No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Jigsaw For The Queen

Episode Date: January 19, 2018

Live from Birmingham, Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss the squatting Queen impersonator, misplace nuclear launch codes, and the statue in Belgium commemorating Peter the Great's sick. ...

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi, guys. Just before we start this show, I want to celebrate the fact that this is our 200th episode of No Such Things a Fish. Thanks for that, Dan. That little woo-hoo. Yep, and a second one. And the way I've celebrated our 200th episode is by making a mistake. Yep, last week's episode, there was an incorrect fact in it. So we recorded the show live in Leicester and my fact was about how the Walker's Crisp Factory can't tell the difference between golf balls. and crisps.
Starting point is 00:00:31 And after we recorded this show, someone came up to me. He was called Greg Hilliard. And he actually works in the Walker's Criss Factory. And he informed me that fact was out of date because they've now created a machine that can distinguish between the two. It's in the last couple of years. So Walker's can now tell the difference between golf balls and crisps. Happy birthday.
Starting point is 00:00:50 No such thing as a fish. Woo-hoo. Another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast. Guys, I'm trying to do the intro here. A weekly podcast coming to you from Burm. My name is Dan Schreiber, and I am sitting here with Anna Chazinski, 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 point is 00:01:46 Starting with my fact this week, my fact this week is that in Brussels, there is a commemorative statue to where Peter the Great once vomited. Anyone else want to vomit at this stage? Is it in the shape of vomit or what? What do you mean? Oh, the statue? No, it's off Peter the Grey. Yeah, yeah. But what it was is he was over in Brussels
Starting point is 00:02:20 and he was out just having a big day and he had a bit too much of a big day and they pulled over to where this sort of little fountainy bit is and he vomited and it was established that that's what he did historically. And then years later, it was in 1856, there was a prince who donated a... statue to say we need to commemorate this. So it said, it had this little plaque on it, which
Starting point is 00:02:42 says, as he sat on the edge of this fountain, he ennobled its waters with the wine of his libations. Did I say any of the words right in that? It's close enough. His, I think his. Peter the Great was obviously, in one sense, this very grand historical figure, like probably the most influential Tsar Russia ever had. You know, like early 18th century influenced everything that came after him, but also he was an absolute lad. So he founded a drinking society called,
Starting point is 00:03:12 it was originally called the Jolly Company and then it was called the all-joking, all-drunken sign-od of fools and gestures. And it had a few rules, so there were rules like you were never allowed to go to bed sober, you always had to empty your cup when instructed to,
Starting point is 00:03:29 and they just did mad stuff all the time. Right. Just constantly fooling around. So there was, I think there was something where his favourite jester got married. He had this jester, and he decided he was Zah by this time, so he could do whatever he wanted. So he decided to make this wedding, like a massive royal deal. And he gave his jester his Tsar's carriage,
Starting point is 00:03:48 and then him and his drinking society wore boots made of straw, and they wore gloves made of mice. So they shoved their hands into mice. What? Sorry. Do you mean like finger puppets? No, it must be mouse skin, right? They weren't putting the hand up a mouse skin. Oh, yeah, okay.
Starting point is 00:04:06 Well, I don't know, because they wore squirrels, tails, and cats' paws just hanging off their clothes for fun. And then they made the married couple enter Moscow on the back of a camel. And then they just spent three days getting absolutely smashed. And as one biographer put it, the joke may have been carried too far because the groom died during the celebrations. May. May have been carried too far. That's a historian's way of looking at it, isn't it? He was a terrifying man. So he was six foot seven.
Starting point is 00:04:39 He had a standing desk. That's not terrifying, but the standing desk he had, the writing surface, was five foot six inches off the floor. Wow. He was huge. Yeah, and also, the other thing about it, he was obsessed with dwarfs. So when he was a baby, this is before he was...
Starting point is 00:04:56 To him, everyone would have been a dwarf. Yeah. But he had a retinue of dwarfs acting as his servants and playmates, and he had a mini carriage, and he would ride in it, drawn by four dwarf ponies, with four dwarfs riding their own horses at the side. And even in later life, he became obsessed with dwarfs in pies. He loved a dwarf jumping out of a pie at a banquet.
Starting point is 00:05:13 Really? He was obsessed with it. Often naked, naked dwarves jumping out of pies. He was really into, yeah. So Simon Seaback Montefiorey wrote a really good biography. And he basically said all of the parties they had, had naked girls jumping out of pies, dwarves being tossed, dwarves dressed as old men, old men dressed as dwarves,
Starting point is 00:05:29 all of them naked, except for the bishop who would be carrying dildos on a cushion. What? But that's the thing about it is this thing that he did this club, it was called a synod, wasn't it? And so it was basically to take the piss out of the church. That's why he did the whole time. So instead of holy water, they would scatter vodka.
Starting point is 00:05:51 Wow. And if you were ever caught being sober, you'd get excommunicated from his club. But the worst thing was, if you got excommunicated, you were barred from all the pubs in the whole of Russia. Wow. Way. Way. Wow.
Starting point is 00:06:08 Imagine the horror, Anna. Listening at home, you want to be able to imagine the horror on Anna's face right now. He did another thing where, so he did a number of trips to Europe. He was famous for these massive trips. And one time he came back and he was so impressed by the clean-shavenness of the Europeans that he imposed a beard tax into Russia. But the way he did it was, he came back and they threw a massive reception for him. And he was giving a sort of arousing speech.
Starting point is 00:06:35 Everyone said it was elation. Everyone was so excited. And then it turned to horror when he suddenly said, I don't want beards anymore. And he pulls out a massive razor. And he starts shaving the faces of people who were attending what they thought was just a pleasant talk of a homecoming hero. And they all left without their face hair.
