No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Bee On The Moon

Episode Date: December 29, 2022

Happy New Year! Live from the Up the Creek in Greenwich, Dan, James, Andy and Anna look back at 2022 with facts about Will Smith, Gareth Southgate, Jair Bolsonaro and Liz Truss (remember her?).   Vis...it nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes.   Join Club Fish for ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at nosuchthingasafish.com/apple or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon

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Starting point is 00:00:02 The podcast this week coming to you live from Up the Creek in Greenwich, London. Stan Schreiber, I'm sitting here with Anna Tashinsky, Andrew Hunter-Murie, and James Harkin, and once again we have gathered around the microphones, but not with our four favorite facts from the last seven days, but with some of our favorite facts from the last 12 months. This is no such thing as the news meets the book of the year that we didn't get to do, all smashed into a 30-minute podcast. So, in no particular order, here we can. Go. Starting with
Starting point is 00:00:56 a fact. Who wants to jump in? I can jump in because we're recording this at the same time as the World Cup semi-final is happening between France and Morocco. And I have a fact where 40,000 people in France thought they were
Starting point is 00:01:12 watching a World Cup match, Germany versus Japan, on YouTube, but they were actually watching someone playing FIFA 23. And apparently this is a group of people in Vietnam, this is what they do. They play FIFA, they pixelate it, so that someone watching the game thinks that maybe they're watching
Starting point is 00:01:32 a pixelated version of the actual match. And they make hundreds and hundreds of pounds by just getting people to watch. Because the ad money or whatever. That's the thing. They're genuinely, I read this too, and it's amazing. And what a letdown when you find out that it's not. And how foolish you are. I saw some pictures of the pixelated, and it does kind of look right.
Starting point is 00:01:50 But when they clean it up, it's very much a video game. Really? Oh, yeah. They're good now. Because it is a video game. Yeah, yeah. But I thought, I haven't played FIFA almost ever. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:01:59 So, yeah. Could we do that with the podcast? Like, if we sort of play a kind of slightly garbled version. So it's like, oh, yeah, like that. Yeah. People might listen to that. Does that mean there are people out there who might think that, like, Wales won the World Cup? Oh, yeah, because you could totally rig it.
Starting point is 00:02:16 Apparently they're not that gullible, it says. Sorry. Sorry. But they did. They did. As James was pointing out, they matched up the right match, so everything was fine. The thing that was the kicker was it was a Vietnamese commentary, as you say.
Starting point is 00:02:31 But I don't think... But actually, that added sort of realism to it, because when you go on to YouTube and you're watching some Huckie channel, it might be in a different language. So it kind of gave realism to it. Yeah. Another news story from the ear, the Queen. The Queen died. Oh.
Starting point is 00:02:46 What? Oh, wow. Way to bring a downer on it. So just to cheer us all up, Let's remember the greatest tribute paid to Her Majesty, which was by the London tourist attraction, Shrek's Adventure. Do you guys remember this? A lot of companies jumped on the bandwagon. Domino's Pizza said everyone at Domino's joins the nation and the world in mourning.
Starting point is 00:03:08 Pizza Express went for a slightly different message, but they also said the same kind of thing. And Shrex Adventure London said, Shrex Adventure London joins millions of mourners around the UK and world in paying tribute to HMQE2. Wow. I went to Shrex Adventure this year. I thought you were going to say you went to see the Queen.
Starting point is 00:03:24 No. The queue was shorted by just a bit at the Shrek Adventure on the South Bank of London. Wow. Actually, I remember a few weeks ago, I never used this on the podcast, but I found out that the longest ever theme park ride was eight hours long. So you could have done that ride three times
Starting point is 00:03:41 in the time you'd have got to see the Queen. Really? What was it? What was the ride? It was the Hogwarts one at Universal in America. There's an eight-hour-long Hogwarts ride. It was when it first opened. What was like a broken motor or something?
Starting point is 00:03:51 Like, what was it? No, it was like so... Everyone wanted to go there. Sorry, the queue. Sorry, the queue. The queue. Sorry. You said the ride.
