No Such Thing As A Fish - 328: No Such Thing As A Romantic Lollipop
Episode Date: July 3, 2020Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss Summer Homes, Summer Treats and Sunday Trading Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. ...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to another 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 Anna Tijinski, Andrew Hunter Murray
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 fact number one and that is my fact, my fact this week is that the London
Underground used to have a church interval on Sundays.
Wow.
Yeah, it respected the church, it would stop services during church times.
Stop services so that you could have a service.
Very nice and we're off.
It's a bumpy start, but at least we're moving.
If you were halfway between stations, would it just stop underground and you're trapped
there having to worship God from the subterranean?
That's such a good point, I don't know.
I did find a thing called the London Underground Church and I thought, oh great, there's going
to be a church down there, but apparently it was a political movement, it was a sort
of like underground in the sense that it wasn't allowed to be known.
So it was a couple of hours on a Sunday so people could go to church, is that all?
Yeah, it was 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. roughly and this is a thing that has existed for a very
long time.
So the London Underground, very, very old, the first line opened in 1863 just to put
in context, nine days before that Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation
in America.
Wow.
Just to put it in context of how old this is.
Trustingly though, Dan, I know how old the London Underground is, better than I know
when the proclamation was signed, so it didn't really help me that much.
I think that was more for American listeners.
Got it.
Yeah.
Got it.
Yeah, and it's, so there was a big thing where you had to respect a lot of the church
during those times and one of the things was transport also had to do that and that extended
to the London Underground and that extended all the way till 1900 when I think it was
the central line, was the first line that didn't abide by the church interval.
And interestingly, a famous celebrity on the first central line ride.
Oh, wait, did you know what year it was?
1900.
Oh, who was famous in 1900, who we would have heard of today, Gladstone.
It was, this is again for the American listeners, it was an American visiting.
Oh, Charlie Chaplin.
Who is British, but that's cool.
Yep, got it, cool.
What about Edison?
No, not Edison.
I mean, it's, it's going to be too hard to get.
Henry Ford.
No, not Henry Ford.
No.
Alexander Graham Bell, who I appreciate was Scottish, but he spent a lot of his career
in America.
A lot is Morissette, who is Canadian, but a lot of people think she's American.
She's North America, wasn't she?
Is it Freddie Mercury, who was born in Zanzibar?
Very nice.
So we need someone who was alive in 1900.
Let's start with that.
Oh, you're still, you're still making us guess.
You're not just going to tell us.
Oh, I've been waiting to tell.
There's so many.
A silent movie star.
A silent movie star.
JFK.
It was an author.
Hemingway.
An American author.
Yeah.
Hemingway.
Again, 1900.
Anna.
Yeah.
He would have been very young.
He would have been very young.
Yeah, but.
He got up for free.
They just carried him over the barriers.
It was fine.
Hemingway could have been a little two-year-old on holiday in Britain at the time.
That's true.
We wouldn't, Dan, put us out of everybody's misery.
It was Mark Twain.
Yes.
Yes.
Wow.
Do we nobody thought of it?
I didn't actually, no, I didn't actually find, but we do know what the Daily Mail reported
about us.
It said, voracious curiosity, astonished satisfaction, and solid merit.
If this kind of thing goes on, London will come to be quite a nice place to travel in.
The conductor was all a quiver of joy and pride, but there was no indecorous exhibition
of emotion.
Every man was solidly British.
These early breaks, though, or these rather, these kind of Sunday trading rules, a lot
of it, I think, because there used to be trains every day.
There used to be Christmas Day Expresses.
And then a lot of the trains had to be axed on Sundays, partly because of religion, but
that was a bit of an excuse, really, because a lot of it was down to economics.
And the fact was there was this thing called the Railway Mania, which sounds like an amazing
time in Britain's history, where every person in the country was invested in or actively
building a railway.
And they got thousands of railways across the country, and most of them didn't make
any money because they didn't have any passengers.
And this was an easy thing to ax, was Sunday trains.
And companies were needing to save money in the 1860s, and these were lightly used trains.
They were an obvious target.
It's a bit like, do you remember when they opened up directory inquiries and you had
all those different 118 numbers, like 118, 118, or 118, 888, or 118, 111, or 118, 222,
whatever.
It's like they opened this thing up for anyone with a little bit of money to think, I can
make something big there, and everyone came in, and then, of course, most of them just
died out.
But what were the things that you could bring and ask?
Like, what is Andy's phone number?
I hope no one would tell you that.
I hope the only people who could tell you that would be me, with my phone number, and
you haven't heard already.
Well, it's interesting you should say that, Andy, because in the olden days, which you
won't remember, there used to be phone books that had everyone's phone numbers in them.
Yeah.
I'd be extra directory.
They let you take yourself off, though.
They let you take yourself off.
Yeah.
And if I rang up and said, what's Andy's phone number?
This is back in the day, and you're taking yourself off, they say, oh, he's taking himself
off.
My mom definitely still does 118, or she certainly was a couple of years ago.
She would ring up for someone's number, and you don't want to be extra directory, because
they were always pricks, if you remember, you know, and it was always either your parents
or a doctor, which for some reason was okay, or you're a bit of a dickhead.
On Sunday trading and Sunday hours and things like that, the history of Sunday trading in
Britain is very funny when you look into it, and did explain to me why still, if I ever
go out to buy something on a Sunday, my mom will say, well, I mean, the shops won't be
open.
What are you doing?
Because, so the Sunday Shops Act happened in 1950, which basically said no shops except
essentials can open on a Sunday because of church.
And it was repealed in 1994, but I was reading all these parliamentary debates in the interim,
which showed how very controversial it was, because the rules were so convoluted.
So for instance, you could buy essentials.
People acknowledged that perishables couldn't wait another day, so you could sell vegetables.
So there were all these people, for instance, who would have furniture shops.
There was a case in 1972, Waller versus Hardy, where a furniture shop was selling carrots
for £250 each, but you got a free item of furniture with your carrot as a free gift
to get away with it.
That's amazing.
