No Such Thing As A Fish - 34: No Such Thing As A Giant German Sandcastle

Episode Date: November 8, 2014

Episode 34 - Dan (@schreiberland), James (@eggshaped), Andy (@andrewhunterm) and Anna (#getannaontwitter) discuss the scent of a comet, sky girls in go-go boots, the James Bonds that could have been a...nd the most expensive thing Bruce Willis ever bought.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 We ran it on QI a few years ago, which was, there's no such thing as a fish. Yeah, there's no such thing as a fish. No, seriously, it's in the Oxford Dictionary of Underwater Life. It says it right there, first paragraph, no such thing as a fish. Hello, and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from the QI offices in Covent Garden. My name is Dan Schreiber. I'm sitting here with Anna Gizinski, James Harkin, and Andy Murray. And once again, we've gathered around the table with our four favorite facts
Starting point is 00:00:32 from the last seven days. And here they are in no particular order. Okay, back number one, James. Okay, my fact this week is that comets stink. How could you know that? So the Rosetta probe, which we all know is currently going around the comet. And during that, they've managed to collect some data from the comet itself. They've managed to do some spectral analysis on the molecules. And they found out that it smells like a mixture of rotten eggs,
Starting point is 00:01:01 cat urine, and bitter almonds. Yummy. Although, did we talk about the fact that cat urine is good if you smell it in wine? So if that could be distilled into a wine, if you smell it in wine, it's like a wine flavor. Wine, say, or it has a cat pee aroma, not as a bad thing. Oh, okay. Cat pee, I guess, is like ammonia, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:01:20 That's the kind of smell. But the chemicals that they have on this comet are hydrogen sulfide, ammonia, hydrogen cyanide, formaldehyde, methanol, and sulfur dioxide. And that apparently gives those smells. I really like the science writers who receive that kind of slightly dry. Some people would say report from Rosetta and go, so I've read this list of chemicals. Do you think we can do the headline, Comet Stinks?
Starting point is 00:01:45 Yeah, let's go with it. I kind of, yeah, fine. It does overstate it a bit because actually, if you were on the comet, you wouldn't be able to smell it because the molecules are just not numerous enough for your nose to detect them. If you had a sniffer dog, they'd be able to detect it. Dogs can smell the weirdest things. I didn't actually realize that nostrils were as amazing as they are.
Starting point is 00:02:05 So they can smell whale poo from a mile away. They've been trained to... Basically, the way they tell about whale's health is to analyze their poo. It's on the edge of a boat. So it's on the edge of a boat? Yeah, yeah, just kind of like holding water. Yeah, just barking whenever it finds the poo. I've read this on the Daily Mail, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:02:23 It's true. And DVDs, they can smell DVDs as well, which helps her when people are trying to counterfeit DVDs and get them over borders and stuff. So they can smell huge hordes of DVDs. Dogs are right-nosed, I think, when they smell, they smell with their right nostril. All of them.
Starting point is 00:02:40 That's a good question. I don't know if it's like humans and some of them aren't. You get some left-nosed dogs who are more creative and ask you. Don't want to let it all the time. 90% of dog presidents were left-nosed as well. Yes. So harmful smells, they smell with their right nostril, but nice, familiar smells, they reserve for their left nostril.
Starting point is 00:02:58 And their right nostril, new smells, they always smell with their more sensitive right nostril. And weirdly, their ears are the other way around. So they'd prick up their left ear when they're hearing something that's threatening, like a thunderstorm. And if they're hearing other dogs barking, they want to hang out with, they'd prick up their right ear.
Starting point is 00:03:12 But what if there's something threatening over on their right? They spin around and around and then collapse. Just take it back to space for a minute. Even if you were up there, the odds are that if you were an astronaut up there, you might not be able to smell this comet. And that's in spite of the few molecules thing, because in space, your sense of smell really suffers.
Starting point is 00:03:30 Because all the fluids that normally pooling at the bottom of your body throughout the day, just because you're upright, go all over your body and they tend to bunch up in your upper torso and in your head, which is why astronauts like eating spicy food. Because it's some of the few foods that can actually get through your sinuses. Right.
Starting point is 00:03:44 It makes you smell better. Do humans like smell half the time on the left nose and half the time on the right nose or something like that? Especially you breathe through nostrils on an alternating basis. Camels have the ability to close their nostrils because of sand. It's like with their eyelids. So they have three sets of eyelids. One which are like window wipers.
