No Such Thing As A Fish - 463: No Such Thing As An Especially Attractive Barge

Episode Date: January 27, 2023

Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss Minion mythology, pregnancy pranks and poking parishioners. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes.  Join Club Fish ...for ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at nosuchthingasafish.com/apple or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon

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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 Covert Garden. My name is Dan Schreiber, I'm sitting here with Anna Tyshinski, Andrew Hunter Murray 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 my fact. My fact this week is that to combat people sleeping during church, priests used to employ a sluggered waker who would walk around the congregation poking people awake with a very
Starting point is 00:00:49 long stick. Brilliant. Yeah, this is an amazing thing. Can't see that jump, Andy. I think it sounds quite fun. It does, doesn't it? You wouldn't make many friends, but you're not in the business to make friends, are you? Oh no.
Starting point is 00:01:01 In the business to keep people awake, listening to the sermon. Exactly. I reckon you'd be great at it, yeah. Why? You've just got authority about you and we all respect you so much. Oh, when you put it like that, I suppose, yeah, I would be a prettiest. You think I like correcting people for minor errors they've made? Yeah, and you really piss people off, so it sort of feels...
Starting point is 00:01:20 You're not losing anything, you know, people... I've already got zero status in this society. Yeah, the congregation don't like you anyway. I'm disliked enough that it doesn't matter if I'm... And you always walk around with a massive stick. Prop people with it. Actually, that's an even better reason, yeah. How long was the stick?
Starting point is 00:01:37 Do we know? Well, in some cases, they'd be 10 feet long because you've got long pews, don't you? You've got very long pews, so if you've got someone at the end of a pew and you need to reach them, you've got your stick needing to have that... That's the slugger waker saying, isn't it? I would touch him with a 10-foot pole. I read about this in a book that I was checking out called Old Church Life by a guy called William Andrews, and it's a very old book, and it's full of really odd, quirky little
Starting point is 00:02:02 nuggets about the church back in the day, and so these people would be paid good money to go around... Wait, money? Well, but money, yeah. They were paid. I think for a lot of... I don't know the wealthiest, most high status people in society, but yeah. They were, and although some of them were given a small amount of land to live on, the church,
Starting point is 00:02:20 and in one case, there's a place called Yule Grave in the Midlands, and they had one who was entitled to a hat, as well as the small wage, and then one in Wakefield, who also got hats, shoes, and hoses as part of the job. They turned sleepfield into Wakefield, that was what they had on their badge. It is a part-time job. You wouldn't expect it to pay a full salary. It's only when there's a sermon on, isn't it? Absolutely, yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:46 And often they did other things, other jobs as well, and that was just a bit of it. But sometimes women got separate treatment, nicer treatment, so sometimes they'd have a stick with a knob on one end and a little brush on the other, and as a woman, you got a little tickle, whereas a man, you got knobs around the face. Everyday sexism. There's a guy called Obadiah Turner who wrote a journal. He was from Massachusetts, living around 1640s, and he in particular had a fox's tail on one side of his stick.
Starting point is 00:03:18 And on the other one, he had a long thorn, which he used to prick people, so it wasn't just a little whack around the head, he actually stabbed you with it. And he said there was someone called Mr. Tompkins who fell asleep, and he pricked him with his long prick, and the guy woke up and said, BUST THE WOODCHUCK! And apparently he'd been dreaming about a woodchuck biting his hand when actually, you know when you're asleep and you kind of integrate the alarm into your dream? Yes. Well, that's what he'd done.
Starting point is 00:03:47 What's he saying, bastard woodchuck? BUST THE WOODCHUCK! That's a good church, it's a good church appropriate, swear, swear. Yeah. You haven't said anything wrong. It's a mid-stealth, isn't it? Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:03:58 Do you think it was more or less annoying for the priest giving the sermon that rather than have people falling asleep quietly, it was just a constant cacophony of, OUGH! BUST THE WOODCHUCK! That's a good point. I'm not sure it was about being annoyed so much as the people in the church are supposed to be listening to the word of God. Exactly. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:04:18 So, who's got ultimate authority over this system? Is it the sluggard waker has autonomy and is allowed to basically stand at the front and see people falling asleep, or does the priest have to say, there, pew three, seat four, get him? No, the priest is doing his gig, you've got sluggards there to make sure it'll go smoothly. That's the skill of the job, it's the only skill of the job, it's spotting the sleeping people. Does the priest have to keep telling you then you're being fired?
Starting point is 00:04:42 The present person who needed a bit of skill, Betty Finch, who was a sluggard waker in Warrington, she was known locally as the bobber, because the way that she woke people up is she had a fishing rod, and she had a little bob, like a little weight on the end of her fishing rod, and she used to swing it round and wake people up with the rod. That's very deft. And if you did it repeatedly, she got a hook into your cheek and just reeled you up. She was the only, I've found a few names of the actual people given the job, she was the only woman with the job I found, so I feel like a very male dominated industry.
Starting point is 00:05:14 As I said, they did often have other roles in the church, didn't they? One of them seemed to be dog whipping, which was an important thing to do, because in church services in times of yore, and we're talking about a long period of times sluggard wakers existed, I think. Yeah, 1600s. So far, as would often, if they're going to church, they'd be like, well, I'm going to use this chance to bring all my sheep, sell them at market, so they go sell the sheep at market, go to church, and they've got all their sheepdogs in church, so you've just
Starting point is 00:05:41 got a bunch of sheepdogs running around. So yeah, the sluggard waker also whips the dogs out of the church during services. Well, can we give the proper name of this position? The knock nobler? The knock nobler. That's the person who has to chase the dogs out of church. Distracting, I would have thought. That's like the Benny Hill show down there.
Starting point is 00:06:00 Yeah, no, that's the knock nobler, or the dog noper, that was another one, who just has to get in there and whip the dogs, and they have special tools as well. So the dog whipper, who might also be the sluggard waker, was sometimes issued with a special set of tongs for those hard to reach dogs. If a dog had hidden in a crevice or something in the church, you'd have to use the tongs. We have been, this is really exciting, we've been somewhere which has a dog whipper's flat. What's a flat? A flat like an apartment.
