No Such Thing As A Fish - 319: No Such Thing As 19th Century Feudal Japanese Monopoly
Episode Date: May 1, 2020James, Anna, Andy & Anne Miller discuss the Amazon, Jumanji, Loofahs and Ooya! Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. ...
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Hi, everyone. Before we start this week's show, we first of all want to make sure everyone's okay
and hope that you're keeping well and keeping sane and you're getting through this lockdown okay.
But one thing we quickly wanted to say is that Dan is away still. He'll be back next week. But
in his stead, we have our good friend and colleague Ann Miller. Yeah, that is right.
Miller's here. Not only is Ann Miller a QIL, for you'll know very well. She's also a published
author, which I'm sure you guys might know. And honestly, if you're looking for a book to
entertain your children while you're stuck at home with them, having to endure whatever it is
that children do, do go look up Ann's book is called Mickey and the Animal Spies. I mean,
I've actually read it and loved it. And I realized I'm 34. But I do think I loved it in the mind of
like a nine year old. It's about basically a bunch of animals and a ray of animals who go around
solving crimes together with the lead character, this really adventurous kind of spunky gal called
Mickey. It's fab. Yes. And actually, the other person who's on this week's show, as well as myself
and Anna and Ann, is of course, Andrew Hunter Murray. And of course, he has a book as well,
which we should mention. And that's for people who's reading ages above the age of nine. So have
you read that, Anna? I have indeed. So here I have to slip into my 10 year old self to really get to
grips with that. No, that's called the last day. And it's brilliant if what you're looking for to
escape this kind of current dystopia is a fictional and much more exciting dystopia. You want to go
to the last day. The concept is amazing. So the concept is that the world stops spinning, and half
of it's plunged into darkness, half of it's in light. And it's all the repercussions of that
combined with a thriller story. And again, a great spunky female character, I think it might be Mickey
when she's grown up. Oh, wow, imagine that if that's the same universe. Oh my God, this whole thing
has been blown wide open. Alright, so go and look at both of those books, The Last Day and Mickey
and the Animal Spies. Yes, especially at the moment when it's a really good time to be supporting
authors and buying books. It's such a good time to buy books, the whole book industry is massively
struggling. So it's just think of it as a good thing to do for the world as well as yourself to go
out and buy books. Okay, on with the show.
Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you
not from the QI offices in Covent Garden but from four rooms across the country.
My name is Andrew Hunter Murray and with me today are Anna Tajinsky, James Arkin and Ann Miller.
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 you, Anna.
My fact this week is that loofahs are edible.
A yummy but time snack. Yeah.
Yeah. This is, I didn't say they tasted nice but loofahs, which I find it a really funny word.
So loofahs are plants from the luffa or the loofah plant. So I think I assumed and maybe
other people did that real loofah sponges that you get in the shower are sponges like the animals,
the organisms, but they're not, they're a plant, they're a gourd in fact. And you can grow them.
I realized that there's this plant that I've been looking at in my local shop in London,
pre-lockdown obviously, that I've never known what it is and it's this. It's just a loofah sponge
in its early days. No. Yeah. It looks like a ridged courgette. And yeah, basically it's like
a gourd and the loofah that you have hanging in your shower is when it's past its delicious phase
and more in the dried up, desiccated phase. And it's like, if you think of a pumpkin when
you empty a pumpkin out to make a face out of it, then all the white stringy stuff in that,
when that dries up in the loofah, it turns into a sponge.
Loofahs have so many uses that I didn't know about. So researchers in Mumbai,
they've made bricks out of loofahs and they have more air pockets than a standard brick.
So you have to dry it and grind it down and mix it with aggregate material, kind of like
concrete is, you know, it's mixed together with other stuff. But they're really porous
and they can harbor plant and animal life inside the brick. And they're so porous,
they have kind of mini water tanks inside them. So that cools the building down.
So loofahs sound like the ideal brick home building material.
Okay, but one thing you shouldn't really use loofahs for is scrubbing your back in the bath.
Isn't that right? According to some microbiologists, they're like a breeding ground for bacteria.
Because they have lots of air pockets and lots of holes where bacteria can get in and
dead skin cells. You get dead skin cells in there, what the bacteria like to eat dead skin cells.
Where do they like to live in warm, damp environments? What is it after a warm, damp
environment? It's perfect. I read a bit of advice saying you should chuck away your loofah pretty
much every week, which feels like you're going through so many loofahs. So the three-pack should
last you about a month. Yeah, that's too many. Yeah, but loofahs are quite long. I've seen one
at Kew Gardens and it's much longer than a loofah you put in the bath. Maybe you just cut a bit
off, maybe it grows back like celery, just take the end off it. Maybe it does that.
We're not sure. Anna, maybe you can buy one from that shop when it reopens.
I will. Well, if there are anything like your average kind of gourds, you know when you try
to grow courgettes and you end up at the end of the season with 200,000 courgettes or marrows,
by that point you don't have to do it. No, I don't know that. Maybe. I've never grown a marrow.
This might be your experience, but it's not a universal human experience.
I think anyone who's ever done gardening and garden with courgettes that turn into marrow
will know. I remember this in my childhood that they grow much better than any other vegetable,
so you get so sick of eating them for every single meal. Please write in if you've had this
experience. Anna, don't say that. You're going to get hundreds of thousands of emails now.
The one thing you can do if you don't want to throw your loofah away is microwave it.
That's all advice from the loofah experts. They say that to eat it or clean it.