Starting point is 00:04:01 The other which is their normal eyelids and the third one which are transparent so that when it's sandy, they can just see through anyway. And their nostrils as well have the ability to go boop and just shut up. That's cool. That'd be really useful. Did they make that noise?
Starting point is 00:04:11 Yeah, they did. Boop. Yeah, when they shut up. Elephant. That was before and it's to describe something else, but it's something rude. Oh, that's it. It's about hippo's testicles retracting inside their bodies.
Starting point is 00:04:22 I love that my impressions are limited to you. Don't get tired of your impressions. His retracting hippo testicles are exactly the same as covering nostril as his Arnold Schwarzenegger. The comet doesn't smell bad to anyone under the age of four because apparently up until the age of four, nothing smells bad to you. What?
Starting point is 00:04:46 This is a TED talk given by this four-year-old. It all sounds great, guys. I like it all. So everything is just interesting and then you learn to react badly to certain smells post the age of four. I feel like I've made my brother smell wasabi before he was four and he freaked out.
Starting point is 00:05:00 But that's more of a kite. That's more sensation. You know that losing your sense of smell is one of the chief indicators of dying soon. They've tested lots of elderly people and of the elderly people who couldn't smell or whose sense of smell was really badly impaired, a significantly higher proportion of those people
Starting point is 00:05:16 died in the following five years. Right. His own is not guaranteed at all. It's interesting that you're saying that your sense of smell is dulled in space because there are quite a lot of examples of astronauts giving very sort of exact descriptions of what things smell like.
Starting point is 00:05:30 Like Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong saying that the moon smelled of gunpowder when they got back in. Also, apparently one of the big issues that they have so as well as having a sniffer at NASA, one of the big things they were trying to work out was the diet of astronauts because both farting and burping were a massive thing,
Starting point is 00:05:46 particularly in the Apollo missions going to the moon. It just smelled of farts inside me. It's because of the smell and not because it could propel you across the space. No, Mary Roach, who wrote a book called Packing for Mars, actually looked into that. There was no idea that you could fart, propel yourself across. Yeah, surely you could.
Starting point is 00:06:00 According to the person that she asked, he said that the size of the human against the push of whatever error was coming out wouldn't be enough to actually do it. It would be enough, but you just probably wouldn't move very far. Yeah. You should have had a lot of baked beans
Starting point is 00:06:12 before going into space, 17,000 cans. You have to not care how long it took you to get to the other side of the space lounge. Space lounge? I mean, it should be called lounge. They must have a lounge. They must have a lounge, yes. Where? On the ISS?
Starting point is 00:06:25 Yeah, or in any. Did they have one on Apollo 11? Maybe the lounge, no. It's a luxury, isn't it? Yeah, I think that wasn't a necessary trim down. Lose the billyard room. The fireplace has to go. So, we've definitely covered in our fact books before
Starting point is 00:06:43 that in space, astronauts' hearts get rounder. But also in space, their eyeballs get flatter. Wow. People who are in space for a long mission, they report blurred vision sometimes. And what they think is the reason is extra fluids in your head, which are normally elsewhere in the body.
Starting point is 00:06:58 So this results in a flattening of the eyeballs and even swelling around the optic nerve. And when they go back to earth, the swelling around the optic nerve subsides. But sometimes your eyes don't. They don't round out again. So you have slightly flatter eyeballs, yes. If you had aliens who came to earth
Starting point is 00:07:13 and they looked like humans, you would be able to tell they were aliens because they'd have flatter eyeballs because they'd been in space before they came here. So that could be a way of... Oh yeah, that would be. That is the plot of James' first novel. I was reading Bill Bryson's short history
Starting point is 00:07:29 nearly everything a while ago, and he says this thing about comets in it. And I guess meteorites, anything that enters the earth's atmosphere, he was asking these two guys what kind of warning we would have against a comet meteor asteroid strike. And they said in all reality, unless someone had spotted it,
Starting point is 00:07:47 and it's very hard to spot, one second. Well, for instance, that's our warning. Well, what about cellabints? There wasn't any warning of that. It just came down and landed in the middle of Russia. Well, it would have been one second. That's terrifying.
Starting point is 00:07:59 What would you do with that one last second? That's a great idea. Well, I guess I'd ring people and tell them what I really thought. Comets. A lot of scientists think that it's comets that brought life to earth, don't they? Because comets are made of water.
