No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Hoverhorse
Episode Date: April 17, 2015Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss supersmog, horses on treadmills and impossible colours. ...
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Oh, and welcome to another episode of No such thing as a fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from the QI offices in Covent Garden.
My name is Dan Schreiber. I'm sitting with Anna Chazinski, James Harkin, and Andy Murray.
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. That's my fact. My fact this week is that monorails were originally
horse drawn. That's really great. It's like the ultra modern with the not very modern at all.
Yeah, exactly. It's the future, but there's a horse attack. It's like everything. I always
wonder. Spaceships have the same thing. Yeah, exactly. I've always wanted to know if like back in
that period there were books that were just called like, when will I get my hover horse?
Like they hadn't yet known about the next bit of technology. Yeah. I don't. The thing I really love about it is all
the main new inventions coming out of that time, even household stuff that was run on QI that
vacuum cleaners used to be horse-drawn as well. Just everything was horse-drawn. We should say why,
because that sounds insane. Oh, yes. Yeah, they were really, really, really big is the idea. And
the vacuum cleaner would pull up outside your house and they would send in tubes to Hoover inside
the house and it would suck all the dust. And the tubes were see-through so you could see all of the
crap coming out of the house, which is quite cool because then it's like, see what your
neighbors all the crap that's in the house. Yeah, you don't want to drop embarrassing stuff on your floor.
So you might end up doing that thing of making sure all the stuff that's vacuumed looks really
expensive and nice, you know, just for a nosy neighbors.
Got a few more, it doesn't matter. I don't know if you've seen, but the Jackson's have some
very expensive looking dust. So when are we talking? What era? This was in 1820 and it was a guy
called Ivan Elmanov. And this was in Russia. The 1800s,
like when you think about all of these horse-powered things,
it just feels like it was such a productive time for horses.
They had a lot of jobs that they,
they seemed to have gone through like a job recession recently.
Because they were doing monorails,
they were doing, obviously, fire engines,
they were doing trains.
They were, I mean, they were everywhere.
And there was this amazing, actually, before I mentioned this bit,
they were used in plays.
The first Ben Hurr play that they did on Broadway
was done using real horses on treadmills,
the stage.
Yeah, on these treadmills.
And they were attached to these poles so that the horses couldn't get loose and go into the crowd.
But they wanted to make it a spectacle when the audience was watching the chariot races.
That's quite a spectacle, isn't it?
Yeah, it's incredible.
So all these horses were lying, bolting like crazy on a movable floor, so they weren't making it any ground.
And it toured the world.
It was a huge, huge play.
So they were in plays as well.
Do you think the Grand National will ever just be on treadmills?
Wow.
It's not a bad idea.
Yeah.
Well, it's not a great idea, is it?
What's wrong with it?
One disadvantage, for instance, is you only have a very small amount of place where people
can watch.
But on the other hand, everyone there gets a really good view of the whole race.
You don't see the horses go by in a flash and then you have to wait another five minutes and come around again.
You see the whole race.
No jumps.
That's a problem.
Not with my revolutionary moving hedge treadmill system.
It'd be like an OK-go video, isn't it?
Yeah.
Monorales are very old-fashioned in a way.
So the official monorail, well, I don't know how official it is, but the monorails website I looked at.
What was the website?
It's monorails.org, I think, or monorails.com.
It's one of the two.
But there are lots of theories that the guys who are on that website have about why monorails are not more popular, why we're not all on a monorail all the time.
And there is one theory that they espouse that people actually make a lot more money out of railways.
or that more groups of people stand to make a profit out of railways.
So that's why they've been keeping monorails down.
It's the same reason we don't have those everlasting light bulbs.
Right, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Likewise light bulb manufacturers will go out of business.
Or the idea that Gillette supposedly have come up with a blade that never Dullens,
but they won't sell it because then people will stop buying blades.
Yeah, I don't buy it myself.
But they also say that another problem is that people think of monorails as being a bit eccentric or quaint.
So it's the Disney problem is what you've got.
know that they go around Disney World or Chessington World of Adventures and, you know, they're not serious.
They aren't that serious, though, are they really?
I like him, though.
But it's like someone who rides a unicycle just going, no, I don't know why everyone's not riding unicycles.
