No Such Thing As A Fish - 320: No Such Thing As A Hairy Gearstick

Episode Date: May 8, 2020

James, Anna, Andy & Dan discuss the Greatest Showman, the Longest Limo and the World's Most Dangerous Mirrors Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes....

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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 our four respective homes in the UK while we're all on lockdown. My name is Dan Schreiber and I am sitting here with Andrew Hunter Murray, Anna Tijinski and James Harkin and once again we have gathered round the microphones with our four favourite facts from the last seven days and in no particular order, here we go. Starting with you, Anna. My fact this week is that P.T. Barnum once tried to buy William Shakespeare's birthplace and transport it to America.
Starting point is 00:00:49 Would that technically have made Shakespeare American if his house where he was born was moved to America? Definitely. Yeah, I think that's how citizenship works, would have been ideal for him. He could have worked in America, that's the dream. So P.T. Barnum, the very famous 19th century showman, entertainer, circus man and businessman and great PR man above all, who, very famous guy, I think there was a film about him recently. Was it The Greatest Show?
Starting point is 00:01:15 Was that about him? The Greatest Showman. Showman. Showman. There you go. Hugh Jackman. It's all in the title. So yeah, this was in 1844, we know it actually happened because as well as Barnum reporting
Starting point is 00:01:25 on it, he reported on every detail of his own life pretty much and lots of details that maybe weren't in his own life, but as well as Barnum writing about it, his signature is in the visitor's book in the house, so it was in 1844 and he signed the visitor's book and he signed it along with Tom Thumb, who was one of his acts. He signed it saying this is P.T. Barnum with or carer of Tom Thumb, but I couldn't tell if Tom Thumb was actually there or if that's just how he signed stuff, he was just like Barnum, carer of Tom Thumb. And yeah, he visited and he thought it was pretty great and as he wrote later, I obtained
Starting point is 00:02:00 through a friend the refusal of the house, i.e. like a friend said he had dibs on the house and I planned to take it in lots of boxes to New York, but the project leaked out and British Pride was touched, so several English gentlemen interfered and purchased the premises for the Shakespeare Association instead. So sadly his plan was thwarted. But actually these English gentlemen who interfered, they had been planning to interfere for quite a long time. They had gotten together a group that was always going to buy this house and they put
Starting point is 00:02:32 the wheels in motion in 1835, but they'd just been really procrastinating and not really doing anything and it was only when Barnum came along and actually a few other Americans who thought they were going to buy this that they went, oh shit, we better get our arses in gear and we better buy this house and one of the people who was involved was Dickens. And in the end they started putting on all these kind of shows to get money together and Dickens was part of those shows and put on like Shakespeare plays to try and fundraise. Yeah he did, he played Just as Shallow in The Merry Wives of Windsor I think and then they also made this what appears to be a kind of mash-up called This House to be Sold, great
Starting point is 00:03:12 name and it was a new play but it featured lots of kind of Shakespeare characters along the way. It sounds amazing. It hasn't, yeah. Written partially by Dickens. No, written by Ben Elton. Ben Elton, yes. So Barnum was insane.
Starting point is 00:03:32 We've mentioned it a couple of times before. We've mentioned one of his first claims to fame was this lady Joyce Heth who was a very elderly African-American woman who he claimed was 161 years old and had been George Washington's nursemaid. He also said that at one point she, when that sort of that ruse was being sort of uncovered and exposed, he then said that she was an automaton and that she was, yeah he saw there as an automaton and said that she was being manipulated by ventriloquist for the sound and if you look close you can see the cogs and so on.
Starting point is 00:04:11 Anyway, Joyce Heth died and doctors examined her and said, yep this is an elderly woman but not a 161-year-old woman and Barnum wrote in his autobiography about it. He said, the doctors disagreed and this dark subject will probably always continue to be shrouded in mystery. There's an interesting bit in this book about Joyce Heth, so we should say one of the reasons we're talking about this is there's this new book out which is quite a big deal, Barnum and American Life. It's the latest Barnum biography, but he says that one thing that P.T. Barnum did quite
Starting point is 00:04:41 well was sort of play with his audience, half acknowledging that a lot of his things were a ruse. So for instance, with Joyce Heth, he'd claim she's 161 and then he'd be like, or is she guys? Is this a big old trick? Why don't you come and see and judge for yourself? That's a strange tightrope he walks. I was looking at some of the less exploitative acts in his circus.
Starting point is 00:05:03 So when you went, as well as these people, you could see glass blowers they had there. They had a guy called the lightning calculator. I can't work out what he did. I think it's him like taking large numbers from people and then multiplying them together really quickly rather than the hearings of lightning and some thunder of working out how far away it is. Like every dad could think. He was the first dad to do that.
Starting point is 00:05:29 That was so amazing. Do you think, you know, when you go to a festival and there's quite, there's the main stage and then there's some quite shit tense on the edge. That's glass blowing, right? Like when you've got a woman with 17 hens doing trapeze acts in the big tent, who's going to see the glass blowing? Only when it's raining do they go to the glass blowing tent. This museum, the American Museum, it sounds amazing.