Starting point is 00:06:31 Oh, right. So we've been somewhere. Was it the Sydney Opera House? That's right. Yeah, very late, when it was being built, they thought that's just okay. No, it's Exeter, we went to Exeter on tour last year, and Exeter's got a cathedral, a lovely cathedral, which I visited, didn't see any of you guys there, no praying. Well, we had confidence in our research, we didn't really feel like we had to go and
Starting point is 00:06:57 get help from the Almighty. I was like, please, God, please, I just need one good fact about lasagnas. But it's not an actual apartment, it's a room, but it is a room, it's a really nicely placed room, so as you go into the cathedral, it's just above you there, and it looks out onto the nave, it's a viewing spot basically, so you can, you know, be on 24-hour shift looking for dogs in the cathedral. What, and then you have to descend quickly as soon as you see a dog. Yeah, there's a pole, you slide down it, yeah.
Starting point is 00:07:26 Swing on a zipline. That's cool. Do you think that's where Whippets come from? They maybe were the worst-behaved Whippets. And you needed to whip it. Yeah. Often. Really?
Starting point is 00:07:37 No. Definitely the origin. I think it did really used to piss priests off, by the way, I know we were saying, would they go through the, it really did, and there was in American Boston in the 1600s, there was such fury from a priest over there that he suggested that a cage be made so that you would drag the sleeping person into it and cage them up like a bird and just let them have to wake up and deal with that. And that was off the back of someone being woken up and in a rage, attacking the sluggered
Starting point is 00:08:06 waker or tithing man as they were often tithing man, as they're often called in America. Are they called that? Interesting. Because a tithe is the bit of your income you give to the church, a tenth of your income. Yeah, so probably as well as doing this, they collected the money. Yeah. They're actually very busy people, the sluggered wakers. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:26 They also rang the curfew bell. So we had in this country a curfew bell against early medieval times, which was, I think the original aim of it was to keep people from having like rebellious, seditious meetings. But anyway, it was quite useful because it stopped fires because curfew literally coming from the French, I think to cover the fire, couvre-re-feu, is like time to cover your fires now. And it tended to be eight o'clock. And so at eight p.m. every evening, then you'd have the curfew bell rang.
Starting point is 00:08:57 It was like cover your fires and go to bed early. Even for Andy, who's like famously not a night owl, you wouldn't want to have to be an eight o'clock every day. Even I normally make it to the watershed at nine p.m. half an hour root TV, a strange bed. Praying for your sins of watching it afterwards. Have you guys heard of the role of the beggar banger? Beggar banger.
Starting point is 00:09:20 The beggar banger. Yeah. No. What's that? It's not as exciting as it sounds. It's someone who was responsible for controlling the length of stay of any unwanted strangers in the parish. Okay.
Starting point is 00:09:32 They were known as the beggar banger. Was that employed by the church? Because that's not a very churchy, welcoming thing to do. As a church, you are supposed to embrace particularly beggars and paupers, aren't you? Charity has its limits, Anna. And you know. As Jesus said. Are you guys aware of Acts of the Apostles, chapter 20, verse 7 to 12?
Starting point is 00:09:54 I think you've just stopped me off and all. So Paul was preaching. Oh yeah. Okay. And he was preaching. He's doing this speech. It's a very long speech. And there's a guy called Eutychus.
Starting point is 00:10:07 And Eutychus was listening, but it was a really, really boring speech. So he fell asleep in the middle of St. Paul's preaching. And as he fell asleep, he fell out of a third floor window and died. So this is what the Bible says will happen to you. If you fall asleep while someone's preaching. And that's why churches are always on the ground floor. Yeah. You get very few on the top of skyscrapers.
Starting point is 00:10:29 Yeah. Just thinking a third floor window is pretty, is a risky place to risk falling asleep? Well, quite. Yeah. Probably don't sit there if St. Paul's doing a sermon. Anyway, luckily Paul went down, picked him up, brought him upstairs and said, oh, don't worry, he's fine, even though everyone could see he was dead. But then a bit later, he did come back alive.
Starting point is 00:10:52 Oh, wow. Any more explanation on that? He just... It's the Bible, Dan. That's the kind of thing that happens in the Bible. Yeah. Zombies. Very common.
Starting point is 00:11:01 I've got to read this book. Have you guys heard of Pew Openers as a job? No. No. A Pew Opener was someone who basically was an usher. He would collect you at the front. He would walk you to your pew and they used to have little doors. And he would open up the door and he would allow you to not have to do that on your own.
Starting point is 00:11:15 And he got paid a very minimal amount for doing that. And you could also pew rent, so you could rent the actual row that you wanted. You know, he was a concierge kind of character. That's quite interesting because if you go to church, you'll find that the same people every week go to the same church, right? Yeah. And they all tend to sit in the same places. And if a new person comes into the church and sits in one of those places, there are
Starting point is 00:11:38 eruptions. Do you think the Pew Opener would say, excuse me, I think that's actually where, madam? Yeah. And I imagine he did this mostly for the wealthy families. They would have their own Pewies where they would sit and he would be the one guiding them to them. Have you guys ever been to a church with a box pew system? No.
Starting point is 00:11:57 Those are good. So, you know, pews are in rows normally and some church, some Georgian and earlier churches would have box pews. So it's kind of a little pen that you sit in. So the Murrays don't have to sit with the riffraff. Well, you know, or any surname, any family. Yeah. Any family of good standing.
Starting point is 00:12:15 No, no, no, no. We once did an ostentatious photo shoot in a church which had those. It's very interesting. That's what they were made for. Just someone else whose job it was to guide you to your seat, could be, would be the Deaconess. And the Deaconess seems to be one of the only official church jobs you could get as a woman and from like really early church time. And basically, so one of her jobs would be to guide you to your to your pew.
Starting point is 00:12:43 Another job would be like you'd help distribute communion. You could take communion to people in the community who couldn't make it to church. And they were basically ordained. And the reason they came into being really was to stop male church officials from seeing naked women. So their initial job was baptism because yeah, because baptism was almost always adults then and it was always get your kit off. You got your kit off.
Starting point is 00:13:12 You went into a river and it was very improper for a male priest to be seeing accompanying women into the water. Yeah. So that would be her job. She'd undress the woman, hold the veil up so none of the clergy could see, go into the water with her, baptize her, pop out again. That's awesome. Do you guys know what a pedo Baptist is?
Starting point is 00:13:30 Here we go. Okay. That's someone who baptizes children. Yeah. It's you're very close. It's someone who believes in baptizing children. Yeah. There's a big divide in the church for pedo Baptists and credo Baptists.
