No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Cat-a-Cops Cartoon
Episode Date: July 7, 2017Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss the police force for dead people, Indonesia's KFC CDs and Chinese mistress-dispellers. ...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from the QI offices in Covent Garden.
My name is Dan Shriver and I'm sitting here with Anna Chisinski, 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 you, Chazinski.
My fact this week is that in China, you can hire mistress dispellers to lure away your husband's mistress.
Incredible.
Yeah.
What if your husband doesn't have a mistress?
Do you have to hire a mistress?
Yeah, you do.
And then hire a mistress dispeller.
Cost twice as much and it's almost futile.
This was a piece in the New Yorker, which they did on this new thing, which is becoming
bigger and bigger, which are these companies that call themselves mistress dispellers.
And if your husband has a mistress that you know about, and I think a lot of men in China
are quite unsubtle about it, then you go to one of these mistress dispelling services and you
say, can you sort this out?
and they charge tens of thousands of dollars,
but they do a really comprehensive service.
They have like a psychotherapist, they have lawyers,
and it's a two-pronged attack.
So one psychotherapist goes to the mistress
and lures her away.
So for instance, there was one case
where a mistress was convinced by the therapist
to get a job in a different city.
Yeah, they're banned from getting emotionally involved,
although there are stories of some male mistress dispellers
who will start having an affair with the mistress.
Yeah.
And there are lots of different companies, so lots of them do different things.
So there are some companies that say don't get involved.
But then there are other companies that openly say,
our mistress dispellers are attractive men.
They're there to seduce the mistresses.
You guys probably know this.
I'm surprised I don't.
What is the male mistress?
Master.
Just master's?
Well, mistress is a feminine version of the word master.
That's etymologically.
I wouldn't say, I think my wife's got a master.
You'd say she's got a fancy man.
Right.
Sorry, I think.
Fancy man.
That's what I'd say.
So obviously there's no equivalent because we've lived in a very sexist society for the last 4,000 years.
Fancy man.
I know we may not have the wording, but are there fancy man dispellers in China as well as mistresses?
I don't think there are because it's just not such a commonplace thing.
Isn't it true?
I read somewhere that like actual family counsellors and people like that really don't think this is a particularly good idea at all.
That sounds very plausible.
I read that it was the director of the Guangdong Province Marriage and Farmers.
Family Counselors Association who says,
really these problems need to be solved
between the husband and the wife,
rather than spending tens of thousands of pounds.
No, absolutely not.
You need to spend $45,000
dollars hiring someone to trick your mistress
into leaving you.
It's funny because if it's a traditional family
where the husband is earning the money
and sharing it with the wife,
the wife then goes and spends the money
on getting rid of the mistress.
So it's money circling around.
Do you see what I mean?
Yeah, it's weird.
The man is the breadwinner.
It's then the husband's own money
that's being spent
on getting rid of his mistress.
Yes.
It's quite pleasing.
Do you think he notices
and says what's happened
to all of our money?
And then the wife says,
well, I spent it on disposing
of that woman you were showing.
But I think that's probably the problem
is that some of the case studies
where they produce accounts
from the wives
and the reason they've done it.
In some cases,
they've said too much money
is disappearing from the family account
because these guys with the mistresses
have gone too far in.
They're spending way too much
much money on them. I'll put a stop to that by throwing thousands of dollars more.
You'll have lots of very happy marriages of extremely poor people.
I found another curious job. This is a website tester. So basically a lot of people release new
websites they've created and they're way too complicated in some cases, unusable, not very
friendly. So this is called this user is my mum. And it's this guy's mum who is very bad at the internet
tests out your website and says out loud,
I don't understand what is this doing,
how does this lead?
And he writes you a report,
and his mom just tests it.
What's interesting about this is it's a job
where the more you do it,
the worse you get at it.
Yeah.
Because you'd get more proficient on the internet,
so you wouldn't be as stupid.
Yes.
Yeah.
She must be replaced.
She must be secretly replaced.
She must be replaced.
You can't secretly replace someone's mother
like you might do a hamster.
I don't know if you'd notice.
This isn't really a job.
This is one.
bloke, but the, James, you and I were talking about China's doing this massive face recognition
drive at the moment.
Oh, yeah.
And they're installing facial recognition technology everywhere.
And you need it now to get into your taxi app on your phone, or you need it to get into
your, you know, digital wallet or all this stuff.
Yeah.
But there is a guy called, I think he's called Wang Yu Heng.
And last year, he beat a facial recognition software machine.
He's one of these super recognizers, right?
And he played three rounds against a machine.
and it was a draw for the first two rounds,
and then he won the third one.
But on the TV show he was on last year,
he successfully identified a single glass of water
from more than 520 identical glasses of water.
Whoa.
What?
Yep.
No, he didn't.
Well, the one thing here is they can't have been identical.
Yeah.
They were identical to you and I, but wang saw.
What did he see in it?
What are you seeing in a glass of water?
I don't know whether that was the only one which was.
With lipstick on it on it.
That one was half empty and all the others were half full.
I went to a club the other week and they had facial recognition stuff.
So you went with your ID and they scanned your ID and then they scanned your face and it had to look the same.
Otherwise, they wouldn't let you in.
But mine didn't look the same because my idea is from when I was about 18 when I had short hair.
But they just let me go anyway.
They must look at the age.
It was taken at.
Yeah, and thought that guy is obviously...
This guy needs a drink.
This guy's at a hard life.
Let's let him.
That was the same club I tried to get into at the weekend to meet you,
and they didn't let me in.
But then I didn't bring any ID, so they couldn't scan it.
