No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Boomerang Shaped Spaceship
Episode Date: November 21, 2024Live from Adelaide, Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss ants, boomerangs, cubes, and Danish editorial foibles. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. J...oin Club Fish for ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at apple.co/nosuchthingasafish or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon Get an exclusive 15% discount on Saily data plans! Use code [fish] at checkout. Download Saily app or go to https://saily.com/fish
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast this week coming to you live from Adelaide.
We're here with Anna Tishinsky, Andrew Hunter Murray, and James Harkin, and once again we have gathered around the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days.
And in no particular order, here we go.
Starting with fact number one, and that is James.
Okay, my fact this week is that during World War I,
Australia invented a hand grenade that was shaped like a boomerang.
Now.
Now.
Can I ask the obvious question?
Yeah.
Did it come back?
Well, it depends how you threw it.
It depends how good you were at throwing it.
Right.
I think mainly it was to get people who are around the corner,
or let's say there was a high wall, you could throw it and then run,
and then it would come and hit the people behind the wall.
Right.
I should say it was never used in the wall.
Oh, really?
But it was invented.
This one that's on the screen that we can see,
it's in the Auckland War Memorial Museum.
So it was that one that went but didn't come back if it's in New Zealand.
Were we at war with New Zealand in World War I?
I imagine it was used as a test.
So it was tried out, and this was in 1915,
and one of the people who was there at the tryout
was a guy called Colonel Dengar,
and when they did the first trial, he said,
that'll astonish the Turks.
What's amazing is the one that we have on the screen here,
if you were describing it, it's a leather item,
and it's got embossed on it in the leather,
an emu and a kangaroo,
in case you didn't know what nation.
And it's got the words,
Some worries across the top.
But the amazing thing is,
this one that we've got here is not the only one.
There's an online forum called Great War Forum.
And they found out about this as well.
And they went to look for other ones,
and they found loads of other ones.
So there was one invented in the UK,
which had a hinge in its middle.
So sometimes you could make it come back,
and sometimes you could make it fly straight.
And that one had knife-like edges.
so that if you threw it at the enemy,
they couldn't catch it and throw it back,
because it would cut them.
There was one...
That's unsporting, so just to say.
There was one that was in Melbourne
and that was shown to the Army Intentions Board,
and it was a professional boomerang thrower
who threw it to show them,
and he managed to land it on a piece of paper 140 yards away.
What?
Impressive.
Because I think boomerangs are just really good for throwing, aren't they?
So how come they can get...
For that kind of accuracy? Sorry.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, he was a pro.
What can I say?
It also doesn't say how big the piece of paper was.
Or how many goes he had?
Yes.
It was actually A6.
But one of the reasons that it didn't happen is because it is difficult to throw a boomerang,
and even if you know how to do it, two soldiers are always going to throw it slightly differently.
So it's a very different thing to regulate.
I can't get past this guy who landed a boomerang on a piece of paper, 120.
I imagine it was a total fluke.
it landed and he turned to the troops and went, see, easy-peasy.
And then went back home and said to his wife,
you will not believe what happened.
I just remember, I found his name on my nose.
He was called Frank Donnellan,
and he was a famous boomerang throw at in the 1950s.
That was for World War II that he was doing.
Oh, okay.
When you think, Grenade,
I imagine a lot of people think of the sort of pomegranate-shaped thing
with the lumps all over it.
It's green, it's got the handle, it's got the pin,
it's got all of that.
That is basically all thanks to one man called William Mills,
who invented the first grenade, which became classic.
And he was knighted, because it was a very successful invention, it was rolled out everywhere.
He was knighted.
His coat of arms in 1922, when he was knighted, had four hand grenades on it.
It's a very weird, it's very weird seeing something that modern on a coat of arms.
But it was so necessary because before then it was all cans on a stick was the basic shape of a grenade.
It was a canned stick.
And often they would bounce off the edge of the trench, and it was just, they were really ungainly.
really hard to use and they weren't built for, they weren't built like something that people
had practiced throwing like a ball or whatever it might be. They are, they're named after
pomegranates. That's why they have a similar name. Really? Yeah. Yeah. So the Russian for grenade
is granite and the russian for pomegranate is granite and that was a problem for one Russian-speaking
man in a Portuguese bar in 23 who wanted to ask for pomegranate juice and found himself
handcuffed and surrounded by our police.
I just want to know at what point
the people in that restaurant thought
we fucks up here.
A, why is he asking us for a grenade?
Is that what you would do?
That's the opposite of a threat, isn't it?
Exactly.
And B, he's sitting there saying,
what's going on? The police are on their way.
He's pointing at the pomegranate juice.
Surely.
I am addicted to silly grenade.
Silly things that have happened.
It's either always someone finding a grenade
and thinking, well, this looks like a rock.
So there was someone recently on the Isle of White
in the UK who,
brought back a lovely old fossil from the beach
and caused the entire resort to be evacuated
because it was an old hand grenade.
I think my favourite one of these, it's in 2016.
And stupidly, I didn't write down the country,
I think it was in India, but it might have been in Germany,
so just fudge that.
Potato potato, right?
It was a policeman who took a grenade to a courtroom
during a trial as a piece of evidence.
And he was trying to demonstrate
how the grenade was detonated.
And what he was trying to show
was that contrary to the defendant's assertion
that it was a very complicated thing to set off,
it was actually incredibly simple to use.
He assured the court that it had been safely disarmed
before accidentally detonating it,
like knocking the judge off his chair.
