fish finger guy. The fish finger guy. But was he an actual captain that one? Always he liked just an actor. He was an actor for TV Adverts. But this was the big pitch where they unveiled him to the public. He's called Mitch Cummins.
Starting point is 00:26:39 He was a South African. And he really looked the part, you know, great big bushy beard and probably looked like Captain Birdseye. But then he got very recently replaced by a man called Ricardo Aserbi, an Italian, who is basically a model. He's really, really, like it's too good looking to be Captain Birdseye. Seriously? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:57 How bizarre. And he's quite young as well. And the whole thing just stinks. Does he have a big beard? Does he have a beard? He's got a beard. Is it like a big white beard? It's more like an iron gray, hunky, modally beard.
Starting point is 00:27:09 If you want to get off with this guy, you just give him a cool Andy. Yeah. If you want a bird's eye view. It's better than the fish finger. The thing is that a lot of people get motion sickness now because we drive in cars. Yeah. Which we didn't evolve to do. And people use VR stuff like headsets and stuff.
Starting point is 00:27:33 It's a real problem with people getting motion sickness. Apparently, there are some VR games where 100% of users get motion sickness. Like literally everyone. And usually for most games, it's between 40 and 70% of people get it. So it's like a really common thing, motion sickness. And yet admirably, like ratio Lord Nelson, they're so passionate about the pursuit that they will make this. Exactly. My wife plays them all the time.
Starting point is 00:27:58 It's almost as if being in a virtual reality is preferable to being married to me. She's throwing up constantly. Does she write your letters? But then she puts the VR set up. Does she write you letters from inside the game saying, you're affectionate, seasick, Polina. Have you heard of the SS Bessemer? This is a very cool anti seasickness innovation from the Victorian times.
Starting point is 00:28:22 It was a steamer ship across the English Channel for passengers. And it was experimental. It was a guy called Henry Bessemer who invented it. And the idea was it had a room inside it, which would be suspended using incredibly elaborate counterweights and counterbalances and all sorts of mechanics to keep it exactly in position while the ship moved up and down the waves and left and right. Really cool. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:48 So he built a model of it at his house. Huge model, which could, you know, the thing would move around and the room would stay the same. And it got a lot of investment. And on its first trial, it couldn't quite sail properly. I think partly due to this stuff inside it. And it smashed into the pier at Calais. It was slightly fixed. And then on its second, he said, oh, we haven't had enough time to fix it properly.
Starting point is 00:29:10 So it had only one public voyage. And it crashed into the Calais pier again. Did it have a massive magnet in it or something? It was a disaster. It's a shame. I wonder if that's the same Bessemer as did the Bessemer process for smelting aluminium or whatever it is. Don't know. Was that a profound cock-up as well?
Starting point is 00:29:33 It was. Sounds like it doesn't know what he's doing. He designed something that's not a boat, clearly, if it's just constantly crashing. I don't know. Was there nobody steering it? It had people steering it. You can't say it's not a boat just because it crashes. You can't say the Titanic is not a boat.
Starting point is 00:29:48 Not a boat. Just a rock, as far as I'm concerned. We should talk about what's actually going on. So it's just the difference of information between what your eyes are seeing when you're on a ship, this is. So your eyes are seeing, let's say, a stable room because you're in a ship room and you're moving with the ship. So it's all the same to you. But your body, your inner ear can tell that you're moving around. And actually, that's the case in all these things, right?
Starting point is 00:30:14 Yeah. So if you're in a car, it's the same. You're reading a book which is still, but actually everything else is moving around you. Yeah. But there's a third thing as well. So apart from your eyes and your inner ear, there's a third bit of your body which is also sending you conflicting information. Can we guess what it is? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:30:30 Okay. Well, you're saying your eyes, your ear and... And that little boxing bag at the back of your mouth. The uvula. Yeah. Yeah. You can imagine that would work. If it's tilting over.
Starting point is 00:30:42 Yeah. If it's swaying. Okay. No. Great guess. Great guess. Oh, it's close. You're so close.
Starting point is 00:30:50 Oh, is it in your bottom? If you're sitting down, it's in your bottom. And this is a... Wait a minute. What is outside of my bottom when I'm standing up, but inside my bottom when I'm sitting down? Your feet. If you're standing up, you can tell this through your feet. And if you're sitting down through your bottom.