That's a great point. I don't know how it cooks in a microwave, but if you have a
loofah in your bathroom and you're worried that it's getting a bit germy, apparently if you shove
it in the microwave for 30 seconds or a minute, then it all don't put it. Just start with 10
seconds. Okay. Don't put it in for too long. That's the microwave. Always the way with the
microwave though. Start for 10 seconds, build up to giving it an hour. Yeah. Take it out, stir it
around. Nice. Do you guys know that there's only one hotel in the UK that grows its own loofahs?
Really? Yeah, one hotel. Where? It's near Bath. It's near Bath. That's funny. A place called
Ston Eastern Park, and not only do they make their own loofahs, they have an annual event,
the loofah harvest, where you can go to the hotel and see the loofahs being harvested.
And it's the end of October or the start of November every single year, so hopefully it
won't be affected by the current lockdown. Fingers crossed. And the gardeners will take you down
and advise you on your own loofah cultivation. And then they'll give you a demonstration on how
to de-skin your loofah. And then you get a two course lunch. I don't know if there's any loofahs
part of that. Must be both courses. And then you get a loofah demonstration. And at the end of the
day, you get to go back to the garden and pick your own loofah. Wow. What a day out that would be.
Sounds amazing. Yeah. Hey, you know who would love that? So I was looking up
gourds and squashes. So, gourd is basically generally used for the inedible ones and squash
are the ones that we eat. But the American Gourd Society, they began in 1937 and they are big
enthusiasts of all the kinds. And I was having a look at other kinds of gourds because the loofah
obviously great. Do you know about the bottle gourd? No. So it's basically it's long and when you dry
it out, it kind of becomes hollow and it's got a long stem which works like a handle. So you
can use it to carry water around. Oh, nice. Kind of useful. I was just thinking the word gourd,
I think I first came across it in the asterix books. Did he used to carry like magic potions in
his garden stuff? That does so well. Yeah. Yeah, because you definitely drink out of them. Like
use them as mugs and stuff, wouldn't you? Well, Anna, you must have a nightmare with your 200,000
courgette mugs every year. My cupboards are full. Have you ever been to one of Anna's drinking parties
where we all drink tequila out of a gourd? All the drinks taste of courgette. It's actually not
very pleasant. We're here for a gourd time, not for a long time. That could be the tagline.
Another historical using of loofahs. It was a real craze in the end of the 19th century. So
this is when people really picked up on the loofah as being handy. And it was because friction baths
had just become very popular. And so this was the idea that it began with the concept that
showering or washing was bad for you. So for 200 years, it was quite common not to wash much
because people thought that getting hot opened up your pores and led in lots of little bad guys.
And then they decided that scrubbing with something really rough and sand papery. So women
used to use mohair or flesh brushes. If you scrubbed and scoured your skin, that would get
all the bad guys out. And then they discovered loofah, which was perfect for scraping out
all these tiny little evil creatures. Bad guys, yeah. The bad guys. I guess we'd now call them
sort of pathogens or something. But there was this craze for friction bars. And it was
invented by a guy called Lewis Coon. And it was a friction sits bath. And what you did was you sat
in a bathtub, but the water was about 10 to 14 degrees centigrade. So cold, unpleasantly cold.
And you rub your lower abdomen, hips and genitals very vigorously with a rough cloth or a loofah.
And the nerve stimulation was thought to evacuate all the toxins. Wow. And then you go straight to
bed. I wonder if that's part of the loofah day out that James passed. I started to go off the
loofah day out if that's part of it. The genital stimulation you have to pay extra for that part.
Some of the people are not people, actually the opposite of people,
animals. Some animals that have friction baths are sperm whales. And now sperm whales. People are
animals. You're right. It's not the opposite at all, is it? Animals are not people though. No.
Well, some animals are people. This is contentious, guys, and for another day.
Okay. So anyway, animals that have friction baths include sperm whales. And what they do
is they get together and they exfoliate by rubbing against each other. So normally,
sperm whales are quite solitary, although they'll be in small pods of maybe 10 or 15. But every now
and then about 70 of them will come together and they'll all start rubbing against each other to
get the bad guys off. Because they have like bad guys who attach themselves to the skin,
like limpets and stuff like that, parasites. And theirs genuinely serves an actual purpose,
doesn't it? So it's like temperature regulation. If you're covered in algae, it's hard to regulate
your temperature or you've got proper parasites. Whereas for humans, it's kind of bizarre that we
exfoliate. Or I obviously don't because I'm not a fool. But it's bizarre that exfoliating has become
such an accepted thing. I mean, what is it? There's no scientific evidence to say it's doing
anything useful. Find it kind of gets rid of those gross bumpy things on the back of our arms,
which I'm kind of fond of. But that might also be personal to you. I think you need to see someone
about those. Oh, no. But when I was reading about the different kinds of gourds they've made,
apparently a warty girl does quite a thing because it's like it's even more distinctive. So they
like a warty girl. They would want to exfoliate. I don't think kind of saying that her elbow looks
like a warty god. Well, actually, it sounds like it's me. Yeah, you've been spending too much time
rolling around in the courgette patch. Okay, it's time for fact number two. And that is Anne.
My fact is that the man who invented Jumanji did so because he hated monopoly. Wow. If only we
could all kind of channel that hatred for monopoly into some creative stuff. I mean, we've all been
there, right? Yeah, he's awesome. So his name is Chris Van Alsburg. He is a children's author
and illustrator. And he's got really interesting ways of how he gets ideas. So as well as he
wrote Jumanji, the original picture book, and he also wrote the Polar Express, which also turned
into a big movie. And he said that when he was younger, he used to find it frustrating that if
you were playing Cludo, you couldn't actually interrogate Colonel Mustard. And if you were
playing Monopoly, you didn't get any money, you weren't actually rich at the end, even if you
built lots of hotels and had all the expensive properties. And then he also thought, well,
what are things that I see a lot? Like, so everyone's seen footage of a rhino stampede,
but they haven't seen a rhino stampede in a living room. And then he was like, ah,
a jungle game that comes to life. That's what I'm going to make. Okay. Yeah. That was this huge thing.
