No Such Thing As A Fish - 339: No Such Thing As A Penguin in a Nightclub

Episode Date: September 18, 2020

Anna, James, Andy and Tom Scott discuss flashing lights, measuring trees and naughty penguins Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. ...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi everyone, welcome to this week's No Such Things as a Fish, where myself, Anna and Andy are joined by none other than Tom Scott. Now, most of you will probably know who Tom Scott is, but for those of you who don't, he is a YouTuber who makes unbelievably interesting videos about the most incredible things from all around the world. His videos are right up our street. I know they'll be right up yours as well, so you should definitely check out his channel, which is youtube.com slash Tom Scott Go. And actually, if you're looking for videos, you can always go to our channel, which I don't think we've mentioned very much, which you can find at qi.com slash qitv, and that has a whole load of clips from Fish. Dan and I recently did a video for the Ig Nobel Prizes, which you can see on there. There's all sorts. You should definitely check that out. Okay, on with the podcast.
Starting point is 00:01:04 Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Things as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from four top secret locations around the United Kingdom. My name is Anna Tyshinski, and I'm sitting here today with Andrew Hunter Murray, James Harkin, and a very special guest, YouTuber Tom Scott. And we are here to discuss our four favorite facts from the last seven days. So, in no particular order, here we go, starting with you, Tom. I wanted to make a YouTube video about how interesting strobe lighting is, but the likelihood was it would give one of my viewers an epileptic fit, so I've come on your podcast to talk about things. Mmm. Fair enough. So happy to serve.
Starting point is 00:01:46 Can you give anyone an audio epileptic fit? Not to my knowledge, but there's definitely a thing about lights and strobe lights. So, I was trying to work out how to demonstrate this without demonstrating it and without giving instructions, because statistically, one of my viewers was going to find out that they have photosensitive epilepsy the hard way, and I just couldn't figure out a way to tell it. So, one of the really cool things about this is that it goes back a long, long way. There's a story that Nostradamus once received visions by closing his eyes and staring at the sun and waving his spread hand in front of his face, so he was getting flashes of the sun against his closed eyes at the right frequency. That's probably rubbish, but that's the oldest reference I could find.
Starting point is 00:02:31 That feels like a not very cool chemical way of inducing hallucinations as well. That feels like kids sort of rolling up non-drugs and smoking them and trying to get high off that. Like banana peels. So, what did he report seeing Nostradamus when he flashed his hand in front of his face? The first reference I can find is sort of early 19th century, and they got called strobescopic hallucinations. And basically, you close your eyes, you flash a strobe light. So, this could be something as simple as you've got your eyes closed, looking out the window of your 19th century buggy as it goes along. And you pass some railings, and that sort of flashing light-dark, light-dark, light-dark against your eyelids is enough to induce this.
Starting point is 00:03:13 Everyone sort of sees grids, urn fractal patterns, and sort of weird 3D abstract shapes. So, have you presumably done it and seen that? Because I was researching this yesterday and had a relatively severe hangover, and I couldn't bring myself to attempt to do any of this, because I was afraid I would vomit, but how intense is it really? So, it depends on how intense the flashing is, which is kind of an obvious thing to say. But the sort of basic version where you just get a strobe app on your phone and you point it at your eyes, after about 10, 15 seconds you'll start to see some sort of floating patterns.
Starting point is 00:03:52 Might be like you're rushing down a tunnel, might be like you're sort of travelling sideways, might just be some flashing grids, things like that. Tends to be red and blue, it appears. The first time I ever got to experience this was a device invented by a hacker called Mitch Altman. Now, I don't know if you've heard of any of his stuff before. Have you heard of the TV be gone? No. It's a little pocket-sized device, fits on your keychain, and he invented it sort of early 2000s, I think,
Starting point is 00:04:19 and it sends every remote controls off-code one after the other. So, if you're in a bar and you want to turn off that TV in the corner, you just sort of point that and wait. There was a group of people called the White Dot organization or something, and they thought that no one should ever watch TV in pubs because it's anti-social, and so they went round to all the pubs and they deliberately turned off all the TVs, and it was while I was working in the pub industry and we were furious. Did people do it?
Starting point is 00:04:50 Yeah, it was on the front page of all the industry newspapers and stuff. It was a big story. But did they come into your pub and have someone press a button and switch the TVs off? You know what? Or was it just the threat of them? I reckon they probably didn't do any of this stuff and it was probably like a big story in the local newspapers, which never actually happened, but it was definitely something that we told our landlords to keep an eye open for.
Starting point is 00:05:15 Really? Because these things do work, don't they? And I kind of can't believe that they're sold. You can get one of the TV be gone for about 30 quid, and apparently it still sort of works. I think technology is moving beyond it, but then it catches up. I don't know if you've tried it, Tom, but I really want to say it. I actually owned one once because like Mitch Altman, I wanted to support his stuff,
Starting point is 00:05:36 and I couldn't... I think I only have used it a couple of times because it turns out that actually having this thing on your keychain is kind of annoying and it's quite a big thing. He actually built two versions. One smartphone came along. He built a super-powered one that looks like a smartphone and works from a huge distance. And you can find footage of someone taking that to a trade show
Starting point is 00:05:56 and just irritating every single technology booth. And it's just like... It's not nice. Like, that's something... That's just someone trolling. Does it work on traffic lights? No, sadly. Someone definitely invented that as well.
Starting point is 00:06:11 That definitely exists, but that is, I think, actively illegal. Oh, yeah. It's a brave person, I think, who enters a pub on the evening of the Champions League final at the TV Begon. Oh, yeah. I think I wouldn't be willing to risk it. But it is pretty incredible.
Starting point is 00:06:26 And did Mitch Altman also design the glasses you were talking about or the brain thing? Yes. I got to try one of Mitch Altman's brain machines, which are just... They're kind of glasses, or at least the one I tried was just paper glasses, the kind of thing you get for watching the clips or something like that. But with an LED in front of each eye,
Starting point is 00:06:47 so you just close your eyes and it would flash the LEDs at roughly the right strobe frequency, about 12 hertz. He claimed they were at brainwave frequencies and they sort of matched to do sort of 15-minute session over time adapted your brainwaves to do some... I'm not convinced of that section of it. But, yeah, like, I saw a huge amount of patterns. It was really interesting to see.
