No Such Thing As A Fish - 537: No Such Thing As The Notorious British Institute of Graphologists

Episode Date: June 27, 2024

Dan, James, Anna and Andrew discuss squashing, scribbling, sun spots and sea snooker. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. Join Club Fish for ad-fr...ee episodes and exclusive bonus content at apple.co/nosuchthingasafish or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi everyone, welcome to this week's episode of No Such Thing As A Fish. Before we start, a little bit of news that is very important to Anna and I and that is that our new book is finally out in paperback. Woohoo! I know that might not seem like a big deal to you, but honestly this is a real chance for us to get more people Reading this book one very interesting thing to say is that the book has had a name change What used to be called everything to play for is now called a load of old balls the QI history of sports By James Harkin and Anna Tyshinsky a lot of people have said to us, why did you not call it that in the first place?
Starting point is 00:00:46 I'm not sure if they're being rude, I hope not, because it is a book full of the most interesting facts and stories about sport you can possibly imagine. Even if you're not into sport, probably this summer you will notice that everyone's off watching the Euros, everyone's off watching the Olympics. Perhaps you don't really have much to say to those people when it comes up at a dinner party,
Starting point is 00:01:08 well read our book and you will be the pinnacle of all sporting knowledge and all quite interesting sporting knowledge at that. As you imagine from me and Anna, it's just full of silly stories, fun facts. We spent so much time doing loads of in-depth research in there that even if you are the kind of person who's watching every single sporting event this summer, there will be loads of stuff in there that you didn't know. So if you go to anywhere where you would normally buy your books, then look for a load of old balls, the QI History of Sport, or search for our names, James Harkin and Anna Tyshinsky, and you will find that book. Please do buy it, it would mean the world to us if you did. Of course we're going on tour, don't forget that. People in Scotland, Wales, England, Ireland, New Zealand, Australia do get your tickets very very soon, a lot of them are sold out. I know we've got quite a few tickets left for the Scottish dates in Edinburgh and Glasgow and I think quite a few for the show in Cardiff so if you're in any of those cities then do get your tickets but actually you know go to no such things
Starting point is 00:02:12 a fish.com forward slash live and you will see all of the dates where we're playing and hopefully one of them will be near you. Okay not much more to say apart from on with the podcast! Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from the QI offices in Hoburn. My name is Dan Shriver, I'm sitting here with Andrew Hunter Murray, Anna Tyshinsky, and James Harkin. And once again, we have gathered around the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days. And in no particular order, here we go.
Starting point is 00:03:04 Starting with fact number one, and that is my fact. My fact this week is that snooker games on cruise ships are sometimes played with flat balls. Are we talking about the balls on the table or the... The men playing. Yeah. This is, this is obvious when you think about it. Oh, it's so obvious. It's so obvious when you think about it. I don't really know how you could place an uke on a cruise ship with a ball-shaped ball Actually well on a rough cruise ship
Starting point is 00:03:30 We'll get to that in a sec because I can and there's a pretty awesome way that you do that But this I got from a book that's written by an Australian comedian called hung Lee. It's called the crappiest refugee He tells the story of from immigrant boat to cruise ship comedian. Anyway, he wrote this book and inside the book, uh, he mentions that he's seeing a bunch of guys playing on a pool table or snooker table and they are hitting with puck like objects because obviously in the rough seas, the balls are going to be rolling around. And so there will be cruise ships out there that have these tables on them. And the idea I think is like, you know, air hockey. Yeah. It's those kind of like puck things, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:04:06 Exactly. Now to your point, Anna, a modern day cruise ship does have pool tables or snooker tables, billiards, but they use gyroscopic technology. So it's amazing. It's honestly, I've watched videos of it online. It's so cool because basically,
Starting point is 00:04:21 while the rest of the ship is moving, the pool table isn't. That's insane. It's just the top of the pool table. That's a high end, that moving the pool table isn't. That's insane. The top of the pool table. That's a high end crew ship. It's insane. It is incredible. I've read stories of people finding it so fascinating that like staring to fire,
Starting point is 00:04:34 sometimes people will just go and sit and watch it as it doesn't sway. There's even stories of crew members that when they get particularly sick, they'll go and sleep on the pool table. No. Because the seasickness is getting to them. It's not moving. So you can have a restful night. That's a question.
Starting point is 00:04:48 Why isn't every bed on a boat gyroscopic? Probably price. How good is the correction mechanism? Like if you have a Titanic situation, how long can you continue with your game of snooker? So it goes vertical. Yeah, exactly. I see that.
Starting point is 00:05:02 So I met someone who was a dancer on cruise ships. Oh yeah. This sounds like a good anecdote. She did the musicals because they often have a theater on board and sometimes a show. And she said that the most difficult one she'd ever done was starlight express where you're on roller skates. She said in rough weather you would set off across the stage and you didn't know how soon you were going to arrive. Cause it might be that you caught The ship moved with you and suddenly you're there Or you're going against it and you just roll backwards
Starting point is 00:05:37 So yes, Nuka, it's a good sport mostly not played at sea largely It's a lot. It's a land-based game. Isn't it a land lovers game? I did watch a tik-tok yesterday just coincidentally of people playing on the beach. That looked really cool. Snooker? It was cool actually, but they kind of dug holes for the pockets and then we just hit the balls. They played on actual sand? Yeah, yeah. There's no facts to this, but it did look pretty cool. I'm amazed that Snooker in any form has made it to TikTok, because Snooker is famously quite a long game to watch. TikTok is not a long format.
Starting point is 00:06:02 Andy, honestly, if you could see my TikTok, it's just snooker, golf, cricket. It's the dullest TikTok because it just suggests things that you like, doesn't it? And it just works out what you like. I reckon if you were on TikTok, which I bet you're not, but you would just get moss video after moss video. Yeah, that sounds very calming. It's amazing how it works. Yeah. But it is very slow, isn't it? As in, or rather, it takes a long time. You play lots of frames in the course of a match.
Starting point is 00:06:28 And it's interesting, because for anyone who doesn't follow Snuka, only one person is playing at a time. That's weird. Well, you play a frame, right? Well, no, you play until you mess up. Yeah. And then the other guy gets to have a go.