Is that all that happened?
Pretty much, yeah.
It's like his wig fell off.
Fortunately, it wasn't, yeah, yeah, it wasn't bad.
Was the country cartoon world?
There was a guy in China who he was in his small village
and the police went around with leaflets
talking about unclaimed grenades that were still out in the wild.
And he freaked out because he suddenly realized
the thing that was in the picture
was what he had been using to crack nuts,
like walnuts and stuff,
but not just recently for 25 years.
Wow.
It was his nutcracker.
And he freaked out and they took it away
and they don't know, well they didn't know,
at least at the time of this reporting, whether it had been, you know, disarmed or not.
I suppose as long as you don't crack your nuts in a fire, then you're safe, aren't you?
That's the thing.
Just try not to light them.
China, of course, being the place that invented grenades way before the rest of us,
like all of that kind of war stuff, but they had the earliest version from at least the 12th century,
and they were called thunder crash bombs.
And they were very cool, but also they were thrown mostly at sea from these paddleboats
where everyone would have a thunder crash bomb in their hands,
and you paddled the boat like a pedalo.
So you had little treadmills instead of oars,
and they'd all be treadmilling along.
That's so cool.
Imagine a war when everyone's in like a swan-shaped pedalo.
That would be so cool.
I don't know which aquatic animal they were shaped like, actually,
but it could have been.
If the Aussies had a boomerang-shaped grenade,
the American went also towards their stereotype
and had a NFL football
a gridiron ball shaped grenade
that they trialed in the 1970s
and it largely was a gridine ball
that they just hollowed out and put the explosives in.
They needed something that looked not like a grenade
so if they were in trouble, the enemy would see
oh, they've just got a bunch of NFL footballs around them
and they would pick it up and be able to throw it.
And they thought because most American soldiers
probably played NFL, they'd have a great understanding of accuracy.
Well, some of them would have been wide receivers.
Yes.
So some of them would have been trained to catch the ball.
Yes.
Which I think could be a problem.
Yeah, I think that was a problem
because the result was, as they say in quotes,
unpredictable.
And so it was never properly used.
But that was a go as well.
The British made some that were shaped like cricket balls.
Really?
Which is a sport that we play.
I don't know if you guys in Australia know that.
Oh, no.
So even if we lost the war,
we'd at least have the moral victory.
This is sludging, isn't it?
Yeah.
That was self-sledging.
You know, Grenadiers?
Grenadiers, they obviously started as people who threw grenades in the 17th century,
and they pretty much stopped, because they stopped throwing grenades by the Napoleonic Wars.
So Grenadiers were only throwing grenades for about 100 years,
but they've kept referring to people in the army who are super elite,
because you had to be the strongest, you had to have amazing upper body strength to throw those grenades.
But you also famously had, in Britain, the tall mitre hats.
It looks more like the Pope's hat in my head.
Well, yeah, the mitra is the name for a bishop's hat.
Indeed. It looks much like that.
But do you know why they had the tall hats?
Deflection of grenades?
So people aimed for the top of their head and they knocked the hat off.
That's very clever, yeah.
But no.
It was because...
They wanted to blend in in a group of bishops, maybe.
There's a conclave happening and they just tied in there.
All grenades were thrown from the Vatican, yes.
No, it was because all other soldiers' hats at the time had rims.
But if you had to light a grenade,
your rifle and then suddenly you have to sling it over your shoulder in order to light the grenade with your match and when they were slinging it over their shoulder it kept getting caught on the brim of their hats and knocking their hats off so they were given special dispensation to have hats without a brim i don't know why they then had to be super tall you're making it sound like a dunce's cap basically yeah yeah um yeah you know um bayonets are invented by grenade throwers as well just because we were saying that just um because you had a grenade in one hand and you had your gun in the other hand but what if the at the at you
enemy get close to you, you want a knife as well.
But they couldn't hold their knife
because they didn't have enough hands, so they attached it to the end
of their gun.
As soon as you said that, I thought,
Three Armed Soldiers.
And that's how we got the Three Armed Soldier.
There's quite a famous boomerang
that I think is in Adelaide at the moment.
It certainly was for a while, which is,
there's a space museum here, isn't there,
in Adelaide. Is that yes?
Yeah, and there's a boomerang that went up into space.
Oh, that one's not there. That's in the South Australian Museum.
because I saw it this morning.
Oh, you saw it?
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, wow.
And so, yeah, it went to space,
and I don't know if it's the exact one,
but they showed that if you throw a boomerang in space,
it still comes back to you.
Oh, so it wasn't thrown,
sorry, it was an incredibly strong boomerang thrower
who hurled it all the way up.
He comes back home, honey, you're not going to believe what else I did.
Get your telescope out now.
So that proved that a boomerang still works in space.
And James, you studied physics, right?
Yeah, but don't ask me how that works, because it doesn't feel like it should.
Yeah, because I'm curious if you...
Okay, so one of the big problems with space travel is having enough fuel to get you back right.
And often we need to swing around planets and use their...
Yeah, are you saying we should build our spaceships to look like boomerang?
Shaped like a boomerang, chuck them out into space.
Surely they return back to Sender.
But...
I mean, like, yes, obviously that would work, yeah, yeah, but...
We need to move on.
in the same guys. Can I tell you one more
daft invention? A military invention. This was the
B-E-9 plane. Again, early, early, early days of flight,
like First World War or pre. So right, you're in your plane.