Starting point is 00:05:52 So more people went to it proportionately, I think, than have been to Disneyland or Disney World or whatever it is. But the museum, it did have a lot of acts or exhibits which were not great. So they had a living cow with five legs and two tails, well, all right. They had the preserved hand and arm of a pirate called Tom Trouble. They had some black bugs found in the stomach of a distressed Maryland lady and a hat made out of broom splints made by a lunatic. Wow.
Starting point is 00:06:25 That's the least good stuff he had, basically. And this museum was in the center of New York City. This was on Broadway, which is amazing. To think of this astonishing building with all these oddities in there, and you could go up to the top of the roof. They had daily hot air balloon rides that would leave from this, yeah, from the roof of the building. Just bizarre location.
Starting point is 00:06:46 That's so cool. Nice. Can we talk about his wife a bit? Do that. Or his wives. So he was married to charity, his wife, for 40 years, and then she died. But they weren't very close, I think, because he got the news that she had died when he was off buying racing ostriches in Hamburg, and then he didn't go to the funeral.
Starting point is 00:07:06 So maybe a sign there. Imagine if he'd turned up to the funeral with the racing ostriches. I can't find anyone to look after them. They're going to have to come with me. I came as quickly as I could on an ostrich, like whatever he's called Bernie Winters are. You mentioned Tom Thumb earlier. So Tom Thumb, General Tom Thumb, as he was nicknamed, had dwarfism. He was only three foot high, and Barnum took him on as an act, basically.
Starting point is 00:07:37 But because he was only about four years old when Barnum took him on, Barnum then aged him up and said, this is an adult who has dwarfism rather than a child who would be small anyway, who also has dwarfism. He just liked adding ages to people, didn't he? He just liked making people older than... He loved it. You're absolutely right. He called the ages of every one of his most famous acts because it's more impressive.
Starting point is 00:08:00 He would be amazing as one of those people who made fake IDs when you were a kid. That's probably how he started. But he married Tom Thumb off to another lady with dwarfism, and then there was an intense rivalry over her affections. I think she was called Lavinia between General Tom Thumb and then a third dwarf who was called Commodore Nutt. I think Barnum set up this love rivalry between the three of them, huh? Amazing, these people all came from military backgrounds.
Starting point is 00:08:30 Yeah. Yeah. Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is James. Okay, my fact this week is that in 1547, the Venetian government assassinated two men to stop them from revealing how mirrors were made. So good. Yeah. Well, I read this on a website called longreads.com, an article called The Ugly History of Beautiful
Starting point is 00:08:58 Things, and it's all about mirrors, and they mostly used as a source a book called The Mirror a History by Sabine Melcois Bonnet, or Bonnet, and this is all about the fact that mirrors were made in Venice for hundreds and hundreds of years, and no one else around the world knew how to make them. So Venice had a complete monopoly on them. It was, in fact, even in Venice, it was just this one island called Murano, where all the glass makers lived, and all the mirrors were made, and they were extremely expensive. If you wanted to buy one in England, for instance, Henry VIII bought one, the cost of one Venetian
Starting point is 00:09:33 mirror was about the same as buying a large naval ship, that's how much one mirror would cost. It was incredible. They basically completely cornered the market, but everyone else wanted to know how to make these mirrors, so they wouldn't have to pay such massive amounts. And then in 1547, two Venetian workers moved to Germany to try and sell their wares over there, and the Venetian government were having absolutely none of it and sent some assassins out to try and kill them, and they did kill them.
Starting point is 00:09:59 And they did kill them. They did. Yeah, I mean, from what I read on that article as well, the stuff that they would do to these people if they attempted to leave the island, so if you went off the island, they would hold your family hostage on the island to make sure that you came back, because they didn't want you giving out those secrets. Unbelievable, the mirror island, it's amazing, never heard of it. It was policy, basically, wasn't it?
Starting point is 00:10:22 Venetian policy, and it lasted for hundreds of years, like you say. So there was, even in 1665, this rule still existed that if you took the secrets away with you, then the government could track you down and kill you. And there was this huge diplomatic incident in 1665, because the French were gagging for mirrors and for the technology to make mirrors, and so the French ambassador was sent to Venice and told, you've got to get some of those Murano workers back with you. And so he sort of bribed a few of them and said, you know, I'll give you shed loads of money, come with me.
Starting point is 00:10:50 They went back to Paris, and it was awful for them, because they were working in these Paris factories. They still, because they wanted to keep the secrets, they wouldn't let any of the French workers see them work. So it was kind of pointless, because the French weren't able to find out their secrets. And they just kept having nervous breakdowns, because Venice kept sending threatening messages in various ways to them, saying, we're going to get you, we're going to kill you, you better come back now.