Starting point is 00:07:11 Wow. And then the bit above that, the most intense version of this that I've ever seen, is an artwork called Zee by Kurt Henschlager, which I saw in Liverpool once. And it was a room filled so thick with theatrical smoke that you literally... If you stretched your hand out in front of your face, you couldn't see your hand.
Starting point is 00:07:31 I have never been in fog that is thicker than that. And then just super powerful strobe lights going at 12 hertz in a pattern. I got told later that they were just pure white strobe lights. I thought they were red and blue and all sorts of colours. You saw all sorts of enormous patterns swirling around you. It felt, I don't know, like in some sort of... You're in some sort of Star Trek transporter beam because there are just fractal patterns swirling around your hand.
Starting point is 00:07:59 It is absolutely astonishing. But, yeah, if you look up news articles about it, there are all sorts of things about, yeah, they decided to close. It gave 2% of the people who went into an epileptic fit. Oh, no. It induced epileptic fits in people who had never had photosensitive epilepsy before. It was genuinely dangerous.
Starting point is 00:08:16 It was also one of the most incredible visual experiences I've ever had. But I can see why it didn't tour as much as it perhaps should have. I mean, it sounds extremely unpleasant, I have to say. I don't think I'd want to subject myself to that, even without photosensitive epilepsy. I've got a question. Do you ever, in these experiences, get beyond seeing kind of fractal patterns
Starting point is 00:08:36 and you start seeing, you know, dogs with nine legs or whatever? Does it ever get really crazy? So, while I was researching this, I found that this was part of the beat generation, where Alan Ginsberg tried a thing called the dream machine, which was a bulb and a record turntable with sort of slattered paper around it. So, you just started the turntable going
Starting point is 00:09:03 and it was calibrated to kind of hit your eyes at the right frequency, which is the brain machine just built for an entire room. And I think, was that inspired by someone, was it a guy called Gysin, who was going on a car along a tree-lined street and had the light flashing? So, if you do want the cheap way, you can drive along a street of plain trees, I suppose, in the sun and lean out the window and close your eyes. That's really cool. I mean, you might want to do that as the passenger, but yes.
Starting point is 00:09:29 But actually, that dream machine, when Gysin made it, he thought that it was going to replace the television set in every single home, which I've got to say, if there's no dogs with nine legs and if it's just like fractal patterns, I don't know. I know there's some crap on TV at the moment, but... I think you could do that because the visuals of TV shows, often they're not very interesting, actually. Often it's just panels of, let's say, question time.
Starting point is 00:09:53 If you had the audio of question time and you've still got the content, but you were able to see magical fractal patterns throughout, I don't think people would not do that. No, that should be an option. You should be able to press the red button to get fractal patterns over Fiona Bruce. Yeah, I got a quote from Ginsburg.
Starting point is 00:10:09 While I was researching this, it creates optical fields as religious and mandalic as hallucinogenic drugs. Although didn't he also say that a combination of that and drugs was really bad? Right, that's the thing. Like, all this does is create an optical illusion. It creates weird fractal patterns.
Starting point is 00:10:28 I cannot find any sort of research as to why. It seems to just be a failure state for the vision system of the brain that we never dealt with, you know, 12-hurt strobe lights in nature. So brain just faults trying to do it. Do you know what the most common hallucination is in the world? I think. This is my theory.
Starting point is 00:10:45 Is it like a mirage, maybe? Or is that not really a hallucination? It's not common. Yeah, I think we're positive. No, that's external. No, I would say that's not hallucination because your eyes are accurately reporting the lights coming in. Yeah, that's fair.
Starting point is 00:11:00 Is it the dog with nine legs? Yeah, it's the dog with nine legs. Always nine. Five billion people have seen it. So I think it's the phantom phone ringing thing. So it's when you are hallucinating your phone ringing. So phantom vibration syndrome. I looked it up a bit.
Starting point is 00:11:15 It has a load of other names, more fun names. It gets called ringxiety. The faux alarm, like faux as in false in French, faux alarm. Wait a minute, wait a minute. The word false means faux anyway. So why do you need to include at the word faux? That's a really good point. Yeah, I can't.
Starting point is 00:11:32 It seems cleverer than I thought. But isn't it faux alarm because faux sounds a bit more like phone? Faux alarm. It must be that, Andy. I mean, I've copied it down directly from the internet and it's just going fresh. Anyway. I think we've invented a new name for it.
Starting point is 00:11:45 The faux alarm. But it started off. The earliest reference I found, although I didn't look exhaustively, but it was referred to in Dilbert, the comic Dilbert in 1996. But back then it was called phantom pager syndrome. Because people thought their pagers were going off.
Starting point is 00:12:00 And yeah. So apparently the only way to solve it would be to move your phone to a much more sensitive part of your body. Like if you keep it in your mouth, you'll always know whether it's ringing or not. Do you think, Andy, they ever had? I mean, that's very funny. But do you think?
Starting point is 00:12:18 We've all got a joke we want to do. And we'll give it to ourselves. So although that does bring new meaning to the word dictaphone. So there we go. There's the punchline. Dictaphone. Did you think when you used to have pocket watches and you would keep it near your heart,
Starting point is 00:12:36 that kind of thing, and it would tick, do you think if you didn't have your pocket watch, you would have phantom pocket watch syndrome? I bet you did. But you can't feel it ticking against your heart, can you? You might be able to. I mean, that's your heartbeat you're feeling. I mean, it's normally on the outside of a shirt and a waistcoat,
Starting point is 00:12:52 I guess, if you're doing it properly. If you're going commando and you're just wearing your pocket watch. Where are you attaching it? It's under my full skin. The pocket watch is under my full skin. Oh, no. Have you got the time?
Starting point is 00:13:09 Yes, but I'm not sure you're going to want to know. I read that the Roman novelist and orator Apeleus, he said that the spinning of a potter's wheel could sometimes give people seizures, like almost in the same strobing way. Really? I don't know if that's true. That's what he said. But if you get a wonky pot, maybe that's why.
