No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Magic Oven For Chimps
Episode Date: November 3, 2017Live from Newcastle, Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss British boomerangs, primate rock-paper-scissors, and why the Catalans are so anti-cat. ...
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Welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast this week coming to you from the Stan Comedy Club in Newcastle.
This is Dan Schreiber. 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 no particular order, here we go. Starting with you, Andy.
My fact this week is that Britain exports over 50,000 boomerangs every year to Australia.
And then imports them again, presumably.
Yeah, this is just something that happens.
But who knew that the post-Brexit Britain is going to be boomerangs to Australia,
coal to Newcastle?
Is this a recent thing?
Oh, by the way, the phrase cold to Newcastle, is that well-known here?
Yeah, because we tried it on some people in London,
like young people, and they'd never heard of it.
Yeah, that's true, actually.
Anyone under the age of about 25 in London hadn't heard of it,
maybe 30 even.
But actually, they import coal in Newcastle, don't they?
Or don't you?
Well, do you?
Yes, you do.
Great.
Well, okay.
In 2013, Newcastle imported 4.9 million tons of coal,
the second most in the UK after somewhere in Scotland.
Wow.
No way.
What are they doing with it?
Do you all get some?
Is that...
I think, yeah, then it's sent around the country for people to burn.
That's what you do with coal.
No, I know what you do with coal.
I just didn't know what Newcastle was doing with Cole.
What special thing do you think Newcastle does with Cole?
Well, apparently, they just send it back out again.
It's like the boomerangs.
The thing is, Dan, right, the UK is an island.
And when we bring stuff in, it has to go into a pole.
and Newcastle is one of the best parts we have.
Now I get it.
I thought you meant like Manchester was sending coal to...
I thought Newport was just collecting coal
and then went, now you can have it back.
Newport is somewhere else.
Don't...
Wait, so what's happened?
Oh my God.
Can we recap?
What's...
Don't worry. I think you've trod him on enough toes.
It's a good thing James just said
they've got the best port.
Kiss us.
So we've won a few people over with that.
Anyway, my fact this week is that Britain exports over 50,000 boomerangs a year to Australia.
I looked at these boomerangs and they don't look very boomerang-like.
Well, wait till they hit you in the back of the head, James.
No, well, they're toy boomerangs.
Yeah, they got three sticky out bits.
That's true.
That's like fidget spinners, right?
Yeah, they look like fidget spinners, big ones.
They do.
They do.
But they're cool sports boomerangs or something.
Yeah.
And they basically fly for miles and they do come back.
Yeah.
And the really cool thing is,
The guy who runs the company which sells them,
his name is David Strang, okay?
And he moved from Scotland to Australia at the age of eight,
and then at the age of 20, he came back.
Can I just ask, just a box says,
did we all just exclusively look for facts
where something went away and came back?
So it's just him, isn't it?
It's just this one guy, this one company
that's making them an explanation.
sporting them, is that right?
So you know the song
My Boomerang won't come back?
Yeah.
My boomerang.
No.
It's a comedy song
from the 40s or?
Yeah, 50s.
My boomerang won't come back.
Everyone else knows it, right?
Do you guys know it?
It's a really famous song.
Like six people are saying, yeah.
How many people don't know it?
I mean, that's huge.
It's.
All right, minority.
Do you know who produced that song?
a certain George Martin
who went on to produce
more famous songs by the Beatles
So the Beatles produced
The guy who wrote Game of Thrones
I did not
That was his big break
My boomerang won't come back
And then he went on to make the Beatles
Yeah
In the course of researching this
I actually listened to that song
On repeat for about two days now
Did you?
Yeah
It's very good
Although these days it's a bit culturally insensitive
So I'm not going to praise it
Do you know who else owned boomerangs?
Tutankarmoon.
Oh, Tudan Karmun, too.
It's full of boomerangs.
Both kinds.
Both kinds.
Both kinds.
If we get through these boomerangs, you might find something.
Tutin Karmun back as soon as your chuck.
No?
All right.
I'm sorry.
So do you know what is the world record longest
time a boomerang has been in the air?
No.
Do you want to have a guess in minutes?
Minutes?
Three minutes.
37 minutes.
37 minutes?
What do you think a bird flew off with it?
Well, the answer is 1,440 minutes and nine seconds.
Oh, come on.
