No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Midsummer Night's Bream
Episode Date: November 25, 2022Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss bowler hats, Kalamazoo, gravestones and anaesthesia. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. Join Club Fish for ad-...free episodes and exclusive bonus content at nosuchthingasafish.com/apple or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon
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Hello 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 am sitting here with James Harkin, Anna Tashinsky, and Andrew Hunter Murray.
And once again, we have gathered round the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days.
And in no particular order, here we go.
Starting with fact number one, and that is Anna.
My fact this week is that Indigenous Bolivis.
women traditionally wear huge colorful skirts and bowler hats and I can't believe I'd never
really seen this before it's striking and they all do so these are they tend to be known as
charlitas which is basically a term for like the iMara and the keshua and other rural
bolivian women not charlie chaplain as it sort of sounds like the charlitas it's a i know you're
trying to make a jump to the charlie chaplain bowler hat and i appreciate that
Yeah, so like his fine club, you know, like, all these, like, Lady Gaga's are called their monsters.
Yeah.
Maybe you've blown this wide open and that is why they do it.
So, Cholietas, it used to be a pejorative term, I think, and it was, it comes from the Spanish Cholo for mixed race, but it's, like, very much reclaimed by them now.
And if you look them up, they always wear these stunning, kind of white, like silky waistcoats with a brooch and these huge dresses with, like, petticoats underneath.
So, like, really big Elizabethan style.
dresses and then a bowler hat which doesn't fit but it does work it makes the look awesome
works in that way oh yeah and works in like a you know it because bowler hats were originally
invented to stop twigs from hurting your head when they so I wondered if it would probably
stop a twig from hurting your head is it's not functional I'm talking fashion I'm saying it
works that works yeah it does work um yes and we're not quite sure why they do it they
started doing at the turn of the 20th century. There's the legend that when British and Irish
railway workers were in Bolivia, which they were, because the railway building company was a
British company, there was a big shipment of bowler hats that was sent for them to wear, because
it was like workers' hats, and they were too small, so some clever marketing person flogged them
to the indigenous women. I think there was a guy called Domingo Solingo, who did a very good job
of popularizing them and ran a good PR campaign. Try to get men to wear it first from one
of the other stories versions of the story and they were just not interested so they'd just as a
last minute thing went women would you like a minute then when he was walking along with a tray of
samples one day he tripped over and one of the hats fell onto a woman's head and completely by accident
he discovered that's so interesting because they are I mean they are comically small
they're not like you know just a little bit too small to go in your head are they I would they're
not like yamalka if you're picturing it's like yeah just clearly too small they sit on top
They sit on top.
So I mean, who were they made for?
Is my question.
We have this in the house all the time
where you order something
and then a novelty small size version
comes in the post.
That must be what it was.
You know, like we bought a crown
for my son Wilf's birthday
and it arrived
and it was the size
that would fit a Kendall's head
by accident
because we just hadn't read the measurements
and we got a washing life.
Need to read the measurements.
They clearly didn't hear as well.
One thing I like about the
Cholita thing is that the,
I didn't really.
I mean, I didn't know anything about this style before or even this cultural grouping before researching this.
But they weren't allowed to walk freely in the main square of La Paz, which is the capital of Bolivia or in the wealthy suburbs, in this outfit.
For many years.
And then it's really been brought back on board to the extent that they're officially a part of the city's cultural heritage now.
It's called the Troilita of La Paz.
And also, there are Trilita fashion shows.
There is a Trilita modeling agency.
And I'm sure you guys came across the Fighting Trolita.
Oh, yeah.
I did not.
I'd like to hear about the Fighting Jolitos.
It's just a wrestling group, but they're female wrestlers who wrestle in traditional.
With the hats.
With the hats.
Do they do like odd job?
The odd job kill.
Yeah, they do.
Yeah, they die by the dozen every man.
Anyway, the Fighting Cholitos.
That's the one where they play golf, isn't it?
Yeah.
Yeah, that's the only Bond film I've seen the one where they play golf.
Did you Google?
I just Google Golf and it came up.
Right.
Do you have, you know, there's an app that can tell you when to go to the toilet at the cinema.
like toilet break. Do you open that just tells you when golf scenes are in a movie and you just
show up for that bit? I do. I only ever watch Caddyshack and that Bond film.
They are a real happy story which we're all on the lookout for these days. But I think it was basically
since Eva Morales was in charge of Bolivia, right, who was their first indigenous president
who came in the early 2000s and sort of completely rehabilitated their reputations because they
had been kind of ostracized and had all these horrible repressive rules.
made against them.
And now they're doing so well.
And it's a real great story.
And they're quite well off.
They've got all these celebrations about their heritage.
They have,
I think they have a few indigenous people in parliament.
They're like lawyers and doctors.
And yeah, it's quite nice.
Because they have since like literally back in the day
when the Spanish colonized.
And they wanted to distinguish them,
the superior colonists from the indigenous people.
So they said,
okay, well,
what do people who are lower class do in Spain?
they wear these big peasant dresses
and so they made them all wear these big peasant dresses.
So yeah, they put them these, just say, like you're beneath us
and the Chalutas just went, all right, we're going to own this.
It's interesting because like the big dresses come from the Spanish peasants
and the bowler hats come from British, you know, upper-class people.
That's right, yeah, I see.
Fusion.
Yes, yeah.
Yeah.
Have you guys ever drunk Coca-Cola?
No.
Yes.
What kind of a question is that?
You might be right. You might be right that you haven't.
So this launched in April.
2010 and Coca-Cola
co-l-L-A. Coca-Cola.
Coca-Cola. Yeah.
It's a local Coca-Cola
basically that they've
just manufactured on their own. So it has
a red label with white writing.
I mean, the packaging is very similar
but it's sold as a legit
product there. They've not been in trouble.
And they're all right with this.
Or are we now getting them in trouble
if someone who works. The Coca-C-C-C-O-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-
Because it's named after the color people
and the coca nut which is in it.
Yeah.
And they say to Coca-Cola or whatever on Coca-Cola, they say, well, you know, there's
nothing you can do about it.
And I'm not sure Coca-Cola are particularly happy about it, but there's nothing they can do.
They're definitely not happy about it, no, but they can do crack-all.
And they've got coca leaf extracts in it as well.
So actually, it's an illegal drink to be sold over here.
So they're quite regional because it's legal there.
