No Such Thing As A Fish - Little Fish: Bizarre Choreography, Schnapps, and Singing in Swedish

Episode Date: December 21, 2025

Dan, James and Andy discuss YOUR facts including 4D and D-Day. Andy's pronunciation of Houston gets him in trouble again, and we meet eight new Custodians of Fish Facts.  ...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Nice list all the way. The eggnog booster ball and caramel pie booster ball are two new goodies for the holidays at booster juice. But only for a limited time. Happy holidays from booster juice. Canadian born blending since 1999. Ho, ho. Hey, everyone. Welcome to this episode of Little Fish.
Starting point is 00:00:28 Before we get into it There is just a little announcement that I would like to make Christmas is only a few days away And if you were looking to get a present For someone in your life who loves fish I would love it if you would be able to come To my new tour that I'm going to be doing Around the UK as of March next year
Starting point is 00:00:49 What? I'm so sorry This is a terrible way for you to find out We're going on tour You're not unfortunately Dan you can come I don't have a stick to where? You can come and watch. I can do my act. No one wants to
Starting point is 00:01:02 see that, mate. I've been practicing. I can do it without injuring any of the audience by now. I really can. Oh, Dan, I'm so excited. Where are we going? Where are we going? Okay, well, this show is called This Changes Everything. And we should clarify, it's just Dan. It's not me. I'm just being a silly banana. You could come along. I would be very happy if you did. I'm going to be in the front row with pom-poms every night, Dan. It's going to be Dan on tour. Where are you going?
Starting point is 00:01:23 So, on the 15th of March, I'm going to be in Warwick, and then I'm going to be in Salford, I'm going to be in Brighton, I'm going to be in Edinburgh, Nottingham, and then I'm going to be playing the Royal Geographical Society in London. Yeah, this is going to be a great evening of mysteries, amazing fact, mind-blowing stories from history. I've put together the best of the best of stuff that I've been digging up over the last 10 years. If you've read my book, The Theory of Everything Else, you'll know the kind of tone of it. It's all the stuff that has led to the world we live in today, but it's all the bits of history that have been swept under the carpet because people would rather you didn't know about it. So if you like mystery adventure and
Starting point is 00:02:00 jokes, please come along to This Changes Everything. So if you're looking to buy tickets for yourself or someone else, just put Dan Shriver, This Changes Everything, tour into Google. You'll find a link. You can also find it on my Instagram at Shriverland. It'll be in the bio. Please come along. It's going to be an awesome night. I'll be there. And Andy will be there. I mean, just come to just to see Andy. Sure. Sit and watch Andy watching me. We've got another little fish for you now. These are your facts. Here we go. On with the show. On with the podcast. Thank you for doing that.
Starting point is 00:02:31 I didn't have a choice. Now please, please, then, put the call through and release my family. Hello and welcome to Little Fish, the show where we look at the great facts that you guys have been sending in over the past seven days. Andy has gone through the inbox, as bulging as it was, and taken out the very, very best, sent them to me and to Dan and kept some for himself. And we're going to read through them today and maybe chat a little bit more about them. So, without further ado, who's going to read the first one? Maybe Dan. Yeah, okay. I got a fact here, which is from... Eli Jones, who says that jungle gyms were invented in Japan in the 1880s by a British polygamist
Starting point is 00:03:32 with the goal of training a generation of children to intrinsically comprehend the fourth dimension. So jungle gyms, I think, is what I would have called soft play when I was younger. Right. So me, a jungle gym is the metallic bars that are in a sort of a crescent shape from the ground that you would climb around. Oh, interesting. An adventure playground? Yeah, that's a jungle gym to me, but do we know what this guy invented? Wow.