For listeners at home, Dan's wagging his finger at me.
like, and I told you so, hey.
Can you explain?
I can.
You're not going to like it.
It's space, right?
It's a guy called Jay Perrett, and he was at the South Pole, and he threw it, so it went
through all of the different time zones, so technically went around 24 hours.
That's awesome.
I'm not the only one who didn't like it.
I actually have the world, the Guinness World Record for the longest distance of...
You have it.
Oh, congratulations.
No, no, sorry.
I'm sorry.
Thank you.
Thank you.
You hide your talent under a bottle then.
Imagine if that was true.
This was the first time we'd ever heard it.
I like to brag.
Yeah, no.
2005, the Guinness World Record was set for the longest throw of a boomerang.
And do you want to have a guess of how far that was?
Oh, like 80,000 miles.
If you could take my question seriously, mate.
James, do you want to have a guess?
Well, let's say I think it would be about 300, 400 yards.
I've got it written down here, so I probably...
Okay, great.
So why don't you have a guess, anyway, Anna?
Is it...
I only guess 4287 meters.
Well, I've got it in feet, so I don't know what that...
So, yeah, you might be right.
Tell me in feet, and I'll...
convert it for you.
1,401.427 meters.
So Anna was closest.
So this was set in Queensland
in Australia and it was set by a guy
called Mr. Schumey.
And Mr. Schumey when he was asked about it
he said it wasn't really a boomerang
throw, admitted Schumey,
as it didn't come back.
But weirdly, the Guinness World Records thought we'll just accept it.
Because the record should be zero meters.
Exactly.
Exactly.
Well, the record for a returning one, which I think is the one that should really stand,
is a Swiss guy, actually, who threw it 238 meters out and then 238 meters back.
Which is further altogether than Mr. Schumey, isn't it?
Again, you've thrown numbers that I don't understand.
It is.
We need to move on to our second fact.
Okay, so it is time for fact number two, and that is James.
Okay, my fact this week is that the Catalan region does regular checks of websites that end with dot cat.
To check that they're about Catalonia and not about cats.
Are they the only two options?
Well, no, but it seems...
Basically, they want all of the websites that are dot-cats,
because that's the Catalan domain name.
They want them to all be about Catalonia,
but actually everyone else wants to put cats on the internet.
And when you put cats on the internet, what are you going to do?
You're going to put dot-cat, right?
And so people do it all the time.
And every now and then they have to do an audit,
and they give people six months to shut down their website
or add a translation tool to translate their website into Catalan.
So there is a website called, is it Nyan or Nyan?
Does anyone know?
Nyan.
So it's Nyan, you'll all know about it.
It's like a little cartoon cat that's got like a rainbow on it
and it's a stupid song that happens.
And that was Nyan.Cat.
And they were told they had to take it down
until they put a translation tool.
And so now you can watch Nyan Cat in Catalan.
Wow.
Thank God.
Yeah, but it's really like for them,
like for the Catalan.
people, it's really important, obviously,
a lot in the news at the moment, but I think
they were the first sort of
group of people rather than a country to have their own
top-level internet domain name.
Yeah, there were only eight, only
eight top-level domains were allowed, and then the
Catalonian people said, no, we want a night, we want it to
be our own space. And it was
because one of the guys who organised it was
Catalan. So that kind of
helped. Yeah, he was called
Amadu Abriel E. Abriel,
and he was a lawyer, and he was kind of part
of the top-level internet thing.
but he was Catalan, so he kind of managed to pull a few strings.
They are very active internet users, though, apparently.
Cats, yeah.
Cats, yeah.
It's them that are posting all these pictures of themselves.
The Catalonians, too, though.
So in 2013, Catalan was the eighth most used language on blogs online,
which is kind of extraordinary,
given that they're like 8 million, 8 to 10 million Catalan speakers.
They love the internet.
It'll never catch on.
No.
I think I heard that blogging is massive.
Yeah.
Because it is that.
Yeah.
And I have this thing.
It's called MySpace.
And you go on.
No, it's because they're, you know,
obviously they want to be independent from Spain.
A lot of people in Catalonia, so they blog and they have message boards
which are all about Catalonian issues.
And it's a very sort of adhesive identity, basically.
Yes.
Did you read about the guy, though,
who has started a cat-based internet thing
that is really cool?
