No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Crown Of Willie Thornes

Episode Date: May 22, 2020

James, Anna, Andy & Dan discuss dizzy monks, soggy cheese and slimy sausages.  Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. ...

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Starting point is 00:00:02 Welcome to another episode of No Such Thing is a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from four undisclosed locations in the UK. My name is Dan Schreiber and I am sitting here with Andrew Hunter Murray, Anna Tijinsky and James Harkin, and once again we have gathered round the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days. And in no particular order, here we go. starting with James My fact this week is that hagfish can eat by sitting inside their dinner and absorbing the nutrients through their skin
Starting point is 00:00:47 Isn't that amazing? Wouldn't that be incredible if you could just sit inside your curry and just eat the food like that? There will be some foods that it would be worse for or messier for. Go on. If you had to get inside a sausage
Starting point is 00:01:01 before eating it, you'd need a very big sausage. I think it's going to be messy almost whatever food you're climbing inside. Yeah, true. I think with a sausage, you might just rub it against your skin rather than climbing inside it. You just strap the sausage to yourself.
Starting point is 00:01:15 I think so. And slowly absorb it. That's what I would do if I was a hagfish. That's a good idea. I'd like to see a hagfish eating a sausage because they look a bit like a long sausage. So it would be like watching a sausage eat a sausage. You wouldn't know what was going to eat what.
Starting point is 00:01:25 I should probably explain what a hackfish is, shouldn't I? Yes. Okay. Well, it kind of looks like an eel, and it is most famous among people on the internet. for creating loads and loads of slime. That's what they do, basically. When they're threatened,
Starting point is 00:01:41 they create this incredible amount of slime, and it stops them from being able to be eaten. But the way that they eat, they have a few different ways of eating. They can rasp things with their tongue. They've got extremely hard tongs that can rub against some meat and bring it into their digestive system,
Starting point is 00:01:56 or they can actually just absorb it through their skin. And actually, weirdly enough, the skin one is a slightly better way of them getting nutrients. Really? Yeah, it's bizarre. That it's better for them to absorb food or they can do it faster or more effective. They can do it more efficiently, yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:11 And you know what I thought? I was thinking about this. Why don't we all just absorb food through our skin? Why do we have it through our stomach? And I don't know if this is right, but I did wonder if maybe if you eat a sandwich and it goes inside your stomach, then no one else can get it at it once it's in your stomach. You're eating it. But if you sell a tape to it to your face, then someone might be able to come and steal it off you.
Starting point is 00:02:32 So maybe that's one reason why it's better to eat stuff. That's what I was thinking. If you were sort of sat next to them, you could just stick your finger in it and like a straw just suck at it. Yeah. I don't think that's the reason. Can I just say, James? I don't think that's the reason the stomach evolved. Is it that? I think it is a size thing. And that... Size thing?
Starting point is 00:02:51 So, for example, some very small organisms can absorb oxygen directly through their skin, even some tiny frogs. But larger animals have such a large volume in relation to the skin area they have that it's inefficient for them to do that. it wouldn't be possible to absorb all the... So I think humans might need so many calories a day that you couldn't absorb, you know, 20 sausages a day through your skin. You know what? I'm going to email Ed Yong and ask him
Starting point is 00:03:16 because I read this fact in an article in the Atlantic written by Ed Yong. And by the way, if you have like a few hours or a day or a week to spare, go on the internet and search for Ed Yong and read everything that he's ever written because he's a brilliant science writer. Oh, it's heaven to read his articles.
Starting point is 00:03:33 Yeah, so true. Such a good shout. Go and read that. What do they eat, by the way? Is it dead sharks or is it seed? In this case, yeah. They can eat lots of different things, but in this case where they're sitting inside something
Starting point is 00:03:45 has to be something a lot bigger than them. And so it'll be, yeah, like Anna says, probably whale carcasses or something like that. So they don't have a lower jaw. That's the other thing about them. They've only got upper teeth because they're quite badly put together animals. And the only way they can bite something
Starting point is 00:04:01 is they can tie themselves in knots really easily. and they tie a knot at their tail and then they work the knot all the way along their body until it gets to where the lower jaw would be and that provides a lower surface for them to squeeze their upper jaw against. I mean, they're really silly.
Starting point is 00:04:17 So awkward. They also use the knots actually for scraping themselves free of slime, don't they? When they eject all their slime, they knock themselves up and they've got a knot at their head and they'll pull the knot down to the tail to lose the slime.
Starting point is 00:04:31 It's multi-purpose knots. The slime is. It's a real headline. I mean, the absorbing stuff is good, but the amount of slime that they make is incredible. It's amazing. And the slime that they produce, the way that it expands, at the rate it expands, is just insane. So Young puts in the article that it can expand by 10,000 times in the fraction of a second. And there's been cases of that very famous photo, actually, online, of a truck of hagfish overturning and covering an entire car and slime, the entire road, just slime everywhere in a second. We should say that it's not, although the main purpose of their slime is so that they can go
Starting point is 00:05:07 viral on the internet, it has a sub-purpose of being a very useful protective device. So basically, not a single predator with gills is able to consume them, because they would be quite easily consumable otherwise, because they eject their slime and immediately it clogs up all of a predator's gills. So if you're a shark or something, your gills are suddenly clogged up, you can't breathe anymore. And we don't know, there's a lot we don't know about hagfish, but we don't know if this actually kills them because we've seen videos of them get clogged up and they swim away. And then we don't really know how they'll get the slime off.
Starting point is 00:05:42 So they're safe from any predators with gills. It's mostly water the slime, isn't it? It's 99.99.96% water. And each time they release a bucket's worth of slime or a jug of slime, it's only 40 milligrams of actual stuff that they are giving off from their body, mucus and proteins. It's almost none, but it reacts so quickly with the water that it generates this massive amount. Otherwise, it would be the slime, they would have to have this massive slime tank inside them. Yeah. The amount they have inside them is extraordinary in terms of the fibers that
Starting point is 00:06:13 then turn into the slime. So it's sort of two-tone slime production equipment. They've got these lengths of fibers in their body and then they've got some mucus. And the length of fiber in their body, the total length is 20,000 kilometers of fiber. Wow. So an, and it's, and it's, It comes in these 15 centimetre long threads. So it's lots of these little threads coiled up in these tiny little storage boxes inside their body. So that means that the threads are essentially 10 million times longer than they are wide, I think, and just coiled up. I read one explanation of this. You might have read the same thing, Anna, which is it's the same as stuffing one kilometer of Christmas lights into a shoe box without having a single knot or tangle.
