No Such Thing As A Fish - 301: No Such Thing As The Queen's Christmas Burlesque

Episode Date: December 25, 2019

Merry Fishmas! Live from Birmingham, Dan, James Anna and Andrew discuss the earliest known pornography, Mariah Carey's Christmas tree, and how a poodle saved the Queen's speech. Visit nosuchthingasaf...ish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Has he been? Who James? Father Christmas. Has he been where? To your house to give you presents because it's Christmas day! It is Christmas day! Yes he has. He went down the chimney of my laptop to deliver me a new episode and no such thing as a fish! Amazing! Yes! What we have got for you today a little bit earlier than scheduled is our Christmas special recorded live in the most Christmassy of places, Birmingham! Oh it was so Christmassy. It was so Christmassy. There was stuff outside, there were lights, there were German sausages. So many German sausages. It was like flippin' Lapland. It was. It was Christmas. It was Christmas city. It was such a fun episode to do. We enjoyed ourselves like we always
Starting point is 00:00:48 do in Birmingham. It's one of the best places that we go and visit. Really, really hope you enjoy it. It's full of Christmassy facts that you can tell all of your family over the Christmas table. Over the Christmas table? Over it? Over the Christmas table. Get over that table and tell them our facts. Well hey, this has been successful. Enjoy your day. That's the main thing. Yeah the main thing is that you have a really good day. Enjoy your Christmas. Hope you got lots of amazing presents and here is an extra rarely episode of No Such Thing As A Fish. Or Ho Ho Ho Such Thing As A Fish. Sure. Okay on with the podcast. On with the Son of God cast and all like.
Starting point is 00:01:30 Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing As A Fish. A weekly podcast this week coming to you live from Birmingham. My name is Dan Schreiber. I am sitting here with Anna Chazinski, Andrew Hunter Murray and James Harkin and once again we have gathered round the microphones this time with our four favourite Christmas facts from the last seven days. And in no particular order, here we go. Starting with you, Andy. My fact is that in 1958 the Queen's speech was lost on the day of delivery and then found by a nearby poodle. It's a heartwarming Christmas story. Although what it says to me is that the coggies are really shit at finding things. Yeah that's true.
Starting point is 00:02:46 This was in 1958 so obviously she hadn't done many of these speeches before, pretty nerve racking, still live delivery and one of the most important copies of the speech, one with all the producers notes on it, was lost and then found by a poodle. So what was the poodle doing there? I thought security was quite tight around the Queen. I think it was not by the Queen. So if it, I mean she would have found it if it would have been next to her. But surely it must have been near the Queen. I think it was at a nearby train station wasn't it? What? Also this poodle has no involvement in the story. Well no he's the main protagonist in the story. I don't know if you heard the story. Sorry, so what I mean is it's not like
Starting point is 00:03:24 the poodle was in Buckingham Palace going lost script, I'm on it. They didn't summon it in to find the script. He was brought in to find the script. No no they didn't summon it in to find, Jesus. You don't say I've lost a script somewhere in the United Kingdom, I need one poodle. The poodle at a train station noticed a bag, there was a bag and the poodle went over and explored it. I can't remember the name of the poodle, I don't think I wrote it down. How did he know it was the Queen's speech? Well, he did a sort of series of mimes to his master. The owner of the poodle was a guy called John Harvey who then took it to the police. The Queen's speech was saved and things just carried on as normal. Thank
Starting point is 00:04:10 God, because where would we have been without that speech? Right, right. Everyone remembers the 1958 right? I remember the 1959 speech and when I say I remember I'm not that old but I can tell you about the 1959 speech because it was the first speech that had a joke in it as far as I can see because I read through the early ones and this one the Queen said she explained all the places they were going, all these new countries in the Commonwealth and she said so between us we are going to many parts of the world, we have no plans for space travel at the moment. I mean I'm not saying it was a great joke. It passes our bar for joke but I'm not sure it passes many people's. It was a good one in 1957. I classic
Starting point is 00:04:55 in 1957 I would say again it was still live and the Queen was doing her speech and mid speech there was interference in the signal for the speech itself on TV so while people were watching suddenly they could hear American police officers coming over in place of the Queen speaking and the line that was heard most by most people was Joe I'm going to go grab a quick coffee. That was suddenly just in the middle of the Queen's speech in 1957. Some of them they put them out on telly but there was no picture. Yeah I think between 1952 and 1957 they realised they had television now so they broadcast it on TV but she didn't have a makeup done on something so the first TV broadcast was
Starting point is 00:05:38 57 wasn't it where you could actually see her but before that you could just listen to her but watching a black TV screen. Wow. Wait a minute so people might not have really known much about the Queen what she looked like and stuff like that so when they heard someone saying Joe I'm going to get a coffee did they maybe think it was the Queen doing that? I think from all the money they knew what she looked like. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:03 Okay here's a challenge for you. Can you guys guess one thing that she never does while she is recording the speech? That's fair. That's technically the correct it's a correct answer. I've never seen her stuffing a turkey. Yes. Andy you've got to reframe the question. It's been a long time. She never takes a wee. She never stands on her head. She doesn't smile in a genuine way. She does her kind of queen smile. She doesn't do the
Starting point is 00:06:38 sort of big friendly smile. She has a kind of controlled smile. She's got a queen smile. That's cool. Yeah but there is. There was a time where the sound man decided oh she's got such a nice smile I'm going to see if I can make her smile during a thing. So he attached a sign saying smile to the camera boom arm and he put a sprig of holly and some tinsel next to it and she saw it and she immediately frowned. And he was last victim of capital punishment in this country wasn't he? I discovered while reading about the Queen's Christmas broadcast that she is a podcast pioneer.
