No Such Thing As A Fish - 575: No Such Thing As A Guinea Pig Saloon
Episode Date: March 20, 2025Dan, James, Andy and Anna discuss sobbing sticks, selling saffron and sacrificing sheep. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. Join Club Fish 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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Hi everybody, Anna and Andy here. Just before this week's show we have a little announcement
to make, which is that our colleagues Jack and Manu have started their own podcast which
is about food and it's called Lunchbox Envy.
Yes, they have and it is. It's spicy, it's salty, it's saucy, it's sweet, it's vinegary.
It's great. It's a food based podcast jam packed
with really amazing interesting facts about food that I mean, I didn't know we've been
researching for 10 years why our own babies don't just drink our blood. Do you want to
know the answer to that? I do. I'm happy that they don't. But yeah, every episode is about
a different kind of food. So they've done all sorts so far. They've done garlic and
sausage and chicken. They co-hosted it with Rosie McKean, the pasta
queen. All three of them every week, they bring something new to the table in their
lunch boxes about that particular food they're talking about. It's great fun. It's the most
umami podcast I've heard for ages.
Lovely stuff. And everyone who listens to it loves it. It's got five stars by 97% of
listeners. It's been featured by Amazon and Apple podcasts
already. You've got to get listening for your food fix. So wherever you get your podcasts,
look for Lunchbox Envy.
All right. Pack your lunch up, squash that sandwich down, give that a listen, and on
with the show.
On with the show. Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing As A Fish, a weekly podcast coming
to you from the QI offices in Hoburn.
My name is Dan Schreiber. I am sitting here with Andrew Hunter Murray, Anna Tyshinsky and James Harkin.
And once again, we have gathered around the microphones with our four
favorite facts from the last seven days.
And in no particular order, here we go.
Starting with fact number one, that is Andy.
My fact is there's a city in Alaska where almost the entire population lives in one building.
Big building?
Yeah, they call it the one house town.
Very good.
Very clever.
Yes.
Yeah, I thought it was everyone.
It turns out there's another tiny block of flats nearby
where there's a little bit of overspill,
which is so annoying.
And if the city of Whittier, Alaska could shut that down, so if it was one building, it would be a much better fact.
Do we know who is it, sort of the social rejects who live in the smaller building, the people
who piss somebody off?
Almost certainly.
Actually, I found a few people who live in that second building. One of them is the mayor.
Oh, really?
No.
And another one is an artist called Brenda Tolman, who used to live in this big building,
which I think is called BTI, which we'll get to in a minute. But she moved to the other complex because of what
she called the forced socialisation of this building which is basically people will just
come over in their socks and pants and just go, oh how's it going?
It is pretty amazing because there's about 300 people that live in this building. So
that's your teachers, that's law enforcement, that's the grocers. And they do literally just, if they want to hang out, just stay in the elevator.
You're bound to bump into everyone because that's your social life.
And that's why I'm afraid of lifts.
Rush hour in the morning is when there's a queue for every lift in the building because
everyone's getting to work and the only way is up and down.
That's right.
Work is in the building, right? Like the doctors and the shops and the school and everything you need.
The school isn't in the building.
The school is on the other side of the road.
I don't know if you've been on Google Maps and had a look at the whole area.
Yes, because then you get to it by a tunnel, actually.
So you have to go down in that building to the bottom floor, to the basement, and then
you go in the little tunnel and you get to the school.
I half count that.
Yeah. You don't have to the school. I half count that.
Yeah.
You know?
If you don't have to go outside.
Yeah.
And it does sound like the school times were changed because of what Andy just said, the
congestion in the elevator.
You couldn't get all the kids to school in time, so they had to, yeah, everything is
moved around the elevator service, basically.
I've got a slight quibble.
We say that they're all living in one building.
I would argue it's three buildings.
Uh oh.
Okay.
Because it's a sort of three tower thing, but they're joined together.
Exactly.
So there's actually a 20 centimeter space between three separate buildings for earthquake
purposes.
So they needed for it to have sway because it survived one of the greatest, most powerful
earthquakes, a 9.2-er.
It survived.
But are they joined together? Well, there's a few platings. Yes, they are. There's a, it survived. But are they joined together?
Well, there's a few platings.
Yes, they are.
There's a few platings, yeah.
They're joined together.
Quibble retracted.
Thank you.
Quibble denied.
And the history of it is very cool.
This place was developed in the Second World War as a military harbour, basically, and
a logistics base, because it's in Alaska, so it's quite near Russia, quite near Japan,
and Japan actually occupied a little bit of Alaska in the Second World War, but quite near is a bit of a stretch, but you know what
I mean.
Relatively, yeah.
It's a good bit for Japan to try and evade if they're going to go for it.
So two buildings were built in the town.
This one, this was opened in 1957, the BTI Tower, and they planned loads more, but they
only built two in the end.
And the other one is abandoned now and it's just sitting
there next to the one house town. And it's so creepy. Like it was a military base and
it was quite secret and they had all sorts of stuff in it.
The Buckner building.
The Buckner building, exactly. And it had a theater and a bowling alley and a library
and a barbershop and a church and a rifle range. It was lovely. And then it was very
quickly abandoned because it was damaged by this earthquake in 1964,
the big Alaska earthquake.
Sometimes people break in and ski through the corridors
of that building.
Apparently one of the hazards, hibernating bears
is the issue in that one.
Oh wow.
It is very snowy there, isn't it?
Which I maybe you'd expect from Alaska generally,
but I think it gets a thousand times more snow than the US average, which obviously a lot of the US doesn't get very
much snow at all.
There's a lot though.
Yes. But also nicely, it's named Whittier, as you said, and it's sort of named after
this poet called John Greenleaf Whittier. And well, a glacier nearby was named after
him and then it was named after the glacier. And his most famous work was about snow.
I think it was called Snowed In by coincidence.
Oh, so there you go.
That's pretty cool.
That is very cool.
I found a Reddit which had an ask me anything by someone who lived in this building.
A guy called Spankadelic.
Oh, yeah.
I should have locked in a building.
That's one of your neighbors.