But for us, yeah, it's a drug.
I think we should legalize.
I mean, we should probably legalize all drugs.
Coca leaves, I definitely think we should legalise in this country.
So we can get this call a drink?
No, because, like, when I was in the Andes, it's the best thing.
It just gives you a little bit of a pickup.
Yeah.
It's so useful.
Honestly, when you've got a hangover or you're tired or anything, just chew a cocoa leaf,
and it just makes you feel so much better.
And it's just a tiny little buzz.
Have you tried cocaine, James?
You'll love it.
I think the Pope has tried the cocoa leaves.
Has he?
I think he visited it several years ago
And when he went
I think he said
Oh, I'll have some of that
So
Yeah, they're everywhere
Like if you go to a hotel
You know if you go to a hotel
In the UK
They might have a bowl of Murray Mint
Oh, a lovely hotel would have that
Yeah, exactly
Well, all the hotels in Peru
And in Bolivia
They have a bowl of these leaves
And you just pick them up and chew on them
It's a bowl, it's a bowl
La Hat
Upside up, isn't there
And pull of those leaves?
Are you sure it's not just
Poperi?
You've been munching away
Because it leaves your breath
Really nice
At the end of it.
Guys, did you know, not 25 minutes walk from where we're sitting right now is where the first bowler hats were sold?
Who's that true?
Invented and sold in St James's Street.
I mean, it might have been invented in someone's house, you know, but it was brought to St. James's Street to Locke and Co-Hatters who've been going since like basically the 17th century when they were founded.
And the shop is still there today, so you can still buy hats from them.
I walk past there quite a lot.
Do you?
Right.
So that's where the bowler hat is from.
That's very exciting.
That is exciting, isn't it?
You're going to turn up next week in a bowler hat?
Because I can see it of the four of us.
Just a comically small one, I think.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, that's not really, it's a nice shop.
I don't think they make a huge deal out of it on the shop front.
No, they don't.
And their legacy is huge because they not only sell bowler hats.
They sell all kinds of hats.
They sold Admiral Lord Nelson, his, what was it called?
The bichorn.
Bicorn, sorry.
Yeah, the bichorn that he wore at the profound.
Yeah, Napoleon was the tricorn.
You don't want to confuse them.
They get very offended.
No one with a unicorn hat.
Which is a shame.
And I think that would have made the Battle of Trafalgar really.
That's got the element of surprise, I think, in the unicorn hat.
According to Lox, it was devised by a pair of people called Thomas and William Bola.
Okay.
And they, Edward Cook said, can you make this hat for us to Lox?
And Lox said, well, we'll get our mates, Thomas.
and William Bowler to make it.
Now, according to the OED, the bowler hat gets its name because it's shaped like a bowl,
not because it's named after these guys' bowlers.
So I don't want to upset the people at Lock and Coe, because I'm sure their story is
completely true.
But there is a suggestion that maybe there's nothing to do with these Thomas and William
bowler people.
And if you do look at the kind of newspaper archives, there was a thing called a bowl hat
that existed before the bowler hat.
And you can see loads of examples of people having their bowl hats stolen and stuff
like that. So did the bowlers exist?
It feels like they, no.
In fact, they definitely existed.
Thomas and William Bowler existed. And actually there was another
guy called William Bowler who existed
before them, who was a famous hat maker.
So there were bowlers who were making hats
for sure. But whether
these guys invented the bowler hat and gave the name to it,
I'm not so sure.
It's tough. I'm really torn.
I'm not going to walk past Locke's
sharp in case of odd job
hat. You know,
that's...
Do you know what they have on bowler hats, the curl at the edge,
which I'd actually never notice was a fundamental feature of them.
What on the brim?
Yeah, so there's a brim, and then it curls very sharply inwards at a 40-degree angle.
What? A little bit, and it's a d'Orsay curl.
Okay.
And it's named after Alfred Dorsay.
This is niche, but he was basically, I think he was the Byron of France.
He was apparently extremely attractive.
He was the handsomest man of his time.
And he was mates with Byron, in fact.
and he, the other time you might have seen him,
is he's the model for the New Yorker mascot.
You know, if you...
You know, on the New Yorker?
You got that bloke who's actually not wearing a ball of hat in it.
That's a top hat.
He wore a number of different hats.
Just literally...
But that's him. His face is him, is what you're saying.
His silhouette is him.
Oh, the monocle?
He has got a magnifying glass, I think, and maybe a monocon.
I'm not thinking of Monopoly.
Mr. Monopoly is exactly the thing of.
That was actually based on.
Pete's.
Apparently, according to...
Glad we settled that.
No, Anna, that's a great...
That's great knowledge about this dorsay.
I just think, let's connect the bowler hat to the New Yorker.
Sorry, what was the link?
He invented the thing on the rim?
It was named after him.
The curl.
Because he was such a dandy.
I guess he was a curly, curly dandy.
Wow.
That's really cool.
Well, it's really cool as a strong term, but it's...
It's probably the one thing I'll remember from this podcast.
I know.
It'll be so annoyed.
about that.
The Susie Dent wrote an amazing book about how slang is used amongst different tribes of people,
so like taxi drivers and dock workers and stuff like that.
And she mentions in that section that Hackney taxi cabs, the height of the cab,
was based on the bowler hat height for when you're getting in.
Yep.
It sounds a bit dubious, but I think.
I don't know what you'd say.
I didn't say anything.
All I did was pull a face.
And the listener didn't notice that.
No, but I think that is a rumour that's sort of out there, isn't it?
But how can, I thought it was for, I thought Hattney Cabs were sort of for top parts,
because Bollahats don't really have any height.
They're the same as a head.
That would only add another centimetre or two to the height of the cab.
Absolutely, but maybe a necessary extra centimetre.
It feels like you wouldn't redesign the whole cab.
You've got quite a long torso, Andy, don't you?
Or do you have long legs, actually, a short torso.
I've got a normal torso.
Oh, sorry.
Long, I've got a normal torso, long legs, long neck, short head.
Okay.
That's, and that's why the Murray.
cab it has a lot of legroom
out of the legroom and then
very low ceiling
sorry
you know before we were talking about
bichons tricons and unicons
there is a
what I suppose would be a quadricorn
no and the quadracon
is a very... That's too much surprise Andy
sorry that's awesome the idea of a four
cornered hat does not worry that
I think that's incredible
okay it's up there with Alfred Dorsey
that's the thing I'm going to remember Anna
I suppose the reason it's
interesting is because it is related to this fact because it's the traditional hat of the
Tuanakun people of Bolivia. And that is like a really old culture, pre-Columbian culture in
Bolivia. And they had these very intricately designed four-cornered hats that sort of the
rich people would wear the intricately designed ones and the poorer people were really plain ones.
