No Such Thing As A Fish - 303: No Such Thing As Suckling's Column

Episode Date: January 10, 2020

Dan, James, Anna and Andrew discuss 11th century rental eels, Nelson's lesser-known brother, and how to break into Alcatraz. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and mo...re 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'm sitting here with Andrew Hunter Murray, Anna Chazinski, James Harkin, and once again, we have gathered around the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days, and in no particular order, here we go. Starting with fact number one, that's my fact. My fact is, in 1996, a windsurfer successfully broke into Alcatraz prison while it was hosting a movie premiere of The Rock, a film about people trying to break into Alcatraz.
Starting point is 00:00:50 Wow, that's good. So he broke into the prison. This guy called Jeff Bunch, and he was a windsurfer who was on the outskirts of it, and he wanted to go, so he wore a sort of tuxedo over his wetsuit, and he got to the island. Over his wetsuits. I know, a bit weird, right? I guess he didn't plan on falling in, so if you don't fall in, you're dry.
Starting point is 00:01:10 I guess so. I mean, it's the idea, right? That is sensible, actually. Yeah, yeah. Because actually James Bond does it the wrong way, doesn't he? Like he has a wetsuit over his tuxedo, doesn't he, and then he has to go to the changing rooms. He's got a wider pound to put it in the locker, take his wetsuit off.
Starting point is 00:01:27 And it actually doesn't make any sense, because the wetsuit doesn't stop you getting wet underneath. So actually, when he reveals a tuxedo, James Bond, it should be drenched. Yeah, I'm starting to wonder if that scene in the movie, I've just made it up. So this guy did it the right way around, and he wanted to get to the premiere. Yeah, he wanted to get into the premiere, and supposedly he did. He was arrested and taken off premises, but he said he managed to get a cocktail with Sean Connery.
Starting point is 00:01:51 So I haven't seen The Rock. What? But I gather it's Michael Bay's best film. Do you? Well, I gather that in a crowded field of other films Michael Bay has made. Better than Transformers 3? I know, I know, I know. It's a controversial opinion.
Starting point is 00:02:06 I've read a thing saying it's his... I think it's supposed to be quite good, isn't it? I obviously love it. Yeah, it's an awesome movie, and I think it's his favourite movie that he's made. All I saw is it got 66% on Rotten Tomatoes, which to me is definitely not worth saying. Yeah, but to Michael Bay, that is an absolute triumph. You know Michael Bay's slamming today? It's awesome.
Starting point is 00:02:26 OK. So it's about... And it has Sean Connery in it, and it has apparently Navy Seals trying to break into the island in the film, and they use real Navy Seals in the production, didn't they? Yeah, absolutely. So just for anyone who doesn't know the movie, which apparently no one does, the idea is that many, many years ago someone successfully escaped from Alcatraz, and he was put in prison when he was caught on the other side.
Starting point is 00:02:46 He's been in solitary confinement for years, and suddenly The Rock, as it is known, is taken over by a bunch of military people who have gone rogue, so they need to break back into it, and they get this guy, Sean Connery, out of jail to help them back in with Nicholas Cage. That's the basic premise. So The Rock is in it? The Rock is not in it. The island plays the role of The Rock in it.
Starting point is 00:03:08 Alcatraz is known as The Rock. This party sounds really cool, actually. There were 500 guests, and they were told to dress informally. This is according to an article I read in SF Gate, and Patricia Arquette was there, and she was wearing a chocolate brown three-quarter length satin coat, with matching pants by Dolce & Gabbana, and an aqua silk blouse that matched her iridescent eye shadow. Wow. So that was her dressing informally.
Starting point is 00:03:34 And Sean Connery was wearing a tan parka, a fisherman's sweater, and no toupee. Nice. No toupee. According to SF Gate. That's for dressed down Friday, if you don't put your toupee on. You'd never get asked on the red carpet, and who's toupee are you wearing tonight? Here's a tiny little funny fact I've found about the actual making of The Rock. The script was done, but they brought in some writers to sort of punch up the script, add
Starting point is 00:04:01 some jokes, but also to do some rewrites, and the two people they brought in were the guys who wrote porridge, the British sitcom. Wow. This is a Michael Bay action, and yeah, the creator of The Likely Lads came in to do the script. That's a great bit of trivia. So The Rock of Alcatraz, this is not the only time that a former criminal from Alcatraz has gone back to it, as in it happens fictionally in the film, but it's happened in real life
Starting point is 00:04:25 as well. Right. So they're pretty sure that Whitey Bulger, he was a gangster, he was involved in lots of murders, not a nice guy. He was there for four years when it was operating as a prison, and then later on he went back as a tourist. He went there with a girlfriend. Really?
Starting point is 00:04:40 With a girlfriend? Yeah. Lots. Well, when they were there, they did all the tourist stuff. So he dressed up in a striped uniform, which they let you do, and he had a photo taken behind a set of replica bars. That is amazing. When was this?
Starting point is 00:04:55 Because he wasn't here in the ages ago. I think he was in in the late 60s, early 70s. And he went back. You're close in the 60s, isn't it? 62? Oh, okay. It must have been before that. 63, it was closer.
Starting point is 00:05:05 Okay. But he went back obviously later when it was a tourist attraction. Yeah. I wonder what date you bring up that you were far back at Alcatraz. I think it's on the Tinder profile. It's quite right, or else. Yeah. Because if you were going out with someone who'd been in Alcatraz, that would be a
Starting point is 00:05:19 really cool little thing to say about your boyfriend, wouldn't it? And you'd want to go there and experience it. You think that's a cool thing to say? My boyfriend was at Alcatraz, the most secure for the worst of worst criminals? It's not actually for the worst of worst criminals. That is a bit of a misconception. Really? So that would be the first thing I said about my boyfriend when someone said that.
Starting point is 00:05:38 Although Whitey Bulger was involved in 19 murders, so I don't know if he's in minimum security. Maybe that didn't come up to the third date. Some of them were just tax avoiders, like Cal Capone. So this is the thing. It's a real mixed ability prison, isn't it? The thing with the Alcatraz was really was a prison to cure people who were in other prisons who kept on kind of trying to break out or misbehaving and pulling pranks on the
Starting point is 00:06:05 prison offices, that kind of thing. Pulling pranks. Yeah, trying to kill them. So that's why it's kind of a amusing idea in a way, because basically that's what it was. It's my boyfriend Whitey. We say murder. He's more of a prankster, really.