I would more be worried about having the next door flat to him trying to get it sleep at night
Keep it down a bit, please thank you, darling
So spankadelic said I lived in Whittier
Ak in a building which has the entire town of 200 people asked me anything a rainy sun bun said
which has the entire town of 200 people ask me anything. A rainy sun bun said, so what about the sex lives?
Is it mostly families who live there?
I'd imagine everyone is just having sex with everyone.
To which Fankadelic replied,
it was mostly families and really old people.
So no, it was not like that at all.
And then hardspank916.
What?
This is a normal Reddit thread.
It's not some kind of weird layer of Reddit.
Is this a relation or? Hartbank said, isn't Alaska AL and Arkansas
AK? To which Spankadelic replied, nope. Understandable mistake though. Nice username.
That was the entire interesting bit. Wow.
One of the most fascinating things about people living in this building is if they want to
go to the major local town Anchorage, you can only get to it via this tunnel, the Anton
Anderson Memorial Tunnel.
It's four kilometres long.
You're not allowed to walk through it.
You're not allowed to bike through it.
It's for trains and cars only.
And it shuts every night at about 10.30. So if you go to the movies, you've got to be back before
10.30. Otherwise they just shut it down and you got to sleep in your car and wait for
it to open in the morning.
As people do, right? There are sort of people who've lost it. And the tunnel doesn't seem
to have been built to accommodate what it's meant for.
No, it wasn't. It was so it was built for a train. Yeah, it was initially you could only get there by boat and by
time when this tunnel opened by train.
Yeah. And then they adapted the tunnel in 2000 to be a road tunnel as well.
But they didn't add an extra lane or anything.
No, they just put a bit of tarmac down in between the train tracks.
And so now you can either drive or get the train.
And there are very strict timings, obviously, of when you're allowed to drive.
Well, and it's also one lane, isn't it? So the train and there are very strict timings obviously of when you're allowed to drive.
Well and it's also one lane isn't it? So the train's coming all the time so every hour
the direction switches. So you arrive there, you've got a 15 minute window, you can go
through that and then they have to air it out after every single line of traffic has
gone through.
They've got massive fans all the way through.
I'd give that five minutes of that would you?
I've always wondered why they have big fans in tunnels.
Can anyone tell me that?
I can.
It's to suck out the fumes.
If you get stuck in the tunnel and the tunnel's shut down
and people's car engines are on,
the air can get very toxic very quickly.
And so this tunnel has a few little safe house bits
and it's got huge fans to blow out the fumes.
I was going back to when they were building
the access tunnel and most of them seemed
to be hugely against it.
There was a lot of protest because they pride themselves, they pride themselves
on being this place you could not access by road, you know, we're on our own here, we
don't want you.
It was famous as like the real middle of nowhere city, wasn't it? And I think quite a lot of
people moved there because they wanted to get away from it all. I think you kind of
hear stories of people who lived there who said, you know, I was having a bad time in
LA and I decided to come here instead kind of thing
Um that earthquake in 1964, which trashed the other building and which the main building survived
That sounds extraordinary as in it was a lot of Alaska it hit
But 140 people were killed by it. I think it was the second largest earthquake in recorded history
Yeah, and it was on Good Friday, 1964.
Some places got 30 feet higher because of the tectonic plates rattling about.
Because the ground shifted up?
Yeah.
Geez.
Get this.
It was so massive, some salmon could no longer jump up to their spawning grounds because
the cliff they had to jump up had just gone whoop.
30 feet is a long way for a salmon.
No one ever thinks about the salmon in earthquakes do they?
No. And there might be another one one day. There's a receding glacier which is 50 kilometers away
and that's destabilized the mountainside and they think that mountain if there's any earthquake that
mountain is going to slip and cause a tsunami and even though it is two hours away by boat
this mountainside it will hit Whittier in about 20 minutes. The
tsunami. Wow. Thanks. Yeah. So everyone in the tunnel. Yeah. And also the building's
reaching its end of use date, really. It's, well, they keep saying structurally this might
be, you know, not for very long. Interesting. You know how it's on Prince William Sound?
Yeah. Well, I was there. So Prince William Sound. What is a sound?
Well, exactly. What the hell is a sound? Prince William Sound is the one thing you'll never hear
Prince Harry say. Yeah, so Prince William Sound is a very important piece of water. And we should
say the reason it was the military base was put there is because it was the only non-freezing
harbour. So it was really militarily important. So it doesn't freeze in the winter. It doesn't freeze over.. Yes, it was the only place you could get boats to repel maybe a Japanese attack and get supplies over. But yeah, I was like, what is the sound? I'm going to do everyone the favor of telling you so you don't have to wander next time someone bloody mentions it. It's actually not very well defined. It has a number of options. So a narrow passage of water between a mainland and inland or like a recessed bit of ocean, which I guess is what we all imagine. But it comes.
Usually big hills on each side I always imagine. I don't know why.
Yes, me too. I actually wonder if I imagine that because I imagine them being an echo
because it's got the word sound.
What's the most famous sound? Is it Long Island? Is there a Long Island sound? I feel like
there is.
For me it's...
Is it P Long Island sound? I feel like there is. For me it's... is it Paget sound?
Paget sound, yes. But there are lots in Alaska. But it comes from an old Norse word,
sunned, which means to swim. And so it's because it was like a portion of water that you could
swim across. So from one bit of land to another. And that also used to be the name for a fish's
swim bladder. I could find that. I'd call it sound. That's such solid research.
It's since I went too deep.
That's really good.
Do you know why Juno, you know Juno, the capital of Alaska,
in fact?
Do you know why that's called Juno?
Juno life.
Yeah, exactly.
I've been to Juno.
Have you?
Yeah.
That's quite cool.
That's the end of the anecdote.
No, it's good though.
No, it's a really nice place to be.
But I thought it was named after a person.
It is.
It's named after Joe Juno, but there's more to it.
So Juno is a capital and you can't get to it by road.
You can only get by boat or plane.
And named after Joe Juno, because it was founded by him and Richard Harris.
