No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Million Dots

Episode Date: June 8, 2018

Anna, James, Andy and other James discuss bouliganism, flying on Titan, and tiny, tiny wasps.Episode 220 - No Such Thing As A Million Dots ...

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:02 Welcome to another podcast from No Such Things a Fish, a weekly show coming to you from the QI offices in Covent Garden. My name is Anna Tashinsky, and I'm sitting here with James Harkin, Andrew Hunter Murray, and fellow QI elf James Rawson. And we are going to tell you our four favorite facts from the last seven days, starting with Rawson. My fact this week is that Usain Bolt could fly on Titan. Do we say Usain or Usain? Oh, good question. I say Usain. Do you? But Usain, Usain.
Starting point is 00:00:48 Let's call the whole thing on. So Titan, we're talking about the... Oh, is it Titan? No, it's... We're talking about the moon. We are talking about Saturn's largest moon, and it has a couple of things going for it that make it really great for human flight.
Starting point is 00:01:03 Well, one bad thing, lack of humans. Yes, that is a bad thing. But a good thing is that its gravity is only 14% as strong as Earth's, so pretty low gravity. and its air pressure is 50% higher than Earth's. So really weak gravity and really strong, nice thick air. So people have said anecdotally for years that if you could get people on there, strap some wings on them, they'd be able to fly like birds.
Starting point is 00:01:27 But in 2014, some students from the University of Leicester actually did the physics, and they worked out that if you were wearing a normal wingsuit, which has a wingspan of about 1.4 square meters, and if you were running at 11 meters per second, you would be able to be able to be to run, jump up and take off and fly. So great. So if you're a normal person, you couldn't, right? It's only if you're as fast as Usain Bolt. He is just him and a few others who are cracking that speed, isn't it? So Usain Bolt can go at 12 metres per second or he could in his heyday. He's now retired, so I imagine that he's useless. But yeah, Usain Bolt in the day could do it. A normal
Starting point is 00:02:05 person could do it if they could run at six metres per second, but they would have a large and unwieldy wingsuit. So they wouldn't be able to get away with the normal sort of day-to-day wingsuit that we're all wearing now. Very cool. You'd also need a very warm coat though, wouldn't you? Because the temperature is about minus 180 degrees Celsius. Yeah, quite a warm coat. And actually a warm coat would wear you down quite a lot, and then the physics probably wouldn't work anymore.
Starting point is 00:02:27 Well, if you had a very big coat. Yeah. Do you remember when you were a kid and those like high winds, like gales, and you would hold your coat out and then try and fly with it? Yeah, that was great. Or your umbrella. Sometimes you'd fly with an umbrella? Yep. Well, I wasn't Mary Poppins when I went to school. But actually, you couldn't do it with the winds because there's not much wind on Titan, is there?
Starting point is 00:02:46 No. And that's because the temperature is always very low. And we get our wind on Earth because of the changes in temperature with the sun. And they don't really get those changes of temperature. Yeah, which is why they... It's because they've got lakes. One of the reasons it's so great for human habitation, apparently,
Starting point is 00:03:01 is that it's got stable liquids on its surface, hasn't it? Which is extremely unusual. And it has an atmosphere that is sort of similar to Earth. but it's liquids Well, similar. It's not similar. It's a vaguely similar level of kind of thickness and it's got some nitrogen in it.
Starting point is 00:03:17 It's got lots and lots of nitrogen. There's no problem with nitrogen. You like nitrogen. You're going to love Titan, but it's got no oxygen, basically. So the lakes are made out of methane. They are. So it has a lot of methane and ethane in it, which I imagine means that it smells really bad on there.
Starting point is 00:03:30 Well, in fact, I think they might have looked into how the atmosphere there smells. They've tried to recreate it. Scientists did this this year or last year. and they got some methane and ethane involved they got some nitrogen involved and it still wasn't behaving quite like Titan's atmosphere and then they added some benzene
Starting point is 00:03:46 and that's the crucial ingredient that mimics the atmosphere and it smells like petrol. So the whole place if we live there smells like a petrol station. Yeah, I love the smell of petrol stations can I just say it's one of my favourite smells. Yeah, it's very nice. I like that too. But a lot of people kept saying how good Titan would be
Starting point is 00:04:04 and they were saying things like that you know, it's got some liquid, it's got an atmosphere. It's the only other place in our solar system where it rains. Basically, it just sounds like a recipe for a very bad picnic. I think it's really, really habitable compared to the other moons of the solar system, which is a bit of a low bar. The other thing about picnics is instead of wasp flying around, you have 100 metre runners kind of flying around.
Starting point is 00:04:29 Another good thing about Titan, since you're so busy about emousing it, is that this is, so they've recreated also Titan's live. lakes because there's a plan for NASA to send a submarine up there in 2025. I'd send a spaceship if I was NASA, but go on. You need to ride to them. They're sending a submarine up and they're going to get there and they need to dive so they need to deal with the coldness of the liquid. But they've realised that icebergs can't form.
Starting point is 00:04:55 So one of the people recreating this has said a really vital positive is the fact that because the freezing temperature of these methane lakes is so low, iceberg's not a possibility. so you won't get Titanic on Titan and also the submarine won't crash into any icebergs. Do you know who might be crewing this submarine that we're going to send up? Robots. Bacteria.
Starting point is 00:05:17 Come on. Well, it's a stretch. So there are deep sea bacteria which theoretically could survive there. But they can't drive a spaceship or a submarine. I'm not saying. There'll be an intense training montage with the bacteria. No, but there's a...