Starting point is 00:03:59 You said the ride was eight hours long. You said you could go on it three times. Well, let's see if I said that by the time the edit goes out, shall we? Imagine it. Not knowing it was an E-L ride. Oh. Sorry, I'm the queen. The queeny thing, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:04:19 So, you know, do you remember, so you remember for the... day of the funeral itself, the Queen's coffin was carried on a gun carriage. You know, that was a thing, and it was pulled by lots of naval ratings. That was a thing, hundreds of them all pulling it in front and behind
Starting point is 00:04:30 to get at exactly the right speed. So that carriage, this is just an interesting thing. That carriage has been kept in a sort of storage room. That's not the interesting bit. It's been kept there for 40 years and every single week its wheels have been oiled
Starting point is 00:04:47 and turned around one quarter just in case gravity affected and misshaped the wheels and meant they wouldn't work properly on the day of the funeral. But because, I mean, gravity doesn't do that. We've got other wheels in the world, haven't we? And we don't turn them a quarter every week.
Starting point is 00:05:05 Yeah, it's not like I come back to my car after I haven't driven it for a month and they're all square. What's gravity doing to it, sorry? It's just... Making it flat. It's a heavy carriage. It weighs tons. Well, get there, yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:17 Yeah, yeah. And the wheels are obviously quite sensitive, and you just want to... So what, by shifting your wheel? That's effectively an anti-gravity machine. It's not... Sorry, you even out, don't you? You even out the effect of gravity over.
Starting point is 00:05:28 If you flatten out this bit, if you shift it round a quarter turn, you flatten out that bit, and then you flatten out that bit. It's like doing something culinary, like dough or something. There's a culinary metaphor in there, which if I cooks, I'd be able to give you right now. Right.
Starting point is 00:05:41 Domino's pizza actually had to change that time in anticipation. I just think that's an interesting example of the extreme thought and preparation that had gone into it over decades. You were talking about the different things that different brands did. So Morrison's, apparently, it was said that they turned off the beeps in their checkouts in deference to the queen dying. But they denied it, and they said they merely turned down the sound. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 00:06:09 So instead of going, beep, it went, beep. Although for someone who's dying, going, beep, beep, beep, beep, you don't really want that, do you? They should have replaced it with the Big Ben Bongs. That would have been nice. That would have been great. Bong. She caused confusion as a result of her death in Canada. I don't know if you saw this, but in Canada,
Starting point is 00:06:31 there was not long after she died, quite soon, there was a citizen ceremony going on where they were anointing new citizens of Canada and doing the pledge and so on. And it was all done virtually, and there was 140 people there or so. And they started doing the ceremony, and they had to stop it and say,
Starting point is 00:06:47 sorry, we can't make you Canadians. We don't know who you're pledging to. the queen or is it to the king? Really? So they had to like go off and find out who the fuck's in charge. Does that mean it doesn't count? If they said the queen instead of the king, it doesn't count.
Starting point is 00:06:59 I think so, yeah. Really? Because quite a lot of the England team in the World Cup matches would sing God save the queen instead of God Save the King. So do you think we could get a rematch against us? Hey, here's a crazy stat that I read is that the queen was, she was obviously very old, but was she 96 years old when she passed. So that means that of all the people alive in the country,
Starting point is 00:07:20 only 100,000 people had been around longer than her. So everyone else of us had her in our life. That's still quite a lot, I think. 100,000? I can't believe 100,000 people are older than 96. Yeah, it feels a lot. It's gone the wrong way. You just needed to present that with a different tone.
Starting point is 00:07:39 Do you know 100,000 people have been around longer than the Queen? Wow, that's a great fact, okay, okay. And that'll make the edit. That will make the edit. Just on royals, we're not the only royal family in the world. Obviously, the Saudi Arabian royal family forgave Thailand this year for a really interesting thing. I had no idea they've been having this feud for 30 years. But there haven't been any flights from Saudi Arabia to Thailand for 30 years.
Starting point is 00:08:09 There have been no ambassadors, anything like that. And it was caused because 30 years ago, a Thai cleaner who was employed as a servant at the Royal Palace, the Saudi Arabian Royal Palace. He was called Kran Kri Tekamon. He stole $20 million worth of gems and diamonds and precious stones, hid them in some vacuum cleaner bags because you use what you've got and like duct tape them to himself.
Starting point is 00:08:35 Oh, he didn't accidentally suck them up and then... That may have been his excuse in court, I don't know. And he smuggled them out of the country. And I love this, the way he smogged them out was he got them to Thailand by putting them in a big box of cargo and then he knew that the Thai officials at the other end would check them at customs unless he did something.
Starting point is 00:08:52 So he bribed them with an envelope, stuff with some cash, and with a note saying, hey, in my cargo, I've got loads of really bad porn and I'd really rather you didn't search it because that would be really awkward for me. So can you not? And they didn't.