Starting point is 00:07:17 Is she? Yeah. The Queen's speech was released as a podcast in 2006. Wow. Wow. We started in 2014. Like that's how distant it is and it's I haven't heard it but I assume it's the same as the speech but yeah it's not very long. She's like you know she could have done a podcast slant. Once father wrote a porno.
Starting point is 00:07:41 Stop the Queen's speech. Stop the Queen's speech. Hello. We're sponsored this week. By the Royal Mint. By all of you. Of course before the Queen's speech was the Queen's speech it was the King's speech. So it started I think the first one was 1932 although it only became a yearly thing in 1939 and 1932 they'd actually so John Reath who was general manager of the BBC at the time had been trying to persuade King George V to do a King's speech for years and he really
Starting point is 00:08:14 didn't want to. He was sweetly shy and nervous and thought he wasn't a very good speaker and was a technophobe so he didn't really understand this new fangled radio thing and he finally was persuaded to do it when it turned out that Roger Kipling was going to write it for him and he thought okay well that sounds good. He wrote it for him. Yeah he wrote the speech for him. Jungle Book Guy.
Starting point is 00:08:32 Jungle Book Guy as some people know him better. What a speech. The bare necessity is the simple. No it wasn't. He wrote some other stuff as well. Okay cool. Yeah so it was one of those other things but apparently King George from his naval days I read felt most comfortable in small rooms and so he even though they made a fake recording
Starting point is 00:08:57 studio which was one of the grand rooms in the palace he actually recorded it in a box room under the stairs at Sandringham house and yeah Harry Potter. It was like Harry Potter yeah. His hand was shaking. If you listen to it you can hear the paper rustling because his hand was shaking so much. Wow. And he said it ruined his Christmas. Guess who produced the can you see I've got another Christmas challenge for you.
Starting point is 00:09:22 Yeah. See if you can guess who produced the messages between 1986 and 1991. Was it Dieter Von Teese. Oh yeah. I wish I hadn't got you that book about burlesque. No it was not Dieter Von Teese. So a BBC producer. Yeah but also a friend of the Queens.
Starting point is 00:09:42 Friend of the Queens. Oh Prince Charles. David Attenborough. David Attenborough. Great fact. It's just not his normal thing is it you know. But he was was he the guy he was quite a famous producer before he did his other. He was in the 60s.
Starting point is 00:09:58 Is he the guy who I might get this wrong but is he the guy who decided to put snooker on television to sell colour TVs. Yes. Yes. Yeah it was when he was a controller of BBC one I think then he said to sell colour TV. Can I say that's just a tiny bit worse than me saying is that the Jungle Book Guy to say David Attenborough is either snooker guy. Well coming from you the Queen is that the woman off the money.
Starting point is 00:10:24 Oh why do we always argue at Christmas. Some more stuff about TV and movies around Christmas something like that so there were four Flintstones Christmas specials which how exactly they celebrate Christ's birth I don't really know. Oh yeah. They were pioneers. There was a there is a YouTuber called Jake Roper and he decided to look at that classic Christmas movie Home Alone.
Starting point is 00:10:52 Oh yeah. And he found out that he looked at all the tricks that Kevin played on on the burglars and found out what would happen in real life. So apparently shame on me I haven't seen this movie but I believe this is what happened. I know. James that's a better fact than whatever you're about to tell us. So apparently at one stage he heats up a door knob and they burn the hand and apparently the temperatures needed to transfer enough heat to the outside knob would have melted
Starting point is 00:11:22 the door or set the house on fire but there is a crowbar that goes to the chest of one of the burglars. Oh yeah. That would have punctured his lungs and his heart but it wouldn't matter because Kevin would have already murdered both of them with the paint can trap. Apparently the force of those paint cans would have killed both of them. That would be a very different movie. What would it be?
Starting point is 00:11:44 Yes. How do you know? You don't know? I'm assuming. Maybe they both die. It is weird. It's like watching you read a foreign language where you don't understand it. You obviously don't quite know what this is in reference to at all.
Starting point is 00:11:57 Look I read the synopsis on Wikipedia. Do you know there's such a weird thing about Home Alone? Joe Pesci who is the bad guy and who's not an idiot, he obviously was more used to doing kind of gangster films. He's in quite a lot of serious gangster films and I think he might have thought this was a similar thing so he went really method in Home Alone. On the set of Home Alone he refused to see Macaulay Culkin at all because he wanted Macaulay to be really, really terrified of him.