There was this bizarre rule where fish and chip shops were specifically banned from selling
fish and chips on a Sunday, but anyone else could sell fish and chips, so a Chinese takeaway
could sell fish and chips, but a fish and chip shop couldn't, but a fish and chip shop
could sell a Chinese takeaway on a Sunday.
It was wild.
There was a thing where you're not allowed to buy dog food, but if you said to the guy
of the shop, I have a pony who only eats dog food, you're allowed to buy it because you're
allowed to buy pony food, and it didn't say...
Oh, because dogs are very religious, but I think horses aren't, so I think.
That's insane.
I found out about a sex shop in Cheshire called The Private Shop, and in 2014, they were applying
to be allowed to trade on a Sunday, and they were not allowed to do so, but they were granted
permission to leave the door slightly open.
Right.
Well, the thing is, I bought a carrot from there for $5.99, and they gave me a free dildo.
Well, that's two dildos for the price of one.
That's great.
I'm not very bad to ask for a Sunday lunch.
In 1816, in Massachusetts, there was a guy who was called George Pierce who was arrested
for riding on a Sunday, because in America, you weren't allowed to ride your horse on
a Sunday.
He was arrested as acting against the peace and dignity of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
and he was put in prison, and then he was only let out on a Monday, but then he sued
the officer for false arrest because he said, yeah, you're not allowed to do anything on
Sundays, including arresting me, and he won his court case, and he got $500 of damages
from the police officer for arresting him.
Wow.
Brilliant move.
That's great.
I read a bizarre thing that this is just things that were banned in the UK on Sundays.
It was in, for about 28 years, roughly, in the 16th century, it was made illegal to not
wear a woolen cap on a Sunday, and this was not for all parts of society, but it was predominantly
for the people who couldn't afford to pay the fine.
So Queen Elizabeth basically put a law in place where she said that maids, ladies, gentlemen,
noble personages, and every Lord, Knight, and gentleman of 20 marks land were exempt
from having to wear this hat, but everyone else had to wear a woolen hat on a Sunday
in the UK.
If you were caught not wearing it, you'd be fined so much that you probably couldn't
afford it and then would have to do jail time, so there was a huge risk to it.
And the reason was to help the woolen industry, right?
Yeah.
Exactly.
Yeah.
What are you in for?
Well, I think you can see.
That's very hot in summer.
Yeah.
Yes.
Were there regulations about the size of the woolen cap?
Could you basically wear a very small sort of button size woolen cap?
I think it was a very specific design.
It was a sort of a uniform style bubble hat that you would have to wear.
Yeah.
That's been quite a common way of policing these kind of Sunday laws is to find people
for not doing it.
In 1581, it was the law that you had to go to church every Sunday.
Everyone in the country had to go to church, and if you decided you didn't want to, you
had to pay a fine of £20 per month, and that was 20 times the average monthly wage.
So, it would take you almost two years to earn that fine if you didn't do it.
Oh, my goodness.
Yeah.
Just while you mentioned church ceremonies, I found out about the longest church service,
because this fact is about church intervals.
Okay.
Have you heard of the Sigwee?
Sigwee.
Don't think so.
Are you trying to do a Segway?
No.
I am trying to do a Segway into a fact about the Sigwee, but that is just a coincidence.
This is a mask festival held by the Dogon people of Mali, and the last one lasted for
six years.
Come on.
So, it's a long service.
What?
I'm not sure you have to spend all your time at it.
It's not like a sermon that lasts for six years, but you have to carve a great mask,
and it's several meters long, these masks sometimes, and then you have to perform what the Guinness
Book of Records calls a time-consuming procession of dances from village to village.
Wow.
And, yeah, they're not doing another one until 2037.
I was wondering if Southern Rail have been on a church interval for the Dogon people
of Mali for the last seven years.
Okay.
It is time for fact number two, and that is James.
Okay.
My fact this week is that the first ice cream on a stick was called the Good Humor Bar.
It was a modified version of a lollipop called the Jolly Boy Sucker.
Hmm.
You said that like the Jolly Boy Sucker.
Well, I would say it was the Jolly Boy Sucker.
There's no punctuation, so I don't really know.
I don't know how to say it.
It's in the eye of the beholder, isn't it?
So, this is the weather outside at the moment as we record is absolutely sweltering.
So, I thought we could do a fact about ice creams, and this is about ice creams on a stick,
things like, I don't know, magnums or mini milks or whatever you would have.
And they were invented in around 1923.
So, a few years earlier, Harry Burt, who is a guy from Ohio, he'd put a lollipop on a stick,
which he called the Jolly Boy Sucker, and his son suggested adding ice cream on the outside of it
and maybe a chocolate covering, and it became really popular.
And he called it Good Humor because he thought that your mood was related to your sense of taste.
So, if you tasted something really good, you'd always be in a good mood,
and if you tasted something bad, you'd always be in a bad mood.
Hang on, is that like the medieval theory of the four humans, where if you're too choleric, you have too much bile?
I don't think when he called it Good Humor, he thought it has half a bit of cholera, half a bit of bile, half a bit of blood.
I don't think he thought that.
But actually, Good Humor, I didn't know this because I haven't spent much time in America,
but it's quite a big brand in America.
It's owned by Unilever, I think.
Yeah, I don't know it by name, but I recognize the logo as almost a childhood ice cream, bizarrely.
So, sorry, was there a lolly?
Was it like he kept the lolly inside, did you say?
So, you break the chocolate and the ice cream, and then you chow down on a rock hard piece of candy.
Oh, I did, that's amazing.
That's good, isn't it?
Do you remember those, like those, what were they called?
You used to get ice creams where you had some bubble gum at the bottom.
It's a bit like that.
Oh, cool.
You guys are all too young to remember these things, but...
Well, Anna's mum will text 118.
This whole class is going to be me reminiscing about the ice creams of my youth,
and you guys going, oh, we only have carnettos.
These Good Humor bars, they were kind of, they were seen as very proper
and sort of very, the firm was seen as a very moral one.