But you'd have like birds' heads, you would stick on there. Some of them had wings attached to
them.
It's awesome.
But that sounds a bit grim.
Like a decapitated bird's head.
Wow.
They must have done some kind of, you know, put, pickled it or something.
Yeah, it was a different time.
It's popular back in the day to put dead birds and things, wasn't it?
Valentine's collards and so on.
A full bird.
Yeah.
Not a death.
Okay, gotcha.
Not just the head.
The head off and sticking it on.
The bloody neck sort of hanging out.
I think they wipe that away.
The birds.
I think that's fair.
Is that where we get, like, wearing a knotted handkerchief on your head at the beach from?
Absolutely not.
No.
Drive.
No.
Okay.
That would be quite unusual for this culture to come back to life, having, you know, gone out before the Spanish came along and then travel to 1950s seaside.
Scars gone.
It would be unusual.
One of the greatest test pilots in America for wartime planes was a gorilla wearing a bowler hat smoking a cigar.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
And what I've done there is tricked you.
Because actually,
because actually it was a man.
What's your career?
Oh, no, I do.
Allow you to say that.
This is a guy called Jack Valentine Woolham's,
and he was one of the greatest test pilot pilots that were out there,
and he used to take out planes that weren't ready,
that they were, it was advanced technology.
What would you do that?
Well, you know, he's a test pilot.
He's testing.
So it is ready, right?
He's not taking a plane with one wing.
No, no, but you're, sorry, as in we don't know the limits to which we can push this particular plane,
so he would push it to places to see if it were.
You just made it sound like he was sneaking into the hangar up.
Sorry.
No, these were approved flights.
And what he used to do is a bit of a practical joker,
is he used to bring with him a gorilla mask, and he used to bring a polar hat and a cigar.
And he would fly up to other processions of planes that were flying,
and he would have that gear on, and he would wave at the other pilots.
And I think from what I've read, the idea was is that no one would believe anything about the plane,
let alone the pilot if they came and said, I saw a new plane and it was being flown by a gorilla with a cigar and a bowler hat.
That sounds a bit pushed for me.
I think actually he was just a practical joker.
But the idea was he was going to say no one would believe that pilot existed, therefore they might not believe the plane existed that was being tested either.
It was interesting that you tried his practical joke on us, didn't you?
Yes.
Because he was trying to make people think a gorilla was flying the plane.
and you also kind of made us,
no, you didn't really lift it.
Yeah, yeah.
But it was less dangerous in this context
because we're just sitting around a table,
whereas I think making a prank out of putting off pilots
flying actual planes is very irresponsible.
Yes.
Will there quite a lot of comical, you know,
a pilot gets so distracted,
they fly into a mountain?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
400 deaths were a resulted.
A comical flying into the mountain.
Yeah.
Wait, ooi, o, o, o'o, y.
Another death in the mountain.
Army today and man was it funny we close our show with this light-hearted story I think it was
picturing the cartoon version okay it is time for fact number two and that is James okay my fact
this week is that there are no animals in the only zoo in Kalamazoo
what is sad a lot of children there must be in Kalamazoo what what it sounds great
does it oh yeah what is there it's the airs
Zoo is the air zoo and the air zoo is a museum about airplanes which has lots of planes
that are named after animals.
Okay, because it does sound like the air is what they've called it because all the cages are
just full of air.
You're like an air guitar.
Yeah, yeah.
You're right.
It does sound like that.
But actually, it's a really awesome air museum.
So planes that are named after animals.
So I'm thinking immediately, I'm thinking the sop with camel.
Great.
I don't know if there is one of those.
Okay.
All I know is that there's a warm.
hawk, a goony bird, a wild cat, a bear cat and a hell cat.
Oh, these are very American animal plane names. It's very American. Yeah, Kalamazoo is in the north of
United States of America. Yeah, Michigan. In Michigan, yeah. The Hellcat. Yeah, that's a very,
the Sopworth camel is a very British animal plane name because that's ridiculous.
Well, Gooney bird sounds quite British as well. No, I still think that's a bit of an American.
You've got to see the goony bird.
I was thinking Goon Show.
Yeah.
Okay.
So, yeah, and actually on the Warhawk, sorry, you just mentioned that, the person who runs this museum, who's called Sue Parrish, she was one of the last 20 members of the Women's Air Force Service pilots from World War II who still flew planes.
And she flew a bright pink Warhawk.
That's great.
Is she still alive?
She was still alive when I read an article.
It was from a few years ago.
I think she's not.
Yeah.
The article, actually, I read was from the early 90s.
So, yeah, she might have died since then.
She has.
So there's an airport, which is Battle Creek and Kalamazoo Airport.
There's a statue of her.
Oh, is that?
I believe it's at the airport.
If it's not the airport, it's somewhat of the vicinity.
And you can also see her plane, which is, as you said, pink kind of cool.
Do you know it was pink, this airplane?
Oh, oh, oh, yes, because she only flew it when it was red sky at night,
Shepard's Delight in the evenings and it was a
camouflage thing. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Not far off.
In fairness. Just wrong, but not
a million miles wrong.
Is it?
No, Dan, you're right. Dan, please, I've got it.
She flew only among
flocks of flamingos.
Yeah. It was a cowfowars thing.
We're getting wronger.
It was because she's a
woman and women like pink thing.
No, it wasn't. It wasn't.
Damn it. It was because
it was originally flown in Libya
these planes and the landscape, lots of, you know, rocks and sand and quite pink sand and stuff like that.
And so it just helped to blend into the landscape.
That's pretty.
Okay, so it's not hot pink.
No, it's not hot pink.
It's not very pink.
It's pretty pink.
Yeah.
Yeah, it looks awesome.
And I think that's in the entrance when you go into the Arab Museum as opposed to the airport.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And after World War II, she wanted to become a commercial pilot, but she got rejection letters saying,
with your qualifications, if you're a man,
we would have hired you.
Oh, well, that's a nice consolation, though, isn't it?
It's awful, that's the highest praise you can give, really.