Starting point is 00:06:21 He was about guilty of 70 pranks. So it's basically a prison of people who had experience of escaping from other prisons. So in fact, I think the most famous escape probably was of Frank Morris and John and Clarence Anglin, and they inspired the film Escape from Alcatraz, the 1979 film, and they got out in 1962. But they'd all come there because they'd escaped or attempted to escape other prisons. And their escape is incredible, isn't it? It's unbelievable.
Starting point is 00:06:51 So I just read the Count of Monte Cristo, and I thought, this is implausible, everything he does to get out. But so they chipped away at their cell walls with spoons for ages, and then they would conceal their work with kind of painted cardboard that they'd accessed somehow. They made an improvised drill from a vacuum cleaner, which, I mean, how do you do that? And somehow they disguised the noise of the vacuum cleaner working as a drill by having one of them play the accordion the whole time. They should have played the spoons.
Starting point is 00:07:19 Well, the spoon was busy. They've got, oh, I'm sorry. Who's letting them get all this stuff, though? I mean, who's let the accordion in, I think, is the big question. That really is. They had a band there, like Al Capone was part of the band, one of the famous prisoners. Yeah, I think he was on banjo or something like that. He was.
Starting point is 00:07:39 Yeah. He started the band, I think. So this was way, way before this escape, wasn't it, in the 30s when Al Capone was there. Yeah. But yeah. It's a very long running band. And I guess it's very easy to do a reunion tour decades later, because you're all still in aftertaste.
Starting point is 00:07:52 I think it's like sugar babes, it's a constantly rotating guitar. More on this escape, we didn't get to the end of it. They had papier-mâché. They made papier-mâché heads of themselves, and they made it not, they didn't have actual papier-mâché. They had to use toilet paper and soap, and they sculpted these heads of themselves, and then they covered them in real hair, which they got from the prison barber shop. Cool.
Starting point is 00:08:18 Brilliant. Yeah. So good. They stole over 50 raincoats. Again, don't know where they're getting 50 raincoats from, they stole these raincoats and they made them into makeshift life jackets, and they vulcanized them properly using steam pipes in the prison. They worked this out from some kind of magazine they'd had smuggled in.
Starting point is 00:08:35 And they also, I think, converted one of them into a life raft, and apparently they converted a musical instrument, according to the FBI, into a tool to inflate the life raft. Oh, you just use the accordion, you squeeze it up and down, don't you? That sounds like the one, doesn't it? But then they'll hear you blowing up the... It can't be that. In fact, the whole point of musical instruments is they all make a noise when you pass wind through them.
Starting point is 00:09:02 I went on the FBI website and they said that they officially closed the case on December 31st, 1979, about this escape. But they have turned the responsibility over to the US Martial Service who continue to investigate. So if you at home have any leads or information to share about this escape from 1962, then please call Deputy US Martial Michael Dyke on 415-436-7677. Do you think you cop? But he thinks they made it. He thinks they made it to the mainland, definitely, and that they made it away.
Starting point is 00:09:38 Because some people think that the raft, which was made of raincoats, and it was also made of cement. That was the other ingredient. They made it after raincoats and cement. But he thinks they got away. And the family of the Anglin brothers, two of the escapees, they think that they attended their mother's funeral. Really?
Starting point is 00:09:56 Yeah, because their mother died several years later. But obviously, the funeral place was crawling with FBI agents and they think they might have attended dressed as women. And all three of them will be pardoned, but only if they make it to the age of 100. There was a team of Dutch scientists who did some computer simulations about whether the rafts would have made it to the mainland. They launched 50 virtual rafts every half hour between 8pm and 4am by looking at all the tides that would have happened at the time and from different locations on the island.
Starting point is 00:10:24 And they found that if they left it exactly midnight on the night, they might have made it. They would have been sucked out towards the Golden Gate Bridge, but at the moment they were close to the Golden Gate, the tide would have reversed and that would have sent them to the north side of the bridge and they would have been able to get to the land. Wow. And that's the only specific time. Every other time they would have got sucked out to sea.
Starting point is 00:10:45 But this is assuming that they weren't just there controlling the rafts, right? Yes. They did actually put into the computer that they might be able to do some steering. Because they had some oars. They made a couple of oars. They did have a couple of oars, but they were both made out of accordions. On the escaping via the only method through the ocean, there's a theory that so Alcatraz was meant to be actually quite a pleasant experience in terms of food, in terms of their showers.
Starting point is 00:11:14 They had hot showers. Prisons don't really have that. Pleasant is a strong word we should clarify. Maybe it wasn't such awful torture. You got your own cell, which actually was according to a bunch of people who've written about it since having come out saying that that's a really pleasant experience not to be in it. I think what Anna's saying is it's like a pleasant experience compared to being in prison. It's not the wits.
Starting point is 00:11:36 It's not an objectively pleasant experience. It's like saying that The Rock is a good movie compared to the other Michael Bay movies. Yes. Okay. No. But you know why they had hot showers? Well, this is, yeah, I was about to say because of the ocean. So the theory was that they were so used to hot water that when they got into the ocean,
Starting point is 00:11:54 that would immediately give them hypothermia or they wouldn't be used to it as opposed to cold showers getting them used to a cold swim. It is swimmable. So people have swum. So I think in... Oh, when was it? It was... The year before the prison opened, actually, a 17-year-old girl swam it in 47 minutes.
Starting point is 00:12:12 Wow. And she's not even the youngest person to have done it. Obviously, you need to be very lucky with the currents and the tides because it's pretty treacherous. But in 2006, a seven-year-old boy swam it. No. Also in 47 minutes. What? Isn't that crazy?
Starting point is 00:12:25 Wow. Do you think that maybe it's like, you know, when you go to a water park and there's that ride where you just sit in a ring and it just takes you around in exactly 47 minutes? It seems like there must be just a current that switches on once a day and that just pretty much helps. Some other people who are in Alcatraz. Yeah. Basil Banghart.