Starting point is 00:13:45 Did they have John the Baptist and John the pedo Baptist? Yeah. It's funny. Only one of them's made it to the big time hasn't he? What was the other? Credo Baptist. Credo Baptist. And there are people who believe that you should only be baptized once you have been
Starting point is 00:13:57 able to come to an adult understanding of God on your own. Because credo is Latin for I believe, right? Yeah. And there is that you can say yourself that you believe that as opposed to a child who doesn't really understand what it all means. What have they done to deserve that? Well, I always thought it was just about protecting them to get into heaven. So.
Starting point is 00:14:14 Ah, it's interesting because it seems like Hannah and I are credos. Yeah. But dad, it sounds from what you're saying. Big ol' pedo. Wow. Interesting. I've never heard those. Those terms.
Starting point is 00:14:24 No. No, I don't think they get bandied around actually. I don't know why. I said I'm a credophile. OK, it is time for fact number two and that is Anna. My fact this week is that the Queen of France once pranked a girl at court by secretly taking in her clothes to make her think she was pregnant. Oh.
Starting point is 00:14:54 This is just great. Yeah. Pretty mean. This is this great, great story from the memoir of Hortense Manchini and she was one of the Manchini sisters who were so fun. But her uncle was a guy called Cardinal Mazarin who was the closest person to the royal family in France really. And Cardinal Mazarin decided that he would start teasing his six year old niece.
Starting point is 00:15:23 That's the thing. That's the thing. You hear this fact and you think, oh, it's a clever prank to play on. Someone who's probably what, 20 or maybe a T.A. It's not a six year old. That's what makes it so funny. So there's this girl called Marianne who's six year old and she's the person who's writing the account Hortense.
Starting point is 00:15:38 It's her little sister and Cardinal Mazarin says, hey, you've got an admirer and he's got you pregnant, hasn't he? And then they would take her clothes away and secretly take them in so they got tighter and tighter. So she thought that she was pregnant and the whole court got in on this gag. You know, it was just hilarity for everyone. Oh, look, it's a fine line, isn't it? Between are you laughing with her or laughing at her?
Starting point is 00:16:03 It's a fine line and I think they crossed it. Anyway, the queen, it was Anne of Austria and she was the queen mother at that time. She had been married to King Louis and then she'd been the queen regent. So she was referred to as the queen. She turned up by the six year old's bedside, consoled her, said, gosh, yes, you are a pregnant, aren't you? And then they planted a live infant in her bed, which we think was a baby of one of the servants.
Starting point is 00:16:27 This is next level. Classic. Yeah. This is Jeremy Beedle level. This is crazy. Yeah. This is amazing. And then what happened next?
Starting point is 00:16:35 Well, the queen offered to be the godmother, said, well done, you. And then I think they probably at some point came clean, I don't think they made her raise the child. I think the person whose child it was would have objected. Well, they asked her who the father was. Yeah. Didn't they? And she said it could only either be the king or the conte de gouiche.
Starting point is 00:16:51 Yes. Because they were the only ones who she'd kissed. Yes. That's quite sweet. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Although the conte de gouiche was a known absolute playboy. So. Right.
Starting point is 00:17:02 Right. She wouldn't have known that. She's six. She's six. He just gave a little kiss on the cheek. I quite like this in the memoirs from Hortense, who was three years older than her at the time. So she would have been nine.
Starting point is 00:17:12 And she said she was very proud to know the truth of the matter and I never tired of laughing about it just to show that I knew it, which is such a relatable thing when you're a slightly older sibling doing that over the top laughing to be like, yeah, I get it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I kissed. Please don't do this kind of thing to me.
Starting point is 00:17:31 I feel like an idiot. I was looking up pregnancy pranks. Oh, yeah. There aren't many good ones. No. It's mostly pranks that you, if you're pregnant, can pull on people around you. Oh, right. It's not like, because you could throw a water balloon at someone in the night and then they
Starting point is 00:17:46 think their waters are broken. Yeah. Yeah. That's one. That's one. If you're pregnant, you could walk around with like a doll hanging between your legs. So it looks as if. Right.
Starting point is 00:17:57 You've even birthed without noticing. Yeah. Yeah. These are all about the level of the ones I found. The only one I found that was any good potentially was using your pregnancy to help someone else with their pregnancy prank where you can pee on their pregnancy test as they will come up as a yes. Yes.
Starting point is 00:18:13 Right. And then she'll be able to say to whoever, you know, oh look at them. That's really funny. They're saying that men don't really know much about pregnancy tests. So you could literally probably just take a vape and draw a line on it and say, hey, look, I'm pregnant. You can take a COVID test. I'm not pregnant, but you do have COVID.
Starting point is 00:18:35 This book is, it was published in 1675 and I guess at the time it's sort of quite sort of timely. We're talking about it. It's sort of the Prince Harry memoir of its day to an extent because it was very much what an amazing attempt to make this book relevant to absolutely everything. It just totally is. Absolutely bang on. It just totally is.
Starting point is 00:18:55 Who is this? Hortense. Hortense. Did she get a frostbyss and penis? Well, no, this was the first time that, you know, this is someone who was amongst the royals. She was almost basically a queen at one point and it was a book that was published when women weren't really writing books either about their personal life.
Starting point is 00:19:14 And so when it came out, it was it was a huge bit of news. It was it was scandalous and she filled it with gossip. It was it would have been like with Prince Harry's book coming out and everyone going, oh, wow, you've actually said that. God, cool. Wow. I've never heard of her prior to reading up on this, but she wrote her autobiography and then a couple of years later, her sister wrote her autobiography as well.
Starting point is 00:19:38 And as you say, they led just an incredibly interestingly bizarre, fun, but also quite tragic life. They were in marriages, which were very unloved and which fell apart. They had to flee the country from time to time because of being exiled as a result of their dubious affairs and so on and their husbands being furious. It's it's a real rollicking adventure. Well, let's quickly mention this husband that she had. Yes.
Starting point is 00:20:02 Who appears to have been slightly unhinged. Oh, man. He believed that milkmaid shouldn't touch cows udders in case they became aroused by them. Yeah, there are a couple of accounts of this. This is this just let's give his name. He was called Amon Child Duller Port Duller Mayeray. That was his name and he was incredibly rich, wasn't he? He was.
Starting point is 00:20:23 He was like the richest man in Europe, pretty much. Yeah. And he. So I read that account that he was worried about milkmaids finding milking sexy. But then I read another account saying he worried that men might get aroused by the sight of milkmaids doing their milking. Yes. Either way, I think Hortense didn't rise about any of these things, actually.