Starting point is 00:31:01 Got it. And it's a sense called proprioception. And it's where if you're swaying, there's more pressure on one side of your feet and then on the other. You know what I mean? Yeah. Your body senses this. That's the thing that can give you motion sickness or if you're sitting down, it's on your bottom.
Starting point is 00:31:19 Yeah. And it's like when you're on a tube train, you know, you can feel the acceleration really strongly on one side. Yeah. That's really cool. Other things that get seasickness. Oh, yeah. I mean, loads of stuff does really.
Starting point is 00:31:30 So dogs, people, anyone who's had a dog will know that they get motion sickness. It's bloody irritating in a car. Mice amphibians fish who said frogs get it quite badly. So they tested this, but they often test it by putting them in parabolic conditions. So it's simulating weightlessness by sort of spinning or spinning them round to simulate this sort of concentric movement. And so I was reading a study about whether frogs get motion sick and they said the way we find out is we put them in these containers and then we subject them to parabolic flight
Starting point is 00:32:01 and then we open the containers and the presence of vomitus in their containers after flight will be used to indicate if they get motion sick. My wife, we brought her up far today, but she's going on one of these parabolic flights next year. Wow. So I wonder if she'll vomit. Yeah. Well, do you know how she can tell is by the presence of vomitus in the container?
Starting point is 00:32:23 I mean, is that just vomit US? It's Latin for vomit. I mean, why do they need to still say vomitus? It's bizarre. I looked this up because I thought they must have made that up. Yep. It's just vomitus. The definition is the stuff that comes out of your mouth when you vomit.
Starting point is 00:32:36 It's vomit. Wow. But anyway, it turns out they are different to us and how they seasick themselves. Are we talking about frogs? Frogs, yes, because they don't throw up at the time. They throw up afterwards, which is actually quite considerate. So they will wait until the cars stopped or they won't do it on the roller coaster. But it usually happens between a few minutes and 24 hours afterwards.
Starting point is 00:32:55 Almost like a hangover vomit, right? Yes. I was reading that the guys who built the Golden Gate Bridge, the builders supposedly were put on a special diet by the leader of the construction works guy called Strauss. I can't find any detail though about what that diet was. But the idea was the diet was for motion sickness. It was for dizziness because people were very scared when they were building this bridge. You had to climb very high.
Starting point is 00:33:20 And so supposedly there was a diet to stop that. But a really cool extra thing about that was what they ended up doing was they built a giant net under the bridge. It cost $130,000 and it was like a circus trapeze net. And the idea was the dizziness would have been a huge factor in the construction pace that was going on. And by building this little netting, it meant that people could go and work harder with the knowledge that they would probably survive if they fell off.
Starting point is 00:33:47 And 19 people did fall off. Oh my God, did they all live? Yeah, yeah. And they became what was known as part of the Halfway to Hell Club. When was that built? Did you say? It was 1932, 36. Okay.
Starting point is 00:34:01 So they probably wouldn't have had any effective actual medicines at that time to deal with seasickness because the drugs weren't invented until the 50s. And the drugs just switch off the information coming from the inner ear that we today. So the Victorian cures involved sucking lemons, which did absolutely no good. No, just did not help. There were loads of cures which didn't do any good actually. Opium, I think, did some good. But opium's good for everything.
Starting point is 00:34:26 Something that removes you mentally from any kind of reality is probably going to stop you being aware of your seasickness. If you're the captain of the ship, unfortunately. That's why it crashed. There are some special glasses you can buy that have been made by Citroen, the car company. They're called C-Truen. Very cool. C-Truen.
Starting point is 00:34:47 Nice. C-Truen, C-Truen. Yeah, C-Truen. I don't think they thought of the C-Truen. But yeah, they have this blue liquid inside them and it gives you an artificial horizon because a lot of it is being able to see the horizon, isn't it? Being able to see that moving at the same way as you're feeling it's moving. So whichever way you move, it makes the horizon look like it's in that direction.
Starting point is 00:35:10 Apparently they do work. After about 10 to 12 minutes, your motion sickness will just disappear. That's really clever. But what is the point in them? Because the only time that you're not looking at the horizon, the reason you get travel sick is when you're reading or something and therefore you're not looking outside, you're not seeing the world go by. But if you're wearing these weird horizon glasses, can you read a book with them?