Starting point is 00:06:53 But he did the tax to start off with. And then when people started paying the tax, he just went, oh, I'm just going to ban them then. So he just didn't want beards at all. Because he saw that as an example of the old Russia. and he was a great modernizer of Russia. So he had a law that everyone had to dress as either a Hungarian, a Frenchman, or a German.
Starting point is 00:07:13 That was because he knew a very funny joke about a Hungarian, a Frenchman. But with the beard tax, the thing was, with the tax, they gave you these coins, and I didn't realize these coins are still in existence. This is from the 1700s, and you can see them. There's pictures online where it's like a sort of a goatee
Starting point is 00:07:30 and a little... What's that bit called? A soul patch. soul patch kind of thing, but like Satan would have, you know, the more pointy one. A goatee. Oh yeah, a goatee. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So that would be on the coin and you would carry
Starting point is 00:07:44 your coin around with you. So if you were seen in the streets with a beard, they'd go, where's your coin? And you'd look around for the coin. And if you didn't have your coin, they'd shave your face on the spot. He took Russia back 5,000 years as well as being a massive modernizer. What you mean? He left Russia
Starting point is 00:07:59 in the year 7,206, and he got back and he said, I don't want this anymore, because Russia used to begin at 5,5008 BC, and he left Russia for the West and he found, oh, it's 1,700 here. Well, I prefer this. And so he came back and said, right, it's 1700.
Starting point is 00:08:16 Forget the 7,200 nonsense, changing it. Beards don't exist in the future. That's so cool. So he just altered time. Yeah. And he trained as a shipbuilder. Did he? When he was touring Europe, he personally went to a shipyard and just worked there in Amsterdam for months. And he cooked his own meals and he lit his own fires
Starting point is 00:08:37 and he ignored anybody who called him Your Majesty. He answered only to carpenter Peter. No way. He was very eccentric, but an incredibly practical man in loads of ways. Yeah. He also really like cutting something else off people. So you would be actually thankful if he cut your beard off because he loved cutting people's heads off himself.
Starting point is 00:08:57 So usually as a world leader at the time, people were beheaded, but you'd get your executioner to do it. but he really liked to be there in the thick of it. And so he did lots of executions himself, and he was really fascinated by anatomy, again, because I think he liked Europeans and they were maybe a head in biology. If he comes at you with a razor,
Starting point is 00:09:15 at what stage do you know he's going to go for the beard and not cut your head? That's got to be absolutely terrifying, hasn't it? It comes out with a great big axe. No, this is just my beard axe. Don't worry. He actually had a mistress called Mary Hamilton, and then she ended up being beheaded
Starting point is 00:09:29 as lots of mistresses did. and when she was beheaded, he was there, and as soon as she was beheaded, he lifted up her head in front of the crowds who were all watching, and he gave them all a medical lesson on anatomy. So he turned her neck side out and was like, this is the trachea, this is, you know, her carotid artery, and then he gave her a big snog, and then he dropped the head and walked away. He gave her a snog?
Starting point is 00:09:53 Yeah, yeah, he gave her a big kiss on the lips. Oh, my God. So this fact was sent to me by a listener of our podcast called Carrie, and I loved it because there are amazing statues all over the world that represent very odd things. I found one which I find I've been trying to track down whether the truth of this, which is George Washington in Trafalgar Square, very close to where we work in Covent Garden,
Starting point is 00:10:15 literally a walking distance. There's a statue of George Washington there outside the National Portrait Gallery, and it was donated by the Americans. However, there was a sentence that George Washington said just before he died, which is he said, I would never will stand on British soil again. and as a result, it is said, and this is what tour guides tell everyone,
Starting point is 00:10:34 that as they were putting down the statue of George Washington, they imported American soil, and sitting underneath it is American soils, so he still is not standing. No way. What's under the American soil? It's more British soil. How far down does this go, basically? On vomiting and on American presidents, actually,
Starting point is 00:10:55 Ulysses S. Grant was president and also he was prominent in the Civil War and the American Civil War before that and so he was kind of a war hero but at the same time he was an alcoholic so he used to swig whiskey wherever he went apparently and at one point in battle he vomited into his horse's mane
Starting point is 00:11:15 whoa wow and just went on with it what about George W. Bush was it George W. Bush? No it's George H. W. Bush wasn't it? Who vomited on the lap of Japan's prime minister in 1992. And as a result, the Japanese coined a phrase, bushu suru, meaning embarrassing public vomiting.
Starting point is 00:11:37 Or literally, to do a bush. Because that is frowned on, isn't it, in Japan? Yeah, actually everywhere. What? Oh, I've got so many apologetic texts to send. Do you know, he was so good-natured about that moment, though. So he kind of collapsed at this dinner. He'd been feeling bad anyway, I think,
Starting point is 00:11:56 because he'd just played a tennis match against the Japanese emperor, and he'd lost. So he was feeling really unwell after that. And he collapsed onto the floor, vomited, passed out, and as soon as he woke up with the Japanese Prime Minister there above him saying, you're okay, he said, why don't you just roll me under the table and I'll sleep it off while he finished dinner?
Starting point is 00:12:14 Really? Which is quite cool, yeah. Yeah. One thing about Peter the Grey is at his parties, he would train bears to serve alcohol, and they would growl and harass at those who said no. So I thought I'd look at some other awesome parties. And I really like the engagement party
Starting point is 00:12:34 of the newspaper magnate Gordon Bennett. He turned up at his own engagement party so drunk that he immediately urinated into the living room fireplace in full view of his hosts. And it's in the Guinness Book of Records as the greatest engagement faux par. And it's supposed to be where we get the phrase, Gordon Bennett.
