No Such Thing As A Fish - 495: No Such Thing As A Peanut Hall of Fame
Episode Date: September 7, 2023Dan, James, Andrew and Neil Gaiman discuss bagels, boulders, bees and boldly buttering burnt bread. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. Join Cl...ub Fish for ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at apple.co/nosuchthingasafish or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon
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Hey everybody, Dan and Andy here and we have two very exciting big announcements before
this week show starts.
That's right, the first one is that we are joined by a very special guest this week and
that is the incredible Neil Gaiman.
Yes, Neil Gaiman has done so much stuff, so he's written brilliant novels, he's written
for the screen, never where, American God, Star Dust.
He cover good omens with Terry Pratchett, he's done it all.
That's right and it's not even just the books, you know, the TV work as well. The
Sandman was converted into a show. Dr. Who, his episodes are Dr. Who, is some of the
best episodes of the modern era, and then, of course, Good Omen's comes to Amazon Prime,
and then they do a second series, despite the fact that Terry Pratchett has passed away,
I was quite nervous, it comes out, it is brilliant. So the guy just continues to deliver extraordinary goods
I I've been to day in one go by the way. I don't know if you've seen it Andy. It's it's incredible
And so yeah, we're very excited because what was he gonna talk about this mystical man?
Was it gonna be ghosts? Was it gonna be graveyard?
Was it gonna be the history of Norse gods? What was it gonna be Andy? What was it?
Bagels bagels the man loves bagels and he needed to tell us about it
So that's why it's so exciting because Neil is a thunder nerd just like us anyway
That's announcement one announcement number two Andy the other huge announcement
We've got is that we are going to be doing a live show really soon
We're going to be at the London podcast festival on the 14th of September this year now
It's sold out in the room
But there are still streaming tickets available,
and they're available for a few days after the show,
so if you buy a ticket, you can watch it at your convenience,
and there is a really good reason to buy a streaming ticket.
In fact, there are two reasons.
The first reason is that it's gonna be our 500th show.
We've moved Roman numerals,
but the last one we had was C.
Now we're doing D. This is amazing.
So, that's the first big reason.
And the second big reason is that we have a special guest.
Now, in all the months that we've been having special guests in Santa went on maternity leave,
our guests have been great.
But there's one guest who we've been really excited to get.
And for this show, show 500, our special guest is Anna Teginski.
Yes, she's back.
Yes. We're so excited.
Anna will be joining us live on stage.
So if you want to be part of that party,
as we're surrounded in giant D balloons,
I'm so regretting letting Andy
organize the balloons now,
you can do that by simply heading to
nosuchthingasoffish.com slash live.
You'll find a link to the live stream tickets
for the London Podcast Festival.
That's where we'll be.
If you're a fish cordian, you can chat about it online
with everyone else as it goes out streaming live
and let's make this into a massive party
and a proper return for Annotishinsky.
Yeah, no such thing as a fish.com slash live,
get your tickets now, that's it from us on with the show.
On with Mr. Gaming and his bagels. Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming
to you this week from four undisclosed locations around the globe.
My name is Dan Schreiber and I am sitting here with James Harkin, Andrew Hunter Murray,
and Neil Gaiman.
And once again we have gathered around the microphones with our four favorite facts from
the last seven days.
And in a particular order, here we go.
Starting with fact number one, and that is Neil. My fact is that the bagel in the form that we know it
only ever came to exist through Polish anti-Semitism.
Now I could have gone for something much more sort of easy
to chat about with bagels, like the fact that every year
over 2,000 people are taken to hospital in America alone with
bagel-related injuries.
Neil, I've got to pause you there. I want to know what a bagel-
as in I cannot think of anything less likely to injure me than a bagel.
I feel like I would have to be misusing a bagel in some terrible way in order that I would
need to go to A&E with this.
I can tell you, Andy, it's cutting them open. It's finger cuts from... Oh, go, go.
...and quite often people try and cut them
while they're still frozen.
Oh, I do that sometimes.
I do that. I try and crack it.
Oh, there you go.
There you go.
Oh, yeah.
There was a report, 2008,
bagel-based injuries with the fifth most common injury
by knife reported to hospitals.
I read that, Dan.
But did you see the...
Did you see what the other four were?
Yeah.
What were they?
Okay, so number one was chicken.
Chicken-based.
Chicken-cutting would get you in.
Number two, and I don't know if these are in the right order,
but the other three are potatoes, apples, and onions.
Wow.
And then you get the bagel.
Oh, cheese comes afterwards.
Cheese is very safe to cut.
In America, though, they don't really,
they just have to take it out of the plastic sheet, don't they?
Oh, yeah, out.
There we go, a bit of slinging for our American listeners
about the quality of your cheese.
Nice try.
But apparently it's so prominent that you would have
these bagel-based cuts that someone went in
and said the nurse looked at the cut
and went, were you cutting a bagel?
Because the horizontal cut of the laying down at the bagel
would be, yes, similar to the cut.
These are all way more wholesome than my interpretation
of what you would end up in hospital with a bagel for.
So that's good.
So good.
So sorry, medieval Polish anti-Semitism.
Let's get on to the real medieval Polish anti-Semitism
because the initial way that a bagel was made is it was boiled.
And there were laws enacted in Poland that forbade
Jews from touching bread, baking bread in particular. So when forbidden to bake bread, they made
their bread into essentially rings and started boiling them. And that was where our bagel begins.
I got heavily into bagel making during lockdown,
in the way that one does.
I had my little pot of sourdough fermenting away
in the sideboard, and three times a week,
I would make my bagels, and just started getting into
why you boil them.
Okay, so then boil them water and then they rise, they float to the top and then and only then
do you slam them into the oven? And I'm assuming those original bagels were not even
ovened. I know that there were various sort of laws being enacted and lifted. At one point, there was a very nice Polish princely
bollus love in 1264, who actually pronounced the law,
saying Jews may freely buy and sell and touch
bread like Christians, which was the kind of him.