It's all two-man planes of that, you know, one pilot
and one gunner. Gunner traditionally sits behind the pilot,
like, shoots the gun behind, right? You want to fire forward, though,
but the problem is you would shoot the propeller. How do you solve it?
Like, back up to the enemy, so you can shoot that way.
Fly backwards? Yeah, reverse.
Yep, good.
I don't know.
Didn't they not?
I thought they shot between the blades, doesn't they?
They eventually worked out how to do that.
This was their previous solution.
What if we just put the gunner in front of the propeller?
So this plane was built and it flew.
You've got a normal plane pilot,
a propeller on the front of the plane,
and then in front of him is this mad box
with the gunner sitting,
with his gun sitting out the front of it.
Unfortunately, they cannot communicate at all.
They just can't talk to each other
because the propeller's in the middle going,
Right, so they're just sort of stuck not talking.
They wouldn't need to.
All that kind of saying is,
and then it's a problem if he shits himself
for the guy behind.
We are going to move on now to fact number two,
and that is Anna.
My fact this week is that the number four is two squared,
the number eight is two cubed,
and the number 256 is two zenzy, zenzikht.
Yeah, but you didn't know that.
Bet you thought at first my fact was going to be
the number four is two squared, and you got worried.
But yeah, Zenzhi, Zenzheny, Zensikin, is a thing.
It's a great word.
It is. It's not a common word.
It was the word that was invented by a mathematician,
Welsh mathematician called Robert Record in 1557
in a book, The Whetstone of Witt.
And he got annoyed because, you know,
we didn't have any way of saying to the power eight
that was easy. We've all struggled with that. So he said...
Did he say when we would need it? Like outside of deep math?
Yeah, I don't think he imagined in the shop you'd ask for, can I have three Zensi-Zensi-Zensik's
potatoes, please? No. But in deep math. And so he said, well, Zensik was the German for
squared at the time. So for the power four, something to the power four, he said, let's say
Zensi-Zensik, which is the square of squares. The power six, well, that's obviously the
square of a cube, so it's
zensi cubic, and then
to the power 8, zendiz, zendiz. And if you really
want to know, the power 16 is zenzze, zenzeked.
And I find that very useful to know.
The power 16, he didn't write that down, did he?
Someone else came along and went, oh, we could just add another zensi.
Oh, really? He is an amazing guy, this Robert
record guy. But I've never heard of him before.
I mean, why would you have done? He was a 16th century
mathematician, but he was also a doctor
and he wrote math textbooks, and
And, get this, he invented the equals sign.
Oh.
Yeah.
I feel that deserved more.
You know what we mean, right?
You know, the equals sign.
Wait, what did they...
Lovely, thank you.
But just I think that's...
Imagine if I just put that in something like,
wow, the people of Adelaide really love the equal sign.
So what did we do before? Like, what were math tests like before?
We used to write is equal to.
Yeah, but in Lacton.
Oh. Yeah.
Qualis, which is the Latin for, is equal to.
And so in his book, he says,
to avoid the tedious repetition of these
words, I will set, as I do often,
work use a pair of parallels.
Because no two other things can
be equal. Two parallel lines
is the most equal things you can get in the world
according to Robert Ricard.
So cool.
He was loads of stuff. He brought
the words linear, denominate, binomial
equation. He came up with definitions for
square, compound, rational number,
irrational number in English. He was the
just do all those things.
And we don't really know about him
because no one gives a shit about any of those words.
Is that...
No, no.
I would say, like, to me, he's quite famous,
someone who studied maths.
Okay, because I'd never heard of him.
And maybe if you're a doctor as well,
because he also wrote loads of medical textbooks,
including one called the urinal of physics.
The urinal.
The urinal of physics.
And like, physics is in physician,
and it's about what doctors can learn
from their patient's urine.
Yeah?
So this wasn't...
Did you read it?
No.
But you did?
I didn't actually read it.
Well, I've just had some issues lately,
so I wanted to take a shed any light.
And he gives tips for collecting urine samples.
And one of the things that confused me was,
he said, when you're, as a patient,
collecting your sample to give to the doctor,
make sure you don't just give the watery bit
and throw away the dregs,
because a lot of people do that.
And the dregs are an important part of the urine.
What are the dregs?
Sorry, does everyone else?
We have dregs in the bottom.
If you had a bladder stone,
you might have dreg.
Right, maybe they were very common back in the day.
He said urine comes in three varieties, thick, thin and mean.
Red, white, and rose.
Mean was the third one?
Weirdly mean is just the one in between thick and thin.
I suppose it's like the mean, the average.
Oh, the average.
Yeah, right.
And it also has three levels.
The ground, brackets, the sediment, the swim and the cloud.
Okay.
Which is quite nice, isn't it?
I see that.
Because it does have a little cloud, doesn't it, above it?
Well...
Bubbles.
Foam?
A bit of foam, yeah.
Foam?
Yours doesn't foam?
Damn.
Get yourself to your urinal physician immediately.
Yeah.
It should have about an inch of foam on the top of it.
It might be underneath all the dregs that I have floating on top.
If you pour it slower, you don't get that amazing.
So, yeah, you have to pour it at the right speed.
You've got to tip the toilet at an angle.
Did you guys know that four used to be fine?
So when 1, 2, 3, 5, 4?
Sort of, if you were reading it, that's what you think it would be.
Right.
Because Arabic numerals first came to Europe in the 10th century.
And if you look, it's really cool if you look at charts of how they've all progressed,
the numbers 1 to 10, what they looked like.