Starting point is 00:11:13 And they sent sort of fake messages from their wives saying, you must come home now. And then the French responded by sort of abducting their wives and bringing them to Paris in the hopes that way they'd stay. If I was the French, if I was the French government, I would send a mirror right from the mirror island. But I would write on the frame of the mirror, this guy's dead, if we ever get him. Right. You know?
Starting point is 00:11:36 That's a great idea. Manusur. Oh my God. Yeah. You would have been an excellent Renaissance diplomat. Thank you. Yeah. And in the end, the French did get it, didn't they? They did.
Starting point is 00:11:48 They got all the technology and they built the Hall of Mirrors in Versailles, which was a big fuck you to Venice. Wow. It's an opening move, a whole hall. That's awesome. And it did collapse the Venetian industry, didn't it? So it kind of went to show that hundreds of years of obsessive secrecy was totally worth it.
Starting point is 00:12:04 Because as soon as the secret got out, the industry died. Yeah. So it was kind of, if you're a Venetian mirror maker, you kind of had some good bits and some bad bits. So the good bits were that you were really important in society. So you're one of the few people in Venice that was allowed to have a sword at all times. And your daughters were allowed to marry into affluent Venetian families, because there was like almost a caste system where, you know, you weren't allowed to marry outside
Starting point is 00:12:32 of your level, but the glassblowers were allowed to. But then on the downside, they worked with Mercury and so they all went mad. Yes. Yeah. Yeah, there was a contemporary account from 1713 by a guy called Ramazzini who said that the curse of that, of having to work with Mercury and the insanity that came off it, but having to look at yourself as you were going insane in these mirrors, watching the madness take you over is, yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:59 So even if your daughter brings home her affluent new husband, you think he's a pickle because you've gone mad because of the Mercury? Is that the curse? That's it. I'm not sure if it was that specific kind of insanity, but you think people are pickles. It was more of a descent into madness. Like there was a quote where they said that the mirror makers scowled at their reflection of their own suffering in the mirrors and cursed the trades that they have chosen.
Starting point is 00:13:27 Mind you, if they could have hung on for another couple of hundred years, they would have found a career with P.T. Barnum because you've got glass blowing and it sounds like they're kind of loopy by that stage. Yeah, that's true. Great circus performance. Yeah, we seem to, we, I mean, humanity seemed to make mirrors for quite a while. So there were mirrors in ancient Rome and then in the dark ages, like with a lot of stuff, they sort of disappeared, right?
Starting point is 00:13:50 And then this technology took a while to come back, but they definitely had them in ancient times and good mirrors. And I read that a Caligula, who obviously made a bit of a living and a reputation out of scaring the shit out of people. Caligula used his mirror to practice scary faces. That wasn't really, that wasn't the side hustle for Caligula though. That's just something he did in the course of being emperor. He didn't have a sort of spooky emporium.
Starting point is 00:14:14 That's great though. He practices faces. I love that. Yeah. That's really good. You don't hear that about evil dicks. No. You just think it comes natural, right?
Starting point is 00:14:23 Yeah. You've got to work hard at these things, Dan. Yeah. Yeah. Mirror question for you. Oh, correct. Cool. Are you looking in your bathroom mirror at your face and your neck, maybe your shoulders?
Starting point is 00:14:35 And you want to see your whole body and imagine you've got a massive bathroom. How are you going to make it so the mirror reflects your whole body? Get a full length mirror. No, go as far away from the mirror as possible and eventually you'll be able to see yourself. I would crouch on the basin. Crouch on the basin? Yeah. If I want to see my whole body, I'll just awkwardly crouch on top of the basin.
Starting point is 00:14:55 How unbelievably strong is your basin? Andy doesn't have a toilet in his bathroom, actually. He just uses the sink for everything. It's multi-purpose. Well, I'm astonished to say this, but Andy's right, I'm afraid. So I was amazed by this. You are always the same size in a mirror. No matter how far back you go, you're never going to be able to see any more of your body.
Starting point is 00:15:20 And that size is half of your actual size. So let's say you look in a mirror close up and you get a permanent pen and you draw your face or you draw a circle around your face of where your face image is in the mirror. If you stand back 20 yards and get someone close to the mirror to do it again, it's going to be in exactly the same place. Wow. Isn't that... I found this amazing, but it's so obvious when you actually think about the old boring
Starting point is 00:15:47 physics lessons about mirrors because it's about the fact that the angle of incident, so where the light hits the mirror and then where it reflects off the mirror, always has to be the same. So imagine you're standing really close to a mirror and you want to see your feet. Then the light from your feet goes up to the mirror at a steep angle and then has to reflect at that exact same angle to get to your eyes for you to see your feet, right? But when you go away from the mirror, it's going to be exactly the same problem. If you couldn't see your eyes there, when you go away from there, you won't see your
Starting point is 00:16:18 eyes further away because the light has further to travel. So even though the angle is smaller, the light travels further and goes over your head. Through a diagram and you'll understand it. So even if I have a very, very, very long bathroom, so I've got a bathroom that's 100 meters long and I have a mirror at the end of it that I can't see my feet in up close, even at the other end of the bathroom, I still won't be able to see my feet. You'll never be able to see your feet. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:16:41 Well, the thing that's confusing me is the other person standing next to the mirror who's drawing the head because if you were standing at the back of the room and I was next to the mirror and you said, can you see what's in my teeth and opened your mouth, it feels odd to me that I'd be able to see your head as a real size head, despite the fact that you're all the way over there. Yeah, no, you've misunderstood that. Great. Because that person is a different person.