Starting point is 00:06:56 That's because the slime glands are so small and these threads are so. numerous. Well, they're big, generally, the skin on them. So there was a study that was done that was showing that in a lot of cases, the slime that they released to predators, let's say to clog their gills, is actually released after they're bitten. And they try to work out how they survive after they're bitten. And it turns out that the metaphor they use is basically their skin is like really loose pajamas. Like they're just so flabby with extra skin that if you injected them with the same volume of stuff that's in them, you could get 40% more. of them into them before their skin starts to stretch.
Starting point is 00:07:32 That's how loose they are. They're like a sausage. They're like a sausage with a very massive skin. And it's only attached in a few places as well. Again, so that they can avoid being bitten. If they get bitten, the shark is mostly biting skin, really. And they're also, they're the bloodiest animals on the planet or close to it. So there's 17 milliliters of blood per 100 grams of mass, which is a lot.
Starting point is 00:07:55 At least twice as much as any other fish, I think. And also apparently they maybe have the blood because they need something to fill the space between their flesh and their skin. They've just got to put some liquid in there. So they're like, well, I guess I'll make more blood to fill myself up. They're so weird. It seems so inefficient as a fish to have a loose set of pajamas on. Very handy. What's going on with their name, I wonder?
Starting point is 00:08:20 Hagfish, because they're not witches. They're not witches. No. No. I just wonder if there's any link between that and hag rid, which is a, you know, that's a word for bedevish. by witches, isn't it? Or that was the origin of the name Hagrid. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:32 I think it's just, it goes back to the, I think it's 1603 or something. It's really quite a long time. And it is just because they thought they were ugly. Although it would have been a worst series of books if a giant hagfish had turned up and slimed Harry Potter. Are you joking? I don't know. Come on.
Starting point is 00:08:50 A hagfish in Harry Potter would absolutely turn the thing a light, wouldn't it? It would be brilliant. It does seem like a missed opportunity for a great. superhero. The hagfish. I can't believe, I mean, it's amazing that this is the one fish that nothing can eat. Well, no, no, anything without gills can eat it. Yeah. Of course, it's only the gillies, of course. South Koreans can eat it. famously lack gills. That's one of the first things everyone knows about people from South Korea. Yeah, they're hugely popular there. They eat about, is it, five million pounds of hagfish meat every year. Wow. And you get hagfish wallets.
Starting point is 00:09:23 You do, don't you? Those are a very useful adaptation, because obviously if someone tries to mug you, it immediately sweats this gloop and the mugger is unable to actually grip your wallet. It's very handy. It's called, it's eel leather, I think. Eelskin leather. So if you've got anything that's eel skin leather, it's actually hagfish. And apparently I read somewhere that it's sort of as a more ethical alternative
Starting point is 00:09:44 to actual leather. I think on the ethical hierarchy maybe, it's sort of as more ethical to get some hagfish than some cow or whatever. But there you go. If you think that's more ethical, you should have a hagfish wallet. It sounds like you don't think it's more ethical. I haven't made up my mind, Andy. I don't have an opinion.
Starting point is 00:10:02 We just present the facts and we let other people draw their conclusions. Does anyone know how hagfish have sex? Do they tie themselves and not? Actually, Anna's right. Nobody knows. So that was the question. Does anyone know how long hagfish live? No.
Starting point is 00:10:19 Seven years. No. Again, nobody knows how long hagfish live. Does anyone know why 90% of them appear to be? female? Another no? It's another no. It's another no. Yeah, but isn't that interesting? Like, of all the had fish that we've caught, 90% of them are female and we don't really know why. It might be that 90% of them are female, or it might be that the females that are easier to catch, we don't really know. Or they're all homophrodites, but when they sense they're about to be caught, they throw away their
Starting point is 00:10:47 penises. That's equally well. I mean, it's all, you know, it's not equally likely. Supposedly, it's really hard to find their eggs. And I think, it's equally, and I think, it's a think this is a bit like, do you remember we talked about eels and how hard it is to find their gonads, but supposedly in the 20th century, scientists found a total of three hagfish embryos, and that was it, because they live really deep down. Before that, there was one man called Bashford Dean, and in 1896 he found 800 eggs, including 150 embryos, and he is the kind of hero of Hagfish research, but he had two main interests in life. One of them was Hagfish and Zoology and the other was armour, military armour. And when he wasn't
Starting point is 00:11:32 collecting hagfish embryos, he was obsessed with collecting medieval armour. He started bidding in auctions age nine for medieval stuff. And anyway, he became a... He was getting too much pocket money. If that's the age you're bidding in auctions. He did get outbid. He got outbid at his first few. But he was, he became a museum curator and was immensely well regarded in his field. And then the First World War happened. And absolutely all the work he'd done over his life paid off because he started designing helmets based on medieval military armour because the US Army needed a metal helmet basically that would stop bullets. And he designed several prototypes. One of them was designed exactly on a 15th century
Starting point is 00:12:12 Italian knight's helmet. So it looks like a proper full face visor with a tiny slit for the eyes. And that was being built in the 20th century because of Bashford-Dene. So we used medieval helmet designs for the First World War because I thought we'd moved on from then. Well, it was for people, that particular one was for people who were in a forward position, say, they were in an extremely dangerous environment and they needed lots of protection for a short space of time
Starting point is 00:12:35 because it was so heavy this helmet. The helmet weighed six kilos alone. Sorry, can I just ask, when you say he found his 10 million embryos or whatever, and we've only ever found three, where are we finding them? Well, say, no, it's Sotheby's when he was 10 years old. The story is that he collected them from fishermen
Starting point is 00:12:55 who had been dangling lines with bait on them and I don't know why that couldn't then be just done again but we think maybe they hide their eggs on the floor of the ocean or that, yeah, so there are lots of theories. Do you guys know the US Navy's been experimenting with hagfish in warfare? Well, for the slime thing or for they getting nutrients? For the slime thing? All right.
Starting point is 00:13:17 They're not getting the soldiers. to climb inside a whale copse. No, not that yet. I'm sure that's on the cards. They have been trying to use the slime as a non-lethal way of stopping these boats and destroying them by chucking it at the propellers of the boats. So if you can slime up the propellers,
Starting point is 00:13:34 you would stop their rotors from turning and you would disable the ship entirely. And are they going to extract the slime from hangfish separately? Or do you just get a big tub of fagfish and then chuck it at the enemy when they come to water? Yeah, you feel like that could be just that, right? Like, it's, they produce. much, but no, I think they're synthesising it.
