No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Molten Lava Football Pitch

Episode Date: July 22, 2016

Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss synchronised heartbeats, how to barbecue with lava, and the people who only read Playboy for the articles. ...

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:02 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, and I am sitting here with Anna Chisinski, James Harkin, and Andrew Hunter Murray. And once again, we have gathered around the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days. And in no particular order, here we go. Starting with you, Andy. My fact is that a group of scientists is currently making their own lava. Pretty cool. So there's a load of scientists who are at the University of Buffalo's Center for Geohazard Studies,
Starting point is 00:00:47 and they want to study what it's like when lava and water meet, because it's something that you don't get to study a lot in the wild, in the natural world. But it's really important as well because when lava and water meet, it gets really, really explosive as opposed to only normal lava explosivity. And so they are making their own stuff. And they melt 10 gallons of basaltic rock at a time in a furnace at 2,500 degrees. Is there not a thing about water and lava meeting, which is related to the laden frost effects, one of James' favourite effects?
Starting point is 00:01:19 I think it's, which is when two substances of vastly different temperatures meet each other. And it means that the water isn't caused to boil straight away because this layer of gas suddenly forms between the water and the lava. And I think that might be what makes it so explosive, because this layer of gas forms and then eventually that layer of gas collapses and then this massive explosion helps. Do you know where they could have gone
Starting point is 00:01:41 to see lava meet water? No. 1973. They went to 1973. There's an Icelandic town called Vesmanya. I'm pronouncing that wrong, obviously. But in 1973, they had a volcano erupt and the lava was heading towards this town,
Starting point is 00:01:57 which was quite far away. And what they decided to do was they got water cannons and they pumped billions of gallons of water. at the lava that was approaching to stop it and they did it from months on end and it eventually did stop and so the town was saved. Some people would say it is harder for scientists to build a time machine and go back to 1973
Starting point is 00:02:15 possibly even than making their own lava. It would have been a better fact though. Wasn't there a town, was it in Spain or Italy where there was a volcano going off and the villagers kind of made a trench so that the lava wouldn't go into their town? Yes. But instead they directed it into the next town.
Starting point is 00:02:32 It was in Sicily. It was when Mount Hetner exploded. The village was called Catania, and they dug an artificial breach, so to redirect the lava. And the really cool thing is, do you know how they kept cool? They wore wet sheepskins while they were working.
Starting point is 00:02:48 But the villagers, who they redirected the lava flow to, then redirected it back to this other place called Patrano, and the Paturnians just sent it right back their way. That's so funny. Do you know how to tell if a volcano explodes, whether you're really, really, really, really in trouble. No?
Starting point is 00:03:04 You look up at the spout of lava that's coming out of the volcano and if it's moving left or right, you're absolutely fine from your perspective. If it appears to be staying still, you're in trouble. Well, because presumably that's coming towards you, right? Because it's exactly on the same axis as you.
Starting point is 00:03:19 I could be going directly away from you. Well, it's not, James. It's coming towards you. For being annoying. I find it amazing that volcanoes are made of lava. I never really thought of that. I thought, oh, they're just made of rock that's sticking up
Starting point is 00:03:31 and then the lava comes out of it. But they're made of either larva or lava and ash in layers building up over millions of years. I thought what was amazing is, do you remember the tunnel going through the Alps? The Got Hard Tunnel. Do you remember that? And how when they went through it,
Starting point is 00:03:46 some of the time the rock was really hard and then some of it was crumbly like sand. You always think of a mountain as being like solid all the way through, but it's amazing that there are gaps in there and little crumbly bits. It's like a trifle. You said there are bits,
Starting point is 00:04:00 You said, because we did it on no such thing as the news, there were as bits which were as soft as butter. Yeah. I can't believe that. Actually... You can't believe it's butter. You'd be so annoyed if you were building on that mountain, or you're trying to get through that mountain,
Starting point is 00:04:15 and your mate got the butter bit, and you got the granite bit next to it. So you turned up with a massive boring machine, and he's just got a butter knife. Actually, speaking of tunnels, there are lava-related tunnels on the moon. Oh, the best thing I've been. It's so amazing. Yeah, and I can't believe I didn't know these existed. So we discovered this
Starting point is 00:04:35 quite recently, I think, that the moon has these underground tunnels and they were formed by lava flows 3.5 billion years ago. So lava would flow and then it solidifies on top, fast and it solidifies underneath. So the top creates this roof. And then underneath the roof is hollowed out as the lava flows through it. And so there are these hollow lava tunnels. And one of the ways we know this is because they have things called skylights in these tunnels, which is where a bit of them fall in. And then we see this hole that suddenly created, which shows us this tunnel underneath. It's so cool. The reason that scientists are really interested in it is because the idea of building these moon bases that always get proposed. One day we'll have a moon base. They actually think, so part of the problem with moon bases is all the radiation coming in.
