No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Pint Of Wine
Episode Date: December 28, 2018A compilation of the best deleted bits from the last year of Fish. Happy New Year! ...
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Hi everyone. Welcome to the bit in between Christmas and New Year where you're not really sure what day it is and you've eaten way too much turkey. It's Friday. So that means it's a no-such thing as a fish day. And what do we have for you today? We have the 2018 clip show, all the best bits from this year that didn't quite fit into the actual episode. So it's all new. You've never heard it. They're all times when we were just too silly, too stupid. People were making mistakes. There's loads of outtakes. And we'll see you with a brand new episode in 2020.
2019. So please enjoy it. On with the show. Ho-ho. No?
Okay, my fact this week is that it might look like Anna is drinking a pint of lime and soda,
but that is a pint of wine. It's not.
And this is not a podcast. This is an intervention. We love you. We're worried about you.
It's not a pint of wine. It was a pint of wine. There was only one wine. There was only one wine
glass in the green room genuinely and Andy hogged it so I had no choice.
I practically threw it at me saying no no it's fine I'll use this.
Okay none of this could go in the podcast. So according to old English folklore if you dream
of gathering nuts then that's a bad omen. Oh a there's an old English proverb which is a good
year for nuts is a good year for babies. Very true. Very true. Can you guess why that is?
Um, eat lots of nuts.
Nope.
Do they come, did people used to think that when a nut fell from a tree, it cracked open and a baby came out?
No, they weren't idiots.
No, it's because gathering nuts was like, um, you could do it undercover as like a way of meeting people of the opposite sex.
Oh, I see.
Yeah.
So you're like, oh, we're just going gathering nuts.
And then, um, you'd plant your seeds.
And there's a, there's a thing.
Here we go, gathering nuts in May.
and May is springtime.
Do you think that could be a sexy...
Well, weirdly, that doesn't make any sense
because...
No, not your... I'm not rubbish in your theory.
I think it's a really good theory.
Thank you.
The rhyme itself.
Obviously, if you think about it,
nuts aren't falling in May, are they?
I don't know.
Well, you know, in autumn, they come down.
Right, okay, cool.
Let's all shame, you know, suburbs, Murray.
You do know what happens in autumn.
Yeah, shall I?
Conquers, actually, yeah.
No nuts.
Yep.
There you go.
With half a second's thought, we could have avoided this.
I didn't.
So here we are.
I think we're all pleased.
We had to go through it, though.
So what's gathering nuts in May?
So actually, it's thought that it's the knots of May,
which is something that they used to refer to Hawthorne.
So they're just gathering Hawthorne,
but that could have been a sexy thing to do as well, I think.
Yeah.
Did you know that the first ever aircraft carrier was for hot air balloons?
No.
It was in the US Civil War,
and they were used for reconnaissance,
and it was called the General Washington Park Custis.
It was a converted coal barge
and it had its deck cleared
and it was used specifically
to store lots of the Union hot air balloons.
That was the first ever aircraft carrier.
That's very cool.
But it was, it didn't fly itself.
No, much like a normal aircraft carrier today.
They don't fly on the sea.
They just bob around on the ocean.
Excuse me, this aircraft carrier is not flying at all.
I'd like a refund of my $50 billion.
I've only ever listened as far as the word aircraft.
The story of the first nativity, I found quite sweet.
So it was created by Francis of Assisi.
It was in 1223.
That was the first ever nativity scene.
And it was because, you know, he was the patron saint of animals, wasn't he?
He was always shown with loads of rabbits crawling all over him and stuff.
In a nice way.
It wasn't constantly deluged with rabbits.
biting them off and having to kill them just to get a bit of sleep at night.
Why were these rabbits, leave me alone?
Trowning in rabbits.
Yeah, when he got up for air to gasp for air, he said,
let's make a nativity scene because at that time the Bible was read out in Latin,
in church at Christmas, and no one knew what anyone was saying,
and he really wanted it to become a bit more relatable for people
and for them to actually understand what was going on.