So, there was a book about ice cream, which I looked at a bit of, called Sweet Spot.
And it has this to say about the Good Humor trucks,
because he kind of invented the ice cream truck in a way as well.
It said the white shirt and the cap the drivers sported
helped create a mythology around the Good Humor brand
of trustworthiness and dependability.
That lasted until the mid-1970s, when the Brooklyn District Attorney's office
filed a 244 count indictment of Good Humor,
charging the company with falsifying records to hide excessive amounts of bacteria.
What?
Really?
Wow.
That was a long time ago, though, we should say.
Yes.
A very long time ago.
But the origins of, as you say, like the ice cream truck,
and they really cared about the presentation
of how they were going through the community.
So, anyone who became a Good Humor man,
which became quite a culturally significant role,
there was movies made using that title, The Good Humor Man, later on,
they all had to go and do courses to learn how to be the best version of that role.
So, there was a two to three day course that you would go on.
They were taught to always tip their hat towards a lady
if they came towards them, and if they didn't do that, they would be fired.
And they had to say, Ice Cream Good Humor,
if they said Good Humor Ice Cream, that was the improper way of saying it,
and that could lead to them being fired as well.
That was quite good.
Yeah, there was a handbook called Making Good at Good Humor
that they all had to study in order to become this representative of the company.
Don't forget, Dan, they also had to falsify records
to hide excessive amounts of bacteria in the product.
Do you know what people's favourite ice lolly is today?
I was quite surprised by this.
Oh, so lolly or ice cream?
Ice cream or lolly on a stick.
Anything cold on a stick.
Cold on a stick.
Magnum.
Oh, you straight away went for magnum.
Okay, it's magnum.
It's bang on magnum.
28% of the country think they're the best, and the runner-up is on like 8%.
I think it's because it's not very easy to remember any others.
Yeah.
Do you think?
You're right.
Yeah.
I would go feast.
They're the weak.
Yeah, feast is great.
But magnum in...
But it's not a market leader in the way the magnum is.
It's like saying, what's your favourite flavour of cola?
You're only going to get people to say Pepsi or Coca-Cola at you.
That's true.
Well, anyway, it might be so popular
because they invented a new kind of chocolate for the magnum.
Oh, really?
Which is a really exciting move.
They've only been around since the very late 80s, I think.
And basically, the problem was that chocolate cracks at a certain low temperature.
So it was actually very hard to get good quality chocolate around ice cream.
And they created this new kind of chocolate that didn't break at minus 40 degrees.
Wow.
And I read this weird blog by a business analyst,
which was saying that magnum is the epitome of good business
because of its simplicity.
And then when they brought along the new flavours like cherry,
Gavara, John Lemon, Woodchuck and Jami Hendrix,
none of which I knew existed,
they described them as the four horsemen of the apocalypse.
Wow.
I don't think we've ever mentioned this before.
There is quite a widely known claim that Roger Moore, James Bond,
invented the magnum.
Yes.
OK.
And it's because he was being interviewed in the 1960s
and he was asked, if you could ask one person any question,
what would it be?
And he said, I would like to meet Mr Walls of Walls Ice Cream
and say, why don't you do a chalk ice with vanilla on a stick?
And he also said, I didn't realise that other people at the time
said they wanted to meet Gandhi or Jesus.
That was his answer.
Anyway, Walls sent him a cake,
which had plain chocolate on the outside and vanilla ice cream on the inside.
And this later got parlayed into,
he invented the concept of the magnum.
Anyway, the magnum was eventually made 23 years later.
OK.
Well, he was ahead of his time.
Yeah.
A spokeswoman for Unilever told the son who asked them about it.
Sadly, we've never heard this brilliant story,
but we are thrilled to hear the late great Sir Roger Moore was a fan of magnum,
very carefully saying there's no truth in this matter at all.
I believe it because it often takes a long time between the prototype,
like Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin.
It was a long time before he was able to market it.
So probably in the same way, that first magnum cake, you know,
there was, of course, there was a gap before they could make it.
Yeah.
A magnum cake.
Didn't Harry Burt spend three years trying to get his Good Humour bar patented as well?
Yeah.
And no one was granting the patent.
And I think he eventually went down to the patent office with the ice cream
and gave out samples.
Yeah.
And then according to the story of Good Humour's official website,
that's when they were granted the patent.
Yeah.
He apparently had a five gallon bucket of these ice creams
and just handed them out to absolutely everyone who could make a decision.
We were just talking about walls,
which is kind of the UK version of Good Humour,
because they're both owned by Unilever.
They started around the start of the 19th century.
In 1812, George the Prince of Wales granted Richard Wall
a royal warrant as the purveyor of pork to the king.
And that's where they started.
He was the official royal purveyor of pork.
And it was because he had a shop on German Street in London
where he could make sausages.
And no one really else could make as good sausages as him
because he had this machine and it was a donkey that would walk around the machine
and it would create a cutting motion that would turn the meat into minced meat,
which he could then turn into sausages,
which he could then purve pork like to the king.
That's amazing.
Because these days, a technical edge is having a better factory
that makes micro-processes more effectively.
And in those days, the commercial edge was just your donkey on a string.
Yeah.
And then in 1913, they came up with the idea
because what would happen is in the summer,
no one wanted pork anymore because it was too hot for pork
and they were like have to lay people off.
And so they came up with the idea of making ice creams
because he had refrigeration.
So they came up with the idea of making ice creams to avoid layoffs
and that's when they became this big,
probably the biggest ice cream company in the UK.
I thought you were going to say that they sold frozen pork for people to sell.
And that was how they part-laid it.
That's right.
The Magnum used to be a flat sausage on a stick.
And the thing was he also sent people around
in kind of an early ice cream van way.
They had tricycles with the ice creams in
and they had the slogan stop me and buy one, which still exists today.
But he would let them go on a Sunday
where most people wouldn't let people work on a Sunday.
He would let his ice cream sellers go on a Sunday,
but he said that they would only let them do it
if they went to church in the morning
and it was under his supervision.
