No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Cat In A Muumuu
Episode Date: July 17, 2025Dan, James, Anna, and Andy discuss feline ads, Egyptian irons and the Hammer of the Scots. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. Join Club Fish for... ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at apple.co/nosuchthingasafish or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon
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Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from the QI offices in Hoburn.
My name is Dan Schreiber. I am sitting here with Anna Tyshinsky, Andrew Hunter Murray, and James Harkin.
Once again, we have gathered round the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days.
And in a particular order, here we go. Starting with fact number one, and that is Anna.
My fact this week is that ironing in Egypt is traditionally a man's job and they do it with their feet.
Yes.
And that's what you shouldn't let men do the ironing.
Do they put the shirt on the ground or do they put their foot on the board?
Yeah, good questions.
And also do they use an iron or do they have really, really flat feet?
Hot flat feet.
Well, it's in the desert, right?
You just stand in the sand for 10 minutes until your feet get warm.
That's it.
No, they use an iron.
A normal iron.
So these are people called the macawaggy.
And the macawaggy regal are specifically the foot ironers.
Macquar means iron.
And it's been going on for hundreds of years.
And on every street corner, you'd have a man who does your ironing.
You take your ironing to him.
It's passed down from fathers to sons.
And traditionally, it was done with feet.
So you'd have a big heavy iron.
I read one reputable source saying that the irons can weigh 40 kilos.
What?
40 kilos.
I know, it doesn't seem plausible, doesn't it?
They don't lift it with their feet?
They just push it.
And they look like a classic old iron.
So they're just an iron that's heated over coals or in a stove, right?
Like a big metal iron.
They're not plugged in.
Not plugged in.
You haven't got that little water button that you press or the steaming option.
Dan trying to pretend that ironing is a man's job in his household as well.
I think I can probably say we all know I iron non-star.
Dan is an obsessive.
Dan and Andy actually, I feel like you spend half your lives ironing.
It's quite sad.
But it's not sad when these guys do it.
And can I just say?
that I don't just let my wife do all my eyeing.
I just like to be creased.
In answer to your question about the spray,
this is one of the coolest things
and I was going back to old 19th century sources
when people visited Egypt
and reported on it happening there
to spritz the garment
so they're a bit wet, they spit.
And so now these days, I think...
Terrific.
Does that cost extra?
There are accounts of the real prose,
the real traditional ones,
having just a continuous spray
constantly coming from their lips.
But if you were walking the streets
looking for someone to do your ironing
and presumably there might be a bunch of competition,
what you want to see is just one old guy
dribbling like crazy.
And that's the one you go for, right?
That's the best version.
How did this industry fare during COVID?
That's a really good question
and I forgot to investigate.
Actually, people used to spit on their irons
in the UK as well.
Really?
Yeah, yeah.
So we're talking from the 17th century onwards.
We had something called sad irons.
And sad meant solid in those days.
So there were solid irons.
And they're kind of pretty much, you know,
like when you play Monopoly and you're the iron,
it's that kind of thing.
So again, it's just like a piece of metal.
You put it in the fire until it's hot enough.
And then you would use it to iron things.
And to find out when it was hot enough,
you would spit on it.
And if the spit sort of laid and frosted,
around and spat around on the iron, then you knew it was ready to go.
But you don't want it too hot, presumably, because then you burn your clothes.
Yeah, absolutely.
As well as the sand iron things, there was slug irons, which I like as well, where you have
a slug of metal, literally it just like an ingot of metal, that you put in the fire for ages
and you draw it out of the fire and shove it in the iron, and that makes it, that makes it
hot.
There were rough irons, I think called a goffering iron, where you could iron fabrics into a scalloped
edge.
So you know all those amazing Elizabethan ruffs?
Yes. They have to be ironed into place, basically.
I do your first level ironing, which is I just want things flat and uncreased.
But there is an art to ironing where you do put in these ruffles.
You do put in the line on your trousers.
I aspire to be there.
You'll put a crease of a shirt sleeve, though.
Yeah, you might do.
You've got to have a crease on shirt sleeve.
But here's the thing, back in the day, ironing wasn't just for getting your clothes to be uncreased.
It was for cleaning as well.
So there's reports of, let's say, during the Crimean War, there's a report there where
cannibals might be heated.
it used as a makeshift iron. And it wasn't so that people went, you know, I'd want to look
on creased when I'm going into battle. It was because you would have things like lice living
on your clothes that you want to get rid of. So it's burning it off basically. So it's doing a
double job. It's very hard to, it's very hard though, to aim it correctly for an ironing job.
So it just gets the ironing right. It's a difficult method.
Can I ask Dan as the only other ironer in the room? I suspect another question about
this. What's your opinion on wrinkle-free shirts? Sorry, James. I mean, James is wearing a
a collared shirt now and it looks actually very nice.
No, no. I just, I've never really ironed
any item of clothing since I
left a proper job about 25 years ago.
Fair enough, fair enough. And I live in
hope of getting a proper job. I'm
constantly heading to interviews, so I do mean
those shirts ironed.
So what was the question again?
Would you wear a wrinkle-free
shirt? Like a non-iron
shirt? Because a lot of shirts sold these days
a non-iron. I definitely wore those when I was
at university, for sure.
It was the one thing if I went to a men's wear show.
I would luck to see if it would need an iron on that.
Really?
Yeah.
Why would you?
The clip on tie as well.
Stop angry colleagues strangling you.
That's very helpful.
I was talking about at university when we went clubbing.
We didn't always wear ties.
How are you letting in?
Ridiculous.
You borrow one from the bouncing.
He's got he opens his jacket.
He's got a big rack of ties in there.
And he picks one that goes with your complexion and shirt.
Yeah.
No, but so non-iron shirts are made with formaldehyde.
Well, they certainly used to be.
They've been treated with the special chemical,
which means that they don't crease, which is very clever.
But they make you need to do a poo, right?
We've talked before about how formaldehyde makes you need to poo.
That is true.
I think the good thing is that the formaldehyde is locked into the shirt,
so actually it doesn't do you any harm as the wearer.
But the people who made it,
people who worked in the non-iron shirt factories,
they all got quite sick, I think.
Right.
Really?
I think there's a higher proportion of cancer
in people who worked in those factories.
than in the general population.