But basically, 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8 and 9 throughout the years
are vaguely recognisable as how we would write them today.
But then 4 was drawn like this weird curly B-shaped thing.
and five was just written as we'd write four.
It was about 300 years that five was just written as four,
and then eventually they sort of swapped around.
So if you do go back in time about 500 years
and someone writes down to you
that they have five children,
I know this is unlikely.
That's useful.
Well, I'm trying to share some useful math tips.
I thought that was interesting.
Dan was wondering before
what use Senses Zenzik could have,
like two to the power of eight.
Zenz-Zenzzi-Zenzik, the two to the past 16, that is 65,536.
That is a very useful number to remember,
because that is the maximum number of characters you can use for one message in WhatsApp.
Really?
Really?
It's so high you've never reached it, right?
Did you test it? Did you just keep riding until you got to the limit?
Why do you think I sent you all those messages yesterday?
How many characters?
65,536.
Characters, that's not words.
Not words.
Yeah, but that's still a lot.
It's effectively to a WhatsApp user, it's infinity
because no one's ever going to reach it, right?
I don't know, I leave some pretty long messages,
you guys have very noticed.
I reckon I'm coming.
I just think I'm scraping the ceiling of that.
It'll be like Twitter eventually.
They'll be pressurized to double it.
2 to the power of 24, which is 16,77,216
is a number of unique colors you can see
on most computer monitors.
And 2 to the power of 32,
which is just over 4 trillion,
is a total number of possible IP addresses
under the original number of IP addresses that you have.
Really? It is useful.
And two to the power of 136,279,841 minus 1
is the largest known prime number,
which was found just a couple of weeks ago, I think.
Oh, yeah.
Maybe last week or I'm not sure.
How did they find it?
Well, there was a guy called Luke Durant,
and he sort of borrowed a load of computers
from around the world in 17 different countries
and got them all running this computer program together
to look for prime numbers.
It's never just like this guy was counting,
and then he just reached the limit of the WhatsApp.
Did you guys see that math news actually yesterday,
which was, you know that old adage
that if you left enough monkeys with enough typewriters,
they'd eventually type out the works of Shakespeare?
Did you see that mathematicians have just worked out
that they wouldn't?
They worked out that if you got all the monkeys that we have
and all the monkey-like things.
Yeah, but it's all the, yeah, but that's all the monkeys.
There aren't that many monkeys.
Isn't it infinite monkeys with infinite time?
It is infinite monkeys.
Is it like however many monkeys we have access to?
Yeah, do you know what?
That's such a boring calculation.
It's quite interesting to know how many monkeys there are.
These guys said until the end of the universe,
as many monkeys as there will be,
and said that it almost is a one and a million chance it would happen.
So you're right.
With infinite, yeah.
Okay.
What would they come up with?
Because that's more interesting in a way.
They said Chaucer, probably.
Have you guys heard of the Semiotic Alliance?
Oh, no.
This is kind of cool.
I was reading about, you know, Alex Bellos, the mathematician?
He wrote a book about his adventures in math, basically.
He wrote about meeting this guy called Greg Rowland,
who works at the Semiotic Alliance,
and he basically provides consultancy for companies
on what number they should have in their product name.
So he says, KFC, 11 herbs and spices is perfect.
Oh.
Like 10 herbs and spices,
would be too dull and two round.
And 12 is too spicy.
It's much too spicy.
11, perfect. Levi 501.
How interesting.
501?
Bit more than, like Levi 500 is a bit mechanistic, isn't it?
It's a bit dull.
And did he come up with these, or are these just examples of...
He has consulted for various companies.
I don't know if he says which he's come up with and which he hasn't.
But he says WD 40, that's good.
That's a reliable number.
But that was actually his 40th attempt at making WD, whatever that is.
Water displacement, 40th attempt.
That's what it happens.
That's right.
But was it really, or did he just talk to someone like that?
Came up with the reliable number.
It was actually his 39th and he thought, fuck it, let's tip it over.
Why, Andy?
Why did he say 40 doesn't need...
Well, it's solid, isn't it?
It's reliable.
Oh, right, okay.
You want a good product in your home.
WD 37, fussy.
WD 40.
Because you're not looking something interesting and creative.
You're looking for something reliable and boring.
Yeah, exactly.
Nice, okay.
So I think there's a lot in this.
Okay.
Yeah.
I don't know about a lot, but there's something.
Hey, can I ask a quick question of the crowd?
We mentioned this on a show ages ago,
and I got a lot of people writing in saying that this is not true.
But supposedly a measurement, a unit of measurement,
often in Australia, if it's really tight,
like if something like whisks past your ear and it's that close,
you describe that unit of distance as a bee's dick.
Yeah?
You would say that?
You missed it by a bee's dick, mate.
Oh, great, because we said this on the show,
and I had a bunch of Ozzy's riding in saying,
never heard that, that's bullshit.
I can imagine every other city in Australia going,
yeah, but it's those guys in Adelaide, isn't it?
They've got very badly endowed bees in Adelaide.
We know that.
It is time for fact number three,
and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451
has been translated into over 30 languages
under the same title,
except in Denmark,
where it was published
as 233 Celsius.
And, yeah, so it was, as I say,
it was published in over 30 different languages,
and every single one had either
a direct translation into the language
or just used outright, the title,
Fahrenheit 451,
except for Denmark.
So do we know why the Danes did it?
Because I thought it might have been
because Celsius was Danish,
but he was Swedish, wasn't he,
the guy who came over the Celsius,
chart. Oh, and as Celsius.
