No Such Thing As A Fish - 424: No Such Thing As An Ark For Peanuts

Episode Date: April 29, 2022

Dan, James, Anna and Andrew discuss pilchard performances, banyan behemoths, thai tastes, and fun foley.  Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. ...

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from the QI offices in Covent Garden. My name is Dan Schreiber, I am sitting here with Andrew Hunter Murray, Anna Tyshinski, and James Harkin, and once again we have gathered round the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days, and in no particular order, here we go. Starting with fact number one, and that is Andy. My fact this week is that there was a job in the 19th century which just involved looking at the sea and being able to tell when there were pilchards under the surface.
Starting point is 00:00:50 They weren't sticking their head under the sea. No, don't be crazy, James. Okay. A little bit of inside baseball, Dan told us before we started recording that's what he thought the job was. Yeah, and I told you before the recording specifically so we wouldn't get mentioned on the recording. Look at us now. This is an amazing job, and it's not like they're sitting like a lifeguard on a boat
Starting point is 00:01:12 looking down. They're up on a hill. They are. They're not even in the sea. So I should say where this comes from. It comes from this brilliant blog called about 1816, which is by an author called James Hobson who's written loads of books about George and Britain. There's one about stagecoaches, which I was reading recently, and he also writes about
Starting point is 00:01:27 Cornish Piltred culture in the 18th century. An obvious crossover. And well, there were these, it was this huge part of Cornwall's economy in the 18th century. It was Piltred fishing because they were these fish that came to the coast by the millions and millions of them. This job was called being a hewer, literally like hue and cry, you know, shouting. And they would stand on the high points along the coast. And when they saw this moving patch of purpley, oily color on the surface, they knew that
Starting point is 00:01:57 was the sign that there was the huge, let's say, flock, a shoal of Piltreds underneath it. And maybe there were some seabirds hanging around it as well. And then they would blow a special trumpet or they would wave their little flags and they would shout, go and get the Piltreds to the fishermen. And then the fishermen would go and... And they would, they would shout, have a trick. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:16 Have a... What does that mean? Have a... It's an old word meaning fish in Cornish. Fish. But now you get have a cake if you go to a Cornish bakery, but it's not fish cake. Oh, that's confusing. It's just related to the cake that was baked for these fishermen when they would leave
Starting point is 00:02:31 a day out. Oh, okay. Yeah. And the trumpet thing, by the way, hewing is an old word for trumpeting. Oh. According to the OED. Oh. Apparently.
Starting point is 00:02:41 And it's not, this is not like your regular trumpet. This was a four-foot trumpet. Was it? Yeah. It's huge. I know. Yeah, yeah. And they, they had these flags as well.
Starting point is 00:02:49 So they would wave semaphore flags, which had special meanings to communicate to the boats, like go over there or come this way a bit or whatever. Because then they directed the boats, didn't they? Yeah, exactly. And they're, because Wilkie Collins, obviously, and I'm famous, Victoria Northup, he also wrote a bunch of essays and one of them was about these hewers. And he described them as feverishly waving two cloth-covered bushes, acting the part of a maniac of the most dangerous character.
Starting point is 00:03:13 Yeah. Because they're just standing on a cliffside. Cloth-covered bushes. Like, before they had flags, they had to cover a bush in cloth and wave it. It's weird. Yeah. They could have just waved around the cloth, you would think. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:03:25 What would they, presumably, if you had spotted, you've sounded your horn. Yep. You've got your semaphore flag out. Bush. Presumably, you've, you've sounded the horn because you've seen pilchards. Yeah. Okay. You've seen them over that way.
Starting point is 00:03:37 Otherwise, you're going to lose your job as a healer. You're going to lose your job. Exactly. You're going to lose the job. You've pointed your flag at the direction. What semaphore needs to happen? What are you trying to communicate with the semaphore? You're telling the boat where they are specifically.
Starting point is 00:03:49 So you're saying, go to the right, go to the left, go out to sea, come closer. Okay. Right. Or drop your nets there, kind of thing. Yeah. It was probably less complex semaphore and more just pointing a flag to the right or to the left. I'm pretty sure it was proper.
Starting point is 00:04:01 It was proper. It was proper. I've looked up the signals. Yeah, yeah. I've looked up the signals. It wasn't just, you know, left to the left. So what were they? I take it back.
Starting point is 00:04:09 I'm trying to communicate what the semaphore signals were. I think it could explain. No. But it's just like you said, James, there would be go east or go right off, which means go straight out. Oh, yeah. It doesn't mean go right. And cast net.
Starting point is 00:04:19 Oh, yeah. But they would also, they could get messages to ships. So they could signal to a man on board a ship that his wife had had a baby. Oh. Yeah. In semaphore language. I don't know what the semaphore for that was. It's been so good.
Starting point is 00:04:33 They're seriously oily. I'd never really understood when people talk about oily fish and the non-oily fish and they bang on about oily fish being really good for you. What really was the difference was, but that's why they were prized. So in the 19th century, they were prized for their oil for lamps, weren't they? Yeah. And so that would just be sold and that would fund the whole industry. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:04:53 And you'd have these filtered palaces where they put all the fish in a barrel, put 6,000 fish in a huge hog's head barrel, and then I think you squeeze down on the fish and all the oil comes out and drains off into the gutters and then that's barreled up separately. Yeah. Right. And you burnt, you can use it for lamps and things like that. Well, they used to just hand them out as well to anyone who was quite poor. So as the boats would come back in, there's reports that you would have locals standing
Starting point is 00:05:19 in the water just waiting for it to come in and say, can you please just give me Piltards? And the person who was on the ship would feel it was honor bound to give the Piltards. So they would just hand them out. And then at the palaces as well, there would be the poor waiting outside and they would be waiting for fish that had like broken backs or that were diseased or, you know, the ones that were being shot. They must have derived from the 30 million Piltards with little X-ray machines if they had broken their spine.
Starting point is 00:05:44 Well, this one's got a bit of a cuff. Cut that to the par. Cross the line. For the early days, kids used to go to the beaches with plastic bags and kind of scoop them out of the water, but it's not just today. Plastic bags. But not plastic. Quite century in now.
Starting point is 00:06:01 Cornwall is, you know, quite behind the times in some aspects, but in others, unbelievably advanced. It had the Tesco plastic bags early in the 1400s. They had the oil to make it from, didn't they? Yes. Bloody Piltards. Exactly. Sorry, not plastic bags.