He started stalking cats around the world
and then he started posting up where they live online.
So what happens is,
if you post a picture of your cat on Flickr
or, like, what are the other ones?
Instagram.
Ask Jeeves.
You put a cat on Ask Jeeves?
You can put a cat on Ask Jeeves.
And he'll take the cat and he'll scrape all the data from behind it, all the metadata.
Who is this pervert?
Why are you telling us about him?
He's not a pervert.
He's someone who's trying to highlight the security problems online with posting your pictures up
because you often accidentally geotag yourself when you put pictures up.
And so he's created this map of the world and you can see all the cats that live in certain places.
So if you've ever posted a picture of your cat up, then you can go to where you live and your cat may well be there.
Or you might go to near where you live and see your cat.
and then you'll know that it's cheating on you
and someone else has been posting pictures of your cat.
But that's clever, right?
So he's not posting pictures of actual people
because that would be a bit creepy,
but he's just posting pictures of their cats.
Wasn't it the case that one of the greatest hackers
that the internet has ever seen was caught
and they tried to break into his system
to work out just to get into his computer
to see what he'd done?
And they're like, oh, he's going to have the most intense password ever.
And it turned out his password was his cat's name
and one, two, three, four.
Yeah, it was.
Scientists in Japan have studied cats recently
and they found that they do recognize their owner's voices
but they then choose to ignore them.
So they played the cat a recording of the owner shouting the cat's name
and then they played another recording of a stranger shouting the same cat's name.
They found that the cats have a much greater response
to the owner shouting their name than to a stranger
but they still do not get up.
But dogs are catching up online, right?
In the last couple of years, I think dogs have become as prevalent online,
whereas cats used to be much better.
And I think the idea is that the age of the smartphone
has meant that is more friendly to dogs
because smartphones, I am told, are good at videos
and streaming them and dogs are a bit more video-friendly.
So cats are very image-friendly
because they are still for 99.9% of the day.
But now we can actually do the video thing
and post that up easily and watch it,
then dogs work better.
And so now it's about 50-50
in terms of how many are being posted respectively.
I did not know that was the reason.
That's interesting.
It's a theory.
There is that place where you can feed a cat
that's 4,000 miles away, can't you?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, that's right.
You can have heard of this.
There's a webcam set up for a cat sanctuary
in, I want to say Russia,
and you can move a toy remotely.
And you have to wait for ages in a queue
while other people get to move the toy around remotely.
We did it at the office.
We were not there that day.
I was, yeah.
Yeah, that was great.
A very long afternoon.
So I was looking into all these dot something sites.
As we say, like, dot cat, things get misappropriated for the country that they're meant to represent.
So obviously, dot xx is for porno websites.
And that one is not a country, obviously.
Or if it is, I want to.
want to go there sometime.
I don't. I'm married, I have a kid.
But.
DotXXX is one that is allowed because
what they want to do is try and separate the porn
so that you can actually identify it.
The problem is no one's using it because then people
can say you're definitely using porn as opposed to a dot com website.
You could just say, oh no, I thought it was for people
who are 30.
And Roman.
That's true.
So anyway, but there's other ones.
AC is the Ascension Islands.
They have a population of 806, and that's used largely for academic websites.
Dot AC.
It's also used for it, and I had no idea this was a big thing.
Air conditioning industries, it's a huge thing, air conditioning industries, and they use AC.
Dot L.A. is for Lao, or Laos, and that's being properly marketed as for Los Angeles to use that.
And then I found Dot TV.
And I remember Dot TV is a famous one, because it's two-fold.
So I looked at, there's a list you can see,
the most famous dot TV websites
that you can get. And I found last night
and I was up, because I've got, I've just had a son,
so I was up at about 3am after feeding him
with a bottle and my wife was asleep
and I was doing research for tonight's show.
And I found right there, up on the list,
there's all these different dot TVs, hamsterporn.com.
Oh, Daniel.
And I saw it and I thought,
there's no way I'm not clicking that.
So,
so I click.
clicked on it and I was brought to hamsterporn.tv and annoyingly it was just a regular human porn site.
There were just a bunch of...
That must have been really annoying.
It was super annoying.
So it was all these just screen grabs of videos of humans doing porn.
And as I was looking through it and just slightly upset, my wife woke up.