Celsius. Was it just because
they thought our people will understand that
better, maybe? There's not an amazing amount of
literature and what happened, and there's not many
books as well. So when you go online, there's a few
copies that you can see photos of and collectors
desperately try to get it. They all got burned.
That was a sad thing.
Ironically, I think Ray Bradbury
from the little I could find
did not like that this
had this new title, and so they did
effectively... He didn't like any
changes, did he? I think that was it.
Every now and then his book would get changed very slightly in America or something like that, and he hated it.
Yes, he hated the internet.
He didn't want it published an e-book form, and he resisted for a long time.
I think that's totally fair enough, given that the entire point of Farnight 451 is that screens are really, really bad,
and totally ruin human society.
I can empathize with him saying, please don't turn my book into it fucking ears.
It's so amazing, because when you read it, like, because I reread it on the plane over,
because I read it when I was younger, and the bit where they kind of explain,
the whole plot, they might as well be saying, TikTok is shit.
Do you know what I mean?
Basically, it's like, oh, no one reads long things.
Everyone wants shorter and shorter media,
and no one's got a good attention span and all that kind of stuff.
Yeah, yeah.
It's a very good book.
It's a brilliant book.
I mean, it's great.
Obviously, it's a classic.
It's quite good.
Yeah.
It's great.
He wrote it.
I love this on a coin-operated typewriter.
Yeah.
It's so cool.
He wrote it in his local library at UCLA in California,
in California, and he carried a little bag of loose change.
And if you put in 10 cents, it would give you half an hour.
So it cost him $9.80 to write.
That is quite good, isn't it?
As a writer yourself, Andy, I don't know if you get writer's block,
but do you think it would help you to churn out those words?
I think it probably would.
Yeah.
I'll try anything at this point.
But interestingly, churning out the words was a thing that he had a philosophy about.
So he had eventually his own typewriter at home.
He left the library.
And above his typewriter, he would have the words,
don't think.
And it was a reminder for him to feel the stories
as opposed to sit mulling on them
and getting stuck into, you know,
writers' block effectively.
That was his philosophy. And it certainly was what happened,
wasn't it? I mean, I think three of us might have read it
on the flight, but in the version
that I read, he writes an introduction and he talks
about the process, and he said
I didn't write the book, It Wrote Me,
and he said the main character was the person who was speaking through me,
it wasn't me speaking at all. And it's amazing
him describing the process. For a guy who is
famous for his words, it wrote me.
Look, he's not a great writer. It wrote me.
No, it didn't, buddy. Yeah.
But he made a lot of weird claims. So that's quite mystical.
A lot of authors do say that.
They say sometimes an idea is downloaded into their head and they are merely a vessel
for whatever it came to them. They channeled it.
That's just because they plagiarized it from somewhere else, isn't it?
Oh no, it just came from there. I know it's quite similar to this.
But he also made odd claims. Like he claims his memory was so good. He remembers
the moment of birth. And he would always tell this at dinner parties. He would say, I remember being
born. I remember coming out and being like, hey, he just, he has full recollection. And people would
say, no, you need to see a psychologist for it. And he would, and he would tell them. And they couldn't
dissuade him. He was saying, I remember. I remember being circumcised. Man, that was painful when I was
six days old or whatever it was. Like he had, yeah, he had total recall of his life, according to him.
Yeah, wow. Pretty cool. He had good recall, probably, according to
him again. He said while he was in the library, he literally just
tipped books down off the shelves, powered
through them and remembered quotes.
And in fact, in Fahrenheit 4-5-1,
there's a bit, without giving away the ending,
which assumes that once people have read a book,
they can retain all of the words in it
and then re-quote them at will,
which is not two of me. People used to be able
to do that, I'm sure. As in verbal recall
of what you'd seen, was fantastic
before mass literacy.
So in Shakespearean times,
you would remember a lot more of a speech from a play
you'd seen. So you would be able to go
home from this show tonight and just do like big bits of the show all over again.
Lucky, lucky, lucky.
Ferenheit 451, by the way, which used to be called Fahrenheit 541 when 4 and 5
5 used to be different numbers.
Of course, yeah.
Well, the good thing about 451 is that it's one more.
Like it's 5-450, very bad title.
Very boring, workman-like.
He did decide on the title because it sounded good though, so I'd like to know what Alex
Bellas had to say because it was called the fireman at first and his publisher said,
give it a better title. And so he called the local fire department as you do and said
what temperature does paper burn at? And they said it's 451 Fahrenheit. And so he thought,
that's a cool number. But I wonder what number would have made him think, no.
Apparently it doesn't burn it that. Yeah, I've heard that. It depends on the type of paper and stuff.
Right. I see. And it's off the top of his head, this poor fireman. And he's got fires to be
putting out. He's just said the first thing that comes to him. Do you guys want a little quiz of original
titles for books under which they should have been published?
Oh yeah?
Sure do, Andy.
Okay.
Let's say that's the jet lag talking.
We're going to do it anyway.
Le d'Ane de la mare.
Oh, Les Mesaresrableaubleaubleauze.
No, Le Don't.
Moby Dick.
The teeth of the sea.
Jaws.
Jaws.
Yeah.
Jaws.
Wait, sorry, that was the original title in the English language.
No, it was proper to French.
Sorry.