And so it was done with real actors, or, well, probably not professional actors,
real people. It was done in a village in Italy and it involved a manger and a real ox and a real
donkey. And he quite sweetly had a wax model as the baby Jesus. And he tried to explain as he
was giving the sermon that this was the baby Jesus, but he was so overwhelmed with the motion
that he couldn't say the word Jesus. So in the first time, the word Jesus wasn't said. He just
kept on saying the babe of Bethlehem and couldn't get it out. Yeah. But then it really took off from there.
hay from that very first nativity scene
was then taken away by all the onlookers
and fed to their farm animals and apparently
it cured them of all their malaria
and other diseases.
That's how you cure it.
How you do it? Magic hay.
Horses can only breathe through their noses.
I didn't realize. As opposed to their mouths.
Yeah. Sorry, yeah.
As opposed to their anuses.
I know. I don't know where I was going on that.
I saw you realizing
halfway through that question what the alternative was.
I suppose when you see one, a horse in the
cold and it's breathing, it is kind of the, it comes out of the nose, doesn't it?
It's always the nostrils, isn't it? Yeah. So don't tape up a horse's nostrils or anything.
I won't. No, okay, in case you were going to. I have to leave.
Churchill used to listen to translations of Hitler's speeches on a gramophone and he would
play back the bits where Hitler mentioned him by name. Did he? Yeah. That's very trumpy,
isn't it? Yeah, is a bit.
Oh. Why did he do it? What a loser?
Yeah, is it just an ego trip?
I don't know. I don't know. I regret mentioning it.
I was looking at some strange driving rules that you can infringe abroad in this country,
but I didn't realize this thing about parking rules in various countries can get so complicated.
So in various countries, but particularly in Sweden, you have this system that they call datum parkering,
which is about parking on alternate sides of the street depending on the date.
So if there's a certain sign on lots of streets
And what it means is if you see this sign
Then on the morning of odd dates
Then you're not allowed to park on the side of the street
Where the houses have odd numbers
And on the morning of even dates
You're not allowed to park on the side of the street
With the houses have even numbers
And so if you park in the evening
And it's going to be there the next morning
You have to plan for the next morning
That it will be on the right side
I mean it just sounds like a way to get money off foreigners
Doesn't it?
That sounds a bit like that
The system in Paris that they have
where only on Wednesdays, like Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays,
odd numbered license plates were allowed into the centre.
Oh, yeah.
They did that in Central or South America.
It might be in Mexico City.
And what happened was just people bought two cars.
They brought two cars and they were always old cars because they had to buy two.
So they had to be cheaper.
So the pollution went way up.
But it is this odd numbers houses thing seems to dictate as well in other countries.
In Belgium, for the first half of the month,
you can park on the side of the road with odd house numbers.
and the second half of the month with even,
which is kind of a hassle if you have to jump out of your car
and run up to a front door and check the house number.
It's amazing. I'm sure. I'm 100% certain.
In fact, I know I've parked in Belgium.
Yeah, it's not every road.
There'll be a sign, and it's a special sign that they all recognise.
There's not even any words on it.
It's just a random image.
That you definitely would think.
Foreigner scratching his head.
Giving away money.
When I went to New York, someone was telling me that
the parking is actually, surprisingly,
if you're a resident in kind of Manhattan,
and it's actually surprisingly, like, easy and cheap to park outside your house
and cost fairly nothing.
And the only rule is that you have to, once a week, you have to, your car has to be
out of the space for two hours while they clean the street.
It must be the same two hours for everyone, right?
Otherwise, it's a poor street cleaner.
Every time he sees a car leave has to jump in there.
But wait a minute.
That can't be true, right?
There's no way for two hours every week, every single car in town starts driving.
It's not the same time.
I'm sure there's a rotor of streets, right?
you know there's like one two hours.
Just all your neighbours turn up.
Hey man, parking thing again.
Yeah, let's all go, shall we?
It's a ridiculous assumption that Manhattan has one street clean who's got two hours.