Starting point is 00:12:57 Oh, really? Something bad, yeah. Supposed to be. Wait, Guinness, still accepting any advance on urinating into the fireplace? Sure. Okay. Go for it.
Starting point is 00:13:06 I think we could smash that. During the gin craze, there was quite a few good parties. So this was in the 18th century, and a lot of people were drinking gin, especially in London. There was an author called Henry McKenzie, who was at a drinking party,
Starting point is 00:13:21 and he didn't want to drink anymore, so he fell to the floor. to disguise himself as a drunken body. Wow. And then soon after he felt a small hand around his neck, and he was like, what's going on? And he confronted the boy who was doing it. And apparently the boy said it was his job
Starting point is 00:13:35 to loosen the neckties of the guests to prevent them from choking on their own vomit. Wow. If you have to hire someone to do that. Yeah. I had at my stag do party... Oh, are we... Really?
Starting point is 00:13:49 Yeah, just before I did my speech, my brother made me drink what in Australia is called a shoe. and they do it on the Formula One. You fill a shoe full of beer, and you have to drink the whole shoe of beer. So I did that right after I decided, I'd say a quick thank you to everyone that came, and I did that, passed out, woke up in the morning,
Starting point is 00:14:05 and thought, oh, I did a pretty good speech last night, and my brother said I recorded it. I thought it was like about two minutes, 45 minutes. Did a 45 minute speech? Whose shoe did you have to drink from? My brothers, it was disgusting. Because he's a clown, isn't he? That was a problem.
Starting point is 00:14:20 Let's move on to our second fact of the show. Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is James. Okay, my fact this week is that only one study has ever found that men are better than women at recognizing faces. It was a study looking at the recognition of the Transformers. And I know that's bad, obviously, but internally, I am thinking, yeah, I'm pretty good at recognizing Transformers. It's true.
Starting point is 00:14:53 And they're robots in disguise, so that's even there. Right? So this is obviously like an on average thing. So you couldn't say, for instance, that Anna would be worse at recognising Transformers than Dan. Just on average, women are worse than men. Although you know that I asked you earlier what Transformers were, so...
Starting point is 00:15:09 And that was having just read the Wikipedia page on Transformers, wasn't it? I still didn't understand it. Conforming to stereotype. And you couldn't say, for instance, that Andy would be worse than Anna at recognizing Barbie faces, which is the other part of this study. So they took Barbie faces and they took transformer faces.
Starting point is 00:15:28 And they found the women were better at recognizing Barbie and the men were better at recognizing transformers. And what they think is this is a study about looking where that experience is important when it comes to recognizing faces. So they found these things where they thought women would have more experience in looking at Barbies and men would have more experience in looking at transformers.
Starting point is 00:15:46 And they found that maybe experience has something to do with it. But actually overall women are a lot, lot better than men at looking at faces. Yeah, because I think, think I read a study, and this is off memory, so very risky right now, but also women because of the genetic maternal instinct, then you kind of have to be primed to recognize people more often, and you have to like take an interest in more people so you can form a bond with them, and as soon as you form an emotional bond with people, then you're more likely to recognize
Starting point is 00:16:15 them next time you see them. Yeah, it could be that. Could be that. Whereas men are more likely to. But it's probably the Barbie thing. So you have these things called face patches in your brain, and these little bits, they're about the size of a blueberry and they are specifically for recognising faces so they don't respond if you get shown another body part but they do respond if you get shown a face and they are so predictable these face patches that scientists tried it out with monkeys
Starting point is 00:16:38 monkeys also have face patches and they would measure the electrical activity of the face cells and then they could recreate the face that the monkey had seen accurately. No what? Yes. From the activity in the brain cells. Wow, that is magic.
Starting point is 00:16:52 But monkeys don't, aren't. very good at recognizing faces, I don't think, are they. I think great apes are, but monkeys are quite bad. They are good, though, at recognising bottoms. Chimpanzees, especially, recognize each other by their bottoms, the way that we recognize each other by the face. Well, not exactly the same way. Well, the same way, but upside down.
Starting point is 00:17:13 Yeah. Does that mean they back into every social engagement? They go, arse first. But then they can't, because one of them has to be face first in order to see the ass. Oh, yeah. It's unbelievably embarrassing when one comes in arse first and another one comes in arse first. Imagine that in an engagement.
Starting point is 00:17:32 But do you know how they tested this? They tested it by showing them... They showed humans' faces and then faces upside down. And humans are much slower to recognise faces when they're turned upside down. They then showed the chimpanzees, arsees, and then arces upside down. And the slow down was the same.
Starting point is 00:17:49 Whereas humans did not slow down when they were shown a normal bottom and then an upside down bottom, which they also did for this experiment. Could the humans recognise the bottoms? No. They also could not recognise upside down bottoms. Okay, I got it. I just thought maybe I'd have a quick game of Transformer or Barbie.
Starting point is 00:18:08 Oh, okay. Great. We can't do the images because this is a podcast. But what I can do is give you some names of either these are people from transformers, not people, transformers. They're either transformers from Transformers. People to me, James.
Starting point is 00:18:23 Or toys from the Barbie universe. Okay. So, dude. A friend of Ken. Yeah, it must be a Barbie thing. Transformer. It is, everyone? Barbie, they knew it.
Starting point is 00:18:40 Yeah, it's a friend of Jazzy. What? Slag. Is that a Barbie doll? Or is it a Transformer? I think it's an incredibly ill-conceived Barbie. It's a triceratops dino bot. Oh, wow. I should have got that.
