No Such Thing As A Fish - 551: No Such Thing As President Iceberg

Episode Date: October 3, 2024

Live from Glasgow, Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss deaf composers, daft names, presidential pigs and fabulous frogs. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more epi...sodes. Join Club Fish for ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at apple.co/nosuchthingasafish or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon

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Starting point is 00:00:00 You can sing along. Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing As A Fish, a weekly podcast this week coming to you live from Glasgow! My name is Gav Schreiber. Hello! My name is Gav Schreiber. I am sitting here with Anna Tyshinsky, Andrew Hunter Murray, 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 with fact number one, that is James.
Starting point is 00:00:42 Okay, my fact this week is that according to DNA analysis Beethoven wasn't very musical. Is that saying something about Beethoven or about DNA analysis and how useful it sort of is not? We might come to Beethoven in fact I'm sure we will but this is basically a study where they looked at Beethoven's DNA and they looked at the DNA of a load of students in a couple of universities, one in Tennessee and one in the Netherlands. And what they were saying is that DNA tests can't really give much to historical people and tell you about the characters really. It's kind of a warning against that. But in actual
Starting point is 00:01:22 fact, Beethoven, well, he wasn't like Mozart. Mozart, when he was age four, could play incredible pieces. But Beethoven couldn't hold a tune. He could not write a tune. No, he wasn't, really. I like him. I don't love him. I like him, but he could not write a melody to save himself. And I bet he'd say he was above that. You know when you get some avant-garde pop stars
Starting point is 00:01:41 who say, I don't write the catchy songs because they're beneath me. Lots of them perform in Glasgow actually. Wait, so what? Yes, all of Beethoven's very uncatchy tunes like... Oh, come on! That's the only one. It's a pretty solid riff. I'm sorry, I disagree with that completely.
Starting point is 00:01:56 Just on this study of Beethoven, the sort of DNA that they studied, they had a lock of hair from Beethoven, and in fact they had eight locks of hair. This was really exciting. But only five of them were genetically identical. Oh. So what does that mean? Three of them were fake. Oh, they were fake.
Starting point is 00:02:13 He wasn't like some kind of chimera who was half Beethoven, half someone else. Or was it the dog Beethoven? It's the dog Beethoven. Oh, yeah. There was one lock of hair which turned out to be from a woman. And that was the one that said, Oh, you've got terrible lead poisoning So that's not true
Starting point is 00:02:27 but the thing they found which is exciting is that they've studied some modern Beethoven's and they studied the Identical locks of hair from him and they found that the Y chromosome is different between the two and what that means is that in his family Line somewhere. There is an extra pair paternity event Yeah Someone's been playing a false note. Yes family line somewhere there is an extra pair paternity event. Oh, okay. Yeah. Someone's been playing a false note. Yes. Anyway. Dave Grohl of his day.
Starting point is 00:02:55 Wow. Can I ask, do we know if it was head hair or hand hair? I don't know. I assume head hair. Yeah, I'm assuming head hair as well. Not everyone's hands are as pursuit as yours are, Dan. Well, mine, I've got a bit of hair, but apparently he was like... He looked like Wolfman, according to some reports I read.
Starting point is 00:03:15 Yeah, and so if you were going to see if he was musically talented, maybe it was more on that hand hair than it was the head hair. Because that's where the jeans would be. They would be in the fingers hair, wouldn't they? Were these the hairs that... I mean, I don't know where these ones came from, but I know about one person who stashed a load of Beethoven hair. A musician called Ferdinand Hiller,
Starting point is 00:03:34 and when you were a fanboy in the olden days, you snipped hair off dead people that you liked. Was that from him? And what I like about this is that every strand of hair was counted. It was 582 strands, and they were bought by a urologist. And do you remember? Oh, yes. Yeah, he's the guy with most... He gets constantly approached to get DNA analysis done on the strands of hair that he has.
Starting point is 00:03:57 He does, but wait, wasn't it also a urologist who collected Napoleon's penis? Yes, it was. Yes, urologists. Something weird about them. Wow. That's penis. Yes, it was. Yes. Urologists, something weird about them. Wow. That's interesting. Could you, in theory, with the Beethoven hair that we have, could you stretch them and make a sort of very tiny piano using the hair as...
Starting point is 00:04:15 I don't think so. I think they'd snap. But a tiny piano. Yeah, come on, James. No one's going to hold you to this if you say it's possible. I just think if I say it, then is on our next talk going to go, where's my fucking piano? Yeah, okay, sure.
Starting point is 00:04:30 There we go. You've just made him happy. There we go. Can we talk about... I'm kind of enjoying the whole piano talk. Sorry. No, no, go on. What were you going to say? Him going deaf. Oh, yeah. Going deaf. By the age of 30 he could not hear conversation.
Starting point is 00:04:45 And that was at a period where he was composing most of his most amazing music. And this is just so interesting because one of the things he did was, we know how he communicated because he had conversation books. This is so interesting that they survive. So what's that? Well, if you're Beethoven, you carry a notebook. And if someone wants to ask you a question, they write it down in your notebook, and then you answer it. So we have a list of questions that Beethoven was asked, and we don't have any of his answers.
Starting point is 00:05:13 It's exactly the wrong way around. And sometimes we have his shopping lists as well. That is less revealing about the mind of a genius. And then the thing was, he had a secretary called Anton Schindler, who became kind of the keeper of his flame. And he was his first biographer. And he was very, very much he sort of wanted to keep this to himself. So he would answer the door wearing Beethoven's old dressing gown. Pretty creepy. But what we also found was he had a lot of these conversation books. And if he found a blank page in one of them, he would just forge an entry himself. Really quite frustrating for biographers, because they've only just done handwriting if he found a blank page in one of them, he would just forge an entry himself. Oh, really?
