No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Holiday On Uranus
Episode Date: May 28, 2021Anna, James, Dan and Andy discuss bowling, bonging, fighting and farting. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. ...
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Hey everyone, welcome to this week's episode of Fish. What you're about to hear is a live show that we recorded at the O2 Forum in Kentish Town. It was amazing to be back in front of an audience. We're not going to be doing that again until later in the year when we do our tour nerd immunity. However, there is going to be a special different podcast we're going to be doing on June the 14th.
There is. We couldn't resist going back out in front of an audience because we're suckers for having ego massages. So we're crashing Richard Herring's podcast.
I believe it calls it, the Richard Herring Lester Square Theatre podcast.
And that is going to be on the 14th of June and you can come to that.
That's right.
But it's not happening, as the title says, at Lester Square Theatre.
It is going to be happening, in fact, at the Clapham Grand.
Do get tickets.
It's always fun.
Richard Herring is one of the great interviewers of modern times.
He's certainly the pod king of the UK.
And he always asks us really awkward questions and gets Andy particularly to reveal things
He's revealed to no one ever and never wanted to.
Yep.
So come and find out about Andy's braille size, et cetera.
By booking tickets there.
Go to no such thing as a fish.com for tickets.
Okay, on with the show.
Welcome to another episode and No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast this week
coming to you live from the O2 Forum in Kentish Town.
My name is Dan Shriver.
I am sitting here with Anna Tushinsky.
Andrew Hunter Murray and James Harkin.
And once again, we have gathered around the microphones
with our four favorite facts from the last seven days.
And in no particular order, here we go.
Starting with fact number one, and that is Anna.
My fact this week is that one of the main villains
in China's equivalent of WWE
is Steve, the English as a second language teacher.
That is terrifying.
It's a frightening.
concept for a lot of Chinese people trying to learn English, I think.
It's quite a small outfit compared to WWE, which you may remember as WWF, but of course
it's not allowed to be called that anymore because the Wildlife Fund got that name.
Yes.
It was a big fight with Hulk Hogan and a panda.
Bizarrely the Panda won that one.
So this is Middle Kingdom Wrestling, MKE, which is the very nascent Chinese pro wrestling
organization. It was started in 2015
and yeah, it's got some
imaginative evil dudes.
So Steve, the English was a second language teacher.
He brings exam textbooks into the ring.
Does he? Does he like hit them with it?
I think he does a bit, yes. Does he?
I thought he did. He probably does. I was imagining he just
opened it up in front of them and said, answer these questions.
I know.
Grades them, yeah. I read the article
that you sent round about this, Anna, I read
something. It was in sixth tone, I think,
was the website. Yeah. And
it said, burger, burger, repeats the English language instructor,
showing a picture of a hamburger to his opponent.
And then the commentator says,
cowardly attack here by Steve, the ESL teacher,
letting issues from his personal life creep into the business life again.
Yeah, his wife cheated on him with a hamburger.
Very awkward.
But they do.
I mean, it is like WWE, used to be WWF,
you know, amazing characters.
They've got the bamboo crusher,
who's a guy who comes out with sort of...
It's basically he's meant to be a panda
and he's just got two black marks around his eyes.
Yeah.
There's another character who is the Curry Kid
and he wears a devil mask quite scary.
And then on his head, there's a...
I thought it was a weird looking hat.
And I zoomed right in and it's a paper plate
with rice on top.
I don't know if it's real rice
and it's like finishing school
where you have to balance it on your head
the whole way through.
Wow.
But that was him.
That's amazing.
There's Queen Marie, who just wears a crown.
She's the only lady.
And there's Buffer Da Boomb Box.
No, sorry, buffer and Da Boomb Box.
Who carries a Boon Box.
Wow.
It's a great cast characters.
He's Buffer.
He's Buffer.
And Dubboon Box.
And A Boon Box is his sidekick.
You said there was only one female wrestler there.
Does that mean she fights against the men?
I think they fight other wrestling outfits.
So there's another outfit called the OWE Oriental Wrestling Entertainment Entertainment.
and I think they've interacted,
but I'm not sure what Queen Marie does.
Interesting, because do you know that TV show glow
that used to be on?
Yeah.
Brilliant TV show, the gorgeous ladies of wrestling,
it's called, and it's about women's wrestling,
but it was based on real-life wrestling.
And they brought in all these women
who were mostly dancers and stuff like this,
and there was only one woman who had any wrestling experience.
She was called Dee Booha,
and she played Matilda the Hun.
But when she was doing her wrestling,
she wasn't allowed to fight against the men
and there were no other women who could
fight against her so they needed to find someone to fight her
and they found a female bear
who she fought
it's Hulk con-converted the panda all over again
so she wasn't allowed to fight men
they had to find a female
they found a female bear
I know okay so surely fighting a female bear
is harder than fighting a man
have you not seen that thing on Twitter
that's been doing the rounds
that most men think they can beat up a bear.
Oh, I'm so glad that we've got onto this.
I didn't think we would.
But it was really interesting
because the question specified,
this was a you gov poll,
which was, you know,
what percent of men and women
think they could beat which animals?
And it was within the last week, wasn't it?
And it was something like 38% of men
think they could beat a chimpanzee, unarmed.
Chimpanzees are strong.
It was like 7% of men thought they could beat a lion.
Yeah, and it was something like 8% of men.
And women were the same number, weirdly.
both men and women, about seven or eight percent,
think they could beat an elephant in a fight if unarmed.
Wow.
I mean, what do you do?
How do you fight?
You grab the trunk, obviously.
You grab the trunk.
But then what?
I mean, it submits, I guess.
I mean, they're very sensitive.
Yeah.
This thing of sort of the villain wrestlers, the heels,
you know, the sort of,
which I don't really understand
because I'm not a wrestling fan,
where you have to stay in character,
no one really acknowledges the...
Yeah, it's a...
Yeah, it's a whole thing.
You don't acknowledge the...
kind of fictional elements of the universe
and, you know, all of this.
But this was such a big thing
that wrestlers in the 70s and 80s
weren't allowed to travel to matches together
if they were on opposite sides
in the fictional universe of wrestling.