I don't think the actor who played Dumbledore, because it was in the 1880s, because they
found gold there. And then a whole bunch of other people like Flock said to find gold,
a guy called Rockwell took over.
And it was originally called Harrisburg after Richard Harris,
because Junot was French-Canadian, so couldn't write English.
So Harris was just like, well, I'll just write down my name then.
But then there was a winter in 1881 where all the leading figures
in the area left for winter to do other stuff,
except Joe Juno, who was a man's man and kind of a really fun guy. He stayed with all the
miners and he spent the entire winter in the saloons, buying them all drinks throughout
the winter. So at the end of that winter, the miners all took a vote amongst themselves
to change the name to Juno.
Wow, that is cool. I've been to one of those very old saloons in the middle of town.
Have you? Yeah. And they have, um, I don't think I've said this before. They
have sawdust on the floor. Do you know why they have sawdust on the floor? To soak up
spit and urine. Is that not genuinely why? Yeah, that's what people are doing. They don't
have any toilets. And when you ask them, they they say, oh just go there, it's fine.
It's a litter tray based system.
Especially all guinea pigs that live there.
If you want a drink there's just this huge bottle upside down.
Yeah, so that they don't, if people drop their food, they don't act like animals and re-eat it.
So it's about dropping things. Think about what Anna said about why people went to Juno in the first place.
Miners mine for gold, and if you drop your gold, you will lose it in the sawdust.
Yes.
And then what does the owner do?
Then the barman gets to sweep it up at the end of the day.
Sweeps it all up, puts it in a big barrel, the sawdust floats on top of the barrel, but
the gold goes to the bottom and he gets to take it out.
Wow.
Brilliant.
Isn't that cool? Isn't that true? That's true, yeah.
That's great.
That's very cool.
Do you know, there are actually, I said there are two ways.
There are three ways to get into Juno.
Oh, a boat.
What do you think they are?
So we've got boat and plane.
Yeah, boat and plane.
I know there's no roads that go in because I was told that if you want to borrow someone's
car, you can just ask them and they'll just let you borrow it because they know you can't
drive anywhere.
I was told that.
I never tried it, but yeah, it's still totally.
Oh, so it's not as boat is air.
It has no road. So it's tunnel.
I'll give you a clue. It's not it's sort of tunnel.
It's a canal.
But what I actually this is just a trick question.
What kind of canal narrowboat canal, a birth canal?
You know what? I should be annoyed about that question, but I really like it.
You could be born there.
Stop the podcast.
Stop the podcast.
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On with the show!
Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is James.
Okay, my fact this week is that the earliest known kids birthday party included the sacrifice
of a sheep.
When was this?
This was during the reign of King Lugalanda in a city called Lagash, which was an ancient
Sumerian and the reason we know about it is
because there are cuneiform tablets which describe it. And there's a historian called
Vladimir Emelyanov at St. Petersburg University who studied these tablets. And he found that
there is a mention of celebrating the births of the ruler's children. And when they celebrated
the birthdays, they sacrificed an animal and
shared it with their deceased ancestors.
In a range of party bags that were left on the tomb.
You get a blower, a hat.
Liver.
So yeah.
Oh, lucky kids. Lucky little Sybarian kids.
When he was taken away from power, Lou Glander, because he was quite corrupt, we kind of lose
the birthday party for a while and we don't have anything more on them until, you know,
really recently, not really in ancient Egypt.
They didn't really do it.
And I read that there were birthday parties in ancient Rome, but they were only for the
male head of the family.
So only dad basically got a birthday party.
It's incredibly unfair for the children.
So funny.
Herodotus wrote about the Persians celebrating their birth dates,
but the fact that he was writing about the Persians and going,
isn't this weird that they do it, suggests that probably in the Greek and Roman world,
it was quite unusual.
Yeah.
You might celebrate the gods.
Yeah, you celebrate the gods.
Like you give Artemis a cake on her birthday, but that's not...
What a waste of cake. Imagine the only time you make a cake is from a fictional being who doesn't eat it.
How long do they sit there?
Because right now you can just go to a supermarket and buy a birthday cake, even when it's not your birthday.
It's unbelievable the times we live in.
I think we've gone too far the other way.
When you put it like that it sounds insane.
It's not even stopping you Andy. You can do it right now after the show.
Just my programming just wouldn't let me by calling the caterpillar.
Honestly, nothing's stopping you doing that and putting candles on it.
The earliest surviving handwritten Latin message by a woman, quite a lot of caveats to that,
was an invitation to a birthday party.
Oh wow.
It was by someone called Claudia Severa.
It was found at Hadrian's wall in fact,
from the first century,
I think it was the first, almost 2000 years ago.
And she was the wife of an officer
and she was inviting her friend Lepidina to her party.
She said, on the 11th of September, please come.
I give you a warm invitation to make sure you come to us to make the day more enjoyable for me by your arrival.
It's pretty amazing because she's that is the oldest now date that we have for a birthday party.
And it happened about 100 AD, right?
But on top of it, it's September the 11th is the birthday party.
We can't necessarily assume that was her actual birthday, but that's when the party was.
It might have been the weekend. It might have been the weekend. Exactly.
Everyone at the party will have asked her in Latin, is it today? And she'd say no, it was Thursday.
But that date is almost bang on for when the most popular birthdays tend to be. September the 16th
comes out most likely, but if you look at the top 10 most likely dates of birthdays, they're all September.
Because people have sex when it's cold and dark and office parties and stuff, and then
nine months later.
So that's the birthday of the birthday, isn't it really?
Exactly.
But unfortunately it's September 11th, so I don't think we could really throw a massive
party.
No, for the world.
In Europe, I think you wouldn't have birthdays until the 19th century with proper birthday
parties. Not really. And there are loads of theories as to why. So in the 19th century,
everyone had 18 children and it's exhausting celebrating them all. When that started to
come down a bit and you've got two or three children, you think, okay, fine, we can do
birthdays now.
Do you think that's fine?
There's one theory, yeah. And also there's a big change because it used to be name days. So I love this. Every day used to be, or every name, every common name
would have a day. And it's normally a saint's day. So St. James's day or St. Anna's day.