Starting point is 00:12:43 He was known as the owl because he had big eyes. Ellsworth Raymond Johnson was known as Bumpy because he had a bump on the back of his head. And Joseph Bowers was known as Dutch because he was born in Austria. Presumably they just... They heard he was European and just gave us so funny. Okay, it is time for fact number two and that is Andy. Andy. My fact is that Horatio Nelson had a brother whose name was Suckling Nelson.
Starting point is 00:13:16 So not the most heroic of the Nelson siblings. No, it feels like he was given a short shift in life, wasn't he? Yeah. By getting that name. Definitely. He was never going to become the head of the Navy. Well, maybe it means he was the only one who was breastfed. Do we know if that was the reason?
Starting point is 00:13:33 That was not the reason. Right. That's a great theory. So this fact actually comes from friend of the podcast, Carrie Adloid, who sent it to me saying you're the only person who will find this interesting. That's great. So it's because of the suckling side of the family. So his mother was called Catherine Suckling.
Starting point is 00:13:49 Okay. And she had a brother called Morris Suckling. And so, Nelson was one of 11 children, eight of whom survived to adulthood. So a lot of siblings and I think they were running a bit short of names. And Suckling was one of the last brothers born. And he was not very impressive, I think. So there's almost no references to him in biographies of Nelson. One of them just describes him as the feckless suckling.
Starting point is 00:14:14 He was a struggling vicar and Nelson got him a job. He was a draper in Beckles who tried to be a draper but failed. And then he became a vicar when his father, who was a vicar, retired. And he became the vicar and then he died a few years later. And I don't think he was very close to Horatio Nelson because Horatio wrote to his wife in 1799. I am not surprised at my brother's death. Three are dead younger than myself. That was his response to the death of his brother.
Starting point is 00:14:43 He died quite young and actually his father, so their father, wrote to Kitty, who was Nelson's sister, about Suckling. He will no doubt pass amongst a crowd of undistinguished preachers and gain some respect in the village from his quiet disposition, his liking to a little conviviality and his passion for greyhound racing. Wow. God, this podcast has turned into a roast of suckling. Poor guy. Dead for Ages, brought back finally via Cariad.
Starting point is 00:15:12 I know. I'm just ripping him. I think we've taken down again. The name Suckling came from the surname of the family, which comes from the word to suck. And in ancient times it was a baptismal or patronomic name of endearment. So it's like how you have the surname Darling. Although there's a poet called Sir John Suckling. Do you know what? So I was reading about Sir John Suckling
Starting point is 00:15:37 and he's related directly. So he was an English poet. He wrote Ballad Upon a Wedding. He also is credited as having invented the card game Cribbage. Really? Yeah. I studied Sir John Suckling at school. Did you? He was one of this group called the Cavalier Poets,
Starting point is 00:15:51 who were a lot of sort of roistering lads who were all in favour of King Charles. I think you've mentioned him before. I think so. And the poem Ballad Upon a Wedding contains one of the... is an early masturbation joke. Does it? At a wedding. It's not in the ceremony. Do you have the joke?
Starting point is 00:16:08 I think it's talking about how beautiful the bride is. And it's saying that if so hot I had a white dress. I think it's saying that if the groom had slept with the bride, as often as all the sort of invited male friends had imagined themselves doing it, it would have spoiled him surely. Wow. Yeah. Is that a masturbation joke?
Starting point is 00:16:31 Yeah, because they're all imagining that they're sleeping with her. Of course. Sorry. Anyway. Nice. But he was probably the most eminent of the Sucklings. It's thanks to the Sucklings that Nelson went to see in the first place. Because it was the Nelson's uncle Morris Suckling, who when Nelson's mother, Catherine, died,
Starting point is 00:16:50 Nelson was only, I think, eight or ten years old. He was quite... he was very young. And Uncle Morris said, well, take one of the children off your hands. And that happened to be Horatio. And then Morris got command of a ship, and Nelson wrote to him saying, take me to sea, please.
Starting point is 00:17:02 I want to go to sea. I want to go and have adventures. So that's how he got into the Navy. He could have been a draper. A missed opportunity. We could have such amazing curtains. You could have Suckling's column. The thing about his mother that he remembered,
Starting point is 00:17:17 so I got that his mother died when he was nine. So I like that you skirted around that with eight and ten. Between eight and ten. So I think his mother died when he was either eight, nine or ten. And he said he remembered her well. He claimed to remember her well. But then the only concrete thing he said he remembered about her was that she hated the French.
Starting point is 00:17:36 It's the whole thing, just an attempt to please his mum. It sounds like it might be. Wow. The whole thing. He was not very impressive in adulthood. I mean, to crowds who were observing him. Horatio Nelson. Horatio, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:50 So crowds thought he was rubbish. He was very short and a German onlooker at the crowd. It said, A more miserable collection of bones and wizened frame I have never yet come across. Ouch. I know. Yeah, but he had the crap kicked out of him at war.
Starting point is 00:18:03 I mean, he lost an arm. He lost an arm? Yeah, like this isn't a guy who was, you know. He had a hernia? There you go. You can't see that on the outside though, can you? You can. If you put your top off.
Starting point is 00:18:14 But I don't think he did not put his top off. Although he was very good at his own PR. So if he had a six pack and he also invented the phrase the Nelson touch to. What does that mean? It's about having some kind of brilliant naval strategy. It's amazing. And people use it, you know, even today.
Starting point is 00:18:31 Yeah, yeah. It's a phrase. It's not used much outside navies, I think. No. We talked about Lady Hamilton. No. So Nelson was married to Fanny and but then decided to leave her for Emma Hamilton, who was married to William Hamilton
Starting point is 00:18:50 at the time. And Nelson was sending love letters to Emma Hamilton, but William Hamilton knew the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs. So was opening all of his mail and reading whatever he was saying and sending it to the government. So whenever he was sending letters like to Emma Hamilton saying like, I kissed you fervently and we enjoyed the
Starting point is 00:19:12 height of love, Emma, I pour out my soul to you. Her husband was reading all that stuff and I guess scanning over it and getting into the important naval stuff. So he completely knew about the whole thing. But then, of course, they ended up living in some kind of weird Menasha twelfth. Yeah, they lived in the same house was it? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:30 They've seemed pretty open by the end of it. Everyone was kind of cool with it. It was a very modern sort of foursome and Fanny seemed not to have too much of an issue. They had a really unhappy marriage. Yeah. So I think it was probably a relief for both of them when he buggered off with the lady.