I think, I mean, when he says like Christians,
I imagine there are still some restrictions on Christians
just touching all the bread they like.
I mean, if I was running a bakery, I would not want people no matter what their creed or denomination to come in and just touch the bread.
Yeah.
I think the theories were like, well, the few various theories that are part of cross, but like one of them is that obviously bread was used for communion by the Catholics.
And so there was a worry that if the Jewish people were touching the bread they might touch communion bread. There was also at one stage the idea was
that Jewish people were poisoning bread basically the anti-Semitism of
the Jewish people are trying to kill us and they're going to do it through our
bread. And the boiling could have been to show that it wasn't poisoned.
You know, if you buy or something, then that shows that there's no poison in there.
So there's one that's one theory as to why they're bailed.
Right. That's so interesting.
Did you guys hear about the Beggill Baker's local 338?
No, it's after a chat line, actually, but it's not.
They were the group of bakers in New York in the early 20th century and they were all Jewish
and if you wanted to get in,
you had to be able to roll 832 bagels in an hour.
That was the what?
What?
What?
What?
I know, they all had the special bagel muscle
on the outside of their elbows,
like just pointed to it on the screen.
You can see mine is not very well developed
but it's like here. So it's just above your elbow. Oh, maybe just below actually. I think
it's the one that's the same as if you opened a lot of bottles of wine. You get an incredibly
strong muscle there. Do you have a person who does that for you Andy, don't you? Yeah, I've
got an incredibly strong shout out to get the Butler muscle, but not the, no, and so they're
like they won't be like crazy unionized. You know No, and so they're like, they're crazy unionized.
You know, they had a really good career,
they're great pay, great benefits.
You could take home 24 free bagels every day,
every individual baker, so you're laughing.
And if they didn't get good contracts,
they would go on strike,
and the city would have a terrible bagel drought.
And then, sadly, bagels started to be machine-made,
and they all put the knobs in.
So when did they actually come up with machine-making Begles?
I think it was the 50s.
Yeah, it was the late 50s.
It was a guy called Daniel Thompson, wasn't it?
And he came up with what he called an apparatus
for making a tour ride.
Oh, nice.
But he did say in his patent that it was specifically
for Begles because people had tried to make bagels using donut machines
But the dough was too thick so it wouldn't work on the donut machines
So this was an improvement and the one of the thing that Daniel Thompson invented this is so random
He invented the first wheeled folding ping pong table
So what two things to give the world like automatic bagels and the folding ping-pong table.
What would you headline with on the headstone?
I'm not sure. Probably the automatic bagel.
I think so.
Yeah. I'd go with the bagel because it's changed more light.
So am I right in saying that a common filling for bagels is something called cream cheese and locks.
Has anyone heard that?
Yeah. You are absolutely.
What's locks?
Smoke salmon.
Yeah, it's smoke salmon.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The really interesting thing about this
is that the word locks hasn't changed in sound
or meaning for 8,000 years.
Wow.
And in the English language,
we think it's the oldest word.
That if you got in a time machine
and you went back 8,000 years,
they wouldn't understand anything that you said apart from if you got in a time machine and you went back 8,000 years, they wouldn't understand anything that you said, apart from if you asked for some locks on your bagels might not have existed then, but if you asked for some locks, they would know what you mean, isn old language that kind of spread out and all the different European and West Asian languages come from.
They work that out by using this word locks because it comes in old Germanic in
All sorts of different languages.
This is bizarre. I have a I have a link to
proto-Indo-European and bagels that is not the locks thing because I was looking up whether where bagel comes from and
bagel comes from a proto-indo-European root,
which is bleg, B-H-E-U-G.
And it means to bend, if something was so,
a bagel is bent into a circle, so there.
And bleg also features in bow,
you know, when you are the verb to bow.
It features in bow, like bow and arrow.
It features in bow, like the bow of a ship, also bent, elbow. Oh, I'm saying. Yeah, and bucksome also is the other word that derives
gradually from boi-g. So when you've got bagels elbow, you're doubling up on the bow
in the script. Yes. Oh, that's lovely. I love the idea that it's 8,000
years ago. You're wandering round, proto-Europe.
And somehow you're able to persuade somebody to give you a roundish piece of bread with smoked salmon on it.
Cream cheese, by the way, the most famous type in Britain at least, and I think probably in America, is made in which city?
Philadelphia. I'm afraid night was invented in New York, but it was named
Philadelphia because the Philadelphia area was so famous for making good dairy products that they
wanted to name it after this area, but it was actually invented in New York. Right. So now you're
saying American cheese is good, James. Interesting about face, you've done all this for a first.
Just very quickly, just while we were talking about the words for Beagle, what's quite surprising
is that up until 1951, Beagle wasn't really a known word outside of the Jewish communities
in the major cities of America. So it was in 1951 that when the New York Times was writing
an article about the strike that was happening, that they actually had to provide a pronunciation
guide to show, so B-A-Y-G-L-E, just that's how this word that you're now reading is pronounced.
Which is quite amazing. My mother, who is 89, whenever the subject of bagels comes up,
as it doesn't as often as you'd expect, always gets a little bit aggrieved, because she's like,
it's not bagel, it's bagel. I-E-I-G-L, and she says, and I know that because my mother's aunt and uncle, Rosie and Mick, owned
the Johnny Isaacs fish and chip shop in the East End.
And outside the fish and chip shop, there was the little old biegal lady and my mother
is still slightly put out about the fact that the pronunciation has gone bagel because all of her childhood,
they were bagels. There's a book on the bagel that was written by a lady called Maria Valenska,
and she finds an old pretzel tin, and it's got a bagel on it as a name. It turns out that there
was a family in Poland called bagel who were part of the Jewish-baking community in pre-Nazi crack-out, and she thinks,
ah, is that where Bigle first originated from as a term?