Starting point is 00:13:51 I think they're turning it into something different. Yeah, what they do is they put the genes that create hagfish slime into e-coli bacteria, and then the bacteria can create the slime themselves, so you can do it on a larger sort of manufacturing scale. Seriously? Yeah. Nice. That feels...
Starting point is 00:14:06 And without scraping thousands of hagfish off the floor of the ocean, I suppose. It's more ethical, I would say. It's probably more ethical, yeah. The bacteria don't think so, James. No, you're right. Who will speak for the bacteria, if not Anna Tijinsky, the bacteria is Braddon. Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is my fact.
Starting point is 00:14:27 My fact this week is that 1982's Time Person of the Year was the personal computer. The article announcing it was written on a typewriter. Very bizarre. Yeah, so this is, obviously, Time, have the tradition of doing Person of the Year, and this was the first year in which they did Machine of the Year. They stepped away from Person of the Year, and they gave it to the computer. but the time officers in 1982 were still running almost entirely on typewriters. They wouldn't upgrade their systems for another year.
Starting point is 00:14:55 So they were behind the times with their own person of the year. Do we think it was a hint to their owners, you know, making it the first of the year to say, guys, we still don't have one of these fuckers, okay? Full count. The article was quite interesting because it referenced Apple's first personal computer, which was called Lisa. But Steve Jobs was really annoyed about it. And that's because he expected to be named person of the year that year.
Starting point is 00:15:20 And so he was really annoyed that the computer got his title. And he was also annoyed because it said that he had a daughter named Lisa, but he denied paternity of that daughter. So he was just ultra-pissed off with that. He was really bad in that article. Steve Jobs, the way he denied the paternity. He said that 28% of the male population of the United States could be the father of this child. Seems unlikely, though, doesn't it?
Starting point is 00:15:42 It does seem unlikely, yeah. Why did he say that? He took a paternity test which showed that there was 94% chance that it was his kid. Oh, I see. Because the way that you said it sounded like he was being unbelievably misogynistic about his ex-partner saying that she slept with all like pretty much every sexually active man in the entire country. That's so true. I should have, yeah, I should have qualified it. That's absolutely what I took it at. But that's not necessarily a negative. That's actually incredibly impressive. If that's what he meant.
Starting point is 00:16:12 So time person of the year is an interesting concept. and also has not been time person of the year for very long. So in fact, at this time when it was time computer of the year, it wasn't replacing the time person of the year tradition. It was time man of the year. So it only got changed to time person of the year, I think, in 1999. Before that, it was always time man of the year, except we should say three crucial occasions since the 1920s
Starting point is 00:16:35 when an individual woman got time women of the year. So Wallace Simpson got it, 1936. And that was obviously because she's shagdardarking. And then in 1981 it was that woman who had sex with 100 million men in America, wasn't it? It was. Yeah. We were just so impressed. Between 1927 and 1999, when they changed it to person of the year, individual women won it the same number of times as Franklin D. Roosevelt, the U.S. president.
Starting point is 00:17:04 Wow. Yeah. That's correct. It was three. It was Queen Elizabeth, as you say, Wallace Simpson and the president of the Philippines. But it's not always good to get, you know, If you get it, doesn't mean it's a mark of high standards. No, no. And I think the point is, because I think people have said this is a sexist award, and it's not.
Starting point is 00:17:22 Time Magazine is just reflecting who has power and influence. And what it reflected was that women had no power and influence. And shamefully, the third person who got it was Corazon Aquino, who was president of the Philippines, who I knew nothing about, but who was a definite good guy in what she did. She overthrew Ferdinand Marcos, established kind of democracy in the Philippines or tried to. and she got it in 1986. But it's a bad thing in that it shows what, I guess, still male-led world we live in. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:55 So, 1998, which is, I guess, the final year where it was man of the year, it was given to two men, which was Bill Clinton and Ken Starr. And Clinton, not for good reasons, it was for his role in the Clinton impeachment. But the thing is, is that in theory, it should have gone to someone very different that year because they held their first online poll where they asked members of the public who do you think should be the man of the year. And the winner with over 50% of the votes
Starting point is 00:18:23 was a WWF wrestler called Mick Foley who plays a character called Mankind who wears Mr. Soco, a sock puppet on his hand and throws himself off high cages. He got 50% of the vote, but he was then pulled from the poll and they gave it to someone else. But it turns out that the poll
Starting point is 00:18:39 doesn't reflect who they give it to anyway. It's a useless poll. Sure, that's what they claimed after the poll when he won it. We were never going to make this decide. Yeah, that's so funny. That should have been the warning about Donald Trump, shouldn't it, that long ago and democracy, the inevitable decline of democracy that we're seeing today, when people are voting for a WWF wrestler, no offence, I know you like WWF, Dan.
Starting point is 00:19:00 Yeah, Mick Folley's amazing. I think it was when Bell and Sebastian won a Brit Award for Best Newcomer instead of Steps, and that was done by the public. I think that was when it all went wrong. Well, look, we've all got our moments where the rot second is. in our opinion. We can all just agree it's bad. Weirdly, you mentioned Donald Trump
Starting point is 00:19:18 because he's obviously got loads of history with Time Magazine. So he was told off by Time Magazine for making up his own Time Magazine cover and putting it on the wall of his golf club. The magazine pointed out, look, the date that you've put on this fake magazine, Kate Winslet, was actually on the cover. And Trump has also claimed
Starting point is 00:19:34 that he's been on the cover more times than anybody else, which is not true. This is not person of the air, just the cover of the magazine. But it is a US president who's been on the front more than anyone else. Do you know who? Obama.
Starting point is 00:19:45 Oh, Nixon. It's Nixon. It's Richard Nixon. He's been on about 55 times. Something crazy like that. Yeah. Actually, it was Nixon's successor, of course, who was one of the only three presidents,
Starting point is 00:19:56 US presidents, who haven't been time person of the old time man of the year since it started. So, so embarrassing. And the first two were very early on. So the first two were Coolidge and Hoover.
Starting point is 00:20:06 And we've talked about how relevant Coolidge was before. And I think one of my favorite, Dorothy Parker, quotes, when she was told that he died and she said something like, how can they tell? And so Coolidge and Hoover were pretty crap. And then the other person, the other poor president who didn't get on there ever, was Gerald Ford. And I hadn't realized about Gerald Ford that so famously he never won a US election, of course.