Just brought a glass of water.
Wait, are you guys hanging out on the weekend?
Yeah, what the hell?
We went to a party.
You guys were invited, I think.
Were we?
I don't know.
I'd just not mention it.
Yeah.
Well, I've been doing a bit of extra research,
because I've been free at the weekend.
I was reading about sort of the...
King's mistress, which in France was an official position for centuries. You know, you'd get
your own flats and you'd get an official title. So Madame de Pompadour was an extremely
famous mistress to Louis XIV for 20 years, despite the fact they didn't really sleep
together. She found other women for him to go to bed with and then she would just talk to him.
So she's a pimp? Well, no. More of a madam. A madame. A madame, yeah. Well, she's Madame de Pompadour,
yeah. But she used to be called Miss Fish. She was called.
called Mamselle Poisson before she was elevated.
Was that her surname, you mean?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But when she met Louis XIV, it was at a ball in 1745,
where she was dressed as a shepherdess,
and he was dressed as a tree.
So did she bring her sheep underneath him to shelter from the rain or something?
Yeah, I think that was it.
Yeah, yeah.
So romantic.
Very cool.
Until 2006 in America, if you wanted to get divorced,
you could get divorced in Guam by male.
So both of the people,
could write to Guam and say we want to get divorced and they would just do it. You need never have ever
been to Guam. You could just do that and that was a legal thing. And then they changed the law. So now
you can still get divorced in Guam, but you need to have stayed there for eight days and no one does
it anymore. Yeah, because Guam is really far from everywhere. Imagine how suspicious you'd be as
the partner when they say, hey, I've booked us a holiday to Guam. Ask work for eight days off.
So Benjamin Franklin wrote a letter which was advice to a friend on choosing a mistress.
Have any of you read this?
Yeah, bedside reading.
It's not going well, is it, Andy?
So this is a letter to his?
That is harsh.
I've just been dispelled.
They didn't dispel the mistress.
They dispelled their husband.
It was the only case they decided to change policy.
She's way better off of that other guy.
fancy man
he still uses phrases like fancy man
what is the phrase
what's the word
well master according to james
i was talking etymologically
of the word miss
bit on the side that's it
squeeze
squeeze
sorry sorry Anna you were saying
anyway
yeah squeeze is even just as old as fancy man
saucy gentleman
and I are from the same century
it turns out
speaking of centuries
So Ben Franklin in the 18th century
wrote this letter to a friend of his
called Cadwaller Colton
who had written a letter to Ben Franklin
saying, I really want a mistress
and a mistress in those days wasn't someone
who you were cheating on your wife with
it was just if you didn't have a wife
anyone you wanted to have sex with with your mistress.
The way you got this was you wrote to Benjamin Franklin
and he would get his mum to look through
a list of people.
Maybe his mum was involved
because his first piece of advice was choose an older woman
when you ring old Mrs. Franklin
I hear she's good
Anyway he wrote this letter in 1745
And it was actually genuinely quite good advice
And first of all it said actually I advise you get married
But if you will insist on not getting married for a while
First of all get married to an older woman
Because they're smarter, they've lived longer
They've got better chat
And also he said
There's no hazard of children
Which irregularly produced
May be attended with much inconvenience
So he's talking about quite an older woman
Well indeed post menopausal
and he also says when they stop being beautiful
they study to be good in other ways
you say good advice but it sounds a little misogynistic
I don't know what you're talking about James I'm the woman here
and I think he's right on the feminist money
but this is interesting he says
don't worry about the appearance issue because
even though in old age some bits get wrinkly
it starts from the top down so he says the face first gets wrinkled
then the neck and then the breasts and arms
but the lower parts continue to last as plump as ever
so that if you cover all above with a basket
and regard only what is below the girdle
it is impossible to know an old woman from a young one.
You're absolutely right, this is feminist.
Happy birthday, darling.
Get the basket ready.
About to upgrade you to a deeper basket, I'm afraid.
A basket?
Did you have Franklin sign off with?
You should see my mum.
She's got a basket on them.
She's all right.
A teacher actually.
actually got in trouble for using a quote from this letter in his classroom.
But this is his teacher in Oklahoma and he had a picture in his classroom of a cat.
And he had the quote, in the dark, all cats are grey, which maybe is saying something about don't judge my appearance.
And actually, Franklin said in this letter, also you don't need to worry about the appearance because in the dark, all cats are grey.
As in doesn't know how you turn the lights out, not an issue.
And this teacher got suspended.
It's quite an old gag as well.
I mean, that was used by one of the Russians, Catherine the Great.
or Peter the Great or somebody.
Oh, it's about the same kind of era.
It would have been a lot darker then as well, right?
Because this is pre-electricity.
So, yeah.
Just when it gets dark, you've either got your candles or you're in the dark.
So are you saying people even more, were even more familiar with darkness?
Just cats.
Like, might as well not have even bothered.
Yeah.
I mean, what's the point of having colour if you're a cat in the olden days?
I've got colorblind anyway.
No.
No?
I think it's dogs.
Yeah.
All dogs are grey.
To all other dogs.
Two other dogs.
All the time.
Do you know that the first ever divorce in America was due to bigamy?
It was a guy called James Luxford.
And he was fined £100 and sentenced to an hour in the stocks.
But they gave him an even worse punishment, which is the worst they could come up with.
They banished him to England.
Wow.
That is rough.
I guess if you're an American being sent back to England is embarrassing because it's like being sent back to your mum's house.
Yeah.
Yeah, it is.
That's exactly what it is because they were all English.
they all come over for their new life.
Oh, okay, right.