Starting point is 00:05:50 Quite frustrating for biographers because they've only just done handwriting analysis and worked out, oh yeah, some of this is lies that were never asked. But I guess, yeah, he is only forging the questions. Yes, unless he's writing an interesting shopping list. Well, they might be. They can tell a lot of shopping lists. And actually, you can read a lot from the conversation books by what the people are asking him. Like, there's a really nice one. He was very, very close to his nephew.
Starting point is 00:06:09 We might go on to talk about his relationship with Carl, his nephew. But he was very close to Carl, and they were in a restaurant one day. And this is in 1818, which is when he just started to do these conversation books. And we have Carl's question to him. Just because you eat sausages by taking the casing off and only eating the meat inside, it doesn't mean I have to. You see? And Beethoven said, that's not a question.
Starting point is 00:06:33 That's really funny. He did have, you compared him to Mozart, James, and he did have this sort of sad relationship with Mozart or connection to Mozart because, you know, Mozart very famously, child prodigigy very pushy dad and Beethoven's dad really wanted Beethoven to be the next Mozart. He was got called Johann He was a court musician so he expected that one of his kids would go into music He realized Beethoven was quite good, but he used to lock him in the basement
Starting point is 00:07:00 He dragged him out of bed in the middle of the night and force him to play piano over and over again He you know he beat him a lot. He was a very Unpleasant person it sounds like desperate to make him rich and famous Because of being so talented and also he convinced Beethoven that he was two years younger than he was So for years of his life Beethoven thought he was born in 1772 Because his dad was so desperate to make him this child prodigy. There's a story that he did meet Beethoven as well, that he was presented to him.
Starting point is 00:07:29 He did meet him. Yeah, and Mozart was really pissed off that he was having to break away from his personal writing to meet this kid that everyone was saying, oh, he might be really good. He sits down and he starts playing a piece by Mozart to him, and Mozart says, stop that, I want to hear what you've got, and he plays a little original piece, and supposedly Mozart did the old, you got it, kid,
Starting point is 00:07:50 and everyone was like, whoa, he's got it, and so that was like a seal of approval kind of thing. Yeah, he said, watch out for this guy. We're still in Vienna, are we? It feels like we've moved to California at some stage. Now you know like when Billy Joel brings someone up to play the piano and afterwards he's like, watch out for this guy, he's going to be making... No, you don't watch YouTube clips like that? OK.
Starting point is 00:08:11 Do you think Mozart said that to literally everyone? Every kid who came along, he went, watch out for this kid. Well, this guy... So he did nine symphonies, didn't he? And the ninth one was the one where he was really deaf and he was conducting. And there was another conductor on the side because he was conducting, he couldn't hear what was happening, so he was just basically waving his arms.
Starting point is 00:08:31 And all of the people in the orchestra were told to watch the other guy, basically. And then as soon as the symphony finished, he was carrying on conducting because he didn't realize it had finished. What a shame, because if you just had to follow what he was doing, you would have gone an original Beethoven piece and it would have just kept going and kept going. That would have been one of the most amazing nights of music ever. You say that.
Starting point is 00:08:54 One of the worst nights of live music ever was... In 1808, Christmas in Vienna. Picture the scene. Oh, it's frosty, sparkling, it's beautiful, these incredible buildings everywhere. It was the marathon performance of Beethoven's new stuff. And we're talking the premiere of Beethoven's fifth, da-da-da-da. Premier of the sixth. No gap, just straight on through.
Starting point is 00:09:19 Here's another symphony. Choral fantasy, another piano concerto. Four hours of music. Oh, my God. Bit long. It's like when Stuart Lee does back-to-back shows in one evening. It was a complete disaster on the night because all the best musicians in town had a rival booking so they couldn't come and play.
Starting point is 00:09:38 So the orchestra was a bit of a scratch job and it was extremely cold. The critics hated it. One piece, they hadn't rehearsed it enough, the choir just sang it wrong and he had to stop the whole gig and say, no, no, no, we need to go back to the beginning. It was just a total fiasco of it. Yeah, it was a nightmare.
Starting point is 00:09:54 So then he did his night symphony and then he started his tenth. But he never completed the tenth. He died before he completed it. But luckily AI has completed it in 2021. And the piece had its world premiere in Bonn, in Germany. Apparently it's very good. Unfortunately you need six fingers to play it. Any good? What are the critics saying?
Starting point is 00:10:16 Yeah, it's fine. Sounds a bit like Beethoven. Fine. What a review. That's what you want. Beethoven, by the way, his name means vegetable garden. Cool. And his full name Ludwig van Beethoven means loud fight in the vegetable garden.
Starting point is 00:10:33 Which is what a lot of his music sounds like. No, I think he's brilliant. He just doesn't write melody. But do you know where his last words were? There's two versions of it or something. So Beethoven famously died during a thunderstorm. Quite cool, quite classic, Beethoven. And his last words were,
Starting point is 00:10:50 pity, pity, too late, because he'd just been informed that he'd received a gift from his publisher of 12 bottles of wine. Which I know the saddest thing about his life. They won't be your last words. Start opening them now Breathe
Starting point is 00:11:15 It is time for fact number two and that is Andy my fact is that one of Scotland's most eminent 19th-century illustrators was called Willie Hole. There you go. That's him there. And there he is in all its glory. Why is that interesting, Andy? Why is that interesting? I think Andy... I think he's an under-celebrated artist.
Starting point is 00:11:37 Okay, yeah. And you're bringing him to life today. Absolutely. I think this is the most immature fact any of us have ever done. And you know what? I thought it would be James. My money was on James for the fact that it's just a rude name. I'm sorry.