Starting point is 00:06:15 Other bags. Non-plastic bags. But yeah. So it was back in the 1800s. It was massive. And in 1871, they were exporting roughly 16,000 tons per year. Now that declined massively in Cornwall, massively, massively, to the point of the 90s where they were only landing about six tons in total.
Starting point is 00:06:35 So from 16,000 to six tons, and that's the early 90s. But then that all changed when a man called Nutty Nowhere came along and he reinvigorated the whole thing by rebranding the Piltred. I've seen Nutty Nowhere. I think he's making some strong claims. Huge claims. He's facing just a random fisherman. Is he from the South Coast?
Starting point is 00:06:56 Yes. What's he claiming? He's from Cadwyth? Oh, he's from Cadwyth. Yeah. Okay, yeah. I go to Cadwyth every year. I probably met him down the pub.
Starting point is 00:07:04 And I don't know if he's a guy who's reformed the whole industry. I mean, it's not like everyone's eating Piltreds for every meal, right? No, but I mean, a lot of people, when you read interviews, sort of claim that he called them Cornish Sardines, that suddenly was like, ooh, that sounds a bit posh. Well, someone called them that, isn't it? They have had a rebrand. Yeah, exactly. It wasn't him, but it was in that.
Starting point is 00:07:21 Well, actually, no, it was him. It wasn't him. It was a guy called Nick Howell, I believe, in the 90s, who, yeah, realized that Piltreds had a bad reputation. They're called Sardines on the continent. And so, yeah, they were called, and Piltreds are just adult Sardines. What we call Sardines, Piltreds are like adult versions of that. And they're all herring.
Starting point is 00:07:39 And they're all types of herring. What was his connection, then, to Nutty Nowhere? Because Nutty Nowhere was a guy called Martin Ellis, and he was basically the only... Why do you keep calling him Nutty Nowhere? That's what he calls himself. It's his nickname. And he collected two of every nuts, didn't he? Saved them when there was a big flood.
Starting point is 00:07:59 Exactly. Two bee nuts. Well, ironically, apparently, his ship sank. So I don't think... That's the story. Did you read this? No. He took in too much Piltred.
Starting point is 00:08:10 It's got too heavy. And his ship went down, and it had to be rescued. And the helicopter had to come in to do it. I can't rescue a whole ship. I think him and the Piltreds, possibly. Take the Piltreds first. But this one's going to broken back. I don't care.
Starting point is 00:08:27 Women and Piltreds first. Yeah, the point is, I can't find any record of a helicopter picking up a Piltred man called Nutty Nowhere. So it's the story that's told him. They do a lot of rescues out in Cornwall. But they log them as well. You log rescues. You do have to log the rescues.
Starting point is 00:08:47 It's frowned on to just go around rescuing people. Did you check Nutty Nowhere and his actual name? Martin, whatever it is. Good point. I just did Nutty Nowhere. I should go back and check Martin Ellis. They wouldn't put it on the form, would they? Person rescues.
Starting point is 00:08:59 It was a massive list. There were six tons of Piltreds that I had to get through before his name. Every individual one. Bobby, Billy, Sarah. They are elsewhere. It's not just Cornwall that has a monopoly on them. And I actually, when I was looking at my Piltred can and realized it came from South Africa, I thought, I wonder how many there are.
Starting point is 00:09:22 And there are shed loads in South Africa. And they've turned it into a big tourist industry there. And the Sardine Harvest, the Piltred Harvest, is so massive that sometimes they don't need nets because the sea just dumps piles on the beach. Wow. The sea retreats. So just like a tractor or a dump truck. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:09:42 Scoop it up. Wow. They've got sort of festival days where they invite tourists to come and take part in various Sardine marches and stuff like that. No one knows why they go there. It's kind of a mystery because the shores of like northern South Africa where they hang out are not very appealing to Sardines. And do we know why they come to Cornwall?
Starting point is 00:10:01 Are they mating? Or are they feeding? I think it's for feeding. I think they're coming. Which way would they be coming? I think it's for feeding. But that African Sardine run that you mentioned, Anna, that might be the biggest biological movement on the planet because there's also the East African wildebeest herds.
Starting point is 00:10:19 Obviously, your individual wildebeest is a lot bigger than your individual Piltred. But there are so many Piltreds that they might outweigh all the wildebeest. It's hard to tell. It's one of those classic, would you rather fight one wildebeest or a thousand Piltreds? It depends where you're fighting them. If you're in the sea, I'll take on the wildebeest. Because they've challenged you. You are the one who gets to choose the location.
Starting point is 00:10:43 I would choose actually a hot air balloon for either. For either fight. That's clever. Playing it really safe. Don't even back yourself against the Piltreds on the desert. Why take the risk? They have a tendency of disappearing and reappearing. So I think people keep blaming the decline of Piltred industry on people's declining tastes.
Starting point is 00:11:01 But they just bugger off sometimes. This is the thing with oily fish is why you can't depend on them. Because they slip through your fingers. Because the reason they're oily is because they have to have loads of fat in their body. Because they're the fish that migrate huge distances in massive shoals. So that's why you've got these oily fish. They're fish that pelagic that live in the middle part of the sea. As opposed to all your white fish, which live at the bottom.
Starting point is 00:11:25 Good word. Which I think very much. I didn't make it up myself. But thank you. So these shoals sometimes migrate somewhere different. So in 1820, we say the industry was massive. In 1820 they all disappeared and went to Ireland. And the Cornish were really furious.
Starting point is 00:11:41 And there were articles written in the 1820s saying, you know, this is a complete disaster. The Irish don't like Piltres. They're just flocking to Ireland and the Irish are saying, we think these are disgusting. The Irish do have their own hewers though. And they have their special laws for their hewers. So I think it's got Piltred fancings going up and down. So they have sometimes had a big hewering tradition. And then it just went out of fashion.
Starting point is 00:12:02 There's a special law in Ireland that if you're a hewer, you're allowed to stand on any private property to do your job. No way. What? I mean, you can't go into the middle of Dublin. Like in just standing someone's house. I need to come into your bedroom now. Presumably it's someone's property that's on the coast.
Starting point is 00:12:21 I've got reason to believe there are five million Piltreds in this room. Let me in. Let me into this bank vault right now. Help me with my trumpet. Can I just ask on the hewers that you said it was a job, but they, I mean, the Piltres just turn up at one stage in the autumn, right? So what do they do for the rest? It's very seasonal this job.
Starting point is 00:12:44 It is seasonal work. You're absolutely right. I don't, I imagine they had a kind of portfolio career. They might be a trumpeter for the rest of the year. Yeah, absolutely. Or a Bush, Semaphore instructor. I mean, there's all sorts of stuff they could do with their skills, you know. But they had, yeah, they did get paid a guinea week during the good times.