Starting point is 00:20:43 These all came from a guy called Abbey de Choisie, who was he wrote his memoirs and they came out after he died. And they're all about the story of how he went to live in the countryside in France, pretended to be a woman and seduced a load of young girls. And he apparently was friends with Perot, who wrote a lot of fairy tales. So we think actually a lot of it might not have been true. He was the one who wrote all this stuff about this crazy guy. And he was basically the idea with Amon Child was that he was incredibly pious,
Starting point is 00:21:11 wasn't he? And very religious and imposed really strict rules like that. So I thought everyone was going to be aroused all the time. Did things like he had a collection of priceless works of art that he'd inherited and, in fact, from Cardinal Mazarin. And he went around knocking all their genitals off because he thought the genitals were improper. You know, he'd slashed tapestries, he'd clay painted black bits of penis and balls and nipple on various paintings. There are so many different accounts.
Starting point is 00:21:40 So one of the things I read is that he did that specifically because he was worried that she, Hortense, was going to get aroused by them. To be fair, she did have quite a few affairs. She did. She had a time. She had a time. She was leaving around. And she almost married Charles the Second when I mentioned before that she almost became Queen. So Cardinal Mazarin, who was sort of he was he was their uncle
Starting point is 00:22:03 and he was very much taking them around town and trying to set them up and arrange marriages. Charles the Second met Hortense, fell in love with her and thought, I've got to marry her, made the offer. And he said, no, because Charles the Second was an exile. And he said, no, you've got, you know, you got your name, but you've got no money. You've got no title. I don't know your prospects. And so he denied it. And then only a few months later, even weeks, Charles the Second suddenly is restored back as king.
Starting point is 00:22:26 And so Mazarin comes running back, saying, actually, Hortense would love to take your offer. And he says, not afraid, that's not going to happen. Such a shame. Yeah. This could have been a queen of England. Yeah, they did hang out in England. Hortense definitely fled to England and spent a lot of time at court and she was super fun, live in the whole place up. And they were the thing is, they were this Italian family.
Starting point is 00:22:45 And we should say they were called the Mazarinettes and there were seven of them all together. And they were the seven nieces of the Cardinal. And they all looked quite different. They were dark skinned when everyone was very pale skinned. They look similar to each other, but different to normal other people. Different to normal noble women, yes, who were all very pale. They all seemed to have the same name. There were two Laura's, two Anne-Marie's and one Marianne, which is quite confusing.
Starting point is 00:23:11 But yeah, they were fun and Hortense especially. So at one point when she ran away from Armonne Charles, she ended up in a convent or I think she was put in a convent to try and make her behave. But she became best friends with this woman called Manmousel de Cossel, who maybe she was in a relationship with or had a little fling with. Maybe they were just really close friends and they sort of played practical jokes on the nuns quite a lot. They all thought they were pregnant.
Starting point is 00:23:37 I promise I haven't had sex all the nuns. Yeah, she did things like she filled two chests with water and apparently the water leaked through onto the nun's beds. But she had this really cool adventure in the convent where her husband came to try and kidnap her away when he found she was misbehaving. And her and Manmousel Cossel found it's like the stuff of fantasies. They found a little hole in a grate in the parlour, which they could just squeeze through to escape.
Starting point is 00:24:04 And so they squeezed through this grate and they climbed out the outside. And then they actually realised it was a false alarm and their friends were visiting, not her husband. This is the story of the sound of music. This is their baddies in a convent and you're squeezing through a gate. Yeah, come on. Yep. Well, then they squeezed back in because they were like, girl, we're going to look stupid. It's just our mates.
Starting point is 00:24:25 And she got stuck in this grate between two iron bars for about 20 minutes. And Manmousel Cossel, that's like, tug her out. And then they ended up covered in syrup on the parlour floor, snogging. No, I've embellished some of the ending. But yeah, sounds fun. After she died, her husband caught up with her and had wanted actually to repatriate her for ages. But it's so much easier to catch up with someone after they die.
Starting point is 00:24:50 Well, exactly. It's really easy. Well, he caught up with her. He caught her body. He put it in a sealed coffin. Great. Fair play. You know, it's what you meant to do. And then he just like carried it around Europe on a sort of weird, posthumous honeymoon to all the places they had been together in life
Starting point is 00:25:09 for four months, a long time. And then eventually he left her in a country churchyard and then and then eventually when he died later, they were buried next to each other. I don't know how she would have felt about that. And then during the revolution, they got choked in the sand. Yeah. So it has a an unhappy ending. Not if you're the people. Obviously, you know, I'm a big fan of the aristocracy.
Starting point is 00:25:35 I read an article that she introduced champagne to Britain. I read that. Yeah. I think popularized popularized. Yeah. Oh, really? She was. Oh, my God. And this is the most fun thing about her. I did all this reading and then finally at the end, find this one article which talks about this extraordinary saloon
Starting point is 00:25:51 that she opened up in the 17th. I think Salon. I think a saloon is a Wild West bar. I said, not a saloon. All the ladies in London used to come and they they had to leave the guns of the car and had those swinging doors and the piano player that would stop when when Hortense walked in. That's it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:09 So we're calling it Salon. So let's let's let's go with Salon for the moment for that. Yeah, because it was kind of French, so let's say a saloon, but with a French angle like Salon. So let's land on Salon. I mean, that's that's definitely that's what they're called. It's like Salon's very popular in those days. Yeah. So she she ran this.
Starting point is 00:26:28 Let me get to the fucking facts. 17th century London, she had basically this extraordinary like book club that she ran next to St. James's Palace and all the ladies who were encouraged not to do this, to have intellectual conversation, to read books and discuss them with each other, to share their ideas, their philosophies would go. They would drink champagne and they would do all this stuff together. And she was she was just such a the article describes her as an influencer of the time.
Starting point is 00:26:53 Definitely. The interesting thing was these Salons were massive in France, weren't they? They're like a huge thing in France at the time. And all the middle class and upper class women would go to these Salons and kind of learn things. But she was the one who brought it to London. Yeah, because it didn't exist here at the time. Yeah, you could you could say that really podcasts are the Salons of the present day. It wasn't.