It's because they make money out of that extra wheel.
It's also because it's much easier to ride a bicycle, mate, and it's much easier to make a train.
It is monorails are really unbalanced, like unicycles.
Well, they're very hard to balance.
They're not because they have saddlebags kind of below.
the level of the track. And you have to admit that is more complicated and difficult than just
having two rail. See the trains people have got to you. I mean, Winston Churchill once drove a
monorail. Did he? Yeah. For a job? Not for a shop, no. In 1910, before he was
Prime Minister, it was at a Japan-British exhibition and the Daily Mail wrote it up and said it
was as interesting to him as a new toy would be to a child. And he liked it so much that he
then persuaded the Prime Minister and the Chancellor to come and have a go.
And he put loads of money into developing it and he was hugely enthused.
Wow.
The money ran out eventually.
That was a nice simile as interesting as a toy to a child.
And I have some other similes here.
As useful as a coal man on a maglev monorail means like as useful as a chocolate teapot or something like that.
A coal man on a maglev monorail.
Yeah, because you don't need to put coal into a monorail because they run on so whatever.
There's a list of some other as useful.
as a, which I found online.
So these all are things that are useless.
As useful as a warm buckets of spit.
Like one of those really handy, cold buckets of spit.
Tons of use.
And another one, this is my favourite.
As useful as a hatful of busted assholes.
So that's a little hat full of busted assholes.
That's a little phrase that you could use.
Wow.
Wow.
Have you guys heard of tumor monorails?
There's a medical innovation they've come up with.
So it's still in the very early days.
but they're very tiny nanofibers
which scientists want to use
to put into the body
to persuade cancer cells
to move along them
because it mimics the past
that cancers use
to get around inside the body
so they latch on the cancerous cells
they get them to other bits of the body
which is either where scientists
can cut them out more safely
as where it's less dangerous to operate
or they can even, they've tried experiments
actually moving them out of the body
and this is just on rats they've tried
and into a toxic gel.
Isn't that incredible?
Do you have a little rail comics coming out of your face and you just watch the little train tootle out?
Yeah. How do they persuade the cancer cells to get on board? Do they have very cheap fare?
It just looks like it looks to the cancer cells, I think, like the way that they get around. So they just assume, oh, this is the route that we're going to go on. Isn't that unbelievable?
That's so cool. And you thought monorails were bad.
I take it back. That's awesome. All right. Anyone got anything else?
San Diego Wild Animal Park opened in 1972 with a monorail around the park like a lot of things do.
The railway was called the Wagasa Busch line.
Everyone thought Wagasa was like an African name or whatever, but it actually stood for,
who gives a shit anyway?
Because they couldn't think of a name.
Oh, wow.
That feels like the end of a long meeting.
Okay, time for fact number two.
Andy Murray
My fact is that the Great Smog of 1952
was so bad that blind people
led sighted people home from the train station
because sighted people just could not see where they were going
it was completely impossible
That's brilliant
That's amazing
So the great smog is the most extraordinary
I think it was a five-day stretch in London specifically
But it later spread across the whole of the UK
So what was it like people burning things in their houses or factories or
Yeah a bit of a mix
So people were using coal but they were using very dirty coal
which had lots of sulfur in it.
And factories were also belching out lots of sulfur dioxide,
which then turned into sulfuric acid in the air.
So, and all the dirty coal,
normally the coal fumes would have just gone into the atmosphere and spread out.
But there was this layer of cold air above London,
which sort of formed this bubble, if you like, of warmer air inside,
and everything just turned back towards the ground and mixed with moisture.
So would it have been hazardous to your health to breathe in?
Yes.
Very much so.
Right.
I think they think now that 12,000 people died and 100,000 became ill.
Wow.
Yeah.
Oh, my God.
There were 19 people.
I'm not sure if this was the same great smog.
It might have been 19 people were drowned after unwittingly walking into the Thames.
Yeah.
Because they couldn't see where they were going.
Yeah.
So you couldn't see your feet, could you, by the end of it?
And bus conductors had to get out of buses and have flames in front of buses to guide them down the street.
Because it was, I mean, it was about three feet of visibility.
Yeah.