Yeah, absolutely.
But yeah, basically, I remembered that there was a place called Kalamazoo,
and I googled to see if there was a zoo there, and there isn't,
but there is this place.
I didn't know anything about Kalamazoo before starting to research it,
apart from, of course, the Glenn Miller song,
I've got a girl in Kalamazoo, in 1944.
Put it on the map.
Internationally, in a way.
It's named as one of those places which has a funny name
and no one really knows where it is or if it's real
and it's kind of, you know, it's lumped in with places like Timbuktu
which I have an interesting...
I wonder why.
Exactly.
If you're writing songs.
Exactly.
But Kalamazoo, get this.
I'm only getting in with this fact before you guys all do
because I know you'll all have it too.
Yeah.
Was the first place in the world to install dropped curbs.
Is that a curb where you can get like a buggy down?
You mean?
Like it goes flat.
It's as it sounds.
The curb has been dropped.
So that you can get a buggy down or a wheelchair.
That's quite amazing, isn't it?
I know.
Do they have a blue plaque there, they must do?
Well, there are lots of claims as to what, you know,
there are other cities which try to steal Kalamazoo's thunder.
They're all, I think, incorrect.
I think this was the first city where you had dropped.
How deep have you had to do for this?
This is a full day's work.
There was this veteran from the Second World War called Jack Fisher,
who was an advocate for both veterans and disability rights,
and he trialed them.
In America, they're called curb cuts.
And they were first tried out here.
That's incredible.
What year?
What year were we talking?
I think it was the late 40s or early 50s.
And there are other places which tried them in the early 60s.
Yeah.
There was another thing in the 60s.
And I think in America, there was some disability activists who hacked away at curbs at night and laid concrete to smooth their path.
That makes sense.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
They only did it on a few occasions in a few places.
When you say he tested it, what's interesting about it is it feels it doesn't need testing.
It feels just logical, right?
It just doesn't.
What do they think might go wrong?
Well, I guess it's never been done before,
and he's just pointing out,
look, this would make it a lot easier
for lots of people to get around
if you install these things.
So they say, oh, right, well, we'll install a few.
And then obviously you just see how it affects.
I mean, things that can go wrong is it allows dick-eas like me
to pop your bike up on the pavement while you're cycling
and really upset pedestrians.
He didn't think of that, did he?
No.
Didn't think of that, the idiot.
I don't know.
Same with my car.
Calamazoo originally was called Bronson
and it was because a guy called Titus Bronson
was the first white man basically to arrive there
and set up a town there
and then yeah he turned it into a place
where the streets were kind of named very obviously
for the thing that they were operating as
so there was Church Street
where you'd have three churches on there
there was the Academy which had the college on it
there was Jail Street
It makes sense, doesn't it?
Yeah, it makes total sense.
You know where everything is.
I think the church one is weird
because I know that, so there's a thing in capitalism right,
where if you've got a shop that sells a certain thing like baby clothes,
then you have lots of shops in the same area and they cluster because that works.
Like the curry mile in Manchester with all the curry houses.
But churches, you rarely are like, well, we've got to fit 10 churches into this county.
Shall we just put them all on the same street?
Yeah, absolutely true.
The story goes that Bronson was in Detroit and he walked west
into the woods and he kept going until he got out of the woods and this was where Kalamazoo was.
It's 140 miles walk until he got to any kind of clearing.
We're not quite sure why, but he definitely left town at one stage.
Now, he might have left town because they changed the name to Kalamazoo or he might have left town because he stole a cherry tree.
He was run out of town.
The cherry's a few different stories and it's not clear what's what because if you look at contemporary reports,
Neither of them is mentioned.
But there is a 1909 headline from the Detroit Free Press
that says,
because of the name of the village he founded
was changed to Kalamazoo,
Titus Bronson died of a broken heart.
And so when they changed the name,
apparently it hurt him so much that he died.
They have gone by a lot of different names.
They used to be called the Celery City.
They grew a lot of celery?
They grew a lot of celery.
Someone came over and grew celery there.
Actually, it was a Scott, I think, called George.
Apparently George Celery Taylor.
known as. But you know how you never know how you never know if people were actually called that
at the time? Like the bowlers from earlier. Like the bull. No, that definitely was then. But they could
have been like the trade that then became the name. No, but they didn't name themselves after the
house. They were. I'm saying we don't know. I'm saying we do. Ah, okay. Well, there we go.
One of the reasons that Kalamazoo is mentioned in a lot of songs. So you mentioned, who do you
mention Glenn Miller? Glenn Miller. So Kalamazoo in other songs by Frank Zapper, Ben Folds, Johnny
Cash, the Black Keys, who I know you like.
There's Kalamazoo mentioned in there.
And I think one of the reasons is because Gibson guitars were made in Kalamazoo.
Yeah.
And loads of famous people, Chuck Berry, Eric Clapton, Cheryl Crow, Bob Dylan, all people
use Gibson to guitars.
And really interesting thing about the Gibson's is the Gibson Girls.
Now, during World War II, the Gibson Guitar Company was still making guitars.
But the thing was, they didn't have anyone to make the guitars, right?
because all the men had gone to war.
So what they did was they brought in all the local women
to make these guitars,
but they denied making them.
And the reason being that they thought that,
one, if we told people were making guitars during the war,
people would think we're being really frivolous
and we shouldn't be doing this kind of thing.
But secondly, they weren't sure
whether people would buy guitars
if they knew they were made by women.
Right.
And so they sold them as what they called new old stock.
So they pretended that these were old guitars
that they had in stock
and they were selling during the war.
war, we're not making them during the war, but actually
all these women were doing all the work.
And they also sometimes said that
they were made by seasoned craftsmen
who were too old for war.
Really.
Wow. I mean, not brilliant, obviously. Sorry.
It's good, you can appreciate the marketing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Did the women who were making them
leave any kind of clues as to the fact that
inside did they write? Drop a tampon into the
body and drop the towel.
Used tampon.
Just rattling around in there.
Yeah.
That was the key to their individual sound, actually.
Just a couple more things on Kalamazoo.
A notable person from there, William Shakespeare, Jr.
And what I did there was trick you to make you think.
It was actually a gorilla.
It was a William Shakespeare Jr.
He was an inventor, quite a notable inventor there.
So he was around in the 1800s.
And he invented what's known as the Shakespeare Fishing Tackle,
which is a really big thing that's still used today.
