No Such Thing As A Fish - 561: No Such Thing As Hot Golf Balls

Episode Date: December 12, 2024

Live from Sydney, Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss movies, murder, mini golf and M&M'ses.  Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes.  Join Club Fi...sh for ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at apple.co/nosuchthingasafish or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon Get an exclusive 15% discount on Saily data plans! Use code [fish] at checkout. Download Saily app or go to https://saily.com/fish

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey Toronto, as the holiday season approaches, let's make it a time of giving, not just gifts. This year, the City of Toronto is asking all of us to do our part to reduce holiday waste. Instead of traditional gifts, consider low-waste, high-impact options like donating to a charity on behalf of a loved one. Try new ways to swap disposable items for reusable ones, such as using newspaper or fabric for gift wrap. Curious to learn more ways to swap disposable items for reusable ones, such as using newspaper or fabric for gift wrap. Curious to learn more ways to reduce holiday waste? Visit toronto.ca slash reduce dash reuse.
Starting point is 00:00:34 Let's make this season not only festive, but environmentally friendly too. Hey everyone, welcome to this week's episode of Fish. This one comes to you from the State Theatre in Sydney as part of our massive Aussie and New Zealand tour that we just finished. We had an absolutely incredible time while we were down there, as we did in the UK, but the tour down under had one extra special element that we didn't quite manage for the UK, which was we had merch. We had awesome Thunder Nerd t-shirts to go with the title UK, which was we had merch. We had awesome Thunder Nerd
Starting point is 00:01:05 t-shirts to go with the title of our show, we had Thunder Nerd beanies, we were selling our ultimate guide and no such thing as a fish tour book, which by the way if you haven't got you really need to get your hands on. It's got everything from a spread on Moss by Andy, Anna's Only Day on Twitter, there's timelines of everything that we've done, we've got bios on every guest who's been on there, there's a lot of behind-the-scenes, in fact there's a bunch of QR codes all throughout the book as well that has secret videos that we've never published anywhere, and audio commentary from us, so it's sort of a mini episode within the pages of the book. Anyway, along with some pin badges, all of that is available on our website, go to no such thing as a fish dot com slash store
Starting point is 00:01:46 and if you get in there quick enough, you're gonna be able to buy some of that swag just in time for Christmas. Now, if you're an Aussie and New Zealander listening to this right now and thinking, damn it, I didn't pick up anything at the gigs and now I've got to buy it back from over in the UK, don't worry, we've got you covered. Just head to the website and you will find a link there that is specifically for you Antipodeans so that you can deal with it more locally. Now, if you're looking for a good book to read over the Christmas period, I highly recommend our books. We're all authors. We released books this year and he has a new comic novel called A Beginner's Guide to Breaking and Entering. Brilliantly funny. James and Anna wrote a fact-packed book, which is the QI history of sports called A Load of Old Balls. And I've
Starting point is 00:02:29 written a non-fiction book for kids ages 7 and above all about the mysteries of our universe called Impossible Things. Okay, that's it for plugging. A lot of plugging there. But hey, you're a popular person. You've got a lot of presents to buy. So there you go, problem solved. Anyway, enjoy the show now. Coming to you from Down Under, on with the podcast. Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast this week coming to you live from the State Theatre in Sydney. My name is Dan 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 point is 00:03:35 Starting with fact number one, and that is Anna. My fact this week is that in 1944, the filming of the Oscar-winning movie, National Velvet, was delayed to give its lead actress time to grow a bit taller. Ah. And who was that? No one's heard of her now, so it's not worth mentioning,
Starting point is 00:03:56 but she was called Elizabeth Taylor. Yeah, this is one of her first films. Did she fluctuate in height a lot? Yeah, she was 35 at the time, but sometimes she'd wake up six foot tall, sometimes five. No, she was obviously, she was still a child. She was about 12 at the time. And this was every child actress was trying out for this part.
Starting point is 00:04:16 And I think they've been preparing for years. So a few of the tryouts were adults by the time they finally cast it. And how much did she need to make it into the movie? Well, she needed, so Pandro Berman, who was the producer, met her and thought, she's absolutely perfect, need her, but she needs three inches. Which is a hefty whack, really.
Starting point is 00:04:34 That is. It's a decent amount. They also, they asked her to wear braces, I think tooth braces, not up and down ones. And they pulled out two of her baby teeth. What? Yep. They also wanted to dye her hair,
Starting point is 00:04:49 which seems like a minor imposition after they've pulled out two of your teeth. And they wanted to change her name to Virginia, but her parents refused. And because they were really struggling to get the right actress for this role, what they needed was a child who could speak with an English accent and ride a horse.
Starting point is 00:05:05 That was the whole brief. But what's incredibly confusing, because this is always the claim, is that the basis for it was she was very good at riding, and will probably go into her relationship with horses, which wasn't weird, like I've just made it sound. And she was very good at riding, and she had been born and a bit of her life
Starting point is 00:05:20 brought up in England, so she needed a British accent. Now, if anyone's seen National Velvet, she does not talk with a British accent at any point during that film. So I'm not sure why it was a thing she needed to have in her backpack, just in case. Yeah, who knows? Yeah. Maybe she got a very bad back when she was riding King Charles,
Starting point is 00:05:39 which was the name of the horse, King Charles. It sure was. And she loved it so much that the head of MGM, Louis B. Mayer, gave it to her as a 13th birthday gift. Oh, wow. That's amazing. Did you read about how they met? No.
Starting point is 00:05:54 Her and King Charles, it's so sweet. It's like something in a film itself. So she had been taken to go riding at this country club by her parents to try and teach her to ride. And she'd seen this beautiful horse from afar, fallen in love with him, said, I must ride that horse. This is an 11 year old girl. The owner had said, this horse is mad.
Starting point is 00:06:10 It's my horse. Literally won't let anyone near it. She waited until everyone had left. And then she climbed onto the hay bales and jumped through the hole where they fed the horse hay, landing on his back. And she just lay on his back, just lay there in the stable, and she did this day after day after day until eventually the owner one day went in to ride him and was like,
Starting point is 00:06:29 there's an 11-year-old on my horse, what's going on? And said, okay, well she's obviously tamed him and handed him over. Just a beautiful tale. True love. Her looks, we've mentioned a few things about what they wanted her to do, moving the baby teeth, she needed more height. When she was born, the doctor said to her mum, you've given birth to a mutant. They didn't say those words, Dan.