Starting point is 00:09:06 I really. I would have thought you'd go for something slightly less tempting than that, wouldn't you? You're right. They're very respectful, the Thai officials and customs. Anyway, this year finally, Saudi Arabia forgave Thailand because it became this huge diplomatic incident. People were shot dead because of it.
Starting point is 00:09:24 Oh, yeah, there was lots of back and forth, yeah. Yeah. That's terrible. But the blue diamond's still missing, so check under your seats before you go. It's not Oprah. We're not Oprah. Just while we're talking about porn,
Starting point is 00:09:36 even though it was just a word, I'm just going to quickly grab that and bring it over here. There was a news story which, in Manhattan, a congressional candidate called Mike Itkus. He's running and he has a sex positive approach as part of his campaign.
Starting point is 00:09:52 So he thought, I'd like to demonstrate how positive I am about sex. He released a 13 minute long porn video with himself and a porn star that he filmed and put out to say, I'm a man of my words. It's called Bucketless Bonanza. And it's with Nicole Sage,
Starting point is 00:10:08 the porn star. And, yeah. Sorry, what party is he from? I would say wherever he is, there's a bit of a party going on. There was someone called Alexandra Hunt who ran in the third district for Congress and she was a former exotic dancer
Starting point is 00:10:25 but rather than hiding it she decided to embrace it and one of her campaign slogans was just elect hoes and the other one said I may have danced for money but I'm no corporate whore Wow That's not good, isn't it? Yeah, that's quite good, yeah
Starting point is 00:10:41 There was a guy in Nebraska Bruce Bostleman who apologized for repeating the rumor that schools are accommodating children who self-identify as cats by putting litter trays in the corner of the classroom. Why are they putting litter trays in the corner? No, no, they're not.
Starting point is 00:10:58 Right, okay. So the premise of his accusation is flawed. Yes, he accused them of doing something that definitely did not happen. Right. I got a fact that was sent in by someone actually, like a couple of weeks ago. Someone called Brain Blobs on Twitter.
Starting point is 00:11:13 So thank you, Brain Blobs. This is a really thrilling thing, guys. So this doesn't sound thrilling, but there's been a general conference on weights and measures and some scientists no, no, stay with it, because
Starting point is 00:11:27 some scientists from the National Physical Laboratory in the UK attended that conference on weights and measures and obviously I don't need to tell you that that's the authority of the International Bureau of weights and measures. And so, anyway, we've got some new units
Starting point is 00:11:43 to celebrate and that's really good. So A measure of weight, a ronogram. A ronogram. It sounds like it's someone's birthday. And you just send someone called run around. Hello. What is it? I'm Ron.
Starting point is 00:11:59 Happy birthday. Oh, that's so much better than what I've got here. So a ronogram is a one followed by 20 zeros, okay? And I think the earth weighs six ronograms. Which is really good because previously we had to say it weighs like 250 million blas. And even that was the previous. biggest unit. Okay.
Starting point is 00:12:17 So you see what I mean? Now we can just say it's six ronograms and that's a much more convenient way of putting it. Great. Yeah, that's good. That's very handy.
Starting point is 00:12:23 Yeah, because people often ask how much is the Earthway and you... Yeah. Any more units? Well, there's the ronometer. Oh yeah. And a universe is...
Starting point is 00:12:31 It's how you measure runs, isn't it? The entire universe is just one ronometer across. What? Oh, that's great. Because it's very big. It's huge. You sound surprised,
Starting point is 00:12:39 but you haven't just heard that a ronogram is a large thing. It's a large thing. It's bigger than a gram. But I don't think that then helps you understand anything. Well, all right, Dan. No, no, no, that's fair enough. All right, it's fair enough. Correct me if I'm wrong.
Starting point is 00:12:52 It's an expanding universe. Well, eventually it'll be two ronometers. Okay, here's a, okay. Better example. The other end of the scale, they've added some very, very small things as well. Yeah. Right?
Starting point is 00:13:03 So what about a quectogram? Okay. There's a rontogram, which is the weight of an electron. So this will be the weight of a quack or something like that. It's the weight of something even... So the weight added to your phone if you get one extra bite of data on your phone. That is one quectogram.
Starting point is 00:13:22 Right. So that has actual weight? Yeah. I swear to God, I emptied my phone some apps the other day. And it floated away. I'm not kidding. It felt so much lighter. I was like, wow.