Starting point is 00:04:02 A hard, this sounds like a hard play. Yeah, that sounds like a hard play. Hard play. Well, here's the story. While living with one of his families in Japan, a British mathematician called Charles Howard Hinton tried to instill a fundamental understanding of the fourth dimensional geometry into his children. What is the fourth dimension? Sorry to throw you an easy one so early. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:04:23 Well, I know. Imagine you take a square and you turn it into a cube, you're adding a third dimension. Now imagine you turn that into the next level up. That's the fourth dimension. I've just got another cube on top of a cube in my head. That would be a hypercube. It's really hard to explain. I thought the fourth dimension was time, but that's clearly not what we're talking about here.
Starting point is 00:04:43 No, this is the fourth spatial dimension. Oh, boy. Okay, well, it sounds like soft plane might not have been enough to do it, I'd say. I suppose was he trying to teach children spatial. awareness because they're moving through a 3D space. Yeah. And they're becoming, are the children the fourth dimension? He said he wanted to help them with the understanding that we typically move in two
Starting point is 00:05:06 dimensions, walking around cardinal directions, is what he said. Yeah, so you walk flat on the earth. We're not flying. Like a bird is in three dimensions because it can go up and down as well, but normally we're on the ground. If someone stops me and asks the directions, I very rarely include the third dimension in my answer. I'd say take the second left down here and I never say you'll need to rise about three meters. And then go into the fourth dimension. So to us, you'll still appear like you're in the
Starting point is 00:05:36 same place, but actually you'll be in a different position in that other dimension. Right. It's very simple stuff, guys. So he wanted to do this by creating a bamboo grid and running drills with his kids where he would shout coordinates at them and they would scramble through the grid to get the coordination right. So that was his plan. It was to invent a device that allowed for them to do that. A byproduct of it was the invention of the jungle gym. Yeah, I've seen a picture of it, and a jungle gym you're talking about is like a
Starting point is 00:06:06 climbing frame, but made of lots of boxes, if that makes sense. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, definitely. What was the other thing that maybe it was soft play that was invented by a guy in Manchester who saw the people were playing and burnt out cars and decided that maybe we should give them something else to play in. Was it bomb sites as well? Yeah, I think so. There are a load of precarious concrete and
Starting point is 00:06:28 rusty metal strewn patches and kids were playing on them because it was a kind of free space for them to play. And it never did them any harm. He definitely came up with some kind of playground. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I remember that. Yeah, well, great fact. Indeed. Andy, what about another one?
Starting point is 00:06:44 All right, here's one. From Andy Walker, who's sending his favourite film fact, the UK actor Richard Todd was a D-Day veteran and I really like this he was in a film called The Longest Day which is a really really famous Second World War film it's about three hours long it recreates
Starting point is 00:07:01 large chunks of D-Day basically he was in the film The Longest Day playing his real life commanding officer so he had been at D-Day himself as a young man 20 years later he gets cast in this film playing the guy who was in charge of him on D-Day and there's someone else in the film
Starting point is 00:07:18 playing him as a younger man really yeah and I'd never heard of Richard Todd really I haven't seen this film and he was incredibly popular in the 60s and 50s and he was a matinee idol and he was there at Pegasus Bridge and D-Day
Starting point is 00:07:33 which he had to capture and sort of hold off really fierce German attacks to try and retake it because they were trying to shut the whole thing down and yeah he ended up in this film later on
Starting point is 00:07:43 with a load of I mean it's a huge film with a lot of incredibly famous actors in it many of whom had been there on the actual D-Day that must be crazy Has to be so surreal. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:07:54 And he had enough of an impact that he was a character in that movie. Yeah. That's pretty wild, isn't it? Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's really cool. I guess small regiments, you would know the names of everyone, you know, that you were talking about. He was one of the first people on the ground. He landed at 40 minutes after midnight on D-Day.
Starting point is 00:08:09 He was absolutely one of the first people. Did it start at midnight? That was, maybe that's when the parachuting dogs landed. I think it was when the parachuting dogs landed. I think we said in an earlier episode that that's what came in first. Yeah, yeah, yeah. He was one of the first two-legged mammals on the ground. I'm not sure I would start at midnight, because I think that's when they'd be expecting it.