Starting point is 00:20:26 He just stepped in as the replacement when Nixon had to go. But he stepped in because he was VP. I hadn't realized that he hadn't even won the election as VP. The only reason he was vice president was that in 1973, Spiro Agnew, who had been vice president, had to resign on completely different fraud and bribery-related charges. And so he stepped in as the default replacement as vice president and then found himself as the default replacement as president. Wow.
Starting point is 00:20:51 And really, it's no surprise that he never quite met it at a time person of the year. I think the biggest slam in the time person of the year is from 2006, when the winner was you, which basically means everyone was the winner. And it was because people were, you know, making lots of content on the internet. But then the runner-up was President Ahmadinejad of Iran. So what I think that means is he doesn't count of the U part. So everyone else in the world came first and he came second. That's so good.
Starting point is 00:21:20 So the U, the only people who qualify to be part of the U are people who were content providers before 2006. So that means if you had a MySpace account, for example, and you uploaded anything, then you qualify. So I know that definitely three of us must qualify, Anna, Have you even heard of the internet in 2006? Look, I was joint with Ahmadinejad in second place, and I'm comfortable with that, okay?
Starting point is 00:21:48 Do you know it started off as a mistake, the time man of the year? Or it started off to rectify a mistake the magazine had made. They were really embarrassed because in 1927, Charles Lindbergh crossed the Atlantic, flew across it, a very big deal, first time, and they didn't put it on the cover. They just completely flubbed it. They put a picture of King George V and his wife. wife in costume on the cover instead that week.
Starting point is 00:22:10 Huge editorial blunder and they thought at the end of the year, hey, you know what we could do? We could just say, we've been saving him up to call him the man of the year. And that was how they started. Wow. And the profile of him is hilarious in that magazine
Starting point is 00:22:23 because obviously they were still working out the form. So the profile had, you know, word, colon. So they had feet large. Because when he arrived at the embassy in France, there were no shoes big enough for him. Oh, I thought you meant feet as an F-E-A-T, As in what he did was an extremely large feat. No.
Starting point is 00:22:41 They listed his habits. They said, smokes not, drinks not, does not gamble, eats a thorough going breakfast, avoids rich dishes. It just went on like this. These don't feel like the leading elements of Charles Lindbergh's character, do they? Large feet, non-smoking. They also described him as a very taciturned person. All the adjectives were things like modesty, tacitality, diffidence, women made him blush, apparently. singleness of purpose, occasional curtness and phlegm.
Starting point is 00:23:12 Which, although we do refer to being phlegmatic these days, we very rarely say that someone has a huge amount of flame. He was part man, part hackfish, wasn't he? Just back on computers for a second, I was reading about the Lisa, so this was the computer that was given as part of the machine of the year. And Lisa had a problem. So you know the Y2K problem? Yeah. Have you guys heard of the Y-1995 problem? No. Why-1995?
Starting point is 00:23:42 So this was Lisa, for the same reasons that all computers had the problem with Y2K, the Lisa computer only had a 15-year time limit. So it was launched in 1981. For some reason, they backdated its time limit to 1980, and it only had 15 years to run before the clock freaked out. And so that was a big problem for the Lisa computer. It's not like Apple to create a product that becomes obsolete. for a sad amount of time, is it? That's true. And that's why it wasn't a problem in the end. That's why we haven't heard of the wide in 1995.
Starting point is 00:24:14 In 1982, as well, the first computer virus that went through personal computers from one to another to another. There were a few viruses before that, but this was the big one. It was called the Elk Cloner, and it was invented by Rich Screnta, who was a 15-year-old student, and it spread by floppy disks. So he would put a game on a floppy disk, give it to his friend, and they would put it into their computer. and after 50 times they played the game, they'd get a blank screen, and then a poem would come up saying, it will get on all your discs, it will infiltrate your chips.
Starting point is 00:24:45 Yes, it's the cloner. And then it found itself a little place to live in your computer, and then the next time you put another floppy disk on it would go on there, and it's spread by floppy. Oh, wow. Think about 15-year-olds is they're very good with computers, but often they don't have a way with words, do they? What do you mean?
Starting point is 00:25:00 I haven't told you the second stanza yet. It goes, it will stick to you like glue. it will modify RAM to send in the cloner. I think we can all agree he was the W.H. Jordan for the 1980s. Just one other thing that I found on computers, specifically in 1982. For the first time ever, a movie, Tron, had used computers to do CGI. But they weren't nominated for an Oscar at that year's Oscars because the Academy saw it as cheating to have used a computer. So no nomination.
Starting point is 00:25:31 And the best special effects went to E.T. for that bicycling across the moon. Wow. Pretty. That was pretty good. And because they didn't use special effects, they did manage to actually get someone to bicycle across the moon and then film it, didn't they?
Starting point is 00:25:43 Yeah, they fired them out of a massive cannon, didn't they? Yeah. That small child. What they did was that was a real moon shot that they'd taken and they used a load of charts and stuff to work out exactly when the best shot of a moon would be and where they had to go to America. And they shot this amazing real scene.
Starting point is 00:26:02 And then they put green screen to pull. put someone like a model of a bike going in front of it. Wait, hang on, because when you say moonshot, moonshot has a different meaning, doesn't it? Doesn't it? Doesn't it? I think moon shot is, oh, this is a real moon shot. You know, it's a sort of one and a million attempt to do something.
Starting point is 00:26:16 I seemed you meant it was a bare bottom. I don't, I haven't seen E.T. But I don't think it's a massive bare bottom that's at the... You haven't seen E. You just told us an amazing story about the most famous shot in the entire film. Yeah, well, I know all about it. Why would I watch it? No, I'm joking.
Starting point is 00:26:31 But I haven't seen that, obviously. Like, no. That is criminal. I'm still shocked sometimes when you say that you haven't, because I know you watched lots of films recently. I've watched all modern films, yeah, but I haven't watched anything old, really. I haven't seen either. I feel like I'm too old now.
Starting point is 00:26:44 You haven't seen ETA. I have to give you fair treatment after the same years of change. You haven't seen E.T. Done? I've seen it at least three times on covering us all. Don't worry, Andy. Nice. I hope they don't give time person of the year for everyone who's watched E.T.
Starting point is 00:27:00 It's just me. Anna, President Ahmed Dinajad. Okay, it is time for fact number three. That is Anna. My fact this week is that in order to decide which direction to go and preach every day, Franciscans spun round and round until they were so dizzy that they fell over and then went in whichever way their head was pointing. This was just a group of early Franciscan preachers.