Starting point is 00:13:36 And so that's true. That's it. Yeah, yeah, there we go. Do we think any of these are going to come in handy at Weight Watchers meeting? Maybe, yeah. You've lost a ronogram this week. That really is. Wow. Well, actually, on the earth and universe,
Starting point is 00:13:53 worrying news this year is that our days are getting longer, and we don't really know why. So there's this quite confusing thing where in the very, very long term, the days are getting slightly longer because the Earth's rotation is slowing because the moon's moving away from us. That's over millions of years.
Starting point is 00:14:11 You don't need to worry about that. But in the short term, like the last 50 years, weirdly counterbalancing that, they've been getting shorter, which we haven't really known why. And now suddenly, the last couple of years, they've gradually started getting longer. I don't know if anyone's noticed here. The extra... I felt it during Andy's a tiny bit, actually. So there's a new measure of time, the Andy Graham is before.
Starting point is 00:14:40 It's only a matter of minutes, but you were. will age. But yeah, we think it might be because of the Chandler Wobble. What? Chandler Wobble. Could that be any more weird? Lovely. For someone who I know has never seen an episode of Friends.
Starting point is 00:14:59 Someone who's read the Wikipedia page of Friends. Halfway through I was thinking I'm out of my death here. All right, you nailed it. Do you know whose time on Earth has been made, longer by one to two years as of six months from now? Oh, yes. I think I, I mean, despite the way you phrased that, yeah, I think I actually do. So it's South Koreans.
Starting point is 00:15:28 South Koreans have just extended their life by one to two years, and that's going to happen between June of next year, because they usually, in South Korea, the way that they measure your age is when you're born, you were born one years old. So they say that your, you know, nine months is rounded up to, 12 months, you are one. And if you're born, I think it's like close to December, then you become two because
Starting point is 00:15:51 it just is a new year. So you go, you're two quite quickly if you're born in, let's say, November. So that's been a thing where people have always found confusing if they go overseas because their birth certificate or the passports, we all carry our birth certificates, right? Their passport will say an age, but they'll say a different age. And it's really confusing. So now South Korea has decided to abandon the whole thing of saying you're one or two when you're born.
Starting point is 00:16:14 and they're going to be like the rest of the world's metric or I guess the majority of the world. Yeah, it's really sad. That's so sad. How come? Well, I just think it's a cool, interesting thing to do. Yeah, it's an interesting cultural difference. Yeah, don't do it, career.
Starting point is 00:16:28 Go back. Because it would be cool if, as you claim, they're adding two years to their life and if that's how they've tricked them into it, then yeah. Oh, I think if I could, I'm 38. If I could be like, I'm now 36, I think that would make my day. No, but you wouldn't be. You would have...
Starting point is 00:16:43 You're still going to die on the same day. Well, yeah, but... And it's soon. Sooner than you think. But I will have died two years younger. Also, more people will say, such a shame. Yeah, yeah. It went too soon.
Starting point is 00:16:58 There were only 100,000 people older than Dan Shriver. Can I drag us quickly back to sport? Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. And, well, actually, one thing I just wanted to say about Southgate, which, Gareth Southgate, Sorry, yes, I'm not familiar. You were thinking a tube station, weren't you?
Starting point is 00:17:17 I was actually thinking a scandal. Did you hear about Southgate? So, football manager for England? England's football manager. And, you know, everyone thinks he's a really great guy now. So obviously he was the bad guy in the 90s because for international listeners, he missed a penalty at the Euros,
Starting point is 00:17:33 a bit of a crisis for his popularity. Everyone loves him now because he wears waistcoats and England's a quite a good team. But I found out how he met his wife. and he is ropey. Oh. What do you mean with ropes? It's actually not that bad.
Starting point is 00:17:50 But he saw a woman he fancied who worked in a shop in Croydon and so he first of all would loiter around the shop pretending he was looking at the clothes there a lot to try and talk to... What sort of shop? Clothes shop, I reckon.
Starting point is 00:18:00 Oh yeah. It's actually a hardware store. Picking up padlocks and going, I love this t-shirt. I love this high-vis. Jack? Okay, sorry, so he's hanging around the shop. He's hanging around the shop.
Starting point is 00:18:16 He finds out she's got a very serious live-in boyfriend. But it happens. He goes to a restaurant one day, and her and her boyfriend are sitting nearby at the table, and he senses that they're having a bad time together, you know?