But which game was he playing when he decided to do Polar Express?
I think that will be that train game, which I've forgotten the name of that goes through Europe.
Oh, Ticket to Ride. Ticket to Ride. Wow. And was he annoyed that at the end of Ticket to Ride,
you're not in but a pest. Like, this guy has very high demands of his board games,
I would say. I think everyone else accepts the fundamental conceit that the end of Monopoly,
you don't get 30 grand and the Hilton. So yeah, it's interesting. It's another interesting leap,
isn't it, that he went from Monopoly to rhinos. He must have had a jungle penchant running alongside
his hatred of Monopoly. Yeah, he does sound very cool. Um, no, I love him and his approach to
stories. So he shared a letter that a fan wrote to him. And this is a girl called Alexandra,
and she said, Dear Mr. Van Alsburg, I love the books you write. I am glad your books are so weird,
because I am very weird. I think you are weird, but great. I wish a volcano and flood would be in
my room. Okay. What a silly thing to wish for. Very, very troubled home life that we're not really
going to have time to get into properly, I think. My favorite origin story actually for a board game
is, um, there's the two men who invented Trivial Pursuit in 1979. And it's an incredibly boring
story. Uh, after you get to the bones of it, it's like they're two businessmen who thought,
yeah, should we invent Trivial Pursuit? So it came about, I think one of them said
they were inspired to invent it when they were playing Scrabble and some of the pieces were
missing. So they couldn't play it anymore. Now, if you think about it, if you have pieces missing
in Scrabble, it doesn't matter. If the piece that's missing is the bard, then that's a problem.
That's the crucial, yeah. It's the only absolutely crucial piece. No, I think there are lots of
different ways in which you lose pieces. So for example, if you lose all the vowels,
that is going to be a tricky game of Scrabble to get through. And that would actually be a great
prank to play on someone. Maybe it was the holder for the counters and they couldn't find a way
to display them without the other person seeing what they had. Must have been the holder. That's
very good. We found three different ways in which this origin story stacks up.
I like the origin of operation. Do you know that game? It's like, it's a guy in a hospital and you
have to pick out bits of his body with tweezers, right? And if you hit the sides, then it makes a
buzz. Now, this was invented by a student in the 1960s. He was a design student and it was for his
exam. But before that, Benjamin Franklin invented operation in the 1700s.
He invented a game which was basically the same. It was called treason. And it had a picture of King
George II. And you had to get a crown out of him. And if you touch the sides, then it would make a
buzzing noise. So Benjamin Franklin invented operation. Isn't that amazing? That's incredible,
James. If real life operations were anything like operation, then surgeons would open up their
patients and go, Oh, shit, there are no organs in here at all. Who's taking the organs? Is that
what happens in operation? Do you just lose the organs over time? Pretty much. Okay, I've never,
I've never owned a set. Oh, now's a good time to get one, Andy. Yeah, that's true. I've only got
four board games, one of which I bought for an earlier episode of Fish, which was the Cattle
Seaman trading board game, grade up to elite cow. Wow. And then one of the others is the QI
board game. What is Scrabble? I don't have a very good cover. Do you think they could turn the,
you know how Jumanji is like kind of a board game, but then also a movie? Do you think they
could turn the Cattle Seaman trading board game into a movie? Yes, I absolutely do. I think some
bad guys hold the world's Cattle Seaman stock to ransom. And the rock will have to be involved
somehow. Because they did have Monopoly the movie, didn't they? Or no, they're making,
no, they're making Monopoly the movie. I think they've tried, I think they've tried before,
but they're making a new one with Kevin Hart, who was in the new Jumanji movies. So I feel
that he's going to absolutely conquer board game movie crossovers. Well, it's going to be very,
very long. That's the only thing we know about the Monopoly film, be 16 hours long. You know,
they're about to ruin Monopoly, or I think they might have ruined it already by inventing a new
updated version where it's cashless. So they want to get in tune with the modern man or woman.
And so they've got a cashless Monopoly where basically Mr. Monopoly is the banker. So no
player gets to be the banker anymore. Mr. Monopoly is a top hat, a big top hat who sits in the middle
of the board and uses voice recognition technology to know which player's talking to him. And a player
will say, I want to buy Park Lane. And then he'll just deduct that amount from your amount.
That's stupid. So it takes away the joy of cheating as the banker, which is the only
reason anyone plays Monopoly in the first place. Exactly. The whole point is to cheat.
Well, Anna, I know which version you should get, because they've also made Monopoly,
the cheaters edition, where a part of the game is to try and steal from the bank,
lie about your dice rolls. And it comes with a set of handcuffs, like a token of handcuffs.
Great stuff. They're really embracing the cheating. But there's tons of, like, novelty Monopolies.
I had a look at a big list of them. And just the ones beginning with A include Aber Monopoly,
Alton Tower's Monopoly, Alice in Wonderland, Alpaca Monopoly, that's it, unofficial one,
and Aberdeen Monopoly. There are so many. If you look up Monopoly, and if you're attempting to find
facts about it, then half the news results are different places, you know, Kingston upon Thames
is getting its own Monopoly set. And I wonder, I do wonder what the advantage of this is, or
whether they franchise it or whether, because it seems like no one, you know, I used to live
quite near Kingston, I didn't want a Kingston Monopoly set. Well, I think they're all pantering
to this one guy who has the world record most number of Monopoly sets. Okay, he's called Neil
Scallon. And he has the Guinness World Record. And how many Monopoly sets do you think he owns?