And she looked up and she saw the screen and she looked at me and went, what are you doing?
looking at porn and I said
no honey sorry I thought it was going to
be a side of hamster porn
and
she literally said nothing
and turned around in the bed and went back to sleep
I can't believe you have
roped us all into your lie
here Dan
a week on Friday you're going to make your wife
listen to it and go see
the new top level
domains though just to get nerdy
that's a new thing so the dot xxxx is a new
thing and so it used to
and you be that your country, the dot coms, the dot co.
dot UK's. But now we can
register stuff for things like, there's a big
long list you can read, but dot hair,
dot wow, dot weirdly, dot
that's good, dot weirdly, is lovely.
We should do us at dot weirdly.
Sorry, there's no dot weirdly.
I was interjecting myself. But there is dot Ferreiro
and dot roche, but there's not
dot Ferreiro Roche. And there's also
dot off, which is just feels
like you need to start registering the sod,
and the boggers and the, you know, X dot off
before they get snapped up.
Just a really quick, geeky, top-level domain name fact.
Yeah.
For Montenegro, the country of Montenegro,
it was Yugoslavia, and then it went to Montenegro,
and so the top-level domain went from dot you to dot me.
Thank you.
Oh, God.
That's awesome.
That's a sort of like Bruce Forsyth kind of website thing.
Wait, no, like a Chuckle Brothers website.
Yeah.
I think you were thinking, nice to see you.
That's what I was thinking.
To see me, to see me, to see you.
Thank you, James.
Yes.
We should move on.
It is time for fact number three, and that is Chazinski.
Yeah, my fact this week is that when Walmart opened in Germany,
it scrapped its policy of making employees smile at customers
because the Germans found it too weird.
This is a genuine problem.
So Walmart started opening up stores in Germany in 1998,
and they ended up in 95 stores opening,
and it was just a disaster, really,
and Germany didn't really get along with Walmart very well.
And one of the main reasons was these golden Walmart rules
that they have in America, and they are,
if a customer comes within 10 feet of you,
you have to smile sweetly and offer help,
and this is known as the 10-foot rule.
And other things like,
if a shopper made a complaint,
it needs to be dealt with by sundown,
that's called the sundown rule
and customers bags have to be packed at checkout
and it turned out they did this in Germany
and they did various studies researchers
looked at how it was playing and it was playing badly
so smiling was interpreted as flirting or creepy
and the head of the Walmart trade union
said in Germany just said
Germans don't behave that way
we don't do the smiling and then
the biggest German research institute said
in Germany if people try putting stuff in a bag for you
you, the customer will just think, hey, I just paid for that. That's mine. What are you doing
putting in a bag? So it didn't work. And it was just very interesting. So they had to
cancel the policy just because it's very different customer service in America to outside
of America, it turned out. Amazing. I don't think of Germany as being unsmily, though. I think
it's that America is very smiley. Yeah. The 10-foot rule thing. Yeah. Does that apply even if
there's a like a shelf in between you and the customer? Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah. I have
run all the way around.
Yeah, and so Walmart's not in Germany anymore, is it?
No.
They all closed down.
I read one other thing that they thought maybe was one reason why it didn't work.
And that is because Walmart employees are required every morning to stand in formation and chant Walmart.
Walmart.
Yeah.
And they thought maybe the Germans didn't really like standing in a row, chanting things for obvious reasons.
they also they would always make them do the charm
which was like give me a W
W give me an A
A and apparently lots of staff
used to just hide in the toilets for that part
as I think a lot of us would
if you were forced to do that every day
and also they had to chant every morning
at the morning meeting at the end of every meeting
the boss would say who is number one
and all the staff would have to chant
the customer of course
so I think staff spent a lot of time in the bathrooms
but you're going to work and just chanting
no such
as a fish
no such as
you turned up
on time a bit more often
you'd see
in fact
that goes for all three
of you may I say
so in some countries
I read the New York Times
said that
they've had trouble
in various places
in Korea
apparently
they ran into trouble
because they had
taller racks
than those of local rivals
and so it was just
a bit harder to reach this stuff
and customers would have
to get on ladders
so I was like
oh, maybe the average height in Korea is a bit shorter.
I looked it up.
Koreans are exactly the same average height as British people.
So it just, apparently, they slightly overshot the shelf height in Walmart.
Yeah, but Walmart's ladder sales went hugely through the road.