Starting point is 00:27:30 so in the early 1200s who got into this. And I learned this. This is kind of transgressing in a way that we haven't transgressed before. I'm bringing the adverts into the podcast because I learned this on a great course's course. Oh, oh my God. You get separate advertising money that the rest of us to do this. I'm getting a huge amount in order to share this fact.
Starting point is 00:27:52 It's not even true. No, look, I'm sorry, I'm listening to this amazing lecture series. It's by a guy called Flip DiLeader who's a lecture series on the high middle. ages and there was this bit about Franciscan monks and they are fascinating so the reason that they preached in this way was because they didn't really believe in planning for the future they thought that was all very sinful because God should decide what you do it's up to God everything you do and planning from the future is like you saying I know better than God and so you know they mustn't choose which direction they walk in they'll leave it to God and it was actually portrayed
Starting point is 00:28:24 in a film wasn't it which I've never seen but I really want to called the Flowers of St. Francis Rossellini film where I think St. Franciscans do it at some point in it? I think St. Francis does it. And in that, I'm not showing that movie, but the flowers of St. Francis was like pretty much a biography of St. Francis, wasn't it? Yeah. And so they say that he did it, and that's why his followers did it, right? Yeah. Yeah. St. Francis sounds like an interesting dude. Yeah. Apparently would sometimes strip to his pants while preaching, his undergarments. I'm not sure. I don't think they had M&S Y fronts back in the day. But he would give his clothes away. And he played.
Starting point is 00:29:00 I haven't been able to find more information about this. He played a kind of proto-gitar while preaching, which had been condemned by the authorities, and he played his own songs on it, and he encouraged others to play the instrument too. The red hot chili peppers, isn't he, getting down to his pants and playing a guitar. In front of a massive crowd.
Starting point is 00:29:18 I never thought of him like that, but yes. I don't think he thought of himself like that. Yeah, he was strange. He converted, according to one story, when a crucifix spoke to him, just hanging out in a church. the crucifix said, hey, you need to go and rebuild this church roof. So he thought, well, yeah, the crucifix has told me, I'll do it. And he went and begged for money and stones to do that.
Starting point is 00:29:39 And his parents were very embarrassed by his crazy behaviour and his stripping down to his underwear. And it did a lot of weird stuff. So when trying to work out what rules to include in the Franciscan order for his monks, he just got a Bible. And again, because he loved the randomness, he just said, we'll randomly open the Bible on three pages. and the first three things we see will have them as the rules. Unfortunately, they were quite good things. I think he must have done that a few times because the Bible is a very big book with a lot of crazy stuff. Some weird shit, yeah.
Starting point is 00:30:13 Only ever own 13 goats on a Tuesday. That we have to go and attack the Canaanites. A lot of his early attempts failed. That's really interesting. He didn't used to just exclusively preach to humans. though. He would preach to animals. He would preach to birds. Yeah. That's why he's famous far, isn't it? The most famous thing, really. Uh-oh, glad to mention the most famous thing. I didn't get that out of the way.
Starting point is 00:30:37 I don't actually know much about this guy. Yeah, he once persuaded a wolf to stop attacking some locals. They came to an agreement whereby they would feed the wolf, but that was due to his great communication skills with animals. That was very good. I literally all I knew about him before this research was sort of an image of a guy with a bird landing on his outstretched hand. Yeah, he's sort of a patron state of all these animals. He went to the Middle East to try and stop the crusades from happening. Very bullsy.
Starting point is 00:31:09 He visited Saladin's nephew, who was in charge of the defence against the Christian invaders, and they spent a week talking, and they had a really good summit about all sorts of stuff, and Saladin's nephew was very impressed with him. And then Francis went to speak to the cardinal, who was in charge of the... invasion effort, Cardinal Pelagius Galvani, and said, look, I've had a great summit with
Starting point is 00:31:31 this guy and I think maybe you should call off this crusade and it did not work. Right. So he went to the wrong guy. He just got pissed with a nephew, an irrelevant nephew for a week. And then had his attempts rejected. But he was a bit naive, I think. He sent a bunch of Franciscists and monks to go preaching in Germany. So this was in Italy that the order started.
Starting point is 00:31:52 He sent 60 of his members to go preaching in Germany. But because you weren't supposed to really plan for the future, you just had to trust to God. He said, you don't need to learn German, because if God wants you to be able to communicate with him, you will. And so they turned up, and they picked up that yeah was a thing that meant yes.
Starting point is 00:32:09 And that was it. And so it was all fine while people were saying, hey, are you nice guys? Do you want to drink? And they were like, yeah, yeah. And then when they said, are you guys heretics? Are you guys criminals?
Starting point is 00:32:18 And they kept going, yeah, yeah, yeah. And they all ended up sort of being arrested and then having to return to Italy. What they should have done is got a guidebook and then opening it on a random page and just said whatever it said on the guidebook. I don't think we've got any asthma medication and a phrase. Favorite thing that I read about Francis.
Starting point is 00:32:38 So one of the things that we have actually mentioned before is that he's accredited with creating the first nativity scene in case you missed that episode ages ago. He's responsible for that. He used live animals to do it. But my favorite thing is that he once had to put a stop to something, which was the dead body of a dead Franciscan was performing too many miracles
Starting point is 00:32:56 and it was causing traffic jams in the town basically where it was happening because just all these miracles kept happening so people kept coming. So he had to pray for the miracles to stop because it was too chaotic. And they did, yeah. What kind of miracles?
Starting point is 00:33:11 Was it just like a hippopotamus appears in the middle of the road? I don't know, I guess it's someone who could suddenly walk again. You know, that kind of stuff when you go near something that's of religious importance. And so this was a...
Starting point is 00:33:20 Anna, that's Jim Angie you're thinking of. You're right. And James, Jumanji was a 1995 film, much like E.T. I've watched Jumanji. It came out last year. Oh, my, a heretic. Jumangi heretic. Yeah, this was a Franciscan called Peter Kattini, and this was in 1220. What kind of traffic jams could you have in 1220?
Starting point is 00:33:42 I know. Like a human traffic, I guess. It was just not good for the area. You can have a cart jam? There was actually, there was a cart filled with hagfish slime, three carts. Which just ruined everyone's day. The Franciscans themselves, they got in trouble in 2001 for hiring a Milanese fashion designer to redesign their habit. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:02 Oh, really? They said the old one is too heavy and it was cliched. That's fair, isn't it? I think. I mean, I guess whether you're cliched or not, shouldn't be a worry when you're a monk. Yeah. I think the point of Franciscans being entirely anti-materialist and, you know, you don't really want to have any physical possessions to deploy a Milanese fashion designer. Well, the new one, they said it was meant to be.