Completely, each one is completely different. 312. I'm going to go, I think there's over a
thousand novelty ones. I'm going to go a thousand. A thousand and one. And each other. I'll say 400.
He has, as of the 25th of January 2019, so a while ago, he has 2249
different Monopoly sets. And if you go into the amazing website, worldofmonopoly.com,
you can see a list of all the ones that he has. Oh my God.
Oh, that's not a cheap game. That's a lot of money. He almost could have like real Monopoly.
I know, I know. And also, Anna, you and I have a copy of an extremely random Monopoly set,
don't we? We do the University of Kent, right? Yeah. And this guy also has that. No way.
Ah, that's so good. Christmas in this guy's household must be hell.
I was so sure we would have one that he didn't have, but that is amazing. Jesus Christ.
I wonder what his like, like the most sought out after it, the most, the rarest, like special
Monopoly is. Because I read about one they made from Wall Street where it's like made of solid
gold pieces, which I think is a bit overkill. But I wonder if there's like a, I don't know,
what's a, like from a tiny village somewhere who's just got their own one and selling it in the
post office. I wonder what's the hardest to get. I went on to eBay and I looked for the most expensive
Monopoly set at the moment and it was a Bulgarian Monopoly. I guess for some reason there weren't
many made or something like that. But yeah, it was quite a few. It was about 700 pounds or something
for a Bulgarian Monopoly. And so you got it on the QI credit card. Exactly. I just, I don't want
Neil Scallon to have it. Stop him. I wonder if Chris Van Ellsbrook ever like makes up with
Monopoly. They could make a Jumanji Monopoly. That would be quite fun. Oh, there must be one.
I don't think the world needs more editions of Monopoly. I have to say it's so interesting how
people who play board games in any serious way all hate Monopoly so much. So the Guardian asked
people for their least favorite board games for a feature they were writing. And one of the responses
just said Monopoly is awful because of the vice-like grip it has over how the British
public perceive board games. I'm going to a board game night at a local comic shop this evening.
Nobody will be playing Monopoly. And if it was suggested, then I would assume it was a sick joke
of some kind. They had in 2016, Hasbro now makes Monopoly announced they were operating a special
hotline on Christmas day where people who'd been traumatized by their Monopoly based experiences
could call. It actually ran from Christmas Eve to Boxing Day. And I just feel so devastatingly
sorry for whatever intern was asked to perform that. It wasn't a recorded message. They said
we'll have experts on hand with the official rule books to instantly settle any disputes and
advise on how to resolve common complaints. Okay, so it's Christmas day. You're an intern.
You have to work and you're sat by the phone. Would you rather no one called you or someone
called you to talk to you about Monopoly? Oh, God, it's Sophie's choice, isn't it?
I'd rather go directly to jail, to be honest with you.
I was reading some Monopoly strategy. And I'm sure, so there was basically an article in the
New York magazine with the headline, you don't hate Monopoly, you just suck at it and said,
the reason we hate it is we can't play it properly. But if everyone can play it properly,
then we all suck at it again, because there are only so many key skills and tricks you can get.
But the main things they say are, if you're after the oranges, it's good to stay in jail
because there's more chance of ruling a double and completing your set. When there are not so
many properties available, it's good to sit in jail because then you don't have to pay any rent.
And they were very cross about the some people play a version where you collect the money
from fines if you land on free parking. And they are very angry about that because apparently it
messes with the game and makes it more random. Oh, it's the only joy of Monopoly is going to pick
up that money. And I hate the people that won't let you do it. Well, you hate the people who use
the actual rules of Monopoly. I hate them. You need that hotline. I read an article with the
2015 UK championship winner Natalie Fitzsimmons. Wow. And she gave her tips of how to win Monopoly.
And this is I mean, I think this is terrible what she does. So she basically goes and buys
all of the properties she can, and then mortgages them all. And so she gets the money back,
but she doesn't collect any rent, but it doesn't matter because the rent's so small.
And then she collects one group and then puts four houses on each of those groups.
She doesn't put a hotel on there or anything like that. And then she tries to get into jail
for as long as possible. And apparently this is the best technique to win the game. Wow.
Isn't that amazing? And another thing she says is sometimes you can get,
instead of mortgaging them all, you get a few different groups,
and then you always put four houses on each. So there's not enough houses left for anyone else to
build houses. You just run out the pieces of the game. Yeah, there's not enough houses in the box
for everyone to put four houses on each thing. So if you put four on all yours, it stops anyone
else from being able to do it. That can't be in the rules. It is. If you run out of houses, you,
oh my. It is the rules. It's the rules. So when we were younger, we used to just put like a
thimble instead of a house, but we were doing it wrong. Oh my God. Wow. That's amazing. I suppose
that's realistic. Yeah. If you've run out of building materials, you can't replace them with a
thimble. That's true. We've actually never mentioned it on this podcast, although I think we have on
QI the origin story of Monopoly. So basically there's this guy, Charles Darrow. And if you go on the
Monopoly website, actually, if you look at Find the History, which I think they've buried deeper
than it used to be, it still says Charles Darrow who dreamed up Monopoly in the 1930s. And this guy,
Darrow, went around saying, he'd just come up with it. In one interview, someone said, you know,
where did it come from? And he had no origin story. He just said, it was like magic. It just came to me.