Do you know it?
No, I'm just trying to think of a pun.
Me too, me too.
Yeah, so yeah, fishing tackle, lots of innovations of that sort of,
he had patents for camera equipment and so on.
Is that cast, casting, no?
Oh, yeah.
You can say whatever you want now for the next five minutes.
Yeah, well, I'm trying to bait.
It's not working.
I've joined now
Anna you take over
Anyway
Let's get astonishing
You run through his plays
There are almost no fish puns
It's bad isn't it
Yeah
Amid some nice Bream
Very good
Nice there you go
There he goes
Can we move on is that
Is that
No
No okay we're still doing it
Go on Andy
Macrow Beth
No
No that's nice
That's great
That's good
Yeah
I like it
Yeah
as you pike it
Oh
Very nice
Bloody enough you guys all got one
Oh gosh
If you have one at home
Then why not send it to
At Andrew Hunter M
Okay
It is time for fact number three
And that is Andy
My fact is that some American gravestones
feature recipes
Yum yummy
I've had to cook the human below it
Yes
This is a thing that happens
sometimes in the States
the original wording of the fact was
lots of American gravestones
contained recipes and it was pointed out that they're about
11 so far
there's a query over whether that's technically lots or not
which is fair
but there are people
who've made it their
hobby to track down all gravestones
which feature recipes and bake them up
and it's
especially big on places like TikTok
there are lots of grave people on
TikTok and they're nicknamed
Tapophiles which is people who love
graves and cemeteries.
Is that what?
It's on TikTok, because I haven't been on TikTok.
I didn't realize it was that.
I thought it's like dancing and stuff.
It's not all of TikTok.
Yeah.
There's a lot.
Again, when I say lots of people on TikTok do it, some people on TikTok.
It's more effort than filming a dance.
But it's not really interesting.
TikTok tapophiles is a nice eliceration, isn't it?
Worth becoming one.
Yeah.
And these grave recipes are the, some of them date back, you know, decades or first.
I just thought like TikTok, it's like, what do you call that thing that reminds you of death?
The pendulum.
It's like a memento mori.
Mento mori, isn't it?
So whenever you think about TikTok.
TikTok.
Is it very morbid place TikTok?
I think so.
It's just thinking about the number of seconds you have left.
Yeah.
The number of seconds you spent watching this, crap.
Yeah.
Wow.
So yeah, so people are doing it on making up the recipes and then showing
them on their TikTok videos, right?
Yeah.
People are going around doing that.
Any examples?
Well, there's a lovely fudge recipe.
There is blueberry pie.
There's yeast cake.
But it doesn't always work.
Sometimes there was one gravestone which had a typo in the recipe on it.
Oh, no.
I know.
And it would have made very runny fudge if you made it according to that.
But thankfully...
What was the typo?
I want to know what clever is that makes runny fudge.
It was too much vanilla.
Oh, really?
Yes, so it said it's a tablespoon.
opposed to teaspoon, I believe.
That's not going to make it that running, is it?
That's not much difference.
I haven't tried it.
It's not like a kilogram versus a gram.
Because you don't put much vanilla in a fudge recipe, do you?
It's just a tiny amount.
Well, that's why.
Because if you do a tablespoon, apparently it turns out vapor.
Anyway, they corrected the entire gravestone off the back of that, which is a relief.
Why would you, yeah, trying to work out why you would do it.
Do what?
Put a recipe on.
Yeah.
Well, people like to be creative on their gravestones, right?
It's a really fun thing.
And passing down your great recipe, I think.
I think that's what it is.
I think it's something that matters to you,
something that's traditional,
a recipe you might have inherited
from the generation above you.
People like to pass on recipes
to the next generation, don't they?
I guess there's very little you can pass on,
you could pass on like a series of dance moves.
I'm trying to think of something else
you might pass on to the next generation.
But you're right, recipes are probably it.
Dance moves.
Not great.
It's encouraging people.
you put to dance on your grave.
You can have a set of those footprint outlines.
Like they have in Japan.
I was thinking like, you know those games that you play in Japan where you can dance?
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
What are they light up?
Well, I was just thinking, I'd like mine to be kind of like that molewhacker game.
So you put a coin into the grave and then my head pops out from one of the time.
You've got to slam it with a hammer.
Then my arm comes out another and then my leg.
You'll be so annoying if you're one of those people who wasn't actually dead and tries to escape from your grave.
But he'd be constantly malleted down.
Guys, though, seriously.
But I think it's great.
I mean, there are so many gravestones around the world
where people, as their sort of like last wish,
have said, can you make this happen?
And people do.
And they're beautiful.
And I read a great one.
There was a 99-year-old woman who in Mexico,
her dying wish was for her gravestone to be made
according to what she loved most in life.
And so she got it.
It was a 600-pound, five-foot-tall penis
of just a giant,
That's what she loved in life, a five-foot penis.
She loved calling people dicks in life, apparently, and that's what she asked for.
And I've seen the video of them unveiling it.
It looks like it's got a giant condom over the top of it, which is then removed.
It's a huge pink penis, like five-foot-five.
But unfortunately, if you're in Libya, you couldn't see it.
The testicles, apparently, they really had a lot of problem with, because the balsack apparently kept just disfiguring during the melting process of the actual materials, which was, I believe,
plastic and so they had to like build the testicles quite a few times and they're big balls
when you see it um so it's sort of standing up right anyway is this is this it is it a is it a churchyard
or yeah it's in a cemetery but surrounded by other i can imagine being slightly annoyed if i had the
grave next door totally absolutely by that time it's you can't be annoyed no yeah it's true
i know you're an easily annoyed person andy but i reckon that after death you're not going
he will
if I can I will
that's what it's going to say on his toothstone
I actually
God I'm so with you though
if I was a relative of someone who'd been buried next to that
I would find that
but this is what happens a lot
in the UK certainly
so many graves are the
traditional whether it's slate
or you know it's normally
it's grey stone and it's carved
and it's all down to the individual
church or individual local authority
And so there's this mad, you know, if you want something out of the ordinary, you might get it approved, but you really might not.
Well, like shape-wise, like a big penis.
Well, shape-wise and colour-wise, and there are rules about what you can and can't carve.
But there's no one authority in the UK, which tells what you can't carry out.
It feels like we should have that.
And it does feel reasonable to say no penises.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I agree.
