No Such Thing As A Fish - 327: No Such Thing As A SCUBA Diver In A Tree
Episode Date: June 26, 2020Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss Spies, Flies and Tornado Lies Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. ...
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Hello, and welcome to another Working from Home episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a
weekly podcast coming to you from four undisclosed locations in the UK.
My name is Dan Schreiber, I am sitting here with James Harkin, Andrew Hunter Murray,
and once again we have gathered around the microphones with our four favourite facts
from the last seven days, and in no particular order, here we go. Starting with you, Andy.
My fact is that spies can tell what people are saying by looking at the lights in the room
they're in. So, this is a new spying technique which has been discovered, or I don't know what
you do with spying techniques, but it's been found out by researchers from the Ben Gurion
University of the Negev and the Weissmann Institute of Science, and what they found is that
there are lots of different ways of eavesdropping on people, and this one is called Lamphone,
and what it means is if we're all talking in our rooms, if there's a light bulb, and it has to
be a hanging light bulb, so you know, a classic bulb, your conversation will make tiny, tiny
vibrations on the surface, and that will slightly affect the light inside the bulb,
and you can get very cheap equipment, like it costs a couple of hundred dollars,
and you just observe the light bulb from outside the room, and you can pick up what people are
talking about, you can decode speeches. Yeah, so you can, it's not like Morse, it's not translating
into Morse, you can pick up the actual sound? Well, I think it has to be translated from
light bulb language into sound. So it is light bulb language. Yeah, but they can even, you can
shazam the song that someone is playing in a room. That's how, yeah. It's amazing, isn't it? And they
reckon that they took a snippet of a speech by Donald Trump, and they could understand what he
was saying, which is quite impressive, because most people can't understand what he's saying,
Can we do a light bulb episode of Fish that we just release in light bulb language, and
people can decode down the line? Yeah, good idea. Yeah, that won't present any technical
problem. It's hard enough to get on Zoom, Dan. Is this, do they use lasers for this to
reflect, because you can't just pin your ear to the window and listen to the vibrations coming
off the light bulb or anything, presumably? Is it lasers they bounce off it? Yeah,
it's invisible lasers. So you won't notice a kind of sniper dot on your light bulb,
so you won't be able to tell you being spied on. What it is actually, I believe not a laser,
I think. I think it's just a telescope, so you get the light and an electro-optical sensor. Now,
that might have a laser in it for all I know, but I think what it is, is it takes the light in,
and it can sense the very, very slight changes in light. Can I just say why I
flubbed that? It's because there's a separate thing called a laser microphone, which this was
used, this is where you fire a laser at the windows of a room, and you can eavesdrop that way.
And this was used in 2013 in a place called a bottle bed, and it was used to find out that
there was an extra person inside a building in a bottle bed, and that extra person who never
left the building turned out to be Osama bin Laden. So that's how they found out there was
an extra person inside that building who never went outside. Do you know who invented this,
this laser? No. It was Leon Theramen, the inventor of the Theramen. That instrument?
Do the noise again, Dan? You should explain what the Theramen is as well as doing that
excellent impersonation. I think we have mentioned it before. Yeah, so Theramans are,
you will have seen them possibly as an instrument that I don't, I actually don't know how they
work technically. They give off electromagnetic waves, don't they? And your hand can disrupt
them, and they make a noise. Yeah, so people use their hand. If you see them sort of pushing
forward and backwards their hand, it will sort of make that kind of... Yeah, it's basically a
ghost impression is what it sounds like. So Leon Theramen invented what basically was the
precursor to the modern laser microphone that we have today and it was used by the Soviet Union
and he was given a Stalin prize for inventing this, what was advanced espionage technology.
So Theramen found Osama bin Laden. Wow. That's amazing. Sort of spooky.
The other thing that Theramen did really interestingly was he had invented basically
like the technology you have on contactless credit cards. He put one of those in a giant wooden seal
and when I say seal, I don't mean the animal. I mean like kind of a symbol of the United States
and then gave it to the U.S. Embassy somewhere, I think, and they had it up in their room,
but what they didn't realize is there was a tiny chip in there and that they could hear what was
happening by using this contactless technology, I think. Yeah, you're completely right.
They didn't have to go up to the seal. The Soviets didn't have to go up to the seal and then sort
of tap on it to get the sound files out, but they sort of fired electromagnetic beams at it,
didn't they? And that activated it just like your oyster card is activated by the ticket stand.
It was called the thing. The thing. That's what it's called. The seal was called the thing.
Soviet school children gave it to the U.S. Embassy or the U.S. Ambassador in 1945 and they
managed to get seven years of espionage recording out of it. Wow. That's so cool.
How did they make sure the U.S. Ambassador put it in the right room?
It was so big, I think, that I had to go on the wall somewhere. I don't think they could guarantee
the room, but also it was completely made of wood, so they thought this is definitely safe.
There's no way this is a spying tool. And the really clever thing about those kind of chips
that you have in your credit card and in your oyster card is they don't need any power, do they?
That all the power comes from the thing that's scanning them.