Starting point is 00:06:40 Yeah. But whoever your opponent is, they have to stay in their chair. Yeah. They just stay in their chair watching you, and you could be playing for hours if you don't make a go. But whoever your opponent is, they have to stay in their chair. They just stay in their chair watching you and you could be playing for hours if you don't make a mistake. It's just psychological torture. Are there any other games which are like that where, I know tennis you're only playing when your opponent is not playing. But usually it's quite soon before you're playing again. I don't know actually, but that is one of the
Starting point is 00:07:01 main things about snooker is the psychological angle of it. Although Ronnie O'Sullivan said he likes it, obviously, because he's always going to be... Who's Ronny O'Sullivan? I think he's a famous snooker player. I would say Ronny O'Sullivan and Don Bradman are the only two people, I don't know what James thinks about this, but who have excelled everyone else so much in their sport that it's like, whoa. So Ronny O'Sullivan is the best Nuka player ever. And he hates the fact that it's so slow, for instance, because he's this mercurial, crazy character with an amazing history. And he
Starting point is 00:07:32 likes Nuka to be super fast. So I think he's got pretty much all the records for fastest break. But yeah, he's amazing. And he's got such an interesting history. His dad went to prison for murder when I think Ronnie was about 16. Yeah, he was a millionaire though. So even though his dad went to prison for murder when I think Ronnie was about 16. Yeah, he was a millionaire though. So even though his dad went to prison for murder, he was from a very affluent background because his dad ran a lingerie shop or something like that. I believe he may have called them lingerie shops in the newspaper as well. I think they were sex shops. I mean, potatoes, potatoes. You say potato, I say vibrator. Yeah, so I think some of the other Snooker players who came from less affluent backgrounds kind of point to that and say, you know, we're working class,
Starting point is 00:08:15 but Ronnie actually was quite rich when he was growing up. Interesting, because it was heavily embedded probably in that gang culture a bit. It was one of the Cray Brothers, the third Cray Brothers driver who he murdered in a nightclub I think. Oh sorry the third Cray brother? Yeah. I didn't know there was a third Cray brother. You hear about the Cray twins? I know he was very much the um... It's like the third Chuckle brother. Yeah he and the third Cray brother must have like given each other a wry look sometimes across the East End clubs. They both have that picture of Bramwell Bronte in their house. That's so neat. Imagine a joke that has the craze the chuckle brothers and well Bronte.
Starting point is 00:08:50 We got the Jonas Brothers as well. They've got the extra brother who's called bonus Jonas, who is the one that just isn't in the band and does his own thing. Bonus Jonas. Snooker's got fairly sort of poshish sort of foundations, doesn't it? Because it was invented by supposedly, this is the big story, by Neville Chamberlain, not the Prime Minister, but apparently a cousin. The reports are a bit dodgy, but apparently he was in India in the 1800s, and he basically incorporated two existing games. There was one called Blackpool, and there was another which was called Pyramid. And so one was played entirely with red ballspool and there was another which was called Pyramid.
Starting point is 00:09:25 And so one was played entirely with red balls and that was in a pyramid shape. So he goes I would love the pyramid shape. And then the other one had all the other colour balls in it and he brought that over, smashed them into one big game with the pyramid and then just kept yelling snooker at people as they were playing. And by the end of the game, he'd called everyone snooker and so it stuck. Why did you call someone? What did it mean? Did it mean dickhead? I think it was a sort of term for an idiot, someone who was incompetent at whatever task they were doing, a rookie. I see. It is weird though because he said he invented it in 1875, he only said that in 1938, which is a substantial amount of time later, that's what. Yeah. 63 years
Starting point is 00:10:02 later. Yeah. 63 years later and he was an army officer already when he invented this So he must be knocking on but the claim was accepted and I think It's sort of widely accepted that that's that's where that is where it comes from Yeah but also the other weird thing about snooker that name thing you were saying Dan is so if you snooker someone is it that I Need to hit a rednecks, but I'm behind the yellow or whatever precisely. So That is unusual as well because it's a it's a move in the game where you've messed things up for someone else.
Starting point is 00:10:29 Which is, isn't croquet like that? It's a bit like that. You croquet and croquet someone. I think there is a connection between croquet and snooker really. I think snooker kind of grew out of croquet like games. And that's why the table's green, because it was originally played on grass. The bays, which has to have, do you know the difference between the bays
Starting point is 00:10:53 in snooker and pool? I got a bit too into table makeup, actually. Is it the nap? Yeah, I was gonna almost disqualify you from answering this question, James. Full disclosure, I am very much into snooker. You're not allowed to answer any more quiz questions in this section.
Starting point is 00:11:09 What's the nap? So the nap is the way that the kind of hairs on the substance that the table's made of bend. So basically in snooker, you have to have a nap. And that means that it's a little bit like, if you imagine a velvet surface, in fact, if you look at those cushions over there. I'm having a nap listening to this explanation.
Starting point is 00:11:25 LAUGHTER Andy, this is fascinating stuff. Sorry, sorry, go on, go on. OK. You look at those cushions over there, they're velvety. You stroke them one way and they look smooth. You stroke them the other way and they look rough. Oh, OK, yeah. And that's like a snooker table. It has to have that effect. And it really affects how the ball travels,
Starting point is 00:11:40 because as you can imagine, if the little hairs, fibres are standing up a certain way, and depending on the angle at which it's hitting them you really have to work with the nap. So if you aim for a shot in the middle pocket you have to aim slightly outside the pocket because the nap will make it naturally bend towards the pocket. That's so interesting so part of the gameplay is literally getting your face close to the table and seeing how the nap is looking? No it's always the same. Yeah it's always the. Well, I actually read in a really furious blog that a man who has heard of people who install their own tables putting the nap on back to front, which is obviously an absolute disaster. Doesn't it just go the other way then?
Starting point is 00:12:13 Or do you mean upside down? No, I think he means it goes the other way. So it will go slow and it should go fast. But you would be used to it. Like you would be very much used to it being one way. I got a question. Are you allowed to comb the table before your pot shot? Before every frame, before every frame? Yeah, probably someone will come on and give the table a quick comb. And also you are allowed to kind of flatten it. If you see a bit come up a little bit,
Starting point is 00:12:38 you are allowed to flatten it with your hand. Mid game. Yeah, mid shot, like not mid shot, but just before your shot you're allowed to do it. Like a bit of the rugs rocked up. Yeah, you are allowed to do that. And you're just smoothing it out. Mid shot would be like curling, but just before your shot, you're allowed to bit of the rugs rocked up. Yeah. You're smoothing it out. Which would be like curling. Would be a game. So actually, snooker isn't played on a snooker table. It's played on a billiards table. What? Because
Starting point is 00:12:57 billiards was invented before it. And then snooker was played on the billiards table. And we still call it a billiards table rather than a snooker table. Officially. So what gets played on a snooker table? There's no such thing. There's no such thing as a snooker table? Well, it's just another word for a billiards table, I guess. Right. That's great. And what's billiards?