Starting point is 00:08:30 Good point. I think I'd start like 17 minutes past something. Well, that's why it was such a terrible failure, because they didn't listen to you. No, that's fair enough. I don't know if it was dead on. But I did a little more reading about him in his life, and it was a very interesting life. One of his other superior officers on D-Day, this is just an amazing name I've tracked down. he was a guy called Geoffrey Pine Coffin.
Starting point is 00:08:53 That was his surname. That's very good. It was a double-barreled name. The Pine and the Coffin families had got married to each other a century before. And they call themselves Pine Coffin. You don't get names like that anymore. It's a brilliant name. Yeah, here you are.
Starting point is 00:09:08 Okay, here's one from me by Dario Percicino. Thank you very much for writing Dario with this incredible fact that it would take just over 1,418 years to eat a flycino. all Jesus. So what Dario has done here is assumed that when you're eating a communion wafer, which is the body of Christ, that that is actually Jesus. And he's worked out all the stuff. He sent us all the working out, and I can promise you that it's all great.
Starting point is 00:09:41 And he worked out that you would need 74,000 communion wafer's to eat to complete Jesus. And assuming you receive communion once a week, it would take approximately 4,000. 1,418 years to eat a full Jesus. He says this does not take into account any philosophical issues of transubstantiation and that it hasn't taken into account the weight of Jesus' foreskin, which he said he knows would be a point of interest to me because that's where it was excommunicated. But he said he figured it would only make a one small wafer difference. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:17 I get a friend of the podcast, Jesus is foreskin now. But Dario, honestly, absolutely stunning, stunning bit of maths. I wonder how many bottles of wine it would take to drink or the blood of Christ. Dario, get on it. That's in true Harkin style, that fact, isn't it? I read a recent article about Communion Wafer, which had got the Blood of Christ on it. And they found red stains on the Communion Waifer and thought that's what had happened. In actual fact, it was caused by a fun.
Starting point is 00:10:50 us and three different types of bacteria, all of which are commonly found on human hands. Oh. Now, there is a theory that Jesus was a mushroom, so he could have been reforming on that wafer. Right. Could be. Could be. That's brilliant. That's really good.
Starting point is 00:11:10 You've all taken your tinful hats off. What's going on? Should I do one? Yeah. Yeah, go for it. Okay, this is from Anton Gillenberg, who writes, fact, The Vatican Apostolic Library holds shelf after shelf of self-help hiccup remedies. Do they have the finger up the anus?
Starting point is 00:11:28 Which is, I believe, beyond the medically certain way to cure it. You're right. You're right. Wow. Digital rectal massage. Yes. Is that what the Sistine Chapel is? Is God's finger coming towards.
Starting point is 00:11:42 No. Stop. Adam, have you got hiccups? Okay, so this is Pope Pius the 12th. health, who reported this friend of the podcast, huge friend. Give me, give me, he was the guy who said that anyone who mentions Jesus his foreskin gets excommunicated. He was the guy who's embalming went incredibly wrong. Yeah, that hot summers.
Starting point is 00:12:03 Who had that crazy doctor? He was a proper friend of the podcast. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Oh, well, welcome back, Pope Pius. So, yeah, he suffered from chronic hiccups. So over the years, people from all around the world would send him all kind of remedies from charming suggestions like being startled to the more vulgar ideas
Starting point is 00:12:22 that we have mentioned on our show. I'm assuming. There we go. Finger up the bum bum. So, as correspondence addressed to the Pope, God's representative on Earth, these submissions could not be discarded and were preserved
Starting point is 00:12:36 according to standard Vatican archival procedures. So they are all there. So there's many unusual items, including all of these remedies that are now part of the collection that are maintained. by the Holy See. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:49 There's a PS to this email, by the way, from Anton, who is in Helsinki in Finland, just to add that. P.S., I have actually come to possess the only full-proof method to cure hiccups. As it involves bizarre choreography, schnapps, and singing in Swedish, it's rather difficult to explain in writing. But if we ever meet in person, I would be delighted to share it with you. Okay, let's book that gig in Helsinki straight away. Absolutely. The only... I've come in to possess the only foolproof method. It's quite strong, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:13:20 It's got choreography involved. Yeah, I think this is exciting. I imagine what it is, is everyone gets some schnapps, stands in a circle, does this sort of really amazing dance with, you know, your arms going one way, your legs going the other way, all that kind of stuff. Then we all say something, like some ancient riddle in Swedish. And then we all put our fingers up each other's buns. I've got one.