Starting point is 00:12:23 He didn't want to kill the magic of him being this bad guy. In the scene where which you may remember and I do remember and James doesn't remember where he's hung up on a coat hook at one point if you remember by his coat and Joe Pettie says to him, I'm going to bite all your fingers off one at a time and in one of the rehearsals he actually bit Culkin really, really hard and drew blood and he still has a scar. Really? Yeah. Apparently this little nine year old boy had to do a screaming fit and be like, I don't
Starting point is 00:12:51 care how many Oscars you've got and don't go around biting nine year olds. That's apparently in E.T. when they were filming it. Steven Spielberg needed Drew Barrymore to cry during a scene. There's a scene where she really sobs. Right. And behind the scenes of it is that apparently before the take was done Steven Spielberg leaned into her going, it's going to be a good scene. You know, you'll be great, you'll be great.
Starting point is 00:13:14 By the way, your dog just died and then walked back and she burst out crying and that's her genuinely crying. Wow. Anyway, Merry Christmas. We need to move on to our next fact. Time for fact number two and that is Chazinsky. My fact this week is that as well as being the birthplace of Jesus, Bethlehem is also where we found the oldest known depiction of people having sex.
Starting point is 00:13:43 Yeah. Which is very, that's very ironic because famously that was a sex free zone. Oh yeah. Yeah. A sex free zone. It was just they had two people of many people hadn't had sex. Okay. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:02 It is related to non sex. They, Mary and Joseph didn't have access to this piece of art. Otherwise they would have known. They didn't have instructions. Yeah. So yeah, I think this is such a weird coincidence. This is a really quite a beautiful piece of art. It's made of calcite.
Starting point is 00:14:16 It's from 11,000 years ago. So it's a stone age piece of art and it's kind of this couple of androgynous humans sort of inside. I don't know how sex works when they're that androgynous, but sort of intertwined like legs, legs over each other. Look it up. It's very nice. Face to face.
Starting point is 00:14:33 So the traditional way. And it, you've got to specify, but not missionary, I would say. Well, when you look at it, it's quite hard to tell if it was meant to be upright or horizontal. So that's sort of in the eye of the beholder. Anyway, I'm really looking forward to your BBC four documentary on the history of art. So this, it is, when I first looked at it, I thought it just looked like a rock. Okay. I maybe I'm just not into my art as much as Anna is.
Starting point is 00:15:06 It doesn't look like a rock. It looks like two people gloriously intertwined. Sure. Okay. But according to artist Mark Quinn, depending on the perspective and how you look at it, it also resembles a penis, breasts, or a vagina, depending on which way you kind of move it around. So it's like a bit of trick art. Oh, cool.
Starting point is 00:15:26 It is, it is very cool. Because if you put it, if you put it sort of sideways onto you, so it said it's widest, it looks like the couple one next to each other. And then if you move it so it's sort of end on, it looks like a penis. And then on the base, there's a cheeky vagina. So it's a very, it is amazing. A cheeky vagina. It's a three for the price of one, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:15:45 It's basically your pawn hub of 10,000 years ago. Because you could just search for any of three things and then you would get it. Anyway, so it was found in the 1930s by some Bedouin shepherd boys. And obviously it's now in the British Museum. It's quite nice that it was shepherds. That's cool. Isn't it? Just watching their flock.
Starting point is 00:16:09 Right. Yeah. They just looked at their horny rock by night. Is that a star in the sky? It doesn't matter. Keep looking at the rock. We have no evidence. They got any kind of arousal out of it.
Starting point is 00:16:24 They just, they found it and then they gave it to an archaeologist. It's in an area just sort of within a few miles of Bethlehem called Ain Sakri. And it's in a cave. And yeah, it may by the Natufians who were, they're called as sedentary people, which isn't as insulting as it sounds. It just means that they were not nomadic very unusually for that time. They, they weren't nomadic. They found a way to sort of...
Starting point is 00:16:46 I think they're my favorite group of people from history than the Natufians. Really? Are they? Yeah, because they're the first example we have of anyone who domesticated the dog. They're the first examples we have of a big feast. They were the first example we have of beer. It might be just people are looking in that place and stuff like that. But I think they sound like a really cool, you know, bunch of people.
Starting point is 00:17:06 The first known beer, I think, is from 13,000 years BP, which is not a petrol reference. So I didn't know about this phrase, but it stands for before present. And I don't know why we need it when we have BC. But so it's 13,000 years BP, so I guess about 11,000 years BC. And when do you think before present is sort of starts from? Well, just when you said it a few seconds ago. But not anymore.
Starting point is 00:17:33 Now it's now. And so forth. Is it not that? I'm going to have to say your first answer. And it's not. It's 1950. Okay, Boomer. It's not when archaeologists just decided the present is 1950.
Starting point is 00:17:50 That is so strange. Is it because some people think it's like where there was atomic bombs. It's exactly that. Is that because of it? And so then any rocks from then on have some kind of radioactivity. So you can't use carbon dating as well. Exactly. So everything's kind of screwed up after 1950 because of all the nuclear shit, as you say.
Starting point is 00:18:09 There's a theory that it's the other Bethlehem. But this is the Bethlehem that we have where there is a church and a cave and all the tourism and religion. What do you mean by the Bethlehem? There's one in Wales, for instance. It's not that one. I know there's one in Pennsylvania. It's not that one. There's one in the Galilee.