So they had to go to church with him in the morning
and if they did, then they could sell the ice creams in the afternoon.
Wow.
Just a little ice cream news story I found in the process of this.
In 2018, a man called Mr. Tickle was arrested
for threatening an ice cream van owner with a samurai sword
while high on cocaine.
Wow.
That started off so risible with Mr. Tickle
and then it went dark really quickly.
It's actually an awful story.
There were children present.
It was incredibly upsetting for them.
He later went and hid by some bins before being arrested.
Unfortunately, they saw his really long arms
poking out from the bins, didn't they?
He put up his hands to the cups.
Knocked down some aeroplanes.
Anyway, it's probably too inappropriate
because he did threaten the van owner with it.
He was called Jamie Tickle.
Okay.
That's all right.
No one died.
He gets out of prison quite soon
and I just don't want him to come and find me.
It's all right.
He'll get stopped by the long arm at the last.
I've got a 2008 press release
that I can tell you about.
You guys are too young to remember this,
but until 1988, all lollipop sticks had jokes on them.
Oh, yeah.
So whenever you wet your magnum,
when you got to the end of it,
you could read the little joke on the sticks
and they were phased out in 1988
because they thought that people who were eating ice cream
were becoming a bit more sophisticated.
They didn't think that the jokes were appropriate anymore.
This is so weird, James.
I thought I remembered that,
but I was not in a position to read lollipop stick jokes
in 1988.
It's possible your parents had a lot of out-of-date ice creams
that they were giving you.
I think that must be it.
No more parents that is likely.
They phased them out in 1988,
so I suppose there might have been a few stragglers a bit later,
but maybe like the kids ones,
like Minnie Milks might have kept them on.
But in 2008, Walls approached James Corden
to start a new career,
writing jokes for ice cream sticks
because they wanted to bring them back.
They said that he would be ideal
because James is an up-and-coming comedian
who is cutting edge, you know?
That's a missed career opportunity for James.
I know.
We don't know if he said no yet, Hannah.
We don't know if he said no.
Well, I think he did say no.
But where is he now?
Where is he now?
Something else they phased out in the 80s,
which only James will remember,
is the double popsicle.
Actually, I think this was in America,
but I didn't know these were such things.
I remember though.
It's like an ice lolly with two sticks.
It's a lollipop with two sticks.
Oh, right.
No, I don't remember that.
These were actually a ploy in the Great Depression
to sell more people lollipops.
So it was invented
so that they could sell two for the price of one.
So the idea, a public health nightmare, you'll agree,
is that you would share a lollipop,
so you'd buy one lolly,
but you have two sticks,
so two people can share it and they hold it.
You're each holding the stick and eating it.
Your mouths are right next to each other.
It's like a lady in the tram moment, just a lot longer.
That's a much longer scene.
Yeah.
That was it.
They both lick either side of this lollipop.
Until eventually,
they both get to this final sliver of lolly,
where they lick the final bit
and then eventually, romantically,
they're licking each other's tongues.
Yeah.
This is how romance happens in the 20s, I'm telling you.
But over the years,
I think people forgot that it was meant for two people.
And so it just became a lolly with two sticks.
Sorry.
You know, in Lady and the Tramp,
he basically pretends that he doesn't know what's happening, right?
He's just eating the spaghetti. Yeah.
And he pretends he doesn't know what's happening.
He turns around and he's like,
oh, now I've got to kiss the other dog.
I don't think you could pull that off
if you're licking a lollipop. No.
Because you'd see that there's no flex and give.
No.
Like there is in the spaghetti.
You're looking dead into the other person's eyes
for several minutes while you lick his eyes.
Literally, the very start,
everyone knows what they're getting themselves into.
Well, actually, scientists worked out precisely
how many licks it takes to lick a lollipop to the end.
To the time-touching phase.
Are we like scientists? Which scientists are these, Anna?
I just want to defend the scientists.
They did a very important experiment.
And then they thought,
how are we going to get the press to pick up on this?
Well, we can use this experiment
to also work out how many licks to lick a lolly.
So they cooked up this hard candy
and they had water currents flow over it.
And then they calculated that it would take 2,500 licks
to lick a lolly.
It's 1,000 licks per centimeter,
which I think is extraordinary and flawed
because we have saliva, right?
Whereas they were using water currents.
So our saliva is much more abrasive.
Yeah, OK.
You'd think so.
A lot of licks, though, is what we're saying.
Just to take us back to the Lady of the Troubles,
I think that means that you're licking for 40 minutes
before you eventually lick each other's tongues.
It's a long scene.
Yeah, there's a director's cut available
where you can actually see that original scene.
OK, it is time for fact number three,
and that is Anna.
My fact this week is that Kublai Khan's summer palace
could be dismantled and folded away
at the end of every summer.
Oh.
It was clever.
Like a camping trip.
Exactly, yeah.
Oh, wow.
Every summer he went on a big, long camping trip.
It's sort of everyone's nightmare, except Kublai Khan.
Did they have that same problem of once they dismantled it,
fitting it into the bag?
That would just only seem too big to get into.
It could never do it.
He was always to be heard,
roll it, don't scrunch it.
It was a nightmare.
So this was in, it was Kublai Khan,
who was the grandson of Genghis
and extended his empire.
So we're talking the second half of the 13th century.
And he had a summer capital in Shandu,
or made famous as Zanadu,
of course by Kolarich in his poem.
But it was called Shandu,
and in his summer capital he had this big palace,
and it was apparently, you know,
really, amazing palace, huge.
And it was based on the Mongolian kind of yurt,
or guh, design.
So they all had guhs, they were very nomadic people.
And so it was held up by 200 silk cords,
and at the end of the season you release the cords,
and the whole thing folds up.
Although I don't know how,
because it was made of proper materials,
it was made of canvas.
It was made of like, cane,
and it had these huge pillars and stone dragons on top of it,
stuff like that.
And domes, yeah,
there's a lot of solid stuff to go in that bag.