Starting point is 00:05:17 And they think that these tubes could lead to these sort of underground bunkers where we could put the bases. So they're now looking into these tubes and they've got probes that have been flying over that have been sussing them out and trying to learn more. So exciting. Wow. Yeah, that's amazing. You know how we've been discussing in the office recently,
Starting point is 00:05:36 the football and Iceland has a lot of volcanoes? Well, the Icelandic football team, until the 1950s, played and practiced on lava. They played on gravel, which was made of crushed lava. Wow, that's great. No wonder they're good these days. More impressive to do it on liquid lava as it flows out of the volcano.
Starting point is 00:05:54 That would be pretty cool. Because also if you put your foot on lava, it's so hot that it sets fire to your foot. So that would be quite cool. You'd look like one of those cartoon characters that has your shoes on fire. No, that would have been a very impressive... Yes.
Starting point is 00:06:05 Yeah. I mean, it's not a practical... In cartoons, you do see people falling into lava, but that would never happen because lava's quite thick and gloopy and more viscous than humans. Would you just fall onto it? You'd fall onto it and set on fire.
Starting point is 00:06:19 Right. Rather than kind of, well, no! And kind of the last thing you see is your eyes. I'm going into the lava. Yeah, that's... What about the end of Terminator 2? Spoiler alert. Where Arnie, of course,
Starting point is 00:06:29 goes into the liquid steel. Well, is he not a robot? He's made of metal. Yeah, so it's slightly different to humans. He'll have a different density to humans. All right. They have researched it, Andy.
Starting point is 00:06:41 They're not just making stuff up on the glove of their heads. Does he ever swim in Terminator? No, he doesn't. No, that's why. I was reading, Mark Commode and Simon Mayo's book, and they were talking about movie endings that don't quite make scientific sense. And one of them, they say, is that Lord of the Rings right at the end, for Frodo to go into the volcano, that wouldn't be possible because you would just explode
Starting point is 00:07:06 from the heat. Sure. Is that true? How dense are hobbits? I mean, these are all made up things, aren't they? I know volcanoes aren't made up, but they're in a fantasy world, so they could have. Tolkien could have specified that in Middle Earth, volcanoes are a bit colder. Oh, yeah, that's true. Now you do have cold volcanoes. Have you heard about this? Are you talking about fountains? There is a volcano called Geli Volcano which is near Lake Natron, which is in Tanzania. And their lava is made out
Starting point is 00:07:37 of natrocarbonateite and it has a different melting point to normal rock, which means it's a lot colder than normal volcanoes. I mean, it is 510 degrees Celsius so it's not that cold, but it is that slate, half the temperature of a normal rock. volcano.
Starting point is 00:07:53 Bring a jumper, you're saying. I'm saying. If you're going to wear wet sheepskins, then you'll be better off at that one than a normal volcano. It's a great tip. Okay. Although you do get ice lava. Really?