Starting point is 00:18:27 He senses this relationship on the rocks. So, when the boyfriend's not looking, he sneaks over to her and drops a letter in her hand with his number. A letter? A full... A bloody hell. 18 pages.
Starting point is 00:18:40 Wow. A note, I suppose a note. Yeah, yeah. And saying, you know, when this cocks up, which clearly it's going to, why don't you give me a call? And she did. And they had their dates in Tesco Carpac for a long time because they had to be secret, I think.
Starting point is 00:18:55 Oh, so she hadn't left, they just started dating secretly. Yeah, yeah. Wow. This is a gossipy story, isn't it? A Tesco Carpac is not a very secret place either. It's actually open to anyone who wants to go there. I assume her boyfriend, shopped at Sainsbury.
Starting point is 00:19:12 Yeah, yeah, I guess so. It's the only safe place for them. Anyway, so that is some hot gossip from 30 years ago. 13. 13. About Carra Southgate. Are they still together? Yeah, the art's very sweet, actually.
Starting point is 00:19:24 Oh, that's nice. Well, that's nice. I've got sports news here as well. This is to do with the world of badminton. You'll all know this, I'm sure. But just to remind you, four Chinese badminton players were put on probation for two years this year after failing to try
Starting point is 00:19:40 their best to win in 2018. So the match happened in 2018. They finally had the thing. Basically, the people that were watching the match noticed that either side were sort of not really given it. They were just sort of like dicking about. And that apparently is illegal in badminton
Starting point is 00:19:56 because they did it for a very good strategic reason, right? What, both sides? Is it so they can play a different team in the next round? Yeah, exactly. I thought you were going to say maybe they'd been paid to throw the match. Oh, you know? I'm pretty, I think it was because they, if, whoever won would be playing the better team.
Starting point is 00:20:12 And I believe it was two Chinese, a Chinese team, wasn't it? Yeah. Who, if they won, were going to end up playing the other Chinese team. And so that was silly because they want China to win. So it's pointless China playing China, because they're going to knock one of them out. And so they all want it. And then I think, was the other one Korean? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:20:28 Apparently, you know this way better. I'm just guessing. I'm just like crystal ball. Yeah, I think then the other team were like, hang on, you're trying to lose. We're going to try and lose as well. and... And then they got picked up and then the second half
Starting point is 00:20:43 they kind of went for it properly because I think they realised we've been caught out. But now they're banned, yeah, for playing shit. Which is amazing. In 2024, the Olympics are going to be in Paris.
Starting point is 00:20:54 This is the fact about next year, I should say, because this year they unveiled their mascot they're going to have and everyone said the same thing that it looks rather like a clitoris. Oh. And the woman who designed it
Starting point is 00:21:07 when they said to her, You know, it's a bit weird that your mascot looks like a clitoris. She said, I'm so happy after everything that's happened with feminism, that people can now recognise the clitoris. I saw the mascot. I didn't think it looked like... I don't think it looked like. And they did find, I'm sure everyone saw this today,
Starting point is 00:21:28 they found the snakes clitoris for the first time, haven't they? It's got two. It's got two. Yeah, because they have hemipinis, don't they? Right. Pienuses, so they have double clitorises as well. Oh, good for them. I got a few records.
Starting point is 00:21:44 Oh, yeah. Do you want a little quiz? Yeah. Okay. Right, this record was broken in January by Lauren Noonan of Sydney is the most cartoon characters identified in one minute. How many?
Starting point is 00:21:54 20. Okay. In one minute. 40. 31. 106. Come on. Imagine that.
Starting point is 00:22:01 That's a lot. Yeah. How identified what, like, by photos or... I mean, yeah, some kind of... pictorial. It looks like... I thought a voice, I guess. Oh!
Starting point is 00:22:11 Yeah, I thought a voice. No, I think it was pictures. You know, Pope, Betty Boob, Donald Duck. That one. Okay. Question two. Question two. All right, right.
Starting point is 00:22:17 February record. Franz Huber from Milan. Most swords swallowed while hanging upside down. Okay, I've seen, I reckon I've seen people swallowing around six or seven. So I'll go for that. Six. Okay. One.
Starting point is 00:22:32 Hundred. Sorry, you didn't let me finish. One. 100. You're both right? It's 100 swords. No, of course it's not. It's nine.
Starting point is 00:22:42 Oh, okay. Although is that, if you're upside down, is it still swallowing something? Yes. Well, what is it if it's not? It's just sort of pushing something up, isn't it? You know, like swallowing is where you swallow something down and it goes into something.