Starting point is 00:13:13 So billiards is a game where you have three balls only on the table and the rules say you get a point by either potting one of the balls or by hitting one ball onto the other, right? And then if you get a point you get another go and you get another go and another go and another go until you stop getting points and then your opponent comes on the table, okay? So a bit like snooker, your opponent sat there
Starting point is 00:13:32 for quite a long time, just watching you play. But in 1907, a new technique was discovered where, you know, the pockets in snooker where the ball goes into. What this guy called Walter Lovejoy managed to do was to get two balls stuck in the pocket. And so he could just tap these two balls every time and they would always hit the cushion or hit each other. And he could do that again and again and again and again. And there was a game a bit later between
Starting point is 00:14:00 Tom Chapman and Tom Reese, where Tom Reese managed to score 499,135 points by using this technique over 85 hours and 49 minutes of playing. Wow. Oh, what a tedious person. Is it illegal now as a technique? It's illegal as a technique. And also, like, this record was never in the record books because all of her fans went home, the referee went home and even his
Starting point is 00:14:25 opponent went home. Wow. That's so good. I worry about this guy's home life. It sounds like he didn't have much to go back to. I didn't know that pocket billiards was real. I thought it was a vulgar euphemism all my life and actually it's a proper game. And what is it? It's just a smaller version of billiards or it's slang for messing around with yourself. I would stop playing pocket billiards is what you'd say to someone. Yeah. If they were masturbating in public. Yeah, right. Just don't get them mixed up. That's all I'm saying. I thought I was getting away with it all this time.
Starting point is 00:14:57 I think I'm playing billiards. Oh dear. Stop the podcast. Stop the podcast. Hi Daniel Schreiber. Do you like wine? James Harkin. I love wine. Oh, well have I got the deal for you. What's your favorite kind of wine? Oh I love a white or a red or that pink, you know the pink one into that. Yeah but the thing is you like me probably know that you like wine but you don't know specifically the kind of wines that you like or maybe there's one that you get all the time but you'd like to open up your world of wine. The way to do that let me tell you is to go to Naked Wines. Yeah, Naked Wines is an amazing company. Over 300,000 people in the UK are already signed up to it.
Starting point is 00:15:51 It is a curator of all the best wines that are made by independent makers out there, and it gets tailored specifically to your taste buds. Absolutely. You can get a third off what you pay for similar wines in the high street, and if you ever find one you don't like, there's a 100% hassle-free guarantee. They'll give you your money back. Yeah, it's amazing. And if you want to test this out, you can get your first order for less than six pounds a bottle by going to nakedwines.com slash fish and you'll get 50% off your first order.
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Starting point is 00:16:52 Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is Anna. My fact this week is that one of the major battles in the Cold War was to see who was better at squashing metal Was it to get rid of the Iron Curtain This is the heavy press program which sounds kind of like a raunchy sexual program, but it wasn't It wasn't. You get turned on by very different things to me, Anna. No, I'm with Anna. Fancy coming around to my place.
Starting point is 00:17:26 We're heavy press. I don't know. No, I'm just going to stay at home and do some pocket billions. The heavy press program was launched by the US in response to the fact that the USSR in the 1950s, it believed had got very good at squashing metal. And the good thing about squashing metal is that it was a much better way of making aeroplanes. So it meant that you could put a huge ingot into a machine and squash it into the shape you wanted for a big bit of wing or something.
Starting point is 00:17:56 And that would mean that it would be a lighter aircraft that if you just nailed together lots and lots of little bits, which is why you were making planes. I've seen images of this thing and it's so impressive. It's a ginormous structure, the one in America that we're going to get onto, which is a very famous one called the 50. You say it's very famous, but I think it's only known because there's this one guy who's just written a series of amazing articles about it. It's one in the Atlantic and other than the New York Times who's just really into it. And that was in Cleveland, Ohio. It still exists today. So I think they made 10 machines in the US and they made four pressing machines, whether you squash
Starting point is 00:18:28 metal and six extrusion machines where you squeeze it like toothpaste and I think eight of them are still going today. It's nuts. At the moment every single US military aircraft contains bits made by this 50 machine. By this one machine yeah. I mean these were built in the 50s. They're still going today. The engineers of the 50 think it's going to be going in total for about 110 years. Can I ask Squires called the 50? I think it was because it would exert 50,000 tons of compressive force, which is the equivalent of being able to lift up 500 blue whales. Wow. And it's massive. It's 87 meters high. So it looks huge. It's so cool. Honestly, this really awoke something in me. This machine. This really like brought my inner Clarkson to the fore. It's
Starting point is 00:19:12 really the most amazing machine in the world. It's just so cool. It is. I think it's the size and the majesty of them. And there are lots of them. So there are those in the US. And then, well, as I said, in the Cold War, the reason it became a fight was because Germany was actually the best at making them. So Germany had all this technology in the Second World War for pressing metal that no one else had. And as part of the agreement after the after the Second World War, we divided things up and the USSR got their biggest heavy press. So they got the 30,000 pressing machine, 30,000 ton pressing machine. Whereas I think America only got about 10,000 tonne one and I ended up reading all of these CIA documents Spying on how Russia was using them and saying what are they doing with this thing? They're incredibly boring
Starting point is 00:19:54 aside from the word secret at the top But yeah, they had to transport it back in four specially made train carriages from Germany to the USSR But yeah, America were like, oh no, they've got this now. We'll have to make a big one. And it partly relates back to the First World War, right? So in the First World War, again, lots of post-war reparations. Treaty of Versailles took a lot of things away from Germany.
Starting point is 00:20:17 And there was a shortage of various key materials for the German economy and for the armaments and all of this. So they developed the technique of press forging, which is where you press down on the, just because it's more efficient. And the one thing they'd been allowed to keep, or one of the things they were allowed to keep was their magnesium, right?
Starting point is 00:20:34 What a treat. The Allied powers said, we're not interested in your magnesium, so you can have that. But the problem is that the previous method of forging things is basically big hammer, smashes down, smashes off. Does it not explode if you hit magnesium?
Starting point is 00:20:46 I think it's because you put water on it, isn't it? But it does crack. It doesn't forge well under the current forging conditions. That's why Germany invented the technique of press forging, because they were working with the materials they had, and also they had to be as efficient as possible. Once again, shot yourselves in the foot with Versailles, didn't you allies? But then actually, you got the technology back. So sort of a nice good draw for the treaty of Versailles. I think that's right. Yeah, I think the Treaty of Versailles is a foe of the podcast because we give it a right kick. Yeah, the highest pressure ever achieved is 770 gigapascals, which is more than twice the pressure
Starting point is 00:21:28 in the inner core of the earth. Okay. Yeah. What did we do it for? Well, it's just scientists in it. They wanted to see what happens if you squash osmium really, really, really. And who's he? Richard Osmium. He's the Roman Richard Osmium. It's the chemical element osmium, and they really, really a lot. And who's he? Richard Osmium. He's the Roman Richard Osmium. It's the chemical element, Osmium, and they really, really squashed it with all this pressure and they found out that it does not change its crystal structure. Wow. Well, sometimes you've got to go through that experiment to find out. It's as important to find out nothing as to find out something.