Starting point is 00:06:51 They did. I refuse to believe. But it's what she has in common with you. What? Elizabeth, so I think I know what you're going to say. So do I, but I don't think Dan has this. Dan, OK. It feels like all four of us are holding a hand of cards
Starting point is 00:07:07 about what mutation Elizabeth and Dan... What I'm saying is excess hair, but it's distributed differently on the two of them. So, Dan, a suit man. I mean, big time. Because we're looking at a picture of Elizabeth Taylor on here, and she doesn't quite have Dan's hairiness. No, but interestingly, that's me next to her naked.
Starting point is 00:07:35 We should say for listeners at home that that is lassie. You're done. OK, so what she did have is she had a double set of eyelashes. So her mom was like, oh, that's okay, that's fine. But it can be dangerous because it can be a condition where if the second layer of eyelash grows inward, it can go into your eyeballs. And a very low percentage of people who have had it
Starting point is 00:08:01 have died of a heart disease later in life, which is how she died. But I don't know if a connection has been made. Because it's a genetic thing, isn't it? Yeah, exactly. It's a gene called FOXY2. Yeah, it's so cool. F-O-X-C-2. Do you know one other thing about her face that she also had?
Starting point is 00:08:21 She once, supposedly, I've read this in a few places, won the title Most Memorable Eyebr this in a few places won the title most memorable eyebrows in a magazine poll and yeah Lassie came second no sorry just the dogs have eyebrows well let's look oh yeah yeah okay I would say if the two people on screen Elizabeth Taylor's are more pronounced yeah but yes certainly they have they have the rich, don't they, the dogs? Yeah, they do. I just never learned that.
Starting point is 00:08:49 So, I mean, Lassie was one of her first big hits, wasn't it, Elizabeth Taylor? Yeah, it was basically Lassie first, then National Velvet. She did a very strong line in animal-based films. Yeah. Yeah, and the dog was played by a dog called Pal, and Pal earned a salary of $250 per week, while Elizabeth Taylor was only paid $100 per week. But the dog actually was male, so it was kind of standard for the time.
Starting point is 00:09:14 Right. So obviously, for anyone under the age of 70, we should just say that she's, you know, in case you're not familiar with her stuff, she's unbelievably famous throughout the 20 of 70, we should just say that she's, you know, in case you're not familiar with her stuff, she's unbelievably famous throughout the 20th century, not only for her films, things like Cleopatra, which was the extremely famous one, but lots and lots more,
Starting point is 00:09:34 but for having seven husbands and eight marriages. Yeah. Because she's married to Richard Burton twice. And- Was that his accent, or did you just have a weird- It was his accent, it was his accent or did you just have a weird stroke? It was his accent. Just stuffed out, sorry. Richard Burton, that's not his accent.
Starting point is 00:09:52 He was Welsh, he was Welsh, that was not Welsh. Anyway, the list of her husbands is so extraordinary because it goes through all of these, you know, her first marriage was to this horrible guy called Conrad Hilton, who was the hotel chain heir. She was 18 years old. MGM picked the bridesmaids and invited the guests for her. So she would have been step-mom eventually, or step-grandmother to Paris Hilton, right?
Starting point is 00:10:16 Because she married Eddie Fisher as well, right? Eddie Fisher, who was mother of Carrie Fisher, so she was step-mother to Princess Leia. Yeah, you find it... it's weird when you research people like this because you find yourself getting into very heat magazine territory with celebrity gossip, but it feels okay because it was 50 years ago, but I found myself finding it so juicy that she was,
Starting point is 00:10:35 when she married Conrad Hilton, Conrad himself was actually having an affair at the time with his own stepmother, Jean-Jacques Gabor. What? Whoa! Jean-Jacques is in the story now? Jean-Jacques Gabor. What? What? Whoa! Is Jean-Jacques in the story now? Jean-Jacques Gabor? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:47 The woman who introduced the Rubik's Cube to America. Exactly. She's not just famous for that, James. Is she famous for something else? Is that why you were fired from Heat magazine, James? Jean-Jacques Gabor can fit into over four trillion positions. No wonder he liked her. All of our marriages, they're obviously quite high profile.
Starting point is 00:11:09 But the double marriage, the most famous one, Richard Burton, that one was the most interesting because those two ran Hollywood as if they were the king and queen of America. They would go into parties, they would spend ludicrous amounts of money on it, they would have weird reasons for leaving parties, and they would tear up rooms, they would have tantrums, and no one seemed to do anything about it.
Starting point is 00:11:35 And so her life, Elizabeth Taylor's life, really when you read the juicy stuff, it's all about the diva-ism, all about the amazing demand. Like for example, in Cleopatra, when they were filming that, she had twice a week delivered to her on set her local favorite meal from Dave Chasen's chili because she just loved it so much and what made that really difficult is that that restaurant was in LA and she Was filming in Rome so they they got it on airplanes twice to three times a week
Starting point is 00:12:01 Just her meal to be delivered to her for lunch. It was so bad that the Vatican stepped in, didn't they? And the Pope accused her of erotic vagrancy, her and Richard Burton, actually. And there's an amazing scene in Cleopatra where she's coming into, spoiler alert, coming into the city on a big sort of chair, and there's huge crowds.
Starting point is 00:12:26 And apparently there was a moment where all of these extras who are all Italian Catholics are starting to come towards her and she thinks they're gonna lynch her because it's been in all the newspapers that the Pope hates her. And then just at the last second, they all turn around and go,
Starting point is 00:12:41 Liz, Liz, Liz, Liz. And they just loved her so much. Wow. The filming of that is absolutely insane. Because they tried filming in London, it didn't work. It starred Jackie Chan, a woman called Jackie Chan. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. That's so funny.