Starting point is 00:11:52 I do feel a bit ashamed. But I also feel thrilled that we can talk about him. He was called William Hole. But in day-to-day life, who's got the time? I'll challenge you, Anna, for a more childish fact. His dad was called Dick Hole. Yes. Oh, true.
Starting point is 00:12:08 Middle name, Richard Brassy Hole. And his mother was called Anne Burn Hole. This family just had it stitched up. How many people here... Sorry, they didn't have it stitched up. Sorry. Who here has heard of Willie Hole? How many people here... Sorry, they didn't have it stitched up. It was a disaster. Right, sorry. Who here has heard of Willie Hall? And shame on you, actually.
Starting point is 00:12:32 Imagine if there'd just been a roar of recognition for Les Bates. He was quite obscure. Well, at the time, he was very eminent. He was a member of the Royal Scottish Academy. He illustrated books for Robert Burns, for J.M. Barrie, Robert Louis Stevenson. I know they weren't all alive at the same time, but he was alive at the time. He lived from 1846 to 1917. And I just think under-celebrated.
Starting point is 00:12:56 And don't confuse him with another Willie Hull, who was the person who designed all of England's coins, and James I. Yes. And he, proto-Willie Hull, he was amazing. Because I think, was it him, James, who... Yeah, it would have been the same time. He invented the Colouring In book. Really?
Starting point is 00:13:14 He published the series of maps. There was this poem called Poly Albion, which was about all the parts of England and Scotland. And it was... There was the beautiful maps of, you know, weird things. The rivers were all on there and there are weird sort of mythical beasts all over the map and It was fashionable to hand color your own maps back in the day
Starting point is 00:13:31 And that was a big trend in the 1620s gentleman's manual said, you know If you're gonna be a proper gentleman, you gotta know how to color in Go over the lines if you want an eligible lady to marry you. We also shouldn't forget William J. Hull, Willie Hull Jr., the American film director, mainly known for his B movies. Really amazing, he did a movie called Hellbound, which he made for producer Howard Cock. Yeah, and then he did Speed Crazy in 1959,
Starting point is 00:14:01 which starred Charles Wilcox. So is this just gonna be us all listing people with rude names? Well I actually looked to the Wikipedia list that's called other people who are called Willie. Yeah there's over 218 notable Willies out there. You've got the professional golfer in America called Willie Tucker. Lovely. And does that help in golf?
Starting point is 00:14:24 James, do you play golf? It can get in the way of your swings. There's the Austrian footballer called Willy Fitts. There's the Kenyan runner called Willy Cumming. Brilliant. Superb. That's all my research for this fact. The history of illustration. I've got some quite dry stuff on the difference between a wood block and a wood cutting. That's what we want.
Starting point is 00:14:49 But no, so William Hall was at the tail end of a period where basically illustration was the only means of getting any visual information to anyone else. There was no YouTube, no TikTok. There was no TikTok. That was in the 1870s after his period. No. And basically, it was hugely important and hugely legally contentious as well. Oh, really?
Starting point is 00:15:11 So yeah, I was reading about James Gilray, who was sort of the most famous artist of the early 19th century, who did caricatures. But they were so offensive and insulting that he was charged with blasphemy. Wow. He drew the wise men, and he was charged with blasphemy. Actually. He drew the wise men and he was charged with blasphemy. Actually, the real reason was that the Prince of Wales
Starting point is 00:15:27 was clearly in the picture being, you know... As one of the wise men or just like popping up behind, like he's photobombed. There was a disgusting baby in there and, you know, there was all sorts of... Jesus! I mean, sorry, in the drawing... Talk about being arrested for blasphemy. Sorry.
Starting point is 00:15:43 In the satirical drawing, I'm not afraid of blasphemy charges, am I? But basically, and you know, he was interviewed by George Canning, who was later the Prime Minister, saying look, I want a caricature of me. And so the charge against him, the blasphemy charge was dropped
Starting point is 00:16:00 and he was given a government pension. Gilray is the man who was responsible for everyone thinking that Napoleon was short. Oh really? He truly was short. Napoleon was a normal height. It's entirely thanks to someone drawing him 200 years ago that we think Napoleon Bonaparte was short.
Starting point is 00:16:14 That's so interesting. So that's the power these images had, just repeated and amplified and caricatured. Yeah. What an influence. So Willie Hull, he did caricatures of quite famous people, right? Like he did, I think, J.M. Barrie and a few people like that.
Starting point is 00:16:26 I think he mostly did the work, as in he mostly would... J.M. Barrie's books, he would illustrate those. So not the author's illustration. He illustrated Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde for Robert Louis Stevenson and kidnapped. I read that Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde was written in six days and six nights while Louis Stevenson was on a cocaine bender. Oh, yeah. According to RobertLouisStevenson.com, that's a myth.
Starting point is 00:16:52 No, well, they would say that wouldn't they? It feels like it. They said that he was on medication. But there's no evidence that he took cocaine for recreational purposes. Willie Holt's grandmother, or great-grandmother, was Jamaican. Okay. Just unusual to have a mixed-race couple in the 1790s. But his Scottish father married a Jamaican woman in the 1790s. And the resulting child went on to be the first student of African descent at the University of Edinburgh.
Starting point is 00:17:23 And then governor of Sierra Leone and that's that's Willie hole That's my Willie hole fact. It's good. It's not about if it's not a funny name, but we're all learning Can I can I tell you maybe my favorite artist of the period so George Cruikshank right again hugely influential caricaturist sat satirist, drew outrageous things. He once got a bribe of a hundred quid from the king himself saying, please do not caricature his majesty in any immoral situation. So that's how powerful he was at the time. Imagine if the current king paid, I don't know, Michael McIntyre not to do any jokes about him.