Well, they don't sound like good resins that get used to them.
I don't know whether they've ironed out these problems yet.
But from what you're saying,
as it sounds like that might still be a thing.
The study with this of the instance of cancer was 20.09.
Oh, okay.
But yeah, ironing basically.
Okay, so let's say you've got a cotton shirt.
It's made up of loads of fibers, chains of cellulose.
And when you put it in the washing machine,
the cellulose goes a bit wonky, and it comes out
and it's all creased.
And the ironing works by loosening these cellulose threads.
And when they're loose, when they're nice and...
It's warm and relaxed.
Warm and relaxed.
Then they can get into a line.
You press them down and they'll stay in that line.
That's how it works.
Interesting.
But the non-iron ones, the formaldehyde basically locks those cellulod fibres in place.
When you join the army, if you go to Sandhurst,
which is a very, very posh, British Army...
It's Prince Harry's place, wasn't it?
Academy. Yeah, probably were to Sandhurst.
you have to carry in your own ironing board.
Really?
Yeah.
And I asked a friend of mine who went to Santa and he said, yes, you do.
Do you?
Interesting.
You know, of course you do.
You got to bring you an ironing board.
Could you not share an ironing board between a barrack?
There's simply so much ironing to do that.
You've got so many different kinds of uniform as a modern heroic action man type.
Okay, yeah.
And because they don't have so many cannonballs in warfare these days,
you can't just wait for it to happen, actually.
I wonder if they're very hard with a cruise missile to get a really crisp line on the chat.
I wonder if they're not.
bulletproof or if the fabric is Kevlar, because that is a fantastic defence shield that you could double up an ironing board with.
It's basically human size, isn't it? It is. That's a human size shield. You're suggesting people wear their ironing boards into battle.
Are we not talking about the front lines here? We're just talking about back at the barracks.
You don't do it.
Here's a really British thing that I'd never heard of before that used to have in the past with ironing.
Some homes, and we still know a few examples of these homes, had a room for ironing newspapers.
Fantastic.
That's the dream.
That is the dream.
Yeah, I read about this in Bill Bryson's book at home,
and it was featured, I think, in Downton Abbey.
But the idea was before the master of the house would be given the newspapers,
the butler would take it into the ironing room,
and they would iron the newspapers, not for creases,
but to make sure that the ink becomes dry and solid into the newspaper
so they can wear their white gloves as they're leafing through the newspaper
and not worry about ink smudging on them.
I didn't know that was why it was.
I think I honestly always thought it was to make the newspaper
nice and flat for the posh people.
We should say ironing's at risk.
What?
Ironings at risk, big risk.
Right.
From the youth.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
30% of 18 to 34 year olds,
many of whom may be listening,
don't own an iron and never do any ironing.
What do they do instead?
I don't know.
They do like me, just be wrinkled.
I think so, yeah.
And they will claim things like their clothes
don't need ironing.
They don't.
Oh, mine don't and James is don't.
Honestly, I would always wear mine flat.
So what I would do is I would wash my shirt
And then just before it was dry, then I would start wearing it.
And my natural body shape would flatten the shirt.
I mean, it's clever.
You want it to the shape of your body.
You do.
I mean, that's the point, isn't it?
If you iron it to an unrealistic standard of a completely flat person, which is not what any of us are.
Of course, it's going to crease.
My whole body is actually creased.
When I'm naked, I have these terrible creases all over.
That's a good idea.
Although a better version would be to put it on someone whose body you aspire to look like.
so that when you get it back, you can feel what you want to eventually not great-let.
And your body can iron itself into the shirt.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Speaking of nightclubs, as I was, I am in-border good for DJs.
Let's say you're an aspiring DJ.
Yeah.
You're going to a house party.
You've got your decks, but you don't really want to bring a big old sort of like all the stand.
I'm a hog on your table.
So what do you need?
You need something that's flat, but also you need it to be a very certain height.
Yeah.
You don't want the decks to be up at your eye level or at your V level.
And the good thing about ironing boards is they're adjustable.
Yes.
There you go.
That's so cool.
So you look at interviews with DJs and they say, oh yeah, my first ever DJ gig was on an ironin board.
That's so funny.
And if you pop a pair of pants under the decks, by the time your set is finished, they'll be lovely and crisp.
That's a journey home.
Actually, probably the heat of the deck.
You might do it.
Yeah.
That'll, yeah, yeah.
Do you think in the future, they'll be looking at these ironing boards and saying,
did you know these used to be used for ironing?
Well, they became.
Everyone's a DJ.
On the DJ boards, yeah.
There is actually a guy called DJ ironing board who built his rig that fits perfectly on a normal ironing board,
and he does festivals and stuff.
That's awesome.
Oh, wow.
But, I mean, you've got to be careful.
And so many times when I'm mid-iron, you hit the little handle underneath that sends the entire thing down.
You don't want that.
How do you do that?
I never have experienced that.
It happens to be non-stop.
No one else?
No.
Can I give you another use for an ironing board?
If you want to be Pope.
Okay.
Quite neat.
Well, for instance, the most recent guy who was Pope was Robert Provost.
Pope Leo the 14th.
And as a child, he played at being a priest by using the family's ironing board as an altar,
according to his brother.
So he would get the ironing board up.
He would get a load of biscuits.
and then put them there and his family would come round and he would give them a Kit Kat and say body of Christ.
Really?
I'm serious.
Absolutely.
And again, you can alter the altar as you're growing up.
Alter the altar.
So it's all good.
I mean, they must have thought he was on a, that was a pretty long shot when he was a kid doing the Ket Kat thing.
But that's incredible.
They're laughing on the other side of their face now, aren't they?
He works in mysterious ways.
This is good news for the world of ironing because actually the last Pope, Franz
actively announced that ironing needed to stop in certain homes.
So there was a question about all these Italian kids that weren't leaving home
and what do I do to get my son a job and get him out of the house?
And the Pope said, stop ironing for him.
And that was like huge consequences.
Exactly.
Why would he leave home?
He's got his stuff being ironed every day by you.
You're molly-calling him.
An interesting thing to focus on is Pope, but, you know, they're focused on worse, I suppose.
It turns out.
They're all obsessed.
Another great world leader who did a spot of ironing in her day, Margaret Thatcher.