Starting point is 00:18:25 And an Israeli archaeologist has said that although there probably won't be any proof due to modern building work, a lot of Jesus' life happened near the other Galilee, or near the Galilee. And also that one is only a few hours of a walk from Nazareth, which is where Mary and Joseph traditionally came from. So it's more reasonable that a heavily pregnant woman would have walked for a few hours. But did they say that they spent weeks in the desert walking from one place to the other? They must have got really lost if it's this one right now. That's true.
Starting point is 00:18:55 That's the thing they didn't, though. That's the weird thing. So the Nativity, the birth of Jesus, is only mentioned in two of the Gospels anyway, Luke and Matthew. And it's only in Luke that they make the journey. So in Matthew, they're already living in Bethlehem. And even in Matthew, this is the extent of the whole journey that we have, the impression of the donkey and the long trip. He just says, you know, it was for a census.
Starting point is 00:19:16 So they both confirmed that they were going to Bethlehem for a census, and they sort of happened to have a child while they were there. But it went, Joseph went to be registered with Mary who was expecting a child. While they were there, she gave birth and wrapped him in bounds of cloth and laid him in a manger because there was no place for him in the inn. And that's it. That's all we have. And all the other stuff is from later, the donkey, the long journey, the cave.
Starting point is 00:19:36 It all comes from the proto-gospel of James. Wait, you didn't say the keg, did you? The cave. Oh, the caves, sorry. They cracked open a keg and had a whale of a time. Traditional English Christmases used to have a mince pie in the shape of a manger. And you would put a little Christ child doll in the pie, basically not in the pie, sorry, not in the pie, on the pie,
Starting point is 00:20:00 on the pie which was sort of shaped like a manger, like a kind of trough. And then you would put the Christ child in it, and then at dinner time you would eat the pie. So sorry, did you eat the Jesus? No, you didn't eat the Jesus. The Jesus, I think, was an annual decoration to be got out every year. The pie was just, the pie was the edible bit. He's complaining to the waiter.
Starting point is 00:20:18 Waiter, waiter, there's a Jesus in my pie. And what comes next? Is there an ending to that joke? Are you joking? With the fly? Yeah, you are. No, I'm not. What's the end to the fly joke?
Starting point is 00:20:31 Oh, my God. Should we sit together? There's a fly in my soup. Don't shout so loud. Don't talk too loud. Everyone will want one. That's, that's, that's dated. It's the way we told it.
Starting point is 00:20:46 Do you guys know where the animals come from in the nativity? You know where you usually have an ox in a kind of a document. So they're not mentioned in the Bible, Iber? They're not mentioned in the Bible, but they come from the Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew, who appeared in the eighth century and claimed that he sort of remembered all this stuff. No, he, so Pseudo-Matthew wrote the Gospel, which is where we get a lot of nativity ideas. And he introduced the stable where Jesus was born and adds an ox and an ass. But he also added to the scene lions, leopards and dragons.
Starting point is 00:21:18 No. That's so cool. Yep, that's correct. If you want to do the nativity properly, if you're having an ox, you might as well have a lion, a leopard and a dragon. He said they were all wagging their tails to show their devotion. Have we spoken about nativity thefts? I can't remember if we've ever talked about it before.
Starting point is 00:21:34 Are it people stealing nativity scenes? Yeah, it is. And it's, so there's been a huge rash of this in lots of places in the last few years. So there is another Bethlehem in Pennsylvania. And there, a woman stole the crib in 2016 and, you know, it broke a bit. And the chief of police had to glue baby Jesus' leg back on. It was very, you know, embarrassing. So they had to put a security camera solely on the baby Jesus when they reinstalled it.
Starting point is 00:22:00 But this keeps happening. So there's a place in Wisconsin called West Bend where 2017 Jesus was stolen. Then they found it. They replaced the Jesus. Then on Christmas Eve, it was stolen again, the baby Jesus. And there was a police officer who saw a woman suspiciously cradling something. I don't know how you do that. And it was the replacement baby Jesus they put back in.
Starting point is 00:22:23 And the officer yelled, police, stop. And she dropped the Jesus and pegged it. So now in West Bend, everything is bolted, literally everything is bolted down. The baby Jesus is plastered to the manger. And there is a camera which has hunting technology where when someone leans in for a closer look, a motion-activated trail camera kicks in and starts recording their every move. We need to move on in a sec to our next fact. We could talk about some erotic art.
Starting point is 00:22:50 Oh, okay. Yeah, sure. Well, I just wanted to quickly mention another very old piece of art, which is all the statues of this Egyptian god called Min, who I didn't know existed, but he was the god of fertility. And you see little sculptures of him from around the fourth millennium BC. So a plenty long time ago. And he has a very close association with lettuce.
Starting point is 00:23:12 And that is because if you look at him, he's always seen standing with a very erect, very long penis, which he's cradling in his left hand, I think. And then he's associated with lettuce. Suspiciously cradling? That's how you always suspiciously cradle something. If it's a penis, it is always suspicious. I don't think that's how she was cradling the baby Jesus, though, was it? No, no, it was not, I'm sure.