And librarians, I find this a really funny image.
So it got inside buildings.
And library workers reported walking through stacks of libraries
and turning a corner along the library corridor
and suddenly bumping into a huge waft of smog
that was just sitting in their library.
Yeah.
Just hanging in as a column.
Just hanging out.
It sounds like something out of horror.
It's amazing.
Trying to check out a book.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because like I read Sadler's Wells.
They had to stop a play midway through because so much smog entered.
But I love that idea.
It's suddenly being like, whoa, the production levels of this play.
It's phenomenal.
Look at this.
And they had to abandon dog racing because the dogs couldn't see the hair.
And presumably the people couldn't see which dog won either.
Everyone demands their money.
And they had to cancel football matches because nobody could see the ball.
You just kick the ball and you, that's it.
Everyone's looking for the ball for then, you know, for half an hour.
I've been to football matches where they had to be cancelled for fog.
Really?
Yeah.
And it's interesting when you're like a fan because often you're behind a goal and you just can't see anything on the other side of the pitch.
and you just hear a massive cheer from the other side
and you've got no idea whether it's a goal
or a little table.
I like this as well.
So obviously very dangerous on the railway lines
because there are workers on the railway lines
and if you can't see a train.
So train engineers, what they would do,
they put little explosives on the line itself
which would go off as the train went over them,
like a cap gun basically.
I like those things that kids throw on the floor
to make a little bang.
And then that would make a noise
so that they would notify the workers
that there was a train coming slowly along the tracks
and they could get out of the way.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
But that must have been, because a smog like that,
when this must have been a really productive time of people going,
okay,
um,
blind people are now offering their services to walk people home at tube stations.
The train people are going,
okay,
we're going to lay down.
Like,
it's very home alone,
isn't it?
Like everyone's like trying to reinvent how you can get by.
Yeah.
In a city where you can't see.
Everything's like a 1980s movie to you,
isn't it?
Well,
just think about it.
Like no one would have been prepared for an entire city to be,
yeah,
totally just...
Actually, there were...
It was kind of semi-common, wasn't it?
That they would have these kind of things.
This was the worst by Miles,
but P-Supas were kind of common at the time.
P-s-super being...
P-supor just being the nickname for the fog
because it was as thick as P-Soup.
And it was greenish, apparently.
The greenish-yellowish...
It had lumps of ham in it.
Yeah.
Blicking the air.
Yeah.
No, you're right.
It would have been a time of ingenuity,
but also, like, the roads were covered in abandoned cars
because people just could not see you to drive.
Well, speaking of ingenuity,
they have quite bad smog in China at the moment,
especially in Beijing.
And the Chinese state media came up with a number of benefits of smog in China.
Has anyone seen these?
Yeah, they're really good.
So one, it unifies the Chinese people.
Which is kind of what you were saying, Dan,
about, you know, everyone gets together and has to,
it's like against a common enemy.
Yeah.
If you excuse the 12,000 or so deaths,
it's kind of a party.
Yeah.
You think about it.
Like big massive smoke machine.
It's like the beginning of Matthew Kelly's stars in their eyes.
That's what it is.
Tonight, Matthew, I'm going to be falling in the Thames.
Another one was it makes people more knowledgeable brackets of things like fog.
Sure.
And also, apparently, it makes people funnier.
Oh, it's because of the dark humor that comes with it.
But obviously, if you do come up with any jokes, don't put them online because the party will find you.
even in the smog.
Actually, there was a fire in Beijing in 2013 at a furniture factory,
and no one noticed it was on fire because a smog in the city was so bad.
That's terrible.
I know.
Well, the thing in China as well, in Beijing, particularly,
is that the gobi is kind of really encroaching on China at the moment.
So not only, so smog and fog must be a massive one,
but they get huge sandstorms now.
Like, they have sandstorm warnings on the weather now.
And they started this plan.
Do you know about the great green wall of China?
China. I do not. Yeah, they've been building this huge wall of effectively a forest wall,
yeah, where they're going to try and stop the desert from encroaching and capture all the sand as
it comes in. So it's like sand versus smog at the moment, like an alien versus predator for
21st century China. Yeah. They're taking each other on. Yeah. You compare everything to bad
2018 films. Yeah, like shark to puss versus, yeah. In China, in 2013 alone,
Chinese consumer spent the equivalent of $140 million on anti-smog devices, which is not great
because I think...