You know, Edward Snowden, he has a secret device to stop himself being spied on,
which is a blanket over his head. Is that what inspires you? Because you do that sometimes
when we record and I thought it was just to embellish the ghost impression that you've been
honing. That's just social anxiety, but Edward Snowden has, he calls it his magic mantle of
power and basically it's to stop targeted video surveillance because obviously if you're Edward
Snowden, you know, leaking secrets, there's a chance someone will be trying to spy on you.
So he just puts a blanket over his head when he types his password in.
I remember reading an article about, was it Glenn Greenwald who interviewed him?
Yeah, someone like that. And they said that whenever they went into his hotel room or his
house or whatever, they always made you put your phone in the microwave as soon as you
walked in. That was what you always had to do.
I think Snowden makes people put it in the refrigerator because his, yeah.
How does it work, Andy, though? If he's put it over his head, yeah.
He's not going to be able to see what he's typing, A, but also it's just his eyeballs and
I'm not seeing. I reckon Edward Snowden could touch type.
But still, what are they recording? His brain?
All of him is under the blanket. Oh, he's in a port?
He's in a port? No, he knows. Well, yes.
He's got a blanket over his head and his hands basically. It's in case there's
somewhat the camera in the room that would fill what he's typing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And you've got to assume that he's done the very basic putting masking tape over the camera
on his laptop because if he's missed that shot, he's an absolute love of tea.
Actually, you know what? They can tell what you're typing by just listening to the sound
of your typing on your keyboard. So there are some researchers at the University of
California, Berkeley. Actually, it's Doug Tiger and his team and they've worked out.
Every time you click a button, it makes a very, very slightly different sound to the other ones.
But you can't really tell which one is which. But what you can do is you can take all the
clicks and then work out the one that comes most often is probably E.
And if there are two letters together, these researchers, they realize that it could be
TH or it could be ER. And it could definitely not be BF because there are no words with BF
next to each other. What the hell of course there are.
What if you're like, me and my BF are both hardcore spies?
Exactly. If you are Edward Snowden, here's a little tip for him and these are his little
thoughts and you want to trick the FBI, just keep writing about your BFF.
He's been a major sort of revealer of a lot of these secrets that we've been researching,
hasn't he? So a lot of stuff came out on the back of his revelations. So I think, for instance,
when the Guardian was doing their investigation and they got hold of a lot of the documents,
they were told that they weren't allowed to keep any of the Edward Snowden files in their
offices because the government thought that they could be spied on by laser microphones,
just bouncing off their glasses of water and stuff like that. So it's not just the windows,
it's if you've got a mug of tea or anything similar to that, they could do that.
And yeah, he's in the wake of his revelations, a lot of countries took action to make sure that
the US or the NSA couldn't spy on them too much anymore. So Germany, for instance, invested in
a whole bunch of typewriters, which I don't know if this would have solved the typing issue,
but the idea is that if you're writing on a typewriter, there's no digital memory of it
anywhere. You've just got it on a bit of paper in that weird old school font, and then I guess
you just post it to somebody. But it is quite annoying if you need to share a document with
20 other people. I don't know what you do. But yeah, and Russia, I think, spent 10 grand on
antique typewriters after that. Really? Do any of you guys have a typewriter? I have one.
And they're the pain to use compared with a computer. They're so annoying. Like they just
always get stuck, and whenever you make a mistake, you can't press delete.
James, why are you writing on a typewriter? That's a big question for me.
Well, you know, I'm married to a Russian.
No, I got one as a gift, and I really liked it. And I thought I might try typing on it,
but it's really a fucking annoying thing. It does seem like a pain.
Yeah. It must be so annoying for all these people who work in spy centres coming up with
new ways of spying on people that some dorky scientists are just publishing these papers
going, oh, we found out that they must be reading light bulbs. They're like, damn it, that took me
years. I created a technology to read light bulbs, and now we're going to look for something else.
What next? Yeah, because some people do that. I think there's a data analysis company called
Palantir, which is used by the US Secret Service, so they must know what they're doing.
And they have designed their windows to have these things that they call
acoustic transducers on them, which basically, if you try to use the window vibrations,
it just sends out white noise or something. Maybe it sends out some kind of ha ha prank
you message to anyone trying to spy. Brilliant. If you could hack your window to send other
messages, that would be great. But I think, isn't that why governments would use net curtains?
I think that's why, because that supposedly dampened the vibrations.
Other governments which use net curtains, because I also think they're with suburbia
in the 1950s, and you have to have an old lady peering around them to see what the neighbours are doing.
You know, the Sopranos, the great TV series, the mobster TV series. So it was so realistic,
it was so on point for what would happen in the real life of a mobster, that mobsters started
thinking there must be someone on the inside who was leaking information to the writers and
producers of the show. And we know that they had those conversations, because the FBI were actually
wiretapping the mobsters who had that conversation and fed that back to the writers and producers
of the Sopranos. But they used to listen into conversations of mobsters going,
did you see the Sopranos on Sunday? How did they know that we do that kind of thing?
Come on, Dad, you could have done it better, Italian American accent.
No, he couldn't, turns out.