Starting point is 00:13:01 So maybe it was one of those jobs where much like a tourist season today, actually, you know, it's very big in the high seas. And then you just sort of, you know. Could be a signalman. A woman. Yeah, on the railways. On the railways. On the railways.
Starting point is 00:13:14 At the airports. At the airports. Could be a plastic bag maker. Yeah. Okay, it is time for fact number two. And that is my fact. My fact this week is that the sound designer for the movie King Richard is called Richard King. So good.
Starting point is 00:13:35 So good. So great. Did you just, did you just spot this? No, this, this was a buddy of mine, Ali Plum. He's the BBC radio one music reviewer and interviewer. He spotted it and he told me about it. And yeah, Richard King is, you know, he's, he's actually quite a famous as you can imagine. He's, he's part of this big movie.
Starting point is 00:13:54 He's won for Oscars. He's won for Oscars. And he's, you know, he's been the sound designer for movies like the latest Wonder Woman 1984, Tenet Dunkirk. So he's very tied in with Christopher Nolan. He did interstellar with him. Do we know if Richard King only took the job because he enjoyed the symmetry of the name? Oh, I've got a good reason why he might.
Starting point is 00:14:13 Tenet is all about things being backwards as well as forwards. And King Richard, Richard King. That's, it explains why he took the job as well as him being a massively respected sound engineer and him needing the work. But for Tenet, this is one specific thing. So I haven't seen Tenet. It sounds nice. So some things happen backwards, even though the world is happening forwards. Kind of got two parallel things that happen in one goes forward and one goes backwards.
Starting point is 00:14:37 I haven't watched it, but they had to make reverse gunshots. So they tried playing all the sound effects they had. You know, they have a sound effect of a gun, which is a bang. And then why didn't they just use you for that? But it's, but it sounded rubbish. It sounded cheap and stupid when they just played the sounds backwards. So they had to generate new sounds of what, you know, a plane taking off might sound like backwards but forwards. It's so weird because they could have just taken the original one and made it go backwards.
Starting point is 00:15:07 Right. They have that technology, but they have quite sound right. They have the technology to make sound rewind. You're kidding. They haven't shared this with the rest of us. 20 years ago they had that. But the thing is that King Richard is about tennis and that movie is Tenet. So maybe he's just looking his way through the success.
Starting point is 00:15:25 He's definitely got a word thing. He's the Susie Dent of the sound engineer world. I don't know. I wonder if this movie does because they had a carpenter called James Crane. Carpenter's might use cranes, might, and they... There was a carpeting emergency frame for me. Okay. Look, this is...
Starting point is 00:15:42 The fewer was stuck somewhere in Ireland. This is the one I'm opening with. They had an island safety manager called Guinevere Aid. Like first aid. Yeah, that's good. That's good. And the tennis racket Stringer was called Jeffrey Ibatuwan. That's not true.
Starting point is 00:15:58 Ibatuwan. Ibatuwan. How are you spelling it? How much of your words for pronunciation? No, no. I-B-A-T-U-A-N. Ibatuwan. Oh, wow.
Starting point is 00:16:07 That's good. I would definitely have opened with Ibatuwan rather than James Crane, the carpenter. If you'd been called James Plane, I'd have been absolutely on board. I'll be honest. Like, I was working on just basically all the people who worked on this show on IMDB, and it was Slim Pickings. There were Slim Pickings on it. I love them.
Starting point is 00:16:29 So, sound design has a nickname which is used within the industry which is called Foley. So, you're a Foley artist. Foley sounds within movies. It's really amazing. And particularly if you read interviews with Richard King, he can make something that is quite a boring sound. Suddenly seem like, wow, what a day that must have been of picking the sound for this tiny thing that I would never think about. If you're in a room and a door needs to be opened, right? You would think, okay, there's probably just this bank of sound where it's just door opens,
Starting point is 00:16:58 and he talks about it saying, no, the variety is endless. You have doors that are opened because maybe they're open because there's a baby sleeping in the room, so it's a soft opening. So, he's like, you don't only have just the creaks of a door speed opening, you have emotional content to the opening of the door. And he's like, so I have like, you know, he's got thousands of doors that he's collected. Soft door, happy door. Drunk door.
Starting point is 00:17:21 Terminator 2 I was reading about. The opening scene of Terminator 2, there's a sort of exoskeleton terminator walking in a apocalypse over all these skulls and stuff. So, the ambient sound that you hear in that scene, if you watch that scene next time, is you've got someone having put a microphone just next to the crack in a door at George Lucas' Skywalker Ranch, and just getting the ambience of the outside. And that's mixed with someone going whoosh with their mouth whoosh. So, that's what you're hearing in the background. And then when this exoskeleton is standing on all of these human skulls,
Starting point is 00:17:57 that's pistachio nuts being crushed. So, those are the elements that you see in that scene. And just how they get to thinking a pistachio nut can be a better sound than a real skull being crushed is... Sometimes it's easier to act as a pistachio nut shell than actual skulls, isn't it? If you get a pistachio nut, you know how they're like slightly open on one end. If you just squeeze the slightly open end, then the lever mechanism will open the other end, and you can just pull the top shell off and then just get to the inside without kind of breaking it. Are you sure that actually works?
Starting point is 00:18:30 You would have been fired by Richard King immediately when you handed in your sound effects. What the fuck is this, James? What I'm just thinking is, when you watch actual tennis, right, someone does a serve and you hear the noise of the serve, and it's quite... You would know that noise if you heard it, right? But I remember reading that sometimes in sports on TV, they add the sounds in later, right? I don't know if this is true, but I remember reading that, like, when a dart hits a dartboard, if you imagine yourself playing darts, they don't make that...
Starting point is 00:19:04 It hits it, right? But then some people do that. And I remember reading that in horse racing, there's no microphones on the far side, so there's no way you could make that sound. So I thought that they use Wilder Beast. They do! They absolutely play that in. It's the sound of a stampeding Wilder Beast. Well, they don't play it for the audience in the...