Starting point is 00:13:32 People are always kind of claiming that we've managed to hone this technology to become a military weapon, aren't they? When you research kind of flashing lights and strobe lights, being able to have a weird impact on your brain, it's always like the US military is researching how to incapacitate the Russians with a flashing light. And I can't really find any evidence that these things work,
Starting point is 00:13:53 even though they're constantly tried, except last year, it was reported that Russia had fitted two warships with this light, which I think flashes, and it induces hallucinations and vomiting, apparently. It's called the FP42 fill-in, and it's non-lethal, but it releases a strobe-like beam and apparently disrupts eyesight,
Starting point is 00:14:13 which I would imagine you're just flashing something in someone's eyes. Yeah, of course it disrupts eyesight, but if you use them, you can become delirious and throw up everywhere. Probably the fact they've just given you a lot of Nobbychok doesn't help either. The reason I started down this whole rabbit hole
Starting point is 00:14:29 is that I got an email from a startup in Bristol that is trying to use EEG, sort of brainwave reading kit, and then trying to synchronise the strobes with that, kind of have a greater effect. They claim to be able to get altered states of consciousness with it. They claim to be able to get something higher than I'm just seeing some patterns. I'm sceptical because you can't really test that
Starting point is 00:14:53 against placebo all that well. You can't test it against pretending to flash a light in someone's eyes. They are in very early studies, but they hope to be able to do something with it. I'm not sure what that something is, but I wish them the best of luck. I do find the placebo thing interesting.
Starting point is 00:15:10 It only struck me recently how often you can't use a placebo because of things like that. You can't do a placebo effect of a flashing light, or I think they have problems with studies into how much exercise impacts health in certain ways, because you can't do a placebo exercise. You can't convince someone that they have been for a run every day for a week if they've been sitting in front of the TV.
Starting point is 00:15:29 Well, they also say you can't do a placebo of a parachute. You can't give one person a parachute and then give one person no parachute and see which one works. I think you could do a placebo of exercise, though. Can you? Definitely. Let's say you want to see what it's like for someone running five miles, and the control group is you'll have to get them to run one mile,
Starting point is 00:15:51 but they'll think it's five miles. You would put signposts all around their local park saying, I'll keep going. You've nearly done five miles and so on. By the time they get back there, I've only run one mile. That's a placebo. You'd have to get all the trees in the park moving towards them so it looks to them like that.
Starting point is 00:16:08 You'd have to create smaller trees, maybe, so they thought they were running past them faster. Maybe a revolving park. Small, everything really, small dogs. But then you've sort of created a cohort of people that think they've got superhuman ability to run past. And then they turn up at the Olympics and they're absolutely shit.
Starting point is 00:16:25 Just on strobe lighting, it's possible that the neuralyzer from Men in Black might exist. Do you guys remember what that is? Yeah, it's a blast to your memory. You flash a light at someone. Yeah, but how would you know? Well, that's the big question. It might exist already
Starting point is 00:16:44 and it's just that it's erased our memory of it every time it's been used. But scientists have now done some experiments sure on mice as usual. But it turns out that if the researchers kind of shocked mice on the foot when they went into a certain room and then usually what would happen is the mouse would freeze as soon as it enters that room again
Starting point is 00:17:02 because it expects to be shocked again. But they found that when they flashed a light in their eyes at a certain frequency, they had completely forgotten the shock and they went back into the room. And so it seems like just by flashing a light in a certain way at people, then they think it interrupts connections
Starting point is 00:17:18 between the nerves that are forming your memories. And so it blanks out your memory and it only blanks out about the previous four seconds. So it's got to be something that's happened immediately before you flash the light in their eyes that you want them to forget. So it looks like we might be able to use strobe lighting in the same way they do in that film
Starting point is 00:17:36 in the sunshine of the spotless mind. Is that why whenever I've been to a nightclub I could never remember the next morning what happened? Yeah, that's it. Exactly why it is. Yeah, just flash a torch in your face and it'll all come flooding back. OK, it is time for our second fact and that comes from Andy.
Starting point is 00:17:57 My fact is that from the 1880s until 1927 Paris had an underground clock system which ran on puffs of air. So this is from an article on parisianfields.com brilliant website all about Paris and sort of various weird things that it's got in it. So in 1880 Paris
Starting point is 00:18:15 installed this series of clocks and they all kept the same time. So they were public clocks, sort of there as a public good and each one of them was connected to an air pump and those pumps were led to this wrought iron pipe system and all of that was fed from this power plant
Starting point is 00:18:32 in the middle of Paris, this coal-fired plant. And every minute that system would pump out a pulse of air which would get into the clock and it would activate the small bellows inside the clock and it would move the clock along by one minute. So that's how the system worked.
Starting point is 00:18:49 Every minute it worked literally as regular as clockwork and you could subscribe if you liked. So some hotels signed up and they basically had a kind of subscription service to time on the basis of this system.
Starting point is 00:19:05 And if you got a subscription service you were agreeing that they would dig a pipe in your floor running from your clock back to this pneumatic system. Pretty much, that's it. Wow, that is incredible. Because there was an article in Scientific American that said, OK, well there will have to be a massive pipe
Starting point is 00:19:22 in your house but maybe you could paint it in the same colour as your wallpaper and no one will notice it. Lovely. But yeah, the Hotel Maurice they had 148 of them in the building, didn't they? Jesus.
Starting point is 00:19:38 Would some be a bit behind the other? Because presumably you pump a little puff of air out but it takes longer to get to one of the outskirts of Paris. Does that mean they were a minute behind? I don't think it does. I think they probably adjusted for this because there were these various kind of holding stations along the way.
Starting point is 00:19:54 So it wasn't like one puff had to get either to the first arrondissement or it was... There were a few that were a little bit out of sync. I think the further away you were from the station the obviously the slightly further out it was but there were enough of these stations that it didn't make that much difference.
Starting point is 00:20:10 You say puffs of air, it was sort of 20 seconds on, 40 seconds off. So there was a cashing system in there that needed a big pump of air for a few seconds. That would advance the minute hand and then the next 40 seconds off would let that sort of calm down again. So it wasn't sort of precise to the second
Starting point is 00:20:26 because nothing back then had to be precise to the second but it was precise enough. Yeah. And I wonder how often people used the excuse when they were late to meet friends for a café that, oh, I'm actually quite a long way from the air puffs so it takes further to get to me.