I agree.
Yeah.
Definitely.
Well, on that gravestones, there's an amazing cemetery in Paris, the Père Lachaise cemetery.
and it's got loads of good graves in it.
But one of them is the grave of Victor Noir,
who was a 19th century journalist,
and he wasn't that famous in his lifetime.
I think he was shot by Napoleon Bonaparte's nephew in 1870.
And loads of people suddenly went to his funeral
because it became this kind of political cause.
But for some reason, we don't know why, his effigy,
so on his gravestone is a big bronze effigy of him lying down,
it has a bulge in his crotch.
Oh, yeah.
It's quite tight trousers,
lovely, big penis bulge.
and what's so rank about it
is that it's a bit like
you know there's Greyfrize Bobby and Edinburgh
the famous dog statue and everyone always rubs
its nose for luck so that's really shiny
and in the same way everyone keeps rubbing
and mounting and
writhing against this crotch
so it's incredibly shiny
and not only that it's not just the crotch
but his lips and nose
well they kiss his lips yeah they kiss his lips
I know they do to his nose
but what I mean that's
because that's not just rubbing they've mounted
fully.
Yeah, yeah.
So it's a fertility thing.
You go and you do that
if you want to get pregnant.
But it's not.
It's people going for a joke.
Everyone's like they do it.
This is 20th century.
This is people going to France and going...
It's for Instagram, isn't it?
There is a sign that says any damage caused by graffiti or indecent rubbing will be
prosecuted.
Oh.
It's all indecent rubbing.
It was decent rubbing.
Yeah.
That's actually a...
That's true.
But I always think with these, they would be the best place for like a zombie
apocalypse to start.
where there's loads of famous people.
Oh, that would be a great film.
Or like Westminster Abbey, that's where you want your zombie apocalypse to start, isn't it?
Where all the famous people are buried.
I think Jim Morrison is in the one you were just talking about as well, I believe.
That's really good.
Because that's a good mix.
Westminster Abbey is all a bit like royals and nobles, isn't it?
Yeah.
But if you went to this one, you get rock stars, you get authors.
Yeah.
More like the doors to hell have opened.
Yes.
Great.
It's more like that.
You've redeemed yourself.
Fishgate is forgotten.
God. Speaking, as we were earlier, of people doing inappropriate things in graveyards,
do you guys know about the Bustiuri?
Bustiorei?
No.
They were sex workers in Rome in the first century AD, and they plied their trade in cemeteries.
Oh, naughty.
Yeah. So in the daytime, they were professional mourners.
Okay.
But in the nighttime, they were sex workers, and they would write on the gravestones what their
prices and stuff like that.
They used them like phone boxes.
A little bit, yeah. And people would go and, you know, they had very pale skin and severe expressions
and they were kind of quite gothic looking in and of themselves. There was one called
Noctina who would sleep on the graves and cover her eyes with coins. And then they were also
prostitutes.
That feels like she's encouraging some worrying kings. I'm afraid that there was some of that.
If you read Marshall, Juvenile and Catalysts all talk about it,
and apparently there was some of this...
Bloody hell!
The fact that they're professional mourners in the daytime, you know.
That's sort of...
And then at nighttime, basically, the morning garb comes off.
Yeah.
And then in the morning, the morning garb goes back on.
Oh, yeah.
They had this weird thing in Roman tombs,
which were called libation tubes.
Have you heard of this?
No.
This is so cool.
These are terracotta tubes that go down into the grave from Ground Double,
and they're deliberately so you can give the dead a drink.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
It was sad.
You go and tear wine into them.
Yeah.
It was just a pipeline right down to the mouth of the dead.
Was that different to the sausage one, the sausage pipe?
I don't know.
We did talk about that.
That rings such a vague bell.
Was there a sausage pipe?
John Bonderson wrote about it and buried alive.
Yeah, there was a, I think that the idea was if you were buried alive, you had a string that you pulled,
and it would ring a bell, and they would come and get you and say, we're coming and get you out,
but here have a sausage until then
and they would
pop a sausage then the sausage pipe
so you had some sustenance while they were...
A cooked sausage?
It doesn't say, I assume a cooked sausage.
You don't want to give them food poisoning while they're down there.
Tragend he died of botulism
while we were getting the spade.
A fast acting lethal sausage.
You know,
Petter, the
animal rights
organization. Yeah. They
did a thing a few years ago.
They bought a tombstone
in a cemetery for one of their
colleagues. It was called Matt Prescott.
But
it was, they bought a tombstone in a very specific place.
They bought it right near Colonel Sanders.
Oh, this is a tombstone.
Yeah, yeah. And it
had a message on it. It was a little poem
that they'd written for their colleague Matt.
And it was an acrostic.
And the first letter of every line
spelled out the phrase KFC tortures
birds. Wow.
I know. My favorite gravestone
is an acrostic.
Oh. It's awesome. It's
it's for a guy called John René, R-E-N-I-E, R-E-N-I-E, or René.
And what it says on it is it says, here lies John René.
But then it says it basically 45,760 times in total,
because it's an acrostic that goes 19 squares across and 15 squares down.
And everywhere you start reading it,
you can make here lies John Renee along this box of a end.
And the total that you can add it up to is, yeah, 45,000.
So it's like the second line, it reads, ear lies John Renee, like that, doesn't it?
And the next one is slightly different, the next one's slightly different.
So you can read it down diagonally.
Exactly.
Like the world's most boring word search.
So cool.
That's great.
It's an amazing thing to look at.
Oh, the guy who first formulated pie to 35 places was a German mathematician called
Ludolf van Sernel.
Soylen, and his gravestone reads 3.141-5-9-265-358-9-7-9-3-2-3-2-3.
And why is that if it isn't a recipe for pie?
Okay, it is time for our final fact of the show, and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that doctors used to prepare their patients for surgery
by either getting them really drunk or smacking them on the head with a mallet
and hoping they didn't kill them.
that's back in the day
so when we talk which day we're talking
this is in the 1800s this was in the top floor
of America's oldest surgical amphitheatre as it's known
this is in the Pennsylvania hospital
and I guess what's so surprising is how late in the day
this was happening this is in the sort of mid-1800s
and mid-1800 was when we had we
I take a lot of credit but we had got like
some ether chloroform
stuff was like to happen.
And a lot of them weren't fully accepted, though.
So this, it definitely was around at this time.