Really? Even after she was an MP, she would iron her husband, Dennis's shirts in Parliament.
Not on the floor of the House of Commons.
Just on the dispatch box.
There is a desk there actually, isn't they? Yeah.
I think it's wooden. I think that would be very bad for it.
You're right, you're right. You're right.
No, there was a ladies room.
This was a time when there were fewer female MPs than there are now.
So there was a need for women to have their own space empowerment.
And it had an ironing board in it.
And she frankly monopolized that iron.
Well, she was a fan of monopolies.
Brilliant.
Absolutely brilliant.
That's the best that's a rhyming monopolies joke you'll hear on any podcast this week.
This week.
But if you listen to Offending next week.
Okay, it is time for fact number two.
And that is Andy.
is that 900 years ago, England beats Scotland in a battle with an earthhorn super weapon
which scattered the Scots by frightening their cows.
A lot to unpack.
What's an earth, what's an earthhorn?
Glad you ask. It's not a common thing anymore.
This was word of the day on the OED website the other day.
Highly recommended.
If you're listening to this, just go over to the Oxford English Dictionary website and see what the word of the day is.
And this is earth horn.
I think this was the first and maybe last time it was used.
Yes, it's a hapax legominon
As in there's only one mention of it
In the whole of literature
So it didn't take off basically
This earth horn like secret weapon
Whatever it was
Seems to have been a big horn
Despite working apparently
Yeah, you're right
You're absolutely right
And the other thing to say as well
Is it was only mentioned once
And that was in 1338
And it referred to a battle
That happened in 1138
Yes
So
It's like the 200th anniversary
of this battle.
Finally, we're going to uncover
this secret weapon that we used.
No one's mentioned it before now.
And again, it's not completely clear
from the OED source
why frightening the cows
was a key factor
in the end of the battle.
Okay.
Well, give us everything
we know about it then
from the description.
We don't know a huge amount of it.
That's on this battle.
I think we don't know anything about
the earthorn, definitely.
We don't know if it was a sound.
I mean, horn implies it.
And do we know why Earth?
Is it made of Earth?
Is it comes from the Earth?
I can't stress.
enough this was 900 years ago, as James says, first recorded 200 years later for the first and last time.
We really don't know much about it. This is my challenge fact for the week.
As I said, it happened in 1138. So what was going on?
What was going on was a thousand years of conflict between England and Scotland, on and off.
But quite a lot of on. So what I found was the earliest battle recorded between angles and Scots-slash-pix. That was in 596 AD.
And the last battle between England and Scotland as completely independent kingdoms was, when was it?
That was 1547.
And this particular one that were talking about, the Battle of North Vallerton, also known as Battle of the Standards.
This was that time when Henry had died, Matilda was maybe going to be our queen, Stephen was maybe going to be the king.
There was a whole load of conflict about who was going to take over.
and the Scots were on the side of Matilda
and a lot of the barons in England
were on the side of Stephen
and so there was a big old battle
because the Scots wanted to help out
because Matilda was the daughter
of a Scottish kick.
I read that this battle took place
on Calton Moore.
Is that interesting?
That is interesting.
Moor.
Do you want to say that again?
Couton Moore.
You didn't want to stress the cow part.
Well, that was obvious.
The moo is going to be a bit more difficult.
No, I think that's really good, Dan.
Yeah, that's very good.
Given them lots of cows.
Absolutely.
We talked about this when David Mitchell was on the podcast.
This era we did, yeah.
If you've got your English history, kings and queens ruler,
it's the bit that goes Willie, Willie, Harry, Steve.
It's the Steve bit, of this, King Stephen.
And if you've got the ruler that goes all the way forward
and just to emphasise how much the Scots and English didn't like each other back then,
and obviously it's all water on the bridge now,
but between 1040 and 1745,
33 out of the 36 English monarchs either invaded or were invaded by Scotland
Which is strong
It's a strong record, isn't it?
So it's a long old skirmish.
I know.
Although it could have all been avoided, or the worst bits could have been avoided,
if it weren't for just a small diplomatic cock-up.
So the worst phase, and with all the famous battles like Eubannick Burns and your Mel Gibson's,
was 13th and 14th centuries, and that was the wars of independence.
and it all kicked off when Alexander III of Scotland dies in early 1290s.
And there were these two guys, John Balliol and Robert Bruce, who was the grandfather of the famous Robert Bruce.
Sorry, was one Robert the Bruce and the other one was just Robert Bruce.
Yeah, there was his middle name.
Yeah.
You're sometimes got to slip that in there to differentiate.
So, no, there was a guy called John Balliol.
There was a guy called Robert Bruce.
Robert Bruce's grandson was also called Robert Bruce.
He's the famous one, who for bad reasons we now call Robert.
Robert the Bruce, I think related to the fact that he was Robert de Bruce.
He's braveheart for anyone who knows that movie.
This is Mel Gibson's granddad, Robert Bruce.
Exactly.
They couldn't decide who was going to be king.
So they asked Edward I first of England as their neighbour and friend,
as an impartial observer, to say which one of us should be king.
And Edward I first thought, great, here's my chance.
And he said, OK, I'll do that.
But first of all, I need to have legal authority over Scotland to have this kind of authority
to decide who's king.
And so little legal loophole
He gave himself authority over all of Scotland
And then the rest is history
He just started getting in the way all the time
And what a cock up
Yeah
Berwick upon Tweed is the
Now if you're heading north from England to Scotland
It's pretty much the last English town you pass through
If you're heading on the East Coast
If you're heading on the East Coast
Absolutely
Sorry a big fan of the West Coast main line over here
I love the West Coast main line
But for international listeners
Let us simplify
I'd just say it's the last term before Scotland
So, Berwick-upon-Tweed
Very, very northern English town.
It has changed hands 13 times over the last thousand years.
I mean, mostly, like, centuries ago.
And all the times it changed hands,
it wasn't just being captured in battles.
So in 1174, Scotland gave it to England
because William I first had been captured,
and that was part of the ransom is like,
we want Berwick-upon-Tweed.
Then 20 years later, Scotland bought it back
because King Richard needed money for a crusade.
They're like, what can I flog off?
Oh, I'll sell Berwick-upon-Tweet.
The Scots love that.
For about 200 years, once every 15 years, it changed hands.
Do you think they ever knew?
