No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing as a Blatant Plug for the Book of the Year 2019
Episode Date: October 24, 2019Dan, James, Anna and Andrew discuss four facts taken from The Book Of The Year 2019, including Greta Thunberg's adventurous middle name, the polling station with only one voter, and the worst way to d...ispose of a speeding ticket. The Book Of The Year 2019 is out now! Amazon:https://www.amazon.co.uk/Book-Year-2019-Such-Thing/dp/1786332019 Apple Books: https://books.apple.com/gb/book/the-book-of-the-year-2019/id1462378633 Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes.
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Hello and welcome to an extra special edition of No Such Thing as a Fish.
This time we are celebrating the release of our new book, The Book of the Year 2019, The World's Weirdest News.
My name is Dan Schreiber. I am sitting here with Andrew Hunter Murray, Anna Chisinski, and James Harkin.
And once again, we have gathered around the table with our four favorite facts from our new book, which is out now.
And in no particular order, here we go.
Starting with you, James.
Okay.
fact from the book of the year 2019, the world's weirdest news, is that Greta Thunberg's middle name
is Tintin.
Amazing.
So good.
Isn't that great?
Now, you can argue this isn't technically true because...
Glad we opened on this one.
Immediate climb down.
Well, she has five names in total, and Tintin is the second one.
I call it a middle name.
So she is called Greta Tintin, Eleanor Ehrnman, Thunberg.
I'll say that middle name tinton
That's an incredibly
That's an incredibly professional way
Of a view to caveat that fact James
Because any other person would have just said
Her middle name is Tintin, that's fine
But you said well technically it's one outside her middle name
But it's not a first or a surname
We kept editing that sentence out of the actual book though in the end
I reckon that any name which is not your first name
Or your surname is technically a middle name
Definitely yeah absolutely
Agree like if you're in a family of 10 people
And you're the ninth child
You say you're one of the middle siblings don't you?
Yeah, sure.
I think you only get to single yourself out
until the first name or the surname.
I would say I was the penultimate child.
You do, don't you?
And you're an only child, which is bizarre.
She's not the only person with a fun middle name
to appear in our book.
Just very quickly.
Lucy Bronze, the footballer for the England football team.
Her middle name is tough.
Yeah, very cool.
That's a great middle name.
That's good.
But why is Greta Thumburg's middle name
Tintin? Do we know? I don't know, actually. I can only assume her parents were fans.
Yeah? Oh, she has a white dog? She could, although she wouldn't have had it when she was born.
No, you're right. I have no other Tintin references, so I can't think of any other reason.
She's a sort of young adventurer going around the world, having adventures. That's true.
That's true. But she wasn't when she was born. No, again. No, you're right.
She is still very young to be adventuring, though, isn't she? I'm always surprised that she's 16 still, I think.
She's amazing.
And she's currently, so she took this trip to the US and then going on to Chile to attend these conferences.
And she's still, as we speak, traveling down through the US on her way to Chile.
And I don't know who she's with.
Does she have any parental guidance there?
I think is it not true that if you're traveling under the age of 18, your parents can drop you off
and then someone can pick you up at the airport and actually you're fine.
I think that's probably what she's doing.
Yes.
Should we just quickly say?
She isn't doing that, by the way.
She definitely would never go by airplane anywhere.
No, no, absolutely.
I was just going to say, we should say there might be a few people out there
who genuinely don't know who Greta Thunberg is.
You know, she's one of the biggest names of the year,
but the way we've been talking about it,
sounds like she's an adventurer.
So she's the environmentalist campaigner
who has been causing huge storms of the good kind.
It's climate change, which is causing the huge storms.
She's trying to fight storms wherever she goes.
She started off sitting at,
outside, was it her Swedish Parliament buildings?
Swedish Reichstag, yeah.
Yeah, and she was skipping school to do that, and that turned into the huge
school strike movement. But her initial leaflets that she handed out said, I am doing
this because you adults are shitting on my future, which is a great phrase.
It is.
Terrible misbehavior. So she skive school and then use foul language to abuse strangers.
Okay, you have to stop reading the telegram.
No, she is great. And she led what were the biggest climate protests in
all history. So I think in the space of one month she led two which were attended by four million
people. She's just extraordinary, isn't it? Amazing. Do you think they'll look back, like we look back
now at Joan of Arc who was what 14 years old or something and can't believe that she managed to
have the whole of a French army behind her? But now there's this 16 year old who's got four million
more than that, let's be honest, people behind her. It's just insane. But Greta Thunberg isn't
using those people to throw the English out of France. We should say that. There's been a lot of
stuff thrown around about her.
There is one conspiracy, this is a very mad
conspiracy theory about her that says she's actually an
Australian actress called Estella Renee
who is working for the deep state
and deli-it. It's not clear why the deep state
would need. That would be amazing.
If you looked back at old episodes of
neighbours and she just pops up there.
Do you know the foundation for this rumour?
No.
Cool.
Incredibly weird people on the internet.
Yeah. I mean, it's really, really
loco. Because we know who her parents are.
We know where she was.
was born. There are records of her all the way through.
Look, I wasn't suggesting it might be true.
I just wondered if there was any logic to it.
Maybe someone thought she had a tan that maybe she'd got from Australia.
I believe you, Andy. Don't worry.
Well, there is another one which is, it's slightly less mad, but it's still completely mad,
if you know what I mean, which is that she's got an IMDB page and she's listed as an
actress because she once did a voiceover.
So that's some people, that's the evidence for some people saying that she's therefore not real.