Starting point is 00:18:00 Is Michael McIntyre known as the most hardcore political satirist of our day? Okay, Ant & Dec, fine, whatever. But he was a dreadful guy, crookshank, in his personal life. So he ill-treated his wife quite badly. He was an avowed anti-drink campaigner, right? So he looked strict, strict, strict, because his father had died of alcohol poisoning. He'd just won a drinking contest and then died, his father. Oh, really?
Starting point is 00:18:29 Died happy, though, at least. It was like the second worst result possible. That feels like a disqualification after the match, right? That feels like you've got to live at least a month post... Yeah. OK, here's the amazing thing about George Cruikshank, right? He was on his deathbed, and he was talking to his wife, who he hadn't been terribly nice to,
Starting point is 00:18:48 and he said, what will become of my children? And his wife said, what do you mean your children? We haven't got any children. Now, he had been married once before. That marriage hadn't produced any children either. It turned out, this is spicy gossip time, it turned out he had been leading a secret double life and he had a mistress with whom he had had eleven children. Whoa!
Starting point is 00:19:15 The last of whom was conceived when he was 82 years old. Can you imagine the number of times you'd have to say, oh I'm just popping out. It's so funny, His obituary said, there never was a purer, simpler, more blameless man. Something childlike in his transparency. A week later, the will was read out, to which he left all of his money. Oh, my God. That's amazing.
Starting point is 00:19:36 You know, there's only one image of Shakespeare that we have. OK. It's done by an engraver called Martin Droschute. He was a Flemish. And it's kind of, you'll see it, like if you ever see a picture on an old book of Shakespeare, it's the one that you see, which is like black and white. He's bald, he's got his hair on sides.
Starting point is 00:19:55 Now it turns out that Martin Droschut was a terrible, terrible drawer. He was really, really bad. And we only have one other portrait that he did, Francisco de la Peña, and it looks almost identical to the one he did of Shakespeare. And it seems like he only really knew how to draw one person. So we don't know how likely it is
Starting point is 00:20:16 that this actually looked like Shakespeare at all. He actually had a Mohican, according to sources of time. Did you know, speaking of the influence that illustrators have, it was an illustrator who invented macaroni, or who popularized macaroni. Okay, the pasta or the penguin? No, if you're being pedantic, neither the pasta nor the penguin. It was like a look, wasn't it?
Starting point is 00:20:38 A dandy. A dandy, yes. So a macaroni in England in the 1770s and 80s was, there was a fashion for men to be really effeminate. They had like huge hair. They particularly had massive hair and then they wore a tiny hat on top. Which is so cool.
Starting point is 00:20:56 And sort of striped stockings and really tight pants and fancy walking sticks, bright colors. Anyway, there's a woman called Mary Darley. In fact, it was a husband and wife team, Matthew and Mary Darley, and Mary was the real caricaturist. She sort of made caricaturing a thing, invented the art of caricaturing, like exaggerating these effects. And they made their name by having the macaroni print shop on the Strand, where she basically drew caricatures of all these effeminate men
Starting point is 00:21:25 created, popularized the macaroni. Yeah. You spoke about dandies before. Of course, the dandy is a Scottish illustration of sorts. What a great link. Thank you. Just leapfrogging from the 1760s to the 20th century comic book. That was very impressive. Made by DC Thompson.
Starting point is 00:21:41 And DC Thompson is also home to the world's oldest magazine the Scots magazine And in one of the early issues they had a first-hand account of the Battle of Culloden How old that is wait, sorry that wasn't the first issue of the Dandy Because it's desperate down had been onside. It could have gone the other way. Yeah. What was... can I... sorry to be ignorant, but what was the Battle of... ...Klogger?
Starting point is 00:22:12 That is... Why don't you just ask someone in the street later on? Okay. Well, I don't know what's known here. You don't know who Willie Hole is, but you know that battle? What's going on? I'll tell you... I will tell you later, and I will tell you at some length, but it's really interesting Yeah, but on the on the subject of comics and DC Thompson stuff I thought we could have a quick game of comic strip or darts nickname
Starting point is 00:22:32 Oh, okay Because I realized that some of these comic strips have kind of got similar names to the darts players like calamity James is a darts player No So for instance bow and arrow Be a you and arrow is that the name of a comic or is it the name of a darts player? It must be darts player because the what is a top of the tiny arrow Well, it's got to be a comic book Otherwise, you wouldn't have presented it and tried to trick us into thinking it was a dance
Starting point is 00:23:00 Do you get tag teams in darts? You chuck it halfway along the distance and they lean over and hammer it home. Yeah, you lift your arm up and Bo pulls it back and releases you. The answer is it was a double bluff hammer. It's Bo Graves who's the current back-to-back, two-time ladies world champion to darts player. Dirty Dick. Darts player or comic book? I'm going to say darts player.