Like a sort of like cleaning Santa to cover all of Manhattan.
It can't be done.
I'd like to see that sitcom about that guy.
No, I think I think a Christmas festive film where he has to do it in one night.
Picture if you type on a keyboard and you're typing something and you don't look down.
You're one of those people who've got amazing words per minute.
So they did a study in a university where they got people to type 70 words per minute.
That was the goal.
Can you get that that fast?
And everyone, 94% of the time, managed to do that.
They then did a second test on them, which was, can you now write out where everything on the keyboard is?
Querti, can you write out the placings?
And all they could manage was at tops, 15 of the letters of the alphabet.
They had no idea where the rest were.
Because it's all automatic memory.
Something's going on.
the fingers are doing the dancing at that point.
That's really interesting.
That's like, you know, when someone says,
what's your pin number,
if someone's, you know, paying with your card,
and often you have to go up and say,
oh, I need to type it in.
You have that, right?
Yeah.
It's like that.
It's in your fingers.
The magic is here.
That's actually, like,
this isn't a fact,
but that's the worst feeling,
isn't it,
where your fingers stop remembering
and then you just,
you've lost it.
There's no way to get your number back then.
It's all over.
Is that just me?
That's not just me.
No, no, that's me too.
Because I look away as well.
I'm like, oh, come on.
And then when it's wrong, you're like, oh, you were my last.
Like, this isn't even my laugh.
This, asshole.
And that's...
Then they say, sir, a step away from the ATM machine.
Maybe it falls out when you cut your nails.
It's just a theory.
Just a theory.
Something else that rained down to Earth was the Earth's core.
What?
No.
Carr is made of iron.
And the way that it got there, we think, is a massive meteor comes in, hits the earth, vaporizes, goes into the sky, and then rains down and eventually seeps into the center of the planet.
So it's tunneled its way in?
Kind of.
Well, it's denser, isn't it, than anything else around it?
And that's where it goes there.
Sneaky.
Wow.
So that would have been iron rain, molten iron rain?
Yep.
Wow.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There was another dog.
called Rolf. It was a terrier and he spoke through
tapping his paw against boards
each letter of the alphabet
represented by different taps.
If you ask them, all dogs are called Rolf.
It's a real
dad joke that one.
I read about a
Bible-themed amusement park
which is in Bonis-Tierras
Santa and it is
meant to have like roller coasters
and stuff like that. They didn't end up doing
that. So it's a lot of sort of plastic Bible scenes that they've made. So the scale down has gone
quite a bit, except for their one centerpiece for the whole thing, which is that they have in the
distance with a hill a 40-foot tall animatronic Jesus that comes out from the side of the
mountain every hour as part of the resurrection. He resurrects every hour a 40-foot Jesus out the
side of a voutard.
But he wasn't resurrected as a giant.
No, but he's really far away.
So maybe he looks really close when he,
when you see it.
Wow, that sounds absolutely terrifying.
Yeah. Do you know where the largest Jesus
statue in the world is, just as a bit of trivia?
I would have said in Rio de Janeiro.
No, there's a taller one.
In Svi-Bodzin in Poland, it's called Christ the King.
It's 108 feet tall.
And it has Wi-Fi transmitter in its crown.
Wow
Just like the real Jesus
Any stuff on King Louis
13th of France
Got some stuff
Yeah
Because he did not comb his hair
Until he was nine months old
Well he probably didn't do it at that age
But no one killed his hair
Until he was nine months old
And no one washed his legs
Until he was five
And he had his first bath
At the age of seven
What did
Why did he start somewhere
So sorry
Did they start with his legs?
Or had they washed the rest of his body
and then they didn't get to his legs until he was five?
They washed his legs first when he was five in tepid water.
And then when he was seven,
he had his first bath and at that stage everything was clean.
Yeah.
It's not like until he was five.
They only just quickly dunked him in the bath,
but they were holding his legs.
So obviously you can't wash the legs.
No, he just didn't wash anything.
So they didn't wash anything.