Wasn't the one, someone said they were going to
call it, what's that gnosis? That was his dad's suggestion? His dad or his father-in-law said,
that's a good title when he was struggling for it. Um, chocolate for breakfast. This is quite
guessable, I think. Oh, breakfast. No. Chocolate for breakfast. Yeah. Who's a sort of stereotyifically
messy crazy crazy character? Willie Wonka. That's good. That's good. Charlie and the chocolate. No.
Um, chocolate for breakfast. Like, who's a classic, like, crazy protagonist who's always getting in scrapes?
Borat?
Yeah. Yeah, Borat, the novels. It's the novelization.
of Bora. And the novel came first, interestingly.
Everything happens in the film.
I prefer the novel, actually.
Really? Really?
Yeah, I think it's more true to the character.
For me, the stage show?
Yes, the stage show is very good.
Is it Josh William?
It's Bridget Jones's Diary.
Ah, okay. You know, like your messy character.
Okay, here's one. Twilight.
Oh, uh.
Oh, well, 50 Shades of Grey was based on Twilight.
Dracula.
So good. No, it was William Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury.
No.
It was called Twilight.
But Twilight was originally called Forks.
But I couldn't find a novel that was originally called Forks
and changed to whatever the third one would be to complete it.
My favourite, just a super quick one on translations,
the Mexican title for the movie Greece is Vaselinea.
So temperatures, Fahrenheit, Celsius.
Sir Isaac Newton had his own version,
and it was a temperature scale that only went from zero to 12.
and zero was the freezing point of water,
and 12 was his body temperature
on the middle of the month of July.
Okay.
And then he realized that this wasn't enough
because you need to go higher than that, right?
So then he added higher numbers.
So at 14...
We already had numbers higher than 12.
It's not like he had to...
Yeah, but he needed to define what they were
as the temperature, didn't he?
So like 14 was the greatest heat of a bath
which one can endure for some time
when his hand is dipped in
and is kept in constant movement.
Oh, that does help.
Now that I'm picturing how I check a bath, that does.
Well, you're not meant to test it with your hand anyway.
You shouldn't be putting your hand in the bath.
What do you test it with?
Elbow.
Which doesn't work, by the way, as any parent will tell you.
Yeah.
Thermometers used to be upside down.
And this was Celsius himself
made his own thermometer upside down, idiot.
It was to make anything.
sense in our minds, right? The boiling point of water
was nought degrees and the freezing point
was 100. And what we call today is a Celsius
scale because someone flipped it
shortly afterwards. Linaeus in fact.
It was, yeah, I think two people
suggested flipping it and he was one.
But I thought the reason that he did it upside down
was quite interesting and I didn't know
and it was
because he was also very involved
in measuring the brightness of stars and he came up
with a much more accurate way to measure the brightness
of stars and I didn't realize that we do
that upside down. So a star
magnitude is inversely proportional to how bright it is.
So the brightest stars have the lowest magnitude.
And that's literally just because Ptolemy, you know,
a thousand years earlier, had said that should be the case.
And so everyone copied him.
And so Celsius was saying, okay, well, if stars, you know,
the brighter they are, the lower they are,
then we'll do the same with everything else.
I like that.
I think it's fine.
I think as long as we're not using Fahrenheit, it's fine.
I think Fahrenheit is such a stupid.
It's so stupid.
No, but it's only America that is using Fahrenheit
in any big way. I think it's like a couple of other countries that use Fahrenheit.
I think Micronesia is still on Farronite, to be fair.
Sure. But like it's really bad.
And America has tried to change.
Like the French adopted Celsius, partly because of the French Revolution.
Everything has to be sort of metricised and, you know, made rationale on all of this.
And America, they actually passed a law, the metric conversion act in 1975,
which was beginning the process of metrification.
It was going to be great. America was going to be sensible.
And no one wanted to do it.
And Ronald Reagan dismantled the board at 1982.
Well, they made it full entry, didn't they?
which is the one thing you're not supposed to do with the law.
You can't say, don't commit murder if you don't want to.
And that's basically what they said.
They were like, change to Celsius if you want to, but don't, if you don't.
So everyone was like, well, I'm not going to then.
Were they around at the same time, Celsius and Fahrenheit?
Yes, they are.
So on the year that Celsius was born, which was 701,
Fahrenheit's parents died after eating poisonous mushrooms.
I so did not expect that to be the answer to my question, just saying.
I think they might have been
there or thereabouts, basically.
I'm going to have to move us on, guys.
Can I just quickly,
I feel like we haven't covered enough
the kind of guy Ray Bradby was.
Oh, yeah, okay.
I didn't massively warm Tim,
so I want to quickly tell you one thing about him,
which is very representative.
He was quite egotistical,
which is clearly when you read him.
He kind of thinks everyone's an idiot
who is going to become brain dead from TV,
except a few academics have gone to Cambridge,
is one way of reading the book.
And he said he was really unhappy
a lot of times in his teens
because he didn't fit in
a lot of the time and he said
you pay a certain penalty for going your own way
you're not as popular with girls
as you should be
I used to take my short
stories to girls' homes and read
them
and they didn't want to hear about it
they just wanted me to pour at them
how pathetic is that and I just think
a man who thinks the world is the problem
when he takes his short stories to a party
and reads them to a girl who doesn't like
is the problem.
Yeah, but at the same time when he died,
he wanted his ashes to be sent to Mars in a soup can.
So, sounds like a fun guy to me.
Okay.
We need to head into our final fact.
And that is Andy.
My fact is that when young ants are sick,
their mothers immediately eat them and recycle them into more ants.
There's no, there's no, like, oh, well, just go, like,
sleep it off.
It's really like, right, this happens now.