Okay, we don't need you here anymore.
Yeah.
Head off back to England.
Do you think he went back to England and went,
didn't even like it there anyway?
It was rubbish.
Everyone's an idiot.
Too many wives.
Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is James.
My fact this week is that Richard Nixon's chair
was 2.5 inches higher than everyone else's in the cabinet room.
It's amazing.
So I read this in an article in International
Business Times and it's about how much money Donald Trump has spent on furnishings for the White
House. So in four months he spent $133,000, which is triple what Obama spent. But one of the
things he bought was a conference table from a company called Kittinger. And on Kittinger's website,
it says that they got this stuff for Richard Nixon, including a 24 chairs around the table,
one of which was 2.5 inches higher than the rest. And that was for him. It's just the back, I think.
I think it's the back of the chair, isn't it?
Wait, the back of the chair.
I mean, just the horizontal bit
that supports your back.
But surely if that's higher,
then you will look a bit shorter
relatively in your chair.
I think the idea being that you have
such a magnificent chair
by 2.5 inches that people give you
a bit more kind of leeway.
Because it's like a throne,
isn't it?
Yeah, a big throne that the queen sits on
presumably, I don't know,
does she sit on a big throne?
Yeah, I imagine she sits on one
a bit like the Game of Thrones iron throne.
Yeah, a bit less bony.
But, okay.
A bit less made of swords.
Yeah.
But she did at the opening of Parliament, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
And one of the reasons, because obviously they were mucking around with when they were going to have the Queen's speech,
I think part of the reason that she was angry, they said it was going to be because she was going to miss Ascot and she loved seeing the horses.
But also, I think it's because she normally practices wearing the crown for a week before the ceremony.
Because it's really heavy.
It's extremely heavy, yeah.
And so I think she didn't know when to start practicing.
It's a little bit like the guy's mom with the website, though, right?
She's been wearing the crown so often now that surely she is used to it at this point.
Surely her neck muscles is permanent.
You look at the queen.
She doesn't look like Frank Bruner with massive neck, does she?
Anyway, sorry, chairs.
Can I just ask if, because Nixon ordered the Kittinger table,
and do you think he actually was looking for Kissinger and he just mispronounced it?
And it was all a big mistake.
Is that the We One You guy in the poster?
No, that's Lord Kitchener from the First World War in.
the other country.
So Kitchener had very little to do with Richard Nixon, whereas Kissinger and Nixon were a very
strong partnership for a very long time.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
But he did try and buy some furniture for his kitchen and accidentally got a poster of a lot of Kitchener.
But sorry, just to say, I read, there's a book called Believer My 40 Years in Politics by David
Axelrod, who's the chief strategist for Barack Obama's presidential campaign.
And he says that Obama's chair was slightly taller when he was president.
Oh, so was it not the same chair?
Because it's the same table still.
I thought it was.
Maybe it's not, actually.
Yeah, I don't know.
So the cabinet office in Downing Street, the prime minister chair is the only one with arms on.
And this has prompted a diplomatic row in the past.
In 1979, the president of France, Valerie Giscard Desteng, was visiting the UK,
and he was going to visit Thatcher in the cabinet room.
And his aide said, yes, could he have a chair with equal status to the prime minister, please?
And they said, what?
And they said, well, it's very simple.
either he wants one with arms or you have to put that one in the corner
and Thatcher has to have one without arms
and they had to write to the British ambassador in Paris
and say, look, can you sort this out?
And he wrote back saying, yeah, they're really serious about this thing.
So what did they do?
We're actually still at war with them.
The ambassador said his first reaction
was to think that the obvious solution
was to stand the prime minister's chair in a corner
and have her seated on the same sort of chair as the president.
He thought the president would be very surprised if it was otherwise.
so unfortunately it's not recorded how they solved it but
I think the obvious solution is to have one sit on the other's lap and then they switch around
halfway through right?
Hey the other difference of cabinet chairs in the British cabinet room is that the prime
minister's chair is the only chair that's left on an angle so that it's more accessible
to the prime minister they can just slip into it whereas the others have to pull the chair
out all that they can be chucked out of it is that's very interesting yeah it's just when
they walk in, all the positions are straight except for the prime ministers, which is on a slight angle, which allows easier access.
Another important person in the world who has a high chair is...
Prince George.
I was going to say, Lord Sugar, in The Apprentice.
Oh.
Yeah, he has a platform that his chair's on, which is about three inches higher so that he's the highest person in the room.
And they found that out because they had a camera shot from behind him in one of the episodes.
Wow.
And everyone kind of noticed that there was like a little platform that you sat on.
Really?
It's interesting.
It's always people who are universally loved and respected who have these slightly higher chairs, isn't it?
Watson, Alan Sugar.
Sarkozy, if we talked about when Sarkozy went to, because he was obviously quite sure,
he went to do a speech in a factory, and he had lots of the factory workers standing behind him when he made the speech,
and he made sure to select the 20 shortest factory workers to stand behind him,
and they interviewed them afterwards and said,
why were you chosen to be in this picture?
And they said, well, they checked my height.
And they said I was adequately small
to not make him look too short.
Was he working in Willy Wonka's chocolate fashion?
Sorry.
So, okay, I do have one wild fact
about presidential chairs.
Go on.
There was a guy in the 19th century
and his name was Seth Kinnaman, right?
He was a hunter.
He claimed to have shot 800 grizzly bears in his life.
Wow.