Starting point is 00:19:01 M.C. Hammer. Barbie. Barbie, yeah, he's got it. Yeah. Got it. Because they do celebrity Barbies. There's an Angela Merkel as well. Yeah. Yeah. I tried to get one, and they'd said it was for sale,
Starting point is 00:19:17 but then it turned out it was, they brought it just to an EU conference. Barbie created an Angela Merkel Barbie, and so it's not for sale for general public. it is if you pay 50 billion pounds. Yes. One more. Alan. Transformer. Who's for Transformer?
Starting point is 00:19:36 Who's for transformer? Who's for Barbie? Who doesn't give a shit? Okay, it's time for fact number three then. Well, the answer is you were right not to give a shit because it's both. Oh. It's a high-speed train
Starting point is 00:19:54 and someone who's married to Barbie's friend, midge. I beg your pardon. I said midge. Oh, midge. Cool. I mean, if her friend was called Minge, that would have been one of my...
Starting point is 00:20:09 So, you may well have heard of these guys called Super Recognizers. Oh, yeah. So they're police officers, and they're incredibly good at recognizing criminals' faces based on really blurry CCTV. So in the Metropolitan Police, they identify a quarter of all the criminals.
Starting point is 00:20:26 despite the fact that out of 32,000 Metropolitan Police officers, there are only six super recognisers. Whoa. And they get a quarter. And they're so good that one officer was interviewed for the Guardian, and he said,
Starting point is 00:20:39 I was coming back from court, and I saw someone who was wanted for seven offences, because they just spot. They remember the faces of people who are wanted, and they just see them, and they go, that guy. I saw someone who was wanted for seven offenses. Once I had to stop the car three times,
Starting point is 00:20:51 I would take one person in, and then on the way to the station, I saw someone else who was wanted. So I picked them up. And then as we were driving, I saw someone else. No. Yeah, there's constantly seeing crooks. Wow.
Starting point is 00:21:02 Do you know who was very bad at recognizing people was back to American president Ronald Reagan? So he had to speak at a graduation ceremony in 1964. And he was giving, you know, the graduation certificates to students. And a boy came up on stage. And he shook the boy's hand, gave him a certificate and said, my name's Ronald, what's yours? And the boy said, I'm Michael. I'm your son. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:28 It was his adoptive son. They adopted him when he was a baby. He was 19 by that point. Oh. I mean, for an actor who has to recognise people, you would think that would be a flaw, not being able to recognise other humans. Do actors need to recognise people?
Starting point is 00:21:42 I mean, it helps if you're facing the right way. You only have to recognise the camera then, no? I guess so. Just because I can't recognise people, so I'm just a bit worried I can't be an actor. James has genuine face blindness. He doesn't remember faces. Yeah, kind of.
Starting point is 00:21:57 I have no imagination, so I can't... Oh, James. I thought those poems you showed me what wonderful. And that whole Barbie Transformer game was top. I can't imagine people's faces. I can't imagine what my wife looks like, for instance. So he's not proper face blindness, it's Aphantasia, it's called, but it means that I can't really recognize people very well.
Starting point is 00:22:20 Afantasia? Yeah. What a whimsical name for presumably a bad condition? It's not. It's not. I'm not debilitating. Whoever the fuck you are. I'm your wife.
Starting point is 00:22:37 Just one quick thing about face recognition. This year, there was a festival in Wales that used facial recognition technology to recognise evil Elvis's. Whoa. They were trying to scan for people who were wanted, same as the police do, when they were on their way into,
Starting point is 00:22:58 the world's largest Elvis festival in Bridge End in September. 35,000 people were going in. Most of them dressed as Elvis. And officers scanned their faces all. And what, they were looking for bad guys? Yeah, bad guys. There's a thing as well in Barcelona. They've tested out this new thing at comedy clubs,
Starting point is 00:23:17 whereby they've put on the back of seats, little cameras that stares directly into the face of the person sitting watching the comedy show, and it's there to monitor laughter, patterns so every time you laugh it clicks and says you've laughed once so if people at the end of the show go up and say i found that very disappointing i uh would like a refund they can go well actually you've laughed 67 times this evening and you can't have your money back there's one yeah two but everyone fake laughs at a comedy show don't think for a minute we genuinely think you're laughing
Starting point is 00:23:53 everyone puts on a fake laugh you could be laughing at how shit it is yeah yeah no it was it's a it's a It's to see how it would work because what they do is they then they drop the price all together of the ticket And so they clock up everyone's this is free gig you go to it they clock up the laughter amount and then at the end of the gig They say you've laughed and there's a cap on how much laughter there is Because then everyone's just gonna go I'm just gonna enjoy this but I'm not gonna laugh so I get it for free But they awful yeah mouth closed look straight ahead think of death think of old people just think of sadness Some people don't laugh even when they're finding things really funny.
Starting point is 00:24:29 You keep telling yourself that after your Edinburgh show. I'd refer to the audiences at my solo show who had a wonderful time on the feedback forms. I just explained a lot of them were remembering something sad. Can I quickly tell you my favorite headline that I've read recently?
Starting point is 00:24:48 This is about recognizing stuff. The headline is that babies can see things that adults can't but are unable to tell them. They'll look at a picture and they'll notice differences that we won't have spotted or maybe they haven't told us we don't know. That's what they think. So how do we know they can see the differences?
Starting point is 00:25:06 I don't know. I didn't read the article. I just read the headline. That's going to go on your headstone, Dan. Should we move on to our next fact? Yeah, let's move on. Okay, it is time for fact number three. And that is Andy.