The people in Berwick-upon-Tweed going about their lives.
Do you think they ever knew?
They just say they're from Berwick.
A lot of people there are to say, I'm a berica, you know.
There's a guy called Derek Sharman, who's a local historian, who says this a lot.
Derek from Berwick.
Derek from Berwick.
He says that basically,
he says basically that they're all just berikers.
And actually, if you're from north of the river and south of the
that's kind of a distinguishable
sort of almost nationality as well.
Is it? That's where the next big civil war is happening is.
Edward I,
Edward I, who was the famous antagonist,
the hammer of the Scots.
Hammer of the Scots. Long shanks.
Lots of nicknames.
He is still in Westminster Abbey
buried just in a very plain lead casket
not with a normal regalia of English monarchs.
Is that to not upset the Scots?
It's the absolute opposite, James.
It's because
Is it to properly wind them up?
To really fucking piss them up.
No, I think it would give the Scots, it would gratify them
because basically he said,
I don't want to be buried properly
until the Scots are finally conquered
and they haven't yet finally been conquered.
And so no one's yet exhumed him
and buried him in a pocket.
Did they not consider when we beat them in Euro 96-1
without Paul Gascoigne gold?
People were battering away at Westminster Abbey
with spades.
How interesting.
Yeah, Edward I was the first,
the really interesting thing about him is the siege of Stirling Castle when he got this
enormous treboshae built.
So a treboset is like a catapult.
And it was called the War Wolf.
It was 90 metres tall.
It took three months to build.
And the Scots, when they saw it sort of trundling up, they went, oh shit.
And they said, it's okay, we surrender, we surrender, we surrender.
And King Edward went, oh, I've spent three months making this now.
And so he attacked them anyway.
Edward.
Even though they surrendered.
Yeah, Deneep, it was basically going,
okay, I'm just going to test it though.
And you're not allowed to leave the castle until the test is over.
Good Lord.
Pretty wild.
It's a great name.
The War Wolf.
Yeah.
Yeah, that is cool.
You don't want to waste work like that, do you?
You know, you can see its point.
We'll just wheel it onto the next place.
I'll tell you what, the War Wolf was good against this castle,
but it was even better up against the castle made of sticks and the castle made of straw.
Hey.
Get it, I get it
Yeah
One of the chief nobles
who led the Scottish rebellions
After ever the first little land grab there
He was called Andrew Demore
Or Andrew Murray
Oh really?
He was like the other William Wallace
He was the one who wasn't William Wallace
Yeah
That's Damore
Brannickburn
Where
Freedom was one
That was the moment
For Andrew Murray here
Then deceased
Was it you or was it William Wallace?
I think I was dead
by this point. I think it was an earlier battle
where I did very, very well, by the way, but then
I got injured and died. It was Stirlingbridge
in fact, sadly. That's so would be on your
tubes though, Andy. Did very well, actually.
Red like a four star battle.
When you're killed in a fight but you still did
all right, that's de Morae.
So many battles over the
centuries, it's kind of insane. Scotland
had a huge role in what gets called the English
Civil War, which turns out
It turns out we shouldn't call the English Civil War. It should be called the War of the Three Kingdoms.
Okay.
Is that the War of the Ronsheds versus Cavaliers?
That one.
So War of the Roses is, um, ends in 1485 with Henry,
the Third and Battle of Bosworth and Henry the seventh taking over.
Uh, what goes called the English Civil War is the 1640s, basically.
It started partly because Charles I, who was like basically a useless, like imagine a useless king.
Oh, you've bought the Cromwell Kool-Aid of him.
He was just like big floppy rough, you know, suspicious continental practices.
People worried he was a Catholic.
Imagine the ironing it took together that way.
He had tried to interfere with the Church of Scotland
and he'd tried to impose his own prayer books on the Kirk in 1637.
This went down phenomenally badly.
It led to a thing called the Bishop's Wars.
We're just like ecclesiasticity.
They're on a taggnally.
That's the best bishop this week.
I don't know.
You haven't heard.
parenting hell this week.
And Scotland got so angry about this prayer book difference
that they occupied Northern England
and he had to not only back down,
he had to pay expenses, which is so humiliating after a war.
Pay expenses?
What, like, we bought these train tickets to get down to leave?
Pretty much, yes.
Oh, really.
Excuse, £10.60 at Pratt.
Who was this, guys?
There was a sandwich and a drink,
they're expensive these days.
And so Charles then had to ask for money from Parliament
because of the war debt that had been imposed
and that helped kick off the entire Civil War period
and then at the end of it
the English execute Charles, Cromwell comes in
and the Scots are furious
and that leads to another battle
because they were so angry about
as they saw it their king
getting his own, chopped off.
Yeah, okay. Do you know this
William Wallace period, Robert the Bruce?
Robert the Bruce don't hear too much about him
these days, but he influenced
something great in modern popular culture.
Someone was named after him.
Someone was named after Robert Bruce, Bruce Farsight.
No.
Bruce Springsteen?
No.
Robert Mugabe.
Okay.
Is that, I'll be saying that's popular culture?
Oh, his middle name, Winnie the Pooh.
No, it's Bruce, and it is in the world of fiction.
Bruce Almighty.
No.
Bruce.
He's the most famous Bruce.
Bruce Dickinson.
The guy from Matilda, the fat kid.
Yes, Anna.
Bruce Banner.
from the Hulk.
You're so close.
Bruce.
Superhero.
Bruce.
Is he Australia?
Oh, Bruce Wayne.
Bruce Wayne.
Who's Bruce Wayne?
What do you mean who's Bruce Wade?
Oh, you only know Batman.
Okay, so Batman.
Bruce Wayne is Batman?
Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that in 1999, the first ever TV ad made for cats was broadcast on ITV.
and had an estimated viewership of 3 million cats.
Three million.
Well, the numbers?
Because the number you sent around was 7 million.
Yeah, but then I did some additional research.
Interestingly, I have 2 million.
I have 2 million as well.
I've had to go over my numbers quite a few times.
Basically, this was a commercial that was put together by whiskers, the cat food people,
and they wanted to put something together that was specifically for cats.