So it was in the time when washing was seen to be perhaps not great for you.
Yeah.
His hair's combed.
What more do you want?
At one stage he boasted that he takes after his father and he smells of armpits.
Yeah.
He was a smelly man.
He was.
But he had a horrible upbringing.
I think his parents might have just not washed him out of spite.
He was a very, very sad man.
I grew to really like him.
And so his mother tried to keep the throne for as long as possible.
So he was made king, officially, I think, about age nine.
But his mother was desperate to stay region and hated her son.
And so she would humiliate him or keep him out of power.
So once when he was.
15 and he's king he's in front of his court she just stood up and slapped him in the face
just to tell him off another time he tried to attend a meeting of the royal council that he was
supposed to be holding and whereupon the source i was reading said whereupon she took him by the
shoulders and threw him out of it so she was real harsh and she also forced him to sleep with his
wife so when you know almost every historian concurred that he was gay um and he never had any
he never showed any interest in women, showed a lot of interest in men.
And he was married off to Anne of Austria, who was confusingly a Spanish queen when they were both.
That must have been so annoying for her, always being asked of what's it like in Austria?
My parents just had a silly sense of humour.
She, Anne of Austria of Spain, came over.
Her brother, Dave of Denmark.
Yeah, she came over to marry him
And he had to be physically carried into the wedding bed
Because he was desperate not to sleep with her
And he was really freaked out
And two nurses were there to monitor the act
To make sure it happened
Because otherwise you could sort of get an annulment
And that would ruin the alliance between Spain and France
And then he ran out of the bedroom
As soon as he'd done it
And refused to even enter it
Or eat with his wife or speak to her for about six months
Wow
He had a regiment of Croatian mercenaries
that he liked.
We were actually from Portugal.
And they are famous, for what reason?
Because they're uniform.
Ooh.
The cravats.
Because they wore cravats.
They wore neckties.
And because Kravatska is Croatian for Croatia, they became known as Kravats.
And that's where we get the word from.
Cool.
That's so cool.
And he was also big on wigs.
He was sort of the original, yeah, he was a big wig.
He was a big wig.
He was the original wig wearer.
in the way that cravats sort of became fashionable, he brought them back in wigs back into fashion as well.
So he was thinning in his hair and he wanted to disguise that.
And the surrounding friends all thought, we want to help you out and not make you look like you're the only person wearing a wig.
So they wore wigs as well.
And then that spread and everyone was wig wearing again.
And Anna Vostria popularized hot chocolate.
Did she?
Yeah.
She brought it over from Spain.
and it became an instant status symbol
and they said that only the aristocracy
were allowed to drink it
and that was true for a while
and then after a while
everyone was allowed to drink it in France.
I know I've said this before
it is easy to see why they had a revolution
if they're saying only we can drink hot chocolate.
Yeah.
I'm amazed it took 100 years after this.
There is a theory
that there is a bonus track
hidden in The Last Supper.
What do you mean?
Is that the bread rolls on the table
are a musical arrangement.
Come on.
And if you play the bread rolls
from left to right
along the Last Supper,
it plays a tune.
And if people...
So presumably people have done this, right?
Yes, I clicked on it earlier today,
and it said video unavailable.
We just...
So we don't know what the tune is now.
No.
I have actually heard it.
Yeah, and it's a tune that does work.
So I'm not making this up?
No, you're not making this up.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Everyone else was like I'd be making it up.
I mean, the guy who discovered it is insane because it's not real.
It's not a real thing.
He's looked at bread rolls and thought, that looks like a quaver.
Like, that's not a thing.
Did you guys hear about the countdown thieves in 2009?
No.
So these were some, I think I might have read this in the Daily Mail,
but these were thieves that the police were hunting for
who were stealing letters from shop signs in Norwich.
did it to seven stores over three nights
and they were sitting specific letters
and then one of them was caught on camera
and was overheard saying,
I'm just trying to spell my own name.