Starting point is 00:17:04 So this is just about how it looks. So the reflection, how it looks to you, the person, obviously to the person standing next to the mirror, you're going to look like you're in a completely different place and etc. But so we can't test your idea of drawing the circle then, the other person drawing your circle. No, you'd have to tell the other person what to draw. You'd have to guide their hand with your words.
Starting point is 00:17:24 Gotcha. But what you're describing then and not quite understanding that is something called the toilet of Venus illusion. And that is that there's a lot of paintings of the toilet of Venus and that is Venus is lying down kind of sideways on a painting and there's a cherub holding a mirror and then you looking at the painting can see Venus and can see her in the mirror. And most people think that she's looking at herself in the mirror. But the fact is, if you can see her face, she can't see her face in the mirror.
Starting point is 00:17:55 She can actually see you in the mirror. So she would theoretically be looking at the person who's painting the painting. Yeah, cool. She wouldn't be looking at herself, but most people when they see those paintings think that she's looking at herself. She's not as vain as people think. Yeah, that's very cool. You know that thing of practicing faces in the mirror.
Starting point is 00:18:14 The curricula. Yeah, there's a nice thing which is that Kate Winslet keeps her Oscar in her bathroom because she knows that everyone wants to practice giving an Oscar speech in front of the mirror. Great idea. And she can tell when people are doing it because she'll say the flush goes and it's almost as if they clock it's in there and they just spend an extra few minutes in there silently doing their speech.
Starting point is 00:18:41 You know what? And generally speaking, this is an uncontroversial statement, generally speaking, it's a bad idea to have a secret camera in someone's bathroom. But in this case, I would love to see people doing that speech. That would be amazing. Yeah, she can pick up some ideas. I thought you were going to say she keeps it in her bathroom so that she can pretend she's got two Oscars.
Starting point is 00:19:01 I thought you were going to say that. Or maybe she has a mirror behind the mirror and it looks like she's just got infinite Oscars. Yeah, infinite Oscars. More and more green as they go on. There is, if we're on movie stuff, have you guys seen Terminator 2? I watched it just this week. Okay, amazing.
Starting point is 00:19:21 For the first time. Wow. Did you like it? I did actually, yeah. And I watched Terminator 1 as well for the first time. Oh, nice. Okay, well, it's a zinger. But okay, in Terminator 2, there is a scene, it might be in the extra features, but there's
Starting point is 00:19:31 a scene where there's a mirror shot, okay, and it's the two humans operating on Schwarzenegger, the robot, and they're unscrewing his brain case and they're opening his head up. And you can see the operation happening in the mirror as well. That wasn't done using a mirror because there's no film crew reflected in the mirror. Of course not. And you would think, oh, well, they might just remove the film crew with CGI. They didn't do that. They literally had a cut out space, so they had a fake Arnie in the foreground, and then
Starting point is 00:20:01 the reflection shot in the mirror is the real Arnold Schwarzenegger, except he's not in a mirror. He's looking opposite a dummy of himself. Oh, that's so clever. And then Linda Hamilton, who plays Sarah Connor, she has a twin sister who did the reflection or did the foreground stuff, and Linda Hamilton's in the reflection, so you see both of them, and they're mirroring each other's movements, but they are not actually being shown in a mirror.
Starting point is 00:20:27 There are two things. I know. Isn't that insane? That's incredible. It's amazing. Do you know there's an animal that has mirrors in its body? No. And that is the scallop, the humble scallop.
Starting point is 00:20:40 So it has eyes made of mirrors. Scallops have about 200 eyes each, and rather than having a lens like we have to focus the light as it comes in, they have what most telescopes have now to focus the light, which is the mirror. So the light hits a mirror that's curved, and then obviously it bends and focuses. So this means that their retina is actually on the ceiling of their eyes. So with us, our retina is behind our lens, so the light hits our lens and then is focused on our retina, which is just behind it.
Starting point is 00:21:10 With them, it hits these mirrors, which are their eyes, and then bounces up onto the ceiling of their eyes, which is the retina. Isn't that cool? That's really cool. If you were to get, let's say, 20,000 scallops and remove all of their eyes and then paste it on a piece of cardboard, would you be able to make a mirror that's usable? It's a bit of a fucked up mirror, isn't it? I don't think people would come around your house.