Starting point is 00:22:02 I wonder if it's especially tough, Osmium, or is it especially dense? Yeah. Okay, that's cool. Surely, otherwise it seems silly. If it's just... I didn't like, we'll start off by squashing a flump. You see. The biggest press now, I don't think gets much press.
Starting point is 00:22:19 It's in Vienna and it's made by an Italian company, who would have thought? I mean, not me. I don't see any made by an Italian company, who would have thought? I mean, not me. I don't see any reason why the Italians wouldn't be good at pressing. I suppose that most industrial things like that have Russia and China, sometimes America, and they do have the other big ones. But an Italian company have made it in Vienna and it's called Tyson. Is it to make lasagna sheets? They can make a meatball that is as dense as the sun.
Starting point is 00:22:49 And yeah, that exerts 100,000 tonnes of force, which is the equivalent of being able to lift up 100 Eiffel towers. Wow. Wow. Which is impressive. That is. It is amazing. And is it used for the same, just making like sheets of metal for airplanes and stuff?
Starting point is 00:23:04 Yeah, and they do lots of stuff with like oil and gas industry and wind turbines and nuclear and Things you'd imagine need loads of metal. I was reading into the humans crushing metal. Oh, yeah Yeah, it's a it's a thing and it turns out there's a lot of Guinness World Records for people who have done that in the past So one of the records I found was the most cans crushed with shoulder blades in one minute. Okay, so this is your back shoulder blades. Yeah. So you're sort of moving them together to create the crush. What do you reckon in one minute? Oh, well, okay. Question. Yeah. Is someone putting the cans in your shoulders or do you have to place them there yourself? Because that feels tough. So the records held by Fabrizio Malito and another one for the Italians.
Starting point is 00:23:49 Exactly. Crushing metal is just their forte. And it was his brother Frank who would replenish the can in between the shoulder blades to be crushed. 84. You're not far off 68. 68. That's 10 more than someone managed to do it with their head in one minute.
Starting point is 00:24:05 So 58 achieved with their head. It's interesting because if you ever crush a can these days, it's really easy. It's very, and that used to be seen as like a Popeye or a manly raw kind of thing. It turns out that that did used to be that because cans were 40% stronger back in the day in terms of the material and the strength and the thickness. This really shows how old I am, but I remember when aluminium cans came in and that they were much much easier to crush. It used to be that you could buy cans of pop and some of them will be aluminium and some of them wouldn't be. The aluminium ones were way easier to crush. Were the previous ones steel? I suppose they must have been. I'm not really
Starting point is 00:24:40 sure but I just remember Blue Peter had a thing where everyone had to crush cans and send them for recycling in the eighties. And so we were all into can crushing back then. Yeah, of course. Before Tamagotchi. That was what it was. Can I read it an introductory sentence to you? Yeah. Is it from your new novel? It's from a piece about another kind of forging that we just think of drop forging and it's
Starting point is 00:25:04 in, um, Kada he, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I think will drop forging and it's in, um, Kada he, I'm sorry, I'm sorry. I'm sure I'm pronouncing it wrong. Milwaukee. It begins like this tucked away in a Kada he warehouse. Something big has been pounding away since 1959, but this is a huge, great hammer. And it's, this is the, this is the kind of thing where you just have a giant hammer to smash down on your metal and get it into the shape you want. And this one, it weighs one million pounds and it goes five floors above ground and also five floors below ground. So it's called a counter blow hammer, which is meaning that you are whacking above and below at the same time. Like a crocodile. It's so cool. It's just like flames and fire inside it.
Starting point is 00:25:47 And it's just mashing away at these objects. Right. Yeah, yeah. Basically, that hammer, that gigantic hammer, has been in operation so long that you've got multiple generations of the same family who've been operating that hammer. Uh-huh.
Starting point is 00:25:58 It's been going since 1959. Nice. Wow. So there was a guy interviewed for this article saying, yeah, my grandfather worked on this hammer. God. I know. What would happen if you put just a person in there? Oh, they'd be in trouble. So there was a guy interviewed for this article saying, yeah, my grandfather worked on this hammer. I know. What would happen if you put just a person in there?
Starting point is 00:26:07 Oh, they'd be in trouble. They'd be in such trouble. They get just squished. But I'd love to see what that like, does it look like a literature? It's not like when you frame Roger Rabbit. You would not love to see that. Become a perfect two dimensional human. It's a shame that's not on the list of options for like, you know, you've got classic burial
Starting point is 00:26:27 cremation obliterated by mash. The flattening. Can I tell you one thing about a cool destruction engine from the 19th century? This is great. This is, there was a great new scientist piece about it and it was, it was called the Victorian monster destruction engine, not its official name. But it was made by an engineer called David Kirkholdy, who was Scottish, and he was the chief engineer behind this machine, which existed to smash metal, to tear it, to twist it, to crunch it, to bop it, you know, to do all of this.
Starting point is 00:27:05 And it was because before his work, you could not test the components of a bridge, say. So you know, you just have to trust that the bridge you're building was strong enough. Yeah, you've got some rivets, you need to know whether they're going to hold if you put a load of pressure on it. How do you do that? Exactly that. And he built this gigantic machine. It was 116 tons, which at the time was huge.
Starting point is 00:27:24 And its entire job was to tear things apart. And it could measure the tonnage at which or the force that needed to be applied before things broke. And this changed engineering because you know, there was the Tay Bridge disaster in Scotland. And they went down to the river bed after this awful disaster had happened. Lots of people died and it was a really tragic event. A really bad bit of poetry was written about it famously by McConaugle. That's right. The day bridge disaster disaster.
Starting point is 00:27:50 And they went down and they got some of the lugs that had attached the bridge rods to the supporting columns and it was found that they broke at 20 tons of pressure rather than the 60 that they should have done. So that, you know, ruined the career of the engineer who had said, no, these are fine and these are strong enough to support the bridge. So you feel like they should have used buttresses as many a wise man confesses. It's a line from the poem. It's genuinely a line from the poem. If all the poems you could have memorised, why that one?
Starting point is 00:28:20 But yeah, he made loads of bridges as well, didn't he? Like, and they were shipped all over the world because he was the first person ever to test these things. So the Sydney Harbour Bridge was all tested, but in his one machine. The various bridges in London, Hammersmith Bridge. The family thing, like the generations, the festival of Britain in the 1950s was some of their structures were tested by his grandson. And I love this.