Starting point is 00:05:35 They're called, oh, this is a tough name, metanothermococcus Okinawensis, and they can survive irrespective of temperature and pressure and vitamins and toxic chemicals. And I think they live around vents very deep in the sea. Vitamines, did you say? Yeah, they don't even need to take vitamin meals in pill form when they're in space. That'll save on Satuma, wait. I think basically they just go into hibernation and as soon as the conditions are right for them to spring back into life, they do.
Starting point is 00:06:00 So we could possibly set up a submarine in front of those guys and just see how they did. I went on to Yale Scientific Magazine because they had an article Why Can't Humans Fly? Mm-hmm And? We can't, turns out. We would need a wingspan of at least 6.7 meters
Starting point is 00:06:15 to fly according to this website. That's 6.7 across the whole wingspan, so 3.35 either side. Yeah, it's still a lot and it would make the wings too heavy to function, unfortunately, and also the muscles that you need. So those wings would need to have smaller wings helping them fly.
Starting point is 00:06:33 Well, we've sort of cracked quite an important human-powered flight thing really recently, didn't we? Because there was a prize set up in 1970, I think it was, awarding £250,000 for the first person to make a human-powered helicopter. And it was thought to be impossible. And all these studies were written saying it's impossible. And I only found it because I was reading a Washington Post article saying, no one's come anywhere close to achieving this in 2011. And then in 2013, we did it. or engineers from the University of Toronto did it.
Starting point is 00:07:04 And they've built this helicopter, which is basically about the size of a football pitch. Howard by one human. Yeah, it's unbelievably light. It weighs only 50 kilos, but it's ridiculously large, because as you say, you've got to have really big wings, and there's a little guy on a bicycle in the middle of it,
Starting point is 00:07:21 who's desperately cycling up. It's amazing. And then, well, it's not as amazing as it would be. So my wife flies helicopters, and we always have to find a place for her to land, which is not too many trees, around and stuff like that. I think if your helicopter is the size of a football pitch, that is going to be tough, right?
Starting point is 00:07:37 It's too big. I looked up a list of names of human-powered flight machines. Oh, great. They were called things like The Reluctant Phoenix. That's your drag name, isn't it? That does sound like they once crashed it in a bowl of flames and they couldn't get it back again, right? There was the reluctant phoenix. The Perkins inflatable, which I liked.
Starting point is 00:08:01 There was the puffing. the puffin two and there were three called Icarus named after the... Why do they name it after the thing that... The one who died, yeah. They only read the first half of the story, I think. This is great. Don't need to finish. Really respect this guy's confidence.
Starting point is 00:08:16 Usain Bolt, who I know you've touched on in the past, but did you know that... So he has scoliosis, so he has curvature of the spine. So his legs are actually significantly different length from each other. Like Richard the third? Not quite as dramatic as Richard the third, I don't think. But his right leg is half an inch shorter than his left. The prevailing wisdom is that if you want to go in a straight line, as fast as you can, you should be symmetrical.
Starting point is 00:08:40 And obviously he's not quite symmetrical. And they don't know if he was symmetrical, would he go faster? Or does this slight off balance somehow work in his favour? Because he goes pretty quick from what I have. You do know about the sports. So someone who doesn't like sport, you've picked a very sport-based fact involving very spree. And flying. There is a sprinter at the moment called Brianna Liston, and she's 12 years old.
Starting point is 00:09:08 She's from Jamaica. And in 2017, she ran the 100 meters in 11.86 seconds, which is unbelievably fast. And in fact, if she'd have taken part in the 1896 Olympics, she would have won by more than 0.1 of a second. 12-year-old girl. the team behind the Cassini mission which was the probe that went to Saturn and it dropped off the how do you pronounce it? Hoagans?
Starting point is 00:09:37 It's the moonlander that they drop down it's the only human thing ever to land on a body beyond the asteroid belt and now it's there it's going to be there for millions of years is very very cool. Anyway the Cassini probe the team behind it they spent 20 years working on it this huge long project and they got so close that they had all these cool team things
Starting point is 00:09:56 that they did together. So they had a softball team called the Roving Marauders and whenever there was a big date in Cassini or Saturn or what are tight in history they would brew a special beer and they'd give it a special name.
Starting point is 00:10:08 Yeah. Nice. Do you think we should do that? We don't have enough for a softball. We already do, James. Do we? But softball's only a three-player game. Oh, right.
Starting point is 00:10:18 And there's no James's rule and I already turn up, so. Okay, we should move on On to fact number two. And that is my fact. My fact this week is that in 1604, one of King James I first grooms rode from London to York and back five times
Starting point is 00:10:41 in the space of five days for a bet. Wow. Did you choose a James Facts because James Rossin is here today? I did, yeah. It's the first James. Yeah, why have you never done a James Factor before? I just never noticed you being here, I guess. Yeah, this is really cool.
Starting point is 00:10:57 So this is a guy called John Lepton. and it was first recorded in this amazing book which I wasted all my research time reading today which was this book called Abridgment of the English Chronicle and it was written in 1604 by a guy who died in 6005 so he just got in there and yeah it was this story that he sort of said that he reckoned he'd be able to go to and from London
Starting point is 00:11:17 and New York five times in six days and he ended up managing to do it with one day to spare Wow it is really good that isn't it Yeah is it different the horse every time That's the annoying thing it wasn't recorded How often he changed his horses. You would normally change your horse, though, on a journey that long, I would think. Would you?