And so they asked someone what would generate a cat's in?
interest. And it turns out an incredibly surreal 40-second animation full of weird ping noises,
little sounds, a mouse running up, a line going up and down the screen. Very random stuff. And they
made a big deal out of it. It was a big promo thing. And on the 27th of January, 1999, there was an
announcement just before it was coming on, a pre-ad to say, we were about to play the first ever
ad for cats. Get your cat. Let's do this. I think it was also announced in like the newspapers and
stuff beforehand because I remember it happening.
They had to advertise the advert.
It's quite clever, really, because you get publicity out of the fact
you're doing an advert. That's very hard to do.
It won a lot of awards, basically, for innovation
of getting the interest of the people to make sure that their cats were in.
Now, the numbers are dodgy, obviously.
1999 was a period where it went from viewership to households,
so you don't know how many people would be in a household.
So 2.2 people per household, roughly is what
the ratings would suggest were watching.
How many cats?
Well, let's get to hang on, guys.
Don't jump ahead on the numbers.
Okay, so we know what the numbers were of the viewing figures that night. It was 18,520,000.
That's what we're watching. However, that's viewers, not households, right? Okay, so if we're talking houses that might have a cat in it, we've got to look at houses. Right. Yeah, so let's 2.2 people, so you've got to bring that down that number, basically split that number in half, right? Yeah.
Then it wasn't just shown on ITB that night. It was also shown on Channel 4 and Channel 5. So we need to add those in. So that's 21.2 million viewers.
split that in half, it's roughly 10.6.
I'm not counting the Channel 5 viewers because I remember Channel 5 in the 90s and it was too blurry to make anything out.
Okay.
They didn't see any of those images.
And how many contain the cat, I suppose?
Well, at that time, it's estimated that a quarter of all houses in the UK had cats.
And then what percentage of households invited their cats into the room to watch when it happened?
And do they have one cat or two cats?
So most houses had 1.6 cats.
So you've then got to add those things in.
It was a gruesome time, the 90s.
So roughly, when you add all those numbers together, in theory, there could be roughly around.
three million cats that were in front of a screen in the rooms.
So are you having three million as your number?
I'm going to go for three million because I'm also going to add in the fact it was played in
America and so those numbers are going to add up.
Can I say I think the number might be three million and one because I let Harley watch
it this week.
Oh really?
My cat.
And if you want to know what she thought of it, then go on my TikTok or Instagram because
I'll put the video on.
Oh, that's very exciting.
A little ad for another format within our show.
You're doing what the cat people did.
Yeah, that's his thing as James Harkin, get on there.
Wow, that's very good.
It was considered a success.
So successful, they released it on video, VHS.
No.
I actually found it on eBay.
So this is it, the first ever commercial for cats.
Oh, my God.
Officially released by Whiskers, an old VHS.
Wow.
Why is everyone calling it the first ever,
as though now we are inundated by cat adverts?
Well, perhaps at the time they thought this is going to be massive, right?
So the back says, thousands of cats across the length and breadth of Britain, jumping, staring.
It could have been thousands off thousands.
Thousands of cats.
So one in a thousand viewers of the advert had any reaction whatsoever.
So yeah, so we don't know the numbers.
And they've just muddied the waters even more.
That's advertising.
Yeah, but it did good for them.
It did really good.
Oh, yeah.
You know what else did well for whiskers?
Eight out of ten cats?
That's one of theirs.
Yeah.
What do you mean?
That's their slogan, is it?
Yeah, so there's a TV show 8 out of 10 cats and 8 of 10 cats does countdown,
but that came from a slogan by whiskers,
which was 8 out of 10 cats prefer our product.
And they ran it for quite a lot of years until the advertising standards authority
encouraged them to change it.
And they changed it to 8 out of 10 owners who expressed a preference said that their cat prefers it.
And the problem was that basically they've been doing this 8 out of 10 cats for ages.
And everyone knew it at the time.
And then they went up to 9 out of 10 cats.
They did a survey in 2001 and they thought that actually now it's nine out of ten.
And when they did that, the people at Friskees, who is another cat food company, said,
oh, we're not having this.
And they went to the ASA and they said that this is a biased survey and, you know, it wasn't a fair reflection.
Well, if it's eight out of ten owners who expressed a preference, that leads to other questions,
doesn't it?
How many owners express a preference?
Absolutely.
Yeah, that's fair enough.
But does this mean that Jimmy Carr has to change the title of the show as well?
Surely.
Yeah, let's do it.
Good, cool.
Let's go in contact.
There were very good whiskers, by the way, with their promotion in 1999 specifically.
So over in Australia, there was an Aussie rules footballer called Gary Hocking, who changed his name by Depot to Whiskers.
And the idea was that as he was playing, they had no choice but to say, oh, whiskers has got the ball.
They were being paid.
Did they do that, or did they just use his old name?
Like, that's what happens when football teams change the name of their stadium to a company name.
People just call it the old name.
Yep.
The AFL were very against calling in Whiskers.
and really stuck to Gary Hocking.
They were paid a couple of hundred grand
in order to advertise them generally,
and this was a sort of extra move by Gary Hocking
because he thought it's going to be funny.
And it made news stories.
It did the job, right?
Like, that's all that this needs to do.
It's like when the snooker player Jimmy White
changed his name to Jimmy Brown
to advertise HP sauce.
Oh, did he?
Yeah.
One of us should change our names to something.
I've changed my name years ago to Maserati,
but no one...
They keep asking me to stop.
No one here uses it.
Nightmare.
Videos actually look cracked cats
This TV advert would have looked rubbish
Because they see so much better than us
They see about 100 frames a second
So we only need to see 20 frames a second
For stuff to look smooth to us
And I think TV is about 24
Or TV is 30 in films of 24
So to cats
It's just going to look like a series of photographs
So cat videos in general
Can you think of a role
A famous role that was inspired by cat videos
Catwoman
Well there's no fun if you're going to get it immediately
When Anne Hathaway, the actress, she played Catwoman.
It's just because we did the Batman thing, yeah, yeah.
Wow.
Yeah, yeah.
But Catwoman isn't an actual cat.
Well, no, but she...
Come on, Anne.
Look, she's got to justify her fee somehow, Anna.
So she's going to say, well, I spent a couple weeks looking at cat videos online.
So that'll be another million quid.
When Daniel DeLewis went for the same party, just sat there looking his ass for three weeks.
Thank you, Mr. Day-Lewis.