And so then the police released the fact
that they were looking for people
who might be called one of these names,
Sam, Danny, Alan, Lloyd, Glynn or Manning.
Can they realize?
Manning?
To turn with Manning.
He'd fall on hard times.
I once tried to convince Dan Schreiber
that one of the lines in the English national anthem was
Oscar Pistorius
Everything else seems to rhyme with that
And he was like, that's not true, surely, surely he had not...
And I was like, when is he going to pull out his phone and Google it?
And he pulled out his phone.
He's like, it's not true, right?
And I was like, no, of course it's not true.
You're not going to do it anything.
He sounds like an idiot.
Yeah, what a moron.
I discovered a few things that genuinely surprised me
about both ears and what we can hear
and what we can't hear.
So first thing that shocked me is that when we're asleep,
our ears are still listening.
Isn't that weird?
Well, how do you think loud noises wake you up?
We saw you went deaf.
Oh, she's got you there, pal.
I assumed that that was some sort of secret knock to let in.
Like, it's just if it's at a certain loudness,
then you get woken up.
But I did genuinely think that when you went to sleep,
you sort of just boo, shut down.
and your ears kind of just went,
okay, I'm taking the night off as well.
You are alone in thinking that, I think.
Yeah.
Really?
So let's move on to my next amazing thing.
Apparently, when this is a noise that we can't hear
that we make on our own,
when you rub your forefinger and your thumb together,
you make an ultrasonic signal.
That is so, it works so clearly
that people often use it to detect
whether a bat detector is working.
So you rub it against a back detector.
and that will give you a signal.
So anyone listening, I'm doing it now.
If you just go to your bat detector
and I wonder if over a podcast
I can set it off.
Anna.
I'm so sorry.
I mean, James.
Sorry, what is a bat detector?
Who has bat detectors?
People with bats.
What do you mean about detectors?
Something that's detecting the ultrasonic sounds of bats
like a scientific instrument.
Must be.
But yeah, that's...
Dan, for the listener
at home, Dan has been rubbing his finger and thumb by the mic
for about 30 seconds now.
And if I could get a better...
And your home will be full of bats.
Did you know that laughing cow is comtee?
Which I love.
Sorry, I don't know a compte.
Oh, maybe...
Is that a soft cheese?
No, maybe this is just a thing that we have in my family
because I love it.
It's like really creamy, nice European cheese.
I don't think your family are the only people who...
I don't think there's a special Tuzzynski family cheese.
Isn't cheese?
Wow.
Wow. It was a hard one and I tried it and it didn't work out.
What about Shizinski?
Yeah, that's the obvious.
Shit.
Shit.
The great pigeon race disaster was something that Anna posted about on the QI boards a few years ago and that I read about.
Do you remember that?
I love it.
I couldn't believe I've never mentioned it before when all the pigeons disappeared because there's an extremely famous pigeon race.
Sorry, extremely famous among pigeon fancies.
And it's between Paris and London, isn't it?
It's between France and the UK.
And it was in the 80s or 90s?
It was from Nantes to the UK,
to the people's homes in the UK.
And yeah, there were 60,000 pigeons taking part
and 90% of them disappeared.
It never happened.
Like every year before that, they'd all arrived back.
No one knew why.
There's a theory that there was a Concord flight
that was going over the channel at the time,
and that disrupted their magnetic impulses and confused them.
What were we in?
97.
Oh, okay.
So quite recently.
Yeah.
And there was one guy called Tom Roden who lost his winning champion pigeon White Tail.
And five years later, the pigeon was on his doorstep.
Yeah.
Oh, no way.
Five years.
I want to see the movie about 100 that's five years.
That's incredible.
Do you think he opened the door and just went, where the hell have you been?
Have you heard of Bristol's punctuation Banksy?
This is an amazing guy.
He was active at least until last year.
So he goes around just correcting poor punctuation.
And there was an interview with him recently.
He has built himself a device he calls an apostrophizer,
which is a very long-handled bit of kit,
which allows him to either cover over an apostrophe
which shouldn't be there in a sign or add one in,
if he needs an extra one.