Starting point is 00:21:36 I'm just thinking that the French could have used this technology instead of going to Venice. It could have been a very different world. It could have been what a world we could have had, where the Venetians have good mirrors and everyone else has to kill a million scallops. Would you guys get your hair cut without a mirror? Yeah, I have done it many times. I have to.
Starting point is 00:22:03 Well, there is... Why do you have to? When you go to the hairdressers, do you say, sorry, no mirrors? Well, are you a vampire? I technically, so because I wear glasses and I can't see very well, I have to take them off for the haircut. So there's a mirror in front of me. I can't make out what is in front of me.
Starting point is 00:22:23 You don't force them to remove the mirror. Turn it to face the wall. There's only one hairdressing salon that I've found, although I haven't looked very hard, where this happens. But this is in Peckham in London and it's instead of a mirror, you get given a piece of modern art and then your hair is cut and you have to look at the modern art for nearly an hour. Isn't that...
Starting point is 00:22:48 Because one of the worst things about sitting in a hairdressers I find is having to look at myself the whole time because I'm like, oh my God, what a mess. But if I was looking at a Picasso, for instance, where the nose is where the ear should be and stuff like that. I think I'd feel even worse about myself. Oh, but you'd think, oh, at least I don't look like that guy. At least my eyes are on different sides of my face. That's pretty good.
Starting point is 00:23:10 Fair enough. OK, it's time for fact number three and that is my fact. My fact this week is that the longest car in the world was so long that it had a literal backseat driver. Now, what do you mean by this? Someone at the very back of it having to shout really loudly to the driver in the front. I thought it was that you needed someone in the backseat of a normal car but with very long arms to reach to the front.
Starting point is 00:23:37 Stretched arms strong. Yeah. Yeah. Well, this is this is a limo that was built called the American Dream and it was 100 foot long and has 26 wheels, has things like there's a helipad on the back, there's a jacuzzi, there's multiple interior rooms. You can play putt-putt in the middle of it. But as one solid unit as a 100 foot long, you can't take corners, it's too long to take
Starting point is 00:24:01 any corners. So what the car had built into it was a bit in the middle where you could hinge it apart and when you see on bendy buses where they have that sort of the accordion style thing, this car would have that and in the second half of the car, there was a second booth for another driver to be changing the angles of the wheels back there. So it had a backseat driver as well as a front seat driver. Dan, can I ask what happens if the person in the backseat slams on the brakes and the guy in the front seat carries on going?
Starting point is 00:24:30 Does he come back and smash him in the face like a cartoon? Yeah, you're right. It would stretch out to probably 110 feet and then, yeah, lob itself back. It's like the Blackbird SR-71 plane, which as we all remember stretches and compresses depending on which altitude it is at. But why are you bringing that up? Why are you bringing up these old wounds? So this is a limo which is Guinness World Records certified as the longest car in the
Starting point is 00:24:55 world and it's built by a man called Jay Orberg who lives in America and is one of the great car makers for movies that there's ever been. He's the man behind the DeLorean in Back to the Future. He built cars for like Kit for Night Rider. Not the original, but he built one that was a modified one that they used in the series. He did cars for the Flintstones movies. That was a more basic engineering challenge, wasn't it? It was, yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:25 Yeah. He did the Batmobiles for the Tim Burson Batman Return movies. So he's an amazing designer and this was his big dream to create this super luxurious 100 foot long car. But unfortunately, no one wanted it and it sort of fell into disuse and went to a garage and it's wasting away now. But it's being repurposed now. As what?
Starting point is 00:25:47 It's been bought by the Auto Museum, or the Auto Zium, I think it's called, in New Jersey and they've bought it to teach, not children, to teach their students how to do up cars. So a bunch of students started rebuilding it in 2016 and I think they said it'll take years and years to rebuild it properly, but it's been used as a teaching tool, so it's finally found a purpose. Great. But I have a question about this car. It said it's got a jacuzzi or in some more enthusiastic articles, a swimming pool and
Starting point is 00:26:20 it also says it has a diving board. Yes. That's the depth of a pool that you can get into a limo because it's not a super high limo. It's just car height. If you're diving off that, you're breaking your neck. Very good point. Very good point.
Starting point is 00:26:33 I mean, these things were never actually driven anywhere, were they? Not really. They're always publicity gimmicks, aren't they? Yeah. I saw one interview with someone who had basically it was like a stretch limo that had been turd into an entire jacuzzi and swimming pool. As in literally everything about it was a swimming pool, apart from the bit where you drive.
Starting point is 00:26:52 And they said, yeah, we would never drive this anywhere because all the water would just splash out. Yeah. We just take it to car shows to show that it's something we can do in theory. So I was looking up other Guinness World Records that are held by cars and one which was set at a autosports international show in Birmingham was the record for the Titus Parallel Park. Oh, yeah. And this was done live in front of an audience at Birmingham.
Starting point is 00:27:21 So the Titus Parallel Park is 7.5 centimetres. That's the gap. On each side or altogether? Yeah, yeah. I think altogether that this person going in was allowed. Yeah. That's insane. That is quite...