Oh, really?
So, like, if two of them saw each other
on a plane, they'd have to get in a big fight.
Basically, yeah.
And so there were two wrestlers
called Hacksaw Jim Duggan.
Oh, yeah.
Bubba beats people up.
Okay, so...
Hacks or Jim Duggan.
I should just say,
we are very much on dance
specialist subjects in the section.
That's not even his theme tune.
That was like a random WWF music album
that was released in 1995.
It's great.
Brent the Hairman Hart has a love song on it.
Mucha Man Randy Savage.
Keep going, sorry.
Thank you.
So he, C.F. Dan's earlier bit,
hacks or Jim Duggan and an evil character
called the Iron Shake.
Ah.
Classic.
Huge.
Oh, I think I know what you're about to say.
He was at a conference.
The Iron Shake met up with the ultimate
Warrior and he wanted to say hi and the ultimate warrior didn't want to say hi back and so the
Iron Shake slapped the man who said he would say hi. It's very dramatic. It's on YouTube.
That's not what I was going to say.
Anyway, this fact has received such a kicking from Dan, but basically...
I'm just giving background context. Hacks or Jim Duggan.
Thank you. And the Iron Shake were arrested while traveling in the same car in 1987.
Wait, because they were traveling in the same car?
Admittedly, they weren't arrested because of the fictional universe of wrestling being breached.
They were arrested for possession of cocaine and marijuana, but still.
But I bet the police were bloody cross about the fictional world being breached as well, weren't they?
You guys shouldn't even be in the same room together.
Well, there was a guy, another famous pro wrestler in Britain in the 60s, 70s.
Actually, I think wrestled up to the late 80s, 90s called Kendo Nagasaki,
who actually there are two Kendo Nagasakiesarkasaki's.
is a Japanese guy, which sounds about right,
who is called
Kazuo Sakurada, but the famous
one in Britain is just this bloke
called Peter Thornley.
Now, Wikipedia
describes Peter Thornley as
someone who remains a household name
in his home country. Has anyone
heard of Peter Thornley?
No. Right. So it's not, none of the households
here tonight.
But he, yeah, so he was super
committed to the role, and he wore a mask,
and his character was, he had these powers of hypnosis,
and he was very dark and brooding and had a very troubled pass
and he's taking vengeance on everyone, et cetera, et cetera, lots of bullshit.
And he never spoke, so he had to have with him a verbaliser at all times.
It was called Gorgeous George Gillette.
Oh, yeah.
So basically this guy was like sooty, Kendo Nagasaki.
Yeah.
And gorgeous George had to lean over and say,
what's that Kendo Nagasaki?
You're going to beat the shit out of this guy.
Well, I'll tell them, but I don't think they're going to like it.
It was very intimidating.
What do you think of that, boys and girls?
So his life was essentially ruined in the late 70s
because he was sort of living with Gorgeous George at the time, it seems,
and his identity was fully hardcore secret.
No one knew he was.
And then their toilet broke, and they had to call a plumber in.
And the plumber saw Gorgeous George answer the door,
put two and two together and was like,
I bet that guy who's sitting there on the sofa is Kendo Nagasaki,
because he's hanging out with Gorgeous George.
And so he then...
printed loads of leaflets saying
this is the real identity of Kendo Nagasaki
and this is the address he lives at
and he used to hand them out at all the gigs they did.
Really?
Whenever he'd put adverts in the newspaper
so there'd be a big ad that Kendo Nagasaki's
having a big fight here, then just
below it would appear posted by this
plumber a thing saying the above wrestler
Kendo Nagasaki is Peter Thornley
and he lives at this address.
And everyone in the UK
has gone, we know who Peter Thornley is.
But that is the reality.
when you've got these amazing characters
and then the real life,
they do, that you do,
you know, Yokozuna,
one of the greatest characters in WWF,
he was a Japanese sumo wrestler.
He wasn't, he was from Hawaii,
and his name was Rodney in real life.
You know, Holthoggan, his name's Terry, you know.
Is it?
Yeah, is it Terry Hogan?
No, it's called Belayer,
something like that,
Balea.
I should have learned that you would know.
Yeah, Terry Balea.
Okay, here's a quiz question for you, Dan,
seeing as you're such an expert.
Okay.
In which country do you think was
the highest attended wrestling performance in history.
Ooh, I'm going to say Philippines.
No. Keep going.
I'm going to say America.
You've got 193 countries in the world.
I'm going to say...
South Sudan.
Andy, this is my game, sorry.
It's pretty much one of the last places you would think of.
It's North Korea.
What?
Okay.
And in 1995, there was a load of wrestlers.
from America, from WWF,
went over to North Korea
with Mohammed Ali, by the way,
to do a big sort of wrestling show.
One of them was Rick Flair, who I'm sure you will know.
Yeah, the nature boy, Rick Flair.
Always wore red when he was going to lose.
No one knew that at the time.
We've never done a podcast with live footnotes before.
And it's unbelievably annoying.
And he fought against this guy called
Antonio Inoki, who was a Japanese wrestler.
and he kind of had some connections in North Korea
so he could do it.
But there were about 100,000 people
watched this wrestling match.
All North Koreans, and so didn't cheer.
They just sat in silence
and watched this match happen.
And then Rick Flair at the end,
they tried to force him into doing a statement saying,
I can see why North Korea is so great
and why America is so afraid of North Korea
and stuff like that.
But he refused to do that.
But in O'Korea,
who's the Japanese guy,
he was also a politician,
and he once successfully negotiated
with Saddam Hussein
for the release of Japanese hostages,
this wrestler.
Wow.
Isn't that amazing?
And he's so revered
in the Japanese wrestling world
that if you're a Japanese wrestler,
you might request to be slapped in the face by him.
And that might give you some of his courage.
That's the idea.
I didn't know that slapping in the face
is apparently a big wrestling move
I'm learning tonight.
Yeah.
You're not supposed to do it with an open palm, is that right, Dan?
Well, you don't do it with a fist.
You don't do it with a fist.
It's an open palm so that you don't make, it's a more, let's see that noise?
Yeah, thank you.