Dan, you sounded like a Kiwi. You sounded New Zealandish, which is the opposite of being,
that's New Jersey you're trying to get, you did New Zealand.
Do you think New Zealand is the opposite of being in the Sopranos? That probably is quite close,
a harmless Kiwi. Pretty much is. Yeah, you're right.
Dan, you know what you were saying about what is annoying that all these secrets come out,
must be irritating if you're in the Secret Service. So I have a suspicion that everything we found out
is all just fake news that's subtly put out by the CIA or MI5 to throw us off the scent,
because it's just so much they release, like there's this amazing book.
Or, Anna, sorry, by Big Lumpshade, could be them.
The Lumpshade companies trying to make us buy Lumpshades.
You were absolutely bang on or candle.
James, you're 1950s house. You've got your neck curtains,
you've got your big fringe Lumpshade. The time writer's out.
I am from Murder She Wrote, Jessica Fletcher, or whatever she's called.
I'm sorry, Anna, I interrupted.
So Big Lumpshade, or whoever it is, has put out this fake news, because this stuff that comes
out is amazing. So there's a book called Spycraft, which came out in 2009, and it was written
by the head of the Office of Technical Service, which is the CIA department that's responsible
for all of their gadgets. So it's written by this former head of that, and he just revealed
this amazing stuff, but it sounds so implausible. So he said that they used to, when they met
business people or politicians or diplomats, they'd hand out gifts, and all the gifts would
have devices placed in them, so a bit like these schoolchildren. But so they'd hand out books or
lighters or flower pots, apparently. But you just think if you're...
Wait a minute. If you're going to give a gift, right? Don't give a flower pot, which they might
put outside. You need to give them something that would... Oh, here's a milk bottle as a gift.
You've got to give them something that they'll definitely keep in the house.
You're so right. The only noise you get from that is wind, and then squirrels and foxes,
desperately digging through earth. I saw an amazing video online, just while we're on the CIA.
So the CIA has a chief of disguise, which I didn't know, and the former chief of disguise does this
video. She's called Jonna Mendez, and it's amazing. This video is her sitting talking about how you
can slip into a disguise very quickly or the elaborate ways that they do it. And during the
video, she slowly goes into different disguises. So someone who's an old man, and it's really
incredible. And she was talking about a lot of the mythology of CIA disguise and what they do,
particularly the Mission Impossible movies with wearing the sort of fake head. And that's not
far from the truth of what they did. And there's this fantastic set of photos when she went to
meet George Bush Sr. to tell him about what they were up to, that she sat doing the whole meeting,
and then near the end, rips off her mask and has a different, her real head underneath,
and Bush didn't notice the entire time. You can see these photos. Highly recommend.
But did he notice her ripping off her own face?
No, he saw that fit. He didn't just carry on with the meeting. I thought this was later the
presidency where he wasn't really paying attention anymore. No, he didn't notice that she had a
fake head on during the meeting. I do not found it suspicious that Mrs. Doubtfire wanted to have
a meeting with him in the first place. Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is James.
Okay, my fact this week is that London Bridge was destroyed by a tornado in 1091.
What? What? Like, I can't believe I didn't know this already. I thought,
why are they not teaching it in schools? Why is it not a great movie? Yeah, this is incredible,
this fact. This was one of the first London bridges. In fact, probably the first one we 100%
definitely know about. There will have been some before, but we're not quite sure what happened
to them. But it was William the Conqueror. He came into London in 1066. And one of his first
things that he did when his army came in was they built a new bridge over the River Thames,
and it was just 25 years later that it was completely demolished by a tornado.
And we don't know much about it because obviously people didn't write much down in those days.
But 12th century historian William of Malmesbury says that it was completely wrecked. There were
also churches that were wrecked, and there were more than 600 houses that were completely flattened.
And we now think that it was what's called an F4 tornado, which is the second strongest tornado
you can get with winds over 200 miles an hour. Amazing. Is it how? Did he call it a tornado at
the time? Did he call it a mighty wind or something else like that? Because presumably
they didn't have the word then, did they? It's such a good question. They won't have had the word.
So that's, yeah, you answered your own question. Actually, what a bad question. You knew the answer,
you were wasting everyone's time. I didn't know. And only two people were killed,
apparently, in this tornado. That's so weird. It was no one in any of the 600 or whatever houses
that were falling down. It's so weird, isn't it? Everyone's out at work. It sounds extraordinarily
powerful. So the church of St Mary LeBeau had 26 foot high rafters, and apparently they were
driven so far into the earth by this tornado that only four feet of them remained above ground.
Wow. Which I was thinking, because Mary LeBeau is a very famous church in London for those people
who aren't Londoners, because that's if you're born within the sound of the bells of Mary LeBeau,
then you are officially a cockney. And I'm guessing the bells weren't functioning once it
was driven into the ground. So anyone born in that period couldn't be a cockney.
That's incredible. How does that work that it shoved it into the ground? That's like a giant
screwdriver. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I'm just putting myself in their place. We don't know what this
thing was. There was a giant spinny screwdriver in the sky, and it's drilled some of our big
panels into the ground. Well, that's when they changed traditional church architecture away
from the screwdriver design to less easy to drive into the ground shape. That just seems,
but that's a lot that's 20 feet to go into the ground. London grounds very swampy. It's a lot.