Starting point is 00:34:24 simpler, cleaner, more dynamic and professional. And it also had a breast pocket for a mobile phone. And the other orders were very envious of the Franciscans, but there was a bit of a kerfuffle about it. Here's another cliche about monks is the tonsure, which is their haircut. So they have like hair just going around the side of their head, don't they?
Starting point is 00:34:44 And then it's all bowled on top. And the reason that they have that is because they want to replicate the crown of thorns that Jesus wore. But there's loads of different versions of it. And the Roman Catholic one is the one that most people will recognize like Friottuck had and stuff. That goes around like a crown of thorns. But before that, in Britain, they had a Celtic one. And it was basically you shaved a triangle in the top of your head.
Starting point is 00:35:08 So you had a massive triangular bald patch at the top of your head and you had hair everywhere else. And I just think that that sounds like that's the next thing in Milanese fashion houses, isn't it? A triangular ball patch. I had no idea that that was a crown of thorns thing. I thought it was to do with... I thought it was just genetic male pattern boldness affects monks. The same way it affects all of us.
Starting point is 00:35:31 Yeah, I mean, it might be, you know, like when you're starting to go bold and then you start shaving your head, it's like, no, no, it's a crown of thorns, honestly. And another person with a haircut like that, Willie Thorne. Interestingly, who's the snooker player? It's a very niche reference for our listeners.
Starting point is 00:35:48 Still? Our demographic of listeners to know such things of a fish, I'm not sure how many of them know who Willie Farn is, but... There are a couple of middle-aged men guffawing away in their arms show. I found a few other bizarre people from that time, so St Joseph of Cupertino. He's an interesting character, much like I was saying with the other guy, Peter, causing traffic with his constant miracles. Cupertino had a problem where he was constantly flying. So he was known as the Flying Saint.
Starting point is 00:36:17 And people, if they'd mentioned Jesus, he would just start levitating up. This was a constant thing that would happen. And it became a problem in his life. I'm not surprised. If he is a preacher, people are going to be mentioning Jesus all the time to him. Even if someone just hits their thumb with a hammer and says, Jesus, does he start floating? He starts floating. It got even worse for him.
Starting point is 00:36:35 If you started mentioning saints, any saint, he would start flying. So it became very disruptive to the point where people didn't like it. And they ostracized him. They got rid of him and said, you can't be part of this. How did they do it? Did they just keep going, Jesus, Saint, Jesus, Saint, Jesus, Satan. Until he floated away. far they couldn't see him anymore. Yeah, no, he ended up in a monastery and they kept him in a cell
Starting point is 00:36:56 by himself. So he must have done some other things wrong other than just floated. But he's, yeah, so that was a problem. Awful being kept in a cell as well. He must have hit his head on the ceiling constantly. And obviously once he hits it, goes, Jesus! And then re-hits it. It's a horrible loop. I like the fact that another one of the leading preachers at the time who actually ended up being labeled a heretic, even though he was basically the same as Francis Vassisi, was Waldo. No. Wow.
Starting point is 00:37:23 The Waldensians. But there was a big search for him, wasn't there? Afterwards. Yeah, he was always in crowds, though, because he attracted to huge crowds. Right. Another guy, St. Dennis. Have you heard of St. Dennis? He had his head chopped off but continued to walk and preach afterwards.
Starting point is 00:37:38 And he was made the patron saint of headaches. If you had your head cut off, would you have phantom head syndrome? No, I think you'd have phantom body syndrome, wouldn't you? Yeah, because you're minders in the head part. I don't think he lasted too long. I think he picked up his head and walked for six kilometers and buried it and then fell down. I think he did last quite a long time if that's what he did. I think that's much more impressive than I could handle.
Starting point is 00:38:03 That's true. Twirling monks are still a thing to a certain extent. Oh yeah? Oh yeah. So in 2019 last year, there was a Buddhist monk. She was called Master Hui Yan. She was in Taiwan and she was blessing a temple. And you can see footage of her doing this online.
Starting point is 00:38:18 and she blesses the temple by going along the red carpet up towards it, twirling 150 times in a row. Wow. Unfortunately, she then throws up, and it's a less spiritual ending to the video than you would expect. That would be an easier way of doing the San Francisco thing, wouldn't it? It's like whatever direction the vomit goes. Follow it.
Starting point is 00:38:39 Follow your chunder. So there is a modern day follower of the Franciscan faith, and this is in Brazil. It's a lady. She's a grandmother in Brazil, and she, as part of her faith, would pray to St. Anthony of Padua. Apart from her grandchildren,
Starting point is 00:38:56 realized that she wasn't praying to a figurine of St. Anthony of Padua at all. She was praying to a figure of Elrond, Lord of Riverdale, the Lord of the Rings. And she'd been praying to this elf every single day for a couple of years, and it turned out it was just an elf.
Starting point is 00:39:12 She had lovely pointy years at the end of it. That was the thing. We need to move on in a second. I was just looking into other leading religious figures in this period. And someone who is particularly amazing is Hildegard of Bingham. So I didn't know much about her. Fagely heard of her, but she was this very, very influential Christian mystic. And she sort of traveled around a lot, very unusual for a woman to independently travel around
Starting point is 00:39:35 and used to draw these huge crowds. She was a rock star. And she was a composer. She's actually the only person really whose music we still play from the Middle Ages. So it's still played and sung today. and she was a philosopher, she's like the founder of German natural history, she was amazing, and she was very religious nun, but she also invented her own language. And I think it's the first person we have evidence of doing kind of what we did with Esperanto, which is trying to invent a perfect language, a new alphabet. And we've got this whole glossary of her language that she wrote in. It's over a thousand words. And she just made up this language. It's full of zeds. And it's really weird stuff. Like she's got a specific word for great, great, great, great grandfather. And she's got, you know, drunkards, vaginas, urine. She just made up her whole language.
Starting point is 00:40:21 She covered all the main subjects, didn't she? My drunk great, great, great, great, great, grandfather's got a vagina. She could say that. And it's full of urine. Okay, it is time for our final fact of the show, and that is Andy. My fact is that in 2004, a Canadian cheesemaker dropped $50,000 worth of cheese into a lake to make it taste better. but then lost the cheese. Oh, no.