Starting point is 00:23:36 But yeah, he was the god of fertility and associated with lettuce, and it was thought the lettuce was the most aphrodisiacal food stuff, because it looks like a penis, but also if you break a leaf off a lettuce, it oozes kind of white substance. And so this was really revered. Sorry, I must say that these are old lettuces that you would get in ancient Egypt. If you go to Sainsbury's and get an iceberg, what it doesn't look like a penis,
Starting point is 00:23:59 and two, it doesn't ooze white liquid. It looks a tiny bit. Is that romaine, long romaine, long phallic thing? But yeah, it looks less like a penis and doesn't do the oozing. Waiter, waiter, there's a penis in my lettuce. That one actually doesn't have an ending. Sorry, can I say one last thing about nativities? Sorry, it's just there was a nativity set available on Amazon.
Starting point is 00:24:20 I've read a lot of reviews of nativity sets that you can buy for yourself, and there is one set that is available on Amazon for £3.69. So this is a very, you know, cost. Reasonably priced. Reasonably priced nativity set. And the main review for it says this, bearing in mind the price, I did not expect a work of art. But I did hope for something tasteful.
Starting point is 00:24:41 The three figurines were tatty and badly painted. Joseph had white paint splattered all over his cloak and down his staff. The bit... No, stop. Are you sure that wasn't lettuce juice? It gets, like this nativity gets worse. The beard on the right side of his face was higher than the left and covered his whole nose.
Starting point is 00:25:02 Mary's paint work was even tattyer. She has two left hands. Baby Jesus has a right eye that is twice the size of his left eye and his mouth is on the right side of his face. So it is an optimistic... And there was no dragon. We need to move on to our next fact. Okay, it is time for fact number three.
Starting point is 00:25:26 And that is my fact. My fact this week is the most likely time in the year to have a heart attack is during a family Christmas gathering. This is absolutely true. This was research that was done in Sweden. They looked at Daser of 283,000 heart attacks that took place in the country between 1998 and 2013. And they found that at 10 p.m. on December the 24th,
Starting point is 00:25:49 which is when the Swedes celebrate, that is when the Christmas gatherings happen, that is when it was most likely to happen. 37% more likely to happen on Christmas Eve than say 20% on New Year's Day or any other period of the year. That is really good. And they got this information from a database they have of 283,014 heart attacks and the database is called sweetheart.
Starting point is 00:26:17 That is sweet. It is something that ruins lives. Do we know what they think it is due to? Is it due to Christmas arguments? It is due to arguments, stress. Did I get the right present? I have got all the family here. We have got uncles and aunties and children
Starting point is 00:26:33 who don't usually hang in one room necessarily or when they do. You say it is due to, obviously we don't know why it is, but we are speculating that it is because of that. It wasn't like they interviewed everyone mid heart attack and said, why is it that you think it is caused this? And they said, well my wife is being a real bitch in the kitchen. People thought it was the cold quite a lot, but then they did a similar study in the southern hemisphere
Starting point is 00:26:53 and found quite similar results, I think, didn't they? I think it is monopoly. Have you seen this about monopoly this year? They have released the longest ever game of monopoly. Really? Yeah. Because they are always doing new additions. The newest addition, they have 66 properties that you can get instead of 28.
Starting point is 00:27:13 There are 40 extra spaces but you only have one dice, so it takes you way longer to get between each one, and the game carries on until one player has absolutely everything on the board. So you keep going into more and more and more debt, and basically you just keep going forever until one person wins all the money. That's good, isn't it? Because that's what I've always said about monopoly, is that it's just over too fast.
Starting point is 00:27:37 Actually, in 2016, Hasbro ran, they are very good at PR stuff, they ran a monopoly helpline from the 24th to the 26th of December to literally, because they said, people always argue while playing this dreadful board game of ours. Yeah, and the idea was the person at the end of the hotline wouldn't solve this sort of like family dynamic argument, it would be, I will tell you what the official rule that you were disputing, because that's the main thing.
Starting point is 00:28:02 So there would be people in the list of why people would call, or why the arguments happen, free parking, no one really knows officially what the rules are, and that would be a big thing that they would argue about. And then it would be stuff like people taking too long to take their turn, someone buying a property that you want when they definitely didn't need it. On the top of the list, it was people being... That's allowed.
Starting point is 00:28:25 I know, it's allowed. That's the best part of the game. Exactly. Well, this is why your attitude is causing. And yeah, the top being people being too cocky when winning. So this is just a helpline of people who can't be asked to read the instructions, which are all of four pages long. Is that what we're saying?
Starting point is 00:28:44 Yes. Right, just checking who this was targeting. There are theories about why people argue... It's an actual psychological theory about why people argue over Christmas. And one theory that I really like is that there are things which are social allergens. So you're not allergic the first time someone makes a tiresome joke to you over Christmas. But by the fourth or fifth time, you're having a very much stronger reaction, even if it's someone completely different making that joke again.
Starting point is 00:29:09 I don't know. Don't talk too loud, everyone will want one. That never gets old. There was a study done recently which asked people their main reasons for post-Christmas grumpiness. So people get very depressed in January. It's sort of kind of depressing things like suicides go up. New Year's Day is the biggest day for suicide. But happily, Christmas Day is the smallest day for suicide.