Starting point is 00:23:00 It still ends up in your stomach, though, no matter which way you're orientated. Yeah, I think you've forgotten the definition of the word swallow. Okay. You can't like say, oh, I didn't. swallow those diamonds, officer, because I was upside down at the time. Please go on your way, sir.
Starting point is 00:23:14 We legally can't arrest you. Okay, fine, fine, fine. All right, final one, final one. March record. This is Miyabi Kugimachi of Tokyo. Most socks sorted with one foot in one minute. And I want an answer in pairs, please. How many pairs of socks sorted?
Starting point is 00:23:31 Half. Half of one pair. James has lowballed it. 30. 25. Pairs. 400. 12.
Starting point is 00:23:42 4. Again. 400 pairs of socks. I half listened to the question. Eight pairs of socks per second. Final answer. I can't, I don't know or care who got it right. I think it was Anna.
Starting point is 00:23:57 I think it was 15. Pears. No, no, no. I know. I just can't remember what everyone said. Oh, right. Sorry, I agree with you for guessing 400. But I kind of forgot Anna's answer.
Starting point is 00:24:06 You guess sort of. 25. 35. Yeah, but I meant to. So 12.5, I thought. Wasn't this, I think I saw this, and wasn't she known on YouTube for foot-related content anyway, I believe the person who won?
Starting point is 00:24:20 Well, maybe I came across her in a different walk of my life, but... Oh, right, okay. What is foot-related content? I know it means sexual stuff, but what does that... But what does that mean? I actually don't know what that means. Just sexy photos of feet? I don't know, I guess it's sorting socks with your feet.
Starting point is 00:24:33 I don't know. Sorting socks with your feet? Yeah, well, that's what she's doing. That's what... This lady... Again, I didn't hear the question. Okay, I have a related fact on these kind of people. It's about influencers who do strange things.
Starting point is 00:24:50 Oh, okay. And this is Stephanie Mato, who sold farts in a jar. Oh, yeah. And she managed to get very, very sick because she was trying to fart too many times because she got so many orders. She was trying to make as much as possible. And what that meant, because I found another story in the same week, is that you can end up in hospital
Starting point is 00:25:10 if you fart too much and if you don't fart enough. Because there was a woman called Kara Clark who got extreme stomach pain when she'd been holding in her farts too much and then this influencer, Stephanie Mato, had been farting too much and she ended up in hospital as well.
Starting point is 00:25:26 Were they in the waiting room at the same time? But what that says to me is there's an optimum amount. Yeah, well, if you read the uncar version of Goldilocks, there is that scene where one of the bears in hospital, yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Why was the second Roman holding in her farts?
Starting point is 00:25:43 Because she had a new boyfriend. Oh, no. And she's fine now. They have to laugh about it. Okay, that's very good. So what you're saying is we're all walking a kind of, be it quite a thick line. Yes, I think so.
Starting point is 00:25:55 But Stephanie has now retired from selling farts in jars. You'll be glad to hear. Her family are glad to hear. But she is now selling her fart jars as NFTs. Okay Can I mention one of the big stories of the year Yeah go on The very infamous Chris Rock
Starting point is 00:26:15 Will Smith moment The Slap at the Oscars I fell in love with this story Because it was just a very good example Of how very quickly We all jumped to insane theories To sort of justify why it may have happened So there were two theories that came out
Starting point is 00:26:29 Immediately after it happened One was that someone said That the slap is much less interesting when you realise that Will Smith almost certainly went through the Scientology courses that tell you to unapologetically use slaps and physical force to let a fellow Scientologists know they've done something wrong.
Starting point is 00:26:45 So the idea is that in the training, they just go, huapang, on the side of your face because they're bored or whatever, and that's them letting you know that they don't want to hear. Please, please no, please know. I won't last one. Tell us some more unit facts, Andy. Pow!
Starting point is 00:27:02 But then Scientologists, including ex-Scientologist, jumped to immediately saying, no, no, that's not a thing. My favorite one, though, of all the theories that came out is that someone noticed just before Will Smith came up to slap him on stage that Chris Rock had dared to say the word Macbeth on stage, which you should never do. The curse of Macb... Oh, shit.