Starting point is 00:08:15 Well, advice. And that might be where the water and organic matter for earth came from. When the last time Halebop came around, because they're on orbits around the sun and they go past the earth every now and then, the last time it came before 1997 was when Stonehenge was being built approximately.
Starting point is 00:08:31 Really? That's how big that orbit is. So people going crazy with comets, that happens quite a lot. In 1910, there was a comet. It was Halley's Comet where everyone went crazy when it came over, do you remember? Why did they go crazy?
Starting point is 00:08:45 Well, what happened was, you know all these chemicals that they found? One of them includes cyanide. And people had already realized that there was cyanide inside a comet's tail. And some people had thought that when the comet goes past, the tail would go through the earth and we'd all get killed by cyanide.
Starting point is 00:09:00 And so everyone thought the world's going to end, not in one second, but in like a few years. You'd all asphyxiate, basically. So they had end of the world parties in New York. They had enormous, we're all going to die, events everywhere. It was this mad, enormous scare. Like you said, yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:15 Everyone, they sold these leather inhalers that you would cover your mouth with so that it wouldn't kill you. Some people thought that the cyanide would react with the earth's atmosphere and create laughing gas. And so everyone would be killed by that. You'd all laugh to death, basically, yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:27 If you want to do an operation, well, there are lots of operations booked for that. And there was one guy in California who somehow managed to nail himself to a cross on the day it was going to happen. Wow! Of course, the day went back. How do you get the second hand?
Starting point is 00:09:41 Well, that's why it says somehow in the report. Right, yeah. Okay, time for fact number two. And that is Andy. So my fact is that the explorer Sir Randall Fiennes, who is the oldest Briton ever to have climbed Mount Everest, used to get such bad vertigo that he would ask his wife to climb ladders
Starting point is 00:10:02 to clear the gusses instead of him. That sounds like an excuse, doesn't it? It does. Yeah. And we're talking about, is it acrophobia? He has a fear of heights. I do think he has the, yeah, the medical vertigo, which is where you feel dizzy,
Starting point is 00:10:14 no matter whether you're in a high place or not. So, yeah. It's weird. Everest is one of the only mountains I've seen where any photo doesn't justify the largeness or the danger of it, because it's such a wide mountain that you can't really get an understanding
Starting point is 00:10:27 of how tall it is. That's true. Like, the main peak of Everest is the highest peak in the world, of course, but the second highest peak is the second highest peak of Everest, which is taller than K2. That's cheating. It is cheating.
Starting point is 00:10:40 Yeah, it's riding on the back of someone else, right until the very end. So, basically, this fact is pretty much just an excuse to talk about Serenal Fiennes, who's done a lot of absolutely amazing stuff. It's great. He has gone up the Nile on a hovercraft. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:56 Just the first time someone did that. His expedition, the Trans Globe expedition, went around the world, but not horizontally, vertically, leaving from Greenwich, going through both poles and then back to Greenwich. No one has done that before. No one's done it since then, which is amazing.
Starting point is 00:11:10 And then after he had a heart attack and a double heart bypass operation, four months later, he did seven marathons in seven days on seven continents. Such a show-off. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:21 He, just on the badass nature of Randolph Fiennes, he once, off an expedition, got frostbite on his fingers and he got it so bad that he needed to have them amputated. But when he took his fingers and himself, they're still attached to a doctor,
Starting point is 00:11:33 they said, we need to wait for it a bit longer for it to deaden before we can amputate. And he lost his patience at home one day. So he went into his shed. He eventually took them off with a black and decker vise
Starting point is 00:11:43 and a fret saw. But he tried a number of other devices beforehand, different saws, and it just wasn't working. That's great product placement for the black and decker. Yeah, that's all.
Starting point is 00:11:52 Yeah. So he's done, so he's quite fun anyway. He seems to be quite an entertaining cap. So at one point when he was in the army, there was a ball, I think, and he persuaded some of his fellow military men
Starting point is 00:12:03 to procure a lively squirming piglet, cover it in tank grease, and slip it into a crowded ballroom, which is quite fun. But another fun thing he did was, he was wanting to get into the SAS. Do you know about this? No.
Starting point is 00:12:14 So one of the tests to get into the SAS that he had to perform was to plan and try to execute a bank robbery. And so he was supposed to rob a branch of Barclays Bank. And he went and he asked for a tour around Barclays Bank.