But this hospital was like, nah, not into it.
We'd rather hit you on the head.
It happened in Britain as well.
There was a guy called Henry Hill Hickman, who used to try suffocation to get his
operations.
Yeah, so this was a thing.
And, you know, the drunkenness hopefully would see them through an operation as would such a massive
hit on the head.
Some of these operations were very.
very quick, weren't they?
They were amputations and stuff.
Yeah.
They were trying to do them in a matter of seconds, really.
In fact, that seems to be the most effective method of pain killing up until, you know,
they found ether and stuff was just speed.
And there was, we talked about drug.
You love it, then.
Just get people incredibly anxious before the operation.
No, it was, yeah, doing it within a short amount of time.
And we've mentioned Robert Liston on QI, but his, he was a famous 19th century surgeon,
and his catchphrase was, time me, gentleman.
time me and there's a huge amount of showmanship to his surgical performances it's a good catchphrase that
it's a good catchphrase and it would kind of reassure you if having your leg cut off you want it to be
quick and he used to brag he could amputate a leg in 25 seconds wow um and his chances of dying
because he gets a lot of stick these days for being all about the show and less about the safety
but you only had a one in six chance of dying which was quite good for surgeons then and there was one
Great, the best story about him, which I'm pretty sure we looked at when we did QI and is probably not true, but it was reported that he once was so focused on doing something incredibly fast that he's amputating a limb and he accidentally at the same time cut through his associate nurse's finger on the way.
And so both the person whose limb was amputated and the person whose finger he amputated died pretty quickly afterwards.
And also someone who was watching died of shock.
and it's always recorded as the only operation
with a 300% mortality rate.
Wow.
Great story.
It's a strong story.
Don't check it ever.
That's a comical ending.
Like an airplane going into a mountain.
That's comical surgery.
That's comedy, you're right.
That's, yeah.
Just on the sort of reputation of surgery back in the day,
this is a fact actually got sent into us
from Sarah on Twitter, so thank you, Sarah.
It was about the operating theatre in Aberdeen.
And there used to be,
Above the door to the operating theatre in Aberdeen, the words,
prepare to meet thy God.
Which is such an unchaeful thing to read.
And it was all about this surgeon called Alexander Ogden, who worked there,
and he discovered Staphylococcus, which is a very big...
Common bacteria for getting infections and infections and abscesses and pus and all of that,
and really dangerous Staphyloccus.
And he was so inspired by antiseptic zeal that he returned and he pulled the sign down and burned it
on one occasion.
Wow.
Because it was a very, very religious place to have your operation.
I can imagine.
So the one that I was talking about in Pennsylvania,
the surgery itself had a skyroof, basically.
So there was a dome at the top, and it was glass.
So they would do all the operations in the day,
and natural light was what was giving them their light.
Lovely.
But I'm like the surgeons will take off their robes and show you a good time.
They would write their prices on the page.
spleen.
They did have
anesthetics before then,
various types throughout the world.
A Chinese physician called
Huatuo.
I'm sure I'm pronouncing that wrong.
Apologies if I am,
but from 140 AD to 208 AD.
This guy,
he would use something called
Maffailles San,
which is cannabis boil pounder.
So he gave it to the patient.
And apparently it was so good,
there was a guy
called General Kuan Yu, and he was wounded by a poison arrow, and he was sort of given some
surgery to try and bring the arrow out and clean the wound, and the general played chess
while his bone was being scraped clean, because his concoction was so good.
But did he win the game?
He just kept whacking the pieces of, because he was in salvage pain.
Yeah, we still don't know how they work.
Yeah, crazy, eh?
I find it's so much of medicine, we don't know how or why it works.
It's just we kept trying and this one stuck.
I mean, it's people speculate that this is general anesthetics, so what puts you to sleep.
It's speculated that it dissolves some of the fat in your brain cells, so stops the cells activity.
There's just been a study that found out that one particular anesthetic maybe weakens the transmission of electrical signals between your neurons in like the higher functioning parts of your brain.
So that's why it will knock you unconscious, but it won't stop your breathing because the lower,
functioning parts can still keep going.
But yeah, it's so weird that we don't, we just accept it works.
Yeah.
But I like before, another anesthetic.
I don't know how my microwave works.
But someone does.
Yeah.
That's true.
Sorry, when I say we, I don't just mean we couldn't be asked to research it.
I mean, even the scientists can't be asked to find out properly.
But another ancient way of anesthetizing people was electric rays.
which
like fish
yeah
yeah
so these were used
in ancient Rome
it was like
torpedo fish
I think we've talked
about before
could give you
a real electric shock
and it was treatment
for gout
or it was if you wanted
to numb an area
and you needed
to do something to it
it was recommended
that you stand on the shore
and you let your legs
be washed by the sea
and various electric rays
wrapped themselves
around it
and wait for them
to electrify you
if you were just
stood in the sea
you would need to bring them to you, right?
They wouldn't just naturally sting you.
Yeah, how are you attracting them?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, maybe you drop some food for them.
No, wait, are you the food?
You are kind of.
You could maybe cut your legs so there's a bit of blood in the water.
Yeah, nice.
Then awful if the shark comes before the eels.
And then it's just all the thing up to take it.
It's not convenient, though.
So they quickly, they would shock you.
You would go numb.
They would carry you out and then...
And then they can do a treatment on you, like cut off a bunion.
or...
Yeah.
Bunyan.
All that for a bunion, my God.
Jesus.
You know how in the very first episode of this podcast we talked about...
Anyone remember?
So, yeah, President Garfield's...
President Garfield's anus.
So I have a related fact to this.
Yeah.
I think you should quickly explain that for anyone who can't remember 460 episodes ago.
So this is the fact that for the last...
Was it month of his life?
Three months, I believe.
Three months.
President Garfield ate everything through his anus.
And that's because he...
he'd been shot and he wasn't able to eat through the mouth and so he was fed through the
bum. So the American president usually hands over power when...
Yes, he does. But in Donald Trump's case...
You're so right. Donald Trump is the outlier here.
James, it's exactly right. So, okay, normally when the US president, always a man so far,
has a colonoscopy, which is a procedure. If you're a bit older, they put a camera up your
and they just check what's going on.
Normally a small camera on a little wire,
not like a big long-lens paparazzi camera.
And it's a very common thing.
So Joe Biden did it in 2021,
handed over to Kamala Harris for the, you know,
half an hour, a couple of hours of the anesthetic.