I'm sure he did
I'm sure he did
He was Californian
But he made for a spell
Every single new president of the USA
Got a chair made by Seth Kimman
And they were the creepiest chairs
You've ever seen
One of them is made just from elk antlers
Straped together
He once played for President Lincoln
According to Wikipedia
On a fiddle made from the skull of a mule
Wow
So this is the kind of guy who was
Anyway the chair he made for Andrew Johnson
Was made from two wild bears
Right
The legs of the chair
The four legs were all bare legs
and when you touched a cord,
the head of a grizzly bear
would snap out from under the seat
and gnash its teeth and then go back.
That's amazing.
Who is that for?
That one was for Andrew Johnson.
That's incredible.
Yeah.
You could see photos of it and it is terrifying.
If you wanted to make a really creepy chair,
you should have a chair that then has an arm built into it
where if you sit in it, the hand is resting on your thigh.
I just think that would be a good creepy chair
You're in the market for one
It was a good idea
Because it's always creepy when someone rests their hand on your thigh
It's not always creepy
I find
It's on detail of the judge
When you become Prime Minister Anna
You can have one of those chairs
In the British Cabinet room
Apparently they won't let me
Because it has to be this slightly armchair
Perhaps like an added little
What you want
As long as you have the same creepy chair
for the president of France.
Can I make a quick presidential chair correction?
Many, many, many podcasts ago, probably about 10 in.
I made a mistake.
I said that underneath the chair of Barack Obama's Oval Office table was a trapdoor
that should the president in an emergency need to get out of the room,
he could open the trap door and slide down the slide.
It turns out that that's not true.
by a website, the White House website, which turned out to be a website called
not the White House website, a parody of the White House website.
And I failed to read the strap line and the knot.
I think if this guy needs to replace his mum, he could quite easily hire you, Dad.
Well, apologies to anyone who's used that fact, because I didn't edit it out of the show,
despite having learned that.
So Richard Nixon's inauguration, one thing he didn't want was pigeon poo all the way down
the road where he was being inaugurated.
Who does?
No, every other president has requested it.
But he was weird. He just didn't like it.
And so he decided that what he would do is try and get rid of all the pigeons.
And so they sprayed something called roost no more, which is a bird repellent on all the
trees nearby.
And the idea was it would make the pigeons feet burn and they would fly off.
But unfortunately, it contained a chemical that killed them.
and so as he was
inaugurated they went down the road
there were just dead pigeons everywhere
amazing
that's amazing incredible
it's not a good start is it
it's the first omen
or is it like when you get pooed on by a bird
it's like that's actually a really good sign
lots of dead birds
pulling all over you
sure that's what his advisor said
but that's the thing I guess
being pooed on by birds is supposed to be good luck
isn't it so he's got rid of all the good
luck and got pigeon corpses.
Yeah.
That's a double dabble bad luck.
No wonder things played out as they did.
So Nixon was very, very clumsy.
I hadn't quite realized the plethora of hilarious stories about him.
So he used to always drop medals at award ceremonies.
So any military award ceremony, he was trying to put a medal on somebody,
drop it to the extent that...
The dead veterans scattered all over the thing.
So one of his military aid said that...
He had to take the pins off the back of medals and replace them with clip-on devices.
Because if he didn't drop the medal, he'd then stab the military person in the chest with it.
He once picked up a lobster as part of like a PR thing.
He was visiting a fish farm.
And he picked up a lobster and it clawed onto his suit lapel and wouldn't let go.
It was hanging from him.
He spilled the inkwill at Downing Street.
He always spilled soup on himself.
And so he said that soup courses had to be eliminated from state menus.
That is so funny.
That's really good.
in middle kingdom egypt um it was a symbol of status to have a folding stool
wow yeah stools were popular but folding stools were very difficult to get hold of and they were
expensive so if you weren't quite as posh as a fair old but you were pretty posh you would have a folding stool
i didn't even know they were invented as far back as they know it's amazing is that to prove you
are rich enough to go on beach holidays i think every holidays are beach holiday in egypt
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, it's a constant beach holiday.
Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is Andy.
My fact is that there is a special police unit in France,
whose job is to monitor six million dead people.
And they are called the catacops.
So these are the guys who look after the catacombs in Paris,
and the catacombs are this massive thing.
I'd heard of them before.
I didn't realize how big they were.
They are 200 miles.
of tunnels over 32 square kilometres in area.
So they still haven't all been explored.
It's 10 times the area of Central Park in New York.
It's absolutely massive.
And the catacops are the people who walk around underground
trying to find people who are trespassing
and people who are mistreating the catacombs.
So they're not actually policing the dead themselves
and checking they don't cause trouble.
No.
Although if they do cause trouble, I'm sure they'll be first on the scene.
Exactly, yeah. Although there are only five people in the catacops these days.
I read there called cataflicks in French.
Yeah.
What the people who go down there?
The cops.
Oh, the cops.
Oh, that's good.
Because everyone is called cata something.
There are cataclasts.
These are people who mistreat the catacombs.
They're people who leave rubbish and they spray paint over all the works of art.
They're very bad people.
But there are cattophiles as well, people who love the catacombs and who treat them well.
And then, if you're a catafeel and you bump into a catacop, he might well let you go.
Surely if you're a catar glass, then you claim you're a catar file if a catacup comes along.
Yeah, but if there's litter behind you or you're daubing stuff on a wall, then you'll
carrying spray paint cans.
Exactly. You'll say you're a cataclass, don't you?
No, no, because I actually took them off a cataclass because I saw they were doing something wrong.
So I've got the cans, but they're not mine. I haven't been using them.
Oh, well, on your way. Thank you.
And then you point and you say he went that way.
He went 200 miles that way.
And also there's cata chicks, apparently, who are a subculture who walk around the tunnels
in bikinis.