Starting point is 00:20:42 Well, I read in popular science that it was never allowed to exceed 10 seconds of error. Wow. I think if you're 10 seconds late, I don't know. We all know those people are always 5 minutes late and 10 seconds, I think. I'm furious. If anyone's more than 9 seconds,
Starting point is 00:20:58 I'm absolutely livid. Also, in Paris, 10 seconds late is 10 minutes early, isn't it? Let's be honest. Very true. Very chic. I guess it's kept going all the way through the First World War. 1927 is when it lasted until
Starting point is 00:21:14 and in fact, the first time it broke down was in 1910 and it was because the air plant was flooded. There was a huge flood of the River Seine that we were always worried about and the coal-fired plant temporarily had to be turned off from reset then and then the clocks all stopped
Starting point is 00:21:30 and there were thousands all over the city by this point. It's such an awesome system. I don't understand why you'd ever decommission it and it sounds like it was an enormous hassle to install. Because it's cheaper for us all to have a casio on our wrists, I think. I'm going to invest a pneumatic wristwatch. I'd love to see that.
Starting point is 00:21:46 Basically, whenever you go into a room, you have to attach yourself to the massive pipe. The bellows. You could have a second set of bellows in your clocks, which would do a chime. So you would have one that would attach to the kind of the minute hand and then you would be able
Starting point is 00:22:04 to divert it off and it would make a little bing-dong, bing-dong, like that. That's so cool. I did read though that there was a time when in France, in French railway stations at least, then clocks were set deliberately five minutes fast so the travellers didn't miss their trains.
Starting point is 00:22:20 I think that was a thing until about 1910 or 11. I think that's still a thing in Edinburgh, isn't it? I remember. Yes. Yeah, the Balmoral Clock. Yeah, has always been set three minutes fast. It's on the Scotsman Hotel, right? It's on the Balmoral Hotel, I think.
Starting point is 00:22:36 But yeah, just outside the station. So the people, I think it's three minutes and the only time that that one runs on time is for New Year. So I think they run three minutes fast all the time and then they put it back for Hogmanay so they're not ahead of everyone else. It's a clever trick. I always have my watches run fast.
Starting point is 00:22:52 There is a really cool website I found which is a website of stopped clocks. Oh yeah. Yeah, it was created in 2007 by a guy called Alfie Denon and it basically is for people to submit stopped clocks near them. You take a photo of your local, the public clock. It's not just that your
Starting point is 00:23:08 clock has stopped working in your home. He doesn't want that. And it's so people can campaign to get them back up and running again. Unfortunately, no one has posted on it since 2014. So the website itself has also stopped. That's amazing.
Starting point is 00:23:24 I've been ranting about this for years in London. I reckon over half of the clocks have stopped and I've always thought if I took a sabbatical I would use it to go around London and take a tally of exactly how many clocks are wrong and how many are right. And I do think it's more than half.
Starting point is 00:23:40 So Alfie Denon, you've got to get that website back up and running. It's a disgrace. Yeah, that would be great. I think so. Well, people used to sell the time, didn't they? Which is such a weird concept. So when you, you know, when people wanted to know the time, there were only a few people
Starting point is 00:23:56 in town who'd know it. The astronomer royal would know it. And so he used to get very annoyed in the 19th century. It was John Belville and I think we've talked about him before because people would knock on his door and say, hey, me, I hear you an astronomer. He's not all the time is. It was it was Ruth Belville, who I'm sure
Starting point is 00:24:12 we must have mentioned, but who at the same time as France had this amazing kind of system of blowing bits of air through to get the time, we had a lady called Ruth Belville who was walking around London saying, do you want another time? Do you want another time?
Starting point is 00:24:28 People would pay her because she would at the start of each day, she would go and set her pocket watch with the exact time and then she'd go around and sell it to people. It feels a bit rude, someone approaching you saying, do you want to know the time? It feels a bit, do you want to have a good time? Well, that was the problem.
Starting point is 00:24:44 So in 1908, there was a guy called Mr. St. John Wynne who publicly made some comments about Ruth Belville saying that she was using her femininity to gain business. You used the tricks at your disposal. Well,
Starting point is 00:25:00 it was sort of flirting with people as she offered them the time. Yeah, do you want to have a good time or a long time or an accurate time? But then what happened was is what people didn't realise was that Wynne was the director of something called the
Starting point is 00:25:16 Standard Time Company which sold the time through telegraphs and so he wanted people to get the time, the accurate time through the telegraph system and stop using people like Ruth Belville. So that's why he kind of slandered her with this thing. It feels like
Starting point is 00:25:32 using a sledgehammer to crack a nut and you have to deliberately crash this poor woman whose only means of making a living is to go around asking people if they need to know what time it is. It's so mean. Yeah, although I do think that she was probably on the way out anyway technology wise. I don't think she'd still exist
Starting point is 00:25:48 today even if he hadn't come along. I reckon I'd be using my casting watch and not when there is passing lady. I reckon you could walk around town in London next to all those broken clocks and just say this one's broken mate, do you want to know the time? Come on it.
Starting point is 00:26:04 I should say, yeah, John Belville wasn't the astronomer royal, sorry, he was employed by the astronomer royal because the astronomer was getting so annoyed at people asking him the time and then Ruth was his descendant. That's right. I've always thought that the sort of big synchronisation of everything to the second that we've had
Starting point is 00:26:20 since smartphones have come along has basically the biggest argument about there being some sort of weird psychic power, like all that stuff you hear about some psychic field connecting people together, because basically on the hour, every hour to the second, somewhere in the world
Starting point is 00:26:36 a huge number of people get startled awake by alarms. Like there is this wave travelling around the world, like 7am, 8am, 9am every country millions of people suddenly get jolted awake at the same time. Are you guys one of the people who always sets your alarm
Starting point is 00:26:52 for a round number or for a non-round number when you wake up in the morning? A round number. Yeah. Do you mean a 5 minute do you mean like 7 o'clock or 7 21? Well I would always like to set mine for like 12 not 12, 7, let's say it was
Starting point is 00:27:08 7 that I woke up in the daytime. I would like set it for 7.37 rather than 7.30 or 7.45 always. The only time I do that is when I'm convincing myself I'm literally going to have a 2 minute nap and I'll set, you know, it'll be
Starting point is 00:27:24 7.30 and I'll set it for 7.32 or something. I think the idea is that by looking at a time which is slightly weird it kind of confuses me enough that it wakes me up slightly that I don't kind of, if it's 7.30 I'll just look at it at 7.30 and go straight back to sleep again. Oh you'll think, oh yes
Starting point is 00:27:40 a normal time, 7.30 and then 7.37, what the hell is this? I did it from when I was a kid and I had a paper round so I don't like it's just a hangover I guess if you were getting up at noon for your paper round James I can see why it didn't last. So just back to the pneumatic system
Starting point is 00:27:56 in Paris. This was actually not Paris's last pneumatic system. You could send someone pneumatically driven post in Paris so you know pneumatic tubes where you put a capsule in, the capsule gets whizzed off to someone. You could do that until 1984. Could you?