So in fact, what happened, and this was only really uncovered in the 1970s, was that there was a
woman about 30 years early in 1903 called Elizabeth McGee. And she sounded so awesome. She was very
unusual, a proper self-made woman who was independently made living. She was a secretary. She
wrote poetry and short stories. She did stand-up comedy. She once came second in a beauty contest.
And you wouldn't have thought that someone so fun would invent Monopoly, but she did. She called
it the landlord's game. And the whole point of it at the time was that it exposed the folly of
capitalism. So there were two sets of rules. There was the anti-monopolist rule where everyone is
rewarded for the wealth that they create. And then there was the monopoly rule where you build up
monopolies and crush your opponents. And she didn't quite mean for humanity to fully embrace
the second one and decide that was the one we wanted to play. But she played it and she showed
it to her friends and it caught on. And eventually, you know, quite a few people played it in a
certain part of the state. And it reached Charles Darrow through a friend. And he sort of like slightly
tweaked it and published it, claimed the patent, sorted. He's a hero. That's terrible. He needs to
go straight to jail. We're going to have to move on in a second. I just have one thing. I went off
on a bit of a tangent here because it was about Jumanji. And what this guy didn't like about
Monopoly was the fact you couldn't go into the game and experience it. So I was looking up other
kind of going into immersive reality experiences. And I just came across this short story that I
read. And it's called Pygmalion Spectacles from 1935. And I think it's the earliest reference to
virtual reality, sort of 3D, amazing experience glasses. So it's by this guy called Stanley
Weinbaum. And it starts out with a man who's a bit drunk at a party and stumbles out into the
street, meets a professor who says, wouldn't you love to see a film that was really realistic?
Got to bear in mind this was the 1930s. So the guy was like, yeah, but that could never exist.
And he said, what if I give you these glasses? And this chap puts on the glasses, and suddenly he
can see, hear, feel, taste and smell everything. And he has this incredible adventure. And it's
really, really exciting. And then he takes the glasses off and he's like, fuck, that was magic.
And then the professor says, it's not actually, I just dipped these glasses in a chemical,
electrical solution, which did all the audio input. And the woman you fell in love with is
actually my niece. She's an actress, like in one of these immersive reality theater things.
But what I wanted to tell you was, he said, so the guy was like, how did you make all the trees
seem so real? You know, it was like Jumanji, he was in a forest. And he said, oh, the trees,
they are simply, now what do you think they were?
Uh, toilet brushes.
Incorrect. Andy, you might know.
Moss.
No way.
The trees are club mosses enlarged by a lens. Now, I don't know if we have mentioned openly on
the podcast before, but Andy's been insisting for years that club moss looks exactly like trees.
And now this is vindication.
Vindication. Vindication.
Okay, it's time for fact number three. And that is James.
Okay, my fact this week is that there is a man in Brazil who nobody is allowed to go within five
miles of. And is this so he hasn't showered for a long time?
No, it's not a social isolation. Well, it is a social isolation thing, but not a,
and actually it is on government advice as well. So it's kind of similar to what's happening,
but he is the last survivor of an uncontacted tribe. He lives in the Amazon rainforest.
And basically what happened in Brazil for a long time is these people who are living in the
rainforests, they would try and contact them and try and assimilate them into modern life.
And obviously, or maybe not obviously, but I think we now know that that is not a particularly
good idea because basically you're bringing pathogens over there. You, you're kind of destroying
the ways of life. They lose their languages, they lose their culture, stuff like that.
And so the current idea is a thing called policy of no contact where you just let people live
their lives. You don't have to get in touch with them. You don't have to give them stuff.
If they want to come to you, they will come to you. If they need stuff, they'll come to you and
get it, but you need to leave them on their own. And so there is this one guy who's living on his
own. It seems he's the last member of the tribe. And in 2007, Brazil declared a 31 square mile
area around him to be completely off limits for anyone else. So no one else is allowed to go there.
And it was later expanded by 11.5 square miles. So about 3000 hectares. And now you are definitely
not allowed to go anywhere in that area because you'll be disturbing his way of life. Wow. Yeah.
So cool.
Does the government have to keep proving that he exists?
That's a good point, actually. I think the last time they saw him was a few years ago,
but I think they do have ethnologists who go there every now and then just checking up to see
what's happening because he builds lots of different huts from place to place.
Goes from one place to another. He makes traps for animals, which he then eats,
and he also makes markings on trees, which they think may be some kind of spiritual thing.
So he's constantly using his environment for various things. And so you can see
when he's moving around and what he's doing. Doesn't he also dig quite deep holes? And people are
because obviously nobody can ask him. They're not quite sure whether that's for him a shelter,
whether it's a trap for animals, whether it's something spiritual. It's quite mysterious.
Yeah. So weird. Is that why they call him the man of the hole?
Yeah, we haven't said that he's called the man of the hole, actually. But that's that is one of the
things they call him. Yeah. James, if this guy moves, does the Zono Exclusion move with him?
So could he move to the centre of Rio de Janeiro and everyone would have to go?
You're absolutely right. This is one fundamental flaw with the way that I've worded by fact.
No one is allowed to go within five miles of him if he stands in the middle of his range.
If he goes right to the edge of the area which has been given to him, then actually you could
stand right next to him. You could stand within two metres of him if he happens to be standing at
the edge of that area. Otherwise it would be tragic if he ever tried to make contact. People
just sprinting away from him screaming. But I guess that's nice because then if he wants to
greet people or meet someone, he can go to the end and there are people there. Exactly that, yeah.