It is like a cult, though.
I was reading a blog by a guy called...
Sorry, Andy, a blog is where people just put thoughts and stuff, yeah.
I was reading a blog by an ex-Walmart employee who was saying that they get really
obsessed with box cutters.
So they get given a box cutter when they join as a member of staff.
This is in America and he said,
staff go apeshit for these box cutters.
And at staff meetings, they would have Sam Walton trivia contest.
Now, Sam Walton is the guy who founded Walmart.
I don't know how much trivia there is about Sam Walton,
but apparently enough to have a trivia quiz on him every staff meeting.
And where the answer is always Sam Walton.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Is Sam Walton the best person ever?
Yes, correct.
Walmart, Walmart, Walmart, Walmart.
And then the winner of that quiz,
who locked onto that, would get a slightly padded box cutter.
And then this member of staff said they used to taunt
the other staff with their slightly better box cutters.
But that's quite aggressive.
Yeah, with a knife.
So I was looking at, like, smiling around the world,
happiness with different countries.
You always get these things where all the countries
are ordered by how happy they are, don't you?
and usually the same people in like Costa Rica or something.
But Denmark has won it for the last few years,
and this year they were beaten by Norway into second place.
But actually, the guy in charge of happiness in Denmark said he was very happy for them.
Lying bastard.
He said, we don't have a monopoly on happiness.
Wow.
That's, I mean, but that's the ultimate happy sentence to lose the happiness competition.
that's almost, we're going to have to take the prize off you.
That guy just went Uber happy.
That's insane.
Yeah, and that's obviously why he did it, the cynical bastard.
He said that and then he went, are we back at the top spot?
Yeah, great.
When McDonald's opened in Russia, in fact, where, you know, the service industry has
slightly different cultural norms.
Staff were taught how to smile, the Russian staff were taught how to smile
because it's not a particularly normal thing.
And actually, there was a study that was done looking at how different
countries view smiling and in Russia most people view someone who smiles a lot as quite stupid
whereas in America and actually in Britain we view them as a bit more intelligent in fact if
someone smiles at you and they engage with you um it all depends I would say on context if there's
someone smiling at you on the bus and they won't stop it is true though actually in Russia
because my wife's Russian so I go to Russia occasionally and they just don't smile at
photographs. They do a bit now,
but in the older days, they really wouldn't smile in
photographs. And it was very much
drowned upon.
I'm sorry.
I almost bottled out of that
joke, haven't we?
And I thought there's nowhere to go in it. But it is
actually true. It is, yeah.
If you see old pictures of Russians
even from the 80s and 90s, they're just
very stout. Americans
used to be really serious. They used to have a reputation
for being serious until the mid-19th century.
Really?
Yeah.
Well, I was just thinking of the very old photos that used to get taken
where nobody's smiling.
And you often read that.
And the reason that no one's smiling is because that just was the thing.
You just don't smile.
I didn't realize it's because of the long exposure of the photo.
So it takes so long for the photo to be taken.
And you don't know exactly what point it's going to be.
You just had to keep a normal face.
I mean, not in the 1980s.
Camera technology had come quite a long way then.
No, no.
I mean, you know, the super old school.
we're talking like, I guess
the, you know, BC.
Before cameras.
Yeah.
But so, because, yeah,
it was just the exposure was too long.
So to hold a smile, to hold the cheese,
it would be so long that you would just look pained
and it would be, yeah.
I have read a debunk of that, actually,
just for the record, that maybe the exposure
wasn't quite as long as we thought.
Maybe it was only about 30 seconds
and anyone can hold a smile for 30 seconds,
but I don't know.
No, but they were just going,
used to smiles back then, so it would have felt a lot longer.
Sure, sure. They could have had
a happiness hat. This was something in the news
a few years ago, and the happiness
hat was a hat, obviously,
and it was made of metal, and it
had these kind of metal bits coming down
the side, and then it had a metal spike,
and whenever it sensed that you were frowning, it would
stab you in the head with a spike.
I remind you to smile.
Oh, God. Really? Sorry, which
shopping chain was this?
Where was this?
It was just one guy who invented it.
Oh, really?
But he hit the news.
Yeah.
Wow.
Should we move on to our final play?
Yeah, we should.
Okay, it is time for our final fact of the show, and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that it is really easy to beat chimpanzees at the game Rock Paper Cissors.