There is another crack-out linguedly, and this is like the origin of the bagel, because
there's a story that it came from the siege of Vienna in 1683 when the Ottomans were
siege Vienna, and you know, there was to celebrate the victory
and the breaking of that siege probably.
It's not true.
I mean, no, it's not true because at least 70 years
before that in a Jewish crackout,
there was a statutes saying you are allowed
to give bagels to a woman who's given birth.
It was a kind of fertility thing.
It was a kind of, if the woman's given birth,
you'd give her a bagel, give the midwife a bagel,
any women or girls who are present at the birth,
they get a bagel to you get a bagel, you get a bagel.
I think it's cause it's ring shaped.
It's sort of as a fertility thing.
Is it like, what you were thinking
about how you would end up in the emergency room, Sunday?
It's not far away from that place.
It's pretty close. Stop the podcast!
Stop the podcast!
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Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is James. Okay, my fat this week is that it's actually not that bad to spend eternity pushing a boulder up a hill for it only to roll down again every time.
Sure.
That's how I perceive making this podcast.
Yeah, it's not that bad after all. It's like this supposed to be this eternal punishment, and it's kind of fine.
So this is Cicipus, and it's the great Greek mythology story,
pushing a boulder up a hill, but can never make it up
to the top as the punishment.
That's right.
You never hear him complaining, do you?
Or does he?
Mm.
It's definitely a punishment from the gods.
It is a punishment.
Look, this is something that I read, a study called
Idleness of Version and a Need for Justifiable Bizziness,
which was a study from 2010 from the University of Chicago,
University of Shanghai, and a few other places,
which I read about in improbable.com,
run by our friends, that website.
And the idea is that now that humans don't have to spend
their day just trying to survive and run away
from lions and collect food and all that kind of stuff, we need to be kept busy in order to be happy.
And what they did was they did an experiment where people in the room and they had to do a survey
and then at the end of the survey they had to take their paper either to the front of the room
or they had to walk 10 minutes to another place and put
their paper there, right? And in both places they'll get some candy as a thanks for doing the survey.
Now when they did that study most people just went for the box which was right next to them because
why not it's right there. But when they told them that in one of the places it'll be plain chocolate
and the other place it'll be dark chocolate more than 50% of them would start going the 10 minute walk and the 10 minute walk back
rather than just doing the short one and then waiting for everyone to come back from wherever
they've been. So people would rather go and get the candy than sit around idly for 20 minutes waiting.
And the weird thing is no matter what you did, if you put the milk
chocolate in one place and the dark chocolate in another, or you swapped it round, people
still make that walk. And the idea is that people prefer to do something rather than sitting
around doing nothing when they think they're going to get something for their efforts. And
it doesn't matter what the thing is that you think you're going to get for your efforts,
you're going to do something.
Yeah, that's very clever experiment design,
because otherwise it would have turned into a referendum
on which is better playing chocolate or dark chocolate.
That's an unintended consequence, yeah.
And so what they thought was these people who did this study,
and they speculate about it in their paper,
is that people are just happier when they're given something to do,
and the cicifus, which they actually mention in the paper,
the cicifus would be happier rolling the rock up and down the hill,
every, oh, up the hill every single day,
and then it goes to the bottom and he has to do it again
and do it again and do it again.
He would be happier doing that than if he spent
all of eternity just sitting around
twiddling his thumbs, doing nothing.
And that's the idea.
Yeah, I mean, they mention things in the paper
that's written in the science paper
where they say home owners may increase the happiness of their
Iodil housekeepers by letting in some mice and prompting the housekeepers to clean up.
Yeah, I did read that. Yeah, governments may increase the happiness of idle citizens by having them build bridges that are actually useless.
And then they put in practical examples where people have done this, where they've shown that by stopping the idol-ness, that happiness, is hopefully increased, and that's in airports,
and that is extending the distance between getting off
the plane and the baggage carousel,
so that you don't just get straight there,
and then you're idly waiting for the bags to come out.
That's the idea is that at least you're walking
to something and you're using up a time.
Yeah, don't know if that's true.
I think that one is apocryphal, isn't it?
Oh, it's not absolutely nailed on,
because I think the claim is that Houston Airport did that
because they were getting loads of people complaining
because the plane landed a minute
from the baggage carousel and then they had to hang around waiting.
And then when they just switched the arrival gate
and sent the bags so that people had to walk
for the eight minutes basically before the bags got
to the thing, then complaints dropped.
So yeah, Cicifus founded Corinth.
I've been to the hill which he pushed the rock up, supposedly.
Oh, really?
He's on the outskirts of Corinth.
What's so did he complete the gig?
No, but it's like a story, isn't it?
Yeah, it's like a story.
So the people of Corinth say, oh, this is the hill.
Oh, the tall guide says this is the hill which he did it.
Very cool.
So I've disgraced myself as a mythologist
and as somebody who's written books on mythology
and written stories, sent mythological times
and even had Cicifus as a character.
The one place in literature he gets to stop rolling his rock
is when Orpheus goes to the underworld and sings
and I've written that.
And I just realized I've completely forgotten what he did to be punished to do that.
Is he one of the ones who accidentally did he feed the gods his son accidentally?
Was he one of those?
No, it wasn't.
It was Zeus, wasn't it?
Yeah, he tricked Zeus.
I guess he did it to... basically it was a second offense.
I think that was the thing where the gods get really annoyed with you.
So the first thing was that Zeus had run off with a woman and since the first had seen
it happening, he snitched on Zeus. And so Zeus decided, well, I'm going to strike you
down with a thunderbolt. And then he tried to cheat death by chaining death up so that he
couldn't take into the underworld. And then a second time he tried to cheat death by saying that he needed
to go up to see his wife because his wife hadn't done a proper funeral or something.