Starting point is 00:29:33 So people hang on. But people get upset in January. Can I just apologise for my fact? I've never... I believe I did this to us today. It's a depressing fact. The main reason people get upset after Christmas, apparently, is because there were a list of 20. One of them was, our house is full of Christmas presents and I don't want most of them.
Starting point is 00:29:56 Which is extremely ungrateful. Apparently, children become a complete nightmare because they get used to the indulgence of Christmas, which I don't know if that's true, but they become terrorists, basically. And then people cited chocolate withdrawal symptoms. That's not real. Top 20, why I'm grumpy in January, medical chocolate withdrawal. One bad thing that in the olden days would happen just after Christmas. In the 1600s in Wales, they had a tradition where you would beat up the last person to get out of bed on Boxing Day.
Starting point is 00:30:32 Bring her back. And is that White's Boxing Day? No. They would also, around the same time, they would throw food at the wall on Christmas Day, and whatever it spelled out on the wall, that's who you would marry. I mean, do they have Alphabeti Spaghetti in 16th Century Wales? What? Can you hope to spell out?
Starting point is 00:31:02 If they're a trifle, it'll go uggghhh. Yeah, you're right. I suppose maybe like spaghetti. They probably didn't have spaghetti in those days, did they? Have you guys heard the song? An eel. They would get an eel from the table and throw that up. Again, their name would better begin with S. Have you guys heard of this song from 2004 called The 12 STIs of Christmas?
Starting point is 00:31:29 No. This was a song written by the Department of Health as part of a public safety campaign, and it was to teach people, especially young people, about the risks of unsafe sex, and it started, it had all the verses. So it started, on the first day of Christmas, my true love gave to me a bug that made it hard to pee. Okay, so that's, right, but they kept mixing up the verses all the way along, so I just want to share verse nine with you on the ninth day of Christmas.
Starting point is 00:31:57 My true love gave to me, genital warts, tricomony, asses, hairper, tightest pubic, lies gonorrhea. Genital herpes, syphilis, chlamydia, and soles that spread anerly. That's real. That's an official thing. I reckon no one has ever stood on this stage and sung the word gonorrhea quite as beautifully as you did. There was a study in 2016, and it was a Christmas study, so it was quite light hearted in its intent, but it said, recent estimates show Santa has to travel 510 million kilometers at nearly the speed of light each night before Christmas,
Starting point is 00:32:38 while controlling the estimated 5.6 million reindeer necessary to pull his 2.3 million ton sleigh. Considering one fatality in commercial aviation about every 323 billion passenger kilometers, and assuming that Santa's sleigh is not considerably safer than a standard aeroplane, Santa would die on duty every 45 years. When's the next one due, do we know? Well, it says statistically he should have died four times since his first appearance in the 18th century, but he keeps on surviving. He's fine. He's fine. They looked at some injuries in America between 2007 and 2016 over Christmas.
Starting point is 00:33:21 These are just injuries, but 36,000 people just over died, sorry, got injured from electrical decorations, 80,000 got injured from other types of decorations, 17,928 got injured from artificial trees, and 277 children were hurt during interactions with a Santa impersonator. Apparently, according to the researchers, their examples they gave is by either falling off his lap or falling while running away in fear. We need to move on to our final fact of the show, and that is James. Okay, my fact this week is that Mariah Carey has three Christmas trees,
Starting point is 00:34:05 one of which is decorated with pictures of herself. Okay, so this is the modern day Santa Claus, Mariah Carey. And she has a main 19 foot tree in her living room. She has a smaller one in her bedroom, and she has one in the family room area that they call the Charlie Brown tree. And it's a really cute, kind of slightly scraggly looking one, but they put polaroids of the family as well, not just her. So it's a nice thing.
Starting point is 00:34:34 And she has told us all about what happens at her Christmas. She always takes a plane to Aspen in Colorado, and she comes off the plane and she gets onto a sleigh pulled by reindeer's while they play All I Want for Christmas is You again and again and again. Yeah, and she absolutely loves it. Actually, she does really like her own music. She likes to do stuff with her own music. According to her ex-husband Nick Channon,
Starting point is 00:35:02 when she gave birth, as the babies came out, they were playing a Mariah Carey song, and they didn't just want any old Mariah Carey song, they wanted a live version of Mariah Carey singing Fantasy in Madison Square Garden so that when the babies came out, they came out to a round of applause. Wow! She is the absolute Moby Dick of Pop Divas. She is just the perfect...
Starting point is 00:35:27 Wait, is the monkey one decorated with pictures of her? Yes, it's just like, like I say, Charlie Brown. It's kind of a more traditionally, kind of a small one. I think it's quite sweet, actually. Yeah, the thing is, Mariah Carey, I think we need a few people who exist in that diva land that we just celebrate as opposed to going there crazy, because it's so amazing to know that there's someone out there
Starting point is 00:35:52 just living this insane life. And all these rumors, we don't know which ones are true and which ones are false, so the things like people say, she never wears a watch, she can whistle with her hands. She never wears a watch, it's not diva behavior. I mean, you're not wearing a watch right now. Oh, Dan Schreiber, the Mariah Carey of no such thing as a fish. She has supposedly an extremer version to overhead lighting
Starting point is 00:36:17 and as she claims that elevator lighting is toxic. And the thing is, some people sometimes pick her up on the fact that she has these big rumors about her and ask her about it, and often the answer is crazier than the actual accusation. She was interviewed by someone who said, there's a rumor going around that you only bathe in bottled water, sort of sparkling water, and she said, that is insane. I bathe in milk.