Okay, well, her mum was in the arts, wasn't she? She was a performer.
of some sort. Yeah, opera singer. Yeah, so okay, that makes sense. You might have your child
appear in something at a young age without their consent. I think it's a climate thing that she did
a voiceover for, actually. I mean, Donald Trump is listed as an actor on IMDB, so being on
IMDB does not mean that you're not a person. Well, he is. No, he is, though. He was in home
alone too. Yeah. Classic scene. He's an actor. He's an actor. He was brilliant in that,
and I thought. No, I haven't seen it. Yeah, her mother, it's quite interesting. Her mother's a
woman called Melena Earnman and she was a famous opera singer, a really famous opera singer in
Sweden and she gave it up because of Greta. So Greta convinced her to cancel her entire career
because all the international travel is so bad for the environment. Oh, the travel. I was thinking
like because you do so much singing and you're kind of breathing a lot. All the carbon dioxide
that comes out. That's what I was thinking. I read this is a bit of a, it must be very hard
trying to get everything right when you're trying to do your best to stop a carbon footprint. So her
going across to America in a boat, I read that, unfortunately, in order to get the boat back,
they had to fly out two of the boat pilots to America in order to bring it back.
They could have just sent them off in another boat.
Exactly.
Well, why weren't they in the boat?
What's going on?
Where were they?
They did.
But they said in response to that that their whole flight was carbon neutral, so they, you know,
they offset the carbon of that.
It's tricky, though, because offsetting is a thing which some people say doesn't really work.
You can't really suck up carbon in the same way.
I think the argument mostly is that by doing it, people think that it's okay to fly.
Right.
And so if you think, oh, I'm going to offset it, then you might be more inclined to do more short-haul flying.
Yeah.
The protests, the environmental protests, have been pretty interesting.
There was a really good fact that one of you guys found, I think, which is that the levels of pollution on Oxus Street fell by 45% due to the extinction rebellion protest because they stopped all of the cars going there, which is really cool, I think.
That's very cool.
That's like immediate action.
And also, I found this protest in Australia, which was pretty cool.
It was on Manly Beach near Sydney, and 150 protesters buried their heads in the sand.
That's a great protest.
The pictures are amazing.
It looked like they're preying, you know, they're right on their knees with their heads down and stuff like that.
That's very funny.
Did they have guards to stop people just running around, kicking them all up the ass one after the other?
I didn't see any guys.
Look, I support the protests.
I just want to make it clear.
But we didn't assume you didn't have.
We did when he implied that he was going to rod along the beach of protesters
kicking them all in the arts.
I think the implication was you support the protests,
but if you see a big row of arces in the air, you have to kick them, right?
Yeah, that's where I went.
You could play them like bongos.
You could play them like bongos.
It's not quite as violent, but it's still funny.
One of the first things Extinction Rebellion did was to occupy the officers of,
guess where?
So was it in Sweden?
No, I think it was here actually.
In London. Okay, the offices of Shell.
It was Greenpeace.
Was it?
Yeah.
They sort of, they handed out flowers, but they also gave out leaflets saying we're going to be much more assertive about this than you guys have been.
Wow.
Greenpeace do their share of, you know, stunned protests and things.
Yeah, yeah.
But Extinction Rebellion were just, you know, marking their territory.
God, I think of Greenpeace is quite assertive.
I do as well.
They also had this thing in July where,
Hundreds of environmental climate demonstrators picketed the headquarters of Drax,
and that's Drax is a big energy and gas giant,
and they were picketing them over a new gas-powered plant
that they were planning in Yorkshire, I think.
Anyway, they hadn't done the research.
Drax moved out of that building over a year ago,
and they instead chained themselves to this block in Moorgate,
which is now occupied by Europe's leading renewables generator.
You can't win them all.
I love the headline that we actually have for the Extinction Rebellion article
in our book is a woman glued her breast to the road to protest against climate change.
And this was just the most wonderful.
The glue was just fantastic.
They were gluing their bums to the windows in Westminster.
They were gluing themselves on streets.
A guy did it on top of a plane the other day.
Did you see that?
What?
Glued himself on top of a plane.
As part of this new Extinction Rebellion sort of revival,
he was getting on a plane from the steps on the outside,
and he climbed on top, and he glued himself to the top.
And so, yeah, disrupted this.
flight. That is amazing. I know there's a bit of me that wish that they just pranked him, just
closed the door and started heading down.
Andy really behind the plane trying to kick him in the ass.
I just want to say I do support the whole. Thank you.
There were the people who glued themselves to Corbyn's house, weren't there?
Oh yeah. I think it was four protesters, glued themselves outside Jeremy Corbyn's home.
But, you know, a lot of these people are very nice people, the climate protesters. So they admitted
they felt absolutely terrible about upsetting his wife, who was indoors at the time. And they had
flowers and Easter eggs delivered to the house to apologize for the inconvenience.
I think sort of while they were still glued, I think maybe one of them with their toes
dialed the flower delivery service or something.
One protester was arrested while dressed as some broccoli.
Oh, I saw a video of that.
He looks very, very good because they've been very creative with the costumes and everything.
And as he was arrested, he was heard to be shouting either give peace a chance or give peas a chance.
Not clear which he was shouting.
Why was he a broccoli then?
Because broccoli is good for you.
You should eat less meat.
You know, this kind of stuff.
Yeah, it's green.
It's green.
I get that, but dress as a pee if that's going to be your line.
What about broccoli leave fossil fuels in the ground?
Very nice.
He could have done with you.
But I do support what he did, I think.
Just, can I just say my favorite group of people who are protesting climate change is drug users and drug dealers with them.
So this was the news this year.
This is in our book that cocaine is now being sold in environmentally friendly.
PODs. This was
an interview that was done, I think, in the Birmingham
Mail, the Birmingham Post, and they interviewed
a drug user who said that he thought
this dealer was joking when he gave him a reusable
container with his cocaine in it. It was like, what on earth
is that, mate? And the dealer said,
basically, we're not using the plastic zip-lock
bags anymore. We are using these reusable
ones. And if you want a refill of cocaine, you're
going to have to bring back your reusable
container. You know what? I'm going to take
it up again. That was always a deal breaker for me.
And finally. They could have just
introduced a 5p charge for a small plastic container drugs.
That would have been amazing.
Oh my God.
Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is Andy.
My fact is that you can now be pulled over for drink driving by your own car.
Where did you read this fact, Andy?
Did you read it in a book?