Still that in some countries. In Greece, for sure. My brother-in-law is Greek and he celebrates
his name day.
There you go. And so I think the theory is, if everyone knows, oh, it it's Saint Christopher's day. So if your name is Christopher, you get a lot more attention
from strangers. They say, Oh, people who know your name, but don't know much about you.
They say, Oh, have you, have you seen Christopher's day is your name day. So you get more kind
of general attention. I just remember we did that primary school. Really? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. We'd all have a name day. Wouldn't we, with our four names? Yeah, we would.
Yes, and there are rare names, obviously, if your name is really unusual.
I can't think of any unusual names now.
Couldn't think of one, could you?
Couldn't think of one.
Circe.
Circe.
Brilliant.
If your name is Circe, there is a tradition in some places like Latvia where the 22nd
of May is the name day for people who don't have a name day in a normal calendar.
That's nice.
And the church hated birthdays when they were being brought in.
Pagan in it.
It's pagan.
Name days is saintly.
That's proper.
Yeah.
And birthdays were a bit...
Another reason they came in in kind of industrial revolution time is because dates and times
became important, whereas they didn't used to be.
So people started having clocks and we started knowing what date it was and people had calendars
that, you know, the printing had become much bigger so people could have calendars in their
houses and until then you would be, you know, what's it like outside now at time of recording
it's start of spring and you just know it was the start of spring.
You wouldn't necessarily know that it was the fifth.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No one knew what their birthday was probably.
No.
Have you guys heard there's a tradition in Germany, birthdays are quite big in Germany. A lot of offices will have a birthday calendar in
the kitchen. Oh, and you can't under any circumstances, wish someone a happy birthday in advance. Very
bad luck.
That is bad luck in a few cases.
I completely agree. I say happy new year when it comes. People start throwing around happy
new year on the 28th of December. I shut that down.
Do you?
Well, yeah. How do we know the new year is going to come? Would you like tossing it around?
You like-
Well, that's the thing in Russia, if you wish someone's happy birthday before their birthday
then the idea is that they'll die before their birthday.
Yeah.
It's just a fool's errand doing that.
You think the earth will explode when someone says that to you.
I'm not saying it will, I'm saying let's not take the risk.
But there is a tradition, please write it if you're German listening to this and this
is real, in the north and west of Germany if you have a birthday after the age of 30, but you're an unmarried man, there's a tradition that
you have to sweep the steps of your town hall dressed as a woman until you are kissed by
a virgin.
I don't think that happens.
It can't do.
It feels like we'd know about it, wouldn't we, if everyone was doing that.
Like, Germany's a serious industrialized country. There simply isn't the time for people to
take time off to do this.
But it's a good way of finding love, I suppose, you know, if you don't want to go on the apps.
Germans, yes, big into birthdays, big into child's birthdays, big into childhood.
I feel like Germany invented childhood and the kinder in the late 18th century.
And in fact, the earliest birthday celebration I could find
in Germany was in 1801. And it was Goethe describing it of Germany's answer to Shakespeare
fame and friend of the podcast. And he was describing the birthday cake of Prince August
of Saxgotha Altenburg. And he described it as a generous talk with colorful flaming candles
amounting to 50 candles, which was how old he was. So that's like the first time we have, you've got the number
of candles to go with your age on a cake. But he said that was weird because usually
in children's festivities of this kind, you have a number of candles indicating your upcoming
years. Oh, and I found a couple of other sources saying the candles on the cake would be the
number of years you're estimated to have left.
Life expectancy in those days was quite low, wasn't it?
So you didn't have to blow out as many. Yeah.
It must have been a bit of a shock, wouldn't it? You see the cake coming out of the kitchen.
Why are there only four candles on here?
Wow, that's amazing.
I know, I know. Ominous. You've always got to guess.
Birthday songs. There's obviously the happy birthday song. Um, what would you say
is, is the most famous other birthday party?
Happy birthday to your shawty. It's your birthday.
Okay. There's so many. I wasn't expecting that. Uh, it's my party and I'll cry if I want to.
Leslie Gore.
Leslie Gore.
Incredible song.
Gorgeous song. And, um, so I, I'd never properly, I know the chorus never properly listen to the lyrics.
It's about the singer Leslie Gore in the story.
She is at a party.
We should say sixties singer.
Yeah.
For people who haven't heard of her these days.
Yeah.
She's a brilliant singer.
She was a brilliant singer.
She was at a party and I'll cry if I want to.
Exactly.
And she was about 14 when that came out.
She was so young.
She was so young.
And so the story is about her boyfriend, Johnny, disappearing disappearing from her birthday party comes back with a girl called Judy and
She's wearing his ring and it's this whole horrible thing, right? Did it really happen to Leslie?
No, it didn't it kind of happened to one of the songwriters
But it was his daughter being upset that her grandparents had been invited to the party and she was crying and then he turned
It into a more of a love triangle thing. Here's the interesting thing though
There was a sequel to that song called Judy's Turn to Cry.
And so it's a follow on where Johnny then sees Leslie Gore kissing someone at that party
and he gets jealous and he punches the guy and he goes back.
Dan, can I get can I show you guys something on my phone?
So, yeah, yeah, sure.
Well, OK.
So Andy's gone over to the sofa.
He's pulled out some what's it's and it's not that that he needs.
He's pulled out, what's that, some greens of some sort? Oh, there's his phone.
Okay. So. If this was just you on holiday last week, then you've got to save it.
That series of photos of me crying. No, I have this album on my phone.
I'm a big fan and she released an entire album of crying based songs off the back of this. Yeah I'll cry if I want to. The tracks are Cry Me A River,
Cry, Just Let Me Cry,
Cry and You Cry Alone, No More Tears, Judy's Turn To Cry. Yep.
I understand I would. Misty, probably about crying. What Kind Of Fool Am I? And The Party's Over.
Andy, is this your Spotify raps every year?
It's a cracking album.
It is amazing that they basically went, this single is such a hit, you are now our cry
singer, and let's do a whole album of it.
And then there must have been a shift because there was one song which you mentioned there
on that album, which is What Kind of Fool Am I?