And it's because if an infection spreads through a hive,
it can be really dangerous.
And, you know, there aren't many protections against it.
And scientists tested this out by giving an ant queen
a small fungal pathogen,
and they would eat sort of lots and lots and lots of infected larvae.
So that, sorry, the larvae have been infected,
and the ant queens just ate them,
as well as 6% of controlled larvae,
which were not infected at all, which were just sort of collateral.
I was going to ask what a sick ant is like,
but it's fungus is it.
Yeah, exactly, if they just have a bit of this on them.
And as soon as the queen ant finds a sick larvae, she just starts tromping.
And the queen ants, which did this and ate them, then gave, they produced lots more eggs.
And it happens at the very first sniffle.
Which then, yeah, than the ones that the controls was.
Yeah, yeah.
So it is, it sounds sort of crazy and frankly unkind.
I read that these, the recycled ants have got better immune systems as well.
So actually, you eat them, and then they come back and they're super ants, kind of.
So why not keep eating and eating and eating and regurgitating and regurgist?
I'd spend my whole life as a mother eating, remaking, eat, remake, and then you'll make Superman.
Is this like what we're doing with astronauts with them drinking their own urine and recycling?
It's exactly like that.
Yeah, it's like a recycling.
So that's the future.
Eat the infected astronauts in your boomerang spaceship and we will be into the stars.
Yeah.
It's amazing with ants how primed they are to be aware of disease.
And it makes obviously perfect sense because they live in.
in gigantic colonies, where at the moment someone gets sick,
you've got to know about it and you've got to deal with it.
But, I mean, Queen Anne's also will eat their best friend.
So I actually didn't realize this about ant colonies,
but about a fifth of them are founded by a pair of queens,
not just one, so there'll be two best pals who get together
and say, let's form a colony together.
If one of them dies, which sadly sometimes they do,
the other one quickly chops them up into pieces
and buries all the pieces in different places.
and that's to make sure that whatever infection it was
cannot spread through the colony.
But a tough job with your best friend.
Yeah.
I thought you said they ate them.
Yeah, I thought so too.
Sorry, they put them in their mouths
to chop them into pieces
and then they bury them.
I don't know why they don't eat them actually.
Maybe they don't taste very nice when they're all.
Well, because they might be infected with something, possibly.
No, but the Queen Nents have protections.
They have a special anti-venom gland,
which they begin to massage.
Oh, yeah.
If they detect any sort of illness,
they just start massaging their gland.
It's so amazing.
They do it before and after, yeah.
just there massaging this gland.
They call it, I think it's a positive PR kind of spin on it.
They call it hygienic cannibalism.
So it's...
It's still not the word cannibalism in it.
I think if you really want to go positive PR, get rid of the word cannibalism.
But it's more appealing, isn't it, when you say,
no, it's hygienic cannibalism.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it sounds like you're saying, it's vegan.
It's not vegan.
But the ant queens are all single moms, or by and large,
so they have a tough or gig.
and they've got a queen.
They can do what they want.
They go very hungry to raise their workers.
They will eat any old crap though, ants, won't they?
Will they?
In 1904, there was a problem with ants in New Orleans, right?
It was a hospital, and they were completely overpowered with ants.
There was millions and millions of them.
And so a group of entomologists went over there to see what they could do.
A guy called Edward Titus was in charge,
and he found that they were eating human sputum.
Basically, there were a lot of tuberculosis patients,
and so the ants would march, march, march, march, march,
pick up someone's phlegm,
and then march, march, march back to the nest and eat it.
I feel like I've lost the audience.
Yeah.
The ants are going nuts for this, though.
You just don't hear them.
One thing that they'll do is they will not go to work,
if they'll take the day off if they're sick, right?
Yeah, because your mum's waiting.
Yeah, at the office.
Yeah.
But is that amazing?
They'll take sick days,
so they will wait outside the nest
if they feel they've got a cold
and they just let it pass
so that they don't spread it, get killed,
and then hygienically or non-hygienically dealt with.
Do we know how many malingering ants there are in the world?
Is it like 50% of them aren't actually sick
but just don't really like the job?
No, we do.
There are studies on this.
So a study found in 2015
that 40% of them are,
all ants are doing nothing all day.
They're not hardworking. They're very, very lazy.
But it's not the same ants all the time, right?
No, well, this is the weird thing.
It's the theory is actually they're in reserve, right?
They're not needed at the moment.
But if one of their colleagues gets ill or, you know, it's eaten by the queen.
That's what I said when I was unemployed for six months.
I'm in reserve.
But the idea is basically they're living pantries.
I mean, some of them might just be lazy.
That is another theory that's currently doing the rounds.
But a scientist called Dr. Daniel Charbonneau work this out,
but you put dots of paint.
on particular ants, right?
He worked out which ones were the hardest working in the colony,
and then he removed the hardworking ones.
So, you know, this should have presented a work problem for the colony.
Actually, if you remove the hardworking ones, others step up,
and they fill their place.
And so the same amount of work gets done.
So the lazy ones are just hardworking ones waiting.
They're smart.
They're hardworking ones who know that someone else is going to do the shit.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, good on them.
They're very good at looking after they're injured, as well as they're sick.
I think this is absolutely incredible about ants.
They're often in big battles.
It's usually ant against termites,
so they'll attack termite colonies.
And if an ant gets injured,
it will get carried off the battlefield by its friends
because it's not useful in battle anymore.
It will get evacuated back to the nest
if it has an injury which is salvageable,
where their lives can be saved.