Starting point is 00:28:12 Which is really late. That is late but it kind of still feels to me like the future. Do you know I mean putting things in pneumatic tubes feels like what it will be like in 300 years but actually it's done. You're absolutely right. I mean it is very futuristic
Starting point is 00:28:28 it's sort of the past version of the future. Well it is efficient, it goes pretty fast. Any more handy? I mean there's one final thing which is just kind of cute which is that Berlin used to have pneumatic night clubs so you would get shown to a table and then your table had
Starting point is 00:28:44 a phone on it right and you could see an attractor stranger across the club and you could give them a ring because all the tables had big numbers, table numbers, lit up above them right and you could give them a ring but if you were shy you could send them a pneumatic tube message and it would sort of whoop up to their
Starting point is 00:29:00 table and it would say hey do you fancy a drink? That sounds really cool. But all the messages were sent via a sensor, a female sensor to make sure you weren't getting too fresh with someone so to make sure you weren't saying something really obscene. Wait so did they have to install a little female guard
Starting point is 00:29:16 inside the tube who stopped it halfway through and read it? Oh no because you'd need a post office would you? You'd need a switching system unless you've got like every tube going to every place you need someone in the middle who can look at the note and root it anyway. I think you might have given the tube to a waiter
Starting point is 00:29:32 who took it to the sensor who then posted it onto the table. I mean it sounds like a very complicated system compared with just normal talking but... Okay it is time for fact number three that is James's fact. Okay my fact this week is after a penguin had to be isolated
Starting point is 00:29:52 due to health issues zookeepers in Perth are keeping him entertained by letting him binge watch Pingu. I thought we've been a bit highbrow up to now so we should probably talk about Pingu for a while. So this is a penguin called Pierre
Starting point is 00:30:08 they found him washed up in Australia and they're a little bit worried about him. Washed up in a sort of psychological sense you know. Drugs, gambling, booze, girls, cocaine Krill. Too much Krill. Krill addiction.
Starting point is 00:30:24 So it's a washed up penguin story. Washed up penguin and the thing is about penguins right is if you're a penguin your feathers are really important because you might get too cold and also they're really important for you to swim because they're really water resistant and so most birds when they molt
Starting point is 00:30:40 they kind of lose a few feathers here and they grow back but penguins don't do that they do like an explosive molting period where they lose... Sorry, sorry. I know what you mean but let's just all take a moment to appreciate the phrase explosive
Starting point is 00:30:56 molting period because that is everywhere. It's messy. Well I think there's an actual word for it which is... I think it's called a catastrophic molt which is almost as entertaining. Do you know what I read about this a few months ago and I knew it had a really impressive name
Starting point is 00:31:12 but I've just remembered the wrong word. But anyway, so they have a catastrophic molt and so for a little while they have no feathers but then they grow back quite quickly but with Pierre they never really grew back properly and so he's kind of stuck in Perth for a little while. He can't really
Starting point is 00:31:28 go anywhere else until his feathers come back and so he's stuck in Perth. He doesn't really have any mates there so they wanted to show him videos of penguins which they did. They showed him videos of certain other rock hopper penguins in Edinburgh Zoo but they also thought well
Starting point is 00:31:44 why don't we show him pingu because pingu is a penguin isn't he? And Daniel Henry who's looking after Pierre and the zoo said he probably doesn't even realise that pingu is a penguin. He's just responding to the colour and the movement which I suppose is probably true. James, is this a way of you working in the fact
Starting point is 00:32:00 he doesn't even know he's a penguin into the... My next level I think in Steinian philosophy is that penguins don't know they're penguins but they don't even know pingu is a penguin. Wow. If pingu could talk, would we be able to understand him?
Starting point is 00:32:16 Well pingu, can pingu talk? He goes wah wah wah wah wah. Yeah pingu can talk but we can understand him. Yeah, it's bizarre. So did you guys look into this as well, the sort of language of pingu? It's so cool. Yeah. Because pingu has only ever been voiced by people with training in clowning
Starting point is 00:32:32 and there's an Italian theatre language called Gramelot where it's designed to sound like gibberish and they convert the scripts from English into pinguines as they call it and then they film those. There's a lovely interview with Oliver
Starting point is 00:32:48 Postgate about the Klangers and it's exactly the same. The Klangers scripts were written in English and then translated. I say translated, they're just playing on swanee whistles. But there is a lovely interview here we are. At the beginning of episode
Starting point is 00:33:04 3 when the doors get stuck Major Klanger says, sod it, the bloody things stuck again and the BBC objected and required the script to be changed even though it's just a swanee whistle. So you've got a whistle making the phrase sod it, the doors are stuck.