Starting point is 00:23:32 Yeah? Dirty Dick. Yeah, yeah, comic. It was a character from The Dandy, known as a boy who generally is in need of a good scrub. What about this one? Masturbates. I always thought that Masturbates was the myth from Pugwash that claimed that it was, but it was Masturbated,
Starting point is 00:23:55 and that's exist. Yeah, so you go for that, Spire. Well, the truth is technically it's both. Because there was a character in Oliver Twist called Bates who is sometimes called Master Bates and there is quite a few etchings of Master Bates, but also it was the nickname of darts player Owen Bates. He's known as the Master. He always has one hand in his pocket when he's playing. He always has it on his back. It says that Owen theasturbates, but when he qualified for the World Championships,
Starting point is 00:24:25 they didn't allow him to use it. That's fair enough. You don't want to bring the noble sport of darts into disrepute. It is time for fact number three, and that is my fact. My fact this week is that the title, Prince of Thinkers, was awarded in France to a philosopher whose greatest published work claimed humans were descended from frogs. I'm sure you've all, like Willy Hull, have heard of Jean-Pierre Brissette. This is a guy who was a philosopher, he was a writer, he was a
Starting point is 00:25:06 thinker, he's a bit of an outsider. He lived basically in the same bracket as Willie Hall, by the way, year-wise. Time-wise? Yeah, Willie Hall was born in 1846, died 1917, Jean-Pierre was 1837 to 1919. Did they ever meet, do we know? Oh, good question. No, they obviously didn't. Yeah, they didn't. He was a fascinating guy. The first thing that he wrote was a thing called, learning the art of swimming alone
Starting point is 00:25:35 in less than an hour. That's fantastic. Yeah, it's amazing. It's basically five illustrations that show you how in the confines of your home, so it's not even within the water, you can just practice moves hundreds and hundreds of times, so that when you eventually jump into the water for the first time,
Starting point is 00:25:53 you know how to swim. If you do it 600 times, basically you know, and then that's it. It might be that he got his humans are descended from frogs theory, which we should say now is not true, from... Well, hang on. It has not yet been proven. Yeah, thank you. But because if you view a swimmer from above and they're doing something like breaststroke,
Starting point is 00:26:13 they look a bit like a frog. Yeah. And so that might have linked frogs and humans together in his mind. Really? This guy, yeah, we should say he wasn't an actual proper philosopher, he was... A nobody, but it's quite amazing
Starting point is 00:26:26 How famous he sort of became to a niche bunch of people? So the only reason he became famous was because there was a prank organized by a bunch of kind of Deliterati artiste led by a guy called Jules Romain who? Decided to award this Prince of Thinkers thing. Jules Rémain had come across his book. I think he'd just been rifling through a library, hadn't he? And he'd come across his book that was like, humans are descended from frogs,
Starting point is 00:26:52 and the logic was so mad. So he believed that any words in a language that sounded like other words, that wasn't a coincidence, that told you something very important. So for instance, the word ren for queen sounds like the old French word ren for frog. So he was like, okay, frogs must be really important. He was then walking past a pond when he noticed not only do frogs look a lot like humans in their bodies, so he thought, but they also were saying, go up Co-a, which is French, of course, for what?
Starting point is 00:27:26 What? That's so good. And the idea being that when frogs finally got self-conscious and understood that they were part of the world, the first thing that they would say is, what? There you go. There you go. It's all very interesting. We should just quickly go back a second on the Prince of Thinkers thing here,
Starting point is 00:27:46 because it's quite a mean thing that happened. He was told that this big vote had happened and that he was being made the Prince of Thinkers. And they brought him into Paris on a train and he was met at the station by a group of people and he was given flowers by children. And some poet had written a very special piece specifically for him. He was asked to make a speech in front of Rodin's statue, the Thinker.
Starting point is 00:28:10 Yeah. Exactly. It was his kind of acceptance speech. It's unbelievably unkind in hindsight. Yeah. Imagine if the most eminent authors in the world invited you, Dan, saying, we have, like, Richard Osman's saying it, Dan Brown's in there, McEwan, Ishiguro, all of the biggies. They write to you, Dan, and say, we actually think your book is going
Starting point is 00:28:32 to change the world, it's seminal. Please come to the British Library and stand in front of the statue of Isaac Newton and make a speech. And then it turns out it was a prank and they actually think the book is rubbish. That's basically what happened to this guy. It is cruel. I think that would is cruel. He never knew. I can't see any evidence that he ever knew. And I think they might have felt a bit bad. So Jules Rémain… No shit.
Starting point is 00:28:51 It wasn't in the newspapers the next day. It went too well. So I think Jules Rémain left money for a banquet to be held in his name every year thereafter. And it did go until 1939, possibly because he felt a bit bad about humiliating this guy. To be honest, reading up on it, I'm a bit confused about what they genuinely thought. Because if you read Marcel Duchamp writes about it, and he knew of the work of Bricelli as well,
Starting point is 00:29:15 I think they were taking the piss, and it was elaborate. But they were surrealists, and they were doing a surreal thing here. But I think they admired the thinking. I think they genuinely thought this guy is a weird thinker and we should be celebrating it. They were doing all sorts of stuff like that weren't they? It was like found art kind of thing. It's like we found this thing, we're gonna turn it into art, we're gonna turn it into something special. Yeah I think Richard Osman really liked my book. But there
Starting point is 00:29:42 were quite a lot of these what are known in English as outsider writers and in French as fous littéraires, like means mad writers. But there were quite a lot of them at the time. For instance, there was a guy called Alexis Vincent Charles Berbaguié in Newfoundland time who wrote books about the imps that were following him around. His surname Time was chosen because he thought that the time the herb repelled the imps, and he planned to plant an enormous time field so that it would repel all of the imps. So that was one of them.
Starting point is 00:30:20 I did read about him because he read that the imps and the leprechauns that followed him around made him sneeze and fart enormously. And that was a huge problem. No, it's not me he read that the imps and the leprechauns that followed him around made him sneeze and fart enormously. And that was a huge problem. No, it's not me. It was the imps. He wants to buy himself a dog. There was a guy called Raymond Russell who wrote these really long poems, but instead of rhyming, each line was kind of related to the previous one by the words. So you might have a line which is about a dog,
Starting point is 00:30:44 and the next one's about a bog, and the next one's about a bog, and the next one's about a bot, and like that. But they're really, really, really long. It would have footnotes explaining what he'd done to make that line that was related to the previous line. And his footnotes could have footnotes. And that could go like five footnotes deep for all of it. So it was all footnotes.
Starting point is 00:31:02 The David Foster Wallace of his time and equally tedious. But according to the French Wikipedia, perhaps not surprisingly, Roussel was unpopular during his life and critical reception of his works was almost unanimously negative. Oh man. Yeah. But there was loads of them around. I think it was just like pretty much anyone could get stuff printed. Yeah. That's great.