Starting point is 00:19:25 No, obviously live. They play it over TV, yeah. So this is insane. I was reading about a guy called Dennis Baxter, who was the sound designer for the Olympics in 2012, and in fact, multiple Olympic games. And this is exactly the problem, James, because loads of places, they don't have microphones for the whole thing, but they have to add microphones wherever they can and then sometimes cheat a bit. So for the balance beams, they would put microphones on the beam,
Starting point is 00:19:49 so no audience would ever hear the creaking and the movement of the beam, but you do on TV. And then for the archery, they had a microphone on the target, they had a microphone next to the archer for the launch, and they also put one in between on the arrow's path to capture the swoosh. Oh, so that's why they're catching the actual sound there, but not because for me, I would probably get like a ruler on the side of a table and then twang it. That's genius! Yeah, but you're right, they fake it sometimes.
Starting point is 00:20:18 So Dennis Baxter, he did the boat race for a while. Oh, was this in an interview with him? Yeah, yeah, yeah, I've heard this. It's amazing. The boat race, if you're actually in the boats or on the bank, what it sounds like is the engines of the support boats and the helicopters flying overhead, and if you play that on TV, it would be an incredibly weird experience. So he went out before the boat race, he recorded clean swishing rowing sounds, and that's what you're hearing. You're hearing Dennis Baxter rowing, or someone being recorded live.
Starting point is 00:20:43 That's amazing. How cool is that? I love the tennis as well. It's a really precise job working out when to up the volume of the ball hitting sound and when to decrease it, and it depends completely on the tension. And also the crowd sound, and I think he does ground sounds as well. And yeah, he talks about you have to sense how tense a moment it is and then reduce the crowd sound, or sense that, you know, everyone's getting really excited and then you bring up the crowd sound and then you make the sound of the tennis ball hitting the ground a bit less, the crowd a bit higher. Is there someone doing the moaning as well?
Starting point is 00:21:15 That's his life actually. I was reading about Foley and there was actually a film made about Foley art itself, and it's called Burberry and Sound Studio. It was a horror film that was made in about 2012, had some famous actors in it. It was meant to be okay. Anyway, it was partly about Foley art, so the main character is working in a movie studio and he's coming up with sound effects, and in this film, he has to come up with the sound effects for these really gory horror scenes, and he has to come up with these sound effects by smashing up pieces of fruit, the classic.
Starting point is 00:21:50 So he's shown in this film smashing up watermelons or mangoes or whatever it takes, but they realise by making this film that the sound of fruit smashing up, it does not actually sound enough like the sound of fruit smashing up. So they had to find some skulls and break them in, didn't they? They couldn't get the skulls, but the sound of the fruit smashing up is made with pieces of wet cloth and bits of wood being bashed around. That's amazing. So funny.
Starting point is 00:22:18 How better is that? We keep saying Jack Foley was a real person as well. This was the person who created the idea that you could overdub within the sort of behind the scenes of the movie, the post-production, and his first job when he did it was he was working on a movie which was showboat, and his first, I think one of his first things that he did for it was he walked as three people. So he had a cane and he had his own footsteps, and he managed to match the footsteps of three people walking using both just his feet and a cane,
Starting point is 00:22:51 and that was the moment when they went, oh my god, this is, what is this? And he started experimenting more of it. Was it three one-legged people? No, I guess you can move your feet quite fast to be in time with all of the feet, can't you? So did he get people to close their eyes and say three people are going to come in and out of this room, and then, you know, did three gates, and then said it was all me? Oh, I see. No, I think he just showed them the product of the recording match with the film.
Starting point is 00:23:18 He could have been an incredible master criminal, you know. Make it look like a burglary was five people, but actually it was one. Make it sound like a burglary was five people, you know? That's true. He did no good with an eyewitness. No, he could only operate under conditions of pitch black darkness, but they would, you know, afterwards the security guard who'd been blindfolded. He could rob spec savers.
Starting point is 00:23:42 Exactly. Again, everyone would have to be blindfolded and in the area as well, but then they would say afterwards, oh yeah, 15 large... Will the Beast. Will the Beast came in to the shop and took all the glasses. Or herring. We're not sure which. But he could do them so accurately because they'd never look for Jack Foley.
Starting point is 00:24:01 So he died when he was 76 years old, and he reckoned he had a long career in movies. Well, or did he? Did he just make it sound like he died to continue his crime spree? Good call, yeah. That's a cold case, we don't know. But he reckons he did 5,000 miles of walking in the time of his career for films. He doesn't say whether or not that was like I was walking to buy some pistachios, or I assume it's the footsteps that have appeared on our screens.
Starting point is 00:24:28 Yeah, I would assume so. Oh, I don't know. But also, his voice was on movies. He is responsible for the first ever, we believe, Tarzan call. Oh, no. The very first, yeah, Tarzan the Tiger in 1929 was the first movie, and it wasn't that though. Was it not?
Starting point is 00:24:45 No, it was just him going ee-ah! And that was supposedly Jack Foley. It's sort of a bit lost whether or not it was him because I think the footage has itself been lost. It's one of those lost films. That call, the one that we know that goes ee-ah! It's like a palindrome, isn't it? Yes. That's the fun facts about that.
Starting point is 00:25:02 And it's trademarked. It's owned by the Edgar Rice Burrows family. Yeah. And they've got the exact, it's like 9 calls or 10 calls, isn't it? And it's an exhale. Well, after Tenet and Tennis, Richard King can do Tarzan next. Yeah. The film just about the Tarzan call.
Starting point is 00:25:18 How would you, what would the title of that film be? If it was just about the call. Yeah. I'm just wondering how you'd spell the film name. Just goes away. R-E-R-E-R-E-R, I think. You'd think it was a hospital drama. Shall we talk about the Williams sisters?
Starting point is 00:25:44 So this movie, King Richard, the King Richard in the title is the father of Venus and Serena Williams. And he, I don't think it gives anything away for the movie to say he was a very hot housing father who really wanted his children to be tennis players at a very, very young age. He'd never had any training, but he taught them how to become great tennis players and they were the greatest of all time. I read an interview with Venus from 1991. This was in Sports Illustrated. And even then she knew she wanted to be a tennis player. She was a brilliant tennis player. They said, what would you like to be when you grow up?
Starting point is 00:26:20 She's like, I want to be a tennis player or an archaeologist or an astronaut who travels to Jupiter. Wow. That was her three possible things she wanted to be. And I looked it up because I wondered, and this is true, both Venus and Serena have now owned properties in the town of Jupiter, Florida. No. So they kind of went because a lot of sports people live in Jupiter, so yeah. Very nice. That's great.
Starting point is 00:26:46 It's not the Jupiter she meant when she was five years old, is it? It just happens to be an astronaut, but living as tennis players. That's amazing. Venus Williams, one of the two Williams sisters, owns a quarter of a dolphin. A Miami dolphin? A Miami dolphin, the American football team. She has a stake in the Miami dolphins and it's quite a small stake. With Serena?