And someone said to him,
what he was doing was probably illegal,
going around, mucking around with businesses' signs,
just for having an apostrophe in the wrong place.
And he said, I'm sticking on a bit of sticking.
back plastic. It's more of a crime to have the
apostrophies wrong. He's wrong about that,
isn't you? I think it's wrong.
But he's been going since 2003.
Wow. So, yeah.
So he's been getting away with it that long.
Yeah. And also, how has he not been apprehended?
How misspelled is Bristol that he's still in operation?
Is he only correcting the word Bristol?
Yeah, imagine there people that Bristol had two S's again.
He's like, they've got it wrong again.
I think it's not a full-time job.
It's also not a job. No one's been.
But he is cool.
you say the Banksy of punctuation or
apostrophe Avenger. So he's got, you know, cool
names. They feel ironic to me, those names.
They feel self-given.
Yeah.
There is a national punctuation day in America.
And CNN interviewed the guy
who's called Jeff Rubin, who set it up.
He used to be a reporter. And CNN
wrote that he grew increasingly frustrated as he
spotted errors in the newspaper.
They quoted him, I would sit at the kitchen table
with my red sharpie screaming obscenities
which would upset my wife.
she encouraged me to find another outlet for my aggravation
so he's had up national punctuation day
oh good on him
I mean good on yeah it's better for his wife
sort of I wonder if that has solved his quite deep seed of character flaws
that I'm interpreting from that story
whatever he had to do
they had things called dog dramas in the 19th century
early 19th century where the dog was like the hero of the play
so they would usually have other human actors
but the dog would do the really heroic things.
There was one where the show ended with a dog
jumping in a pool of water and saving a child.
But what would often happen is mischievous theatre goers
would throw meat onto the stage to distract the dogs.
It's so funny.
Thus drowning a child, but it's all good fun for the audience, isn't it?
So you know the idea of just going back to the Fire of London,
did you guys know that there's a worshipful company of bakers,
it's sort of the union of the bakers.
They apologized officially for it.
Did they?
Yeah, 320 years later.
A bit late, guys.
After the legal threat is diminished.
Well, it's never too late to apologize, said the then-Lord Mayor of London, who was called
Alan Davis.
Do you guys remember Alan Davis?
That must have been only in the 80s.
I remember the guy who was in QI.
Yeah.
It's still in QI, by the way.
He used to be the mayor of London.
Really?
No, no.
But Alan Davis, I think around 1986, this would have happened.
if it's 320 years after 1666.
And I did work that out.
And it did take ages.
It was as closest as I come to sounding intelligent.
Yeah, they apologized officially for it.
That's good that they admitted to it finally,
because at the time, the French and the Dutch were blamed all across town,
and loads of French and Dutch were arrested.
And I think there was...
It's just beaten up.
Yeah, beaten constantly.
So we were at war, or Britain was at war with France,
and the Netherlands, there was sort of be Protestant.
plots everywhere and so I think there was a French woman who had her breast cut off
because people thought what she was carrying was like explosive devices and it was just
it was chickens.
She was carrying some chickens and people thought they were fireballs.
Wow.
You would have thought in the process of chopping off someone's boobies you would find out that
they weren't fireballs, they were chicks wouldn't you?
Yeah.
You've gone too far then you've got to go through with it.
You're right.
There are parallels with our current political climate.
unfortunately. Have we progressed? Yes. No.
It's the big breast cutting off of the 21st century. Yeah, it's the horrific metaphor that we
find ourselves in. Wow. In 2010, in Belgium, there was a guy who was experimenting with the
idea of solving the problem of pigeons, pooing all over cities. So, massive problem, poo on
your head, poo on car windows, put on, poo on your head, poo on your head. And so what he's attempted to do,
I don't know if this has actually worked, but he's tempted to create a special bacteria that when it's fed to the pigeons, it metabolizes.
And when they defecate, what comes out is not poo, but a soapy-like substance.
So they end up cleaning your head, shampooing your head and cleaning the streets.