Starting point is 00:08:05 How cool is this? Not on Earth, on other planets, but they're in the solar system. There are ice volcanoes, also known as cryovulcanos, and they throw up, not molten rock. They throw up water or ammonia or methane in liquid form. and then it's so cold on those planets that it freezes almost instantly and crashes to the ground and so that happens on Pluto it happens on some other moons that's very cool yeah has anyone seen a mud volcano no no no I saw some of them in Romania last week
Starting point is 00:08:35 you kind of drive up to the top of like a mountain it's kind of a flat plateau and then you just have this bubbling mud these little pits of bubbling mud and then they kind of spurt out a little bit and then rolled down the hill and it's just yeah it's a really awesome some unusual. It sounds like you'd expect some kind of slime monster to emerge from it. Is it dangerous? Is it dangerous? When you
Starting point is 00:08:59 go there, they tell you not to touch it, but because it's in Romania and they don't really seem to bother about health and safety too much, it's not like in Britain there would probably be fences and you won't be able to go within a mile of them, but actually you can go right up to them. And that's why you're missing a hand
Starting point is 00:09:14 this week. That was actually eaten by the slime monster. Okay, here's the thing. The largest volcano in the world. Any guesses as to which or where it is? In the world. Yeah. Is it underwater?
Starting point is 00:09:29 You love underwater stuff. It's called the Tamu Massif. It's a thousand miles east of Japan underwater. It is equivalent in area to the British Isles. It is 120,000 square miles in area as a volcano. It's not active, thankfully. It's so gradual, the slope on it, that if you were on the seabed, you would not be able to tell which way it was towards the top.
Starting point is 00:09:52 Like it's really, really, really, really, really gradual towards the top. But it is, it does slope and it is the size of Britain. You know scientists have made lava before? No. A couple of years ago, they made lava by heating up rock. This was scientist at Syracuse University, and it took them 70 hours to heat rock and turn it into lava. And once they'd done it, they made the world's hottest barbecue.
Starting point is 00:10:14 It's hard enough, isn't it, to make sure that the outside of your chicken wing is... Not burns and the inside's cut. It's going to be charcoal on the outside and completely raw on the middle. Yeah. Apparently, there was a chef called Sam Bompas who was present and he said it was the best steak he'd ever had. Yeah, right. Oh, he's always going around saying that, Bompus. Okay, so just quickly, this is about making things artificially.
Starting point is 00:10:37 Do you know the hottest temperature that humans have ever made is? What? 7.2 trillion degrees Fahrenheit. And what's that in centigrade? It's only 4 trillion degrees Celsius. I don't know what either of those numbers mean. But like, is that hotter than... To give you an example, that's 250,000 times hotter than the sun.
Starting point is 00:10:56 It's about gas mark 75 million. Fan on or fan off. Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is James. Okay, my fact this week is that the word Timbuk 2 means woman with a sticky out belly button. So this is a book that I'm reading. moment called The Bad Ass Librarians of Timbuktu by Joshua Hammer and it's a brilliant book. And this is just the first fact that I found in there when I started reading it. And nobody really actually knows why it comes from this phrase.
Starting point is 00:11:38 There's some thought that it might have been the goddess that they look towards. What I kind of thought is maybe it's just a belly button thing and it could be that it's in some kind of depression. I think Timbuktu is in like a depression. So it could be like it's the belly button of that area. Although then that would be a real any, wouldn't it? Yeah, so... Unless you're looking at it from the other side.
Starting point is 00:11:58 From inside the earth. You're right. No, I think there are some disagreements about the translation. It could be large belly button rather than sticky out belly button. Okay. It's one of these kind of, nobody quite knows, but this is the most likely. That is a condition, isn't it? There's a medical condition which gives you sticky-outy belly buttons.
Starting point is 00:12:17 Is there? It's like a hernia, I think, isn't it? Yeah, and it's known in the area. It does happen there. So possibly, there was a woman. I read actually on a Reddit thread and I couldn't verify it that someone said, as per my source,
Starting point is 00:12:31 bracket's the 1996 Guinness Book of World Records. So if anyone's got that check it, the longest outy ever recorded was 11.9 inches. Oh, come on. If someone's really screwed up the umbilical cord. If you had like a sensitive chord. No, but that's not how it works.
Starting point is 00:12:45 No, it's not. A lot of people think that an outy belly button is where they've cut the umbilical cord, but it's not. It always gets cut. a couple of inches away from the stomach, but then the muscles seal themselves off and that bit of skin just dries up.