No.
Apparently.
Is there a pool down there?
There's a lot of flooded catacomb area.
In that case, yes.
I think it was last year, maybe the year before,
a surfer called Alison Teal
went surfing inside a catacomb.
You can watch the video.
It's pretty extraordinary.
She says surfing, and all the media said surfing.
She's laying on the surfboard in her bikini.
She's in a bikini.
And she goes through.
But it's an amazing video,
because she goes into these tunnels, which are super tight.
Like, it's just her and the surfboard can fit through.
And there's moments where people who've been down there,
obviously having fun with all the bones down there
and arranging them into a chair.
So you can see her sit in a bone chair.
What?
It's extraordinary.
Like, incredible.
Is that chair made by Seth Kinman,
the 19th century grizzly bear hunter?
They are incredible, though, these catechips.
That's so cool.
And when the first ever catacop chief retired,
his name was Jean-Claude Sorette.
He did 20 years in the tunnels.
The Caterfiles organized a massive feast for him,
and he turned up and he said,
I tried for years to catch you, but now I'm retiring.
If you want, you can take pictures with me.
And they all have their picture taken with him.
Oh, wow.
And they threw him a party.
I've got to say, catacops sounds like quite a cool 80s cartoon.
It does.
Really does.
Are they cats?
Yeah, but they're in the catacombs.
Are they also cops?
Yeah.
And they're wearing a policeman's outfit.
Andy, it's in the title.
every element of this cartoon is in the
80s. You never had to think about
titles of cartoons. It was straight in there.
Thunder cats. They're cats and they
like thunder. Danger mouse. Yeah.
Yeah. Didn't even have to watch the cartoon. Look at the title.
You know what you got? Whereas pepper pig, what's that about?
No one knows.
So the catafiles are
incredible, aren't they? I really
would recommend looking them up. This is one of those facts. I was so
glad you chose it. Because I'd
idea they existed. And they sort of invented themselves in about 1980 and the idea is they're
kind of urban explorers, but they go around restoring parts of Paris that are going without being
restored or the government hasn't got the funds to restore them or they think need restoring.
And the catafiles are the people who do so in the catacombs. And so for instance, a few years
ago, the catacops just came across underground in some of the catacombs that you're not allowed
to access. A cinema, complete with like a bubble.
and a restaurant. This is all underneath the trocadero, an area of Paris. It had seats to watch
films in it. It had this whole collection of films. They'd wired in at least three phone lines.
They had their own electricity system. And there were just people hanging out down there
watching films on a big cinema screen. And so they found this. And they were like, wow, wow,
this is amazing. We found this whole cinema system. Who the hells is this? And the police came back
three days later, and all the electrics have been cut off. And there was just a note that read,
do not try to find us.
Wow.
Can you find what films they watch?
Because I have been trying to find out.
Oh, yeah, I actually saw the name of one of the films.
It's very art house sort of stuff.
Oh, because I was hoping they were watching, you know, Terminator or...
Yes.
Or you mean, like, lovely bones or something.
Oh, that'd be good.
Like bone-related.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Oh, you could have a great time watching zombie films down there.
Yeah.
The mummy, surely.
Yes.
They've all got their own catacomb name as well.
everyone has a nom de plume or a nom de catacomb down there
and you're not meant to
you're not meant to ask about anyone's above surface life
you don't say so what do you do because the answer is
I walk around the catacombs yeah I see yeah right
do you know what they also found in the cinema by the way
they discovered that there was a CCTV monitor
in order to see who was coming so they can review the tapes
I guess if they could see if it was cops or anything
and along with the CCTV they had a bit of sound equipment
so that if anyone passed a certain point,
it triggered a dog barking to scare them off
from going further down the tunnel.
Wow.
Yeah, so it was like that was their security system
to stop the cinema from being discovered.
That would work for the catacop cartoon cats as well.
But they're very dangerous these catacombs
if you are not a catafile
and if you decide to go exploring off the beaten path, as it were,
because these are ginormous
and there are counts of people who've heard of stashes of wine
and they've said, I'm just going to go down
and look for a stash of wine
and never seen again.
I mean, you're in France. There's wine everywhere.
Oh, well, finally, I can get some of this mysterious wine that they speak of.
So very recently, two boys disappeared for three days.
They were found. They got put into hospital. They had hypothermia.
And they were only found because they'd been leaving clues along the way.
But the catacops, I guess, sent in search dogs in order to find them.
And they managed to find them.
But I kept thinking that that's, you can you remember.
Imagine being a dog and going down into a place with all those bones.
This is a thing.
Do you know why the bones are down there in the first place?
Because they weren't originally there.
So the bones were put underground because all the cemeteries were running out of space in the city above ground.
And it was horrible.
So there's a very famous cemetery in Paris called Le Innocent, the Innocence.
And it was giving off a strong smell of decomposing flesh in the late 18th century.
And supposedly, even perfume shops were claiming they couldn't be.
do business because of the off-putting smell.
Surely, they're the one people
should be cashing in.
It's amazing, isn't it?
If they can't support that business opportunity,
they don't deserve to survive.
Anyway, in 1780, a wall collapsed at Les Innocent
and rotting corpses fell into a nearby house.
At that point, people said,
oh, maybe we should move these millions and millions of corpses.
So they, over a period of years and years,
they moved all these six.
million bodies from the city cemeteries into the catacombs.
And what it was is they'd had all these tunnels because it was where they mined for limestone.
Originally they would get limestone from near the ground level, but actually that was kind of
spoiling the topsoil so you couldn't make any agriculture there or anything like that.