Starting point is 00:12:59 Just there are so many stories of the filming, because they could only film if Burton and Taylor both showed up. And if they had had a round the night before, they just wouldn't. So the production overran like crazy. This is a story from Jackie Chan. There was a scene where Cleopatra has a bath on set. And the set was cleared of all superfluous people,
Starting point is 00:13:18 she reported. But a Scottish actor who played a blind poet gleefully told me he was allowed to stay because people had forgotten he wasn't really blind. That's very funny. Just on their mad demands, they both loved animals. Richard Burton loved dogs. She loved dogs.
Starting point is 00:13:39 There was a story going around that the dogs that they had liked her more than they liked him. So he bought a dog and it suddenly liked her more than they liked him. So he bought a dog and it suddenly liked him more than it liked her. And everyone was like, what's going on? And then his diaries later reported that the dog had come and it only spoke Welsh and Richard Burton spoke Welsh to it secretly. But I couldn't verify that firsthand. I wouldn't put it past them. But they did both love dogs and they were staying in the UK and they weren't allowed to bring their dogs to London because of quarantine rules.
Starting point is 00:14:08 So they found a loophole in the law, which said that there was no rule that the animals couldn't be on British waters. And they leased a yacht for $20,000, I think huge amounts of money, about $2,000 a day and moored it on the Thames and just kept these dogs on the Thames. Wow, very clever.
Starting point is 00:14:26 Yeah, it's very clever. She did a lot of crazy and weird things, right? But one thing that she also did is she saved the life of an extremely famous actor at the time. She was at a party with a man called Montgomery Cliff and they were on the way home and she was in a car behind, he was in the car in front. He had a massive accident, car flips over,
Starting point is 00:14:43 smashes and he's trapped underneath. She gets out of her car. She goes and climbs in through the broken window in the car to see him, and he's choking. And so she does something which I think is extraordinary. Most people would do like a Heimlich maneuver, right? Most people would tap the back like crazy. Elizabeth Taylor reaches into his mouth. And because the thing that was choking him was broken teeth stuck in his throat, she individually picked out all the teeth from his mouth until his airway was cleared. And saved his life. That's stunning. I've never heard of a choking being fixed. I heard once there was a dolphin who had swallowed some plastic and the world's second tallest man went in with his really long arms
Starting point is 00:15:28 and pulled the plastic out. But I kind of think dolphins have wider mouths than humans. Yeah. This really doesn't fit. I don't think... If Andy, you had something in your mouth and I'm looking at my hand and the size of your mouth, I don't think one fits into the other. It wasn't down in his rakesm.
Starting point is 00:15:45 It was quite shallow in the mouth. She had waited for her fingers to grow long enough. Yeah. That's the thing. That's what happened. There we go. Hey, Toronto. This holiday season, let's focus on making memories, not waste.
Starting point is 00:16:03 But when you do have to dispose of an item, the City of Toronto has your holiday sorting sorted. Remember that rinsed aluminum trays go in the blue bin, food waste goes in the green bin, and ribbons that can't be reused go in the garbage. Curious about where that holiday waste item goes? Visit toronto.ca slash waste wizard or download the TO Waste app to find out more. Stop the podcast. Stop the podcast. Hi everyone. We'd like to let you know that this week we're sponsored by SALE.
Starting point is 00:16:35 Yeah, that's right. Hey James, we just got back from a big international tour, right? Sure did. First thing when I landed at Heathrow that I saw was a giant queue and I laughed out loud I said that's not me anymore because I know about sailing Absolutely is the best place to go if you want data abroad. They are affordable They have global and regional plans and they have unlimited data plans So there is no way that you're ever gonna run out of data abroad ever again
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Starting point is 00:17:47 Okay, on with the podcast. On with the show. It is time for us to move on to fact number two, and that is my fact. My fact this week is that one of the leading investigators in the Jack the Ripper case Whose only major contribution was to arrest someone who wasn't capable of being the murderer Was called sergeant thick That was the guy Sergeant yeah sergeant William thick or Willie thick
Starting point is 00:18:25 Which is just funny. He basically, yeah, he knocked on the door of a guy called John Pizer, or Pizer, and he said, you need to come with me, and the person said, what for? And Sergeant Thicke, having no evidence, clearly didn't know what for, so he'd had to say, you know what for.
Starting point is 00:18:47 And the guy went with him and he was put into jail and then he was released because there was no evidence whatsoever that this guy was guilty. And Thicke, even himself, when he was interviewed later, saying, yeah, I don't think it could have been him, I don't think he was capable of it, I don't know why I did that. So, yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:04 We should just say Jack the Ripper was a murderer. Because I know we're in Australia and Ripper means something very different over here. Yeah, it was not cool, this guy. And by the way, this is a subject which obviously involves horrific events. And we are probably going to be talking largely about the people who were named as potential killers and so on, but just as a flipside thing, there's an amazing book called The Five that you should go and read, which is all about the women who often don't get humanised in this, and yeah, it's an amazing book. So Mary Jane Kelly, she was known in the press as Fair Emma, Ginger, Dark Mary and Black
Starting point is 00:19:43 Mary, suggesting that she must have changed her hair quite a lot. Very nice. Very nice. There was Annie Chapman, who got into a fight with a female lodger just before she died, possibly over a man or possibly over a bar of soap. We're not sure. They are often confused, I find. There was Elizabeth Stride, who was Swedish,
Starting point is 00:20:05 and she went around telling everyone that her husband and her child had died in a shipwreck on the River Thames. That she survived it, but actually there was no such shipwreck. I have a theory about her. Well, I have a theory about who the killer is, because I don't think we have enough people theorising about who the killer was. And it's related to her, because she lived with a man called Michael Kidney. Now Jack the Ripper famously removed people's kidneys. Okay.
Starting point is 00:20:30 Coincidence? Probably. I don't think so. Almost certainly. Otherwise you're just going around looking for someone with the surname Murderer, I think. Did anyone try that? I don't think so.