Oh, yeah, sorry, I read it in the book.
No, I wrote it in the book of the year.
The world's weirdest news.
You've read it since, though, right?
Of course, it's my bedside reading.
Sorry, just check.
I just wanted the citation in there.
What an aggressive and unhelpful start to a fact.
I'm so sorry.
I read it on a newspaper website, probably, and then I wrote it down in the book that we've all just written between us.
Sorry, what's that book?
It's called the Book of the Year, 2019, The World's Weirdest News.
Right title, when's it out?
I don't know.
Now, Andy, now.
It's out now.
Andy, if you missed the point of this podcast.
We're just trying to get you to see.
say the name of the book.
Got it.
It's out now.
Great.
So anyway.
As you are.
Volvo have developed this car or they have announced they are developing a car which
can tell you off for drink driving if it detects that you're drunk.
I'm sorry.
It just tells you off.
It doesn't make you stop or anything.
It just says, you naughty boy.
I think it actually can pull over to the side of the road.
It's still in development.
So this is not a standard in new Volvo's that you buy.
But I think it detects from the way you're driving.
if you're driving very, very drunkenly.
What if, for instance, not saying I'm like this,
but what if you're just a very bad driver?
You'll never drive again, I'm afraid.
Even if I'm sober?
I'm afraid not, no.
Actually, a bit better after a few drinks,
so I don't see what?
Can I just say that it's not true?
You don't support the drink drivers.
That's very clever.
So it was a car that detects
if you've driven through your own kitchen window or something.
Basically.
It ought to be.
also had some other interesting technology that it announced this year, didn't it?
And that was that its cars will warn each other if you're driving on icy roads.
So cool.
So cool. So I believe this is still in development.
But yeah, it'll be automatic detection.
If you're on an icy road and your car detect sort of a lack of friction,
it will tell all the other volvos nearby.
So the people driving them will get warnings.
And if you don't drive a Volvo, then I guess you're buggered.
That's very cool.
While we're doing an advert for Volvo,
the great thing about Volvo, I always thought,
was the fact that they invented the seatbelt, right?
The modern seatbelt that we have,
which is kind of a 3.1,
it kind of comes across your chest and your waist.
They invented it,
and they never patented it,
so it meant that everyone could use it for free
because they realized that it was so good for safety
that it would be better to be in every car
and they didn't want the money for it.
But one thing that they are working on at the moment
is a self-driving car seatbelt, okay?
Because when you're in your self-driving car,
you're probably not going to want to sit there
at the front looking out of the windscreen,
you might want to be having a lie down
or you might want to be kind of playing, you know,
video games or something like that.
Yeah.
And so they have come up with a seatbelt blanket.
Okay. So you kind of lie down or kind of like lounge a little bit.
And then the strap goes across your whole body
about cross your legs,
across your chest and everything like that.
But it's not real,
it's not like you're being strapped down because you're in a,
you know,
at hospital or something like that.
Yeah, because you're making it sound like you're sort of mummified
into the car. It's not quite like, it's supposed to not feel restrictive, but it does kind of
cocoon you. That's brilliant. And that's the new thing that they're working. That's very cool.
When you set a self-driving seatbelt, I thought it was if you'd driven off without your seatbelt,
your seatbelt at home would remember, and it would drive out to the car and catch up with you
and then get into the car. I've got another car development thing here. It's not Volvo.
Oh, well, I'm not interested then. I stupidly took a sponsorship from Ford,
which are fantastic cars
but this year
and this is in our robots article
Ford have developed
a robotic bottom
which they test on their car seats
so this is the idea of testing
for wear and tear in your car seats
They've had that for a while haven't they?
Yes they have
but what they've added to it this year
this is the 2019 edition
it now has sweat glands
so it can mimic the behavior of someone
with a very sweaty bottom
you're driving on a hot day
and you've taken your trousers
off to drive, as I always do.
See, but your self-driving trousers
are on the way.
They'll get there eventually.
I think that's a real shame,
because you're putting a lot of real-life human bottom
testers out of work, aren't you?
That's very true.
It's a thing that's dealing with a real issue.
Why don't they just find people with sweaty bottoms?
That's what I'm saying.
Oh, gotcha.
I remember when I was at school
and they were telling me what kind of job I might have in the future,
and they did check how sweaty my bottom was.
And they did think I would be able to do this as a job.
guy's been reporting to the authorities actually.
Just because this is about
sort of new robotics technology
starting new robotics.
One of my favorite stories in the book
was the extreme advance in
shoes, which is that Nike has
invented self-lacing trainers.
Yes. Wow. Brilliant.
So these trainers are $300.
They fit your foot shape
automatically. So you try them on. They fit any
foot shape. They're self-lacing, so they don't actually
have laces because the robots don't
need laces. They just tighten and loosen
automatically. And the idea is that it would be good in something like basketball where sometimes
you need some looseness for flexibility to increase blood flow, then sometimes you need it
to tighten up when you need more, you know, more grip. And the problem is it's a total failure
on Android phones. So people tried it on androids and it often broke after a few days. There
were complaints that it only worked on the right shoe. So for some reason, the left shoes just
constantly weren't responding.
And often the app would also say it's already connected to another pair of trainers.
So can you just make people fall over as they're walking by you?
I guess so.
Because you connect your app to their shoes.
That's like the modern equivalent of tying someone's shoelaces together.
Yes.
Speaking of as we were self-driving things, there is a self-driving wheelie bin that has been
developed this year.
It's called SmartCAN.
And the SmartCAN creator, who,
is called Andrew Murray.
No.
Yes.
He said, we want to help people
eliminate unnecessary chores
from their daily lives.
And what happens is basically
when it's bin day,
the bins take themselves out.
Isn't that great?
That's really amazing.
So it's not a thing where
if you can't afford a self-driving car
but you can afford a self-driving bin,
just get in the bin and go to work.
It's not like,
trill a pair of eye holes in it.
My other car is a smart car.
There's other car technology.
So there's a great company Ford who have designed...