Look, they didn't have such good tarmac then. But the other thing that's interesting is that I think
the London Bridge that would have been destroyed by this tornado would have been way bigger than
modern London Bridge because the river was so much wider at the time. That's a good point.
The river used to be about four or five times as wide as it is today, and a lot of it's been
reclaimed. So it would have been absolutely enormous. Yeah. I did read about a potential
precursor to this London Bridge, which is much debated, but a lot of serious journals
do think that sides on the fact that it did exist. And it's off the back of something that we know
from Nordic law, which was, there was a period in 1014 when Ethel the Unready had been trying
to reclaim England. Is Ethel the Unready related to Ethel Red the Unready? It was his mum.
Yeah, it was Ethel Red. Ethel Red. Sorry, I said is they wrong. Yeah. Annoyingly,
this fact has so much English history that I have to get to before I can explain the basic thing.
The basic thing is the Danes were in charge of London at that point, and London Bridge was
very much a spot where they could arm the whole thing with people of bows and arrows for anyone
who was coming down the Thames. And so there was a Viking called Olaf who tied ropes underneath the
bridge and went underneath with the tide and pulled London Bridge down, forcing all the soldiers to
die and perish in the water. It was over 200 soldiers and helped for reclaiming England for
the British as opposed to the Danes. And a poet called Otar Stavte did a poem which was London
Bridge is broken down, gold is one and bright beyond. There's more to it, but that line London
Bridge is broken down is thought to have inspired London Bridge is falling down. What's really
interesting is about the London Bridge is falling down thing, which is a lot of people think that
it might be to do with that story. But then on the other hand, before that, there were other
songs throughout the whole of Europe. So you would have Die Magdeburger Brück, the Magdeburg
Bridge in Germany. And it was basically exactly the same idea of a bridge that would fall down.
And a lot of nursery rhyme historians think what happened was this was quite a common kind of
European song. And then when it came over to Britain, they just gave it the name of the
capital city's most famous bridge. My favorite version of the London Bridge was the one that
was there during Shakespearean times. It just sounds like the most fascinating thing to have
ever walked across. It was packed with houses that were up to four stories high. It had restaurants
on it, restaurants that when you went to them, the way you would order your food is you would get
fish as a sandwich, right? And they would open a trap door and they would put down a fishing rod,
they would catch the fish live, reel it up, and then slap it raw in between bread and give it to you.
No, I mean... So many questions. First, worst restaurant ever, if you're just going to raw
food, it's sushi. Can I say second, how are you going to guarantee if it's the Thames in the 60th
century that you're not going to reel in a turd? Bingo. Well, that was that was the exciting
element of your dining experience. That's the way the phrase comes from, I'd rather eat a shit
sandwich than this restaurant. And third, as we know, the sandwich in this country hadn't really
been invented yet. So it doesn't make any sense. They would have reeled the fish up and had two
bits of bread and gone, God, we don't know how to put this together. So why have you read this,
Dad? This is amazing. I read this, I read this in a book by Dr Matthew Green, a book called
London, A Travel Guide Through Time. And this was a book that was published by my wife. And it's
the most fascinating chapter because he takes you back to the time. So he has someone walking
across the bridge in Shakespearean times. It would take you two hours to walk the length of the
entire bridge. It was so congested. And there's always a bit, apparently, during the day where
it came to a standstill, because you know how there was a polar bear tower at the tower of London,
that it was during the hour when he would be taken out to the Thames to be fed, that people would
stand and just watch. It would come to a standstill because it was such a mad thing that a polar bear
would be fishing for food. He'd be stealing sandwiches out of the mouth of hungry clientele
in the restaurant as well. Oh, what's it called? That polar bear wasn't there in Shakespearean
times, was he? I thought he was like 13th century at the latest, wasn't it? I thought so.
So this is the same bridge that I'm talking about. Because it's spanned a long time. In the 14th
century, we know how many people were actually living on it because we know the number of rent
that was collected from properties. So there were 198 buildings that were all providing rental
revenue from that period. And this was the bridge. If you talk about all the London bridges of which
there have been dozens of iterations, this was the one that lasted, what, 600 years or whatever,
or maybe longer even. But it was because of this that they eventually dismantled that in the 1820s,
because it was so congested. But it's also because it was the only bridge. It was literally the only
bridge across central London until 1739. So it feels weird for them to dismantle it and build
another one when they could just build more bridges. Yeah, true. I was reading a count of the
dismantling, and then they rebuilt it as a wider, more useful bridge. And when they lay the first
stone of a building or a bridge, and there was this account in the British newspaper archive,
it was 1925. And the Lord Mayor was invited to lay the foundation stone. And I didn't understand
the ritual at all. So basically, he had a gold trowel with which he sort of dug it up, I guess.
And then he dropped coins into a box. So there's a wooden box. He drops coins into a box, which
contains four little glass pillars, seven inches high. A lid's put on the box. And then the box
is covered in cement and installed into a hole in the foundation stone. And then that's dropped.