Starting point is 00:20:43 But the women are kind of, they were written up. A lot of it was done, it was made very, you know, it was made exciting, it was made to sell papers. There were so many London papers at the time, about 20 daily papers all trying to get information and sell copies off the back of it. So they were often written up as kind of low women or fallen women or women who sold sex. And actually, like one or two of them had done or may have done, but actually most of them
Starting point is 00:21:09 were out late at night is the... Yeah, not that there should be any remote difference between someone who sells sex for money and doesn't sell sex for money in terms of whether or not they should be murdered, but... I wasn't trying to imply that. No, no, I know, I just think. I think there's an implication of that. They couldn't afford lodging some of them.
Starting point is 00:21:30 That's why the killer had the means or the opportunity to kill them. Yeah, so Jack the Ripper, I think this is quite a fun little detail. There's so many fun details about the guy. In a poll in 2006, he was voted the worst Briton in history. That was before Brexit though. That was. That's true, yeah. Who else was in there? Do you have any details of who else came?
Starting point is 00:21:59 Yeah, I've got them if you want them. So Thomas Becket came second. Thomas Becket? Yeah. King John came fourth. When was this polled on in the 12th century? King John fair. Yeah, Edric Stryona. Who's that? Good question So Richard Rich Lord Rich of Lees I don't like the sound of it based on his name, but I don't know Hugh dispenser the younger
Starting point is 00:22:24 He might know autonomous a Rndel and Oswald Mosley, and a few others. But basically the way that they did it is they got a load of historians and they were each allowed to nominate one person. And so some of them went really straight down the line and said, Jack the Ripper, and some of them said, here's someone you've never heard of. Hugh Dispenser.
Starting point is 00:22:42 Like... You know all those anti-COVID things you see everywhere? Yeah. He invented those. That's great. It's an easy gig for the story that gets Jack the Ripper, isn't it? They've murdered loads of people, pulled their organs out. I win.
Starting point is 00:22:54 Yeah. The end. That's the thing about the case is that a lot of people get very obsessed with it in, I think, a slightly unhealthy way. And it's written up sometimes as the first ever true crime story, because there were lots of people chucking in their own theories and debating with each other and all that, and slightly sort of gamifying it.
Starting point is 00:23:10 One of those theorised to have maybe been the murderer was Dr Thomas Cream, who was a doctor who was eventually hanged for an unrelated murder at Newgate Prison. And his last words were, I am Jack the... And then he was hanged no yeah but but it probably wasn't him but was that bad timing or it was I think it was incredible timing by him I think so he thought the lever going down so wow because he was in prison at the time the murders happened I mean it's just very
Starting point is 00:23:41 very very unlikely that he was actually yeah I think he was just he just had flair. He just had flair. Having a bit of fun right at the end. Why the hell not? Yeah. The industry is pretty wild in the UK and the Jack the Ripper tours are quite mad but my favorite tour is a tour that was set up in about 2017 in Clitheroe which for those of you don don't know the UK, is in Lancashire, about 250 miles away from Whitechapel. It's the Jack the Ripper tour. It was started by a tour guide called Simon Entwistle, who just sort of noticed that bits of Clitheroe, actually they haven't been developed very much
Starting point is 00:24:17 since the 19th century, so they look a lot more like what Jack the Ripper would have experienced than London. Yeah, because that bit of London is completely developed now. It's all skyscraper Yeah, I gotta say having grown up near Clitherow or as we used to call it clit hero I Nice little town. I stopped off to guitar hero. I just didn't think well, it's much more difficult figuring on that You never get any points because you can't find the fucking thing.
Starting point is 00:24:50 How interesting. That's really weird. There are all sorts of... There's slightly sort of unpleasant... OK, is this tasteless? A fish and chip shop called Jack the Chipper. Is it? You know, some people say it's been long enough and that's fine.
Starting point is 00:25:06 The proprietor said it was history, never a celebration. And then they said, we've already shown our respectfulness by offering a 50% discount for women. Which, is that okay? We'd chop them in half as soon as they come in. My favorite theory about Jack the Ripper is that there was no such person. Okay. And this is the one I actually believe. This is a guy called Peter Turnbull who wrote a book called The Killer That Never Was.
Starting point is 00:25:30 His idea is that these people obviously were very sadly killed, but a lot of them were copycat crimes. And they were done by people who'd read the stories in the newspaper and thought, I'm going to go and do that same thing. So there wasn't a single serial killer. And his theories say that there was no consistent modus operandi, so the way that the people were killed was different each time.
Starting point is 00:25:52 It wasn't over an extended period, so normally serial killers kill over several years, whereas this only happened over 13 weeks. And it all took place in a very single area, whereas usually serial killers will kill over a little bit more of a wide area. And some of the really terrible things like that when they were disemboweled the victims, they occurred after people in the newspapers had speculated that that might
Starting point is 00:26:16 happen. Right. So that's, I think that might- So the first one wasn't? The first one wasn't disemboweled. Yeah, because she was the one who drew lots of tourists, right? The industry's been going on since the start. As soon as the first person was killed... Oh, no, I think it was the second person when people started to think,
Starting point is 00:26:30 ooh, something's going on here. It was in 1888, and locals paid a penny to go and see her there. And then when she was taken away, then locals kept paying a penny, and it was the people who lived next door, which good business minds started charging people just to come and look at the bit of pavement. Right. Wow.
Starting point is 00:26:47 And there's quite a few other people who were being named. Obviously, there's a big, big list. There was a guy, this was a big one, Francis Tumblety, which is the most un-serial killer name I've ever heard. Take it, T. You can't really judge people by their name. I'm going to judge Francis, I think. So he was supposedly, not only was he Jack the Ripper,
Starting point is 00:27:09 but he was also complicit in the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. So supposedly he'd done that and he'd come over. But what he was was a miracle quack who just used to sell medicine. His big invention was called Tumulty's Pimple Destroyer. So even if he was guilty, you know, he did some good and he did some bad, right? I mean, pimples are a real blight. There you go. A lot of adolescence.
Starting point is 00:27:29 Have you heard of Richard Mansfield? Oh, the actor? He was an actor who got caught up in this completely, like this was nothing to do with him. But at the time the murders happened, there was a play on which was a dramatization of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hy Hyde which is about a doctor who drinks a potion and then becomes you know changes personality and becomes evil and people thought that he might
Starting point is 00:27:54 be the murderer simply because he was such a good actor at playing both Dr. Jackal and Mr. Hyde and the production was shut down but the stagecraft was so unbelievable people couldn't work out how it was done because he changed physically. People thought that, I can't believe what I'm seeing, right? It was so effective that they thought... People sat with opera glasses trying to look at what this guy had done on stage. Like physically, like...