Give it a rest, mate.
The car in front is a Toyota.
They've developed something not for cars, but for the bedroom.
And this is in our book.
It's a mattress that nudges you away from your partner if you start getting too near to them in bed.
Yeah, it's a mattress.
Like a chaperone mattress.
It's exactly.
If you've got...
The mother-in-law mattress.
Yeah.
You keep your hands.
off her. God, I hope your mother-in-law's not going to be saying that to you.
She's come into your bedroom every evening.
You keep her in the cupboard, don't you?
Yeah, you've got to sort of that relationship now.
But back to the fact.
So it's a mattress.
So the idea is the reason that Ford have been able to make is they've been using the
lane-keeping technology that they have in their cars, which is it nudges the car away
from a lane by taking the steering wheel and moving it.
and they've applied it to the bed.
And it's only a prototype stage at this point, but yeah.
I mean, I'm not familiar with whenever I'm driving a car and slightly go off course,
then my car gets tipped off the road.
But do they do that for the cars?
Oh, right.
Do they have, does this lane in the technology exist?
Self-driving cars in the future will have things that keep you in the lane.
Got it.
So this isn't technology that they have in existing Ford cars.
Because that's one of the two main struggles when driving, I found,
is the left and right of the lane.
staying on the road.
Staying on the main one.
Yeah, it's the main one.
And then you've got the forward and backwards one
of how close you are to the car in front.
And you've got the left or right one of, you know.
It's very much a two-dimensional object, isn't it?
You're not going up in the upper room.
It doesn't help that your mother falls in the back going, Andy, for Christ's sake.
I just have one more bot of the year that I quite liked.
It's trying to help humans out in future.
This is Irony Man.
Based on Iron Man, name-wise, but in nothing else.
This is a sarcastic robot.
And it has a useful purpose, which is that apparently people trust robots more when, and they seem more natural and trustworthy, when they're being a bit sarcastic because humans are sarcastic or ironic.
And so when robots are just giving you direct answers all the time, people don't trust them.
So they've invented Irony Man and it does things like it will pair a really deadpan expression with humorous facial expression, a deadpan words with humorous facial expressions.
Or it will add sarcastic emphasis.
So it will say something like,
I'm delighted you spilled your pint of beer on me.
And then, you know, give a wink.
It smashes you in the face for the...
Exactly.
Violent irony.
It has a slight problem.
So it's sort of to help vulnerable people or older people who,
you know,
people get robots to care for them around the house.
But it can't tell when's the appropriate time to deploy irony.
So in really sensitive situations,
it is currently saying things like...
Which you might get with older people.
Indeed.
Oh, good.
You've fallen out.
over.
That sort of thing.
Well, we got just while we're on robots, we've got a fact in the book about the robot hotel in Japan, where they fired all of their robot staff and replaced them with humans.
And James, you just went there.
I did.
I stayed there deliberately, as people would know from our last podcast, when I deliberately went to this town in the Netherlands just because I read about it, I deliberately booked into this hotel.
Instead of going to a nice hotel, dragged my wife along to this place.
and yeah they have robots at the reception
but I didn't see any other robots in the whole building
I'm afraid so they used to have them didn't they
I believe so but we left quite early that day
and the cleaners were there and they were either
extremely realistic robots or they were humans
because there was one problem was that they could only reach
a quarter of the rooms I think was that right in the hotel
they couldn't get up certain stairs and also whenever a robot met another robot
in the corridor they didn't know how to part
ask each other.
I have that problem a lot as well, where you go left and they go left.
It's a nightmare.
Actually, the only other thing that I did see was they had these amazing cupboards.
I don't know if you guys have seen these before, but it's like a cupboard and you put your
clothes in.
And it's like a washing machine, but I don't think there's any water.
And you leave it on for 45 minutes and it freshenes up your clothes.
Wow.
So it doesn't wash them, which I learned.
Because at this stage, I've been on the road for two weeks and didn't have many clean clothes.
And I thought, maybe it'll wash them.
But it does make them a lot fresher.
And I think, like, maybe business people use them
because obviously in Japan, you work long hours and stuff like that.
And so it just freshenes up.
Do you know how it freshenes them?
I think it's through air and maybe it's damp air, I think.
But you basically hang something up and then close the door and some magic happens
and you open it up and it smells quite nice.
Wow.
But it's not clean.
That is very cool.
I just have one last thing.
This is a technology, a bit of new.
from the book, and it's that the bass player from Blur, who's also a cheese maker, Alex James,
has been this year turned into cheese.
It's going to affect the reunion tour pretty badly, isn't it?
This is quite exciting.
This is done as part of the VNA Museum exhibition in London, and what they did was they took
celebrities and they turned them into cheese.
So they took bits of bacteria off of them and made them.
So Alex James was turned into a block of Cheshire.
Professor Green, a musician, was turned into a sort of form of mozzarella.
The Madness Singer Suggs was turned into a block of cheddar.
You can go visit all these celebs as cheeses.
It's like a weird madam to sorts.
Do you know where on their body they got the bacteria from to make the cheese?
Because I think it would affect whether I was going to beat the cheese or not.
I don't think you should eat the exhibits.
Oh, no.
So it's not cheese that's being sold.
They didn't do it en masse.
No, no, it's just it's part of a museum.
A lot of waste.
Yeah.
That's break in.
Well, the thing is with cheese is it gets better the longer you leave it, some cheeses anyway.
So maybe once the exhibition is finished, we can all go with a few crackers and eat Alex James.
Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is Chisinski.
My fact this week, taken straight from the book of the year, 2019, available from all good bookstores and online.
That was really professionally done, Anna, I must say.
That is how you do it.
It's really good.
Thank you very much, guys.
my fact is that in a country of 1.3 billion people
a polling station was set up in the middle of the jungle for one single man
so that can only be India or China
and it's one of them take a pun
well which one has elections
and you've narrowed it down
yeah this was in India India had an election this year of course a mammoth election
and there was a priest a holy man called
Lars Shandas, who he takes care of a temple, which is in a wildlife sanctuary, very deep in the jungle.