What are they?
Anti-smog masks?
Oh, they're just those smog masks that you see a lot of people in China wear.
Only about a fifth of them work, which is kind of a shame.
But it's been adopted into their fashions because a couple of years ago on the catwalk,
the people on the catwalk had to wear smog masks just because...
And a designer decided to make smog masks suddenly fashionable.
So he's called Yin Peng.
and his 2015 collection includes fashionable smog masks
and they look so cool.
One of them looks like the shredder.
Is it the shredder?
Yeah, from Teenage,
yeah.
One of them looks like Darth Vader.
Are they all films from the 70s and 80s?
Yeah.
That's the theme he's going for.
Yeah.
This is the thing.
Hong Kong and China are very good at doing that kind of thing
where they try and convince the public
that it's now fashionable.
And when SARS came out, very similar,
when SARS, remember when SARS came out?
That was first released.
that another 90s film?
So everyone was wearing the masks
to stop themselves from having the coughs
and there were like huge rappers
singing about SARS and stuff.
They tried to make it a pop culture thing
so that people felt comfortable and cool
wearing...
Saas in your eyes.
It's better than dancing with the SARS.
Can I say another thing about sight?
Yes.
Vision. Do you guys know about forbidden colors?
No. I can't believe I didn't know this.
So we can't see all the
colors that are available for us to see. For instance, reddish green. You can't see reddish green
with your eyes, but that does exist and you also can't see yellowish blue. So that means that
you can't see a colour which is in equal parts getting more red and more green at the same time.
Because our cones, which are our receptors which see these colours, will, if they're exposing
themselves to, let's say, the red part of reddish green, then they will shut down the green
bits of the receptor to allow you to
properly see the red and vice versa.
But we could have eyes that could allow
us to see both. And some people think there was an experiment
done in 1983 which tried to make people
see both. And there is a test
you can do and some people claim that they can
see these never before seen, never before
describe colours. So if you just, if you
look up forbidden colours or impossible colours
test, you'll see it online
and it's a yellow square next to a blue square and there are two white
crosses in the middle of each one. And if you stare at that
for long enough, apparently you'll see a colour that
never before been seen.
Wow.
I read a great thing about Tiger Beatles,
which apparently is that they can run so fast that they go blind.
Is that wonderful?
Yeah.
Is that like exceeding the speed of light?
No, they exceed the speed of information, I guess, to their brain.
That's really funny.
Yeah, they don't gather enough photons to make a picture of their prey.
So they end up having to stop to let their brain catch up.
So they're like in pursuit running and then they'd have to just pause.
so their brain can suddenly bring the visuals back.
Yeah.
They have to like sometimes they'll stop three to four times
before they actually catch their prey.
They're like the opposite of pigeons
because pigeons could see a huge number of, as it were, frames per second.
Yeah.
So we did that thing ages ago on QI.
That a film in a cinema after them would look like a slideshow.
They would find it incredibly boring.
Yeah.
And this has been used by some people to explain
why pigeons don't get out of the way as fast as we think they should
if we're driving towards them or cycling towards them.
It's because they're seeing stuff more frames per second
so they can wait for longer because we...
It's like they're in the matrix.
Yeah, but that's not true.
I crash into them all the time.
So whatever there's amazing senses,
which means they can escape quicker,
it's not working.
I cycle into pigeons.
Okay, time for fact number three.
And that is James.
Okay, my fact this week is that on the 24th of March 2015,
the temperature in Antalach,
was higher than in Malta, Madrid and Marrakesh.
So book your flights now.
That is extraordinary.
It was the record temperature in Antarctica so far,
and it was 17.5 degrees Celsius,
and in all those three places, it was around 16 degrees.
Wow.
So does that mean you could go out in a T-shirt?
Yeah, you could.
That is extraordinary.
It's not like in the absolute South Pole.
It was on Antarctica, but not right down in the center.
where it probably was pretty cold.
You can always go out in a t-shirt.
That's true.
No one's stopping you.
No one stopping it.