Starting point is 00:28:15 Yeah, and some people said, oh, he's just putting a mask on. And actually, can I just tell you what he did? This is so good. They had pre-painted his face in a way that standard theater lighting wouldn't show. And then they introduced a colored filter in the lights in the theater, which showed up the grease paint, and he would contort his face a little bit, but it would completely change the look of his face.
Starting point is 00:28:38 And I have not done that tonight. But imagine how interesting that would have been. Wow. And he got completely caught up in it, but nothing to do with him. That's exciting, yeah. We're going to have to move on in a sec, guys. Have you heard of Jack the Flipper? Jack the Flipper?
Starting point is 00:28:58 An aggressive dolphin in a 2013 study. The Dipper, on the other hand, is hand ice cream shop in North Carolina Are you culminating in Amsterdam's Jack the stripper I've got this I'm really anxious about was yeah, okay It is time for fact number three and that is Andy my fact is that German mini golfers refrigerate their balls. So. Doesn't it hurt when they close the door? Lovely. Lovely stuff. Very good.
Starting point is 00:29:35 This was a great piece in the FT about the world of mini golf, which is just, it is not crazy golf. It is big golf made small. Mini golf, as the title implies, is not, there are no windmills, there are no clowns, there are no dinosaurs. I would say Crazy Golf is a segment of mini golf. The fun guy segment, if you will. Yeah, exactly. All Crazy Golf is mini, but not all mini golf is crazy.
Starting point is 00:29:58 And the correspondent went to see the world finals, the senior's mini golf world championships, and they take it very seriously, and the Germans chilled their balls. They have special ball fridges to ensure they have ball homeostasis, and it's a very big deal. And, you know, some players keep their balls in their socks, and they tuck them into their trousers. Right.
Starting point is 00:30:18 Because you want consistency of temperature, you want consistency of rolling. How do you make your shoes fit? If you've got a... Is it you just have to buy a much larger shoe? You want consistency of temperature. You want consistency of rolling. How do you make your shoes fit? If you've got a... Is it that you just have to buy a much larger shoe? No, no, your sock goes higher than your... Unless you're wearing those ankle socks.
Starting point is 00:30:33 That's not going to work. Oh, sorry, I was imagining the end of the sock. I believe it's at the end of the sock, but it's at the other end you're thinking of. Yes, okay. I think we've said it before, that these balls that they use in mini-golf, they're not golf balls, are they? No.
Starting point is 00:30:47 They're kind of rubbery things, which I guess makes it more important that they're the right temperature. Right. They're still golf balls, are they mini golf balls? They're mini golf balls, yeah. And they are, you can pick your own balls? I think we said, did we say that? No. If you play golf, you'll have a, you might like select your club, or you've got a caddy, is it?
Starting point is 00:31:03 Your caddy carries your clubs for you? Yeah. Does that happen? Fucking hell. Do you have a caddy when you play golf? You can, on occasion. Okay, but you can, if you're a mini golfer, have a ball caddy, because you've got so many balls
Starting point is 00:31:17 to choose from, and you can choose which balls you play on which holes. So when professional golfers say, give me the nine iron, or whatever that language is, in mini golf it's the opposite. Give me the red ball. Give me the big round ball. Big round ball. They're all the same size, we should say.
Starting point is 00:31:32 So what are you choosing? Of course, Andy. Come on, you can't play with a marble some of the time and a beach ball some of the rest of the time. Are you sure, sir? This one is twice the size of the hole. Yes, I'll take it. James, Tiger Woods once... This is something I don't know about golf. He played the big championship that he won.
Starting point is 00:31:50 He ran out of balls. OK. And he was down to like one ball and you can't just request more balls. Did he have to use one of his balls? He had used... Tiger Woods famously used his balls a lot. But in golf, however many you bring with you on the first tee is how many you have to, you know, you can't get any more from the club. The ones you've got are the ones you're stuck with.
Starting point is 00:32:21 Here's one really interesting thing that is different about mini golf and maxi golf. And that is in mini golf you refrigerate your balls. In maxi golf it is against the rules to warm your balls up. Explicitly you're not allowed to warm because it changes the way that they might fly through the air. You are allowed to warm them up before the round but then they will go cold quite quickly but during the game you're not allowed to. And it's to such an extent that when you play golf in a country that isn't fucking boiling like this one, you get cold a lot and you would have hand warmers in your pockets,
Starting point is 00:32:57 you'd be advised not to put your balls near those hand warmers because your opponents could say, you're artificially warming them up, you're going to get kicked out. Are you allowed to pocket your balls? You can put them in your pocket. Can you put them in your armpits? Can you keep them in your mouth? I'm not going to ask any more questions but I can think of a few locations which would ensure every hole is a goal. The rule specifically says you're not allowed to artificially warm your golf balls. Is your bum artificial? It doesn't specifically say it would be a case by case basis.
Starting point is 00:33:36 I can tell you for sure, my bum is 100% real. You know? I feel like it might affect your stance. I think you failed the caddy interview Your caddy just walk to the spot you're teeing off it just squeeze their cheeks and drop If they could land it directly on the tea, that is a great caddy. That's a caddy. Oh my God. Moving on. You brought it up.
Starting point is 00:34:08 I'm so sorry. I'm so sorry. Moving on to the balls of the pun. Hey, check this out. A 2009 search for the Loch Ness Monster. Oh my God. How do you do it? How do you do it?
Starting point is 00:34:21 It didn't find the Loch Ness Monster. It found 100,000 golf balls. And basically, they've worked out that there's a driving range where golf balls have been lobbed the Loch Ness Monster, it found 100,000 golf balls. And basically they've worked out that there's a driving range where golf balls have been logged into Loch Ness and they're just all over the ground. They were registering all these signals and there was 100,000 of them. They thought, my God, they're baby Loch Ness Monster eggs. And...