Starting point is 00:33:20 If you change the script to sod it, the doors are frothy. Like it's going to sound exactly the same, isn't it? Like the whistle. Well apparently according to the interview, like this is many years later so who knows how much of it changed, how much of it is memory here
Starting point is 00:33:36 but they changed to, oh dear the silly things not working properly. And I feel like that does have a different kind of intonation to it. I'm with you, I think the original version would have got countless complaints. I think sod it goes whistling. Whereas oh dear goes whistling like
Starting point is 00:33:52 that. That's quite a big difference isn't it? Yeah. That was also a wolf whistle so my Klanger translation is not great. Yeah, the second one was more offensive it turned out. Grandma Lott is really interesting isn't it? Because it came from like medieval
Starting point is 00:34:08 Italy and it was when gestures used to go round to all the different towns of Italy and they would want to do their plays and their comedies but all the different people in the different towns didn't speak the same language in those days or they might have spoken a similar kind of Italian but each village would
Starting point is 00:34:24 be slightly different. And so you would have to come up it's a bit like how Mr Bean is so popular all around the world because he doesn't really talk. So you would have to get your point across but in a way where you don't need to say the actual words. And also there's quite a lot of censorship so you want to
Starting point is 00:34:40 say the things in a way where you're saying oh you know the king is an asshole but you didn't want to say it in so many words so you go like that. You just make the noises that everyone would realize that that's what you're saying but you can't actually say the words.
Starting point is 00:34:56 It works by onomatopoeia basically doesn't it? Yeah so for instance a kind of onomatopoeia where the sound conveys meaning and emotion. So for instance in grammar lots if you wanted to say something was big you would go boo-woo but if it was medium size
Starting point is 00:35:12 you would go woo-hoo and if it was really small you would say ee-oo and so everyone listening knows that what you're talking about is something that's big and small just by the noise that you're making with your voice. It's quite cool. That's really cool.
Starting point is 00:35:28 And then Pingu became a global brand so it was madly popular. You still get Pingu dolls in Happy Meals in Japan. Really? It's really popular in Japan because they think it sounds like Japanese and people in other countries think oh yeah he's sort of speaking our language which shows how
Starting point is 00:35:44 everyone thinks that he's speaking to them. I didn't know how they made it where I thought they would move the clay because it's claymation Pingu. I thought they would move the clay and sort of take a different photo at every point but you have to
Starting point is 00:36:00 have hundreds and hundreds of Pingu's so somewhere there's a box of Pingu doing every conceivable activity in the show and then if you show Pingu walking you know you take stationary Pingu and you replace him with a Pingu who's lifted up one foot and then you replace him with a Pingu who's lifted up even more.
Starting point is 00:36:16 So you need eight Pingu's just to show him walking along. I didn't know that. I thought they would have just moved them. Exactly, yeah. That's one of those things that in hindsight makes a lot of sense but yeah. Once you've got all of them and you need Pingu's where he's being squashed into a ball by an older angry Pinguin
Starting point is 00:36:32 or whatever like there's hundreds and hundreds of them. It always needs to be in the right order I suppose and they can't operate unless they have each other like there'll be one Pingu but in order to walk anywhere it needs to find ten other Pingu's. It's a great, I think it's a plot waiting to be written. It's an analogy for how society
Starting point is 00:36:48 only works if we all work together in one direction, isn't it? We're basically all Pingu. James, did you just say one direction? I have a link. I have a link which is there. Harry Styles of One Direction has a tattoo of Pingu
Starting point is 00:37:04 and Ed Sheeran has a matching one. This is the most pop culture this podcast has ever been. If only Dan Tribal was here for this. Who got theirs first because they have a right to be pissed off. I think Sheeran, I think they got it at the same time.
Starting point is 00:37:20 I've read this as well. Same tattoo artist and they did it because they got drunk and realised that they were both Pingu fans when they were kids and so they thought this is something that brings us together. Definitely worth commemorating. Everyone's a Pingu fan when they're a kid. I never watched Pingu.
Starting point is 00:37:36 I haven't seen your tattoo so are you really a Pingu fan? I keep my Pingu tattoo where I keep my pocket watch You were saying about when Pingu gets smacked on the head and turned into a ball sometimes. Some of those got banned, didn't they? There's a Pingu fandom page online.
Starting point is 00:37:54 Of course there is. And it's got a brilliant list of all the episodes of Pingu that have been censored from around the world. So in the first ever episode of Pingu, I've seen the video of this. It's quite violent. Pingu, which I think might be his mother.
Starting point is 00:38:10 I have never seen Pingu either, I have to admit. But smacks Pingu on the head and just keeps whacking him on the head like again and again and again in a really quite violent way. And that got edited out by the BBC when it was released on VHS because they thought we shall be showing kids.
Starting point is 00:38:26 Basically they're being shown to very, very young children so it's like basically you start there and then you go to Grand Theft Auto and then who knows what happens after that. And then you've got terrorism. That's the interesting because he is really naughty. Pingu is really naughty and there's
Starting point is 00:38:42 a version. I think a Pingu after dark DVD would sell like hotcakes. And actually at the North Pole it's always dark. So... Oh no, hang on. Are they from the South Pole? South Pole, yes. There's so many things running in that sentence.
Starting point is 00:38:58 Poor Andy, Ed Sheeran and Harry Styles gathered at the North Pole with a DVD play. What's going on? What's up? I don't have anything else on Pingu. I don't have real penguins. I've got some stuff on penguins
Starting point is 00:39:14 and talking about colours and shapes. There's some research by Nico Tinbergen who's a Dutch biologist and ornithologist on supernormal stimulus. So this is the idea that you can build an artificial object with sort of big obvious features
Starting point is 00:39:30 and the birds will prefer that over their actual mother or the actual eggs that they're meant to lay. Tinbergen took oyster catches which are kind of wading birds and they sort of have small mottled coloured eggs and he added in an egg
Starting point is 00:39:46 almost as big as the bird itself with high contrast black and white spots and the birds preferred to incubate that one even though it's clearly not an egg just because it has a bigger stimulus. Wow. I also found several references to say
Starting point is 00:40:02 even when the egg was so big that the bird kept sliding off it and that is not in the original study. I can't find that anywhere. I think someone just came up with the image of an oyster catcher just constantly sliding off an oversized egg and thought it was funny. Well this should help them documentary makers
Starting point is 00:40:18 to film penguin shortly because they tinker around with making fake ones in order to infiltrate the flocks, don't they? So I think there are some documentary makers last year or the year before who made a fake penguin put a camera on the inside of it what is it made out of?