Yeah, yeah. He'd already instructed his wife. He said to his wife, don't bury me, right?
This is going to be great. And then when he got to Hades, he said, oh, I haven't had
a proper funeral. So I need to go and punish my wife in a range of proper funeral. And
then when he got back, he just reunited with his wife. And they said, well, if you're going to try and stop, you know,
dying and try and stop death in general,
because he tried to stop death for the whole of the world.
They said, well, we're going to make death really, really shitty for you.
I got to say, it's one of the, I think the punishments are really good in Greek myths.
I'd never heard of this one.
This is, um, Oknus.
Have you heard of Oknus?
Maybe, maybe Neil, you've written about ockness.
I don't know.
I don't know.
So ockness is punishment.
I actually don't know what the crime was,
but he had to perpetually weave a rope out of straw.
But no matter how fast he wove the rope,
the rope that he's already woven gets eaten by a donkey.
And I have to say, that sounds like a holiday activity to me.
Yeah.
You just have to weave some rope.
See a thing?
And you're afraid you've got to be friends with a donkey.
Well, it's not having your liver eaten every day.
Is it pecked out of a blyat, or a tangerine?
Yeah.
It's very much like parking a fence level of clandestine.
That's how much you like weaving, isn't it?
Well, that's true.
And there's always a thing, oh, in life he hated weaving.
So actually, yeah, there was his least favorite activity.
And yeah, there was Ixion, who was a murderer, killed his father-in-law, the first
man guilty of Kinslaying in Greek mythology, and he got bound to a burning wheel, and his wheel spun
across the heavens. Oh my goodness, I would say, definitely take the weaving ahead of that.
Exactly, yeah, That's amazing.
I was trying to find out whether or not there are any modern examples of someone trying to push something up a hill
and finding it quite hard.
Last year, 2022, a Colorado man attempted to ascend to the top of a 14,15 foot mountain called Pike's Peak
on his hands and knees while trying to push a peanut to the
top of the hill using his nose. So you can see footage of this. He has a mask on his face
where there's a sort of black spoon that's attached to the front of his nose. He starts
at the bottom, he's got the peanut there, he's brought multiple peanuts because it turns
out he's not the first person to do this. He's the fourth in Colorado
history. The first person to do it was in 1929 and it took three weeks for that person to do,
but squirrels were stealing the peanuts and so the efforts were quite messed up. So he has multiple
peanuts that he took with him on this trip and it took him seven days, but he got there.
But is he going on hands and knees? Yeah, hands and knees. Yeah.
Push.
You're so painful.
Hahaha.
Does he take the peanut back down afterwards?
That feels easier, doesn't it?
Yeah, kicking it down.
Or is there a miniature can of three previous peanuts
that have been there, and he's just adding to it?
Oh, yeah, yeah, like a horse fame.
It does sound like a weirdly so.
There must be more going on in Colorado.
If you're in Colorado and you're listening to this,
please write it and tell us what else there is to do.
I have a couple more boredom things.
So there was a study in 2021 about what people
were willing to do when they are bored
and whether it changes people's perceptions of morality
or what they prepared to do.
This study found that if you ask people
to watch a boring 20 minute long video,
people are more willing to shred maggots in a grinder.
The scientists gave people a few maggots and they even named them.
They called them Totot TV in Kiki and they left people.
They said, look, I'm just going to pop out of the revolver.
You watch this video for 20 minutes.
Here, your Totot TV in Kiki, here's your grinder.
And just have a great time.
No.
Way more people, so it won't everyone.
They must have, sorry Andy, they must have put the idea into their heads that the maggots
can go into the grinder surely.
If you leave someone with a maggot in a grinder, you're only, you can only combine those
things in one way.
And basically, so it wasn't everyone by a long way, but 67 people who watched the very,
very dull video.
Out of how many
So that was the story that was the title 67 people watched this dull video of them 12 dropped a maggot in and there was obviously there was a control group
When they got to watch an interesting documentary
I don't know maybe in Attenborough. Maybe a Theroux doesn't matter
It was just one person out of 62 well it makes it makes a difference, actually, Andy, if they're watching a nature documentary,
then they might feel more empathetic towards the maggots.
True.
But all they might feel empathetic towards the lions,
you know, nature's grinder.
That's it.
Yeah.
Anyway, you will be relieved to hear that no maggots were actually ground up.
It was a fake machine.
Oh, it was a fake grinder.
That's funny.
I've seen one of those before.
In a, I did an escape room where I had to put my hand in a food processor to get the key.
But obviously it was a fake one, but they didn't tell you it was a fake one.
Oh, yeah. So you were willing to grind up your hand for the sake of getting a clue?
I was quite aware that we were in a controlled environment that they wouldn't let me do that.
They wouldn't let me mutilate myself. So I was fairly certain that if there was a real
food processor there, someone would come over the time I say, don't do that.
Yeah, you mean an awful lot of one-handed men around here with equally as certain?
I've done an escape room with you James, it doesn't surprise me in the least that you
would be willing to risk serious physical injury to get a personal best.
It's true.
Here's an interesting thing that I've been reading about and I don't know it is quite complicated so let's see where it goes.
But I was reading about neuroscience and there is a theory in neuroscience at the moment that the human brain is only built to solve one problem.
Oh, what is the best way to cut into this bagel?
That would be more.
Yeah, what am I going to eat?
What am I going to eat next?
Yeah, I see what you mean.
Yeah, I think all of these could be subcategories
of what these neurons scientists are saying.
They reckon that your brain is created
to make sure you don't have any surprises in your life.
Oh, yeah.
And basically everything you do,
everything that your brain does
is trying to stop that from happening.