Starting point is 00:27:15 Well, we're discussing things. We allow we allow one woman on our podcast. Yes, traditionally a male environment. OK, it's loose. It's a discussion, isn't it? Is this we've all got champagne? Yeah. Oh, God, yeah, I wouldn't come to this if that wasn't promised. But she I mean, this was how great her influence was,
Starting point is 00:27:37 particularly with quite obscure texts, if she introduced a text to be read, it would get round town that this was like something that was amazing. And it would boost up a big run of it with translations because people suddenly were going, what are they reading there? And we we have to be part of that. And it was very much the Richard and Judy's Book Club of its day. Yes, exactly. That's what it was. That's more of a salon. Yeah, yeah, right.
Starting point is 00:27:59 Yeah, yeah, yeah. You know, it's interesting about Hortense, if you Google her, the first image painting that comes up of her is of her looking very beautiful and then just a little nipple hanging out from the move. Yeah, yeah. And it's there's only a few paintings of her that are around, but that's one of the I think that might be just your history. It's just as you get.
Starting point is 00:28:22 Yeah, that's possible. It's interesting you'd have that painted in to an official portrait of an official, but a portrait of you ends up with a bit of nipple in. Yeah, just a general portrait that you get done to show that you're a sexy person like Janet Jackson. Yeah, that was why she did that. But the thing is with Janet Jackson, it was a malfunction, right, where she quickly covered up.
Starting point is 00:28:41 But with a painting, you'd have to sit there for about three days. That's a hell of a mouthful. Maybe the artist was just too embarrassed. You know, when like someone has green in their teeth and just you want to say, but you don't say it is like, oh, I just got to paint it in. I guess. OK, it is time for fact number three, and that is James. OK, my fact this week is that according to their origin story,
Starting point is 00:29:12 the Minions serve the most evil person on Earth, but they were conveniently frozen in a cave and unable to serve anyone between 1933 and 1945. Oh, is this official Minions cannon? I believe it is. Yeah, why is it? It's in the movie. It's in the movie.
Starting point is 00:29:32 It's in the second movie. Yeah. So the dates, you've altered the dates there, but that's that is part of the period when they were frozen. I gave the dates for Hitler, half of them, the dates for the Minions. Exactly. But basically, there's this thing on the Internet that people keep doing this meme where they say, are the Minions they serve the most evil person?
Starting point is 00:29:51 But what were they doing during World War Two? And it's like a big joke that they haven't thought of this. But of course, they have thought of it. And it is in the movie, which I haven't seen. Yeah. So we should say who the Minions are with these little yellow creatures who are in the film, Despicable Me and then all the other and then the film Minions. They were they were henchmen that got their own spin off series. And Minions was 2015.
Starting point is 00:30:11 And in the opening sequence, it tells you the history. So it says that they serve various evil masters from the T-Rex all the way through to. When did they get out of the cave? Sorry to interrupt you, Dan. So they go into the cave in 1812. That's when they first go in and they emerge in 1968, I think, to avoid being so obviously avoiding the Nazis. So 1812 would have been just after Napoleon's retreat from Moscow.
Starting point is 00:30:34 Yeah, yeah. That's probably. Well, it's very cold in when they were treating. Exactly. There we go. All right, I'm going with the with the lore. I love it. I wonder who they're serving now. Who's the most evil person on a few candidates? None of this room. Sorry.
Starting point is 00:30:50 The director, one of the one of the co-directors of the films is Pierre Coffin. Peter Coffin, Peter Coffin. But his name doesn't actually coffin in French doesn't mean coffin. What does it mean? I don't think it means anything. But the word coffin means basket, which is very close. I really thought it was called Peter Coffin. And then I thought it was called Peter basket.
Starting point is 00:31:10 And actually he isn't called either. But he does the voices of the minions, right? Lots of them. Yeah, all of them, apart from maybe one. Yeah, well, there's Jermaine Clement from Flight of the Concords does one. No, one, literally one million. And then this guy and someone else. But this guy does eight hundred and ninety nine millions.
Starting point is 00:31:29 Well, I think there's another director as a co-director of the film. Yeah, who also does some minion voices. The language sounds so difficult to do because every word is, I think, a real word from one language or another. I think there's some gibberish in there as well. It's mixed in with loads of other languages. But they sound so funny to listen to that. I just I love the sound of the minions language.
Starting point is 00:31:47 Like it's really funny. Have you seen them all? No, I haven't seen any of them. Have you seen any of them? Yeah, I've seen minions in bits. You know, you walk in and out while the kids watching a movie. And then you're asked to leave the cinema because where's your kid? You know, it's like, all right, I'm out of here.
Starting point is 00:32:02 Yeah, he's cool, Coffin. And I think that one of the reasons that the Minions speak this combination of languages is that he is very multilingual, I think. So he's like half Indonesian, half French, grew up in Cambodia and Japan. And yeah, invented this language. And interestingly, when it's dubbed into other languages, it gets changed because you notice that they say English words enough. You're like, oh, they must be talking about toast now or bananas, famously.
Starting point is 00:32:27 But in other languages, they'll sub those words for that language. So they'll still use the Indonesian and different places. But then whenever there was an English word, they use whatever country, you know, or just drop in more local words. Well, that's cool. Yeah, his mum was a famous novelist, wasn't she? N. H. Denny Coffin's mum was called. I'd never heard of her inside of this,
Starting point is 00:32:48 but she is an Indonesian novelist and feminist. Very nice. At least two of the Minions films have been banned or altered by censors in China. Oh, really? Who dislike various aspects of the plot. So there's and I just I really like this. So the film The Rise of Gru, which I think is one of the most recent ones.
Starting point is 00:33:07 The Chinese censors added an entirely different bit of the film at the end of it, clarifying that one of the characters who previously been involved in a heist in the film, you know, fictional, fictional heist, everything was caught and served 20 years in prison for the heist. I mean, that's so good. They also say that Gru returned to his family and his biggest accomplishment was his free children. And apparently the reason that they've done this,
Starting point is 00:33:35 most people think is to promote China's three child policy. Oh, they've been trying to do to increase the birth rate over the last few years. Wow. Guys, I was reading about other animated villains. Oh, great. Okay. And so Scar, the Lion King. Yeah. No spoilers, please. I haven't seen it. I think I can avoid spoilers. Great. Who is sexier, Scar or Mufasa?
Starting point is 00:34:00 According to just us or according to you, are they both lions? Yep. Mufasa. It's as equal as lions. I find them both equally attractive that lions could be more or less sexy than each other, apparently completely impossible for James to compete. Just I thought it was a subjective question. Do you find all you must think there are some animals which are sexier than other animals in the same species?