Starting point is 00:12:28 And based on that, he went to a cafe afterwards and made detailed plans of the bank. And that evening, the owner of that cafe called the police and said, a man who looks like he's pretending to be in the army
Starting point is 00:12:39 has left here some very detailed plans of the local bank. Can you please get on this? It was in the headline of The Times the next day was, dodgy looking man leaves behind plans of bank robbery. Although I don't think he was rejected from the SAS for that.
Starting point is 00:12:51 He also was almost James Bond, weirdly. Really? He auditioned for James Bond. Cubby Broccoli got him in and they auditioned 400 people and he made it down to the last six. Okay. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:13:02 But then he got rejected immediately by Cubby Broccoli. Cubby Broccoli said that he looked like a farmer whose hands are too big and clumsy. Well, his hands aren't too big anymore. This is such bad taste. That is fine. Lord Lucan as well
Starting point is 00:13:18 was asked to audition for James Bond. Oh, was he? Yeah. Lord Lucan. Yeah. He didn't go to it. But he was asked to. Sorry, wasn't he?
Starting point is 00:13:24 He was quite famous. Did he not go to it? I'm going to have a being in Africa. He's doing quite a job of going undercover. If this is part of his audition, I would say he's done very well. Also, because that's the one that Roger Moore then became James Bond for.
Starting point is 00:13:39 And I was reading in Craig Brown's book, One to One, that George Lazenby got the job of being James Bond by knowing that Cubby Broccoli was going for a haircut in a place and getting his haircut next to him and feigning ignorance about, oh, hi, how are you? So.
Starting point is 00:13:52 Yeah. Martini, like he was like, I have always wondered how the hell George Lazenby got the job. So when Ronald Fiennes and Lord Lucan were going for it, they lost the job to George Lazenby? No, to Roger Moore.
Starting point is 00:14:03 Oh, OK. Yes. All right, that's fine. Why do you think it's extraordinary that anyone could have lost it to a Lazenby? Yeah. He's the oldest guy to have climbed Everest. Do you know how old?
Starting point is 00:14:12 There have been older ones, haven't there? Yeah. So he's the oldest British guy. Oh, yeah. The oldest guy is Japanese. He was 80 when he got up there. And he spent half an hour up there. And he broke his own record.
Starting point is 00:14:23 He was the oldest. Previous. It was his third trip up there. He went up there when he was 70. And there was this big thing about two days behind him in terms of trekking was an 81-year-old. So he was going to be able to hold the record
Starting point is 00:14:36 for two days. And then this 81-year-old was like, on the way behind, but he didn't make it. Didn't make it. Didn't make it. He didn't die, but he didn't make it. I think there's two of them who keep beating each other's record,
Starting point is 00:14:45 aren't there? Yeah. I think. Because the last time this guy, the Japanese guy, he's called Miura. The last time he did it, they asked him,
Starting point is 00:14:51 if the other guy beats you, are you going to try and do it again? And he said, at this point, I could not think of anything, but rest. It must have been that. Yeah, yeah. That's reverse psychology.
Starting point is 00:15:01 Is it? Trying to convince the other. No, no, no. Not interested. Nope. Not for me. Okay. Time to move on to our third fact.
Starting point is 00:15:13 And that's Chazinsky. My fact is that a Ryanair crew member recruited today could not possibly be the same height as a crew member from the first Ryanair cabin crew. Okay. What does that mean? So they do have height restrictions,
Starting point is 00:15:29 don't they? Yeah, they do. So if you're recruited today, you have to be at least five foot two to be in the crew now. In 1985, on the first Ryanair flight, you had to be under five foot two to work on it.
Starting point is 00:15:41 Under five foot two. Less than five feet. Pretty short. Seriously small. Because the planes were small. It was because it was a tiny cabin. That's amazing. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:48 So it was just crewed tiny people. Yeah. Yeah, but then the passengers. How's the passengers? Is there a height restriction? God knows. I guess they just have to crouch. Well, you're not standing throughout
Starting point is 00:15:56 the whole flight. Oh, I don't know. I don't know about the first Ryanair flights. Maybe you were. Maybe. No, that's future Ryanair flights, I think. That's very cool. But yes, I think it's quite weird
Starting point is 00:16:06 that you need to be over a certain height now. I suppose you need to reach up. Some of them say you need to show that you have to have a certain reach. So you could be shot with very long arms. Yes. Mr. Tickle. I read that on EVA, which is an airline.