Starting point is 00:25:22 My fact is that there is a woman whose job for the last thing. 30 years has been squatting above the queen's throne so the TV cameras can get their angle right. That is amazing. The queen doesn't squat above the throne, does she? Exactly. Certainly not. There's a woman who's called Ella Slack, and she's in her early 70s. She is the official stand-in for the queen at all events where there are going to be TV cameras, because she's pretty much exactly the same size as the queen. And she doesn't look like the queen at all,
Starting point is 00:25:49 but she does it, and she's done it 50 times for different state occasions. Why the squatting thing, that's what I want to know. Well, she said she was interviewed about her life not quite being the queen, by quite a long way not being the queen. She's not even in the line of succession, James. That's what makes you famous these days not being the queen. But what she said about the ceremonies... How long have you not been the queen?
Starting point is 00:26:17 She said about the ceremonies, I've never been allowed to sit on the throne in the house of lords for the state opening of parliament. She said, I have to lurk above it. Yeah, but she says it's a very strict rule. She does say, if I'm in a carriage or a car, I will wave. Which is very sweet. She was employed, yeah, like over 30 years ago when it was realised that the queen had the sun in her eyes at some event.
Starting point is 00:26:42 And so the queen might have the sun in her eyes when she was standing on a podium. And so this woman was sent to check that the sun wouldn't be in her eyes. And now she checks for that. So whenever the queen has to stand up on a sunny day, she goes and checks first that the sun won't be in her eyes. she checks that she'll be visible over podiums in case you've made a podium too high in case Peter the Great's desk is brought up
Starting point is 00:27:01 Wow Yeah and she has her own queen costume Which is put together from charity shops So her queen handbag costs one quid Yeah and she got fake diamonds from Woolworths For the Millennium I just love it I just think it's very nice story
Starting point is 00:27:16 She's not paid she refuses to accept any money for the work she does And she's been doing it for 30 years I think she's one of the great unsung heroes at this country It's weird that she doesn't accept any payment and she pays for her travel and everything. I mean, I agree. She's a hero in a very small way.
Starting point is 00:27:29 Yeah. Speaking of clothing, there is someone else who sort of does a stand-in job for the Queen as well. And that is, it's someone specifically whose job is to break in the shoes of the Queen that are as of yet unworn. So that's what they do.
Starting point is 00:27:44 The people who provide all the clothing for her, her fashion people, the Queen's fashion people, they buy new shoes. And obviously, when you're wearing new shoes are very painful, and so someone is hired to just walk around in the new pair of shoes before she has a go at them. That's cool. So they must
Starting point is 00:28:00 have the same size feet as the queen, right? Yes. It would be very funny if they did not. I was just thinking that the audition for that job, or the job interview, would be just like Cinderella or something, wouldn't it? I mean, there's a load of people sat there, they just need the right size feet. Because there's no other skill there, is there? No.
Starting point is 00:28:21 And it's probably a quick audition. process. Are you size 8? No? Okay, thank you. Size 8? The queen's got massive feet. Yeah. It's not massive. Size 8 is not massive, by the way. It's massive if you're 5 foot, too. Yeah, okay. Do you know, so I was
Starting point is 00:28:38 looking at sort of the reason this lady, Ella Slack, she called. The reason she does is it's like to prepare for ceremonial events and the royal family, they have to rehearse all the royal ceremonies quite a lot. And in fact, the queen herself spent weeks rehearsing for her coronation in 1953.
Starting point is 00:28:56 So she was really nervous about it, and she used to play recordings of her father's coronation over and over again. Her father was George, you know, who had a stutter, and so it's quite difficult for him. She used to play recordings of his coronation, and she paraded up and down what was called the white drawing room, because that had the same dimensions as the theatre in the abbey where she was going to be coronated, and she timed herself doing it to make sure she was going to walk the right, you know, distance at the right pace, and she got all her ladies and waiting to walk alongside her,
Starting point is 00:29:24 and she used to wear her bed sheets as a robe as her queenly robes, which are so cool. That is really cool. Do you know in 2012, there was a queen shortage in the UK. Sorry? There was a queen shortage.
Starting point is 00:29:39 It was due to all the Jubilee stuff, and they needed queen lookalikes. And basically, there's about, I don't know, there's about a couple of dozen people who can do queen lookalikes, and they needed them all the time. And they said the main lookalike
Starting point is 00:29:52 a company, Susan Scott lookalike, said, we could have done with double or triple the amount of queens. That is amazing. Isn't that cool? Imagine when the button was pressed. Dispatch the queens. They'll come out. What do you do? What do you do? What do you do? What do have room? Do you think they've
Starting point is 00:30:14 ever all been at the same place at the same time? I don't know, but I did read an interview with a Kate Middleton look-alike, and she says that one of the queens are one of the queens, Queen lookalikes is like her honorary granny. And the reason is because they all hang out together all these lookalikes. Of course you do. You wouldn't be because you're all working in the same role. You're kind of job.
Starting point is 00:30:32 The Queen lookalikes and the Kate Middleton lookalikes will hang out with them. Yeah, and the Pippa Middleton lookalikes, the Harry Potter lookalikes, the David Beckham lookalikes. They all hang out together. Why is Harry Potter at that party? That's breaking a wall of some sort. Because then that's the only time they can truly be themselves because outside those circles,
Starting point is 00:30:52 everyone's always saying, oh, you look just like Camilla Parker Bowles. What did the Harry Potter look like? Have you ever thought about changing your lookalike, mate? You don't look like Harry Potter. They, just on that subject, they do often, if they're a couple who are celebrity couples in real life, they will fall in love with each other and get married.