Starting point is 00:13:00 And I don't know where it goes. I mean, there have been 90 billion of those things since humanity evolved. Well, you think there's some kind of a pit somewhere? There must be somewhere. Shed belly buttons. But it's like, for instance, everyone's toenails are always growing
Starting point is 00:13:15 and people trim them. Yeah. But it's not like there's a massive cave of toenails. Which shows what you know, James. Wait till we get to... So, Timbuktu, do you know where it's twinned with? This is rather nice.
Starting point is 00:13:31 It's twinned with Hay on Y. And when it was announced, someone from Hay said, Timbuktu is the oldest home of the written word in Africa. It has a large number of private and public libraries housing ancient Arabic and African manuscripts. Hay on Y is the secondhand book capital of the world. It's basically the same.
Starting point is 00:13:50 Actually, Timbuktu had a few, was twinned with a few, and actually, obviously, that makes you not a twin as soon as you've got more than one. Yes. You can't be tripleted with... It's amazing looking into Timbuktu, because I genuinely knew nothing about it. I know the only thing I knew about it was that it was a lyric in an Oliver song. Go to Timbuktu and back again. That's the only thing I knew about it.
Starting point is 00:14:11 And it turns out that it was this incredible cultural hot spot for knowledge. Well, that's why it's so good that it's twinned with the second half-box. of the world. Because actually it's right, they do have loads of manuscripts. And this book is about a guy who tried to take a load of manuscripts away from Timbuktu to the Malian capital Bamako because they were under threat by Islamists. Yeah. And it's an amazing story, isn't it? It's a great story. And they genuinely did it. So Islamists were coming into Timbuktu and they thought, we bet they're going to try and destroy our libraries because they had hundreds of thousands of really valuable manuscripts. And lo and behold, a little short while later, a few months
Starting point is 00:14:49 later, then the libraries were sort of raised to the ground, and they'd managed to save and smuggle out of the country more than 300,000 manuscripts. Only a few hundred were left. So everyone thought when these libraries collapsed, oh no, that's all gone. And then these guys came out of the woodwork saying, don't worry about it. We got rid of them. And where are they now? I'm not telling you, because this goes out on the internet. So why did Timbuktu have a big collapse to the point where I read a 2006 survey of 150 Britons, 34% did not believe it existed. So I've actually got the survey here.
Starting point is 00:15:25 This was reported by the son under the headline, Timbuck, who? But anyway, the survey, I think this is the survey we're talking about, Dan. It was in 2010, and it was of 18 to 30-year-olds. Okay. And of them, maybe it was the same, maybe it was different. Half thought that Timbuktu was made up. 10% thought that Kazakhstan wasn't real.
Starting point is 00:15:47 A third said that Atlantis was somewhere in Greece. And one person thought that France was in Spain. But actually, for a long time, Timbuktu people weren't sure whether it existed. It was kind of a half-legendary place in North Africa. And because Europeans didn't really go to North Africa, a lot of people went to try and find this so-called city where great education happened. And gold reserves, right? It was quite famous for its gold a few hundred years ago.
Starting point is 00:16:15 Exactly. The first westerner in modernish times to try and find it was a guy called John Ledyard. And when he went, he'd never been to Africa. He didn't know a single word of Arabic. And when he got to Cairo, he had a bilious complaint and decided to treat it with sulfuric acid and took so much that he immediately died. Whoa! Hang on, so he was just trying to find it.
Starting point is 00:16:40 He didn't make it. He was, well, he got as far as Cairo. And then he saw us on what he felt was Gaviscan. If only he'd known a single word of Arabic, namely sulfuric acid. It's not the first word you learn, though, is it? No, it's not. It's quite deep into the textbooks. It's right at the back of the phrase book, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:16:58 It's in the medical section. You just do hello and where is the toilet and stuff like that. He probably could have done with where is the toilet at some point. Do you know about the first Westerners to get to Timbuktu? No. He was called Gordon Lang. Okay, he got there in 1826, and he was a Scottish. and he was a Scott and he was an adventurer basically, about 30 years old,
Starting point is 00:17:17 and he had this huge competition between Britain and France to get to Timbuktu. And they obviously had a head start up because they're closer. Yeah, because they're in Spain. Yeah. He said to his parents, I shall do more than has ever been done before and shall show myself to be what I have ever considered myself a man of enterprise and genius, right?