Yeah, so Kublai Khan,
we should say that we largely know this
from Marco Polo's account,
and then supported by Chinese historians
who, for instance, list there were five great halls,
which might have all been removable,
because essentially the Mongols were nomadic.
This was the fundamental thing about them.
And so they just wanted new land to graze.
All their conquering was just about having new grazing land.
And so, yeah, it took all their buildings down
and buggered off at the end of every season.
Wow.
And they went somewhere where they could graze more easily.
Is that right?
Is that what you're saying?
No, this was this,
the buggering off here was just, you know,
summer is over,
so he went back to the winter capital.
Got it.
But in all of their conquests and stuff,
like one of,
so obviously they conquered
the biggest contiguous land empire ever known to man.
And they didn't care about, like,
settling cities and founding big cities,
so they just flattened cities
and then would leave them and go home again.
And I think people think the reason
they didn't take over the whole of Europe
is because once they got to Hungary and Poland,
it wasn't such good grazing land,
so it was kind of pointless.
So Kublai Khan was the,
was he the first non-Chinese emperor of China,
as it were?
Yes.
He founded the, is it the Yuan dynasty?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's really interesting.
One of the things that Marco Polo says about him
is the introduction in,
amongst his group of paper money.
So Marco Polo writes about that,
brings that back.
And just a very tiny thing is the Yuan dynasty or Yuan.
In Chinese, another way of you put a different tone on that
means money.
And I do wonder if there's a connection to those two
because that was such a dominating thing
for his court.
Yeah.
It used to be centred some of it, apparently.
Some Chinese paper money was centred.
Think around about this time.
Well, they were very big on counterfeiting
right away, weren't they?
They tried to,
they tried to stop every possible...
Yeah.
But if you went to a bar in Mongolian times,
they didn't take 20-pound notes, sniff it,
and go, this isn't real, did they?
I don't think...
I'm not sure that was a counterfeiting thing.
Oh, maybe it was.
I don't know.
Maybe it was.
But it was all mulberry bark.
It sounds really cool,
but actually it was a sheet of paper-like substance
derived from the bark of mulberry trees.
And it had to be signed by multiple officials.
And it had pictures of the old money on it as well,
which I think might have been a way of explaining
what this is to people who weren't accustomed to paper-like money,
because the old money was just ropes with coins hanging off them.
So it just had a picture of this,
hey, this is what this was,
and now this is what it is.
That's so cool.
That's a bit like when you have,
you know, when we all got mobile phones,
and you'd have a picture of an old-shaped phone
on your mobile phone,
so you knew that was what you pressed a call?
It's exactly like that.
That's so cool.
I love school Amarthism, it's called, isn't it?
Yeah.
Or a picture of a floppy disk being the sign to save something.
Yeah.
Or a picture of a carrot to sell dildos.
Yeah.
Yeah, sure.
Because he had such a big empire, Kublai Khan,
it meant that people could travel from all the way from Europe,
all the way to the other side of Asia.
And that's obviously why Marco Polo
managed to get across there,
because before that it was really difficult
to traverse those areas.
So what's the deal with Marco Polo
in that I, the last that I'd read
or was told about him is that, you know,
he might have been a fraud
or that these weren't trustworthy,
but all the places that he described,
like we know where Xanadu was,
we've found the dragon statues,
we found he got the perimeter sizes wrong,
but they were not too far wrong.
Well, he was blindfolded a lot of the time, Marco Polo,
so that's why he wasn't able to...
There are theories,
but they're still pretty unusual that he genuinely didn't get there.
I find it totally implausible, because he wrote about it
in so much detail, and it was possible to access,
and other people went there as well from the West.
William Brue Brick was another one,
but people used things like he didn't mention
the Great Wall of China,
but actually the Great Wall of China
wasn't really that great at that time,
so not really worth mentioning.
There's people in China who still don't know
what the Great Wall of China is, genuinely,
because it's...
Because they've not been up in space, have they?
So they've not been able to see it.
I think the argument is, and I don't subscribe to it either,
that he got the stories from other people,
and he wrote them down,
rather than him actually going and experiencing it.
That's the argument, I think.
OK.
Another guy who did go and experience the Mongols
was this guy called William Brue Brick,
who was a bit of a Marco Polo.
He was a Franciscan.
We talked about Franciscans recently.
He was a missionary,
and he revealed to us a serious problem
with the Khan dynasties, with the Mongol dynasties,
which was alcoholism.
So a lot of them had a real issue with this.
He talked about this amazing thing
called the silvertree of Karakorum in the Mongol capital.
And it sounds extraordinary.
So it was a huge, tall silvertree in the center,
and it had an angel-type fairy figure
with a trumpet on top of it,
and then it had lions all around it,
and the lions would spout a different drink from their mouths.
So there were four lions,
and the lions produced grape wine,
fermented maize milk, rice wine,
and honey mead, depending on which you fancy.
And the way it worked...
Well, the way it was supposed to work
was that the angel on top of the fountain
was an automaton, and he blew some bellows at the bottom.
It played a trumpet, servants rushed out and filled it.
But the angel automaton never worked,
and so what they had to be was a man
inside the trunk of the tree at all times,
with a trumpet, who as soon as the emperor decided
he wanted a drink, had to blow the trumpet
so it looked like the angel was blowing it,
and then everyone flocked in to refill it.
But then how amazing is that?
He'd have a party, and there'd be lion fountains
spouting every drink of his choice.
That's so good.
Pretty good.
That's amazing.
So I probably would have replaced the maize milk
with, like, maybe sangria.
But that's just me.
That's what I like.
Yeah, maybe the later dynasties went there.
It's like those magical machines that you get in Nandos,
which have five different kinds of soft drink in them, basically.
It's like that.
It is.
It's cut based on...
They actually have a very small bud inside them.
With a pair of bellows.
I do actually have another Nandos-related
Kublai Khan fact.
Do you mean another?
That last one wasn't related to Nandos.
You just shoe-horned it in.
So true.
Okay, well...