So if you went to the bottom of London Bridge now with your scuba gear, and then you cut away
into some of the stones, in one of them, there's this little box full of glass pillars. And these
coins, isn't that weird? That's really cool. I know what happened to the previous foundation
stone from the previous bridge. So Anna, was that the 1831 version of London Bridge that you
were talking about? Okay, so the previous one, lots of it got sold off as souvenirs. So there are
bits of various British country houses which are made of old London Bridge. But the stone got turned
into a chair, the foundation stone. And where is that chair? It's in the base of a chair. Where is
the chair? Yeah. It's in Fish Hall, which is kind of the fishing guild, the fisherman's guild.
And it's right by modern London Bridge now. And it's just a fancy chair, basically.
That's so sad for that stone. So it spent its entire existence watching live fish swimming
happily around. And now it's condemned to this place full of dead slaughtered fish.
Fisherman's bottom on him every now and then.
We can't leave London Bridge alone without talking about what happened to that new 1831 version,
which is now in America. So the idea was that it was sold to an American and he got conned, right?
That's... Oh, well, people claim that, but he insists he didn't. And I suspect he didn't. But
yeah, basically, so that London Bridge is now in Haversu, which is in Arizona, because this
crazy millionaire in... It was in 1968, wasn't it, that it was put up for sale and this millionaire
in America bought it. And there's always been a rumour that he meant to buy Tower Bridge
and got the wrong one. But I think he likes that because it drummed up even more publicity
for the fact that he was moving London Bridge to the desert, which everyone thought was insane.
It's amazing because they installed it in a dry bed of the desert and then they redirected the
nearby stream to go under it. So there is water going under it now, but the bridge was put there
before the water was. Yeah. It is quite weird to have to build a river in order to satisfy a bridge
rather than go around. But the weird thing is that London put the bridge on sale in 1968. It
wasn't like some mad Yosemite Sam millionaire turns up and says, I want to buy that bridge.
It was that London was trying to flog it off. Yeah. But who did they think was going to buy it?
Probably someone with a river. So they were probably quite surprised with this guy got it.
They probably, when he came over, they were like, oh, nice. Yeah. What river are you going to put it
over? Oh, right. Okay. It is worth saying, if this guy did make the mistake of Tower Bridge
and London Bridge, that possibly a lot of international listeners listening to this
episode right now are making the very same mistake. The almost iconic bridge that you've
pictured in your head, that's Tower Bridge. That's one where it opens up in the middle
and it's got the huge two giant, I don't know what you call them, arches, whatever,
that bridge, the one you're thinking of. London Bridge, very dull. It's terrible. It's horrible.
So you can understand where this guy is. It's just a road bridge, isn't it?
It is. It's just a straight old bridge that an unimaginative child might draw.
Yes, exactly. I did read an amazing thing which was in 1952. This is a fact about Tower Bridge,
the one that does open up in the middle. If you've ever seen the movie Speed,
where they have to jump the gap of a bridge, that happened on Tower Bridge with a bus driver
in 1952. His name was Albert Gunter and he was, during December, he was driving the number 78
bus which goes from Short Itch to Dull Itch and the person who would usually ring the bell to
say that the bridge was going up forgot to ring it and he noticed that the bridge was
bending upwards as he was driving towards it and he didn't have enough time to slam on the brakes
because that would have been disaster. So he hit the accelerator and he jumped. He jumped across.
Now, only his side had lifted up and he jumped a six foot drop basically onto the northern side
of the bridge. It's still a lot on a massive bus. Exactly on a massive bus, but yeah,
someone jumped the gap of the bridge in 1952. Did they remember to put the sign over the
tunnel saying this bus is on diversion because that's not part of the planned route?
So he was okay in the end. He broke his leg which was the only major
problem and 12 of the 20 passengers had minor injuries, but so 21 people in total
all survived this big bridge jump and as a reward, he was given £10 which is about £290
in today's money and a day off for his bravery. Right. Ah, that's enough time for a broken leg
to fully heal. Okay, so some stuff on tornadoes. Yeah. It's really difficult to know when you
read articles about tornadoes, what's real and what isn't real because they happen in the middle
of the countryside. The only people who see it are the people who are there at the time
and they often seem to come up with some stories that I don't know if they're real or not.
So there's a story from the start of the 20th century. I think it was in Kansas where there
was a man with a baby in his arms and the tornado came and lifted the baby up and deposited it in
a tree. Oh, no. Which doesn't sound very true. Apparently in 1976, this one seems like it might
have been true. It was in Michigan. There was a tornado and there was a house which was blown
by the tornado so it went onto its side. So people had to use a ladder to get into the front door.
Well, apart from the side thing, it's looking pretty good in here.
But then there are some that are definitely not true. For instance, in this 1915 one in Kansas,
there was a story that an iron jug was blown inside out.
Pretty sure that one isn't true. I read one as well years ago, which was there was a mystery of
a scuba diver found in a tree and he was fully clothed. No, Dan. No, I know what you're doing.
What? Are you doing the famous mental brain teaser where they've been picked up by a
they've been scuba diving and they've been picked up by a helicopter that's trying to put out a fire?