Starting point is 00:17:35 So big claim. This is from a website called great british nutters. Dot blogspot. Amazing. So he got to Tripoli, immediately proposed to the British consul's daughter, and she found in love with him, and they got married. And then he said, right, I'm off to Timbuktu. He thought it would take him a few weeks. The temperatures were huge, right? 120 degrees Fahrenheit. The food was patties of dried fish and camel's milk. Bandits everywhere. One night he was
Starting point is 00:18:00 attacked in his tent by bandits, as he was sleeping, hacked at with swords. He got 24 wounds, 18 of them serious. The next morning, he still said, put me on my camel. So he was trapped onto a for 400 miles seriously injured, kept going, right? It took him over a year to get to Timbuktu. He finally got there after, you know, recuperating all of this stuff, and it was abandoned and poor. It wasn't this great center of learning anymore. And then two days after he left, he was murdered in the desert by Banders.
Starting point is 00:18:31 This is incredible sort of awful journey. And do we know if he thought it was worth it? We don't know. Because he was glad he went. It wasn't what he was looking for, which is like James says, this amazing Centre of Learning with universities and gold and books
Starting point is 00:18:43 you know it wasn't like that anymore there's got to be a moment on that track when you've been strapped to a camel and you've got hack wounds from giant swords that you're thinking did I make the right call?
Starting point is 00:18:56 Just at least for a minute he must have had doubts. Just a second. Yeah. Do you know when we started thinking of Timbuktu as that semi-fictitious far away place?
Starting point is 00:19:06 No. So you know how we say today oh we'll send him to Timbuktu because, you know, it's just this... I'm constantly saying that around. I'm constantly hearing it. It's actually a not-to-it English dictionary definition in its own right. The word is to a long-distance place.
Starting point is 00:19:23 So it's been in use since Lady Duff Gordon, the English writer in the 1860s, was in Cairo, and she was getting really fed up with the fact that Cairo was being sort of gentrified. So lots of other British people were coming there. Exactly. Serial. cafe. That was exactly her problem. So she wrote a letter back from Cairo saying, it's growing dreadfully cockney here. I must go to Timbuktu instead. And that was the first
Starting point is 00:19:50 reference of, you know, got to escape to a more distant place than this. Yeah. So the idea that Timbuktu, the name, meaning the sticky outy belly button, I started looking into what places, how their names were derived. So it's thought that maybe Canberra means women's breasts. No one quite knows where Canberra comes from in Australia. Yeah, they think it means meeting place as well, because it derives from an Aboriginal word, but actually... But often they would meet at women's breasts. Exactly. It's very confusing if there's more than one woman in the bar where you're meeting. Manchester's named after breasts. Yeah. Is it? Yeah. The man in Manchester comes from
Starting point is 00:20:31 Mammeries, and it's because of the hills around Manchester. Oh, so it should be called breastchester. Yeah. Chestchester. Stop looking right out of it. And then this is my favourite. This was named after someone. There's a place called Anus Haven.
Starting point is 00:20:49 I'm probably pronouncing that wrong. I don't think you are. It could be Anus Haven. Or it could be Anishaving. But the thing is, is that this place is in Armenia, and it's named after a World War II hero called Dr. Anas Haven Galoian. Anas Haven actually sounds like another cupboard in your house, Andy.
Starting point is 00:21:08 Okay, it's time for fact number three, and that is Chisinski. My fact this week is that lover's hearts beat in sync. Gross, gross, gross, gross. This disgusting fact comes to you, courtesy of research that was done by the University of California, Davis, in 2013, and it put couples in a room, and it monitored their heart rates, and the couples weren't touching each other or speaking to each other. So they were married.