Starting point is 00:27:08 Yeah, but I think, so it's about, it's less than 1% that they own or that she owns. But anyway, if you include all the spare players they would have, it would work out at one quarter of one dolphin. Amazing. Wow. That's really good. Wait, and it's both of them that own it, then, is it? It's quite hard to find the exact chapter of verse on how much they own or whether they own it together. You can understand why that hasn't been too extensively reported on, I guess, with all the stuff out there about the Williams sisters.
Starting point is 00:27:35 In 1995, Serena was 14 and she wanted to go pro and she was too young by the rules. And so she filed a lawsuit, an antitrust lawsuit against the WTA, I think. Really? Saying, I should be able to play. And actually, their dad had a bit of a vault vast in their early teens because he suddenly realized that tennis can really screw you up. And the junior tennis circuit, all the parents were just awful. There was a little bit of racism around and he actually said to, I think Venus, I don't think you should become a tennis player. But she must have thought, well, thanks a lot, Dan.
Starting point is 00:28:09 Nothing else for 12 years. But yeah, Serena tries to do this lawsuit to say that you have to let me in even though I'm 14. So that was Serena, was it? Sorry, Serena did the lawsuit saying that you have to let me in even though I'm 14. So at that stage, Venus will have already become pro, right? So maybe that was the reason because, yeah, in the movie, a lot of it is about how he doesn't want them to become pros. Really? They don't want them to play any matches until they become professional, really.
Starting point is 00:28:33 They play when they're like 10 years old and then they don't play again until they're professional. Except they play with him, don't they? They practice, yeah. They never touch the rocket again. But how do you go pro without going up a system to get to the pro? Well, they were so good. They basically had a pro, they had a trainer and they were really, really good. And there was one game, one of her first ever games, Venus, she lost against a rancher Sanchez Vicario
Starting point is 00:28:59 and this is part of the movie and they kind of slightly changed what happened in the movie. But anyway, she lost this game and then they interviewed her afterwards and said, well, you know, how is this loss against one of the best players in the world? How is it compared to the other times when you've lost in other games? And she went, well, I've never lost before. And she'd never lost a match in any of her junior things. And then she stopped playing and then she became pro. And so, yeah, she'd never, ever lost a match before at that stage.
Starting point is 00:29:26 Amazing. Yeah, so Richard, the dad, he basically decided that he was going to turn his two girls. And he had a family before this was his second marriage and a new two new kids to the family. He was watching TV and he saw that a tennis player could earn $40,000 a week. And he thought, my God, that sounds amazing. I'm going to train my girls up to do that. And he wrote up the 78 page training manual for Serena and Venus that he had, you know, everything that he'd learned in there and how he needed them to be.
Starting point is 00:29:52 He did a really interesting thing. And I say interesting, it's terrible. He had his kids play Venus and Serena out in the public. And he would pay local kids to come and jeer at them, to yell at them as they were playing so that they could get used to the idea of crowds being against them and having to push through it. Oh, my God. There are people out there right now who have an anecdote, which is I was paid as a child to jeer at Serena. I think my family might have been doing that at fish gigs.
Starting point is 00:30:22 What kind of prodigy were they attempting to turn you into and where did it go wrong? Okay, it is time for fact number three and that is James. Okay. My fact this week is that there is a tree in Pakistan that has been under arrest for more than 120 years. And still no charges brought. That's Tony Blair levels of, you know, what's it called? The thing that Tony Blair did was habeas corpus suspension. That is such an obscure reference to Blair era home office policy.
Starting point is 00:30:57 Guys, we all remember it. Oh, sorry. We're all still outraged. Yep, sorry. Anyway, yes, apparently no habeas corpus when it comes to trees in Pakistan. This is, well, is this true? I mean, there is a tree. There's a tree in Pakistan.
Starting point is 00:31:15 That is undoubtedly true. Yeah, it's a banyan tree. It's undoubtedly true that the tree is chained up. Yeah. And it's undoubtedly true that there is a board on the tree that says I am under arrest. One evening a British officer heavily drunk thought I was moving from my original location and ordered mess sergeant to arrest me. And since then I am under arrest.
Starting point is 00:31:37 All that is true. This officer is supposedly called James Squid. I have no evidence that there was ever anyone called James Squid. I looked as well. I couldn't find anything. Nothing in the newspaper archives, nothing in old books, nothing. Also, it just feels like Squid wasn't anyone's surname. Well, it is.
Starting point is 00:31:56 There are people called Squid. I looked on one of those genealogy websites where you can see families. Squid was a surname back in the day, but there's no notable Squids. If you go to Wikipedia, notable Squids. Empty page. Empty page. Wow. Sort it out.
Starting point is 00:32:10 The Squids. Jimmy Wales. Well, he's only interested in the larger marine levels. Wow, James Squid. And this is a thing that certainly the people who live in the Landy Katal, which is the place where this tree is, which is in the Khyber region of northern Pakistan near the border with Afghanistan, the people there, it's the story, the local story is that this happened.
Starting point is 00:32:33 And I think one reason possibly that it's still there is they wanted to remind people of the colonial times and the bad things that the British colonists brought to the area. And yeah, remember the bad times. I've got a question. Yeah. What's it chained to? The ground. The ground, I see.
Starting point is 00:32:50 And the reason it's chained to the ground is because so that it can't run away. Because the reason James Squid had it arrested is while he was riding home one night, it leapt at him. It made a sudden movement. And he was like, whoa, there. It was quite a windy night, wasn't it? Yeah. So he claims drunkenly, supposedly drunkenly.
Starting point is 00:33:09 And I say supposedly it's about a possible fictional human. There's a possible fictional human. We don't even believe the fictional human's drunk story. Sounds like James Squid has a lot of questions to answer himself. Can't answer them. But yeah, it's said to have. Well, they can walk, can't they? They can.
Starting point is 00:33:26 And they do walk quite slowly. Sorry, could we unpack this a bit? Yeah. So they possibly don't walk fast enough to jump out at you on a dark night. But they are an extraordinary tree. They're known as strangler figs because the way they grow is they start out as a seed that's put out of a bird or whatever or blown onto the branch of another tree. And then they drop their roots from that branch.