Starting point is 00:28:42 It was certainly in 2014 there in a museum, I think it's in Southwark. And there used to be on the top floor, a museum of fractures, which was a collection of broken pieces of metal. But tragically during the second world war, a bomb fell on it and all the pieces came back together. What am I supposed to do with these? Find a pristine spitfire. OK, it is time for fact number three and that is James. OK, my fact this week is that in 18th century America, you could tell a merchant from a lawyer just by looking at their handwriting. So the lawyer would put little hearts over the eyes. Yeah. This is insane.
Starting point is 00:29:30 The merchant puts dollar signs. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, it's crazy, isn't it? I just didn't know this. It was in an article in the Atlantic, I read it, an article by Rachel Gutman Way. And she wrote that there were different font types for different jobs.
Starting point is 00:29:45 The handwriting of the merchants apparently was supposed to reflect the efficiency and speed with which they worked and lawyers would have different scripts, aristocrats would have different scripts. And what would happen is it was you'd be in your guild or whatever or you know, you would be taught to do this job. And when you were being taught it, they would teach you particular ways of writing. So as the years went on, it would kind of get more and more enforced,
Starting point is 00:30:09 this style of writing. Because doctors are the only people today who've reputedly got a particular kind of handwriting, which is terrible. Yeah. I don't think that's a font, is it? It's a bar script. I feel like journalists,
Starting point is 00:30:20 I've seen journalists doing fast writing. Short hand. Yeah, short hand, which feels very them. And that's a sort of separate language to no tape. But this is, you're talking about the English language written in... Yeah, so you would write the same words, but you'd be able to read them and you'd be able to say, this person is a merchant, this person is a... Could you masquerade?
Starting point is 00:30:36 If I was a merchant wanting to pretend to be a lawyer. I suppose you could, but it's a bit like forging signatures is, I guess it's difficult, right? Because your signature you do naturally without thinking, whereas to forge it, it takes time and sometimes it's not very easy to do it exactly. You probably need other proofs that you're a lawyer. It probably wasn't that people would hire a lawyer by saying, can you just write your name on a bit of paper? Looks like a lawyer's handwriting to me. I'm in a Mrs Doubtfire scenario in my head. I'm like, I'm the aristocrat and the nanny
Starting point is 00:31:05 in this, what I'm trying to do. Right. Well, one thing that might work there is that men and women had different handwriting as well. Yeah, so interesting. So men had more masculine handwriting, they were taught, or muscular handwriting. What does that even mean?
Starting point is 00:31:20 Well, muscular handwriting, according to someone called Carla Peterson, who is a professor of English at the University of Maryland, they used more pressure on the pen. I'm just, yeah. Just holes in the paper. 50,000 tons of force on every letter. And women had like more like an italic cursive handwriting. What I thought was so interesting about this fact is that I hadn't really considered until
Starting point is 00:31:42 now the fact that we were all taught a font. So basically the handwriting, the equivalent of font is script and we were all taught a script and of course we were. And when you see, you know, when you see writing from the olden days, like if I look at collections of letters written by, like my grandparents had old letters written by their grandparents from the 19th century, the handwriting is so different and that's because official styles changed. And so there was this thing called Spenserian script in the 1900s, which President Garfield called the pride of our country. America's done so much stuff.
Starting point is 00:32:16 That's the biggest one. Is that the biggie? That's the biggie, Spenserian. The guy who came up with this, Platt Rogers Spencer, said he was inspired by pebbles on a beach and is sloping. It's got to be an exact angle of 52 degrees, sloping forwards and slightly rounded. Okay. And it was that like, basically Americans would write that like that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:38 Because I know like, for instance, my wife writes in a Russian font, which is different than an English font for sure. Yes. Yeah, yeah. There's lots of chat about the different ways that different European countries still write. So Platt Rogers Spencer spent so much time trying to get it to be the standard writing style they were teaching in schools and so on, to the point where it feels very missionary. When he died, his sons then took textbooks of it and they sort of went out and campaigned for it to be changed. Have you tried this font style?
Starting point is 00:33:04 You can go to schools and hand them and... And then sort of people start and campaigned for it to be changed. Have you tried this font? Style? Go to schools and hand them. And then sort of people started reading the books and said, no, don't read the words. Just look at the letters. Yeah, exactly. So weird. Yeah. And then it did get taken over by a thing called Zana Bloso method. And then that eventually got taken over by another. So we've, we've got generational changes within how
Starting point is 00:33:21 we write. You can tell when texts come from, right? Because you can analyze, there's a thing called paleography, is that it? It's old writing and it's the study of old writing. You do courses in it because if you look at a text from hundreds of years ago, even if it's in English, it's going to be really hard to decipher. It's hard to recognize time travelers, I suppose, is that they have different handwritings. Yes, it'd be so obvious if someone suddenly started writing in that Gothic script that,
Starting point is 00:33:44 as you say, you can barely read it. It looks so different, doesn't it? So hard to distinguish. I was thinking people from the future might write like, for instance, in block capitals or something. Oh, hello. Oh, wow. Busted. So Spencer in just very quickly before we wrap up on that. That did go out and these other fonts took over, but it did embed itself in society and we see it virtually every day. So it was a win for Platte.
Starting point is 00:34:13 Oh yeah, it should be. Think of ingredients lists on packets of food. Oh, they're always in handwriting, aren't they? Okay, okay, okay. I'm just warming up. Something that's in handwriting. Yeah. Okay, then we see something on a banknote, like the... Don't! I promised to pay the bearer.
Starting point is 00:34:31 No, it's a logo. It's a logo. It's a logo in handwriting. Tabriz! It is a food and drink product and it is not anything that you've said. It's a drink. Coke! Leukazade.
Starting point is 00:34:42 Coca-Cola. Oh, of course! That lovely... you're right, that rounded cursive. That rounded cursive. I forgot what the question was. So it was basically phased out Spensurian, but he managed to have an impact staying and Ford cars is also the way that Ford is written is based on Spensurian. That is great. What a legacy. That's a great legacy. That's kind of time travel, but the normal way around, you know, What a legacy. That's a great legacy. That's kind of time travel, but the normal way around, you know, like a survivor. It's like those animals that you find, which are, oh, we thought you went extinct 130 million years ago, but here you are swimming around. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:35:15 It's a Coca-Cola can. Did you set me up for that joke on that? No Because it felt like it. It felt like I walked straight into a fur trap there. We should probably say that handwriting evolves for practical reasons. So it was all about these people saying this is a quicker way to write and this is an easier way to write. This is an easy way to teach. Or the reason that gothic, which was invented in the 12th century-ish, that was quite squashed up and it was because there was parchment shortages
Starting point is 00:35:45 and so you could fit much more on the page. So it's all practicalities which feels relevant when it's enforced today because people say, isn't it sad that no one learns the proper cursive anymore and there are a number of American states that enforce it legally and there isn't really evidence that there's particularly a purpose. Because it is just joined up handwriting, right? Yes. I can tell you a lot about someone, their handwriting. Yeah. Well, no, it can't really. But it can tell you how drunk they are.