George Bush had it twice
and both times handed over briefly to Dick Cheney.
There was a report a year or so ago
that Donald Trump underwent this procedure,
but he refused to have the anesthetic
because he didn't want to.
to hand over to Mike Pence.
However briefly, the reins of office.
So he just sort of bearbacked it.
Wow.
One chance they thought they had to silence Donald Trump
for a couple of blissful hours.
That's really interesting.
I've got another thing about putting stuff up the bum.
Oh, yeah.
If you want to hear it.
So this is about the first woman physician
to specialize in anesthesia who's called Isabella Herb.
And she was the first person to use ethyl.
as a general anesthetic.
And there were two main ways
that she'd get you out of the
anesthesia state. One of them
was to give you stricene,
which would apparently help,
presumably not that much. And the other one was
the installation of warm saline
solutions to the rectum.
Installation.
So if you were under, because of
this ethylene, then she would squirt
some salty water up your bum and it would get you
out of the... Wow. Sounds kind of pleasant.
Although, is that not the thing that makes you weight yourself?
No, that's, that's thing thing in there.
I think that's putting your hand in a bowl of water, not squiriting.
I'd better if you put your bomb in it, though.
Something happens.
The interesting thing about ethylene and a problem that she had was that it does explode quite easily.
And so what she did was she had her operating theatre and they had very, very high humidity because apparently that helped you because there's slightly less oxygen in the air, so less likely to explode.
But also because, um,
it was an early time of having electric lights and stuff like that.
They grounded everything in the building.
So the table where the person was being operated on.
And in fact, everyone kind of had things attached to them.
Do you remember we talked about this big spike that people had on their heads?
Yeah, everyone had electrical conductors to conduct the charging wires.
Basically, everyone was wearing these wires to, and they attached to the pipes around the room, the water pipes.
So that if there was any kind of spark in there, instead of setting off the ethylene,
it would go into these grounded things
and then go down into the building.
Isn't that amazing?
That's really cool.
That's a lot of great name.
Imagine, you know when you fill in the forms
before you do an operation where you say,
I understand that I might blah, blah and blah, blah, blah.
Imagine just that, I understand there's a 30% chance
I'll explode.
Yeah.
Just on doctors sort of beating patients around us,
this mallet people did in the fact.
August beer was the person who came up with the first spinal anesthesia.
That was in the 1890s, 1898.
And so that was injecting cocaine into your spinal cord, was the first spinal anesthesia.
And he wanted to work out how much you really needed to inject.
Because if you injected too much, had bad side effects.
And so he thought, okay, well, I'm going to test out on myself.
And so he asked his assistant, also called August, to inject him.
The fun they must have heard.
The two augusts, I mean, a very non-orgust time.
And so his assistant injected his spine, sadly,
his spinal fluid started leaking out quite drastically and so they had to stop so he said do you mind if we swap
so the august swapped and his assistant said okay you try it on me um so august the assistant
lies there and august beer jabs him with the cocaine and then tests how high his pain threshold is
and the account is just incredible so he starts by tickling his feet quite pleasant couldn't feel
anything. And then he jabbed a large blunt needle into his thigh. And then he got a larger,
blunter needle and put it in down his femur, apparently. He then, and he's awake through this
process because it's local anaesthetic. So he's chatting away and having a great time. He got sharp
forceps and crushed his skin up. He burned a cigar out on him. He yanked all his pubic hair
off.
In one go?
That was just for fun, wasn't it?
He actually, yeah, he'd ask for a wax, and you might as well two birds one stone.
He actually got his pubic hair off and then did the chest hair for comparison.
Just to say, see, it would hurt if, you know, if you weren't anesthetized.
Hit his shin with a hammer, squeeze his testicles very hard.
And so, look, how impressive is that?
I think he compressed his testicles.
between two plates, didn't he?
And then just kept squeezing, squeezing, squeezing.
I'd remember reading about this, yeah.
Well, they'd had a big feast afterwards,
so maybe they ate off a testicle place.
Oh, my God.
So afterwards, was it just broken?
How did you, how did that go for you?
Oh, it's absolutely.
He was a bit bruised as it wore off.
But he was, they had, they wind and dine and cigar together.
And cigar, I would let cigars anyway.
Maybe I've got that.
Some people wake up in the middle of a general anesthetic.
Yeah.
And it sounds awful.
No, no, no.
The good thing is you almost always forget afterwards.
So I spoke to someone who carries out anesthesia quite regularly and says sometimes patients get chatty during procedures.
And you could just tell them to shut up and be really rude to them because they won't remember after the operation.
What patient had been going on and on about their job, I think, at NatWest, and how interesting.
it was and they just had to say,
look, to shut up, please.
That's so funny, because when I last had
general anaesthesia, I thought, I'll just
have a chat because I'm not met an anaesthesia
expert before, and I just
started chatting to him and then went under.
And now I'm realising that
as soon as I went under, he's like, you boring
bastard.
You've worked up with no pews, right?
Yeah.
Yeah. But they, so normally you don't
remember it, but sometimes you
do remember it and you can't move
because the drugs are paralysing you.
sounds terrible.
That sounds like the worst thing in the world
because you can, you wake up, you know what's going on
and you can't do anything about it.
And all you can hear is the Anisid is going,
ah, I shagged your mum.
Fennela woke up after she had surgery
where she went under general anesthetic
and she woke up and was quite tired
and they didn't realize that she was awake.
This is post-surgery.
They were moving her away.
And all she heard was a conversation
about how much the doctors enjoyed
no such thing as a fish.
What a...
the worst possible love.
Yeah. She was like, oh, Christ.
I'll put you back under.
Okay, that's it. That is all of our facts.
Thank you so much for listening.
If you'd like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we've said over the course of this podcast,
we can be found on our Twitter accounts.
I'm on at Shriverland.
Andy?
At Andrew Hunter, M. James.
At James Harkin.
And Anna.
You can email podcast.
com.
Yep.
You can go to our group account, which is at no such thing.
Or our website.
No such thing as a fish.com.
Check out all the previous.
episodes from No Such Thing as a Fish, they're all up there. You can also find your way into
clubfish. There's lots of bonus content up there. Check it out. It's really awesome. And otherwise,
just come back here to our free podcast that comes out every week. We'll be back again next week
with another one. We'll see you then. Goodbye.