Starting point is 00:31:23 But I feel like a lot of them were self-con... They were self-conscious. They were often rich white men. Yeah. Yeah. And they knew what they were doing, whereas this guy didn't. I found something quite random about Brisey, which is that so he was in the army.
Starting point is 00:31:34 And I think something quite odd about him, and this is often surprising today about people who hold very strange beliefs. Dan, you know a lot of these people. They function very normally in the rest of their life. And so he, as we've said, he worked on the railways. They did try to sack him a few times from the railways because he did have some quite strange ideas that they attributed to a head wound from being in the army.
Starting point is 00:31:57 What did he have? What were the ideas? Well, there were a lot of the stuff we've just talked about about how all humans are descended from frogs, that kind of thing. Oh, not trains specifically. Yeah, it made it sound like he was saying the trains should all run backwards. No, sorry. He made the trains run fine. He just kept on wanging on about this whole humans from frogs idea. Yeah. But he was wounded in 1859 at the Battle of Magenta, which was a battle of France and Italy versus Austria. It was a huge success and victory for the French, and I just didn't know that that's where the color comes from.
Starting point is 00:32:25 From the battle? Really? Yeah. So it was this big success, the Battle of Magenta, for the French, and at the same time, a French chemist produced the color that they called Fushina, and then they were like, hang on, we've just had this big victory, do you mind if we rename that Magenta? What color is Magenta again? What color? The one in the printer that always runs out even though you never use it.
Starting point is 00:32:45 Thank you. Hello old friend. Okay, language, how we got language in the first place. Oh yeah. The theory, because the 19th century was a time when lots of people were trying to work out, how do we get language? And the theories were fantastic. Yeah, it was because we just had the theory of evolution had come in with Darwin and people
Starting point is 00:33:02 thought well surely language must have evolved in the same way, so can we fill in some of the gaps? Yeah, exactly. So the bow-wow theory. We came from dogs. We came from dogs. Notice the language comes from animal sounds, and the humans started language off by doing impressions of animals to communicate with each other. So, for example, James, if we don't have language, I've got no way of saying there's a dog behind you unless I say woof, right? Sure, but how do you say it to someone in another country that doesn't know the word woof?
Starting point is 00:33:33 Because in English we say woof, but dogs don't objectively say woof, and they don't say bow-wow, and in all different countries they say different things. Yeah, but I'd go, arararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararar And then he would know there was a dog behind you. We're in the same room. It's just 30,000 years ago when the anderfels When the anderfels yeah, and the guy who came up with this was a guy called. I love this Johann Herder Has he worked out what he thinks the words have evolved into like what does that wow wow wow what does that? Enough of what this is late 18th century, so I haven't read enough of his stuff I think it was that you start off with And then eventually you get to wolf and then like yeah A few more steps, I'm not gonna spell out and then we've got this podcast
Starting point is 00:34:17 Do you know what dogs say in Burma just while we're on this subject? They say woke woke woke woke, woke, woke. Like a GB News presenter. Because they're pissed off everyone's calling it Myanmar, aren't they? Listen, Andy. That's the best Burma-Myanmar joke you'll hear on this day for weeks. How much do people believe him? Because I believe this theory 100% right now.
Starting point is 00:34:41 This sounds like the most sensible thing I've ever heard on this podcast. It's the first thing that kids do. You're speaking to your kid, you teach them the noises that animals make. Of course language came from there. But what about the Yo-He-Ho theory? What's the Yo-He-Ho theory? Hang on, this sounds better. We all evolved from pirates?
Starting point is 00:34:56 Basically. Basically, yeah, this is Edward Bernard Tyler in 1871, proposed that language evolve when you're doing manual labour together. You might be rowing, you might be hauling logs, and you have to say, row, row, or yo-he-ho, or whatever. And that gradually evolves into more complicated structures, but it's basically you need some kind of shared sound that we all make when we're pulling a log. I like that.
Starting point is 00:35:20 There's also the poo-poo theory. What's the poo-poo theory? The poo-poo theory is that it comes from automatic responses from disgust or happiness or something. So you see something and you go, poo. You just make that automatically it's not a word and then eventually words evolve from that. I think it's the woof woof thing.
Starting point is 00:35:38 Do you? There's a very famous philosopher and linguist called Ferdinand de Saussure, who you've all heard of, as had I before I started researching for this, of course. But he's one of the founders of linguistics, apparently. Anyway, so he's very well respected. He died in 1913. Sometime after he died, eight cardboard boxes were found that belonged to him
Starting point is 00:36:02 that showed he was obsessed with the idea that all of classical literature had hidden anagrams within it and people still talk about this people still kind of Write papers about what this means and whether it's justifiable, but he just got obsessed with like the idea There are all these weird anagrams and phony matching and patterns in classical literature. It's really interesting We're so weird about finding the patterns. It's the same with Brusset, I guess, because he said, okay, we've all evolved from frogs, and these frogs saying, quoi?
Starting point is 00:36:33 And then that goes into what in French? But he kind of assumes that French is the original language, right? Yeah. That's the big problem with this theory. Well, he says that. But what's the nickname for the French? Frogs. Oh. I'm just saying. Yeah, that's a big problem with this theory. Well, he said it but what's the nickname for the French frogs? Oh
Starting point is 00:36:47 I'm just saying holy shit. Maybe there's some have I just blown this shit. Why don't this shit wide open? We need to move on to our final fact of the show All right It is time for our final fact of the show and that is... Anna. My fact this week is that in 1968, a pig was nominated as a US presidential candidate but was arrested in the middle of his acceptance speech. When we are saying his acceptance speech...