Starting point is 00:27:36 I see a space which is smaller than twice the length of my car, I think. I'll drive around a bit longer. Yeah, this is Alistair Moffat 2015. He set it in Birmingham. That's amazing. And the car is still there. He hasn't been able to get it out, has he? You heard of the World's Harriers car?
Starting point is 00:27:55 No. No. No. This was owned by Maria Lucia Mugno and Valentino Stassano in Italy. They were hairdressers and they thought, what better way to advertise our business by sweeping up a load of human hair off the floor and gluing it to our car. Wow. And that's what they...
Starting point is 00:28:16 Actual human hair from their customers. Actual human hair. And it's legal. You're allowed to drive it. Because... Yeah. Who would come up with the law? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:25 What sick legislator would think of that? I mean, it is... Also, they're too bad. Their customers couldn't see them stealing their hair behind them because they had the modern art in front of them. Yeah. And it's legal and there's only one part of the car you're not allowed to put the hair. Oh, don't tell us.
Starting point is 00:28:42 Don't tell us. I would say... No, because you could like comb it out of the way. Instead of windscreen wipers, it has two massive combs. Center parking, very bold. I would say on the steering wheel because... This is a legal thing. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:03 But I think a hairy steering wheel would be a hazard to road users, other road users. I don't think so. I would say you could just have a hairy steering wheel and the rest of your car's normal and that would be fine, wouldn't it? Hairy gear stick. That's an horrible euphemism for something. I'd say the accelerator pedal because the hairs might get caught underneath somehow, tie up and then you can't lift it back up.
Starting point is 00:29:24 Such a good answer. The answer is engine because if you put it on the engine, it might set on fire. Better answer. Yeah. So you're saying it's allowed to put a moustache on your brake pedal if you want to? In Italy. What about the number plate? I thought it was illegal to conceal your number plate.
Starting point is 00:29:44 You know what? When I asked this question, I didn't think you were all going to come up with a million great answers. Well, let's be honest. Almost every part of a car is a terrible place to put a hair. Yeah. But no, you can get inventive of that because if you have grey hair, you can spell out the words and letters.
Starting point is 00:29:59 Sorry. Numbers and letters. Nice. Just with different colour hair. That's very easy to do. Really? Yeah. Point.
Starting point is 00:30:07 Yeah. Do you know what, Dan? I think if your car is covered in hair, no one needs your number plate. At least you're putting out a car call for it. Okay. It's time for our final fact of the show and that is Andy. My fact is that ancient British fruit varieties include the hens turd apple and the bloody bastard pear.
Starting point is 00:30:34 So this is just about amusing names of fruit. It doesn't get much more amusing than that, Andy. Does it? No. There are amazing, there are hundreds of varieties of apple and pear and other fruits which have kind of gone out. For example, one ancient one is called the shitsmok plum which apparently has a laxative effect if you eat too many of them.
Starting point is 00:30:58 I believe the bloody bastard pear also has a laxative effect and I think that's where that got the name as well. Oh. Wait, so how does that... I think you're on the toilet and you've got bloody bastard. It doesn't create bloody stools. Oh, oh. That sounds like you shouldn't beat.
Starting point is 00:31:14 Well, it just sounded like that was what you were suggesting. Yeah, no, I wasn't intending to suggest that. Well, that's a relief because I've just eaten seven. They are inedible. Can I just say, if you go to the shops and see a bloody bastard pear, do not eat it. They are inedible. Irresponsible for them to be selling it. There's a load of pears in the UK which are inedible pears but they used to make peri,
Starting point is 00:31:41 they used to make alcohol. So peri is the pear version of cider and bloody bastard is one of the ones that's used to make this but you can't eat them because they'll give you the shits. Right. And similarly, in fact, with a cider apple, I don't know why so many of these fruits have this effect. There's a cider apple called Slack McGurdle which is, again, a reference to the fact that you're going to have to drop your trousers once you've eaten this guy.
Starting point is 00:32:05 Oh, wow. Can I give you some funny names of apples and pears just for fun? Yes, yeah, yeah. So I was looking for the bloody bastard pear and it's enshrined in UK legislation. So they have certain apples and pears that are able to be used to make cider or peri. It's by the Apple and Pear Research Council Order of 1989 and there's a big long list of them and the apples include balls bittersweet, bloody turk, crummy Norman and as Anna says Slack McGurdle and peri pears include bastard sack, clipper dick, golden balls, hairy knob
Starting point is 00:32:42 and Margaret and they're all official fruits that you should use to make cider or peri. They also have on that government list, they have the startle cock pear which is, and now I think people can now guess because there's been a pattern why it's called the startle cock. Is it like a Viagra, a natural Viagra? It's not that. That's one of the things that could have been, you're right. Does it fall, do the fruits fall from the tree to the ground shortly before dawn, waking
Starting point is 00:33:15 up cockerels? Oh, what a sweet and wholesome explanation. No, it's because it's a diuretic. So your cock is literally startled into urinating when you eat it. Oh, okay. Or when you drink the cider, I suppose. Gosh. You know, you say, oh gosh, my cock's a bit startled.