Starting point is 00:11:34 Yeah. Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah. From my knowledge of horses. Probably swapping at Watford Gap. Yeah. So when he finished this, according to the book that I read, it said, I think this is probably the same one. He finished his appointed journey to the admiration of all men in five days.
Starting point is 00:11:53 And upon Tuesday the 28th, he came to court at Greenwich to his majesty in a moment. as fresh and cheerful a manner as when he first began. Yeah. Nice. Although he arrived on, so he was due to arrive on the Saturday night. It's really cool this account because it really gives intense details of the time that he arrived, how long he slept for. He arrived on the Friday night.
Starting point is 00:12:13 And then there is a gap in our knowledge for the Saturday and the Sunday. So you can only imagine he got absolutely hammered in York for Saturday and Sunday, woke up with their heinous hangover on Monday and then struggled back to be cheerful on Tuesday. Sounds great. One thing that I think I read about this, which I think is quite interesting, from the Journal of Sport History, it said that this could kind of be seen as the first sporting record. So it wasn't really until the 19th century that people became obsessed with like, I've done this sport in this amount of time, you know, that kind of record-breaking mentality. It was another two centuries before men began routinely to abstract the quantified performance as a mark to be equaled or surpassed. But this is kind of the first instance of that happening.
Starting point is 00:12:57 he said, I can travel this long in this distance. Yeah. Will you put money on it? Exactly. That's really cool. They do, don't they? They quote it the first sort of sporting match that we have a record of. But I was reading, again, in this book, that there were lots of really weirdly progressive
Starting point is 00:13:10 rules around it. So it became a huge gambling thing. You often bet on horse races than as now. But if you won more than 100 marks on a horse race, you had to give up all of your remainder to the poor. So that was a rule that was introduced in James's time. There was an act passed in Scotland that said, stop feeding horses hard meat in summer,
Starting point is 00:13:30 that practice being held one among other occasions of dearth of victuals, which I think is basically the poor people need meat in summer. And if people keep feeding it to their horses, then the poor people aren't getting it, which is very progressive. A bit like the National Lottery. Exactly like the National Lottery. Where if you were more than 100 quid,
Starting point is 00:13:48 you have to give the rest of the poor. Not quite like the National Lottery. Do you know about John Lepton's other horse feet. Do you mean hooves? Yeah, hooves, that's it. So surely after this event, there was Remember the 5th of November, the gunpowder plot
Starting point is 00:14:08 and a couple of days after Thomas Percy was a fugitive, he was involved in the conspiracy, everyone was looking for him. So he had connections in Northumberland, Cumberland and Yorkshire in the north of England and people thought that he might be sort of hiding out there. So our hero, John Lepton, was sent to see if they could find him.
Starting point is 00:14:28 Wow. No way. And according to my source, John Lepton missed his man and his epic ride took him to Scotland before he realised that the trail had gone cold.
Starting point is 00:14:38 So in that instance, he sort of overshot his mark a little bit. Well, because he was so fast. So he was probably going by the average time he was told him. He probably thought he was in Wolverhampton and then he looked around
Starting point is 00:14:49 and he was in Scotland. I've got to think about a great horse racing bet. Oh, good. Well, this is a bet about distance and travel. So there was a guy called Lord March who made a bet
Starting point is 00:15:02 that he could get a letter 50 miles in an hour which at the time, exactly, was impossible. I would take that bet definitely. Yeah, exactly. No horse could run at 50 miles an hour for an hour. No way. Even if you were on a cheetah, it would be pretty hard. A cheetah couldn't do that.
Starting point is 00:15:16 He won the bet. No. Yes, he didn't use horses. Did he use pigeons? No, that's quite a good idea. Although, I don't know, even they, I'm not sure they can go at 50 miles an hour. What he did was,
Starting point is 00:15:26 this is very clever. He put the letter inside a ball, okay, and then he hired... Oh, um, hamsters. Oh, no. He hired 20 expert cricketers, and for an hour, they threw it in a massive circle
Starting point is 00:15:40 all the way around over and over again. Oh, the letter traveled more than 50 miles. No way. In that hour. Doesn't count. He won the bet. Well, I wouldn't pay up. Pointless.
Starting point is 00:15:50 Hasn't got anywhere. I think that's a really crafty, crafty Lord March. He's a clever man. I've got a... of ridiculous wages from the 18th century. So I think that wages really took off in the 18th century when it all just got a bit silly. In 1735, Count de Buchberg bet a large wage on riding to Edinburgh backwards on a horse, which was accomplished in just under four days. I don't know if
Starting point is 00:16:13 the count did it or if you got someone to do it. So just to be clear, the horse is going forwards, but you're facing backwards or it's the horse facing backwards? I think it's like on a train where the train's going forward and you're facing backwards. You're probably didn't need to make a train analogy there. It's like a horse going forward and you're facing backwards. And in 1770, I read this from The Gentleman, which is just so great, two earls bear that one could ride from London to Edinburgh and back in less time than it took the other one to draw a million dots. Who's counting the million?
Starting point is 00:16:49 I do not know. So they announced the wager, but then there doesn't seem to be any sort of follow-up or result section in the following issue. So you don't know who won that. So I don't know who won. It's actually, actually, you only don't know who won because it's a very long line of dots and you don't know what happens
Starting point is 00:17:04 at the end of the long line of dots. There's a lot of suspense. But he could make the dots in the most expedious manner that he could contrive, which I think includes hiring people to draw dots. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:15 Or some sort of mechanical hire a million people. It's just one dot each. Yeah. Just glue a million pencils together and make one dot. Just glue a million pencils together. Does it count the time that you take gluing the pencils together or...