So her follow up album, that was clearly a hit is basically songs would fall in the title
She's a fool my foolish heart. She's lancing onto the wrong thing
You haven't got a number one because of the vocabulary you've used in your title
And Quincy Jones was the producer which is why it's such an amazing
Sound but yeah, what an amazing story. It's like a diss track sequel
It's so she's the Kendrick Lamar of her own day of her own song I don't get that. Okay, and it's more of a Drake fan
I feel like we haven't innovated any birthday stuff our generation. We've not moved the birthday along at all
Oh, well your generation hasn't but what's your favorite birthday game? I don't really have any favorite
Just name it one part of our music chairs both rubbish
I like the one where you go through the Times birthday announcements guessing the age of the celebrities and public figures whose birthdays are listed in there.
What, the Richard Osmond birthday game?
I do play that daily.
Well, like Anna said, if you ask most adults, 67% of people will say that Pass the Parcel
was one of their favourite party games, and 61% will say musical chairs.
But in young children today, or in fact this was 10 years
ago, so this was a study in 2009, 31% of children aged 4 to 7 said they like Pass a Parcel,
and only 19% said they like musical chairs, and they said that their favourite was playing
the Nintendo Wii and the Sony PlayStation.
I'm with them.
That's innovation, Andy. I feel so old.
Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is Anna.
My fact this week is that saffron was invented by humans.
I thought this was really interesting.
I didn't know that saffron is in the very expensive spice that we can eat. It cannot grow in the wild at all. It cannot reproduce without humans
intervening. So it's all propagated, harvested manually. And that's been the case for thousands
of years. And there's no wild equivalent. There's something that people call wild saffron, which we
think maybe originally came from a mutation of that. But basically about 4,000 years ago,
maybe in Crete, maybe in Persia, some people, I guess, found a mutated wild crocus and then
tried hand breeding it with another one and it came up with saffron. And then since then
for 4,000 years, we've been having to hand pollinate or hand breed saffron.
So it doesn't make seeds. Is that the thing?
It doesn't make seeds. Yes. So it all has to be propagated with the bulb, which blossoms
into lots of little bits underground.
It's called a corm, isn't it?
A corm, yes.
It's like a bulb, but it's basically, it's very similar to a bulb. And they grow little
offshoes and you just pinch those off for replanting. But yeah, is this why it's so
expensive?
Yes. Yeah. It's quite labor intensive, isn't it?
Having to dig up every saffron bit, pluck some corns off, replant them.
And also because you need a lot of flowers to get not much saffron right.
Oh, shed loads.
Each one grows three of these little bits, which are basically the stigma, the stigma
of the female bit of a plant.
That's what the red threads are.
Each one has three of them.
It needs 200,000 flowers to produce one kilogram of dried saffron threads, and 200,000 flowers
is the same as the entire number of flowers used at the World Cup of florists in Manchester
in 2023.
That puts it into perspective.
Well, it was the 100th year of the competition, which is why.
You don't need to tell me, James.
And of course, like, being a World Cup, the Germans won.
Oh, really?
Yeah, yeah.
It's an amazing process.
It's weird.
It's so weird.
And very time consuming.
So you hand pick the flowers, and then you pick out the three bright red threads, and
then you dry them out, and then they lose about 80% of their weight in the drying process,
so you've got almost nothing left of them, and then you press those threads into a cake, I believe, or you can do to pack it. Oh, right. For storage purposes. But like,
quite often you'll just buy them. If you go to a souq in Morocco or something, they'll just be a
little sort of, it's almost like a petri dish with them in. Yeah. Have you heard of bastard saffron?
Oh, bastard saffron is fake saffron, which obviously is very profitable because you're
selling it even if you're selling it cheaper than saffron. fake saffron, which obviously is very profitable because you're selling it,
even if you're selling it cheaper than saffron,
it can be ground petals of calendula or safflower.
So they look a bit similar, I suppose.
Maybe you add in some beef fibers or bits of Brazil nuts,
also quite expensive actually.
Yes.
Beef and Brazil nuts, that is not cheap.
And then you store it in a damp location
and it gains a bit of weight,
so it absorbs a bit of water from the air.
It does end up looking-
Does it taste like saffron?
You wouldn't have thought beef fibers
are contributing to the saffron flavor.
No, you're being swizzed.
But Pliny recommends two methods to identify
whether or not something's real saffron.
One, you press the threads and if they crackle,
then it's not saffron.
And secondly, you touch it on your face.
And if it is saffron, it'll sting you a tiny bit.
And is this true?
Yeah. You have said it as though this is how to do it.
He also said it was an aphrodisiac.
Is it not?
Nothing is. Everything is claimed and nothing is.
Well, they say, yeah. So the famous thing that will be mentioned is Cleopatra would
use saffron infused baths to sort of get her loins going and get into it.
Did she not have baths of milk, Cleopatra?
She did with saffron also as part of it.
Yeah. I thought something that was really interesting about saffron was just how
unbelievably widespread it is in meals across the world. Like it doesn't seem to have a country or
region or even a continent that it's fixed to like in Spanish paella, Indian dishes,
in South America now and European dishes. And we seem to have been using it for ages. It's reached us about
2000 years ago in Britain even. And we even have saffron Walden, the place, which is named
after it. And that was back in the 16th century. It's in Essex, isn't it? Yes. And they changed
their town seal to a picture of three saffron plants surrounded by a wall because saffron
walled in. Oh nice! It was called something else walled in before. It was called
Magna-Walden. Magna-Walden. And they're also known for their lavender in
saffron. Yeah Ian Lavender who played Pike on Dad's Army. Oh for God's sake!
Listed as a notable resident. Saffron growers, croakers, called croakers.
Oh, because a saffron is a type of crocus. Because it's a type of crocus. I assume that's
where it came from. But they were known as the worst complainers of Tudor times.
Because of the labor intensiveness of the work?
Basically, they were always complaining about the price. It was written in a book about the
table on a history of food. And it to the croakers if the yields too big
They complain if the yields too small they complain that they can't go at grown enough
I see because if the yields too big the price goes down
Too small then they just don't have anything to sell
Exactly and so much so that by the 19th century the word croaker was a word for a grumbler or a Mona
Can I tell you about a complaining croaker? This is from 1556 and it's about saffron Walden.