Whenever he had his raw horse meat,
he used to put a little flag in it, didn't he,
to say how spicy he wanted it.
Well, if you thought that lick was tenuous, James,
you'd wait till you hear this one.
One of Andy's famous sugoirs,
or whatever it was you were calling them.
I think that Kublai Khan basically invented
the Nandos Black Card,
which is a card where you get free Nandos
forever if you have this, right?
That's what the Nandos Black Card is.
So Kublai Khan had a bit of a correspondence
with the then Pope,
and obviously this is incredibly difficult to do,
because you're thousands of miles away
and transporting letters to the nightmare.
But he sent Khan, this is,
sent an ambassador with a paisa,
which is a golden tablet,
which is three inches wide and one foot long.
And what the paisa does is,
it authorizes the holder to free food
and lodging anywhere throughout Kublai Khan's dominion.
So it's effectively Nandos Black Card
for a whole country.
Yes.
No, I'm going to give you that, Andy.
Marco Polo had one of those as well.
Did he?
Yeah, Marco Polo, when he left to come back to Italy,
he was given one of these golden tablets,
and it worked brilliantly until he sort of reached
the stronghold of his influence,
and it sort of got weaker and weaker.
And at that point, the gold tablet meant nothing,
and they started getting beat up,
and they started losing the clothes.
And it's what led to basically him
arriving back as a ruffian, supposedly,
and being jailed.
Really?
Yeah.
It's like when you try to pay with Scottish money
for something at the corner,
and you're like, this is legit.
I promise you.
So the person who made it for the whole dynasty
was Genghis, right?
And he started off really poverty-stricken.
So he started off being a hunter-gatherer,
because he was basically exiled.
But he was born, this is this weird thing,
he was born with a clot of blood in his hand,
apparently, which meant that you were going
to be a great ruler.
I mean, obviously, he wasn't, if we don't believe
in the mythology of these times,
but if you're a Mongol,
a clot of blood in his hand,
and it was a sign that he was going to be ruthless.
And he was, so once he massacred,
as well as massacring an entire city,
he massacred all the pets,
all the cats and dogs and cows
and camels in the city as well.
What an awful person.
He was a bad guy.
But he really liked loyalty.
He was a good guy to his mates.
He was one of those, like,
if you're friends with him, he's really good to you.
He was in one battle,
and someone almost killed him,
shooting his horse out from underneath him.
And he sort of stopped the battle,
took a bunch of them prisoner,
and was like,
who was it who almost shot that horse out from underneath?
And the guy put his hand up for some reason,
and Genghis said,
okay, you, that was a great shot, come on my side.
And this guy ended up being one of his most important generals.
Helped him conquer the world.
You just had to go on his good side.
When he went through the Middle East,
trying to siege all these cities,
the reason that they were so good
is they had these massive catapults,
and their catapults were amazing.
And they would fire the stones at the city walls,
and then eventually they would have to give up.
And they were so important that if,
you know how they killed all the dogs and cats,
and stuff like that?
Well, they wouldn't kill the engineers of the city.
They'd give them a chance to kind of come over
to the Mongol side,
because they knew how important the engineers were.
And if they agreed, then they would come over
and they'd become part of the Mongol army.
And there was one city in China somewhere.
I can't remember what it's called.
And they heard about this, that this was happening.
They heard the Mongols were coming,
and they decided to get rid of all the stones from the area.
So for a couple of days,
they literally, within about a mile's circle,
they grabbed every single stone they could find
and brought it into the city.
But then what the Mongols did instead
was they got some mulberry trees, chopped them down,
put them in water, left them out to dry,
and they became rock hard,
and they could use those instead of stones
to fire over the city.
Now, there's some argument...
Yeah, there's some argument that they weren't good enough,
and in the end,
they had to bring in some stones from somewhere else
because they had like a postal service for stones
that they used sometimes where they get like storage of stones,
like an Amazon storage site of parcels,
but they would keep stones in all these different places.
Really?
Yeah, they would be like one day's ride away
and they'd bring the stones to each place.
So there's an argument that they might have done that,
or it might have been these mulberry trees, we don't know.
That's so funny.
That's so expensive.
If you're shipping stones internationally,
it's a hard-backed book,
but imagine like a hundred bricks or something.
And you're asking for next day delivery
on a lot of these stones, so yeah.
Presumably, though, you could catapult it to the area
you want to get it from.
That's such a good idea.
Just catapult on to the next catapult.
I don't think they even thought of that, Dan.
Don't even in charge.
They used to also tie trees to their horses
if they didn't need the trees to be replacement rocks.
So they had all these clever tactics
of carrying the enemy,
and one of them was tying trees to the horses
that didn't have riders,
so it sounded like they had a much bigger army than they did.
Wait, sorry.
The horses would sound much heavier.
Is the horse dragging along a tree?
Okay, sorry.
Tying trees to the horses makes it just sound like
you're tying your horse to a tree.
Sorry.
But you're getting it wrong.
There's a very big difference
between tying your tree to a horse
and trying to get a horse to a tree.
It's a completely different thing.
Imagine being the one guy is just standing there going,
I don't understand this tactic.
Where's everyone gone?
Oh, no.
Oh, embarrassing.
Yeah, sorry.
They uprooted the trees and branches,
and they did things like they banged metal pots together
and they rappelled bells when they galloped into battle
so that the opposing army couldn't hear each other
shout instructions.
They wanted it into battle?
When they were going into battle,
they would bang metal pots and pans together
and they'd rung lots of bells and stuff,
and that meant that the opposition couldn't hear each other shout.
That's really interesting.
You won't be able to hear yourself think.
But that's what happens in American football.
Like when the other team's on offense
and they need to make all their signals,
you get your fans to make as much noise as possible
so that they can't get the signals across.
And it means that they can't do it.
So that is a really common thing in American football.
Wow.
And then you slaughter the entire...
Yes.
Hang on.
Just to go back to this time, your tree to a horse thing.
Yeah.
Doesn't that...
And so the idea is the enemy thinks you've got a much bigger army
because it sounds bigger.