Starting point is 00:34:21 Have that buff kangaroo. I'm not sure that that is true. Do you think of all humans as being equally sexy? Absolutely. Apart from my wife, of course, you're slightly less sexy than others. Wait, doesn't your cat have a modeling contract, though? No, she doesn't. She has. She has appeared.
Starting point is 00:34:41 She has appeared in some adverts. So you must think she's sexy. You don't have to be sexy to be in an advert. That's not what they are always cast for. But the difference here is Captain Birds. Well, I kicked a terrible example of the sexiest man on TV. Can I just say I don't find my cat sexy? Yeah, you're allowed to say this.
Starting point is 00:34:58 It could be a model and not sexy. It's the human personality, which is adding to the sexiness of these characters as well. Well, they've got voices, haven't they? Yeah, the human voices. And I'm speaking in English, yeah, yeah. For me, I would say that physically, Mufasa definitely sexier,
Starting point is 00:35:14 but in terms of personality and voice, Scar, of course, is more sexy. OK, well, Scar's like old and manky looks. No, but I know that's why I said. No, I know. No, no, and he personality-wise is evil. OK, well, can I say one of you is right and wrong? Mufasa is less sexy than Scar.
Starting point is 00:35:32 Scar is the sexier one physically and would be in the real world as well. In fact, specifically in the real world. So this is a study about what makes a lion sexy or unsexy. And for years, they've been thinking about... Come on, you're talking from a lion's perspective. That was the whole point. This is about what?
Starting point is 00:35:48 Main darkness. Because some lions have really, really light mains and some have really, really dark ones. You know, scientists have been trying to work out for years. What does this have any effect at all? And they just introduced these fake lions and they could sort the mains around. And you could attach them with velcro,
Starting point is 00:36:04 so you could whip off a mane and then reattach it. And the dark mains were very much preferred by the lady lions, lionesses, as they're also known. But interestingly, dark mained lions have more abnormal sperm because they have heat stress because their mains are so dark that they keep absorbing sunlight. Interesting.
Starting point is 00:36:22 And they have to eat smaller meals as well because they get more heat stress and if they eat a massive, great meal, you know, it warms you up. Yeah, yeah. You know, sometimes you have a huge meal and you're like, I'm so hot off. Oh, no, no, no, mate.
Starting point is 00:36:32 Sperma-deformed. Would you like a dessert? No, they're deformed enough already. That's why I make my husband dye his hair peroxide blonde before every meal. You've got to watch out. I'm sure that peroxide's good for him. Lex Luthor, do you know what made him evil?
Starting point is 00:36:53 He's the villain in the Superman universe. I actually don't. No, I don't have a handle on what he came from. What is he? He's just like a rich guy. He's a rich guy, but he was a scientist and it was basically Superman made him bald. And that is why.
Starting point is 00:37:07 Bald? Yeah, as in no hair. So he used to have a huge amount of ginger hair on his head and there was an incident between Superman and Lex Luthor where they were in a science lab. Lex Luthor was trying to make something really good. Superman had to blow it out because something went a bit wrong
Starting point is 00:37:23 and in the big Superman blow that he did it just pushed these chemicals onto Lex Luthor's head, made him bald. He was so furious. He became a supervillain. And that's an overreaction. It's an overreaction. He's got temper issues with us.
Starting point is 00:37:37 What's amazing is this is a retroactive story to explain why he suddenly goes bald because you know part of like comic book artistry they would hand it to sort of as it was ghost artists who would come in and do the sort of comic strips and help them. One of the guys who was in charge of it one week, mistaken Lex Luthor for one of the bald henchmen
Starting point is 00:37:55 and accidentally drew Lex Luthor as a bald headed man. And so it was a total mistake and it ran for a couple of weeks. It went out and then another one went out and that just had to be it. So he had no hair. So the only reason he's bald is an artistic mistake. Who the has proof reading this?
Starting point is 00:38:09 That's like releasing a few scenes from The Lion King where a hyena plays Scar and no one notices. And then what? Lex Luthor would buck the trend of most supervillains because villains in fiction and particularly depictions of villains are generally more pointy than heroes. Yeah, there's the sense of,
Starting point is 00:38:29 you know, you can draw Mickey Mouse with three circles. But if he was bad, it would be triangles. Well, yeah. So I was reading an explanation about this, about the graphology of films and so on. Darth Vader literally has a triangle on the front of his face. Oh yeah, he does.
Starting point is 00:38:41 More scary. But more sexy very often. I mean, they genuinely are made to be a bit attractive. I think. Sorry, Darth Vader. He's got a dark main Darth Vader actually. So he is more attractive to female Vaders. Yeah, he was king of the prize.
Starting point is 00:39:00 More like, more than women actually. Often quite sexy. Is he not sexy Darth Vader? Darth Vader? He's got a sexy voice, doesn't he? Have you seen Under the Helmet? I haven't seen any of the. Okay, no.
Starting point is 00:39:10 Don't look under the helmet. Don't look under the helmet. Keep that helmet on. If you're making out with Darth Vader, just keep that helmet on. Yeah. I think in Disney films, the female villains are acknowledged as sexy.
Starting point is 00:39:21 In fact, there's a book called The Enchanted Screen, the Unknown History of Fairytale Films. Who are you thinking of? Which says. That woman in The Little Mermaid. The Big Octopus. That's what you learned, yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:31 Pick the one example that I haven't done in a long time. Although she's got some nice lipstick on. There's arguments about whether or not she's an octopus because she's only got six arms. But then. Human arms or octopus. She's got tentacles, hasn't she? Right.
Starting point is 00:39:47 She has tentacles. The argument is she does have two human arms, which makes it eight, which, yeah. Hang on. Isn't there a QI fact that octopuses have six legs and two arms? Two, like pedipals. Yeah, because they use their legs to walk
Starting point is 00:40:00 and they use their arms to grab things. So they've got it bang on. She's a perfect octopus. Six legs, two arms. Yeah, I guess so, except that she's a myrrh something, right? Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. So I don't know. Do you count the human part in with the octopus part?
Starting point is 00:40:14 That's right. I don't know. I don't know. Anna, I think you were saying something about. I'm on some weird forum, Stan, but I was just saying that in Snow White, that queen in Snow White is acknowledged according to this book. It says, as is well known, animators all preferred
Starting point is 00:40:30 drawing her when they were making Snow White because she was very complex as a woman and much more erotic than Snow White. And she isn't everything of Corella DeVille she is, and in sort of that. They're kind of glamorous, you know? They're glamorous, yeah. Yeah, maybe it's glam.