It's 70 kilometres into the jungle in Gujarat.
And he wanted to vote.
And so five election officials traveled the 70 kilometers into the jungle, set up a polling station specifically for
this guy.
And he could vote.
Although, weirdly, and I couldn't find out why this was, they set it up a kilometer from
his house.
So they went all that way, and they couldn't quite recall the to do the last kilometer to his front
door.
I think you're going to make the efforts a vote, don't you?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like you've got to go.
He might want to think about who he's going to vote for during that one kilometer walk.
They probably put placards on the trees on the way, sort of trying to convince him to sway the vote.
Yeah, you're right.
But this wasn't the only polling station for just one person.
Was it not?
Amazingly.
So there was another one in a place called Malagam, and the team traveled 300 miles with the polling booth.
That must be cumulatively.
It must be.
And there was a big interview with them.
And I think the Washington Post it was went along.
And as they were setting up the voting machines, one of the,
of them said there is both excitement and nervousness. If the one voter turns up, there will be
100% voting. But if she doesn't, it will be 0%. And they got there and the locals nearby
said, oh yeah, she's left. She's left the area. Oh, wow. And they, so they, but they thought,
no, we hope she turns up. They still have to have it there just in case, I assume, right?
Right. And, but it's so demanding. So they had to, at 5 a.m., wake up and carry out a mock poll
with 50 mock votes, even though there's any one voter coming to the polling station. And then, but it's
Then, thankfully, the woman in question was called Tayang, and she turned up.
She had been 125 miles away, looking after her ill mother.
She came all the way back to vote here.
She arrived at 8.30.
She still had to queue up because there was a problem with the machine.
No way.
She voted.
And then they had to stay open until 5pm.
Oh, my God.
So if you've ever overslept and missed a council election or something, you should feel
incredibly guilty.
I know that story.
Considering the polls usually close at 10 o'clock, I think.
If you've overslept.
Come on, James.
We've all been students.
Do we know if the original person that we're talking about with this fact voted?
Dajan does vote.
We are not sure who he voted for.
Because it's...
Well, there's a lot of people to vote for because there are thousands and thousands of
thousands of people who take that in this election.
Because there's 1.3 billion people, as we said in India.
And anyone who doesn't have a criminal conviction can stand in the election.
So you have so many thousands of people.
there's only 543 seats.
And in the last election in 2014,
we didn't have the figures for this year yet,
but 90% of the 8,200 people who were going for election
forfeited their deposits.
Oh.
I know.
So everyone's getting like 0% and 0.1% and stuff like that.
There's a guy from Tamil Nadu who has contested and lost 201 elections.
Oh, wow.
How old?
He must be pretty old.
Maybe like you say, council elections, local relations, stuff like that.
And there was another guy called Fakhad Baba,
who is currently on his 17th time running for the national election.
And his guru has predicted that his victory will come on the 20th attempt.
So he's got three more.
So annoying having to go through all 20.
Yeah, only to not win on the 20th attempt.
Did you say it's if you're not convicted of something?
If you've not been convicted of a criminal offence.
But I know there are a lot of people who have been charged.
Yeah.
So we found out something about this in our research for the book,
which is that of the MPs elected, actually elected,
43% are facing criminal charges of some kind.
And of those, 18% are either charged with murder or attempted murder.
So it's about 8% of all elected MPs in India
are charged with either murder or attempted murder.
And the reason is, of course, because in India,
they have an unbelievable backlog of cases,
which I think we might have mentioned before.
Like there are millions.
If they did one every day or, you know,
or 100 every day,
they won't clear it up for something like a thousand years or something like that.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think we have discussed.
And in fact,
there's one story in the book.
I think an Indian man was imprisoned this year for,
he stole something like 20 rupees in 1979.
That's right.
So it's been 40 years waiting to get through.
And he pled not guilty.
And then he sort of disappeared in 2004.
They finally caught up with him,
arrested him, put him in jail.
and then I think they exonerated him.
He spent three months in jail
and then they were like, actually you're not guilty.
I don't know how much evidence you can collect for this theft of...
They released him and then they said, don't do it again, I think.
They did, but they found him not guilty.
You're not guilty, but also don't do the thing you're not guilty of again.
That's very lucky it was only three months
because presumably the waiting list of revisit cases must be equally long, right?
Yeah, yeah.
That's the thing in the Scottish courts, isn't it?
They used to have that, I don't know if they still got that verdict.
Not proof is guilty.
not guilty and not proven, which means
not guilty, but don't do it again.
Isn't the old line, yeah.
Just, we should say how amazing
and undertaking the Indian election is.
So it's held in seven different phases
because India's so vast.
As you say, it just shows how swollen our parliamentary system is
because they have about 100 fewer seats than us in Parliament
and they managed to rule this massive country.
But it lasted this year from 11th of April to 19th of May.
What voting?
Yeah, voting.
So they do it in seven different sections
and it's across 20 states.
and of course, Narangra Modi won in the end.
Just in sort of political news that we have in the book,
one of my favourite stories was about the Prime Minister of Bhutan.
We found out this year that he likes to unwind from his very stressful job
by going to a hospital every Friday and operating on someone.
There's a quote.
He said, some people play golf, some do archery.
I like to operate.
Which he is qualified to do, isn't he?
Well, no, but he doesn't do operations he's qualified for.
That's the amazing thing.
He takes a random patient and he picks a random procedure.
and he just does it. It's very impressive.
The things you can get away with in public office.
For a long time, so before he was
Prime Minister, he was the only urological
surgeon in Bhutan. And he used to have a TV
show, he used to go on on the BBS, which is
Bhutan Broadcasting Service, and
the public would call in and he would give
advice over the... Oh, like embarrassing
bodies, basically. Yeah, but live, I guess.
Okay, embarrassing bodies live. What do you want?
I've actually seen it. I don't know what that show does.