Starting point is 00:17:31 Yeah, that's all part of the time. I'm making this up. You see. Like, the time it takes me to press a dot, right? You're not going to be able to do one pencil gluing, are you? I would start just drawing dots, but I would instruct a friend to go and hire a lot of people immediately to come and join and draw more dots. I reckon 1,000 people at 1,000 dots. Oh, easy, yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:52 But I'm paying a thousand people. Like peasants? 18th century peasant? They just do what you tell them. But so many peasants are illiterate. I don't know if that's got to you. No, you can still draw a dut if you're illiterate. No, they were really illiterate back then.
Starting point is 00:18:06 You'd get lines. What if you get a paintbrush and just kind of flick it? Does that count as a dot? Oh. Let me revisit the wording. Amazing. But what a good bet, because he would be drawing dots, drawing dots. And the other guy would be riding to Edinburgh.
Starting point is 00:18:21 it's very exciting and suspenseful and the different kinds of achievement as well. I think that would be really exciting to watch. I think if they had the Grand National and they also had some dot writing competition at the same time. Yeah. It would be a hell of a lot more popular.
Starting point is 00:18:35 Yeah. No. There's another good bet, which is another kind of crafty bet, a bit like Andes, where someone was outwitted. This was in the 18th century and the Earl of Barrymore,
Starting point is 00:18:46 who apparently was known as Hellgate or Rake of Rakes because he was big womanizer and, a bit of a rake. He thought he was a bit of a sportsman. He was very tall and thin and its hair. It was all big and pointy.
Starting point is 00:18:57 Like to gather leaves. Yeah, like that. He fancied himself as a sportsman and this guy called Mr. Bullock challenged him to a running race and Bullock was a massively fat, unfit man. He weighed 18 stone and he said, I challenge you to a race. All I'm saying is I want a 35 yard head star and I want to be able to choose the route. And Barry Moore said, yeah, sure, I'm way fit than you. Look at you.
Starting point is 00:19:19 You're a mess. and so lots of people put money on it. Everyone backed Barrymore, and Bullock took those bets, so he's the only one backing himself. And the route he chose ran through an extremely narrow alley. And so he ran the entire route with poor old Barrymore not being able to squeeze past him on either side. And apparently he sort of wobbled from side to side
Starting point is 00:19:40 as he went to make sure there was no way of passing. That is brilliant. I've got a fact about jockeys as we're on horse racing. Sure. So jockey posture, you know that weird posture that jockeys have? No. They're kind of crouched on a horse. They're all sort of hunched up.
Starting point is 00:19:57 This only caught on in 1898. Before that, you would just sit upright and try and win the horse race. And there was a guy, a jockey called James Foreman Sloan. He started doing it. And it was like the Fosbury flop, you know, in high jumping. Within 10 years, everyone around the world was doing it. And horse race completion times improved by 5 to 7% over those 10 years, solely because of this guy.
Starting point is 00:20:19 Wow. Yeah. I can't believe they didn't figure that out before. It's so obvious. But it's not by reducing wind resistance, which you might think it would be.
Starting point is 00:20:27 No, I wouldn't have thought that. I would have thought you were kind of getting a bit of a kind of a movement going. I'm doing the movement. It's grinding back and forth. It's when you're upright, you're like a sandbag and you jog up and down on the horse.
Starting point is 00:20:41 But when you're in jocky position, or if they call it martini glass position, you can move relative to the horse. So you are moving. at a more constant speed and I think it just helps the whole thing go a bit more smoothly. Maybe for the horse and for you. Like finding a resonance almost. Yeah, exactly, yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:55 Do you guys know that the precursor to the steeple chase was the wild goose chase? So I just came across this, an old book, which was referring to a wild goose chase as an actual race. And this was the main horse race that people bet on before the steeple chase. And what you did was, the horses all started running and after racing each other, after 12 score yards, after 240 yards, whoever was in the lead was the one who would, chose the route from that point onwards. And you had to play in.
Starting point is 00:21:22 And so they all went into this really thin family. And it was mad. And so you'd like dodge about, you'd jump over a ditch and then suddenly you'd take them over a massive fence. They didn't know what they were doing. That's a really good idea. But then if you overtake them, do you then get to choose the route? No. If you overtake them, then you've won. Wait, but if you, if you ever take them,
Starting point is 00:21:42 there's no route to get wrong, is there? So if you ever take them, you choose the route. That's why I was thinking. but actually that's the end of the race if you're up to take up. That's the end of the race because apparently when you choose the route
Starting point is 00:21:51 when does the race end you just have to run forever. This is why it was banned so again too many thousands of deaths it was very dangerous and it was banned according to this like
Starting point is 00:22:03 Sports Illustrated or something in 1856 Sports Illustrated equivalent it was banned because it was too hard on the horses and the riders because they would just collapse in the end
Starting point is 00:22:11 they just go on and on and on dodging about and then one of them would collapse that's amazing but that's the original world goose chase? In 2012, Prince Harry bought chairs in a horse called Usain Colt. Amazing.
Starting point is 00:22:25 James, you can edit that into either section of the show. I love that. That's so funny. Okay, we should move on to fact number three, and that is Andy's fact. That's right. My fact is that there are a species of wasps the size of amoeba. So cool. Very cool.