Starting point is 00:19:44 If they kept the family's surname, she could have been called Fanny Suckling. Oh, that would have been the dream, wouldn't it? Actually, as well, Emma Hamilton used to call Fanny Tom Tit as a nickname. So she could have been Tom Tit-Suckling. Tit-Suckling. Oh, God.
Starting point is 00:19:59 And that was because it was really not very nice. So she suffered from rheumatism in her legs and supposedly walked a bit like a bird. And so Emma Hamilton being a bit not very nice. That's catty. It's a bit Rebecca Vardy, isn't it? Yeah. I read a really random thing about Fanny Nisbitt.
Starting point is 00:20:16 So before she married Nelson, she was guardian to these three children who were the kids of a plantation owner who was away in the Caribbean with his wife. And him and his wife returned. And Fanny Nisbitt's looking after these kids. And Fanny brought the three kids in to say, hey, here's his daddy. And he said, who are these children?
Starting point is 00:20:36 And she, Fanny said, good God, don't you know them? You know, didn't recognize his own kids. They're your children. And so neither of the couple had recognized their own children. And it said that his wife was so surprised that she set her headdress on fire on a nearby candle. What on earth is that story?
Starting point is 00:20:54 It's really random. It's so random. It's like, you come home. You must know you have three children. So when three children stand in front of you, there's a process of deduction going on there, isn't there? He would have thought she hadn't figured it out. She was astonished.
Starting point is 00:21:08 Did she set her headdress on fire deliberately as a protest against the looks of these children? Or did she stagger back into a candle? It's not clear. It's written in a letter by her husband, and he doesn't specify. He just says she set her headdress on fire. That's an amazing science.
Starting point is 00:21:24 It's like an episode of Miranda. You know, the Hardy, Kiss Me Hardy, I think we've mentioned before, his dying words, Kiss Me Hardy to one of his officers. The Hardy later became First Lord of the Admiralty. He did really well in his career. Yeah. But this is amazing.
Starting point is 00:21:41 The Nelsons and the Hardys are still in touch as a family. Wow. Yeah. So there was a dinner party in 1990, and there was a woman there called Mary Arthur. She is descended from Nelson, and her husband was talking to one of the other guests and said, oh, this is my wife.
Starting point is 00:21:54 She's a descendant of Nelson. And the person they were talking to, Robin Stainer said, that's funny. I'm descended from Hardy. And they got back in touch that way. Wow. Not having known each other. They've been in touch since then,
Starting point is 00:22:06 and they became really good friends. And the Times wrote about it. The Times said, Mrs. Arthur, who lives in Woburn in Bedfordshire, confirmed that the two descendants continue the family's tradition of kissing. Nice. It sounds like it's all an excuse for them to have an affair. I don't think that is an excuse at all. I think he said, I'm a descendant of Hardy.
Starting point is 00:22:23 And she said, kiss me Hardy. And then they crossed the table and snogged. And the husband can't say anything because they're just reenacting the historic scene. Yeah. Well, I think that's a really bad story. Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is James. Okay. My fact this week is that in the 11th century,
Starting point is 00:22:44 hundreds of people in the UK paid their rent in eels. Okay. So this is a website run by a guy called John Wyatt Greenlee. He's a historian whose work, according to his site, examines the cultural history of eels in England from the 10th through the 17th centuries, focusing on eels role in economic change, the growth of a national English identity, and the evolution of spatial practice in early modern London.
Starting point is 00:23:12 And that was a quote that was a lot longer than I thought it was going to be. But he has a bit where he looks at rents that were paid in eels. And this was a thing that happened probably before the 10th century, but that's where we have the records from. For instance, a doomsday book records payments like the village of Hamston, who owed Earl Hugh 75,000 eels per year for their rents. Dead or alive? I think dead.
Starting point is 00:23:37 Okay. It's harder to collect. I suppose live eels. Yes. No, it's easier to collect. No, it isn't. Andy, come on. I'll tell you why.
Starting point is 00:23:47 There are 10 dead eels on the floor and 10 live eels in a bucket. Let's see who can pick them up quicker. Okay. It's easier to collect dead eels, but it's harder to find them, I think. Harder to find. Dead eels. It's harder to find dead eels lying around. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:02 The natural state is alive. Yeah. I do get that. Presumably they're eel farmers, right? It's not people going around just looking for dead eels. No, no, no. You can't farm an eel. You can't farm an eel.
Starting point is 00:24:11 You can't farm an eel. No. This was basically people catching them and then selling them at market and then picking them up and using the most kind of currency. Oh, wow. And they were dead because they came on sticks. So you get 25 eels on a stick. So when you had to give 75,000 eels, it would be, what, 3,000 sticks?
Starting point is 00:24:31 What? It was sort of like the equivalent of candy floss or something. You'd take a stick of eels and lick away at it. I'm not sure about the licking part. Well, they were ranked collectors so keen on eel. Was it just a huge surplus of eels? It's popular food. It is popular food.
Starting point is 00:24:49 John White Greenlee says that the reason that he looks into this is actually, if you look in the Doomsday book, there's payments in pigs, in fish, in ale. You might pay in different foods and drinks because if you don't have cash, it's a thing that everyone has. But people these days are really particularly interested in eels because we don't really eat eels anymore. So when you look at a list and it says 75,000 eels, you go, bloody hell, where'd you get 75,000 eels from?
Starting point is 00:25:14 You can't farm an eel. I had an eel for breakfast at the weekend. Did you really? Yeah, smoked eel. We don't eat eels anymore. No, no, I know what you mean. I had conflicts, but what I'm saying is it's less common. I didn't have, yeah, 75,000 eels.