And that's the reason why people like routine
because they know that there's not gonna be any surprises
and it'll be the same all the time.
But it also in theory explains people being curious
and people inventing new things
because what you're doing is you're slightly pushing
the boundaries so you can test it and so that your brain doesn't get surprised if
anything beyond those boundaries happens. And I just find that a really
interesting idea that you know this incredibly complicated thing in your head
is only really trying to do one thing but it just everything else feeds from
that. I feel like true. What about... I mean I feel like I like to be surprised by works of art, like a book or a film.
I will like a surprise. But to be fair, I only like a surprise within certain parameters.
So if I'm going to see Mission Impossible 7, there is a set number of things which I'm prepared to adore,
but if they introduce like a time travel, I will I will be unpleasantly surprised by that. It's like the idea that what you want
when you're seeing a film is for it all
to end in the way that you wanted it to,
but not in the way you were expecting.
That's nice.
Yeah.
You need surprise parameters,
because at the moment where you can literally call off
every beat in a film by the numbers,
you start looking around for maggots to grind.
Well, whenever I watch an episode of the Big Bang Theory, the maggot toll is absolutely
astronomical by the end of the 20 minutes.
Wow, it's been a while since you had a big bang theory, Andy.
That's a call back.
I'm trying to surprise our listeners, but within people, they're by limited range of references.
And that's one.
That's half our listeners you've just offended.
I was on the Big Bang though.
I was a guest star.
I played you.
Oh wow.
I didn't mean that episode.
Obviously.
That's the one when no maggots went
were hard in the watching of this episode.
What were you doing on it?
It was an episode about a comet
and it begins with the gang up on the roof looking at the stars
and one of them gets a note saying,
oh my god, Neil Gaiman was in my shop
and he tweeted about it
and they're also vaguely baffled
because obviously they would have known
and then you cut to me in the shop
trying to join their conversation and being rudely rebuffed in itself.
It's kind of fun.
I like, I now have this sort of peculiar tiny career playing versions of Neil Gaiman
in shows of which the best one of all is still The Simpsons because I got to be an evil, murdering book thief who couldn't even
turn that, couldn't even read and who poisoned somebody in the final moment. So it was kind
of, kind of, I like him best.
Okay, it is time for fact number three and that is Andy My fact is that beekeeping was only legalized in Minneapolis in 2009
I knew this
I knew this because I was a beekeeper a
Little way out of Minneapolis. I lived at the time in little town and hours drive from Minneapolis and I would have
sad in little town, an hours drive from Minneapolis and I would have sad, nervous,
Minneapolis, I'm over to my house and gaze longingly at my bees in this way.
Right, you weren't in the band zone. You were far enough out of this. I was far enough out.
I was far enough away that my bees were entirely legal bees. What would happen
Neil? What would happen if your bees flew over the state lines as it were into anti-B territory?
Great point. I think nobody would actually have put little trackers on them to find out.
But actually I believe bees have a maximum five mile radius. So I think my bees would have been okay
Unless I decided to drive them to Minneapolis for a day out. Come on bees. We're gonna see the world
I will show you the sights of Minneapolis. I'll show you many apples and poor airpour
I will show you all these exciting things
Yeah, it was really strict. I think it was because it was an urban environment basically
It was saying you know you look this is a builtup area. You can't have just hundreds of thousands of
pieces around the place. Yeah. And even when they legalised it, you had to get permission from
80% of property owners within 250 feet of your home. That's a lot.
If you live somewhere with apartments, you could, you might have to ask a hundred different
people's permission. Yeah. And, you know, get 80 of them to sign off on it. I think it's slightly loosened up a bit.
I suppose if you live in an apartment in a tower block,
you probably don't have much room for bees anyway.
No, I think that's true.
And I thought, also, it's a bit, it might be a bit cruel
if you don't have the flowers, the flower space.
Because you can't just keep bees in a, you know,
in a box.
You can keep them in a box.
Well, I mean, you do keep them in a box.
Sorry.
You have to.
In fact, that's kind of the rule.
I was reading about Utah, the Beehive State.
Oh.
And in Utah, it is illegal to keep bees
unless you have government permission.
You need a license basically.
So just not any old person can have bees in Utah, either.
But the State emblem is the Beehive. You might have seen it on the Utah flags and stuff is like that sort of
It's like skip is that one is called a skips. It's a cool a skip. They were made of woven
Straw they'd weave straw together and circle it and that was what bees were in until mr. Langstroth came along and
and that was what bees were in until Mr. Langstreuth came along and invented the modern hive. Yeah and these modern hives they have like things that you can pull out, is that right?
They do. The biggest problem with the initial bee skips was that you had to destroy the
skip to get to the honey. So they didn't have openings and what Langstreuth came up with was
So they didn't have openings and what Langstrath came up with was hives with removable slats, exploiting the concept of bee space.
Okay, so bee space.
Can I just be boring for a moment?
I love bee space.
And the Puthas maggots away.
So the way that bees work is bees are kind of like people in rooms. If a bee sees something
that is room size for a bee, which is to say more than twice the size of a bee, or twice the
size of one bee climbing over another bee, it will try and fill it with comb. If it sees something much smaller, it will seal it off. However, if you get your
bee space right, a bee will regard your bee space as a corridor and not build comb and so
on and so forth. So Langstras genius was to figure out bee space, figure out the exact size and shape of one of these...
That was pretty cool.
...heives that you put the slats in.
But it was basically unpatentable.
The moment he had discovered it and figured it out, every farmer with nails and a tape measure
could build their own heives.
And so his discovery caught on immediately and hugely, but he was not a happy man.