Starting point is 00:22:47 And not special giant amoeba either, because there are giant amoeba we talked about before on the show. Yeah, because I was going to say. say there's an amoeba which is 10 centimetres long. Exactly. So no. And the smallest dog is 9.65 centimeters. So there are dogs that are small of the amoebas.
Starting point is 00:23:04 So exactly. Amoeba, James. Yeah, can we clarify plurals? Amoeba, amoeba. Yeah. So this is a wasp called Mega Phragma Maimarepeni and it's 0.2 millimeters long. It's the third smallest insect known.
Starting point is 00:23:19 The other two smaller ones are also wasps. So I've just picked this guy. because he's been studied. But it's the size of an amoeba and it's got eyes, brains, wings, muscle, gut. So it's obviously made up of thousands and thousands and thousands of cells
Starting point is 00:23:32 but it's the size of a one-celled organism and it's done that. There's been a study by a scientist called Alexei Polilov and it found that basically they're missing huge amounts of stuff and they have to cut down on their own brains and remove all the nuclei from the cells
Starting point is 00:23:46 inside their skull just to make room for a few neurons. Really? It's incredibly weird. So do they have nuclei and then they extract them as they grow? Or they just don't have any nuclei from the start? I think it destroys them until it only has a few hundred. This is what I read.
Starting point is 00:24:02 Is it one of these that doesn't really need to make that many decisions in life? Yeah. It's life is simple. Don't need that many neurons, right? But it's got to make, it's only got a hundred, a hundredth perhaps as many as a bee. And bees themselves do not make that many decisions. No. Flower hive, flower hive.
Starting point is 00:24:19 It's about the size of a human ovum That does not help put things in perspective No, come on, think of the human ovum Think of a very small, full stop What? Think of a dot Now think of a million of those I'm afraid you've only drawn 999,999 dots
Starting point is 00:24:38 Because this is a wasp The other earl wins the bet What is the name of the wasp? Mega Phragma My Mary Penny. There's another one, which is small. I think it might be one of the two that's smaller than this one called Dicopomorpha, ecteroges. Something like that.
Starting point is 00:25:03 It's the males that are really small in this species. I don't know if it's the same with yours. And the reason they're so small is because basically they never leave their egg. They kind of live inside their egg, and they mate with their sisters inside the egg. and then the sisters fly off and they just die. Oh, mate. Broaden your eyes and... How?
Starting point is 00:25:24 That's crazy. Yeah, so that's their whole life. They just, they grow up in the egg. They mate with their sisters, they die. So are these parasitic wasps? Is it their own egg they're in, or are they in someone else's egg? They're in their own egg.
Starting point is 00:25:35 Okay. Yeah. But parasitic wops are amazing. Yeah. Actually, you said wops there instead of wasps. I'll say it again then. But do you know that wasp used to be wops? Really?
Starting point is 00:25:45 Yeah, and then it got changed. just through people saying it wrong over the years. As in it comes from an old Germanic word whops. I really hope it shows an etymology with whoops. It probably doesn't, but it would be nice, wouldn't it? What, like, whoops, I've stepped on a... On a wasp. Yeah, parasitic wasps are totally awesome, aren't they?
Starting point is 00:26:07 Well, there's a piece by Ed Yong, who writes a lot about bacteria. He writes for the Atlantic. It's a great piece. He's so good. I just want to say he's probably my favorite, like, science journalist and you should all look at it. Yeah, I agree. All right. God of my turf. Do you get his weekly email that he sends with all of his writings in it? I will say, there's a piece by him.
Starting point is 00:26:31 Where he's saying everyone thinks the beetle is the king of the things because there are so many species of them. So he writes a bit better than saying the king of the things. I don't think he does. I don't think it's possible. So there are 380,000 species of beetle, which is a quarter of all animal species, which is a lot, obviously. But there's a scientist from the University of Iowa called Andrew Forbes, who reckons that there are so many parasitic wasps and that every single species of insect even has at least one and probably several species of tiny, tiny parasitic wasp inside it. He reckons that wasps outnumber even beetles by about two and a half times.
Starting point is 00:27:06 So is that like if everyone on the planet had an average of two hats, then there has to be more hats than people? Exactly. Okay. Except the people are beetles and the hats of wasps. Yeah, exactly. There are shed loads of wasps, given that we don't give them enough credit. I think there are just over 5,000 species of mammal and 14,000 of ant and 200,000 species of wasp.
Starting point is 00:27:27 And even fig wasps have many thousands of species of fig wasp, don't they? So we need to pay them more attention. They're so small that no one notices them. Even if you find a new beetle, it's probably got loads of wasps living in it that you don't know about. There's an amazing quote from Josephine Rodriguez, who's an entomologist, who was responding to this discussion about there being more wasps than Beatles. And she says, it doesn't surprise me at all that there are more wasps. I really think that only people that would disagree would be the fly people. So just like the politics within entomology is great.
Starting point is 00:28:01 Operica McAllister isn't listening to this. She's a fly person. Has she been on that planet? We've had her on. Yeah. Yeah, she'll be fuming. She'll go out and find 100,000 different species. fly today. There's a really cool parasitic wasp called the green-eyed wasp, which
Starting point is 00:28:15 parasites of a ladybird. So it lays its eggs inside a ladybird. And then when they hatch, they come out and they immediately weave this cocoom between this ladybird's legs. And this paralyzes the ladybird, but it also sort of possesses the ladybird. So it turns it into a zombie. When you say, so weaving the cocoon between the legs which paralyzes them, is it like tying someone's shoelaces together? It's exactly the same as that, except also if you tie someone's shoelaces together and then you injected their brain with some kind of chemical that turn them into a zombie. That is a next level prank. You get two detentions for that one.