Yeah, they're shit at it.
Chimpanzees have recently been taught to play Stone Paper Cissors, Rock Paper Cissors.
scissors, Rushambeau, whatever you call the game.
And they actually, the flip side is they actually know how to play stone paper, scissors.
It's amazing.
And they can learn it to the level of what a four-year-old would learn it.
So you could actually, at the moment, they've only been playing with computer simulation,
so playing against a computer or an iPad.
But if you were to play them, you could actually have a genuine game with the movements
of rock paper scissors and beat them.
The reason you can beat them is they're really bad at learning from their mistakes.
So whereas four-year-olds will make a mistake and go, I need to adjust.
Chimpanzees will be like, I'll use paper again.
And then afterwards, when they're beating again, they'll be like,
I'll go for paper this time.
And then when you beat them again, like,
he's not going to see what's coming next.
Good old trusty paper.
But if I was playing against them,
I might think they're not going to be stupid enough to go for paper again,
as I would probably lose.
You are still sore about the match you lost.
the weeks ago.
Actually,
they're a lot better
than you'd think,
Dan.
It's interesting
because it took them
a hundred,
the chimpanzees
to learn,
they tried it,
I think,
on seven chimpanzees
and five of them
managed to master it.
It did take them
a hundred days
to learn it.
Yeah.
So it's a very,
very long time
for them to learn.
Yeah, they're idiots.
It's a simple game.
I mean,
I don't want to brag,
but I got it
in about 30 days.
Anyway,
but the really tricky thing
that the chimpanzees
didn't get
was the circular nature
of it.
So they understood
rock beat scissors.
and then they understood, okay, scissors beat paper,
but they found it hard to get their head around paper
then beats rock.
Really?
That makes it even more weird
that they went for paper every time.
But actually, I'm with them.
Why does paper beat rock?
I mean, I know it covers it.
You wrap it.
But that's not beaten, is it?
I mean, scissors is actually demolishing the paper, isn't it?
And their rock is demolishing the scissors.
Yeah, but if you hide a rock in some paper,
you can smuggle it into a recycling bin.
Got it.
In Japan, it's tiger, a village chief,
and the village chief's mother.
Right?
And that's that circular thing.
So the village chief's mother
kills the village chief,
because she's angry with him.
The village chief kills the tiger,
and the tiger kills the village chief's mother.
Do you know the Indonesian version?
No.
It's called ant-human elephant.
So the human tramples the elephant.
That was tight.
tiny elephants they have in Indonesia.
I think I got confused between
ant and elif
ant and it foxed
me, sorry.
The human tramples the ant.
The human tramples the ant,
then the elephant squashes the human, but then
the ant beats the elephant by...
Tramples it. Yeah.
It's that
the ant gets into the elephant's ear and it
tickles it.
Oh.
Really? I read that the ant crawls up the elephant's trunk.
can eat its brain.
Maybe I was really sick.
I had parental guide lock on.
So I am very confused by the chimp fact.
I didn't realize they were less good than us
because there's no such thing
has been good at rock paper scissors.
There is no strategy.
You can't learn from your mistakes
because we all basically make the same mistakes
and we can't really predict each other
particularly.
I mean, if you're really a pro, then maybe.
You've obviously not been on the rock paper scissors website.
They have a lot of times.
tactics on that. One thing is
if your opponent pays scissors
in the first go, you can tell by how
wide the scissors is what they're going to do
in the next go. No, you can't.
Well, no, you can't.
I mean, they say you can't.
They have another, apparently this
is a trendy strategy.
It's the exclusion strategy.
Okay, so you never play, say,
rock and you keep doing different ones.
You keep doing paper or scissors, and your
opponent just gets obsessed by the fact
that you've never played rock, and it
just fucks with their mind.
That's great.
Good idea, right?
And that's the trendy strategy.
That's the trendy one.
That's how to be cool
as someone who subscribes to rock paper scissors.com.
You don't actually have to subscribe
to a website.
You can just...
You can just go there and then go away.
Some of them you do,
like hamstafforn.com.
Children are very hard to play at rock paper scissors.
As in they're very good at playing it
because their choices are genuinely random.
they haven't yet mastered the gambits that James is discussing
so they're much likely just to go with whatever
and that makes them quite hard to beat.
Right.
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense.