Was that a mental brain teaser? Yeah, that wasn't a real story.
I think he's just come across an amazing fact website. Look at all these anecdotes.
Okay, but the room was locked from the inside. There were no windows. There's just a puddle of
water. The fish were called Romeo and Juliet. But the doctor is his mum.
Okay, it is time for fact number three. And that is my fact. My fact this week is that
this year's Dutch national headwind championships was cancelled during the race because it was too
windy. So this is a cycling championship that's been going for the last six years. And the idea
is that they don't know when it's going to happen. They look out for storms. And as soon as they
hear a massive storm is on the way, they give everyone three days warning to say, we're going
to be doing this race. And they have to go down this one strip of 8.5 kilometers. And you just
have to ride against the wind. And actually, it wasn't the cyclists who pulled out of it. It was
the fact that it was the trucks carrying the bikes were being toppled over. So they couldn't physically
get the bikes of them. So my friend, Tom Scott, who's a YouTuber was there. And he did a video
about this. And he said that they didn't topple over, I think they just it was too dangerous for
high sided vehicles to go across. So I don't think any trucks actually went over, but they were
just banned from going over. And what happens is, everyone has kind of the same bike, that these
kind of single speed upright bikes, and you cycle across and then this big lorry picks up the bikes
and takes them all back to the start again. So the next lot of people can go down. And the lorry
couldn't come across the bridge because it was banned. And instead, it would have to go on like a
20 mile route rather than going that way. So they just canceled it halfway through.
Yeah, there is another way of moving bikes without a truck. And especially is coming back
and you've got the wind. It's a good pipe. This year, they were going to they'd gone all out to
make it even nicer than the previous events. And they had storm resistant seating for the
spectators and a special designated vomit zone. It's really funny. You can see it's these three
big bin bags that are sort of hung up and it has a big placard that says vomit zone. And there's
little bike handles for you to hold as you're vomiting into the rubbish bin. You don't want to
be stood down wind of that as well. Why do they need a vomit zone? The endurance of doing this
race. So they say it's kind of like if you were going cycling up a hill that was a sort of 10
percent incline, it feels and you've got no terrible bike on a terrible bike. And the whole
thing is, you know, there are winners, but everyone is just wanting to finish it's an
endurance thing. And they push themselves to the limit and it forces them to vomit enough
so that they've set up the vomit station. They should have vomit zone shortly at the end of all
marathons and all races and every they do. It's called the side of the road.
Wasn't it stopped also in 2017 because it wasn't stormy enough?
Yeah, I think it was. It was an absolute, because they need a certain level of wind,
don't they? So if it doesn't come, it doesn't come. And also the wind needs to be in exactly
the right direction. So that's why they can only do it three days in advance. They need to know
that the wind is not just going to be there, but it's going to be coming directly over the bridge.
Yes. And this bridge is an amazing bridge, right? This is the Ulster Schelterkring. And it's a
bridge that is basically a storm barrier bridge. And they're very proud of it there. They have a
little inscription on the stone, which says, Here the tide is ruled by the wind, the moon,
and us. It's sort of they're so proud of how strong it is, which I saw on a video by your
buddy, Tom Scott. Really worth watching if you're listening to us right now. Talk about this.
He's on the side of the road. The wind is blowing in his head. And he's seeing people
ride past him. It's fantastic. Isn't that sort of the beginning of an ancient Greek story about
hubris where you end up getting swept away by the tide because you tried to control what only
God can control. Yeah, it's King Canute, isn't it? It's Canute. I think a Dutch are winning at the
moment. They're nailing it. You're right. Those Dutch bikes are really hard to cycle fast on.
The ones which don't have a bar at the top from the front to the back. They force you to cycle in
a really sedate way. Another good race is the Red Bull Time Lapse. And they call that the longest
one-day road cycling events. Do you know how many hours it's for? 24. No. 25 because they do it when
the clocks go back. Is that right? When the clocks go back. Yeah. It's quite cool, isn't it? Yeah.
And it's just a 6.2 kilometer course and they see how many laps they can do in 25 hours. Nice.
You could do the shortest one-day cycling event where you just cross the international date
line. Yeah. And you're just like, oh, I've been cycling for a day. Yeah. And actually, it's just
one second. That's great. Apart from you're probably in the middle of the ocean. You're dead, but you're
a smug. There's a bunch of cycling things that you can do where it's underwater. So underwater
cycling. And it's quite nice the way that they get the bike to stay at the bottom, which is they
take all the air out of the bike wheels and they fill it with water. So when you plunge in, you just
sink to the bottom with it and it becomes easy to ride. How do they deal with the fact that humans
are quite buoyant? They replace all the air in their lungs with water. Eventually, that's probably
what happens, isn't it? Yeah. Do you have to have weights? Oh, yeah, weights. Yeah, weight belts
and things like that to keep you down. Yeah, I'm not sure. Yeah. I didn't see that in the photo
that I saw. Because some of them go quite deep, don't they? The underwater ones. There's one,
the underwater bike race in North Carolina, which seems to be the home of underwater bike racing,
where it's 60 feet underwater. And the race is across this shipwreck of a German U-boat called
the Indra. Wow, that's so cool. And you ride 100 foot. Doesn't that, that's the kind of thing you're
going to book a holiday to go and do? I don't really like cycling or swimming, but I like the
sound of that. That sounds amazing. I don't like chess or boxing, but I love it.