Starting point is 00:28:48 But yeah, this is really cool. So this ladybird sits there and it's possessed, which means it twitches involuntarily, which scares away any potential predators. So it's just standing there like this great fort with the babies all in between its legs. And then they crack out and leave, and the ladybird, I guess, dies. No, not true.
Starting point is 00:29:05 Really? A quarter of the ladybirds recover, and some of them are even parasitized again. Oh, no. Do you want to hear about my favorite messed up was? Yes, please. Oh, no, it's not. It's a fly.
Starting point is 00:29:18 Anyway. Well, Erica will love this. Okay. It's, this is the smallest fly that exists, okay? Okay. And it feeds on itself really tiny ants, not even normal size ants, really small ants. And what it does is the egg hatches inside the ant, parasitic fly. It goes into the head of the ant, from inside.
Starting point is 00:29:37 inside and it starts eating it. So it feeds on the muscles that control the mouth parts, which are very big and muscular bits. So the ant then can't chew. So he's walking around thinking, I can't chew anymore. And then this tiny fly eats the brain. So the act now can't think anymore. You can't even think I can't chew anymore. Yeah, exactly. So, but it stays walking around. It walks around for another fortnight while this fly is inside it, eating it. And then finally, the fly larvae dissolves the membrane which keeps the ant's head on. And the ant's head comes off and then the fly just lives in the decapitated head for another fortnight
Starting point is 00:30:11 which I think is the most goth thing I can possibly imagine how cool is that and then once it's an adult it just leaves the head leaves this decapitated head longer how insane it's all fucked up isn't it it's horrible you know that it's so fucked up it made Charles Darwin question his belief in God
Starting point is 00:30:26 parasitic wasps he wrote a letter to a fellow naturalist Asa Gray said I cannot persuade myself that a beneficent and omnipotent God would have designedly created parasitic wasps. He used the technical term. With the express intention of their feeding within the living bodies of caterpillars. Wow.
Starting point is 00:30:46 It's a good point. It's not a nice thing to do. If there is a god, he's a goth. He then goes on to say, or that a cat should play with mice. So that also seemed to upset him quite a lot as well. Oh no, they're just having fun cats and mice. We've all seen Tom and Jerry. Fortunately, he didn't live to see that terror.
Starting point is 00:31:04 Do you want to hear my favorite parisos? Oh, we've all got one. It's so nice. So it's Asakodes abatarsis, and it's a parasitic wasp which lays its eggs in another wasp, which is called Dibrakis Bukianus, and then that lays its eggs in the pupae of a species of igno monodye wasps, which then lays its eggs in the caterpillar of the Cricopia moth, which lives and feeds in a poplar, wild cherry, or apple tree. So that means it's a parasite, inside a parasite, inside a parasite. inside a parasite, inside a tree. Wow. I think this is where my hat metaphor falls down. It's the inception of the wasp world.
Starting point is 00:31:45 I was thinking he's the most disgusting Russian doll you could ever be able to know. Do you want to know my least favorite wasp? Yep. It's the tarantula hawk. And it's a type of wasp. And it has the worst sting probably of any wasp. And the recommendation if you're stung by this wasp, and this is in a peer-review journal,
Starting point is 00:32:05 is to lie down and start screaming. What does that do? Well, apparently what happens is it's so painful that you're not going to be able to maintain verbal or physical coordination after you're stung and you're likely to just kind of run off and hurt yourself all ever. And so the best thing to do is just lie down and scream and hopefully someone will come and help you.
Starting point is 00:32:27 Oh my God. Wow. It's such a good name as well. Is it a tarantula? Is it a hawk? No, it's a wasp. The smallest fly in the world is named after Arnold Schwarzenegger
Starting point is 00:32:39 Nice Is that an ironic kind of thing? No, it's because it's got big arms It's a small, it's a tiny fly with massive arms It's not 0.395 millimeters long And its arms are big relative to its body But they are not They're not the size of Arnie
Starting point is 00:32:55 You don't just see a pair of arms lying on the ground And a tiny thing in between them And the scientists who discovered it Brian Brown said As soon as I saw those bulging legs I knew I had to name this one after Arnold. Legs. It doesn't have, I've got to say don't have arms.
Starting point is 00:33:07 They've got front legs, haven't they? Is that what you call your arms? It's what I call my arms. I've never known why you walk on all fours. But we're all the, all mammals have two arms and two legs or four legs. But I believe flies are not mammals. Well, we don't have time together for science at those games. We should probably move on at this place and probably dig this hole any deeper and we lose you entirely.
Starting point is 00:33:35 We should go on to fact number four. and that is James's fact. Okay, my fact this week is when Patonk players getting to fights, it is known in the French press as bulliganism. It's amazing. Love it. That's very good.
Starting point is 00:33:49 So I read this in a recent Telegraph article, and it is all about how they're trying to smarten up the reputation of the sport of Patonk, which is French bull. So for anyone who doesn't know that, it's basically you have a big iron ball. It's not that big. It's about the size of a cricket ball.
Starting point is 00:34:07 Iron ball and you throw it towards a small wooden jack and whoever gets closest wins. And they're trying to smarting it up. They've stopped people from wearing jeans. And also they're trying to stop this bulliganism, which is alcohol-fueled brawls between players, which has been tarnishing the sport for the last few years. And it's an extremely traditional French pastime. I've seen people playing it.