Starting point is 00:33:48 That's the crate. Have you guys heard that before? I'd never heard of that. That is extraordinary. It just takes over a tree from the outside. It's very cool. It kills it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:59 And then it kills the inner tree. The banyan then becomes what's called a columnar tree. So there's a hollow column in the middle of it where the previous tree was. And then all sorts of animals get to live inside that hollow bed. It's like the magic faraway tree. But the walking is, I still don't believe they walk. So the walking is if you've got your original root that's been dropped from the branch of a tree and that embeds itself and that's essentially the trunk and then it's rooted into the ground.
Starting point is 00:34:29 And then it grows up again from the roots and it grows out. So you have these things that look like forests of lots of trees that are just one tree because it keeps on growing up from the roots and then dropping roots down again and then going up again. And then often the original trunk will get diseased and have to be removed. And then I say that that's walking because it's lifted up that leg and taken it out of that position and moved it to the next position. It's just been removed. It's just died and been amputated. But the new trunk basically, the roots that come down, one of those will become the major trunk.
Starting point is 00:35:02 Yes, that's right. I was forgetting that definition of walking where I have my leg amputated but then I grow a new leg which I put somewhere slightly different and then do this a series of times over a century and end up going about 10 feet. Ah yes, walking. Love to go for a walk. Look, when you're a tree you have to take everything you get, right? That's true. It's not running. I saw a massive banyan tree this morning.
Starting point is 00:35:29 It's humongous. It's in India. How big? We're talking about 4.7 acres. But this is how big it is, what Anna was mentioning about the idea that these roots grow back out through the ground. So they're called aerial roots. They look like their own trees. This one has 2,800 of them. That's how many it's grown. And the original trunk, like Anna was mentioning about the other one, also has been diseased and chopped away. So even the original leg is no longer there. They're pretty amazing.
Starting point is 00:35:55 They're so big that these trees, these really, really massive ones, I reckon shelter 20,000 people. So let's say it's raining and you're with 19,999 friends and you all need to keep dry. You can just all slip underneath one of these trees. Or you're Jack Foley. You've just pulled off a job and you need to make it sound like there are 20,000 of you hiding under a tree. Yep, I understand. 20,000 people though. That is a lot of people. That's like, if you think of most lower division football stadiums, Tremere Rovers, who I support, like that's twice as many, more than twice as many of people who go and watch Tremere every week.
Starting point is 00:36:31 So people could leave Tremere one week and all hide under the same tree. And the next week, a completely different crowd of fans could turn up. Join the initial crowd under the previous tree. And the other crowd are like, what was the scar because we just missed the match because we're hiding under this tree. Or in fact, because I think the biggest one is about three football pitches. So you could all crowd around the outside of the tree and then three teams could play three different matches underneath it. Although there are shed loads of branches in the way, so actually that wouldn't work. Hang on, three football pitches, you can get six teams on there, can't you?
Starting point is 00:37:01 That's such good football. I'm not a football expert, but I think you can have two teams on the same pitch and it fits a really exciting match. Yeah. So there's a story that there's a prison in the Shabakodar area and it's called Shabakodar Fort. And in the 1800s, 1840, there was a group of warriors that attacked it and they went inside and there was a big clash. And it went on all night long and the Sikh people who were in there fought back and they managed to get them out. But there was this huge thing going, how the hell did they get in here? Someone's responsible for this, they need to pay.
Starting point is 00:37:39 And so they had a big court case, as it were, like a big inquisition into working out who did this. And they came up with a verdict. And the verdict was it was the fault of the wooden doors that let them in. And as a result, the wooden doors have been arrested and have been hanging in the tower, chained up much like this tree ever since the 1840s. And they're still chained up. That's the scapegoat, isn't it? The escape door. Not the escape door. That's awful if you try and get out through the escape door.
Starting point is 00:38:09 And you just walk into the door basically. So wow, this might be a thing, like a trend of chaining up trees or wood. I've not heard of it happening anywhere else. I did look for arrested trees and you don't find any others. And this slightly predates your tree as well by about 40 years or so. And also, these are wooden doors, so they were trees a lot before that. Yeah, we don't know how old the doors were. We don't know.
Starting point is 00:38:38 Food for thought. Do some Banyan trees have bells hanging off them so you can ring the bell to access the spirit at the top of them? Is it a helpful spirit? Well, they're very sacred, so yeah, it's a positive thing. There's lots of mythology around them because they are quite extraordinary trees. They feature quite heavily in Hindu mythology. In fact, I think there's Hindu texts from like 500 BC that say the entire universe isn't upside down Banyan tree. And so it's growing from the heavens down to us and then it leaves a little aphorisms, little bits of wisdom.
Starting point is 00:39:16 Women wrap threads around them, don't they? There's a festival in India, Vat Purnima, which I think means Banyan full moon and married women go for three days and hang out with Banyan trees, wrapping threads around them as a way of... Why? Because they love their husband so much. It's pretty gross. There is, yeah, a lot of it is, it's a bit like, what do you call it, like a Hindu almost, right? Because all the women go together. But a married woman, Hindu.
Starting point is 00:39:43 But they're only married, yeah. I reckon that's the next place for the Hindu market to go. The Banyan trees. No, just like married hendis. I think that could be a huge thing. So what are you celebrating then? Getting away from your husband for a bit, probably. Yeah, nice. How much you love him?
Starting point is 00:40:00 Oh, sorry. That's how it's sold, but everyone who goes on it knows we're going for a fun party. Well, if we love our husband so much, why don't we go to a strip club in Blackpool? There's a tree in the middle of it. Stop tying ribbons to that. So that guy's drunk. Oh my God, he's got an aerial route. Okay, it's time for our final fact of the show, and that is Anna.
Starting point is 00:40:31 My fact this week is that Pad Thai was invented as part of a fascist government initiative. Wow. And every time you eat it, you are supporting fascism. Oh, shit. Yeah, I know, awkward because it's delicious. Well, this is the last time you all had Pad Thai. I had it this weekend. About two weeks ago.
Starting point is 00:40:50 Yeah, same. I'm not sure I've ever had Pad Thai. Well, you're very liberal out here. Because of my principles. This is an amazing thing. It's from Thailand, hence the name, and it was essentially invented sort of by the leader of Thailand, a guy called Phoeban, full name Luang Phoeban Songkram, and he was a big populist leader in the 1930s, that era of big populist leaders who became fascists.
Starting point is 00:41:18 Thank God we got out of that era. Indeed. How times have changed, and he became essentially dictator of Thailand in 1938, and he was very anti-China, a very nationalist, as was the way with sort of fascist leaning dictators, and he wanted to stamp tiness onto everything and make everything very Thai. There were loads of Chinese people in Thailand at the time. They tended to sell most of the street food, for instance, so all the food had Chinese influences. He wanted to scratch that and create this new dish, and it's not totally clear who invented it.