It's true.
They have that thing called the 300 Club, don't they?
Do you know that?
You sit in a sauna at 200 degrees Fahrenheit for as long as you can stand,
and then you go out and run around the pole naked.
And the idea is that the difference in temperature is 300 degrees Fahrenheit.
And also that you pass through all 24 time zones in the nip.
Do you need to do passport checks at all?
of those different borders.
No, obviously not.
You don't get passport checks at time zones.
No, but parts of Antarctica are claimed by different countries.
So theoretically, they could put up barriers.
But no one respects that, though.
Like no country, they'll be like, this is ours and everyone's going, it's not.
But that's true.
It's like Britain saying, oh, this bit's ours.
And then everyone else is going, no, it's not.
But this is ours.
You're always like, no, this bit's hours.
No, not really.
But this is ours.
There is a, I thought there was a,
Treaty of the Antarctic, which said no one owns it, but only about 50 countries have signed it, and it's probably countries which don't have large claims staked.
Yeah, Equatorial Guinea.
That's cool, we'll sign it.
We'll be the bigger person here.
In order to bolster their claim to the Antarctic, Argentina sent a seven-month pregnant woman to Antarctica to give birth.
So the first baby born in Antarctica was an Argentinian baby called Emil Marco Palma.
And that was in 78 or possibly 79.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I remember it was 78, I think, because it was the same year I was born.
I mean, I don't remember it from when I was born.
Even then, James was finding facts.
I remember reading it and thinking, that could have been me.
Because the first test tube baby was in the same year, Louise Brown.
It's a big year for celebrity babies.
You could have been so special, James.
I know.
Some people say I am.
Your mom.
She's a good woman.
So it's this idea that it's hotter in,
Antarctica isn't to say that it's always hotter in Antarctica. They logged the record cold
temperature last year as well. So it's not to say that everything's warming up exactly by that
amount. It's a lot more complicated than that. But of course, this is all probably down to climate change.
Wow, big year Franktokka, breaking its own records constantly. There's a guy online. He's called
Maximiliano Herrera, and he's a climatologist. And he has a list of all the extreme temperature.
records for every nation on earth.
It's a brilliant website.
You know, if you like data, go there.
And he's found that in 2015 so far,
five nations or territories have set or tied
all-time records for the hottest temperature.
Wow.
And they are Antarctica, Equatorial Guinea,
Ghana, Wallace and Fortuna territory, and Samoa.
Have you seen the hottest temperature ever recorded
was in America, I think?
It's somewhere called Furnace Creek Ranch.
But on the Wikipedia, it says...
Is that just a coincidence that name?
Well, on the Wikipedia, it says in brackets after it,
formerly Greenland Ranch.
I assume that they changed it after that, but I'm not sure.
I think I might have been there.
Is that not in Death Valley?
Yeah.
Yeah, I've been there, yeah.
Yeah, it was hot.
It was a sign saying you must not go out of your cars after 10 AM or something
because it was so hot.
Everyone was ignoring it, of course.
And the people were like frying eggs on the floor and stuff like that.
Not hygienic.
That's something people will never talk about
when you talk about frying eggs on a car bonnet,
it may work, but it's not hygienic at all.
No, I don't think they generally eat them straight afterwards, do they?
Oh, do they not?
What do they do?
What do they do?
What's the point of that?
I know.
It's a waste of a waste.
I mean, you could eat something in a wrapper, like a microwave meal, for example,
on the bonnet of your car,
and then at least it would be hygienic,
thus dealing with Anna's problem.
Dan, please tell us the microwave fact that you told me yesterday.
Oh, yeah, I saw this online on National Geographic.
There's been a pulse that's been detected.
a microwave...
From space, supposedly. It could be a pulsar or aliens even.
Since the 90s, they've been thinking,
what the hell is this thing? It's been a big mystery,
and it would come by every so often. They'd log it,
and no one would know what it was. And they've dealt with this kind of thing
with space before, mysterious signals that they eventually find out.
So they've continued the search to find out what it was,
and they've had a breakthrough. They now know what it is.
The microwave signals were coming from a microwave,
basically on-premise.
And anytime someone used it, it would send out microwave.
signals, it would register it, and that was mystery solved.