Starting point is 00:34:31 People play it in a square near where I used to live. On the piste. I've been to play in that square. It's brilliant in South London. It's very nice. You love it. Yeah, and you hire the equipment out from the pub. Did you get into any fights?
Starting point is 00:34:43 Huge brawl. I'm not allowed back to South London, actually. Well, I thought this can't possibly be true, but it goes back about 10 years. So in 2017, some referees had to be given special protection from bulligans. There were death threats at the World Cup in 2016. Yeah. Just there are so many stories. One team said they were going to rip their heads off another team if they didn't let them win.
Starting point is 00:35:04 And then the tournament's organiser said, this sort of incident happens. quite often in Patonk in response to that. There was one guy who got a 200 euro fine and a four-year ban for hurling a bull at his rival. Wow. And they are hard, bulls. They're super hard, aren't they? You don't want that?
Starting point is 00:35:22 There was, I think one guy, according to an economist article, was jailed for shooting dead a Patonk rival when one of his bulls landed on his foot. What? What year was this? It didn't say, it just said, in brackets, it was an economist article about Patonk, and then it was just like, for instance,
Starting point is 00:35:37 the guy from Grenoble who was jailed for shooting dead arrival when his bull landed on his foot close brackets no more information so I found three examples of people who've died in the last 10 years playing Patonk and I was not looking for them they just kept coming up in my search results one of them was trampled by a runaway circus elephant though so I don't know if that
Starting point is 00:35:57 counts as the dangers of Patonk that's what eventually cleared us off the South London right actually this thing about them not being able to wear jeans it's annoyed a lot of Patonk players and one player has protested by turning up to an official tournament game dressed as a clown,
Starting point is 00:36:14 which now I hear about it seems a little bit too soon almost. Although at least if another player's ball lands on your shoe, it probably won't hurt your foot. There is one thing that Patonk players are now allowed to do which they weren't a little while ago, which is to drink during matches. And this is competition players.
Starting point is 00:36:35 And yes, you're right, they are trying to professionalise, aren't they? because they want it to be an Olympic thing. But they did persuade the world, this is a very French thing, they did persuade the world anti-doping agency, it is okay to have a glass of pastis or whatever during a competition.
Starting point is 00:36:50 And they've been allowed to as of 2008, but they are still asked to abstain from steroids, growth hormones, heroin and cocaine. I can't imagine heroin's going to help you play for talk that much, is it? It's a slow game. I mean, steroids aren't going to help you. either. Oh, come on, you can get some proper power in your...
Starting point is 00:37:10 If you're really big, you can just kind of lean over and put the ball down. Doesn't make your arms lengthen. I don't really. I don't really fair to it. I'm thinking of stretch Armstrong. I can't get over how full of both of your arguments are. Andy's stories don't lengthen your arms. And James, it's not really a game of power.
Starting point is 00:37:26 Look, we'll have a game soon. But there are a few different shots you can play. One way you just try and get it close to the jack. And another one where you try and bash the other guy's ball out of the way. Oh, yeah, you can do that. of like Quidditch. Is it? Yeah, because in Quidditch, there are people who are trying to score points,
Starting point is 00:37:43 and those are the people in Patonk who are shooting for the jack, the tiny wooden thing. And then you've also got shooters in Patonk, who are the, would be the bludgers who try to, you know, but they're not flying, are they? And they've played it on Titan. Look, every analogy breaks down eventually, I'm just saying you've got scorers and knockers. Do you? Talking of knockers, can we talk about kissing the fanny? Smooth.
Starting point is 00:38:08 Thanks. So kissing the funny is when, if you lose a match 30-0, you then have to kiss the funny, which is where you ideally have to kiss the bare bottom of a lady called fanny. But as there isn't always one available, you can kiss a picture of the bare bottom of a lady called fanny. Or quite often they have like small statues of fannies nearby that you can kiss the bottom of. So is that part of the equipment list for a match? I assume it must be. Every club has its own model fanny in France.
Starting point is 00:38:45 Wow. They have them specially made. There was a match where someone lost very badly. And a local waitress, I think, called Fanny said, you'll have to kiss me on the cheek if you lose. And then when the mayor lost really, really badly, she said, well, you have to kiss me on the bum now. At some clubs in Provence have special rugs to kneel on
Starting point is 00:39:03 while you're kissing the statuette of the woman. Fanny on the arse. Yeah. It's a weird kind of prayer. Do you know why England is not so good at Patonk? Is it because we have Crown Green Bowling or Tempin bowling, so we don't really play it as much? That's a nice idea. I think, well, my theory as to why we're not a world-leading Patonk power is that...
Starting point is 00:39:28 We like to wear jeans a lot, so we won't be able to play anymore. That's another one. This is a bit more historical, is that Edward III forbade people from playing legally you were not allowed to play, especially if you were an archer. And this goes back, you know, loads of sports were banned if you were an archer. Because you had to be doing your archery practice. But until the 18th century, artificers, laborers, apprentices and servants were banned from playing any time outside Christmas. Really?
Starting point is 00:39:54 Yeah, which is not good for training. And also, yeah, because in Christmas the ground's going to be cold. Yeah. Snowy may be. So you might not be able to play anyway. Poor playing conditions. Good point. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:05 Yeah, it was thought of as a. a kind of corrupt sport, wasn't it? Only people have ill repute played it. It was associated with saloons and gambling and stuff like that. All back to the gambling. Well, you say that Britain isn't a Patonk powerhouse, but we do have teams. In 2002, Purcell sponsored and paid for the kit of the British nude
Starting point is 00:40:26 potonk team. Pay for the kit. Yes. So I think it was mostly sweat buns. Wow. Do you say Sears? Purcell. Purcell, so exactly the clothes detergent brand.