Because I was reading about the centre-lead islanders and they are basically hardly anyone
has had contact with them. There was a group of anthropologists who made two trips to try and
make contact and the one way they managed to do it was they went in their boat and they floated
coconuts over to the island and the islanders don't have coconuts so they took them and that was
sort of like the beginning of a barter system. But then when they went back they were not quite
so keen the next time. So it's sort of trying to make contact if people want to make it but
not to impose yourself. Yeah, especially you don't want to with the centre-leads because they're
famously, they're not, I wouldn't say unfriendly, I'd say quite murderous of strangers.
I read one thing about those guys that if you go onto their island and they don't want you to be
there, the first thing they'll do is turn their back on you and go down on their haunches and
pretend to defecate and that is kind of their putting two fingers up saying fuck off, get our
far island kind of thing and then if you don't pay heed to that then they'll start firing arrows at
you and try and kill you. That's really interesting but can you imagine the slight shame of the
anthropologists who went all the way there? I've been like we're going to do it, we found a way
to make contact and then they say and what happened? They buried their bombs and pretended to defecate.
You can't really eat us. You can't give a big lecture tour based on mooning, I don't think.
Do you know if you google map North Sentinel Island, which is where they live, it's, you can
zoom right in and you will see there's actually a bar there. So yeah, go on to go, it's a curry
house and bar. It's got a series of five star reviews and at the moment there is a sign underneath
that says hours may be affected by COVID-19 which is understandable but so the reviews include a
good getaway especially given current events, dinner good but interrupted by arrows and death threats
from waiters. So what is it? Is that a joke? It's a google joke, it was actually someone sent it to
me a guy called Harry Johnston wrote in a fan of the podcast saying have you seen this about a year
ago and it's just stayed up there, a curry house and bar. So give it a visit. I also went on google
maps for this area where this guy is living, the Brazilian guy and the scenario called Vale do
Havari, a lot of people call it like one of the last unexplored areas of the world but actually
of course lots of people live there because you have lots of Amazonian tribes who live there
but if you go on google maps and you search for it it's basically just a gray square and then you
can zoom out and zoom out and zoom out and zoom out and it's still just a gray square with like a
river going through it and there's literally nothing and you can zoom out to about the size of
like England and Wales and you could still not see any towns or anything it's just a gray square
it's absolutely amazing but in this area there is a mountain called Pico da Neblina and this is the
highest mountain in Brazil and no one knew it existed until the 1950s. Wow! That is how isolated
this is. The tallest mountain in the whole country is there and no one knew it was there.
Isn't that amazing? That's very cool. And in theory what happened is someone was flying over it
in an aeroplane and thought oh there's a big mountain there where it's not supposed to be
and they went maybe someone could check this out and then they measured it and it was way
taller than anywhere else. Wow! That's awesome. I was having a look at other remote places places
that are hard to get to and do you know there's a section of America where they still receive
their post by mule it's part of the official US postal service. There is an Indian reservation at
the bottom of the Grand Canyon and so it's hard to get helicopters down there and if it's windy they
can't fly at all but the mules go whatever the weather every day so they go by car right road
to the edge of the Grand Canyon and then it is a three-hour trip down by mule down to the bottom.
It's a posty called Charlie Chamberlain it's his job and he they basically anything you can put a
stamp on they will take they take food they take supplies they take post and they've got a
joke that if you want the express service they just let one of the mules go free and run to the
bottom. I would have thought the express service will be throwing a mule off the edge of the Grand
Canyon. It's a highly trained special mules Andy. That's their mail. I was looking up the other
loneliest people in the world uh people like this so um you're there's one person who missed
Neil Armstrong saying this is one small step for man one giant leap for mankind. Guess who it was?
Michael Collins. It was Michael Collins. Michael Collins was on the other side of the
moon and could not get that line so so many other people in the world would have had access to that
and people keep asking Michael Collins who's still alive um about his isolation because for 76 hours
when Armstrong and Aldrin were on the moon Collins was orbiting and for 48 minutes every two hours
he was on the far side of the moon so he was completely out of contact with everybody and
you know there was there was only one person on that side of the moon out of three billion people
on the other side of the moon um and he keeps being up but he's so he's now enraged anytime
anyone asks him so he says um he keeps being asked Mr Collins won't you the loneliest man in the whole
lonely history of this lonely planet by your lonely self behind the lonely moon in this lonely orbit?
Won't you terribly lonely? And he says he was really happy he had nobody in mission control
went yakking away in his ear he was absolutely delighted out there yeah. Sounds like that journalist
could have done with the thesaurus. Yeah I think the person who's got the Guinness world record
for the most isolated person is the other guy I can't I can't remember this is just from memory
but it's the other person. It's Alan Warden. Alan Warden yeah who also went around the back of the
moon didn't he? Oh really? Why does he get the record? I think he was there for longer okay while
they were exploring. Cool. It was three days. It's kind of a kind of a kind of a burn on him
and his social life to give him a Guinness world record for loneliest dude ever. Do you not think
it's quite a good line in a bar is go hi I'm the world's loneliest man. What is that a pickup line?
Do you think it's a bit needy? I think it is. It's a bit intense as an icebreaker.
I was reading about life in the amazon did you know that there are no bridges across the amazon
river the whole river it's it's the longest either the longest or the second longest river in the
world depending on how you measure it and there's no bridges across a whole thing and do you know
why that is? It's because it's massive. What is that? Oh you mean it's a massive river because it's
wide it's right because it's wide yeah yeah it's not always wide it's wide at its mouth but it's
narrower at its source isn't it? Yeah obviously it's narrower in the source I know that I'm just
saying I you know it's most of it seems pretty big to me. Well I guess you're kind of half right.