We've actually received enough half mice.
We're going with Athaway
I'm sorry
She fits the suit better
That's been done by a bunch of them
Tom Holland
Studied the movements of a spider
In order to
Robert Downey Jr.
Watched ironing videos non-stop
It's something to say in an interview
Isn't it?
You run out of stuff to say in interviews, yeah
I read a really good article
It was like an inside look at
the Wolfram Pet Care Science Institute
at Milton Mowbray
which is the science arm of Mars pecker,
which is where all of our pet food comes from.
Mars makes it all.
They go to such great lengths to look after their cats there
and to test really advanced foods on them.
They found out that cats prefer Asian cuisine
because their favourite flavours are...
Well, you can probably guess.
Plum sauce.
Plum sauce.
Same flavour, yeah.
Umami.
Umami.
And the new one.
Kukumi.
Yeah.
I'm sorry, for those of us not up on our flavours.
What's that?
So it's, I think it's like fullness and richness.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's not like a flavour so much as an enhanced.
It is officially a flavour, but it's like enhances salty things and...
Is it like MSG?
No, that's sumami.
Yeah.
Okay.
And once all the cats are tested on at Melton Mowbray at this site, they get taken home and adopted by one of the people who work there.
In other words, they get turned into pot pies.
Yeah, we know what you mean.
They're very good owners to the extent.
that one of the research scientists called Scott McGrane adopted a cat
and then noticed when he took it home
that the cat was a bit perplexed by his telly
because they had never seen one before
and since then they've installed loads of TVs
a TV room for the cats there.
Why?
So that when they get adopted,
they don't get confused by TVs.
Is that a massive like safeguarding welfare thing
for cats being confused by TVs
when they go to their forever home?
Is that really a problem for them?
The RSPCA is clamping down, yes.
Can I just say Scott McGrain is very much a name
you would come up with if you're trying to come up
the name for a Scottish person and failing.
I do hope someone says,
Scott, you've been mentioned on the show.
Listen in.
You know, cats falling off things.
Yeah.
And flipping the right way up and landing on the feet.
Yeah, they land on the feet.
So this was a physics puzzle
from much of the 19th century
how it happens.
Because there was a scientist
called George Gabriel Stokes.
James, you did math.
You may have heard of him.
Yeah, Stokes equation.
I've heard of that.
Yeah, it's about fluid mechanics.
or something. Okay, perfect. So he was a
Lucasian professor of maths at Cambridge
and other holders of the role with people like
Isaac Newton, Stephen Hawking, yeah. So big brain, George
Gabriel Stokes. He and his colleague
James Clark Maxwell, another
big physics name. They were there at the same time
and they could not work out, right?
Cats, if you drop them, they fall onto their feet.
How? Because they seem to be
violating the law about the conservation
of angular momentum, which is if something rotates, it has to have something to
rotate against, which rotates the opposite way, right?
Yeah, got it. So how
does the cat rotate with nothing to push against? So like, let's
say you jump off a diving board,
you've pushed off against that, and you use that kind of a momentum
to twizz around in the air. Exactly. But if the cat's just falling, how do they do
that? Yeah, exactly. Can I just ask him further clarifying question? If I didn't
dive off the diving board, if I let myself just fall forward, can I swing
around to my back midfall? I think Andy's about to answer. Right, yeah.
But the judges will mark you down for that.
I've just proved Maxwell's theorem.
Two, two, no.
So this was so interesting, like, how on earth are they doing it?
It turns out what the cats do as they start to drop, right?
It uses its own mass to rotate around.
How?
It flips in its four legs, it pulls them in.
And that means, like a gymnast, its top half spins faster.
then it flips out its forelimbs
and it flips in its back limbs
and now its back half is revolving faster
and it like switches back and forth
between those two so it creates
its own momentum using its limbs like an athlete
so that is how the cat rotates
and it can do that as quick as falling off
this table that we're recording it's stunning
I mean so quickly in 1998 there was an Italian researcher
who dropped a cat called Esther 600 times
and determined that
RSPCA had to get it off
the sub-stage.
They're too busy with the telly thing.
What you in for?
Introducing a cat to my home without briefing it about the TV.
Me? Oh, no, I dropped mine 600 times.
Anyway, it came to the rainfall and conclusion.
She could fall on her feet when she was dropped from anywhere between two and six feet,
but not from one foot.
So it's only from two feet up.
They can do all this mad weird gymnastics in the air.
And I read the same thing, Anna.
It was so good.
He dropped Esther from the height of one foot,
100 times in a row to make sure she definitely couldn't do it.
And she didn't land on her feet once.
It's much bigger than the sample size that you statistically need.
He did write in his paper.
I want to thank the cat Esther for her initial cooperation in this experiment.
So we didn't get an answer to my question.
Would if I fell off a diving board, do humans have the muscles to do what cats do?
I'll hand over to James. He's got a physics degree.
I think that you would not be able to do that.
Right.
Maybe not fast enough.
But I would think if you trained for long enough, you might be able to.
Because the physics is there, right?
It is possible.
But I think it would take training.
Because you're not flexible enough?
Like we can't shift our bodies, like a cat.
Because they have got not extra vertebrae, but you know what I mean?
They can move.
Very flexible.
They're very flexing.
I think, yeah, with training.
The way I thought of it, and I think I skimmed it more than Andy, so this is probably wrong.
But I thought of it is like squeezing a cat like a sponge.
Yeah.
You know when you squeeze a sponge out, you have to.
in two different directions at once, don't you?
And that's the only way that it's going to be able to twist around its...
Okay, so, Dan, stand up.
Yeah.
How easy is it for you to twist your top half in one direction
and your bottom half in the other direction?
Yeah, you see like this part...
Oh, dear.
Uh-oh.
Holy moly.
Oh, wow.
I'm really...
Dan, that is going to be the TikTok craze,
dance craze of 2025.
Did you film it change?
Can I make a cameo?
That's amazing.
Ow.
Sorry about that,
no, that's fine.
Do you think if you were sat holding a cat right now,
and I took a photo and then we put it on your dating profile,
people would find you more attractive or less attractive.
Let's say women.
Okay, well, first off, my wife doesn't know about that cat.
Yeah, I'd say they think you're more attractive.
With a cat?
I would say maybe less.
Anna?