Starting point is 00:21:41 Speaks the married man. Right, so these couples didn't touch or speak to each other, but it was found when their heart rates were monitored that their hearts were beating in sync and their breathing really closely matched. And then in this experiment, they mix the people up a bit. So they put males and females with people that they weren't in a couple with, so just like strangers in the room with them
Starting point is 00:22:01 and their hearts wouldn't be in sync. You know other things that synchronise? Or other occasions on which heartbeats synchronised, this is quite cool. So mothers and infants, their heartbeats synchronise when they're just looking at each other. A mother with her own baby, basically. Also, choirs their heart rates rise and fall at the same time. And they think that is a breathing thing as well,
Starting point is 00:22:20 because some bits you need loads of breath, and when you breathe, then your heart rate goes up. And also dogs and their owners sink heartbeats. Yeah. According to research by pedigree child. Yeah, I know. I know. I love when you read where that research has come from.
Starting point is 00:22:36 It always is, yeah. Although I don't know how that helps with sales. Well, what was interesting about that study was it basically said that when dogs are reunited with their owners after separation, then both those beings' hearts start beating faster, which isn't necessarily them sinking. It's presumably more likely them being quite excited that they're seeing each other again.
Starting point is 00:22:53 Here's a cool thing about heart rates. Obviously, different animals hugely faster and slower depending. And I think we may have even said before that, so sperm whales have about nine beats per minute, shrews 835 beats a minute. If you put a whale in a room with a shrew, what happens then? They synchronise. They'll love us. The whale speeds up to 400 beats a minute and immediately dies.
Starting point is 00:23:18 No, okay, this is a really cool thing. So the whale and the shrews' hearts both deliver over the lifetime 200 million litres of blood per kilo of body weight. Right? So it's exactly the same rate for both animals. So in both animals, each gram of tissue over the animal's lifetime receives 38 litres of oxygen. How weird is that? This is a stupid question, but is that true proportionally for most animals? I think it's not just those two, basically.
Starting point is 00:23:47 This is a sort of rule of life. Yeah, it's true of all mammals, I think, pretty much, but humans don't work in the same way. So it was thought for a while that all mammals have the same number of heartbeats in the lifetime because the shorter-lived animals beat much quicker and the longer-lived ones beat much slower. And it does kind of work a little bit, but it doesn't work with humans. And I think the reason being that we have really good medication and stuff,
Starting point is 00:24:12 so we live longer than we probably should do. There's about a billion heartbees. Most mammals, with some exceptions like humans, get a billion. So it might still be worth getting into a relationship with someone who has a very slow heartweed in an attempt to extend your life. But if you got, let's say in the future, we managed to do heart transplants, is it a case of confusing a single heart that how many times it's personally beat or is it responding to the body?
Starting point is 00:24:35 As in, if you take a heart that has had no beats and put it, in the body of someone who's coming up to a billionth beat, will reset the clock? The heart will keep going, yeah. If a heart's beaten a billion times, then it'll be much more tired than the heart. It's not that you can get to 90 years old and then put a child's heart in your body
Starting point is 00:24:50 and you're going to live for another 90 years. Someone's got to tell Rupert Murdoch that. But let's say that it's a heart collapse that you had that leads to your death. Would it eliminate the chances of that happening? Well, it's certainly true that if your heart is in trouble, you can have a heart transplant, and that will help. But did you know this?
Starting point is 00:25:07 you can transplant your heart into someone else and still live. No. What? Okay. So this is a medical procedure. It doesn't happen very often. But say, for instance, I needed a heart and lung transplant from another person from Anna, say. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:20 But Dan needed... I didn't sign anything, by the way. And then Dan needed a heart transplant. What they can do is because the heart and lung coming from Anna would be better working together, they can give me the heart and lung from Anna, and then I can give my heart to Dan. So I've actually transplanted my heart and received from another person. It does occasionally happen. Do I then give my heart and lungs to Anna?
Starting point is 00:25:43 Yes, where am I getting my heart? I'm this. You don't make it in this. I'm sorry, you're the person who is a donor. Why doesn't Anna just give me the heart? Why were you the in between? So I really need, let's say I really need a lung transplant. But the lungs will work better with a heart of Anna's.