Starting point is 00:16:21 They do have a height restriction thing as well, but it's purely for aesthetic purposes. I wouldn't be surprised if they had that in the 70s, but these days, it seems a little bit... Well, I found out about what it was like in the 70s. OK. Yeah. OK, so this is during Pan Am's heyday.
Starting point is 00:16:36 You have to be, as you say, Anna, at least five foot two, weigh no more than 130 pounds and retire by the age of 32. Oh, jeez. And you weren't allowed to be married or have children. And so most women lasted about 18 months because... Because they've always bloody go off and have kids, don't they, these women?
Starting point is 00:16:52 And that's why we can't be relied on to employ them. Well, the marriage restriction lasted until the 1980s, which is unbelievable. You know, the first budget airline was in 1971, it was founded, which is a long time ago. But that one was outrageously sexist. The stewardesses had to have orange hot pants and white go-go boots.
Starting point is 00:17:09 What is a go-go boot? Before they were dressed as that, though, they used to dress as nurses. And that's not some sort of weird sexual fetish. The one nurse is the one nurse. Yeah, exactly. In fact, the first official flight attendant was a nurse and a pilot,
Starting point is 00:17:24 and she only became a flight attendant because they didn't allow her to become a pilot. Yeah, nearly you can't be a pilot. That was Ellen Church, was it? Yeah, yeah. Yeah, did you read this article in Collectors Weekly? It's a really, really good website. They have loads of great articles on there.
Starting point is 00:17:39 And they did a thing about hostess uniforms. And they talked about Ellen Church, and she was a registered nurse. But the reason that they had registered nurses is because all the passengers were getting nauseous and vomiting because of the DC-3 planes, these particular types of plane
Starting point is 00:17:56 that were just all over the place. So everyone would be sick, and that's why they first brought in the female attendants because they needed nurses. Wow. To hold out sick bags. Yeah, apparently. All right.
Starting point is 00:18:06 She, by the way, wasn't the first ever flight attendant. Oh, she wasn't? No, she wasn't. And it's such... First female one. She's the first female, but the first ever proper flight attendant
Starting point is 00:18:14 was a German guy called Heinrich Kubis. And he was flying with the red baron and would just give him tiny peanuts. He was on all the Zeppelins prior to planes, but he was the flight attendant, and he very much cared about his job. To the extent that he would wear hot pants and go-go boots. Yes, exactly.
Starting point is 00:18:37 But he also... So he was on a number of famous Zeppelins. The most famous of all he was on was the Hindenburg, and he was the one who basically noticed that it was on fire and helped all the passengers to get off it. And he was a very, he was a very...
Starting point is 00:18:50 It's actually a lot of people survived the Hindenburg. A lot of people did. Yeah, yeah. A lot of them jumped from about 15 feet in the air, and then he was on the edge, and he went, all right, everyone go.
Starting point is 00:19:00 And so he gave the go-ahead. The Hindenburg was almost called the Hitler. It was originally going to be called the Hitler. Wow, yeah. I didn't know that that pole on the top of the Empire State Building was actually to dock Zeppelins. It was a Zeppelin docker.
Starting point is 00:19:13 Yeah, that's so cool. It's very exciting. Just to go back to Ellen Church for a second, the first female stewardess. So they were called Skygirls originally. The Skygirls were expected to, I'm quoting here, whole luggage,
Starting point is 00:19:26 screw down loose seats, help with fueling the plane, and finally, at day's end, help the pilots push the plane into the hangar. How good is that? The first passenger flight, it was one guy, and it was from St Petersburg in Florida
Starting point is 00:19:42 to Tampa, and it lasted 23 minutes, and the flight rarely exceeded 5 feet. In altitude. It's brilliant, isn't it? It's like, we are now cruising at 5 feet. If you look to the left,
Starting point is 00:19:57 you'll see a man. Here's some chewing gum for you to chew, so your ears don't pop. Your ears, crazy. Wait, give us more details of this. This is amazing. Well, I know it was called a flying boat, I think,
Starting point is 00:20:11 because that was the only terms in which they could just know, because they had planes, but they called it a sky boat. Wow. Well, it was the first guy paid $400, which was about $9,000 today, but then the prices came right down after that, and basically it carried maybe 1200 passengers
Starting point is 00:20:26 over the next few months, and they paid a $5 each. First one was kind of a special thing. It was the former mayor of the town who got to go on this journey. And weird that he had to pay more to be the one who's trying it out. Yeah, it's not really fair, no.