As the women in the room, I'm going to say less.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, it's a good thing.
new men as less masculine, higher in neuroticism, agreeableness, an openness, but less datable.
I wonder I'm not getting less swipes.
Friend material.
Less flexible.
No, it doesn't say that.
And is there like a league table of animals?
Like if I pose with a water vol, am I?
Oh, yeah.
Or a mink.
Or koala must be a good one.
Do you remember when you did your first Edinburgh show?
And I wanted you to do a poster where you were completely naked, but with a water bowl over
your privates and we were going to call it socks and gloves and cock and bowl.
Yeah, I do. I do. Why did you never go for that? Why did you not do that? I just ran out of time
the shoot day. It's such a shame. Had the vol.
Can I ask James a question? Yeah. As the cat owner in the room, do you have done in the
past? Okay. But as a current cat owner, James, would you buy a matching outfit for yourself and
your cat? No, my cat only wears what God gave her.
And she insists on not being ironed every day.
No, I would never buy clothes for animals, really.
Then you're part of the nine in ten in your age group
who would not buy a matching outfit for yourself and your cat.
Whereas a third of 19 to 28-year-olds would do that.
Really?
Yeah, that's the Instagram generation, isn't it?
Would they be able to get the clothes on the cap, though?
That's my question.
I don't think they could.
It depends on the clothes, doesn't it, as well?
If it's a shapeless sort of burnoose or a mum?
or something, it might be quite easy.
I don't know what I just those things are.
I don't know why the two items of clothing that came to my mind.
We're a Bernouce or a moo-boo.
What are they?
It's a sort of north-African desert carp.
It's like Lawrence of Arabia might have got around in a burnoose.
Have you ever seen that show, Mr and Mrs?
Where you write it down and your partner's going to have to guess what you said?
One two items of clothing
I'm going to go for
shirts and pups
I'm afraid not
he went for Bernouce
You must be kicking yourself
Okay
It is time for our final fact of the show
And that is James
Okay my fact this week is that
America's nudist of the year
1973
Who also invented a contraption
That allowed him to
sunbathe in sub-zero temperatures was a man called Dick Bacon.
The name's Bacon.
Dick Bacon.
What a guy.
Dick Bacon is an absolute legend.
So I found this in an obituary of Dick Bacon.
Damn it.
You always find out about these people too late, right?
He spent his life on Lake Michigan, sunbathing.
And anyone who has been to Lake Michigan or lives there knows they.
in the winter it gets very, very cold.
But the newspapers said that he set up a series of reflective shields
to protect him from the wind,
and inside the temperature would get high enough for him to tan.
Still going to be pretty cold, though, isn't it?
And he was naked, wasn't he?
He was actually usually bathed in a small swimsuit.
But that was just to keep on the right side of the law,
and he definitely preferred to be nude.
He began his nudism when he was 25.
He worked as a live model at the University of Wisconsin,
but he didn't want tan lines.
It was unfair on the people drawing him that they had to draw in the tan lines.
So he thought, well, I'm just going to not wear any clothes anymore.
That's amazing.
And he basically just went, okay, how do I make it so that every single day I can be out there all year round?
So he worked in a brewery.
He always took the second and third shifts in there.
So he always had the morning free.
So he was a morning.
Oh, that's interesting.
Yeah.
So just every day, go get the sun as it's going up.
He married someone and he had this line that I just absolutely love.
He met this girl and she said, what's your name?
And he replied, Bacon.
one a strip
and that works on two levels
yeah
like a strip of bacon
yeah
and strip as in take your clothes
I'm a nudis
yes let's go strip
oh it's just a wonderful
double entendre
yeah yeah yeah
it's very strong
that is good
in fact it's better than
fancy
fancy some pork
it's better than that
it is better than that
yeah
he won nudist of the year
in 73 like I said
but he won that by accident
no
stop
okay
this too far
He just so happened to be in this place called Naked City
when the competition was taking place.
He didn't deliberately go there for the competition.
And he said after his win, they interviewed him in the newspapers
and they said that he was aiming to reach his natural colour.
Although the Daily Herald where I read this said that he was already a deep red.
Yeah.
Do you having a natural colour? It's a bit weird, isn't it?
Do we have a natural colour?
Yeah, good point.
Because you turn, it depends whether you've been in the sun or not.
Yeah, exactly.
I feel like my natural colour.
it's incredibly pale, but that's because I haven't been in the sunshine.
Well, you're looking tan today, I would say.
Well, I'm trying to sort that out, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, that's why I've got this Bernouce with me.
He was arrested a lot, Mr Bacon.
He was, yeah.
For nude and lascivious behaviour.
But he was a campaigner.
He was saying this isn't harming people.
This is a natural, healthy, almost sporting way of living in harmony with the elements.
I completely back that.
And he was in very good shape.
In fact, I was recently on a nudist beach, a partially nudist beach, not by choice.
Partly a new beach, that's just a beach.
You're partially nudist beach, not by choice.
The plot is thickening.
I was on a beach where a lot of people weren't nudist, including myself.
But there were a lot of nudists.
And it's completely fine, but they're not all in amazing shape, whereas he was like a gladiator, wasn't he?
Yeah, I guess he would be if you've won all the awards that he has.
Well, he won Mr. Nude America.
He won Mr. Nude Apollo, Mr. Nude Galaxy.
Are any of these awards big awards?
The Galaxy?
Yeah, Anna.
I think it might be.
Yeah.
You know if you put Factor 50 sun cream on?
Yes.
Will it stop your skin aging?
I guess so, probably.
Or make it age more slowly.
Nothing can stop your skin aging, guys.
Well, I would have thought that UV rays might age your skin,
and so the lotion might stop that.
Yeah, get you more leathery, right?
They absolutely do age your skin, but only UVA waves.
So what they don't tell you on the sun creams is that when they say the factor,
UV rays are split into UVA and UVB, and it's basically about the wavelengths.
So UVB have shorter wavelengths, and they're the ones that cause sunburn, and they're the most carcinogenic.
So when you've got Factor X suncream, it's just blocking the UVB rays, or sorry, reducing them.
But it doesn't refer to UVA, and they're the ones that cause skin aging.
They're the ones that go deeper and make you wrinkly and crusty.
So you need to look at the star rating as well.
well if you want to not go wrinkly and crusty.