Starting point is 00:37:19 They're very eloquent pigs if you would just listen. I am. This... I am. Yeah. Don't say, oh yeah, that makes sense. Honestly, I was thinking of the pig from Babe, and I was like, he was eloquent. It wasn't that pig, it was a different pig. This is a pig called Pigasus, and he was a presidential candidate of the Yippies, which were a political party slash Inquate group
Starting point is 00:37:46 of late 1960s sort of activist dissenters who sort of didn't like the war in Vietnam, as no one did, and they made a big fuss about it. And one of the big fusses they made was, this was two days before the big Democrat conference, national convention, and they showed up, they called a press conference, and they rocked up with this pig candidate, and one of their leaders, Jerry Rubin, started
Starting point is 00:38:09 to do the acceptance speech on the pig's behalf, because the pig was very shy, and interrupted halfway through by the police, who genuinely arrested all the candidates, including the pig, and took them away. I read a rumor that he was subsequently eaten by one of the police officers. Yeah, I heard that as well. That's a rumor. I don't think it is. And the reason I don't think it is,
Starting point is 00:38:31 is that it's quite difficult to just go from a live pig in your possession to it being on your dining room table. You've got to have kit, haven't you? You've got to have the gear. Actually, I read a different rumor that he was married off and taken to a farm to live with mrs. Pegasus Which is a nice one. Yeah, and I think that's that's plausible as well. Probably somewhere in between is the truth
Starting point is 00:38:53 Probably rehoused and then eventually eaten. Yeah Well, I read a further rumor that months like five months after this incident The yippies held an honorary, what they called, inauguration for Pegasus. Lovely. Yeah, it's all great stuff. It's good stuff. I think they were fun.
Starting point is 00:39:15 Protesters had quite a lot of fun in the 60s, as well as being very angry. Well, this is flower power. If you want to put a name that's connected to it, Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, they were all part of this big moment of saying anti-war and peace is needed But they were pranksters and they were also pulling stunts like this to To sort of get themselves in enough trouble that it made a statement
Starting point is 00:39:36 But nothing, you know bringing a pig to a nomination is is not really it wasn't even in the building You know, it was sort of easy go. They were nicknamed the Groucho Marxists, but the Yippies, as they got called, this was, it stood for the Youth International Party, but actually they were named, because one of their founders, a guy called Krasner, was going through the alphabet for words that rhymed with hippie, and eventually got to, almost the last gasp, he got to Yippie, and he thought, well yeah, we could make that stand for Youth International Party if we mangled it a bit. And so they didn't get the name first and then come up with the acronym.
Starting point is 00:40:10 They came up with the acronym first and then backformed it. Yeah. And they did take it seriously as well as being pranksters. Like the whole pig thing, there was a big argument about it. So I guess the three main people were Abby and Anita Hoffman who were a couple and Jerry Rubin. And Abby and Anita Hoffman, who were a couple, and Jerry Rubin. And Abby and Anita Hoffman bought the first pig for this big press conference
Starting point is 00:40:30 and presented it to Jerry Rubin, who rejected the pig out of hand, was furious, said, this is too small, it's too attractive, we need a big pig, we need an ugly pig. And he had to himself... I want another picture here. He's not that... I've seen bigger pigs. I've seen bigger pigs. I
Starting point is 00:40:52 Agree, it's an attractive pig to my eyes, but it was supposed to represent sort of political power of the day. I suppose That's the satire there. The other thing they did very famously was walk to the Pentagon and try and levitate it Yes, that's right. It's really interesting when you speak speak to people who were on this march, and there was a lot of them, most of them say, yeah, we were just going for a long for the fun and we weren't really going to levitate it. And then some of them, admittedly, who were kind of off their tits on LSD, they actually thought they were going to levitate it. I genuinely think some of them thought they were. Yeah, they thought they were going to send psychic energy towards it until the building itself turned orange with the energy and vibration
Starting point is 00:41:28 and then it would slowly levitate. And they were going to do it by psychic energy to better chance. And as you say, they knew it was a joke, but then there were people that thought, well, if enough of us did it, maybe this would actually work. And it was, you know, I mean, the names that keep cropping up, if you know your counterculture, America, well, this is... Wait, what happened? Oh, yeah, so it lifted up
Starting point is 00:41:47 Still there. Yeah, it's still in the air now. It's a nightmare. You gotta get him by ladder. It's insane Nothing happened Andy. It didn't work Well, Alan Ginsburg, who's one of these cats guys? Yeah, and he said the Pentagon was symbolically levitated in people's minds he said the Pentagon was symbolically levitated in people's minds. Oh. Yeah, that's such a crap excuse. That's like my facts on this show. It is true if you just believe hard enough. He, Hoffman by the way, I'm saying that he was sort of part of a peaceful movement and
Starting point is 00:42:17 so on, but you know, he did write a very infamous book which was called Steal This Book. Kind of like the Anarchist Cookbook, it had a lot of stuff in there that you don't want people reading, you know, there was bomb making, that kind of stuff in order to, but it was largely a book about how can you help with the troubles that are going on, how can you make a point,
Starting point is 00:42:37 but have little hacks to get through it. So for example, if you need to talk to a large crowd, don't spend ages like doing what we have like here, you know, like booking a theater, all that stuff spend ages doing what we have here, you know, like... Booking a theatre. Booking a theatre. All that stuff. There's a lot of money. Go to a show where there's a theatre booked, and before the show starts, jump on stage.
Starting point is 00:42:53 They've got a PA system. Just use what they're using and go into... Don't do it here, obviously, Glasgow, but that's what his suggestion was. And always do it prior to a show, because you don't want to preach to people who can get angry at you for interrupting a show. That's fine. That's not too dangerous. The bomb-making stuff is bad, but I think interrupting someone's show... Yeah, yeah. Well, I'm okay with that.