Starting point is 00:40:38 Why would you associate yourself with something as risque as nude Patonk? Risky and also not terribly popular, I imagine. Purcell makes your clothes disappear? I mean, what are they trying to tell you? Do they turn up to competition saying, look, we're not wearing jeans? I've got a quote from Pat Thompson, the team manager and president of British naturesan. We might not have a Beckham or an Owen, but landing this sponsorship is set to boost the profile of nature's petonk just as we go head to head with the World Cup
Starting point is 00:41:07 Head to head What year was that? 2002 and see, did anyone pay attention to that World Cup? I think not. Potan kind of advertises itself as being good for kind of all ages, all genders, it's not a super physically testing sport even to the extent that you
Starting point is 00:41:25 can buy magnets attached to cords so you can pick up the bulls without having to bend down and this is a thing so that's fine. It's all like you go fishing, fishing, your petunct balls. Exactly. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:37 But it won't pick up the wooden one, will it? No. God, you're right. What do you do about that? Long Hoover. You can get those claw things
Starting point is 00:41:46 that Park Rangers have, you know. Yeah, you're right. That's called a piglet. It's called a cauchonette, that little wooden thing. Yes. Or like we would call it a jack, right?
Starting point is 00:41:56 Yes. One of England's best players is called Jack blows. Really? Nice. Pretty cool. So prior to researching this, Did anyone else assume that Patonk was an onomatopoeic name?
Starting point is 00:42:09 Yeah. Patonk? I mean, it is onomatopoeic. It just wasn't named for that reason. Yeah, just not intentionally so. There was an old man who loved to play bull, which involved taking three steps and then throwing your ball. He had terrible rheumatism, so as if you could do it sitting down.
Starting point is 00:42:22 His friend said yes, and they agreed to be stationary when they threw the ball as well. And that is Patonk, which comes from the province words ped-tanko, which means feet still. Ah. Yeah. And I think that's really nice as an origin because it originates in basically early disability rights. Right? Because it used to be much more active. So I think in Provence, it was called Provence Long.
Starting point is 00:42:45 And you threw the ball really far. It was often about throwing the ball quite a long way. And the ball, for some reason, I couldn't discover, was sheathed in nails. And it resulted in so many injuries in the 18th and 19th centuries that it was banned almost everywhere. So, sorry, can I just say, so the nails, the spiky bit is on the inside, right? Yeah. Because the way you said it, it could have possibly been sticking out. Yeah, sticking out.
Starting point is 00:43:07 So it's basically cork. And then you would stick a load of nails so that the outside of it was the heads of the nails. And so that's how you got your iron kind of ball. So that's how you got the weight or whatever. Yeah. So it's not like a hedgehog or something. Yeah, got it. That would be very dangerous, though.
Starting point is 00:43:22 Yeah, but maybe more fun. Do you use a hedgehog? No, no. I was thinking of the sticky out ball thing. Oh, sorry. Yeah, I was thinking, oh, this is Alice in Wonderland. I'm sure I've read this before. with a real piglet that you throw at the beginning.
Starting point is 00:43:34 Well, you know why the metal balls came about from the technology of the First World War, so sort of making small mines and bombs and stuff using that technology that was improved in the First World War, they could then make Potonk balls. Wow. Yeah. So it was good for something.
Starting point is 00:43:51 It was. So war, what is it good for? Patonk. Finally, we've answered the question. Potonk bowls are dangerous. objects officially. According to the Federal Transportation Safety Administration, you're not allowed to take them
Starting point is 00:44:09 onto aircrafts. Oh. Did you find an example of that? No. I found a guy who, he's a star player from Jersey, Keith Boliath, and he had his luggage seized on route to a big competition in Denmark because it had three suspicious looking perfectly round iron balls in it. And obviously they thought, well, this could be a bomb, what is it? And he had to borrow another set.
Starting point is 00:44:31 and someone else's trousers because he travelled in jeans. The umpire wouldn't let him play in the competition. So his game suffered very badly because he was playing with a set. He wasn't familiar with the weighting. And different trousers. And different trousers, yeah. Do you think it's important to, like, use your own bowls? Well, he says that they have slightly different weightings and possibly even different sizes.
Starting point is 00:44:54 Or just that he was used to the feel of his own balls. Sorry, is this the new disper tongue, can't he actually? in the time. Okay, we should wrap up. Thanks so much for listening. We'll be back again next week with another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish. In the meantime, if you want to get in touch with us,
Starting point is 00:45:13 you can do so on these guys' Twitter accounts. James is on. And he's on. And Andrew Hunter M. And James Rawson is on. At Jay Rawson. Sorry, it shouldn't be like James is the obvious James and you're James Rawlsson.
Starting point is 00:45:26 Just call me other James. Random James is on. James Harkin. Say it again. At Jay Rawson. And also he is in control of all of our other social media accounts. So if you want to abuse him anywhere, that's where to do it. In fact, if you want to abuse anyone anywhere, just do it on social media.
Starting point is 00:45:47 It's fashionable. If you want to get in touch with us as a group, you can get in touch with us via at no such thing or email podcast at QI.com. That's all for this week. We'll see again next week. Goodbye.

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