Starting point is 00:25:30 But maybe it was just there was a lot more, so I think 50% of the biomass of European fresh water or some parts of it was made of eel in the olden days. Wow. I say the olden days. I don't have an exact year, but around this time. East Anglia too, back in the days before the fens were drained, was very rich eel territory.
Starting point is 00:25:51 You know, you'd go boating around the waters. And this guy, John Wyatt Greenlee, he's brilliant. Yeah. His Twitter name is surprised eel historian. And then the biography for him says, surprised historian, not surprised eels. He's a medievalist at Cornell University. And he's done a map.
Starting point is 00:26:11 He's done an interactive map of the UK. And you can look on it and you can click to see where your nearest local eel rent was. And I looked and it's about four miles from where I grew up, Kingston. There was a rent of 125 eels. Wow. Yeah. It's really interesting. My closest was Manchester.
Starting point is 00:26:27 Nice. I just was busy looking at his replies to that tweet because it was so successful. He was like, oh my God, who would have thought eels? This is fantastic. So he was a surprised eel historian. He's done a kind of calculation of what eels would get you today, today's money. So he said that he worked out, because he's at Cornell University,
Starting point is 00:26:47 that if you had to pay to go to Cornell University, you would need between 106,612 and 213,024 eels, either of which represents a number of eels that the Cornell versus office is ill-prepared to handle. He did say that an Amazon Prime membership, which is $99 a year, would cost only 150 to 300 eels. That's about six to 12 sticks of eels. I really didn't know that you cannot eat eel raw.
Starting point is 00:27:15 So again, in sushi, it's kind of... Did you just find that this weekend? I've had a very bad few days. You get it in sushi, don't you? You do, and it's always cooked. So because if you eat it raw, it's got toxic blood, and it causes your muscles to spasm, including your heart, and it's got enough toxin that it can kill a human being.
Starting point is 00:27:33 Yeah, if you suck all the blood out of an eel, you'll die. Yeah. Wow. I think you deserve to as well. But so that, if we're saying eel's not eaten that much here these days, in Japan, it's obviously massive. They have an annual consumption rate of 100,000 tons of eels. So that's 70% of the worldwide eel catch that we get.
Starting point is 00:27:55 But they've declined in their eel population so massively, something like genuinely 99%. That's how high it is. So they now have to import eel, glass eel, and so on from America in order to eat, but also as a result, because they're manufacturing great sushi out there, they get sent back to America, the Americans are sending their eels over to then have it sent back to eat.
Starting point is 00:28:17 So it's taken two plane rides by the time they've eaten. That's kind of nice in a way, because eels in their migration are used to migrating thousands of kilometers. They have this extraordinary migration. So it's maybe it's sort of nice that posthumously, they're still migrating thousands of miles back and forth. Do you think that's a little bit of consolation for the... No, I don't think so.
Starting point is 00:28:37 No, probably not. I mean, the population decline is amazing. So there are temporary bands that have been put in place in the UK. And it's lots to do with dredging of the ocean as well. This really just decimates the population. But they hatch in the Sargasso Sea, which is West Indies way, Bermuda. It's like North... And it's not a sea, it's a portion of the North Atlantic, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:29:01 So it's a portion of the ocean. But then they drift over on the Gulf Stream when they're really tiny, and then they burrow into river mouths and estuaries and things in the UK and across Europe. And then they stay there for up to 12 years. But some of them could live in a pool for up to 30 or 40 years, just living there and getting bigger. And then they suddenly, they feel the call,
Starting point is 00:29:21 they swim back to the Sargasso Sea, they spawn, they die. Yeah. We think. We think. No one's ever seen it happen. No one's ever seen an eel spawn. It's crazy. It's insane.
Starting point is 00:29:31 So in the olden days, people like Pliny and all those other types, until the 1700s, kind of thought they came from nowhere. And I kind of still think they do. Because no one's seen this one. We found young eels, very young eels born in the Sargasso Sea, haven't we? And then we've got the old eels that look totally different, by the way, in Europe and America. But that's it.
Starting point is 00:29:50 And they're constantly changing color. So when they spawn, they look like these tiny glass leaves. And then they become transparent glass eels. And then they turn into noodle looking things. They go brown. Then they go yellow. Then they go silver. It's this weird kind of disco effect.
Starting point is 00:30:06 And silver is the one where you know that they're going to start heading back to the Sargasso Sea to die. How do they feel the call? We don't know that either. We don't know. And we do know that if you farm an eel, which you can do these days, they have eel farmers. Oh no, you don't.
Starting point is 00:30:20 I apologize. But if you have an eel farm and you raise them there so they were born there, they still have the instinct to return to the Sargasso Sea, which is kind of embedded in them somehow. So do they just jamming their heads into the edge of the pond in the direction of the Sargasso Sea? I fear they might do that kind of thing. Wow.
Starting point is 00:30:39 They're really clever in the way they migrate as well. So now we have scientists have actually tagged them. Bizarrely, they haven't managed to tag them all the way into the migration. Come on. They're just not looking close enough for this spawn, are they? I know. I reckon if we go to the Sargasso Sea. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:30:54 Well, I think you can see the spawn. You've just never seen the eels spawn it, right? There was one Danish scientist who spent 15 years of his career looking in the mid-Atlantic for seven millimeter long larvae. He never did. Yeah, but that, I mean, it does feel like he's not done a very good job. You surely look for the bigger ones on their way back to the Sargasso Sea. Have we seen that?
Starting point is 00:31:15 You would look at the spawn and then you keep looking at it at earlier and earlier times and then look at the bigger ones later and later times and eventually the two things must come together. Guys, it must be harder than it looks. Otherwise, I'm sure these people would have succeeded. Anyway, so I was just saying that we have tagged them now. So they've tagged them for about the first 1,500 kilometers of their journey. And what they found out is if you tag a European eel when it's going back to spawn,
Starting point is 00:31:39 it doesn't make a beeline for the Sargasso Sea. It doesn't do the shortest route. It heads a bit further south. So it heads towards like where the Azores would be. And that's because they're smart enough to know that there are ocean currents that they then pick up like a conveyor belt. And that'll get them there much faster. And that's the only way they get there.