Starting point is 00:34:42 They all had time lists written on the side. Yeah, they didn't think that. That's what I would have thought, is what I mean. But yeah, so lost balls. I mean, this is an actual job that you can get at a golf course, not a mini golf course, but they have scuba divers who are paid to go into all the bits of water and they go hunting for balls and they get paid by the ball that they found. So that's a job you can get if you're one of them.
Starting point is 00:35:08 It's incredible. They build up so much over time. Have you heard of Glenn Berger? This is a guy who has exactly the job that Dennis just described. He's been working, he was profiled about 10 years ago. He had already collected 15 million balls. His personal best is 17,000 balls in a day. What? He's employing lots of people to do his balls work, right? Yeah, but that's, I think, his personal best. That's him going down. No. Yeah, because if you go somewhere that has been played on a golf course for years and
Starting point is 00:35:34 years. I guess if you're literally just dredging them, maybe. He's dredging, or he goes down and he'll just pull them into sacks, because they all settle in the same place. There is a website called golf.com, a very good website. If you like golf. If is a website called golf.com, a very good website. If you like golf. If you like golf, yeah. It claims that in the late 1990s there was a golf ball diver who spent several hours stuck on the bottom because he was pinned down by an amorous alligator.
Starting point is 00:35:57 Right. Oh my God. Who was trying to flirt. One way of improving your golf balls perhaps perhaps, might be to make them radioactive. Ooh, okay. In 1910, there was a company called the Worthington Golf Ball Company that started making golf balls with radium in them. And they said they were wise enough to stop at a reasonable position
Starting point is 00:36:18 and not develop unduly a power that could be dangerous. So I think they just had a little bit in. Why were you doing it? Is it so you can find them? Well, the idea is in those days they thought, because radium was this new sort of wonder material that they found, they thought you could add radium to anything and it would just make it better. They had radium condoms, for instance.
Starting point is 00:36:37 Yeah, radium crockery. I saw some of that recently in a shop. Yeah. And I walked past at night and I thought, oh, what a cool light display they've got. And it was a display of, I think it was uranium. Really? Were you shopping in the 1910s?
Starting point is 00:36:50 It was an antique shop, but it was very, yeah. I think that it's kind of, you're not supposed to really buy too many of those, are you? I think they're kind of, yeah. But they did these in 1910, but they didn't really sell very well. But then they came back. And in recent years, there's been some scientists at the Atomic Energy of
Starting point is 00:37:08 Canada who said that they have put their golf balls in radioactive position and they travel 20 to 30 yards further than conventional balls. Really? Yeah they put it in an electron beam but they have said that they won't make any claims, you know, claims in the shops to say this definitely won't work. They said that would require study, and we don't intend to study it. OK. That's science.
Starting point is 00:37:37 There's actually a stop gap in between your 1910 and then more recent ones, which is in 1951. There was a guy called Dr. William L. Davidson, and he supposedly was creating golf balls, but with little quantities of radioactive material inside. And as you say, Andy, it was for if a golf ball got lost, you would go with a Geiger counter and you would be able to locate your ball. That's a really good idea.
Starting point is 00:37:59 Do you know how many balls there are out there? This is, in America alone, USA alone, 300 million golf balls go missing every year Wow, that's almost exactly the population of America for every person in America If you're listening to this in the States, there is a golf ball for every year of your life waiting It's out there and you'll never find them all. Oh, oh, yes. Yes What a sobering thought we What a sobering thought. We don't know what happens to them either.
Starting point is 00:38:28 No one knows what happens to a golf ball that doesn't get touched. There's no like recognized studies. So they don't know. Because they last a thousand years. They just don't degrade. Yes. It's nice that the cockroaches will be able to play golf
Starting point is 00:38:38 in the future. Just a sort of lateral thinking test for you. So golf balls used to be surrounded by a very hard, vulcanized rubber shell, which isn't quite the same as they have now. So that was replaced with fully synthetic rubber in the end. But it was in 1965 that the transition started to be made. It was a chemist called Harry Lander, was one of the people who did it. And he was trying to make a really durable golf ball,
Starting point is 00:39:02 and he made one, and it was successful, but it didn't have that hard shell and so he had to make a tweak to it, a special change, because it didn't do something that all golfers wanted it to do. What did he have to add back in? Okay, what did it not do? So it wasn't hard on the outside.
Starting point is 00:39:20 Yes, it worked still just as well. Okay, so they just liked the sound of the thwack. Liked the sound, James. You've got the mind of a so they just like the sound of the thwack. They like the sound, James. You've got the mind of a golfer. You had to add the click back in. Really? Like a car door? Exactly like a car door. They added the click back into golf balls.
Starting point is 00:39:36 That's so funny. I'm going to have to move us on, guys. Can I do a 2018 headline from the UK? Man filmed having sex with ninth hole of golf course. And a quote, from where he was, it looked like he had his penis in the hole while he had the flag in his backside. Interesting.
Starting point is 00:39:56 It was the most weirdest thing I've ever had the most fortune to see. All I can say is if my ball ever goes in the ninth hole at Brackenwood it can stay there And that's where the 300 million others are Hey Toronto this holiday season let's focus on making memories not waste But when you do have to dispose of an item, the City of Toronto has your holiday sorting sorted. Remember that rinsed aluminum trays go in the blue bin, food waste goes in the green
Starting point is 00:40:30 bin and ribbons that can't be reused go in the garbage. Curious about where that holiday waste item goes? Visit toronto.ca slash waste wizard or download the TO Waste app to find out more. It is time for our final fact of the show and that is James. Okay, my fact this week is that M&M's deliberately made the green character sexy because of a school ground rumour that that coloured sweets were an aphrodisiac. This is Ms. Green. And for people who can't see her on the screen, she has pouty lips and eyelashes and high heels.