You don't get that with the, so it's more for the dramatics of it,
and it's obviously safer, and you don't pull hair.
But also, like, there was a tag team called the Bushwhackers,
and they used to lick people's heads.
They were from New Zealand, and I met them as a kid in popcorn.
Sorry, sorry, sorry.
The New Zealand pit was your headline,
but I think what you said just before it was more interesting.
Oh, so their whole thing was they would lick people's heads.
Was this pre-COVID or?
Very safe at the time.
Is that a winning move?
I don't understand how that would incapacitate you.
Did the two of them lick their enemy's head at the same time,
like a sort of finishing move?
No, no, it wasn't a finishing move.
Oh, it was just a mid-match.
Cheeky lick on the head.
Come on, Annie, that's foreplay.
That's crazy.
That's coming first.
It would be before matches.
It would be if they were being interviewed by the WWF, you know, ring announcers and so on.
Why would they, what, they would lick the heads of the people?
Is this mid-match or is this in an interview?
Just you'd lick the interviewer's head?
They'd lick the interviewer's head.
Occasionally, there'd be a mid-match lick if it called for it.
My point is, is when I met them, I asked them to lick my head, and they did.
And because...
They licked your head?
Yeah, both of them.
I've got photos.
I've got, like, a tongue, like, really burrowing right next to the...
What, they had tongues that could burrow into your head?
Big ass tongues,
probably why they started
licking heads professionally.
That's amazing.
Wow.
Can I tell you my favorite fact
I learned about wrestlers,
which will be of interest
to a very small proportion of people?
But I'm going to do it anyway.
Probably done.
Maybe not.
Right, you know David Arquette,
the actor who was...
In scream and...
And what?
And it's very, very little else.
Courtney Cox?
Oh, God.
So as Dan has specified, David Arquette, the actor famous for Scream and Courtney Cox.
He, one of the reasons his career sort of disappeared is that he got really obsessed with wrestling.
So he played this character called Gaudy Boggs in a film, a 2000 film about pro wrestling.
Gordy Box?
That gaudy Box.
Oh, sorry, it just sounded like gaudy Box, which sounds like Courtney Cox.
And I just wondered if that was before or after he met Courtney Cox.
Well, this is after, but this is what's interesting.
They were together, they were married at this point.
He played this character, he got obsessed with pro wrestling.
He was actually crowned the champion of pro wrestling,
which was extremely controversial in the wrestling world
because they were like, he can't even wrestle.
But he got so into it that it became really embarrassing.
And Courtney Cox, as said in interviews,
it was a lot to handle to be with David and to see David at this point
because he suddenly got all consumed by that.
He was going to wrestling matches and being loud and screaming,
and it was kind of insane.
I remember feeling embarrassed.
Now, what is effing weird about that?
Is that as a plot in Friends,
three years before it happened in real life, right?
Who remembers that plot?
Wait, her boyfriend, Tom Selleck,
wants to be the ultimate fighting champion?
It's not Tom Selleck, thank you for the arm of my God.
Is it not Tom Selleck?
No, he is also Monika's lover in Friends, but...
John Fabro?
Yes, it's that guy, yeah.
Wow.
Anyway, how weird is that?
Three years before it happened,
this happened to Monica in Friends
and then happened to Courtney Cox in real life.
Yeah, that is weird.
What a roller coaster.
But now David Arquette.
in 2018, decided to take up pro wrestling
because he wants to redeem his name in the wrestling communities.
How is that a roller coaster if the same thing is happening?
A rollercoaster, you want different things to happen.
It's a shit roller coaster.
What a monorail.
Okay, it is time for fact number two,
and that is Andy.
My fact is that expert bell makers
can tell where a bell was made
just from listening to the bong.
Yeah, I mean...
Pretty cool.
Is that a useful skill, would you say?
I mean, how often are you in a party?
And someone's got a massive church bells, I guess, right?
Church bells, yeah.
Yeah, and someone's like, hey, Andy, come over here and tell us where this is from.
It's a party, it's more of a party trick, unless you're a professional founder, which is that
you're right.
You're absolutely right.
How do you verify it in the moment?
How do you, if you said, that's from, you know, this small,
Foundry.
Yeah, yeah.
I don't know how you verify it.
I guess the person asking you,
where was this bell made,
knows, and you don't.
So they're being forced into the game.
They're not just bringing it up.
You're telling someone something
they already know in effect, aren't you?
No, well, no, you're saying,
come and listen to my bell,
if you're a vicar say.
You get the founder into your church,
they listen to the bell,
they say, oh, that was made
at the Whitechapel Bell Foundry, or whatever.
By the way, if a vicar ever says
to you, come and listen to my bell,
do not go with him.
Oh, my God.
Oh, dear.
There aren't that many places, and I don't mean to belittle this,
but there are not that many places
a bell could have been made in this day and age, are there?
That's true.
Yeah, but we have a lot of old bells.
There's a lot of old bells.
There are a lot of bells.
But this is the problem, okay,
this is exactly the problem with being a bell founder
in this day and age.
So this is from, I should say,
it's from his brilliant article.
It was a Guardian article, a long read by Hetty O'Brien,
and it's about a place called the Whitechapel Bell Foundry.
Foundry is just a bell factory.
and it went out of business a few years ago
and it'd been in business since 1570
Queen Elizabeth I was
on the throne when this place started up
and it was one of the last foundries in the country
before it shut down and the problem is
that Bells last forever
because it's not like an iPhone is it
no no that's why Steve Jobs didn't go into Bell
you didn't come out and say this is our new
we know you like the iPhones but here's our new thing
it's a 400-ton bell.
Yeah, it's a real problem.
So they made, the Whitechamble Bell Foundry,
made two bells for Westminster Abbey in 1583,
which are fine.
They're still working.
They don't need upgrading.
They don't need changing.
Yeah, so bell companies have a nightmare
if we're not on a period of active church building.
Except, though, except when disaster strikes.
So if, say, like, World War II happened,
that's fantastic for the bell industry
because so many churches are being destroyed,
suddenly they're back in business.
I heard that they were behind the whole thing, actually, the bell makers.