Starting point is 00:31:55 Like a 7-year-old boy off Alcatraz. Exactly. Wow. That is amazing. And they can just sit in it, not do anything. So we've been looking as to how they spawn for centuries, right? But it was only in the early 1900s that that was found. And it was this guy that you're talking about.
Starting point is 00:32:13 It was a Danish biologist, Johann Schmidt. And he was the one who pinpointed the Sargasso as the spot that they were doing it. And he, I was just looking into him. He was married to a lady called Kool. And he studied under a man called Warming. Very nice. Nice as that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:32 And so Kool was the daughter of the old Carlsberg brewery in Copenhagen, the chief director there. And actually the whole thing, the reason we know about this morning, is Carlsberg itself sponsored him to go and look for it. So it's thanks to Carlsberg Beer that we know about this. And was he the 15 years guy? Yeah. He's probably not the best scientific study in the world, is he?
Starting point is 00:32:54 And then this other guy, Warming, is a Danish botanist who is a founder of the scientific discipline of ecology. He's the relationship of man and earth. He's called Warming, which is quite nice. Nice. He's a really good scientific fact, Stan. Thank you. There is one reported case of a male dolphin masturbating
Starting point is 00:33:13 by wrapping an electric eel around its penis. What? How do we know it was masturbating? He was thinking about John Suckling's wife at the time. I mean, did it ejaculate at the end? I haven't seen the video. This is too personal a question. I'm sorry, but if the dolphin is going to tell us
Starting point is 00:33:31 it's been masturbating with an eel, then we want the details. I don't know. You're quite right. The eel might have been trying to asphyxiate the penis. Indeed. Or have sex with it thinking it's another eel. I don't know what happened. Speaking of members with eels wrapped around them.
Starting point is 00:33:49 Good link. Okay. There is an old tradition in the Fens of England of using a wedding ring made of eel skin. Oh. Yeah. So that's another way you can wrap a bit of eel around yourself to symbolize a love match.
Starting point is 00:34:01 Yeah. Sounds very flimsy. Yeah. I don't know if it's the ring for life, but it's maybe the ring used for the wedding ceremony. Okay. Or someone you feel like it's your first husband kind of thing. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:14 Okay. It is time for our final fact of the show. And that is Chisinski. My fact is that according to Polynesian mythology, Maui, who is the god in the Disney film Moana, died by climbing into a goddess's vagina and being crushed to death by the obsidian teeth in there. And they didn't show that in the film.
Starting point is 00:34:38 Yeah. Yeah. We went to Disney and watched that film. Do you remember? Because we were sponsored by Moana. Yeah. That's right. You guys were quite late getting in because you needed to,
Starting point is 00:34:47 do you remember you had to sign in or something like that? Yeah. And so you missed the start of it. Missed the start. But I went in without signing in. And they showed that scene. Oh, you get that at the top. It's at the top.
Starting point is 00:34:56 Oh, God. It's a show. Show the death scene at the top. Okay. And then the rest is a flashback. Of course. So if you did miss that first scene of the film or the film, you should know that this is the film Moana
Starting point is 00:35:08 and Moana sort of demigod sidekick in the film is Maui, who was a real God, very important God in, or demigod in Pacific mythology. And he exists all over the Pacific islands. So like in Hawaii, he's very important. But Tahiti, Samoa, the Maui people, they all have slightly different versions of him. But there is a version where he's a real trickster character.
Starting point is 00:35:31 He's a prankster. He's a prankster. He's like Whitey Bulger or Al Capone. Yeah. He's a prankster slash murderer. Yeah. Does he murder anyone? He doesn't actually.
Starting point is 00:35:41 He's just a little prankster. And one of the ways he dies is when he's trying to become immortal. And the way he decides to do this is to enter the goddess of death, who's called Hine Nui Teppo, to get in through her vagina, pluck out her heart on the way up to her mouth, then emerge from her mouth. And apparently this will reverse the birth process
Starting point is 00:36:01 and make him immortal. I don't know if that's scientifically accurate. Anyway, he does this and he's got his bird friends with him. So some birds who are his mates. And he says, please don't laugh while I do this, because she'll wake up. And they couldn't hold it in because it's quite funny watching someone climb through a vagina.
Starting point is 00:36:17 And so she woke up and she tensed up and the little teeth in her vagina, which we all have, crushed him to death. Wow. That is quite a story. She's really, she's described us, but did you say she's the goddess of death? Yes.
Starting point is 00:36:33 Oh, wait, or a mortality? I think death and mortality. She's got very vivid description in the myth. She's got eyes of green stone, hair of kelp and the mouth of a barracuda. As well as, of course, having a toothy fanny. She has a vagina a bit like a moray eel. They've got really big teeth, haven't they?
Starting point is 00:36:54 Oh, they do. They've got like a pharyngeal jaw like alien. Oh, yeah. And they've got backwards teeth, so that if you accidentally swim in the mouth, you can't swim out again. Oh, gosh. Grandma, my, what big teeth you have.
Starting point is 00:37:05 And then what a surprising location. So Maui, anything on Maui? Well, actually, we said that he didn't, his pranks didn't kill anyone. And I think that is true, perhaps. I don't know of any that did. But he did once go fishing with a guy called Irawaru, who was the husband of his sister.
Starting point is 00:37:25 And he was so annoyed with Irawaru that he turned him into a dog. And that was the first ever dog. And that's where dogs come from, because Maui actually, if you know the song from Moana, you're welcome, which is his big song. It's all about the things which he did.
Starting point is 00:37:40 So he created the moon and the sun and the wind and all these different things. He pulled the islands up from the ocean floor, didn't he? He had a magic jaw bone, which according to some of the myths is the jaw bone of his grandmother, but is also quite big. So she must have been huge.