Starting point is 00:41:13 And she was invented by a marketing agency called BBDO, who wanted to transform M&Ms into a brand, into a more iconic brand, I should say. And they came up with these ideas of spokes candies. And in their press release, they say that the green M&M, she adds credence to the rumor that her mere presence is a turn-on. And it turns out that kids, throughout the previous 20 years or so,
Starting point is 00:41:37 had all been saying, if you eat the green ones, it's an aphrodisiac. And they thought, oh, we might as well run with it. Yeah, it's pretty amazing that every single color of an M&M was associated with a kind of school ground or workplace or general life myth, right? It was everywhere. So green ones were an aphrodisiac. The last one you pulled out of the bag was red.
Starting point is 00:41:56 You need to make a wish and it will come true. If the last candy that comes out of the bag is yellow, you can call in sick and stay at home. Orange. Who said that? No one ever did that. Did any boss ever receive that call? Please write in if so. Orange M&Ms, good luck. Brown ones, bad luck. It was all that's just, that was, that's what people said when you pulled the thing out. I just feel like a lot of people are probably similar to myself, a packet after packet of
Starting point is 00:42:22 M&Ms without being aware any of them had personalities until now. Really? I certainly didn't know until I read this. I couldn't believe she was sexy. Did everyone else know this? Uh, yeah. Well, it's... No. I mean, is it...? I was a loner at school. I didn't pick up on those things. I think the rumor was that. And I had no idea about the connection.
Starting point is 00:42:41 I just thought they'd been a bit weird by making one of them a bit... Fit? A bit fit. And it's got controversial lately, hasn't it? I mean to a certain extent Oh extremely controversial. Okay. Why well, you know should we have one who's wearing high heels with no pants on to be honest Looking at that picture. None of them are wearing pants. It's weird. If one of us wearing pants I don't like it. I'm wearing pants at all they did they did attempt to replace replace the green ones high heel boots with trainers and they put like sensible heels on the brown one who used to wear little kitten heels.
Starting point is 00:43:12 And there's a huge backlash by which, I mean, I think one person wrote an article about it. And so they reverted, you know, because it was woken us gone mad. Yeah. So there was one bit where she did a sports illustrated swimsuit modelling thing. Weird. Where she sort of unzipped almost her entire body to reveal the chocolate inside.
Starting point is 00:43:35 Oh, wow. Which feels more like a horror movie thing than a sexy thing. That's why cats got in trouble, because they had a cat wearing a fur coat. I was like, where did you get that fur coat? What's it? What's the fur? Do you remember Judy Dench in cats? Is a cat but she's also wearing a fur coat and it's everyone was like a bit. Well, that's a bit rum, isn't it? Is it? Oh, it's a bit rum. Anyway, was it more or less controversial than the huge Eminem controversy? Let's be real they're just smarties right right? They're just smarties. What?
Starting point is 00:44:05 Oh, come on. Can I just say, for legal reasons, they are not just smarties. They are basically smarties. But also, don't they predate smarties? No, smarties just predate them. So, Forrest Mars is the scion of the Mars dynasty. He had broken with his family firm, but he was of chocolate pedigree.
Starting point is 00:44:23 And he was in Spain during the Spanish Civil War. Unclear why he felt the need to stick his beak into the Spanish Civil War. But... There was a lot of beak sticking happening. So much. There was a mix time. He spent time with George Harris from Roundtree.
Starting point is 00:44:36 And the story, which may not be true, but it may, is that he noticed some soldiers with Smarties, and they have a hard candy shell, and they don't melt as in the fierce Spanish sun, as easily as just normal chocolate would do, and miraculously he then thought of M&Ms. What gave me the idea? We'll never know. And he's one of the M's of M&Ms. So it's Forest Mars, and then the other person is Bruce Murray, who was part of Hershey's, and it was a sort of collaboration, right, where they had the chocolate, he had the idea, stolen from the Spanish Civil War, and then they came together.
Starting point is 00:45:08 And that's why it's M&M's, right, so the apostrophe M means it belongs to both of them. So it means, M&M's means belongs to Murray and Mars, but that means that a single M&M, that still belongs to them both, right? So that, I reckon a single M&M really should be an M&M's because it belongs to Murray and Mars. And that means I reckon a full packet of M&M's should be M&M's. And that's what I will be asking for in the shops from now on. Right.
Starting point is 00:45:38 This is going to be the next big controversy, isn't it? One panino and two M&M's is great. I completely forgot to check something, speaking of the M's and the M's on the sweets. And I meant to. So sorry, I wouldn't normally ask the audience, but if you are listening at home, please try it. I read in the Atlantic or the New York Times that if you pour a packet of M&M's into some beer, the letters will peel off from their shelves and float around the beer on their own like a ghost trying to spell out a message. Ooh!
Starting point is 00:46:08 Really? But the ghost is just saying, mmm. In fairness, he's in a pint of beer. Yeah, that's true. I think didn't they, they invented it or they changed and innovated an existing machine specifically to print the M onto the M&M. They're very secretive about their machines. Yeah, right. There are stories that if you're an engineer and a machine goes wrong at the M&S. They're very secretive about their machines Yeah, right
Starting point is 00:46:25 There are stories that if you're an engineer and a machine goes wrong at the M&M factory that you're led in to repair it blindfolded It's not a secret where it is in the factory and you can't fix it blindfolded I think not but suppose that maybe you don't see the umpalumpas as you pass them by. It's the idea. Right. But you'd hear them singing. But they're really... like Forrest Mars, we have mentioned before on the show, he was insane. So if executives had meetings with competitors or outsiders, they would sometimes stand up in disguise with a false moustache or whatever. Supposedly even their bankers don't have access to their financial records.
Starting point is 00:47:03 What? Don't know what's going on there? But he was he was a total recluse there are no photos of him or there might have been one photo of him ever taken Publicly it might have a lot in his family album Maybe but he was never seen ever wanted to be seen in public Yeah, someone in 1999 tried to find out the name of the president of the Mars company, right? 1999 no one knew the name of the president of the Mars company, right? 1999, no one knew the name of the president of the Mars company, one of the biggest companies
Starting point is 00:47:27 on the planet. A journalist phoned up and said, can you tell me who's the president of the Mars company, please? Only to be told, I'm sorry, I can't give out the names of our associates. Phone was hung up. Really?