Starting point is 00:20:40 And also $400 down to $5. That's quite... Yeah, he was kicking himself. He was kicking himself. He probably had booked it a week later. That's the thing with low cost airlines, you've got to keep checking the prices. It just went on lastminute.com straight away.
Starting point is 00:20:56 Other things that have been taken on planes or attempted to take on planes, a two month old tiger cub was recently, a woman recently attempted to smuggle it by disguising it as a stuffed toy amongst other fake tiger cubs. Oh, that is clever. It is clever.
Starting point is 00:21:09 That's what ET does when he tries to hide among the other toys. He puts all the... Yeah, that's true. But he sticks his face out. Oh, yeah, yeah. Whereas a more sensible alien would have just hidden behind him.
Starting point is 00:21:18 He put his face out. Why did he need to do that? Why did he... I was pushing him. Bit of a show off. Bit of a show of ET. And then there was the last one which I did put on Twitter yesterday,
Starting point is 00:21:26 which was Woody's toy gun was confiscated from him recently at Heathrow. And there's the guy who was confiscated from, took a picture and the guy is literally removing this tiny toy gun from Woody. Do you mean the toy gun from Woody? Woody the cowboy. Yeah, Woody the cowboy.
Starting point is 00:21:39 What? And it wasn't like a... It's not like a gun... A life size. Yeah, it's like a tiny little pistol. It was a tiny Woody and they just put an AK-47 in his hands and said,
Starting point is 00:21:49 What is a toy? Don't be ridiculous. That's... There was a guy who was on ground staff. This guy said, Here are some of the conversations I overheard. There was a lady who tried to bring her goldfish on board. And so she had it in a bag with water in it.
Starting point is 00:22:04 And they said, Okay, what we've worked out is we can allow the goldfish to go on, but we can't allow the water. Yeah. So they did allow the water. The other one was they said... So the goldfish had to live in a little 25 milliliter.
Starting point is 00:22:16 Yeah, exactly. Yeah. But you can buy liquid once you've gone through security. So could you hold it in your hand and run and buy a bottle of water? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Drop it in your aviar. And the other one was they had an argument
Starting point is 00:22:26 about what state mashed potato is. So they couldn't decide if it was a liquid. A hundred mills of water. Yeah, they didn't know what it was. And so they eventually decided that it was a gel. And that you couldn't allow it. That's what the grand staff decided it is. I've got two other things on height restriction.
Starting point is 00:22:43 One is astronauts have height restrictions as well. But there was famously, there was one astronaut who was a great astronaut called Scott Parazinski. He was not allowed to do a mission because of his height restriction. Interesting thing about him though, just in relevance to this podcast.
Starting point is 00:22:57 Was he really tall or really small? He was really tall. He's the only astronaut ever to have gone into space and also to have reached the summit of Mount Everest. Just as an interesting connection. Did he land on the summit of Mount Everest when he got back? Did he go up Everest and go, no, I want to go higher than this?
Starting point is 00:23:14 Yeah, almost there now. Might as well carry on. I've just read that I'm on this astronaut, Scott Parazinski's Wikipedia page. And it's got a list of awards and honours. And he was the honorary captain for the US Luge team for the 2010 Winter Olympics. What do you mean honorary captain?
Starting point is 00:23:32 I don't know. It's just they made him an honorary captain. I'd like to be the honorary captain of an Olympic team. Yeah. I wonder if he got a medal if they won. Oh yeah, he could say he won. You get an honorary medal. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:41 You stand on an honorary podium, which is next to the main podium. You're so tall, it doesn't matter. It is weird that the word honorary just means not. There's restrictions on heights of sandcastles on certain German beaches. They can't be above three metres in height. There's some three metres.
Starting point is 00:24:03 Which is huge. I'm not surprised that you can't be above three metres. That's not building a sandcastle. That's building. That's earthworks. You need a planning commission for that. There's at least one beach in Germany where they knock down the sandcastles
Starting point is 00:24:17 at the end of every day so that people don't trip over them in the dark. That's funny. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. Seriously, three metres. I know. What are the crazy rules to the Germans?
Starting point is 00:24:25 I've been allowed to build a massive house on the beach. Got allowed to drive more than a thousand miles an hour. Okay, time for a final fact. And that's my fact this week. My fact is, according to his website, Steven Seagal is the only private citizen to destroy a nuclear device. Steven Seagal, the action hero.