Starting point is 00:36:43 I don't think that was actually with Mariah Carey that I interviewed, because this was in The Guardian and the description is so bizarre, but basically he sort of led into this room where he says it's dimly lit and he can barely make her out and she's sitting in a weird throne, and then she asked to be moved to a different chair slash throne, doesn't she? And there's this sort of air throughout that all you can see is her glittering diamonds and sort of the red of her outfit in this weird dimly lit space, and I think she's just sending standards around the world to repeat mad stuff about her.
Starting point is 00:37:12 But there are clues that it might have been her. She wasn't wearing a watch, for instance. She whistled to Beck and him. So the song All I Want For Christmas Is You is, I think it's just over 25 years old. Really? Yes, it's now an oldie, and when she was told, when Mariah Carey was told that the song was turning 25 years old, she had an amazing response. She just said, I don't acknowledge time.
Starting point is 00:37:39 That's why she doesn't wear a watch. She doesn't acknowledge time because she doesn't have birthdays. We don't truly know when Mariah Carey was born. That's a real thing. She was either born, I think it was in 19... What are the two days? I think it was at 59, 1960? Yeah, exactly, and we don't fully know...
Starting point is 00:37:59 Oh no, sorry, she was either born in 1969 or 1970. She was either born in 1969 or 1970. We don't fully know because we haven't got the birth certificate to tell, but she doesn't have birthdays. She has anniversaries because she doesn't acknowledge time. Well, it's still acknowledging time if it's an anniversary, isn't it? You've just given it a different name. Good point, yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:20 She hasn't thought this one through. Yeah, no, I think she's a fascinating character. And the amazing thing, All I Want For Christmas Is You, she's expanded it into so many territories. There's a movie that she made recently, an animated movie, All I Want For Christmas Is You, The Kid's Cartoon, which I watched the other night. She's made... Sorry, you watched...
Starting point is 00:38:39 Yeah, I saw it the other night. Was it good? Yeah, it's fantastic. Did your son enjoy it? He doesn't watch that shit. I put it on, he was like, I'm out. He went to play with his Thomas the Tank Engine toys, so I watched it on my own. But it's...
Starting point is 00:38:56 That is so depressing. Why? It's a fantastic song, a fantastic movie. She's a fantastic human who doesn't acknowledge that time exists. Like, it's a... How long is the film if time doesn't exist? To be fair, it did feel like forever, but... There is a whole article deconstructing the meaning of the song,
Starting point is 00:39:15 All I Want For Christmas Is You, on the Atlantic, which is really good. And it kind of does it slightly academically. So it says, The author carefully sets out her premises. There exists an entity, I, representing conscious selfhood. This entity exists in relation to material space, a lot, and seasonal time for Christmas. The entity expresses this relationality through the vocabulary of desire or want.
Starting point is 00:39:39 And though its desires could theoretically be expansive, they are not. Yet how could we understand the author's examination of Christmas as anything, but an implicit critique of capitalism? She doesn't want all the other stuff for Christmas, she just wants you. They've plagiarized her notes when she was writing that song, haven't they? Because you did write it, we should say. I didn't quite realise that she wrote all of her songs.
Starting point is 00:40:03 I come in my Hanuman number one, she said, but dozens. She did write basically all of them. She co-wrote that one, I think, right? She co-wrote it. I think, as a co-writer, she is unique in that she has had one number one hit for every year of the 90s. And no one else has had that. She's had, yeah, so she's...
Starting point is 00:40:20 She'd had about 19 if she'd written 18 of them, or at the very least co-wrote them. And there is a theory, our colleague James Rawson, who is a Big Mara Kerry fan, has a theory that all the diva stuff is actually to distract us. And it doesn't draw attention to the fact that she's a very good songwriter, and she has a five octave range, which is almost unheard of. But, you know, if she goes on about that, it might sound vain. So she just does the fun diva stuff instead.
Starting point is 00:40:43 Although I don't want to suggest her career is going downhill, but last year she was doing the Tube announcements in London. Was she? She did the Please Mind the Gap, or she did... All I want for Christmas is Houston. Very, very strong. The next train will be along at some point. When?
Starting point is 00:41:07 No, she did. She did a Please Stand Clear of the Yellow Line, and also have you heard my new album, Tube Announcement. Wow. Did she actually say the new album bit? She did, yeah. Oh, wow. This year is a fight like every year for Christmas number one.