Yeah, he seemed an interesting guy. So he was a he was a pastor and he was going over to one of his
parish members and he noticed that they had a bowl of comb honey and he thought, wow, this is pretty
tasty. This is pretty amazing. He said, where'd you get it from? And he was led to the attic where
he was shown near an open window. There was a hive there and he just immediately went, this is what I want to be doing, this makes me happy
because he was suffering from abouts the depression. That's quotes from him saying that he would ask for his books to be hidden away from him
because even the letter B, seeing the letter B would just make him
miss his own Bs and go into a sadness while he couldn't leave the house. Yeah. So he was he was deeply troubled.
But I mean, happy Earth Day to you.
But quite extraordinary character when you read into a story.
And those those hives now, a lot of states you have to use those, don't you?
You can't use the old steps.
You have to use these ones.
So I'm thinking of the like the filing cabinet where you're hanging cabinet where you
yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
First, that beehive all the filing cabinet, because I feel like they've knicked from each
other. One is based on the other surely.
Interesting.
I don't know that actually filing cabinet early 20th century.
I know. I mean, these beehives sound like they were early 20th century.
Yeah, 1851 is one of the cabinets.
Oh, I think maybe it's first.
Yeah.
Wow. So maybe the filing cabinet has borrowed from nature's filing cabinet.
Which is not nature's because it was invented by a human.
Yes, yes. Well, that in itself is thought provoking, I think.
Invented by a human, but exploiting this 60 million year old insect who is astounding. Yeah, that's so cool. Astounding, you know, I mean things like the use of the hexagon because it's the most efficient use of wax and stuff.
I get all excited about bees.
Did you get stung much?
Obviously I'm sure you had all the beekeeping kit when you were doing it.
I got stung about four or five times during the course of the six or seven years that I was active and beekeeping.
I just kind of liked that. I felt like everybody should have a hobby that could kill them.
And mostly it would be my own fault. And it got a little more stressful.
One day I got stung and all of a sudden my hand blew up like an inflated
rubber glove and my breathing went to one key. Oh, this is that, this is that anaphylactic
shock thing. This is actually, it's now happening, it's been primed. So I had to go and buy
epic pens for some keykeeping just in case, but did not get done after that. Very recently, a beekeeper who had a very distinguished job of looking after the Queen's bees
was given the task of having to tell the bees that the Queen had died.
And this is an old tradition of when there's a notable death within a family that owns
hives, that the bees need to be informed and you need to
put Black Ribbon on the outside of the hive and so on in order to show that there's morning.
But so the queen has had for the last 15 years of her life, John Chappell, who was the official
palace beekeeper, and that was his job to do, except for some reason he had no idea that that was a tradition.
So on the day that the queen passes away, an email pings up in his email, box saying from
the head gardener, have you told the bees?
And he must have thought I was in very part A, such a joke.
Exactly.
But so he just, he had to go around and he had to tell the bees, he had to say the line,
the mistress is dead,
but don't you go, your master will be a good master to you.
And that was how he broke the news to the Queen's bees
that she was gone.
It was a tradition.
You tell the bees not just of deaths,
but important family news.
There's even a Kipling poem about it.
Right.
Did you tell the bees stuff, Neil?
Did you just pop down and was there a benchmark of the kind of news that you would impart
and then stuffy?
Are they won't be interested?
There's two small, smaller deals.
You know, I would never tell them to sort of casual internet gossip because I figure bees
are above that kind of thing.
I would tell you know, I love the idea of being part of the beekeeper tradition.
So there were definitely a couple of times when I would tell
bees things. And I just go down to the hives and say, right, my son is engaged. Can I just quickly
say one or two things that are illegal in Minneapolis? So I've checked this for sure. I've checked
in the code, this definitely exists in Minnesota law. so this is the whole of the state of Minnesota.
No person shall operate, run, or participate in a contest
game or other like activity in which a pig greased, oiled,
or otherwise is released.
And wherein the object is the capture of the pig,
or in which a chicken or turkey is released or thrown into the air, and wherein the objects is the capture of the pig, or in which a chicken or turkey is released or
thrown into the air, and wherein the object is to capture the chicken or the turkey.
Some laws, it feels like some laws are made out of basic principles, right? Like stealing
or murdering or whatever. It feels like some laws are created in response to specific incidents
which have gone badly wrong. And you're saying this might be the latter. I think it might be. Yeah.
Yeah. So pig, greased pig chasing is explicitly illegal in Minnesota. And if you go on the
internet, you'll see a lot of people saying that it's illegal to cross the Minnesota
Wisconsin border with a duck on your head. Okay. And apparently this isn't true. And
it's because there was a thing called cotton duck
and cotton duck was the type of woven cotton fabric
which comes from the Dutch for linen which is duck
and cotton duck is a specific thing
and you weren't allowed to cross the border with that
because it was, you know,
they were trying to help the cotton makers
and so they said you couldn't do that
but people mistuck it to think
that you couldn't cross the border with a duck on your head.
I love those sort of industry specific things.
I remember talking to old people in Wisconsin while I was out there and they were saying that
when they were young, marjorine could not be yellow.
They were local laws that only butter was allowed to be yellow. There were local laws that only butter was allowed to be yellow, but that they would
sell margarine, and I don't know if this is strong enough, they would sell margarine with
little yellow coloring things so you could mix it together and have a yellowish thing to
put on your bread. That's so funny. Yeah, because they wanted to protect the butter makers
in Wisconsin, right?
And that's how they did it.
Because I think Marjorine comes from the Greek for pearl,
like the name Margaret does, because it had to be pearl-colored
in the olden days.
That is very cool.
I didn't know that.
Me neither.
I can also tell you that it's no longer illegal
to have a dirty, threshing machine
or to impersonate
a straw inspector in Minnesota, but that they have been through in the last 100 years.
Oh, impersonate a straw inspector. Finally, comedy clubs around Minnesota.
With the classic straw inspector impersonations. Thank God. It's a language learning app. And now, genuinely, whenever I go, anyway, if I get a France or Italy,
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And I will just spend a couple of weeks
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And I just love immersing myself in that language.