Starting point is 00:36:13 Of all these kind of graphology things, which is you're supposed to be able to tell people's personality or whatever from their handwriting. Most of it does seem to be mediocre, but definitely for sure. The height of ascending letters, height of descending letters, spacing between words, tremors. Bit of sick on the page. The height of the upper and lower case letters all changes depending on how much alcohol you've had.
Starting point is 00:36:38 That's good. That's very good. That's got to be one of the most pointless studies ever done to complete handwriting declines with alcoholism. Did you find the B.I.G? Notorious? Notorious British Institute of Graphologists. They're real.
Starting point is 00:36:56 They're pretty hardcore aren't they? They are. That's really funny. And their claim, and I think I'm not, I don't think it's backed up by solid evidence, is that it's better than therapy. Because actually with therapy, you can only know what the client has told you. Whereas with graphology, you just look at the writing and you say, well, that's disgusting. I can't believe you had that dream or whatever.
Starting point is 00:37:15 You're not a merchant, you're a lawyer. We did a debunk of graphology on QI once and got very angry emails. And letters, didn't we? Penwritten. Yeah, we got one letter from a graphologist saying that some of the evidence is if you get a pen and put it in your mouth and try and write something on a piece of paper, you'll use the same movements as if you were to do it with your hand. Like, so Andy would write it with his same sort of spidery handwriting with his mouth as he would with his hand.
Starting point is 00:37:48 And that's evidence that it's coming directly from your brain as opposed to being something in your hands or whatever. As it's inherent in yourself, the shape of your letters. Is it, is that claim true in either sense? Like, is it true that there's any correlation with your mouth and hand or that you could draw that conclusion? All I'm giving is both sides of the story like I'm on the BBC. Get on your mate. But no, that's what they claim. But of course, you know, I think these days we
Starting point is 00:38:12 think that it's nonsense. Unless you're listening to this podcast on BBC Sounds, in which case the jury's out. I do wonder if we were able to bring back certain people from history and just say, oh, I love your book called that. And they go, that's not what that's called. And it's because they're bad handwriting. There's a few cases where people claim this is a thing. So apparently Beethoven's piece for Elise, apparently that's not the title. What? It's called Furry Leaves.
Starting point is 00:38:39 Yeah, apparently it's for Therese. No. Yeah, it's Therese or Theresa. It's either that. No way. But his handwriting is so dodgy that it just it's, well, we. No. Or Theresa. It's either that. No way. But his handwriting is so dodgy that it just, it's, we'll just go with Elise. Are all the notes different as well? That's so funny.
Starting point is 00:38:56 Well, if you're worried about bad handwriting, which I always was in exams, because I have quite a legible small handwriting, I always thought, they're never gonna read this gold. I happened to be on the OCR, which is one of the famous exam boards, OCR exam board page, FAQ's page, and they clarified examiners are experienced at reading a wide range of handwriting, and if one examiner can't read it,
Starting point is 00:39:17 it gets passed to another one, and so on. So I think if your handwriting's bad, it just goes, gets passed to 20 different examiners. That's so funny. I know where it would end up. Where? At the very end. There is a lady on the Isle of Man who runs a firm called Transcription Services and almost
Starting point is 00:39:33 no one does what she does. She is just phenomenal at reading handwriting. Really? Specifically, old writing. Look, the work by William Wordsworth, the Brontes, John Donne, it's all passed to her in the Isle of Man. And she's just amazing at it. And that is paleography. Yeah, one person who was really difficult to decipher was Catherine Mansfield. I was reading about the New Zealand short story person.
Starting point is 00:39:58 Her handwriting was so bad that when she died and left 53 handwritten notebooks, it took decades to decipher them. Wow. And the person who was doing it once spent an entire week trying to decipher a single word. So the way you write can kind of show where you're from. I thought this was really interesting. So the way you write a T, for instance, which bit do you write first? The width. Don't even know. I go the top. I don't do the cross, basically. You don't cross your T's instance, which bit do you write first? Don't even know. I go the top.
Starting point is 00:40:26 I don't do the cross, basically. You don't cross your T's? No, I do that last. All right, okay, yeah. Don't cross your T's, imagine that. I'll see you tomorrow. See you later. So presumably, oh, Dan, actually,
Starting point is 00:40:41 what do you write first? Well- Oh, you write all in capital, so it's kind of over- No, no, no, but if I, but I- Who writes the cross bit first? Well. What's the cross bit, do you mean? Across your T's, what, the bit that goes across? I do, I do.
Starting point is 00:40:53 You write the cross first? Okay, if I was writing that in lowercase, I go. Guys, do you know what's so fascinating about this, right? Do it again. What does Dan, what can Dan also write that none of the rest of us can? Brilliant books about weird beliefs. I don't think he can write this. What can he speak and where was he brought up? Oh, um, Mandarin. Australian slang. Mandarin! Australian slang, yes. Mandarin writers write in lots of little short
Starting point is 00:41:20 dashes and so it makes sense for them to write when they learn English they tend to write the cross of the T first because it's lots of little short dashes and so it makes sense for them to write when they learn English they tend to write the cross of the T first because it's lots of little figures whereas we would always write and there's lots of little stuff like that in Koreans they write nine backwards do you write your lines backwards Dan? No I well I don't know you might tell me now that I do I write it like that. No that's like everyone writes a nine. That's normal. I wonder if I've got a cultural mesh going on because I will start that like that But then I'll do that to end it Wow. Yeah Interesting because I've never seen you write in lowercase before. Yeah What do you think the school I went taught. Well, let's not go there.
Starting point is 00:42:05 Okay, it is time for our final fact of the show and that is Andy. My fact is that the sun is surrounded by a layer of moss. Hey. Is it? Space moss. Hey. Is it? Space moss. No, I mean, it obviously isn't. So this is a thing which industry experts, sun experts,
Starting point is 00:42:34 Industry? Astronomers, big science brains, they call moss. I love this. So this is in the sun's corona, outside the sun itself. And there are areas where the sun's magnetic field bursts out and the gas that makes up the sun flows around these huge loops and then spears back down into the thing. It's all really awesome.
Starting point is 00:42:55 Anyway, and the moss is these sort of lacy patterns around the corona and around those coronal loops around the feet of them, if you like. It's a term that NASA uses and lots of other astronomers use it. Of all the sexy words you can use for lace-like structures, to use moss, I feel like. Yeah. Yeah. What would you have gone for? Well, lace.