I'll stick with head and shoulders.
You don't want to squeeze a pigeon over your head in the shower.
Yeah, so the idea is that...
You can't make them poo so.
It's not fair.
It's not fair, but it's probably possible.
But I just can't...
Where's the waste problem?
product going. I mean, there's poo in that soap. There is poo in there. It's pooey soap.
It's pooey soap. It's pooing. Yeah. I suppose what they're saying is, okay, so there are soapy
molecules in there, which will attach to the pooey substances. And when it rains, it'll be
easier to flush away. Does that make sense? It feels like, I forgot that poo has to come out at some
point. So yeah, that must be the, that must be the logic. Unless these pigeons are just growing bigger and bigger and
bigger and eventually they just explode with their own feces.
Which presents more problems to cleaning up a century.
It totally does.
It's a very short-term solution.
This wasn't just a mad guy.
They were given a grant by the Flemish Architecture and Design Committee and Ministry
of Culture.
It was a funded proper science idea.
You would go to the Ministry of Culture though, wouldn't you?
If you had this slightly strange idea,
that's true.
Don't go to the science people.
There is a thing.
This is another amphipod, which this is originally about, and it's called, and I'm
going to take a run up at this. Sudamphithoides Incaveria. It lives in the Caribbean and it eats
seaweed. And this is another really sort of just a weird kind of defense mechanism in nature.
So the seaweed that it eats has chemicals which deter fish. Same deal. It gives off toxic chemicals.
But the amphipod, it doesn't just eat it. It also makes a little house for itself out of this
algae. And it has...
As of its own food, I guess, right? Yeah. Like a gingerbread house kind of thing.
Yeah, exactly like that.
And so exactly like that.
And it swims around with its head and front legs sticking out of this.
It's more like a sleeping bag, I guess.
It's more like a gingerbread sleeping bag.
Yeah.
Or like a ham sleeping bag.
Like a hammock.
Like a hammock.
Wow.
You guys are going to be so surprised by the laugh that comes after that when the podcast comes out.
I don't remember that'd be nearly as funny on the night.
A lot of pigeons are being smuggled out of Syria at the moment.
Wow.
So because Syria was the world leading pigeon breeding place.
So in the Middle East they say, you know,
all the best pigeon breeders are Syrians.
And now they're getting sent over the border
because obviously it's not safe for them to be there anymore.
And pigeon fanciers in Syria can't keep them anymore.
And so there are lots of collectors who are going on these kind of death
defying missions to get them. There's a guy who's spent
$5 million on Syrian pigeons. This is a guy called
NASA who's a Jordanian,
who's Jordanian. And there was
one instance where 70 pigeons were killed
when they were being smuggled across the border and
they got caught in a fight.
So, yeah, it's taken its toll on the poor pigeons.
But yeah, they are really valuable there.
That's amazing. Akbar the Great, who was a Mughal emperor
around there in the 16th century,
he always traveled where everywhere
went with his personal colony of 10,000 pigeons.
10,000?
What?
What?
They're only small.
I can have 10,001 rooms, please.
I don't think they all got their own room.
No, maybe not.
But they could, like, some of them were really beautiful.
Some of them could do tricks and tumble through the air and, you know.
Some of them pooed so.
But it's an whole whole thing.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I doubt it.
No.
He probably named his favorite ones.
Yeah.
Yeah. That is impressive. I haven't taken register every day for that.
Do you guys know what's happened to actually the original manuscript of the origin of species on the origin of species?
No.
So it has various drawings on it. So for instance, it has a drawing of a green fish with pink legs and fins and a bright blue umbrella.
And this is it's covered in these doodles. And this is because Charles Darwin was a really fun dad.
So he wrote The Origin of Species.
And then he gave it to his kids
And I was like, well, I'm done with this now, I've had this idea,
have that, and it's covered in his kids doodles.
Cool.
And so, I read the book and thought maybe one day animals will evolve to have an umbrella.
Yes.