I was looking at slipstreams, because it's a movement and cycling. Absolutely. And so slipstream,
of course, is when you're, so you can get in a slipstream, for instance, if you're on a bicycle
and you're behind a big vehicle, I do not recommend you do this, but the vehicle sort of pushes the
air out of the way in front of it. So it creates this sort of negative pressure around you. But
the record for how far someone cycled in a slipstream is held by a woman who's Denise Molo
Koronek and she went at 184 miles an hour in 2018 behind a race car. Isn't that incredible?
Incredible. So she's pedaling, right? Yeah, you've got to be pedaling. So you can't,
she's in such a high gear that you couldn't possibly start. So they have to get pulled
along by the car at first until they're going at 100 miles an hour and then released and then
you peddle along behind the car. Wow. She move on to. Can I just talk about one,
can I just talk about one other slipstream guy who I love, who's the guy, this guy called Charles
Minthorn, mile a minute Murphy, mile a minute was added later. He was the first person to ride a
bicycle a mile in under a minute. He was an 18, this is an 1899 and he persuaded a train engineer
because trains were the only things that could go fast enough at the time to build the next
or track for him that he could cycle along. And then so two miles of track and then he would get
dragged behind it in the slipstream. And so he spent, he spent 12 years planning this, dreaming
about it, fantasizing about it. And at first it didn't work because the train couldn't go fast
enough. So he was there capable of cycling. The train couldn't go fast enough. Eventually they
got a bigger, better, faster train and he ended up going so fast, burning rubber was flying up in
his face because the track was warping and stuff. But lots of people were watching and he, it got
to the end of the track. So he's going faster than the train at one point because he got,
he fell behind a bit because he lifted his hand up to sort of wave at one of his trainers.
And I was like, oh fuck, I've just lost 50 feet. So he caught up with the train going faster than
the train. The bloody guy driving the steam train just cut the steam as soon as he got to the end.
And so Charles went slanted, flew of his bike at 60 miles an hour and somehow got caught,
there were two people standing in the train, one caught one arm, the other caught the other arm.
And they saved him. That is amazing.
Okay, it is time for our final fact of the show. And that is Anna.
My fact is that every week, planes drop 15 million flies on the border between Columbia and Panama.
Okay, so we're expected to believe that, but a scuba diver in a tree
is perfect. Maybe the scuba divers hurling them out of the plane and he fell out too. I don't know.
This is this incredible, not a story, true, true fact. And I read it in an article in The Atlantic
by Sarah Zhang. It's a brilliant article, but it's about how it's 14.7 million screwworm adults.
So the flies of the screwworm are dropped over this border and it's in order to keep down
screwworm populations, weirdly. And it's been happening for over 50 years. And it's because
they're a terrible pest. So they were this awful blight in the US because they destroy
livestock for reasons that I have no doubt will go into in disgusting detail. So they started
looking into how to get rid of them. It was sort of in the 1950s, the US Department of Agriculture
started looking into eradicating them and decided to sterilize a bunch of screwworms, drop them all
over the continent, and then those guys would shag, male screwworms they drop, those guys would
shag the females who only shag once in their life. So if you shag a sterilized male, that's it,
you're not having kids. And thusly the screwworm blight is ended. So the screwworm was screwed
by screwing, you could say. Very nice. I could say that should be their logo. And we should say,
I don't know if you said this, Anna, but the reason why it's in Panama, between Colombia and Panama,
is they eradicated these flies from the whole of North America, but they still exist in South
America. And the bit where Panama is is obviously very, very thin bit of land. So if they can make
sure that nothing gets past that little bit of land, then it means that nothing will come into
North America. So that's why they flood Panama and Colombia with it, just to kind of create a barrier.
And also to make a big buffer zone, I think, because at first they did try to make it a barrier
with Mexico. But because that's just a bit too close, Mexico's right there, they were like,
we've got to make this big buffer zone. It's like the Eastern Bloc in the Cold War.
Can we talk about the worms and how horrific they are? They lay their eggs in open wounds.
That's what their jam is. And sometimes they go for mucous membranes if they can't find an open
wound. But that's why they're so painful and horrific. So you're living in a mucous membrane,
are you? Yes, yeah, but we're saving up and we hope to find an open wound soon.
Yeah. And then they sort of chew their way. They chew their way really deep as well. Like,
they can get two inches down and they're just awful. They're awful animals.
There was a British tourist called Rochelle Harris in 2013 who had a screw fly who went into her ear.
And there was like this weird buzzing and scratching and stuff and she didn't really
know what it was. And eventually they found out that she had these flesh-eating worms living inside
her head. And then they interviewed her afterwards. I think this is mine in the Daily Mail. They
interviewed her afterwards and she said, I'm no longer as squeamish as I once was about bugs.