Starting point is 00:41:53 His son claims that it was in their household, that it was invented, and they used to have it as a family together. Other people say maybe he ran a competition to invent it, but essentially he published and promoted this recipe for Pad Thai to incorporate lots of nice Thai tweaks, and made everyone eat it. That's interesting. I did read that it's not Thai, that it's a Chinese meal, which has been sort of adopted. Did you see that? Well, it is. Because China and Thailand are all kind of noodle or rice-based stuff, it does use Chinese noodles.
Starting point is 00:42:26 They basically took Chinese noodle dishes and added lots of Thai-ness to it, so the Thai bits are things like the palm sugar, that real nice sweet sugar-iness, the chilli tamarind flavour that you get. That was all Thai. Also, bean sprouts, you don't really, is very Thai, which is on top. But yeah, it wasn't like a pizza. They had to work with what they had, and what they had was the same ingredients as Chinese food. Yeah, actually, you were saying about the food vendors, all being Chinese, any foreign food vendors were banned by Phoeban. They said you're not allowed to do that, and the government kind of bought a load of food carts, and then got people to run them and said, right, you've got to sell Pad Thai from these food carts.
Starting point is 00:43:06 They made it so that everyone had to eat at certain times every day, and you were allowed no more than four meals a day, because this was the Thai way as opposed to the Chinese way. It's not that rigorous, is it? How many meals a day? I was like, well, snacks allowed? I don't know, because I have some pretty hefty snacks. I only have three meals a day, but if you add in snacks, I'm shading snacks. I think you're not allowed, you wouldn't be allowed in 1930s Thailand. He was the one who changed the name to Thailand from Siam. He mandated that everyone had to sleep six to eight hours a day, which apparently was also a Thai thing as opposed to a Chinese thing,
Starting point is 00:43:46 and he said that everyone had to wear hats. Were the Chinese eating 15 meals a day and sleeping for 21 hours? It appears that way. It wasn't even just hats. You had to make sure you wore shoes. If there were photos of people without hats and shoes in them, they were painted on onto the actual photo itself. Really? He made sure that, and this was an order, that you had to kiss, this is if you were a male worker, you had to kiss your wife before you left for work. That was part of the mandate.
Starting point is 00:44:12 I do think that's nice. If you have to, it takes the meaning off it. If you go to work and give your wife a kiss, and she knows that if you don't do it, you're going to be arrested. I think it takes a lot of love out there. Sometimes you've had a tiff, and you actually want to make a point. And you're like, I hate you so much. I'm willing to be arrested by the fascist governments of Thailand. That actually really makes the point much more effectively.
Starting point is 00:44:39 They're just saying, sorry, train, gotta go. The reason we all think it's nice is because we are Westerners, and that's why he was trying to... He was trying to Westernize. Yeah, it was just absolutely bang on classic, but desperately trying to Westernize and modernize, partly because, partly our fault he came about, because Thailand or Siam had never been conquered, never really been colonized by the West, unlike pretty much everywhere else in the area. Sounds like it was explicitly not our fault. No, but wait for it.
Starting point is 00:45:08 It felt like they were in danger of being colonized because we weren't over that phase of history at the time, and they were like, the reason we haven't been colonized is because we're really cultured, we're civilized, you know, Westerners think that we don't need to be colonized, and we need to kind of persuade the West not to invade us by Westernizing and modernizing massively, and that's gonna mean kissing our wives. And that's why the Brits didn't invade Thailand. We saw they were kissing their wives as they left, and that was the idea. And wearing hats.
Starting point is 00:45:35 And wearing hats. Can't possibly arrest all these good chaps who are going around wearing hats and kissing their wives. Precisely. You've got the British mentality of the 1930s. Yeah, it's not the first time I've heard that either. He banned listening to American and European music, though. Why would he do that? Well, again, he wanted to get the Thai culture.
Starting point is 00:45:54 He ordered every single household to have a picture of him in their homes, classic fascist behavior, as vintage stuff, and also theater and cinema audiences had to bow to an image of him before each viewing of the screening of the film or the forms of the play. That's fine, because 19... Well, 1930s cinema and theater. You looked about at Boris Johnson before you see one man, two governors. You've got to stand up and sing God Save the Queen in the cinemas before a movie,
Starting point is 00:46:21 and at the end of the movie. That's what happened here. Like, it's not any different. They said that same thing, yeah. Yeah. He had to use forks and spoons. National cutlery. Got rid of chopsticks.
Starting point is 00:46:30 Again, it's this weird hybrid of persuading the West, that we're Westernized and modern, but also keeping real Tainas. Thai food with forks and spoons. Also, they went through all these popular songs, and they took out... If any popular folk songs mentioned other ethnicities that weren't Thai, they were rewritten.
Starting point is 00:46:47 So, like, if you were Lao or if you were Burmese, because there were lots of different ethnicities in Thailand at the time, then couldn't sing it anymore. Really? Wow. So, if you had, like, the song the Irish Rover, did they rewrite it as the Thai Rover? Yeah, and that was one of the most popular songs at the time.
Starting point is 00:47:04 I can't think of any other songs that you had an ethnicity on them. But so, they would send the artist back into the studio. It wouldn't be like the DJ at the radio station would just come in and just say a new word over a song playing. Well, this is where Andy's Foliartist comes in, isn't it? They employed Jack Foley to say the word Thai over everything else. Actually, it doesn't sound like Thai if you say the word Thai. You have to say the word Swiss,
Starting point is 00:47:29 because that better creates the sound of the word Thai. Anyway, he was a fascist bad guy. Yeah. They had a noodle song as well. Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah. Do you want to hear it? Yes, please.
Starting point is 00:47:41 It sounds so fun. One, two, three, four. Noodles, noodles, noodles. It's how it starts. Thai vegetables are wealth in the ground. You can find it anywhere. Keep buying and selling as Thai people always help each other. Noodles, noodles.
Starting point is 00:47:52 I imagine something's been lost in translation, but... The tune. Do you know we've only just worked out how to break a noodle in half? Not true. Scientists have. Well, okay. 2018. Okay.
Starting point is 00:48:08 Okay. Four years ago, this is like a straight noodle or a bit of spaghetti, and it's just impossible to snap it in half. Yeah. If you try doing it. Oh, yeah. It's really interesting. If you're at home now,
Starting point is 00:48:22 like get a piece of long piece of spaghetti along spaghetti. You hold both ends of it and then start to bend, right? Until it snaps, you'll find that the two bits in your hand stay in your hand, and then the bit in the middle comes out. So it doesn't break into two pieces. It always breaks into three. It's really interesting.