Starting point is 00:40:45 I think it's glam, yeah. They're glamorous, they're powerful, they're independent. They know what they want. They want to skin dogs to make a coat. I like a woman with ambitions. I'll be sold. Yeah. You know what I'm saying?
Starting point is 00:40:57 Yeah. One thing that they do often have at villains, I think this is more men than women actually, but they often have terrible skin. And dermatologists are not happy about this because they say it may foster a tendency towards prejudice in society. Because all the bad guys in movies have bad skin,
Starting point is 00:41:16 if you see someone with bad skin, you're going to think they're bad. And really there's quite a lot of people who are saying that really you shouldn't do this. We should stop having scars, we should stop having... Yes. I'm trying to think you have bad skin. Well, for example, almost all James Bond villains,
Starting point is 00:41:30 even in the... I think in Christoph Waltz in anything he's in. Yeah, exactly. As like scars, doesn't he? No, the most recent Bond movie has two villains, both of whom have facial disfigurements. Have You About Them has one in a previous film, and it's like...
Starting point is 00:41:41 The bad is Roger Rabbit. There is a lot of it when you start looking. I thought you just meant acne. Because I think scars are kind of cool, but being covered in acne, I can see that that would be insulting. No, no, no. But it's lots of people who suffered facial scarring
Starting point is 00:41:56 for whatever reason. And then you see film after film after film, the baddie is a baddie because they've suffered some facial scarring. Two face, the Joker. Yeah. And that's full of it as well. When you start, you do realize this is mad.
Starting point is 00:42:10 Yeah, that's true. Just another backstory, and another World War II related backstory. Donald Duck. There's a theory about him that I quite like. So basically... Is there anything to do with his cock-screw-shaped penis? Like the old ducks are.
Starting point is 00:42:25 I think you can probably make it to do with that, I believe in you. But before World War II, Donald Duck existed. Obviously, he's part of the Disney franchise, lots of shorts with him. But he was quite a light-hearted, fun-loving duck. Can I just quickly say, lots of shorts, but no trousers. Very good.
Starting point is 00:42:42 Thank you. Thank you for that. So as we know now, Donald Duck, bad temper, right? That's what he's famous for. He's always shouting at his nephews. He's very... That's uncanny, James. That was a good impression.
Starting point is 00:42:56 Really good. Yeah. I didn't know you could do that. It's not a good tempered noise. It's not a happy noise. So he changed. And the theory is that he... It was the war that changed him,
Starting point is 00:43:06 because he is the only character in the Disney franchise who actually saw active service. So you know... Stop it! He was on the beaches at Normandy. He only wanted a piece of bread. What do you mean he saw active service? He saw those cartoons.
Starting point is 00:43:21 You know all the propaganda cartoons that Disney released during the war? Loads and loads of propaganda cartoons. So all the characters featured in these, but they didn't go actually into battle, except Donald Duck, who did. In which theatre? What do you mean?
Starting point is 00:43:35 In which theatre of the war did he fight? He... The Pacific. Sorry, I didn't... I actually think it might have been the Pacific. While he is a duck, he would make sense for him to be in the water. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:45 He should be Navy. If he's in any of the services, yeah, yeah. But I can't remember to be fair, but he's shown serving in the US military and won the propaganda films fighting an air battle against the Nazis. Oh, an air battle? Well, he is a duck after all.
Starting point is 00:44:01 Makes sense that he should be in the air box. He's the perfect weapon. He doesn't even need a plane. No. Wow. And you're saying that he's got PTSD, effectively. Well, straight after the World War II, his temper got worse.
Starting point is 00:44:12 He became very sensitive to loud noises. You know, if his nephews make a racket, he gets upset. And that's the idea. And actually, in a recent duck tale, he had to have anger management courses. Wow. So, that's the theory. He's got PTSD from the war
Starting point is 00:44:25 and all the evidence is there, I think. Whenever anyone was shooting, they would go, duck! LAUGHTER OK, it's time for our final fact of the show, and that is Andy. My fact is that every barge firm on the River Thames used to have its own signature whistle.
Starting point is 00:44:46 Oh, my God. That's very cool. Yeah. This fact, Andy, I reckon, if you put all of your facts into an AI, this is what they might come up with. London whistling and a means of transport that's not very popular anymore.
Starting point is 00:45:04 Yeah, seemingly dull. But really interesting when you get into it. Well, let's find out. Yeah, exactly. You'd be the judge at home. So, anyway, this was on a British Library blog post about the decline of whistling, which is absolutely meat and drink to me, obviously. And it's about Lighterman.
Starting point is 00:45:18 Lighterman were the men, almost exclusively, who steered barges to their destinations, and barges are basically flat-bottom boats that were used to transport lots of cargo. So, you might dock your ship in the river because there isn't a proper dock. You just drop it in the middle of the river and then you have to unload it,
Starting point is 00:45:34 and the barges are the things that go back and forth, emptying them out or loading them up. And there were different barge firms, and every barge firm had its own whistle. And it was so you could identify yourself at night. There we go. Who's was that? Yeah, that's the sexiest of all the barge firms.
Starting point is 00:45:49 James obviously doesn't see any difference between sexiness and barge firms. So, me, barges are all the same. Yeah, so barges, barges are great. The apprenticeship used to be five years long, just for the Thames. Yeah. Anna's been on a barge. You've looked after a barge, haven't you?
Starting point is 00:46:04 Yeah, well, a canal boat. So, not one of the big Thames barges, but you had to sail. Must be the Thames. No, James, please. We're gonna get deeply into the difference between a narrow boat, a barge, all of it. But the apprenticeships lasted for so long, didn't they?
Starting point is 00:46:19 So, they were introduced, I think, in 1555. And that was when parliament established the company of Waterman and Lightman because, you know, they needed to regulate the industry. And I think it only stopped maybe 500 years later. I think it was 2007, the government suggested. Maybe we don't need to spend five years learning. More so more than 500 years, exactly.
Starting point is 00:46:42 I mean, it's tough, but come on. Also, there are no working barges on the Thames anymore, so it does seem quite weird to be doing that. I think that's a good thing, that we stopped people learning how to barge and, like, getting them to do maths instead these days. Well, it takes just two years of training now and six months of local knowledge training, which is...
Starting point is 00:47:02 But then, are people just trashing barges into each other? Yeah, it's woefully inadequate. It's ridiculous. We've seen the Thames here. So, you're saying there's no barges these days, but they're clearly barged. Well, there are barges for other purposes. So, it's not really for freight anymore.