Starting point is 00:13:44 Yeah. This is from Emma W. would, and I find it quite fascinating. So she sends a couple of facts. I'll just do the second one, if that's the right, Emma. It's a bit anecdotal. But she says, I personally found this quite a cursed piece of trivia. Years ago on a tour of a famous commercial radio station,
Starting point is 00:14:00 I was told for their breakfast show that they use a specific voice filter to make the hosts sound more artificially happy in the mornings. Hmm. I can't. Any knowledge about, is this person British? do you think? I don't know. She says, in my research, unfortunately,
Starting point is 00:14:21 cannot find anything documented to back this up. Is this a radio-wide conspiracy? Have I blown this shit wide open? Well, we can say because we know Zoe Ball, and we've all been on her breakfast show, that she is genuinely that happy all the time. Yeah. But we add a filter to our show.
Starting point is 00:14:37 This show, we've got lots of filters on him. Oh, yeah, which just remind me what they are again. Well, we put on one which makes us sound a bit cleverer. Oh, yeah. Damn to yours has been broken for a while actually I know, I've been meaning to get that looked at I have the cruelness filter on mine of course
Starting point is 00:14:55 You've got that set to strong today I see Anna, believe it or not we've turned down her sarcasm filter Yeah, that's why she hasn't been on for three months Okay, so here is another fact This one is from Gudrun Ulfaz dot here
Starting point is 00:15:14 and she says that tourists in Iceland have been tagging the place name Gielskilda in hundreds of photos on social media recently. The weird thing is that these photos seem to be taken in lots of different places around the country. The reason is because Gieldskilda in Icelandic means parking fees apply.
Starting point is 00:15:37 Lovely. Lovely. And apparently lots of parking lots people have been putting up this sign to make sure that people pay but then people have just seen it in fairness it looks like it could be a name of a place in Iceland for sure but of course it reminds me of the Pravo Yazdi thing a few years going to Ireland where loads of traffic infringements had been given to this single person called
Starting point is 00:16:02 Pravo Yazdi but it turned out the Pravo Yazdi was Polish for driving license I just like to give it back I left that one yeah that's brilliant yeah um should I do one more Yeah, yeah. This one is such a fish-geared fact. You have to know an in-jerk in order to like this one, I think. Caleb Gruen has sent this in. I'm a long-time fan of the podcast. As a U.S. law student, I recently came across a fact that might be of interest to you.
Starting point is 00:16:32 Judging by word count, the constitution of the U.S. state of Alabama, sources vary, about 373,000 words is probably the best estimate. Wow. is longer than Anna Karenina, which is around 364,000 as the highest estimate. Wow. That's the fact. How much verbiage does it take to run Alabama effectively? Probably there's a lot of stuff about farming and the Alabama Constitution, like there is in Anna Karenina.
Starting point is 00:17:02 Yeah, I think, I think, yeah, Caleb basically wanted to let us know that because he said, spoilers about the Alabama Constitution will probably be less infuriating to our listeners The spoilers about Anna Karenina. That's really funny. Andy, go on, give us one more. All right, here's the final one. This is very exciting. This is from Yanna Rao, and Yana is working on a sub-Antarctic...