Starting point is 00:24:51 I found this on his website. Okay, sorry. Steven Seagal has dismantled. Steven Seagal has dismantled, according to his website. It's in his philanthropy section of his website. That is a philanthropic act. It is. Definitely.
Starting point is 00:25:03 Yeah. So, looking into it, he's tricked us a bit. He didn't physically, with his hands, dismantle a nuclear device. Oh, he used his mouth. Yeah, he used his ponytail. He sponsored people to dismantle. So, he gave the money to be able to do it. That's really funny.
Starting point is 00:25:20 Will you, Steven Seagal, turning up at your door, will you sponsor me to dismantle a nuclear device? If you give me 50p per megaton. That's great. So, he paid for it to be decommissioned, basically. Yes. Yeah. He was one of the people.
Starting point is 00:25:35 He's an interesting character. He does, he's a bit of a lone wolf, old Seagal. Is he? Yeah. Well, he, you know. What is a lone wolf? A lone wolf is someone who just says, I'm not a part of any kind of,
Starting point is 00:25:45 like, he doesn't do cinema really anymore. Does he not? He goes, he's straight to DVDs. I don't think that's out of choice, is it? On principle, I am a straight to video man. That's a good point. Very good point. He might be in the New Expendables movie.
Starting point is 00:26:01 So, yeah. Oh, right. So, he sacrificed his strong principles for that, didn't he? My favorite things about Seagal, I'll just give a quick breakdown. He's a musician as well. I found that out in the music section of his, what is this website?
Starting point is 00:26:13 Did he want to pay someone to play music? He's got two albums. What is called Mojo Priest, and the others called Songs from the Crystal Cave. Wow. Yeah. I think it's Mojo Priest that has 19 tracks on it, because he's got a lot to give.
Starting point is 00:26:29 And one of the songs is called Talk to My Ass, and Cockpuncher Blues is another one. Is that cock as in cock fighting? I don't know. Because he doesn't like cock fighting. Because he's an animal rights activist, isn't he? Well, he... No, he's a sheriff.
Starting point is 00:26:45 He's a sheriff. We think we mentioned before that he was... Yeah, you can. I think we mentioned before that he was a sheriff, haven't we? Yes. But one of the things that he did as a sheriff was break up a cock fighting ring in America. Wow.
Starting point is 00:26:57 And he used a full SWAT team, a bond-detecting robot, and a bevy of armoured vehicles, including a fully-fledged tank. He was in the tank, wasn't he? Yeah. Yeah. 115 birds were euthanised on the spot, and thousands of dollars of damage were done to this guy called Jesus Levera.
Starting point is 00:27:15 Lots of damage done to his property, including damage caused by the tank knocking over his walls. Hmm. There's a bit overkill, isn't it? Yeah, we said 115 birds were euthanised on the spot. Surely part of breaking up a cock fighting ring is to prevent cruelty to animals. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:28 Let's just go in all guns blazing. Well, you're not in a fight any more, are you? You missed the best bit of the story. God. He got the wrong house. What? Yeah, it wasn't the right house. Yeah, he slaughtered all these animals, including...
Starting point is 00:27:41 Wait, it was just another house with a hundred feet of cockroaches. No, it was a guy who was just breeding them. And not only did the chickens, the cockerels die, so did the owner's dog, and Steve and Seagal had to write an apology letter to the kid, because he killed his dog. Good. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:59 That's appropriate. Yeah, yeah. They needlessly disposed of a lot of bombs, which the family just harmlessly had. They were just breeding the bombs. Why would you take a bomb disposal robot to a cock fighting ring? Why would you drive a tank through the house? Steve and Seagal, that's what he does.
Starting point is 00:28:15 In 1940, they had new golf rules to do with the war in certain clubs in England. And one of them was, a player whose stroke is affected by the simultaneous explosion of a bomb may play another ball from the same place. Penalty, one stroke. Wow, I think as a golfer, I think that's quite harsh.
Starting point is 00:28:34 Like, it's not your fault. Penalty? Yeah. But you've got to be very focused, James. And I think it shows you're not taking it seriously enough if you're distracted by every bomb that goes off. Yeah, that's true as well. That's a good point.