That's really interesting. They didn't
have TV in Bhutan until the 80s or 90s as well. So he must be like one of the biggest
TV stars in history. Yeah, actually, do you know what? It's possible this is radio. I just
realized I'm going to actually put that detail down. Oh, so like any questions on Radio 4?
But live. Oh, sorry, any answers on Radio 4? That's the one where you ring in, but it's
normally ringing in saying what you think about Brexit. It's like Gardner's Question Time.
Yeah. But not about gardening. But about... Yeah. Yourological problems.
Please don't call up either Gardner's question time or any questions with your weird, bodily
problems.
Jonathan Dimbleby will not appreciate it.
Hello, is that embarrassing bodies?
No, this is Gardner's question time.
Oh, can I tell you about my problem anyway?
I'll go into the garden.
Hang on.
The rash on my penis is still there.
Now the neighbours are shouting something.
Other political news from the year?
Yeah.
So there was the election of Zelensky.
president of Ukraine, who's recently come to his own by getting involved in American politics.
But he was a film star, so much like the Bhutanese guy, he was famous before he became president for other reasons.
Or Greta Thunberg.
Or Greta Thunberg.
So he starred in a series called Servant of the People.
And it was an extremely popular series where he plays a man, the lead role, where he plays a man who accidentally becomes leader of the country.
and so he thought, I'm going to try that for real.
And so he set up a party called Servant of the People, because why waste that name?
And yeah, he smashed it.
It's insane.
It's so bizarre.
I mean, I can't think of it.
I guess it's like the stars of the thick of it, isn't it?
Actually becoming Prime Minister.
Or, you know, like the star of the apprentice, becoming president of the United States.
Yeah, true.
That kind of thing.
I guess I think of it, yeah, because they are absolutely leaders.
Did you see the recent news about Zelensky, which is too recent for the
book actually, aside from the fact that Trump's obviously in a small bit of trouble for asking
him to look into his rival. But Zelensky also just broke the world record for the longest ever
press conference.
Did he?
So this is a few days ago. It lasted from 10 in the morning until just after midnight.
It's a long press conference.
Oh my goodness. And what was that? Questions and answers?
It was questions and answers. And apparently he largely did it to try and deflect attention
because he's getting in trouble in Ukraine for having got involved with Donald Trump in this
questionable way. But at eight hours, so I guess at 6pm, someone came up and announced that he'd
broken the existing record, which was set by Belarus. So presumably everyone thought, oh, thank God,
we can go away now. He went on for another six hours. That is amazing. It's impressive, isn't it?
Wow. And he also said that he had special surgery done or a special treatment done on his vocal
cords to make them stronger, had injections to strengthen his vocal cords. Oh, yeah. You can get
Botox in your vocal cards, can't you, to make them stronger? Oh, it must have been that.
But wouldn't that seize them up like it does with your face muscles?
It would seize them up, but then the amount that you put in depends on how much they're seized up, right?
And actually, looking at it now, some of the questions were, why your vocal cause looking so sexy.
So I think it was the Botox thing.
Well, there was who I would have liked to have won the Ukrainian election, because then they would have been speaking to Trump on the phone and discussing Joe Biden, is the person who was called Darth Vader, who ran for a seat in that.
election.
Darth
Victorovich Vader.
Wow.
So you just want to hear
his heavy breathing
voice on the phone
you're saying?
Look.
You're taking
where you can get in.
But no,
I just like,
I just love the idea of
instead of Trump
being in trouble
with Zelensky
being in trouble
with Darth Vader.
I think that would
have been hilarious.
Trump turns out
to be his son
after his fifth term
in office.
One of my
favorite facts
of this book.
So there was a
there was a kid who became quite famous globally known as Eggboy.
Egg boy became famous in Australia because he threw an egg,
well, smashed an egg rather,
on a far right politician called Fraser Anning during a live TV interview,
and Anning punched him.
And so he became famous.
But it's just a tiny detail that I think James, you found out,
that Eggboy, who got given the nickname Eggboy for the thing that he did,
in later interviews, he revealed that at school he is already known as Eggboy
because he used to bring hard-boiled eggs to school
and classmates complain that they smell.
So he used to be egg boy in a bad way
and now he's Eggboy the hero.
That's good though.
He's taking back control of the name Eggboy, really, is what you're saying.
Yeah, exactly.
His two things have happened in his life now.
Taking back control.
Anna, you have to stop reading the telegram.
Seriously.
There was one more Aussie politician.
He got caught replying to his own Facebook post
but under another name.
This is Angus Taylor MP.
He was a Liberal MP.
and he posted a video announcing extra parking spaces at train stations.
Fine, fair enough.
And then he immediately replied to it, but under his own account name,
saying, fantastic, great move, well done, Angus.
And everyone spotted this, and they immediately also started replying,
fantastic, great move, well done, Angus.
So actually, you got what he wanted, lots of supportive responses.
Lots of praise.
That's the egg balls.
It's the ed balls.
Eggballs or something you need to see that urologist about.
Okay, it is time for our final fact of the show, and that is my fact.
My fact this week, taken from the book of the year 2019,
is that a Canadian man who threw his speeding ticket out of his car window
was then given a ticket for littering.
So he lost twice.
That will teach you.
It's the opposite of egg boy, basically.
And two wrongs don't make a right, do they?
The speeding ticket didn't undo his...
Not in law, definitely.
Littering, no.
Two murders.
It's fine.
Did an even number of murders.
So many people have been ruined by that misconception.
It's such a shame.
Yeah, there was a lot of funny, weird crime stories this year, wasn't there?
A lot of kind of fitting ones, a bit like that.
So one of the stories in the book is that five guys were arrested at a branch of five guys.
The Burger Chain.
This was in Florida.
and they got into a fist fight
and it was an out-and-out brawl
and I think we like to think that
there were only four guys involved and the police
just asked the fifth guy, do you mind if we arrest you as well?
We've got to make this work.
There was
there was a British fugitive who got arrested.
He fled Australia on a jet ski.