Starting point is 00:17:23 Sub-Antarctic? Sorry. It's not where the Nazis live. It's the entrance to the hollow earth. Sorry. I think this must mean just above the Antarctic rather than just below the South Pole. An island called Marion Island off the coast of South Africa. and Yanna and 19 others are living there for 15 months
Starting point is 00:17:44 doing scientific research your podcast keeps me highly entertained and puts a smile on my face in the field while we hike hundreds of kilometres in shitty weather and Yanna is a seabird researcher working closely with wandering albatross so cool so cool and just sends a few brilliant facts
Starting point is 00:18:02 about the wandering albatross so I don't think we've mentioned them very much and they're basically they've got the longest wingspan any bird it's two and a half meters, roughly, and I really like this. They've got this elbow locking mechanism. They can keep their wings open for as long as they want without activating their muscles, and basically they can fly several hundred miles in one go without flapping their wings once. I just didn't
Starting point is 00:18:25 really clock how far they can fly. Like, imagine several hundred miles from wherever you are. Yeah. It's a long way away. From London to Bolton. Without flapping. Yeah. Not one flap. Last time I drove, I was flapping the whole way. Right. And so they, they, they, they, they lock their elbows so that it just rides the wind. Yeah, yeah, exactly. And I looked at what's going on on Marion Island from where Yanna is writing, and it's where
Starting point is 00:18:51 they're trying to wipe out the mice, which have for years been absolutely demolishing the albatrosses. It's been a real catastrophe because half the world's wandering albatrosses are bred on this island and the island next door, so it's a really important base for them. They shouldn't be called the wandering
Starting point is 00:19:07 albatross, should they consider they have such a small... They're all from here. Well, they do wonder Like they can fly Some of them have been seen flying 75,000 miles in one year So they do wonder Just a couple of flaps to get there then Yeah
Starting point is 00:19:22 And basically this island Introduced five cats to the island in 1949 to control the mice Which were already causing a huge problem Guess what they didn't do to the cats New to them They didn't new to them So then they had hundreds of cats
Starting point is 00:19:36 preying on the albatrosses Because it's easier to catch the mice Did they consider dogs after that? Yeah, it was very much the old woman who introduced an unneuted cat to Marion Island. Basically, they finally have got rid of the cats about 30 years ago and now they're going after the mice
Starting point is 00:19:51 and if they can do it, if they can do full elimination, this will be a huge boon to the albatrosses which have really suffered their populations so that might be what Yam is working on. Very exciting. Very cool. It's very cool. Very, very good. Okay, one more fact. Do you want one that's also about birds
Starting point is 00:20:06 or one that's also from an expert in the field? Oh, I'll say expert. Yeah, expert in the field. Okay, bad news to Kirsty Blackman and her penguin fact. We're going to go. No. Sorry, Kirsty.
Starting point is 00:20:18 It's all right. It was just penguins can't taste fruit. That's all I got. That's what Kirsty said. Why would they have evolved to taste fruit? They're in a fruit-free environment. I have all the information, but we're not going to go into it today. We're going to instead have the fact from Ralph De Roa Mikado Mesquita.
Starting point is 00:20:34 Who writes that if elephants were to walk on the moon, their limbs would need to be about 10 metres. long to maintain normal gait mechanics. What? So this is, Ralph is a biomechanist and researcher in locomotion and his team wrote a paper about what elephants would have to do if they were on the moon. I basically will just pre-see this. Basically, if they wanted to keep walking in the way that they walk on Earth, they would
Starting point is 00:21:01 need very, very long legs based on the gravity and their leg length and all that kind of stuff. That is an astonishing fact in that I just assumed you could transfer. bought any animal to the moon and they would be able to moonwalk up there like they do down here. Like when you say moonwalk, you don't mean walk backwards like Michael Jackson. I think that's the agreed way of how you have to walk on the moon. Is it not? No, it's true. But obviously if humans walk on the moon, then we are bouncing rather than walking, really, aren't we? So, yeah, the elephants would have to have certain changes as well. Ralph and his team will be presenting the project at the Society of Biomechanics.