They would always send the same pulses that were two minutes long, and then a 30 second gap,
and then another two minutes.
With a mysterious, ding.
Every time.
Did you say since the 90s?
Yeah.
And I think it's neighboring microwaves as well from houses around.
It was at Parks Observatory.
That's where it was.
Such a good fact.
I love that.
So there has been some really weird weather this year, in America especially.
So they've had down the west.
coast, for instance, San Francisco has recorded its first ever January without rain, I think.
And then on the East Coast, it's been ridiculously snowy, this everlasting snow in places like Boston.
And they've realized, scientists have realized it's because of the blob.
What?
Which is, it's this warm mass of water.
It's a thousand miles long and it's sitting off the coast of, off the west coast of America
in the Pacific Ocean, it's 300 feet deep.
And it's not cooling off.
And it's been there for about a year and a half.
And it's just sitting there like hot, not hot.
It's about seven degrees Fahrenheit above the water around it
and not cooling like it usually would.
And so this is causing these crazy weather phenomena all across America
because of the blob.
That's amazing.
I've never heard that.
That's amazing.
Yeah, that's cool.
So here's a weather thing for you.
Go on.
What killed a third of Napoleon's army on his way to Moscow in 1812?
Yes, it was the cold snap.
No, it wasn't.
It was heat stroke.
What?
Yes.
No.
Yeah?
That's not what I learned in school.
It was just as much of a problem
Don't get me wrong
Cold was also a big problem later on
But no there was an enormous heat wave
Which killed a lot of the soldiers who died
Was this going for an Antarctic style
Let's break two records in one year
How do you know what to wear in the morning?
Yeah quite
It's a nightmare
You go invading Russia in layers
Always that's what they're saying
So you can take them off if you have to
I've got a fleece but there's a cropped up underneath here
Don't worry I'll be fine
There's an incredible image
of the journey to and from Moscow,
and he starts out with 400,000 men,
a very, very thick line,
and it shows where he goes geographically,
what the temperature is along the way.
By the time he gets there, he's got 100,000 men.
By the time he gets back, he has 10,000 men.
Yeah, that's incredible.
It's one of the best infographics they would call them these days,
but it's a very, very classic chart.
I'll try and put it up on my Twitter.
Yeah.
Because it looks unbelievably cool.
Wow.
Oh, sorry, go ahead.
No.
I was just going to say I do love how weather in places that you,
Antarctica is the one place that on this podcast is,
constantly mentioned that blows me away in terms of the facts.
Yeah.
Like the fact that fires...
Fires a problem there.
Yes, it's a huge problem.
So they have a fire service there.
Interesting you say blows me away.
It's got a serious wind problem at the moment because of global issues as well.
Oh, does it?
Yeah.
I read that it suffers from horizontal avalanches,
but I think that's a kind of a description that people who are out there,
it's not as dangerous or as crazy as it sounds,
but they describe the idea of a horizontal avalanche.
I'm guessing it must be wind,
smashing. That's weird. So this is another thing that's happened in America. I think that's called
an ice shove and that's, it's an or it's also known as an ice tsunami and it is where wind will,
for instance, in a frozen lake, wind or weird water movements cause the ice to just move like a
very slow tsunami onto the land. But it happened last year in Minnesota and it's so weird. People
just woke up and this huge wall of ice was just creeping into their houses and creeping up. If you
watch it, it moves at about a centimeter every couple of seconds.
That is still scarier than smog, though, isn't it?
Yeah.
Like, imagine walking through a library and there's a big load of ideas.
Yeah.
Have you heard of spontaneous snowballs?
No.
This is a very similar thing.
Right.
Basically, it's when snow rolls up and forms a snowball on the ground spontaneously because
of the wind.
And they have a hollow center, and there can be huge.
They can be up to a foot in diameter.