It was Big Bell, wasn't it?
Big Bell, yeah.
But that's the moment when they suddenly have popularity in business.
That was the only time they made a profit in the 20th century.
The entire 20th century, the only time they made a profit was the years after the second war.
And then most recently it was only because of Downton Abbey being so popular with a little
ding and ding-ding.
That suddenly they were back in business.
Those are not a glamour product for them to be selling.
So they're in trouble, aren't they?
There's only one left, I think.
Taylor's of Loughborough.
That's correct.
So wait a minute, this is even worse.
When Andy's at his party and you say,
where's his bell from?
There's only one to choose from.
Only if it's a new bell, you know,
as in, I don't know how many founders can do all like 400,
which closed down over the last two centuries.
Probably not.
Imagine there used to be 400 bell factories.
That's a lot.
So many.
I think weirdly, Andy, if you hosted a TV quiz show,
which was merely identifying bongs of bells,
I think I would watch it.
I think it would actually be really great.
How many episodes would you actually watch?
I'm definitely watching the trailer.
I can imagine Andy being at a party
and someone brings out a bong
and Andy goes, oh, speaking of bongs.
It took me a while to get that joke
because I was so into bell law
that you said bong and I thought,
yes, brings out a bong of a bell,
someone does a bong.
I was devastated with an article about Taylor's
of Loughborough, now the only remaining bell foundry,
because during the government shutdown,
during the whole COVID shutdown,
then it was difficult for all industries,
including the last remaining bell foundry.
And the headline in the art newspaper was
shutdown tests metal of UK's last major bell foundry,
and they didn't even spell metal like metal.
They just spelled the M-E-D-L-E-L- like absolute chumps.
Come on, the art newspaper,
that's why you're not a household name.
not like Peter Thornley.
But they've just got this lottery funding.
Why are we subsidising these non-profit-making institutions?
They just got $3.45 million.
You're not going to subsidise the profit-making companies at you.
I say subsidise Pricewaterhouse Cooper.
I'm not to be happy about paying tax.
No, it is sad.
It's a sad thing that this industry is no longer as big as it was.
Well, this Whitechapel place is completely shut down now as well.
the White Chapel Bell Foundry,
which, as you say, has been going since the 1500s.
And that's just happened because it looks like a hotel
is going to be moved in in its place,
a sort of hipster kind of hotel.
And I agree.
I think that is really sad.
It's a huge part.
Big Ben is from there.
The Liberty Bell is from there.
It's got huge history.
Both of those bells have famously got massive cracks in them,
haven't they?
Yeah, they're not very good at what they do.
It's amazingly lasted this long.
It's a 400-year con making shit bells.
So the big Ben Bell
It was made in 1858
And it took
So once you pour the
It's molten tin and bronze
I think that goes into a bell
Once you pour that into the cast
It takes obviously
You know a day or two to cool down
This bell was so big
It took 20 days to cool down
It was still warm from the casting after that
And then it was taken to Parliament
On a trolley pulled by 16 horses
It's incredibly ceremonial
It took 18 hours
To get it from the base
to the top of the tower.
Were they carrying it upstairs?
Like, pivot?
I thought horses couldn't go upstairs as well.
They can't go upstairs, they can't go downstairs.
They're still there.
Who do you think's been dogging all the time on the belt?
Help!
They did pull it up by hand.
Amazing.
Unbelievable.
Wow.
It weighs absolutely tons.
And it was eight, just.
eight men who got it from the bottom to the top.
Could they not have made it up there
rather than making it in a different place
and then bringing it there?
If only you've been around to advise on the project,
it wasn't just them carrying it
because obviously it literally waste tons.
They had a crank and they had built
and they had to construct an 1800 foot chain
to attach it to and then they had a timber cradle
carrying the belt and then they just had to turn
this huge windlass, you know, around and around and around.
I've gone into excess detail.
Yeah.
That's great.
If you're ever looking for a crank in future,
When they bonged Big Ben during World War II,
it was a problem, wasn't it?
So at first, the BBC news would be broadcast,
and the Allies broadcast BBC news in Germany,
and it was sort of a propaganda thing
to, you know, kind of undermine the enemy.
And on the hour before the news,
they'd always do the Big Ben bongs live.
And then they realized it was giving away
what the weather was like,
because the Germans who are listening
were able to detect what the weather was like
in London based on the sound of the bongs
because depending on the humidity of the air
and depending on the temperature,
the bongs make a slightly different noise
so I think moist air will absorb
kind of higher frequencies.
That's exactly what the bell makers want,
don't they?
They want all the bells to be blown up
and they can make more.
Can your bong people tell that, Andy?
The weather?
My bong people.
I don't know.
I don't know.
It wasn't.
They changed it though
because they were figuring it out
So then they would play, the BBC started playing recorded bong
so they wouldn't give away the weather.
So they'd trick the Nazis into thinking
the weather was perfect for a bombing raid
when actually it was rainy.
No, no.
You would trick them into thinking it's not perfect for a bombing raid.
You wouldn't be like, oh, it's a glorious day.
You can see where you're going.
What a beautiful day for a bombing raid.
Oh, the prime minister's in.
Jesus Christ, Andy.
This is why you were fired from Churchill.
wall cabinet.
Okay. Bells used to be
really important to people in Britain.
They would, lots of different things.
If you were living in a village or a town,
really there wasn't much noise,
there wasn't loads of traffic noise or anything like that.
So really the bell was the loudest noise
that you could hear from miles and miles around.
And it would mean lots of different things.
It was like a kind of language of the bells.
So if it did certain bell rings,
it would say you had to go into church
or it might say, you know, there's a fire and you need to run away,
or it might be that there's been a death in the parish,
or there was loads of different things,
and it was basically you would hear the bell
and you would know what was happening in your town.
That's very cool.
There's going to be a bombing raid due an unfortunate misunderstanding.