Starting point is 00:48:38 That is interesting. Although if you hold it in the middle, you can. Yeah, yeah. That's what they learned in 2018. Andy, if only you'd been there. I mean, you could have saved thousands of pounds. Yeah. A really famous scientist.
Starting point is 00:48:52 Richard Feynman was, he was obsessed with this problem. So he used to stay up all night repeatedly snapping strands of spaghetti. Incredibly famous physicists, Richard Feynman. And he died in what? The 80s or 90s. So he never, he's not alive to see the 2018 innovation. What happened? Well, he died clutching a noodle.
Starting point is 00:49:14 It flew into his eye and through to his brain. We figured out why you can't do it in 2006. And that's to do with this kickback wave that travels through the spaghetti when you snap it and smash it up. But it then took another 12 years to figure out how to overcome it. The way you overcome it is you twist the spaghetti 280 degrees. So almost a full all the way around. And then you break it gently, slowly.
Starting point is 00:49:43 And that solves your problem. Yeah. I think if you are at home and you do try that, sometimes you break it and it does go into two and you're really disappointed. But I think that might be because you've got either too much or too little moisture in your spaghetti. Yeah. If you try it just without the twist.
Starting point is 00:49:58 If you try, I'm just saying, don't write it. Yeah. If you try it with spaghetti and it breaks it too straight away, then don't write it. It's your fault is what we're saying. Yeah. So are there any, it feels like a stupid question. Are there any applications for this?
Starting point is 00:50:11 Got loads. Yeah. Yeah. But that's pretty not time to go through. Probably military. It's probably D.A.E. systems have probably bought it. We make drones out of a snap spaghetti now. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:50:24 Is it the same principle for anything that is one big long stick? I'm trying to think of someone doing a lollipop. No. Sorry. A pole vault. Yeah. Yeah. A vaulting pole.
Starting point is 00:50:36 They're at one end and we do see them snap and they tend to snap in two, I think. Do they snap? Yeah. They have snapped from time to time. No. I think it's because the spaghetti has got a certain tensile strength that it works, but particularly well with that.
Starting point is 00:50:48 Okay. I think. Okay. How about in the last year, a woman was burgled in a helicopter and a helicopter was dispatched to the scene of this burglary. Yeah. Right. So it wasn't in Britain then?
Starting point is 00:51:03 No. Because of police funding. Yeah. Yeah. The only thing. We were allowed to make references to Tony Blair's home office, but I'm not allowed to comment on police cuts now. Can you just say how many police cuts do you think you would not have to have
Starting point is 00:51:18 before we could get a helicopter going to every burglary that happens? What I'm saying is, James, when I stand for a lecture, I get policies chopper at your house within seven minutes of the burglary happening. Well, this actually, this story does weak of an overfunded police force because the only things that were stolen were eight pot noodles. Okay. Not just individual noodles. Pot noodles, but like, you know.
Starting point is 00:51:41 They dispatched a helicopter. I don't think they knew at the time that it was just pot noodles that had been taken and women just saw. Was this woman the queen? Yeah, she loved it. She learned earlier that they were using helicopters to lift up pilchards from the water. Yeah. Nutty Noah.
Starting point is 00:51:57 So, you know, it's like, What are you saying? We've got spare helicopters coming out of our ears. Yeah. It seems like it. Yeah. I think she didn't know at the time she just saw this burglar in her garden having leapt out of her house, I guess, called the police.
Starting point is 00:52:07 They were like, oh God, emergency. And it was only later when they interviewed her, they said what's been taken. And she said, well, actually eight pot noodles. And she said they took all the beef and tomato flavored ones, but didn't take the chicken and mushroom ones. Really? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:22 I understand that. I was going to say, yeah. Have you heard of Watana Panic? No. Say it again. Watana Panic. No. Watana.
Starting point is 00:52:33 It's in Thailand. It's a noodle soup joint. Maybe the Watana family, I don't know. But it's a place where you can buy noodle soup. And they're one of these places where every day they take the last bit of the previous soup and put it into the next soup, like a perpetual soup. And so whenever you, whatever you buy, if you get some of this beef noodles, you might be having stuff from, you know, 50 years ago.
Starting point is 00:53:00 Isn't it cool? How long it's been going on? It's been going three generations. Wow. We think 45 years and counting. But I was reading about these perpetual soups and there's some claims. One of them apparently, there was, there's one story that there was a perpetual stew in Perpignan in France that was going from the 15th century until World War II.
Starting point is 00:53:26 What, then the Nazis bombed it? They ran out of ingredients due to the German occupation and had to stop the stew. You could just water it. I would have thought you just water it down until it's basically water. But keep the stew, technically it's still the stew. But you've got bigger things on your mind when the Nazis are rolling in. So that's fair enough. Yeah, you do.
Starting point is 00:53:45 There was one in Normandy that apparently was over 300 years old. This is an article in a newspaper called The Navhyn Times, which is from Goa. I can't find it anywhere else. So God knows if this is true. They've got an unbelievably good Normandy correspondent. Wait till I tell you what it is because it's so unlikely. But also what a weird thing to make up. In Normandy they had a pot which had been bubbling away for over 300 years.
Starting point is 00:54:14 It was in a Cistercian abbey and researchers went into this soup and like took some tests and they said that there was still some ingredients in there that had been in the stew for 350 years. What, James? What you're reading is the Indian equivalent of the daily experience. It is like that thing, isn't it? Where every glass of water you drink has been through a dinosaur. Yeah, okay. And Hitler.
Starting point is 00:54:40 And Hitler, yeah. Yeah. Which is why I've stopped drinking water, actually. Yeah, is there a filter for that? Fittler is cool. It hasn't been through. I mean, Hitler didn't drink that much. I don't think every glass of water.
Starting point is 00:54:55 I think he was a tea total. Is that a thing that there's enough? There's enough molecules. Yeah. Sorry, sorry. I just remembered it's not the whole glass of water. It's one molecule. Okay, that's it.
Starting point is 00:55:14 That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening. If you'd like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we've said over the course of this podcast, we can all be found on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shriverland. Andy. At Andrew Hunter M. James.
Starting point is 00:55:27 At James Harkin. And Anna. Yeah, we can go to our group account, which is at no such thing or our website. No such thing as a fish.com. All the previous episodes are up there, so do check them out and we will be back again next week with another episode. We'll see you then. Goodbye.

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