Starting point is 00:33:32 I've never heard anyone say that. I think that's a new phrase that we're going to bring into the lexicon, isn't it? Whenever you need to go to the bathroom, it's a polite way of saying I want to go to the little boys' room or little girls' room, just say, oops, my cock's been startled. I'll be back in a minute. So naming apples happens today as well, though. So there are new named varieties. Have you guys been reading about the Cosmic Crisp?
Starting point is 00:33:58 No. Okay. So this is a new apple that was launched last year with a $10 million marketing budget. So basically, I know it's one of the biggest apple launches that has not been of an apple icon. What? Is it called again? It's called the Cosmic Crisp.
Starting point is 00:34:15 And it's got PR people who have said it's enormously crunchy and wipe your face juicy. Are you under the thumb of Big Apple? I'm not. So normally, apples get launched with a bit of fanfare, but this is an unusual apple. So it's got taglines which include the apple of big dreams and imagine the possibilities. They've hired an ex-astronaut called Leroy Chow to be a social influencer plugging the apple. Wow.
Starting point is 00:34:45 Its actual name is WA38. And it was patented by Washington State University. They developed it. And so this has been launched as a thing. Sorry, this is all sounding a bit hashtag spawn. It is. And I'm just feeling sorry for the career of Leroy Chow, which has clearly taken a dip since his astronaut days.
Starting point is 00:35:04 I think it was a commander on the ISS. Well, now he's flogging apples. I know. But anyway, because you can patent an apple, every time someone buys one of these, a bit of the money goes to Washington State University because they were the people who cross-bred it. It's a really controversial thing, isn't it, being able to patent fruits and seeds and stuff.
Starting point is 00:35:26 Other people think it's really important because then you get more varieties, which helps feed people. But then other people think, well, how can you patent an apple? Yeah. I'm not saying which side of the argument I come on, but no. So, yeah, we used to have lots more varieties of apples and pears than we do today. But it seems like they're making a bit of a comeback. This fact suggests people are getting more interest in these quirky new varieties.
Starting point is 00:35:50 And especially you mentioned peri, pear cider. So, peri is also making a comeback. So all these different types of pear are starting to be bred again. And most of the pear cider that you get in pubs, I didn't know this. Most of the pear cider that you order, like a basic pear cider, is just apple cider and they've put pear flavouring into it. Oh, wow. Is that true?
Starting point is 00:36:10 Yeah. Isn't that weird? That? Secondo. Unless you're getting nice, proper expensive peri or whatever, or you're going to devon for it. I feel like I've been really ripped off by that. I'm so sorry.
Starting point is 00:36:22 I'll be honest. I'm not sure I've ever bought it, but I still am furious. One thing that I have drank, which is definitely peri, I think, is baby sham, right? Yes. Baby sham is peri. And that's definitely made of pears, I think. That's made of baby sham, you're right. But the peri industry is a bit annoyed about baby sham because it doesn't have a massively
Starting point is 00:36:44 high brow reputation. And they want peri to. And one of the people who's trying to rejuvenate peri's reputation is the kind of leading pear, cider, bloke in the world, I'm going to call him. He's called Tom Oliver. So he's staging this big comeback. He's an award-winning, Herefordshire cider maker. And his other job is being tour manager of the Proclaimers.
Starting point is 00:37:05 Wow. That's pretty weird. Just two pretty weird jobs. It's amazing, isn't it, that these people who had such amazing jobs like astronaut and tour manager of the Proclaimers would then go into proof. Hey, I found that in Italy, 275 meters below the surface of the earth are 10,000 tons of apples. What?
Starting point is 00:37:30 What? Yeah. What are they doing there, Dan? So this is a way, okay, so something that is well known is that apples that you eat are often not freshly picked. They've been picked for a year or so in storage facilities to be able to make them last longer. So you can pick them and you can put them in storage. And they do that by reducing the oxygen right down to 1% basically.
Starting point is 00:37:54 So in Italy, what they've done is they've taken over these old mines. It's throughout the Dolomites in the Italian mountains. And underneath it, they've converted these mines into giant refrigerators where they're stocking up to, they say, 20,000 tons of apples. So at any given time, there must be a different amount. But yeah, if you visit there. Wow. That is amazing.
Starting point is 00:38:18 Yeah. Wow. They say that, this is what the article said, when compared to a standard above ground storage space, the savings by having them underground are equal to 10 Olympic swimming pools of water being saved a day and 10 hectares of land. Wow. Wow. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:34 So that's why they do it. But yeah, there's a lot of apples underground in Italy. God, every time I bite into an apple now, I'll reflect more on what an adventure it's going to be. I'll get here through the bowels of the earth. I found some other fun fruit names, actually, there was a good article on BBC Future about how, again, we've lost our passion for these smaller, smaller scale fruit varieties. And this article was saying that fistfights used to break out over which tomatoes were
Starting point is 00:39:01 better, those grown in Mississippi or those grown in New Orleans. And now only dedicated foodies know of Lee's Golden Girl tomato and radiated Charlie's mortgage lifter tomato. Radiated Charlie's mortgage lifter. That's right, radiated Charlie's mortgage lifter tomato. Wow. You can still get it. It just sounds like you've put four random words together.