Their injuries are licked clean
and they're left to rest until they recover.
And amazingly, they've quite recently discovered
that they do amputation.
And not only they're,
Antiputations.
Antiputations.
I'll tell you what, by the time I edit that, that will be such a tight word.
It's going to take so much editing.
I almost want to make you say it again.
But I'll leave you to suffer.
Yes, they do ant-putations.
How did you say that so well?
And they know which amputations are most likely to be survivable.
So scientists were really confused about the fact that ants only amputated, injured ants,
legs above the knee. So if they were injured in the thigh area, if they were injured below the
knee, they would not amputate. So obviously, scientists being what they are, took a bunch of ants,
and they amputated their legs below the knee. And lo and behold, they were like, oh, look, they
all die. Or they only had a 20% survival rate. I guess the other ants know this. But yes,
because if you amputate below the knee, apparently the infection spreads more easily because of the
way the blood's pumping around. And they know this. I think you do get wound care in the form of
licking if your lower leg is injured.
Oh, you still got wound care?
Yeah.
You don't get abandoned.
Yeah, yeah.
But also, what's interesting is when they were doing this study,
they were trying to work out if it was empathy that was bringing them back.
They discovered that it's not because if an ant was passing an injured ant,
not in battle, on the way to the battle, they would just be like,
okay, see, there was nothing that made them want to care about it.
So what it largely was is that they need their army numbers up.
And so bring them back.
They can recover in a few days, and they're back out again, back into the war zone.
How interesting. A lot of the battles are Ant on Ant, aren't they, at the moment?
You have lots of these big colonies.
There was a couple of groups in Southern California, the very large colony and the Lake Hodges colony,
and they were in a battle for six months, and it was over a line that was just a few centimetres wide,
but it was several kilometres long, and 15 million ants died in a six-month period,
which is equivalent to most of the highest estimates
of the number of people who died in World War I
in the human wars.
But there are 20 quadrillion ants on Earth.
We almost got to find out what life was like as an ant
because there was this amazing game that was pitched
a few years ago called Ant Simulator
and it was a Kickstarter or one of those crowdfunding campaigns
where they raised a bunch of money for it.
And unfortunately...
They realized that would be incredibly boring.
Well, no, I mean, I think it got its funding,
really quickly. Everyone thought it was an amazing idea. They couldn't do it because his two other
business partners took the money and according to reports spent it all on booze and strippers.
And so he had to write to everyone saying, I'm sorry, it's the money's gone on a
debauch, like hangover movie-style weekend. He just saw a huge wallet being carried slowly
past his office away from him. Can I say something about, we've talked a lot about Ant War.
Can we talk a bit about Aunt Peace? Yes, please do.
Ants can make yogurt.
Isn't that nice?
Is that an inherently peaceful product, yogurt?
I think it's about as peaceful as it gets.
Yeah?
Is it?
Do they do it out?
You mean, if you make them, make yogurt?
If you drop live ants in milk, you get yogurt eventually.
Oh, really?
That's got quite violent again quite quickly.
No, you're right, you're right.
But this is a traditional method around the world of making it like Turkey and Albania and Bulgaria.
This is how you make yogurt.
It's a recognised method.
As few as four ants in a picture of milk.
What happens?
They release formic acid, and that makes it acidify and then coagulate.
And you end up with yogurt.
So, I mean, can this sometimes happen accidentally?
I mean, I'll leave an open bottle of milk in the fridge sometimes,
and would it be that I've got fromage fray at the end of the day?
If you've got ants in your fridge, it could happen.
I think some people, when this study came out,
some people suggested that that might have been where yogurt came from.
like accidentally some ants fell into some milk once
and they went oh let's do this properly but I don't think that is true
I do buy that
do you? Well you leave your milk out don't you and then you get your ants
I can see how it would happen unlike most inventions which happened by mistake
we're going to have to wrap up guys
what's the fastest you can spin any part of your body
like move it in an arc let's say like a baseball player moves their arm in an
I mean there is a very naughty thing called the helicopter
which.
Oh yeah.
You reckon you can do that quicker
than a baseball player can spin their arm
or something like that?
Yeah, I think the thing I'm using is smaller,
so I think it can make the turns quicker.
It can go as fast as a bee's dick.
I'll tell you what the fastest thing you can do, and it's this.
So when you click your fingers,
the rotational speed is 20 times faster
than the blink of an eye.
It's the fastest thing.
Dracula ants can do a similar thing
by moving their thorax
they make a lot of pressure, a lot of pressure
and then release it.
They snap their body?
They snap their body
and they can do it a thousand times quicker
than you can click your finger.
Okay?
And they do it to stun centipedes.
Wow.
So centipedes coming along,
they go, and the centipede goes,
what the fuck was that?
By the time they've done that, they bug it off.
It's like if you could like,
go into a field and click your fingers
and the cow would fall over.
I thought you...
Oh, the dream, the dream.
Is that what you mean, though?
It's not, it's not...
They literally stun them into like...
Yeah, yeah, stun them.
I thought you meant they're like,
well, what was that?
I thought I meant that was fabulous.
That was absolutely...
I'm stunned, I'm stunned.
But it's not...
So every aunt is Darren Brown, basically,
going, looking to my eyes, look at my eyes,
you're under.
And that's it.
That is it.
That is all of our...
We can't thank you enough, Adelaide, for having it.
This is our first bit of the Down Under tour,
and it's been awesome.
Thank you for having us.
We will be back again.