It's rumbling bigger, isn't it?
Well, the rumble is bigger,
but this only works in a place where the enemy can hear you
but not see you for one thing.
Well, no.
If you're running with an army,
presumably a lot of this is going to be on dirt,
there's going to be a lot of dust raising,
you're going to create...
It's all theatrics.
That's thought it through.
You really should have been in charge.
It's so right.
The Mongolian desert, the sand everywhere.
You can't see a thing.
But the reason that didn't go there
is because of the death worms they have in Mongolia, isn't it?
They're killed by lightning bolts from the anus.
No, thank you.
This Kubla Khan, Samuel Taylor Coleridge,
sort of immortalized Xanadu in that great poem of his.
And this is such a basic thing that I didn't know.
So I'm saying it for the other people out there
who did not know this, even though 90% of you will.
He never finished the poem because someone knocked at his door,
a person from Porlock, and he lost his creative thread
and didn't know how to finish it.
And I didn't realize that that's become a term
that you use for when creativity is disrupted
when your inspiration suddenly goes
because of some exterior thing.
A person from Porlock has come,
is the term to say, I've lost my thread of creativity.
I think it's fur down that that is not an extremely common phrase
that people use all the time.
Oh, really?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I wouldn't say 90% of the people listening to this.
If you're listening to this,
you're not in a 10% of people who didn't know this.
You just say, it's not that common.
Well, it's a way to make all of our listeners feel very stupid.
Well, I was in the category,
but then that's even more insulting, I guess.
Yeah, so he wrote it in this opium haze.
He was inspired after reading about the description
of Xanadu in Marco Polo's accounts.
And it never got...
Now, I haven't actually read it myself.
So does it just cut off or...
Yeah.
But does he write about a person from Porlock at the end?
He doesn't write into the poem.
Oh, sorry.
Who's that at the door?
Hang on, I'll be back in a minute.
I've got a great idea for the ending.
And then he comes back and he's like,
I've got to rhyme something with ending now.
What am I going to do?
No, it does stop halfway through.
And actually, a lot of people think that
there was no person from Porlock and it was just an excuse.
A lot of people think that it might be just
because he was off his face on opium
that he maybe didn't finish it.
OK, it is time for our final fact of the show,
and that is Andy.
My fact is that according to the people who have drunk it,
billion-year-old water tastes terrible.
I know.
Wait, this doesn't make any sense
because I've got some water right here
and I've been drinking it.
And this water here, I would say, is more than a billion-year-old.
Really?
I reckon this water is like four billion-years-old
or something, 12 billion-years-old.
And it tastes fine to me.
All water, surely...
Surely it's been cleaned.
No, so you don't make water, do you?
Like, the earth doesn't make water.
The water that we have now is the same water
as when the dinosaurs were around.
So, I'm receiving a lot of early challenges on this fact,
and I'll go into it a bit more.
So, you're absolutely right
that pretty much all the water on the planet
is unbelievably old
and may well be much older than a billion-years-old.
This is a body pocket of water
which was found by a team of Canadian scientists
led by Barbara Sherwood Lola,
who is an earth sciences professor.
And she and her team found a bit of water
about a mile down in Canada beneath a mine.
And this pocket has been isolated from the rest of the world
for over a billion years.
So, pretty much all of the water on the planet
is part of the water cycle
where it will cycle into the oceans.
It'll cycle into clouds.
It'll maybe go into underground aquifers.
But this stuff that she found and her team
has been isolated for up to two and a half billion years.
It's really, really, really...
You know, it's been kept separate.
It's not been in circulation.
And she was interviewed about it a few years ago.
And she says she tastes it from time to time
and it always tastes terrible.
And she doesn't let her students do it
because obviously there isn't a huge amount of this stuff
to go around.
And so...
So, this is a common thing, apparently, right?
Geologists just go around licking and tasting
the stuff that they're investigating.
She was saying to find...
Because apparently you can get an immediate read
if you get that kind of thing
of the kinds of minerals and stuff
or the extent of the minerals.
And she did say that if you're a geologist
who works with rocks, you've licked a lot of rocks.
Which is quite weird.
The point is that she's looking
for the oldest water in the world.
That's like what their job is.
That's what they're looking for.
And the older it is, the saltier it gets
because it means all the bits from the rocks
are leached into it.
So, as you're going,
you're kind of licking little bits of water
to get saltier and saltier and saltier.
And the most salty one you get is probably the oldest.
So, that's why she does that.
If that was her job, she did a bloody good job of it
because the previous record holder
was only tens of millions of years old.
So, she's not only found one that's older
but by almost two and a half billion years.
Which is pretty good going.
The reason that they realized that this one
is so much older than any they found before
is they've got a new technique of checking
how old things are.
And by using this new technique,
which was, I think, discovered
by the University of Manchester in England,
they kind of looked at the isotopes of various gases
which are found in this water.
And by doing that,
I won't explain exactly how you do that
because it's pretty obvious for everyone.
But basically, you work out how many of certain isotopes
of these noble gases are in your water
and that will tell you when it kind of landed there
in your aquifer.
Yeah.
But to go back to Anna's original complaint about this fact,
it is bizarre that water is...
There's a lot of water which is older than the sun.
Most water is older than the sun.
Four billion years old.
Four and a half billion years old.
Is that bizarre?
You don't find it bizarre that the water on the planet
is older than the rock?
Well, I find it bizarre.
But I know that we have a lot of alien water.
So it's...
Yeah.
That's the thing I'm saying is bizarre
that there's a lot of alien water
which predates the planet forming.
I think that's mad.
It is mad.
He's right.
So most of the water that we have on Earth,
we think actually it's interesting
because no one really knows where all the water comes from,
but we think most of it comes from asteroids
because you can look at the chemical compositions
of your water and notice that it's quite similar
to what you find in asteroids.
Yeah.
But some of it has come from the actual formation
of the sun itself.
So when the sun forms, all these bits come together
to make this massive body in space,
but some of it becomes what's called the solar nebula
which is like a gaseous part of the sun
which doesn't become the sun itself.