Hang on we're surely we can work this out. Is it because the bits where it's
narrow enough to put a bridge across it's protected or sacred territory? No not really
it's more that in the bits where it's narrow enough to put a bridge across no one lives there
so it's basically you know at the mouth of the river there are a few cities and really it's too
wide there to put bridges across really it's kind of super wide but in where it gets a bit
narrower no one lives there and there's a few kind of boat crossings and stuff like that but really
there's no roads so why would you need a bridge? Jesus I can't believe there's not an in-between
zone. Yeah you would think so wouldn't you? That's an amazing fact yeah it's not cool. Yeah do you
know that there's a bridge over the Atlantic? Is this another Boris Johnson fantasy? Over the
whole Atlantic? No. Go on. So I was on holiday on the west coast of Scotland a wee while ago and
that was one of the local attractions so it's a stream that comes off the Atlantic so they
claim it as the bridge over the Atlantic because it's the same bit and I thought that was amazing
because in my head it's from Cornwall to New York. What do you mean as a stream? It's a bit of water
that comes off the I can't remember the details I didn't actually get to visit it so I sadly I did
not get the information guide they claim it as the bridge over the Atlantic. What do you do? Do you
go and look at it or do you? Yeah and you can walk across it right? Yeah well if I'd gone I could
answer all these questions so you know. Basically I think Anne's parents took her on holiday and
told her they'd been to America when in fact they'd been to a small stream on the west coast of
Scotland but she walked across the bridge. No we didn't we didn't get to go Anna this is my dream.
You didn't even get to go. We went near the bridge over the Atlantic. Amazing. One more thing about
living in the Amazon one issue is they have piranhas but what do you think would happen
if you actually tried to swim with piranhas? I know. Go on Anna you've got your hand up.
If you fall in a river that's full of piranha they'll strip off your skin like your skin
a banana there's no time for screaming there's no time for groans in 45 seconds you're nothing but
bones. That was an amazing bit of improv. Thank you very much. What's that from? I just happened to
know the answer to your question. What is it from that? It is a random poem from my childhood and
I'm sure it's scientifically accurate. What really happens? I'm really sorry for whoever wrote that
poem but that's not true. Oh god. Piranhas they're kind of scared of big animals they don't really
want to go near you if you fall in the water and you don't bother them they'll just hide away and
they don't want to go anywhere near you. Now if they're in the dry season when they're not getting
any food or if they're in the breeding season then you might have a bit more problem but really
they're more like vultures they're more like scavengers so if a bit of dead meat goes in there
they'll go after it but if a human goes in there they'll think it might be something trying to
attack them and they'll just hide away. Oh really? So most of the time you'll be completely safe if
you fall in a piranha pool and another kind of type of piranha that definitely won't kill you
is the vegetarian piranha which is a thing that exists. There is a species of piranha that is a
vegetarian and they just eat seeds and fruits and stuff that falls into the water. I love them.
But those guys they seem innocuous but they can strip a courgette right down in 45 seconds.
There is a hermit in Scotland just while we're on the subject of lonely people
and he's obviously he's playing amateur league hermiting if he's in Scotland as opposed to in
the middle of completely nowhere but he's quite elderly he's called Ken Smith and he was injured
this year by a log pile falling on him but he was rescued via Texas so he has an emergency beacon
on him and he can press a button and it flags up with an American satellite and it goes to a command
post in Texas saying the hermit in Scotland has had a mishap and then they contact the Coast Guard
in Scotland and they say one of your hermits is injured and then they have to send out a team
to go and chuckle him. But they just go over that bridge of the Atlantic don't they to go.
That's why they built it. Yeah but the amazing thing is that is the second time it's happened in
two years that he's been rescued from the continent. That's amazing. What does he keep doing? Is he very
clumsy? He's got a wood pile and I guess it's improperly stacked because it keeps falling on him.
Hey he's doing that all by himself. There's no one to help him build it safely I guess.
No true. It's like a real you know how Chumanji is a real life board game.
This is like the real life Jenga that he's living.