Starting point is 00:40:50 I know. Oh, guy. So that could possibly be like the most tasty bit of cheese that's ever been made and we'll never find it. I know. After 15 years in the lake, it's probably approaching its peak perfection now, I would say. So this was a Canadian cheesemaker.
Starting point is 00:41:06 He ran a frommagery called La Frommagery Boivin. He dropped 800 kilos of cheese into the water of this lake in 2004, and he let it see. sit there for a year and he was really confident that it would be delicious once it had had a bit of of lake treatment but they started looking for it it wasn't in the spot they left it in and then they ramped up the search a bit so they started sending in divers and then they sent in some tracking equipment after three dives they still hadn't found the cheese and the cheesemaker was called luke bova he said it got too expensive at some point you can't be crazy and they just called
Starting point is 00:41:42 off the search so this is a phantom cheese that the world will never get to eat so the reason that thought to put all this cheese in the water is actually because a fisherman had come to them a few years earlier and said that he'd found a bit of their cheese at the bottom of a lake. Now, I don't know how that bit of cheese got there, but he's found it. And the first thing he thought when he got this cheese out of the lake is, oh, just try it and see what it's like. And he said it was the most tasty cheese that he'd ever had. And so obviously, this framagery guy thought, well, I'll just put all the rest of my cheese in the water. So this is the complex science on which
Starting point is 00:42:18 Frommagias depend is just the random word of a crazy fisherman who eats cheese off the bottom of the lake. Basically. He just spares the hagfish off. And also they should have seen it coming, right? Because wasn't the lake called a bay de ha-ha? Yes. It's one of the few places in the world
Starting point is 00:42:34 which has punctuation in the name of the place because ha-ha has exclamation marks after it. Yeah. Even if they had found the cheese, there is serious doubt over whether they would have been able to sell it because the Canadian Food Inspection Agency are real sticklers about just put dropping food in a lake and then selling it to the public.
Starting point is 00:42:52 And they said, yeah, we would have needed to check this throughout its aging process. And then they interviewed afterwards one of the divers who was looking for the cheese, a guy called Mr. Daffour, and they said, are you not a bit sad that you didn't find the cheese? He's like, no, I'm really optimistic because the Titanic sank in 1912
Starting point is 00:43:10 and it was only found in 1985. So as far as he's concerned, there's still plenty of time to find this cheese. I like the idea that the Oscar-winning film in the year 2060 is going to be a film called Bravan's Cheese, where they finally dreads up the giant cheese from the bottom of the lake. You know what? I would have thought that would be better than Titanic,
Starting point is 00:43:29 because I haven't seen Titanic, but... Surprise, surprise. You know what's going to happen at the end, don't you? Whereas in this cheese, it's an actual mystery of what happens at the end. You're right. And I read also an article. This was it in 20.05, Andy. And obviously in 205, it was quite a slow news year.
Starting point is 00:43:47 And so it was in the news a fair amount. And then afterwards, they said that he was going to do it again. And he was going to fit the cheddar with a tracking device. Amazing. But then I couldn't find if he's actually done it. And there's nothing on his website to say that he's done it. So I don't know. Maybe he looked back to that quote that Andy gave us where he said,
Starting point is 00:44:06 at a certain point of crazy, you've got to realize you've got to stop and turn it. around and he reflected a little bit on that. They used a $1 million multi-beam sonar device to find this cheese. What? It's amazing. It's absolutely amazing. It's basically the Canadian Nessi is this cheese. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:44:25 There is lots of, when you're probing cheese or when you're trying to do experiments on cheese, so there has been a new method developed in the last year in Uruguay, Uruguayan scientists, developed a method to non-destructively probe. emmental cheese, which is massive news for the industry. Does Emmetal have holes in it? It does. So surely it's easy to probe without destroying it. You just go through one of the holes.
Starting point is 00:44:49 There aren't holes on the outside because obviously it's right. And I think you knew that and you were teasing me. Basically, you need to measure when the eyes, as they call the holes, are big enough. And when they're at the right size, the cheese is ripe. And if it's too long, then the eyes all merge into each other and the cheese collapses. Disaster. So you make a batch of cheese. And to measure it, normally you would need to.
Starting point is 00:45:09 sacrifice a wheel of cheese every time. That's a lesser known bit of the Bible, isn't it? Where they sacrifice a wheel of cheese. Abraham says, to God, I won't give you my son. But I will give you this baby bell. Oh, very good. So anyway, so normally you need to, as I say, sacrifice one of your precious cheeses every time you want to measure the bubble size.
Starting point is 00:45:30 But these Uruguayan scientists have invented a kind of magic cheese hammer. It's kind of a sonic electrical probe, which allows you to tell from, the sound. It's like a tuning fork if you'd like for cheese. But they're very specialist instruments, obviously, and you need a lot of training to tell from the sound whether a cheetah's right. But the new method is an electrical hammer,
Starting point is 00:45:52 which allows any old schmo who doesn't have years of training and expertise to tell the rightness of the cheese without destroying it. So this is big news. I was in a cheese shop the other day. No, the other month, in France when we're allowed to go outside. And I'm They had, like, the back room, you could look into the back room, and they had all the massive wheels of cheese. You know, like, they're really, really expensive, aren't they?
Starting point is 00:46:18 And they used them as, like, lone collateral and stuff like that. And it was just really amazing to see how big these massive wheels of cheese are, because they're absolutely huge. How big are we talking? Give us an animal. I would say 350 weasels. Wow. Thank you. That's huge.
Starting point is 00:46:36 That's done nothing for me. Is that an elephant? What is that? Could we not pick one animal? It's kind of a big, really big pig. Yeah. Or a small pony? Like a Shetland pony.
Starting point is 00:46:47 But if you squashed it down into a circle. Yeah, are you cutting the legs off? You're bending the legs into the body and then making it into a circle. Either way, I think the authorities will be taking a close interest. Actually, the most interesting Canadian cheese I could find was a giant cheese. The mammoth cheese. This was prepared for the Chicago World's Fair of 1893, but it came from Canada, from Ontario, which is one of its biggest cheese producing provinces. And it weighed 9,900 kilos, which I was trying to see what that was the equivalent of.
Starting point is 00:47:20 And it's the equivalent of 144 average-sized women. How many is that in weasels? You're going to have to do the weasels to women conversion yourselves at home. That's amazing. It was an amazing undertaking. He used milk from dairies all over the country, all over Canada, and they had a special railway car made because the first one they put it on it just fell through the bottom of it. So they had to transport it by this railway from Ontario to Chicago.