Starting point is 00:21:39 in Marseille in two weeks from the moment he sent that email. So probably if you're in Marseille, you might have missed it. Yeah, yeah, I think so, I'm afraid. What are they hoping to achieve with this study? It's just fun, Andy. Oh, I'm sorry. That's what I missed it. It gets people interested in locomotion and gaites and biomechanics and stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:22:00 I don't think they're intending to actually send elephants up to the moon. But I think that's, I think you're right. It's super interesting. And if someone did, let's say, fantasize the idea of a moon zoo, how would animals function on the moon if they were living there? There was probably so many interesting different ways that you would have to adapt an animal to be up there. The space suit for the elephant is going to be a big ask, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:22:20 Where does the oxygen go? In the nose? In the trunk? They don't need a helmet. They just have a little thing on the end of their trunk, don't they? I think their spacesuit is doing more than just helping you breathe. That's a good point. That's a really good point.
Starting point is 00:22:38 And he's like, no, I'll go out. I'll just hold my breath. I'll go out. I can hold my breath for two minutes. I'm going to go out, pick up a few moon rocks come back. I'm having a piss. I don't need. It's fine.
Starting point is 00:22:49 I don't breathe through my cock. Shut up, Houston. Houston. Your last words. I'm in trouble. I've got three seconds left. What can I do, Houston? It's actually Houston.
Starting point is 00:23:09 Okay. On that diabolical note, we still have one more thing to do, and that is to tell you the listener, if you are a member of the upper tier of Patreon, whether or not this week you are a new custodian of one of our facts. So who is going to go first with one of those? I'll do one. This one goes out to Edward Cox. Congratulations. Edward, your fact is one from another great friend of the podcast, Levin Skider,
Starting point is 00:23:37 who came on the show in episode 13 and presented the fact. During the Second World War, the Nazis employed two official Nazi comedians, Tran and Heller. They made a series of films, didn't they? And I think maybe they got fired for being a bit too about regulations or maybe committing the Cardinal sin of making fun of the regime a little bit. Yeah. Yeah. Great fact. And this was our first moment with Levin on the show.
Starting point is 00:24:02 We've since had him on multiple times, largely when we do Nerdland, which is his festival in Belgium. Are we going to do it next year? He's just sent us a message. Oh, has he? Okay, well, if the dates work, yeah, maybe. Is this an exclusive, an official response? Levin, if you're listening? If the dates work, yes.
Starting point is 00:24:19 Maybe. Great, very cool. Okay, I'll do one. This was my fact from episode 13, and this is for Lynn. Lynn, you are now the custodian of this fact. The Philippines Basketball Association is the world's second oldest, and names of its 10 teams include the rain and shine elastopainter. San Miguel Bierman
Starting point is 00:24:41 and talk and text Trupang Textors Brilliant Great names At one stage when you started I thought we were going to get all 10 teams I don't remember this And the reason is
Starting point is 00:24:56 Was I in this episode? No, you're not No I don't think I've ever even listened to this episode Oh wow, it's a goody It's a goody Yeah Well, Lynn, congratulations
Starting point is 00:25:07 Yeah Here is another fact This one is now under the custodianship of Casey McKenzie Johnson And the fact is that If you get a zebrafish drunk And put him in a tank with other zebrafish The sober ones will follow the drunk one around
Starting point is 00:25:23 Lovely And as a fact in episode 13 I feel like she was just hoping That that was what happened with her life But no This is about zebrafish which are often used in medical trials because they have quite similar nervous system to humans and to other animals. I think maybe my cousin studies zebrafish.
Starting point is 00:25:46 Really? I haven't asked her lately how it's going. I'll have to drop her a line. Very nice. Yeah, that's cool. I didn't know that. Yeah. Well, I mean, I barely know it clearly.