Such was the plenty of saffron in this year
that the murmuring croakers envying the store
said in blasphemous manner in and about Walden in Essex
that God did now shite saffron.
That's good.
The colour saffron, which is like an orangey colour, is on the flag of India and it denotes
disinterestedness.
What?
Why?
It's because the leaders of India must be indifferent to material gains and dedicate
themselves to their work.
So wait, is the saffron representing material gains or the work?
It's because it's so labor intensive to pick saffron that you need to be dedicated in order
to pick that saffron and you dedicate yourself to your work instead of material gains.
That makes sense.
That's very cool.
Do you know what a saffron massage is?
Um...
Feels like one could guess.
It's expensive.
You tickle someone with those little saffron hairs.
You get massaged in three very specific spots as if they were plucking the three logs out.
Interesting.
Imaginative.
Okay, when I tell you what it is, you can decide yourself who was closest.
It's another word for what we would call scissoring between two lesbians.
Oh yeah.
And it was written by 13th century Tunisian poet Shahib Aldin Ahmed
Al-Tafashi, who was writing about lesbianism in the 13th century, North Africa. And he wrote
about this community headed by a woman named Rose, who was all doing this saffron massage.
What? The saffron massage? So it's just maybe it's because sort of two legs look like one when you've
got the four legs together. So it looks like a three legged thing. It could be. You know what?
I couldn't work out for all my googling exactly where this came from. But I can tell you that
the ancient medieval Arabic term for lesbians was suhaqiyat, which meant rubbers. People who rub
things together. That makes sense. And it was believed that
lesbianism was due to a hot itch in the genitals that could only be cured by rubbing clitoris
to clitoris. The idea was that heterosexual sex created a hot orgasm and lesbian sex produced
a cold orgasm. And so the cold would be against
the hot itch and that would cure it.
Oh, okay.
Whatever you gotta tell yourself.
And your husband.
Well, on the, just running on the sexual theme for a second. In 1967, Saffron had quite a
big moment in America as a result of Donovan and a song called Mellow Yellow.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Back to Mandy's.
Let me take out my Donovan.
Yeah, yeah.
Donovan is fantastic.
Mellow Yellow.
It's a great song.
Yeah, absolutely awesome song.
Well, there's a line that opens it, which is I'm just mad about saffron.
Saffron's mad about me.
And no one knew at the time if he was talking about the spice,
if he was talking about a woman who was called saffron,
there was a rumor went around that it was smoking banana skin and that's sort of like,
yeah, getting off on that. Mellow Yellow actually appears in one of James Joyce's books, Ulysses.
It's a description of Molly Bloom's buttocks. So that's what Mellow Yellow is.
Wow.
So he describes her buttocks as Mellow Yellow and then it's coincidence that there was a dot. I think that's a coincidence because he doesn't, I don't think he said that that's what Mellow Yellow is. So he describes her buttocks as Mellow Yellow. And then it's coincidence that there was a song.
I think that's a coincidence because I don't think he said that that's why.
But what he says is where he got the idea for the song was when he saw an advert for a yellow vibrator.
And there was the line, electrical banana is going to be a sudden craze.
And so yeah, Mellow Yellow is...
Wait, that's the line of the song, isn't it?
Yeah.
So then he came up with Mellow Yellow because he thought that was a good description of what this vibrator might achieve for you.
I think in most of these cases, it's just Mellow rhymes with yellow.
Yeah.
Exactly.
That's quite a nice phrase.
Dan is just floating a lot of theories here.
I don't know if you know this.
Oh yeah, I'm just saying what people have thought.
But Saffron got a moment off the back of it.
Did it?
Did it sail?
Did we not have it sail?
It sort of skyrocketed.
The croakers were furious.
You know that gardening books used to rhyme. So this is really good. I was reading about instructions of how you plant saffron or how you grow it. And there's a 1440s book,
The Feet of Gardening, which is by John Gardner. Very nice.
So here's an example. With a dibble, they'll shall them set that the dibble before be blunt and grit three inches deep.
They must set B and thus master John gardener said to me.
Was he Indian?
No, no, no.
What was that accent?
It was such a weird one.
It was old timey.
Old English.
It's old Chaucerian.
Yeah.
So you put your Dibber in the ground, which makes a hole.
It's like a log stick, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And it has to be three inches.
And basically it's for people who are not literate to remember gardening instructions
better.
That's great.
I'm big faff writing the books though, isn't it?
Oh yeah.
If it doesn't, if you can't make the rhyme work, then you just have to tell people to
plant everything in December.
And it just is a nightmare. So many months writing in December. And it just doesn't like me. So many months riding the December.
Sorry.
There's the worst gardening right.
15th century multi-dollar
Catholic arrived for November.
So I know oranges were grown in that period.
Uses of saffron in the old days.
Saffron in breast milk is good for eye complaints.
According to whom?
Perverts.
Good for seasickness.
Great for plague.
It really perks you up if you've got plague.
Nuns would send their veils with saffron to perk themselves up a bit apparently.
But there's also this thing.
Have you heard of a philosopher's egg?
I know.
So you get an egg, make a hole in the top, take out the stuff and then you fill the shell
with saffron.
Then you roast the shell and the saffron together in charcoals until the shell becomes yellow.
Then you beat it all together in a mortar with some mustard seed.
Then you, as soon as any suspicion is had
of infection, dissolve the weight of a French crown of that stuff in 10 spoonfuls of posset
ale, drink it lukewarm and sweat upon it in your naked bed. And then you become immortal.
That's good. Is the idea that they just make it so complicated that if you die, they're
like, Oh, he just didn't do it right. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. He must have only used nine spoonfuls of Pocidale.
Put one extra candle on his birthday. Ancient Egyptians used aphron. They used them in their
head cones. I wasn't really familiar with these ancient Egyptian head cones, but they're very cool.
Like a dunce's cap? It's sort of a more sexy version of a dunce's cap.