But then during the Reformation,
obviously bells associated maybe with Catholicism,
and so they kind of banned the bell.
and Edward
the 6th made a law that said
only one bell was allowed in each church
okay you're allowed one bell
but a lot of the villagers
like they had such affection for the bells
that they would bury them
hoping that the law would change in the future
and they'd be able to dig their bells back up
and then put them up
and Edward the 6th of course is where we get
the word bell end isn't it
because he ended bells yeah
and they're pissed up
that's a great so maybe some of them
are still out there
You know, still in the ground
If you were a metal detectorist
That would be the most exciting find of your
It's the fucking jackpot
Yeah, yeah
We're going to have to move on in this way
No, no, no, no, we're going to have to
We're going to have to, in a really unprecedented move
We're going to have to go back to the last fact
To do more wrestling
Can I tell you one more thing?
Yeah
This is just a, I was looking up Guinness Records
And this is not about church bells
This is about the hotel bells, you know, the little thing
You know, when you get to the, yeah, there, those
Do you know what the record is
for the most desk call bells
run with the chin inside one minute?
Okay, so I reckon
I could do probably about 40.
Okay.
At least one a second.
So, 75.
That's the same bell you're doing there, Dan.
Yeah, you're doing, you can't ding the same bell.
You have to have other bells, yeah.
Right.
They're all different bells.
So the concierge desk needs to be really long.
You need a...
Exactly, yeah.
So it's a guy called
Cherry Yoshitake of Japan.
He's known as Mr. Cherry as well.
And this year, he broke this record.
He dinged 149 bells with his chin in one minute.
Wow.
Unbelievable.
It's almost like he had nothing better to do in 2020.
I love that his nickname isn't even related to this insane thing.
What else is he doing with cherries that is far more interesting?
That's his nickname.
Can I quickly tell you about a,
suffragette bell ringer.
This was a lady called Mary Maloney
and when Winston Churchill was trying
to regain his seat in Parliament
in Dundee in 1908,
she wasn't very happy because he'd
said some remarks about the suffrage movement
and so whenever he went to any
kind of speech, she just stood right
next to him and just rang a bell.
And then she'd stop
and say, Mr Churchill, do you want
to apologise for the things she said about the suffrage
movement? And he said no and she went,
okay.
And she just would follow him
and he'd kind of start getting flustered
and then he'd leave and go in his little carriage
and she'd follow him
and then as soon as she got there
she'd start dingin again and dingin again
and there's an article in the London Evening News
that said that
Mr. Churchill struggled good-humouredly
against the bell
but he said if she thinks that this is a reasonable argument
she may use it, I don't care.
I bid you good afternoon and he left.
But then according to the biographer
of Churchill by Michael Sheldon.
So this is a bit biased, but he reckons that by the end of the week,
everyone was so sick of this suffragette with a bell
that they all kind of got on Churchill's side,
and he did win the election in the end.
Really?
Shot herself in the foot.
A little bit.
Foolish woman. That's suffragettes, you see?
A bunch of idiots.
That wasn't the point of that story.
Can't believe you're broadcasting this negative shit about the suffraudette.
Okay, it is time for fact number three,
and that is James.
Okay, my fact this week is that
in the 1930s, Canada's bowling galleys
had to close on nine occasions
due to strikes.
Very strong.
So this is what...
A little bit of insider lingo
at what happens at QI.
We call this a remote-controlled fish.
I'm not sure why we call it that.
But basically, you come up with the funny idea
of a fact first,
and then you try and prove it.
It's true.
So I thought, wouldn't it be funny
if there had never been a strike in a bowling alley?
And then I found this paper called
Strikes, Bogies, Spares and Misses,
Pimboy and Caddy Strikes in the 1930s by Ian McMillan
that talks about all these amazing strikes in Canada.
I think it's more impressive that you found the strikes you were looking for
because this was hard to research.
If you just searched Bowling Alley Strike,
you don't get the industrial action side of things very early.
So why were they striking?
So basically these were pin boys in bowling alleys.
So these days, if you go 10 pin bowling,
there's a machine that picks up the pins
and puts them back where they should be.
But in the olden days, it would be adolescent workers,
young lads who would do this job.
They would sit on a little shelf behind the bowling alley,
and then once you've rolled, they'd jump down,
and then they'd shift away the ones that you'd knock down
and put the other ones where they should be.
And there was this one particular moment in Saskatchewan
where they forced the pin boys to shovel snow
outside the bowling alley, but wouldn't pay them.
And when they said they wouldn't do it, they fired them,
and they went, no, we're going to go on strike.
And they were helped a bit by the Communist Party in Canada,
and they just continually, for about a decade,
just kept going on strike.
Really?
Yeah.
I'm impressed because I thought that pin boys were, you say adolescent,
but they were, like, young, weren't they?
And a lot of them, I think often who got pushed out
with the photos for the promo shots were young, pretty pubescent.
And the idea of sort of a nine-year-old boy striking through the streets
is very strange.
but yeah they were put out of business
all of them eventually by the awesome machines you get in
bowling alleys now weren't they
see whose side you're on
the pin set up the side of mechanisation against the humble
working child
these nine-year-old Luddites are going to need to
catch up with technology
can ask a question about the pin boys
would they so they would go down
after the first bowl and the pins that were
knocked down they're moving out of the way
but obviously it's very important that the formation
remains the same of the other ones but they
popping them back into to be reset, weren't they?
So they would have to make sure that they were placing them in the exact right spots.
Yeah, so when you bowl once and then they get rid of the ones on the floor and then you
get to a chance to knock the rest of them down, they stay where they are.
But then the next person would come and they'd have to put them right in the exact place.
But if you tips them really well, they might put them in a slightly better position for you.
So they kind of move the front pin a little bit closer and move the side ones in a little bit.
and the people who they didn't like,
they would move them out
so that they couldn't get that straight.
And then one of the trick they would do is,
as well as putting the pins up,
they would have to roll the bowls back to the bowler,
and what they would often do if they were really skillful,
if there was someone they didn't like,
they put back spin on the ball,
so it went up towards them,
and just before he's about to get it,
it would spin back towards them.
That's amazing.
That's so good.
I remember one thing that they did,
or one of their duties,
which was if, so they put the things in a setting
So the setting machine does put the pins out, but they are placing them there.