Okay it's time for the final fact of the show and that is my fact. My fact is that in 19th century
Osaka flat residents owned the rights to their own urine but the rights of their poo
belonged to their landlord. Amazing. So yeah. Chalancy agreements must have looked absolutely
bizarre. Yeah much messier. So this was a great article on aeon.com which I will try and put
up on my Twitter and it's all about the relationships between humans and human excretions basically
and how it's been used throughout history and the the kind of commercial arrangements that we've made
over it and in 18th and 19th century Japan and particularly in the city of Osaka there were
complicated arrangements because feces were used for fertilizer and if you lived in an apartment
building the rights to your feces belonged to the building's owner who would have arrangements in
place to sell that and it would be loaded onto ships and taken away but you owned your own
wee that was something you had. So feces were valuable because they would help to grow crops so
it would affect your rent. If there were lots of people living in your flat then you would produce
lots of poo for your landlord to sell and your rent would be slightly lower as a result whereas if
you were single occupancy you'd pay slightly more not just because you got your own flat but also
because you weren't producing enough of the the brown gold. And could you say to your landlord
if you're a negotiator you know I eat a lot of curry I actually have quite extravagant bowel
movements honestly you'll be getting triple the average from me. I don't think so. So I was talking
to a friend of mine in Tokyo called John Perry he is a writer of quiz books and pretty much my go to
experts on Japanese history and he said that what you say is true but it's very slightly different
it's not the landlords who had the rights to your poo it was like the managing agents
because the landlords they would live miles and miles and miles away and would have nothing to
do with this they would own your house but they would really not be involved in your day-to-day
life and what would happen is you'd have these people who were called Uya and they would be
slightly higher than the tenants in importance but not much higher but they had a full-time job
where it was like looking after the house collecting the rent doing the repairs settling disputes
stuff like that and they would be able to read and write whereas the tenants might not be able
to read or write and they would take the poo and they would sell it and they would get the money
but the money was kind of expected to be used it would pay their wages but it was also used for
all the tenants as well so they would buy rice cakes for New Year out of the money from the poo
and so it would go it would all go back into the community all the poo money. Nice! Doesn't that
cool? That's very cool and they call Uya which sounds like the noise they would make as they're
collecting your poo you'd walk into someone's bathroom and go oh yeah that is that's a bad one
it sounds like the noise you make while you're making the poo doesn't it? It does and you were
saying about um like if you've had a curry you would tell people or something Anna yes well
sort of what I'm saying yeah sort of what you were saying but the um the value of your night
soil which is what they called it depended on um how rich you were so if you were rich you had a
really good diet and it meant that your poo was better as a fertilizer so you'd be able to sell
it for more so it's kind of a monopoly thing whereas the rich get richer do you know what I mean
yeah but in a in a kind of poo sense because their their poo is literally richer in nutrients
yeah but this is not James a version of monopoly I would like to play I don't think I need to play
19th century feudal Japan monopoly look there are 2,500 different types of monopoly I haven't
looked through the whole list for all I know there is a poo monopoly it would be called monopoly I'm
sorry I just needed to say that it's good that you got it out yeah thank you in 1724 in oscar there
was a fight that broke out over the collection rights to poo so there were two groups from the
villages of Yamazaki and Takasuki and they um had the rights to buy the poo from the um the
managing agents and then they would give them to the farmers um but they kind of fought against
each other and it turned into a massive riot in the city really a lot of kind of shit slinging
yes there was a lot of that going on and it was got so valuable people would steal it so people
would just um in the dead of night come into your apartment and steal all your poo I mean
it's sort of it depends on the scale of the crime doesn't it whether it's worth it for you
because if you just go into I just wonder about someone walking into their living room in the
morning after a night sleep and looking at the the third cabinet and thinking oh my god we've been
robbed was it stealing large consignment so I wonder that probably makes more sense than
individual burglaries yeah I don't think they would just take a single stool from each household
there used to be quite harsh penalties in Japan for it didn't there because it you know it was
lucrative and we should say this continued for hundreds of years and still up until the 1980s
people would go around to people's houses in Japan and in lots of the east actually so in
China it was a huge thing as well but in Japan in the 1980s there were vacuum trucks that would
drive around to your house and you plug them into your sewage tank I guess and they suck the poo out
and then it's gone and it's sold but yeah China as well uh was uh used feces human feces to enrich
their soil for many hundreds of years and it was crucial so a lot of people think that it was
part of the reason that Chinese agriculture did really well in a time when a lot of western
countries didn't and there was a soil scientist I think this is in your article Andy that you
sent us a soil scientist in 1911 called FH King who estimated that over 180 million tons of human
manure was collected annually in the far east to enrich the soil and now that equates to 1.2
kilos of poo per person per day which is quite a lot so we do wonder if he overestimated slightly
because even if you're efficiently collecting it from every single person that's you know
it's a lot you know earlier I mentioned the the bricks that you can make out of lufas yeah
there's another way of making bricks out of human urine so this is another as they call it biobrick
that you can produce and it's urine and living bacteria so you get urine you get sand you get
bacteria you put it all in a brick-shaped mold and there is a chemical reaction which ensues
and that gradually solidifies the brick kind of like baking a cake kind of like baking a cake
kind of kind of I don't fancy your chances on the great bitches bake off next year Andy
for my showstopper I've made a piss brick um but the the really good thing about this is the
astronauts might one day be able to piss their own moon bases that's how that's basically what we
do you go you take a load of the molds up there and you slowly you know wear your own home into
existence okay so that means as the food on the space station is depleted the space station
is being built around you presumably yes exactly yes but you only get food or shelter right that's
true you're not very far up Maslow's pyramid of needs they do call it cake actually in like the
biosolids that are used in all of our farming lest we forget um so sewage is picked up and it's
treated and then it's often used as fertilizer um but when they talk about the digest states
of basically poo and other types of um matter like that they do refer to it as cake and it comes in
these cake shaped and cake textured particles that um you know you order pure farmer so for the
great British Bake Off you could say I'm going to be making a cake today yeah you could get away
with it I think you would be voted out but you could call it a urinal cake and that has an that's
like a triple meaning of the word cake they're always making cakes out there in the shape of
weird things yeah so you could make it could be in the shape of the urinal cake but it could be made
of biosolids so it's almost it's like a trick you think you're getting one disgusting thing but you
get one even more disgusting thing as they're off we do the first bite you think no don't worry guys
I know this looks like your urinal cake it's actually a normal cake made of my piss
okay that's it that's all of our facts thank you so much for listening if you'd like to get
in contact with any of us about the things that we've said we could be found on our Twitter
accounts I'm on Andrew Hunter M James at James Harkin and at Miller underscore and
and Anna you can email podcast at qi.com yes or you can go to no such thing as a fish.com where
you can find all our previous episodes you can find merch you can find actually loads of previous
episodes because all 320 odd are now online and available for you to listen to so that's it for
this week we'll be back again next week with another one until then stay safe hope you're doing
well and speak to you soon all right that's it bye I don't know how Dan does this I've never listened
this far