How can you be after they've been inside your head? I just think I think that would make me
more squeamish. Way less likely to lie down in the garden if I've had a load of screw worms in the
brain. It sounds like one stayed in there and is running the show now. That's such a good idea.
Their name, it literally means flesh-eating, which I love. So their scientific name is the
Cochleomia hominivorax and hominid is man and vorax like voracious as eating. So man devouring,
gosh, which is fitting. Yeah. The actual discovery of the idea of sterilizing all of these
screw worms and dropping them over had been called in the New York Times in 1970 the single most
original thought in the 20th century. That was according to a lot of scientists at the time
because it was down to a guy called Edward F. Knippling. Knippling?
It's Knippling. It's usually a silent case, isn't it? I think it's Knippling. Either way,
we can agree he does not make exceedingly good case. Well, let's say Knippling and he used to
was a child. He used to watch adult screw worms mate and he obsessed over it, not in a sexy way.
He was watching a lot of his animals on a farm be devoured by these horrible flesh-eating
species. And so, yeah, apparently that was just such an original thought that some scientists
claim it's the single most original thought. Yeah, that was before the internet was invented,
wasn't it? So he was really amazed in this Edward Knippling. He died relatively recently,
I think, and I saw a few obituaries of him. Apparently, he named all of his pets after
insects. Isn't that cool? But his pets were not insects?
No, he had Siamese cats, Colton, Anthonomous, and Koolex that were named after a type of cotton
boll weevil and a type of mosquito. Do you know how you get a screw worm out of someone?
Do you lure it out somehow? You do. You use a treatment called Bacon Therapy.
Which sounds like such a much more enjoyable thing than it actually is.
It's just a little jamming raw pork into the breathing holes that the worm has,
and it either suffocates and pushes its way out or it finds it yummy and sort of goes towards the
bacon. It is like fishing, though, isn't it? I couldn't tell. It's so weird when they say that
you use it to block up their air holes because they're really small. I mean, that is a tiny
rasher of bacon. I think they're attracting them to them, and once you've got 10 or 11
on your bacon, you reel it in, I suppose, don't you? If you think it's like fishing,
I'm not coming to your restaurant in the middle of London Bridge.
The maggot sandwich flies off the shelves. They're a kind of blowfly, and I was wondering
why we call blowflies. The first reference to flies being associated with the word
blows comes from Shakespeare and around that time, and people would refer to flies blowing
you. So, Cleopatra says, lay me stark naked and let flies blow me.
She wants that to happen rather than being taken prisoner. It's not as pleasant as you might
think. It's more about something that's referred to being fly blown when flies had laid their eggs
all over it, basically. I mean, if you go and see a prostitute and ask her to blow you,
then make sure she doesn't come along with a load of maggots.
Tip and pile of maggots on your leaf. You've got to be very careful.
It's possible, is all I'm saying, if she happens to be an entomologist in her spare time.
A lot of crossover between the two.
So, they do actually blow bubbles, blowflies, even though it's not where they call blowflies.
They're forever blowing bubbles, and it's to keep them cool. This was discovered quite recently,
and it's blowflies in Brazil. It's actually latrine blowflies, so they hang around in toilets,
and they do this really clever thing where when they get hot, they blow
brown bubbles out of their mouth, which I imagine are brown because they're latrine blowflies,
and the brown bubbles, when they're blown, they lose lots of heat because heat evaporates off
them, and then they pop and they suck them back in, and then that spits a bit cooler.
It cools the head right down. It's really clever, that, isn't it?
Yeah.
It's like having bubblegum and then blowing it, and then it gets cold on the outside,
and then you suck it back into your body and get the coolness.
Exactly. If your bubblegum was made of other people's feces.
Which is not a hub-a-bub of flavour as far as I know.
I've just got one more thing. I started looking into insect factories off the back of this,
because there's a factory which grows these screwworms. There's a firm called EntoCycle,
which is currently hoping to breed millions and millions of soldier flies, and then turn them
into protein powder. You breed millions of flies, which are eating rubbish. They're eating old
coffee grounds. Then do they give that to cattle and stuff?
Exactly. That's the hope. Then the hope is that you don't need so much
soya to be grown, and that takes up land that used to be the Amazon rainforest.
Yeah, it's a genius idea, and this firm EntoCycle is based in London Bridge.
Okay, that's it. That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening. If you'd like to get
in contact with any of us about the things that we have said over the course of this podcast,
we can be found on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shriverland, Andy.
At Andrew Hunter M. James. At James Harkin. And Anna.
You can email a podcast at qi.com. Yeah, or you can go to our group account,
which is at no such thing. Or you can head to our website, no such thing as a fish.com.
We have all of our previous episodes there and links to a bunch of merchandise. Also,
you'll find the links to our live show that we're going to be doing on the 18th of July,
the Drive-In Show. Just go to qi.com slash fish events. You'll find the link there. And also,
please do donate to that care workers charity by simply going to qi.com slash donate.
And yeah, we'll be back again next week, guys. As ever, we hope that you're safe.
We hope you're well. Thank you so much for listening to us still in this crazy, crazy
time. We'll continue doing it and we'll be back again next week with another episode.
We'll see you then. Goodbye.