So they had to go deep, deep down to get their rocks.
And this is amazing.
Once they'd made, they'd got rid of all the rock and the catacombs existed, but completely abandoned
because they weren't being used for anything,
people started farming there.
So mushrooms were grown in these catacombs,
and all the farmers got kicked out
because they wanted to throw all the bones in there.
No way.
Yeah, and still today, in bits of catacomb
that are not occupied by bones,
are growing mushrooms still.
I've got to say, as someone who's scared of mushrooms,
like I have a real phobia,
I think I could live with the bones and the skulls and stuff like that.
You'd freak out of them.
I really would.
That's a horror movie for you.
It's really awful.
And here's the other thing about the catacombs is they are the reason that Paris has maintained not having high-rises in the city.
Because they collapse.
They would collapse.
The ground underneath them are not stable enough in order to allow for high-rise buildings.
It was Louis XVI.
He founded the organisation, the IGC, the Inspection General de Carrier, which does all the maintenance of mapping.
And he was forced to found it because in 1774, 300 metres.
of street just collapsed into a 20 meter deep hole.
Imagine.
Because obviously the limestone is eroded or it's eaten away by rain or whatever it might be
and suddenly, boom, 300 meters of a street.
It sounds almost fun to be on a street that then kind of turns into a tunnel side or something.
What are you talking about?
What are you talking about?
It wouldn't be.
I'm not saying it would be.
It sounds like it could be.
My sister is terrified of sink holes.
Really?
Me too.
Absolutely.
It has a massive phobia of them.
Doesn't you live in a cemetery?
No, the other sister.
All right.
Surely it's more logical if you do live in a cemetery to be afraid of falling into the ground.
Because you've seen all these other people who've done it.
My sister.
That's not how they all die.
My sister who lives in a cemetery grows her own vegetables.
And my other sister who doesn't live in a cemetery refuses to eat them because she thinks they've got dead bodies.
Oh, I don't blame her.
Yeah, there's something about that connection.
But you eat crops grown with excrement.
as fertilizer, that doesn't bother you,
doesn't it? But isn't that bizarre
that we're constantly eating food that's grown
using cow poo?
Or human poo? All poo.
It's just poo. Any kind of poo.
It all works.
That is weird, isn't it?
We're all over it now.
Not enough gets made of that. You're right.
I agree with you. People always say
they look at like the way that animals are killed
and say maybe if you knew how your animals
were killed, you would all go vegetarian.
But maybe if you knew that there was poo smeared
all over your vegetables.
You'd only eat meat.
Okay, it is time for our final fact of the show, and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that the number one place to buy CDs in Indonesia now is KFC.
KFC, the fast food restaurant.
They should call it KFCD.
Oh, yes.
This is amazing.
That's such an amazing fact.
This is extraordinary.
Hang on, KFCD would be the Kentucky Fried Chicken Disc.
Kentucky Fried Compact Disc.
KFC.
CD is what you're suggesting. Yeah. So in Indonesia now, in KFC, when you go to buy your chicken,
you are offered a bundle deal in which you can also purchase a CD. And they sell over 500,000 albums a month
in the KFCs all over Indonesia. And this was set up by a very well-respected, well-known producer
of bands like The Killers, predominantly U-2. He's done the majority of their biggest albums.
outside of Brian Eno.
And he realized over there, credit cards and streaming isn't such a massive thing.
So people are still buying the physical objects.
CDs get sold for $4 and there's a lot of black market CDs that go on.
He thought no one goes out to buy things anymore physically, but they do go out to buy chicken.
So what if I combined chicken and CDs together and started selling them there and it's
absolutely worked?
So he releases at the moment predominantly Indonesian artists, but they're looking into bringing
in the Western music. You too have got that new album coming out, haven't they, Family Bucket?
His name's Steve Lillywhite, by the way, the producer of all these albums. He's done the Rolling Stones as well. I mean, he's ginormous.
They interviewed him. The New York Times interviewed him and he said, my job is basically like running a record label, except this record label also happens to sell chicken.
I think it's a man who's not fully adjusted to the new reality. It very much sounds like a man who used to be a record label guy, then fell on hard times, got a job at KFC.
and then someone from the New York Times came along and said,
aren't you that guy who used to produce U2?
And he's like, yeah, yeah, I still do that kind of stuff.
But incredibly, that's not the case.
While he gave this interview to the New York Times,
he was busy mixing or playing the latest U2 single
that he just made in the background.
Like, this is a guy who's like jumping between producing pop hits
and selling...
And the music that he sells in KFC in Indonesia
is not English language, is it?
So it's all Indonesian music at the moment.
And he says that he thinks 98% of the music sales come from people who just went to buy chicken
and turn up there and go, oh, I'll have a CD too.
Impulse buy.
It definitely makes sense.
But also piracy is not necessarily bad for CD sales.
So Japan is somewhere where CDs are still a huge thing.
So I think globally 39% of music sales come from CDs.
Or this is true last year before.
Whereas in Japan, it's 75%.
And piracy isn't necessarily a bad thing.
because apparently when people pirate CDs,
they copy them onto other CDs,
and that gets people used to just physically having CDs.
I think people are all used to physically having CDs now.
I think that's the argument of a pirate in the dog.
Quite possibly.
Actually, I was hoping to spread the sale of CDs,
just happened to be blank ones that I was buying and ripping off.
I don't know.
The Japan thing is bizarre, though, the CD thing.
So CDs in Japan cost about 25 pounds on average.
each one.
So it's not like they're cheaper.
Well, it's because of all the bonus tracks.