And it's when you have a crust of old snow, which is covered by a thin,
layer of new snow on top and if the conditions are right a small bit of snow gets rolled along by the
wind and it gathers more as it goes and they have a hollow center yeah that's amazing very cool um
i was looking at places in antarctica there are some quite good place names oh i was literally just about
to say this oh you go for no no you go take it and turns do one each okay let's see who runs out
first okay okay okay all right yeah yeah let's go so got to pick my favorites now nipple peak
okay uh that's gonna be hard to be yep uh knobhead
wait a minute are we doing names or just insults here
nor pets good i will raise you dick peaks
similar theme asses ears
nice
the office girls
no one knows why
shag nasty island
football mountain
uh shapeless mountain which is really interesting
because it was named that
was named that because of the inability of the discovering team
to agree on what its actual shape was
so much so that
shapeless mountain was a confusing thing that when they went to climb shapeless mountain,
they climbed the wrong mountain because they assumed it was shapeless mountain,
and they ended up naming that mountain that they mistakenly climbed, mistake peak.
Yeah. I think I've only got Mount Cox left and then I'm out.
Guys, these names are about as much use as a hatful of busted assholes.
Okay, time for our final fact of the show, and that is Chazinski.
My fact is that Tonga's official finance minister was also its official court jester.
This is this guy Jesse Bogdanov, who was employed as their financial advisor in 1994, financial advisor to the government of Tonga.
And he was, I guess he got a promotion.
Actually, he decided he to be a court jester.
It was at his own suggestion as financial advisor.
He said, why don't you make me your court jester because my birthday is April the 1st?
So it seems like the obvious thing to do.
It's not much of CV that is it.
Why should you get this job?
Well, my birthday's on April the 1st.
It would have been better if it turned out his birthday wasn't on April the 1st.
And there was a trick.
Maybe it was.
He wasn't a very trustworthy character, slanderous.
I hope he's not listening.
He did lose the country about $25 million as their financial advisor.
Wow, really?
Yeah, there was the Tonga Trust Fund, which he was given to manage,
and he invested it all in...
Squirty flowers.
Massive shoes.
And the big shoe index fell off a cliff a few months later.
All those little cars that pulled a bit.
It was basically that.
He invested it in questionable places and it disappeared.
He lost all their money.
He had to flee the country.
So he fled the country?
He left the country and he can't return now because he says he fears for his life.
I think some Tongans who put their money into this fund were pretty angry when he lost it all.
But as court jester, he was quite fun.
He used to play saxophone at royal events.
and he wrote a poem about the king
and yeah, he was generally an entertaining chap
in that part of his.
That doesn't sound like a lot.
Dan, he played the saxophone, for heaven's sake.
The funniest of all instruments.
So where is this guy now?
He's in America.
He's changed his name to Jesse Dean.
He's the founder and sole practitioner
of a company called the Open Window Institute
of Emotional Freedom in California.
And he does offer hypnosis as part of it.
So he can't go back
because he's terrified for his life
but is he a wanted man there or is he
not openly
I thought he was forced to pay back
a million dollars
he was forced to pay back a lot of money
and he still has to pay part of his income to Tonga
but he never admitted any liability
right it was very nice for him to pay it back then isn't it
nice out of the goodness of my heart
so we should say
Tonga because a lot of people won't know much about Tonga
yeah Tonga is 171 different islands
okay right and they're spread over
700,000 square kilometres of ocean.
It's hugely spread out.
But only 36 of the islands have actually
got permanent inhabitants on them.
Right, okay.
Yeah, so lots and lots of them are empty.
They used to be called the friendly islands, didn't they?
That's nice.
They originally called that because James Cook
was given such a friendly welcome
when he arrived there in 1773.
But legend tells that, unbeknownst to him
when they were having a big feast,
the only reason he departed unscathed
was because the chiefs could not agree a plan
on how to kill him.
I've been to parties like that
They must have been kicking themselves after he left
They must have been so close
Okay, so we're five to four in favour of decapitation
Please can we
Yeah, it's amazing that there isn't just
Okay, if we don't decide on anything
Here's our fallback
Like, how do you not have a plan B of basic death?
Between 1918 and 2006, Tonga had only two monarchs
Very long reigns.
Do we know who the current one is?
No, nobody knows.
People have been looking into it.
The current one is George Tupo the 6th.
What do we know about George Tupo the 6th?
Almost nothing.
But I believe we know some interesting stuff about George Tupo the 5th, who was quite a fun character.
He used to own the island's only power company, brewery and mobile phone company.