Starting point is 00:43:13 No, arguably the most dangerous thing about the book was it's called Steal This Book, encouraging everyone to not pay for it in the shops that they were at. And that's what they were... Did it happen? Did that happen? Yeah, it did get stolen. He should have called it Buy This Book. Or Buy 10 Copies of This Book. Yes.
Starting point is 00:43:27 I think that might have defeated his object while, yes, making him some more money, James. I think he did call his autobiography something like Coming to a Theatre Near You or something like that, soon to be adapted into cinema. Really? Yeah, so he did have titles like that. I think on the last page of the bucket has a list of other books worth stealing. Nice. Oh, that's nice.
Starting point is 00:43:47 Oh, I thought you were about to list all of our books, so it was a bit of sly publicity. But no, okay. They invaded Disneyland in 1970. They managed a huge victory there. That night, Disneyland had to close slightly early. Wow. Take that, the man. But it supposedly, Andy, was only the second time in Disney's history where they had to
Starting point is 00:44:07 shut and get everyone out in order to deal with the situation. So for Disney, it was a big deal because they were going to liberate Minnie Mouse. They were staying on Tom Sawyer's island. They wanted to liberate Minnie Mouse and cook Porky Pig. Again, another very pig-based, they clearly turned to violence by this point. It's just two years after they were being nice to pigs. But you're missing the main thing about that. Porky Pig's not a Disney character,
Starting point is 00:44:31 so it's not even there. So they got there and there was no Porky Pig. You gotta know your genre. Yeah. You need a brand. Hoffman played by Sacha Baron Cohen quite recently, if anyone's ever seen the film, The Trial of Chicago 7. And very confusing, so The Trial of Chicago 7 was basically,
Starting point is 00:44:46 there was a huge riot and they were all put on trial, these guys. And Hoffman and Rubin went into court wearing judicial robes, basically disguised as the judge. This was even more confusing, given that the judge was also called Hoffman. So... And then so confusingly, Rubin, the other one, went on to meet a nemesis.
Starting point is 00:45:06 He moved to Miami and he decided to lead this thing to occupy a golf course for one, to achieve one of his aims with a bunch of people. And he met his nemesis, who was also called Rubin. So it was Rubin versus Rubin, faced off against each other in this church in Miami. And then he turned into a stockbroker. faced off against each other in this church in Miami. And then he turned into a stockbroker.
Starting point is 00:45:26 And they went on tours with Yuppie versus Yippie, didn't they? They did. This was after Jerry Rubin became this big shot stockbroker and kept saying, but it's good. It's all part of the be good plan. What's a Yuppie again? What's that defined as?
Starting point is 00:45:39 Obviously mobile professional person. Yeah. Just like the 80s with a big mobile phone. Yeah. Okay, right. Yeah. So Anita and Abbie Hoffman had a child that they called America. America with a small a because they didn't want him to be pretentious. Well actually he does seem okay actually. That'll come across really well over the phone won't it? No, no, no. Small a.
Starting point is 00:46:05 He later changed his name to Alan. Still with a small a? No, he's now half Alan and half America. Because he's changed his name back to America, but he's kept the capital A from Alan. General political protests? Yeah, sure. Now's not the time, Andy. I've gathered us all here for a reason
Starting point is 00:46:26 No, it's just reading about other other protests of various kinds. So Pig based protests actually specifically I started looking into okay. There was one in Taiwan a few years ago The big debate do we let in American pork which has been treated with this particular chemical? Spanned in lots of countries. Anyway, this was the report from I think the New York Times It's banned in lots of countries. Anyway, this was the report from, I think, the New York Times. Members of the Kuomintang on Friday threw pig hearts, intestines, lungs, and other innards. This is in Parliament.
Starting point is 00:46:51 Just Parliament became a like a, what's it called? Mardi Gras, the tomato. What's the tomato thing? Oh, tomatina. Yeah, it was like that, but with pig hearts. And they threw other innards, leaving the chamber's crimson carpet street with ropey strands of intestine and milky viscera. Some lawmakers donned rain jackets, others brawled in business suits soiled by what appeared to be bits of pig fat.
Starting point is 00:47:15 So, you know, just when you think our politicians are bad, that's... No, that's great. We could do with more of that. We would all tune into BBC Parliament if we were expecting awful to be hurled around in. Similarly, in 1975, there was a group of vegetarians in Michigan that protested McDonald's. It was a two-floor McDonald's. They went to the top floor and all vomited onto the floor below. On command. They all downed a mixture of mustard and water, and then immediately vomited.
Starting point is 00:47:45 But not in unison, right? That would take so much practice. It wasn't like the Fountains of the Bellagio, I don't think. But it was... kind of around the same time, at least. And the newspapers got a press release afterwards, which they reported was written in either blood or chocolate syrup. I'm gonna go for the latter. There was an election in Iceland this year and one of the candidates, someone who's trying to become a candidate, was
Starting point is 00:48:17 Snaesfell Jorkuddle which is a glacier. The rules say that to become president you have to be an Icelandic citizen. And actually in Iceland a few years ago, they made a new law that all of the glaciers are now citizens. Oh, okay. So it passed on that. You had to be age over 35,
Starting point is 00:48:37 glacier, 700,000 years old, and no criminal record. No criminal record. And the only reason that it didn't become is they didn't get enough signatures. People didn't sign. Otherwise, there's no reason why it couldn't do. And it's actually the glacier that's mentioned in Journey to the Center of the Earth by Jules Verne. That's the one they go through.
Starting point is 00:48:58 So that could have been President of Iceland. Oh, man. And they're going to go for it again next time. That would have been so nice just for someone for Joe Biden to stand next to and feel young and sprightly. That is it. That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening.
Starting point is 00:49:19 We will be back again next time with another episode, but thank you so much, Glasgow. That was awesome. And we'll see you all again. Goodbye!

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