Starting point is 00:37:56 And he did things, useful things with it. So he used it as a fish hook to pull up islands from the ocean floor. And actually, the names of North Island and South Island in New Zealand now are te ika a Maui and te waka a Maui, which means fish of Maui and canoe of Maui, because that's from when he caught a fish
Starting point is 00:38:15 and turned it into an island, and he turned his canoe into another island. That's turning stuff into islands. That's great. You raised the sky. That was the thing he did. The sky was pressed down close to the earth, so if there's height of a tall tree,
Starting point is 00:38:28 it was pressed right down to there. So it's obviously very restrictive for everybody. And he just lifted it up and ran to a very high peak and chucked it up in the air. That would be so annoying if this guy was that low, wouldn't it? Yeah. So was it like it wouldn't, you wouldn't hit your head on it,
Starting point is 00:38:41 but you would be able to fly a drone. You wouldn't be able to fly a drone. Nightmare. Yeah. So another character in Moana is Te Fiti, who's that goddess who comes up at the end. She's actually based on Pele, who is a genuine goddess in Hawaiian mythology.
Starting point is 00:38:57 And so she's like the most important goddess, goddess of volcanoes and stuff like that. It's like the big volcano in Hawaii is called Mount Pele or Pele, I think. Yes. And that's kind of her embodiment, is that right? Yes. I think you're meant to pay tribute to it when you go there.
Starting point is 00:39:12 I went there and I did it. Did you not? No. God, I wonder you got this cold for so long. You're meant to give, I think it's brandy, I think it is. You go and pour gin for Pele. She loves gin. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:28 There was a hog god called Kamapua'a, which I'm sure I'm pronouncing wrong, but he married Pele, the fire goddess. And his habits were so bad because he was a hog that she couldn't cope. And they had huge arguments and eventually she won all the arguments and he was forced to surrender and turned himself into a fish.
Starting point is 00:39:48 And that is a Hawaiian fish. And it's the Hawaiian fish with the best name. I think we might have talked about it before. Oh, the really long name. Yeah, okay, I'm going to have a crack at it. It's called the humu humu nuku nuku apua'a. And it makes this grunting noise, which apparently sounds a bit like a hog,
Starting point is 00:40:06 which is because it used to be a hog when he was a god. That was always a relationship that was going to fail between a volcano and a hog, wasn't it? It's a one-way trip to a barbecue, basically. Can we talk about having teeth in vaginas? Sure. Because this is an extremely common myth around the world, around the whole world.
Starting point is 00:40:27 In fact, there are 22 variants of this. It's called vagina dentata myth in North American cultures alone. The Wichita one has a toothed vagina wandering around at night castrating men in their sleep. The Mandaruku myth has a woman with a vagina like a crocodile's mouth. In Orissa, in India,
Starting point is 00:40:47 their myth has the toothed vagina not only castrating men, but also eating the rice crop causing famine. And it's basically a misogynistic way of saying that women are evil and you should stay away from them. Right? I don't know. I thought it was like empowering women.
Starting point is 00:41:05 We get to chop off men's penises with our vaginas if we want to. I immediately bought it to the misogyny. I was like, greedy vagina. Most of the time, it is quite misogynistic. Very occasionally, you get one where the woman is empowered in the story. So in the Chukchi myths, which is in northern Siberia,
Starting point is 00:41:22 you have a woman who is married to an old man and to avoid having sex with him. She puts a fish head in her vagina so the teeth will cut him every time he tries to have sex. Right. And she takes the piss out of him, doesn't she? He has sex with her the first time. He's like, oh my gosh, there are teeth in there.
Starting point is 00:41:37 And then she was like, I can't believe you didn't know all vaginas have teeth. How embarrassing. But it's just a fish head that she's put in there. Just a fish head. And she must take it out. I assume she doesn't leave it there because she's got away with it once.
Starting point is 00:41:47 She doesn't have to have it for her whole life. Just a thing on Moana, the movie itself. Oh yeah. So if that scene, the vagina crushing scene was in the movie, obviously it would have been an X-rated movie, right? Right. But in Italy, they actually had to change the name of Moana altogether because in Italy,
Starting point is 00:42:07 there was a very famous porn star called Moana. Moana Posi. And parents were worried and they were worried in the studio that people googling Moana to see cinema times and so on would come across Moana Posi instead of the actual cinema. So it was renamed to be Oceana. So in Italy, it was released as Oceana to stop the X-rated references coming up.
Starting point is 00:42:28 It was used, of course, to be a very disgusting club in Kingston, Oceana. Which is why it couldn't be called Oceana in the UK. Exactly. They had to change it back. They did really good research on Moana into Pacific Islander's culture and history and stuff, didn't they? And they consulted lots of experts.
Starting point is 00:42:48 So I think the creators of the film traveled to Polynesia multiple times and they put together a committee of linguists and anthropologists and historians from all over the Pacific Islands, who I think ended up being called the Pacific Committee or something. They were called the Oceanic Trust. And they did things like, for instance,
Starting point is 00:43:06 Maui for the first year of when they were coming up with the film was bald. So if you remember the film, he's got all this curly, big curly head of hair. And that's because he was bald and they went to the Pacific Island anthropologist who said, that's incredibly offensive because the hair is where your mana is,
Starting point is 00:43:21 is where your power is. And he's very powerful. You've got to give him more hair. So they gave him more and more hair until they told him to stop. It was meant to be quite a skinny character as well. Maui in the mythology is a skinny character, but they made him quite large.
Starting point is 00:43:33 Do we know why that was? Why would they go against that? So that was controversial, but that was actually at the advice of the Oceanic Trust Committee. So he's a very strong character and people said that he's playing into stereotypes of obesity. But the committee said,
Starting point is 00:43:47 look, he's just incredibly powerful, imposing figure. And also it's much funnier if you've got this huge thing. And he's not fat in a film. I would say he is big-boned and strong. Mighty. Exactly. Mighty Maui. Do you know what are the main imports
Starting point is 00:44:02 of the Pacific Island? This is now a general Polynesia effect. Imports. Spam. Oh, it's so close. Oh, I think... I thought it was, yeah. Yeah, all right.
Starting point is 00:44:12 Well, maybe another one that... Oh, damn, okay. Okay, but another food stuff? So it's the food stuff that... Not eels. It's the food stuff that Americans in the USA eat a lot of, and it's a bit of it that Americans never eat.