Babel makes it very easy to do.
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Okay, back to the show.
On with the fucker.
[♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
OK, it is time for a final fact of the show,
and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that the author Douglas Adams
once put his back out while buttering a slice of bread.
This is a fact that comes directly from the creator of QI and is a friend of Neil Gaimons, Mr. John Lloyd.
He, a long time ago, wrote the forward to a biography of Douglas Adams by guy called MJ Simpson,
and in the forward he just talks about his sort of day-to-day life, and famously within the
circle of friends, he was always mocked for the fact of once putting his back out.
So, do we know was he really buttering the bread in extremely ostentatious way or something?
Oh, heavy knife, thick cold butter. Oh yeah. It was just literally, he was just standing there, probably whistling.
I don't know, Neil, have you got any insight?
Douglas was gloriously accident prone.
I remember him once telling me about breaking his nose with his own knee,
playing rugby, I think, as a small boy,
about the time he first bought a fancy car with hitchhiker money,
he bought a Porsche
and on the way home from the showroom, going round Marble Arch, he managed to total his Porsche.
And I remember once turning up at some incredibly fancy event,
four Hitchhikers, it had sold a million copies or something like that.
And his publisher, Pan, presented
Douglas very proudly with a book on mushrooms. And I said, Douglas, why are you now holding
a huge book on mushrooms? And it turned out that he'd gone to France for a gastronomic thing
the week before. And on day one had eaten the kind of mushroom that you were not meant to eat and
had not eaten anything else for the following five days.
I once read there, if you go to France and you go to any pharmacist, they can tell you
if a mushroom is poisonous or not.
No.
As in they're all trained for it.
That's why I read once.
I've never tried it.
We must try it.
We must all try it. We must gather mushrooms
and march into French pharmacies. In American pharmacies, I'm not completely convinced they
will be able to identify it as a mushroom. What is that thing? So you, I mean, we should just
quickly say that Neil, you wrote a biography on Douglas Adams. You knew him, right? It was your
I think second book that you'd written,
nonfiction book called Don't Panic.
I did.
It was called Don't Panic.
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Companion.
And it also contained a lot of biographical stuff
about Douglas, because there's only so much
you can say about Hitchhikers.
And I got to know Douglas relatively well,
but always from a sort of position of your fancy author
and I am a small journalist who first interviewed you
when he was 22.
So he was definitely the grownup.
He was so impressive to me.
He had all of these amazing careers,
like being a bodyguard for the Saudi royal family.
I said, what did that job
been tale? He said, well, basically it entailed standing
around in a hotel corridor going out occasionally to bring back
enormous quantities of McDonald's and planning to run away
if anybody with a gun.
Sure.
Oh, I found a kind of related fact on that, which is so hitchhiker's go was turned into a TV series, wasn't it?
Quite soon after it was already a series and then a book, it was a telly series.
And one of the guys who plays a bodyguard in the TV series of hitchhikers is Dave Prouse, aka Darth Vader.
No, really? He's in it. Yeah. Wow.
I have no idea if it's a speaking role or not. It's been a long time since I saw the series, but that's so interesting
It's not I know. So was Douglas Adams very tall Neil. That's why I read about he was he was very tall
He was about six foot five six foot six ish. I remember him saying that when he discovered how tall
John Cleese and Graham Chapman were he decided that he had all the qualifications necessary
John Cleese and Graham Chapman were, he decided that he had all the qualifications necessary for comedy. The reason I ask is because tall people are very susceptible to back injuries. That's why I was
reading it. There's a few like mechanical reasons for that, but one of the reasons is basically the
world is just made for averagely-hited people, and so they always have to squeeze themselves into
various places. But I read that he was six feet tall by the time he was 12 years old, Douglas Adams.
And that would be only three inches shorter than the record tallest 12-year-old in the UK.
That's so cool.
Did you find the trousers shorts thing James?
No, I was.
This is great.
So he was at school.
He was in shorts like all the rest of the boys in his year.
And I think there was a point where he was going to go up to being able to wear trousers all the rest of the boys in his year and I think there was a
point where he was going to go up to being able to wear trousers with the rest of his year
but unfortunately at exactly the year that everyone went to trousers he discovered his school
tailor had no trousers in his size because he was so much taller than everyone else that
they just couldn't fit him so for this key four weeks of his life he was the only boy in his year
wearing shorts and that obviously is psychologically scarring,
especially if you're so much taller than everyone else.
I can't believe he had a school tailor.
In my school, they used to just set fire
to the bottom of your trousers.
I know, it does say something about...
Do you remember, there's a bit of QI,
isn't there, where Stephen talks about his school...
Perhaps school tailor being called Gorinch.
Yes, sir.
That's right.
Has it run with Gorinch? Yeah, sir. That's right. Has it run with our age?
Yeah, yeah.
I was looking in today.
I thought I knew quite a lot about
so that the cultural impact that hitchhikers had on the world.
And there was so many elements of hitchhikers
that you'll find in pop culture.
So Radiohead had a song which was called Paranoid Android,
which was named after Marv and the Paranoid Android.
You had the fact that the 42 is just the answer
to the meaning of life question.
People know that sort of generally,
but I didn't realize that things like in the X-Files,
Fox and Boulder lived in apartment 42,
which Chris Carter said was a direct nod to hitchhikers.
You've got Coldplay, who's very first song
on their debut album was called Don't Panic.
And they also have a song called 42, which again is a direct link.
The Allen Telescope Array, which is a telescope which is looking for extraterrestrial intelligence,
the antenna has 42 antennas paying tribute, like it really is.
It's seeded everywhere.
They must have been going for around 40.
They weren't going to have to and thought, well, let's add another 40 just to make it the right number. That's true. Absolutely. Yeah.