Starting point is 00:43:15 Lingerie. Lace. Yeah, negligee. That's quite a cool... Yeah. Yeah. I do think of it when I was reading about it. Yeah, you've described it pretty well
Starting point is 00:43:25 there. It's the it looks like a rainbow if you look at these coronal loops and the moss is sort of at the bottom of them. So it's like the gold at the bottom of a rainbow. Very nice. Lovely. What's really weird is I read that this is the case. There may be other reasons for it, but the reason those loops come out at all is largely to do with the rotation of the sun. Right. Yeah. So you've got basically it takes 25 days at the equator to rotate, but at the poles, it takes 33 days. So you have this bit overtaking the outside and it sort of snaps and it creates these big loops. It's sort of running past itself in a, yeah, it's the weird rotation, the double rotation of the planet.
Starting point is 00:44:05 Yeah. Well, because it's all gas. So it can, it kind of feels natural, right? That it would rotate at different levels, but yeah, that chaos that's generated. But it seems like we still don't know a lot about the sun, which is quite exciting. And they're still discovering stuff about it, aren't they? I mean, this is all linked to that eternal mystery that why is the sun's atmosphere, the bit just above the surface of the sun, so hot? I think we might have mentioned before. So hotter than the surface or even the core? It's the hottest there, is that what you're saying? It's hotter than the surface, definitely. I'm not sure if it's hotter than the very
Starting point is 00:44:36 core. Yeah, it's so much hotter. So the surface of the sun is about 6000 degrees Celsius. I think we can all agree, very hot. But the corona, the atmosphere, is 1,000,006 degrees Celsius. It's a million degrees hotter. And do you know that NASA says that there are flares, which they think might be between 10 and 40 million degrees Celsius. Wow. 40 million degrees. So the sun's rotating, produces magnetic field, right? And then these lines of magnetic force, they get tangled and they build up pressure and they snap.
Starting point is 00:45:07 And most of the energy goes outwards, but some of it goes back inwards into the sun. And the particles in the sun's lower atmosphere, they build up this pressure wave and it penetrates deep into the sun and it becomes a sunquake. Just everything starts sounding like a cool title for a metal album. Sunquake. I've been going around singing sunquake. There's a group called the Solar Wind Sherpas who also sound pretty cool. Sorry, they're banned? No, they're a group of scientists, but just anything sun related like coronal moss or whatever.
Starting point is 00:45:41 That one doesn't quite work. No've got to say. It's not metal, I don't think that one. No matter how much you put that voice on. Okay, okay, okay. Quite similarly, you get solar rain, which is actually lumps of plasma that fall down from these coronal rainbow loops. And when they splash into the chromosphere, the bit in between the atmosphere and the surface, they make a big splash and they send up loads more plasma. We are chromosphere.
Starting point is 00:46:03 This is our album, Solar Rain. You see? We are the solar hedgerow. What about that? Bit rural, bit rustic, but nice. Yeah, maybe like the vessels. I mean, it's not that interesting. It's just like filaments of mossy-like stuff from the sun
Starting point is 00:46:20 that create loops that go in like a line, like a hedgerow might. But it is an official term apparently. Do you know who is the first person to take a photo of these filaments on the sun? Oh, someone we've heard of. Oh no. That narrows it down. That narrows it down. You might have come across her name. Annie Maunder, she was called. And she was married to Edward Walter Maunder. And she was probably the last of what was called the lady computers.
Starting point is 00:46:53 So in the end towards the end of the 19th century, this is obviously there were computers like for the space race and stuff like that. But these were women who would do the calculations when astronomers would come up with loads of data. They would give them to the women and the women would work them out and work out what was going on. And also the Maunder Minimum is named after her, which you might have heard, which was a time in the 17th century when all sunspots disappeared. Was that when it got very cold? Yeah, the Little Ice Age. Exactly. Was that the Maunder Minimum? It's named after her and her husband as well. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:26 Yeah. That's awesome. But so she's coming through data to find all this stuff. So amateur photographer on the side. She was also a photographer on the side. Yeah. Okay. And she and her husband did photographs of the sun and we're doing it all the time. Basically, whenever there was a clear day,
Starting point is 00:47:40 they would go out and photograph the sun. How do you photograph the sun without... You need a special filter to stop it hurting your eyes? There are lots of different ways of doing it. Yeah, like for instance, you can do it with a pinhole camera. Right. I think you could largely just point it in the direction and snap. I think if you do that and you send the photos to boots, you're going to get a sticker on them. I don't know, in Britain you can photograph the sun pretty easily. There's sort of vague white dot obscured by cloud. That reminds me of the warnings when there are eclipses about what they can do to your eyes.
Starting point is 00:48:14 I've been sort of mad to varying extents over the years, but I was reading about the eclipse in Melbourne in 1976. I think it was when there was this doctor who sort of spread panic around the city saying there could be an epidemic of thousands of kids being completely blind, because all you need to do is look at that for a couple of seconds and you can go blind. Now it's not, it is exaggerated, these, this scaremongering, but it scared Melbourne into watching it from inside. So two million of the 2.5 million people that watched it on their tellies. It is a problem, I think, with the eclipse, which is it is bad for you and you can't say
Starting point is 00:48:48 it's not bad for you. But pretty much all the time everyone says it's worse for you than it actually is. Okay. That's the problem. So when Trump famously looked at the sun, that wouldn't have done. It depends how long you look at. I think you can tell if it's doing damage. Bloody left wing media spinning these stories to make him look bad.
Starting point is 00:49:07 We're not saying you should go and look at the sun. That's the problem is you can't say that. You can't say go out and look at the sun. I would say give Trump a break. That's what I'm saying. But yeah, it's like you've looked at the sun every now and then by accident for a second or so, right? And you're like, oh, that hurt my eyes, but you didn't go blind at any stage. No, because it's the eclipse. Isn't there a risk that people are gonna try and look for longer than the tiny, tiny glimpse that-
Starting point is 00:49:31 There is, but it feels so much common sense that the only people who do get in trouble, and I think this was true in Britain when we had it in 1999, are people who are on lots of drugs. So there was a girl who'd taken lots of speed who stared at the eclipse for half an hour, and she did have some permanent eye damage. Isaac Newton, there was a story that he stared at the sun and that sent him partially blind. That was deliberately for an experiment to see what would
Starting point is 00:49:51 happen if he stared at the sun. So you can be very, very clever and also very, very stupid. So I think it's just good to wear on the side of caution and say, never look anywhere. I think that's fair. I think one bit of good news is if you do go blind for staring at the sun for too long, is that there's a new invention that allows blind people to enjoy eclipses. Really? Yeah, it's called Light Sound and it sort of measures and translates the sky's brightness and turns it into music and so you can like put your headphones in and apparently it gives a really good impression of the change of the sun and the change of the brightness that's happening.