I really like this guy.
Where was he going?
He was going to Papua New Guinea
which is 120 miles
and I think he stopped for a few of
at an island on the way. However, he ran out of fuel three miles short of Papua New Guinea.
He was, and he was wanted, I think, for some pretty bad stuff. He was armed with a crossbow as well.
And when he arrived at this remote peninsula to refuel with his jet ski, a witness told the Brisbane paper the Courier Mail that he stuck out like dogs balls.
That just reminds me, the Australian jet ski guy, of a story that we had in, I think it was the first book of the year, still available, still very readable.
Remember the guy who was the, I think he was the musician who had eaten way too much at a restaurant, a seafood restaurant, he jumped into the ocean to escape the police.
And his tactic for escaping the water jet, the water ski riding police was to hide underwater.
Yeah, he was out there.
I can't remember his name.
He had an amazing name.
Oh.
He was a rapper.
Yeah, I want to say self-made cash, but he's from this.
Yeah, he is.
He is.
Because self-made cash is the rapper who has got done for credit card fraud, right?
That's right.
What was it?
I think the judges, when they condemned him this year, said self-made cash,
because he's actually written all these songs where the lyrics kind of talk about how you can do a good fraud.
Or, screw over the authorities.
Do a decent fraud, mate.
And so I think when he was sentenced, the judge was like,
self-made cash thinks that he is really adept at credit card fraud.
He is not.
Yes.
If a judge is saying that to you, you probably know that you're not very good at credit card fraud already, don't you?
Can I give you a crime story which wasn't in the book this year?
Yeah. This is kind of serious, but also quite amazing.
So there was a man who was arrested on suspicion of stalking a female pop idol in Japan.
But the way that he stalked her, this is incredible.
She took photos and selfies and stuff and put them on social media.
And he looked at her pupils and looked at the reflection in her pupils of what she was looking at.
And then he used Google Street View to find out where she lived.
What?
Isn't that unbelievable?
Oh my God.
I mean that is terrifying.
It's terrifying.
It's not a fun story, but it's an amazing story.
But it's useful because it means that we should all start walking around with our eyes closed.
I think just whenever you take a selfie, have your eyes closed.
Yeah.
But if you really want to be safety conscious, Anna, just go around with your eyes closed constantly.
I think so.
There was a similar story, though, that is in the book, which was about Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
Do you remember the thing about the fact that she was in a bath and it was a nude photo of her?
in the bath and you could see in the
forcet at the end you could see
a reflection that looked like her and she
was insisting that this wasn't her and
they couldn't really prove it but someone eventually got
to the bottom of it and it was someone who uses
the website WikiFeed which is
where feet are posted up of
celebrity women all over the world
and you rank them and you look at pictures of their feet
do you?
Only sometimes
but this guy's the person who exonerated her
for the fact it wasn't her because he was able to show
that it wasn't her feet.
And he said,
I've sucked enough toes in my life
to recognize
when something doesn't look right.
Yeah.
It's, I mean...
He becomes a hero for doing that
and then immediately in the same sentence
becomes a creepiest person in life.
There was another,
weirdly, another story related to that as well,
which was about Taylor Swift
using facial recognition at her gigs.
So, what is it?
When you arrived,
I think there are lots of booths around.
And if you look into the booth,
you can get snapped or your photo is taken
or there are cameras all around at her gigs
and then those are those images are uploaded
to a sort of central command post
and then they're cross-referenced
with images of people who are known
to have been stalkers of Taylor Swift
or have, you know, been, you know, too creepy.
And then...
Is that a crime?
I think being too creepy is a crime.
Oh yeah, too creepy, sorry.
Too creepy.
And so then the people can be slung out of the gigs.
Yeah, I read.
just on the facial recognition thing,
that in China,
they've literally just come up with this new technology,
which can facially recognize an entire stadium of people.
That's what it is.
It's a really, really high megapixel camera.
So this is one of the most clear cameras that exist in the world.
And you can get an image of 10, 20,000 people,
and it can facially recognize all of them.
Wait, so if those exact 80,000 people are together again somewhere,
it'll know that they're the same ones who all attended the Shulton game.
That's not the reason.
Sorry, you say 80,000 people in a Bolton game.
That's my takeaway from that story.
That was where that fell down.
Sorry.
No, it's like to look for stalkers or criminals or whatever.
The purpose is not to have a comeback gig for an audience.
I just like the phrase it.
It could recognise an entire stadium of people.
It needs to see that one stadium exactly composed that way.
It would be an amazing game of spot.
the difference or Where's Wally for an AI machine,
that would be fantastic.
If you could cajole the 20,000 people to come back again.
Apart from one person who can't make it.
And they'd just replace them with someone in a red stripy jumper.
Amazing.
I mean, if you want really good facial recognition,
it helps to be an authoritarian state like China
because they are way out in front with it.
They are.
They are.
That's good advice.
But on facial recognition,
we should also talk about bodily recognition,
which has a big feature in our book.
And this is specifically the story
that a Swedish police officer
recognized the naked body of a criminal
when he was sharing a sauna with him.
Amazing.
Wait, I thought he recognized the face.
We don't know.
He doesn't say.
He said, we recognized each other.
We don't know which part.
I know that rash.
What a hero, though.
That is amazing.
Because obviously, sauna's a bigger thing in Sweden
than they are here.
Yeah.
And so he arrested him. He made a naked arrest. They were both naked in the sauna together. And I hadn't realized that they did recognize each other. So it sounds like their eyes met across the steam room.
Do you think I reckon if I was a criminal, I'd quickly put a shitload of water on the coals. So it got really, really steamy and then you could make your escape. That's brilliant.
That's why I'd be such a great super criminal.
We had just a bit of behind the scenes on the writing of this book. Obviously, for all the articles, there was a lot of sort of back and forth about what we thought was a funny away.
to put things or a better way to write things. Massive arguments, just put it as it is.
Massive, just absolutely life-shadowing arguments. We're not yet talking to each other fully again.