Starting point is 00:25:58 I don't think we have to date with me saying it. But yeah, yeah. Should we have another one? Yeah, it would be. All right. This one goes out to you, Joshua Smith. Joshua, your fact from this day forward
Starting point is 00:26:08 forsaking all others is that the youngest woolly mammoths are older than the oldest pharaohs ca-pang! Yes, Bosch! Pharaohs, mammoths,
Starting point is 00:26:19 there was a time where you could have had a pharaoh riding a woolly mammoth. Yeah. And it's an absolute catastrophe that we didn't make that happen as a species. How stupid are we? We didn't know that the woolly mammoth
Starting point is 00:26:31 was going to go extinct so quickly. We didn't. We didn't. And we also didn't know that the pharaohs were going to die out so quickly as well. No, you're right. You would have thought they'd both go on happily forever.
Starting point is 00:26:40 But, yeah, and the last Willie Manath, we're living on this place called Rangel Island, I think. And it's just because it was quite remote. And there are all these theories about why they died out. In Siberia, right? Yeah, that's it. Yeah, yeah. Would the two have ever met? Do we know if?
Starting point is 00:26:54 Absolutely not. No, pharaohs in Siberia. No, but I meant ancient Egyptians. Would they have traveled at that point to that area? You can't really. They did some seafaring and they did some travels in Africa, but there's no way they could have got up to Siberia. I'm sorry to say. They wouldn't have had the warm dogs for that environment. No, those like tunics and funny hats that they wore.
Starting point is 00:27:16 Absolutely not. They would not be good in Siberia. Absolutely not. It's so sad. Yeah. Don't give us another. This one is for Rachel Gilbert. Congratulations. You now own a James Harkin fact, which is that the CEO of Levi's hasn't washed his jeans in more than a year. Maybe 11 years at the dirty bugger. No, I do remember this one, and I remember it being quite controversial in the office, because I think Anna said she had never washed her jeans ever.
Starting point is 00:27:46 Yeah. Was the LJ you put it in the fridge? That was the... Freezer, yeah. That was one way to do it. But basically, they said that they just don't need washing. And I just straight up disagree. Still, after all this time, I think washing clothes, I mean, call me a rebel,
Starting point is 00:28:01 call me a maverick, but I think washing your clothes is a good thing. Yeah, it's not... Jeans are not the kind of clothes that need washing every day. You know, I try and get a new pair of pants on every day, and I don't mind sharing that on the show. But jeans, they can go a while.
Starting point is 00:28:15 Because if you spill something very urgent on them, then you need to change them quite safe. I think... I agree, if you shit yourself, you should change them. Well, yeah, if you shoot yourself badly, you should change them. It's case by case. Oh, I've said too much
Starting point is 00:28:34 This is why I try and keep quiet about my personal life Okay, let me do one more This fact is going to Devin Perent Stein Appears that Parents is this person's middle name And Devin, you are so lucky You are really getting your money's worth With this fact
Starting point is 00:28:55 Because it's a Dan Schreiber fact Wow, this is long, is this how I said it on the day? Surely not I've read audiobooks that are shorter than this fact. The thing is we just hadn't got the hang of delivering a crisp fact yet. Oh my god, the Alabama Constitution is short of this fact. Devin, your fact is, the first successful transatlantic flight in 2019 was made by Olcock and Brown. At one point, they got lost in a cloud and when they came out, they were only 60 feet above the water and
Starting point is 00:29:25 flying at 90 degrees to water. A double water in there as well. Yeah, I don't think I would have double watered it. Okay. Okay, mate. Maybe I typed it up wrong. Maybe you actually said something that was only five words long and I just got carried away when typing up the episode. I think I would have said the first bit as the fact and then quickly came in underneath it with the qualifications. But that's not an interesting fact that Alcock and Brown were the first people to cross the Atlantic. That's just a bit of trivia. I think Devin would feel absolutely stiff if his fact was that the first transatlantic flight was made by O'Cock and Brown. You're welcome then, Devin, because I've included the extra exciting detail.