Yeah, maybe actually Darwin discovered a lot more than he led on.
But, you know, he wanted to keep it secret.
Yeah.
So he put around this story, oh yeah, my kids just drew that weird creature with 15 legs.
An umbrella growing out of it.
Finn.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So it was actually him who.
drew it and he was backtracking on his own illustrations.
That's what I'm saying, is that Darwin drew all these secret animals that didn't exist.
Because he thought if they don't believe that relatively plausible evolution stuff,
they're never going to believe in the umbrella fish.
Another Canadian thing.
Well, do you know what the national animal of Canada is, which I think is a bit right.
It's not a beaver.
Yeah, it's a beaver, yeah.
I just always think it's such a great thing to have bears.
I would have picked that.
But it's really controversial.
They're not really into having the beaver.
It's been debated whether they should ditch it since the mid-19th century.
And in 1964, I was reading a lecture that a Canadian historian gave that complained that the beaver is representative of English Canada rather than French.
And that means that it represents a pretty intelligent animal on a rather low level who was very fond of work and has not much idea beyond that.
So that was his impression of what the English element of Canada had given to the country that the beaver represented.
What did the French area want in?
I'm not sure, actually. What would the French animal be?
Not a beaveral.
Something with fur that was cute that we would kill.
Yes, a bear.
Yes, a bear.
Or a silper.
Lovely.
But are we introducing beavers to Scotland at the moment, isn't that happening?
It's not a happening thing?
And very interestingly, when they were introduced wolves in the various parks in North America,
particularly Yellowstone, it had this extraordinary effect of increasing the beaver population,
which no one had considered,
but just as sort of another example
of how interrelated everything is,
is that the wolves slightly kept down
the elk's stroke moose,
and they didn't go as far south,
and they didn't eat the young vegetation
on which the beavers relied
to sort of fluff up their dams.
Okay.
So they thrived because of the...
But miles, you know,
a thousand miles north where the wolves were,
was affecting the beavers
Wow. You couldn't have predicted that.
No, you really couldn't.
Yeah, it's marvellous. It's like a butterfly effect in a way.
It is. That's why we shouldn't mess with it.
Another Canadian thing, one more thing.
Poutine.
Yes, nice, delicious.
Food. Yeah. What is it?
Gravy on...
Gravy on chips with curd.
That's it.
Right, and they give it a posh sounding name to convince us that it's hope of cuisine.
It does sound like allergies name for a lady part.
Well, the thing is,
In the French party speaking in Canada, it's kind of unusual sounding to them because in France, you don't call Vladimir Putin, Putin.
Because in France, Putin means prostitute.
Of course, Putin, yes.
Putan, yeah.
So in France, they all call him Vladimir Putin.
And so in Canada, they have like a Vladimir's Putin restaurant.
Very cool.
Do you know when the queen takes her Christmas decorations down?
Never.
Never.
She's one of those weirdos who has them up all year round.
She waits till February.
February the 6th.
And it's actually quite sweet.
It's in honour of her father who died on that day.
And then they do these weird things when they have their Christmas dinners.
So this year, Megan Markle will be weighed before she has her Christmas turkey,
as will all of the royal members.
They do this thing where they weigh them.
They all stand on a weighing scale.
Not just the members, though.
The people as well, right?
Sorry.
I'm ashamed.
Yes, they will be weighed.
The great royal Christmas Todra Weiard.
So they weigh the full humans
and they then have the meal
and then they weigh them afterwards again
to see whether or not they've been well fed enough.
That's the symbolic idea of them doing that.
You have to eat the most.
You have to gain the most.
No, I don't think it's a game.
I think it's just a tradition.
And also the queen likes to wear.
Again, this is like you say,
a lot of this stuff is put out there, who knows if it's true,
from their official sources,
but she likes to wear the paper crown from a cracker.
That's her thing.
Is she?
Quite a nice image, isn't it?
Yeah.
It's really nice.
Wouldn't it be great to rig up Prince Charles's cracker
so that there's never a crown inside?