What could be more sexy than a Duns' cap?
Come on, let's get in the corner of the room together. Okay. You've faced the wall.
Let's not hear anymore about your Catholic school days, James.
That's what I say when I want the D. I'm referring to the letter on the cone.
This was head cones that were scented. So there are lots of images in tombs of people
entering parties wearing these cones. Or you'd actually go to a party as an ancient Egyptian,
if you're a posh one, and you'd be given a head cone, a bit like being given a cocktail
or a canopy at the start. You'd be given a head cone, which bit like being given a cocktail or a canapé at the start, you'd be given a head cone which was made of ox tallow, which is a sort of fatty wax, infused with
saffron and over the course of the evening the heat of your body would melt it gradually
and as it ran down your face you'd emit the scent of saffron.
It's so weird, yeah, it's incredible.
That's bizarre.
Delicious.
I've never heard of that before.
Who doesn't like the smell of beef jipping?
Come on. I mean, I'm from before. Who doesn't like the smell of beef chipping? Come on.
I mean, I'm from the north, so obviously I do like that.
And that's who they were targeting, people from Bolton.
And everyone gets one?
Everyone at the party, I think, gets one.
Yeah, you'd have a servant come up and pop the head.
I'm sorry, I'm doing non-beefy January, I'm afraid.
Do you have a vegan code?
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Okay, it is time for our final fact of the show and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that in order to achieve tears in a scene, Okay, it is time for our final fact of the show, and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that in order to achieve tears in a scene, actors are often shot in
the face with a crying stick.
Okay.
Why don't they get our Andy Spotify playlist?
So I saw this in quite a few places now, where it's a behind the scenes trick of the trade
whereby if an actor needs to cry in a scene but they can't force themselves to bring up
real tears, you have a few methods available to you. One of which is this crying stick
which you point at the eye of someone and you go and you blow a sort of methanol odor
into their eye.
Mental. Sorry, sorry. Mental. Methanol would be... When you blow a sort of methanol odor into their eye... Menthol.
Sorry, sorry.
Menthol.
Methanol would be...
Well, it's just crying, okay?
When you dial it down a bit...
Why did your crying stick business get busted, Dan?
Okay.
Menthol.
And it creates tears. And it's quite nice because it's not immediate tears,
they sort of arrive, I guess, once a director would say action, they sort of gradually appear,
and so you can probably time it perfectly.
So what you're talking about there is a tear blower, I think.
So there's the Krylon 3000 tear blower, and Nigel Beauty's menthol tear blower that are
available if you go to specialist shops.
But there's also a tear stick, which is basically like a lipstick thing which you kind of rub
on your eyes and does the same job but doesn't have the blower.
Put it on your bottom eyelid actually.
Don't put it on your eye.
Because there's different methods aren't there?
Oh there are so many.
The craziest one that I read is that stage actors, they'll keep a pair of tweezers on
them and they will pull a nostril hair out on both sides in order to get both eyes crying.
Just a good beefy tug on those, that'll do it.
Yeah, Kate Branschett talks about this.
She says on stage that would be a method that you would do.
Absolutely.
Does it work, really?
Because I feel like I've tried that before.
I feel like it's mentioned in a sitcom, I've tried it.
Does that make your eyes water?
I've never tried it. If you get a good old deep-rooted one, it works alright. In fact,
a lot of great actors will have a tiny piece of thread going to the front row of the stalls
where a member of the production company will be sitting, so they don't have to pluck it
themselves and at a certain moment they'll just give a yank on the rod.
That does feel like the problem with a lot of these, right, if you are doing a play, for instance, having to have someone sprint on with a crying stick
and blow in your face halfway through the scene.
Yeah, or if you're being filmed in a long shot, it feels like it will be very hard to puff a blow
menthol into your eye from a distance.
Yes, that's the reason that the stick is quite useful because you can sort of
hide it about your person and just shove it in there.
Well, and also how many nostril hairs do you have? If you're in a long running play, that is...
They regrow.
And as you get older, more and more they regrow more quickly.
My friend, Diva, who's an actor, she said that she had a friend who would ask you to list anything bad
that had happened to you in your life and they would read it and they would use that to make them cry.
They'd read it to the person who created the list?
No, they would think about the bad things
that had happened to you.
So if you and I are in a scene and I want to cry,
I think about the bad things that have happened to you
and that will make me cry.
What?
That's very empathetic of you, isn't it?
It's very empathetic.
I would only laugh if I hear that bad things happening
to other people.
Like, that's, oh, sounds like a you problem, you know?
Yeah.
And then you're crying with laughter.
Yes, yes, yes.
Because quite a common thing is you think about a bad thing
that's happened to you.
Yeah, yeah.
Probably the most common way of doing it.
That's the Stanislavski way of doing it.
Right, but for someone else,
they're the bad things that have happened to them.
Or there's a thing where you put,
if I'm acting in a scene with you, Dan,
I will put you in a scene from my life,
if you know what I mean.
Like I'll imagine someone telling me that they're ill and then I'll think, okay, I'll
sort of recast you as that person in my life.
Imagine someone walking in with one candle on Dan's birthday cake.
There are some things that I just can't believe work.
The Toronto Film School website has a few tips and I tried the only one that was low
effort, the yawning method, which
was take a deep breath and slowly exhale while faking a yawn, but keep your lips tightly
pursed, which is where it becomes a bit more hard, and then focus the yawn in the back
of your throat like you're trying to swallow your sadness, which I found very difficult
and hurt my throat quite a lot.
Okay, so I've just yawned and my eyes are watering a bit.
My eyes are watering as well. Guys, you've actually done quite well. But there's no tear
coming out, but they are watering. No, that's good. I'm convinced. But on camera, you want a bit of,
you know, that subtle. Yeah, that feels like, yeah. I know I have to wipe my ass. You're
properly crying. Yeah. You okay? Jesus. I was thinking about something bad that happened to me.
There's other methods. There's a story of Natalie Wood. She had to be able to cry on
cue, but her mum solved the issue by ripping up a living butterfly in front of her to ensure
that she would cry. So there's an option.
They only live for a day, so you're not really cutting its life that short, are you?