Starting point is 00:40:34 Is it like a child in a tuxedo or... Yeah. Holding a camera on its shoulder. What is it like a plastic cast or something? No, it's very fluffy, it's really cute it's a baby and it's got a normal penguin's head and then it looks like it's just got a huge fluffy skirt or cloak and then it's on wheels
Starting point is 00:40:50 and it wheels along and the penguins much prefer that and get much less stress than every human's there and it causes problems actually there was one who a researcher I think who created a fake penguin which one of the males started to try and flirt with and to mate with
Starting point is 00:41:06 and his original mate came over in a jealous rage and attacks it and sort of ruined the fake penguin because you know thought this is a threat to my men. If you're studying penguins and you're a human actually going in with the penguins that could be a problem because
Starting point is 00:41:22 I'm sure you all saw this study this year where researchers are getting high off laughing gas which is produced by the poo of penguins so the penguin poo kind of ferments and then it gives off this what is laughing gas?
Starting point is 00:41:38 Nitrous oxide, yeah it gives off nitrous oxide and then they can it says after nosing about in the guano for several hours one goes completely cuckoo feeling nosing about in the guano I think that could be a thing for us to put in our new nightclub
Starting point is 00:41:54 which is mostly fractal patterns induced by going in a buggy past the plain trees then you get to the end of the plain trees and you get a big pile of poo to sniff because actually like nitrous oxide it's like hippy crack isn't it they call it and it's really bad for the environment
Starting point is 00:42:10 to make it and stuff so like it's really hard for the hippies because they want to have the nitrous oxide hit but they also don't want to wreck the environment but we're not blaming the penguins for generating it are we? No, but what I'm saying is like it's quite an ethical way
Starting point is 00:42:26 of getting your laughing gas fix just to have a penguin in the corner of your room just shitting everyone If you have a penguin on the podium in the nightclubs then everyone can just gather around and get a hit off that and then you send a little message on your pneumatic tube saying meet me by the penguin
Starting point is 00:42:42 This nightclub it's going to be fresh it's going to be really good They do have the same thing as we have which I find really amazing about penguins so you know when you go into a crowded room you're meeting a friend in a bar or something
Starting point is 00:42:58 and it's very loud Do you remember that? I definitely recall this, yeah You know when you're going to an illegal rave and before the police arrive you're looking for your mate and if they're speaking at the bar then you'll recognise their voice and be able to distinguish it
Starting point is 00:43:14 from the cacophony of sound all around and penguins do this to an incredible extent so if they're parenting the parents take turns to go out and hunt and then return to their mate who will be the one who's sitting on the egg or looking after the offspring
Starting point is 00:43:30 and when they return they'll return to a colony of like 10,000 other penguins and they all have individual calls that they'll be able to recognise so they'll be hearing 10,000 calls but they'll be able to pick out the one call that's meant for them which is their mate saying
Starting point is 00:43:46 dinner please and they can track that down which I think is extraordinary That is amazing When you said cocktail party effect I thought it was the thing where you just have a lot of penguins all together and then just through coincidence they all go silent at the same moment
Starting point is 00:44:02 just as something really loud and offensive over the top of everything else Barry's been hogging the fish It is time for our final effect of the week and that is my fact and my fact this week is that the person who measured the world's tallest tree did so by climbing to the top of it
Starting point is 00:44:18 and dropping a tape measure down How smart, how else would you do it? It makes more sense than standing at the bottom of it and slowly pushing the tape measure upwards hoping it doesn't bend You know those mechanical ones where you can keep pushing it up and then that was the game you always played
Starting point is 00:44:34 as a kid to see how far you could get it before it collapsed on it I don't think you ever got it as tall as this tree I'm fairly sure there's the world tape measure championship somewhere which is entirely about how far you can extend that arm
Starting point is 00:44:50 When you're taking your year off to do all the clocks of London this is what I'm going to do you train for this championships I say that but that may just have been something that some friends of mine did once I think there must be
Starting point is 00:45:06 I mean why wouldn't there? I don't know if there's a record for the longest tape measure It feels like we're missing the main point of this which is that there's a massive tree somewhere I think it's mostly about the tape measures which I should specify probably it's not one of your
Starting point is 00:45:22 day-to-day tape measures I think he just dropped some tape from the top once he got there and then they would have measured that but this is this amazing guy called Steve Sillett an ecologist and he's been really into tall trees since the 80s and he was the first person
Starting point is 00:45:38 who ever ended up in a redwood tree canopy so I think it was like 1987 he was 19 and he saw a redwood tree, a giant redwood looked at it and then ran at it and scaled it and went up about almost 300 feet and thought
Starting point is 00:45:54 well I love this, I'm going to do this for a living and he's one of our leading botanists and he identified this tree, the tree is called Hyperion it's a coast redwood in California and it's 116 meters tall which is sort of significantly higher
Starting point is 00:46:10 than the Statue of Liberty and yeah some hikers came across it and thought that looks like a big tree let's tell someone about it you can't just like put a helicopter above all the trees and just say oh that's the tallest one can you because the undulations in the land they might be growing, the bottom might be lower right
Starting point is 00:46:26 is that the point I think measuring trees is difficult although there are other ways to do it easy ways to do it but this guy happens to love climbing them so they call this guy and that's the most accurate way of doing it actually hang on
Starting point is 00:46:42 how do you define the top of a tree because if he's dropped the tape measure down he can't be perched on top of the highest leaf that's a really good point he's got two tape measures one he pushes up using the Harkin method exactly
Starting point is 00:46:58 and then the other one he drops so he has to add the two together so it's an extra line on the spreadsheet at the end I think he might give the tape measure to a passing bird or maybe a little ant or something and ask it to scale those last few leaves an ant
Starting point is 00:47:14 yeah we need something very light don't we and maybe then the ant gives it to an even smaller ant that just does a little bit on top exactly isn't he afraid of heights this guy I mean he's picked the worst job I'm skeptical about whether feeling nervous when you've scaled
Starting point is 00:47:30 over 300 foot redwood and looking down and feeling nervous is a fear of heights or just kind of a rational human response to being in a dangerous situation but he does claim it's a fear of heights so I have a theory that this isn't the tallest tree in the world my theory is that
Starting point is 00:47:48 the largest tree in the world is a fig tree in South Africa and that's because I'm counting the root to tip so I'm including the roots and there is a fig tree above the echo caves in Limpopo which is only about 10 meters above the ground