I've never seen a star rating on my sun cream.
They often don't have them.
If they don't have a star rating, does that mean they don't protect against the UVA?
I think I believe it does.
Yeah.
Careful.
Okay, can I run a tanning practice past you guys?
Yes, please.
Have any of you heard of or you two done testicle tanning?
Jesus Christ.
Was it last week or the week before when you were talking about perennian tanning?
Testicle tanning is completely different.
Because this is actually, it's not sunlight.
You don't have to go down to the beach and bury yourself.
I do do that, but I always iron mine first.
It does take one of those 40 kilogramme irons to get them flat.
This is actually, it's not even a real tanning.
It's a very dubious medical thing.
It's just blasting red light at your knackers
and claiming that it'll improve your testosterone
and a load of male.
energy and hormones and stuff.
And people are doing this, are they?
In their bucket loads?
Thankfully, I don't think it's very popular.
But it is the kind of thing that a load of dubious Americans
have basically glommed onto and started saying is a good idea.
And it's not.
Well, unless you want to save the poor life drawing class,
which apparently was Dick Bacon's motivation,
who can't draw two shades of skin color.
This is very similar to Perineum tanning,
which we did talk about a couple of weeks ago.
Friend of the podcast.
Very scientifically.
But I wasn't there, and so I insist on revisiting it.
And there was something I found interesting about this,
because it's mostly obviously just a TikTok nonsense thing,
where there's like one person who says it's a really good thing
to expose your bumhole to the sun,
and after 30 seconds you get the same benefits,
so you get exposing your body for a day and it's nonsense.
And there is Josh Brolin, the actor, put a thing up saying,
so he's Thanos and Avengers.
Yes.
No country for old men.
He's in that if you want to picture his face.
Yes.
And he put a thing out.
That is the part of him I want to picture. I must have it in this fact.
Thaneus, more like.
He said don't try this on your thanus, because I did it in my pocket hole is crazily burnt.
I mean, he obviously didn't. He's taking the piss. I assume he's not an insane person.
But what I quite like is that, you know, conspiracy theories always come from a kernel of truth.
And the woman who started this said, it's an ancient Taoist practice to bathe your bumhole.
in the sun. And actually, it does come from this idea in Taoism. So Taoism is like ancient Chinese
philosophy, basically. And Hui Yin is the collection point of all yin energy in your body. And that is your
perineum. So all of yin, you know, you've got yin and yang, the two opposing forces that work together.
Yin is all gathered in your perineum. And they do believe that it's good to bathe in sunlight and
moonlight for wellness.
And so, you know, there's a kernel
of truth in this bollocks.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Brazil, home of great
tanning culture.
Do you know what the fashionable
bikini is to wear in Brazil at the moment?
Is it like a full body, like a burkini,
but it's very, very stiff, so your arms go out
like Christ the Redeemer?
Oh, wow.
It's a starched benuce of energy.
Is it, well, okay, like Brazilian,
that you would think, okay, very thongy.
It's very thongy.
Oh, is it that borat one?
It's not the mankini.
Not the mankini.
What's it made of?
What fabric is it made of?
Cashmere.
No.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
I'm link thong.
I know.
Spider silk.
Just one piece of spice.
It's very.
Oh, you really feel that.
The aim of it is to give you incredibly crisp tan lines.
So something that blocks all of the...
It blocks really effectively.
So like a lead or a hazmat suit.
I'm going to tell you, I'm going to tell you.
It's electrical tape.
Do you give yourself a Brazilian when you take it off?
Well, what you need is this thing, the Marquina de Feetor, the little tape mark.
And you go to a salon, they will put a literally tape a bikini onto you
and they'll give you a little bit of fabric for your nips and stuff like that.
Of course, because I was thinking like lead is the same as a swimming costume.
They all block it.
But what you need is for your body not to be able to shift underneath it
tall. Is that right?
So it's just that one bit of skin that is covered with the fabric.
So you could super glue yourself as well.
Well, look, there are all sorts of roads to the answer.
Yes, but this is the biggie?
There are salons where you just go and people go up to the roof.
You pay about $8.000, which includes a breakfast buffet.
So I would do this.
Eight quid.
I know.
It's cheaper than it's travel lunch.
They don't do anything to your nips.
You're not going to be beach body ready after a full English.
Yeah, and then people lie there and they spray with water every now and again,
and that's how you get those incredibly crisp lines.
Hey, sugar nips.
Thank you. Yes, sweetie possum.
Yes, go on.
Do you know what sugar nips?
I read this today and I'd never heard it before.
No, I thought it was just something that, how you used it just then.
Me too, right?
So sugar nips were like a little pair of scissors you would use.
And if you had a block of sugar in your house or a sugar loaf, they would call it.
In fact, Sugarloaf Mountain just outside Rio.
But you would have a sugar loaf on your table and you would use your sauce.
sugar nips to nip off a little bit of sugars
named after your tea. Yeah, I'd never
heard that before. That is a kind, that's a, because
you guys know I like a rare bit of crockery or cutlery. I'm surprised and
disappointed that you weren't familiar with them and in fact
don't own a pair, Andy. And I'm actually
now regretting it because I could have bought you some for your birthday.
I'm going to hop straight on eBay after this to go with the asparagus
tongs and the butter spade. Probably when
you Google sugar nips.
I'll take my chances. I'll take my chances.
Okay, that is it. That is all of our facts. Thank you very much for listening.
If you'd like to get in contact with us about the things we've said over the course of this podcast,
we can be found on our various social media accounts. I'm on Shriverland on Instagram.
James? My TikTok, no such thing as James Harkin.
Andy, I'm on Instagram at Andrew Hunter M. And Anna, to get to us as a group, they go to.
You can go to Instagram at no such thing as a fish or at no such thing on Twitter or email podcast.
At QI.com.
Yeah, and check out our website. We've got a kick-ass website. No such thing.
Asafish.com. All our previous episodes are up there. There's lots of merch that you can buy up there.
You can see if we're going to be doing any live shows in the coming year. Check it out there.
And of course there's Club Fish, which is our wonderful hidden private members club.
We put a lot of bonus episodes up and so on. It's great fun. Check it out. Otherwise,
just come back here next week. We'll be back with another episode and we will see you then.
Goodbye.