I love the way that hitchhikers has kind of weirdly penetrated the culture, but I also love
that those little bits of hitchhikers that have changed with time. There's that line in the opening
of hitchhikers about how human beings were so primitive
that they thought that digital watches were a pretty neat thing.
And in 1978, how we thought that digital watches were a neat thing?
We thought that digital watches were miracles.
We had the power of science suddenly appearing on our wrist and it had numbers.
These still things, I think.
Sorry, I just want to say that a watch that functions
on a wafer of silicon is amazing,
that it counts the, you know, how many passes.
Yeah, the piece of electric effect,
Tandy.
That's what I'm saying.
I mean, yeah, sure, the Swiss guys can make them,
the cogs very small, but that's not the same
as vibrating silicon.
I mean, I think actually, I think it was a red Miss Fire for silicate. I mean, I think actually I think it was a red missfire for Adam's.
And I think, I think I should be calling it out.
Can I tell you guys about the, so obviously Hitchhike was his first book and he'd amazingly
become friends with all five members of Monty Python.
And you know, he'd even appeared in the later series of Python as a couple of times.
And wrote for it.
He was one of the...
And wrote for it.
And he was only a few years out of school at an university.
It was amazingly fast to be meeting kind of comedy giants like that.
Anyway, on his first book, he got quotes from all five of the main members of Monty Python.
John Cleese said, really entertaining and fun. Terry Jones then said,
much funnier than anything John Cleese has ever written.
Graham Chapman then said, I know for a fact that John Cleese hasn't read it. Eric Eidler wrote, who is John Cleese has ever written. Grown Chapman then said, I know for a fact that John Cleese
hasn't read it. Eric Eidl wrote, who is John Cleese?
And then Michael Paylon wrote, really entertaining and fun.
So good. That's really good. I was reading through the Oxford
English dictionary to see if Douglas Adams has been the first
citation of any words. And as far as I can see there is only one word
that he was the first person to ever say according to the OED of course which is you know
that it's just what they found do you want to have a guess or yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah
first of all I can tell you won't guess but you can have a go anyway is it Sloddy Bartfast?
that's not a prediction name yeah yeah Golga Frinchian isn't going to be in there
anyway. A fruit. A fruit is a word from Hitchhiker's. A fruit? A toopy? A toopy? A toopy? Yeah.
Oh yeah. No. It's actually not from Hitchhiker's, it's from a comic relief Christmas book that he wrote
in 1996 and the word is Todger. Oh, yeah. He's the first person in print to use the word toger according to the OED. Wow.
And before that, the word was toger. People used to refer to their penises as togers,
possibly in northern dialects for like a tadpole or something, but he was the one who turned it from
toger to toger. One of the amazing if one day all of his legacy is forgotten,
all his books and just the one citation sitting in the dictionary.
It's all we know him for.
But the Tadja guy, that will one day happen.
There's one thing, one of the big mysteries of Douglas's career
for a lot of people is what is behind the number 42?
How did he come to the number?
I remember John Lloyd sort of saying that
they were in a garage together and they were just going, oh what number should we use? But supposedly
Stephen Fry says that he's the only person that Douglas ever told what the meaning was to and
he's going to take it to his grave. He's never going to say what it is. So there was a kind of
meaning behind it. But 42 would always pop up in interesting places, and before Douglas passed away, the Hubble telescope was trying to find the defining parameter of the expanding universe,
and it got identified as 42.
And for Douglas, that was just like, ah, look at this synchronicity that I've managed to come up with this number,
which is the speed of the expanding universe.
So that's the only time that we've got a sort of hint of Douglas's interest in it having meaning. But otherwise, no one knows. But I wonder if a drunken evening between you
and Stephen Neal has led to the reveal. I've never heard anything from Stephen. I remember
asking Douglas my theory. When I was a 22-year-old asking him for the first time, I suggested
that it might have been from Alice in Wonderland's Rule 42, all persons more than two miles high, as leave the court.
And Douglas talked about how traumatized he was by Alice in Wonderland and how terrifying
he found it when he read it.
But what Douglas said to me was that he was trying to find a number that didn't sound funny.
Preset it, not terribly interesting.
37 sounds like it's the kind of number that has interesting things going on.
42, it's not prime, it's not even an odd number.
It wasn't interesting.
It didn't have anything about it that was interesting.
Because I think he tried a few in the 40s
and settled on 42 as a punchline.
It's a punchline to the answer to the great question
of life, the universe and everything is
and the computer has been cogitating on this for millennia.
And now it gives the answer and the answer is 42 and it needed to be a letdown
in every way to be funny.
It 121 sounds like there's something going on with it.
42 is I thought, what?
That's not the answer.
But then the universe is a wonderful place and it accommodates us and once 42 was let loose
in the universe, I'm sure the universe has been running with it
ever since.
Okay, that is 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've said over
the course of this podcast, we can all be found on our Twitter accounts.
I'm on at Shriberland, Andy, at Andrew Hunter M. James, at James Harkin and Neil.
I'm at Neil himself, but I'm on Twitter less and less and less.
So I'm probably much more likely to be Neil himself at Threds or Neil Dash game and at Tumblr.
Or over at Blue Sky as soon as the rest of the world gets their invitations and it becomes a giant party.
Nice, okay, yeah, all right, well let's all head over to that party with Neil and you can get us otherwise on at no such thing or you can go to our Instagram account, which is no such thing as a fish,
or you can go to our website, nosuchthingasoffish.com, all of our previous episodes are up there, but most importantly, make sure you head over
to Amazon Prime because the return of Good Omen's
is here.
Good Omen's too, written by Neil Gaiman himself.
Make sure to check out that entire series.
I've heard previews response.
It sounds absolutely incredible.
So really exciting, do watch that.
And otherwise come back next week for another episode
with us.
We'll see you then, goodbye.