Starting point is 00:39:23 Was it supposedly so good that it would allow him to pay off his mortgage? It was exactly that. It was thought that any seller of it would be able to pay off their debts. That's brilliant. And he must have had quite a big house with all those radiators in it. There are some people who are devoted to finding these old fruits. They're often detectives as well. So there's a guy called David Ben-Scotter who worked for the FBI and then started tracking
Starting point is 00:39:50 down apples, ancient apples after. Head of the FBI or whatever becomes an Apple detective. I know. What is going on? There's David Karp who was a Wall Street trader and a Latin translator and he only got into fruits to impress a woman. And she wasn't impressed, but he just kept detecting fruits for the rest of his career. John Bunker, the apple whisperer.
Starting point is 00:40:11 He is amazing. He's an American guy. Come on. It's much easier to be an apple whisperer and tame an apple than it is to be a Robert Redford style horse whisperer. But go on. Well, he's tracked down a hundred varieties and saved them from extinction. And when you think about it, it must be incredibly hard because you know maybe where an apple
Starting point is 00:40:33 was last grown, but you have to comb through historical records for what these apples looked like, for drawings of them, for the taste and he will study these records and he will sometimes go to towns or villages where they were last seen and he will put up wanted signs. No, no, no. I swear to God, I swear to God. Have you seen this apple? Yeah. He will put up a sign saying wanted, alive, Narragansett Apple, last seen in York County.
Starting point is 00:41:03 Originated on this farm. And he does, he works miracles with these things. He once went to a place and he said, have you seen this apple? And an old man said, I know a related apple, which was also extinct. And this old man said, I used to eat from this tree when I was a boy. And the tree was almost completely dead. There was one two inch wide strip of living tissue and there was one branch, right? And he took a cutting of that and he successfully managed to regrow the entire apple breed
Starting point is 00:41:33 from that tiny strip. And so that apple is now alive again. It's a great story considering you just made it up. It's true, it's all true. It's an amazing profile. Wow. What an idea you're going to be if you go to all that trouble and it tastes like crap. So likely.
Starting point is 00:41:48 Is this, that's John Bunker, right? Yeah. Because he seems to have a side project. I guess when you've got these skills you've got to monetize them whichever way you can. He identifies other people's apples. So I think he said what he's looking for is the ones who can't identify, but people are queuing every day saying, you know, what's this? What's this?
Starting point is 00:42:04 That's amazing. Granny Smith, mate. He just looks at the sticker usually. That's the problem, isn't it, that basically it's become homogenized and we're basically just growing the same apple trees everywhere and stuff like that and the same pear trees. You can kind of get invasive pear trees and things like that, can't you? There's one.
Starting point is 00:42:29 I was reading an article in Vice when I searched for pears and the title of the article was, here's why the trees on your street smell like semen. Okay. Okay. The linden trees. Yeah, they're called, these ones are not the linden trees, which also famously smell like semen.
Starting point is 00:42:47 These are pear trees. It's called the pyrus caloriana tree and this pear tree is taking over. They were grown on, ornamentally, like linden trees were, but they kind of, you get one and then someone plants another one and then they hybridize together and you get new types of this particular type of pear tree and they're really good at taking over in an area and just, you know, out-competing all the other pear trees.
Starting point is 00:43:13 All right. You know, Nigel Farage. They're better at the job. It's a less nice way of imagining the song which ends and a partridge in a pear tree if the pear tree in question smells of semen. If you're being given those on the 12 days of Christmas, you're not going to be happy about it.
Starting point is 00:43:31 Yeah, because actually the first 11 days, you think these are quite, I mean, it's a bit awkward having all these swans and drummers and stuff, but they're quite good gifts and then in the end, you just get the jizzy tree. You've been blaming, you've been blaming the lords are leaping until now. Okay, that's it. That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening.
Starting point is 00:43:56 If you'd like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we have said over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shriverland, James, at Jay Tarkin, Andy, at Andrew Hunter M, and Jizinski. You can email a podcast at qi.com. Yep. You can go to our group account, which is at no such thing or our website. No such thing as a fish.com.
Starting point is 00:44:16 We have links to all of our episodes up there, as well as lots of bits of merchandise that are now available for purchase. We will be back again next week. In the meantime, stay safe, guys. Hope you're doing well. Hope everyone's healthy and hope you're staying sane. And thanks for listening to us throughout this period. We'll be back again next week with another episode.
Starting point is 00:44:33 We'll see you then. Goodbye.

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