Starting point is 00:47:49 And they had a cheese timetable which they sent ahead to all the stations. So everyone in the stations between the two places flocked to their station when they checked the timetable for when the cheese was pulling in so that they could come and see it. And by the time it got to Chicago, it had so many thousands of signatures on it from the people who'd come to see it. On the cheese. On the blin'in cheese. They had to, it was on the rind.
Starting point is 00:48:10 Yeah, yeah, yeah. So they repainted the rind. Fine, but that's still pretty. So, gross. While the cheese was going on the train, people were running alongside it signing at all. It sounds like it must have stopped at the stations, but I don't think anyone was boarding and getting on and off.
Starting point is 00:48:23 It wouldn't have been a sold train just for the cheese. You'd have a carriage for it, wouldn't you? Would you? No. They probably just had a carriage. You wouldn't send a whole train and just have all the other carriages empty and just one cheese in one carriage. But also, equally, you wouldn't be like sat. encourage A or B of a train and have to climb around the massive cheese to get to the buffet
Starting point is 00:48:40 cart. That is the buffet cart. What year was this, Sanna? 1893. 1893. Oh, okay, because I found another mammoth cheese from 1866, which is also shipped around to Toronto and New York. And I only know about it because of the famous poem that was written about it.
Starting point is 00:48:59 Do you guys know the cheese poet of Canada? No. This is a guy called James McIntyre, acknowledged to be. be one of the worst poets ever. He was born in the early 1800s and he was a poet, but no one knew this until after he died. He only got fame because he was included in collections with titles like Very Bad Poetry, which got famous. And his most famous poem is called Ode to the Mammoth Cheese weighing over 7,000 pounds. And as it is that James read some poetry, I'll give you a quick extract. We have seen the Queen of Cheese lying quietly at your ease, gently fanned by evening breeze,
Starting point is 00:49:35 by fair form, no flies dare seize. All gaily dressed, soon you'll go, to the provincial show, to be admired by many a beau. In the city of Toronto. So to the mammoth cheese, weighing over 7,000 pounds. That is brilliant.
Starting point is 00:49:53 That's another one that should have stopped computer code. Another Canadian cheese, craft, you know, craft cheese. So cheese slices there, Canadian. The guy who invented craft cheese was Canadian. He invented pasteurized cheese, which everyone wanted to call embalmed cheese when he first invented it, because all the cheesmakers thought you can't have this kind of industrial process making cheese.
Starting point is 00:50:17 It should only be our special cheeses that we make that you can sell. And so you're going to have to call it embalm cheese. And then in the end, they had to call it processed cheese, of course. But he fought against that. And he had a business partner. He was going to go out of business, but he decided to have a business partner. And he made Jesus Christ his business partner. This is on the craft website, if you go on there.
Starting point is 00:50:38 I didn't think Jesus had a very good head for business. Did you not say Jesus Christ? I didn't say Jesus Christ, but that's what he remarked himself as. No, it's on the website. It says that basically he was doing really badly, and then he decided to make Jesus Christ his business partner. He gave 25% of his personal profits to the church, and suddenly everything picked up, and he became really, really popular.
Starting point is 00:51:02 And then a few years later, he brought him. his brothers, Charles Herbert, Frederick, Norman and John into the business. Wow. What a slam for the brothers to have been invited after Jesus Christ. Yeah. We have God to thank for Kraft. I was actually reading a, there was a book written by a random guy who visited the Kraft family a few years ago. And the family tradition says it's been passed down that the reason he got the inspiration to pair up with God slash Jesus as his business partner was when he was just, he was selling cheese in Canada, like one trotting around the street. in his cheese cart, and the donkey that was pulling the wagon from which he was selling,
Starting point is 00:51:38 turned around to him and told him that he had to make things right with God and get him involved in the company. And it was only after the donkey spoke to him that he went into this very lucrative business partnership. A talking donkey? It's basically Shrek. I mean, I haven't seen Shrek,
Starting point is 00:51:56 but I think there is a talking donkey in it, isn't there? So annoying how you're beating me with all the film references. That is amazing. We're going to have to wrap up in a second. Anyone got anything else they want to add before we do? I like the Cyclops and the Odyssey basically ran a cheese factory. Did he? Just sort of looking at old cheeses.
Starting point is 00:52:16 Did he? If you look at the Odyssey from a different angle, then Odysseus is really the villain here. So he goes with all his men to the Cyclops' big caves. And so you probably know that the Cyclops had a big sheep farm because the way they all escaped at the end is by clinging to the underside of these sheep. as they counted out of the caves. But basically, all these men snuck into the Cyclops's caves, and they found that the Cyclops has been milking all of his sheep
Starting point is 00:52:42 and then storing the milk in his caves, kind of like Rockford is stored, in order to mature into cheese. And so they sort of stole the cheese from the caves and escaped. But I just love the fact that the Cyclops was just a cheese farmer. That story, honestly, the Cyclops is the good guy in that story, isn't he? Because they blind him. He's only got one eye to begin. him with and they blind him and then they steal all of his stuff.
Starting point is 00:53:09 I always hated that story. You know, they blind him so they hide underneath the sheep so they can't feel him because he feels the top of the sheep, doesn't he? I don't know. I think that's sneaky and not very nice. He is going to eat them, isn't he? He specifically says, when I come back, I'm going to kill you and eat you. That's just nature.
Starting point is 00:53:25 But that's because they've eaten all of his cheese. He's got nothing left to put in his sandwiches. I think the theory is that it's feta or that it's a kind of proto fetter. Isn't it? Is it sheep's cheese, feta? I think so. Yeah. I weirdly don't know this story.
Starting point is 00:53:38 We've talked about it on this podcast. Don't read it. I love that you do, though, James. I love that there's a period where you stop taking stuff in, but then you go far back it up and you pick it up again. Yeah. It's very exciting. We've just told you the story in such a weird order now.
Starting point is 00:53:53 I wonder what your head is like trying to piece together. This is like that movie memento that I haven't seen where everything's in a weird order. Oh, God. Okay, that's it. That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening. If you'd like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we said over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shriverland. Andy at Andrew Hunter-Ram. James. At James Harkin. And Anna? You can email podcast.QI.com. Yep. Or you can go to our group account, which is at no such thing. Or go to our website. No Such Thing as a Fish.com. You'll find links up there to all of our previous episodes and bits of merchandise to buy as well. As ever, we hope you're doing well. We hope you're all. and safe and we'll be back again next week with another episode we'll see you then goodbye

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