No, but one of my favorite moment was actually an argument that I had with Andy about the
drawing for this article, which was of a man that Adam Doughty drew for us, sitting in a sauna
with handcuffs around.
Adam Doughty is our cartoonist, by the way.
What do we call him?
Artists.
Our illustrator, yeah.
And he drew the criminal in the sauna with a towel on sitting on a towel and handcuffs.
on and he wanted the towel removed because he wanted to see the man's bottom.
Yeah, but probably because in Scandinavia they don't use towels.
Thank you, James.
I wish you'd been in the room for this argument.
Yes, but we, the scene.
I would have still come down on that side.
But he was in handcuffs, so obviously something had happened whereby handcuffs were grabbed.
Most likely a towel was grabbed as well.
That was your internal logic of the way that scene played out.
Please write in with your votes.
Who do you want to leave the show forever?
Or dad.
All both.
He'd an option to see.
I've got one fact which didn't sadly make it into the book because again it happened too late.
But this is another arrest and it's a man in a place called Mold in North Wales.
Oh yeah, I know.
It really well.
So he was arrested after he tried on some jeans in a shop, okay?
But he then left behind 31 raps of heroin in the pockets of the jeans that he tried on.
I don't say really well.
I just want to say.
Wow, that is amazing.
And then absolutely ballsy as he went back into the shop to say,
oh, I've left my medication behind.
It was these 31 little wraps of white powder or whatever.
Oh, my God.
I think I would do that as well because they are probably going to track you down at that point anyway.
How will they track you down?
Oh, CCTV, I suppose.
If you've gone in and paid for your dry cleaning, they're going to have your details.
Well, it's a clothes shop.
He was, he did try, he tried on.
Wait a minute.
He's taken his trousers off.
left them in the clothes shop. I've missed this. Sorry.
It wasn't entirely clear to me. I think
he's left the clothes shop. He tried the trousers
on, but then he was holding the heroin
and then he put them in the trouser pocket so he could
admire himself. Why would you put the...
Maybe he was testing the trousers
to see how they fit with 31 wraps
of heroin in them to see if they made the pockets
look bulky. I think I have done
that in clothes shops, not
specifically with that substance,
but with other class aid trucks, yeah,
because you do.
Well, you put things in the pocket.
You need to check the pockets aren't too tight, I think, if you're wearing quite tight.
Crafty.
This is, there's an example actually in the book.
So we have an article which is called Unusual Suspects where this actually happened where a drug dealer,
suspected drug dealer in Manchester left a rucksack stuff with drugs on a tram.
And they found him because he had his full name and address on the bag.
So it does happen that you can.
Yeah.
Criminals are idiots.
Another good, weird idiot criminal story was, I think this is my top five stories in the book.
It's that the owner of the smugglers in her.
hotel was charged with people smuggling. And this is a place in Washington State. It's near the
Canadian border. And its owner, Robert Boulet, really embraces a smuggler's theme. So, you know,
he's not trying to hide. He hasn't tried to hide the fact before that he's into the smuggling
theme. Every room is named after a famous criminal, you know, all the daycareous smuggler themed.
Next door is the heroin deal is in.
And yeah, he just went one step too far and has been charged with 21 counts of inducing,
inducing, aiding or abetting seven people who are entering Canada illegally.
That's amazing.
But the thing I love about this place is I think this is the thing that you found, Dan,
but that in a more unbelievable coincidence, in 2012, the smugglers in was a scene of a crime
when police arrested three people there for smuggling drugs in a car, coincidence one,
and the license plate was smuggler.
Yeah.
Well, this was the thing we mentioned on the podcast years ago.
Yeah.
Just when we were writing this, I don't think it was my fact,
but I recalled that we'd mentioned it.
I thought it can't be the same place.
And it is.
What's the guy doing?
Same place.
Smuggling.
Yeah.
We should wrap up soon.
Anyone got anything before we do?
Just one other nice little crime story.
This is that a man in Salisbury had to excuse himself from jury duty.
Do remember this?
He was excusing himself on the grounds that he was scheduled to be the judge in the case in question.
That's awesome.
This was Judge Keith Cutler.
And he said, you know, I can't really be on the jury because I'm judging this case.
He's resident judge of Winchester and Salsbury.
And so he wrote to ask for an exemption.
And he was rejected.
He was told by the authorities that he had to apply to the resident judge if he wanted an exemption.
And he wrote back and said, I am the resident judge.
All he needs to be is also the executioner.
He's an idiom in himself.
Okay, that's it.
That is all of our facts from our new book, the book of the year 2019.
It is out now.
We would so appreciate it if you guys,
would buy a copy. We're incredibly proud of it. It's very funny. It's so interesting.
And, uh, sorry, can I just say, like, you might think having heard this, you've heard
everything in the book because we've done so many facts from it. But honestly, there are
a thousand more facts, 2,000 more facts. Yeah. And it's really, this one's really fun.
We've all written individual articles about things that we're passionate about. James has written
about how to make the ultimate betting move to win a lot of money. Um, you've written about
the Mueller report. Yeah, my main passion.
Andy got a sausages article in, finally, finally.
Genuinely, my main person.
Yeah, I interviewed the mayor of Uranus in America.
There's a lot of us in the book this time, and it's a great book.
It is out now, and it would mean the world to us if you would buy it.
If you'd like to get in contact with us to ask us about the book and anything that you've read in it,
we can be found on Twitter.
I'm on at Shriverland, Andy.
At Andrew Hunter, Em.
James.
I can be found at Amazon.com if you search for the book of the year 2019.
Or in Waterstones.
Or at James Harkin.
And Chesensky.
You can email podcast at QI.com.
Yep.
Or you can go to our group account
at No Such Thing or our website.
No Such Thing isafish.com.
We have lots up there,
all of our previous episodes,
upcoming tickets to tour dates,
and you can also find a really exciting
behind-the-scenes documentary
that we made on our last tour
called Behind the Gills.
Okay, we'll see you again next week.
Goodbye.