But if sometimes they didn't work, these setting machines, and if a pin came out wobbly,
a pin boy would have to wriggle out onto the lane on his stomach and position it properly
and just hope that they had seen at the other end that was a wonky pin that was being fixed.
So you might get a ball chucked at you if they didn't see that.
If your reactions aren't fast enough at pubescent or pre-pubescent age to avoid a bowling ball been
chucked by some millionaire.
Anna, we have ascertained which side of the argument.
I'm going to say, me slagging off the suffragettes is looking a lot better, isn't it?
The guy who invented the pin-setting machine, which put all these boys out of business,
was he did it in 1936, and the first pin-setting machine was made of lampshades and flower pots.
Oh, wow.
And in a turkey house on his mate's farm, there's a guy called Gottfried Schmidt.
And he'd heard about what hassle it was having these pin-setters,
because, you know, it takes a long time having a little boy kind of rearranged all your
pins. So yeah, he cobbled some lampshades and flower pots together. That's not, if you're laughing at
that, then that's the problem with you. I was like, there must be a euphemism in there somewhere.
People desperately looking, laughed prematurely. I don't think there is actually.
Hey, did you guys know, this is just a quick, um, modern bowling thing, uh, that I didn't realize.
I, I enjoy bowling and I do love getting the shoes, putting the shoes on. It's always a fun element
of it. Sure.
didn't realize, and I wonder how many people here did. I do love it, James. Don't love it.
I mean, I've been bowling with you. I can see that that would be your best bit.
My 30th birthday, my 30th birthday, I had a bowling party. James came and murdered me.
Murdered me in front of all my closest friends and family who had not met him at this point.
So they didn't know what a twat I was.
I didn't know you had a bowling party for your birthday.
I remember you working putting the pins up
I'm thinking.
He's on his belly, get him.
Thank you for that tip, James.
It was extremely nicely...
Well, anyway, bowling shoes.
When you're out with your friends.
I'm out with my best buds, sure.
They come as either left-handed bowling shoes
or right-handed bowling shoes.
What?
Yes.
How does that work?
Wait, as in there's one left for the left foot
and one for the right.
Yeah, okay.
Like shoes?
Because, yeah.
Oh, boy.
No, if you haven't seen Dan Tribe's amazing square normal shoes, they are a sight to behold.
What are you talking about?
That's my TV show.
What will they think of next?
Check this out.
No, okay, so this is really interesting.
And obviously, if you go to a normal bowling alley, they probably give you normal shoes,
which probably hurts your game, is what I'm guessing.
If you're a professional, you're right-handed or your left-handed.
You have a dominant leg.
You have a dominant foot.
that's going right. So one shoe of every bowling shoe has a sliding element to it and the other
has a breaking element so that your back foot can break while your front is sliding. Wow.
Yeah. So if you're bowling right-handed, you need the sliding bit to be on your left foot.
And so do you think you were maybe given some left-handed bowling shoes by accident? And that's
why you lost embarrassingly to James Arkin. I just, if my family and friends are listening,
yes, I believe there was a conspiracy that night. It's illegal to switch hands bowling as well.
Oh shit, I think I did that. You did it so many times.
Switch hands.
No.
I genuinely did.
You are post-talk disqualified.
That is not allowed.
So sorry, bowling walk.
Screw you, Harkin.
Yes.
This is exciting
because this has actually come up
quite a lot over the years.
Yeah, you're not allowed to
because you might be sandbagging.
Is that what you were doing?
Were you sandbagging?
I don't know what that means.
What's sandbagging?
You are sandbagging.
I don't even want to do the rest of this podcast anymore.
It means cheating, Andy.
Sandbagging is when in professional tournaments,
this is why they ban it in professional tournaments,
then you will try and get a better handicap
by bowling with your other hand
because it's quite hard to bowl badly, deliberately,
but without it being noticed,
with the hand that you're strongest with.
So if you bowl with your other hand,
which some people often do,
then it tricks people into giving a better handicap.
It's like, it's like being a hustler.
I wasn't doing that, but...
Wow.
You're like a soundbagger to me, James.
And that was a euphemism.
I've got a fact about the first bowling alley
opened in the UK.
Okay, so the first bowling alley
in the classic American style that we think of
opened in Stanford Hill in North London in 1961.
It was opened by the American Machine and Foundry Company.
Oh, I've just seen Foundry again. Nice.
Anyway, that's not what it's about. Don't worry.
Take him off stage.
But they, that company, they also made
the underground launching system for the Titan
Intercontinental Ballistic Missile.
Oh my God.
But this is the...
sort of conspiracy I thought of because there's a bowling alley
under the White House. We know this.
Yeah, there is. Yeah. So is it possibly
connected to the intercontinental
Do you think they accidentally ordered
the wrong product from the intercontinental
providers and they were too embarrassed
to say, no, take it back?
Yeah, the vice president of the company
that made a lot of
very dangerous weapons, a very dangerous time
in history, said that
the company's product will make
a great contribution to human happiness
and there was such a good guardian article on this
which you might have read, which was careful to specify,
they meant the bowling alley and not the missile launcher.
And at that event, the first person to bowl the first ball,
so the first ball ever bowed at bowling alley in Britain
was a guy called to John Hunt,
who led the British expedition up Everest.
And it's worth watching the footage
because he does, of course, bowl it straight into the gutter.
It's very awkward.
What an amazing, strange celebrity booking
to open your bowling alley.
I know.
Who else would you get?
Princess Margaret?
He went straight for Princess Margaret.
I think aim high.
Do you think Princess Margaret would have used,
she would have used that thing
where you push the ball down
on the little skeleton thing, wouldn't she?
There's no shame in using that, by the way.
The bumpers.
The bumper is designed for kids, right?
That was the invention.
The bumper is designed for anyone
who wants a more,
actually a more interesting style of gameplay.
Good point.
It takes quite a skill to bounce it off three times
and then still end up in the gutter.
And that's why you won at the 30th birthday party, Andy.
So, you know, that's designed for kids.
And I was amazed to learn that there's this club,
which is the 300, I'm giving it its name as a club,
the 300 club, but the idea is a perfect game in bowling
is 300 points.
So you want all strikes.
And that means nine strikes for the first nine.