Starting point is 00:35:30 I guess that's what I want to know. Can you read a book? Can you read a book? I think you can. Well, I'm wearing the C-Truen. Can you? I think so. The main reason they've invented them actually is because when we have self-driving cars,
Starting point is 00:35:40 people won't be driving and looking at the road. They'll be playing video games or they'll be reading books or doing whatever. So you need to come up with a new way of dealing with that because otherwise, whenever you open any self-driving car, it'll be full of vomitus. But just every time you got to any destination, you just open the door and a sea of vomitus comes out. Oh, the future is terrible. OK, it's time for our final fact of the show and that is my fact.
Starting point is 00:36:11 My fact this week is to honour the US Supreme Court judge Antonin Scalia, Virginia's George Mason University School of Law renamed itself Antonin Scalia School of Law. Then immediately renamed itself again after it was pointed out that the acronym would be asshole. Fair enough. Yeah. So asshole. Asshole. Asshole.
Starting point is 00:36:34 I said asshole, didn't I? Yeah. I went too far on that one. Asshole. Asshole. So this was, I think the way it worked out is they sort of announced this, let's say on a Thursday. And by Tuesday, there was so much public ridicule online that the school's dean made an announcement that it was going to be renamed off the back of it.
Starting point is 00:36:51 And they named it because they'd just gotten a massive donation from a few people, right? Yeah. They got $30 million donation, 10 million of it came from the Charles Koch Foundation. Really? So they could have called it the Charles Koch School of Law, which would have been much better. That's true. Now the Antonin Scalia Law School, but that's still ASLS, which looks in an uncharitable like, like assholes.
Starting point is 00:37:14 Or assless is what I see when I see that. Very yes. Okay. So more stuff on acronyms. Yeah. Does anyone know what the acronym or what the word spam stands for? You know, the food stuff. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:29 Rather than the stuff. I would think it's something, is it something ham? Okay. What would it be? Spurious ham. Spurious ham. That's it. Well, most people would tell you that it stands for spiced ham.
Starting point is 00:37:43 That's what everyone thought it used to mean. But then according to spam, the company, they now tell us that it stands for sizzle pork and mmm. What? Which I imagine might be a back formation. Yeah. Is it, are they saying sizzle, pork? Actually, they're saying sizzle, full stop, pork, full stop, and full stop.
Starting point is 00:38:10 Mmm. Full stop. Mmm. I also say mmm to that, but in a more skeptical way, I think that they would have wanted. Yours comes with a question mark at the end every time. Wow. That's a, that's a terrible back formation. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:24 It's so clunky. So there's a difference between an acronym and an initialism. I think it's very important that we nail down. Oh, okay. So an acronym is, well, some, all of these things are acronyms, but some people say, and it's not really hard and fast, that initialisms are things where it's just strings of letters. So the FBI is an initialism. YMCA.
Starting point is 00:38:46 YMCA. Yeah. I call it mmmka. And that's the difference, right? If it became a word. Exactly. So if people started saying, I go to the mmmka or scuba. Scuba is initials, but it's also become a word in its own right.
Starting point is 00:39:04 So that's an acronym. Self-contained underwater breathing equipment. Apparatus. Apparatus. That would be Scoob. Scoob. I could be more fun. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:13 And also you get the very exciting marriage of the two, don't you? This is where the two come together. It's a bit frowned upon in the communities of initialisms and acronyms. It's like Romeo and Juliet, but you've got CD-ROM, of course. Okay. JPEG. And that's it, actually. They're the only two Romeo and Juliet's of the initialism.
Starting point is 00:39:32 So, okay. What's the deal with the JPEG then? So JPEG is J is just Joint Photographic Experts Group. So part of it you're just saying the letter and part of it you're saying a word. Exactly. Holy. Wow. God, that is more amazement than that deserves.
Starting point is 00:39:47 I just didn't know what it was. You couldn't say JPEG, though. You couldn't say JPEG. You couldn't say Kodrom. Kodrom. You could, but we just don't. In fact, we rarely refer to CD-ROMs. Speak for yourself.
Starting point is 00:40:01 I got a few things on just name changes. Okay. So one of the things I guess that comes up a lot in newspapers is that Peter, and this is the animal rights group, they constantly want places to change their name if there's something that's associated. Oh, yeah. For example. We did on the podcast that they wanted to change great fry up to great vegan fry up.
Starting point is 00:40:24 That's right. Yeah, exactly. So there's a town that they wanted to have changed. It's a village called Wool. It's an English village. They wanted it to be changed to vegan Wool. That was their big pitch. Did they?