Starting point is 00:27:28 Anna, you know what to do. But so just a few moments before, he congratulated Denzel Washington on his performance on the tragedy of Macbeth. And so now, if you go to the Wikipedia page for incidences after invoking the word Macbeth, you will find Will Smith slapping Chris Wall. But isn't that only a viable theory? And I can't remember his wife's name. Maybe it is Macbeth.
Starting point is 00:27:50 It's not Lady Macbeth. Will Smith's wife would have to be called Macbeth. Because I believe it was accompanied with an explanatory words, wasn't it, by Will Smith? He didn't want to leave us in the dark, didn't he say, get. Keep my wife's name out of your mouth. Remove my wife's name from your mouth, please. Oh, I see what you're saying. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:07 And his wife's not called Macbeth, so that's where that theory completely falls down. No. Well, that's the only reason he'd be annoyed about him saying Macbeth. No, the whole idea of the Macbeth curse is that it's out of your control what then happens. So then he goes on to tell a joke
Starting point is 00:28:21 he thinks it's going to be fine, and the curse takes over there. Oh, you're not saying Will Smith was furious because he broke and rule. I thought that. The way you told it, it did sound like... Oh, really? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:31 The Scottish play, you dickhead. Oh, I can't have to go up and tell him. On celebrities, another celebrity of the year was Liz Truss. And... A cheer of slight recognition in the room, wasn't it? Can you just... For any international listeners, can you just say who? Yes, so she was the short-lived five-minute-of-fame
Starting point is 00:28:58 Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. She still lives. She still alive. She lives. Yeah. Liz Truss lives. She was in private. Prime Minister for long. God, how long was it? 37 days?
Starting point is 00:29:08 49 days, actually. That's not too bad, is it? But she, I learned this year that she was often compared to Margaret Thatcher, obviously, because she tried to compare herself to Margaret Thatcher quite a lot. And she actually played Margaret Thatcher in a school play when she was eight years old. Really? So what was the school play? Macbeth. I was in a couple of plays at school.
Starting point is 00:29:34 And none of them featured. It was a nativity. Nativity. It was the school play was the 1983 election. Wow. It was a weird. They did things differently and Paisley in the 80s. I think the Thatcher election was going on at the time,
Starting point is 00:29:57 and so they reenacted it, and they asked people if they wanted to be certain candidates, and they said, would you like to be Margaret Thatcher and try to get people on your side? Right. And then everyone would vote for who they liked best, who was pitching their political theories. And Liz Trust actually got zero votes,
Starting point is 00:30:12 not even voting for herself. Oh, because she was left-wing at the time, because her parents were quite left-wing, and she wouldn't have been a Thatcher supporter until much later. Even at uni, she was in a Lib Dem. Yeah, that probably was it. What she said was she knew the Tories were so unpopular in Paisley at the time
Starting point is 00:30:27 that she couldn't be seen voting for Margaret Thatcher, even though it was her in this instance. My school did the 1997 election, and it's a good fun fun thing to do. Who did you play? We didn't do it as a play. Actually, Michael Gove wasn't around then.
Starting point is 00:30:45 Who were you? Aaron Whitacom. No, we weren't playing individual people. It was just like it was done as it like, I can't remember there was a talk about it or something. You played people talking about the election? No, it wasn't a play for fuck sake. Should we talk about the letters then?
Starting point is 00:31:02 We got to talk about the letters. The trust letters. The trust letters, the lettuce that lasted longer than Liz Truss. But of course there's a big argument between left and right on Twitter like there always is, with the right wing saying that actually there was some discoloration in the lettuce, and maybe it hadn't lasted as long as Liz Truss. But the Atlantic said that it was still usable in a salad. So that counts.
Starting point is 00:31:24 Do we know what happened to it in the end? Yeah, straight afterwards for the next month it was doing personalised messages on cameo for 13 pounds. Are you serious? That's so funny. That's really good. There was a really good quote about Boris Johnson in the Times this year. Boris Johnson for international list is another Prime Minister that we've had this year. This is around about the time when he was flying back from his holiday
Starting point is 00:31:48 to claim the title of Prime Minister again and then decided against it. And there was a school report written by one of his teachers when he was 18, and it was just so good and prescient. So the school report said, Boris sometimes seems affronted when criticised for what amounts to a gross failure of responsibility and surprised at the same time that he was not appointed captain of school for next term.
Starting point is 00:32:11 I think he honestly believes that it is churlish of us not to regard him as an exception one who should be free of the network of obligation which binds everyone else. Right. We were talking to us before the show. Do you guys remember the Sue Gray report? This time last year that wasn't out yet.