And then on the 10th, you need three
because you get those extra goes.
So it adds up to 300 points that you get in total.
And the record holder of the youngest person ever to get that
is a nine-year-old girl at the time in 2013.
She's still the record holder called Hannah-Dim.
And she took up the sport at age six when she was at a party
and she was like, oh, I felt like this was a calling.
Wow.
Yeah, and by age nine, she had bowled a perfect game.
300 strikes the whole way.
And so you get a ring when that happened.
and if you bowl more, they add like a little rock to it each time and so on.
But they're very serious about whether or not to take it the fact that you've said you've got a 300.
There's a team that comes in.
And in the early days, they would confiscate the ball off you to suss out the ball just to make sure that it was a proper ball that hadn't been cheated.
At the end of that day, they would shut down the bowling alley, let no more games come.
And someone would come, and they would have a way of measuring the oil slickness of the,
just to make sure that it wasn't too.
I'll just check that you haven't rigged it.
Yeah.
There's all these things that they did.
So was she cheating?
Had she pulled mercury into her ball?
Had she covered the thing with oil?
She was clean.
She was clean.
Wasn't a nine-year-old going to get enough mercury?
Since they stopped selling barometers
and mercury thermometers,
it's very hard to get your hands on enough mercury.
It's a bold move to make a call back to an episode 12 episodes ago.
To a live crowd.
I thought there'll be one or two.
Barometer fans.
Cool.
You mentioned the oil,
so I didn't know how crucial oil is in bowling,
but this basically answered a question
that's been bugging me for 20 years,
which is, you know when you go to a bowling alley with friends,
and you get kind of a...
Like, if you're on a good role, you get a bunch of strikes,
your friend gets loads of strikes,
and you think, this is so effing easy.
How are they professionals in this game?
They must be getting strikes every time,
otherwise they're just idiots.
Well, turns out their game is way harder than ours.
So in recreational bowling,
if you're going to Rowan's bowling alley down the road or wherever,
then they have the oil arranged in a certain way.
So down a bowling lane, it has oil on it,
and it originally had oil on it to make it more slippy
so that the balls didn't crack the ground.
But it became apparent that oil obviously adjusts the way the ball goes.
So if there's oil down the middle,
the ball slides very fast down that oil,
and then as soon as it goes off the oil,
so there's not as much oil nearer the pins,
then it starts going more slowly,
and friction acts more on the ball,
and it starts to spin, things like that.
So bowling alleys for plebs like you and me
have the oil rigs
so that it funnels the ball towards the pins.
Oh, wow.
And that's why we're all getting strikes.
And if you go to a professional bowlers association,
bowling alley, they do not have that.
They make sure that the oil is spread exactly evenly.
And I think if any of us tried to bowl down one of those,
it would just be straight in the gutter every time.
Really? Wow.
Is it possible that I've spent my life accidentally
going to professional bowling alleys?
Do you think in those professional bowling alleys they would put the tubes on the side?
I guess it's possible.
Okay, it is time for our final fact of the show, and that is my fact.
My fact this week is trees fart.
Trees fart.
It turns out...
Come on, Dan.
Trees fart.
How often have you been on a lovely walk in the forest?
Just hearing fart.
Well, the thing is...
if a tree farts in the forest, but there's no one around to smell it.
So this is, I mean, it's a real technical thing, isn't it, in this case?
Because obviously they don't have anuses, but they do.
Slow down, Professor.
Trees do release little bits of methane, and that's obviously a big problem for global warming.
And the article that I was reading was talking, this is how I learned the fact, it was in Science Alert.
It talks about ghost trees.
Ghost trees are trees that are dead, and they still function, though, in certain areas,
so they can suck up soils and so on through them, acting like a straw.
And as a result, ghost trees release sort of much bigger farts, and they're much more dangerous.
But the thing is, like, a normal tree farts or gives off methane,
but it also kind of sucks in CO2 and photosynthesizes and stuff, so it's kind of fine because it offsets it.
But the ghost trees, they don't have any leaves, so they can't do it.
much worse, these kind of dead trees that you get at marshes and stuff like that, and they suck
up this methane. We think from the soil, although we're not quite sure how they do it at the
moment. This recent study that was in the article, they found that the amount of methane that
comes up is way more than you would expect due to the amount that's in the ground. And so there's
something else happening. We don't know what it is. And obviously it's quite important because
lots more trees are dying because the changes in the climate and stuff and this might cause problems
in the future.
Yeah.
And I think is it that when water
or when sea levels rise,
sometimes you get forests near the coast,
which can't survive in those conditions.
So that adds to the effect as well.
So the sea comes in, it's more salty.
The trees die,
and then they start doing all this farting.
And I think we should say that,
because every single article
and every single scientist who looks into this,
says about 59 times an article, don't they?
We are not trying to say that trees are bad.
The overall impact of trees is still incredibly good.
please God Daily Mail don't print an article saying that trees are about to the environment.
They got to go.
That's what they're screaming.
They got to go.
People of Kentish Town, please do not go straight out to your nearest tree and chop it down.
You do that.
You take those farting fucks out.
Don't please.
I'm begging you.
The whole methane thing is really interesting, just sort of globally the methane thing,
because there is the American NOAA, who are the national oceanic and atmospheric scientists,
they are in Colorado and they are methane detectives.
They have a department which is methane detection.
So for the last 40 years, every single week,
they have received this consignment of flasks from around the world,
which are flasks of atmospheric air, you know, from all over the planet
and they measure what's inside.
So they have been able to measure methane levels around the planet
for the last 40 years.
And they've been just studying atmospheric levels.
They found that methane has been rising since 2007,
and no one really knows why.
I mean, it's our fault, clearly, but no one, like, no one really, they haven't pinned down exactly why.
It could be from wetlands, it could be this tree thing.
Pig manure causes it.
So, like, cattle calls a huge amount of it, so.
So I'm not trying to pass blame, because I'm sure it is our fault, but is there any chance it's beavers fault?
Because beavers are apparently an issue.
I thought he said beber.
I was like, what?
He gets private jets everywhere.