And apparently a lot of that stuff has come down to Earth
and become some of the water.
So it didn't all come from asteroids.
Some of it came from the formation of the sun.
And apparently for every 100 molecules of water,
one or two come from the solar nebula.
So Anna's big jug of water that she's drinking from
at the moment will have millions and millions,
well, way more than millions of molecules
that came from the formation of the sun.
But most of it will have probably come from asteroids.
And that could be why water evaporates
if you believe in a fringe theory
because the sun causes water to evaporate
because it wants its water back.
So it's trying to suck it back up.
I mean...
Wow.
It's just a new theory.
But why it would put itself out?
It sounds like a brand new theory, Anna.
Oh my God, there is so much going wrong
with these last few things that people have said.
We should move on.
Just leave that as accepted facts.
Move on.
Just to go into slightly more kind of human
timescales of water.
Do you know why water tastes weird
when you've left it overnight?
It's gone funky because flies have gone in there.
James' glasses of water are always full of flies floating.
No, they've flown off again.
They kind of go in for a little bath in the evening
when I'm not around.
James, you have to sort out your fly situation.
No, that's not it.
It's that carbon dioxide from the air
has dissolved in the water
and it's formed carbonic acid.
So you basically, according to one article I read about it,
you're basically drinking very, very mild acid rain
the next morning.
Wow.
It was really interesting.
This is a bit of a personal story,
but I'm in Sussex at the moment
and had visitors come recently from Oxfordshire
when it was after the time when you were allowed to have visitors.
And they came from Oxfordshire
and one of them had a bottle of water they brought from Oxford.
And we tasted it and then they tasted the water here
and said, oh, Sussex water is so delicious, isn't it?
So much nicer.
I was like, what are you talking about?
And we all could tell immediately
by just the smell of the water,
we did blind taste testing, which came from where?
You can 100% tell the difference from certain places.
Like from the difference between Bolton and London
is it might as well be a different liquid.
It just tastes nothing like it.
Sometimes it's because of the rocks.
This is because of the chemicals that are added in Oxfordshire,
which is more chemicals.
With us it's because we have soft water in Bolton,
but we have hard water in London,
which is just like, it might as well be orange juice and lemon juice.
It's completely different.
I wonder if there's anyone who can tell every single county
by the taste of the water?
Well, in 2016 they did a taste test
of all the different waters in the UK
with a group of judges that included
Michelin star chef Tom Atkins.
So these were experts on water
and they tasted them all
and they said that the best tasting tap water
was the West Midlands.
It was found in the West Midlands.
And the worst was served by Wessex Water,
which included Bath and Bristol.
But that was because the water was polluted
by a statue of a slave trader.
So...
But now apparently according to...
But then you see these every kind of few...
Every couple of years they come up with a new survey
and someone else is the best
and someone else is the worst, I think.
But long as though, that's a very embarrassing bath.
I know.
It's been trading on it as water presentries.
I suppose they're quite sulfurous, are they, in Bath?
Is that the whole point of Bath?
The actual springs are, yeah,
that you can buy you to cost 50p
for a glass of the actual spring's water
and it's so eggy, it's really gross.
Really?
People used to order it by delivery, though.
So Bath when Bath became a thing,
it became...
There was the resurgence of Bath.
So Bath was a big deal in Roman times
because of the spa
and then the 18th and 19th centuries,
people like Jane Austen in Coastside
holidaying there to take the waters,
which were thought to be very curative.
And you'd visit to cure your sickness.
And sometimes it worked
because water was very polluted,
let's say, in London.
But you'd visit to cure your sickness.
But sometimes people didn't have weeks to spare
to go holidaying in Bath.
And that's where the bottled water industry started.
So they'd write to Bath and say,
oh, can I just have water delivered?
And you'd get subscriptions of spa water
delivered to you once a month.
Wow.
Cure your...
That's amazing.
Wow.
So they also invented the subscription meal service.
Did they?
They did.
Podcasts in the 19th century would advertise.
Do you know...
We were talking about the oldest water,
the oldest rock,
the oldest earth rock.
Do you know where they found that?
Is it in space?
Yes.
Oh, on the moon?
On the moon.
Yeah.
The oldest rock that they think belongs to the earth
and that was formed on the earth
was found on the moon
by the Apollo 14 crew in 1971.
They brought down the load of samples
and this particular one
has got all the right isotopes or whatever
to think that they did come from the earth.
Wow.
And they reckoned that what happened was
an asteroid hit the earth
really, really early on in its development
and it flew a load of stuff into space
and then this kind of went around, went around,
went around and eventually landed on the moon
when the moon formed.
The moon was a lot closer to the earth in those days
and then was found by these astronauts in 1971.
You would be furious if you were NASA.
If you were NASA and you said,
right, guys, can you bring back some moon rocks?
You don't mind, like, literally any bloody rock you could find.
It's all moon rock, isn't it?
Thank God the Apollo 11 astronauts didn't bring it back.
That would not have helped the conspiracy theories.
OK, that's it.
That is all of our facts.
Thank you so much for listening.
If you would like to get in contact with any of us
about the things that we've said
over the course of this podcast,
we can be found on our Twitter accounts.
I'm on at Shriverland, James.
At James Harkin.
Andy.
At Andrew Hunter M.
And Anna.
You can email podcast at qi.com.
Yeah, well, you can go to our group account,
which is at no such thing, or our website,
no such thing as a fish.com.
We have everything up there from previous episodes
to links to our merchandise.
As ever, we all hope that you're doing well
and that you're safe.
And thank you so much for continuing to listen to us
in this bizarre, bizarre time.
We will be back again next week
with another one of these great episodes of Facts.
And we'll see you then.
Goodbye.
And in no particular order, here we go.
Starting with my facts.
Did you just forget the words to the intro?
Yeah, I human buffered.
It's not internet.
Your brain has been buffering for a long time, hasn't it, Dan?
It's really odd.
It's a big rainbow wheel.