Starting point is 00:30:05 It was pretty amazing. Them getting lost in a cloud and flying out of the cloud at 90 degrees to the water is funny. That's funny, because you'd think there would be other signs, like they're drinks spilling. Yeah. Yes. Or them falling out of the plane. Yeah. See, that's a terrible thing.
Starting point is 00:30:21 I actually trimmed this down a bit before we read it out on today's little fish. I genuinely did. Okay. Are we going to do one or two more? Yeah. Andy, what have you got for us? All right. This is for Benjamin. Not Benjamin.
Starting point is 00:30:33 Benjamin. It's this fact. In 2007, a woman called Evan Latimer inherited Napoleon's penis from her father. Oh. Oh. And we did a lot about the afterlife of Napoleon's petit corporal. Uh-huh-ha-ha-ha-ha. Because it was passed around and inherited and probably won and lost in card games and things like that.
Starting point is 00:30:56 And it's had a busy, busy afterlife. Yeah. I play a lot of poker these days, but I think we are missing the time when you could just shove something on the table and say, let's play for that. Really? Now, it's all chips and it's all like, oh, let's play for a fiver and stuff like that. You know, you don't get people shoving Mussolini's eyeball on the table and saying, really? I feel like all my stuff would just be rejected. Like, that's very cool, Dan, that you brought an unboxed Mork and Mindy toy from the 1970s.
Starting point is 00:31:24 We actually dispute your assessment of its worth. You may have paid 100 quid for it That doesn't actually mean it's worth 100 quid of chips Because normally it's like You throw your car keys on the table Or your house keys or your wedding ring or something For Dan, of course It's a life-size cut out of Ben Elton
Starting point is 00:31:44 Signed You don't understand Steve Martin briefly owned this tambourine Oh dear But I think the Lathoma family still own Napoleon's privates. Do they? All right.
Starting point is 00:32:00 The penis anyway. Very good. So congratulations. Congratulations Benjamin. Okay. And let's do one more done. Hopefully something nice, short, snappy and not too penisy. Yep.
Starting point is 00:32:10 So Karen Janes, you are now the custodian of Andrew Hunter Murray's fact, which is to say, I don't care about something. A German person has the option of saying, it's sausage to me. Is this your first ever sausage fact on the show? I think it might. Might be. First of many. I realized then that this was a rich seam of stuff.
Starting point is 00:32:30 Dasis mere worst. I don't care. That's sausage to me. It's sausage to me. But the Germans love sausage, which is why it's a strange, you know, it's a popular national dish. Yeah. Yeah. We actually found out in a recent episode that you weren't in, that they also say, that's
Starting point is 00:32:45 train station, tanoi to me. That's quite good, because that is the sort of thing that you just let pass by you. That's brilliant. Yeah. Huh. The first ever photo shoot that we had with a. national newspaper had us sitting down with placards with our favorite facts on it and this was your fact in you had that i had one about being kicked in the head or something that's right i remember
Starting point is 00:33:06 what anna's was and then dan had a huge billboard next to him with one of his facts written on it there are 30 cricket teams in okay thank you so much for listening to this episode of little fish and congratulations to all the custodians of today's facts If you have some interesting facts that you want to tell us, then send them over to Andy at podcast at QI.com. He will shuffle through them and send them out to us. And we might mention them next week or the week after or the week after that or any time in the next 20 years until eventually we decide to stop doing this. If you would like to get custodianship of a fact yourself, then go to patreon.com slash no such thing as a fish. And you can join the friend of
Starting point is 00:33:49 the podcast here to do that. But in the meantime, please enjoy the rest of your week. And we will see you on Friday for a big old episode of no such things are fish. Bye.

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