Starting point is 00:31:12 I think there's examples of like a Katie Price and a Peter Andre lookalike when that was massive, falling in love because they did so many events together. When that was massive? Yeah. Did you know by the A Whole New World album? So on body doubles, yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:31 General Montgomery in the Second World War, Monty had an impersonator who, for spying purposes, pretended to be him, and would go to different places so that German spies would think, oh, Monty's over here. Actually, Monty wasn't over here. Monty was over there,
Starting point is 00:31:46 defeating the Germans. So the only problem was that the lookalike had had a finger shot off in the First World War. So you needed to count the fingers on the fake Monty. Really? He had a prosthetic finger made.
Starting point is 00:31:59 He wore gloves or a prosthetic finger or something. And the only thing was, there was another body double who was called Keith Dima Banwell who looked exactly like Montgomery. So he was used as a look-like. The only problem was, he was substantially taller than Monty,
Starting point is 00:32:12 so he was never allowed on any account to get out of his car. Was that Tex Banwell? Or was that, or Clifton, James, I think. It was part of something called... Clifton James, yeah. It was called Operation Copperhead. And basically it was when, you know, we were planning, the British were planning attacks on the Germans. And it was dispatched people who looked like him
Starting point is 00:32:34 to all parts of the world to make sure. But he was a drunk as well. So he was an absolute liability, I think. It's so funny, the idea of dispatching these fake Montes everywhere. Well, we've had intelligence that he's in Antarctica. Should we strength and defences in Antarctica? Did you guys read about the Mexican politician who's actually looking for body doubles, or he was looking for body doubles. This is a guy called Renato Tronco Gomez, and this is in 2015. He's a politician in the Mexican parliament, and he put out a call
Starting point is 00:33:03 for body doubles because he wants to maintain his popularity, and he's like, I'm so popular that I need to be in multiple places at once. So he tried to... What an ego on the man. He said, and he said, I'm not that fussy. If you're short, then you can wear platform shoes. If you're chubby, you can lose weight. If you're thin, you can gain weight. It's fine. If you're tall, I'll cut your feet off. He said they're banned from smoking and drinking, because he doesn't smoke and drinking, it has to be realistic. Although at any public events, he stipulated that they would have to say, I'm the double, by the way. You're not quite getting the real guy. You're getting a look-alike.
Starting point is 00:33:40 And he said, most importantly, they will not be able to live in my home, sleep with my wife, or go to Congress. So, no shagging as part of the job. But, yeah. It was only second most important on his list, though, wasn't it? In order of importance, between going to Congress and living in my house. I can imagine that his wife going, wait a minute, you've got no feet. Hey, I read a thing, guys, which is that, so on the subject of body doubles, a lot of, in movies, there's obviously stunt doubles and body doubles for the biggest actors in the world. They all have them.
Starting point is 00:34:16 And I started looking into stunt doubles, generally, for this topic tonight. and I found this thing where there's a lot of anger amongst the Hollywood community of stunt doubles because there's no Oscar for stunt doubling or body doubling and that is such a huge part of the movies. What you see in there is making people believe that you've been blown out of a window or that you've jumped out of...
Starting point is 00:34:38 They have it for special effects. They have a special event, but they think they should have an Oscar for it. And I found that there's actually a big petition that's been going on. And as far as I could see, as of last year, they stopped pushing it to the public because they didn't get the 100,000 votes that they needed.
Starting point is 00:34:52 So it's on a site where they've managed to get 87,393 supporters, and they've not quite hit the 100,000 that they need. So I'm going to read out the website for this here. It's called the petition site.com. You've got to look for stand-up for stunts. And I reckon if enough people who are listening to this podcast can just go to that site very quickly and just give them a petition support,
Starting point is 00:35:20 we could get to 100,000. Maybe next year or the year after, stunt people can get an Oscar at the main award. How cool would that be? But they could abseil through the ceiling and pick up their award. Yes, yes, yeah. They're so close.
Starting point is 00:35:32 And the last update was a year ago, so they've given up. And that's so sad because they're incredible. I would love to see the stunt Oscars. Everyone's constantly blowing shit up, and smashing through the glass. That would be incredible. As a member of the audience,
Starting point is 00:35:46 you'd be constantly looking for the emergency exit before someone said, No, no, no, no, it's fine. It's part of it. But they are, they're more kind of omnipresent than you think, aren't they? So, you know that bit in Notting Hill where Julia Roberts talks about people having butt doubles? I always thought that was a bit that had been scripted in and wasn't true, but they all have body doubles. And in fact, really trashy piece of celebrity information, but in pretty women, Julia Roberts had a body double for that, as she was called Shelly Michelle. And actually, in the really iconic poster of pretty women where, you know, she's kind of leaning against something.
Starting point is 00:36:19 and she's got something over her shoulder, she's wearing some short leather skirt or something. The only bit of her that's Julia Roberts is the head. The rest of that is a body. So I just find it so weird. Someone else's body. But there are a lot of monkeys looking at that picture going, that's not Julia Roberts's house.
Starting point is 00:36:41 Guys, we need to move on to our final facts. James, you got something before we do? So I was looking at Queen's jobs because this is person who's employed to do something for the queen. The queen has a keeper of the queen's stamps. Because the queen doesn't like stamp collecting but she has a shitload of stamps.
Starting point is 00:37:01 And so she implies someone to be her official stamp collector. You're kidding. I am not kidding. Does she go and say, how's my stamp collection doing? I guess so. Why doesn't she like, does she not like the licking the back of her own head? If you collect stamps, you don't lick them. What? That's surely one of the perks of stamp collecting. It's fun. You just go and get your
Starting point is 00:37:24 stamps out and go, oh, just lick that one again. I wouldn't lick the fronts of the stamps. That is deranged. No one's forcing her to collect stamps. She has a collection that's already there, so she needs someone to look after it. But this guy does go and get extra stamps for her collection. Yeah. So he's
Starting point is 00:37:44 basically doing a hobby for her. It's like having an official jigsaw maker. Yes. Oh, but she does collect jigsaws. No, wait. The fact is she doesn't collect jigsaws. Sorry, it's not... Hang on.