Starting point is 00:50:24 How interesting. That's so cool. Yeah. That's amazing. That's awesome. Milosevic scared his people underground. Slobodan or that's the one. Or Aston Villa striker Savo Milosevic. I think it was Slobodan though, of course I haven't written it down, but whichever one was ruling Serbia in the nineties. Yeah. He said that it would make you urinate really frequently and get heart palpitations. And everyone literally went inside, pulled all their curtains down. They were calling help lines saying,
Starting point is 00:50:53 is it safe to watch it on telly? Wow. Like no one went outside, public transport all stopped. So the whole of the rest of Europe flooded outside to watch the eclipse and all of Serbia retreated underground and indoors. Did he have motives that we know now? Was that a weird, the urination thing?
Starting point is 00:51:09 Well, what was, where did that come from? I don't know. I don't know why. There was actually a paper saying what were his motivations and I couldn't download the full thing. So we'll never know. Apart from people who could afford 24.99, we'll ever know. But I can tell you that huge animal rights activists sent sunglasses to the chimps in the zoo. So scared were they. Golly. I think one of the coolest things I read as part of this research is that you got the
Starting point is 00:51:38 sun, we're just staring at it. We're trying to work out what's going on with it. We got nothing to compare it to. Don't stare at it. But we got nothing to compare it to. Don't stare at it. Don't stare at it. But we got nothing to compare it to. And that's not true anymore. It's not been true for a while because the Kepler space telescope,
Starting point is 00:51:51 back when it was operating, monitored 150,000 stars in the Milky way. And they found 369 suns that are incredibly similar to ours. And so now we can look at other case studies as it were and go, oh, this is interesting. That sun is very active at the moment and it wasn't 10, 11 years ago. That must mean that it's running in phases.
Starting point is 00:52:13 So we can learn via these suns that are billions of miles away about our own sun. Yeah, cause there are a lot of scientists that look at our sun as a curiosity compared to other suns in that they say it's spectacularly boring in comparison to all the other Suns that we're seeing in the universe and they partially wonder if that's why we're here at all. Yeah, that must be right. Yeah, if it starts spitting out stuff at us every two or three years. Yeah, gonna die. Exactly. So our Sun is just not that active and that's been incredible for us.
Starting point is 00:52:42 It has and I think actually with the election coming up, sometimes you want a boring center of your universe, don't you? Because it can be relied upon to not destroy you. And that is a party political forecast for Keir Starmer. I don't know what you're talking about. We actually had someone write in who was a space weather forecaster. I am to the fish inbox. Really? This is cool. He's called Gavin Medley.
Starting point is 00:53:05 What dark with no weather again. He works at the last, which is the laboratory for atmospheric and space physics at the University of Colorado. And he was writing about the, um, you know, if the sun emits a giant electromagnetic storm, we won't get warning before it hits us. But there are space weather instruments that sit on spacecraft at Lagrange points and they just sit there in gravitational equilibrium. And one of their goals is to collect data to predict and warn about solar storms and flares, which can take down our electrical structure. And that's how we knew like a few weeks ago when they had that big solar storm that people in London couldn't see, but everyone else in the country could see. Yeah. The could see. The aurora.
Starting point is 00:53:45 The aurora. We know about that because of those things. By the way, we're in the most exciting year for the sun in 11 years. Loads of sunspots. The sun switches poles every 11 years. So the most boring year was 2019 and that was hardly any sunspots because the poles were just like perfectly aligned north and south. And now we're in the most feisty year, which I think might be why they've discovered this thing that your main fact was about. It's because it feels like as a scientist, it's perfectly aligned north and south. And now we're in the most feisty year, which I think might be why they've discovered this thing that your main fact was about. It's because it feels like as a scientist,
Starting point is 00:54:08 it's the most thrilling time to look at the sun because so much mad shit's going on there. So if one of these big coronal mass ejections hits us, we're kind of buggered a little bit, right? All of our electronics are gonna fry and until they fix it, it's gonna be pretty tough. And we knew that this big one was coming a few weeks ago and I was in Wales in the middle of nowhere.
Starting point is 00:54:28 And so I got a load of cash out of the cash machine just in case all the cash machines go back genuinely. You're such a subtle prepper. I love it. Your cash is no good in the after times. But it'll get me home. Like all I had to do was get home. I have an electric car, right?
Starting point is 00:54:43 So if I'm stuck in Wales with an electric car and all the electrics are fried, I am kind of buggered. I'm not necessarily buggered if you have to stay in Wales, James. Come on, good people of Wales. Great place to be stranded for a while. It's a great place to be, but it's not ideal for the rest of my family if I'm in Wales. James's electric tin opener is in London. That's what he's getting back to. Oh, he brings that with him. I keep that in a lead-lined case, a case of a coronal mass ejection. But there's a theory, right? So we could fire out a big loop of wire into space. So the entire earth is covered by one wire. And then when the coronal mass ejection comes in, which is basically charged particles, then
Starting point is 00:55:25 the wire can kind of ground it and it won't fry all of our electric. That's interesting. It's a really good idea. No one's really taking the idea seriously, but they reckon that the loop would cost about a hundred billion dollars to make. But if we did get hit by one of those coronal mass ejections, which will happen sometime, the cost will be way more than that. Yeah. It'll the trillions. It will fuck up our economy for years. Actually, a hundred billion sounds a lot, but actually, you know, a lot of things when you
Starting point is 00:55:54 read about it in the paper, it's like 600 billion. Okay. Yeah. We clubbed together. Well, how much did you get out of the cash point the other day? Well, how much did you get out of the cash point the other day? There's a big queue behind it. The limit's 200 a time. It's only 20 million a time they let me take out. Okay, that's it. That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening.
Starting point is 00:56:23 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 various social media accounts. I'm on at tribal and on Instagram, Andy at Andrew Hunter M on X James knows this thing is James Harkin on the tick tock. And Anna, you can get in touch with all of us by going to at no such thing on Twitter slash X or going to at no such thing as a fish on Instagram or you can email podcast at qi.com. Yep, or you can go to our website no such thing as a fish.com. All of the previous episodes are up there. There's a link to the portal to the gateway of Club Fish our secret private members club
Starting point is 00:57:05 And there are also links to our upcoming tour Thunder Nerds we're heading around Europe. We're going to Ireland where you're going to Australia. We are going to New Zealand There are all the links up there We put on a couple of extra shows one in Sydney one in London if you missed out on tickets for those do check it out It's all up there. Otherwise just come back here next week. We'll have another episode waiting for you. We'll see you then. Goodbye

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