Starting point is 00:41:21 Last year it was won by, we built this city on Sausage Rolls, by Lad Baby. And as a kind of comment against that, there is a couple called Gavin Chapel Bates and Giles Bryant, who are from Cambridge and Suffolk respectively, and they've recorded a single called Peace on Your Plate, which is the world's first vegan Christmas single. The lyrics include,
Starting point is 00:41:44 children are playing by the fireside, there's magic at your tide, but in a different land, it's a different scene in a factory shed, the animals scream. That honestly makes your fact, Dan, look like it's a wonderful life. I think it's unfair to call it the first vegan Christmas song,
Starting point is 00:42:06 when I think a lot of other Christmas songs haven't been rampantly carnivorous. Do you know who invented Christmas songs? Christmas carols. Oh, it can't have been named after someone called Carol. I wish it was. No, it was a guy called Edward White Benson, who was the Bishop of Truro in the 19th century, late 19th century.
Starting point is 00:42:29 And basically, carols were silent in pubs, and he wanted to move them to churches. And he went on to be an Archbishop of Canterbury, which was a big deal, but he had this extraordinary family life, so he was married. His wife had, she kept a diary of her lovers, and she had 39 lesbian lovers,
Starting point is 00:42:45 so she was gay. She kept this diary, she had this. They had six children, four of whom were gay, and two, so they're two sons. One went on to be a famous poet, the other went on to be a famous novelist. One of their two daughters, who was gay, stole her mother's girlfriend,
Starting point is 00:43:01 and he was there being the Archbishop of Canterbury. Wow. She was brilliant, the mother. She was called Mary Benson and Gladstone at the time, called Prime Minister, called her the cleverest woman in England. Which, you know, she had 39 lovers. That's pretty smart.
Starting point is 00:43:17 Yeah, but not when they count all those STDs she got by the end of her life. We're going to have to wrap up very shortly. Anything before we do? Just some more Christmas songs. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So, for instance, the song I Saw Mummy Kissing Santa Claus was condemned by the Roman Catholic Church
Starting point is 00:43:33 in Boston because they said it was showing adultery because Mummy is kissing another man. And it was only when the guy who sang the song Jimmy Boyd met with the church leaders to explain that actually in this song the part of Santa is being played by the father in this...
Starting point is 00:43:49 And then they lifted their condemnation. I think it makes sense to release Christmas songs. So, I was looking at the royalties that you get. In 2016, Channel 5 did a review of all the biggest songs that gets the No. 1 royalty. So, she came in at No. 3.
Starting point is 00:44:09 What do you think, No. 2 and No. 1? Are they Christmas songs? I think it'll be Slade, Merry Christmas, everybody. No. 1. Yeah, how cool is that? And according to this report, they get £1 million in royalties a year from that alone.
Starting point is 00:44:25 Slade. It's only Naughty Holder and maybe one other bloke. Yeah, so probably Naughty's getting most of it. They get between them and the other bandmates get nothing. Yeah, wait. I didn't even say no way.
Starting point is 00:44:41 I just said no. But here's the thing. You don't even need to have written a good song that people have heard about. In 1978, there was a guy called Randy Brooks who wrote a song called Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer. 40 million copies.
Starting point is 00:44:57 It's been covered three times. The family have just been pulling in royalties each year, yeah. Why have we not heard of this? Has anyone heard of that? Oh, really? It's a famous song. We just don't know anything.
Starting point is 00:45:13 There is a firm called Mood Media which provides tunes to shops. 300,000 American shops have this music provided by this one firm. And they have 30 different Christmas music channels. That's how many different kinds of mood shopkeepers might want to evoke in their shops.
Starting point is 00:45:29 So if you run a small Christian bookshop, you might not want to have the raunchy Lady Gaga Christmas songs. But if you've got a cool shop for young people, then you might want to play a song called Christmas in Harlem by someone called Kanye West.
Starting point is 00:45:45 Yeah. Although some of the classic Christmas songs are raunchier than you might think. I think Christmas carols didn't really start being sung in churches until the 19th century when they had to rewrite lots of them. But Deck the Hall, Deck the Hall with Bowser Holly,
Starting point is 00:46:01 the opening line used to be oh how soft my fair one's bosom Fa la la la la la la la. Did it really? Yeah, it was a Welsh song about how fit someone's girlfriend was. Of course, oh come, are you faithful? Have you tried the letters?
Starting point is 00:46:17 Have you tried the letters? No. Actually, you know, that song, oh come on, are you faithful? If you sing that, you're technically pleading for the French to invade England. Because... At this stage, why not try it?
Starting point is 00:46:37 Like... That feels like the big reset button that we need to hit at this point. Oh! It was written by John Francis Wade, who was an English Catholic, and he fled the country during the 1745 rebellion
Starting point is 00:46:53 and he wrote this song. And it was basically, oh come, the Catholics to England and save us from the Protestants. That's weird, because he must have screwed up the lyrics come ye, oh come, you too, Bethlehem, unless... Well, he met the Bethlehem in Wales.
Starting point is 00:47:09 Of course. OK, that is it. That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening. If you would 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,
Starting point is 00:47:25 Andy. At Andrew Hunter M. James. At James Harkin. And Shazinski. 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. We have everything up there from upcoming tour dates to all of our previous episodes
Starting point is 00:47:41 and a link to buy our new book. Thank you so much, Birmingham. We'll see you again. Good night!

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