Japan famously,
there's a great comedian who once said
where all the bonus tracks live.
Every Japanese CD,
which is why they're often imported
to other countries around the world,
is there may be four songs
that don't appear on a CD released in the West.
So if Coldplay releases an album there,
most likely there'll be four bonus tracks,
which are the B-Sides or something
that they would use later down the line.
Four more completely indistinguishable tracks.
Imagine how disappointed you'd be,
if you got to the end of what you thought was a cool play album
and it turned out there were four more tracks to get to listen to.
The first massive selling
CD was
Dire Straits. It was an album called Brothers in Arms
and it was the first one to sell a million
CDs. It was absolutely huge. And since
then I think it's all about something crazy
like 15 or 30 million copies.
But they were the band who were
chosen for the big push of the CD
because the guys who made it for Phillips
said they're mainstream
enough. Like we can't push.
punk we can't push something as Nisha but also maybe they didn't want something
really poppy is that right they want something I guess so yeah so it was but they
were the ones who were almost chosen for that massive promotional push
interesting okay the first person to have a CD released in America was Bruce
Brinkstein born in the USA wasn't he but Abba was the first band to be imprinted onto
a CD so it's always the big ones yeah when you say that kind of thing
it almost feels like that probably was someone else
doesn't it?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It kind of depends, though, because it's launching a new medium.
So I guess like Jay-Z doing Tidal, you know, he signed up.
So Tidal is its own Spotify, effectively.
Dan is looking at my completely blank face about the words J-Z and Tidal.
So Tidal is like its own iTunes, its own Spotify.
It's an exclusive streaming and downloading place.
You can only listen to Jay-Z.
You can only listen to J-Z.
So it's like a beta-max, but all the tapes to J-Z.
Exactly.
Okay.
Oh, I understand.
Why don't you put it like that?
So Beyonce released her lemonade album on there
and as a result it didn't make it
to the top of the charts the first time
that's ever happened to Beyonce in her solo career
because it was a new medium
and not enough people were signed up at the time.
So you need a biggie in order to push the medium.
Yeah. Just in Japan
on Japan CDs, you were saying they come
with extras. So as well as
bonus tracks, they come with other
extra things as well. So now
they're keeping the CD market alive in Japan
by giving away prizes with CDs. So you
get raffle tickets with CDs, you get these prizes, you get family bucket.
A raffle ticket is a terrible prize because it's basically not a prize, is it?
It's a piece of paper which almost always is almost always not a very nice bottle of wine though.
Or a box of matchmakers.
Yeah, exactly.
You can get, sometimes if you are the first, you know, a thousand people to buy a CD, you get the hand shake thing, which is where you get to meet the band of the CD you've bought and shake their hands.
That's incredible.
Yeah, exactly.
Get to Japan, Andy.
But this is a cool thing.
So there's a band in Japan, I think we might have talked about before, called AKB48,
which is a band with loads of members.
And they hold band elections via CD purchases.
So the way they get people to buy their CDs is if you buy a CD by these guys,
then it has a ballot paper inside.
And you can write on that ballot paper, which member of the band is your favorite?
And then it's announced who's the favorite.
So that gets people to buy it.
That's pretty harsh.
So if you're in that band.
Yeah, but at least there are 50 members.
opposed to a band like the Rolling Stones
where there are five of them you get to
cull a rolling stone every time
if it's Chas and Dave
and every year
Dave's like sorry Chas
well there was
it's not the end of the world if you lose because the girl
that came 48th or the girl that came
bottom in the vote one year the following year
I think this was last year or the year before
one fan spent 240,000
pounds buying up as many CDs
as they possibly could in order to send all
votes in because there's no limit to how many times you can vote.
Whoa. So what I would say is
if you want to buy 250,000 copies of our new book that
comes out this November.
Should we put a little ballot paper inside saying who's your
favorite member of the podcast? I really don't think we should.
I think for you and me we should.
Why don't she just photocopy the bit of paper?
That's a lot of money. There's going to be a barcode on there, isn't there?
Some listener in Japan is going, fuck right now.
with a massive catacomb
full of unsolved CDs
eating their dinner off of
place mats
people keep releasing CDs in Sims language
by the way
what does that mean
you never played on the Sims
it sounds like you haven't
the way you said that
no
we'll like to play on the Sims
I think I'm the only one
who has played the Sims
I've never played on the Sims
I've played on the Sims
sorry yeah
I have played on the Sims
I just didn't ever talk about it until now, apparently.
So I was actually looking at weird music brand partnerships for this,
and Simlish is the language they speak in The Sims.
And Katie Perry has recorded a song on an album called Teenage Dream.
And...
Is that a B-side?
I'm with Anna on this.
What, is that a massive album or something?
That's ginor of us.
Oh, come on.
It's not Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club band, is it?
It's one of the best-selling albums of this decade.
Well, I bet I'm the only one.
I'm the only one of us for that's heard the Simlish version.
So who's the bigger Katie Perry fans?
Anyway, all these bands keep releasing albums in Simlish.
So OK Go, Depeche Mode, Rita Orra, Lily Allen.
They will release Simlish songs.
That is very cool.
And so they just redo the language.
Yeah.
That's awesome.
Is there an album where you can buy all the Simlish songs with, you know, like a...
Now, that's what I call Simlish.