He got rid of them eventually.
That sounds like he was having a fun time.
Sounds like an entrepreneur.
Was he just making drunken phone calls all the time?
Is that his life?
he also
I think it was him
wasn't it
who insisted on being driven
around in a London black cab
everywhere
and the reason that he gave
with this was because
a London taxi
has the right proportions
to make it easy for you
to get in and out
whilst wearing spurs and a sword
which I think is why
we all ride around in them sometimes
that's why I never use Uber
can't get my sword out of there
I've got a couple things on gestures
I don't know if anyone does
so one thing
surprised me is that I just probably very stupidly assumed that all gestures were male back in,
you know, the 1500s, the old times. But gesturous was an occupation as well.
That's cool. I can I just say that is definitely not the stupidest thing you've ever assumed,
Dan.
Okay, good. Keep going. So, la Jardinère served as Mary Stewart's gestress in 1543.
and she was there for a very long time
and she got paid very well
she even got paid four pounds of snow every summer
Is I being paid very well?
I reckon you believe the PR she believed
That wasn't cocaine was it
Because if it's cocaine then four pounds is a lot
I believe
I think that was bonus money
Four pounds of snow
Three pounds of scagg
It was seen as a refrigeration thing
Yeah you would
I can see that that's useful
Especially in the spring like having a bit of
you know, a bit of snow in your
in your underhouses
to keep things cold.
I suppose so, yeah.
Tyco Brahe, we've mentioned him before.
He had his own jester.
Really?
Who was a little person,
dwarf.
And it was his own personal jester
who brahi thought possessed psychic powers
and he used to make him sit under the dinner table
while he ate dinner.
And in the source I read, I think it was an I-O-9,
which I do like as a source, but it said,
his jester had to sit under the table
while he ate dinner,
probably best not to speculate why he had him do this.
I don't think that was a necessary comment.
Didn't take Obrahe die because he refused to leave the table?
Did he?
Yeah.
When he needed to pee and he never left.
So maybe the jester had enough of him
and then kind of held on to him and stopped him from leaving
and made him die.
Speculating a little here.
My other, my favorite jester that I've learned about recently,
Perkio of Heidelberg.
Have you read of him?
Bakio of Heidelberg.
18th century in Germany.
His name actually was a shortening of an Italian
for why not.
So, Pacio.
So he was a dwarf
and he was famous
for his ability to drink.
And any time he was offered a drink,
he would say,
Pacio, which was his name.
Why not?
And he would keep drinking.
That was basically his main entertainment.
He would just be drunk the whole time.
And he supposedly lived into his 80s,
so it didn't kill him.
But yeah, that was.
That was his one main thing.
There must have been times where his name was,
and where his catchphrase was quite annoying to him.
Hey, do you want to put this snake on your leg?
Perkyo.
Do you want to punch in the face?
Perkyo.
Because St. Chrysostom defined a fool as he who gets slapped.
Really?
Yeah.
Wow.
That is a good definition.
It's also kind of misleading because the role of fools in, let's say, Tudor courts.
and late medieval courts was to be the person who could insult the monarch,
but get away with it, wasn't it?
I like the trick that King James I sixth of Scotland's jester,
George Buchanan, played on him.
So James of Sixth was really lazy about signing official documents,
and he just signed them without reading them.
And, you know, George kept nagging him,
like some annoying wife to actually read the documents.
And he wouldn't learn.
So George, the jester, eventually went to James
and made him sign this document,
which had tricked him into abdicating the throne
and giving it up to his jester.
And then he took the document away.
he walked back into the room, said to the king,
oh, could you just get up off your throne for a second?
And then he, the jester, sat down on it and said,
I'm king now, by the way, showed him the document.
And apparently, King James of 6th always read his official documents after that.
But the jester was brutally recapituted.
Okay, that's it.
That's all of our facts.
Thanks so much for listening.
If you want to get in contact with any of us about the things we've said in the course of this podcast,
you can get us on our Twitter handles.
I'm on at Shreiberland, Andy, I'm at Andrew Hunter M. James.
At egg-shaped.
Anna.
You can email podcast at QI.com.
And we are going to be back again next week with another episode.
We'll see you then.
Goodbye.