Starting point is 00:26:01 So Anna's lungs will work better with Anna's heart. So I will get the heart and the lungs. But my heart will then go. to you because you need a heart. Yeah, got it. And your lungs are fine. Right. And the sacrificial lamb.
Starting point is 00:26:11 Why am I not involved in this? Do you know that laughing can increase your heart health? Can't it? Start cracking those jokes. Yeah, it vaso dilates your blood vessels. So it increases the width of your blood vessels and it means that you can pump more blood around your body and increases them by 22%, which is actually really significant.
Starting point is 00:26:28 How much do you have to laugh for that? Yeah, just more than you can instigate. So they've also found. found that happiness can actually damage the heart as well. It's all to do with, so there's that thing, it's called the Takot-Subal cardiomyopathy, a broken heart syndrome. It's the idea of broken heart and then you just kind of convince your heart and in very rare cases you convince it to the point of view dying. And they've recently found that happiness can trigger the same thing. So it's a rare condition but happiness has the same effect. It suddenly puts the heart into a
Starting point is 00:27:04 kind of oddly stressed position and that can lead to death as well. Wow. So happiness can be dangerous. Is this why when you're in love, sometimes your heart feels uncomfortable? Surely that's just the adrenaline. It's just interesting. The sort of physical sensations of emotion. Like, why should it be in the chest?
Starting point is 00:27:21 Why on earth should I feel anything in particular there? Because that's about fight or flight, isn't it? And being excited. Why don't my leg feel amazing? You know, but it's got blood in it, isn't it? And he sends Valentine's. I gotts with pitches of legs on. You make my ankle beat twice as fast.
Starting point is 00:27:40 You are my anus haven. Okay, it is time for our final fact of the show, and that is my fact. My fact this week is that this year, Hugh Hefner sold the Playboy Mansion. It comes with 30 rooms, a pool, a tennis court, a zoo license, and Hugh Hefner.
Starting point is 00:28:05 So it comes with Hugh Hefner. You get to keep Hugh Hefner with this. This phrase comes with you. I don't like how to talk. The idea of being that he is now allowed to just live in this house until he dies. That's the part of the deal that he did. He ended up selling it to his neighbor. And I think they've known each other for a long time.
Starting point is 00:28:26 So that seems to be an okay thing. But yeah. So it's been sold. And it obviously back in the 60s and 70s was known as the kind of Disneyland of sexuality. basically. It was... Disneyland of misogyny. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:28:41 The Disneyland of misogyny. And, but now it's sort of very dirty, very, uh, run down and... Yeah, you mean dirty, not just sexually. It's literally dirty, isn't it? It literally is, yeah. It does contain a pipe organ. It does. That's not a euphemism.
Starting point is 00:28:55 Sorry. Imagine Hugh Heffner asking if you want to see his pipe organ. Yeah, so he's in his 80s at the moment. Um, do you guys know where he is going to be buried when he does pass? away. Is he one of these people who wants to be buried like on top of Marilyn Monroe? He's being buried right next to Marilyn Monroe. He bought the plot right next to her. That's weird. She was the first ever cover girl for a playboy. And he's been obsessed with her his whole life in... Oh, well, it's not weird at all that.
Starting point is 00:29:27 Just qualifying the weirdness. You put it in context by saying he's obsessed with her. It sounds like he had a healthy professional disinterested when you said that he bought the cemetery plot next to hers. What a coincidence. I thought you were going to say that he was going to be buried because one of the places that the Playboy Mansion has is a pet cemetery. Did you know that? It has a pet cemetery, which presumably is where all the bunnies are buried.
Starting point is 00:29:49 Very good. Thank you. I have a heart attack. Send Marianne. But yeah, one of his girlfriends had a whole bunch of small dogs, didn't she? And then the women who lived in the mansion said that they would be summoned to his bedroom every Friday. And that's when he would give them their allowance, which I think was $1,000. and when they went to his bedroom
Starting point is 00:30:07 they had to wait for the first ritual which was him scraping all the dog poo off his bedroom floor. I'll stop it out there it's too sexy. In 2011 this was a story that happened 100 people fell ill after going to a party at the Playboy Mansion
Starting point is 00:30:23 and they think it was because there were bacteria in the Whirlpool spa. Because they forgot to scrape the dog poo on it. I thought this was interesting. 40% of all of Playboy's income comes from China. China you don't mean they sell terracotta, like, they sell tea sets and porcith. Yes, exactly.