That's a mayfly you're thinking of. Oh life that short, are you? That's a Mayfly you're thinking of.
Yeah.
Oh, shit.
Isn't that wild?
That is.
Yeah.
That's horrific.
Yeah.
There's another podcast called The Rest is Entertainment.
Have you guys heard of that?
No.
Okay. So there's someone on that called Richard Osmond.
Oh, the birthday game guy.
The birthday game guy, that's him.
And he said that he spoke to an actor.
He said that they don't have to cry on demand anymore because they do it in post on AI.
Oh, well, they as in a CGI and yeah, so you could you just kind of go like pull a face
of someone who's crying, but you don't have to do the actual tears because they'll AI
will do it.
That's really depressing.
I reckon a lot of the good actors still cry to the real cry because you want the realistic
cry face.
Yeah. realistic cry face, don't you? Do you know that Ohio tried to ban fake crying, specifically
in court in 2008? Why might you try to ban crying in court?
Well, because it might influence the jury. Exactly. But it was, I think this is really
interesting that they've assumed that fake crying exists. And it was actually based on
a case ruling by the Ohio Supreme Court
in 1999 that said it's improper to inflame a jury's emotions by crying. And so there
was a prosecutor called Jason Fillebaum, who was prosecuting people who were up for the
death penalty. And he complained about the fact that defense attorneys would strategically
cry on cue.
Oh, defense lawyers, not okay, not people in the dock.
No, sorry, defence lawyers. So you'd be talking to the jury saying, this man does not deserve
to die, he's got a wife and kids.
That is quite theatrical. That's more theatrical than I think a British court would get.
Well I think what the defence lawyers say is that they are quite attached to their case
and they believe strongly in what they're saying and they're very sad at the idea that
a client might be killed for this. I'd love it if they were busted by the
court, who's the guy who does the drawings in the court? Yeah, there's this drawing that comes out
of a lawyer with a tweezer up his nostril. Wait a second. Crying goes in and out of fashion. Like in
the medieval times, it could be a sign of manliness. So if you read all the medieval romance stories of the Knights of Camelot, Galahad is always
bursting into tears. You know, he's always crying and it's seen as a manly thing. It's
a virtue as well. You know, they're very strong and powerful, but also they cry a lot. Bishops
would always cry loads. So there was an archbishop of Canterbury in the 13th century called Winchelsey
and he wept so much that the altar cloths were sodden, supposedly.
Oh yeah, that's the reason.
We'll pop some sawdust on the altar next time.
It's fine.
But basically eyesight was a kind of temptation because eyesight showed you all the sins of
the world and tears were bad for your eyesight.
You might even lose your eyesight if you cried so much.
So actually it was, I mean, you'll go blind. So you keep doing that. So a huge part of religious
life was weeping because, you know, it might damage your eyesight. Jesus wept in the Bible,
of course. Yeah. And so the, is that so you can go blind to the temptations of the world? Kind of.
Yeah. And that was seen as a, as a, you know, that was a very holy thing to do. And also you
had to be celibate
and non-violent. So tears kind of were, they stood in for combat. You were in conflict
against temptation, particularly sexual temptation, and tears were a part of the response to the
temptations of the world.
Like rather than have sex, burst into tears kind of thing.
Yeah. Or listen to a Spotify playlist.
Isn't it a bit of a giveaway if you're sort of standing. Yeah. Or listen to a Spotify playlist.
Isn't it a bit of a giveaway if you're sort of standing with your wife and there's a,
a woman across and you're just filling up with tears because you're trying to
not be tempted into doing something. I think if you're a medieval bishop, you won't be standing with your wife.
A medieval meme is a bishop and of none.
And he's turning around looking at another of nun and he's crying his eyes out.
Babies fake cry.
Okay.
Babies fake they're crying quite a lot.
So some babies are really crying and you can tell they're really crying if you get to a
baby and comfort it and it stays, you know, a little upset for a little while, but some,
sometimes a baby will be crying and if you go over and soothe it, it immediately is,
it's all smiles. Yeah.
You know, it just, it goes, and that's not really fake in a, well, I suppose it is a manipulative
way. It has learned that that is a thing to do that prompts a response from a nearby grownup.
But I guess in that case, they're crying because they want a grownup there. So it's kind of real
like they might feel lonely or completely. Yeah. But it's not that proper emotional.
They're not in distress, but they are making, they're going through the motions of being
in distress.
They're pissed off, aren't they? Very strong difference. It's very evident as soon as you
do give them the thing back and they grin. Other just reasons people cry that aren't
to do with being sad. Okay.
Mice cry to prove how manly they are. And this is because they release pheromones in
their tears and they're an aphrodisiac. So quite opposite to humans, where I think there
have been studies that show that if human males smell women's tears, it stops them from
being sexually aroused. There's a study that found that. The mice get sexually aroused
by these pheromones and they found that contact with tears
mean that a female mouse is three times more likely
to engage in lordosis, which is that thing
where you thrust your rump in the air,
asking someone to have it.
I've never heard that phrase.
Lordosis, I know it's a good one, isn't it?
Wow.
Also, have you ever thought of doing
Chili Cooper on your bus?
Oh yeah.
Have that romp.
Yes, I am available for voice work.
Okay, that's it. That is all of our facts.
Thank you so much for listening.
If you'd like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we have said over the course of this podcast, we can all be found on various
social media accounts. I'm on Instagram at at Tribaland. James. My Instagram is no such
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to us as a group, Anna. You can get us on Twitter at no such thing, Instagram and no
such thing as a fish or you can email podcast at qi.com. Yep, or you can go to our website, nosuchthingasafish.com.
You will find lots of things up there, links to any upcoming live shows.
We have one coming up at the Crossed Wires Festival that's happening this July in Sheffield.
You can find a link to our merchandise.
You will find all of our previous episodes, and you'll find the gateway to our special
secret club, Club Fishfish where you can hear bonus
Episodes like drop us a line
Which is where we read out the letters that you've written in to us and respond to all your comments
Otherwise just come back next week. We'll be back with another episode. We'll see you then. Goodbye