You don't want to overthink it.
Hey, I found a cool thing out about chimpanzees.
Chimpanzees can recognize each other by face like we do.
But if they're just walking along
and a chimpanzee is facing the other way
and the butt is showing,
they'll see the butt and be like
Greg, they
have an understanding of
bums that they can just
if you put like a line up of
bums in front of them they'd be like
Mark, Sonia, Alice
John. Is that what Chimp lineups
are? Is it like
were any of these people, the people who
pickpocketed you the other day Mrs. Chimp
and then she's like that
bum there. Yeah, possibly. It's good because once you've
robbed someone you run away, don't you? So you're likely to see
the bum. Perfect. Yes.
Exactly.
Oh, there was, I heard an amazing burglary.
Burglary.
Burglary.
Robbery.
Robbery.
We did the audio book the other day for the book that we've done,
and it took forever for me to say basic words like that.
The best one was when you misread February as January.
It was truly bizarre.
Yeah.
Yeah, so there was this fact that we found the other day,
which is that a burglar is,
always most likely going to knock on your door before they burgle you.
Isn't that weird?
Is that so they can check if someone's in?
Yeah, basically.
Yeah, that makes sense.
But if you're going to get robbed, they're just always going to knock first,
like in a polite fashion as opposed to just breaking a window or whatever.
Yeah, I don't think it's out of politeness that they're doing it.
But yeah.
Is that, so have you read the thing about chimps that they, according to the New York Times,
have the ability to cook if only someone would give them an oven.
This is what scientists...
I'm like that.
This is something that scientists have just concluded.
And they did this in a study where the researcher involved said,
we invented a magic cooking device to test on the chimps.
As he explained it, it's two plastic bowls.
And the chimp puts a raw potato in one of the plastic bowls.
And then in the other one, there's a cooked potato,
and you maneuver the balls to make the chimp think that his raw potato has been cooked.
Why this guy didn't just use the or...
existing oven that we have, I don't know.
But it turns out that chimps do prefer, if you give them a bit of raw potato,
they prefer to put it in the plastic bowl that will then magically cook the potato
and then to eat the cooked potato than just to eat it raw.
And so that kind of shows that chimps have self-control.
They're willing to postpone the potato to make it taste nicer.
And also, according to the scientist, who did the experiment, said,
it shows they have the causal understanding to make the leap to cooking,
which I would argue believing that you're putting a raw potato into a plastic bowl
and then leaving it for 10 seconds before getting a cooked one
is not having the causal understanding.
Yeah, that's true.
But I didn't know they preferred cooked food.
Yeah, I needed to die.
But I don't know how my microwave works.
If you told me that some scientists, just replace it with a cooked risotto.
I'll buy it.
Okay, should we wrap up?
Okay, that is it.
That is all 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
you, Andy or
at excuse me
me Andy
Chuckle Brothers
I saw that was Bruce Foreside
it's an anti-climax
now but at Andrew Hunter M
James
James Harkin
and Chisinski
you can email podcast at QI.com
Yep or you can go to
our group account, which is at No Such Thing. You can also go to our website. No Such Thing
As a Fish.com. And there's every episode that we've done that is up there. You can get links
to every bit of our tour. You can also buy our new book, the book of the year. It's out November
2nd. And we're about to give one away, actually, to one of the members of the audience who sent us
a fact. James, you've got the fact. I have. It is from Scott Robinson. And the fact is that
cleaning your teeth is the only time you get to clean your skeleton.
That's so cool. So creepy.
Is that true?
Not quite true, you just said.
Whoa, we've not had this on the show before.
Who shouted fight?
I think what we can do is a game of rock paper scissors.
Yes, yes.
So this guy here, who the quibbler, I'm going to call you.
If you show in front of your chest what you want to do for rock paper scissors,
and then we'll get Scott to shout out.
what he wants to do and we'll see if there's a winner.
Oh wow, this is so excited.
I can't see it.
Yeah.
I can see it.
Okay.
Okay, Scott, shout out.
What have you got?
His Scott's the winner.
Scott, come and grab a book from us.
We'll be here.
You went for paper.
Let's do it again.
He'll never do paper again.
Oh, he won't do paper.
Okay, well, we'll be back again next week with another episode.
Thank you so much for being here.
everyone. Thank you so, so much. We'll see you again next week. Goodbye.