Beavors, no, they're invading Alaska.
because waters are warming,
which means they can go much further north
up into the Arctic Circle.
And so they're building lots of dams
up in an area that used to be frozen on extremely cold,
and then their dams are like big heat reservoirs,
which warm up the surrounding soil,
degrade the permafrost,
and there's loads of methane in the permafrost.
It's a massive problem of methane being released from the permafrost.
And so that puts methane in the atmosphere.
Beaver's fault, I'm not responsible.
So what we're saying to the people of Kentish Town
is to go out and strangle a beaver.
Yeah.
Got on a tree and strangler Bibi, yeah.
I think that's responsible messaging.
There was a problem with animals and methane.
Specifically, our old friends, the sauropods,
the big dinosaurs and lots of plant material.
There was some work done by David Wilkinson of Liverpool John Moore's University,
and he reckons, he's worked this out,
he reckoned that sauropod population,
when they were at the absolute biggest,
they were pumping out 520 million tonnes of
methane a year, which is about the same as the current emissions of greenhouse gases.
Really?
Yeah, so the sauropods, and they reckon that that did change the climate as well through farting.
Wow.
So did the sauropod Green Party eventually get some steam behind it and take power?
Eventually someone stuck their neck out, yeah.
Yeah.
We first discovered that methane was in trees, was in trees, in 1907.
And it was this professor, a chemistry professor in Kansas,
wandering around Kansas in 1907
and he saw little bubbles
in the sap of a tree
a certain type of tree and he thought
I wonder what's causing them I wonder if it's methane
so he struck match above it
and it ignited and burps out a big blue flame
He lit the fart of the tree
He lit the fart of the tree
And apparently if you're studying trees anywhere
Your tree professor will always do this
And you can do this
You go through a tree and you get the sap
And it's burping out methane
so you can light it and it does a little burp.
Don't like, if you're in Australia, please don't do that.
Jesus Christ, this podcast is going to cause bushfires globally from that sentence.
Once you finish strangling your beaver, just set fire to the nearest tree and science will win.
Here's a warning, here's another warning.
If you hold a fart in for too long, it may leak out of your mouth.
It's got to go somewhere, isn't it?
Exactly. It's basically, it gets reabsorbed into your circulation, just finds its way in,
and whether you notice or not, it's just going to slowly come out of your mouth.
It doesn't, that sounds, it's, everything you're saying sounds true, but it does sound like
one of those things that your mum says, doesn't it? Well, if you keep your face like that,
the wind will change and it'll get stuck, you know, or whatever.
It sounds like a sort of old, white tail of...
Your mum has got some amazing, say, Eddie. That's what he means.
Have you farted enough today, Andy? Because you know what will happen.
But how come they don't smell like sulphur?
Because the reason fart smell is because of sulphur,
which is in compounds that smell bad.
But when I burp, it doesn't smell like a fart, I don't think.
And I've never smelled anyone's burp,
smelling like a fart, like a sulfuric fart.
No, I agree, yeah.
So something must have happened there.
It must...
Maybe the sulphur is like only the ass.
But the other ones will come out of the mouth.
Maybe.
Hmm.
You've really...
giving us something to think about that.
You'd be great I thought of the day.
Welcome to the Moral Maze on BBC Four.
Why does sulphur choose the anus?
Methane chooses the mouth, doesn't it?
As in for cows, I thought that cows methane was sort of mostly,
like a split at each end of the cow, whether it's burping or farting, whatever.
About, I think it's 95% of cattle methane comes from its mouth.
and this is, this really is a genuinely huge problem
because there are, I think, about a billion cows on the planet
that if they were a country,
they'd be the sixth largest emitter of methane in the world.
What a country.
In this country that's just cows,
are they also running the place and stuff?
Do they have their own cow,
by minister and stuff?
Yeah, in this, yeah, in this whimsical world,
Andy, in that, if that was a country,
this genuine question,
if it was that dense of king,
cows, like it's a country made of cows, as you're saying, so the methane's huge.
Yeah.
If I lit a cigarette lighter, would the whole thing go up?
I don't know.
No, I don't think so. It doesn't if you do it in the middle of a cow field.
It doesn't even if you do it.
This is a country made of cows.
Okay, A is not made of cows.
That's what Andy saying.
There are loads of cows in it.
There are only cows in it.
It depends how many there are.
If there's a billion cows and it's in the size of San Marino,
then that's a lot of cows and a lot of me.
But if you're in the size of the Soviet Union old style, then they'd be fine.
My mistake, if there are a billion cows in a country the size of San Marino, there are bigger
infrastructural problems to deal with.
How are the Italians keeping them out?
It's one very big cattle grid, and they just can't get over it.
But yeah, of course, it depends how much methane you have, but also how much oxygen you have, right?
So the methane will only set on fire if you have oxygen because you need oxygen.
to make fire. And that's a thing that on Uranus, there's a lot of methane. The whole of the
atmosphere is made of methane pretty much. There's tons and tons of the stuff, but you can't set it
on fire because there's no oxygen. But what that means is if you had a spaceship and you went into
the Uranus atmosphere, you would need the oxygen there because you'd have to breathe it. As soon as you
open the door, any kind of turn on the light switch or any kind of naked flame, the whole place is
going up. Wow.
And it's like a reverse Hindenberg.
So like the Hindenberg had the flammable gas on the inside,
but you've got the oxygen on the inside,
and it would just go, wow.
I thought that was very adult of you all,
not to laugh every time.
James, said your illness.
Very proud of you all.
I wasn't planning on going there.
It's another good reason not to.
It is on the government green list, though,
if anyone's interested.
Okay, that is it. That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening.
If you would, thank you, thanks for being here.
If you would like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we have said over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts.
I'm on at Schreiberland, Andy, at Andrew Hunter, James, at James Harkin and Anna.
You can email podcast.uI.com.
Yep, or you can go to our group account, which is at no such thing, or our website.
No such thing as a fish.com. All of our previous episodes are up.
there, check them out. Links to our upcoming tour, Nerd Immunity, which is going to start in October of
this year. Fingers crossed. We'll be back again next week with another episode. We'll see you then.
Goodbye.