One of the guys who developed the CD for Phillips, when it was first introduced, he was so
excited about the new technology he said i decided to get rid of all my vinyl albums and get my old
rolling stones and beetles records on cd it still hurts because he just feels like a complete idiot that he did
that he got rid of all these fantastic original rolling stones and beetles records and he just has them on
cd now he was married to the cause though you've got to throw yourself in with both feet to the
all five of the cause he was married to even even gym that is big of me you should go in the stocks for
like five hours for that
that's a joke that dates us
I mean I did a Chaz and Dave joke
I'm in a car
We're all revealing our deeper secrets
About you know
Jay Z or playing on the Sims
In Indonesia
There's a big trend
For music related to bus horns
Okay
And this is like a little meme that started on the internet
and it's, they videoed these kids holding signs up reading Om Telolet Om, okay, which means
honk driver honk or drive a honk driver, I'm not sure which one.
And the thing is, Indonesian buses have got really cool horns, so they make like little melodic
noises.
And the kids just wanted to hear these horns.
And it became a bit of an internet meme.
And now there's a load of DJs in Indonesia who are making songs related to bus horns.
Cool.
That's very cool.
popular DJs such as Zed and Fire Beets and DJ Marshmallow.
You say that in the same tone of voice that Anna talks about Katie Perry.
So we've all got blind spots, is all I'm saying.
Because Andy's downloaded their albums already.
I love to enjoy marshmallow and the other one you said.
I've got some KFC stuff.
Do you?
Yeah, great.
Finally, we're getting to the nub of this fact.
So in Japan, they have a KFC with a high-end,
whiskey bar.
Cool.
She's pretty good.
In Russia, they had an advert because people weren't really eating KFC.
They had an advert.
And what it was is there was a little kid in a school and he was eating KFC or something.
And the teacher got annoyed.
And so the teacher got the bucket and put it on this kid's head.
And he had to walk around school with a bucket on his head.
And it started.
He must have been aging quite prematurely.
Yeah.
And it was just a meme in Russia, like the bucket head meme.
I don't think we've mentioned this before.
this year KFC have released a novel for the first time.
What?
It's novel starring the Colonel.
And it's a Mills and Boone-style romance and it's called Tender Wings of Desire.
He is a sexy man.
Well, we ascertain before we started recording this podcast that you quite fancy Richard Nixon.
Oh, yeah.
So your taste.
How did we miss that when we got to that?
We didn't ascertain that.
That's warping of the truth.
Oh, I'm sorry.
I find him not unattractive, given that there was an interesting.
But for Andy, that's pretty much someone saying.
you're attractive. That's the best I can hope for these days.
I'm not physically repulsed by him.
Great, date.
He said in an interview that something like, I know how I look.
I'm under no illusions about my appearance, so I'll have to be good in other ways.
And I read that interview and I thought, well, you don't know.
He is good in other ways, isn't he?
Lots of ways that Richard Nixon is a very good one.
What would you say, you're improved himself?
What are your top five ways in which is a great guy, Hannah?
Got a bird problem?
He's your man.
Colonel Sanders was kind of divorced from KFC from quite early on,
as he sold the company.
So he did loads of marketing for it throughout his life.
He travelled 250,000 miles, I think,
visiting KFC restaurants around the world until he died in 1980.
But he used to turn up unexpected at various KFC outlets constantly to test their chicken
because he was really pissed off that they weren't using the recipes.
There's a big picture of him on the wall.
On every bucket there's a picture of his face.
People behind the desk would be like,
Like, you look a bit familiar.
I guess if he takes the suit off and the glasses.
He never did.
Okay, there we go.
They sewed him into it.
He's completely recognizable.
He never took a lot.
Even in the shower, even when he was swimming.
Imagine if Ronald McDonald was going to every McDonald's as a secret customer.
It's just not going to work.
Well, gave it away.
Was it my height?
Yeah.
So first of all, he literally didn't go out in public.
wearing his white suit and he bleached his facial hair to match his head hair and stuff.
So he never didn't wear his white suit. And he turned up unannounced and then they would serve
and say, give me a chicken and gravy.
Please.
And then he would be really angry if they got it wrong, which they often did. So KFC sued him
once for...
They did. They sued him for referring to their gravy as sludge and wallpaper-like.
What?
Because he turned up and said it was that.
So he must... Had he sold the company at that stage.
He sold the company.
He was still doing their marketing and stuff, but he turned up.
Was that a proposed slogan?
Try new wallpaper-y sludge.
There was one employee who complained.
So there was a piece on him in the New York Times in the 70s when they interviewed him saying,
The Colonel is vexed almost beyond endurance by the subject of gravy.
And one of the executives at KFC said, look, the Colonel's gravy was fantastic,
but you had to be a Rhodes Scholar to cook it.
It was really, really complicated.
recipe that was way too labor intensive.
I think everyone really likes KFC gravy,
don't they? Isn't that of the thing that
everyone loves about it? I think it is a thing, because he did make
this massive deal about the gravy. Did he win
the case? He had to pay
$1 million. He lost. Damages?
Yeah. Well, he called the gravy sludgy
wallpaper paste. What do you expect? I guess
so. They suit him for about $30 million, I think,
and he got it down to a minute. He could have said it's all
gravy in the dark.
Okay, that's it. That is all of our
facts. Thank you so much for listening.
you'd like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we have said over the course of this podcast,
we can be found on our Twitter accounts.
I'm on at Schreiberland, James, at Eggshate, Andy, at Andrew Hunter M, and Chisinski.
You can email podcast at QI.com.
Yep, or you can go to our group Twitter account, which is at QI podcast.
You can also go to our website, no such thing as a fish.com.
We've got all of our previous episodes on there.
We have all of our tour dates on there, and we have a link to our book, the book of the year coming out in November.
Sounds great, doesn't it?
Yeah. Okay, we'll be back again next week with another episode. We'll see you then. Goodbye.