Starting point is 00:44:26 But it gets massively eaten. Oh, is it the toy in a Happy Meal? It's the toy in a Happy Meal. They're a huge part. And it's controversial because they've got a lot of plastic in them. And, you know, they'll get eaten a lot in the Pacific... No.
Starting point is 00:44:38 Oh, it's not. No, it's not. That was a great guess. Sorry. I watched Only Connect the other day, and I didn't get anything right, and I know you guys kicked ass on it, so I thought James had just pulled out
Starting point is 00:44:46 another stunner there. So it's turkey tails. So I didn't know about this. But in America each year, there are 250 million turkeys eaten. And turkeys all have this tail, which is this weird oily gland at the very base. And it's basically the gland
Starting point is 00:45:01 that keeps the feathers in of the tail. And it's got this fatty chunk of meat at it, and it's never used. And America also gets called the Parsons' Nose. It's a great name for it. But it's not sent to shops. It just never gets eaten in the U.S.A. So they all get sent to the Pacific Islands.
Starting point is 00:45:17 And America started basically dumping these there. And now it's a massive part of the diet. In 2007, the average Samoan was eating 44 pounds of turkey tails a year, which is three times as much as the average American eats turkey in a tote. I think they think it's a real problem, don't they? Because they do have an obesity problem
Starting point is 00:45:36 in some of the islands. And it's because there's so much fat in these turkey tails. Basically, yeah. They really want to stop importing quite so much. They eat a lot of mutton flaps, too. That's the thing that New Zealand exports, which is a very fatty bit of the cheap, basically. And they don't have teeth on them anymore, do they?
Starting point is 00:45:56 Oh, dear. So another Disney film, which wasn't exactly true to life, was Pocahontas. And in Pocahontas, the male protagonist is John Smith. I understand, having not seen it. But all these things I don't think are in the film.
Starting point is 00:46:14 So he was a pirate turned mercenary who fought the Turks in the Balkans. He was captured and sold into slavery and was a slave for ages and ages before he beat his boss to death in a wheat field and escaped to Russia. And then because he was so famous as having escaped as a slave,
Starting point is 00:46:33 he was invited to help establish a colony in America where he was arrested for mutiny on his way. And then eventually he did get to America and then he did meet Pocahontas, I believe, but then had to return to England to recover from a gunpowder incident which blew his genitals off. Not in the movie.
Starting point is 00:46:52 So he's got no genitals throughout the whole movie? No, this is not in the movie, all this stuff. No, no, but like, you know, underneath the clothes. Again, I must stress this is not in the movie. No, no, no. Surely it must be the pre-genital. Yeah, this is when he's sent back to England after all the stuff has happened in the Americas.
Starting point is 00:47:11 But if he couldn't make it with Pocahontas when he had genitals, it's not like he would have stood a chance when he didn't, is it? I guess not. That's why. These are according to his memoirs, he said all this. And historians do assume that they were a total fiction. Oh.
Starting point is 00:47:25 However, one historian, Philip Barber, has said that nothing that he's written has yet been found to be a lie. Oh. So it could be true, it could be not true. Okay. Wow. The story of Cinderella is a bit more terrifying than the one that we know from Disney.
Starting point is 00:47:41 I kind of loved Disney because they took all the Grimm's fairy tales that are grotesque and made them really child-friendly. But in the original Cinderella, the evil stepsisters when they want to fit into the shoes just resort to cutting off bits of their feet. So I think one of them cuts off her own toes and one of them cuts off her own heel. Oh.
Starting point is 00:47:58 And they're caught, apparently, because of the blood dripping from the shoes. Although I would have thought it would be quite obvious if you put your foot into a shoe that you've either got no toes or no heel. I think so. You would have thought he noticed anyway. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:48:11 Well, if you just get someone to turn up wearing the shoe, I guess you might not. It depends on whether the prince is trying to witness the whole shoe-fitting process. No, because I think what happens is that the prince walks around with a shoe and he tries to put it directly onto people's feet, doesn't he? He, like, kneels down and they give them his feet.
Starting point is 00:48:27 I guess so. They give them their feet. I see what you're saying, because if they went into a dressing room and then, you know, quickly chopped off the toes and emerged. Yeah. If the ugly sisters took the shoe and said, I'm sure I will be able to fit into this,
Starting point is 00:48:38 just give me one second, and they pop into the kitchen. And they do. Yeah, I'm out in a minute. I'm just picking the socks to go with it. I think I picked the red ones. Yeah, the grim version. They also had, they stopped the sisters coming to the wedding
Starting point is 00:49:00 by having pigeons peck out their eyes. What? Yeah, so it was a lot more. Why are they not allowed to come to the wedding? The battle is lost at that point for the sisters. They're still screaming in agony from the toe thing. They'd ruin the vibe. Just don't send an invitation to the sisters.
Starting point is 00:49:12 How about that? Invite them to the evening bit. But we all know the thing with the wedding is that you can only have a certain number of guests. And at one stage, you have to draw the line and everyone else gets their eyes packed out. Okay, that's it. That's all of our facts.
Starting point is 00:49:31 Thank you so much for listening. If you'd like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we've said over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shriverland. Andy. At Andrew Hunter M.
Starting point is 00:49:42 James. At James Harkin. And Czenski. You can email podcast at qi.com. 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
Starting point is 00:49:52 from all of our previous episodes to links to buying our books. And there's also our behind the scenes documentary Behind the Gills. Check that out. Okay, we'll be back again next week with another episode. We'll see you then.
Starting point is 00:50:02 Goodbye. Do you know how the eels feed themselves on the 3,000 mile journey back to the Saga Soci? They keep themselves going by consuming their own bones. So their spine loses 65% of its volume and the skull loses 50% of its volume and they break down these bone cells called osteocytes and they use them to get the minerals
Starting point is 00:50:33 and the nutrients they need. Okay, because they do lose all their teeth and their stomach and their digestive system so I suppose they just have to devour their bones. That would be like if we were born as adults and ended as a baby. A baby isn't an adult without bones and you've got a child now.
Starting point is 00:50:49 No, they have more bones than adults. So it's not like that. It's not being born as a baby and ending as an adult. Well, it's good to know which way rounds. That is.

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