Starting point is 00:32:28 That's all happened this year. We're getting some nose over there, so you're going to have to refresh people. Nah. It's very boring. Another Boris-like person, Chair Bolsonaro in Brazil. He's been away from the public eye for the last couple of months. And no one's really known what's happening.
Starting point is 00:32:44 There's been a lot of rumours. What since the election? He lost, didn't he lost? The vice president said that he'd had COVID three times, even though he denied it existed. And he had a skin disease which stopped him from being able to pot on his trousers. And so he couldn't do any public events.
Starting point is 00:33:06 You can still do Zoom calls, though, can't you? That's amazing. We should think of wrapping up in very, not just yet, but soonish. Can I say a science fact? Yeah, of course. So one thing that's, we've just been getting this yet, it's been in the works for years and years, the James Webb Space Telescope,
Starting point is 00:33:23 which was launched, I think, at the very, very end of last year, and we've just got the first photos back this year. It's amazingly exciting, because we're seeing lots and lots of the universe in completely new ways, and I've just been reading a bit about it. It's so sensitive, the James Webb Space Telescope, it could detect the warmth of a single bee
Starting point is 00:33:42 that was on the moon from Earth. Okay. Wow. Isn't that good? Well, we don't have bees on the moon, though. Well, maybe now we'll find out if we do have bees on the moon down. And do we? Well, no, but it's...
Starting point is 00:33:56 That is quite amazing. Yeah, it's taking these pictures. They get called the baby pictures of the universe because it's photographing light from 13.5 billion years ago, really, really long time ago. So you can see what was happening just after the universe was born. Well, that made me think that all of our baby photos are still traveling out into space. As in if you were far enough away, you'd be able to see yourself as a baby, you know, what you're up to.
Starting point is 00:34:20 You're able to see your own baby photos happening. James, you're a physicist. You'd have to be firing them out somehow. Like, for instance, broadcast stuff, something that's broadcast over the airway. that would go into space and that could be seen for a long time. So technically, no such things the news is still on.
Starting point is 00:34:37 We got cancelled on Earth, but if you're on Alpha Centura, you can watch it live. Oh, wow. Do you think the owner of, or the originator of the James Webb Space Telescope spams their friends on WhatsApp constantly with annoying photos of the baby universe?
Starting point is 00:34:53 Yeah, almost certainly. Quite ugly, but they have to say something nice. I've got a bit of a silly story here of which I just loved. There was a guy in China, two guys in China that were picking pine nuts from a tree recently and the tree was a bit high so they thought the way we'll get to it
Starting point is 00:35:10 is let's just fill up a hydrogen balloon and we'll attach ourselves to that. So they go up in it and they're picking their pine nuts but then the balloon becomes untethered. One of the guys jumps out, the other one's too afraid to. He disappeared for two days into the air. He went on a 200 mile long journey,
Starting point is 00:35:30 really high in the sky. They were monitoring as he went. Fortunately, he had his mobile phone, and he was constantly calling and running low on battery, going, what do I do? And they had to navigate him to slowly let air out over somewhere that was landable, but for two days, he just fucked off.
Starting point is 00:35:48 Wow. What an adventure. It's like up. So great, yeah. Have you got any last stories? In Nigeria they seized thousands of donkey penises because they were mislabeled as cow penises. Okay. There's a romance novelist who wrote an online essay
Starting point is 00:36:05 called How to Murder Your Husband and she was sentenced to life for murdering her husband. The old double bluff. It doesn't always work. And according to a recent study at the University of Singapore, the three funniest word pairs in the English language are Playboy Parrot, Weasel penis, and spam scrotum.
Starting point is 00:36:28 We'll try them in the next episode. Okay, that's it. That is all of our facts from the year. Thank you so much for listening. If you'd like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we've said over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts.
Starting point is 00:36:46 I'm on at Shriverland. Andy. At Andrew Hunter M. James. At James Harkin. And Anna. You can email podcast at QI.com. If you want to get in touch with us as a group,
Starting point is 00:36:55 we're on at No Such Thing, or you can go to our website, no such thing as a fish.com. All of our previous episodes are up there, so do check them out. There's a bunch of other fun things up there. Check it out too. Thank you very much up the creek for being here for our big end of year.
Starting point is 00:37:09 No Such Thing is a new smashed with the book of the year. Bonanza. And we'll be back again next week with another episode. We'll see you then. Goodbye.

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