Starting point is 00:37:58 It's better than it sounds. She doesn't collect jixels. She does jigsaws. She loves them, but to save buying loads of jixels, she gets them out of a jigsaw library. You can rent jigsaws? Yeah. It's just a library.
Starting point is 00:38:13 It's a free library for jixels. Sorry, is she low on cash? She is thrifty. Well, I think they should put our taxes up. If the Queen can't afford jigsaws, I'm not paying enough tax. Hey, listen, let's move on to our final fact of the show, and that is Chisinski. My fact is that U.S. President Jimmy Carter once sent the nuclear launch codes to his dry cleaner. And not on purpose.
Starting point is 00:38:47 I read this article in Timeline, which is one of my favorite websites, timeline. dot com and it's about the fact that there's been an open secret in Washington since jimmy Carter was president that he lost the nuclear biscuit as it's known which is the little kind of credit card with the codes on it because he sent a suit to the dry cleaners and it was in the pocket because the president has to have it on him at all times and it's just it's amazing did it come back sort of slightly blurry and he was like oh is that a is that a six or a five i'll wing it i'll wing it But isn't it true that basically all the presidents lose the codes all the time? They're very scatty with it.
Starting point is 00:39:26 We can only hope that they lose the codes all the time, frankly, at the moment. One of the problems that they do have from George W. Bush onwards is that the person carrying the football has to be by the president at all times. But the president often forgets that. So the president will finish what they're doing, hop in a car and drive off. And then suddenly, guy with the nuclear codes is going, shit, what do I do? And they have to chase after the president. president and try and get back to him
Starting point is 00:39:50 in case he's needed. I would constantly hide as president. You actually would, wouldn't you? You'd be deliberately all the time trying to sneak up. Yeah, because they have to go even in the same lift as the president. I don't know. What happens when the president's asleep, though? They sleep in the same bed as them. Do they? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:08 Well, no, you found a fact for our book, which is about the fact that if Trump goes to... Yes. Yeah. If he goes to New York, the nuclear button has its own multi-million in Dollar Flat in New York, which he didn't... The flat didn't get used for the first eight months of the presidency
Starting point is 00:40:24 because he didn't go to New York, but they've hired a luxury apartment just for the button to sit in. But I like the fact that it's for the button and it's also for the people who guard the button so it's for his staff. But I like the idea that it is mainly for the button, so the button's in the double bed
Starting point is 00:40:37 and the staff are just standing to attention around the bed. Are you comfortable, sir? As you say, Clinton... Clinton lost it. He kept it... rubber banded to his credit cards in a trouser pocket. Imagine that.
Starting point is 00:40:54 That makes sense. It doesn't make sense. It's a very crazy thing to do. What if you accidentally put in your nuclear button card into the machine at the till? I don't think that's how it sets off stuff. I don't think... This is why they say contactless is a very dangerous technology.
Starting point is 00:41:10 And they only found out, didn't they, when I think Clinton's aide said, look, could you give me the biscuit back because we need to give you an updated version. This came out in an autobiography, he wrote a short while ago. I think it was someone called Patterson. And so his aide said, give me the biscuit back, because we need to swap it.
Starting point is 00:41:27 And Clinton said, yeah, yeah, sure. I think he's upstairs. I just left it upstairs. I'll go and get it. And he scurried around for a bit. And then eventually he admitted that he hadn't seen it for months and he had no idea where he'd put it.
Starting point is 00:41:39 Oh, my God. But he must have known he hadn't seen it for months. Oh, he would have been panicking. Absolutely shit in it, wasn't it? So there was a lot of worry. that a president with this kind of power could launch based on, let's say even in our current climate, you know, you get too angry one day, the president might suddenly go...
Starting point is 00:41:56 Even in the current climate, that might happen. Even in the current blissfully calm environment, we're all living at the moment, yeah. But he might suddenly, you know, it's a very, it's quite an easy process to do. And back in the day, there was a Harvard professor who thought about this and thought, actually, we need to make it a bit harder, we need to make it a big decision for the president to do. So this is what he suggested. He said, my suggestion was quite simple.
Starting point is 00:42:17 put the code that you needed to launch the nuclear warheads in a little capsule, implant that capsule right next to the heart of a volunteer. The volunteer would carry with him a big butcher's knife as he accompanied the president. If the president ever wanted to fire the nuclear weapons, the only way he would do so would be with his own hands to kill the person and then to break it out of them in order to do it. And that wasn't a popular suggestion. In fact, I don't think they even went for it.
Starting point is 00:42:50 With Peter the Great, who would have absolutely loved to do that. It's in here somewhere. Although, interestingly, this is the carotid. I think that's a very impractical suggestion. It's a guy Roger Fisher. He was a Harvard professor. He published in the Bulletin of Atomic Science. It was a real thing, and it was very talked about.
Starting point is 00:43:10 Imagine, though, the president constantly being accompanied by this man with a knife. This absolutely terrified, lucky man, a night. How? Just to finish that off, because I found that as well, they suggested it to the Pentagon, didn't they? And the Pentagon said, my God, that's terrible. Having to kill someone would distort the president's judgment.
Starting point is 00:43:31 He might never push the button. Really? Wow. Wow. So like you said, there are two things, isn't it? There's this card, which is the biscuit. Yeah. And then there's the briefcase, which is the football.