Starting point is 00:48:04 but its roots reach 120 meters underground so from the bottom of the roots to the top I reckon it's longer because redwood roots are all quite shallow and quite wide they don't go particularly deep like most roots don't go that deep but this one they go super deep
Starting point is 00:48:20 and I have a theory so much as a trick a language trick fair enough I think that tree's got a claim it can shout that to all the surrounding trees towering above it if it makes it feel better I think that's ok I think again there's like some kind of
Starting point is 00:48:36 story that we can all relate to about being small but underneath being really anyway these caves in Limpopo basically the figs do have long roots anyway but they were searching for water and they went all the way down
Starting point is 00:48:52 because in this cave there's like a big water system and we only found out about the roots because people went into this cave and saw the roots and thought where the hell did they come from because we're so far underground and then they worked out that it was this tree that's really cool that must be deeper than lots of
Starting point is 00:49:08 underground lines yeah for sure it's extraordinarily deep I think most tree roots don't even go more than one metre below the ground 120 metres it's gone insane
Starting point is 00:49:24 it could be just wrong of course because like the tallest tree that was ever measured ever this was a eucalyptus in Australia it had fallen down and they measured it and it was 133 metres high which would be higher than Hyperion but most people now
Starting point is 00:49:40 think that they just didn't measure it correctly they never found any other eucalyptuses that were nearly that tall and it was in 1871 when maybe tape measures weren't quite as good as they are today yeah that is obviously the easiest way to measure a tree
Starting point is 00:49:56 is to cut it down and do it long ways but not recommended I don't think we've ever mentioned Donald Currie on this podcast do you remember him? he was a tree researcher in the 60s and he was taking samples from a really old tree
Starting point is 00:50:12 called Prometheus and two of his drill bits broke inside the tree he was trying to remove a little core see how old it was and he asked for permission from the US Forest Service to cut it down
Starting point is 00:50:28 and they granted permission so he chopped down the tree and it turned out to be almost 5000 years old and it was the oldest tree that had ever been discovered and he chopped it down and he later switched to studying lakes which he promptly drilled into
Starting point is 00:50:44 and drained I just need to drain this lake to find out how old it is just to say you can't just in case you want to go and find Hyperion the world's tallest tree you can't so don't try they keep the location of these trees top secret now so people don't go in an accident
Starting point is 00:51:00 and they sort of kill them with love I think it might have been Steve Silat who said it like that you go, you hug it, you trample on its roots you'll name into it and stuff exactly, yeah he also thinks that its growth might have been stunted so it could have got even higher
Starting point is 00:51:16 but there's a woodpecker that lives right at the top I think right at the top and it looks like it's just damaged the tip oh my god that's so frustrating something else or someone else who was measured by dangling a tape measure is the world's tallest
Starting point is 00:51:32 ever woman okay so I kind of heard about the world's tallest man quite a lot who was Wadlow, something like that, William Wadlow or something Robert Wadlow, that's right but I've never really read about the tallest woman and she's got a name that's really easy for QI fans
Starting point is 00:51:48 to remember, can you guess what that would be? Steven Fry Sandy Toxford and surname no Alan, Sandy Allen so she was the tallest ever woman and she worked at an oil company
Starting point is 00:52:04 and her co-workers realised that she was really tall it's kind of sad because she had a pituitary issue but her co-workers realised that she was really tall and so they climbed up on a load of chairs and desks and then dangled tape measure from the top of her head to the bottom and then took a photo of it
Starting point is 00:52:20 and sent it to Guinness and Guinness used that to say yes this is the tallest lady that's ever lived and then she became really famous she was in a film with Donald Sutherland and she would go round doing Ripley's Believe It or Not shows
Starting point is 00:52:36 but then eventually she went round going to different schools and churches not for money just to do talks about how if you're different it doesn't really matter you can make the most of what you are and stuff like that and she had her own phone number that people could ring
Starting point is 00:52:52 which was 1-888-BIG-SANDY and they would play her little speech that she always did about how being tall is no problem was she married to Tom Cruise for a while I feel like she was I certainly looked that way
Starting point is 00:53:08 but it wasn't but yeah and then eventually she did get sick and ended up in a home and in the home that she was in which was in Shelbyville, Indiana she was there at the same time as Edna Parker who was the world's oldest living human
Starting point is 00:53:24 at the time so you could go to this retirement home place and be the world's tallest woman and the world's oldest person at the same time if you wanted but she's really cool like this lady honestly I'd never heard about her she's super cool God I wonder what the tension was like between those two
Starting point is 00:53:40 I bet there were two clans like the Jets and the Sharks in that old people's home I think that would be a great that's a great setting for a crime scenario like a crime solvers you know one of them is old and one of them is tall and odd
Starting point is 00:53:56 and serious every single crime is related to a high concealed clue or something that happened in 1912 this reminds me of something that happened in the Stockholm Olympics oh but our book about the Stockholm Olympics is on the top shelf
Starting point is 00:54:16 it's okay I could yeah this is gonna be like the nightclub this is gonna be fresh yep I read a survey of tape measure ownership in the UK and 77% of 18 to 24 year olds own a tape measure
Starting point is 00:54:36 and 100% of the over 65s owns a tape measure 100% that's a lot I want to know what proportion of that 100% of people actually would be able to locate the tape measure if you ask them to 50 max
Starting point is 00:54:52 I am in my 30s and had to buy a tape measure last year for a thing and now I own a tape measure it feels like at some point there is gonna be a draw in your house and it's gonna have a tape measure because people don't get rid of them why would you? it's not big enough
Starting point is 00:55:08 to kind of have to throw out because you're moving it just sits in the box of stuff you know who would own a tape measure the world's oldest woman you know who she'd measure I think we're there we're there ok that's it
Starting point is 00:55:26 that's all of our facts for this week if you want to get in touch with any of us you can contact these guys on twitter so James is on at James Harkin at Andrew Hunter M at Tom Scott and you can email me on podcast at qi.com
Starting point is 00:55:42 or you can go to knowsuchthingsafish.com where you have all of our previous episodes and various other fun stuff including a link where you'll be able to stream the live show that we're going to be doing in a couple of weeks so you can go to knowsuchthingsafish.com for all the details about that
Starting point is 00:55:58 but for now that's all from us we'll be back again next week with another four facts see you then goodbye

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