Starting point is 00:47:16 It's for tourism or for taking, like, restaurant barges. Or I don't think there are any that are having iron deposited from Europe and carrying them on the Thames. There were two, right? You had the Lightman, which is carrying all those goods back and forth, but then you had the Waterman, who were the people that carried people across,
Starting point is 00:47:35 which was a massively important thing back in the day, because getting across from the south side of London to the north was an incredibly hard thing sometimes. Or the other way. Or the other way, even if you... Why would you go south? Come fight. I live south. Yeah, so people like Peeps write about it,
Starting point is 00:47:54 saying, you know, it was the quickest way to get across, because often the clogging on the bridges would be so great. What? You say bridges? Bridge, London Bridge was the only one east of Kingston, which is a lot of river with one bridge across it, so they were massively important. And get this, I love this. So loads of their trade came from transporting people
Starting point is 00:48:13 to the theatre. So that was why you would go to the South Bank, because it was where all the theatres were. So that was a huge bit of trade for the Waterman. And then when Covent Garden set up, where we're recording this podcast, their trade suffered massively, because there was suddenly theatres north of the river,
Starting point is 00:48:28 and no one had to cross the river anymore to go and see a show. But you could still get carried down the river, couldn't you? If you lived in Chelsea and you had to get to Covent Garden. That's true, although there were other means of getting from Chelsea to Covent Garden. So they were so angry about the loss of their trade, and they campaigned so much to Charles I, when he was king, that in 1635, he banned taxicabs in the city,
Starting point is 00:48:52 unless they were travelling three miles out of the city. No way, to keep the barges in business. To keep the barges happy. I try to find any notable lighter men. So the closest I found, well, Danny Dyer, who's a quite famous character, his family, he came from a long line of lighter men. Really? Is that right?
Starting point is 00:49:11 That's interesting. That seems classic. But one that I thought was a bit relevant to us was I found that a comedian came from a long line of lighter men, and it was a comedian who was called Malcolm Hardy. And during the boom of alternative comedy in London, particularly, he was a great voice, and he used to open clubs, and they were known as dangerous clubs, because you would have heckles from the audience.
Starting point is 00:49:33 He would heckle the act coming. You know, I don't know about the next act. They might be a bit shit. I think they are. Please welcome to the stage, you know, and then bring to the stage. Cheers, Malcolm. Thank you. So he was an amazing character, and he wasn't a lightsman himself, but he did live on the Thames.
Starting point is 00:49:49 He had a boat that he lived on, and sadly, quite a few years ago, he fell into the Thames and died. But what is interesting about Malcolm Hardy is he's very relevant to us and even the listeners of this show, because he opened up a club in Greenwich called Up the Creek, which is where we do all of our live shows, often in London, and that is the Malcolm Hardy Club. Have you heard of the Trojan barge?
Starting point is 00:50:13 No. No. So this was during the 80 years' war and the Anglo-Spanish war, because they kind of coincided with each other, and it was the city of Brader, and the Dutch and the English were trying to capture it, and the way they did it was with a Trojan barge. There was a canal or a small, like a shallow river that went into the city,
Starting point is 00:50:38 and they had a barge with a load of peat in it, a load of moss. Nice. Nice one for you. And they all hid underneath the peat, and they got into the city and then jumped out and then took the city. That's brilliant. And it was kind of like one of the turning points of that war. Really? Yeah. So wait, when you say that barge with a load of peat,
Starting point is 00:50:56 they didn't put peat on top of the barge and disguise it. They did. They disguised the barge. They hid underneath the... No, no, the barge. Everyone knew it was a barge. Everyone knew it was a barge full of peat, but what they didn't know is that there were soldiers in between the barge and the peat. That's incredible.
Starting point is 00:51:11 And the soldiers used the peat to kind of hide themselves even once they got off the barge, so the people of Brader will be attacked by moss men. This is like the moving forest in my birth base. Yes. You're being attacked by a bunch of peat. That's very tall. That is so cool. But did they have to snorkel through the peat? Because peat, I think, was being very heavy, very dark.
Starting point is 00:51:31 If you're lying with peat, basically buried under peat, that's not good for you. Probably the amount of peat above them wasn't so much that they all suffocated. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, I see that. Yeah, I'm just imagining like a little flat hat that you're kind of wearing. Yeah, but you can't have too little peat, because otherwise they'll see...
Starting point is 00:51:46 Wait, isn't there something under that peat? Probably a golden locks amount of peat that they used, and that was the amount that they used, I think. Brilliant. Well, that's military planning for you. That's my guess, Chris. They actually did do a previous run with another peat barge. So, yeah, they did it with just like one or two soldiers to see if it was going to work,
Starting point is 00:52:03 and it did work, and then the next time they did it properly. That's so funny. What do those soldiers then do once they're in the city, but there are only two of them? Peat, can you peat? Anyone want some peat? Fellow Brader people. I don't have any frame of reference of the 80 Years War.
Starting point is 00:52:18 No, and nor do I in this short paragraph that I've written. But yeah, it was basically the... I think it was just... I'm going to be wrong, but I think it was just before the Glorious Revolution, so I think it's whenever that was. 1688. It's one of those mid-European, mid-century wars.
Starting point is 00:52:35 Yeah, they all merged. The 80 Years War, the 100 Years War, the 27 Years War. They weren't very creative with the names, were they? I've got one more barge I think don't for you. This is actually sent in by a listener. This is sent in by Hannah Watson a while ago. In 2004, there was a sightseeing barge trip happening in Texas, right, on a lake called Lake Travis.
Starting point is 00:52:54 There were 60 people on board. Unfortunately, the barge then passed a place called Hippie Hollow, which contains what was certainly then the only public nude beach in Texas. Every single person on the barge moved to one side of the boat in the hope of seeing somebody naked, and it capsized, and it pissed them all in the water. Beautiful.
Starting point is 00:53:18 OK, that's it. That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening. If you'd like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we have said over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shriverland, James. At James Harkin. Andy.
Starting point is 00:53:31 At Andrew Hunter M. And Anna. You can email podcast at qi.com. That's right, where you can go to our group account, which is at no such thing or a website no such thing as a fish.com. It's got all of our previous episodes up there. It's also got a link to Club Fish, our secret members club,
Starting point is 00:53:45 where you can hear all sorts of bonus content. Do that now. Otherwise, come back here next week. We've got another episode waiting for you. We'll see you then. Goodbye.

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