Starting point is 00:47:37 They had a cult of total secrecy for a long time. Has that changed, or is that still the case? It's still pretty much his descendants who are running the place now. It's still very, very, it's a tight ship. It's still pretty much his descendants who are running the place now Yeah, right still very very it's a tight ship Yeah It's very clever what they did with M&Ms with giving each of the M&Ms a different color because the color became the personality And hence people trying to fill in the gaps and and work out what they brought to the table and I was thinking
Starting point is 00:47:59 Could we could we do that that doesn't work because we're a podcast We can't wear colors people won't be able to hear the colors. And then I thought, actually, someone did it for us the other day because we were at a gig here in Australia and someone gave us a little fanzine that they've done of us by George Rex comics. And they've actually given us words to define who we are.
Starting point is 00:48:22 Well, you mean like the Spice Girls. Like the Spice Girls, exactly. So that's how we need to exist, right? So in this quiz, which is which member of No Such Thing As A Fish are you? Here are the four options for what we could be. Sarcastic. Northern. Boring.
Starting point is 00:48:42 And an idiot. That's devastatingly bad. boring... and an idiot. That's devastatingly banged right. So we've got boring spice, stupid spice, saki spice and scow spice. Northern spice. Scow spice? I was trying to think of another S that was in the North.
Starting point is 00:49:02 Sounds like a really great quiz, Dan. And really relevant as well. That was great. Because I'm sarcastic great quiz, Dan. And really relevant as well. That was great. Because I'm sarcastic. Oh, yeah. And I'm such an idiot, I had no idea that you were... Hey, up, hey, up. Let's get on with it. I can't think of anything interesting to add.
Starting point is 00:49:25 Let's talk about Eminem a bit more. Can we talk about Van Halen? The thing. Oh, of course. Yeah, yeah. Because we were on tour and they toured and so basically we were a rock band. This is a really interesting thing about, you know, supposedly Van Halen, when they, the rock big rock band in the 70s, 80s, they had a line in the writer which said, we want a bowl of M&M's with all the brown M&Ms removed.
Starting point is 00:49:45 Right? That is a story that has done the rounds for such a long time. And the story was, it was so they were checking that the venue was reading the rider in full and doing everything right, so that all the amps were in the right place and the lights. It was actually a way of testing to make sure the venue were reading and paying attention.
Starting point is 00:50:02 That has been turned on its head. This is the exciting thing, double debunk. I was reading Doug Max's Snack Stack, which is a food and snack based blog and is terrific. It's so good. All right, bar in spice. So the story A is just that they've got a big ego. Story B is that it's actually more complicated. But story C, think about it. So the story A is just that they've got a big ego.
Starting point is 00:50:25 Story B is that it's actually more complicated. But story C, think about it. The person whose job is to remove all the brown M&Ms is not the same as the person whose job is to check the amps or the safety of the overall gig. That's an insane way of trying to ensure the safety. And actually, they caused huge amounts of damage to dressing rooms. When they found some brown M&Ms at a gig once, they caused 100 grand of damage to a dining room.
Starting point is 00:50:45 It now seems that they were just being wankers. So why are we assuming that? Just because they trashed the place. They could have been trashing it because they were pissed off they hadn't read the writer. They trashed the place, but also based on their quotes, it sounds like they genuinely did want it. It was kind of a way of throwing it around.
Starting point is 00:51:00 Because also by the time anyone knows about it, it's no longer an effective test of whether a venue has read the writer. So it seems like it has been double debunked. Double debunked, you heard it here first. Do you want to know something about blue M&Ms? I haven't got much of a look in. The dye in blue M&Ms could repair your spine if your spine is damaged, but it might turn you blue.
Starting point is 00:51:20 And this is a really cool, the dye is called Brilliant Blue G, and scientists were just testing, studying it a few years ago, and they realized it blocks a chemical that makes your injuries worse if you've got a spinal injury. So it blocks a chemical that causes inflammation.
Starting point is 00:51:35 So it basically means that you don't get the horrible repercussions of a spinal injury that you otherwise would. And they're looking into it, but the only thing is that it does turn you a bit blue. At the moment, if you're a rat, but We do know That that could be the case and it just reminded me of another die
Starting point is 00:51:52 Sweet based story that I loved that came out recently Which is that the food die in Doritos and pretty much any other yellow thing like macaroni and cheese Any yellow gummies Cheetos cereals? Twisty's twisties sure Are they yellow? like macaroni and cheese, any yellow gummies, Cheetos, cereals. Twisties. Twisties, sure. Are they yellow? Orangey, yeah. Twisties, Orangina.
Starting point is 00:52:12 It makes mice transparent, the dye in that. And they think there's no reason why it wouldn't also make humans transparent. Not if they eat it, right? No, if you rub it on their skin, sorry. No way. Yes. Are we surrounded by invisible mice now? Yes. Not if they eat it right no if you rub it on their skin, sorry no way yes Oh, are we surrounded by invisible mice now? They're not empty on the inside Andy you would see
Starting point is 00:52:36 See a big bag of mouse So how many Doritos do I have to rub on myself tonight? Well just keep trying James and eventually you will go transparent. There are two brands of chocolate milk in Australia that are made from cows that eat chocolate. What? It doesn't come out when you milk them as chocolate milk, does it? Is that what we're saying? No, that is definitely not what I said. Okay. It was confusing. Is chocolate made from the cows?
Starting point is 00:53:09 Chocolate milk is made from the milk from cows that eat chocolate. You have led Dan up the golden path a bit there, haven't you? Is the milk any different to standard milk? No, no. It's just milk. It's just a coincidence, really. But you get these brands of chocolate milk, it's cartons of farmer's union and purer flavored milks.
Starting point is 00:53:30 And the cows that they take the milk from are fed with stuff from the nearby Cadbury factory that's just like offshoes that they don't need anymore because it's a really easy way of giving cows energy. So it's kind of the circular economy. Because some of that milk will have been in some of the milk in the chocolate will have been in a cow. That's true. It's a closed system.
Starting point is 00:53:53 We've solved sustainability. Just feed the cows some chocolate. Okay, everyone, that is it. That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening. Sydney, you've been awesome. Thank you so much for having us. We will be back again. And until then, we will see you. Goodbye!

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