Starting point is 00:43:46 The briefcase is manufactured by a company called Zero Halliburton. Okay, and Zero Halliburton, they're a Utah firm, and they do this, and the other thing is they do aluminium briefcases for Hollywood. So they've made briefcases for 24 West Wing, Independence Day, and Santa with Mussels. That's the main ones. Santa with Mussels is the 79th worst-rated film in the whole of IMDB. Wow. No way.
Starting point is 00:44:18 The whole thing. There must be billions in there. Sorry, they make... Well, they're not fake because they need to use them in the movies, but they're these really awesome kind of aluminium briefcases because the guy who invented it realised that briefcases are not so good
Starting point is 00:44:35 and aluminium ones will be better. And they're good for carrying nuclear codes. The nuclear codes that they have, by the way, are pretty weird, so that it's basically two lists and they're pictorial, and their one list is places to bomb and the other one is how to bomb them. So you basically go down and you go,
Starting point is 00:44:54 I'll go for this one, Pyongyang, and this one, a big fuck-off bomb. Wow. I can't believe. I mean, the one thing keeping the world safe was the idea that Trump would have to read more than six words. A military aide to Bill Clinton said it was like a Denny's breakfast menu.
Starting point is 00:45:12 He said you pick one out of column A and two out of column B. I wonder how seriously this, because it's obviously, you know, it's obviously, you know, it scares you to hear that this thing exists generally, I think. But I don't know how seriously they took it. So the fact is about Jimmy Carter having sent it accidentally the codes to the dry cleaners. When Jimmy Carter first got the nuclear football, it was given to him by the LBJ presidential administration. And when it was brought to him, the guy looked inside the briefcase when he first opened it in the, in the companionship of, in the, companionship of when he was with
Starting point is 00:45:47 Jimmy Carter and inside it when they opened it they found that the previous administration was having a bit of a joke because they left inside an empty beer can and a condom not for humans for horses and that was inside the most deadly bag that a president could have
Starting point is 00:46:03 next to them and he didn't tell Jimmy Carter he closed and he went yep it's all good and Jimmy Carter never found out about that. What? Yeah. Sorry horses have condoms? I didn't know that either. No. Yeah. That for me is the headline from that story. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:17 How do they put them on? Yeah, I've not even thought about how they... Under US nukes. Yeah. So there is a secretive US agency and their job is to transport all the nuclear material around America
Starting point is 00:46:32 because obviously you've got loads of missile silos, you've got loads of nuclear sites and very few people know about this but they're called the Office of Secure Transportation and their vehicles sound absolutely insane. So the defences, obviously they've got convoys they go with, but the defences include shock delivering systems, which basically means if you touch it, it electrocutes you.
Starting point is 00:46:53 They've got axles which explode, so you can't drive them away, even if you do manage to take over it. And they also have thick walls which ooze immobilizing foam. Wow. So if you are wrong on and you touch the lorry, it just oozes out at you
Starting point is 00:47:11 and then catches you like you're on flypaper. God, but it's so weird. Because foam isn't that immobilizing. I've been in baths. Think of how difficult it is to get out of the bath. Yeah. They have special stuff, don't they? I think it's special.
Starting point is 00:47:27 Special foam. Special foam. It's immobilizing foam. Got it, not palm olive. Blackcurring flavored bubble bars. We're going to have to wrap up in a sec. Anything before we do, guys? I can tell you that we've been talking about American nuclear bombs.
Starting point is 00:47:42 We have nuclear bombs as well in the UK. and it is technically legal for Prince Charles to set off a nuclear bomb. No. That's true. It's because he is the Duke of Cornwall. And if you're Duke of Cornwall, there's a few laws you technically don't have to follow.
Starting point is 00:47:58 One of them is the Nuclear Explosions Act. Another one is the Data Protection Act and another one is the Wildlife and Countryside Act. So it means as well as being able to set off nuclear bombs, he can share your email address with third parties. and technically he's allowed to shoot a great crested newt with a machine gun. That's amazing. Okay, that is it.
Starting point is 00:48:29 That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening. If you'd like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we've said over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shreiberland, Andy. At Andrew Hunter M. James. At James Harkin.
Starting point is 00:48:43 And Jasinski. You can email podcast at QI.com. Yep. Or you can go to our group account, which is at No Such Thing, or you can go to our website. No Such Thing Asafish.com, where we have all of our previous episodes. Also got a link to our book, which we're about to give a copy away to one member of the audience here in Birmingham.
Starting point is 00:49:00 We asked you to send in your facts before the show started. And here we go. This is the fact. Andy, what is it? I've got it. I'm just taking the phone off airplane mode. Unbelievable. Okay.
Starting point is 00:49:12 So this fact was sent in by a man called Stephen Conneber, and his fact is that the game Cludo was invented by a Pratt from Birmingham Sorry, that's A Pratt from Birmingham Anthony Pratt from Birmingham specifically And it was called Murder at Tudor Close Wow
Starting point is 00:49:33 Cool, okay, well if you're here Come and grab a book from us at the end Guys, as I said at the beginning We're going to be in the back We've got books, if you want to get one We'll be there signing them there's hopefully I don't know how much time we have
Starting point is 00:49:47 but we'll try and bang through as many of you as possible and then we'll study on them I mean in the current climate Dan bad choice of words but Birmingham this has been awesome and by the way just before we wrap up because again we're doing these bigger venues
Starting point is 00:50:02 we thought we'd end on something special we have here tonight as I said the singer and songwriter Emperor yes Ash Gardner is here and we're going to go out by playing our theme tune live for you guys tonight as I go, yeah. So, please welcome to the stage. Ladies and gentlemen, it is Ash Gardner. Here he is, everybody. And thank you so much, Birmingham. That was awesome. Thank you.

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