Starting point is 00:30:42 So, yeah, in China, the country. And the interesting thing is that the magazine is not sold in China. So they license the bunny logo completely for things like perfumes, things like track suit clothing. I always used to see that in Hong Kong. You would see kids wearing Playboy outfits. But because in China, it doesn't have the sexual connotation. In fact, they completely reaffirmed.
Starting point is 00:31:05 rebrand it out there to be a more family-oriented thing. What is it, basically, it's just a big brand. There was a lady called Chloe Woodall who bought some Playboy for her BIP body spray from, I think it was Asda online. But it got substituted for It's a Dogs Life, Petcare, kind and gentle shine spray. And she said, I do have a Staffordshire bull terrier, but how did they know that? You know this really old idea that people used to say that they would read Playboy for the articles? There is one edition of the magazine that can genuinely be claimed to have been read for just the writing, just for the articles. And that is something that's been published since the 1970s, the Braille version.
Starting point is 00:31:51 They take out any of the nudity. So it's not as if they've made like 3D pictures or anything. It's purely words. And it's purely the articles. I think it was the first magazine that came in Braille, wasn't it? Really? Yeah. Private Eye used to have, and I think still has an addition,
Starting point is 00:32:05 or partially cited or for blind people? Private Eye actually has an interesting connection with Playboy. Peter Cook went over to America to ask Hugh Hefner for funding for Private Eye. According to the official Peter Cook biography, Peter Cook, for anyone listening overseas, one of Britain's biggest comedians. Hefnotton piss off, according to this biography. But it also meant that one of the best stories that I love about Peter Cook happened in this period.
Starting point is 00:32:29 He was at the Playboy Club, and there was this guy trying to get in, and the bunny at the front didn't let him in. So he started yelling into the whole club going, do you know who I am? Do you know who I am? Peter Cook went up to him, and he then yelled to the rest of the club. I'm sorry, ladies and gentlemen, this gentleman doesn't seem to know who he is. Does anyone know who he is?
Starting point is 00:32:48 So the Playboy Mansion that they sold is not the first Playboy Mansion. There was one in Chicago, the first one. It had 70 rooms. It had a swim pool. It had all sorts of stuff. And now they've turned it into three family homes. So you can actually live there. I think students live there.
Starting point is 00:33:05 some of the time. And it had a brass plate on the door with the Latin inscription under your Latin is quite good. Do you want to translate this? C. non-osculas, noly tintanere. If you don't osculas, look. No, it must be something like shake. Ossulate, right?
Starting point is 00:33:24 Is it if you don't have an orgasm, you're not excited or something like that? C-non-osculas, noly tintanare. Tintanare. Don't impersonate Tintin in this building. So Tintanare is ring. as in ringing a buzzer. And so, C non-osculas, noly tintanere. If you're not shaking, don't ring.
Starting point is 00:33:43 It's close, but it's a rhyming thing. Oskillass. Swinging. Swinging. If you don't swing, don't ring. Yes. Latin put to good youth, finally. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:55 I mean, yeah, it's horrible, but it's great. Is the magazine still going? Yeah, it is. They made a big change last year, which is they've stopped doing nudity. That's the latest move. I think they're just not. working anymore. Is it sort of a brand? Is it now going more towards the brand thing?
Starting point is 00:34:11 I think so, yeah. I personally read it just for the party hosting tips. Before a party, scrape all the dog excrement off the floor. Okay, that's it. That's all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening. If you would like to get in contact with any of us about the things
Starting point is 00:34:29 that we've said over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Schreiberland, Andy, at Andrew Hunter, M. James. At Edge Shapes. and Shazinski. You can email podcast at QI.com. Yep, or you can go to our group account, which is at QI podcast. And you can also go to no such thing as a fish.com
Starting point is 00:34:46 where we have all of our previous episodes. We're going to be back again next week with another episode. Goodbye.

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