Starting point is 00:40:37 No, they didn't. In fact, I can't find a single instance where people got a letter from Peter saying change your name and they went absolutely. I've just, I've not found that yet. There's a place called Leatherhead, which they wanted to be changed to Pleatherhead, which Pleatherhead is an imitation synthetic leather alternative. So that was quite nice. There was the Chicken Dinner Road, which is a road they wanted to call Chicken Road.
Starting point is 00:40:59 It happens all the time, but my favorite one is Sausage Street. So Sausage Street, this is a town which is in France. Sorry, there's a town in France called Sausage Street. Sorry, come off it. There's a street in a town in France. It's called Rue de la Sousie, which is Sausage Street. So they wrote a letter to them. I'm so happy.
Starting point is 00:41:21 Can you change it from Sausage Street? And they obviously refuse. The town may say absolutely not, but someone from the town also pointed out that the change would be completely out of place because it is not named after the Sausage itself, but rather the Sausage Street is off the back of a woman who they called the Sausage called Suzanne Tessier and she lived in the area. Do we know why they called her the Sausage Street? Yeah, we do.
Starting point is 00:41:45 Should I not ask? Because when she walked, she stooped over like a Sausage Bending and that was the name. Or like a Margaret about to jump. So the street supposedly is named after Susan the Sausage Tessier. No. Yeah. That's amazing. That is so funny.
Starting point is 00:42:03 So if you have a name of a company and you're not sure if it's going to be OK or if it's going to be a bit of another asshole debacle, then asshole, sorry, then you just need to try and register it because the government will tell you if it's too rude. So you have the company's house and it's the government body which registers company names and every year they release their list of names that they said no to. So this year they banned 87 company names that they refused to register and some of them I didn't get. So first of all, there was Purple Helmet Bikes.
Starting point is 00:42:33 Right. Which, so I sort of can't, I think guess. We did a podcast the other week about what we called people from West Bromwich Albion and Purple Helmet is a synonym for that. Yeah. OK. All that is, it's a convoluted way of explaining it. No, but that's a great way of getting listeners to go to the previous episode.
Starting point is 00:42:53 And in that episode we referenced the one before and it's a constant change. So that's Purple Helmet Bikes. There's also company names that weren't allowed. Fanny's Cababs wasn't allowed. OK. Sodit Systems, which I just like, I like the idea of hiring someone to fix your computer when they're called Sodit Systems. Sodit, getting you on.
Starting point is 00:43:12 Royal Nuts, Anus Beauty. Anus Beauty. Anus Beauty. Who thought that would get through it? It's not exactly a crappy bit of wordplay like Purple Helmet Bikes, is it? It does what it says on the tin. Puts a bit of redness down. Sit on a beach shoot for three hours is their first line of advice.
Starting point is 00:43:34 Oh my God. Nickers knackers knockers. Don't know what they do. I like to know. The problem is we don't find out what they do because these companies don't get registered. Don't they make underwear, door knockers and they kill horses? It was three best friends with three very different talents. In 2015, lots of people called Brian protested after Thames Valley Police announced
Starting point is 00:43:59 that they were going to change the name of one of their police horses from Brian to they said a god-like name such as Hercules. So this was if the horse passed its tests to be a good police horse basically and to be a qualified police horse. And various people called Brian kicked up a fuss. So Brian Lewis from Ascot said, I think it's outrageous. Brian is a good name for a horse. It's not god-like though, is it?
Starting point is 00:44:24 Very famously, he's not the son of God. He's a very naughty boy. Yes, that's such a good point. There was another guy called Brian Poulsen from Bracknell who said, there is no way they should be changing the name. Every horse should be called Brian. Such an extreme alternative. What a world.
Starting point is 00:44:42 What a world. Horse racing. Oh, Brian's coming up the back. We're Brian up the front. 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 about the things that we have said
Starting point is 00:44:56 over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts. We can be found on at Shriverland, Andy. At Andrew Hunter M. James. At James Harkin. And Chazinsky. You can email podcast at qi.com. Yep, or you can go to our group account which is at no such thing or our website, no such thing as a fish.com.
Starting point is 00:45:12 We've got everything up there from upcoming tour dates to all of our previous episodes. You can also download a really fun behind the scenes documentary of us on tour called Behind the Gills. And there's plenty more to find there as well. OK, that's it. We'll see you again next week. Goodbye.
Starting point is 00:45:30 Bye.

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