Starting point is 00:28:43 Yeah, I do get distracted on the golf course. You like conspiracy theories, Dan. I have one. Yeah. So in the 1950s and 60s, there was some nuclear testing in space until that was banned by the UN. But in the UN document that forbade it, it said the reason we have to ban nuclear testing in space
Starting point is 00:28:58 is because it could destroy exotic weapons and other military satellites. So I want to know what exotic weapons are hovering around our world right now. What does that mean, exotic weapons? Pineapple bombs. Pineapple bombs. Just to clarify for listeners,
Starting point is 00:29:17 I like conspiracy theories. I don't believe it. Dan, you say that every week and every week we cut it out. I have to remind it. I know. That rages. On construction sites in Germany, they still often call bomb disposal units
Starting point is 00:29:29 before they do much construction because there are plenty of unexploded bombs. So in Germany, I think someone was killed earlier on this year and man was killed when a bomb from World War II exploded. So were more than a billion shells in Northern Europe that were given by... Billion. Yeah, that were sent over there by the Allies
Starting point is 00:29:46 and 30% of them failed to explode. And the main Belgian group that get rid of it are called Dovo and they recover between 150 and 200 tons of stuff every year. Wow. Well, good know to end on. Anyone want to talk about Bruce Willis? That's who I researched because I didn't know who Stephen Cigales is.
Starting point is 00:30:04 Oh, sure, yeah. So you know who was on Friends? Bruce Willis. Yeah. No, I didn't know that. No, I don't know. Oh, God, guys. Have you played Gunter?
Starting point is 00:30:13 Oh, God, guys. So you've gone to ten very successful seasons. Yeah, it was great. Yeah, everyone listening is going to know this. So he played Rachel's boyfriend and the dad of Ross's girlfriend. Anyway, he did it for no fee. He was in about three episodes, I think, and he lost a bet to Matthew Perry,
Starting point is 00:30:28 and so he didn't get paid for it because he lost a bet... Whole nine yards. ...when they were in the whole nine yards where, yeah, Matthew Perry was like, this film is going to be good. I swear, it's going to go to the top of the film charts and it did go to the top of the movie charts when it opened. Wow.
Starting point is 00:30:40 Is that how Friends works, basically? They got people in and then did wages with them. For the first four seasons, Phoebe was paid in pineapples. They really showed in their acting. Nothing of Ruzuelis. He owns... He says the most expensive thing he's ever bought
Starting point is 00:30:57 is a ski mountain in Idaho. That's the kind of thing you say to someone after you've just bought something really expensive and you want to show off. You say, oh, what's the most expensive thing you own? And then you hope they ask you back. Yeah, exactly. He probably goes around to parties all the time saying that.
Starting point is 00:31:10 So what's the most expensive thing? That sofa looks expensive. Is it the most expensive thing that you own? He actually... This makes him even more vomit-inducing. He said to the Guardian journalist to ask him, I don't tell many people this, but it's a mountain in Idaho.
Starting point is 00:31:26 Obviously, saying it to a Guardian journalist... Wow. Actually, given the circulation of the Guardian, keep this under your hat. Only publish it in your newspaper. Don't bust me. Bruce Willis as well. I seem to remember that he,
Starting point is 00:31:43 when they were looking for Salma bin Laden, said, I will give a million dollars if you find... He put a bounty on his head, basically. Yeah, that's real nerve. That's when we saw that when he goes to parties, he could say, well, it's the most expensive thing you've bought. Oh, I bought Osama bin Laden. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:31:57 Who's the biggest terrorist you've personally had killed? Yeah. Another thing about Bruce Willis is that he lost two-thirds of the hearing in his left ear, when on die-hard, because the director said that they had to use extra loud blanks. And now, apparently, his daughter claims this is why he gets accused of being rude in interviews
Starting point is 00:32:13 is because his hearing isn't very good, so he ignores people a lot. What's the justification for him telling people he's bought a mountain? What was that you said? What's the most expensive thing I've ever... No, Bruce, we just... Just ask what your favorite animal was.
Starting point is 00:32:33 Okay, that's it. That's all of our facts. Thanks, everyone, for listening. If you want to get in contact with any of us about the things we've said over the course of this podcast, you can get us all on Twitter, either on atQIPodcast, which is our general group Twitter page, or individually, I'm on at Shriverland,
Starting point is 00:32:47 Andy at Andrew Hunter F. James at Eggshaped, Anna. You can email podcast at qi.com. Yeah, and you can also go to knowsuchthingasafish.com, where we've got all of our previous episodes, so check them out, and we're going to be back again next week with another episode.
Starting point is 00:33:00 Goodbye. You can also find me here. We're a sign to get together. To show what we can do. And you, hold on to me.

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